The Tenth Man

S2 E31 - Millionaire Riot Sponsor, Men are Better, School Shooting Scandals

November 18, 2023 The Tenth Man Season 2 Episode 31
S2 E31 - Millionaire Riot Sponsor, Men are Better, School Shooting Scandals
The Tenth Man
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The Tenth Man
S2 E31 - Millionaire Riot Sponsor, Men are Better, School Shooting Scandals
Nov 18, 2023 Season 2 Episode 31
The Tenth Man

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Hamas attacks Israel on Saturday, pro-terror riots on Sunday.   How does that happen?

Are there really women in the Army?

What really happened in today's so-called "school shooting"


Commentary on trending issues brought to you with a moderate perspective.

Show Notes Transcript

Send us a Text Message.

Hamas attacks Israel on Saturday, pro-terror riots on Sunday.   How does that happen?

Are there really women in the Army?

What really happened in today's so-called "school shooting"


Commentary on trending issues brought to you with a moderate perspective.

[00:00:00] Where are the Palestine rioters coming from? Are women equal to men? Of course not. In a shocking breakdown of events following the targeted violence against Oxford High School, today, November 17th, on The Tenth Man.

[00:00:25] All this and more. And, uh, some of the more. I mentioned Oxford High School, that's going to be a special, special preview. Heh. Oh, what we're doing is, um, Had an episode, uh, of a, uh, had a coming episode, and sometimes these things grow and end up, hmm, I might have two topics here, so instead of making that little twist at the end, uh, let's just break it in two, but you're gonna hear combined together, and then, uh, decide whether to hear the separate ones, which will be expanded and so on.

[00:01:00] So. Let's move to the Gaza War. Where are the Palestinian rioters coming from? Well, it's rampant capitalism again. We have a near billionaire. His name is Neville Singham. And this comes from the New York Post of 11 17 23. And he's the money behind the People's Forum. Uh, the name already sounds suspicious, doesn't it?

[00:01:31] And, uh, investigators found that. That in the past five or six years, he has funneled about 20 million to this, this organization, which was established in 2017. And he's done doing this through a shell corporations and other shady means. And, uh, they claim that they're a, a movement for the working class and marginalized communities.

[00:01:57] So he has all the right buzzwords. It's really kind of funny that he's, he's a millionaire. Um, Actually, maybe that should give him credence, I suppose. Um, but after the events of October 7th, the, uh, genocide, terrorism, and war crimes of the, uh, Gaza assassins, um, he funded four rallies supporting them since then.

[00:02:22] The first one, the very next day. The very next day, they commit genocide, terrorism, and war crimes. And, uh, we do need to take these words back, alright? If somebody says they're protesting the genocide in Palestine, then you need to assume, you need to adopt the posture that they're talking about what the Gaza terrorists did.

[00:02:51] We need to take the offensive, stop letting other people define and redefine the language for us. So, when you hear somebody like this channel refer to genocide, terrorism, and war crimes in Palestine, it must be referring to, it must be the Gazans, not the Israelis. Um, the, uh, Iraq War. The Iraq war was controversial, supposedly based on, uh, we won't get into all that, okay, but what it was supposedly based on, supposedly based on, regardless of your position, was, uh, uh, fighting terrorism.

[00:03:32] When we went into Iraq, People objected to, did we have this evidence that we needed, but they didn't say that we were committing the genocide, terrorism, and war crimes, okay? There were some instances of supposed war crimes. Having a picture taken with a dog was considered a war crime then. Um, so we always have to be careful of letting them redefine these terms, but nobody said that.

[00:03:59] When we went and tried, and freed the, uh, Imprisoned Jews from the concentration camps. We had to, we had to kill a lot of Nazis to do that. We killed millions of Nazis to do that. Okay. But that wasn't genocide. That wasn't terror terrorism. That wasn't war crimes. We were fighting genocide, terrorism, and war crimes.

[00:04:24] So, if you have trouble telling which side is which, again, just look at all the wars that are being fought in the world, um, uh, the 30, of the 32 major conflicts, you'll go look at them. You'll find that they're Muslims fighting Muslims and they're fighting to establish an Islamic state. Well, the same thing happening here in the, the only war in the world that counts right now, it's Palestinians trying to establish another Islamic state.

[00:04:53] You can find genocide, terrorism, and war crimes, but it'll all all be on one side. Uh, let me ask you a question. Let me ask you a question. What would be the Israeli defense force, what would be the IDFs motive for committing war crimes? Let's back that down. What would be their motive for continuing the fighting in Gaza would be their motive.

