Episode Transcript
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to the uncensored Timcast IRL call-in
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show Monday through Thursday at 10
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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
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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
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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
36:40
Island brings your family summer camp fun
36:42
all season long. Head to camp with
36:44
Snoopy, Charlie Brown and the whole Peanuts
36:46
gang for fun and adventure. Race forwards
36:49
and backwards on the new family boomerang
36:51
coasters, Snoopy's Soapbox Racers. Explore on your
36:53
own with more space to roam at
36:55
Beagle Scout Acres. And don't
36:57
forget to grab a snack at Pig10's Mess
36:59
Hall. It's a new way to play with
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
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they it does make money But memberships is
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since we've been putting all of our
55:46
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rumbles mission and challenging YouTube that means
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Particularly If you are a member watching on
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Rumble, please consider supporting us at Tim Cast
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website for our back and and everything because
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we want Rumble to win. But
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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,
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