DeputyDane Morning Show

DDMS episode 27: The Brink of Tomorrow: Sifting Doomsday Hype, Ethical Influence, and the Echoes of George Floyd

April 08, 2024 Dane Episode 27
DDMS episode 27: The Brink of Tomorrow: Sifting Doomsday Hype, Ethical Influence, and the Echoes of George Floyd
DeputyDane Morning Show
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DeputyDane Morning Show
DDMS episode 27: The Brink of Tomorrow: Sifting Doomsday Hype, Ethical Influence, and the Echoes of George Floyd
Apr 08, 2024 Episode 27
Dane

Step into a world where the end is nigh—or is it? This episode peels back the curtain on doomsday prepping, eclipses, and apocalyptic anxiety. With a healthy dose of skepticism, we dissect the sensationalist theories peddled by those who stand to profit from panic. But it's not all eye-rolls and head shakes; I'll share how my own slice of self-sufficient paradise is a blend of prudent planning and amusement at the more outlandish survival tactics. Ready for a reality check on what's truly worth preparing for? Tune in and find out.

Content creation isn't just about chasing virality; it's a dance of authenticity and practicality. We navigate the murky waters of sponsorships and partnerships, revealing how the allure of freebies can tempt even the most stoic public servant. Yet, amid the sea of offers, I stand firm on endorsing only the products that align with my personal values and lifestyle. If you've ever wondered about the untold stories behind your favorite content creator's glowing reviews, this candid conversation shines a light on the hidden truths of the influencer economy.

Finally, we're not shying away from the heavier discussions, as the George Floyd case and its impact on our society take center stage. This isn't just a regurgitation of news cycles; it's an introspective journey through the evolution of my own viewpoints, spurred by the Anti-Hero podcast. We grapple with the burdens of justice, exploring how a single incident can ripple out to policies and training methods in law enforcement. From the streets' outcry to the courtroom verdict, this episode confronts the complexities of institutional accountability and the long road to reform. Join us for a thought-provoking dialogue that challenges us all to look beyond the headlines.

Support the Show.

Thank you all for all the support! I couldn't do this without everyone's support! Please have a great week and stay safe! Please check out our Patreon to support us and help us grow! https://www.patreon.com/DEPUTYDANE

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Show Notes Transcript Chapter Markers

Step into a world where the end is nigh—or is it? This episode peels back the curtain on doomsday prepping, eclipses, and apocalyptic anxiety. With a healthy dose of skepticism, we dissect the sensationalist theories peddled by those who stand to profit from panic. But it's not all eye-rolls and head shakes; I'll share how my own slice of self-sufficient paradise is a blend of prudent planning and amusement at the more outlandish survival tactics. Ready for a reality check on what's truly worth preparing for? Tune in and find out.

Content creation isn't just about chasing virality; it's a dance of authenticity and practicality. We navigate the murky waters of sponsorships and partnerships, revealing how the allure of freebies can tempt even the most stoic public servant. Yet, amid the sea of offers, I stand firm on endorsing only the products that align with my personal values and lifestyle. If you've ever wondered about the untold stories behind your favorite content creator's glowing reviews, this candid conversation shines a light on the hidden truths of the influencer economy.

Finally, we're not shying away from the heavier discussions, as the George Floyd case and its impact on our society take center stage. This isn't just a regurgitation of news cycles; it's an introspective journey through the evolution of my own viewpoints, spurred by the Anti-Hero podcast. We grapple with the burdens of justice, exploring how a single incident can ripple out to policies and training methods in law enforcement. From the streets' outcry to the courtroom verdict, this episode confronts the complexities of institutional accountability and the long road to reform. Join us for a thought-provoking dialogue that challenges us all to look beyond the headlines.

Support the Show.

Thank you all for all the support! I couldn't do this without everyone's support! Please have a great week and stay safe! Please check out our Patreon to support us and help us grow! https://www.patreon.com/DEPUTYDANE

Speaker 1:

Warning, warning, warning. This content may be sensitive to some. If you feel the need to leave, it is completely understandable. Content may contain examples of death, suicide, sexual content and other shit. We don't know what we're going to get into. This is not to offend anyone or upset anyone on purpose. This isn't your typical Deputy Dane, so listen at your own risk, sit back and enjoy. Good morning everybody. Welcome to the Deputy.

