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It's.
C
Rise.
B
Rise.
D
Your famous, well deserved content creator. I don't think there's been a creator to match you. As for this young man, he insists your bright part reborn.
B
Or was it Hercules? What?
D
Why doesn't the hero reveal himself? Tell us all your real name. You do have a name.
B
My name is Host. How dare you turn your back to me, Big Checkus slave. You will remove your helmet and your headphones and tell me your name. My name is Crowder, Commander of the Mud Club Army. Loyal servant to the middle class, young professionals with college degrees or some college education. Father to a demonetized channel, the voice of the deplatformed. And I will have my vengeance on this platform or the next moderators D. 3. 3. It. Click Rumble Premium and join now for 99 annually or 9.99amonth to get the entirely ad free experience and an ever expanding roster of content creators and free speec. Good morning. Good morning. Good morning. Good morning. Are you having a good morning? I think you're going to have a fantastic morning with us because we're going to argue a little bit about data centers separating fact from fiction, but we're also going to talk about migrants and what's going on in the uk, specifically around the Henry Novak murder verdict that just came out. Actually, this Morning. We prepared this segment because it's one of those infuriating things that you probably haven't heard about because the media is not doing their job yet again. Take one guess as to why. Why hasn't the media covered this story? You're right, Race. We're gonna go through all of the details and give you the happy ending to this story that we all deserve, which is a conviction. And then the police maybe kind of sort of not really apologizing and then talk a little bit more about foreigners and how they are enriching the west. And it's fan frickin tastic. I'm not racist. Just say that at the outset. I just. It's just getting really hard not to be currently in this system. Okay, Lane, speaking of racism, how are you not racist?
E
Whoa.
B
No, I said you're just very starkly white.
F
Well, you know, it's the summertime. I'll be starkly red here in a couple weeks. I like to diversify.
B
Pink pigment, will. Exactly. So you're doing. You're doing well?
F
I'm doing pretty well.
B
Yeah, pretty well.
F
I just had an off brand granola bar. Tasted pretty decent. Things are really cooking right now.
B
Fantastic. Mr. Josh Firestein. How are you, sir?
D
Good. I'm good. I had a Caesar salad last night with red cabbage in it, and, yeah, it's bothering me. I really.
B
Red cabbage is a bothersome thing?
D
No, I like red cabbage, just not in a Caesar salad. Yeah, that's what it's. That's what it's doing to me.
B
You seem angry.
D
I am, well, trying to eat my healthy fried chicken Caesar salad with extra dressing. Somebody threw red cabbage in there.
B
Did you not see the red cabbage?
D
No, I saw it. I just thought, wow, we'll try something new.
B
So really, this is a problem. That's. Yeah, your thing.
C
Let's be fancy.
D
Try something new tonight. Maybe some red cabbage, maybe some anal. We'll see.
G
Whoa.
B
Oh, for you. Can we clip that, please, for the soundboard?
D
That's over.
B
Climb up that butt. Apparently, depending on the weeknight, that's a possibility. At the Firestein household, we're a show. We're gonna get to some very serious topics. So I want to make sure we have a little bit of fun at the beginning. By the way, go see Josh Live. Saturday, May 30, the Roxy Theater in Muscogee, Oklahoma.
D
Muskogee. Oklahomie.
B
Oklahomy Oakley. Homie, They're Okalie. Your homies. Nothing better than that.
C
No.
B
You do want people to come to the show. Right? Yeah. Okay. You just so really what he's doing is like, you have to come and like to see the good comedy.
D
Flip that.
B
Yeah, I see how this works.
D
If I just be quiet, Gerald will walk into soccer.
B
I really do. Okay, well, I was going to do a little more promo for you, but I guess I'm not. I'm moving on. Do me a favor. I am very passionate about this. Obviously, one of the biggest story I think today that we're talking about is the Novak murder and everything that went into it and why this is a problem, not just in the UK but for some of the policies that we're starting to see and some of the attitudes really here in the United States. But what have you heard lately about data centers? To me, it feels like data centers have been made out to be the greatest evil in the United States right now, driving electricity, prices, pollution, all kinds of stuff. And there may be a lot of truth to these claims. So I'm not saying that there isn't. I'm just saying what have you heard? And have you heard anybody kind of separate fact from fiction? So hopefully we're going to get to some of the charges essentially against these data centers and AI and the verdict and give you some clear information. I'm very passionate about it. Obviously, I have some thoughts. Make sure you comment and let us know so when we get to Rumble Premium, you guys can fry me if you need to or admonish me or agree with me, who knows? So we'll see. All right, so before that, I want you to meet Ted Gummit, your maker
C
calling for it, right?
B
You're going to meet your maker. That's what's going on. One day we all will. But before we do, I want you to meet Dr. James David Manning. He's a Harlem pastor and he has some thoughts on parenting and mamdani women
G
who are raising children that are sick. A woman can't raise children. You can't raise children with tits. You gotta have balls. You gotta have a man. Anybody, any man. That. And I'm not after anybody. As I said before. I'm not trying to.
B
Nobody applauded.
G
Not trying to make anybody feel bad. But on the other hand, just looking
C
at the woman behind the stairs.
G
Yeah. Anybody you know when that boy Mondami came out on the scene, This a Muslim. Whoa. He is a jihadist, if you will. Intifada, if you must.
B
Us
G
anti Jesus Muslim and are talking about he got a good program. I don't give a damn how good his program is. He's a Muslim, and Jesus is Lord,
B
and I'm voting for him.
G
And I ain't tell nobody else to vote for him.
B
Preach it, brother.
G
Hell's wrong with you? I'm tired of the Democrat Party making out our women and out of our men. I'm tired of it.
D
I'm tired.
B
Whoa, whoa, whoa, Church. Whoa, Reverend, when you're going to have too many people in your church this Sunday if you're not careful? And look, I. I total. I get it. I know we're. I. I know we're thinking the same thing here. What exactly is he saying? Well, luckily, we have our own black church translator with us today, Brother Todd, from the Ebenezer Baptist Church. All right, Brother Todd, thank you for joining us today. We appreciate it.
D
It is my absolute pleasure, Brother Gerald. Anything for a fellow D1 athlete.
B
Oh, you were a D1 athlete as well?
D
Well, I translated for one of the players for Jackson State's water polo team.
B
A black water polo player? Are you serious?
D
Well, I mean, the pool is only six feet deep, so, you know, he just kind of hopped around.
B
Okay, well, if you don't mind, we'd like your help translating a passage from the black preacher's sermon, if you can give us.
D
Let's get it.
B
Okay. All right.
D
That means yes.
B
Thank you.
G
I'm tired of the Democrat Party making b out our women and P s out of our men. I'm tired of it. I'm tired. I've had enough of it.
