Asmongold TV - What were they thinking?? | Asmongold TV
Episode Date: September 26, 2025What were they thinking?? Asmongold show for all of his stream highlights, competitions, reactions & more. ----------------------------------- ----- Keywords: gaming reactions, streaming moments, ga...me criticism, reaction videos, gaming drama Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Oh, God. Oh, jeez. Oh, God. I saw this yesterday at the end of the show.
Oh. What were they thinking? Look who it is.
Look who it is.
Probably one of the worst decision makers in America right now.
I would say probably the number one worst decision. Not number one.
Probably top five worst decision maker in America.
How do you stab somebody?
in broad daylight in front
of everybody. Why can't you
just wait till they're walking out of the
track meet in the dark
and then run away?
But you didn't even try
not to get caught.
Like there's no sense of self-preservation
at all.
What an idiot, man.
They already bought an $800
mansion. I'm going to look into this and we're going to
talk about it. So I heard murder.
I mean, he's, the dude's literally
holding his hand. Well, I mean, of course he's
holding his handle. They're just trying to get him around from like point A to point B because that's
that's what their job is. But anyway, so this guy, this guy went and he stabbed. Like I think honestly,
I think this is like probably, this is like one of the biggest Ls of the year. Like, I'm going to be real.
It really is what actual privilege looks like. Yeah, not only the fact that he had bail,
the judge lowered it. The judge lowered his bail. Like, why would you lower the, like, if you stab somebody
in the chest with a knife, like, you know who does that? Like, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a,
Mayan priest.
Like, we're going back to the conquistador days at this point.
What the hell are we talking about letting somebody like that go?
Oh, my God.
Yeah, look at the judge.
It doesn't like, I know people, because the judge is black and he's black,
they think that it's preferential treatment that's racially based.
The fact is that it's impossible for me to know whether that's the case.
But I'll tell you this, if it was a white judge and a white guy,
people said the same fucking thing about Kyle Rittenhouse, except for Kyle Rittenhouse, was actually in the right.
So the fact is, any time that you have any interaction between two people, everybody is going to look at it from this direction.
So let me see if I can pull this up and talk about it.
And it's been really, really fucking embarrassing.
I don't even know where it is.
Anthony Carmel, I guess I can just search it here.
But yeah, just give me one second.
And there is.
let's go ahead, was released, this is it.
And so anyway, so
figuring out of white privilege, check your white privilege.
Yeah, I mean, this is insane.
A summary of the events.
So basically, this is what happened.
And it's kind of crazy, this is it.
And summary of events of Carmel and Anthony,
this is incredible.
Trespassed onto another team's tent,
was told to leave, stabbed and killed the kid in response.
Black people raised 500K in his legal defense.
I'm not about using this as a race thing personally.
I think there's plenty of white people that gave him money too.
His bail gets reduced down to 250K, and this is the best part.
Are you ready for this?
The parents buy a new mansion with the legal defense money.
That's right.
That's right.
And so we're not 100% sure whether this is happening or not.
I'm not 100%, but it looks like that's kind of what's going on.
And so like this is, and I look at this house,
this is a nice fucking house
like look at that oh my god
and so anyway they're like
okay well this is the same stairway
because it's like you know the same two things
and so they might have done this not a bad
decision maker at all i mean he's gonna be in jail right
i mean let's be honest and so this is an eight hundred thousand dollar
uh it says right there uh 800 thousand dollar house
uh i'm not sure whether he owns the house they bought the house or not i think that's
kind of unconfirmed right now
and uh house is owned by apparently indians yeah so apparently that's not even
really what's going on. And so they could be
renting it. They're moving into a new house
and hiring private security with the fund that they
can afford the mortgage of a mansion in
Texas. It's basically
illegal. It should be fraud. The problem
I don't have a problem like this,
maybe this is just me, but the
only bad thing I see about this is the
fact that his bail got lowered. Like
if a bunch of retards want to get together
and pool money for some dumbass,
then I don't really think that's too big
of a deal, right? I mean, like, why the
fuck would I care about this? I mean, there's
plenty of stupid money. People donate money to fucking, like, I'm trying to think,
like, what's the dumbest? Like, people would donate money to Star Citizen forever, right?
They've been donating money to these video games, like, oh, this is going to be the next new
Chronicles of O'Leary? Like, is this really that big of a difference to me? Like, yeah, it is kind
of a big difference, but it's not a huge difference. And so they donate to Twitch streamers,
exactly. And so that's not what bothers me. What bothers me is that this woman thought,
to lower his bail. Like, this needs to be an investigation. Why is it that you think that somebody
who, because, like, I mean, again, stabbing somebody in the heart with a knife, like, again,
like, there are, like, levels of, like, violence. And I feel like that one's pretty high up there,
right? I mean, like, that's some, that's some savage shit, right? And so, like, you talk about
doing that. That's a whole lot on stole property. Yes. And so anyway, yeah, Dexter Morgan.
type shit, exactly. And so he shouldn't even
had a bail to begin with. And if anything, a million
dollars, that's one thing.