Speaker 2:

Dane Morning Show. I appreciate all y'all for being here. We got some stuff to get into. I really don't know what we're going to get into, but we'll get into something.

Speaker 1:

Sit back oh yep, there's the sirens. I think we're all going to be detained. Sit back and enjoy the show. Sit back and enjoy the show.

Speaker 2:

Good motherfucking morning everybody. Welcome to the Deputy Dane Morning Show. It's probably a lot of shit. I got to turn that down a little bit. Sorry about that, I was just feeling myself there. A lot of things happening this week. We've got apocalypse starting tomorrow.

Speaker 2:

Everybody, please, get in your doomsday bunker. This is not a test. This is not a test. This is not a test. Get to your bunker. The eclipse is coming. It is the end of the world. If you have not bought all the tinfoil you can, you are effed in the butthole. Okay, sorry, guys, I'm on one today.

Speaker 2:

So, oh, sorry, everyone is freaking out about this. Like, like all these doomsday people are talking about stuff and it's lining up with biblical stuff and I, I don't even know people. The end of world as we know it? Oh my god, that's scary. A lot of people are losing their freaking mind about this. I mean they're saying that in history there's been times where the same eclipse happened and ginormous earthquakes happened which I don't know. I don't know. People are worried about the power grid going down. So I don't even know what to believe anymore. I watch a lot of these dudes selling stuff like all this items for your phone or get this, get that, but then at the same time they talk about the power grid's going to go down. It's an EMP, natural EMP.

Speaker 2:

I've seen a lot of just random shit. I don't even know anymore. If it's going to happen, it's going to happen. I've seen a lot of just random shit. I don't even know anymore. If it's going to happen, it's going to happen. I have my farm. I've got eggs and pigs and chickens and if I need to, I'll go drink out of my pond. It's crazy, crazy. I don't know. I don't know. I'm working that day, luckily nowhere near the path of this Armageddon, but yeah, I just don't even know what to think anymore. Some of the stuff people are talking about is mind-blowing to me.

Speaker 2:

Hold on one second, some of the warnings I'm reading for those who live within the path of totality suggest that you stay off the roadways during this event, plan ahead and run your errands before and stock up on everything in need and, if you're on foot, watch out for distracted drivers. Um, yeah, yeah, um, we also have these things on our cars. It's mind-blowing. Um, every now and then, there's a thing called night time. So you, uh, you have headlights. It's crazy. And nowadays, some of them are automatic. What did you say automatic? I did say automatic. Freaking wild, isn't it? Be prepared, everybody. The end of times is coming. It'll be here April 8th, the eclipse, also known as Apocalypse 2024. Be prepared, don't stare straight at it. You'll go blind and you don't want to go blind at a time of the apocalypse. You cannot be prepared enough. If you have automatic headlights, make sure they're on if you're driving, because it's going to get very dark. If you are in the totality, oh my God, it's going to be scary. I'm terrified. Everybody. Stock up on milk, stock up on bread. Get your Faraday boxes, your tinfoil. Get it all ready. Time has come and it's come too fast. Be prepared, everybody. It's the end of the world, apocalypse or eclipse 2024. Oh my god it's here. Oh my god it's here. Oh my god it's here. See you guys the next day, I guess.

Speaker 2:

Sorry, I had to record that real quick. I did a little thing for the tiki-taki. I have a little thumbnail on there. But yeah, it's fucking mind-blowing. Some of the stuff.

Speaker 2:

People I really think it's just a gimmick to sell stuff. People, I don't know. People are talking about religious and earthquakes and all sorts of stuff. It's crazy. I've really learned it really comes down to what gets them clicks, what gets them views, what gets them whatever they can. So a lot of these people either they're doomsday preppers, which I'm somewhat of a doomsday prepper I still have stuff prepared just in case shit happens. If shit happens, I'd rather be a little bit prepared. I'm not going to focus my life on these things. Um, I have plans If something happens. I have this, but this is getting wild. But I realized a lot of it is just to get clicks and views, but some of it. There are some people that are linking it up to the next coming of Christ and there's also going to be red cows slaughtered for an antichrist at a third temple and Euphrates River is drying up. I don't know. There's a whole bunch of stuff and then the, the eclipse goes over several towns. That is named nevaeh, which is like heaven back, I fuck, I don't know. Good lord, like if I hope they're just doing it for clicks and views.

