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Judge Just RIGGED Trial Against Trump, Tells Jurors NO NEED TO BE UNANIMOUS, Democrat CORRUPTION

Judge Just RIGGED Trial Against Trump, Tells Jurors NO NEED TO BE UNANIMOUS, Democrat CORRUPTION

Released Wednesday, 29th May 2024
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Judge Just RIGGED Trial Against Trump, Tells Jurors NO NEED TO BE UNANIMOUS, Democrat CORRUPTION

Judge Just RIGGED Trial Against Trump, Tells Jurors NO NEED TO BE UNANIMOUS, Democrat CORRUPTION

Judge Just RIGGED Trial Against Trump, Tells Jurors NO NEED TO BE UNANIMOUS, Democrat CORRUPTION

Judge Just RIGGED Trial Against Trump, Tells Jurors NO NEED TO BE UNANIMOUS, Democrat CORRUPTION

Wednesday, 29th May 2024
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that's 877-646-5347. Become

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a member at timcast.com by clicking

1:17

Join Us to support the work

1:19

we're doing and to get access

1:22

to the uncensored Timcast IRL call-in

1:24

show Monday through Thursday at 10

1:26

p.m. You don't want to miss

1:28

it. Now, let's get into the news.

1:32

Jury deliberations are expected to begin in

1:34

the Donald Trump hush money trial, and

1:37

we're in a bit of a news

1:39

stasis period where everyone's waiting with bated

1:41

breath to figure out exactly what's going

1:44

to go on in this trial. Of

1:46

course, there has been what

1:48

some are describing as veiled threats or a

1:50

veiled threat, but it's obvious.

1:53

You had a guy from the New York Times basically

1:56

say that if any one of these jurors decides

2:00

jury they will be Steve Bartman

2:02

on steroids which is a funny

2:04

reference for those are not familiar

2:06

this is a guy who

2:08

was was long believed to have ruined the Cubs

2:10

chances at winning the World Series in 2003 it's

2:12

a it's kind of a crazy story

2:16

but basically this dude's life became a living

2:18

hell because he tried to catch a foul

2:21

ball and Moises Alou was

2:23

reaching for it about to get it and

2:25

he blocked him and this

2:27

is just some regular guy in the stands with no idea

2:29

what's going on that's the argument

2:31

they're making if you do not convict Donald

2:34

Trump and you are the

2:36

one holdout they will come for you now

2:39

we don't know what's gonna happen everybody

2:41

is murmuring the news

2:43

industry is now just

2:46

frozen and this is the funniest bit

2:49

about it you've got comments

2:51

there you've got commentators but you've basically got

2:53

all of these writers just sitting there clutching

2:55

their pens like nothing is happening

2:57

that's why we're bringing you a special livestream this

3:00

morning to go over exactly what's going on right

3:02

now but to potentially have any shocking updates should

3:04

they come in I don't believe that

3:06

while we're filming this live segment this

3:08

morning we're going to get a

3:11

verdict from the jury instructions are going in

3:13

and I believe at any moment the jury

3:16

will begin their deliberations but what

3:18

we're seeing from this is the sheer desperation

3:20

of the Biden administration threats against the jury

3:22

and I think there's

3:24

a good probability Donald Trump does

3:27

get convicted on this and

3:29

it's laid out perfectly in this

3:31

veiled threat that made I don't

3:33

I don't believe it was intentionally a threat but

3:36

you can't go blasting that stuff out because

3:40

that's well that's how people are going to take it you

3:43

know what you know you know where to where the lines are and

3:45

you know where not to come up not to step outside of let's

3:48

do this we're gonna read the

3:50

news here from NBC jury deliberations at the

3:52

beginning Donald Trump's criminal trial don't forget

3:54

to smash the like button subscribe to

3:56

this channel share the show with your friends

3:59

and as always As always, we're going to do it on

4:01

the morning show. We got

4:03

casbrew.com, Ian's Graphene Dream.

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That's right. If you want low-ecidity

4:08

dream coffee, it's available at casbrew.com, and don't

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forget, head over to timcast.com. Click

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Join Us, become a member, and come hang

4:15

out in our Discord server. You'll

4:17

get access to our uncensored members-only call-in

4:19

show Monday through Thursday at 10 p.m.

4:22

So that will be up later tonight after TimCast

4:24

IRL. Let's read the news and then I'll take

4:26

super chats from all y'all who are watching live.

4:29

We have this. Jury deliberations

4:32

will begin Wednesday morning in New York's

4:34

prosecutor's case against Donald Trump,

4:37

the first criminal trial involving the

4:40

former president. You,

4:43

the jury, have the ability to hold

4:45

the defendant accountable, prosecutor Joshua Steinglass told

4:47

the panel at the end of his

4:49

4 1⁄2 hour closing argument Tuesday. Now,

4:52

what's really interesting here is

4:54

that, and everybody already knows

4:56

this is going on, the prosecutors

4:58

were allowed to say a whole bunch of crazy

5:00

things, and the judge wouldn't

5:03

let any of—he wouldn't overrule

5:07

any of the moves that were—I'm sorry, he

5:09

overruled all of the objections

5:11

made by the defense. So one of

5:13

the issues was that the prosecution

5:15

basically said it is

5:17

campaign finance violation, but

5:20

the judge would not allow the defense

5:22

to bring an expert witness to testify

5:24

that it wasn't under the

5:26

argument that, well, if I do that, I'm going to have to

5:28

let them bring in their expert witness, and then everyone's

5:30

arguing about what is or isn't a campaign finance

5:32

violation. So, no, we won't do that, but the

5:34

prosecution's allowed to say that it is a campaign

5:36

finance violation, but the defense is not allowed to

5:38

say that it's not. Absolutely

5:41

amazing. You know, we

5:43

had cash foretell on—we recorded that show on Saturday,

5:46

and we had him—so we aired it on Monday

5:48

with the one with the president, and

5:50

he's explaining how he's in the courtroom, and the judge

5:53

is yelling at a witness, and the witness was a

5:55

former federal prosecutor just confused as to why the judge

5:57

is yelling at him, because the whole

5:59

thing's rigged. Here

6:01

we go. The deliberations will

6:04

start after State Judge Juan

6:06

Machan delivers instructions to the 12-person jury

6:08

on the laws it will need to consider as

6:11

it decides this historic case. His

6:13

instruction is expected to take about an hour. Manhattan

6:16

DA attorney Alvin Bragg, Bragg's office is charged

6:18

Trump with 34 counts of falsifying

6:20

business records relating to a

6:22

hush money payment his

6:24

attorney Michael Cohen made to adult film star Stormy

6:27

Daniels in the closing days of the 2016 election.

6:29

So let's go through all of that for

6:32

those that aren't familiar with

6:35

exactly what this case is. So they claim

6:37

that in 2016, Michael Cohen paid Stormy Daniels

6:39

so that she would not report

6:46

that she had had

6:50

an affair with Trump some years prior.

6:54

And then Donald Trump in 2017 after

6:56

getting elected paid Cohen back because

6:58

they had actually conspired to do

7:00

this to unjustly affect the election.

7:03

And then so it was a felony. I'm

7:06

sorry, it was a misdemeanor and beyond

7:09

the statute of limitations as bringing the case now

7:11

and I say it's a criminal conspiracy because

7:13

Donald Trump was attempting to corruptly influence the

7:15

election. You have to bear

7:18

with me. I'm giving some streaming hiccups. So

7:20

it's throwing me off a little bit because I'm trying to make

7:23

sure everything's working properly. But let's try that

7:25

again. Michael Cohen pays Stormy Daniels that claim. Trump

7:28

conspired with him so that it would help him win

7:30

the election. In 2017, after winning the

7:32

election, he falsifies business records to try and conceal

7:34

that crime. Even

7:37

if that was the case, even if

7:39

it was the case that Trump did

7:41

falsify business records personally, it's

7:43

a misdemeanor. It's beyond its statute of

7:45

limitations now. They're arguing it was

7:48

to corruptly influence an election that he had already

7:50

won because it's the only way

7:52

to bring the case now. It's

7:54

nonsense. Not only that, but

7:56

truth earlier that he has the

7:58

defense of relying on counsel. that

8:00

he's talking with lawyers and saying, you know,

8:02

here you go, like do your thing, and

8:05

then paying his legal bills. Well,

8:08

let's read a little bit more. They say, the

8:10

DA's office was able to eliminate the charge,

8:12

typically a misdemeanor, to a felony

8:14

by alleging the records were falsified, excuse

8:16

me, with the intent to conceal another

8:18

crime. Sign glass suggested Trump

8:20

was trying to cover up a number of crimes, including

8:23

violations of state and federal election laws. Trump

8:26

attorney Todd Blanche told the jury, President

8:28

Trump is innocent. He did not

8:30

commit any crimes and the district attorney has

8:32

not met their burden of proof, period. He

8:35

argues the records weren't falsified because Trump wasn't

8:37

reimbursing Cohen for the Daniels payment. Instead, he

8:39

was paying for general legal services because Cohen was

8:41

Trump's personal lawyer at the time. Styling

8:44

glass called the account jaw dropping,

8:47

noting that Trump had previously publicly acknowledged

8:49

having reimbursed Cohen. Cohen

8:51

was prosecutors key witness and Blanche

8:54

told jurors he couldn't be trusted because of

8:56

a history of lying. He's literally the MVP

8:58

of liars. Styling glass acknowledged that

9:00

Cohen had a history of lying, but

9:02

said he'd often done so to protect Trump. Trump's

9:05

attorneys were trying to use those lies to undermine

9:07

his credibility is what some people

9:09

might call chutzpah. Styling glass said the

9:12

trial began with jury selection, April 15th, blah,

9:14

blah, blah. Trump faces four years in prison.

9:16

I do not believe Trump will get any

9:18

prison time in the event he actually does

9:21

get convicted. What is most likely in my

9:23

opinion to happen? Ankle bracelet,

9:25

home confinement, Trump tower. Some

9:28

people have suggested maybe he'll go to Mar-a-Lago. I do

9:30

not believe they would allow him to leave the state.

9:33

They'll say, you've got a residence

9:35

here. We're locking you in Trump tower. No

9:38

campaigning. You're done. Here

9:41

we go. We got a bunch more. This

9:44

is from Jonathan Turley. This is

9:46

from last night. And there's a few things that I

9:48

think are important here that we'll

9:51

read in the closing arguments. He says, Styling glass

9:53

is continuing to instruct the jury and

9:55

was again stopped by the court. Styling glass just

9:57

reminded them that they can find the New York

9:59

election law violation. violation with any

10:01

of the three claimed crimes and they do not

10:03

have to even agree on which I love

10:05

this part. So four

10:07

can find a state election violation, four

10:09

can find a federal election violation, and

10:12

four can find tax violations and it

10:14

will still be treated as unanimous verdict.

10:17

So if they all disagree on

10:20

what crime they think happened, they will

10:23

convict Trump anyway. Let me let me

10:25

clarify this for you guys. This

10:27

is the prosecution saying you

10:31

might not think Trump committed a crime here.