So this judge needs to be
looked at. Like, how do you make a
decision like this and
think that it's okay? And so anyway,
yeah, I did say it was not a legal
defense fund. It was a fund for the family. You're supposed
to think the legal cost, but didn't make that claim.
Well, what's this year? Family needs
the money to survive. Were they
depending on a 17-year-old high school kid to support
the family? Well, I mean, a lawsuit
costs a lot of money realistically, right?
But anyway, worst part is this established pattern totally expected from the beginning.
Can't wait to see how the trial goes?
I mean, he's going to be gone, right?
Do you want radicalized white people?
Because this is how you get radicalized white people.
I think this is really what the worst part about it is, is the fact that this situation happening
and Anthony getting off on this shit and then getting released and then being like,
this is the post that was made about it, right?
And so, a minister, I mean, like, what I find to be always a minister of justice.
Okay, never mind.
I thought it was a minister of a religion because as far as I know, unless you're worshipping quetzocatl,
stabbing somebody in the heart and killing them is generally not, I don't think that, because like,
Kane did that in the Bible, right? And like, people thought he was the bad guy. So, yeah,
I thought that that's definitely not it. Anyway, so, Comrello Anthony is safe at home. The moment is a
reminder that a community united can never be divided.
Well, has it ever occurred to you that if everybody is collectively morons, that's not
something to be proud of?
Like if, and also, by the way, the community, if this implication, like, the black community
supports this is fucking ridiculous.
There are tons of black people.
And I think that if you really polled average, you go to Walmart and you tell people at
Walmart, black people at Walmart, this is what happened.
They're going to say, no, keep them in fucking jail.
what are you talking about? So like this entire fucking pre the entire premise of this is a complete fabrication.
Massive fucking fabrication. Clueless Asman? No, I'm telling you like, I mean, again, are there racist black people out there?
For fucking sure there are. But to act like that's the majority guys. Like really, take some time off the internet. A lot of people don't see it that way.
So, but supporters are mostly black. So what the fuck? If all of his supporters are black, that still is not an indication on the general population.
of black people. Like, let's say
a million people support him that are black.
If blacks are 13% of the population,
that's like, it's like
2% or something like that.
It's nothing. And so, like,
no, I'm not going to sit around
and act like there's some kind of like collective
accountability of black people
because a handful of them got together
and supported a fucking crazy asshole.
That's not fair. It's not
fucking fair. It's not even a majority.
And so anyway,
chatters back, not everybody always wants to turn this generation.
you do not let these grifters take advantage of you and convince you that this is this person
somehow is you want to know who your enemy is yeah it's this guy but you want to know who the
real enemy is it's this guy it's this guy who tries to sow racial divides racial hatred
who tries to push people apart who tries to use his identity as a weapon and who tries to
create a false sense of solidarity between people on superficial grounds.
This is the enemy.
This guy is just a stupid fucking kid, asshole.
He should have never even been in that school to begin with, right?
I mean, honestly, the people that really, like, he's, he's a minor.
He's 17 years old.
And yeah, I know he should go to jail.
He should be tried as an adult.
I completely agree.
But let's be honest.
The fact that the teacher, this guy had a history of violence and the school let this
kids stay in the school, uh-uh, we got to find and investigate the people that made that decision
and make sure that they never have another fucking job in education again. Because if it was not for
them, if they had made the right decision, not the decision that made them feel good, but the
right decision, they would have actually saved a life. And I think that there is a degree of blood
on their hands. I think so, because they hold the power. This person doesn't hold the power. I know
you might think that's crazy, but I'm sorry, if you're so fucking retarded that you think you're
going to stab somebody in the middle of a track meet, you do not have the full capacity of your
mental facilities. You are insane. This person needs to be taken care of, separated from society,
and given a place where they can exist without hurting themselves or other people. That's the reality.
This is a degree of a lack of self-control that has been, again, also trained.
trained. This person
has probably been violent. That's what that other
girl that went to school with him went. She just
didn't even really know him that well, but she knew
he caused problems. How the fuck is
everybody know you're causing problems?
And you're still there?
Really?
You see what I'm saying about this shit?
This is nuts.
And so anyway,
I go and I see this
and I'll read the rest of the journey as long ahead.
No, it's not. The journey is
you go from court to
jail. That's it. It's over. That's really short. Maybe your journey's not going to, maybe your journey
is going to be long because you get to go on a cruise with all the money that you're getting. Maybe the only,
yeah, maybe your journey is going to be really long. You got to, and now you get to go and talk and be like,
oh, I can't believe this happened to him. And now you get to use this guy and, oh, no, this is another
victim. And yeah, get the fuck out of here. And anyway, we celebrate a victory for justice for the
family and for the power of the people coming to protect our youth.
