Investigate Earth Conspiracy Podcast - George Floyd Conspiracy Podcasts | Autopsy Reports Say Floyd Was Not Murdered

Episode Date: October 23, 2023

This episode delves into several critical topics, with a primary focus on the findings from the medical examiner's report regarding George Floyd's passing. Contrary to the initial narrative, the repor...t suggests that his cause of death was a drug overdose. This revelation prompts us to explore the question of whether Derek Chauvin is now considered a political prisoner. Furthermore, we examine the far-reaching implications of these developments on the dynamics of race relations in the United States, particularly in how they have impacted the relationship between black communities and law enforcement. All of this and more on this episode of George Floyd Conspiracy Podcasts | Autopsy Reports Say Floyd Was Not Murdered https://twitter.com/InvestigateEar1https://www.facebook.com/investigateearth/https://rumble.com/c/c-778523https://www.instagram.com/investigateearthMy Personal X Account

Transcript
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Starting point is 00:00:02 Hello and welcome to Shaddle my host Hii Like the right day Ever comes Now it's Friday And I miss day Hello and welcome to Investigator podcast
Starting point is 00:00:38 I am your host chat Alongside my beautiful wife Sherry Sherry how is it going This evening? It's always going great For me this evening usually But yeah
Starting point is 00:00:51 It's going great Awesome Hope everything's going great with you guys Hope everything thing is going fantastic out there for all of you around the world. It is 8.11 p.m. October the 22nd, 2023. The name of that song is, if you're down, I'm down by. Mind me. I know we get a lot of questions about our opening songs and closing songs. And sometimes that's easier said than done to actually figure out what song it was in that episode. So we try to say it from the very beginning.
Starting point is 00:01:24 If you're down, I'm down by mind me. Anyways, welcome to the show, everybody. So glad to have you guys. Obviously, if you've been following us lately, we've been extensively covering the Israel versus Hamas war. There's so much stuff going on there. I think we're about to see a massive escalation and conflict. As soon as Israel starts the actual ground invasion,
Starting point is 00:01:50 that has been inevitable for at least a week or so. and it looks like it's getting closer and closer. We are starting to see more and more U.S. military assets move into the region of the Middle East. So I think this is something that is just going to go haywire probably in the next week or two. So stay tuned to that. We're obviously going to cover all of that. I did want to also say that thanks to everyone that wrote in and commented and appreciated our episodes on Israel, Hamas, both with Sherry's brother Bobby and Rashid and in our own episodes.
Starting point is 00:02:23 we appreciate all that. And what I will say is in this situation, regardless of religion or not, I do say that you give your thoughts and prayers to the people over there no matter what, because there are innocent people on both sides 100%. And there's never a black and white answer to anything like that. And so that's what we try to do on this episode is cover the things that the media wants you to believe are black and white, right? They want you to believe that whatever they're saying, whatever they're selling on CNN
Starting point is 00:02:53 and MSNBC and Fox News or wherever, it's black and white, guys. Listen, as long as you believe us, you're going to be fine. Just make sure you only listen to us. If you listen to a podcaster, if you listen to a Joe Rogan, if you listen to an investigator's podcast, if you listen to someone like this, that's more than likely disinformation, guys. And we would need you to just come on back here to Channel 45 on your local cable television. Literally.
Starting point is 00:03:19 I mean, that's kind of the narrative. That's great. It is. And it's not just the people. that are the reporters. They, you know, they have contracts and they have people above them. And they have to report what the people that are paying their salary wants them to report. So we got to keep that in mind as well. You know, I think all stations report a certain viewpoint based on who owns that station or who funds that station. So we got to keep that in the back of our
Starting point is 00:03:47 minds when we're hearing these things because, you know, a lot of times we do talk crap about CNN and all that I can even say that all the other shows or whatever, but you got to remember their salaries are being paid by these people that are in control and want to control the world. Yeah, I mean, it's not just, and like to Sherry's point, right, you got the owners of the stations, and then those owners of these massive media outlets are influenced heavily by the elites, the people that we talk about and have been talking about for five plus years, four plus years. I guess I should say four plus we've been here five.
Starting point is 00:04:24 But you're talking about a world economic forum. You're talking about the Clause Schwabs, the Bill Gates, the George Soros of the world. These are the people that heavily fund the news and media organizations. These are also people that heavily fund prosecution teams or prosecution or elections in smaller or bigger cities, small and big cities both alike. But it's easier to manipulate these elections in bigger cities like Minneapolis, like San Francisco, like Los Angeles, like New York City, like all of these places. So you start looking around and wondering why all of these big cities are completely going to shit. Well, there's a good reason for that because you have the same funding that is coming from a lot of these elites and these organizations that are going to these cities and the prosecutorial teams that are in these cities to basically make them far left, far extremist, pretty much, I guess you can call these people.
Starting point is 00:05:21 Marxists, a lot of these prosecutors that are letting out anyone unless you're a law-abiding citizen and you do something for the democracy or for the love of your country or whatever the case is, or they find out you're a Trump supporter or they find that you're a Republican. You're going to get the harshest penalty. If you are on the other side, if you're a criminal and you have an extensive criminal background and all these things, look, they're going to make you a hero. Oh, absolutely. And if you guys want to go check out more about that, you should go to one of our kids.
Starting point is 00:05:51 good episodes. Yeah. And he is, yeah, all about bell reform. He's on the top of the committee. He knows what's really going on. Chicago is getting ready to or I think, yeah, they're already doing a no cash bell. So basically, if you get arrested and go to jail, you can get yourself out of jail free, like monopoly, get, you know, like the monopoly card.
Starting point is 00:06:16 That's what's really happening because of the prosecution, the judge. judges that have been put in place because that's what they want. They want criminals to get out free. That's why in California, you can see people going into Walgreens and they basically have a backpack shoving stuff in their backpacks. And there's a security guard at the door and they're like, oh, have a nice day. Bye. They can't do anything? They can't do anything about it?
Starting point is 00:06:42 And by the way, do you know why these companies like Walgreens and these other ones, which Walgreens have closed up shop in many of these big cities like San Francisco and some of the other ones? but do you know the only reason they actually have security guards at these places? Because this is what the insurance companies did to these stores, especially in these cities to where these far-left extremist prosecutors came in and said, look, we're not going to prosecute anything under a thousand bucks. And in most cases, actually, they didn't even prosecute things that were far more than this, right? This is why you see the Louis Vuitton stores and all this stuff. No one's being held accountable.
Starting point is 00:07:19 but the only reason that they have security guards in these buildings, these massive organization or companies, is because places like Walgreens and stuff, they have to have security in high crime areas due to insurance. Due to insurance. Their insurance companies are going to say, you either have security here or your premiums are going to be through the roof or we're not going to insure you. But when the security guard is then told by Walgreens upper management and whoever, do not do anything. to stop distilling, right? You were not allowed. Right.