10:33

Like I don't even know how to I don't even

10:35

know where to begin with this. So

10:37

a guy's accused of jaywalking, stealing

10:40

a pack of gum and assaulting

10:43

a guy. It doesn't matter which one

10:45

he actually did. It's unanimous if you

10:48

think a crime was committed period. It's

10:52

supposed to be beyond a reasonable doubt. You're

10:54

supposed to be able to sit down and

10:56

say we all agree that a crime was

10:59

committed beyond a reasonable doubt. They are quite

11:01

literally saying this is absolutely incredible

11:03

my friends. They are saying that if you

11:05

all disagree on the crime that was committed,

11:08

who cares? We'll just say he

11:10

committed a crime anyway. You all agree

11:12

a crime was committed? I you know, it's

11:14

not exactly what I thought was gonna happen, but it's close

11:16

enough. My

11:18

thought process was in the closing arguments the

11:21

prosecution is going to say something

11:23

the effect of you know what Trump has

11:25

done. That's you

11:28

know, all right you ever

11:30

think about everything you have heard about

11:32

this man in the courtroom and think

11:35

about every single time you

11:37

heard that he committed a crime and

11:40

harmed and wronged this country in the courtroom.

11:44

Some people just know the best rate for you

11:47

is a rate based on you with all state.

11:50

Not a rate based on Terry who keeps and

11:53

makes the car behind them. with

12:00

drive-wise and all-state apps and only pay

12:02

a rate based on you. Not

12:05

available in every state, such as the terms and conditions,

12:07

rating factors and savings vary and in some states your

12:09

rate could increase with high-risk driving. All-state fire and casualty

12:11

insurance company in affiliates Northbrook, Illinois. The

12:14

point being that they're basically saying

12:16

for the love of God, please

12:18

convict this man for any reason.

12:20

It doesn't matter if he's actually guilty. Now

12:23

they're saying you don't even have to

12:25

agree on what the crime was. Just

12:29

if you think there was a crime, say

12:31

he's guilty. That's

12:34

absolutely insane. Stineglass

12:37

said Trump got his trial and the law is

12:39

the law and there is no special standard. Yet

12:41

there clearly is here. That's

12:43

a wrap. So

12:46

this morning Jonathan Turley back in the courtroom says the judge

12:48

stated he wants to stay close to the standard instructions. The

12:50

problem is that the case is anything but standard. We'll

12:52

be looking for some of the outstanding

12:54

issues, particularly on the standard of proof

12:57

for key elements like unlawful means. Yesterday

12:59

was chilling as the judge

13:02

allowed the prosecutors to engage in what some

13:04

of us view as highly improper arguments. That

13:07

included effectively testifying on facts not in the

13:09

record. Mershan's view of

13:11

argument was considerably broader for

13:13

the prosecution than the defense. For

13:15

the prosecutors making objections, the strike zone seemed like

13:17

it stretched from dugout to dugout. For the defense,

13:19

it seemed the size of a postage stamp. I

13:23

tell you my friends, I

13:25

want to reiterate that point from

13:28

the closing arguments. This is one

13:30

of the most significant in this case that

13:32

breaks down the corruption and evil that

13:35

we are facing and understand where

13:37

our country currently is. By

13:42

all means, you can laugh and

13:45

say, ha, ha, ha, ha, Tim thinks

13:47

civil war is possible. I don't know

13:49

exactly how that manifests or what could

13:52

happen. I can tell you this. When

13:54

they are outright saying to the jury, even

13:57

if there is no unanimous verdict on the committed

14:01

so long as any of you can agree

14:03

that there was some kind of crime in

14:05

any area it's a unanimous verdict on these

14:07

charges this man is

14:09

accused of jaywalking if

14:12

you don't agree he jaywalked if you think he might

14:14

have stolen a dollar stolen a pack of gum or

14:16

pushed a guy that's good enough for us say

14:19

he's guilty of a crime amazing

14:21

now now I will clarify what

14:24

they're claiming is because this crime

14:27

is an underlying crime which is

14:29

requiring a secondary crime they said

14:31

by all means make up the

14:34

secondary crime so long as it

14:36

fits this misdemeanor case which is

14:38

beyond the statute of limitations will

14:40

be held against Trump absolutely

14:45

insane now

14:49

where does this country go uh cash

14:51

Patel told us with a show we had on

14:53

Monday if Donald Trump goes

14:55

to jail he wins overnight

14:59

and I kind of agree when

15:02

Farid Zakaria of CNN says this

15:05

case would not be brought against anyone whose

15:07

name was not Donald Trump that's

15:10

CNN they hate the guy

15:13

yet here we are if

15:15

they really in their sheer panic

15:18

and desperation try to lock Trump

15:20

up it will backfire in their

15:22

face so massively

15:26

but I don't know what this means for this country I

15:29

I've got to say it well I forgive me

15:32

everybody forgive me because I know it's

15:34

gonna be the fourth time I say it but

15:36

I need you to understand what Jonathan Turley

15:38

is saying that

15:41

the jury is allowed as prince

15:43

as per the closing arguments to

15:47

not be unanimous on a crime committed

15:49

by Trump but that they

15:51

will determine it so anyway

15:57

so so for jurors are like well you

15:59

know But we don't think he actually ... What they're

16:02

basically saying is, so long

16:04

as a law exists on the books that

16:07

is tied to secondary crimes, they

16:09

will charge you, and any

16:12

crime you have ever committed warrants the

16:15

first crime to be unanimous.

16:20

It's insanity. Now, as for

16:23

those threats ... Oh boy, I hope you're ready for this one.

16:26

Byron York. Quote, tweeting Kenneth

16:28

Vogel of the New York Times. Vogel

16:31

said, if Trump

16:33

gets a

16:36

hung jury mistrial because of one

16:38

juror, resistance Twitter is going to

16:40

turn that person into Steve Bartman

16:42

on steroids. Now, he edited

16:44

that tweet and changed it. I

16:47

think he realized what he had just

16:49

said publicly, and that is, ah,

16:52

Steve Bartman. Ladies and

16:55

gentlemen, Steve Bartman. I remember this

16:57

like it was yesterday, despite the fact

16:59

it was 21 years ago. I

17:02

was hanging out in my living room on

17:04

the south side of Chicago. We were

17:07

all losing our minds because the

17:09

Cubs were inching towards a World Series

17:12

win. This was a ... This was

17:14

going to ... It was a league

17:16

pennant win, so it wasn't

17:18

the World Series just yet, but it was getting them

17:20

to it. Steve

17:22

Bartman was sitting near the

17:25

field, and there was

17:27

a fly ball. Moises Alou

17:30

ran to jump and catch the ball, and

17:33

Steve Bartman fumbled with it trying to catch it himself,

17:35

thinking it's a foul ball and it's going to be

17:37

mine, blocking Moises from

17:39

catching it, which would have given

17:41

them their second out. I believe it would have been their second

17:43

out. They were leading 3-0. It

17:46

would have put them four outs away

17:48

from winning. After

17:51

that, holy crap. When

17:54

that happened, it was like instant

17:56

demoralization, and the Cubs let eight

17:58

runs in. This dude, Steve Bartman,

18:01

was just some guy who tried to catch a

18:03

fly ball. He had no idea what was going

18:06

on. His life became

18:08

a living hell for years after this.

18:10

There's an infamous photo. Man, do you

18:12

guys remember this stuff? They're

18:14

saying that any

18:17

juror who does not

18:19

convict Trump will live like this guy.

18:23

Yo, people were like, this guy

18:25

was getting death threats. It

18:27

was crazy. The Cubs hadn't won a World Series.

18:29

They hadn't won a league pennant since 1945. Everyone

18:34

blamed him. Not because it was

18:36

truly his fault. The Cubs let

18:38

eight runs in, but

18:40

because he basically

18:44

centralized all of that anger of

18:46

defeat right onto himself. It

18:50

was brutal for him. The

18:54

aftermath was people

18:56

started to look at this and say Bartman was

18:59

not widely recognized until afterwards. He started getting

19:01

calls on cell phones on his

19:03

phone because they watched it on TV. He

19:06

had to be escorted away with security. Cubs

19:08

fans had an insult and threats. Some were death

19:10

threats. One fan dumped a cup of beer on

19:13

him. Security escorted Bartman and two

19:15

people accompanied him towards the exit tunnel. News

19:18

footage from the game showed him surrounded by security. His

19:20

fans pelted him with drinks and other debris. Bartman's

19:23

name appeared on Major League Baseball's

19:25

message boards minutes after the game

19:27

ended. They docked the guy. Six

19:30

police cars gathered outside his home in

19:32

Northbrook, Illinois to protect him and his

19:34

family. Afterwards then

19:37

Illinois Governor Rod Blagojevich suggested that Bartman

19:39

join a witness protection program while then

19:41

Florida Governor Jeb Bush offered Bartman asylum.

19:44

You think it's funny. Like

19:47

yeah, yeah, yeah, asylum and witness protection. They

19:49

ain't kidding. There's probably some just

19:52

in there being like maybe he needs to join

19:54

witness protection. But people were

19:56

actually threatening to kill the guy. That's

19:59

what Vogel just said. If

20:01

Trump gets his hung jury now, the context

20:04

matters because a lot of people are saying

20:06

Vogel was threatening the jury. I think this

20:08

matters a lot. The bulwark,

20:10

Trump legal team pins hopes on

20:12

a hung jury. The article that

20:14

he linked is basically about a

20:16

juror who looked at Trump. I'm

20:18

not kidding. Apparently,

20:21

there was a juror, a

20:23

jury member who looked at Trump

20:26

and they think that signifies he

20:28

may be the lone hung juror

20:30

who blocks this conviction and gives

20:32

Trump a mistrial. If

20:35

Trump gets a mistrial, you know what they're going to do? They're

20:38

going to bring the case right back. They're going to say, let's

20:41

go again, baby. Let's stop Trump

20:43

from being able to campaign. They

20:46

will be relentless. This

20:48

is an insane political tactic.

20:51

Why would they stop now?

20:54

Many people are saying that it is

20:56

patently absurd that they would try such

20:58

a technique against Donald Trump.

21:02

Yeah, I agree. It's

21:05

looking like it's backfiring miserably and

21:07

it's helping Donald Trump. Why

21:09

keep going? They've

21:11

got nothing. That's

21:14

it. They've got

21:16

nothing. Biden is

21:18

a skeleton. That's not fair.

21:20

Skeletor was strong. He's

21:23

some kind of lich monster, frail

21:26

and fumbling and bumbling. He's

21:29

given us such classics like Trudinash,

21:32

Abbot of Pressure, Batacath Care,

21:34

Nexnail Rescent, and Pack Adalacak,

21:36

Pack Adalacak, whatever that was

21:38

like the Mars Attack Sky. Those were

21:41

things Biden has said. I don't

21:44

see how this guy wins. Immigration is

21:46

a major issue. The libertarians just put in

21:48

a progressive leftist as their candidate. That's going

21:50

to siphon more votes away from Biden. So

21:52

they're probably thinking, well, putting

21:55

Trump in jail may not be working

21:58

and maybe helping him win. But

22:00

maybe, maybe if they

22:03

put him in jail, they can

22:05

make it impossible for him to win in

22:07

some way. I don't know.