Our youth, well, what about the youth that got stabbed?
Well, what about the protection, Sam?
Because I agree that Carmelo needs to be protected.
That's why he should have never been in his school in the first place because his brain is
fucked up.
There's something wrong with him.
And the fact is that they let him stay in that school and the kid is dead because of that.
And also, Carmelo ruined his fucking life.
Carmelo ruined his entire fucking life.
He could have maybe got the head.
help he needed. He could have maybe been medicated in a way that kept him on an even keel. He could
have maybe be held accountable as a young man and then maybe that would have helped him evolve
into somebody who could control himself. But none of that was happening because of the
because of the low expectations of education and society. And I hate to say it, but I think some
of these are the bigotry of low expectations. You can be black and you can make bad decisions
and it's still your fault.
This weird fucking thing
where people infantilized minorities
is, it's disgusting,
it's insulting to everybody.
It's insulting to them.
It's insulting to everybody else.
It's awful.
And it's bad for everyone.
This is what I said before.
Remember the video that I pulled up for y'all
about the guy that like he couldn't buy anything
from Dunkin' Donuts because he was being treated
like he's in a jail?
because there's like fiberglass walls
and like bulletproof glass everywhere
and I actually agreed with them
and I said if you treat people like animals in jail
they're going to act like animals in jail
that again
you know who came up with the decision
not to have police everywhere there
a bunch of fucking upper middle class carins
who think that they're helping minority communities
you're not helping minority communities
by not holding the criminals accountable
in their culture
that is the problem
that is the main fucking issue
and it ruins everything for them
It fucks up everything.
I'm so, I'm just, I'm so disappointed in this.
I'm so, and another thing is that I'm so disappointed in a lot of these.
And I think that, again, it's understandable.
And again, it's understandable.
It is.
Like, we've had Jim Crow, we had slavery, we had pre-civil rights, we had segregation.
We've had all kinds of racial context in America.
We have.
and the ripple effects of that are still felt today. Absolutely.
Think about the amount of families that are black with generational wealth versus white with generational wealth.
Small minorities in both, but one of them is certainly greater than the other.
And so I'm not going to try to act like there's no systematic racism and there's no ripples of that that have happened.
There are, and it's important to talk about that.
But at the same time, you have these people that are co-opting these race issues so they can make money.
This guy's wearing a nice suit.
And I bet after this is all over, he's going to be wearing an even nicer suit.
I think it's fucking ridiculous.
It's disgraceful.
Absolutely fucking disgraceful.
This come out now, the minister of defending this guy so hard is the domestic abuser who beat his ex-girlfriend's 12-year-old daughter, and I believe hospitalized her.
He said it on Twitter.
Well, hey, you know, game recognized game.
What a surprise.
You know, I mean, I'm not going to go and say,
that's what happened, right? Because I don't know. But if it did happen, I would believe it. So yeah,
thanks for being level-headed through all these things, Bresherfusserfusser, some on a bias,
extremely basic claim. No, the thing is, like, and this is the problem, is that there is no greater
victim of, like, this form of, like, bigotry of low expectations, like, you know,
like, you know, illusion of tolerance. There is no greater victim to this than other minorities
that are affected by it.
Because here's another really important thing to keep in mind,
is that with every single race,
I'm trying to say this in a way that like, you know,
it doesn't have like something like connotation.
Every single race, including black people,
they kill more black people than any other race.
White people, as far as I know,
kill more white people than any other race.
So the main victims of this,
of this low expectation are other ones of them.
That's the reason.
They're the victims.
They're the ones that are being hurt by this.
And what I'm saying is like, so this crash out that we see with Carmelo, this happens regularly.
Absolutely fucking disgusting.
You're trying so hard to avoid the reality as issue of personal accountability.
Everybody makes choices.
What I'm saying is that the choices are easier to make.
So I agree that he is, he's a, actually, I don't entirely.
when I decide that a person, and this is again
my opinion
but like really
are we really going to act like a guy that's going to pull out a knife
in the middle of everybody and stab somebody?
Are we really going to act like this is a manned of sound mind?
I don't.
Fuck no.
Absolutely not.
Like yeah, I think this is a nutball.
And so anyway, not for a kid.
Yeah, exactly, right?
And so like, and so, well, what my point is
is that when a crazy person does something wrong,
crazy people in a way are not accountable for their own behavior.
Now, you have to take care of them and make sure that people are safe,
but at the same time, you should be asking yourself,
why is it that this person was allowed to get to this point?
Who is it that thought they were doing a good thing
who now has bought on their hands?
And those are the people I think that need to be held accountable to.
am I crazy for saying this?
I don't think I am.
I think I'm the only person that's not fucking crazy.
Because I see everybody turning this into like this weird fucking race issue.
And yes, there is a degree.
I think that there absolutely is a degree of racial solidarity that's happening.
