Kamala Harris eliminated the Bureau of Narcotic Enforcement under the guise of budget reform, which was widely criticized by law enforcement as a crucial task force for fighting organized crime since prohibition. This move was seen as detrimental to disrupting drug cartels in the state.
The motives behind the criminal justice reform movement in California include both pure sociopathy and true belief in radical ideologies. Some individuals push for these initiatives for personal gain and access to funding, while true believers advocate for defunding the police, reducing incarceration, and treating police as social workers rather than enforcers of law.
The Mexican drug cartels have taken over the narcotics distribution market in California, displacing black gangs that previously controlled it. They exert influence through prison-based gangs like the Mexican Mafia, which order hits, run drug trades, and engage in human trafficking from within the prison system. This has led to a situation where the criminal economy of California is effectively run by the cartels through proxy.
The George Floyd riots catalyzed the push for crime equity legislation in California, leading to the passage of laws like the Racial Justice Act of 2020 and AB 37, which allow defendants to challenge convictions based on racial bias and prevent prosecutors from challenging prospective jurors on the basis of bias. These laws have contributed to the proliferation of OJ-like juries and the erosion of effective criminal justice practices.
California has experienced a massive demographic shift, with 27% of its population being foreign-born. This has led to significant changes in its social and economic landscape, including the displacement of native black populations by newcomers, the rise of gang violence, and the transformation of once prosperous areas into zones of poverty and crime. The state's industrial base has also shifted, with tech and service industries replacing manufacturing, leading to a loss of middle-class jobs and opportunities.
California's one-party state status has led to corruption, inefficiency, and psychosis in governance. The dominance of the Democratic Party has resulted in a disconnect between the ruling elite and the general population, leading to policies that favor the wealthy and powerful while neglecting the needs of the middle and lower classes. This has exacerbated social and economic inequalities and contributed to the state's decline.
Tech companies have contributed to the deterioration of quality of life in California by concentrating wealth and power in a few hands while failing to invest in the communities they operate in. This has led to increased homelessness, crime, and social inequality in areas like San Francisco and Los Angeles, despite the influx of tech wealth.
The Racial Justice Act of 2020 allows defendants to challenge their convictions based on the presence of bias or racial animus by anyone involved in the trial, regardless of whether the evidence supports their guilt. This has led to the overturning of convictions and the proliferation of OJ-like juries, significantly undermining the integrity of the criminal justice system.
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I got to say IT is a little bit of standing to those of us from california to see a politician from that state run for president because you in the back, your mind you you wonder like when someone going to ask her about the state sheet from which is like the greatest disasters in the history of united states, probably greatest disasters in the fall of rome, I would say, went from the greatest place, I think it's fair to say, on planet earth. Yes, when I grew up in the seventies and eighties, sixty seven and eighties, to a place that people are fleeing. And so without a blaming common hairs for all, that is not all her fault, but so much have to answer for that.
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Doc com. Here's the episode. You just write a book on this, cause you for doing that.
Yeah.
like baby, oh yeah, everytime.
I run very the moment. Fuck you and egg.
excuse me. As the same eagan, i'd never forgot ten that what what happened to california?
Well, you know there's a lot of there's a lot of reasons as to how we ended up in one party state, how we ended up in a state of dept ude um and um Frankly, with elements of criminality that are so depraved and savage and dark that they're really unseen outside of the worst conflict zones in the world and that is charter ized by, let's say for you, since the rise of child's soldiers juvenes committing a lot of crime, in fact maybe driving the crime surge in the state and certainly in los Angeles, children, children as Young as ten being recruit by gangs to commit armed, drowsy hy jack kings and even murder.
Okay, so now we're just in mexico. We are basically just rushed in worse in mexico. So um there a million authors of this tragedy, but if you are two point to two or three big facts, big changes, big trends that created the this topic or describing what would they be well.
so there's a legislation of angle to this and I think that's a really, really important part of um the the history um and um the pathway to destruction that started um well that was influenced the number factors principally there was a there was an important prime court case in two thousand eleven called Brown vee plata and in this decision um which was a five four split Kennedy um was the deciding factor on the liberal side where the opinion IT was determined that the california state prison system was in violation of the eighth amendment which is cruel, unusual punishment and this was only of the fact that prisons were Operating at two hundred percent capacity at that time and according to this ruling california had to conform to a very arbitrary um capacity ratio or that was established by a federal bureaucracy of one hundred and thirty seven point five percent.
So okay, so if you were at one hundred and thirty seven point five percent, you were no longer in violation amendment. So as a result of this ruling, california did have to find ways to comply and took a number of steps to do so. A number of laws that i'll discussed, but coinciding with with this ruling and going back further is the emergence of the criminal justice reform movement principle coming out of places like stanford law school um and some particular individuals like Johnny micromanage who uh was able to influence the legislature and uh executive a level officers in the state to embrace policies that were part of the criminal justice reform movement and principally dedicated the idea of reducing the so called crisis of mass incarceration so this meant that there was a force coming from the supreme court that was motivating this and also ideological activist elements um that push for these same reforms at the same time.
So as we find that is the formulation that we should never thought about till now mass incarceration, which I don't think any Normal personal, be in favorite of massing corporation. But that's you're only describing one side of the coin. Other way to describe be the matter of the crime wave that we're living through the results. I mean, the results in people going to prison, no one thought to address crime.
Well, so california had up until, let's say, two thousand and eleven, one of the most stringent criminal justice systems in the entire country. We of course, like where the um um the the force behind the three strikes law yeah and three strikes, uh put a lot of bad people away for forever.
IT had problems too to be to be honest, like there were there were problems and there were reform supplies to IT to reduce the potential injustices, right and and I support those but nevertheless three strikes and um and also the um introduction of water called enhancements. So special circumstances hanchen in which let's say you use a gun in a crime um you use a gun that adds ten years additionally to your conviction, if you use a gun and you shoot someone, that's twenty years, if you use a gun and kill someone, its life. So that's an adan's ment.
If you're a gang member and engage whatever crime, gang enhancements will apply and those would add the sentencing. These things were all eliminated and obligate ated a in big parts by uh directives that came from the the so called these progressive D S in twenty twenty. But the dismantling started really um following this supreme core case.
So the first law that was um a big problem uh and put us on this path was called A B one or nine called the public safety realigned act. And the idea was that to reduce the the the numbers of prisoners in the state system, you would transfer so called non violent, non sexual, low risk offenders to county jails. Um there's a problem.
And the problem in the sort of poison pill within IT was the issue of what classified non violent, non sexual lovers k offenders because under A B one or nine, the only thing that would be considered was the last offense for which you were convicted. So in other words, inmates with long and violent criminal history who happened to be in jail and, say, prison because of a nonviolent offence, were eligible for this system, and they were transfer out twenty seven thousand. And even even with that, we still didn't meet the the capacity threshold one hundred three point five, but this was one of the steps to do. So here is the the other.
Think of building more prisons.
Um well, we don't have the money you build bankrupt at that time. Yeah right. And actually like Jerry Brown to his credit, like did did a lot and like earth estate to try and like straighten the write the ship of california fiscal situation.
But these kinds of policies specific to jAiling um were totally ill conceived and um so with A Y one or nine all these prisoners get go into county jail, but the county jail one of the resources to house them, they don't have the the funds um to staff them and uh so the outcome is that many are just released into the communities kala ris um is elected attorney general in two thousand and ten, nearly beating the um Steve cooly who is the probably the last great a district native los Angels. A republican, by the way. He's the only, he's the only republican she's ever run against other than trump and he lost to him. He he lost her by just a few thousand boats, which I am just this is kind of actually kota is that there were also kind of odd circumstances around that election.
Steve was ahead and then you know kind of in twenty twenty fashion um uh there was a search of her roads but anyway she's elected to california and general twenty ten and her first big task is administering uh A B one or nine because as the head of the california's justice department um SHE really has a the most um you high school of presence in for sure understanding the budgetary constraints of the counties and the and what everyone was warning her, including the california district tennis association, uh police unions, that this law was gonna a big problem and SHE supported IT SHE did nothing to try and like bring more resources to these kind of jails and this is a theme matter we'll see over over again in california where the state has some failure. Some bureaucratic um uh you know a incompetency or short form budget or some issue and the and the the the the strategy as segmental is to simply move that problem shifted to locality ties to counties to manage, which are also struggling. So it's kind of robbing Peter to pay paul and nothing changes.
So after one to nine went to affect the next year property crimes, one of nine percent um and moreover, sixty one percent of those offenders were eligible for this program and by the way is retroactive um sixty one percent are arrested within a year and forty one percent are convicted again. So clearly the recipe ism rate traded by this law was a major problem. Fast forward to twenty fourteen.
And the worst of the mall comes out of strategy, a political strategy consultant, firms in seven, cisco, who, by the way, backed kala haris, and to create, create extent. And this is called prop forty seven. yes. So prop forty seven was.
Marketed to californians and I should say for people don't understand california politics, we have this um you a system that allows for you really important legislation to be put forward directly to the voters um and uh that's how a lot of very, very big laws in california have. I M yeah I P thirteen, actually one I can talk about. P six, me, prop forty seven.
This was the stealing legalization.
It's called IT was called just ever, you know, you foisted ally the safe neighborhoods and schools act and the idea behind IT was we would do again address the mass incarceration problem, reduce a the prison capacity by shifting uh again non violent offenders um uh you know out out of shape prisons and treating um theh under nine hundred and fifty dollars as missioners prior to this law theft at four hundred dollars would be felony grand last name and this law changed its such that I would have to be above nine hundred and fifty dollars to become a felony so um as as a consequence of this h there was also um as as another another factor of prop forty seven was that drug possession would um would would no longer be A A felony IT would be treated as a misdemeanor. This is also exacerbated the drug and homeless problem. In fact I think in the years after right after forty seven, one into effect the number of uh E, R, overdose cases was up twenty five percent.
So this is the law that legalize ling and drug you. So effective.
yes.
So I remember this very well. And I think I remember rob reiner. He was more an enemy of civilization, being more of the many celebrity backers ers of this but IT was quite popular I mean like .
a lot of famous people were behind ohs wrote the um wrote the law on that appear on the ballot and commonhold ted. Yes, because in california the attorney general of the state will write the language and the title for every proposition put before Harris .
is the one who wrote the legalize stealing act.
yes. And I will tell you, see, I ve coolly calls IT fraudful by this representation. And there is a poison pill with prop forty seven that is quite shocking. And he was actually called out for IT by the cycle of b and that is that these we classified offenders would no longer be subject to Mandatory and standard DNA testing. As a result, D N, A testing for across the state went from fifteen thousand a month to five thousand a month. And DNA testing is super, super critical for the solving of cold case micio raps and other violent crimes that you are typically are associated with people with track records of crimes. So these non violent know, the larsen y type offenders know, are very likely least IT should be investigated whether they have um some kind of connection to other crimes as we've seen no everywhere um so a small number .
of people commit the overnight .
major crime. Common here is is a description in the ballot uh for forty seven basically options stated this issue of the DNA testing and the experimental be called her out on IT and said that this was effectively a myr resented a failure on her part to omit this information.