22:09

Maybe something happens to him. I have no idea. So

22:13

if there's a mistrial, someone's chatted double jeopardy. If

22:15

there's a mistrial, it's not double jeopardy. Mistrials

22:18

often will get retried. They'll say, we have

22:21

a hung jury, we have a mistrial, so

22:23

we'll hold the trial again. However,

22:25

in some instances, the judge could just dismiss the

22:28

case with prejudice, meaning it cannot be brought back,

22:30

and then you would have double jeopardy. In

22:33

this instance, if

22:35

we get a hung jury, I

22:37

do not see why they would

22:39

just abandon this. These people are

22:41

relentless and desperate. You

22:44

know, and I warned this over the past couple of years. The

22:47

death throws. The

22:49

death throws, and this is

22:51

when in desperation,

22:53

an individual begins thrashing

22:56

around violently. A

22:59

person who is drowning

23:02

splashes violently. That's why they say, if you

23:04

are going to rescue someone who is drowning,

23:06

you have to be very careful. You

23:09

need to approach them from behind and grab

23:11

them because they will push you down and

23:13

drown you both in panic. What

23:19

I see here with the Democratic Party and the

23:21

Uniparty establishment is the death throws. In

23:24

their panic that they are losing control and

23:26

power, they will begin to

23:28

thrash around violently. They

23:30

will burn this country to the

23:32

ground before they let Donald Trump

23:34

have control. This

23:37

is the current state of where we

23:40

are. I don't know

23:42

what else to say. I

23:45

mean, if it comes out that they are

23:47

going to actually put Trump in jail or

23:50

try to. So

23:53

the King's new lemonade lineup is

23:55

here. Name and a lemonade The

23:57

Smoothie King Way try strawberry. Guava

24:00

Lemonade ask refresher over ice

24:02

a power up in it

24:04

can energize, or a blueberry

24:06

lemonade smoothie lead it up

24:08

being. or a blueberry lemonade smoothie wind it up in your cup made with real

24:10

fruit real juice for a real sipping

24:12

good summer Made with real fruit. Real juice for a real sipping good summer. Yeah

24:15

yeah, Data is no Smoothie Kings

24:17

New lemonade lineup of for a

24:19

limited time. Who. Stars Day.

24:22

maybe that bolsters

24:24

his polls massively

24:26

but I just got to say

24:28

I mean maybe there's a special desperation but

24:32

I wouldn't underestimate the the

24:34

political rivals here I

24:36

wonder underestimated some kind of

24:38

shadow campaign in fact this could be

24:40

a distraction who knows waste

24:43

all of our time you

24:46

know what really surprised me if

24:48

they unanimously returning not guilty verdict

24:51

the crisis here for Democrats is

24:54

that if the jury unanimously says

24:56

not guilty Trump's

24:58

approval rating will skyrocket Biden's

25:01

will tank the jury

25:03

coming out and saying this

25:05

is nonsense I don't see that happening

25:09

it's getting wild out here man special

25:12

day that's why we're doing this live

25:14

because well to be honest we're

25:17

waiting for these jury deliberations so

25:20

what we'll do now my friends as we're

25:22

at the 23-minute mark will grab

25:24

some super chats from all of you and maybe

25:28

we'll throw in a bonus segment on top

25:31

of this one and

25:33

crank out some segments but I'll do this

25:35

we're gonna start our poll as we like

25:37

to do one like equals

25:40

one FJB I wonder

25:42

if YouTube gets mad that I do that yeah

25:46

so we'll grab

25:48

smash the like button become a member at Tim

25:50

cast.com pick up Ian's

25:53

graphene dream low acidity coffee at

25:55

Casper calm you know what I was

25:57

thinking of doing is and I'd love to do this Would

26:00

be to do a morning live show and we

26:02

tried this before it didn't really work out. That's

26:04

the problem The idea was to

26:06

do a morning live show and then

26:08

pull segments from it like we do with tim

26:10

cast irl Unfortunately, it didn't work.

26:13

What ended up happening is we did a

26:15

long morning live show and then

26:17

the viewer counts for the so If

26:20

I if I record the morning show in

26:22

segments Do like 22 minutes 22 minutes 10 to 20 10

26:24

to 20 Then

26:27

each of those gets a hundred to two hundred K.

26:29

Sometimes more yesterday We got four hundred thousand on the

26:32

more on the first morning segment And

26:34

that's huge and that you

26:36

know it you get a boost in the algorithm you get

26:39

more likes you get more revenue And so

26:41

we tried doing was what if we do a morning show?

26:43

That's that's an hour and a half long and then pull

26:45

the segments out like we do with irl and upload those

26:47

later in The day nobody watched them So

26:50

it ended up spiking us in

26:52

the algorithm Lowering the

26:54

view totals and it was just ultimately

26:57

Bad in the long run unless there was

27:00

some way to do a live show that uh, Could

27:03

pick that up. I I don't know exactly how to do it,

27:05

but that'd be beneficial because then we could do Morning

27:08

producer five stories. We'd get more segments out

27:10

We'd wrap the day an hour earlier than

27:12

I normally do or or like two hours

27:14

normally could probably do a longer morning show

27:16

But it did not work It

27:19

did not work out, but we'll grab your super chats

27:21

because we're doing the special morning live and uh, Mute

27:24

barbecue says tim pool is the hardest working

27:26

men in journalism You know

27:29

makes me jealous sometimes I

27:31

look at some of these other channels and

27:34

uh, they'll like People

27:36

who do substantially less work get substantially more views

27:38

and it's tough. It's like man I

27:41

do feel like I have to grind

27:43

10 times harder To be able

27:45

to maintain this level compared to many

27:47

others, but that's just the way it

27:49

is. Sometimes life is not fair Uh,

27:52

perhaps if I was just hardcore

27:54

right or left wing then you'd

27:56

capture the larger market shares, but

27:59

uh, well It is what it is, but

28:01

yeah morning show and night show is is

28:03

particularly rough particularly rough When

28:06

when I wasn't doing Tim cast IRL I'd

28:08

finish because I was doing six segments Tim

28:10

cast and Tim cast news by

28:12

4 p.m I had the rest of

28:15

the day off like every other normal human being and

28:17

then I'd be let's go see a movie Let's go

28:19

grab dinner somewhere. Let's go hang out play video games

28:21

now. It doesn't exist now. It's

28:23

morning show exercise dinner

28:25

nightly show Monday through Friday

28:29

forever But

28:31

I appreciate your super chance. I appreciate your support Ryan

28:35

asks how hard is the right gonna beat the

28:37

brakes off the left in a civil war and

28:39

can we nook nuke the liberal

28:42

Cities no you can't And

28:45

I will tell you Look

28:50

the conservatives who think that haha we're gonna

28:52

win a civil war dude Depends

28:54

on who China supports. I'm not kidding

28:58

China is going to Enter

29:02

the war like in all wars and all conflicts

29:04

foreign interference will get involved and that's all that

29:06

matters I do have

29:08

already another segment prepared and This

29:12

is far leftists calling

29:14

for civil war and

29:16

threatening armed revolution Yep,

29:20

that's where we're at threatening armed

29:22

revolution so They're

29:25

claiming they want to buy more guns and so this is

29:28

what I was talking about was doing the longer morning show

29:30

So for everybody who ends up watching the

29:32

full version the full morning show what

29:35

happens is if I would normally get 200,000

29:39

on a segment because no one's seen it the

29:43

75,000 that watch the full morning show like

29:46

let's say let's say I get like 200,000 on the full morning

29:48

show That means that one viewer

29:50

counts for all of the segments So

29:53

if we break this the shop into segments then

29:55

one viewer will appear on each segment And then

29:57

it'll be four views for the channels out of

29:59

one view And that really does matter, breaking

30:01

it up that way. Alright.

30:05

Bumchew says, I'm a carpet cleaner and I've had

30:07

two old ladies this week bring up the Dr.

30:09

Phil Andy No interview. People are waking up. Incredible

30:12

interview, by the way, for those that haven't seen

30:14

it. Andy No breaking down

30:16

the threat of the far left. Gone

30:20

Falls says, I'm ready anytime to be your

30:22

guitarist, Tim Blackpill. No, no. I

30:25

think the idea of the Blackpill lacks

30:28

moral and philosophical clarity. There

30:31

are dark periods throughout life, but they're never

30:33

sustained. It's ebbs

30:35

and flows, my friends. So even on

30:38

the darkest of days, there is something good

30:40

that comes eventually. Straws

30:43

out generational theory, good times, hard men, blah, blah,

30:45

blah. You get the point. Good

30:47

times, strong men, hard times, weak men,

30:49

whatever. Totally backwards.

30:51

I'm just referencing it. You

30:55

get my point. Let's see. The Matrix has

30:57

me says, it's all an effing joke. The

30:59

comedian mocking this process is the best choice.

31:02

Also any improvements coming to the Android Timcast

31:04

app would love to see some of those

31:07

bugs fixed. We got to get on

31:09

it. We are a

31:11

man. You

31:13

know, I get people coming being like, how

31:16

would you like investment? And if we had

31:18

investment, we could probably then bring on like

31:20

some high class corporate guy.

31:23

I'd be willing to bet that if we went the daily wire route,

31:26

brought in some, you know, like

31:29

an actual CEO guy, paid him a bunch of money,

31:31

brought in some investors, we'd

31:33

probably grow massively and then theoretically

31:37

begin to rival the

31:40

daily wire. We're in a different market. There's an overlap,

31:42

of course. Our

31:45

overlap is probably like 60 to 70 percent and

31:47

there's like a bit of overlap that's not there.

31:50

I'm sorry, there's a bit of market share that's not there. And

31:52

that's why the daily wire, of course, wanted to work with me. They wanted to

31:54

expand market share. But I

31:58

just don't see it in the cards. I don't see it

32:00

in the cards. I think Daily Wire's

32:02

cranking in like $250 million per year,

32:04

some ridiculous number. And

32:08

I don't know. Probably not for me. Not

32:11

for me. Joseph

32:13

Laliberté says, just wanted to say my first child was

32:15

born yesterday at 4.19 a.m. He

32:18

couldn't wait one minute. How dare you,

32:20

good sir? How dare you vote Trump? Congratulations.

32:24

Congratulations. We'll

32:26

grab a couple more here. We're reaching the

32:28

30-minute mark. Jason

32:30

Dixon says, Tim, can you please promote the discord?

32:33

We are doing great things in the discord. Ladies

32:36

and gentlemen, what is our

32:38

mission? Winter culture war. We

32:41

believe in meritocracy, personal freedoms,

32:43

individual liberty, the power of

32:46

the nuclear family. These things

32:48

are considered to be largely conservative, but it's

32:50

nuts because growing up they were normal in

32:52

a liberal household, but the left has gone insane. So

32:55

we want to make sure we have a stable functioning

32:58

environment. That means hard work

33:00

comes along with all of the joys, but we

33:03

have a balance of short-term and long-term satisfaction. The

33:06

left seems hell-bent on only short-term. How

33:09

do we win? Well, building culture isn't

33:11

the only way. You need to build community. So

33:14

over at casperu.com we sell coffee. Why?