D
Okay, so what he's saying here is lately I've been feeling a tad overwhelmed by how modern political narratives seem to impact our personal relationships. It seems as though some of the classic traits we used to value in both men and women are being somewhat discouraged these days. And I don't like it.
B
Ah, well, thank you very much. I get it. Thank you, Brother Todd. Tim, can you please.
C
Yeah, I knew where that was going.
D
Now Gerald gets it.
B
I do get it. But I think it was about to get even more racist, and I needed to move on. But before you say, I love this man's church. And listen, I understand using some profanity in church. A lot of you are probably pretty turned off by that. I would be a little weirded out if my pastor started swearing, but it seems like they're used to it because the clapping and hooting and hollering ensue after a lot of it. So it's like, yeah, preach. So to each their own, I guess. But he also blamed blacks not attending church on one source that you're probably going. Huh?
G
Here's what needs to be said and needs to be heard.
B
Okay.
G
That the homo.
B
Ah.
G
That in this community. That the homos have shut down the churches. Cause they're all white and they don't go to black churches. I don't like business no more. Maybe one on 1 16th Street. But what the homo's done, and I'm old enough to have watched it happen right before my very eyes.
B
You did what?
G
And I'm not gonna talk about your toe ache or your headache or your problem. Jesus got a problem. Jesus needs somebody to point out the homos are shutting down churches.
D
Ah, come on, Gerald. You didn't do that, did you?
B
The homos are the problem with black men not attending church.
C
He needs to run for Congress.
B
I don't know, but he is hilarious.
F
If he had a Christ is king Tumblr, I'd buy that.
B
I mean, maybe at that point, it's kind of funny. I love his podium. It just says Jesus straight to the point. Yeah.
F
Why use many words when few words do, Trick?
B
If anybody else has any more clips from this guy, please let us know. I imagine this is not the first time he's gone on these kinds of rants, but he's about to be. Was it like 120 people are in that congregation or something like that? We found out it seemed like a pretty substantial 100 to 200 people. It's about to be thousands, so buckle up, buttercup. Okay, since, you know it's another day that ends in the letter Y, there's more examples of the foreign enrichment of Western societies that we wanted to get to. So let's start with our favorite new mayor Mamdani and his fashion statement. So he showed up at a Bronx Muslim event in this outfit. I didn't know what to call it.
F
It's a dress.
B
Is he going to a soccer match?
C
It's a dress.
B
It's kind of a dress.
C
They wear dresses.
D
That's a snuggie.
B
Now, listen, I know what you're saying. Like, you know, he's just supporting his team. He's an Arsenal fan. Arsenal fans are actually called gooners.
D
What? Yeah. Why are they called that?
B
You heard that correctly, as mentioned by British Prime Minister Keir Starmer. They called us orcs and goons. Mr. Speaker, I am a gooner. I am a gooner. I wouldn't say that out loud, sir.
C
What a sports team he's talking about.
B
I'm a gooner and a wanker. I think Piers Morgan is also a very huge fan of Arsenal, which would make him, like, their prime Gooner. The Washington Post also argued that he was wearing the Arsenal theme kurta, and it made him more relatable. More relatable because I tend to wear my favorite team's jersey to my religious festivals and services as well. I saw this and I thought, like, how is he at this event in that? Like, how did somebody say, you're going to be around a bunch of other Muslim men that are going to be all dressed in the. I didn't know the name Kurta. Right.
C
It's a dress.
B
It's a. In the dress. You're going to be wearing the dress. Everybody else is going to be wearing, like, nice dresses or relatively nice dresses. They're all kind of plain. But he made him go in Arsenal gear because Muslims love Arsenal.
D
Is Arsenal like an American team or something?
B
No, it's in the uk so it's
D
more relatable to British people.
B
I guess we have proof of Pierce
F
Gooner status if you.
B
Do we? Yeah. Oh, my gosh.
F
Oh, to be a Gooner.
B
So he does it with his friends, not.
F
I think
G
we all get together at
B
the stadium and Goon. Yeah.
C
I need a pencil sharp.
B
At what time you gonna goon? Noon. Noon. I'm a knowner goner. Nunna Gooner, baby. Arsenal. Gooners forever. Anyway, if you want more of this, tune in live weekdays at 11am Eastern Time, Monday through Friday for all your Goonies. For all of ruining needs if you're an Arsenal fan. Otherwise, ew, gross.
C
Right?
B
Okay, so not only. Thank you. Not only did he do that, not only did he wear that. And it's just kind of weird. Okay, fine, whatever. He makes a fashion statement, but he did have some things to say about something a little more consequential. His housing plan. Through our new citywide campaign, Fix the City, we will focus on the worst landlords in New York City.
C
Okay, define that.
B
Maybe that's fine. Maybe. Maybe. When necessary, we will take aggressive legal action to remove negligent owners and property. Okay, what does that mean? And for buildings that have suffered chronic neglect, okay. We will work to transfer ownership to responsible stewards.
G
What?
B
Hold up. What do you mean, transfer stewards? That include community land trusts, nonprofits. Nonprofits, or even the tenants themselves. Okay, so hold on. I don't understand what most of what you said means because you're not defining terms on, like, what is extreme neglect and what transfer means and all of the other things, but wouldn't you just say sell? Wouldn't you just say sell? Like I'm not even sure I agree with that. But wouldn't you just say we're going to sell these facilities to someone else, not transfer ownership to the tenants. Do the tenants have to buy it? Is that how this works?
D
Or the tenants are never getting it.
B
The tenants are never going.
D
That's. That was the.
B
Or like the community.
D
Let me get another cheer break right here. Applause break. It's never happening.
B
Even the tenants.
F
He could just say from Badland or he could just say white landlords. Because white people make up most of the ownership classes. Rental market.
B
Yes.
F
And of that substantially, probably a lot is Jewish. So he could just say, we're taking stuff from the Jews and whites and got.
B
Giving it to whoever. And. And just to clarify this point, because we do have Mamdani's housing advisor, C. Weaver, talking about property becoming worthless.
A
Rent control. And they need to be rent controlled. And the reason why they need to be rent controlled is not because, like, rent control is inherently socialist, but because
D
rent control does that thing. Honk.
A
Limits the speculative value of the land. The land is to have the housing actually be worth less. To some degree worth less. We don't want this to be an investment. We have.
C
Mamdani is unamused by this.
A
We don't need people to become millionaires off their homes.
F
Why not?
B
I get most of my knowledge on housing from Sia. Oh, you get it from me. It's just not coming from the source. Not CIA spelled C E A. Josh.
F
We looked at Vicky Palladino's tweet on this yesterday, and she had some claims. Josh, what was the one she was talking about? How basically they're going to try to foment fake claims against the landlords.
B
Yeah.