Speaker 2:

Because if you live your life like this, like where you're terrified all the time that shit is going to pop off and you're like, oh my god, it's coming, the end of time is coming and what shall we do? My family prepared, uh, my parents okay, I was a child. I, my parents, really got prepared for ytk. My mom's very religious, very spiritual. She doesn't believe in east set religion, she just believes in a bunch of stuff. Weird stuff has happened in my life. So't believe in East set religion, she just believes in a bunch of stuff. Weird stuff has happened in my life. So I believe in some stuff. I mean I'm not going to go. I mean I am religious but I don't focus my whole life around it. Either way, religion, whether you believe it or not believe it, it really just makes people better people If you think about it, if you think that there's consequences to your actions, which there are in law and religion, and just being a good human being. It makes you be a better person. So, either way, I love religion because, even if I don't believe it, what it does, it makes other people act right, because they think there's consequences and I don't know. So, either way, that was kind of going down a rabbit hole. But my parents got prepared for Y2K.

Speaker 2:

My mom does coupons I've talked about it on here before A lot of coupons Does coupons, does all this stuff, garage sales to save money. I grew up extremely poor so we had to find ways to do stuff. So that was a way. That was a way to get things that we could wanted and needed at a lower cost. She's really good at it. But we have. We had a shed built and the shed was built just full of stuff she gets from coupons and garage sales and stuff that we could use. Um, it kind of benefits me now because now my kids that go over there and they get toys so it makes them happy. She has a whole toy room with her daycare. It's a a whole deal. But for Y2K man ADD, I'm really on one today. Guys, I'm really sorry.

Speaker 2:

Y2k and all that craziness. Okay, I told you I grew up extremely poor. A funny story to me still to this day my family. We were broke. We were broke a long time. Hold on, I'm going to film this one, hold on, all right. So getting back into it, my family was poor. We weren't like dirt poor, but we went several years without central heat and air. It was just tight, money was tight. So my family, I, didn't get a computer until wait for it, 1999. I know that doesn't sound too crazy, but it was December 31st 1999.

Speaker 2:

My parents were doomsday Y2K kind of preppers where they got everything ready and told us about the Mark of the Beast and there's a whole lot of stuff I don't know. But then they're talking about how the clocks are going to go to yt, the whole y2k craze. So we're doing the y2k craze and everything was going to shut down. Um, and in this process they talk about power grids and anything's hooked up to the power is going to be fried. What night do you think that my parents decided to buy a gateway computer which backed in? That was, it wasn't that dude, you're getting a guy. But it was gateway and gate was expensive.

Speaker 2:

They had me hook it up because I didn't know how this is. This is a sorcery. Um, they had me hook it up December 31st. That night, as we're watching new year's eve stuff, I was like, hey guys, do you want to wait till, like tomorrow? Um, if I wait till tomorrow, um, if it's not hooked up, it's not gonna be fried, but if you want me to hook it up, it'll be fried, like by your theory. Oh okay, yeah, still hook it up. Oh okay, it makes a lot of sense. So they went that whole route with the Y2K thing, but yet at the same time, they hadn't hooked up the computer that night, and mind-blowing, and nothing ever happened.

Speaker 2:

And then there was. There was what? May 12th or I don't know. There's been a lot of end of the time stuff. I've always thought it funny about um doomsday. What was that? Was that may 12th? Was that what? That was aztec calendar, what was that? Uh, doomsday, what was that? Yeah, december 21st, 2012.

Speaker 2:

And so my parents being the whole, we got ready for 2012 or whatever, the Aztec doomsday as well. We were ready. I mean, at the same time, I make light of it, but I mean I'd rather be ready than not ready if something were to happen. But we got everything ready for the Aztec calendar in 2012. And I asked them. I said, well, let me ask something.

Speaker 2:

Okay, we're getting all worked up over a civilization that carved a calendar into the stone. And as they're carving into the stone, do you think one guy one day was just like chip, chip, chip, chip, chip man? Why the hell are we doing this, dude? Like this is thousands of years in the future. Like, why are we even? That's it. You want to quit? We'll both walk out.

Speaker 2:

Today's the last day, okay, like, so I say we both finish today. This will be december 21st 2012. That's a long time away. But I said we just walk out. Dude, this isn't even worth it anymore. We don't get paid. Well, um, it's hot as shit out here and we're still carving into stone for a calendar that, for people that will never see this probably, I think I'm gonna call it quick. All right, just finished, let's walk out. I mean, it's the same kind of thing. We all get worked up over these things. But I mean, like I said, it's better be a little bit prepared than not prepared at all.