And I find it to be disgusting.
And it shouldn't be promoted or advocated for at all.
But do not let those people divide you and make you think that average black people
don't see this and find it to be fucking disgusting.
They do.
The amount of people that supported this guy is a fraction of a percent of the actual amount of people that are black in the country.
It's outrageous.
And so they all get ignored, exactly.
And so that's the point that I'm making here.
First Arrested in 2009.
So this is the guy, right?
Dominique Alexander.
Let's listen to what, this is what he's done.
Alexander was first arrested in 2009 for causing serious violence.
bodily injury to a child. Police reported that he'd been babysitting his girlfriend's two-year-old son
for the evening, and he called her at 11 p.m. and told her to get home now, but he didn't tell her why.
When she arrived, she found her child unresponsive. Alexander told his girlfriend that he'd been
watching a movie with her son on the couch. He paused the movie, police reported, and he walked into
the computer room, heard the sound of her son, who was asleep on the couch, fall off the couch,
onto the carpet. But the doctor disagreed with the statement. He examined Alexander's girlfriend's son
in the intensive care unit and reported that the child had a subdural hemorrhage between the
halves of his brain, the back of his brain. He also had retinal images in both eyes.
Hmm. Oh, geez. Didn't you go to prison for beating a toddler?
Ah, geez. And it all, oh, wait a minute. Oh, bro. This, this. He got a list. He got a list.
And so injury to a child, the two-year-old son pleaded guilty to a felony theft charge from a 2016 business.
He was sentenced to two days in jail.
What?
Alexander was convicted on another felony theft charge of continuous violence against the family after an alleged assault of his long-term partner.
The charge was later dismissed.
His criminal record also convict, also, what is this, is convictions for evading arrest, making a fall,
Okay, dude, who is this guy?
Who is this?
This is crazy.
What is going on?
Really?
He played in G2A.
And again, this is another person.
Again, this guy should never have been let out.
This is another example.
This guy should have, they should have locked his ass up.
He shouldn't even be here that has the chance to get the other guy out.
and so anyway it's yeah and uh democrats love people like this judges are weak i actually i think
that you're right i think that a lot of people view like i i i'm gonna be real i hate the idea
that people have of sympathy and uh like uh you know like what's the word like not
when you let somebody off right uh what what's the word uh same i i'm trying to
think of what. I don't know why I can't think of the word. Empathy. No, not empty. Rigged.
leniency. Yeah. Leniency. Like mercy. There it is mercy. That's the word I was thinking of.
There is no mercy in letting a person like this out. The problem is that people never are able to perceive the
actions that they take beyond the immediate effect of them. Because when you let this person out
and then they do something bad again, that's kind of like your fault, isn't it? Because
you let them out. And you did that because you thought that things would be better. You thought
that you knew better. And so that's it. And mercy, exactly. And this misplaced empathy and this
self-indulgent mercy and, you know, like, oh, well, we're going to let people do this. It gets
people killed. It does. We must liberate the people from the criminals. Yeah, this guy's,
and this is a person who's been violent to a two-year-old. Like, we're not talking.
talking about like, you know, some like weird domestic violence altercation. This is crazy, bro.
Like, it's nuts. And so you see, like, white people see this and it's going to radicalize them.
We don't need to go back to race politics. We've spent 150 fucking years getting away from that.
And these people are speed running going back. It's fucking annoying.
it's exhausting
then stop blaming white people
I'm not blaming
who when the fuck did I blame white people
it's not about
it's people that do this
it's not white or black people
that it's people do this
forget getting radicalized yes
and so anyway
we'll play new runescape game today
yeah but not yet
and anyway can an executive order
take over a case like this
I don't know
but yeah
and boomer mentils
yeah it's really sad
man. You Americans got a lot of black people among you with KKK level of racism. They literally hate white people.
Okay. So what's the point? Like in my opinion, this is just again, this is my opinion.
If I was a black person and I lived in a very impoverished area with majority other people that were part of minority groups and the city has
collectively decided to not police my area, not stop the gang violence in my area,
you know, like not stop the drive-bys in my area, I would probably hate white people too.
I would. And especially because a lot of these people, if you're broke, the odds are your parents
were probably also broke. And so like, and the thing is that, right, exactly, you probably know,
I know like for my dad
my dad saw this shit happen because he was in Florida
whenever he grew up he was born in 1947
and so like he saw this shit himself
like so you you have it
a direct conversation
with a person who was a victim of legitimate
you know police
brutality and bad behavior right
and so like not an excuse
but it kind of is though right
because when you live in a culture
that a bunch of people at a committee have decided
isn't worth policing
because they think that you like this violence
or it's like somehow bad to do that.
Fuck that.
They'll take. They need to take accountability.
It's a culture problem with their community.
No, they cannot take accountability
and go and shoot the gang members.
That's not how it works.