Or the authors of this are like taking the side of rapists over the population oh yeah.
And and well, I will tell you also, SHE was not alone in writing this. The the language I may call haris doesn't do anything he does. She's a facilitator or and an an opportunity is and everything every action really shit has taken in california has been on the basis of what is good for kala haras. But what I have heard from from my sources were certainly would know with property seven IT was significantly influence in terms of the language by prominent figures from the criminal justice reform movement um and even entities are filleted with a George sora who has always been a funder of criminal justice .
reform so they sold this as like good for the california a budget good for the safety of your neighborhood sure of the opposite of the truth or little the opposite .
the truth um and people bought IT what was the .
most sixty percent sixty .
percent yes committed civilization suicide without knowing yes they we sold our own demise yes and we did so because our leaders manipulate language nonviolent offender for instance is not nonviolent offender um in fact in the next law that came about that was again on our pathway to destruction prop fifty seven which passed two thousand and sixteen that law again which kala Harris wrote the language form and which he was exploration by other democrats when he was running for higher office particularly lerret sanchez prop fifty seven uh was again to address mass incarceration and would offer additional parole opportunities for offenders that were deemed to be with non violent.
But on what is non violent under proper fifty seven IT is anything that is not one of twenty three specific crimes that is in an obscure section of the panel code so nonviolent could be drag trafficking, human trafficking, rape by toxic some forms of assault, financial crimes, serious financial crimes. Um and basically uh these these offenders under this provision would uh would have opportunities. Perl and also Pearl administration was also passed down to the county levels who again didn't have the resources to handle this new um burden. So there's a striking example of this was a baLance .
in this to .
also baLance initially asked uh again I think by pretty good margin and not as not as famous infamous as as as forty seven but you know very destructive. There is a case of a of a offender release under this um who went on to kill like four five people in a mass shooting gang related um like within a two years of get of release because of course when they go into the poll system um the prose system is is completely incommoded at us the local levels again they do not have the resources um and there was a participation rate of offenders of nine percent in rehabilitation programs and the and the corner stone and fifty seven was we are taking these you know people that you know they are non violent and they can be redeemed, right but it's really just a gim c um that is driven by again, this this this Mandate by the screen court, but also by the influence of criminal justice reform advocates .
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So now is the time to get to motive. What would be the motive of so called criminal justice reformer of George soros? Common areas move, always poking al.
So we will worry. Answer that question. But but of the of the sincere beliefs in the stuff, the idea that the criminals of the real victims, freedom, stealing, should be legal.
And why? What's driving them? Well, I think there.
there, there are those who are push for these initiatives who are just pure sociopaths, and they are not really committed ideologically. They they gavan's ze around IT because it's invoke and IT allows them access to money like sora money. George guest stone is probably the previous example of this.
Um not an idea g idea gue, by the way um a very bad, stupid lawyer from what everyone says, but not a ninety oo gue um associate path is how he's been described to me as have some of these other road prosecutors but then there's the true believer. S and within criminal justice reform I think that it's fair to say there is a spectrum of of radicalism um you know some initiatives I think um uh have like good intentions. Um you know we we do want rehabilitation and society.
We do want um the opportunity to um build your one's life back by a bady like like that's a Christian value of course but IT goes much, much deeper than that and I think that you as you peel back the layers of criminal justice form and look at what they're specifically advocating for um a range is not only from mass uh incarceration um solutions but also uh Frankly defunding the police um um passive ying the police through you ideas like community policing in which police are sort of characterised now as social workers rather than in long for accusing them turning while literally accusing literally I mean women now make a huge portion of overall cops and you know there's the cops i've talked to who who are like you know serious serious like threatening figures but but good guys. They see the police today's absolute joke and regan to tell you and i'll get into IT about how bad it's getting at at the lpd and and other laennec cement agencies but through version because of these policies and moral erosion but backs criminal justice reform. I think that is really important to strip away informations. And if when when I was evaluating um you know the the tenants of this of this movement IT became apparent to me that not only did IT place the offender above victim IT IT fundamentally resulted in the the diffusion of crime and the spreading of suffering as a policy choice. So as laws like we're trying .
to reach other people's neighborhoods, fe neighborhoods, affluent neighbourhoods, ite neighborhood crime on purpose because they were orderly, affluent and White.
try IT. And I can tell you like for instance.
the that's not a figment of imagination. That's that's an actual choice.
you think. Well, I can for sure. B, L, M activists say that a stealing, mass stealing of retail stores is a form of reparation. This is crime. I call this crime equity um this concept um and it's not even something sad like in gesture or flippantly um it's actually a very deep and dark idea with historical analogues. Um I think particularly partner would be what happened in raise a um where criminals are released from prisons in mass and sent on uh essentially government um sanctioned theft of a White farmer land and other property and this is a form of you know kind of an arctic tyranny, right?
So this is crime as a means of totality, italian control and as a tool uh of racial grips .
a crime as a means to redress historical grievances through collective punishment.
So we're mad about what your ancestors did. So we hope your daughter is raped and that's about as evil he gets.
And I will give you so some example. Um the second in charge of the l county is returned his office the chief of staff a woman name Tiffany black now um who are you know is proud to a ban a writer uh and luder in the one hundred and ninety two roti king was a procedure uh SHE came from the public defenders office uh gash gone is filled the .
way but he is currently .
a prosecute SHE is gas and chief ff.
wow. SHE shows a yeah, she's written about in the race riots have done me to where people were murdered for their skin color yeah, asians in particular here yeah, but lots of koreans yeah, yeah. Well.
we'll get to the issue of asians being targeted because that's another, that's another phenomenon that's taking place. But Tiffany black now um is A A vod racist. SHE wears A T shirt that h she's posted on instagram. IT says like police are trained to kill us, right? And he is effectively number two at the da's office when sana Monica in the west side of los Angeles was being firebombed during the George floy riots and citizens were demoting this the .
part of town, just those from the town .
um tifany black nail said, oh, go crime a river .
I loud SHE .
put SHE posted on on like Peter or facebook.
It's really scary.
Well, I mean, this is this is who gas on to surround himself with so tipping black on a great example of like a true believer that gone. No, he's too stupid to believer. Like commoner haris, I find a very ridiculous when people say, commonly haris is a bolshoi c because if you a bolshoi c you actually have to know about physical hy, you have to know about dialectics.
SHE would have to make IT through dust .
capital commute herr's only knows commute herr's although he doesn't even know that because we can figure out what her name is.
She's a child obviously she's a tool um of greater power. Obviously he went out there by accident because of skin color.
So the laws continue to get worse from there. And in twenty twenty, that was the catalyst. So the George floyd would.
just to be linger on this for one second. Just to be clear, you believe that crime is not an accident. Crime is result of intentional policy. Crime is the point of the policy and part of the aim is to punish people for their skin color with crime .
of course um .
but not of course that's the sickest .
thing I heard this year. Well IT it's extremely evil and IT is um IT is demonstrated ly the case because these laws were so, they were so obviously negligent and reckless. Everyone knew all the law enforcement agencies, all the district attorneys came out against these kinds of initiatives, saying that these the result is going to be dangerous criminals on the street, dangerous criminals on the street.
This is our future. And they passed IT. Anyway, the voters passed IT. Come here is worth the language. And again, crop for something is called the safe schools and igher hood act, right? So the idea is that the funding budget, savings from moving, not classifying these larson's as felonies, and and and there by being mismanage, which are not ever of in force prosecuted um what would save millions of dollars that would then be redirected to schools?
Well, did the schools get great in you?
The schools are worse? Never um are the .
neighbor safer?
No of course not. Like the the L A is as as elly is not as quite as violent as IT was um during the ninety nineties, which was at the peak of the the drug war between the bloods and the crips. Uh however, um we're getting there.
And the difference between now and then is that back then, gangsters were killing each other. They were killing each other for act you who owned what street corner to sell drugs. Right now, the violence is turned against all of .
us chares people who created the society and sustain IT with the labor.
Yeah, so that I because .
the games did not los Angeles or the united states or anything value in this country or they create nothing. They only destroy, just to be clear. And so while all of us are equal, the eyes of god and all of us are equal as american citizens were not equal in our effects. Some of us are created, others destroyers. And you are saying that the destroyers are now killing the creators.
I'm saying the destroyers run california.
man.
And I can tell you that's not hypership. Um and really in many ways, california is actually under the southern tea of the messan drug cartels and this happened primarily california .
is under the sovereignty .
of the mexican southern tea sothern ti is this idea that a one power exert influence on another um and allow some autonomy of the subbed dinant power. Um it's often been used like geopolitical analysis to like for instance describe how rome, roman empire administered ball right exactly. So so there's a sembLance of autonomy but there is still ultimately a power that is answer to. And the reason that the mexican drug cartel ls I think qualify for that is because sometime around two thousand and all these bags have happened two thousand and ten. And if I may have even say, like when we last spoke about the trans issue, that also really got into effect in two thousand and and its peak obamas m so what IT is but in an event, so I think in .
retirement we can say that obama was a destroyer, that the intent was to several and destroy the united states, and that some people call that early. They were derided as crazy or racist. They weren't either one of those things.
They were president I always took him completely deadly serious yes, when he said he was going to change amErica and he did yes maybe forever but um in any event around two thousand and ten there was a hostile takeover of the arctics distribution market in california um which had been otherwise the domain of black gangs. Native born black people, legacy black gangs had run, run our coaches and dupe trade .
can I just say at least know, even if their drug dealers are game members, there are still americans so let me share .
a come history and actually I they, they have, they have principle.
That's kind of the point I was. At least they are part of this country. sure.
I'll tell you a minute how principle they are. Maybe we even agree with them on some things because I suspect promoting .
the same way this november. Well.
on that out there. Well, so when the cartels, when the car tels moved into california, they said to all the black gangs, if you sell dope without our permission, we will, quote, cut your head off. And they meant that literally. They meant that literally.