33:16

We've actually been working to set up this coffee

33:18

shop forever. It's like we're

33:21

almost, we're a year and a half of trying to

33:23

get it going. It

33:25

is frustrating, but we're past the permitting

33:27

phase, the drawing phase, and a bunch of work is

33:29

getting done. Finally, the difficulty we were having was with

33:31

contractors who would start and then stop and then start

33:33

and then stop, and it's a nightmare. But

33:36

still a lot of work has to be done. And

33:38

the goal with selling coffee is it's the cheapest point

33:41

of entry for physical locations where people can hang out,

33:43

have a cup of coffee, talk about things.

33:46

When you meet your neighbors, you guys network,

33:48

you might be like, hey man, I'm really

33:50

good at swinging baseball bats. And the other

33:52

guy's like, I'm really good at throwing baseballs.

33:54

And you're like, dude, you can throw

33:56

the baseball. I can hit it. I'm

33:58

kidding with that analogy. The point is complementary

34:01

skill sets. You meet someone

34:03

who's a great artist and you're a great writer

34:06

and you're like, what if we teamed up and made a cool

34:08

comic book? There has to be a

34:10

way that people can organize and they have to know

34:12

each other and network. In the

34:14

meantime, while we await our physical location, you can go

34:17

to timtas.com, click join us, become a member, and

34:19

join the Discord server where

34:22

there's a bunch of different chat rooms. People

34:24

are collaborating. There's morning shows. There's after

34:26

shows. People are making friends. People

34:28

are meeting up. People are finding

34:30

relationships. That's true because

34:32

that's what networking is. This

34:36

world we are looking at right now, what's happening?

34:38

People are breaking apart. It's becoming the matrix. No

34:41

one's going out to the mom and pop

34:43

shop anymore. They're sitting at home all day.

34:45

There's a chart talking about people. They're saying,

34:47

hey, sugar intake is stable, but obesity is

34:49

skyrocketing. And they're like, it must be our

34:51

food poisoning us. It's got chemicals in it.

34:54

No, it's the internet. We used to

34:56

have to walk to the store. Now we pull up

34:58

an app and DoorDash. We used to have to walk to

35:00

our friend's house. Now we just put on our headphones and

35:02

play video games online. We used to have to walk

35:05

to the train, get off the train,

35:07

walk to our office. Now it's remote

35:09

working. We are burning less calories. We

35:12

need to reverse that trend. We

35:14

as humans must resist the

35:16

matrix by making sure we move

35:19

physically and talk with each other

35:21

lest we find ourselves living in the pods

35:24

and eating the bugs. It

35:26

just so happens that when you join the

35:28

Discord server, that's the function of supporting all

35:30

the work that we do at Timcast. So

35:32

timcast.com, click join us. So I'll

35:34

wrap it up there though. And I do

35:36

have, of course, a bunch more segments coming up. We'll

35:39

talk about on the left calling

35:42

for armed

35:44

revolution. Yeah. But

35:46

that'll be coming up. The next segment will be at 1 p.m. Maybe

35:48

we'll have some updates on the verdict.

35:50

What I like to do is I usually

35:53

like to have the 10 a.m. and 1 p.m.

35:55

segments be big stories of the day.

35:58

10 a.m. is like, here's the big. this morning,

36:00

1pm is here's our developments, and then 4

36:03

and 6pm, the other segments we do,

36:05

are usually more social and

36:07

more culture worry,

36:09

right? Less important. So

36:12

that's why, like yesterday

36:15

we did the AI segment because we want to mix things up

36:17

a little bit. But we'll wrap it

36:19

up there. Smash the like button, subscribe

36:21

to the channel, thank you all for your support. We

36:24

are going to be back at 1pm on this channel and

36:26

I don't know, maybe I'll do another livestream or something

36:28

at some point. And then of course

36:30

we always are back for Timcast IRL. Thanks guys

36:32

so much for hanging out and we

36:35

will see you all at 1pm. Attention

36:38

campers, the new Camp Snoopy at Kings

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36:59

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37:01

the Peanuts gang at Camp Snoopy, now open

37:03

only at Kings Island. For the fun of

37:05

it. Far

37:09

leftists, and actually just like

37:12

weirdo democrats, are threatening civil

37:14

war. If Donald Trump

37:17

is elected, they've graduated from, I

37:19

will abandon this country outright and have

37:21

moved on to, it is time to

37:23

buy weapons because the Second Amendment guarantees

37:25

us this is right. Now the funny

37:27

thing is, these people are posting on Reddit that

37:30

they're going to be put in camps and

37:32

I'm just like, are

37:34

you illegal immigrants

37:37

in this country in violation of

37:39

our law being in

37:42

fear that you will get arrested? Because

37:45

I can't literally understand

37:47

why any one of these leftists think

37:49

in any way they're going to end up in

37:51

a camp considering Donald Trump would not even invoke

37:53

the Insurrection Act to stop the Summer of Love

37:56

riots. But of course, these

37:58

people live in crackpot walls. world so

38:00

they believe garbage nonsense. Reddit

38:03

lies says, this is at reddit

38:05

underscore lies on Twitter, Redditors

38:08

are now discussing an armed rebellion if

38:11

Trump is elected. Yeah right, this

38:13

is what the Second Amendment is was for.

38:16

When we're all in camps it's gonna be a

38:18

little too late. Well

38:21

here we go, here's it here's the post

38:23

from Reddit says, so at what point do

38:26

we in the US start fighting back? Let's

38:28

assume the theocratic fascists get their wet,

38:31

it's from r slash atheism by the

38:33

way, yeah. Let's

38:35

assume the theocratic fascists get their wet dream

38:37

and Trump gets elected and the Republicans

38:39

get the House and Senate. They

38:41

get to enact every part of Project 2025 that they want no

38:45

resistance. When do we start fighting

38:47

back? I'm not trying to be a

38:49

doomer but when we're all in camps it's gonna be

38:51

a little too late. We have to try and do

38:53

something. Y'all are nuts,

38:55

okay. Matt Walsh jokingly

38:58

calls himself a theocratic fascist. Yeah,

39:02

you are not going to live in their world, these people,

39:05

I'm sorry conservatives, Christians, y'all are

39:07

pushovers. That's just

39:09

the reality. These people are crackpot

39:11

lunatics. Christians are so tolerant they

39:13

let evil people into their institutions.

39:16

Oh I'm so afraid. Now

39:18

we're desperately trying to push the evil

39:21

out and I gotta tell

39:23

you it's only after, my friends

39:25

listen please, it is only after

39:27

the far left goes insane that

39:29

moderate left-leaning individuals joining the ranks

39:32

of the right resulted in some

39:34

active pushback. Oh

39:36

by all means you had Christian conservatives

39:38

pushing back, being angry

39:40

about it, but not being particularly effective

39:42

and now that post liberals, people who

39:45

like used to be in these protests

39:47

are joining the right because the left

39:49

is nuts, now the right

39:51

is gaining ground. What I mean to say is Christians

39:55

are too good of people. I

39:57

mean it, I mean it. The

39:59

Christian... sees the the Wayward

40:03

soul who says please please I just

40:05

need help and what does the Christian

40:07

do? They they

40:09

promote this lie that Christians are

40:11

angry and bigoted and mean no

40:13

the Christians Opened up their doors

40:16

to these people tolerated them says let's let

40:18

they say let's be nice to them Yes,

40:20

please. We don't want to fight. We want

40:22

to be good neighbors and they

40:24

allowed Degeneracy into their

40:26

ranks Infecting their institutions and this

40:28

country that was once predominantly Christian

40:30

is now the Christian D is

40:32

on the decline In

40:35

some ways it's coming back. Don't get me wrong

40:38

My point is these are not wartime

40:40

Christians they are peace loving good neighbor

40:43

Christians who try to give everyone the

40:45

benefit of the doubt and Look

40:47

what this has resulted in With all

40:50

of that being said the far left is

40:52

acting like these good Christians who are trying

40:54

to be good neighbors much to their Own

40:56

detriment are the fascists Now

40:58

I know many Christians may take

41:00

offense to this but guys I'm sorry. It's true

41:03

Christians saw these these bad

41:06

people move in and thought we'll

41:08

just be nice and maybe we

41:10

can save them I will knock on their

41:12

door and ask that they understand and what do you get? Jack

41:16

Pissovic goes out Antifa

41:19

gets in his face and screams at him. He's not even

41:21

saying anything anybody He goes

41:23

to DC and his far left are tearing down

41:25

statues firebombing things and the Christians

41:27

for too long tolerated this Now

41:29

they're starting to realize what's going on and

41:32

I still don't believe it will ever result in anyone going

41:34

into a camp Well, here

41:36

we go We

41:38

need more. Here we go. You want the

41:41

uncomfortable answer? This is what the

41:43

Second Amendment was for is what we can do

41:45

about it. Oh, yeah We

41:47

need more left-wing gun owners in case ish

41:49

hits the fan aka it's time for me

41:52

to start hitting the range again Oh

41:55

boy And

41:57

then I've got the oh, yes. Okay.

41:59

All right I want to do the shout out, become

42:02

a member at timcast.com to support our work

42:04

and pick up Ian's Graphene Dream at casperu.com.

42:07

I'm trying to do more shout outs

42:09

because this will probably help the business

42:11

if I do. So hey, Ian's Graphene Dream,

42:14

new coffee, now available. But

42:16

let's jump to the next one. Reddit

42:18

Lies has another one for us. Redditors

42:21

discuss what they would do if Trump gets elected.

42:23

Oh boy, I wonder what it is. This

42:26

one asks, if Trump wins, are you actually

42:28

moving? Where?

42:30

One person said, Vfoepe's grandmother? I'd

42:34

rather stay and fight. There's no way I'm letting

42:36

these people have this place to themselves. Fun

42:39

economy says, I'm 70 and me too,

42:41

can still write, think and speak. I'm

42:44

old too. And if Hitler pig

42:46

was elected and turned out to be as bad

42:48

as we expect, and I

42:50

get a terminal diagnosed at some point, I

42:52

could be a very dangerous person. At that

42:54

point, I would have nothing to lose, so

42:57

I might as well do something corrective. Wow.

43:01

This next guy says, for legal reasons,

43:03

I don't condone this, and I'm also not sure

43:05

if it would make things much worse anyway. But

43:08

part of me always wonders how in a country of 300

43:10

plus million people, there weren't at

43:12

least a few people like that who tried to

43:14

do it. I actually agree

43:17

with that last one. Violence

43:20

is wrong. Violence is the language of

43:22

the desperate and the wrong. Far

43:26

leftists like Antifa, they go out and start

43:29

smashing things up because they know that they

43:31

have no real argument. They're wrong. So

43:33

only by force. Now

43:36

self-defense is not the same as initiating

43:38

violence. This is what people need

43:40

to understand. My friends. My

43:42

friends. There are people who post

43:45

this meme saying, the founding fathers would have been

43:47

stacking bodies by now. No.

43:50

No, no, no, no, no, no. Man,

43:52

I love the founding fathers' history

43:54

of the American Revolution. Homies be

43:56

like, well, the regulars have shot us again.