D
So by her theory, I mean, we could probably bring it up, but by her theory, it's, you know, it's taking all these complaints of negligence about landlords from tenants.
B
Right. No matter how petty they may be.
D
No matter how. I mean, especially petty. Yeah. Something simple as that. The stoop had a dead bird on it.
B
Yeah.
D
And they refused to remove it. I had roaches. The dishwasher stopped working for a day. Or my. I moved in and my fridge was dirty, like that kind of stuff. And they take all these complaints, they pile them up, and then at the end of that. At the end of the day, they go, look at this. Chronic neglect. He said those words. Chronic neglect.
C
Yeah.
D
Well, over the last five years, there's been chronic neglect from these landlords who during COVID stopped getting rent payments.
B
Yeah, exactly.
D
And were Forced to cut back. They were. Well, not cut back too, but they were forced to make changes to the building. Maybe it wasn't livable or it wasn't meeting the. The standards of. Of what? New York.
B
You know, housing regulations.
D
Yeah, whatever. I think it's. I forget the acronym.
C
Sorry.
D
But yeah. So they build this case, and then they have this. This chronic neglect, and then they can just seize it by going, oh, well, we'll just seize. And then they seize that. Then they start from these Nonprofits and these NGOs, they start, you know, branching out into other cities. So it becomes this, like, real estate empire, as Vicky called it, based out of New York City, that is now controlling rent in other cities across America.
B
Now, I mean, rent control is probably the worst idea I've ever heard of. If you can't afford to live in a place, you need to move from that place most of the time. There are some instances where I get a little like, oh, gosh, I feel bad for what's happening here because some nefarious actions are taking place or some kickbacks, whatever, that's different. But certainly taking property from somebody just because there's tenants that get together. I mean, I would right now be like he said, maybe tenants get it. So if we all get together and just start complaining enough about it, they
D
don't even have to be true. Things have to be complaints.
B
Exactly.
D
They'd be like, my water. My heater went out.
F
And this would allow these NGOs to amass tons and tons of wealth in property. Yeah. So now they can start pushing their socialist causes.
B
They want it worth less, though.
F
They have a huge one.
D
So what she said. Real estate empire. What she's saying is this would fund.
B
Yeah.
D
The NGOs and nonprofits and people like
B
the DSA, the Democratic Socialists of America. By the way, this brings me to my Cauchy. Check in, man. Sorry, Koshi. Check in. Son of a guy. I was looking for the Paladino tweet. We did ask you to do that. And when somebody like Mamdani says things like this, you're probably thinking like, okay, people don't like this guy. But right now on the kaushi. Check in. 20% chance of him being times person of the year. Donald Trump's at 24% right now. Pope Leo's 17%. James Tallow. What?
F
Yeah.
B
Dude, are you just trying to piss? That's Kelsey. Check in. Get off of this. I'm not angry enough today. We're not talking about.
F
And he was the number four list of One.
B
So I thought, well, the only reason
D
he qualifies is because he doesn't identify as a man or woman. So it's person of the year.
B
That's the only reason.
D
Reason he.
B
Six genders, typically. I don't even know what six he's saying there are, but I think that's a little exclusive. Okay. I thought there was like, 100 and something.
D
He identifies as marionette.
B
Okay. Well, hopefully identifies as unemployed. He's Beto part D. All right.
F
At least Beto could skateboard.
B
He could. I mean, a little bit. He's radical. So there's a tubular. There was an attack today right over your head. I got it. Got it. I hate you sometimes, Josh, and I also love you. There was a Muslim man. The Swiss attack that was covered this morning on a lot of news outlets right now. It's shocking. They really don't know why this happened, why he stab people. So if I'm correct, Lane, I'm going to lay this out and say that there was a man who. He shouted Allahu Akbar, which is in and of itself enough for me to think murder. Right. He's probably doing something really bad. If he's shouting and running away doing that, you don't typically, like, you know, just shout that. You may think God is great because that's what it means, but it's typically not just said with nothing else going on. And he ran away with. Oh, here it is. Bladed weapon. He ran away with a knife in Switzerland, near Zurich. Okay, so you be the judge. You tell me, Just out for a jog.
D
That Jack Black.
B
So he got stabby, ran away.
G
Hello.
B
Three people were injured. Town is 10% Muslim and apparently 90 infidel, because that's what motivates this guy. So you're. You're telling me there's really no. No understanding of why this guy was doing that?
D
How many times have been a dispute over rent?
B
There's a rent control thing. Yeah, but he doesn't like pigeons in the public park or something.
D
A crime of passion, you know, he stabbed three people.
B
Stabs three people, cuts three people. I'm not sure exactly how badly they were injured, but three people were injured, doesn't matter. He needs to face the stiffest possible penalties, but the media needs to go like, well, wait, he ran away shouting, allahu Akbar. What if a guy I don't know ran? And. So these are the infidels, right? So it's infidels versus not infidels. He's not infidel. What if a white Christian with A cross tattoo on his arm, ran after stabbing three Jews saying Christ is king. Would you wonder and speculate about the motive at that point? Probably not.
D
That could still be a rent issue.
B
It could also be a rent issue, but I don't think it is.
F
It could likely be a rent issue.
B
Moving on to more crap out of Britain, because we're going to get to that here in just a second. The center for Social justice found some very troubling data right now. So from 2020 to 2025, 27 younger migrant workers were hired for every one younger Britain for entry level jobs. The ratio of migrant workers hired versus Britain workers hired that were younger for entry level jobs is 27 to 1. In terms of youth employment, this means migrants up 355%. Britain's at 0.3%.
F
And to cut this off, when people can be like, well, yeah, but those are European migrants from places like Romania or Bulgaria. No, this is non EU migrants.
B
What does that mean?
F
Well, I don't think they're coming from Australia, Korea or the United States. Russia, probably not also. So you can derive potentially that they may be Muslim. I don't know, I don't want to go out on a limb, but.
D
Well, if it's anything like America, they're Mexicans.
B
Probably Mexican immigrants.
F
No, then they're. Everyone knows you would actually accomplish something if they.
D
That's true, yeah. They would have so much more housing.
F
I'll shit on, you know, illegal immigrants all day. But let's not pretend that a Mexican can't build a pretty good house.