That's not how it works at all.
The chatter was correct.
It's an excuse, it's an explanation.
Yeah.
I'm explaining why this happened.
And again, if you can't understand why a person feels the way that they feel,
you can never change the way that they feel because you can't figure out why it's happening.
It's like you try to fix a computer problem.
If you can't figure out why the computer problem is happening, you can never fix the problem, right?
You have to figure out what the problem is and why it's happening.
And I think that's a big reason why it's happening.
I think the moment that you give these people the ability to live in a place where they can expect the rule of law that's being enforced, they can be respected as individuals, they can not be patronized, condescended to, and victims of the bigotry of low expectations, and you treat them like human beings like they deserve, I think that if you hold people to high expectations, they meet them. And I think that if you hold people to low expectations, they'll also meet them.
that's the way I see.
There'll never be a moral and just society when we keep training minorities different than everyone else and infanalyzing them.
Whites are hated?
Yeah, there's a lot of racist black people out there for sure.
But you have to look at, you have to look at why is that?
Why does that happen?
And so as soon as you, and I'll tell you one of the reasons why it happens, it's because of this guy.
This is one of the reasons why it happens.
You have a serial domestic abuser who is weaponizing his race in order to protect other serial domestic abusers and psychopaths.
This is the reason why you have racism.
Go back to the days that Rush Hour came out in movie theaters and everybody was looking forward to seeing it.
Go back to the days that Will Smith was the biggest movie actor in the world and everybody wanted to be like Will Smith.
And everybody, believe it or not, wanted a dad or an uncle like Bill Cosby.
No, absolutely not.
I'm not going to buy into this bullshit.
Everything was fucking fine.
and then these bad actors ruined it.
And yeah, we always had this a little bit.
It was always a little bit.
But now it's way too much.
How the Bill Consby thing turned out?
Not so good.
But how the Harvey Weinstein thing turn out?
I mean, it's not like black people have a monopoly on being creeps.
Like, again, everybody always wants to turn it into a race issue.
I don't think that that's fair.
I just don't.
I don't think it's fair and I don't think it's productive either.
Uncle Phil?
Yeah, Uncle, yeah, Uncle Phil.
There's another great example from Fresh Pins of Bel Air.
Yeah, there's nothing wrong with him.
Exactly.
Diddy versus Epstein?
Exactly.
Guys, do you think the bail system is fair?
I think this instance of it is not.
I think some instances of it are.
Like basically, if a person, in my opinion, like a,
a perpetrator of a violent crime,
especially if it's premeditated.
I don't think should probably get bail,
but a person who is committing a crime that's like not,
like basically it should be determined
whether this person's like a threat to society or not.
That's the way I see it.
So yeah, I don't want to turn into a race issue.
I just want the bad people who hurt innocents to get punished.
Yeah, exactly.
So you guys are just letting murderers out on bail?
Unironically, yes.
unironically we are going and letting murderers out on bail and i want to let you guys know that this has caused
nick flintes can only dream of being able to cause this much racial difference between two groups of people
richard spencer can only dream of being able to ferment this level of racism between whites and blacks
this goes beyond any of these racial instigators or any of this.
This is a million times worse.
Johnny Somali.
Do you see what I'm saying?
Because foment, not ferment, you're right.
Fomit, I use the wrong word.
That's, yeah, that's what I think.
The optics are bad.
The optics are horrible.
Luigi's rotting in jail, but not this guy.
that's a great point
that's actually a great point
holy shit what a good point
why is this guy not in jail
but Luigi is
but Luigi was premeditated
so was him
who brings a knife to attract me
who says touch me and see what happens
that's premeditation in my opinion
it is
the Joker was right
so we let Luigi out
for the sake of my YouTube channel
that would be the best outcome.
But no, I think we keep both of them in.
Yeah, that's premeditation by definition.
Maybe my understanding of it is different.
But I thought it was.
Premeditation for a murder can happen
the instant before the murder.
It just means that it wasn't an accident.
Really?
I thought an accident meant that it was manslaughter.
I'm not a lawyer, okay?
So, like, I'm just thinking about it
from, like, my layman's understanding
of the definitional, like,
vocabulary and what it means. But I know that like the legal terminology for things can sometimes be
different. So I could be wrong about this a little bit. I'm not trying to like go and like have a
big argument about this. So yeah, anyway, that's the way that I feel about it. I don't know.
What do you guys think? Because I read a lot of these comments. Let's see here. Are there any more of
these? This is racist comment. Racist comment. I think this is a racist comment.
him.
Ain't that nigger now.
I got the rope right here.
Oh my God.
Anyway,
and this is, again,
this is, I think, kind of racially,
that's what most people hate you.
Another racist comment.
Another racist comment.
Let's see here.
This is,
I don't really think this is racist.
Could be, right?
It's hard to say.