Speaker 2:

But seeing these people come up with this doomsday thing and and all that is, I don't know. I don't know what to believe. It is what it is things are going to happen. If it happens, uh, I love all y'all. Couldn't do this without y'all, so hopefully I'll catch you sometime. We can meet up somewhere. We'll have a little meeting zone. If you join my patreon, we can set up a rendezvous point. Just kidding, that's pretty fucked up, like, hey, subscribe to my patreon. If you subscribe to my patreon which is the best way to support me if you subscribe to there, we'll come up with a rendezvous point and then I'll give you my ham radio frequency and we'll be able to talk. By the way, if you buy all these items that I have in my Amazon thing, I'll get money for that, but at the same time, it'll save you in the apocalypse.

Speaker 2:

I don't know Crazy times, so like I don't know times, so like I don't know, I kind of get it to an extent. Um, I've been making videos on TikTok because they send me free items. To be honest, the items that I make videos on I get I can't even tell you thousands of offers and I know it sounds like I'm not like, look at me, I'm famous. I'm not famous by any means, I just just they're like oh, you have a lot of followers, let's send you this and I'm like bro, why do you keep sending me stuff for like spandex and like nail extensions and hair extensions? I'm like you guys, really, and it always comes with a message. Their message is always like here, let me pull up one of these. And then it just it kills me. It's going to pull up my TikTok, hold on one second. But these messages freaking kill me because it's like I'll read one here you go, hold on one second. Okay, here we go. Hi there, I hope this message finds you well.

Speaker 2:

This is Kobe from Woodahub. I'm a huge fan of your channel. We really appreciate your content and your long-term partnership. Would you like to sell these products? And you click it and it's like women's spandex and stuff like that. I'm like what in the hell? I really want to accept all these and just start making videos. Be like, all right, sure shit, I'll make it. And then people are like, oh my God, he stretched that spandex way too far. That spandex is not meant to go that far. Holy hell. They'll send me stuff for like women's shoes or stuff like that, and they're like they always started with. I'm a huge fan of your channel Obviously, not you lying SOB, but the items that I do put on are items that I actually want and I'm not going to lie.

Speaker 2:

I'm being a little bit selfish. Okay, being honest with everybody, I want these items and I live on a cop salary. So a good way for me to get these items free is for me to make a video. I know it sounds shitty, I'm a sellout, you can call me whatever, but if I can get a free item just because of me making a video, I'm gonna do it. I'm not gonna lie, I'm not gonna sugarcoat it. I'm gonna be 100% honest. I'm gonna going to sugarcoat it. I'm going to be 100% honest. I'm going to do it because it's going to help me a little bit. Sorry, sorry, the impact I wanted bam make a video got an impact. These little greenhouse things I'm about to post, bam, I wanted them to start seeds, I did it. The hydroponics thing I wanted, I did it.

Speaker 2:

I get a lot of offers for stuff. I'm like, man, I'm not going to, I'm not going to do this. This isn't going to. I don't, I don't understand. Um, this isn't going to help me in any way. I'm not going to make a video just to try to get money off of it.

Speaker 2:

Now, if people buy it. I'll explain how the whole process works on here because I feel like I can do that on here without getting in trouble on Tiki Talkie. The whole process works. They send me these items, I post a video. I post a video and I get a kickback. Normally it's like 10% of how much the item is. Sometimes it's more, sometimes it's less. If you buy the item, I get 10%. That comes to me. Same thing. I have an Amazon store. If you buy anything from my Amazon store, I get a small kickback. It's not 10%, I'll tell you that, but it all adds up. But at the same time, like I said, I only do items that I want.

Speaker 2:

So if I want to impact for my farm but I really don't have the money to go buy an impact or really want to go in there and beg my wife to let me spend the money to get it, while she explains how bills work, and I'm like she's a breadwinner Her family's be for real. I'm like she's a breadwinner in her family. Let's be for real. I'm a cop, okay, I don't make a whole lot of money. But going to her and asking her, I feel like a child, like baby. Can I please, like, I really need this tool. What do you need it for? Well, I don't really know, but I'd like to have it just in case I, you know, every like, once every three years I could use this item. But instead Tiki Talk is like hey, we'll send it to you.