Starting point is 00:07:52 And the ones that did, by the way, got fired. Right. And I just want to tell you guys a quick story of when I was younger, maybe, I don't know, 11, 12 years old. And I was getting into the makeup scene. And I didn't have any money. I didn't have a job. And I wasn't going to ask my mom for money or whatever.
Starting point is 00:08:10 Well, I would go to CVS and Walgreens because that's where all the makeup is, right? And it's awesome makeup. And I wanted my own makeup. and my friend and I stole the makeup. Oh, shit. And we put it in our pocketbooks and we were walking out. My friend didn't get caught, but I got caught shoplifting the makeup. And I'm telling you, that was the worst feeling of my life.
Starting point is 00:08:33 I had to go back in after I shoplifted and I went into their little security area and I pretty much got arrested as a 12-year-old in their little security area because I shoplifted, you know, $20 worth of makeup or whatever. But it was so scary and so, like, awful for me to have to do that. And being with somebody else's parent and going through that and having security, stopping me in the parking lot and bringing me back in saying, we've got to talk to her because you guys can go, but we're going to talk to her because she's still makeup.
Starting point is 00:09:06 Come on. So they basically did arrest me and give me a ticket at, like, 12 years old. But I'm telling you, after that. After that. What are you driving your Barbie car up there to the courthouse? But after that, I thought about stealing again. Like, I would never do it again, ever. Because I did get caught.
Starting point is 00:09:27 And it did scare, like, the daylights out of me. And I think. And you were young, though, at 12 years old, you know, I mean, you don't really understand to see those consequences and stuff. Oh, I knew what I was doing, though. Until you get the consequences, right? Which is what you had, right? Right.
Starting point is 00:09:42 And I think life without consequences based on actions is a, a life set up for disaster. Exactly. And I think that's where we're going now. It's, you know, if you don't have consequences based on the things that you're doing wrong to your community or you're stealing things and you know you can get away with it, what's going to stop you? There is no consequence. No, there isn't. And with me, like at a 12-year-old, stealing makeup and I was so excited to get home and get out of the rappers and try it on.
Starting point is 00:10:11 And, you know, I was excited about it. But I did get caught. And it was awful. Well, and to your point to this consequences thing, and I want to touch on this because you brought it up and it makes sense to our topic of what we're going to be talking about, specifically George Floyd. But, you know, when you have a media that is constantly, you know, at the very least, Fox News is saying, look at all the stuff that all these people are getting away with in San Francisco and Los Angeles, New York, all these places, right? And so that kind of prevails as well. and then you have the on the other side of the of the coin, which you have CNN and MSNBC,
Starting point is 00:10:50 they're almost like hyping this up and they're really making sure that people want to go out there and do whatever they can because they want the narrative to be that you're not going to get caught, you're going to be fine, and you need to go and cause destruction and chaos, and media is doing it. It's literally the, it's literally the, oh my God, I literally just lost my mind.
Starting point is 00:11:13 It's literally what they want to happen right now. This is the narrative. This is what they want to happen. They want people to go in and shoplift and get away with it and come out. And it's all has to do with a bigger thing that we know about or that, you know, is hidden, I guess. Yeah. Yeah, there's a conspiracy obviously out there. And I don't know why I've literally lost my mind right now because I know this very well.
Starting point is 00:11:40 It's like the monarch effect or the whatever. but it's just the mass programming of media. This was a thing that happened in the 70s and 80s. It was kind of gaining ground. Then I think it is at like optimum peak performance, UFC, like elite athlete level mass media psychosis now, right? I mean, if you think the 1970s, 80s propaganda was bad, imagine what it is now.
Starting point is 00:12:06 And I think most of you can. That's why you're here and listen to us. You're trying to have that one last little escape, that one last little avenue of maybe someone that is trying to go out there and find the truth, right? And literally, this is what we're seeking. This is what we're desiring every single day. This is what I desire every single day. And for me, or for Sherry, or whoever, that is coming on this podcast and we're like, okay, where do we find our information?
Starting point is 00:12:31 We literally have probably like seven or eight really true trusted sources that we get our media from. There are actual organizations out there that they have an entire team on the ground. They have journalists that go out there, report, they see, they document, and they are unbiased. Some of these people will report negatively against Republicans, and they will also report negatively against Democrats. And these sources, and even people that have heard us for five years, reporters that are on the ground, people like that, they're also our sources. So it's really hard, by the way. I mean, for those of you, they're like, all right, well, let me look. look up this and you go to Google, that's your first mistake, right? As soon as you go to Google
Starting point is 00:13:13 and look up anything that is true or not, you're automatically going to be given propaganda. It is a algorithm, it is a search algorithm that says this is what we want them to see, and we don't want them to see anything else. Now, and especially when you have these words about misinformation or disinformation, you know, they put this on all these things that possibly can be true and are true, but they put it on their. so that people are like, oh, yeah, this is disinformation. I'm not even going to go there and look at it. Instead of, like, really looking and saying,
Starting point is 00:13:48 I think the government's kind of lying to me. And I think this is true, and I know it's true because of this, this, and this. Yeah, there's just people that, the problem with that is, is there's people now that are just have to be on one side of the other, and they have been given enough information to hate one side. So they're going to follow their, whoever, their leaders are on that other side into the pulpits of hell
Starting point is 00:14:13 and that's literally where they're going to go and they're going to try to drag everyone else with them. I mean in reality, because the more people, the more consensus, the more whatever it is, the Gen Zers, the Gen Xers, whatever it is. Those people that are in colleges right now, we're seeing it with the Israel conflict
Starting point is 00:14:29 with Hamas and all this support from not just Palestine, by the way. This is not just Palestinian supporters, innocent Palestinian supporters. These are anti-Israel supporters. are anti-Hamas supporters. These are people that actually are supporting Hamas. And we're seeing this across college campuses
Starting point is 00:14:45 across the country right now. And we've always known the college campuses we're a disaster. These are the people that are going to be leading our country. So buckle up, Buttercup. Because listen, I hate to say this, but that mass uprising of these
Starting point is 00:15:00 crazy lunatics that are in our colleges and universities are now are going to be running this country within probably 10, 20 years. And they didn't become crazy on their own. No, they were indocturated. Or whatever it's called. Indctrinated, yeah.
Starting point is 00:15:15 Indoctrinated. Yeah. So, guys, before we get into the George Floyd thing, I do want to mention real quick, I do have a private or personal X account. I kind of did this because I was like, you know what? Our Investigator's podcast Twitter account, which, by the way, I encourage you to all go and follow just to fight the algorithm. Because I think we're still shadow banned or band. and whatever on on X slash Twitter.
Starting point is 00:15:43 But I did create a personal account. We're going to be posted more of our personal stuff on that account. Or just if you want to interact with me one-on-one, you can go there. I'm sure he's going to have one soon to follow. But the X account for me, and I want you all to go follow this account, it is at C, free, like C, and then like freedom, but free, and then I-N-V, Earth, E-A-R-T-E-E-R-T-E, and that's it.
