Hodgetwins Podcast - Hodgetwins & Nick Fuentes Have A Level of BLACK FATIGUE That Is Incurable...
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Transcript
Discussion (0)
Well, here's the thing. When something like that happens, he's like interracial killings.
The only thing you're allowed to say is a white person is, well, if the shoe were on the other foot, there would be outrage.
You know, that's the only thing you're allowed to say.
They say if it was George Floyd, people would be marching, riding.
When a white kid is killed, no one does anything.
And I said, you know, but that's really not saying anything.
You know, that's a sentiment which it really just says, well, the left is hypocritical.
there's a double standard on race
but it doesn't really express in my opinion
what white people are feeling
white people are feeling is
why are we putting up with this stuff
and it's like you said
you move to a white neighborhood
you make money
we live in America
it's 21st century
we don't want to deal with these problems
and it just so happens
that it is these young black
adolescents that's doing it
in Chicago and wherever
and so I went on my show
after that killing and said you know
like we're just kind of done with that
we don't want to live near
this. Because here's the problem as a white person. You can either be Daniel Penny or Austin Metcalf.
You can either be someone that takes a stand and defends yourself, or you make a rash judgment,
and you're either in jail or you're a racist. If you defend yourself, you get charged with murder
by a liberal DA, or if you're wrong, then you're a white supremacist, racist, you're super
judgmental, you're canceled. You can't just be a white guy who made a mistake.
Exactly. Exactly. And then on the other side, if you're not racist enough or not careful enough,
if you're Austin Metcalf, you make the mistake of confronting the wrong black adolescent,
you're dead. You forfeit your life. And if that's how it's going to be, who wants to live in that
neighborhood where you're walking down the street at night and you look over your shoulder,
if you cross the street and it's a good black person, you're a racist. If you don't cross
the street and they're a predator, you're dead. It's no win situation, right?
So.
A predator.
Well, you know, a predator opportunist.
Yeah, yeah.
I mean, that's perfect adjective predator.
Yeah, you know, because they're obviously not every black person's a predator.
Right, right.
But there are these opportunists that are, they're crawling the streets at night,
looking for people, not paying attention, young girls, young men.
Yeah.
And so I said on my show, I said, white people, don't want to live near black people, if that's what it's.
Yeah.
Oh, okay.
I don't want to live around black people.
I just don't.
It would be irresponsible if I had a wife and kids to live near black people.
It just would be.
And that's not to say that every black person is violent.
It's not to say that every black person is the same way.
But we watch the news.
We read the papers.
When you drive downtown in Chicago, you know who you got to look out for in work.
about when you're thinking about whether you're going to get car jacked when you're worried about
catching a stray bullet when you're worried about who's going to pull up on the side of the road and
literally shove a rifle in your face and steal your iPhone or shoot you point blank execution style
in Lincoln Park we know who's doing it I don't want to live near them I don't want to be near
them they make me nervous that's a survival instinct and the way this story unfortunately
It's sort of interesting.
Apparently this white student, this Austin Metcalf, confronted a friend of the killer,
presumably black also, and said something like, hey, you're sitting in the wrong spot.
You're in my spot.
Something like this.
And that's when the black guy jumped in and stabbed him to death.
Unfortunately, we just don't know.
When you're on the subway, when you're driving in your car, when you're in the
city streets. You don't know whether the black person in proximity to you is one of the good ones
or one of the ones who is going to summon an unbelievable, I mean literally for people like us,
an unthinkable level of spontaneous brutality, senseless and merciless violence in an instant.
We don't know. There's ambiguity. You're sitting on a subway. You look across. You see someone
acting strange or aggressive. Is this someone who was going to pull out a knife and in two seconds
slip my throat and kill me? Or is this just someone who's having a bad day? We don't know. I'm not
willing to risk my life to find out. It's not worth it to me. I'm not willing to put myself
in a position to find out. Scott Adams couldn't have said it no better himself.