[00:05:15] They go in there, they, they get bad press, nevermind that, but they go, they go in there and they get killed. They have to kill people, which isn't pleasant, and they get killed. So people demand, people demand that they, uh, stop fighting this war crime. They call it a ceasefire. Let the war crimes go.

[00:05:37] Ceasefire. And they're going in there to fight the war crimes. What would their motivation be for doing it if it were not necessary? All right, there's, there's no mullahs, there's no rabbis in Israel saying, we must kill the Palestinians. We must wipe them off the face of the earth. There isn't right. So they're not, they're not, they're not radicalized.

[00:06:01] Okay. So what, what motivation would there be for them to do whatever? So back to Mr, um, Mr. Singh Singham, he started a software company ThoughtWorks in 1993. And in 2017, he sold it and he got 785 million for it. Oh my gosh. No, not another millionaire trying to find purpose in his life. Why can't he just go to his garage and start a podcast?

[00:06:28] Okay. Find meaning that way. Give your money to the United Fund, the United Way, and they'll distribute it to all kinds of people that really need it or kind of need it. Give it to the, the World Wildlife Fund, give it to UNICEF if they still have it. But no, what do they do? It's my money. I'm going to decide how to spend it.

[00:06:50] I'm going to create a foundation and I'm going to be the chairman of it and I'm going to pretend that I'm operating a, uh, uh, uh, uh, an NGO. So he's, he's, he's funds, he founds and funds and is one on the chair of this company. Oh, and he couldn't be a better person. There couldn't, you couldn't find a better person to do it either.

[00:07:12] His mother's from Cuba. His father is a college professor, born in Ceylon. The man grew up in Jamaica. We're talking about the subject. He grew up in Jamaica. He now lives in Shanghai. But he's gonna help Americans decide which side to support in the war against terrorism. Lives in Shanghai. He was investigated by the FBI in 1974 because he was emotionally unstable and potentially dangerous.

[00:07:45] And, uh, recently got married. Um, he's married to Jerry Brown's campaign manager. That's kind of like when Jerry Brown himself was married to Linda Ronstadt. So he's married to Jerry Brown's campaign manager and, uh, I wonder whose idea starting this organization was. And now he finds fulfillment in life.

[00:08:09] He's enjoying his retirement by supporting terrorism, genocide, and war crimes.

[00:08:17] While I was writing the rough outline for this, uh, this podcast, the phone rang, I looked at it and, uh, it was an 800 number or it was a 202 number. Anyway, it said Washington DC. Of course, you ignore those calls always. For some reason, I said to myself, well, maybe it's my representative calling to ask me how I feel about world affairs.

[00:08:40] And, uh, that actually happened once. I did get a call. So, uh. Good person. She actually, uh, reaches out to, uh, constituents, a pretty good person for a Democrat. And it ends up it's the NRA. So the guy starts talking. He says, I got a bill in Washington. I said, okay, fine. Look, but look, look, look in my, our family, we have a budget.

[00:09:05] We send you guys hundreds of dollars every year. That's it. Also, also I don't give out money by, by phone call. It only encourages you to encourages you to keep coming back. If you want me to send you money, send me a letter. I'll read it and make a decision. And no, they always want to get your credit card and your email.

[00:09:23] Right. I spent the better part of a day last night cleaning up, cleaning out my email and clicking unsubscribe and saving those files to a folder saying, if I get another one from this, make it spam. Yeah, I know you're probably tough. You just mark them all spam. And um, Oh yeah, and I did start getting the second round of those where I had three of them that I had unsubscribed and they were in my folder of.

[00:09:49] Mark these spam if they, if they come through again. So maybe I should have just spamified them. Okay. So, uh, he's talking and, um, I said, yeah, like I said, uh, I already, I already send you money. I'm not sending you any more. And he said, yes. And he says, uh, well, you don't have to give, you can just decide, but I just want to tell you about the bill.

[00:10:11] That's a pretty clever script. And I said, no. And this message, this is going to be what, what, what we in the, in the social media trade call a CTA, a call to action. Cause I, I'm going to ask, ask you my listener or both my listeners or my whatever. I'm going to ask you to do one thing and it's not like subscribe all that for this.

[00:10:37] I mean, this, this, this little channel, which is growing, which is growing, uh, but. What I said to him was, stop telling me about bills and start getting your own bills by going on offense. So, you notice in this, in this channel, we're not like, we're not always saying, well, here's what they said and here's what we say in return.