B
That's true. Very hard working people. But with 1 million Britons between the ages of 16 and 24 unemployed, you don't need these migrants to do these jobs. That is not necessary. Britain is fallen for many, many reasons, the least of which may be this more, I guess important or more impactful is going to be the story that we get to in just a second. But though the futures of many young Britons may not be safe because migrants are being prioritized over them, at least they can protect their crypto at the worst of times. I'm sorry, Mr. Evans. She's gone. Oh God. Why? Why did this happen? What could I have done? Could I, I, I should have done something. I could have stopped this. Sorry, son, there's nothing you could have done. There's nothing any the of us could have done. Sometimes we just have to accept that some things are out of our control. But some things are in your control, like managing your crypto. What? Yeah, Rumble wallet makes it super easy. You're in control of your crypto. It only belongs to you. Are you serious right now? Dead serious. No, seriously. Download the Rumble Wallet Wallet and step away from big banks for good. Go to wallet.rumble.com today and you can also support your favorite creators. Step away from big banks. Rumble Wallet. Look, if you are a doctor and you never say anything like that, you do deserve to get punched. But specifically, if you're looking to get into crypto and you don't really know much about it, like me, I know some about it, but not actually how to, you know, use it on a daily basis. It's a very easy way to get started. These guys will really help you out. So go to the link in the description because they try to track these things and we want credit for this. Anyway. Ryan Reynolds here from Mint Mobile. I don't know if you knew this, but anyone can get the same Premium Wireless for $15 a month plan that I've been enjoying. It's not just for celebrities. So do like I did and have one of your assistant's assistants switch you to Mint Mobile today. I'm told it's super easy to do@mintmobile.com
A
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B
Now we're going to turn a little bit more. Serious is probably not the right word for this. Infuriating is more likely the word.
D
It's not silly.
B
It's definitely not silly. There's not going to be a lot of humor in this on purpose because it's a very difficult story to go through. But the latest victim and the cultural Decline of the UK is an 18 year old British Polish student named Henry Novak. And you probably have not heard much about Henry. I don't believe that it's been covered on a lot of the news networks. We'll get down to that in just a second, but pretty much silent on it. Let me give you some of the details of what happened. He was attacked by a Sikh that was wielding an 8 inch knife, supposed to be like a religious knife that these guys are carrying. In response to that, when called to the scene, police cuffed him and his last words were, please, brother, I can't breathe. Does that remind you of anybody? I can't breathe. Multiple people. I mean, was it Tempe that we talked about? Is it Tony Tempa? Tempa talked about that. He said he couldn't breathe either. Begging for his life as cops joked about him passing out pretty bad. Didn't hear about that here in the United States. We did hear about one person who couldn't breathe though, and that was George Floyd. And it was probably because he was overdosing on drugs at the time.
C
Oh, he's a black guy, so.
G
But.
B
And we had video of it and we can sensationalize that. That's the kind of stuff.
C
He's a phony guy too.
B
Yeah, well, that's true.
C
He was white and so was this guy.
B
So you know, and just kind of gets swept under the rug here. Novak bled to death in police custody because his Sikh assailant accused him of being racist and said he was faking. Because that's what cops typically do. They take the word of the people involved in the fight. So you approach a scene and you see a guy that's been stabbed. Obviously we'll get to why that was obvious that they should have seen that. And a guy who was not. And the guy that was not stabbed that has said stabby weapon, says he's faking it. I didn't stab him. Just blood dripping off the knife. But just. What? I don't know.
D
He's bleeding, mate.
B
Yeah, he's having a lot. Get up.
D
He's faking it.
B
Yeah.
D
All right, Cough him and put him on the pavement.
B
Thank God. This broke during our run through this morning about what, an hour and a half, two hours ago. And we're able to tell you that this man, the attacker, is guilty of murder. Breaking news that a 23 year old man has been found guilty at Southampton Crown Court for the murder of university student Henry Novak. Judge William Mosley is adjourned the case now until the 1st of June for sentencing. And Isabel, on that, I think, you know, obviously it's going to be mandatory life imprisonment as any murder conviction. Pause, Hurry. Pause is. Pause it. Tim. Last frame of that video. I just want you to see the chiron. I hadn't seen this before. This just happened. Just read so not Henry Novak right below that. Police apologize for treating victim as racist suspect following stabbing the police Are admitting. Oh yeah, no, we were treating this guy as a racist suspect. What the hell does that even mean?
D
You shouldn't be treating people as a racist suspect.
B
You're suspected of racism. What you mean to him? We're gonna cuff you because you're a racist suspect. So here's the facts of this case. Henry Novak was walking home from a night out when he encountered the 23 year old Vikram Digua. Such a British name, Very British man. Dickwad British all the way through.
D
King Vikram.
B
Hopefully he has some Britain injected to him in prison. Some words were exchanged, but it was unclear how the encounter began. And here is some footage of Noak, I'm sorry, Novak, just before. So this wasn't hours and hours before which some of that video is out there and just kind of shows him. He's very clean cut, kind of white Polish kid. But this is him.
F
You don't have to say white Polish.
B
I deserve an admonishment for that. That clarification was completely unnecessary. He's a clean cut Polish kid. The image in your head is correct.
F
British national of Polish descent.
B
Correct. Right.
C
Yeah.
D
It's one of those countries that are still white Polish.
B
Yeah, a little bit. I love Poland on purpose. So here's some footage of him that night.
C
Well, didn't they claim he was stumbling drunk?
F
Yeah, they were going to try to build the narrative that this guy was drunk and belligerent.
C
Yeah, it doesn't look too drunk.
B
And he seems to be walking fine. Okay, let's say that he's drunk and belligerent and stumbles into you and says, I, you seek whatever the slurs for seeks. I don't really know what it is. Is, is it, is it? The only choice is to go, ha ha ha.
F
And I think we can check this, but I believe toxicology had him under the.
B
Under the driving limit. Yes. So in the United States, we'd say he was under the legal limit if that was here. So you're totally fine. His phone.
D
It's not a license to kill, though.
B
No, it's not a license.
D
It's terrible racism. It's not good. But it's not a license to kill. There are so many groups that think it's a license to kill. You got these people over in Europe, you get the Muslims and you got the Sikhs and the Indian migrants and stuff coming up from there. And here we have black people with the N word. It's like they're licensed to kill. It's like they have an MK Ultra moment in their head.
B
It doesn't make any sense at all to me. So Novak's phone apparently captured the encounter, or at least a large part of it, which showed that Digua was carrying a large knife. And surprisingly, they found Novak's phone in Digua's pocket, which is not normally where you find the phone of another individual who just bumped into you and was saying racist things to you. I guess you just took it for funds. Actually, I think I know why he took it. Because Novak pulled his phone out to start recording the encounter. And according to at least the prosecution, there was no evidence in that recording that we don't have access to it. This is just what they said, that there was any kind of a scuffle or anything like that that showed what Digua claimed had happened, that he was racist and knocked off his turban and grabbed it by his hair. No evidence of that. Maybe that's why he grabbed it, because you could destroy that evidence and then nobody could tell you anything else. Like, well, he did this to me. Well, there's no evidence that he didn't, so maybe he actually did. But just want a quick note for you right now. Pull the image up of that knife again. You see that knife right there? It's an 8 inch blade. That's not like a small knife. You may wonder why he's allowed to have that in Britain, because in Britain, in the uk, it's illegal to have knives to carry them. You can't carry knives. You've heard this all the time. With all the stabbings. They're even talking about getting rid of cutting knives for your kitchen and going to something else. I guess because people are getting stabby and they're like, well, we got to get rid of knives. Well, you're, you're an idiot because you're giving an exemption to this rule as a religious exemption, allowing Sikhs to carry that knife in public when nobody else can. And certainly they can't have a firearm. So you're saying, hey, there's a group out here for a religious exemption, we're going to let them do it. And it really only applies to the Sikhs. We haven't found any other group that it applies to. I don't think Muslims carry it around on purpose, just applies to the Sikhs.
