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April 12, 2024 • 32 mins

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Speaker 1 (00:01):
All right. I am not going to spend a lot
of time on OJ Simpson, but I do want you
to understand that OJ simpson dying is actually a very
important moment to talk about this country, talk about history,
and to explain, especially to young people, what happened with
the OJ Simpson trial. OJ Simpsons passed away.

Speaker 2 (00:24):
O J.

Speaker 1 (00:25):
Simpson, I believe was an individual that was a murderer.
I believe that he killed two people called blood murder.
I believe that OJ Simpson is a horrible human being,
and I believe that OJ Simpson was an abusive individual
based on everything that we know about him. And I
apparently I'm not the only one that believes that. But
when he was in trial, when the OJ Simpson trial happened,

(00:45):
after the you know, the Ford White Ford, Bronco chase
and everything else, there was one thing that was on
the minds of the people that were there on that jury.
How do we know this because the people on that
jury have spoken since he was quit it when he
was found not guilty. And what do they say? They said,
it was real simple. We saw what happened to Rodney King,

(01:07):
and we saw what happened in the riots the LA
riots after the beating of Rodney King, which was also
a horrific moment in American history. And what the jurors said,
and this is what is important that we remember, is
the jury said, we weren't deciding if OJ Simpson was
guilty or not guilty. We were deciding how we were

(01:28):
going to respond to what happened with Rodney King. And
this was payback for Rodney King. Now, again, this comes
from a documentary a reporter who was asking one of
the jurors on the AJ Simpson trial, and I want
you to listen to this carefully.

Speaker 3 (01:45):
Do you think that they're members of the jury that
voted to a quit OJ because of Rodney King?

Speaker 2 (01:52):
Yes, you do. How many of you think felt that way?

Speaker 1 (01:57):
Oh?

Speaker 2 (01:58):
That was Did you feel that way?

Speaker 4 (02:06):
Yes?

Speaker 2 (02:08):
That was payback? You think that's right?

Speaker 1 (02:16):
She puts her hands up in the air and basically
does the I don't know face and puts her hands
back down. How many have you think felt that way?
Referring to jurors, Oh, probably ninety percent of them. Ninety percent?
Did you feel that way? Yes? Was that payback? She
puts her hands up? Uh huh. Now, I remind you
of the history of that to then go to what

(02:38):
the problem is and why this is an important issue now.
And it concerns me because we have lost our way
with our justice system in this country right now. There's
a lot of things that have come out of that
type of mentality about it's time for revenge there, it's
time to get even, or it's payback right for things
that happened in the past. And now we have bail

(03:01):
reform and we have prison reform. And what is bail
reform and what is prison reform? It's a fundamental, basic
statement that has been indoctrinated in young people in high
school and in colleges for the last really, i would
say hardcore ten years, last decade, which is this, our
justice system should not lock up African American men who

(03:23):
commit heinous crimes because there's too many African American men,
we believe in jail and there needs to be some
sort of reparations for what happened in the past in
this country. Very much like you just heard from that
juror and OJ Simpson, we also have have been indoctrinated
really over the last decade, and this has become pretty
public now because we're seeing the disaster of this social idea, right,

(03:45):
this social program, which is if you don't have money,
you shouldn't be in jail just because you don't have money.
And the argument was, well, African Americans don't have as
much money as other races, white people, AKA, therefore it's
unfair that a white guy can get out of jail
because he has more money, and a black person says,
in jail because he can't make bond. And so what

(04:07):
we're gonna do is we're gonna reform the system with
jail reform, prison reform. Right, this goes back to black
lives matter. Black lives matter. It was not really about
really about any one person. It was about an eye
of finding a moment, a flash point, whether it was
George Floyd or whatever was next to then demand that
we have bail reform in prison reform. Now, prison reform

(04:27):
is also very simple. The argument is there's too many
African American men in prison it regardless of the crimes
they have committed, and therefore we should let people out
of prison, and we shouldn't put more African American men
in prison because the system is racist, and we've decided
the system's racist. You can't debate the system. And so therefore,
let every African American man out of jail that we