[00:10:57] No, we say, they lied and we show how they lied. We need to start backing the people into the corner by going on offense. I said, I don't want it. I don't want you calling me and talking about bills. I want you to expose the things that are happening. Like we're going to talk about a little later here about at, at Oxford schools and the, the, the, about how, yes, we have way more suicides and we have homicides and on and on and on that message doesn't get out.

[00:11:24] It doesn't get out. We're always on the defensive. So what I would ask is, uh, Go on YouTube and make comments to the big names like Kalaya Noir, the Conservative Twins, Louder with Crowder, and tell them to stop reacting and start acting. Let's, let's stop defending and let's start going on offense. You know, we have to, we have to start calling them out.

[00:11:50] All these, all these moms, moms who aren't moms, cause if they're moms, how come none of the moms aren't at home taking care of the kids? They're all moms out somewhere fighting for something. And anyone who puts on a red t shirt is a buffoon, but they are voting and running for office and anyone who campaigns simply based on gun laws gets money automatically from Michael Bloomberg.

[00:12:22] And remember, they want gun laws. They, they don't want gun control. They're not trying to get rid of guns. They don't, they don't want safety. They need violence. They love violence. They thrive on violence because that lets them pass gun laws. Laws for law's sake and to keep them in power.

[00:12:43] Here's a segment, uh, that, uh, one of my listeners, two of my listeners, both relatives. Um, One man and one woman said, I can't call it this. This segment is called men are better. All right. The very fact that somebody says I can't call it men are better shows that men are better. Why? Well, why would I as a man have to act like women are equal to men?

[00:13:10] Why would I have to act like that? Number one, it's up to women to prove it and put it another way. Why do you care? Why should anybody care if I think women are equal or not? Because I'm not hurt if you think women are better than men. Okay. And if you're right, make your, make your case. Just make your case.

[00:13:34] That's the same thing we get with, um, uh, you know, with racism, you can be proud to be black and be proud to be, be Asian and proud to be Indian, but you can't be proud to be white now. We're going to, we're going to have a segment on that, on, uh, on, on white pride because, uh, just to take one small example, when they take one small example, when everybody wants somebody to do something about Gaza, they're not running to the black man, are they?

[00:14:03] They're not running to the Chinese. There are, there are almost 50 nations in Africa, way closer, way closer to the Middle East than we are. Heavens, I think the Gaza Strip, that's, uh, touches Africa, touches Africa, all right? It's not like, it's not like Israel is a superpower. Anybody that wanted to help in, uh, in Israel, uh, and, and white people are the minority.

[00:14:31] There's more Asians and there are more blacks in the world, or there are more non whites in the world of any other race than there are whites. So we're the more, we're the minority, but now they go, they go, they always go and pull the, pull the alarm bell. US, do something. And then whatever side we pick, the other side's upset, but they love it if we pick their side.

[00:14:53] So, that was only supposed to be about sex, but ended up being about race, but it is the same thing.

[00:15:00] Stupid tech.

[00:15:03] Technology Should make things better. Technology should make things better. When we got cars instead of horses, you could just dash down to the store because you could jump into the car, turn the switch, run down to the store, and if you forgot something, you could just do it all over again. Alright? You shouldn't do it all over again.

[00:15:24] You should do it right, but the fact that it's so easy means you could just do it all over again because you forgot to pick up one thing. Compared to, uh, well, next, next, next Saturday is going to be market day for the month. So you're going to hitch the mule up to the wagon, everybody's going to get on board with their list.

[00:15:44] You're going to make one trip. Okay? Alright. Now, if you had a car and it was less convenient than the mule and wagon, why would you have that car? And the only reason we have cars is because they've made everything so easy and convenient compared to what's before. They're better in every way. Every way but one.

[00:16:10] You can make a cross country trip with a mule and wagon and take no supplies along. You don't have to have a gas station. You don't have to have any, uh, fuel, uh, stage in front of you. But, we, uh, we seem to have gotten around that. In almost every other way, the car's better. Well, then,

[00:16:30] then I've got to talk about my smart speaker. I've got a smart speaker, and it's because the government that's supposed to protect us isn't doing its job. The Federal Communications Commission, they are the sheriff of the airwaves. When you buy a product, sometimes you'll have a ticket in there that says this device may or may not emit electronic interference.