So every black gang had have then find an alternative revenue stream or get their stop supply from the drive from the cartels from his panic gangs because all his panic gangs in california kind of Operate as a as a um extension of of gangs above them, which is a that which are based in prison and that's another issue. But uh the the highest level gang in california is called the mexican movie it's a prison to prison, but this and this gang ang is the ultimate authority really on all latino gangs in the state. There are two to three hundred thousand ganging members in california.
Sixty three percent of three hundred thousand. Yes, for reference, the U. S.
National guard has two hundred fifty thousand members. There's one point two million gang members near states. And in california.
sixty three, that's bigger than the active duty of a military.
Yeah, thanks. I think so. Oh well and sixty three percent are latina. So as a result of this uh volume um and no numerical advantage, they controlled the prisons. So the mexican mafia, which is actually like a legacy orange ation, has a long history. Oh has a long history, fifty years and um and they are incredibly powerful um and and as as I was told to me by um this incredible l county sheriff uh sergeant who and i'm not going to mentioned the names of any my sources um for their protection and safety but h this gentleman um said to me that a he was head of major crimes puro for the elective sharif and twenty five year veteran of the force now in private security and he said to me that the prisons ruled the street so effectively the criminal economy of california which is in the tens of billions maybe a hundred billion uh passes through california state prisons so that is a premier foi entitled of the failure of of our prisons because from prison the mexican map hia. Is ordering hits, running drug trades, human trafficking, you name IT and they do so as proxies of the mexican drug course health .
in mexico? Yes.
so this is Better on in max there in california.
But this is exactly what destroy our salvador and has rect mexico and gotten ala. Is drug gangs Operating their leaders, Operating from prison with unity, impunity. So ask you to decide, know, because I can't resist.
So in those in mexico are countries as well. The drug gangs are effectively religious organizations based on stationary M O. In california as well.
I will tell you that the the law enforcement and prosecutors that I talk to, you would say that the illegal alien ganging element is charteris ed, by extreme violence.
like extreme.
like .
shooting.
For that, I mean, I in my in my research, I couldn't help but sort of traces like the anthropological and historical basis for this extreme violence.
And we're back to the s tex aren't well.
of course because of course because you have to consider the fact that we've seen so called naro terrorist naro empires many, many times since the and yeah, they killed a lot of people, but they shot them or they use car bombs or basic kind of mafia style hits .
and that is also .
the case for the italian mafia even yes. But in mexico and in central amErica what we see is what I call cultural activism and it's the notion that there are certain cultural traits and um practices that survive the generations and are magmatic into a new society and mexico is a very I mean it's a wonderful place in many, many ways. Agree I love IT but IT is a fusion of indigenous you know indigenous people and spanish cafe in european right and many of those traits um from that survived the as tech period and I will tell you the the level of brutality of the aspect is is beyond belief. Yes, they killed two hundred thousand people a year, at least sacrifice.
The s tex were so committed to human sacrifice and not to sacrifice, but the torture of living people onto the and child of course um and and not just the as text but that my in the incos also that IT does in the end as much as you sort of hate the conkey stores because they were brutal and all .
that you root for the conkey stories with everything of course I will tell you the as tex worships a lightning and rain god called lock and when they were drought they would um they would sacrifice their children and they believe that the tears of their children on the as they walked up the steps of the pym's of their hearts ripped out would be taken by the gods and transformed transaction fied into rain。
Yes, so this is the .
culture you this with in .
some native american cultures in north amErica as well, where it's not simply a matter of killing people but of prolonging they're suffering. Yes, as an offering to to the spirit world.
that's not a guess emerged from this from this kind of amalgamation culture and um they they have authors they have authors of with human skills and other kind of icons that are indigenous to matter amErica um there is even a cartel icon or idol, I should say called santos where today which is um you see on a lot of cartel catch hues and so forth um and you know M S thirteen is even more demonic um although that was born in california, came from los Angeles yed.
So but which craft is at the heart of this? And I don't think that incident all it's not animism yeah that's right or exactly, but it's a religious cult as well as a business organization.
exactly. And that's why I feel it's so critical to understand this dynamic. It's not just a historically interesting fact but the fact is that we have brought in um millions, twelve million in uh migrants, many of them coming from this this triangle right in central amErica and it's really important to understand um what who are these people and especially let's say the two million gateways um which is often excited as the pure criminal element among gs the the migrant in invasion and um because there was all migrants that are looking for economic benefits or wherever they turn themselves into ice and tom homan told me this directly they turn themselves into ice and under the by administration ice as home and put IT has been reduced to instead of enforcement changing diverse and making sandwich es um but for those two million that evade ice, uh they are doing so so that they are net not put into the system and they are peer gangsters and they're coming from um cultures that h display um heads on bridges and skin people alive and boil people in acid and um this is part of their sport and it's and IT is IT is seeping into california we travel to an AA .
lot of countries on the show, to some free countries that windles number and a lot of not very free countries, places famous for government censorship. And wherever we go, we use a virtual private network of VPN, and we use express VPN. We do IT to access the free and open internet.
But the interesting thing is, when we come back here to the next states, we still use express VPN. why? Big tech surveilLance. It's everywhere. It's not just north korea that monitors every move its citizens make. No, that same thing happens right here in the united, in canada and great britain around the world, internet providers can see every website you visit.
Did you know that they may even be require to keep your browsing history unfilled for years, then turn over to federal authorities if ask, in the united states, internet providers are legally allowed to and regularly do sell your browsing history. Everywhere you go online, there is no privacy. Did you know that what we did? And that's why we use express VPN.
And because we do, our internet provider never knows where we're going on the internet. They never hear IT in the first place. That's because one hundred percent of our online activity is rather through express vb s secure encrypted server.
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So you said before I side tracked you into a really interesting called is that thank you for that but that there are the single most powerful force than city, california mexican .
drug cartels in so far as that they control ultimately um through proxy the entire criminal economy of california. May now there's another factor .
of this so we displaced so black crime where people read IT about for years is .
like not more. No IT went somewhere else. They had to find other alternative revenue stream to the vertical. And what what the what was the safest alternative and also highly lucrative residential berteri and retail theft.
So all of the retail theft that you see, that we see in the media of these nord terms being right, looked at by hordes of of thieves. That's not just like incidental individual acts of like larsen y, right that is all organized by gangs. And the market for the the resell the fencing is called for in california maybe just even lost song els is like ten billion dollars. Nationwide retail paths are hundred billion .
dollars. Where's IT?
It's resolved um through fencers um and ebay yeah ebay it's um you know like a pon shops like um but I think primarily on the internet um or to you know even perps other companies for it's go it's IT passes through multiple layers right and um you know these fancy Operations um are extremely lucrative um so so there's that angle to IT. And it's resulted in the emergence of trends within these kinds of burglaries um called flogged or judging or knock knock burglaries or follow home burglaries and basically IT you know flocking is a term that refers you um penetrating like a safe neighborhood, blending in to that neighborhood, targeting a particular person that they're perhaps um um uh I through social media identified as potential wealthy and then going on missions into these neighbors ods um to to rob them, tight up home invasions, whatever um but what's quite interesting is that there are some gangs um that have become so good at IT that they now actually act as consultants to other gangs to teach them how to flock so what does that .
look like from the victim's perspective?
Well IT could look like getting tied up. IT could look like you you're on home and everything you come home and everything is gone um a knocking knock burglary is just like what that sounds like. Criminals will not not on the door if someone's home maybe they don't proceed with the with the crime but sometimes they do um and I can say a story that I heard really, truly shocked me IT took place also in sa Monica um which is where i'm from um that there was a case of A A single woman in her home is in a nice part of antimony a and these two guys gangsters attempt to knock knock on her and they breach the door and her dogs attack these guys so badly that they uh the the also vocation moves into the street and they are wounded by the dogs he calls the police. Police show up and the gangsters claim that their dogs attacked them them and the cops called animal control and a SHE moved up to texas after that.
That's crazy. But it's also a kind of in miniature the bigger problem, which is in california, the status on the side of the criminal against .
the so if I if I can turn IT you like a personal um about a year ago um my home and ana Monica um which it's an influence neighbor od but like my house is for sure that the most haiti on on a block is spending my family through my great grandparents um my brother I live there and on IT and um in september last year we were subject to um two home invasion robberies in a row.
Although I should say technically these are what's called a hot crowd berteri which means that residents are in the in the property when the burglary takes place but don't necessary confront the burglar if if they confront them. It's like a home invasion. So there's a little distinction. Wait, there were someone home when the my brother, I were home asleep in the house when when the berlin came in and uh through a brazing through know and we were kind of native because we thought kelp sanoma is great place in the world, right?
So like we had um a alarm system was not was not like on and the back you back paddy o doors on lock so how he knew that I don't know um but he was a willet house you know there's there's houses on either side science indicating like alarm system um and yet they did not stop him and so we woke up the next day um and my brother was in the main house. We have a little casa um converted garage where I happen to be um during when this took place and I came into the house and uh the door backstories whie open and I went up to my room and my tire room was destroyed every every valuable item i've ever read of my life was taken analyze from my grandparents, guess from my parents for graduation um really just like really in like token memories you know and so was pretty devastating and we call the police and mark police. They showed up twelve hours later um they said that when they finally came, the delay was due to the fact that they're dealing with so many homeless overdoses so um they just for Franker prince and say, yeah this is gonna this is a serious crime and we will take this seriously and don't worry.
Well, the next night, that happens again. The next night, the next, yeah, the next night, he dismantles a window in our dining room, which is also my office. And he he took whatever was left IT was nothing through something left. He can, I mean, the guy would steal things like easter eggs, like sunglasses, like a letter opener um in addition to really valuable stuff um and I believe he came back a third night um because um I saw car um lurking in middle of the night outside of our house and I saw figure in this vehicle that ultimately matched the description of of the perpetrator who was caught um about a about a month later and the story behind this is I think really quite interesting and was the reason and why I undertook the research that i've done because the guy who did this to us was an illegal alien, a dreams are actually an M S. Thirteen ganging member with A A convicted who had done seven years in prison in kelvin, say prison for violent crimes.
He was deported by trump administration homeland security immediately after after getting out of prison in fact, he notes, I read the whole police report of this um in the course of like my trying to understand what took place and it's it's funny he comments to the to the comp during his arrogation that as soon as he was released from a state prison, ice immediately picked him up and deported him backtags soba or immediately and while he was in our salvador he had his ms. Thirteen face tattoo removed and he was in our salvor for Better year so and then went back then travels of france but for some whatever reason the guy had a his day job was as a carpenter um and actually is primary language is english so I guess we can be thankful for that. Um thank you lenny gram and the dream act um but he he sinks back into the U S.