Hey everybody. It's your only two favorite black guys. We got a new
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Y'all support us, so we give back to y'all.
Who else doing this?
Ain't nobody doing that.
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DJ.
Yeah.
When I,
what you was pretty much
rolling,
I mean,
trying to explain to everybody,
you're talking about
urban black neighborhoods.
I don't want to live
in an urban black neighborhood.
Right.
I don't want to.
Black people that become rich and famous,
they don't want to live there neither.
Yeah.
But it's a problem when you say it.
Yes.
Right.
Exactly.
Nobody wants to live in the hood.
Nobody.
And those things happen in the hood
To black people all the time
Yeah, poor people who live in the hood
They don't want to live there
But they have no options
They don't have no means to get out
So they stuck
I don't know
I remember I was in the Marine Corps
I lived in San Diego
I was think I was like 1920
And I lived in a black neighborhood
I came out
Because I would leave to go to work
At like 4 in the morning
There's a bullet hole in the side
of my geo metro
Yeah
Had a lime green geometro
That's how I learned how to drop
stick. Yeah. And had a bull hole
inside of it. I get in the car. I turn
around, I go up to the stop sign, which is maybe
about 100 feet away so I can get on the freeway.
There was a prostitute right there.
And she looked at me
like this, and then she said,
I was like, she must have just got done sucking somebody off.
And I lived in black neighborhoods.
And I was like, when I was growing up, I said, man, when I get the money,
I'm going to live in the white neighborhood.
Yeah. That's the thing.
Black people don't want to
in black neighborhoods. But it's the only part of when white people say it, though.
Right. Well, and here's what I always say. The problem is not
black people's blackness, which is the issue. You know, if you guys move next door,
it wouldn't be a problem because I know you guys are going to be gang banging or whatever.
Hey, let me push back on it. I wouldn't, if I was you, I wouldn't trust me.
Some things you just can't deny. I mean, we don't got that gene.
Well, if I just saw you, I wouldn't trust that.
But the problem is that, unfortunately, a stereotype, which is based in reality, is that when you live in a black neighborhood, you're going to get this set of problems.
You're going to get violence.
You're going to get mayhem, chaos.
And it's not even just that.
It's just rudeness.
People being inconsiderate.
And if people associate with black people with being friendly, being kind, being peaceful, no one would have an issue.
People say, oh, great, black people moving in the neighborhood.
It's awesome.
everybody's going to go up.
You know?
That's not what's going to happen.
No.
That's the issue.
And so, you know, I said that.
And Jason Whitlock, you know, he's super Christian, as am I.
And he said, well, you know, this is an attempt to incite racial hatred between white and
black people to divide up the races with this, you know, with this incendiary rhetoric.
And I said, look, here's the problem.
You can reconcile white and black people with Christianity, but in my opinion, that happens second.
What has to happen first is law and order.
Unfortunately, you have this cycle in America where you have very good laws, safety, you know,
you have police or active enforcing the law, and then you get the activists that come in and say,
oh, there's too many black people in Jews, too much police brutality.
So people say, all right, you know, we're going to ease up.
We're going to mass incarceration is a problem.
Police brutality is a problem.
We're going to let him go.
Then the violence gets out of control.
Then you get, you know, the crack epidemic.
Then you get, you know, the 80s, 90s.
People go, it's out of control.
We need the crime bill.
We need the cops back on the street.
We need stopping frisk.
So then it's good for, you know, 20 more years.
Some people say, police are racist.
We got to get rid of the cops.
I think that was a good lot he pass.
It is.
It is.
100%.
Yeah.
Yeah.
But this is the cycle.
It's like this amnesia.
where it's that, it's that classic meme, you know, good times, create weak men, weak men,
create bad times, sort of like good crime laws, create good times, good times, make people think
the crime laws are racist.
And then, you know, the cycle repeats.
So, you know, so what I'm saying is enforce the laws.
And by the way, the biggest beneficiary would be the black people themselves.