But, like, if you look at a lot of these,
it's just another racial comment
and you see another racial comment
etc and you see how it's breeding this right
do you think it should be this big of a racial thing
I feel like the dude stabbed the other guy because he was pissed at him
yeah I think that's probably what it was too
yeah I mean I bet if you ask Carmelo
did you stab him because it was white even Carmelo would say no
I stabbed him because he's making me mad
no I bet that's probably what
it was. Yeah, they just got, yeah, they got mad. So did a judge made it racial? Exactly, right? And so you
can't erase the race. But you should. Not every single altercation and interaction between two
people of a different race should be colored by that racial connotation. There's no need for that.
There's plenty of times people can be assholes and it's not because they're racist. It's because
they're assholes. The thing is murder is lucky to have killed a person this way. That way he's in
supported racist. Yeah, maybe. I don't know. It's racial because people are fed up with one
particular demographic behavior going unaddressed. But what I'm saying, my point is that
I think that that demographic, like with like black people or anything,
they are the ones that are the victims of this the most. That's the point that I'm
making. And that's why I think this is so insidious. Did you see kind of like that's
like you see how all this fits together
anyway I'll read a few more of these and then we'll move on
the crime itself is probably not racist but the fallout is
exactly I think you're completely right about that
and they're the victims my guy someone died
I'm not talking about that
that's not even what's being discussed
keep up we assume to apply the law equally in colorblind
regardless of who's being arrested yeah
ignoring doing something bad when it's beneficial for you
is worse for society than doing something bad that's harmful because it's self-encouraging yeah
I think so too absolutely and there should just be facts you kill the person has nothing to the
skin color yeah I think so and we move on I'm burnt out on this topic now no we'll move on whenever
I'm ready to move on and I imagine it'd be harder for someone who isn't a black American to
understand what you mean I again I try to be understanding I try to listen to what other people's
perspectives are and I try it to see
I try to see things from their point of view
and I try to look at the bigger picture
like obviously
you know nobody always
gets it right
but I think in a lot of cases
I do get it right with this
I do
so it's just it's insane man
let me see here
this video's perverse scenario
mercy for the guilty is tyranny for the victims
I love that
I completely fucking agree.
Yep.
This is the problem.
Poor people have it just as hard or even worse as minority people.
Yeah.
I think anybody that grew up, you know, working class or lower class knows that.
And so, yeah.
As a black man, I think you should rot.
I think that most black men probably think that.
Of course.
I mean, again, like, there's just a small subset of people that have been radicalized by the internet.
Yeah, no, of course.
Like, duh.
Do you think the judge should lose her job?
Do I think the judge should lose her job?
If you want my personal opinion, absolutely.
I think that there is no logical reason
that you could lower the bail from a person who is a convicted or is like a murderer.
And like, again, like this isn't like a accidental, you know, you got in a fight with somebody
and, you know, like you hit them the wrong way and they fell down.
down and they died, right? Like, this is like you stab them in the heart with a knife.
Lowering this person's bail, knowing the context of the fact that they'll be let out,
at the end of the day, a person that stabs another person in the heart with a knife is mentally
unstable and a threat to society. So did the judge's actions put the public in danger?
I would argue the answer to that is unequivocally yes.
And if you have a judge who is intentionally putting the public's safety in danger,
then she should be disbarred.
Absolutely.
Because that's the exact opposite of what her job is.
It's not even a question.
Hello?
Um, the, uh, uh, uh,
you open at swamp.
years later from my neighbor would go for whatever and he's the old man got in a knife bite in the living
room he's my next door neighbors and the old band killed him right there yeah yeah you neighbor yeah i
remember that story yeah and uh and you know i told you stories about where i could go drinking
when i was like 17 yeah i was bar drinking that whole road there people died there every week
Well, what are you trying to get at?
What I'm getting at is we were treated like a lot of the blacks were treated.
And I would say we were white Edwards, you know?
Yeah.
People considered us.
And so it's somebody brought up this point.
I see it come up that it's being, it's not only being poor.
I mean, there are communities where
there are poor people and everybody gets along fine.
Everything is fine.
Yeah.
But more communities where that's not the truth.
And I think, you know, like I told you,
I didn't have started in my fucking helmet.
You know, I didn't get my head bastard.
Well, there's the one in the front of your head.
Well, that's not, that's from something else.
That's from the bottle, yeah.
Yeah, that's from the Coke bottle.
the guy
Yeah.
The bottle on my head.
And that stopped the fight
because I was in a different place.
Yeah.
I was in a bar and I was just,
you know,
I was in the wrong bar.
Well,
look,
I want to get back to my stream.
I got a lot to go over today.
Well,
I'm just saying
that it's not necessarily black.
Of course.
It's really poor.
If you don't,
if you're poor cops,
like I told you,
they beat the fuck.
out of Pete. That's what you said.
Yeah. They pulled Pete right through his,
they have window down.
They said, roll your window down.