In twenty twenty one under during the biden wave of of migration and he proceed to go on a rampage. He did he does have a kid too at this time so we know have A U S. Citizen um to deal with uh and um he he rob a dozen houses in the same manner all over l county but also in ventura county he robs the home of a judge a very like well respect of a criminal judge who presided over the Michael Jackson death trial um it's funny the police report notes that he took the judges small risk a sacer watch um and just like the guy would took anything and everything he took I saw the police reports and he was taking wedding rings he took a catholic rosy box like there was nothing that was above limits he again like he saw memories from people and he did so carelessly and with impunity and he was eventually a arrested. In a semi valley, which is in venture account, which is tougher on crime overall than an l county, but not by much. And when he was arrested um by a joint task force um in the meal of the day, he was in his vehicle with his wife and child in the back seat um the police found on him alloted a stolen kimber hand gun with hole point bullets uh they found body armor which by the way is a federal crime because he's a convicted felon you cannot have body armor convicted files of federal crime they found strange things like a bachelor's degree diploma from armenia um currency, foreign currency um nize like he went on and on on and like he was clearly clearly a violent person and when he was brought into interrogation the officer assigned to him started by saying, thank you for not opening fire on us we really appreciate that and he said, don't thank me because I was planning on killing you and for sure going eric s on you whatever that means and taking my last stand had IT not been for the fact that my wife and kids were in the car because he said. I'm never going back to jail so fast forward to his a his arrangement h inventive accounting um he's convicted on one count of one of these charges and maybe two but in any event he sentence to two years in jail in a three hundred fine and who probably served less than than three hundred and five .
yeah did you get any of your stolen goods bed?
No no. The way I was notified was because he had my a my driver's licence in credit cards um and so um is part of the investigation they called all the other victims. They also relate this information to sana onic police sana onic police spite the fact that they had a president team come in and swab and take this really seriously like csi style stuff.
Um the assigned detective on my case has still a year more more than year later, not even IT called me or attempted to interview me. They have no interest, and I followed up many, many, many times. They just don't care. They don't care because there's no incentive care because these crimes are considered property crimes in los angles county.
Even though you are a sleep in your home in the sky with the history of violence enters your home with you in IT.
And if if my brother had been awake and woke up, I think there's a high chance of a violent interaction and that would have taken place. I am sure he has had a had a gun or weapon on him when he did this. There's no there's absence no reason to doubt that so it's a miracle actually that that were okay um but I was so shocked by by what happened.
And of course after the second night you just lose sense of like reality. Like how is this happening? Like this is M M M I being targeted? Like and the capture had no explanation for this.
Um I think that the sky thought we were an easy mark because he was an old house. They're still a hand cap. Parking sign in front of the house is from my grandparents time.
So he probably presumed there were old people living in the house and predators go for the week. And so I in an attempt to try and like intellectualize and frame this experience, which still haunts us to this day. I mean, you never feel quite the same in the home, you know. And that's a terrible thing when like a home that's been in your family for almost like four generations is stained and violated, it's almost feels like an assault, like a sexual assault, even like it's it's a very, very strange feeling. I mean, burglary is got you and and it's made all the worse by the fact that victims are revictual ze by the justice system in california.
And so as I started to talk to um prosecutors and law enforcement agent and law enforcement officers about how this could have happened, what is going on in the state? Is this common? Like how could he be common? I spoke to very, very well respected victim's rights advocate and veteran deputy district attorney for L.
A. County, a liberal, by the way, am cataline kd. In the course of my interview and retelling the story, SHE said, was so important about your story is that it's so reliable and I said, related, able, like, how is this in any way relatable that an M S.
Thirteen gang member, convicted felon, trem illegal alien could break into your house brazenly two nights in a row, probably armed, threatened to kill police officers um and get two years in prison and this is readable. So if that is the case, then the system is fundamentally broken. And in fact, I would go so far as to say that the entire look civilization is based around the social contract. And the the tenants of the social contract is that we said we we surrender certain freedoms to the government, to the state, which is supposed to have a monopoly on violence. And the state, in turn provides protection to us from the anarch state of nature, as hobbs .
put IT. So right, and not just in turn, but in exchange in safety and piece of mind, in exchange for our money and some of our autonomy.
exactly. And and when in that contract has been breached and broken in california. So at that point is just it's just, well, gates, the entire legitimacy of the government, that's exact.
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So let me just now maybe a time to ask a question about like just the change in who lives in california. So I lived in a as a kid. I think IT was overwhelmingly White, the city and now it's overwhelmingly non White that some racist statement to acknowledge the fact and uh is taken by the depart of census every ten years and it's a massive change, is an incredibly abrupt change.
In fact it's a bigger change. And probably any civilization um ever in history has experienced accept ing war, accepting invasion. So like what is that a meaningful fact and how that happened? Well.
i'll give you a statistic. In the L A L A school district, L A USD, one hundred ninety five thousand students are english learners. There's ninety languages officially spoken in L, U, S D. Twenty seven percent of california is foreign borne .
of the whole st. Twenty seven percent .
of the interest is foreign born. Mind you, that doesn't mean like chino per generation, which ads probably makes a majority at that point in one nine hundred and ninety IT was twenty percent, which is still high um that was very much in because of the of the rag an amnesty from the eighty, eighty, eighty six but today it's twenty seven percent and the national average I think is like thirteen percent going that maybe .
maybe a little higher much are .
now much hard is the illegal but california is by far um has the greatest foreign you know presence in the in the state and I think that um you know the reason for this is that we how long ago you know and long before these laws that i'm been discussing and we're discussed, enacted policies that incentivised illegal alliance to come into the state because they would get uh welfare benefits.
They would get um basically right more rights than the citizens in fact I will tell you the junior prosecutions I talk to um for this for this this research say that under George gas on and and this also is applied to um other you know other jurors actions, including actually under kalas um policies. But in eley, uh. Illegal alien who commit certain crimes are given special plea deals that would never, ever, ever be given to A U. S. Citizens for the specific 的 purpose of protecting them from ice。 So to me, that's a due process violation.
So I do think anybody who advocates for not just illegal migration or mass immigration, but any immigration of any kind has to account first for california. yes. So here's the state in which has been tried to the greatest possible extent.
And IT went from the best date to the worst state. Maybe you could say immigration and nothing to do with that, but you can't say immigration didn't change california. And the fact is california is becoming much worse place to live in. The immigration numbers from california .
prove that six million have left california last ten years.
okay?
So these only seven million billion dollars in revenue. The says, so these .
are not like opinions. These this is not, you know, crazed right wing of ideology. These these are just numbers about our biggest, the most important state, the bigger economy, the united.
So or what part that also tucker is the d industrializing of california .
for sure there are lots of factors. And just saying, if immigration is good, how about you explain before you impose .
any more of IT on me? Of course california is is a warning um not just to the nation but to civilization.
And what's the warning?
The warning is that all garci. Is always at your doorstep and in reach. And if it's not vigilant, guarded against, IT will consume you. IT will terrorize you. IT will control every aspect of your life and reduce you to a state of misery.
Because california has now stratified between into something that you, I think, feature day is handsome, is very eloquently discussed, that over the years, which is the california has actually regressed into some kind of political economy that is reflecting neo util ism, even where where you have a very small, extremely rich, the the most powerful super rich in the world and an underclass of surf and middle class have left and are leaving more and more cost of living. Other reasons the industrialized um get out the the overall disintegration of the of the state which the elites are uh insulated from. Of course they have private security, of course, and and private schools are touters everything. And so the aristocracy rules the state. And yet in california, because languages is manipulated in almost a welling in fashion, oligarch has become to mean progressive yeah or court democracy.
or democracy, I guess what? And I, for the Victor, say that thing. And i've not at along, as he said, IT and not to be picking about IT, but if I could just defend feudalism against what we singing in california right now, the idea of feudalism, while repugnant to the american mind and my mind, was still based on mutual need.
The guy who owned the property of the lord of, you know, of the manner, uh, was dependent upon his service as they were dependent upon him. I mean, there was a sympathetic relationship. So if the surf died, he became impoverish.
Well, the synthetic tic relationship here is that the service provide electoral hegemony for sure.
But I guess what i'm saying is, over time, a federal family had a built in incentive to, at the bare minimum, make sure that their service weren't dying a fant ology. o. Erez, I don't see that happening in california. Doesn't they have no skin .
in the twenty twenty two to twenty twenty three, there are one thousand four hundred fancy over death, the highest in the country in california, california.
So um yeah I guess they don't. Maybe to put a final point on IT to people who wears the the lord and photos m needed the labor of the surfs. The lords of california do not need the labor .
because the industries are service instant es or their tech. And they require a very, very small number of people to exactly right. And that's part of the industrializing animalization of the state that uh which provided for middle class jobs and opportunity that is increasingly fleeting um and fleeting in in the state um and especially in southern california. And um as a result of that, especially the accidents of airspace defense industries from the state, um we have uh you know republican voters have left and l county, which used to be a republican strong old yeah became a blue strong old and at that point california became a one party state and one party states are are characterised by corruption yes, inefficiency, psychosis I would argue um and uh all sorts of areas and ultimately IT is the antithesis of democracy and of course that is exactly what um these people claim that they're defending democracy.
Examination yeah no the ironies are manifold. Back at one moment, I never thought about that. So you said one party states about corruption, of course, inefficiency, all true psychosis yeah what do you say that?
Well I think because of the laws that we have seen put into a fact the laws were so obviously going to um engender criminality yeah across the state yeah right it's like in law, in torts we the idea of negligence is the foreseeable ly of harm right and that is what really triggers a liability.
You knew this could happen, but you let .
to happen anyway and so the so california's government and and Frankly uneducated voters have inflicted a greevy taught upon the state. And I think that IT is so reckless that to me IT is psychotic. IT is a form of psychotic, sociopathic behavior. And certainly many of the people implementing these policies are raving psychopaths.
A A A uh really impressive um Young uh deputy district ney, an enemy to county, said to me with respect to the um kind of progressive A D A of that of that county name pella Price, that she's quote a raging psychopath who wants to burn down civilization and I will tell you that every prosecutor that I spoke to and I spoke to ten over the course of thirty hours of interviews um and I also spoke to equal number of cops but the one commonality that that every single prosecution I talk you mention was that there seems to be a motivation by the true believer s of burning the system down. They are Jacobeans. They are radical anarchists. They want to hurt you. They want to kill you.
I mean, i'm going right to the spiritual explanation for that. But is there another like what what could motivate that?