Speaker 2:

Make a video Deal, say less, I got it, I'll make the video. I'll get a kickback If somebody buys it. If they don't buy it, I don't, it's not going to hurt my feelings if somebody doesn't buy an item that I make a video for, because what I really did the video for is because I wanted the item. There are some items that they try to send me. I was like, no, dude, I don't want that. I don't need ladies spandex, I don't need ladies shoes, I don't need hair extensions, and there's some items I want, but I don't want to piss people off that much, if that makes sense. Like there's some knives. They keep sending me kitchen knives. I'm like, man, I like those kitchen knives. But then I'm like how am I going to make a video for this and not another? Like my farm page was big enough and I could do a lot of these on my farm page and like these are the items I use, but it's just, I don't know, it's a weird deal. Some people get mad about it. Sorry, I'm not going to lie, these are items I wanted. Sorry, I'll be 100% honest with you, as I am with everything. So well, I mean almost everything. But, yes, so, man, we've gone down a rabbit hole of a the apocalypse, eclipse and all sorts of stuff.

Speaker 2:

Um, I listened to another podcast. I really like another podcast. It's called the anti-hero podcast. They do a really good job. One's a cop, um, one is a ex Delta force, I think. Um, they do a lot of good stuff and they're honest, and that's the way I try to be as well. Whether it pisses you off or doesn't piss you off, I'm going to tell you how I feel. They recently did one on George Floyd and I've been telling people.

Speaker 2:

If you really don't know much about the case, there's a lot to it. There's so much stuff that during the time, the mob mentality fried Chauvin. That's it. They fried him. You had an officer that was like on his third day of being an officer and he got accessory to murder. Um, if you don't know, when you're FTO phase, you spend months just shadowing. You can't do anything. You don't interfere, you don't say anything. You don't interfere, you don't say anything. You just sit there and you shadow, and that's what you're supposed to do. That's what this officer was doing shadowing. He got accessory to murder because Chauvin got murder Crazy, crazy, and they brought up so much stuff in this and if you listen to that podcast they break it down really well.

Speaker 2:

I've been telling if you, if you're on the fence about it, go listen, go to the court case and listen to the closing arguments. The closing arguments are amazing. Um well, in my offense, the defense is that it I will be a hundred percent honest I was very anti-chauvin during all this. I thought, of course, george Floyd had his own shit going on. He's not a good dude, he's a piece of shit. He doesn't deserve a statue. The pregnant lady that they held a gun to her belly and stuff I bet she would beg to differ about how good he was. But if you, I was very anti-Chauvin, but I watched the court case while they're in court and I listened. The defense's closing argument is two hours long. Okay, two hours long, but it's amazing. It is amazing and it'll pinpoint stuff that I was like holy shit, he did everything by the book and all his fellow officers said he was a by-the-book officer.

Speaker 2:

One of the people that was claiming the most stuff is one of the ones that's a firefighter that works for the city. And this firefighter, she was saying that she saw the hate in Chauvin's eyes. She tried talking to him and he wouldn't talk to her. There's a whole hold on. For some reason I can't get my audio to work, but pretty much she says that he had the look of hate and evil, blah, blah, blah, and everything says that he wouldn't even talk to her. Well, chauvin actually tells her at one point ems is in route, they're in route, we have called them.

Speaker 2:

In her testimony she said things that she would have done. Do you know what she did do? She didn't call 911 herself. She didn't call and say they need a paramedic or ambulance. She filmed it. She filmed it and she yelled at the cops. But yet she goes in this whole story about how she would have done this. She would have done that, I would have done this, I would have done that, but you pulled out a camera and you filmed it. That's what you did. Chauvin even says we EMS has been called. She is notified. Ems has been called. She did not believe them because the amount of time it took EMS to get there which, to be honest, that they thought the same thing. Ems has taken way too damn long to get here. They called EMS. There's a lot to the whole story. It's a mind-blowing thing.

Speaker 2:

I'm not going to say whether this or that, but pretty much Chauvin was guilty before he even went to the courtroom. That is a case where they should have moved it. They should have sequestered or whatever it's called the jury, because all that happened is it was so big on the national news, so big that automatically you're going to assume one thing or another when, if you look at body cam footage, you see his leg wasn't on his neck. He actually was trained in this technique. The PD was trained in this technique. The PD was trained in this technique and they were said, when it came down to it, we have never trained this. We failed Chauvin big time. We failed that rookie cop that got accessory. We failed the other cop that got accessory.