You know, be a big guy.
And they pulled Pete out there
where his arms were pinned,
and his head was sticking out of his car.
And they beat the fuck out of him with nightsticks.
Yep.
And I said, hey, man, what's going on?
And they give me a little whack, you know,
just to get back.
And, hey, I'm stepping up, you know.
Sorry, Pete.
and, you know, he took the hit.
And the kick of the ass is, he's a big cop guy now.
I told you watching it over there.
Oh, yeah, I know, I know.
And it's like it's never even happened to him.
Yeah.
That's how bum in the woman it was.
His uncle or whatever it was in South Georgia, when they have an uproar.
Oh, okay.
He just drive up.
Okay.
Yeah.
Yeah, yeah.
Any, any, there's, you know, 44, whatever it was,
bam, bam, bam, you know, to shoot six of a day in a TV show.
And that's the end of that.
Okay.
It was, and I told your mom.
Yeah.
We got our new house there.
Mm-hmm.
I said, don't be alarmed when you hear gunshots all through the night.
That's just guys expressing their opinion when they get home drunk.
And the wife starts in on them about the kids or something.
And it's just a violent community.
Remember that movie Sandlot?
Well, look, look, I want to get back to my stream.
Remember that movie Sandmont?
Yeah, I remember it.
And Keanu Reeves went to this black guy.
You're thinking, I don't think that's not Sandlot.
You're thinking of what's the movie, what's the movie called, the Keanu Reeves movie?
Because we watched it in movie theaters, hardball.
Yeah, that's what it was.
Yeah, because for community service,
he had to be on a coach of a team.
And he went to the people's apartment building,
and he said, he's walking by,
and the doors are open.
People were just sitting there with the doors open.
And he can see everybody's sitting on the floor.
And he said, why is everybody sitting on the floor?
And it was a black...
Yeah, for the gunshots, I know.
Yeah, because they didn't want to get shot.
And I thought, you know, like, why the hell don't you go out there and shoot the shooters?
Yeah.
But they don't.
In the neighborhood where I was, they shot the shooters, you know.
But I, uh, uh, it's, it's a, it's a good people just can't step up against a lot of that shit.
And then you got, no, I, I, I understand.
Okay.
And they foster it, you know?
I know, I know.
I know.
I know.
I know.
But then that's, it's an ethos, and it's reinforced by the cops and by everybody who treats
the people like that.
Yeah.
Like, so they don't.
Yeah.
Like they're not human.
I know.
It's up like that.
And so that's why, you know, I moved you into the neighborhood.
Yeah.
It was a great neighborhood.
You did.
You did.
I live in a great.
You do.
We're working, we live in working-class neighborhoods.
I could live.
in fucking, you know,
we have a big house in a fancy place
where they got a homeowners association.
Yeah, nobody wants to, look, I, I want to get back to my show.
I'll call you later, okay?
I just don't, well, I've got to have left to say about a...
I know, I know, I know you do.
So, all right, I'll talk to you later.
All right.
All right.
Yo, I'll talk to you there.
Bye.
You're giving me the hustle up, the bum's rush.
Oh, it kind of takes me off.
I forgot it was your stream.
I understood.
Well, that's right.
When I'm on, it's my stream.
Managing it, it's jurist.
We're pushing it.
Sounds good.
All right.
I'll talk to you later.
All right.
Yo, bye.
So,
anyway,
yeah,
that's what it was.
And,
no, I mean, like,
I, to be honest,
I know the unscernified.
insert version of some of these stories, I was, I was on edge. What can I say? I was on edge.
So, yeah, so that's what it was. And he got a bunch more of those as well. Now, it was.
And anyway, so, and yeah, there is, my monologue. Yeah, I guess so, right? And more of the
Coke bottle story? Yeah, yeah, basically. But that actually wasn't the one. But anyway,
So did you get
Panas fruit? Actually, I did. I did. I did get
the bananas. But yeah,
so I do think like, honestly,
it's like those people are the ones that get affected by it.
But you can see how, how like,
are we on the same page, by the way?
That like, this is definitely,
this is, this is bad for fucking everybody.
It's bad for fucking everybody.
And it's being, it's being orchestrated by a clown.
You shouldn't even be out.
You should be in.
jail yourself.
Should be, you shouldn't even be, yeah, it shouldn't even be free in the first place.
It's nuts, man, it's bad for everyone.
No, it is.
It absolutely is.
And so anyway, racism is going to go to a stratosphere?
Yeah, I know.
But that's really the way, that's the way I see it.
And it's just really sad for me to see this happen.
And I just wanted to talk about it because I have a lot of opinions about this.
And I think that, honestly, I think that the way that I talk about it,
is the fair way to talk about it.
And I think that most other people talk about it either from a position of fear or a position of bigotry.
So, like, I don't feel like a lot of people give this the right take, if that makes sense.