I mean, look, if you're asking, I mean, of course, like personal power, right? So like George gascon is not party. It's been told to me by people who would know him that he's not particularly ideological. He was a, he was a, he was a lousy lpd cop that apparently he was everyone hated he moved to arizona um at some point got a loss a lot agree and a created an una credit at law school um and through the you know the machinations of as of the one party state, which of course elevate people based entirely on you. Has this identity checkmark been met or not? Like comment as the avatar of that but he ends up as a district torney y uh M S go and pointed by aviation and my succeeding comalong Harris and he follows the money um see a cooly pusses very eloquently. He follows the money, the source money down to L A to to run for for a district tourney in twenty twenty and I just so happened that um you know this was the the perfect ripe opportunity given the riots of the George floyd incident um and the mood of the nation at the time, particular california, when the most radical policies and people could um rise to positions that was otherwise on imaginable um gas on has has absolutely designated lost Angeles he is stacked uh his office with public defenders um he has he has put in directive the first day of of of his tenure that include course no cash bail no enhancement s no no juvenile tried in adult court um obviously death penalty um and he he has also there's this is particularly in city is there is a parole committee called jays what I forget exactly what that stands for but basically it's an opportunity for um victims uh to appear uh with their a offenders um who are up properly and to make a statement I want and then this committee decide um on whether not to grant perl um and under gas gone prosecutors who typically would would accompany these victims for this you Frankly in an ordeal they know seeing your purpose your again is in a rape case you can imagine what a trauma that is well gas kon said prosecutions no longer ladder company victims and in fact what they are now the victims are now cards due is to write a persuasive essay submitted to the committee and the committee is stacked entirely of public defenders come on seriously.
It's tek. Can I ask something that of courses you're speaking up as come to? Um you've said that all organized criminal activity in the state, california is run in effect by the mexican drug car tels through prisons and i've heard people mention that before.
So what is assume that's true? Sounds like IT is true. Use short book IT. How could guess could not know that I mean.
gas on it's not to where gas one knows of anything.
but i'm just singing in places where the where drug cartels run things, which is a lot of that america, they also run the politics.
So let me pretty this way even more maybe. Relevant to the time that we're in. I would say how to come on a harison at that because commonly haris is as as a torney general of california in two thousand twelve under the auspices es of so called budget cutting, budget reform eliminated a one hundred year old agency called the bureau of neurotic enforcement. And IT is widely to held amongst law enforcement officers and and on the prosecution side, that this was a very important task force for fighting organized crime, had been doing so since prohibition and then became a major force in disrupting our codex straight in the state SHE d deponed IT.
Because she's for arctics. SHE wants a drugged with population.
The opener, she's told.
But i'm just saying, like kay, this drug card tells her powerful because they are ruthless. They're a called based on wood craft, but they're also really rich. Of course.
there they are.
fortune five hundred company, exactly. So at some point, like in mexico, there in control still because they paid off all the politicians. Well, is that happening in california?
T it's not clear to me whether that that's happening to the same. I'm certainly um as expressed by tom home and when I work to am um you know he says that you it's very hard often to distinguish the mexican elites from the mexican drug products like this is a there is an interwoven of nexus yeah um and of course like in parts of mexico, the cartels exert actual like authority and governance over certain region in this matter you have right example um but it's it's not really clear to me if they are influencing politicians know through uh you drift or or or through bribes or anything. I'm not clear on that.
Yes I if not I just .
I want tell you that a director of the L P D. Union said to me that um the cartels are increasingly committing ransom attacks in sani o um of hyper file families and this is not getting reported kid kidnapping .
as is so common and let him .
exactly yeah they take him across the border and so special like security forces made up of x um seals and what not have to go into mexico and extract them. This is now apparently rampant.
insane, but IT shouldn't surprise that's effect .
of life in mexico. I think human trafficking is also a very like serious problem in the state um in IT.
It's of course more lucrative in some ways than the drugs because they can be used as over and over over again as sexy right? So it's like it's like a occurring revenue stream, although fans and all should not be um under my under a underplayed anyway file produces like two hundred thousand percent margin yeah and finally, according to the one of the top ganging enforcement detectives in l county, best of content, especial forces guy, black guy, incredible man. He said to me, fenton, it's so ubiquity.
It's like salt. And if you buy a pill off the street, IT has fans all in IT. And that's why, you know, in fact, it's so deadly and so dangerous that even the cartels are thinking that maybe we need to come up with something not quite as lethal because we're killing our customers.
Since you mentioned content. So content was the largest black population west of the mississippi since the second war. But I was just there.
It's spanish speaking. So you've had, you know the black population of huge parts of L A. Moved east in the inland, murdered in huge numbers by newcomer's. And i've never heard in maxim water supposedly represents competent SHE isn't with there.
But i've never heard a single black politician in california mentioned the fact that illegal immigration has like completely overturned life from a lot of black people in california. And not one time i've heard anybody say that. why? What about your corrupt pigs?
Yeah I mean, obviously, but I I think it's I think it's due the fact that the power is now the locus of power is with the newcomer's. Of course.
I just put so it's not in their interest .
ever common these things.
but if your job is to represent your your constituent or your people.
democrats ever represented black people.
fair, fair. I know it's just it's like shocking this could happen and everyone's watching and where people are paying attention or seeing IT as well. If you're from california equal, this is very different that from what I was ten years ago .
and nobody says a word, you know, it's interesting. So in in prison, the prison system, the the black gangs, every, it's all obviously racist secreted. But the black gang is called the black gilla family and gun.
According to this, a gang enforcement specialist that I spoke to, he said, like, well, for the mexicans, it's about money, money in power. For the back gilla family, their enemies is the government, and like their political. And I thought, we have all, at least they have need those great.
It's just interest to, you know, california state prisons are totally, in fact, they were ordered desegregated at one point. And then the prisoners complained. The black prisoners complained because people, the same way they were getting killed. You.
I mean, look, the fact that this sort of level of criminality can exist within the prisons, it's such an entitlement of of the system overall. I mean, it's it's a joke. And in fact all these cops, I talk to say the gangsters laugh at us. They have no fear of us that do not fear the state.
Then how are the prison guards, the highest paid state employees in california?
Because public sector unions have enormous power and screen .
o what I mean, if I think that that was always true, prison guard are always the highest paid. I mean, the dangerous job. I I agree, i'm not I know prison guards. I've always like them. But on the other hand, if your job is to guard the prison and you're getting paid more than anybody else working for the state in california and the gangs run the prisons and that like there's something wrong with that.
Look, obviously there's enormous corruption such that phones are smuggled in, a communication network obviously exists because how are you able to manage a criminal empire from within jail? How are you able to order executions and hit within jail? Um so there is purest, but I think the bigger issue ultimately and this is why don't think it's the prison guards fault, the state's fault.
We the gangsters do not fear the law. They do not fear the law and they they commit crimes with impunity. There are committee increasingly gun crimes with with importunity because gun enhancements, as we talked about, no longer apply in many cases. So gun violence has gone way up like number of I think gun victims in the last three years has shot up in l cy like sixty three percent um you've got very strict .
gun control and exactly right.
So how hard is IT for you?
Don't and get in careful nia.
So I don't learn gun um I I should at this point but um uh I I understand like it's it's quite you know A A difficult process um and a lot of that the guns that the criminals are using us or stolen, they're not like going to you know a sports shop.
Ari, get a twelve gage for like four hundred box mosby g but like we thought about that.
I mean i'd love like one of your like beautiful hunting rifle.
Better off with the twelve is hard to miss and close quarter. Yes, yeah, easy to Operate.
Know, actually they say the government say the best defense against these kinds of crimes. As a, as a big dog, I have a cat.
Yeah, I think, I think the cops lie a lot about guns with respect. Acs, they don't want any competition. They want to the only armed people.
This, the competition and .
very well of the cops tend in general to be against an citizens. Um I like cops. I was defending cops. But on this one question, you know, there are employees, they can keep their dum opinions about guns to themselves for as I am and you have a right to have a gun and and I I have a lot of dogs. I love dogs, but a twelve gages more effective than a dog i'm .
just telling you for sure yeah for sure. Um I will tell you, you know on the copy issue um another factor of the story is the erosion of the quality of cops.
yes. So what about that?
Who'd d be a copy? And a well, right now we're recruiting dca. Um no illegal aliens into the L P D. Actually yes, there's been five so far and um a scandal actually legal aliens yeah they're not allowed to own firearms, right? They cannot have a firearms uh when they're .
off duty you have illegal alien cops.
yes.
So if we import seven million military age men in united states illegally, which the body administration has done, IT does raise the obvious question. What is this? Is this a mercenary army for the ruling class? IT certainly seems like one. And if they're making .
them cops and kind me, tell you a story that's not been reported uh is a cover up and IT was conveyed to me by a senior director um of the L A P D union called the L A police protective league and this is also a twenty five plus year veteran of the L P D and detective. Both his daughters are in the lapd is like he he is as plugged into this world as anyone. In fact, he said to me in in our interview, he is I tell everyone, don't come to L A.
We cannot protect you. But on the darker issue um parenting february of yeah this last february um a off duty L P D attack encountered two members of the sereno gang is a very violent, powerful lino gang in the california uh they were attempting to um uh robots steals car, so there was an exchange of gunfire and the gangsters got away in their getaway car. They were they were apprehended the next day and IT turns out that the car was registered to a docker cadet in the L A P D. And the L P D quietly shuffled her either out of the program or just covered IT up entirely. But the only time is the report on .
the synthetic. So they're hiring illegal female, illegal alien .
with with so at .
that point is just the I mean, it's not a legitimate cut. I mean, at that point, you're just like you're begging to be overthrown course, right? For they have no legitimate PS aren't .
critically ly finding alternative revenue streams of becoming private security officers for the allied. And a lot of the officers that I told you are doing that because it's so lucrative. California has the highest pay rates for for private security and the high demand for private security in the nation. And in fact, like i'll just tell you, and it's this is a difficult thing to substantiate um for a very vary reasons.
But I think it's it's interesting, which is that I heard from this this loni share of former like major crime spiral lead and now in private security that he he believe IT was quite you know well known but quietly known in in secure pride current industry that George us or his proxies were investing significantly in private security businesses. This was also confirmed to me by a former head of federal security for alex and one of the top traders on wall street. So you know again, georgius is portfolio um and transactions are our private.
It's a family office. We really don't know where the investments are going um but I think it's it's quite it's quite a striking to think that there may be other incentives beyond simply undermining the law for some kind of sake of meanwhile creating a new a new world, a destoyer, of course. But nevertheless, I don't think a trader, a financial trader, maybe one of the greatest in the world, stops becoming a trader right now.