Speaker 2:

Chauvin is now in prison and has got stabbed recently. It's not looking good. He's probably his whole family life's fallen through. I mean, it's just, it's mind blowing. They did his civil case and they won. The family won 20 million or something like that before they even went to the criminal case. That automatically you're supposed to do it after, you're not supposed to do it before, because it automatically makes the jury believe well, it before because it automatically makes the jury believe well. If he ended up getting this civil case one, then the criminal case, obviously the officer was in the wrong. I mean, the family was awarded $20 million and that was national news. They were awarded the money. So what's a jury going to think they're going to automatically go well if they did that? But people don't understand the different levels of civil and criminal evidence that you have to prove the burdens like it's. I'll break them both down to you. Let me pull up the actual definition so I don't butcher it and we'll go from there. All right, so we'll break this down.

Speaker 2:

Prepondence of the evidence. So that means in a civil lawsuit, such as suing a city because they killed your loved one, they require plaintiffs to demonstrate to the judge or jury that the defendant is more than 50% responsible for their suffering and losses. Plaintiffs well, pretty much what it is is they have to have enough evidence to say, hey, something might have been wrong, but not 100% wrong. It's a different level. So then, beyond a reasonable doubt is pretty much any evidence that we have brought to you in a criminal case has to be on a reasonable doubt. So if you had a reasonable doubt about something, they have to prove enough stuff to show you. Okay, bam I. I think there's enough here. There's enough to say, yes, he did it. It doesn't have to be 100%, but it has to be beyond a reasonable doubt.

Speaker 2:

So again, preponderance of evidence is lightly put that the evidence that was brought forth to you is that more than likely it happened. It's more than likely that this happened and we need to give it to him. Now the burden of proof is higher. You have to prove higher. In a beyond a reasonable doubt means that yep, um, pretty sure he did it. It's not like let's pass that. Really that's still technically preponderance evidence. So pretty much it breaks it down preponderance evidence. You really only have to slightly prove ah, something's wrong here. Now, beyond a reasonable doubt. It has to be like you are you're pretty sure he did it, but you're not 100 sure he did it, if that makes sense.

Speaker 2:

Um, and the fact that they went ahead and did the civil case. He won the civil case and then they go into the criminal case is mind-blowing to me, really, why I believe it was settled so quick is a mob mentality. They automatically go oh shit, the mob wants this, let's go ahead and do this, get this done. And all they did was they fried their officer. They fried him. He did not get a fair trial. He did not have any of this. He was not innocent until proven guilty. He was immediately saying he's guilty and he's got to prove he's innocent. That's not how the court of law is supposed to go. It's supposed to be you are innocent until I can prove that you did something. And the fact that things were not let in that the judge would not let let in, such as the training, and the maneuver that he used was a training maneuver that they do. It's crazy. It's crazy.

Speaker 2:

I would suggest, if this is something that, like, you're on the fence about or something that you kind of find interesting, watch the defense, the defense, closing arguments. It's, it's good, it's a good way to look at it. They break down a lot of stuff that I think if people would just take the time to watch or take the time to listen, would understand and see like, oh okay, there's more to this. I'm not some legal expert. I've gone through stuff, I look at it, but, to be honest, I don't have the time to completely go through these things. I get all these times that everyone's like what do you think of this case? I have no idea. I wasn't there. Okay, I can't tell you what I would do or what I wouldn't do. It's not fair for me to do that.

Speaker 2:

Now, at some point was his knee on his neck? Probably it slides around when people are fighting you. It's a lot more than what you think. Especially he's a big man. Um, there was so much to that whole case and people you only perceive what you see. Like these people don't take the whole thing into play.

Speaker 2:

And the thing that kills me is the charges he would have got would have probably been a cite and release using a $5 counterfeit bill. You couldn't even probably prove that. You would probably have just trespassed him. If you walk into a store and they tell me hey, he just used a counterfeit $5 bill, I'm not going to go. Oh, he just used a counterfeit $5 bill, I'm not going to go. Oh, he's got a press. The first thing I'm going to say is maybe he doesn't know, I don't know. Sir, did you know your dollar was counterfeit? I did not. Okay, hey guys, that's going to be a hard case to prove, again beyond a reasonable doubt, that he knew that. So I'm going to have to go and say do you want me just to tell him to never come back and trespass him? Okay, you want to do that, sir, you're trespassed, you can't come back. Instead, he ingested a lot of drugs, died of an overdose. It's been proven. The family paid for another autopsy.