It's like you said, who's hurt by this?
Occasionally, occasionally it's white people.
But the vast majority of people that are killed are black people.
The people that live in poverty are the black people.
It's those neighborhoods that can't have a Walmart because of all the shoplifting.
So you enforce the laws.
Unfortunately, there's going to be disproportionate representation.
There's going to be more blacks in jail.
But you got to arrest every lawbreaker.
And then once you get the worst of the worst off the streets, the worst predators, opportunists,
then you can reconcile the people of Christianity.
But, you know, if you want to evangelize to these people,
in Chicago, I mean, be my guest.
But I don't think you're going to get through.
When you see these videos, unfortunately, a lot of them are just lost.
Yeah.
And, you know.
I mean, they made a whole show around that.
First 48?
That's a, that's a documentary of the cultural black holes.
Have you seen the show?
No. You haven't seen the first 48?
No.
It's on any.
That show made me race.
It's like the first 48 hours.
They just track the point where somebody's killed and the first 48 hours of the investigation.
primarily you see black people killing black people
but there are some white people
yeah like one out of every 100
yeah but it's predominantly
just oh I mean of course
killing each other of the most trivial things
it's just it's shocking
yeah the reason why black people have
have something against your message
that you showed
it's because they don't believe
that black people are dangerous
more than white people they actually think
you are being racist by making
those accusations that don't exist, but they're 100% factually true.
That's why what you said does not bother me at all.
I know it's true.
Because you're pretty basically talking about n-hs.
I'm a black male.
He has a probable n-uh, and me being a blackmail, we can't stay in this either.
I mean, Chris Rock had a famous joke.
Yeah.
And it was funny as hell when he said it, but...
Let's go to that tweet, man.
You made a great point when y'all was going back before.
Jason Whitlock said every bit as God.
Godless and stupid as your critics say.
You're Ray Epps 2.0.
I can't see it.
Pointing foolish believers.
Shut, you fucking dumb.
I can see it.
Let me see it.
I can see it.
Your every bit is godless and stupid as your critics say.
Your Ray Epps 2.0 pointing foolish believers into a building that will burn them down for eternity.
Many of the people captured by the wickedness of black culture can claim ignorance.
You know exactly what you're doing.
Demon.
Say, I don't think it's ignorance.
the black community. You just, you can't teach a conscience. You can't teach that. The enemy is paying
people on social media to promote racial division and conflict. The aftermath of Austin Metcalfe Camelo
Anthony is a sciop. I don't think that's a sci-op. No, don't fall for it, stand on the word,
rebuke any so-called believer, and not pointing to Christ. Don't you think in his message in a
roundabout way, he's saying black people are incapable of rational thought and white people are
superior, so we're going to give them a pass. Pretty much he's saying white people, black people
are inferior to whites with that message, because I don't think they can claim ignorance.
Right. Yeah. Black people are not vegetables. They know exactly what they're doing.
Yeah. That's exactly right. And that's sort of the issue is, you know, you have this new breed
of conservatives where they want to hide behind the cross. They're pushing like a BLM, woke. It's
exactly like you're saying. They used to call it the soft bigotry of low expectations, you know,
reverse racism, whatever. And now you have conservatives with the exact same mentality, which
fundamentally means blacks have no accountability. You know, like you said in the tweet, they can
claim ignorance. What does that mean? It means they're not culpable. You know, they're not responsible.
They have no agency. We can't blame them. The IQs are very low. Right. They can't help themselves.
When they rob somebody, they still call, they're wired that way.
I don't know.
Hey, I think your response to him, I love your response, which you said.
So tired of him that black crime is caused by black cultural.
For some reason, rap music doesn't make white people steal cars and shoot people.
It only works on black people.
That was a great response.
Thanks.
Well, yeah, I mean, it may look at, rejudge the things I'm saying.
I keep saying about black people.
Man, it's our culture.
It's the music.
It's in the moods.
But that's just an excuse.