Starting point is 00:16:10 So at C-free, I-N-V-E-E-E-Earth. And you can go follow me there. Also, I want to mention something else briefly. You know, X is supposedly this freedom of speech platform. And we've not really seen that 100% right. I mean, since we've kind of been there and doing our thing. But what I will say is our engagement on our Facebook has been phenomenal.
Starting point is 00:16:36 It's been really good, especially if we post like a picture of us, like something we're doing in our everyday lives. And we get so much engagement. We have so much community over there starting to really build people who are commenting back and forth to each other. You guys are reaching out to us on the comments and we're reaching back out to every single one of you. And so I encourage you, by the way, whether you hate or love Facebook, if you want to interact with us on a more personal level, go to Facebook. Type an investigator with podcast. Go find us. And at the very least, you'll see us hopefully in your timeline as long as we're posting our pictures, which is why a lot of times we do that because even the George Floyd thing.
Starting point is 00:17:09 tonight where we're doing George Floyd. I posted a picture of the George Floyd meme, or not meme, but the mural that's in Minneapolis. And you know, there's a couple of people that said some things down below, which I don't disagree with those things, but Facebook automatically
Starting point is 00:17:25 knows, oh, these people are talking crap about George Floyd, so we got a hindered in the algorithm, right? This is what these social media companies do, but as I said, for our Facebook account, you know, it is probably the most engaging account we have. So go follow us over there.
Starting point is 00:17:41 And that's crazy for us to even say that. Because for a while we're like Facebook, Facebook is shadow banding us. We're going to these other accounts. But now these other accounts that are like supposedly the most free accounts are shadow banning us. Yeah. Which is crazy.
Starting point is 00:17:57 But I think it's because who Elon Musk has in charge of these accounts that he doesn't realize what they're doing under his nose. He really doesn't know. I mean, that's what I really think, sadly. Unless we all got Elon Musk completely. wrong. I don't think we do. I just think that he does not know how to get control of the right, because we kind of, almost the disease that is in his company still. Exactly. Because we got to remember before he took over this company. There was a lot of disease. It was all of it. It was a lot,
Starting point is 00:18:25 a lot, a lot. So I think he's trying to go through the forest and cut down the disease trees. Yeah, it's probably stage two right now. But it was stage four. Right. Like it was terminal. Yeah. And now he's probably a stage two. That's the way I kind of see it. And then also, briefly mentioned one more thing. You know, with this Canada Restrict Act and not just was the UK, UK Restrict Act and then the Canadian, I don't know what their act is called. I can't remember. We've done episodes on both of them.
Starting point is 00:18:54 They're literally trying to change the Internet as we know it. And so they're going to start restricting places that you may listen to us on, Spotify, Apple, whoever. These companies are going to have to conform and agree with whatever they say that is allowed and not allowed on their own platforms based on if you want to be in this government or in this country, you have to agree with what we don't want and what we do want on our platform. So with all those things said, something that I always, every single day, I'm always like, oh my God, like how are we going to save our podcast, save our audience, save our connection
Starting point is 00:19:28 with you guys, I'm thinking about that 24-7. That is my fear that is always on the, like, if you have something following you throughout today no matter what you're doing if i'm working out if i'm doing this there's something always follow me and it is like i don't want to lose you guys i don't want to lose what we built and what we've what we've got and so i've been desperate i mean i've been desperately trying to figure it out the only way in my mind to do that is is our own members own or like our own platform for us for you guys for our website to where it's a member's site to where you guys go you guys hang out with us we release all of our content there we'll have both free and paid or whatever
Starting point is 00:20:07 the case is because, you know, obviously if we get banned one day, that'll be the only way people can support us. So that's kind of our thinking. I just want to let you guys know that now. But anyways, I think that's all we have to say. I just want to give you my thoughts and opinions because you guys are our family. And I think you guys want to know this stuff. So that's kind of some of our thoughts. We want somewhere that you guys can call home, right? It's not just you go to Spotify or whatever and you're at risk all the time. for banning, for us being banned or whatever, we want you guys to be able to have a place you can call home
Starting point is 00:20:42 that cannot be censored, and that's going to have to be something ourselves. And two, and I want to make another quick little point, if you guys are in Canada in the UK, just keep in mind that if Spotify or whoever is banned in those places or they start restricting what you see, there's called VPNs. There are VPNs, and we don't have to sponsor anything, don't worry.
Starting point is 00:21:04 But there are VPNs, And you guys could get a VPN just to make sure that you are actually on a U.S. server so you can listen to anything that would the United States would be able to listen to. Oh, that's great. So they can go around this band thing. Yeah, they would be able to see. Yeah, that's great. So I just wanted to mention that. All right, guys.
Starting point is 00:21:21 So let's start this off with, number one, I don't know if you guys remember Derek Chauvin, Derek Chauvin and George Floyd. This was a case of kind of during the pandemic and all this stuff was happening. Derek Chauvin encountered George Floyd. George Floyd was a multi-time criminal and we'll get in a little bit to his record in just a little bit. But he encountered this guy
Starting point is 00:21:45 that the, I believe, shop owner called the police on him and the police showed up. Derek Chauvin was one of them, along with two or three other officers, showed up. They essentially got into a fight or tussle with this guy. They put him on the ground,
Starting point is 00:22:00 which is what law enforcement will do if you fight with them. and then there were people around the scene that were video and what happened. Now, there are many videos out there actually that kind of depict that Derek Chauvin never actually had his knee on the neck of George Floyd. If you actually kind of look at it, it looks more like almost that his knee was actually on the top right or I guess what would be the top left shoulder. Like the colorbone. The colorbone. Yeah, almost to like the back of his neck.
Starting point is 00:22:32 Now, when we first saw this and heard the sentiment around it and kind of just all the backlash and everything, but we didn't do an episode on George Floyd because we had commented on it, right? But we never necessarily did an episode on it because I was pretty decently torn on what to believe here. Now, obviously, we didn't have all the information on this, right? what the media and everyone was saying is that this guy put his knee on George Floyd's neck long enough to suffocate him to death. You know, as if, you know, and that was kind of the scenario, right? This guy was subdued. He was no longer a threat. He was on the ground.
Starting point is 00:23:17 And he didn't take his knee off. And Derek Chauvin basically choked him to death with his knee on the ground. That was the consensus. That is what everybody believed or ever heard before. And so the reason why we never did an episode on that is because we're not boot lickers, which, by the way, if you know what that is, babe, I don't know if you know that. No, I don't. Well, boot liquor is like someone that no matter what supports law enforcement, no matter what.
Starting point is 00:23:40 No matter whether they're in wrong or right, they're going to find an excuse for law enforcement. And we're not that. We appreciate law enforcement 100%. We think law enforcement is needed. We are like on the side of law and order not defunding police or any of that stuff. but we also understand and realize that within any profession, there are always bad apples. And unfortunately, in law enforcement, when you have bad apples, it can mean life or death. And that is something that does, it does have to be taken seriously because even when it is against people of color, right?