F
It's just another example of acquiescing to the demands of your foreign conqueror. Yes, this is what it is. I mean, you can dance around it as much as you want, but when you can come into the dominant culture and dictate how they behave while still functioning exactly as you would in your culture, then there's no argument to be made that you're trying to be part of British society. The argument is British society needs to become more like mine.
B
Exactly. Did they give an exemption for people that wanted to protect themselves from Sikhs? Wouldn't that be a reasonable next step to say, well, these guys now have knives. They're at a competitive advantage. Shouldn't I be able to have a knife just in case I bump into one and accidentally say something that might be perceived as racist and then get stabbed five times, Once in the face, twice in the back of the legs and once in the chest. That's what happened.
C
Well, they don't believe in self defense at all.
B
No, of course not. They just believe in allowing. Listen, if you're a Sikh and you come over to a country that doesn't allow knives and you're like, hey, but it's a part of my religious thing, then I go, well, then go back to where that religion is practiced and wear it proudly. Get the hell out of here.
F
And this isn't even. And generally speaking, Sikhs are your more peaceful and integrated into.
B
I just don't care.
F
Right. But this, they are just in this equation, they are just not white and that's all anybody sees.
E
Yeah.
F
They could have any other characteristic possible. They could be peaceful, brown, whatever. It doesn't matter. They're not white. So they are going to get the benefit of the doubt.
B
Right.
F
As is constructed.
B
Non white good.
F
Yes.
B
In Britain, white, most likely bad. But listen, if you're going to have a religious exemption for the Sikhs, then you should have no problem at all. With my Christian knife.
C
I have two of them.
B
It'll make the point.
F
I play with that on Halo.
B
It does sound a little bit like Halo. I love that. So here's what happened. So this altercation happened, whatever it was bumping into, saying words, whatever. Dego stabbed Novak five times, including two stab wounds to the back of his legs, one to the chest and one to the face.
D
He looks gay.
B
He does.
F
Well, to be fair, when you're defending yourself, you would go for the back of the legs.
G
Yeah.
B
That's typically stabbed when they're running away.
F
Yeah.
D
That's where you stab them to the face.
B
It's gonna be important.
C
The police didn't see that.
B
Ah.
C
Officers didn't see.
B
Way to go, you. Spoiler in the face. Before the police arrived, his dig was mother, father and brother showed up at the scene. Maybe they were in the area and saw some kind of scuffle going. I'm sorry, they Saw their. Their son stabbing someone to death and ran over and immediately rendered aid to. No, no, I'm sorry. Actually, no. The mother of Digua actually was caught on video removing the knife from the scene and was also charged with the crime. So her first thought was, oh, no, he stabbed somebody. Take the knife. Not. Hey, there's somebody stabbed on the ground. Help them. When police arrived, Digo, he denied that he had stabbed Novak much. Look at the guy. He's obvious. He literally said he's faking and then tried to show the cops that he had a swollen eye, which wasn't even really visible at the time. And he claimed Novak was drunk and he racially abused me.
D
That's not how he sounds.
B
Probably not. Let's be honest. I don't know how Sikh sounds, though, so I'm not gonna do it. Novak protested to the police that he did not, in fact, attack Digua and that he had been stabbed. Hey, I've been stabbed. Look at my face. This guy's not hurt. I am. You know what the police did? They handcuffed Novak and then Novak lost consciousness. Police performed first aid, but he died. And on the police body cam, again, we don't have access to that footage. Maybe that will come out. I really hope that comes out, and I really want to know. I don't think in the uk. No, probably not, but I would love to see that, just to get a clear picture of what's going on in the uk. Novak's last words. Please, brother, I can't breathe. How would you like to be the parents of. Of that kid? Novak's parents. Your son just got into some kind of an altercation. Let's say that your son said a racial slur and knocked off a turban. There's no evidence that he actually did any of that, but let's just say he did. Do you think it's a reasonable response to stab somebody five times, including in the face, the back of the legs, and in the chest? Do you then also think that it's a reasonable response for the police, the people called to the scene, to help protect those people that are supposed to be there for you because you can't be armed unless you're a Sikh, for them to look at you and go, white kid probably bad because that's a migrant, and migrant good in the uk he says he's stabbed. This guy says he's not. I think we're going to take his word and we're going to cuff this guy because he's the one that's Most likely the offender, this guy right here. Cuffed. Please, brother, I can't breathe. How pissed off would you be if you were Novak's parents? How pissed off would you be if you were a parent, period, of a white kid in the UK knowing that this could happen to your son simply because he's white? He's probably the one in the wrong, and it could cost him his life.
F
Was Keir Starmer going to come out and say, oh, this. You know, he could have been Henry Novak. Could have been my son. Remember Barack Obama?
B
Barack Obama did that about. Yeah, Trayvon Martin. Trayvon. If I had a son, it might look like Trayvon. Well, if Trayvon's beating the crap out of somebody and then your son is also beating the crap out of somebody and gets shot, hey, sorry. Maybe train him not to do that. That would be better. But you shouldn't be treated like that. The case is not just as simple as. Well, they got. They did the wrong thing. They cuffed the guy that was stabbed in the face. Right. They cuffed him as he was obviously stabbed in the face, and he died.
F
And we have confirmation that Novak never actually punched or did anything to that extent to dig.
B
No. According to court documents, they said his fists had not had no markings on it at all or any indication that he had recently punched anybody or anything. So most likely didn't even happen. This guy's going away for murder. Thank God. But the police, the people that came to the scene to render aid that handcuffed the guy that was dying, instead of rendering aid to the guy that was dying, they did. At least after the verdict, they finally came around and apologized to Henry Novak's family, but reminded us nothing we could have done. He was gonna die anyway. No big deal.
H
I'm sorry that Henry's life couldn't be saved that night. And I'm sorry that he was handcuffed and arrested in the moments before he lost consciousness. When his killer made that call to police, and he called the police, not the ambulance service, he lied on that court. He lied when police attended the scene. He continued to lie as Henry's condition deteriorated. It is clear, and it is absolutely tragic that it took them three minutes before they started to administer first aid. It is important, though, to say the pathologist has been clear. There's nothing officers could have done which would have saved Henry's life.