Yeah.
And he's coming from this point.
of you that you're teaching white people to be racist.
Everything you're saying, they're already thinking it.
You just got the balls to say it.
Right.
So you're not, it's white people know what's up.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
They do.
Yeah.
I knew what was up when I was like 12 years old.
Right.
So I'm going to play with Scott.
I'm not playing with fucking Tyrone over there.
I mean, the first gun that was ever put on me was at 12 years old and it was a black kid
and we were on the basketball team together.
Wow.
Going into basketball practice.
Yeah, that's crazy.
I still remember that, yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah, well, and it's true.
That is, that's what I intend to do with the show is, I mean, I'm expressing my opinion,
but I'm also speaking for a lot of people that don't want to offend or they don't want to get canceled.
And unfortunately, as far as we've come, because people have woken up a lot on a lot of different issues,
people are still paralyzed out of fear of being called racist, saying the wrong thing,
offending people.
And the reality is that I think that race, it's one of those.
things, you're never going to fully bridge that divide. You know, you have white people, you have black
people. They're different. They identify differently. And this idea that we're going to be so Christian,
we're going to overcome that, or so American, I don't think it's going to happen. And that doesn't
mean we have to hate each other. I think we could live in harmony. And I think, you know, we could
strive for understanding and empathy. But, you know, the idea that the only reason we're set in
conflict is because of racist dividing us or the media or the culture. It's just not true.
True. People are tribal. It's who we are. It's in our genetics. And nothing's going to change that.
I think, I think there's one Carmelo Anthony case, it really, you know, open, it should open a lot of people's eyes, how tribal we can be.
Because when Daniel Penny, what happened with him on the subway with that Michael Jackson person, a lot of white people came to his aid, a lot of people came to his aid and donated money to him to help him in his defense.
which I understand why.
I don't think it was a racist.
I don't think then it was because they're a racist.
But then you look at Carmelo Anthony,
where here's a black kid who obviously did something wrong.
He should have never had that knife,
but you see a lot of black people defending him.
Not because he was right.
It's because they're defending him because he's black.
Yep.
Almost half a million dollars.
Yeah, it's up to a half a million dollars.
Yeah, but if the shoe was on the other foot,
the circumstances was the same,
just the races were reversed.
white people would not embrace what happened.
That's the difference I want to point out when it comes to black and white.
Cautically, I mean, spiritually, I mean, you go on Facebook, TikTok,
is black pastors defending that kids' actions?
They're comparing Carmelo Anthony to Rosa Parks.
Yeah.
I mean, they're not even comparing apples to oranges.
They compareing apples with hairy nuts.
It's like low IQ, low capacity.
Yeah.
That's the only thing I can really call it.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
They're trying to say self-defense.
Right.
Like, Andy even brought up the accusation that if you tell somebody to leave, that's bullying.
Right.
I was like, how did you reach that point when you consider that bullying?
Yeah.
You have to be mentally stupid.
Yes.
Well, it's like he said, it's just pure.
Caldello Anthony, right?
And the black reaction,
is what you expect.
But white people, obviously not all of you.
So let me just get that out the way.
But a bunch of all are just a bunch of races,
bigoted crisis actor.
People really believe that that kid had the right
to tell Carmelo to move.
This kid was a working security.
He wasn't given no responsibility.
He wasn't the seat manager.
Like, if that kid would have just minded his own business,
would he or would he not still be alive?
Obviously got unalive.
A lot of people were trying to make it a race issue
and it's not has nothing to do with that right there this was self-defense that's and this is all over
tic-tac i see a lot of post on facebook to much of self-defense yeah from one demographic of people
here it's all black people did he have any entries do you see as much got clean face nothing
no scratches no nothing uh no punches were thrown from what i heard so far yeah it's something
wrong with the black community i was like man you can't be this dumb man if that was self-de-
defense, the murder rates would go up.
You could kill somebody for anything.
Yeah.