Starting point is 00:24:15 Even if there is a actual case, which there have been, and there have been on both sides, right? There have been on blacks and there have been on whites where cops kill white people, um, with, without guns or without unarmed or whatever the case is. But there are situations, right, that, you know, there are times where law enforcement did mess up. And you can't just blanket every law enforcement officer as because they're law enforcement, they didn't mess up. You cannot do that. We will always call out corruption. That is literally our main goal of this podcast.
Starting point is 00:24:47 Our main goal is to call out BS corruption, especially in law enforcement, small government, local government, state government and federal government. That is our main thing we do. But at the same time, like I said, we support the good law enforcement. We support the good police that are just literally out there trying to uphold and support the Constitution of the United States. And guys, which there are, out of all law enforcement, probably 98% of them are good and they're here to protect you. To protect me. I wouldn't say 98%. What would you say?
Starting point is 00:25:20 I don't know. Because, look, there's a huge. There are some asshole cops. I know that. encountered some of them. No, there's a huge difference nowadays. I think good law enforcement, I would say probably 80%. So you think 80, 20.
Starting point is 00:25:34 Yeah. And then if you go into federal, I would say it's even lower than that now. Just because of leadership and you either do this or you're gone. It depends on who's your boss, too. What you do and what you don't do. That makes a big difference. Yeah, I get that. So just to kind of set that up, I want to kind of, I guess, play to you guys.
Starting point is 00:25:52 you know, what was in, or I guess the day that Derek Chauvin got convicted. I want to play that to you guys right now. This is what the judge had to say. It's only 30 seconds, but I want you guys to hear it. Check it up. Wait, let me make sure it's at the beginning. Okay, here we go. The jury, I will now read the verdict says they will appear in the permanent records
Starting point is 00:26:14 of the fourth judicial district. State of Minnesota, County of Hennepin. District Court, fourth judicial district. State of Minnesota plaintiff versus Derek Michael Schoven defendant. Verdict count one. Court file number 27, CR20, 12646. We, the jury in the above entitled matter, as to count one, unintentional second-degree murder while committing a felony, find the defendant guilty. This verdict agreed to this 20th day of April, 2021 at 144 p.m.
Starting point is 00:26:45 So that was just, just kind of to bring you guys back to that day. And I think a lot of us, like, you know, Chad and I, we watched the whole thing. Yeah, we did. Well, I mean, partially. Yeah, we didn't necessarily watch the entire case. No, we didn't. Because I don't even know that entire case was on TV. Yeah, I don't think so either.
Starting point is 00:27:06 Yeah, you're right. So whatever we could see, we watched. Yeah, we watched all the highlights. We watched all of that stuff. Yeah, we definitely did that. And there were definitely some longer portions of what we watched. But the reality of this was, is you had. Derek Chauvin and you had two support officers, which were also charged and jailed and imprisoned right now.
Starting point is 00:27:25 I don't think they're in prison nearly as long as Chauvin. Obviously, Chauvin's facing a 30-plus year sentence. Right. But these other two guys, they were brand new to the police department or whatever. I think one of them were. They were being trained. Yeah. And they were kind of bystanders and also got charged.
Starting point is 00:27:45 But this was a mass movement, right? This is what they wanted to do. And we're going to get into, by the way, the conspiracy behind us because you had prosecutors in this case that were leaving the case saying, I absolutely refuse the charges officers. This is complete BS because this is not constitute a murder. There were multiple prosecutors. And then we're going to get into the kind of ins and outs to this. But I want to play you also what this jury, from. from George Floyd, explained of why they convicted George Floyd.
Starting point is 00:28:22 This is what Don Lemon. Convicted who? I mean, sorry, convicted Derek Chauvin. This is with Don Lemon. I want to play what the jurors had to say of why they felt like they needed to convict Derek Chauvin. Here you go. The point, actually, that we realized for charge two, at some point, I think it was Jody. I'm pretty sure it was Jody, said, wait a minute.
Starting point is 00:28:47 does the intended act of harm have to be the death of George Floyd, or can it be him not providing the life support? And it was like all of a sudden, light bulbs just went on for those people, I think, that were undecided or on the not guilty side. Yeah, go ahead. I want to hear from you, Jody. Why is it, you brought that up? What did you?
Starting point is 00:29:11 I brought that up because it's... Tell me what you brought up, and why? I brought up to the fact that this is not what he did, but more or less what he didn't do. He did not provide life-saving measures for George Floyd when he knew that the die was in pain or needed medical attention. Even the firefighter that was off said, checked his pulse, checked his pulse. Well, then they checked his pulse. And they said, well, do you want to do anything? No, we're leaving him here. he had ample to roll him over and start CPR and he didn't.
Starting point is 00:29:46 He didn't move one bit. And even when the EMS came up and checked him, he never even got up. And he knew he had been lifeless for 30 seconds to a minute. He still never stepped up and let the EMS come in and do their job. He had to have the EMS tap him to get up. That to me said more than what he actually did. that he just didn't do anything to help him at that time. Why do you think that was a light bulb?
Starting point is 00:30:16 Well, when we were in deliberations, and Jody did bring that up, and we did look through everything very, very carefully, what I thought about is something that was said during the trial, and that is Minneapolis Police Department has a model, and if I'm understanding it correctly, their model is, in our custody, in our care. George Floyd was in their custody.
Starting point is 00:30:39 He was never in their care. here. And that, for me, it just hit hard. All right. So there's what some of the jurors had to say about what their, I guess, decision-making process was to lead to their guilty verdict of Derek Chauvin. Now, here's my consensus on this. That's pretty convincing, though. Okay, it may be.
Starting point is 00:31:00 It may be until you realize what actually was occurring when this happened. Now, you know, this is why I go back to do, did I just come out and. absolute support for Derek Chauvin. No, I didn't because based on the information, which I don't care what anybody says, by the way, out there, guys. For those of you that watch murder trials or any of this stuff, if you really think the jury doesn't actually go home and watch the news or understand what is actually going on with these trials, you're wrong unless they're like really old and they just don't watch the news or something. But most of the time they do. But in George Floyd's case, in my opinion, this is one of those circumstances where I would say that if you play stupid games, you win stupid prizes, meaning death. They can happen.
Starting point is 00:31:55 When you screw with law enforcement that has power and authority, they do. There's such things called officer discretion. There is also such thing nowadays, especially in the climate that we are in, where law enforcement realizes out there. They're normal people, by the way. You have to understand, these are not robots or not AI controlled that makes all the perfect and right decisions at the exact right times.
Starting point is 00:32:17 These officers are always looking out for their best interest because they are there to uphold the law and they're there to make arrest on people that are breaking the law. George Floyd was breaking the law of the state, as he did many times in his life, multiple times. I mean, I'm talking about he has a long rap sheet, which we're going to get to. George Floyd played a stupid game and won a stupid prize.