The worst of money is a disease and it's yeah so because you go back just couple minutes, said that commonly hairs dismantled the anti arcos s task force that had been around since prohibition. I'm wondering though he has bragging publicly about dismantling the cartels that doesn't seem like the behavior .
someone who's D I dismantle car tells I I just explain that the car tells around the and SHE .
says that I mean, there's no truth in that at all.
There's no truth in anything is he says, I mean, he is a SHE is the avatar AR of moral bankrupt y that represents the states, california. So superficial, stupid, sociopathic. And I will tell you, everyone that I know who democrats who have worked with her, including like a very lead consulting firm that tried to manage your campaign one point, they say that SHE is lazy. Steve cool also says that, by the way, he is a lazy prosecute and SHE is vicious.
And when SHE doesn't do her homework and gets a caught in word salad because he doesn't know what she's talking about, SHE then lashes out on her staff so she's kind of like a even dummer version of Hillary clinton um and um I think fortunately like she's so inapt that the country is starting to see that I pretty a god because if if commoter rs rises to the level of the presidency, we now have basically exported california, nh, nationwide. And and and as I told you, this name of my book, IT, is called failed state, a portrait of california in the twilight of empire. I can't .
think of a SATA title or more accurate one. And I just refer back to my own childhood in that state. Mean, the distressing thing is just not like wrecking.
Know what you mean? I think of a couple states that, you know, whatever. Who cares? Kelvin was the greatest place on planet ter course.
Yes, so, but you know, it's intel. SHE actually did go after you know, drug crimes, but he went after people who were smoking weed. Yeah, the easy ones, the easy ones, right? A lot of black people.
yeah but he did not go after the cartels bringing in the drugs for something now so um let's talk for minute about who runs california are from selling california m as a most my um which was by far the most dynamic prospers part of the state by far ero space. You had some egg, obviously tourism. And then you had the creative industries, the moving business, the record business will take quarter there. It's all gone except the egg here. Um but that's not the part of the state that runs everything.
No no. And IT hasn't for some time. Um we haven't really had a true republican governor uh since like the midd nineties with pete Wilson.
Yes, pete Wilson put forward A A very, very famous proposition called one eighty seven just vote supported by voters by over sixty percent. And IT effectively was to um restrict any sort of social services except like non emergency. So we so. Allows that um to illegal aliens and um you can't reward people .
who are here illegally with your money.
So right? exactly. So we went from that to let's say A I think a month or so ago this the legislature put forward a bill that would give illegal aliens preferential mortgages, gave them to his credit.
vetoed that my forenent al mortgage.
they were very sweet, hard deals.
Like, can I just say, because I can contain my resentment. So ever since prop one eighty seven past, and that was invalidated by a judge, because it's a democracy where some judge gets to override to the people. Um it's also fake.
But ever since then, a certain kind of republic ican consultation that would be the dumas people i've ever met. And i'm speaking specifically of Frank Lance, that guy with the hair piece. But there could be many others.
They've lectured republicans about how one eighty seven lost california was a republican that is such a lie, but it's a republican state in prop one eighty seven which deny welfare benefits to illegal aliens. That was hate. That was racist republican consoles and guys like mmc and all the dumb people. The party bought that well.
And of course, because they're funded by the coke brothers and the coke brothers want to bring in cheap illegal alien labour yeah simply is that I mean, I think was london said that the the capitalist will sell you the rope that will use to hang .
you of course that's right. So sorry, I just can't .
but but back I get how reasonable that is. It's not oh, it's beyond reasonable. And california, you should be a reasonable, safe, secure state with really tough laws that put gangs ers away and following, uh, the three strikes law and other reforms that came at the late nineties and into the early two thousands between two thousand and two thousand ten, roughly IT was a pretty damn good place like Steve coolly and laws Angeles, you cleaned up a lot of the mass even his predecessor jacket lacy did did a lot of a good job.
Although SHE was chased out of office by B L, and she's black, SHE was chased out of office by an literally harasser home by B, L, M. Activist because he was not um in line with their anti police, uh anti incarceration agenda enough. Um and um so we then have George gas gone ah who received two million dollars from George.
Sorry, that was enough IT was uh for A D A race that actually was extraordinary amount of money. Um it's interesting because so as played money ball with a these da races is all over the country because he realized that the district attorneys have enormous power because they can set policy about what crimes you're going to be prosecuted, which are not um some of these other directives that I mentioned earlier about cash pail and so forth. Although George source is actively, I excuse me, a georgia zone is actively in violation of state law and just Operates you know none the less um but so is understood that with a few million box you could change A D A race is why would .
you want IT? Why would so as foreigners a and from hungry not from here? Why would you want to reach someone else? This country I don't understand .
that source D S have jurisdiction over like seventy five million americans like it's what's .
the motive? Like why would you want your gear series? You grow and were torn europe.
Then you go to england. You help destroy their economy, right? Which he did. And then you come. The united states was just like in the nicest country, the history of the world. And you decide you want to take your ill gotten gains and use those funds to rect someone else's country. Like what is what's the motive here?
I talk to a lot of people about this. And you know, initially, again, I didn't want to even go down the sorrows, you know rabbit hall because I you're not allowed you're not allow but also like it's .
cliche but .
but the fact is that it's real it's real. And um IT beggs the question of why is IT simply he is a an arctic anarchist. Is he a financial terrorist? I would say yes, but what is the motivation? I I I think again, you know IT, I do not believe A A world class arb arbitrator, trader ever kind of leaves that minds that there's always it's always money that motivate。 So I think IT is again, this is entirely speculation.
But I would be very interested to see what is the portfolio of the family office for us is IT realist because certainly the crimes um uh surge in cities like seven ago and los Angeles have depressed realize in these downtown districts by twenty five percent at least and insurance premiums have gone way up. So is is a trade there? Maybe I don't know, but as I said, um there's you know there's people that I I trust and who would be in a position to know that indicate that term is potentially other motivating factors, at least with respect to soros. So that being said, you know.
it's just crazy how little defense the states like we don't have moral defenses we build this amazing thing, amazing, great things ever been built by any people in all of history. And then a few, I don't know, evil figures like sorrow role in and we're totally people saying, hey, former, go away. In order to do that, you can do that to us.
And but we like execute you. If you try to do that, I mean, Normal society would say, you know, we built this. You can't racket but were .
totally Normal society would have given the kind of violent criminals that are endemic in california and that run prisons right and commit murders in prison, literally against guards, even a Normal prison, I think would have um capital punishment applied to these prisoners, you know, in the prisons yard hanging right something. Whatever IT takes to bring fear of the law and of the state, to those who fear only the justice of the mexican mafia, that that is who they fear when they go to prison. It's not the state.
it's a joe. The mexican mov is the state then fact in fact, I find a word if if .
IT is actually yeah yeah they are the final Alberts. Yeah they are the final Alberts.
So then they are above the state.
Yeah, there.
Um so i'm sorry, keep in erupting you just because it's that's an emotional subject think it's really.
really it's it's really, really upset to live there yeah is deeply upsetting to see your home vandalized and you just literally my home but just my hometown yeah but you're .
saying that los Angeles is not where the decisions are made, where the .
decisions the decisions the locus of power in california is centers around a very elite ite um and small mile in safran. Csco largely run an area called the ifc heights let's .
from from alright, alright so that's funny service vil well and a pretty neighborhood.
Well this co is more of most beautiful cities in the world. Used to be um you know like much of california in any event, the olive archi uh that has been really in in place for almost one hundred years, starting with the getty's involvement um with a the newser family and the news's family involvement with Jerry Brown, goes back to the thousand nine hundred and four and fifties and um the science of each of these uh these dinosaurs all intermarried they were into business together Gavin newsom e's first big kind of you entrance into the scene was forming a restaurant group called plump jack which was receded by the getty family and was also cofounded with A A Billy getty who is the song of gordon getty who is the sound of jay poo eeta um and h the edges have funded gave s entire political career theyve made that possible um in the the the winter and restaurant group the success of that became a launching board into disco city politics um I think he was on the door supervisors then became mir um and but always there was this this a commonality and um nex between polis family policies husband the getty es um the Browns and the newsom's so they are the old money elite that have been running the state for honor off since one nine hundred and forties.
I mean, of course there had been in republican governors or there IT used to be, as we've talked about, like um uh a sort moderate state, mean sometimes voted democrats, sometimes very republican, usually a voted for republican. Can the president joke cannot last one was George H. W bush but um you know the the the accumulation of power among this circle really took hold after these changes that we've talked about in southern cca formia, the d industrializing of southern cca forna, the the exodus of at least six million um middle class californians in the last decade and um and the and airspace and defense leaving leaving something california.
So L A then became a democrat, a stronghold when I was once republican stronghold, and power shifted to san Francisco. And the other reason powerful 3 forces go is because of the presence of tech, big tech. Big tech is the new money and the new money uh interviews with the old money through VC investments and private placements and other sorts of um you kind of social circles and the bohemian growth like you name IT. And um so we then have a power structure of an industry that that is made up a very few people, a lot of foreign, by the way, um of course and um the these kind of dynastic, almost like ancient aristocrats in there in the manner of patron client relationships that define um um this paradise and and they have you formed in enormous uh let's a power block um with tech and and through that um connection, california has been ruled by this oligarchy.
But it's just weird in the physical effects I mean, my mom so I got to california, the eighteen fifties from maine to find their unfortunate. They did. And i've had gone there. My whole life was born there.
And I was, Peter, I thought, a nice city, liberal in some ways, very traditional in other ways, but kind of the same, like the city that saw the least amount of change. And then after during the tech boom, ninety nine, ninety, ninety nine, all this money came in, not just the south bay, yeah, we named silicon valley, but into the city, particularly after two thousand. And I thought, well, okay, someone just was really rich now, yeah, it'll get Better, right? Was pretty nice.
I thought you will get Better. The richer the city got, the dirty got, the more dangerous I got, the more chaotically became, yeah, the money made IT way poor. yes.