(04:48):
can to basically get revenged. It's no different to get
to get even for what happens, same thing that we
heard with OJ. And then you look at ball reform,
Well what is bell. It's a way to make also
defund the police a reality when cities didn't actually and
they weren't able to defund the police. Remember in Minneapolis,

(05:09):
Saint Paul Aery, they were going to defund the police.
It never actually happened because crime was so out of control.
They were like, all right, well we can't actually like
fire all the cops, but what you can do is
you can drive them insane. We'll all quit on you. Right.
It was politically too much for them to chew the
people that wanted to get rid of police officers. And
so the best way to actually get rid of police

(05:31):
officers is drive them to total insanity and madness. How
do you do that? You tell a good human being
a police officer. The majority of police officers, overwhelming are
incredible human beings. They are bad cops, yes, they're bad priests,
they're bad pastors, they are bad doctors. There's bad people
in every profession, but the majority of police officers are

(05:51):
good human beings. And what you do is you tell
that police officer, hey, go ahead, I dare you go
out there and arrest this person that just committed this crime,
and we're going to let them walk before you finish
the paperwork. Go ahead, do it risk your life to
lock up somebody, and watch how fast we put them
right back out on the streets without giving them any bail.

(06:13):
That's how you defund the police, folks, because then police
stop risking their lives. Because what's the point of risking
your life if you know that when you risk your
life that the person that you just caught and the
person you just put in jail is basically laughing in
your face, like, dude, I'm not going to jail. I
got a mud shut. Maybe you might have got a fingerprint.
Maybe I'm free. I'm a free man. I'm going to

(06:36):
give you those details in a moment, But I want
to tell you about our friends over at Patriot Mobile.
If I told you that you were giving money right
now to plan parenthood, and how mad would you be,
especially if you didn't know you were doing it. If
I told you that you were giving money to democratic candidates, causes,
and organizations. How mad would you be right now, especially

(06:57):
if you didn't know you were doing it. Well, that's
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You may not understand where your money's going. And now
you do because I've just told you. They give massive
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massive donations to those that are fighting against your First

(07:18):
and your Second Amendment rights. And that is exactly why
I want you to switch to Patriot Mobile.

Speaker 4 (07:23):
Now.

Speaker 1 (07:23):
Look, I've done it. I just went down to the
Hill Country to watch the eclipse, and I can tell
you my coverage was perfect in areas where it would
have been spotty. Now, that's the number one reason why
people are afraid to switch. They're worried about coverage. You
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(07:45):
about when it comes to service and coverage. And that
is why you should call Patriot Mobile. Now, I'm also
going to give you free activation, and I'm going to
tell you about what happens when you pay your bill.
When you pay your bill to Patriot Mobile, you're giving
back to support conservative causes, candidates, organizations, including fighting to

(08:06):
protect the rights of unborn children. Every time you make
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you're making a difference. So check out Patriot Mobile. Go
to Patriot Mobile dot com slash ben that's Patriot Mobile
dot com, slash ben, Patriot Mobile dot com slash ben,

(08:27):
or you can call them nine to seven two Patriot.
That's nine seven two Patriot nine seven to two Patriot
or Patriot Mobile dot com slash ben. This is all
about reparations at the end of the day. And so
there's a moment here that's bigger than OJ Simpson. And

(08:48):
OJ Simpson is dead. He's died, all right. But let
me tell you what the left is now saying, and
this is what they're teaching kids. There's a guy who
I know well, we've done TV together for decade, We've
had vigorous debates. His name is Marc lemont Hill, and
Mark lemont Hill said something on Twitter today and it's

(09:08):
important that you hear what he actually said because I
want you to understand the mindset of people that disagree
with me and disagree with me on issues about about prison,
and issues about right and wrong, and issues of protecting
and defending and issues of police. A Cooney professor and
race commentator Marcolmont Hill weighed in on the death of

(09:32):
the troubled NFL star OJ Simpson, and this is what
Hill said on Twitter or on x O. J Simpson
was an abusive liar. I agree with Marklemont Hill on
that who abandoned his community long before he killed two
people in cold blood. I agree with that his acquittal
for murder was the correct and necessary result of a

(09:55):
racist criminal legal system. But he's still a monster, not
a martyr. So let's just break that down. You're admitting
that he was an abusive killer that deserve to go
to jail, but more than that, you believe he deserved

(10:15):
to get off because of systemic racism, and therefore it
was correct and necessary to let OJ Simpson live a
life of freedom after brutally hacking to death and murdering
his ex wife and her boyfriend slash friend at the time.