B
Life. I don't care.
D
This is the most Mr. Bean crap ever. Yes, well, because the. The killer. The killer didn't call the ambulance. Well, what did he Tell you on the phone. Well, the killer continued to lie the whole time we were there. Why were you believing him? Why are cops believing anybody in the. In a violent situation? Look at him. He's literally bleeding out of his face.
B
Yes.
D
Maybe just don't take the word of the other guy in the fight who's
B
not bleeding at all just because he's the migrant. That that is the issue here is that that the white person in Britain has been put into a class of probably the bad guy with no other factors, and in this case, lots of other factors. That said, maybe he was the one that needed some attention and some help. Three minutes later you're like, well, it's just. Just to be clear, the pathologist said he would have died anyway. But you're. The officers on the scene didn't know that. They didn't go to the scene knowing that this kid was going to die no matter what they did. And therefore they decided to take this course of action. They went to the scene and saw something raw and said, there's been some kind of a fight here. This person white, this person not white. He says, that guy's racist. We're treating him as a racist suspect, which means handcuffs. I don't care if he's bleeding out or not. Oh, wait, three minutes later you lose consciousness after you've begged for your life. I can't breathe. It's absolutely insane. And this murder didn't get get much, if any media attention until Elon Musk posted about this a week ago, saying this poor boy was running away from someone who stabbed him and stole his phone. Correct. But the police in the UK attacked him instead of his murder. Also correct. Elon has offered to fund a wrongful death lawsuit against the police, which I hope goes through. And I hope they get sued into oblivion because they are absolutely useless Christians in the UK right now. Do me a favor. Add to your religious garb a knife. How in the hell will they tell you you can't? If they give an exemption to the Sikhs. Protect yourself. All of a sudden, as a Christian, the sword of the spirit starts to come to mind. Maybe that's a real physical sword and we as Christians should probably start carrying around some kind of a weapon to protect ourselves. Dare them to stop you. Please do something about it. Because certainly the media will not. Media malpractice. So the media has consistently been guilty of malpractice, but they were silent on this one. Here's the list of those who chose not to cover this. AP, Reuters, New York Times, WaPo CNN, NPR, PBS, Ms. Now, NBC, CBS, ABC, L.A. times, USA Today, and the Wall Street Journal. Most of these are American outlets, but these same, very same outlets covered this. Here's some headlines. Wapo. After far right riots, Brits of color contemplate their safety. Npr. Smaller and less diverse UK cities have been rich ground for far right recruitment. Mississippi. Now Britain's battle with post Brexit hate crimes. You don't think this like in any way should have jumped out at them as something to cover? Shades of George Floyd all over again. I can't breathe. At the very least, get to the bottom of what's going on over here. And the UK media prior to today's verdict. Here's how they covered it. Guardian, Crickets. Nothing. BBC. Murder accused with seek blade. Sorry, Murderer. It should be Murderer accused with seek blade denies manslaughter. Sikh manslaughter. It was murder. It was, yeah. ITV Sikh man tells court he stabbed Southampton University student in self defense after he was abused verbally. Idiot. Daily Mail. Sikh man stabbed 18 year old university student to death with an 8 inch ceremonial knife after claiming he'd been racially abused. Court hears. That is not a humorous laugh, that is a laugh of disbelief. I was racially abused. What does that even mean? That somebody said something mean to you and you took out a knife and stabbed them to death. Does that make any sense at all? Here's from the Telegraph. University student, 18, stabbed to death on night out.
D
It's that trigger word. They all think they're the Winter soldier.
B
Yeah.
D
They hear one word and they get a license to kill.
B
Sticks and stones will break my bones, but words will make me stab you.
C
And what do those headlines cover? Yeah, he died because the police cuffed him.
B
Yeah. None of them actually tell the story of what actually happened. And I understand headlines. You're limited, but they're creative. It's creative in how they cover these stories. It pisses me off. We'll talk about this in a minute. Related to something completely different, but it pisses me off. Not just because of the media and the malpractice, but because of what the cops are doing in the uk, because guess what is happening. The UK is prioritizing everybody else, everybody else over you. And you're having to deal with the rapes, you're having to deal with people coming in by the boatload and destroying communities. You're having to deal with Sharia law, no go zones, stabbings over and over and over and over and over again. You have no way of protecting yourself. You have no way of protecting your children. You have no way of protecting your spouse at all. Hope the police come in time. How does that typically work with somebody that has a knife that's stabbing people? Oh, yeah, and by the way, we're going to give an exception to these people because of a religious exemption for an 8 inch blade that they can carry around but nobody else can. Nobody else can. Yeah. It's not part of your religion.
C
And hey, he lied to us. So we couldn't observe visible, objective reality in the face of a lie because, you know, the cops, I guess, still think it's a high trust society over there.
B
Yes.
C
And anybody could just lie to them if they're brown and get away with murder.
D
But we assume based on the account, he's not wise telling the truth, innit?
F
And I know when we cover stuff like this, especially from foreign countries, people ask, well, why do you care? And it's a little harder to explain in certain cases. But with Britain, as much as we'll crap on them and shut on them for their policies, they are us in a lot of ways derivative of British society directionally.
B
Yeah. And what we want to avoid going that way.
F
We want to avoid going that way. But what they've let completely overcome them, we are in the process of letting overcome us here. Because there was this report that came out yesterday that said by 2050, the US will no longer be a majority white country.
B
Right.
F
And the amount of people that celebrated that like it was a good thing, it's objectively bad. It's insane. Because the United States was never built as a white ethno state. We can all agree on that. And from the start of this country, there were multiple races here, especially black Americans, which is why I just won't hear any of the arguments that we're a white white supremacist country or a white ethno state. But it was a majority white. And the institutions that founded this country that you all want to come to and benefit from are largely derivative of British rule or British society. The way that Britain operated and those people that came over brought those same values of, you know, John Smith and. Or, sorry, John Locke and Adam Smith.
B
Yeah.
F
And the people want to live here and benefit from those ideals and our Christian founding while at the same time celebrating its erasure. And what other country would you be able to celebrate the founding people of that country becoming the minority? If you did that in India or Korea or, God forbid, some Middle Eastern country that is predominantly Muslim, you would be looked at like a bigot. And a racist.
B
Well, they would perceive you as a threat.
F
Correct. And. And you should. Their culture to that culture. Just like we should perceive what's going on as a threat to our culture. And that, I think, that should inspire Americans of all creeds, white Americans, black Americans, Hispanic Americans, Asian Americans, people that value the American part of that hyphenate as the primary identifier of who they are, to push back against this. Because it's not about preserving white people. It's about preserving the country that has been made you and so many other people prosperous that unlike any other society in the history of the world.