Starting point is 00:32:42 Now, the reason I will say this is because knowing now what the actual medical examiner report says shows that, at least according to the medical examiner, Derek Chauvin or those police officers contributed zero to his death. He would have probably died anyway. And what it sounds like to me is that Derek, Chauvin as he arrived with his other officers, just prior to their arrival, I guess it sounds like George Floyd knew and understood the police were there and he was probably going to be arrested. So what did he do? Well, apparently, I guess, from what it sounds like, he was already hyped up and high on fentanyl or some type of fentanyl. Yeah, because he had just took the fentanyl before they got there, right?
Starting point is 00:33:35 Well, he was already high on fentanyl. Once he realized that he was probably about to go to jail. Then he took the rest of it. He took a lot of fentanyl, right? And then so over this course of time, as he was interacting with law enforcement and then also keeping in mind, too, that when you're in a heightened sense of alert, your adrenaline is going, all this stuff. If you took fentanyl or a drug or alcohol or any of those things, it basically courses through your vein like a, like a raging bull and a China shop. taking fentanyl, does that mean he swallowed a pill? Does that mean he put it up in a needle?
Starting point is 00:34:12 Like, how do you do fentanyl? It's probably a pill. I mean, you can do it in many different ways, but most cases there, you know, fentanyl are in pill forms now. They'll cut fentanyl with a Xanax or something else. They have the rainbow pills or whatever. Yeah. Okay.
Starting point is 00:34:29 So yeah, so yeah, there's all of those cases. So I want to get to real quick. is the gentle giant, as they call George Floyd. This was the big narrative on social media and CNN, MSMZ. George Floyd was a gentle giant, right? They wanted to betray George Floyd as this almost like angelic figure. He was this angel. He was this guy that was just so good that like, we came and believed this guy was so good. Like that's how, that's literally how the media portrayed them. They actually used the term gentle giant on many
Starting point is 00:35:06 cases because this dude was he was big. He was a big guy. Tall guy. And especially when you have someone like Derek Chauvin or a smaller police officer, there was an Asian police officer that was there as well. And you got this extremely tall, large
Starting point is 00:35:22 figure dude that is now on drugs. He was already on drugs, but he was also on drugs especially after or I guess right before they arrived. And I just want to ask real quick, When you're on drugs with fentanyl, does it make you like crazy when you're on meth? No, it's not the same. Fentinol is not the same as far as like PCP or something.
Starting point is 00:35:41 But we also don't know what fentanyl was cut with, right? Fentinol could be cut with the upper, right? It could be a PCP. It could be Adderall. It could be any of these things. MDMA. There's so many variants of what fentanyl could be cut with. It all depends.
Starting point is 00:35:57 Because typically, especially in the drug world, they don't always want to, they don't always want to, They don't always just want fentanyl to pass you out because then that's not going to work, right? I mean, if you take fentanyl and you're just dead to the world, which a lot of people do do that as well. If you go to San Francisco streets, there are people literally passed out. Like, passed out, yeah. Zombies. They're zombies. Right. But, you know, they'll sometimes do it with crack with meth.
Starting point is 00:36:20 They'll cut it with Adderall even or cocaine. To give them a little bit of an upper. Yeah. Before they pass out. So it's like a mental, crazy kind of realm. addictive kind of feeling. Yeah. So here is George Floyd's record, just for record.
Starting point is 00:36:37 1997, possession with intent to manufacture, deliver of a controlled substance, which was cocaine. 1998, theft from a person, $50 to $500. $1998, theft from a person with weapon, $20,000. $20,000. $2001,000, failure to identify P.O. fugitive. 2002, possession with intent to manufacture or deliver a controlled substance. 2003, criminal trespass and forbidden entry, 2004. possession with intent to manufacture
Starting point is 00:37:03 deliver or controlled substance. 2005 possession with intent to manufacture deliver a controlled substance. 2007 aggravated assault and robbery in possession of a deadly weapon against a pregnant black woman after breaking and entering into her home, pointed a firearm at her stomach in the attempt of
Starting point is 00:37:19 theft. 2020 arrested for using counterfeit money and then multiple other drug charges. This guy was a criminal, period. He loved his drugs. And he began to get violent. Yeah, it sounded like he was in the profession of dealing drugs as well is what it sounds like. Absolutely.
Starting point is 00:37:39 Yeah, I think there was definitely a big connection with him and dealing drugs more than likely. And then so some of this stuff started getting violent. And this is the gentle giant they called George Floyd. Now, well, here, let's actually go over the latest. George Floyd was not murdered. this is what we have to read based on the actual new medical examiner
Starting point is 00:38:06 or Purset have come out. It says no life-threatening injuries identified. There was no facial oral, muscular or conjectural whatever that word is. Meaning your neck, meaning your neck, I think. Yeah. No injuries
Starting point is 00:38:22 of interior muscles of neck or laryngeal structures. Your larynx, right? So it's basically your throat. So if you have someone pressing in on your throat, usually it can collapse. Yeah. So they didn't have that. No scalp soft tissue, skull, or brain injuries.
Starting point is 00:38:40 No chest wall soft tissue injuries, rib fractures other than just single rib fracture from CPR. Vertebrae column injuries or vicitral injuries. Incision and subcutus dissection of posterior and lateral neck soldier back, flank, and buttocks, negative for occult traumas. Viral testing, Minnesota Department of Health, postmortem nasal swab collected 526, 2020, positive for 2019 NCOV RNA by PCR. See comments below.
Starting point is 00:39:15 Hemoglobin S. Quantitinorin, Postmortem femoral blood, HHC, 38%, blah, blah. So this is the toxicology. And it says, see, attach, report for full details. Testing performed on. On Autorandum Blood Specimens, Collective 52520, this says A, blood, drug, and novel psychoactive substances screens. Number one, fentanyl, 11 NGML.
Starting point is 00:39:41 Number two, Nora Phentanol, 5.6 NGML. And then you go down the line, 4ANPP, 0.65, methamphetamine, 19NG. 11, hydroxy, delta 9, THC, 1.2, delta 9, carboxy, THG, 42 NG, Delta 9, THC 2.9 NG, cocaine positive, caffeine, positive. This dude had everything in him. Literally, everything. And the number one was fentanyl. He had enough fentanyl from what some say would kill multiple people.
Starting point is 00:40:18 And believe me, when they say fentanyl can kill, you can touch fentanyl and something can happen. You can just breathe the dust on it on accident. Because this happened to police officers that have been like, trying to help somebody that's overdosed. Yeah. And they get too close or whatever. And they have to go to the hospital because they just touch them or they breathed it or whatever. This stuff is highly, highly damaging.
Starting point is 00:40:42 Oh, it is for sure. Fentina is extremely deadly. I want to play you what Tucker had to say about this. And then we're going to get into a little more details about how this push, this narrative, this agenda of defunding the police and everything that kind of came behind the George Floyd movement. How did it start? Where did it come from?