(10:37):
And you're saying it now, you're saying is an abusive liar.
This is the problem that we have now in this country,
there is no longer right and wrong if you're on
the left, and this is and I would say this,
by the way again, I want you to not be
angry at what Mark le mont Hill is saying. I
want you to listen to what he's saying because I
want you to understand how far gone we are in

(10:58):
this country when it comes to the basic issue of
right and wrong. He is justifying the abuse, the abusive liar,
the abandonment of his community. And he said he did
that long before he killed two people in cold blood.
But then he justifies it, saying, basically, because of the

(11:19):
sins of people in the past in America, because of
slave owners, O. J. Simpson deserves to walk among us
for decades after brutally killing the mother of his children
because it's righting the wrongs of the past and American
history and a necessary quote result of a racist criminal

(11:42):
legal system. You understand, this conversation we're having right now
is really not about OJ Simpson. This conversation right now
is about people that are today basically saying, you know what,
I'm glad that OJ Simpson didn't go to prison for
killing those two people, the mother of his children, because
we we need to somehow right the wrongs of a

(12:02):
time in America where none of us were part of it,
none of us experienced it. And because there were people
in America's history, they are racists. Therefore we should have
anarchy chaos among us at the hands of minorities to
basically get even for things that happen in the past.
This is bail reform, folks, This is prison reform. This

(12:24):
is what the left has brought into America and normalized.
They are now normalizing decades later, the cold blooded murder
of the mother of oj Simpson's children, saying but it
was a necessary evil for us to let him go,
to get revenge for racism in the past, and to
get revenge for another horrific moment, the Rodney King beating,

(12:53):
and we're gonna get revenge for that, by saying, all right, well,
this is payback. This is payback. Listen to the juror again.

Speaker 3 (13:03):
Do you think that they're members of the jury that
voted to a quotoj because.

Speaker 2 (13:08):
Of Rodney King? Yes? You do. Yes, how many of
you think felt that way? Oh did you feel that way? Yes?

Speaker 1 (13:24):
Did you feel that way?

Speaker 2 (13:25):
Yes?

Speaker 1 (13:26):
Even on CNN today, I'm going to play this for
you coming up in a moment they said the same thing.
And why is it that the media is saying this Basically, well, hey, look,
this is the moment for everybody. Remember, Look, if you're
African American, you go out there and you kill somebody,
we kind of think and believe that you should maybe
be able to get off for this because of the

(13:47):
wrongs of the past in this country. Hey, if you're
a police officer and you got there and risk your
life to lock up some of the killed somebody, hey
maybe we should just let that person go and make
you go crazy so we have lawlessness in our communities.
I go back to the core thing about black lives matter.
The majority of African American men in this country that
are killed or killed by African American men. How is

(14:09):
that protecting black lives? If black lives matter, why are
you letting killers out in the name of reparations for
something that happened in the past. It has nothing to
do with the present. And why are we letting out
people from jail in prison? Now this also goes back.
I want to connect this to one other issue, and
we're going to talk about this. The border you understand

(14:31):
this lawlessness. Once you have lawlessness, it explodes in all
areas of this country. We went from bail reform and
prison reform to now wide open borders. Why because the
Democratic Party. Once you say we don't believe in right
and wrong, and we don't believe in law and order,
and we don't believe in good and bad, then the
wheels come off the bus and it costs people their lives,

(14:55):
the same people you claim you want to protect, the
same people that you say you want to to protect,
the African American young kids who are getting killed in
this country, the young African American men that are being
murdered at outrageous rates right now. When you go on
this world of insanity, this is what you get. I