B
Yeah. And the reason I said it was objectively bad too. And you're right, like, everybody failed him in the uk. Okay, where did it start on this slippery slope? Where did they start? Speech loss, Policing. Speech making. A group of people who were calling out problems. The bad guy and not the people causing the problems. The actual rapes that were going on. It's the people that were pointing that out. No, those are the problems. It's the people that are texting each other and saying something that might be offensive to a lesbian police officer. It's people getting arrested. I think there was around 12,000. It wasn't all from just post or something like that. There was a large part that were arrested for speech crimes, I believe last year in the uk, if that stat is sticking in my mind correctly. They've tried to do that here, and we want to make sure that they don't do that here. But it's objectively bad that white people will not be the majority in the United States. Because it's not that I have a problem with other people maybe even being here. It's that we've let people in illegally into this country in enormous numbers over the last. Not just four years with Biden, the last 30 years, massive numbers of people. And the birth rate of white people is going way down. So it's objectively a bad thing. If the birth rate is going down because it means people aren't having babies, why aren't they having babies? There's a lot of things that lead into that. A lot of it has to do with outlook on life. When you're getting married, if you even can get married, that's a bad thing. Thing. It's not a racial thing. Also, you've let too many people come into the country that are not like the people in this country. That is not also a good thing. You can't celebrate that for any objective reason. It may be good, it may be Bad. That's why it's a bad thing. It's very easy to understand. And I don't want you guys to conflate any of this. I don't want to ever give quarter to genuine actual white supremacists or racists out there. People that really just hate people based on the skin color. I'm talking about culture. I don't want American culture changed into something that it is absolutely not.
F
And if you. I don't care if you like it or if it sounds rough.
B
Yeah.
F
A majority of American culture is overlapped with what they would call white European culture.
B
Yes. White Anglo Saxon Protestants built this country,
F
like it or not. That is what it is.
B
It is. You guys didn't. Sorry. So I know that's a heavy story and we're going to get into data centers and probably have to bleed a lot of that into our Rumble premium coverage. But before we do, please support our sponsors. Go to lwcgold.com right now or call 1-800-628-GOLD and see if you qualify for a no fees for life. Ira. Thanks to the people over at Trugold Republic. We do appreciate their support and we do appreciate that they're not going to screw you either. Plenty of gold companies out there that'll sell you their own specific minted coin for whatever exorbitant additional fee on top of the spot price and then go, well, if you want to sell it back to us, it's actually below spot. Thank God there are good companies out there. Trugold is one of them. If you want to have it as a part of your portfolio, please go and check those guys out. Okay?
D
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B
It's hard to go from that story because I have. I have sons. And if they were ever in a situation like this, I pray to God that they're in a country where they can pull out a pistol and diffuse the situation at the very least. Or fire and save their lives if necessary.
D
I thought that's what you meant by defuse the situation.
B
Well, hopefully it's like, stop. I'm in fear of my life. Stop. Bang, bang, bang, bang, bang, bang, bang. If they have the time for it. If they don't, it's just bang, bang, bang. I pray that they have those kinds of rights. And that's what we fight for every single day. But there are also other threats that we care about. And one thing that I think we've done a pretty good job of because we've tried very hard to do, and I say pretty good job because there are always people that have critiques, is to make sure that we give you the real story as to what's going on. Not sensationalized headlines. And we don't just run after. Well, there's a new deal right now between the president and Iran. All he has to do is sign it. As soon as he signs it, we'll tell you about it. We've heard this story so many times right now. One more time, Axios breaking news. There's like, oh, it's Iran deal, but all that has to happen now is Trump to sign it. Well, we'll see. But data centers, to me, and I'm just going to be honest, I'm very pro. Potentially AI Pro. Potentially. The potential is that there are a lot of downsides to it that have to be managed. Otherwise I'm not pro. It's very simple. If you're going to destroy society and you don't have a plan for that and haven't had conversations about that, I'm anti. If you're going to destroy the job market and therefore destroy society, I'm anti. If you're going to create Terminator and kill everybody, I'm anti. Does that make it clear? But I'm also understanding that there are a lot of potential benefits and a lot of benefits that have already been realized that have been brought by the advancement in AI and related technologies. But you've heard a lot of noise about data centers lately. A couple of the headlines, more power consumed than all of Manhattan. 23 nuclear bombs worth going off every single day. If anybody builds it, we all die. Goodbye. That's the doomer reaction that election. It came not too long after the festive city council approved that controversial data center project. Three of the four incumbents in those festive city council races who lost last night voted in favor of the data center.
A
Just days after voting in favor of building a new data center in Indianapolis, local council member Ron Gibson says he woke up to the sound of gunfire overnight. Gibson said 13 rounds were fired at his home.
B
So many people showed up here to attend meeting. Most of them are here to try
A
to stop the Red Oak City Council from approving yet another data center.
B
XAI is committed to meeting the highest standard emissions. XAI is going above beyond the required emissions. That guy's a cannibal. Eat the rich. Met with a whole lot of resistance. Can you be quiet? Let our citizens hear what needs to be said, please. Multiple interruptions until eventually.
D
For hell's sake, grow up.
B
For hell's sake, I am any planer.
A
We do not want him in nothing. The data center.
B
So that they can watch us, so that they can track us, so that
A
they can enforce their immigration agenda. Senate Majority Leader. Well, that was calling on Sedgwick county to implement a three year moratorium.
B
There's a lot of unanswered questions. For example, three months. Yes. A year ago we were in an emergency drought declaration for water. And so we just don't know the long term consequences this could cause our community in West Edgwood County. Now listen, that's a. That's a more reasoned approach to it is like, hey, we just don't really understand the long term consequences in data centers in this county. Maybe taking. Taking waters away. Water away from farmers. Yes. Okay, three years. No, Lane, you think if he's asking for three, he's hoping to get maybe like three months. Because three years is an eternity in this stuff. So maybe he's negotiating down.
F
The reason that's in there is because it's crazy. It's all over the spectrum. You're getting the people screaming and hollering and you're getting Republicans that are saying there's probably. There could be negatives to this too.
B
Understandable.
F
A lot of it's not measured, but some of it is.
B
Yeah. No, and I think his approach was very measured. His timeframe, if he actually wants three years is a little silly, but. But some time to understand this. Yeah, I get it. And you've also heard that data centers are really the link that will save mankind through the enabling of AI and the advancements of AI. Well, that's the utopian promises. We need growth. We need this infrastructure. How dare you.
C
I don't believe them.
B
We live in the physical world.
F
Thanks, Sam.