Like, they don't give this the, they're not fair about this, right?
They're trying to either say it in a way that makes one group happy, another group happy,
or they're afraid of having, like, an extreme opinion because it could be taken the wrong way, right?
and so that's the way I see it
and thanks suicidal empathy people
for wishes of the best for someone and make it worse for everyone else
yeah I know man absolutely
and it's not
or sometimes worries people come for you
people like this complain about me all the time on Twitter
absolutely that yeah they get mad about me all the time
but the fact is that I actually think that a lot of people
I think that a lot of people
really appreciate what I'm saying
and I think that actually it's the vast majority
that appreciates what I'm saying
and they appreciate the fact
that I'm talking about it in this way
because they're like, thank fucking God
I'm sick of hearing a clan rally
or some like black panther speech
or some other fucking racial undertone
or some you know
oh let's make platitudes
and never say anything that matters
I think people are sick of hearing that shit
they're sick of it
it's exhausting
it's annoying
So yeah
Open Cs seasonal white people
That's the thing right
I don't talk about it like that
I talk about it in the way that I think is honest
Direct and fair
And I wish more people would do the same
But I understand why they don't
I do I understand why a lot of people
Are afraid to talk about it
They don't want to get into it the way that I do
And the main reason why
I'll tell you the reason why
It's because if you talk about this
In the wrong way
People take it
in that way and they call you a racist.
Now, the problem for me
is that I've already been called
a racist 100 fucking times. So
that's already, that's out the window.
Like, the whole idea of me not being
a racist, like that, that's done.
And so, they're scared of being
canceled. Yeah, exactly.
For me, like, I've had so
many, like, so many of these controversies,
hundreds of these
controversies,
it just doesn't do anything to me,
right?
it doesn't matter
but yeah I think they should disbar this judge
or actually I mean I don't know
I mean obviously there should be like a
you know like a process for this
but I just don't see how like you know
when you're a judge
how is this not a misuse of judicial power
by allowing a murderer
to go free
that stabbed somebody with a knife
really like how is it like
how is that not a misuse of judicial
power because like she's really the one by the way she's the one that has the power and keep
this in mind he doesn't have the power he doesn't have the power she has the power and she used it
in the wrong way what happens to the bail money i have no idea so yeah and uh total sign up yeah exactly
and uh right it's not like he's a child yeah but he doesn't get to make the decision for what
his bail is she does he's not accused of stabbing he literally did it yeah everybody
everybody knows it is. And yeah, that's it. Crazy how he just looks angry and mean. Well, I mean,
yeah, I would be mad too. You know, he just fucked up his whole life. And so you stab someone and you
just bail them out. Yeah, I guess so, right? It's interesting. See, this is, again, like this,
it's just, it's so disappointing for me to see this shit. It really is two-tier justice system.
How does somebody look at this and not think that? Really? How does somebody look at this and not
immediately have this opinion. She picked the easy answer, not the right one. I feel like the easy
answer is don't do shit, right? But yeah, there it is. Dei a higher judge, cold blood a murder. I don't
know if she's DEI higher. That's just because she black doesn't mean that's a bit too much.
But yeah, that's the way I feel about it. I think you'd like Tim Poole's take on this from what he saw
cover. He defended his self-defense. I have no stance on it. Be an interesting counterview.
Yeah, maybe. I mean, I don't really, I saw that he said that, but I don't know really why he said that
what the reason was. So yeah, I'm not sure. But anyway, yeah, pool called it self-defense. I mean,
I don't know the details. I mean, from what my understanding was, like, I read two of the accounts of it,
and the accounts were a bit contradictory. And so, like, I feel like the self-defense thing kind of,
like the strength of the self-defense argument, I think gets very weakened when you contextualize it
in the fact that he was in a place that he wasn't supposed to be in the first.
first place, right? So it's like he's trespassing in another person's area and like they want to
remove him. That changes the dynamic for me, right? So yeah, should have never been there. Exactly.
And what about Kyle Rittenhouse? Oh, I'm a huge supporter of Kyle Rittenhouse. I think that,
you know, I think he did nothing wrong. And so did the judge, by the way. Absolute W decision.
Yeah, so that that's what my opinion is. So yeah, Tim Poole changed his opinion about learning more,
he said that's okay i mean some people don't know everything right off the bat and uh what a sudden
reason for somebody anyway let's move on right i've pretty much given my opinion on this and i'll
probably talk about it more as as the information comes out but um i just really hope that you guys
can see that like i i i think this is just it's just it's so like as somebody who grew up
like i feel like in a lot of ways and i think some of this is is is informed by naivete right like i was
naive to the, you know, racial problems growing up. But as somebody who grew up in a place that
really, I mean, at least personally felt like way less racially divided, it's just really sad for me
to see this. And I'm very opinionated about it because I grew up in such a multiracial
neighborhood and culture. And so I have very strong opinions about this.