43:59

Let's send another strongly worded

44:01

letter. They didn't really talk like

44:03

that, mind you, because the Roddick

44:06

English was actually the standard until the British

44:08

changed it, but so

44:10

the colonists actually talked more like we do now with

44:14

minor differences, but for the most part, yes, Roddick

44:16

English. That means we say our R's like car

44:18

and there, and in the UK they say they're

44:20

and ca. They're trying to sound smart, I guess.

44:22

Don't know why that happened. Anyway, I

44:24

digress. The Founding Fathers, a

44:27

year and one month after the start of

44:29

the American Revolutionary War, finally

44:31

said okay, we're declaring independence. The

44:35

war was already going on. Absolutely

44:38

incredible. Lexington and Concord,

44:40

the shot heard around the world, was

44:42

a year and one month before the

44:45

Declaration of Independence. So

44:47

when people are like, the Founding

44:49

Fathers have been stacking bodies by

44:51

now, let me know when you're

44:53

a year into active conflict with

44:55

military and then you can talk to

44:58

me about the Founding Fathers would have been doing. Then

45:00

when you say that, like, oh fair point,

45:03

they did wait a year being shot at

45:05

before they finally declared independence, but

45:08

I guess to be fair, the point

45:10

is when the regulars came in with

45:12

guns, it, you know, the funny thing is

45:14

it wasn't the Founding Fathers. It's a bunch of farmers.

45:17

So you get Massachusetts and they basically say,

45:19

you get the Boston Tea Party.

45:22

We don't, you know, the taxes are bad. And

45:24

then the crown is like, you must pay restitution.

45:27

And it was called the Intolerable X. And then

45:31

outside of Boston, they're like, you have no control

45:34

over us. You can't do anything. So they said,

45:36

we're gonna come take all your guns away. And

45:38

the farm, and Boston, they were like, okay, I

45:40

guess. And then the farmers were like, yeah, good

45:42

luck. And then the regulars tried marching on them.

45:45

Military was dispatched, armed

45:48

and ready to kill. They say,

45:50

we don't know who fired the first shot, but

45:52

the shot was fired. And I believe it mostly

45:54

resulted in, I believe both sides took casualties, but

45:56

it was mostly the farmers calling

45:58

patriots, whatever. just regular guys,

46:01

farmers. And they said that

46:03

was the start of the Revolutionary War. And the founding fathers

46:05

were like, I don't know man, you know, I don't want to

46:07

be involved in this. Like we do not want war. So what

46:09

did they do? They wrote a strongly worded

46:11

letter to the crown. That's

46:13

what they did. Strongly worded

46:15

letter. And a year

46:18

and one month later, they finally

46:20

wrote another letter saying, y'all keep

46:22

doing this. So we are calling ourselves

46:24

an independent nation. We've organized against you.

46:27

That's wild. They tried so

46:29

hard not to fight. Watch the

46:32

movie, The Patriot with Mel Gibson, one of the

46:34

greatest movies of all time. And

46:36

Mel Gibson's character is just like, are

46:39

you should we have independence on the crown? Yes,

46:41

the right to govern ourselves absolutely agree. But if

46:43

you're talking about war with Britain, I say no.

46:46

And then he says, your children will learn of

46:48

this battle with their own eyes.

46:50

It will not be fought on some distant battlefield.

46:53

It will be here in front of your homes,

46:55

in front of your children. They

46:58

did. And I know it's fiction. I'm saying they

47:00

didn't want to fight. These people are crackpots. Okay,

47:02

we don't want to fight. You don't want to live

47:04

in that world. You want to live in the world

47:06

where you wake up and have cold pizza for breakfast

47:09

on the weekend because you were partying with your friends

47:11

the night before. You want to wake up

47:13

in the world where the fresh smell of coffee

47:15

and pancakes as your significant other, but

47:17

your wife or husband has decided to make breakfast

47:19

for the family on that beautiful weekend morning. And

47:21

on Sunday, you walk into church and everyone's smiling

47:23

and shaking hands. And for those that don't go to

47:26

church, Sunday morning, you wake up, you go to the coffee

47:28

shop, and there's old crazy bill pouring orange juice in his

47:30

oatmeal again. What you don't want to

47:32

live in is a world where you walk outside to rubble

47:34

and debris. And when you hear a gunshot, you hit the

47:36

deck and you don't know who's shooting in from where. That's

47:38

not a world you want to live in. Oh,

47:42

great. Phoebe's grandmother is

47:44

back saying, first, we try all

47:46

legal means, but if Trump wins

47:48

legal, may lose its meaning. And

47:51

if that happens, I mean to fight in the

47:53

literal sense. And if that happens,

47:56

I think there will be a lot of

47:58

very surprised and overwhelmed MAGA terrorists. That

48:00

convinced themselves leftists can't fight We

48:03

get Bato responding saying I mean it wouldn't be

48:06

so difficult. Just take out anything with a red

48:08

cap wearing a sympathy diaper Bring

48:11

back the Italian poisoning rings.

48:13

It'd be funny AF Wow

48:18

I'd like to alert the FBI to the press. Oh wait.

48:20

Oh Wait, the

48:23

FBI agrees with them. Hmm. Oh Now

48:26

I tell you what I'll tell you

48:28

what We live in this

48:30

in this crazy crazy world and

48:33

there are people who think civil conflict cannot

48:35

happen They say old old crackpot Tim Poole's

48:37

a crazy man Dancing

48:39

around in the in the West with this

48:41

tumbleweed blown around screaming me Thinking

48:44

that civil wars are coming. I Don't

48:47

know you tell me man. I don't know what's

48:49

coming. I'm telling you this Some

48:53

people just know the best rate for you is

48:55

a rate based on you with all state Not

48:58

a rate based on Terry you keep It

49:02

makes the car behind them Save

49:08

with drive wise and all state apps and only

49:10

pay a rate based on you Not

49:14

available in every state subject to terms and conditions rating factors

49:16

and savings very and in some states your rate could increase

49:18

with high-risk driving All state fire and casualty insurance company and

49:20

affiliates Northbrook, Illinois you get yourself some chickens

49:23

Maybe a metric how? get

49:26

out of the city breathe some

49:28

fresh air Eat some

49:30

fresh berries that are safe enough poisonous mind you so you

49:32

got to learn you got to figure it out and Sit

49:35

in the back porch in a rocking chair

49:37

as the chickens walk around bucking and pecking

49:41

and you'll put a smile on your face Let's

49:44

say that conflict does come You'll

49:47

hear about the conflict in the distant land as you

49:49

live off in the rural area a few hours drive

49:51

away Not the safest

49:53

but decently far enough to where you've

49:56

secured your property you're in

49:58

a place like West Virginia with constitutional carry

50:00

so you are armed and secure in your

50:02

property, you know, pending any kind

50:04

of actual military effort against your land. But

50:07

you'll be sitting there, you'll hear on

50:09

the news the bad thing's happening, and you'll think, you

50:12

know, I got chickens, they lay eggs every day. We

50:14

got a bunch of them. Sometimes we

50:16

eat them. They just happen to make more of themselves.

50:18

It's fun. You eat them in the winter, it keeps you alive.

50:22

You got a little mini-county, you get some goats, you get

50:24

a garden going. And in

50:26

today's day and age, you can actually get a really easy greenhouse.

50:29

They sell them, they're actually miniature greeners, it's pretty cheap. You

50:32

got to heat them up so you'll need power,

50:34

but you could do that easily with modern technology.

50:37

Who's all I'm saying? In the

50:39

event the worst happens and people actually begin

50:41

fighting, you're going to want to be self-sufficient

50:43

to a certain degree. You're going

50:45

to need supplies, you're going to need knowledge. I

50:49

recommend you get that knowledge in those supplies. I

50:52

suppose the challenge right now is for a lot of people, they

50:54

ain't doing none of that. And so,

50:58

man, I tell you, worst case

51:00

scenario for a lot of people is going to be

51:02

waking up to a conflict they cannot survive. Best

51:06

of luck, my friends. I hope we do not

51:08

ever enter that. I hope that Trump wins. These

51:11

people who are screaming civil war stop, and

51:14

then we just get some accountability. Next

51:17

item has come up at 6pm on the channel. Thanks for hanging out, and

51:19

I'll see you all then. The

51:22

judge has given instructions to the jury.

51:24

They have begun deliberating. And

51:26

in the instructions, the judge has

51:28

rigged the trial against Donald

51:31

Trump. The judge

51:33

actually instructed the jury that

51:35

they do not need to be unanimous

51:37

in their decision as to

51:39

the crime Trump committed in

51:41

order to convict him of

51:43

falsifying business records. I

51:46

can't believe it. In this morning's

51:48

special live segment, we

51:50

talked about how in the closing arguments, the

51:53

prosecution said, you don't need

51:55

to agree that Trump committed The

51:58

same crime. Can all

52:00

disagree on the crime he committed so long as you

52:02

all agree he did commit a crime. What?

52:04

Does that mean. Twelve, It

52:06

means that the jury could go back

52:09

behind the scenes and say I don't

52:11

think Trump committed any kind of campaign

52:13

violation another jerk and say I don't

52:16

think he committed attacks violation. The

52:18

other individual can say I don't think he committed a

52:20

any of his my license I think he was jay

52:22

walking. And or something. They.

52:26

Said. Each of the jurors

52:28

could disagree on the crime they think Trump may

52:30

or may not have committed, but so long as

52:32

they all agree a crime was committed, Such

52:35

as guilty. You.

52:37

Really into the judge

52:39

gave instructions, Saying exactly

52:41

that? What does that mean? Welcome

52:43

to the nightmare dystopia my friends.

52:45

The State of New York is

52:47

now saying. If they

52:50

decide to bring a crime. That

52:53

has any kind of underlying

52:55

attachment. The jury need

52:57

not. Actually agree that you committed

52:59

any of his crime so long as they agree a

53:01

crime in general was committed said well. That's.

53:05

right? Donald Trump will be

53:07

will be convicted. In one

53:09

criminal court case of different

53:12

crimes of varying issue. So

53:15

long as they're great job. at some points the I

53:17

can't believe. It. Now I'd been

53:19

saying. For some time now. What

53:23

I saw what happened as the prosecution would

53:25

come out and tell the jury Think about

53:27

everything you've heard about Donald Trump in this

53:29

trial. And everything

53:31

you know, Donald Trump did. Industrial.