Speaker 2:

Shit's all over the place. It's a mob mentality. People jumped on what was gonna sell and what really kept them safe. Jurors were scared. Um, the the jury was hung for, or not even hung, can't say hung because they weren't hung, because they came to the conclusion but they could have been hung. But the reason it took so long. Normally in cases like that it goes fast, if people know it goes fast. But they didn't. So there's obviously argument in there and there was a hung jury. But they went ahead and just went with it. But think about the fear they had. They had to walk out of the courthouse. People were ready for a massive riot if it didn't go the way they wanted. Could you imagine if there was another group that it didn't go the way we wanted? So all the cops got together and we rioted. We'd be in prison. It'd be screwed. We couldn't burn down a building because we didn't like the opinions we got and the riots that were started.

Speaker 2:

Burning down your own city has nothing to do with it. Taking phones from T-Mobile Yep, that's exactly what you're going to do. Even, let's say Chauvin was wrong, chauvin is a. Let's just do this. Let's go through a scenario Chauvin's a piece of crap, chauvin shouldn't have done that. Chauvin, this Chauvin, that blah, blah, blah. Chauvin, he's a piece of shit. He killed him, okay, out, and he did that.

Speaker 2:

What does stealing TVs have anything to do with the loss of George Floyd? What does stealing cell phones have anything to do with the loss of George Floyd? What does burning down mall and pop stores that are struggling as it is, fighting big corporations, have anything to do with George Floyd's death? What does that have to do? You burn down the PD? Fine, you can kind of give that, even though that's fucking wild that they let them burn down the PD. That's wild to me. You let them do it. That's fucking crazy to me. Not no, no way. But burning down the PD, okay, okay, somehow it happened. I can give that to you. You're pissed at the PD. You burn down the PD, bam, fuck you pigs. But the fact that you burnt down mall and pop places, burnt cars. There's a lot of people that had nothing to do with that and their car was burned. You burned a cop car, fine, whatever you proved your point, I tell you right now you try to burn my cop car. There's going to be hell to pay. I've got baby pictures in there and those are my baby pictures. But what does it have anything to do with George Floyd being a great person, which he was not?

Speaker 2:

George Floyd, I'm sorry guys, I'm not going to sit here and sugarcoat this shit. He was a piece of shit, massive piece of shit. I don't. I'm not going to sit here and say he deserved to die. I don't believe he deserved to die. I don't believe. I don't believe anybody should be killed. I mean, okay, I do, but this is not a statement. I'm like oh, chopin killed him, it. This is not a. I'm like oh, chauvin killed him, it's okay, he's piece of shit. I don't think any of that at all at all. His decisions are what pretty much caused his demise. According to the evidence now, chauvin was going to be thrown under the bus regardless of what happened, which is fucking mind blowing.

Speaker 2:

Chauvin, from what I hear in red, is he was a by the book officer by the book very good and read is he was a by-the-book officer By-the-book Very good, followed it to a T of what he was trained and still was fried, even by his own fucking agency. And the problem is we are worried too much about if we get fired. What are we going to do for our family If we get this? What are we going to do? I'm going to lose my retirement if I go to another agency. I will tell you right now there's no way I wouldn't stay with an agency that would not back me If it came down to it. And then you threw me under the bus, even though you trained me to do that, and then you say I didn't get trained that way. Fuck you, you are a piece of shit. All those higher-ups that fucking lied. They deserve to be in prison as well. They did it to cover their own ass, so that way it's not like. Oh well, shit, take the lick Go. You know what? That's probably not the best way we trained people.

Speaker 2:

Let's go ahead and go back in the books and let's redo it. There's so many times it's happened in the past. They go ooh, this isn't good. Look at the use of force, use of deadly force. That was, I mean, that wasn't even that long ago if you look at the scope of it. So if you look, here's a prime example of what could have happened. Prime example the use of force for deadly force really was only majorly changed for law enforcement in 1985. 1985. Listen, that's not that long ago. It seems like it, but I was born in 86, so it really wasn't that long ago.

Speaker 2:

So 1985, tennessee v Garner was a case where a 15-year-old I believe he was 15, 15, 16, was burglarizing a house. Cops get called there by a neighbor. Cops go there. He runs to the back fence, starts to come to the fence. The cop says stop or I'll shoot. He doesn't stop. Cop shoots him fatally, wounding him. The kid dies.