Starting point is 00:41:03 What was the inner struggles and fight between the prosecutors and other prosecutors and the district attorneys and the state attorneys? This was a thing that it's almost clear that there were other agendas at play. There were people out there that had money probably funded to make sure that this was a national news story. We're going to get to that. But first, let's hear what Tucker Carlson and say. effectively, they also sent a cop called Derek Chauvin to prison for more than 40 years. He would be the racist white devil who murdered George Floyd.
Starting point is 00:41:37 But the question is, did he actually murder George Floyd? And the answer is, well, no. He didn't murder George Floyd. And we're not guessing about that. We know it conclusively, thanks to a new court case now underway in Hennepin County, Minnesota. The case was brought by a prosecutor there called Amy Sweezy. She's suing her boss. So the case is not actually about George Floyd or Derek Chauvin, but it tells you,
Starting point is 00:41:58 an awful lot about both of them. In her deposition, which you should read, Amy Sweezy describes a conversation that she had with the county medical examiner, Andrew Baker, right after George Floyd died. Quote, I called Dr. Baker early that morning to tell him about the case and to ask him if he would perform the autopsy on Mr. Floyd.
Starting point is 00:42:18 Suzie recalls all this under oath in the deposition. Quote, he called me later in the day on that Tuesday, and he told me that there were no medical findings that showed any injury to the vital strength, of Mr. Floyd's neck. There were no medical indications of asphyxia or strangulation. Oh.
Starting point is 00:42:37 In other words, George Floyd, according to the official autopsy, was not murdered. He died instead of what we used to call natural causes, which in his case would include decades of drug use, as well as the fatal concentration of fentanyl that was in his system on his spinal day. So this was not a killing.
Starting point is 00:42:56 It was yet another narcotic. in a country that courts more than 100,000 of them every year. The medical examiner clearly understood that and in fact articulated it. And Sweezy explains. He said to me, she recalls in the deposition, Amy, what happens when the actual evidence doesn't match up with the public narrative that everyone's already decided on? And then he said, quote, this is the kind of case that ends careers.
Starting point is 00:43:23 In other words, everyone lied about it from the very beginning. from the very beginning. The people who knew the truth hid the truth and allowed the revolution to proceed. So that's a little bit of what Tucker Carlson had to say. Now, listen, this medical examiner knew that what his findings were were against the narrative. Right.
Starting point is 00:43:44 And he said... And now it's just coming out now. Yeah, but it was coming out partially because of a case with a prosecutor that they're in about something else, which doesn't necessarily 100% depict, George Floyd, but this prosecutor is starting to say all the things that they encountered during this entire case. And even going back to the point, the medical examiner says, what happens
Starting point is 00:44:08 when you have a finding that is against basically the new world order narrative of what this should be? And if this isn't what it is, then you are going to lose your career. That's literally what this medical examiner told this prosecutor. So, so we, We already start hearing the conspiracy behind it, right? We're already hearing that we have prosecutors now that are in other lawsuits based on some weird stuff, right? There's a lot of things unpack here, but just know this. This prosecutor is not necessarily in a lawsuit directly tied to George Floyd, but this is coming out in relation to George Floyd and the medical examiner. Now, to understand this, I guess, more fully, we have to get a little deeper.
Starting point is 00:44:56 we have to understand that what happened inside of this entire case. So new court documents, as we talked about, showed the Minneapolis prosecutors strongly opposed. They strongly opposed charging the three other cops who were with Derek Chauvin when George Floyd died. Several of those prosecutors withdrew from the case over professional and ethical objections. When told there was no valid case against the officers, Henneman County Attorney Mike Freeman, screamed that his prosecutors were fucking this up.
Starting point is 00:45:30 Freeman blamed them for ruining his chance at political stardom and later retaliated against these prosecutors. That damn, Freeman. Yeah, I know. Then the Minnesota Attorney General, Radical Marxist Keith Ellison, stepped in to charged officers. The case against J. Alexander Kuhn, Thomas Kieran Lane, and Tuthaeo, I'm probably saying those names wrong, was political from the beginning, brought to appease.
Starting point is 00:45:56 a shrieking criminal mob rather than to achieve justice. All three of them should be released immediately. Not only that, but Henneman County Medical Examiner said there were no medical indications of affixie or strangulation. In other words, Chauvin's knee did nothing to kill George Floyd. That is what we have to understand. Yeah, and when we looked at the video and I looked at it a million times, I never saw it directly on his neck.
Starting point is 00:46:22 I saw it more on the collarbone. Yeah, you're right. And he was just holding him down. I don't think he was pressing down. And this was a guy that didn't weigh, probably, he probably weighed less than I do. Yeah. And he was, you know, just trying to keep him on the ground until he got reinforcement or whatever from what I remember. Well, I mean, you know, he was on the ground.
Starting point is 00:46:43 He was subdued. All of these things were accurate, right? I mean. Yeah, but I think this is protocol for what you're supposed to do. Technically, even though they've changed the laws on this. right since the George Floyd thing right I mean you're not allowed to put I guess pressure on the neck during a you know when you're trying to subdue someone was it on his neck
Starting point is 00:47:05 well according to the narrative it was right here it was kind of on the back of his collarbone and kind of more towards the back of his neck but but even still if if you have pressure on the back of your neck and your back kind of like almost shoulder area you're not going to have a fixation as far as you're not going to have you losing your breath, right? Now, if Chauvin was on, say that George Floyd was on his back, and Chauvin had his knee specifically on his throat. Yeah, that would be.
Starting point is 00:47:40 Yeah, right. Now, can you close off the airway from a side, you know, basically knee on the neck? Yes, you could. So that was always the big question. But at the very least, according to the medical exam, It did not appear at all in any of their findings that George Floyd died. That he was murdered. Yeah, he wasn't murdered, according to medical examiner.
Starting point is 00:48:04 It wasn't from affixiation or from losing breath. It was literally from fentanyl overdose, they believed. I mean, this is actually what stopped his heart was the fentanyl. It was not because of the knee on wherever it was in Chauvin. You know, would, or not Chauvin on George Floyd. Right. Would George Floyd have died had he not had fentanyl in his system? That's the question, right?
Starting point is 00:48:28 Right. That is a total question of this whole thing. That is the million-dollar question. If George Floyd was on the ground, same exact situation, same exact position, no fentanyl, no drugs, would he have died? And according to the medical examiner, no, right? Now, I'm always, like, very cautious when I say these things, because I don't ever want to and just be like, yep, police are right in this situation. He should be released immediately, whatever.
Starting point is 00:48:59 The only reason I ever say that is because I always have this like, not fear, but always have this thing about law enforcement, right? And when someone has that much power, you have to make sure that they uphold and everyone holds them accountable. You have to. And that's when I go back to where I think he was saying, I can't breathe, man, I can't. breathe or whatever and you know I think that happens quite frequently but I think a lot of times
Starting point is 00:49:29 you're trained not to maneuver until you have help I don't know yeah I don't know I don't know but to me somebody calling out for help that I can't breathe I mean the reality is he did have help I mean he did have three other officers that were there yeah but they weren't really helping I know but he he he could have got off of him right I mean he could have where's this dude going to go yeah right I mean and that's kind of where I go into this a little bit. But I still go back to the whole point of this dude would have probably died anyway on drugs. Yeah, he would have. I think he did die for the drugs.