53:36

The. Point being that they would convince the

53:38

jury to convict Trump not on this

53:40

case, but I'm literally anything. Just lock

53:42

him up. I didn't

53:44

realize the judge would actually give

53:46

those exact instructions. Saying

53:49

out right. You. do

53:51

not have to be unanimous on

53:53

the crime trump good snow normally

53:55

be like this let's say a

53:57

guy is accused of committing arm

53:59

fraud And then

54:01

reckless endangerment with a vehicle followed

54:03

by intentional homicide, right? So it's

54:06

a guy who defrauds a

54:08

person and then Him

54:11

is a guy and his wife are defrauded and

54:14

he's getting his car to leave and they chase

54:16

after him So he speeds full speed Swerving

54:19

it out of cars and then crashes they

54:21

jump out He turns around pulls out a

54:23

gun and opens fire killing one of the

54:25

guys murder You

54:29

you've got to convict the guy in each of these crimes. You've got

54:31

to say we agree the evidence shows he

54:33

committed fraud We agree the

54:35

evidence shows that he was reckless endangerment

54:37

driving his vehicle. We agree the evidence shows that he

54:39

turned around he committed murder What

54:42

they're saying now is it

54:44

doesn't matter on any of these

54:46

counts of tax fraud campaigns finance

54:48

violations or otherwise So

54:51

long as you agree Trump at some point committed a

54:53

crime related to his

54:55

business filings Lachima I

54:58

can't believe it News

55:01

week says Trump acquittal now unlikely

55:03

former prosecutor Yeah Yeah,

55:06

because the judge said you don't have

55:09

to be unanimous I've

55:11

got the jury instructions here We've

55:13

got new updates. It's all coming in in real

55:16

time. Trump is smiling in court Michonne directs parties

55:18

to remain close. You cannot leave the building. Trump

55:20

is not allowed to leave Jerry

55:23

deliberations have begun Before

55:25

we jump into all of these great details my friends

55:28

head over to Tim cast comm click join us Become

55:31

a member support our work directly. We rely

55:33

on viewers like you to keep the

55:35

operation up to running Yeah,

55:38

we're not we do get ad sponsorships and

55:40

they it does make money But memberships is

55:42

the main driver since especially

55:44

since we've been putting all of our

55:46

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55:48

rumbles mission and challenging YouTube that means

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Particularly If you are a member watching on

55:56

Rumble, please consider supporting us at Tim Cast

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56:02

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56:04

Love Rumble! We was rumble infrastructure for a

56:06

website for our back and and everything because

56:09

we want Rumble to win. But

56:11

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Youtube does so we don't make as much

56:15

money. Consider becoming a member, it's him cast.com

56:17

and also eons Graphene Green coffee now available

56:20

at casper.com. We gotta get those

56:22

parts of spots in my friends Here we go. Next

56:24

order says Judge Marshawn has told

56:27

the jury they do not need

56:29

you to anybody to convict. This

56:31

means for jurors could agree on

56:33

the first crime falsifying records for

56:35

on the second tax violations for

56:37

on the third federal elections violations

56:39

federal election but. And

56:42

were sung with. Still count that as

56:44

a unanimous guilty verdict from the twelve

56:46

member juri. The fix is in. ladies

56:48

and gentlemen, the judge has rigged this

56:50

against Trump. I don't know

56:52

where we go from here my friends. Jonathan

56:55

Turley. Is that the breakdown was

56:57

read it. He says the

56:59

judge is giving instructions. He stated that he wants to

57:02

stay close to the standard instructions. The problem is is

57:04

guess anything but standard. Yesterday

57:06

was chilling as the judge allowed prosecutor to engage

57:08

in what some he was highly inappropriate. Arguments were

57:10

a dozen. The early morning segment michelle a song

57:12

They Get A Only Consider Cohen's plea of our

57:15

federal of the to a federal lox had violation.

57:18

Of starlets Marshawn is telling them. That. They

57:20

can only consider Cohen's plea to

57:22

a federal election violation was only

57:24

allowed to judges credibility enough. for

57:26

context, that is mere. Meet.

57:29

After the prosecution. Posters

57:31

of really said that was violations were

57:33

committed as an indisputable let's are indisputable

57:35

fact and that Trump ordered them to

57:37

be committed. Search

57:39

for Son said that if they find any

57:41

witnesses testified with regard any material fact, they

57:44

could disregarded. Machine

57:46

as instructed. The first count

57:48

of falsifying business records in the first degree

57:50

must show that Trump made or causes a

57:52

false and should be made. In. Tend

57:54

to means conscious or purpose to defraud

57:56

intense does not required intent to defraud

57:59

any particular part. That or entry, but

58:01

a general intent to defraud. And

58:04

many says. Marshawn

58:06

as just delivered the Coup de Grasse

58:08

instruction. He said that there is no

58:11

need to agree on what occurred. They

58:13

can disagree on what the crime was

58:15

among the three choices. Thus, this means

58:18

they could split for for for and

58:20

you will still treat them as unanimous.

58:22

Marshawn just noted, if the money would

58:25

have been paid regardless of the campaign,

58:27

it is not a contribution. There.

58:30

It is. I

58:32

can't believe that work that were here. I.

58:35

Mean, I can believe it. I got be as I can believe it.

58:39

The sixes in. Did y'all

58:41

think anything else was gonna happen? We

58:44

thought you'd get a hung jury. The.

58:47

Judges made it clear they're going to go

58:49

back to the deliberations and so and can

58:51

be like i don't think trump commit these

58:53

crimes and they're going to say it's. City.

58:56

Falsify the business records and they're like. I

58:59

mean, the prosecutor said he did. The.

59:01

Prosecutor said as a statement of fact. That

59:04

Donald Trump ordered going to violate federal auctions

59:06

Or why are we here? He did it.

59:10

How could you have a hung jury that case one down

59:12

my back? I'm not. I'm not doing that. You.

59:14

Can even nullify. The like, you

59:16

think any one of these, what about

59:18

taxes He was reimbursing. Tell taxes. Yeah,

59:21

I guess all rights. and he's guilty.

59:24

They. They wow. They.

59:26

Put up a bunch of different crimes, And sad.

59:28

Mix and match. Choose your own adventure. Lock

59:30

him up. You.

59:33

Know what? I tweeted this

59:35

outcome goes to jail. I really do. So.

59:38

When overnight as a cast, Patel said. Trump

59:40

is probably counting on. It. when

59:42

it came to the gag order violations many

59:44

people and the last specially were speculating trump

59:46

was trying to get locked up but he

59:49

needs to make it look like it's the

59:51

judges heavy hand and not trump's heavy and

59:53

meeting trump gets gagged and says okay okay

59:55

are i won't and then presses pushes the

59:58

envelope a little bit So it looks like

1:00:00

the judge is being unreasonable because he wants

1:00:02

the judge to lock him up Preparations

1:00:06

have been made Secret

1:00:08

service prepares for possibility of Trump going to

1:00:10

jail the Secret Service

1:00:12

is reporting met with jail officials in New York in

1:00:15

anticipation of a possible conviction of former president Donald Trump's

1:00:17

hush money case a correction

1:00:19

source told CBS News that such preparations

1:00:21

were underway as the Manhattan trial reached

1:00:23

closing arguments and jury delay Deliberations this

1:00:26

week the report said corrections

1:00:28

officers would be responsible for protecting any Secret

1:00:30

Service agents tasked with safeguarding Trump if he

1:00:32

spends any time spot times my time up

1:00:34

behind bars I You

1:00:37

know look I Believe there

1:00:39

is a greater than chance probability that this will benefit Trump if

1:00:41

he goes to jail, but I don't know for sure Many

1:00:45

people may just be like wow Trump did it. He's

1:00:47

found guilty. I can't believe it. I Don't

1:00:50

know that that would fly though. I

1:00:52

gotta be honest. I don't see that I

1:00:55

have more faith in the American people. Maybe I shouldn't

1:00:57

but I feel like regular Americans are gonna be like

1:01:00

what is going on For

1:01:03

Reed Zaccaria, I'm gonna say this every time said

1:01:05

this case shouldn't be brought He said

1:01:07

they would never bring us against anybody else then

1:01:09

to actually lock him up for it. I Believe

1:01:12

would be the death knell for Democrats News

1:01:15

week says it is unlikely Trump

1:01:17

will be acquitted in his hush money case a former

1:01:19

federal prosecutor has said Niyama

1:01:22

Romani now president of the West firm

1:01:24

West Coast trial lawyers in LA Compton

1:01:26

the former president's chances of acquittal as the

1:01:28

jury prepared deliberations He told Newsweek

1:01:31

an outright acquittal is unlikely But a hung jury

1:01:33

is very possible given the political nature of the

1:01:36

case and even convictions on misdemeanors would be a

1:01:38

victory for the former president in April

1:01:41

Trump the presumptive 2024 nominee became

1:01:43

the first former president in US history to stand

1:01:46

trial in a criminal case He has

1:01:48

pleaded not guilty Remounting to

1:01:50

the defense's closing arguments should have focused on the charges

1:01:52

in the case and stayed away from the two-star witnesses

1:01:55

He added that the defense's case was partly built on the

1:01:57

claim. The records were personal and not business related that

1:02:00

they were not false and that Trump didn't personally

1:02:02

falsify the records and that even if he did

1:02:04

they were not in furtherance to or to cover

1:02:06

up any another crime if the

1:02:08

jurors or even one juror by any of these arguments

1:02:11

as a win for Trump Paul

1:02:14

Dura Ohannesian What a name a

1:02:16

criminal defense attorney in Albany, New York told

1:02:18

Newsweek that Trump's lawyers Should have assumed that

1:02:20

most jurors won't like their client and will

1:02:23

want to convict him The best

1:02:25

approach in the situation is to argue why the case

1:02:27

is more important than Trump Why

1:02:29

would jurors who don't like him acquit him? Make

1:02:31

the case about standing up for the principles of our

1:02:34

justice system like the presumption of innocence and a reasonable

1:02:36

doubt Stephen Gillars law

1:02:38

professor at New York University told Newsweek the

1:02:40

weakest link in the government's proof is Cohen

1:02:44

Gillars headed that prosecutors were able to show that

1:02:46

there was a strong circumstantial evidence in the case

1:02:49

He said circumstantial evidence Contrary to

1:02:51

popular myth can be as strong as or

1:02:53

even stronger than direct evidence and can establish

1:02:55

guilt beyond a reasonable doubt None

1:02:57

of it matters the judge

1:02:59

basically just rigged

1:03:01

the game jury

1:03:03

deliberation 24

1:03:05

minutes in at the time of recording this

1:03:07

absolutely amazing We've

1:03:09

got all these instructions a lot

1:03:12

to break down and we'll get to

1:03:14

what we can But I think this

1:03:16

is all extremely important. We're gonna go back here about an

1:03:18

hour Judge

1:03:20

outlines which records jury can consider

1:03:22

regarding unlawful means of falsification Judge

1:03:26

is now moving through the 34 felony charges

1:03:28

against Trump Trump speaks of

1:03:30

attorney as he reads the charges Judge

1:03:33

reads entire law falsifying business records for

1:03:35

the jury judge one. Rashawn is now

1:03:38

reading the entire law This includes the

1:03:40

definitions for the relevant terms he listed earlier

1:03:42

Meanwhile Trump is slouched way back in his chair with his

1:03:44

chin resting on his chest Judge

1:03:47

explains the difference between motive and intent Rashawn

1:03:50

tells the jury their verdict must be unanimous on each

1:03:52

count now. Here's the funny thing CNN

1:03:56

does this but

1:03:58

they do not include where the judge says you

1:04:01

do not have to be unanimous as

1:04:04

to whether the crime was committed, on which crime

1:04:06

was committed, just if

1:04:10

a crime was committed. Judge

1:04:13

instructs juror in how they should deliberate. A

1:04:16

juror's notes cannot be used by others or in

1:04:18

place of evidence, a judge says. Several

1:04:21

jurors look over at the first seat as

1:04:23

the judge mentions the foreperson. Judge

1:04:26

Michonne describes the process of the vertical play out.