What is that paradox? And it's very interesting. Well.
it's bizarre. When twitter moved, its all tech was against south of the city. But then when the technical started moving into city, I oh this beautiful city, it's our key town. And then I became like, such a rich city, Richard city in the nine states, IT instantly became dirty. Well.
what is that? That this is happening in southern california too so in venice, california google has has established a big office and Venus is um marred by uh just tragic levels of homelessness um that are shocking, shocking and sites that I had only seen when travelling like to know the poorest parts of automobile um maybe worse in some ways but right around the corner from the google office in Venus is a um let's call IT a shanty town of fadell a even maybe but ten after tent after tent and right next to google it's a fascine dichotomy and I was told by someone who would know in the private security sector, in a former former cop, that he has observed because he has done work for google, that gang members, local gangs, extract tribute from each homeless tent every single day, twenty to fifty dollars a day and this is happening he claimed across the city there's seventy five thousand homeless in los Angeles and if they cannot meet the tribute they are forced to sell drugs or other crimes and by the way um thanks to I believe this was a newsome policy cops require have to get search warnings to enter any tense the tense to become denizen of of dense rather of murder of rape of drug the worst kind of drug trade um and other forms of the privity that shocked the senses and it's right next to google so I I don't know I think .
obviously i'm too simple .
to understand .
the role but I always thought problem was poverty and that people committed crimes because they were poor and the richer your society became. The safer more earlier became but the exact opposite has been true and IT makes you wonder, like is there some evil emanating from these tech companies? Answer obviously yes that inspires chaos to private crime, violence and fill.
Well I I think that the answer is is also a economic because tech is not based upon um employing vast numbers of people is right. It's not productive labor, of course. No, I get IT. I mean like becomes the economic power in the state and and manufacturing leaves the state and there's where the where where do people where are the poor, poor working .
class .
people turns? Okay, here's the .
housing crisis is I IT drops the value of .
labor to zero for the rich people. Just play your point about what is getting richer and yet worse yeah it's getting richer. Uh, and but the areas where the rich people live, like athena looking real ized these days.
I was just atherton athons great. Ethernet mellows great. Their pockets of I think males still is great that is um it's so far away no that um IT can be great but but I wonder if the city of sin cisco though is such a great example of the failure of leadership and the failure of the ruling class to be vested in the society from which they're taking their riches.
In a Normal society. The rich people would say, hey, I live here. My kids live. You can do that, should get off the sidewalk. We're going to pay.
We're going to make the same scope department the most efficient and highly endorsed partment in the world. No crime. The saudi's did that. why? Why don't the tech parent?
Well, because we've became a one party state, right? So when Steve cool was da of los Angeles, uh, you know, he was not about politics. In fact, he says the the the drop of A D, A is not to of bring politics into the into the administration of justice IT is to go after bad guys and prospect bad guys and send the way and make .
the city safer yeah using in fact.
at a local you know, this was also the case even in samaria, isco, back in like the two thousands in the predecessor of kala HEllen, who terrene yeah right and he is a liberal, but also like one with A A sense of like duty to do the job. But I think what happened is sometime around like again around the two thousand eight two thousands when Gavin newsome and mohair really came into into their um and to their to their power structures um and in especially around six o IT became not about let's make this city Better, let's make this safer. It's about how do I get my next promotion.
You know, term limits in california, which I supported, we're supposed to fix all this, and they seem to admit worse. Do you understand? Again, this is one of those paradoxes that I don't fully understand. I just noticed.
I don't know. I mean, they didn't work. I think we could say that, right? I mean, clearly it's clearly some .
things not work right again. Yeah, could remember that maybe you don't remember, but maybe too Young. But like trim is came in california.
You are like, okay, this is going to make legislators much more responsive. They can live forever in these dumb jobs. But IT seems like they have live forever in these dumb jobs. So i've just trade IT up jobs, keep moving around you.
I ve also heard it's compared to like the fact that we have a full time legislative vers, that as a part time legislator and that as a moderating effect. And I think that's like a good analog for comparison. I mean, saren o is out of control um with their supermajority ties.
Democrats supermajorities in both houses. There's not a single republican at any any administrative um the officer level position in the state. I think the last one was maybe insurance commission er right and there are no .
state wide republican thread.
Love soldiers that's right. Yeah there have been for .
years and the minor republic, an minority is so small in the body that there and .
and our republicans are weak. I mean, meg whitman was pathetic. SHE ran. SHE spent one hundred and fifty million dollars of her own money to run for governor in twenty ten. And SHE lost overwhelmingly to Jerry Brown.
Yeah, I went to a, went to a house, an action speaking of afro at that time. Um what is that? You would think that the republican of soldiers in the state, the few who remain, would be even clear, IDE and more resolute. But they seem even more cked.
Yes, I would say I would say so I mean the california republican ty basic doesn't exist if you want to run as as as you cannot run as we're republican. I mean for instance, the uh ricossia ran for a man uh recently um he was in a well known republican but he had to against and um he switched to the democrats a party of facilitate the one to give him a chance still lost um and there's caring about been .
a pretty great mayor I .
mean this the board of supervisors in L A. Have know a lot more power in some ways um than the um then then the mir itself um you know it's kind it's the mayor. Los Angels is not have the power of like the mere of new york city um but you know I mean Karen bass did what SHE SHE has done the job he was task for which is to have a black woman as mayor and fulfilling identity politics um quarto in my opinion .
um is gave news some who survived to recall effort pretty serious look like pretty serious recall effort at least two terms now governor um is he popular?
You know i'm not haven't seen like any any recently pulling on that. Have you ever been .
at dinner and heard someone say, man, on this lag? Gavin knew .
someone's our state.
So in a one party day doesn't really matter. Like everyone's brave at a certain point. IT doesn't really matter whether people like what they're getting.
They're getting yeah the only thing that matters is the democratic primary, of course and there is like internecine divisions within the party just like in china. Big time right? And in fact, it's kind of interesting that um you know garden is not like on the hard left of the democratic party california. I actually in some ways think he's probably much more reasonable and moderate than than he has portrait himself to be um I can as someone who knows that I can .
confirm that yeah it's true yeah he's Gavin newsom is I think responsible in large powful what's happening in california. There's no excuse for that. I'll be held he'll be held accountable for that on some level in some life. However, just in point, in fact, he is not some crazy.
No, look, i'll be on to you. I like him. Persons.
yeah, everyone does.
yeah. And I really do. And I I really wish you know he was a phenomenal governor. I think you know if if we do have to live in one party, say, at least our leader's should be you know really confident um within the machine and I think he had a lot of potential um and certainly um you know but but he is also a slave and captured by by this movement and this this left ism um that has has has cast this pal over california week inside there is no doubt .
so can I ask like what there are still very powerful business interest. Mostly the people making A I planning our enslavement um why don't those people get together and just like .
pay for a good government well I will tell you that I have heard at least from folks in the VC world that um there is a lot of quiet support even in this cycle for for trump well that's true .
there is and there's some loud support mark and rison is the biggest VC in the day has come out for traum publicly. So that's good. But I just mean, within the state of california, why don't they get as long as you're going to have a corrupt one party state is just going to be okay, fine, that's what we are now. Why don't the oil, gas get together to say where the least gonna have, I don't know, nice roads and functional schools and your daughters not going get raped on the way to cvs like when I just do.
I think it's it's because it's because these nobels do not have no blazer base.
Now work going with guess that's exact. okay.
Can you expand on that? Yeah so so the idea you for societies that are stratified by class and where there is especially an aristocracy that has a political you know hegemony um as well as social power, uh there was a sense, I think um in in those societies in the past, even even Frankly you know within the united states that there were certain responsibility, ie s as a novel to your your county, to your to your city, to your to your you know land and so forth to your nation, to your nation of course um but uh today we have a situation where um there's a disconnect from that and it's entirely about the self and it's analysts. They all wear t shirts and live on boats totally completely removed from the bad schools, from the bad roads um from the crime they have private police force basically because they are not Christians, that's the actual difference.
They're not Christians. They are not believe in Christians. And a believing question feels a sense of obligation to the poor and the people over whom he exerts authority to the people below him. I mean.
that's just part of the religion. Well, late. So like when we talk about neoh util ism and and maybe how that's not a perfect analogue, I would add in support of your approach is, well, at least fatalism. They believe in god. Well.
and that had certain noble gate. Actually.
you structured the entire society. What is this .
separate conversation? I was probably forty years old before I interest history. I realize that the thousand years between the follow room and the renaissance, referred to as, quote, the dark ages, and there's sort of very little conversation about that among people, people specializing eo pean history.
And I like, why? Why are we dismissing a thousand european as the dark gages? Because actually IT wasn't that dark.
It's actually, these were not societies built on you det, slavery. These were societies built on Christians. And that's kind of why they've been dismissed as as dark and unworthy of further study or you know, conversation. We have nothing to learn from the dark ages, and that's all like a huge lie. Actually, they had much more enlightened ruling .
class than we have. I would say that you know if if you're going to make historical comparisons, let's say, are we in a new dark age, you could argue that you the dark the cool dark ages was characterized by a um a separation from hello ism and classical ideas um and and literacy right and so um I think you could ask you Frankly that modern amErica actually modern whole um in this special during california is also disconnected from its history IT is forgetting its history purposely oh I know and we're also becoming ironically, we are subject to more information than we can absorb and so we absorbed nothing. And maybe that's a kind of new illiteracy.
I think that's exactly right. And I think good weather plays a huge world. This places with really good weather.
You see this on australia as well um allow people to sort of drift along in a state of content nominees and they don't ever this sure of content with you know and ever declining um standard of living and an ever shrinking basket of freedoms at this pointing caliph's nie of the right eb abortion, that kind of only right and they just there. So because it's seventy five and Sunny, they don't complain. You don't have been worries and say romania, they they might complain.
Yeah I will be very interesting to see if there ever if things gets so bad that IT catalist es um action by the voters um one of these prosecutors I talk to um from alee accounts, we were discussing the broader implications of how we got to the place that we did and SHE says he said to me, he said I blame you and my what said I blame everyone he said I you I mean the uneducated voter, right the the voters that um are are um sup table to the marketing gamma s of our of our politicians that reframe legalizing theft as safe neighborhoods and schools act. And this kind of complacency has resulted in in a significant way to the to the degradation of the stage.
Well, it's just, look, this is just a dot on a continuum. This is a moment in time. And all, every bad thing that you described has been made possible by liberal Whites, yes, and they're bad. Their decade and attitudes. And california is about american country basically now, with some recognizable that amErica country problems like rule by cartel and crop politics in the rest one party state.
But at some point it's going be characterized by another feature, black american society, which is fascist interludes, where you can have a military hunt, a or some strong men take over california and all these new immigrants, they're not rich White liberals. Actually, they probably don't think that should be legal. And you're gonna get some cardio in charge of the state. Is gonna endo .
maybe that would not be so bad.
I mean, it's preferable to what we have now. I mean, would you rather have gave d new sumer urban Kelly, that's not a hard choice, exactly. And so that's very different from the state that you and I grew up in, completely different, which was a basically in a galitch an state.