What horrible precedent, president that was said.
Okay, what?
Do something I'll kill you.
Or do something.
Get out.
Get out.
Get out.
Stabbing you.
I don't have it in me.
That's why I didn't respond.
I'm done.
I guess that's my white side talking to me.
That's crazy, man.
It's just, that's.
That whole case is like, man, I just lose all hope especially when it comes to the black community.
Because it's like, why would y'all even put y'all's name, your brand behind defending a kid who is obviously, obviously it's wrong.
Yeah.
Well, it's based tribalism, you know.
It's like you said, they're sticking with this guy because he's black.
And I think what is barely concealed is a contempt for white people, which is, you know, and it's like a racial pride thing.
When they say Rosa Parks, they say, oh, the era of white people.
telling black people, you're in the wrong
seat is over. You know, what's
next? A white woman's going to touch a black woman's
hair and she's going to get stabbed in the face.
Shot in the chest.
Don't touch my hair.
You can't tuck my hair.
Your black voice is better than my black voice.
So I practice it more.
On my mama, I feel you.
All my mama.
Yeah.
But Jason went
like politically, I line with
with him a lot. So I don't know. I guess I think he's showing way too much empathy for the black
community because he is black. And I've been through that. And I was like, you know what? I'm done
with that. I'm just going to stand for what's right. And what's right is that's what I'm
standing on. So yeah, yeah. Yeah. And I like him. He's a good guy. I is very positive towards
him in my, because initially I disagreed with him. I was very positive. I said, you know,
I respect him a lot. He's Christian. I agree. Like you said,
I agree with him so much.
And then he just had this nasty, call me a stupid demon, saying I'm sending people to hell.
So uncalled for.
But that is another stereotype is this, like, crybaby thing that black people do.
A lot of, it's like ethnic narcissism.
And it's like you said, it's a bit of a blind spot where, you know, a black conservative
can be right on 99% of thing.
But when it comes to race, they want to take their bonga home.
When it comes to race, they want to be a crybaby, play the victim.
and I think that's all it is a blind spot.
A lot of white people have it too.
Not even to be that guy, but in fairness,
there's an equal amount of people that I know,
white nationalist types, very proud.
They'll be the first ones to blast black people and their behaviors.
You talk about some of the behaviors of lower class white people.
They say, oh, you're against white people.
You're against your own kind.
Let's just be honest, you know.
Let's just be honest about who we are, who the other is.
So that's what I'm about.
Just you've got to be honest.
I think of what happened with Carmelo Anthony, I can speak from experience.
Growing up as kids, we were, we just had this natural hostility towards white people
because of the past and what black people have been through.
What our parents been through.
And what I tell us every day.
Stand up for yourself.
Don't let no white people push you around.
So I think what happened was he was sitting there.
I'm just speculating.
And then some white kid tells him to get up and move.
and it's just
that's what caused this whole issue
overreaction.
It was race.
I think it was race.
If they're both black
or both white,
this doesn't happen.
Right.
I guarantee it.
Totally.
Just because he's black
and we come up
and we're raised
with this natural hostility
towards white people,
that's why that happened.
Yeah.
That's why it happened.
Yeah,
I don't know why.
He went to a rival school.
I don't know what area
the area was like,
but he's walking around with a knife.
I never did that when I was in school.
Friscoe, I think,
it's pretty rough.
Yeah.
I may be wrong on that.
Yeah.
Yeah.
No, I think you're right.
It's a pride thing, you know, because you could totally imagine how that went down.
The guy was like a white football chad, you know, handsome guy comes up and says, hey, pal, you're in the wrong area, you know, or puts his hands on something like that.
I'm sure some black kid saying, I'm not taking shit from this white guy.
Yeah.
And, you know, I don't know that he intended to kill him necessarily.
I don't think you did.
Why else would you stick a knife in your chest?
That was nuts.
Yeah. Have you read the police report?
Yeah, I did.
They never recovered the weapon, right?