1:04:31

Trump passes a note to his attorney. The

1:04:33

jurors will give their cell phones to a court officer

1:04:35

while they're deliberating. The judge says

1:04:37

jurors may only discuss the case when all

1:04:39

12 individuals are together. Judge

1:04:42

says jurors will work until 4.30 p.m. today. We'll

1:04:46

figure out the other days going forward. He

1:04:49

says, if they stay late going forward, it's

1:04:51

unlikely they work later than 6 p.m. I

1:04:55

think the judge is fully expecting

1:04:58

that the jury will come back very quickly with

1:05:00

a guilty verdict. And

1:05:03

thus, Michonne concluded his instructions. There

1:05:06

is one clarification, which is the

1:05:08

foreperson should not sign the note with his actual name.

1:05:10

Michonne asked the attorneys to approach the bench again. Two

1:05:14

jurors volunteered to learn how to

1:05:16

use a laptop containing evidence. Jeez.

1:05:20

You know, it's fascinating. The

1:05:23

challenge with a jury

1:05:25

of your peers in today's day and age

1:05:27

is that, you know, as the saying goes, you

1:05:30

will be judged not by a jury of your peers, but by

1:05:32

a jury of people who did not know how to get out

1:05:34

of jury duty. It's never

1:05:36

gonna be a jury of your peers. It's

1:05:38

gonna be a jury of random people. I mean, these are not

1:05:40

Trump's peers. These are regular

1:05:43

people. Trump's entirely different. And

1:05:45

he didn't even live in New York anymore right now. The

1:05:49

jury leaves to begin their deliberations.

1:05:53

You must find, to be on a

1:05:55

reasonable doubt first, that he solicited, requested,

1:05:57

commanded, or importuned, or intentionally aided the

1:05:59

jury. that person to engage in that contact

1:06:01

and second that he did so with the state

1:06:03

of mind required with the Commission of the offense

1:06:07

for the falsifying business records. Let's go through this.

1:06:09

This is, okay, here we go. Here

1:06:12

are the instructions. They must not make a

1:06:14

decision based on biases or stereotypes. They

1:06:16

must set aside personal differences. They

1:06:18

must not speculate, speculate how long sentencing may

1:06:20

be or what the punishment might be. You

1:06:23

know what's really funny is, um, they

1:06:26

say things like this. If

1:06:28

I'm ever on a jury, 99% chance I'm

1:06:31

nullifying. So I ain't probably ever gonna get on a jury.

1:06:34

If they show me a video of a guy committing a murder and

1:06:36

the guy says that he did it but his defense is axed,

1:06:39

I'd be like, lock him up. I don't know, whatever, man. But

1:06:42

if you can't prove beyond a reasonable doubt and I got

1:06:44

a high standard, I'm just gonna bet. And

1:06:46

if they, if the judge is like, you cannot hold

1:06:49

it against Trump for not testifying, okay, I agree with

1:06:51

that Fifth Amendment. If they said

1:06:53

you can't speculate on sentencing, I absolutely will. I'm gonna

1:06:55

be like, you want me to convict the guy for

1:06:57

pot and put him in prison for 20 years? Not

1:07:00

guilty. I just, I just, I'll nullify.

1:07:03

The people must prove beyond a reasonable doubt every

1:07:05

element of the crime. He reminds the

1:07:07

jury it must not rest on its verdict on speculation.

1:07:10

They can consider whether a witness hopes to receive a

1:07:12

benefit. They cannot convict Trump on Cohen's

1:07:15

testimony alone because he's an accomplice. But

1:07:17

they can use his evidence if corroborated with other evidence.

1:07:20

The jury must be unanimous if

1:07:22

they find Trump guilty on each count on

1:07:24

whether he committed the crime personally, acted in concert

1:07:26

with others or both. They must

1:07:29

determine if Trump conspired to promote someone or prevent

1:07:31

them from public office. They

1:07:34

should deliberate with the view toward reaching an agreement

1:07:36

without surrendering individual judgment. Jurors'

1:07:39

notes cannot be used in place of evidence. The

1:07:41

foreperson will deliver the verdict for each count after

1:07:43

deliberations are over. They must surrender

1:07:45

their phones and can only discuss the case when

1:07:48

all 12 of them are together. Rashawn

1:07:51

also explained what makes a person guilty of

1:07:53

falsifying business records in the first degree, explaining

1:07:56

they must have the intention to defraud.

1:08:00

constitutes a violation of the Federal Election

1:08:02

Campaign Act. It is unlawful

1:08:04

for an individual to willfully make a

1:08:06

contribution to any candidate running for office,

1:08:08

including the presidency, exceeding certain limits, which

1:08:11

in the relevant years was 2700. He also

1:08:13

walked the jury through what

1:08:16

they must find in the different counts leveled

1:08:18

against Trump. Richard explained what tax law violations

1:08:20

were and said it was unlawful for a

1:08:22

person to willfully produce a tax statement or

1:08:24

document that was false. Fascinating.

1:08:28

They're claiming that Donald

1:08:30

Trump was paying off Stermie Daniels

1:08:33

and then did not properly

1:08:35

track the record so the tax

1:08:37

would reflect differently. Amazing.

1:08:42

It makes more sense Trump

1:08:44

didn't know about it. Absolutely

1:08:46

insane. What

1:08:49

they are doing to Donald Trump could be the end of

1:08:51

business in New York as we know it. We

1:08:55

already saw with Kevin O'Leary when

1:08:59

it came to the civil trial where

1:09:01

they claimed that he was defrauding these

1:09:03

banks because he had improper records.

1:09:06

They said that the Trump penthouse was 30,000

1:09:09

square feet when it was 10,000 square feet. I

1:09:12

don't know the nuances of that and I wasn't in the case,

1:09:14

but I can tell you there's reasonable reasons

1:09:17

for that discrepancy. First, is

1:09:20

it 30,000 total square feet and

1:09:22

10,000 finished? Could it be

1:09:24

the 20,000 square feet of like unfinished floors

1:09:26

underneath it that they don't live in? Could

1:09:29

it be that the guy who did the paperwork,

1:09:32

who was not Trump, accidentally wrote

1:09:34

the wrong number down? That simple. What

1:09:37

are we looking at right now? If

1:09:39

you run a business in New York and

1:09:42

you get a bill in the mail from your legal team, you

1:09:44

can't pay it because if

1:09:46

you do, they can make up a crime and

1:09:49

say, you did it and

1:09:51

they'll put you on trial. Donald

1:09:53

Trump's the boss. That means

1:09:56

he gets an invoice. It goes right to

1:09:58

his CEO. his CFO,

1:10:01

not him. And they pay it. That's

1:10:04

their responsibility. They pay it. Why

1:10:07

would Trump know about it? We

1:10:10

have bills that come in here and

1:10:12

it's a number and I'm just like, sure. Right?

1:10:15

Cause we have teams that do things. If

1:10:18

we're getting a new delivery of something or let's

1:10:21

say it's like we need new cameras, they buy it

1:10:23

and then they say, Oh, we need you to sign this form cameras.

1:10:27

Okay. They

1:10:29

could come and claim actually it wasn't

1:10:31

for cameras and I'd have no idea.

1:10:34

And then they get some liar, couple of liars to

1:10:36

go on the stand and just say, Oh yeah, he

1:10:38

knew. And I'm like, man, I have no

1:10:40

idea what you're talking about. Show

1:10:43

me the man and I will show you the crime. That's where we're

1:10:45

at. They cannot

1:10:47

leave the building. Trump

1:10:50

smiles in court as jury begins

1:10:52

deliberations. I love this. As

1:10:55

the jury begins deliberations, Donald Trump stood up and smiled

1:10:57

and then began speaking with attorney, Alina Habba and his

1:10:59

son, Donald Trump Jr. Trump looked

1:11:01

around on his way out of the courtroom

1:11:03

and seemed to give a couple of small smile, some reporters. Remember

1:11:06

Trump is required to stay inside the Manhattan

1:11:08

courthouse while the jury deliberates. Perhaps

1:11:10

they hope jury deliberations will

1:11:12

just go on for quite some time so

1:11:15

that Donald Trump is jammed up and

1:11:18

can't actually campaign or do anything

1:11:20

to benefit his candidacy. All

1:11:23

of this press on Trump jury deliberation

1:11:25

is now at a 32 minutes.

1:11:29

What are they even discussing? I wonder with

1:11:32

the rules the judge just gave, what

1:11:34

are they even discussing? I

1:11:36

feel like the only conclusion they can have at this point,

1:11:39

based on what he said is Trump must be guilty. They

1:11:42

outright that the prosecutor said in his closing arguments,

1:11:44

the crimes already committed Cohen admitted to it. Trump

1:11:46

told the dirt. That's a fact. Yeah.

1:11:50

What objection overruled

1:11:54

huge. It's the

1:11:56

games rigged. The game

1:11:58

is rigged, my friends. But

1:12:00

we'll see. Maybe there will

1:12:02

be one hung juror. One

1:12:05

guy. One woman who

1:12:07

just says, I am not going to be party

1:12:09

to this. It really depends on where the sentiment is.

1:12:11

They live in New York City. Do

1:12:14

they want to be Bartman? As

1:12:16

that as Vocal described it, wake

1:12:18

up one day with a flaming bag of crap on their

1:12:20

porch or a brick through their window? I

1:12:24

tell you, people are

1:12:26

going to hunt these jurors down. I

1:12:29

don't see how Trump gets a fair trial at all. We already know

1:12:31

it's not fair. I don't see how he gets a fair verdict. We'll

1:12:35

see what happens. Next segment is coming up at 4 p.m. on this channel. Thanks

1:12:37

for hanging out. We'll see you all then. It's

1:12:40

a viral video clip of a

1:12:42

woman crying after her

1:12:44

ex-fiancee was murdered. And

1:12:47

right away when I watched the video, I thought

1:12:49

it was insincere. It seems like

1:12:52

a woman who's baiting to try and get views.

1:12:54

That's just my opinion on the matter. But

1:12:56

it turns out that may be the case. The actor's

1:12:58

family is furious. They're saying that she's not

1:13:01

spoken to him in years and they don't

1:13:03

want her speaking about it. But

1:13:05

let's talk about this story. Now, this woman is

1:13:08

getting a lot of flack. She

1:13:11

makes this tear-filled crying

1:13:13

video when her ex-fiancee was

1:13:15

shot and killed by thieves.

1:13:19

The story is actually quite simple. The

1:13:21

man's name is a former soap star, Johnny

1:13:23

Wachter. He was fatally

1:13:25

shot protecting a female co-worker from thieves in

1:13:27

L.A. Apparently he saw them

1:13:29

approaching a vehicle, or his vehicle. I believe

1:13:32

it was his vehicle. They

1:13:34

say it took place shortly before 3 p.m.

1:13:36

in the quarter of Pico Boulevard in Hope Street.