B
You know, even when we're in the virtual world, as you were saying, we need this massive complexity in the physical world to enable that. We need to need to make the chips and build the data centers. Finally we have the tools to be actually able to understand them properly. That's what this is.
D
Really.
F
What is that thing?
B
Application of large. His name is Emad. You're going to say WG said I don't allows us to unravel the mysteries of the earth and the universe. The ability to deploy data centers in space is a known ability. The question is, how do we scale that up? One of the things that's really terrific
D
is that the amount of energy that
B
will have in space is, you know, basically practically infinite. Data centers will take on more responsibilities.
A
We all rely on data centers to do the things we do every day. So next time you're streaming your favorite show or managing your online healthcare information, remember, the data centers behind the scenes make it all possible. Our personal information and our economy depends on the information that is being stored within these centers.
F
Data center will become part of the
B
solution and less viewed as part of the problem. Yeah, that's good.
C
So I know we're starting a segment here, and before you go further, I want to let you know that we actually used AI to make you a decent stinger.
B
Really? You put some effort behind it.
C
Yeah, we did this time. And I think you're going to like it.
B
All right. I shill for AI. AI will not be the death of society.
C
You're welcome.
B
Just when I think they're gonna do something nice for me, they don't. All right, fine. I am not shilling for AI As I stated at the top, I just want you guys to have a good understanding of this. By the way, in just a minute, we are going to go to Rumble Premium. If you are not yet a member of Rumble Premium, click that button below right now to make sure the data centers don't end up in your backyard. Card 99 a year. You get this wonderful mug here co branded with rumble or 9.99amonth to try it out. Please support us. If you don't, and if you're gonna continue watching for free, please know that you are going on to Hayley Karania. Is that how you say it, Haley? And you'll. You'll continue watching her. You can just continue right along with this. You're gonna want to remember something about the guy that maybe looked the weirdest in all of that. Yeah, he's your boy.
F
I judge by appearances.
B
IMOD is your boy guy. He is the philanthropic. He's also made money on this stuff. But he is starting companies just to solve problems, not for huge financial benefit. And he's pushing everybody to solve all of the problems that are associated with this, that are societal problems. He is absolutely the most. Well, I shouldn't say the most and I shouldn't say absolutely, but he's very balanced. Both of those things can be. He's gonna come back on me and be like no, there's somebody else. And I was like, no, that's not the point. He is the kind of guy you want working on this.
F
But let's get joke based on the weird. I understand.
B
I understand. I'm just saying don't judge a book by its cover. He's your guy.
F
That's why you put a cover on a book.
B
That's also true.
F
Yeah.
B
Unless it's like a.
D
Or something.
B
So here is somebody doesn't understand. We've got kind of a new segment here other than Gerald Shills for a. Which is not really true. Anyway, we're gonna have charge and verdict. Right. So here's the charge. Oh really? Really? Where do you admonish yourself, buckaroo?
C
I'll do it later.
B
Charge. The CCP is funding anti data center protests.
E
Who would want us to stop building our electrical grid? Who would want to stop us from having compute capacity to develop AI? Which adversary would want that? There's only one. It's China. I got my guys to go a deep dig into the IP addresses and here's what we found out. This is fascinating. Party for Socialism and Liberation operation run by somebody called Neville Singham pounding our social media with misinformation about Utah.
B
Doing what?
H
Wait.
E
We found cells inside of Utah.
F
Cells?
E
Alliance for a Better Utah. Taylor Canuck Knash maybe.
C
And cut out of himself.
E
Why are you spewing all this this misinformation?
B
He's a weird dude.
E
Utah. Why wouldn't you. You want national defense in Utah. Why wouldn't you want compute power?
B
Last it is.
E
Elevate strategies. Also a cell operating inside of Utah. Gabby Finlayson. Gabby, what are you doing and why? Who's paying you?
B
Who's paying your bills? Gabby. Now listen. He is not making an outrageous claim. So the verdict is mixed. And here's why. Yeah. Neville Singham and other CCP linked entities have engaged in pushing anti data center messaging. It makes perfect sense. We've talked about this before. To make an overall that China would obviously want to do anything that they can to overtake us in this race. And we're beating them massively in data centers. It's not even close. Right now we're doing a great job. And even Bernie Sanders invited two CCP agents to parrot propaganda at his existential threat of AI symposium. China recognized the AI risks and China is taking a try to balance innovation.
F
And the.
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Marketing is hard. But I'll tell you a little secret. It doesn't have to be. Let me point something out. You're listening to a podcast right now, and it's great. You love the host. You seek it out and download it. You listen to it while driving, working out, cooking, even going to the bathroom. Podcasts are a pretty close companion. And this is a podcast ad. Did I get your attention? You can reach great listeners like yourself with podcast advertising from Libsyn Ads. Choose from hundreds of top podcasts offering host endorsements, or run a pre produced ad like this one across thousands of shows. To reach your target audience in their favorite podcasts with Libsyn ads, go to Libsynads.com that's L I B S Y N ads.com today.
This episode of Louder with Crowder focuses on the breaking verdict in the Henry Novak (referred to as “Nowak” and “Novak” interchangeably) murder trial, examining what happened, the UK’s cultural decline, and the broader implications for race, media, policing, and self-defense rights in the West. Crowder and his panel mix serious political commentary with their signature banter, also covering urban housing policies, the media’s silence on certain violent crimes, and the controversies surrounding data centers and AI.
Foreign “enrichment” and migrants in the West:
NYC Housing policy critique:
Full, detailed coverage begins at [29:40] and dominates through [55:20]:
Begins [56:38], continues into Rumble premium segment.
| Timestamp | Segment/Topic | |-----------|------------------------------------------------------| | 02:45 | Main show kick-off, focus on Novak trial/race/media | | 06:51 | Opening banter, guest intros | | 13:10 | Mocking black church preacher/media/race | | 17:20 | Commentary on NYC mayor/Kurta, migrant “enrichment” | | 19:05 | Critique of rent control, property transfer in NYC | | 24:20 | Switzerland stabbing, media’s focus on migrants | | 26:08 | UK youth jobs stat: “27 migrants to 1 Briton” | | 29:40 | Begin Novak case deep-dive | | 33:03 | “Racist suspect” logic dissected | | 34:44 | Case evidence: toxicology, phone, narrative debunked | | 37:09 | Religious knife exemption critique | | 44:19 | Police official apologizes to Novak family | | 45:00 | Media blackout on the story | | 51:27 | “By 2050, US not majority white,” cultural reflection| | 53:03 | “Where did the slippery slope start?” (speech) | | 56:38 | Data centers/AI/CCP segment starts | | 64:37 | CCP-linked anti-data center activism claim |
For more nuanced points and extended discussion, join Crowder’s Rumble Premium.^[show plug].