I don't think so, no.
Yeah, but it's this impulse thing.
That's the problem is these impulsive behaviors where, you know, I'm sure in the moment,
but when I say, obviously, if you stab somebody, it's a lethal weapon.
You can't say I didn't know it could kill somebody, but I'm sure in the moment that split second,
he did the first thing, and now his life is ruined.
I mean, deservedly so, obviously.
but that is the issue.
And I think that is the genetic aspect that people don't talk about.
I don't think anybody would disagree.
Black people or white people, who has a greater propensity for violence?
I think on a genetic basis is black people.
In the same way that between Asians and white people, who has a greater propensity for violence,
I think definitely white people.
And that's just another one of those differences.
People attributed to culture, I attributed to genetics.
It's one among others.
Asians, who has to hire our cues this Asian?
people. Then it's like white people.
Then I guess it's like...
Everybody else and then black people did last.
I mean, and that's a fact, correct?
Yeah. From what I've read up on it, like black people for whatever reason.
And I think when you put anybody in a situation and they have a low capacity to grasp what's going on,
that's who's going to commit the most murders.
Regardless if they're white people for whatever.
I just think there's a...
I don't know. I hate to say it, but there's...
Don't say it.
I know what you're going to say.
Well, just what I'll say.
Low IQ you can find it in all people.
Right.
I just think it's more prevalent in the black community.
Yeah.
Yeah, I think so too.
It would explain the number of black people in prison.
And IQ scores back me up on that.
It firms everything I just said.
If you look at IQ scores, it predominantly takes who's going to be more successful.
I don't know what's going on here.
It's like, this is all over social media, especially with like, black, black
Like women.
Yeah.
I don't get that.
The first thing they need go for is that weed.
Yeah, that's just, that's low IQ right now.
Oh, yeah.
What would you do that, man?
There's, hey, Joe, I don't want to look at this.
Yeah.
You think you just white man?
Look at this.
Joe swears up and down.
I like black women at big.
Oh, man.
Hey, let me ask you this.
Back to Whitlock's point,
do you think the record labels and rap music
has some part of the blame
when it comes to the black community?
Certainly, certainly.
I mean, it's certainly not helping.
And I do think it exacerbates it
because that's something my grandma's used to say.
I've been in Chicago for generations.
My family's been there.
And, you know, my ancestors were Italian immigrants,
Italian, Irish, Mexican immigrants a hundred years ago.
And so my grandma grew up in the projects with many black people.
And, you know, she always used to say that actually, you know,
she would look across the window in her project, department, or whatever,
and she saw a black family across the way that was more functional than her own family.
She said they would hold hands to say grace before they ate,
and her household was up for grabs.
She had just made her feel really bad.
I'm sure. Yeah, psychologically, right? But, you know, by the same token, she encountered a lot of the same problems you see today, a lot of the same violence. You know, she would get robbed or stuck up by black people in the city. But everybody recognizes anybody lives with black people in the cities will tell you there is a generational difference that the older black people, in many cases they couldn't even read. You know, my grandma had a school. They taught cops how to shoot their guns. It was a.
security school. And they would license security guards, cops, do firearms training. And they would,
they would train up. Black people sometimes couldn't read. You know, they're from the Jim Crow era
from the South. But she said they, they were very honest, very decent, very respectful, polite.
So culture makes a huge difference. I don't think it's everything. It's certainly not nothing.
And anyone that lived, you know, anyone that had that experience living in a city with black people
through the generations.
We'll tell you the exact same thing.
There's certainly a generational component,
but I don't think that explains all of it.
Yeah.
Like all my aunts and uncles and my family,
there wasn't a bunch of miscreants.
It was like polite.
They always wore suits.
Yeah, they always went to church on Sunday.
Right.
I remember growing up.
That's what black people used to dress.
Yeah.
I mean, that was the common thing to do.
Yeah.
And now, you know,
liberals get hold of black people.
and just turn into progressos,
and now this is what you got.