Or even rich people like I grew up in rich part of the state and we didn't feel like we were a class apart, that everyone else was a survey, you know, I mean, and drive through the central valley feeling like I not in common. These people. I felt what they are, california, just like me, that's over. You know I wanted to mention something, but where do you think we're in the chaotic middle period between one system .
and a new yes for sure in fact victim's and Victor Davis hanson um who was very kind in um um helping me with some of the research for my book um makes some incredible insights um on the comparison of the late roman empire really the period between three seventy six A D and four seventy six A D and what we are experiencing now in california and that period and I just say it's so thank you for saying .
that because the fifth century is when we think of the end of room but we forget that there was at least a century proceeding that where I was like .
on the way to the world, of course. Yeah and and IT was characterised by things that are early, similar to what was seeing california. Of course, there is the erosion of borders. There is the influx of of migrants. But I think like one or two million from germanic and hands into rome, not a simulated a breakdown of law at the county levels, a disconnect from the capital um and a lot .
of those immigrants and really went into law enforcement .
and we went the religions that's right that's right um and and there was also cultural factors where the elite um where a hanson calls this if it's called luxury and IT was the notion that um that the elite at that time we're embracing um decadents a called religions hello trans right of course and um and other sort of uh values that were antithetical to the martial .
values built. Carmilla Harris, whoever the help she's calling yourself now is just the is the .
poster girl for that SHE is the personal ation of everything that is bad of our california and it's not because he did all that awful of things I get IT for he actually doesn't have that much of a track record california but that's the point isn't IT SHE is a SHE is just a husk SHE is a face and SHE is the right face that qualified for you know hit the the the quote is that are are necessary california to advance and therefore um we see in her a this shell of a person always talking .
about herself of course that you .
only even SHE thinks about and right but it's .
always your books .
called smart crime.
Can you please use the air quotes around the word book?
Yeah yeah well, was actually ghost written of and and player ze.
Both ghost written and player ize. So even her ghost rider was lazy. Yeah I H no but it's so it's so perfect. That is just as the subs of analysts about our self and me, me, I, I that like you're going to talk about yourself, there should be some requirement to be interesting yeah but it's never interesting, do you know I mean, it's always winning about micro aggression and I were, you know, freedom and I was just like, it's so but all you can just barely stand that I would rather have an interesting dictator .
no the chat for my book on her I call the penalty of evil yeah well perfect um and it's the sense that these like these actions or inaction rather over time that seem incremental um lead to outcomes that actually produce incredible evil and violence exactly and though he is not pulling the trigger right she's not even passing some of the laws I hope I can get to um which are even more insane than what i've already told you um but he never the less is part of this machine and she's also tied to the getty by the way just incidentally um they all they all closes get his new on Browns like it's all the same Willy Brown to um of course and um so there's nothing there are accomplishments to speak up and nothing change when he was a vice president.
But this is what happens when girls become dictators. They killed, build nothing. They nothing. You don't even get like big pretty buildings out of IT and then they kill you by pass .
of aggression.
Exactly yeah so i'd much yeah i'm not to make a gender thing out of IT, but if you're going to have a dictator, at least you know he should be wearing a cape yeah and think you can or something I don't know. They can even be light rail that i'm trying to use the effort in that darn state. So okay, let's get to the loss. And I got A P .
so so after prop fifty seven and two thousand and sixteen that passes, we jump ahead to twenty twenty, where I think everything broke down across the world, but especially in the united states and especially in california.
And as a result of the George floyd um riots, which by the way, all of the law enforcement officers i've talked to who were there and we're there for the one thousand nine hundred and ninety two riots, say these who cannot even be closely compared gangsters in L. A. During the George fluid riots were laughing their asses off because they didn't give IT sees me a shit about George floyd at all. The everyone knew he was just .
a some armed robot .
dies with finality in the revolution of exactly and oh, by the way, the guy robed us on the police report IT is like any drugs or you are any drugs and he writes in like crayon fancy he's on final .
yeah yeah he's .
unfast everyone's on final and in the criminal world on final well he is taking IT because he have been stabbed like a year two before um and so he takes up to the pain and to state level but he's doing carpentry and not it's so .
soul killing have you take an opiates after surgery or something? I mean, I love laughing gas. I that once laughing gas is a totally different thing. I'm not defending natural but I will say it's a totally different gig. But no any opp O I drug .
has the same IT just takes you so away. Well, that's what we see. That's why it's that. But so so after the the riots and there was A A momentous push for um again I I I call a crime equity legislation and this strict the form of two laws that have been absolutely deviating and I think that they probably will ultimately get turn out by the spring court because they are so aggregate. The first is called the racial justice active twenty twenty.
And the racial justice active twenty twenty allows defendants and its retroactive to chAllenge their convictions based on the presence of bias or racial animists by, let's say, anyone involved in the trial or on the police side. That doesn't have to have any bearing on whether or not the evidence supports they're guilt at all. These can be guilty people. The events prove beyond a doubt.
What if there was a White racist involved at any level?
They can get their convictions thrown out into the racial jack or reduce significantly. And this happened in city of k so the anti oc taxing scandal four Young black gangs members were on trial for um uh attempted murder and murder and um very clear that they did IT um they were a gang enhancements were applied to them, which would mean that they were gonna ACE a lot more jail time but at the same time um IT came out that the police officers in antioch were texting racist uh so called racist messages to each other in private not as part of the job, not relating to even their there are you know involved in the case but just about these defendants and when this came out um the judge presiding over the case uh utilized the racial justice act and throughout all the day .
and answers against no killed me let me .
tell you how much worse IT gets defense attorneys can use statistical evidence, nebulous statistical evidence of racial disparity to uh support the case and satisfied they are burden of proof that there is racial injustice so for instance, ince. If a jurisdiction is applying gang and um in greater a proportion to black you know game members and to some other way game members, yeah whatever those are um and um uh the um under the racial justice act, the statistical um uh differences can be entered into consideration by the judge and whether or not to apply the um R.
G A that's just like the end of civilization .
that gets worse um the same year that the second of past A B thirty seventy A B thirty seventy um. Took away the ability of prosecutors to apply for empty chAllenges, two prospective jurors on the basis of bias. So for instance, up until A B thirty, seventy, you could if if a jury would say, you know, my son was had been involved with, have been arrested or I have a negative opinion of police so on and so forth this would be a cause by which a prosecution could use a proem ty chAllenge um to remove the gr well under A B thirty seventy if this germ is a member of a protected group, which by the way includes a gender identity. So like training .
criminal?
yes. Well, training just okay.
yeah.
They can no longer use prompt y chAllenges against them, even if they say, I hate cops because they are protected group. So the result of this is as a one of the top prosecutors in the entire day told me, um is the proliferation of O J O J juries and .
the O G jy, by the way, I never got the credit. We never learned a single thing from that. We spent our entire lives hearing about all juries being bad, but here we had a jury that just let a guy get away with murdering two people because those people just can call that was fine.
Another another gang prosecutor, analytic y accounting, told me that jars have come up to her um and set her face. I will not convicted black man.
So okay. Well, now i'm officially depressed and just and just said about the state. So license end on a happy note.
If you're possible, if it's possible worse. Do you see california getting Better? I mean, is this like a low point? Or is this just like .
is that you know um some of the cops I talked to say they think this is cynically and things will things will come back into some level of Normalcy. You know there's .
a right never came back exactly .
and neither did wrong after four seventy six.
it's still a crappy places far as I can tell.
I mean, you know I I don't know, I I think that there are some time there are some problems that become so embedded. And given the multifaceted nature of this, this function and the complexity of the problems and the entrance interest groups that do not have any incentive um to to modify a system that has rich them. I don't know how you so .
I think maybe the the lesson for me, just as a listener, to the incredible story that you've just told um the main lesson is that civilizations really fragile. You don't maintain IT without continuous effort and violence, and you really have to be radical in in preserving IT yeah and once IT goes away, doesn't necessary come back and you should not participate at all and unjust systems at all, and you should fight like a .
one bat yeah I mean, like, look, if you're talking about solutions for me, for one thing, IT is IT is revoking these terrible laws that i've talked about like that that has that. But how about shaming the people?
Supported them is totally unacceptable. I mean, yeah, well, I don't know anything about bull conner, but like i'm sure his descendants all change their names. I'm not defending bull conner. R trust me. But there is a useful thing that .
culture does, which is is that I would go further. I think it's it's more than simply shaming. I think I think if there is a way that to hold these people liable for negligence .
and prominent, so why should George get going, be able to like, move to tempy, just live out on retirement? I know you should be like.
why should the politicians in europe and in this country who facilitated the invasion of their countries and displacement and um and diffusion of their native indigenous populations as a form of let's a form of ethnic clancy, why should those politicians who act to those laws not be subject to the same kind of standard that was applied to the nern bert trials .
or habit as recently as the the ugo's love wars, the naos wars golovin think soba molossian I died in prison for ethnic cleansing so uncle marco gets away with .
IT or how is that the international laws related to these issues are not robust enough to address this modern form of demographic inversion, demographic engineering? But really the when I was thinking about this as as as a whole, is IT really all that different from what the chinese are doing in john? Like, yes.
Of reeducation camps? yes. Idea of of like bringing the han chinese into jane jang to to um effect of the race that those people is that really any different than that was happening when twelve and you know seven million people have come across the us. Southern border with impunity and are going to most likely probably become a citizens unless unless trump a got willing wins and and reverse said, I mean, it's the times are very dark talker and I don't know like if there is a positive message to be made except I I I pray that um our leadership at at least the federal level um will write the ship and perhaps california over time can come back to some sembLance of what I once was because IT is the defacement of a grand work of art.
IT is work about the sandals to the pretty cities in that I would say pretty city we have by far both them in are very different ways. But um IT is destroying art and you're a placable art and as a birth right california who's living in his great grandparents house, uh you're one of the few in L A who can say that. Um like what's your plane are you .
gonna you know like you're you ve been ask the screen right and you've said, like amErica is my home like i'm not leaving IT I feel that way back california.
They're not understand. I mean.
unless I get like another home invasion that that might like catalyze IT, but I feel very tired of the land like good no should. And I don't feel like IT should be just surrendered because some ass holes in santa cco are I ve decided to spread crime equity across the shape. You know, it's like, I will defend, will defend our home, will defend our castle and that is I think um you know what one duty is to your your ancestors who .
had gone so please buy one yes, good. Call me chance. Thank you course. Thank you. Thanks for listen to talk to cross the show. If you enjoy IT, you can go to talk to cross and that calm to see everything that we have made the complete library. 他是 croson dk。