Starting point is 00:50:04 Yeah, I think so too. But I think the fact that he, when the guy was saying, he's struggling to breathe or whatever, and you hear that in the tape, that he probably should have, like, put him over on his side or something. Well, the thing is, this happens all the time, though, in law enforcement. It may not happen as much now. But it does. I mean, you know, when you have someone that is aggressive, they are trying, they're going to fight, they're going to do whatever. There's way worse situations.
Starting point is 00:50:30 Right. And I don't think we saw anything like I never saw like tapes where he was aggressive beforehand. Well, no, he was not complying. He was not doing any of this stuff. But I didn't see the competitiveness. Yeah, yeah, you didn't. I didn't see any of that video. All I saw was him on the ground.
Starting point is 00:50:47 Yeah. You know? So I want to go over this, this article where quick. According to the deposition of a former Hineppen County prosecutor, the county's medical examiner told her in a phone call that there were no medical indications of affixia or strangulation. New court documents exposed the extreme pressure prosecutors faced in Henneman County to charge Derek Chauvin and three other former Minneapolis police officers in the death of George Floyd. Several attorneys imposed charging the other three officers and withdrew from the case due to professional and ethical rules.
Starting point is 00:51:18 Now hundreds of pages of sworn testimony of Henneman County attorneys and other county employees that Zick placed this summer have been made public. The deposition were conducted in relation to a lawsuit filed by Amy Sweezy, who was one of the office's top prosecutors against former county attorney Mike Freeman. Sweezy is suing after settling a claim with Minnesota Department of Human Rights, alleging that Freeman engaged in sex discrimination and retaliation in the office. Hennepin County agreed to pay $190,000 to settle the Department of Human Rights claim. Freeman left office in January and Sweezy resigned from the current county office in April. According to the new document, Senior Assistant County Attorney Patrick Lofton, who worked on police use of force cases with Sweezy, said the relationship between Seizie and Freeman soured after Lofton and Suizzi withdrew from the officer's case formally on July or June 3, 2020.
Starting point is 00:52:14 Lofton explained the pressure they were under to file charges. Okay, keep it as in mind. It says, quote, the Chauvin stuff is the catalyst of this, Lofton said, which is the new attorney, right? This is the new county attorney. According to the transcript from his June 6th deposition, quote, there was an extreme premium pressure. Yes, the city was burning down, Lofton said. We had to do something. He explained that while he, quote, unquote, wanted the case charged and believed there was probable cause to charge of Mr. Chauvin with third-degree murder, the pressure from outside the office was insane, quote, unquote.
Starting point is 00:52:59 And he had reservations about charging the other three cops. Lofton wrote a letter to Freeman on June 3, 2020, explaining his decision to withdraw from the case. He said, quote, I wanted it in writing and I wanted to make sure it was documented that I was going to. to let that situation, sorry, going to let that situation what was going on in the world affect my judgment because I have to sleep at night no matter what. And so I wrote the letter and I wanted it to be memorized, Lofton said. He also said, I can tell you that everyone that I associate with to any degree professionally or personally agreed with our decision, he added. He also said he was not happy, Lofton said, a Freeman's reaction to the letter of withdrawal. He
Starting point is 00:53:44 felt like our decision and Shobin ruined him and ruined his office. He continued. He didn't say those exact words to me. I know he was incredibly angry with me. Assistant United States Attorney Rachel Cracker, Craker, probably should say Craker in this case. Who previously worked in the county attorney's office
Starting point is 00:54:05 was also deposed as part of the lawsuit. What was her name? That's Craker. According to the official record. Okay. You cracker. That was my understanding that it was not about Chauvin, that it was about the others. Cracken, Cracker, Cracker, Craker told attorneys during a June 13 deposition.
Starting point is 00:54:31 My understanding was that they would drew because they would not file charges, and that was their directive. Now, so we're starting to see lawsuits actually coming out from these prosecutors. that are pissed. Yeah, because they didn't want to prosecute. No. And so something happened inside of this prosecutorial office to where it wasn't just the fact that Minneapolis was burning down. Don't get me wrong. I think, personally, this was an outside federal presence that came in and said, you're doing this or you're done.
Starting point is 00:55:08 So then when the prosecutors under Freeman, which was the main kind of prosecutor, here, the prosecutors under this guy was like, we want no part in this. And they're saying in particular the other officers, but I think it was a massive fight even for Chauvin. Right. And especially they probably were privy to medical examiner records and what medical examiners are new. I mean, literally, one of the prosecutors that is in this case, she was on the phone with the medical examiner. And the medical examiner, when we talked about this earlier, everyone, when the medical examiner told her and said, this is the stuff that will end my career. I understand the public narrative of what we want this to say. Right. But this, he did not die from affixation. He did
Starting point is 00:55:58 not die from Derek Chauvin. He died from fentanyl. He died from drugs. That's what he died from. He had a massive amount of drugs in the system. He died from that. And I know that. And I know that. if I go with that narrative right now that it's going to be ending career for me and keeping in mind too this medical report examination report literally is just
Starting point is 00:56:22 kind of going public now so yeah years after the fact so I don't know what happened between the medical examiner I think he gave what they wanted for the court and the prosecutor the Freeman guy just to get him because you know what you know what would have happened if he was filmed
Starting point is 00:56:38 not guilty towns were have been burned over again. Yeah, but it's all because the narrative of the media. Right. Right. Because this is what happened. You know, this is where Black Lives Matter, I guess, kind of started.
Starting point is 00:56:52 And I think it was before then. But this is when they really started burning downtowns or whatever. Yeah. So we have to give these people what they want. Otherwise, they're going to continue to burn down towns. Well, the problem is we got to quit giving people what they want. Yeah. I mean, seriously.
Starting point is 00:57:10 like I don't know how else to say this but like we got to quit doing this right I mean we have to because when you give people what they want it ruins people's lives and yet they're still going to burn down towns they're still going to do the same shit they're going to do regardless listen if it's for like realistic things and and I and I also think that the media today is one of the worst problems with society literally. I mean, when you have a media that comes out and says Derek Chauvin, this white police officer, killed you know, George Floyd
Starting point is 00:57:50 and this was a, we want to highlight this guys, highlight, highlight, highlight, this is white versus black. It is. Police versus people. Oh, yeah. Police versus black men. And we saw this with Obama. This was under another... Yeah, with Ferguson. Yeah, absolutely. Ferguson. This was Chauvin and George Floyd. This was Michael Brown.