[00:17:00] So that's why you can't sit one thing down next to another and you might pick up static. And one of those big sources of static is some new technology. Because a fluorescent light has in it something called a ballast. And briefly what happens is, the starter... Electricity does not want to flow across a fluorescent tube until it does.

[00:17:24] So you have to have a starter to start the electricity flowing. And then you have to have a ballast in there to keep it from flowing too much and running away with it. And the old ballasts were inductors that provided electromagnetic interference. Sorry, sorry, yeah, not interference, interference. An electromagnetic throttle on that current so the light would not run away.

[00:17:47] And those were magnetic cores that heated up and therefore were inefficient. So they invented the electronic ballast. An electronic ballast is just an electronic switch that switches off and on. Thousands of times per second and controls the current that way. Great. But switching on and off electronic, uh, electronically, switching on and off creates interference, electronic interference, radio interference.

[00:18:16] It's the job of the FCC to say, you can't put ballasts in electric, in your fluorescent lights that create so much interference that people can't listen to their AM radio anymore. But that's where we are. I don't have to tell you what country all the ballots are made in, do I? So, if you want to listen to talk radio, it tends to be on AM.

[00:18:39] It tends to be on AM. A switch at FM will be fine. So, what I end up with is, year by year, it gets harder and harder to pick up the AM station I listen to. So, finally, finally I got a smart speaker. More technology. Okay. And, um, it's advantageous because it just works, it works clear as a bell. Now, of course, the obvious disadvantages, they are obvious, right?

[00:19:05] You've got to have, you've got to have the internet for it to work. So you've got to log it into your internet, internet, connect it, and internet has to be working. When there's a power failure, or, around here, there's a power failure, your internet goes down too. And the internet can go down all by itself, your broadband.

[00:19:24] So, there's not going to be any, oh, all the power's out, turn on the radio and see, turn on the smart speaker and see what's happening. No, you still need your AM radio for that. But, it's better in some ways. So, it's already compromised, but it's way better in some ways. The sound is better, and the distance doesn't matter.

[00:19:45] I could, I could pick up my radio, uh, go to, uh, Go to Timbuk2, hook up to the internet and still play the same station. Alright? So, so far so good. It's, it's, it's as good as a radio and in some ways it's better. And here's the switch, or the, the catch. Every day, the first time you turn it on, it plays an ad for Ford.

[00:20:14] Ford the car company. We're not a car, we're not a Ford family. We're not a Ford family. So remember things that are useless are bad? Playing a Ford ad to me is useless.

[00:20:29] So this impacts us two ways. This is, this, we can show this is objectively bad two ways. It doesn't matter if you like Fords or not. That doesn't matter. At your house it's going to be something else. But here's the thing. If I just use a radio, when I turn it on, I'm going to listen to whatever is on at the moment.

[00:20:50] And it might be the program. And it might be that Ford ad. And it might be an ad for something else.

[00:20:57] And they could have just let that happen. But instead, instead, now this is important. And again, this is not huge, but the point is important. But instead, They went out of their way to deliberately program it to force me to listen to a forward ad that I don't want to hear and is also of no value to them when they could have just let it play and I would hear the show or a commercial for something that is of value to me and therefore to both of us.

[00:21:30] So why in the world would you sit in your room developing your product and say, Hey, I got an idea. Let's make everybody listen to an ad whether they want to or not.

[00:21:40] Stupid technology. And while I go back to the AIM radio, no, uh, but they should know. I say every single time, yeah, every, it's almost every single time. It doesn't depend on the time of day either. Turn the radio on. Apparently Ford, Ford has unwisely spent extra ad money to put their ad at the top when I'm never, ever, ever, ever going to buy a Ford.

[00:22:07] Um,

[00:22:09] and one other point they know this because the, I'm going to say nine times out of a T out of 10. I turn it on, the forward add plays, I immediately say, Computer, Mute. I named mine Mute. And I always say, Please, too. My wife thinks that's funny. Yes, I always say, Computer, Mute, Please. Therefore, they know, or should know, that whenever I turn it on, if the forward add plays, I say, Mute.

[00:22:35] And if it doesn't, I let it play. So, why would not their technical geniuses... Am I spending too much time on this? Well, if, hopefully, the point's coming through. Some good technology. If you do any electrical work, get yourself a voltage probe. Uh, you can get them at Home Depot over in the electrical section.