Speaker 2:

In that agency, which was memphis, they stated that any fleeing felon that doesn't stop to your command can be shot, even if they don't pose a threat to you or others. Now, after a long back and forth with civil law and this, and that it went to the supreme court, it's changed law enforcement nationwide. That says pretty much you cannot shoot a fleeing felon unless they are going to harm you harm themselves or harm others. That is the only way you can use lethal force for someone running from you. Now they have changed, obviously, memphis policy.

Speaker 2:

So if you use Tennessee First Garner as a way that the city could have said, hey, that probably wasn't a right technique we taught them, let's go ahead and let's change it to make it more suitable for everyone involved. Now, that should have been done. It should have been done. This is a 15-year-old kid that obviously should not be burglarizing homes. His dad gets in there, starts suing everybody and it goes back and forth. Now, same thing with here. Why couldn't they have said this is what we were trained in, this is what we trained him in and he did everything by the book. But we will review this and we will change our policy on this. Instead they said nope, no, no, anything about this technique. He used His, I guess I think it was Garner's or not Garner's sorry, different case.

Speaker 2:

Chauvin's mother brought up like a picture of a training book that Chauvin still had and it showed that technique and it was omitted and not allowed in evidence. The judge said no, no, not bringing that in. What the ever living fuck is that? Crazy, crazy.

Speaker 2:

And I'm going through a lot of what I hear, a lot of what I've seen done research. I haven't broke it down that much. I don't have that kind of time, nor do I want to sit here and do it, because then people ask me on TikTok what do you think about this? I just tell people I don't know, because I don't, I don't look into a lot of this stuff. I wasn't there. I don't know the state of mind of everybody. I cannot judge these people by the actions that they had to do that day. I wasn't there, I don't know. You take your own feeling for everything. All I ask is, before we jump to conclusions and I was guilty on this one as well, I was guilty by judging Chauvin before I got all the evidence and everything, his damn toxicology showed that he had overdosed and that toxicology came back quick, quick, toxicology came back quick, quick.

Speaker 2:

If we would have all waited, including myself, we could have seen that he had a high amount of drugs in him that caused him he already had a weakened heart caused him to do stuff. The officer on scene noticed him foaming at the mouth and acting erratic and he said hey, let me go ahead and get EMS here. Ems took forever to get there. Homeboy died Bad deal. I carry Narcan. I've used Narcan several times, brought several people back, but you have to break down everything and they didn't. They fried him. He's now sitting in prison in a cell getting stabbed. People say he'll never get injured. He's in PC. No, not how it goes all the time. There's a chance that shit can happen at any time. So crazy. Look into it yourself.

Speaker 2:

Besides that, guys, I'm going to go ahead and end this here. It's gotten a little bit more. God, I really got to bring people on. I've been talking to my brother and we're working on moving my mom out to the property. We got a lot going on in the farm. We're moving my mom here and moving the old trailer off. There's a whole lot going on. So these are going to get better. But I talked to my brother and he's going to do one with me. My wife's going to do one with me and I'm going to start bringing more and more people on. I've been saying that, but it's just been crazy. I've had case after case. I've just had random things come up um, working on the farm, the loss of my dad trying to help my mom get through the grief and trying to get my mom through everything and also trying to get her out here. It's just, it's a lot. It's a lot going on. It'll happen, things will happen, it'll get there. It's just going to take time.

Speaker 2:

So, guys, that being said, thank you so much to everybody that supports me, supports my Patreon, supports me on here, supports me on TikTok, everywhere. I couldn't say thank you enough. Patreon has been awesome. It's been kind of a good way to. If you want to support me, it kind of helps me going through there. I appreciate everybody so freaking much. What's going on here? What's going on? Yeah, hold on a second. So again, guys, thank you for all the support. I just looked at Patreon. Thank you Trauma, diva and Marianne for staying with me. I know it's been back and forth. I plan on growing it again, really working on everything again, putting some private content on there just to keep everybody updated. So, thank you, guys, so freaking much. I appreciate you guys all so much and everyone, please stay safe. Love one another. Let's grow together. Let's just be kind together, just everything. Be a good person. Love God. Again, guys, thank you for the support. Love all y'all. Let's make this week a great week. Everybody stay safe.

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