Starting point is 00:58:10 This was all of these things that possibly And by the way, Ferguson Well, I think Ferguson was Michael Brown. Michael Brown was a large dude that was trying to overpower A police officer to get his gun And the guy shot him. Right? I mean, I go back to
Starting point is 00:58:26 You play stupid games. You win stupid prizes. Now, I understand if the police are just throwing you to the ground, putting a gun in the back of your throat for no reason. I mean, I understand. those situations and I see videos, right? Yeah, there are. They are videos, like you said, there are bad
Starting point is 00:58:42 apples in law enforcement. I can remember one in particular, I think, that happened last year. I can't remember the dude's name. But I was just like, oh my God, they beat him to a pulp. Yeah. Do you remember that? There's quite a few of them. Yeah. And it was awful.
Starting point is 00:58:59 Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah. Yeah, I do you remember that. Yeah, we did an episode on that. Yeah, we did an episode on that guy. It was terrible. And by the way, most of those officers to beat this black guy to a pulp or black. Yeah, they're all black. I mean, and that's the funny thing. It's not about race.
Starting point is 00:59:13 It's about power. And I think that's... I think the biggest... I think the biggest misconception with people today is that we're not in a battle between race guys. Like, put your race card down, dude.
Starting point is 00:59:27 Whether you're black or white, stop. It is not race. It is not race. They're wanting you to believe this shit is about race. It is not. This is about power and control. This is about the elites versus you and versus me.
Starting point is 00:59:42 It's not about race. Now, they're going to use race because then they know it divides us. And if they can divide us, then they have ultimate full control and full power. And this is just what happens. This is what happens in wars. This is what happens in our country on an everyday basis. But I have to. Listen, hold on.
Starting point is 01:00:00 I want to finish us. Sorry. If we were in a battle with each other, than, which we are, by the way. I mean, we're in more of a battle with each other right now than we are with a government that is ever more encroaching on complete and utter control of every single right you possibly have. You think about North Korea and China and all these other countries,
Starting point is 01:00:22 but North Korea in particular and some of these others, if you're in Canada or you're in Australia or you're in UK, I mean, we talked about the bills they're trying to push forward, but they want to control your internet. They want to control what you see and hear and think. They want to control your access to information. They are going tyrannical. And you UK listeners out there, you Australian listeners out there, you Canada listeners out there,
Starting point is 01:00:47 you're going to be screwed before we are in the United States. We're not going to be long behind you. Don't get me wrong. But I want you guys to understand that you better start preparing right now, whether it be VPNs. I don't know all the kind of things around that. And I kind of wanted to reach out to VPN companies, like see who the real best VPN companies are and maybe we can get people discounts on stuff. I kind of want to do that because this is a big thing.
Starting point is 01:01:12 It is. These people have to understand that we are heading into the age of tyranny. Oh, it is. And I think, I don't think the situations are planned the way they, you know, when situations happen, they take advantage of those situations, I think, is what happens. Yeah, but I think a lot of the situations are also kind of coordinated and planned. not every situation but I disagree with that but
Starting point is 01:01:38 I'm not saying every situation I'm saying when a situation happens you're talking about George Floyd you're talking about when that situation happens they take advantage of that situation to cause divide or whatever else this is where Black Lives Matter really took the forefront
Starting point is 01:01:54 and we had the summer of love the summer of burning down towns you know this is what happened from George Floyd but now we uplift George Floyd, who's still in my downtown downtown downtown, like on the streets. What are you talking about? I'm talking about all the streets. Downtown, what? Well, I'm talking about where everything is still painted about.
Starting point is 01:02:20 The murals. Yeah, the murals. Downtown Minneapolis. Anywhere. My own downtown is like that. Oh, like Black Lives Matter stuff? It's still like that. I just didn't understand what you were saying.
Starting point is 01:02:32 Sorry, I wasn't trying to, I was not getting it outright. But I'm just saying it's still like that today because of George Floyd. But George Floyd is at the forefront of Black Lives Matter. Is that the person that should be at the forefront front? Well, listen, but we have to understand, too. I mean, going back to Black Lives Matter, I mean, Black Lives Matter didn't do a damn thing for black people. No. Never once.
Starting point is 01:02:56 You know what they did with this money? They went and bought mansions. whoever led these organizations and they also used the money that were funded by the elites, mostly white elites, from the New World Order, the globalist movement,
Starting point is 01:03:09 that were funding these bricks, these pallets of bricks, these buses that transported all these people into these cities. I mean, the money either went to destruction or it went to the leaders that were pushing the narrative.
Starting point is 01:03:23 This is what happened. I mean, Black Lives Matter is bullshit. I'm sorry. it is. I'm just going to go ahead and tell you right now. Now do Black Lives Matter? Look, if I even have to explain that shit to you people, then you shouldn't be listening this episode. Well, I think one of the leaders was actually a white person. Well, I'm sure it was. I'm surprised. I'm actually surprised all of them are not white people.
Starting point is 01:03:45 White leftist. Well, you know all the Antifa people are. Oh, absolutely. But I'm just saying, if I ever have to explain that like a certain life matters based on color, then you should not be listening to us because you don't know us, obviously. It's not about color, as I just said. It has zero to do with that. Any statement that ever comes out that is a political narrative or agenda that says any color, life matters or any of this shit is a divide. It is a it is a sci-op.
Starting point is 01:04:14 It is a massive government psychological operation to divide people. And I don't know how anyone would not see that at this point. I think most people do see this. But they're already moving past this, right? 2020. This was 2020 again. Someone had posted a meme and it said guys, do you expect me to believe that like
Starting point is 01:04:36 this one story in 2020 was true like George Floyd? Because they lied to us about everything. COVID. I mean, you name it. But I want to go to this actual poster quick. Because I kind of thought it was funny. And I was like, damn, that is pretty funny. And I actually saved it.
Starting point is 01:04:54 He said, so wait, am I really expected to believe that fentanyl kills everyone who takes it except George Floyd like that's literally what this post said because you know fentanyl actually does kill over a hundred something thousand people oh yeah my best friend lost her son over that stuff like it's bad I think we all know someone who has lost their life from fentanyl yeah no you're right you're 100% right I want to play this last little clip from this guy
Starting point is 01:05:27 And I think this guy, he's wide awake. He's a black gentleman. He kind of reminds me of Rashid just a little bit, which I actually wanted to get Rashid on this episode. But I want to play you what this gentleman had to say a little bit. It's only a minute long, but I want you to hear what he has to say about this whole George Floyd situation. Here you go.
Starting point is 01:05:47 While I was serving in the military, my background is forensics. I know how to read autopsy reports. I even filled a lot of reports. And it finally came to truth about George. Floyd death truck overdose. He didn't die by affixiation or strangulation by the police department of Minneapolis. And the sad thing about it is Keith Ellison and a prosecutor, and a lot of the Democrats knew that was a lie. But they pushed that lie which destroyed cities across the nation everywhere. A lot of people lost their lives, a lot of lost businesses. And then a lot of the cities start to
Starting point is 01:06:22 promote defund the police. Now what's happening in Minneapolis and St. Paul happening in Baltimore, just everywhere. Democrats have been destroying our country ever since they lost a civil war. And y'all people keep voting for them. They don't care nothing about you. They rather take a dumb, stupid person like George Floyd and push their agenda to destroy your own community.

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