[00:22:56] It's, uh, it looks like a fat, yellow carpenter's pencil. It's about that size, but it's a bit thicker. And, uh, I bought one of these three or four years ago. Before that I always, uh, used the, uh, uh, the, uh, the two neon bulbs you plug into an outlet, or the, uh, one neon bulb with two pigtails, and walk around with that.

[00:23:18] But with this guy, like let's say you're, uh, I'm going to tell you two reasons. With this guy, number one, if you want to know which outlet is on a circuit, you go downstairs, flip the, uh, breaker off. Or out to the garage, flip the breaker off. And now you can walk around with this thing, you squeeze the pocket clip on it, walk up to an outlet.

[00:23:40] If it beeps, it's live. If it doesn't beep, ah, that's the one that's on that outlet, because you don't have to put it in there. You can walk around the room pretty fast doing that, and I had to do that earlier this year. But here's the other reason.

[00:23:54] I could hardly hear the radio at all, and turns out... I said, there's got to be something wrong here. I know what it was. I replaced a dimmer. So I had to go from a regular old dimmer to a dimmer that worked with, um, with, uh, LEDs. And when I put in the new dimmer, I had a bunch of interference. I said, huh, something's wrong here.

[00:24:15] First question, did I wire that outlet or did I pay somebody to do it? A professional electrician did it. Ah, must be screwed up. And, I think this is when I bought that probe. And I used, and I've, it's been invaluable twice for the same thing. Go over to that outlet, and the ground was not connected at the other end.

[00:24:38] Think about that. What's the purpose of that grounding, grounding wire? The grounding wire was not connected at the other end. Somehow, it's an old house, and they, they, they, they spliced off another box that had a grounding wire in it, but The connection wasn't good. I had to pull a couple boxes apart. And what happens is, that grounding wire, you got a bit of wire running through your house, what does it become if it's not grounded?

[00:25:02] It becomes an antenna. So it was radiating all the, all the interference, mild interference, off of that dimmer switch into the air. So get yourself a, a voltage probe, and you'll be able to hold it up next to a grounding wire, and if it buzzes, it's not grounded. I had the same thing happen with one in the attic.

[00:25:27] That was me doing some wiring and I ended up, uh, I used an old metal box just to get rid of it and it turned out I had, um, I had a little, uh, uh, it was a little bit tight. I wrapped, I wrapped tape around it, but somehow I ended up having a piece of wire touching and something else. And when I go to flip them on, uh, the whole thing, no.

[00:25:48] It didn't trip. It did not trip. So I got, I got shocked by it. And I went, why isn't this tripping? Same thing. Had a grounding wire that wasn't, wasn't connected to anything. So I ended up running one. And I ended up running a grounding wire. And then the breaker would trip. And then I was able to find, I think, I think I found the same way that the, uh, uh, the metal box was radiating.

[00:26:13] So anyway, get yourself a voltage probe.

[00:26:16] Mass shooting du jour. Last time I talked about the mass shooting of the day, I picked one out, and this time I said, Well, I'm just going to look at whatever the first one is on the list, so it doesn't look like I'm cherry picking. And it hit the jackpot here. So reading Mr. Mark Bryant's Mass shooting list.

[00:26:38] I both have notes and I have a screenshot here, so I might look at both of them. Uh, he's saying, uh, 604 mass shootings so far this year. Oh, and what's this? Separate he's got mass murders. Oh, we're having an impact on the world. He used to just have mass shootings, now he's actually got mass murders. Now, you're not going to see him correcting any of the news when they say we've had 604 this year.

[00:27:05] Cause, cause we've only had 32 mass murders. Only 32. Yes, you can say only 32 cause it's way better than 604. Heh. Um, but that's still a lie. That's still a lie. He's not telling you how many mass murders there were. He's telling you how many mass murders by gunshot there were. And that's important. It was in the news this week about the mass murders in at Idaho university, uh, a year ago, last week, the 13th or was that this week?

[00:27:42] And, uh, four or five people were killed, but they were stabbed to death. Those will not be in his database of mass murders because he only has. Mass shooting murders. The same thing, like the next line, he's got how many homicides and suicides. And, uh, there are 17, 000 homicides. But there are way more suicides, 21, 000.

[00:28:09] But oops, again, that's just the gun suicides. So there are more gun suicides than gun homicides. But there are way more suicides because there's probably another... Uh, oh, 25,000 or so. Of those, there's probably twice as many suicides as gun homicides. Uh, but no one tracks the suicides, just the gun suicides and, uh, asphyxiation are, are more common asphyxiation, which, which people do, uh, three different ways I found out.