1:13:39

He was moonlighting as a bartender, was walking back

1:13:41

to his vehicle with

1:13:43

one of his female colleagues after finishing a shift. When

1:13:46

the vehicle came into view, he saw that it was jacked

1:13:48

up thinking it was being towed. He

1:13:50

asked the man who was lying on the street next to the

1:13:52

vehicle whether that was the case. It turns

1:13:54

out they were stealing his catalytic converter. The

1:13:57

man pulled out a gun and shot Wachter, who was

1:13:59

shielding his female colleague from harm before

1:14:02

he and the two mass accomplices who were

1:14:04

waiting fled. Now

1:14:06

this woman made a video crying about

1:14:08

what happened. She

1:14:10

says that we need legislation. Just

1:14:12

get a real job. Why don't you get a real

1:14:14

job? Wow. Here's

1:14:17

what I think. I think she's

1:14:19

clickbaiting. She saw that this happened

1:14:21

and it was an opportunity for her to get views. She

1:14:24

clearly has no understanding of how government

1:14:26

or policy works and this is why

1:14:28

liberal cities are exactly the way they

1:14:31

are. Mike

1:14:33

Cernovich had a post about this. He says back in the day what would

1:14:35

happen is the fiance

1:14:39

of the victim would round up a posse. The

1:14:42

brother, the family, the friends would go track down

1:14:44

the murderer and they would get justice. We didn't

1:14:46

have policing. I'm talking way back in the day.

1:14:49

I'm not saying it's a good idea. I like

1:14:51

the idea that police handle this stuff. It takes

1:14:53

risk off the regular people and it's not always

1:14:55

perfect. It's not. But it seems

1:14:57

to have been developed this way for a reason and there are a

1:14:59

lot of good cops out there. Now

1:15:04

Cernovich says it is women

1:15:06

like this saying get a real

1:15:08

job. She doesn't understand. The criminals

1:15:10

like being criminals. They enjoy committing

1:15:12

the crimes. Let me play

1:15:14

the video for you. You can see for yourself. Here we go.

1:15:16

This can't keep happening. So many lives are being

1:15:18

lost. Just us not being smart. We have to be smarter as it can. Guys,

1:15:21

even if you're watching this, we have

1:15:23

to stop being so mean to each

1:15:26

other. What

1:15:33

do you think that means? This

1:15:36

insipid, ridiculous

1:15:38

act being mean to

1:15:40

each other. You

1:15:43

know throughout history we learned the

1:15:45

stories of barbarians, raiders, ravagers, rapists,

1:15:48

and I mean in the

1:15:50

classical sense. The Vikings

1:15:52

storming the village, burning it down, killing

1:15:54

everybody, kidnapping the women and getting on

1:15:56

their boats and leaving. stop

1:16:00

being mean to each other. Lady grow

1:16:02

up. But you know what? Perhaps

1:16:04

she did. Because she is

1:16:06

the emotional version of the Ravager.

1:16:09

Making these ridiculous videos for the reason

1:16:12

of personal benefit. I

1:16:14

saw some of the comments yesterday and

1:16:17

it's like, guys, let's love

1:16:19

each other. Let's not feel,

1:16:21

you know? It's so

1:16:23

sad that... I don't even think she's actually

1:16:25

sad. Look at her demeanor. Crime

1:16:28

in LA had to do this and I'm

1:16:30

hoping that um... change

1:16:32

the legislation to prevent this from happening. Uh,

1:16:35

murder is already illegal, lady. So

1:16:37

is stealing people's catalytic converters. These

1:16:39

criminals can't keep being on the street and they

1:16:42

can't keep being sent back and have

1:16:44

no repercussions for their actions. There

1:16:47

we agree. If she's talking about legislation

1:16:49

to make sure we don't let them out of prison,

1:16:52

okay, I'll walk that back and say, agreed,

1:16:54

lady. You know, if you're

1:16:58

the person who did this, you're watching. I'm

1:17:02

sorry, but you shot the wrong guy. No,

1:17:05

they were stealing his catalytic converter

1:17:07

and he tried to stop them.

1:17:09

What do you mean the wrong guy?

1:17:11

Who's the right guy? Was there a right person to

1:17:14

have shot? No. You

1:17:17

know, we can get a real job. I

1:17:20

know the job works hard, but we're all in

1:17:22

it together. They're not in it with you. They

1:17:25

like being criminals. They want to

1:17:27

be hard. You

1:17:30

know, it was um... I think it was Charlemagne, the

1:17:32

god. I was watching his bed on Fox and Friends

1:17:34

in the morning and he

1:17:36

was saying like when he was a kid, he was studying

1:17:38

and they told him he was acting white because

1:17:41

he wanted to study and be smart and improve himself. I

1:17:44

heard that growing up as a kid all the time from

1:17:46

people in my neighborhood. That's

1:17:49

what they think. They ain't in this with

1:17:51

you, lady. You don't

1:17:53

have to steal. No, they like stealing. It's

1:17:55

fun for them. I'm not kidding. You

1:17:59

know. Especially

1:18:04

take a life over it? I

1:18:06

don't believe she's actually crying, I gotta be honest.

1:18:08

I think these are crocodile tears where she's faking

1:18:10

it. She was dating an actor. I

1:18:12

wouldn't be surprised if she had some acting experience

1:18:14

or lessons. And she's not very good at

1:18:17

it. It does not come off as sincere at all. Human

1:18:22

life is disregarded too easy, guys. We gotta mix

1:18:24

and do this as a community. We gotta support each other and come together.

1:18:26

It seems so fake. Maybe that's what Johnny's gift is for us. Maybe he's

1:18:28

gifting that to all of us. Wow. We should

1:18:30

find these killers, guys. right.

1:18:33

And Johnny stood up and did what's right. All the time.

1:18:35

And Johnny's still there. He's

1:18:38

still there. I'm not sure what he's doing. I think he's still

1:18:40

there. He's still there. I'm

1:18:42

just going to wait. I'm just going to wait. I'm just

1:18:45

going to wait. I'm just going to wait. We

1:18:47

can't keep losing things like this because people are

1:18:49

afraid to stand up and do what's right.

1:18:52

And Johnny stood up and did what's right. All the

1:18:54

time. So

1:18:56

let's be like Johnny and stand up and

1:18:58

do what's right. She's not crying. It's

1:19:01

fake. She's making a video

1:19:03

trying to go viral. Ladies

1:19:06

and gentlemen from TMZ, Johnny Wachter's

1:19:08

family doesn't want X talking murder.

1:19:10

She's far removed. There you go.

1:19:14

X's fiancé passionately spoke out against his

1:19:16

murder. And while her heart's in

1:19:18

the right place, the actor's family thinks her mouth

1:19:20

is elsewhere and not needed. We

1:19:23

talked to Johnny's mother, Scarlett, who tells

1:19:25

TMZ that Johnny and Tessa Farrell dated

1:19:27

years ago and haven't stayed in touch,

1:19:29

not having spoken in at least two to three years. She

1:19:32

says his family also hasn't maintained contact with her,

1:19:35

which is why she's peeved about her comments. Tessa's

1:19:38

emotional plea for stricter laws in L.A.

1:19:40

rings hollow for Scarlett, who tells us

1:19:43

she believes Tessa is just clout chasing,

1:19:45

even though Tessa's tearful video certainly seemed

1:19:47

genuine. Uh, I don't think so. In

1:19:50

fact, we spoke to her to get more detail about what she'd

1:19:52

like to see change in L.A. Check

1:19:54

it out. Tessa says letting low-level

1:19:56

crooks back into the street under L.A. zero

1:19:59

bail policies recipe disaster and in this

1:20:01

case tragedy. Full stop. Completely agree. Completely

1:20:04

agree, lady. Completely agree. She

1:20:07

reiterates her demand to swiftly catch

1:20:09

the suspects responsible for killing Johnny. Completely agree. And

1:20:11

in the same breath clarifies she was not sympathizing

1:20:13

with them in her video. She did. She was

1:20:16

like, can't you get a job? You

1:20:18

recall she tearfully spoke directly to the guys who

1:20:20

shot Johnny saying she gets times

1:20:23

are hard but noted they could just get

1:20:25

a job instead of ripping off catalytic converters and

1:20:27

murdering people. I

1:20:30

just it's this

1:20:32

mentality which results in the pain

1:20:34

and the suffering. She doesn't get it or

1:20:36

she does and she doesn't care. These

1:20:39

guys like committing crimes. It

1:20:41

is status for them. It is fun

1:20:44

for them. That's it. Statement

1:20:48

that rubs build the wrong way in a follow up interview.

1:20:50

It has to clarifies that committing crime regardless of someone's circumstances

1:20:52

is never okay. Still it sounds like

1:20:54

whackers family has soured on her regardless. His mom

1:20:56

says she wishes Tesla would stop using her son's

1:20:58

name for press while pointing out that some of

1:21:00

the things Tesla has mentioned like the existence of

1:21:03

surveillance video of the crime is news to her.

1:21:06

In terms of what happens next, Scarlett says Johnny's body

1:21:08

will be flown to South Carolina where his family lives

1:21:10

and they'll have a memorial in LA for him at

1:21:12

some point. Cops have yet to

1:21:14

make an arrest and we're hearing the murder has

1:21:16

rattled many in law enforcement with sources telling us

1:21:19

this is par for the course for

1:21:21

the way criminals have been acting lately

1:21:23

namely more brazen and violent without provocation.

1:21:26

Yeah dude walked up and they got

1:21:28

put a bullet in them. Crazy. That's

1:21:31

crazy. You know look I've grown up I grew

1:21:33

up dealing with a lot of crime men and

1:21:36

the mentality usually was criminals

1:21:39

at least where I grew up. They're

1:21:42

not looking for a fight. If

1:21:44

they think you might be resistant they'll try

1:21:46

and go after someone else given

1:21:49

the option. But it just

1:21:51

depends on if you're confronted by somebody with a gun

1:21:54

pointed at you depending

1:21:56

on your circumstances you might just want to comply. It

1:21:59

is challenging though. Telling everybody

1:22:01

to comply results in criminals targeting

1:22:03

everybody. If the police put out a

1:22:05

message saying, if you are confronted, fight

1:22:07

back and make sure they regret it, criminals

1:22:10

are going to have a harder time targeting people.

1:22:12

In Florida they say, don't

1:22:14

come to the wrong house to loot. Floridians

1:22:17

are armed. In Chicago

1:22:19

they say, drop to your knees and

1:22:21

beg to be spared. The

1:22:23

criminals then go, everyone in the

1:22:26

city is told to comply, it'll make

1:22:28

crime easier. And what do you end up

1:22:30

getting? It's a perverse incentive. Now

1:22:32

it's getting worse and worse. It's a

1:22:35

sad story, man. It really is. But let

1:22:38

me know what you think in the comments if

1:22:40

you believe her tears are sincere. She

1:22:42

hadn't talked to the family or the guy in two or

1:22:44

three years. The video looks fake.

1:22:47

Sorry, I agree on locking criminals up. I'll

1:22:49

give her that much but it looks fake.

1:22:51

I'll leave it there. Next segment's coming up

1:22:53

at 8 p.m. over at youtube.com/TimCastIRL. Thanks

1:22:55

for hanging out and we'll see you all then. Hi,

1:23:08

I'm Lauren and I work for Meijer.

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1:23:13

there? It's because I can get great

1:23:15

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1:23:33

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