Yeah, I got a question.
Do you think if,
just a hypothetical,
what would solve a majority of
America's problems?
Say you as president.
Let's just sit them up.
No.
No, just a set-up job.
I did not want to sit you up.
I feel guilty.
This dude is wearing a wire.
What do you think would solve a majority of America's?
problem. I think, personally for your answer, I think we listen to women too much. Oh, yeah.
I think a big problem America has right now is we have too many women in power and look what
happened when we got too many women in power. We got men in women's bathrooms and in that sports.
It's just women can't even think different. It's so different than a man. That's a huge part of it.
I mean, you can start with women. You can go to the media. You can go to immigration. I mean,
the problem is we can all recognize a country's been getting.
getting worse. A lot of things, there was seismic changes a hundred years ago, technology,
suffrage, you know, more people voting, more people participating, a lot of immigrants from
non-white countries coming here. Things are getting worse, and we're just doing the same things.
It's like, you don't think maybe we put a pause on some of the things that have changed that
might have led to some of these things. But, I mean, the women's a huge part of it, because, like
you said, they think differently. They're way more empathetic, way more. And they're kind of
just like suckers, you know?
Like men.
I like that you said that.
That was perfect.
They're suckers.
Because they're not necessarily dumb, although many of them are, but, you know, because
some of them can be very smart, but they just don't have this quality that men have,
where men will say, nah, that's bullshit.
You know, you're lying.
Women don't have that.
Women will listen to any story, any sob story, and go, oh,
you know, filled with empathy and emotion.
And when you look at who they vote for, this is like a red pill for me when I was in high school.
They said, how do we, I said, if you look at the election results, presidential election results,
separated out by men and women.
If only men voted, every state goes red.
If only women voted, every state goes blue.
All you need to know.
That's all you need to know.
That's powerful.
And even today, the approval ratings with Trump, men overwhelmingly positive.
Women overwhelmingly negative.
And we know Trump is right.
We know the Democrats are wrong, you know?
And these are like not difficult issues.
Should a country have a border?
Can a country run an infinite deficit?
Can we have entitlements?
You're paying people not to work?
Like, no, we can't do any of these things.
But women, they think that we can.
And that's a huge source of the issue, certainly.
The diversity is a big part of it.
The anti-racism.
And not for nothing, but those pictures you show,
that was a time when the society was immensely racist.
Seems like it was better for both sides, actually.
Right, right.
And that's not to say important distinction.
It's not to say we're, you know, because people like to say,
make America great again, what you mean, slavery and lynching and, you know, racial hatred.
It's like, no, obviously, I'm not a sick person.
I'm not a cruel person.
I don't want to see people get murdered for their race or their ethnicity.
But, you know, what did change.
now that people have to walk on eggshells, now that people are afraid to enforce the laws or tell the truth, now there's no rules. Now there's no accountability.
You could say that maybe in the old days there was an excess of justice and it fell into cruelty. It fell into brutality.
Now we have an excess of mercy. And you could see which one is worse. Certainly the excess of mercy and forgiveness, you get a lawless society.
And I would rather be on the other end of a brutal.
brutal cop than a brutal thug. And it's sort of an interesting distinction, right? Because you hear
police brutality, police brutality, yeah, police can be brutal, certainly. I wouldn't want to be on the
other end of that either. But would you rather be on the other end of the law that's brutal or
these young adolescent black men that are brutal that will execute you for not even having to do
with the theft? You know, I referenced a specific case. I said, who's executing people in Lincoln Park?
There's a case where they mugged a guy in Lincoln Park, which is a nice white neighborhood, stole his iPhone, demanded the password, and then they shot the guy point blank execution style.
Now, why do you kill this guy?
You got his iPhone, you got the password, you got what you're looking for.
Why then do you kill this guy, shoot him in a defenseless person?
That is far worse than any brutality from the police, you know, or from the state.
Yeah, no one wants to talk about that brutality.
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