[00:28:41] And, uh, we're having, we're having about 132 suicides a day, so that's how I estimated those numbers.

[00:28:50] But let's look at, uh, we've already talked about mass shootings, so just a little switch here. Let's look at the latest school shooting. The latest school shooting in Mr. Bryant's database. This is hilarious. This is hilarious. Oh no, I'm not laughing at people's deaths. Let me read the numbers for you. It was yesterday, November 16th, in New Hope, Minnesota, which is a suburb of Minneapolis.

[00:29:19] All right. Here's how many people were killed. Zero. Here's how many victims were injured. Zero. doesn't say on this line. I'm reading right off his screen. You can go to look at the incident. All the numbers are zero. Including the number of shots fired. In the school shooting database. I'm not making this up.

[00:29:45] This is the last one, uh, actually the one below it, November, also November 16th in Martin, Tennessee 0 0 0 0 0 0 victims killed, zero suspects killed, zero injuries, zero arrests. There might've been a shot fired. I didn't look at the, uh, I didn't look at the one for that. And then the one after that, uh, 0 arrested.

[00:30:11] Okay. The last is amazing. Oh, I've got to go down 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, Am I in the wrong database? These are all the school shootings and um, I'm going back to November 13th, 14th, none of them has a death. None of them has a death. It's as if I put a filter on it. But I didn't, uh, none of them has a death or an injury.

[00:30:42] So there's your, there's your list of all the school strings in the United States. Uh, now to be fair, to be honest, uh, I, I don't know that Brian has always done. School shootings typically, or originally I used to mock Michael Bloomberg's every town against gun violence and find the same kind of thing. So, but something's going on here.

[00:31:03] How come none of these have a victim?

[00:31:06] . Ah, wait, there's an injury. There we have an injury. Vallejo, California, November 10th. So we've got to go back a week and a half, or two weeks, to find anybody injured in a so called school shooting.

[00:31:21] Go on the offense. Go on the offense.

[00:31:26] Okay, I'm told I forgot a segment of the, uh, men are... Better. Oh, of course I did. Oh, I forgot. If you go on, uh, social media right now, if you go on, uh, uh, I guess, uh, Instagram and, and reels and tick tock, there are girls in the army. Okay. Girls in the army. So what you do, what they'll do is have a girl who's, uh, you know, not bad looking average looks average looks.

[00:31:55] I mean, all women are pretty, but as Jerry Clower used to say, all women are pretty. There's, okay. Some that only just make it. Uh, but these girls are, they're not bad looking and they're, uh, they're in the army, so they're, they're, they're in good condition. So a young girl who's not, not obese and, uh, has her hair up in a bun or something, you know, it's going to be attractive girl.

[00:32:15] So, so the whole point is it's their only fans. They're only fans. So, they put the picture up and they say, After I joined the army, my boyfriend dumped me. So, would you wait for me? And, of course, we know that all This is what happened to me. Happened to me stories. All, quote, here's what happened to me.

[00:32:37] People are evil, unquote, stories. Most of those are bull. 99 percent of them. And, and these are too. Nobody dumped the girl. And then they say, would you wait for me? Uh, and then we talk about, uh, uh, saying prayers for our men and women overseas. And there are women overseas, but there are no girls in the army.

[00:33:00] Not, not the real army. They're trying by the way, and that's scary, but there's no girls in the real army right now. And without making the segment too long, getting into what our army is doing, I'll just want to point this out. Uh, Well, in the first place with the girl that the guy left her, well, you should have found out before you joined up that decision was a, uh, that, well, that was a couple's decision.

[00:33:24] That was not a, your decision. Of course you can, you can do whatever you want. You can make the decision yourself, but he can equally make decision himself. And as far as girls in the army, two years ago, Russia invaded Ukraine. Ukraine responded with a general draft. They did not draft any women. Russia, likewise, is fighting a war with a lot of, uh, draftees.

[00:33:54] Similarly, they did not draft any men. And there are a lot of draft dodgers, by the way. You can go to, um, I think it was Indonesia. There's a city in Indonesia where they're, where the, the, uh, the residents are annoyed because of all the Russians that have gone there, Russians with money went there to dodge the draft and they're making things uncomfortable.

[00:34:15] They're, they're raising prices, renting all the good cottages and so on. And if you want any more proof, just turn on your television and, uh, there are, or at least there were pictures showing the Israeli defense force. And yes, in Israel, in Israel. Everybody has to serve time in the IDF. So they show them in the IDF.

[00:34:38] They show them drilling and carrying their guns and wearing the uniforms and pulling guard duty. But turn on your TV. There are no women in the tanks. There are no women in the tunnels. The only people going into Gaza to clean it out are men. Obviously this shouldn't have to be said, but today it does not only meant that, but when you look at the footage of the original terrorism of the Gossens coming in, popping up out of the tunnels and, uh, taking hostages, there were no women there either.

[00:35:16] There were no women terrorists from Gaza coming in, taking hostage and fighting. So there's just a blank, a statement. Um, there is no example of women doing exactly what men do in wartime. Now you can make the argument they do, but you'll always have to make a qualification. So, unqualified, no example of women doing what men do in wartime.

[00:35:43] That's why men are better.

[00:35:45] So when we talk about a school shooting, and, and, The, all the, all the numbers are zero. No, no, uh, no, no injuries, no deaths, no dead shooter and no arrests. What actually happened there? Well, in the case of the school shooting at the top of the list, the very first one, no, no cherry picking the last school shooting, what it was, was two students in an altercation.

[00:36:19] And the teachers took their backpacks and searched them and found handguns inside. Each of them had a handgun. So when we talk about Oxford, Oxford School, the school took that kid's backpack and gave it back to him. They said, hey, this thing's heavy, and gave it back to him. Why did they search his backpack?

[00:36:45] And you've got two kids who are fighting and had guns. There was no arrest made, really? Why aren't the parents in jail? You have two kids, took handguns to school, and nobody's in jail. So with that in mind, we're going to shift to our special segment. And it's special in the sense that you're not going to hear this exact script.

[00:37:12] You're going to have to hear a much, a much, much better version of it. I knew an improved version of this script when you, uh, when we rebroadcast it, will we put it here? Probably will. We'll put a warning on it that you may have heard part of it before, but it's going to be part of a series of, uh, episodes on the video channels and, uh, You'll, you might be able to hear the transition where we go from, um, where we shift from the school administrators to the politicians.

[00:37:42] And we talk about people benefiting from targeted violence in our schools. School shootings are bad unless you work there. The more people who get killed while you're in charge, the higher your career can fly. How we reward bureaucrats and politicians failing to keep them safe.

[00:38:03] Targeted school violence is rare, says the United States Secret Service, and it can be averted. So why, when it does happen, are none of the people in charge punished? In fact, many of the people who were put in charge of the children's safety and failed completely actually benefit. On October 7th, 2023, Hamas attacked Israel and over a thousand people died.

[00:38:29] There was an immediate outcry demanding the resignation of the Prime Minister for failing to protect the people. Compare that to the violence targeting the Covenant School in Nashville. Six innocent people died in a violent episode within the limits of a city that knows violence. How does the government respond?

[00:38:49] Rather than take responsibility, this man, Justin Jones, representing Nashville, one of America's most violent cities, blames others, says he's a disruptor, and then he's greeted by cheering crowds online and in person, and gets speaking engagements. His reward for the deaths of six innocents in his district.

[00:39:12] Pearson, a lowly state representative, is only imitating successful governors like Gavin Newsom and Kathy Hochul, who are only outraged by mass murders in their states when they should be ashamed. These are people you can see in the news at the top and the bottom of state government. How does it work out for the other players?

[00:39:34] Let's look at the people in between and the ones not involved using the school violence at Oxford High School in Michigan as a case study. Oxford suffered an attack in November 2021. Four were killed and seven injured. An investigation finished two years later assigned blame. We've seen how the school had a bullying problem, which was ignored by the investigation, the prosecutor, and the press.

[00:40:01] The school officials cannot be held criminally liable because of governmental immunity, and they were not the ones who pulled the trigger, the proximate cause. Government protects government. Yet the parents of the boy, who were not responsible for any bullying and did not pull the trigger either, were still in jail without a trial when the investigation was released.

[00:40:25] This overambitious prosecutor craves the fame of convicting people of manslaughter without their breaking any law, while shielding the school employees. The head of the anti bullying problem Problem, anti bullying program featured on ABC News no longer has that job, but she still works at the school.

[00:40:47] Two school employees were blamed, the head of security and the head of student affairs. They were responsible for establishing the administrative programs for stopping an attack. Counselors who failed to take the shooter out of class, failed to do a threat assessment and had his gun but gave it back to him were not blamed.

[00:41:07] They have all been replaced, however. For the two women who were blamed for five key failures, that's a career ender, right? No, the investigation carefully named people who were gone, one who retired months before the tragedy, and the head of security, she left the school a year after the attack to become a security consultant at the firm that provided cameras to the school.

[00:41:33] We'll discuss the cash windfall to the school in a future episode. It's apparent that the less, it's apparent that the less direct involvement you have with the tragedy, the more blame you get. You can be a marketer and a computer programmer, but you send your child to the care of school and professionals for seven hours a day, where he acts out while under their authority and you go to jail without having broken any laws.

[00:42:00] You're the administrator in charge of policy implementation to minimize the damage from targeted violence after it starts, and you get all the blame for the school, but no punishment. But you're in charge of the program to prevent violence, to keep it from happening in the first place, ensuring the welfare of everyone involved, including the troubled teenager.

[00:42:23] Nothing happens to you. You're quietly moved to another job. We're not done. Let's look at the politicians right after you click like and subscribe. Please comment. References are in the description. And, like I said, comment to other people. This is probably where we'll split it in two. Politicians. None of the school employees were prosecuted.

[00:42:49] They're all government employees. What about their government representatives? Did they take responsibility? Not at all. It was a field day of re elections. Their representative to the state was elected to the state senate. The one to Congress was re elected, and the governor was re elected. Most outlandish, another woman ran in a district 60 miles away winning election on the Oxford shooting coattails.

[00:43:14] All these women ran for office using the blood of high school students as one of their qualifications. Most egregious is this, there was a mass attack in Michigan state in 2023. In its aftermath, these two proclaimed, we're talking about the representative and the governor, not, they proclaimed not their responsibility, but their victimhood.

[00:43:36] Two brutal attacks in their state or district, and a mass murder at a university, become their springboard to advance their political careers. One wanting to be president, and the other announcing a run for the Senate. What should have happened is, after the two mass murders, plus the spree in Detroit that they want to bury, yes, there was an active shooter and lockdown in the old murder capital, in between Oxford and MSU incidents.

[00:44:02] Whitmer didn't campaign on it because white suburban women don't care about all crime equally, and also because that spree was stopped by a good guy with a gun. Gretchen Whitmer should have been impeached, if not imprisoned, unless she resigned first. The gun law obsessed often compare violence in America with Asian countries.

[00:44:23] So let's go there. When Wubom Kong shot nearly 100 people, the chief of police of Korea was suspended. Three, sorry, the chief of police of the district was suspended, three police arrested, and most important, the important, the national police chief offered and the interior minister did resign. Those are national offices.

[00:44:48] In Japan, after the Fukushima earthquake in 2011, another disaster made worse by failed risk assessments, Japan's Prime Minister, Naoto Kan, resigned. And more recently, when Shinzo Abe was assassinated in 2022, National Police Chief Itaru Nakamura resigned while President Biden called for an assault weapons ban here.

[00:45:12] Korea's transportation minister resigned after a ferry sinking Greece's Transport Minister resigned after a train crash and Boris Johnson resigned as U the UK's Prime minister over his management of Covid. Speaking of Covid, meanwhile, Gretchen Whitmer imposed some of the strictest and most controversial Covid lockdowns in the US Lockdowns, which are known.

[00:45:35] Contributors to the crime wave, which included Oxford High School. She runs the state with the second worst rate, second worst ratio of counselors to students in the country. And it used to be only third worst. And you might shrug that off, but you can't shrug off the fact that her predecessor as Michigan's governor, Rick Snyder, was held accountable.

[00:45:59] He was put on trial for the Flint water crisis. The Democrats hold the Michigan House, Senate, Governor's Office, Attorney General, and Detroit, its largest city, as well as Flint. But the only government officeholder they consider holding responsible for protecting the people, holding accountable, is a former Republican governor.

[00:46:20] And while the consequences of the Flint bedockle, bedockle, debockle, are as yet unknown, at least no one died there. Gretchen Whitmer presides over multiple violent, deadly attacks, and she runs for president.

[00:46:37] People are practically getting away with murder when targeted school violence occurs. Let's make it the law that you cannot advance your career based on your presiding over the deaths of schoolchildren. Let's hold politicians accountable for the deaths taking place while they're in charge with impeachment, prison, or both.

[00:46:55] Because what we're doing now, treating them like victims or heroes, is terrible. Not working. Thank you for listening.