(15:15):
want to get back to what I was about to
say about CNN a second ago, and this idea that
like O. J. Simpson dies and it's like, yeah, we
all know who's a murderer, But it was payback for
Rodney King and reparations and slavery and other black men
that have been locked up. So we let a killer
walk among us to basically get revenge, get even for
either directly Ronnie King or indirectly for all the other

(15:38):
injustices in America. And this is what is being taught
to America's youth. Now. When I say youth, I'm talking
now twenty five and under have been indoctrinated into this
idea that America is evil, that America's judicial system is
racist and evil, and then America's evil pass with slavery

(16:01):
is something that must be fixed through letting other people
not be held accountable for their actions, including now murder.
CNN Stephanie Elam, reporting live right on the OJ Simpson
death accidentally said the quiet part out loud. Listen to

(16:22):
this carefully how she describes his death.

Speaker 5 (16:24):
And it's also just worth noting how much was impacted
by this trial, Jake. So many things happened, We saw
policing changing here in the city. And it's also worth
noting because of that unrest, that racial unrest in the nineties,
that is why so many people who may not have
been invested in OJ Simpson were just happy to see
that someone who was rich and famous and black could

(16:46):
get away with what other people did in the system
as well too.

Speaker 1 (16:49):
Whoa hold on there a notice, Jake Tapper ain't going
to fight back on that, right, right, I let me
read you the transcript of that, because she just said it,
and then she's like, oh wait, I'm not sure I'm
sorting to say this out loud. Well, hold on quote.
So many people were just happy to see that someone
who is rich and famous and black could get away

(17:13):
with or what other people did in the system as
well too, she's saying it. There were people that were like,
come on, we want a black man to be able
to get away with murdering who's rich and famous, and
we're rooting for this, right, That's that's what we're doing here,
and we're all admitting it. So we're proud of us

(17:35):
of the idea that back in the nineties we got
OJ off.

Speaker 5 (17:39):
That is why so many people who may not have
been invested in OJ Simpson, we're just happy to see
that someone who was rich and famous and black could
get away with it.

Speaker 1 (17:47):
Could get away with a could get away with it. Yeah. Yeah,
that's exactly what they're saying. This idea that America is
an evil country, and this idea that people now who
didn't expect sperience slavery deserve to get a payday in
the trillions of dollars. I mean, I've seen these numbers.

(18:07):
Is destroying and rotting this country. The idea that we
should allow killers and rapists and gang bangers and drug
dealers off because of something that they didn't experience that
happened in the past. By the way, every country has,
every country in the world have passed and parts of

(18:28):
their past that they're not proud of. You know what
I'm proud of as an American, Like in every American
should be proud of this, Like we have righted some
of the wrongs in a very big way in this country.
That makes me proud that we're an imperfect union trying
to do better than we did before. But that's that's

(18:48):
like stopped over the last ten years. The people that
we're electing to office now are not about making this
country a better country. The people that are that we're
electing in this country, many of them are just about
their own power and their own obsession with power, you
know you want to talk about. I think the most

(19:10):
damaging part of letting OJ off is that then moving
forward there was like, all right, well he's the first,
so who's going to be the second? Go I go
back to Marclemont Hill, and this really goes back to
what happened with Black Lives Matter and police reform and
bail reform and defunding the police and everything else. OJ. Again,
I go back to this tweet from markle Mont Hill
is a college professor who's got the minds in the

(19:32):
hearts of people and has owned them, especially in the
African American community, for decades. He is a leader in
the Democratic Party, is a leader in the in the
progressive radical left movement, and he is someone that many
African Americans look up to. And he says it today
on Twitter. O. J. Simpson was an abusive liar who
abandoned this community long before he killed two people in

(19:54):
cold blood. So he is saying, I know that OJ
Simpson is wrong. Was a bad, evil man, that is
a murderer, and he's willing to state it. And then
here comes the however, his acquittal for murder was a
correct and necessary result of a racist criminal legal system, Okay.

(20:19):
And then he says, but he's still a monster, not
a martyr. Okay. So so where do you draw the
line now? Is the question that I would ask Marklemon
Hill if he was here now. How many murderers do
we let off. How many rapists do we let off? Like,
give me a number here for reparations. Because of the
evils of America's past that that O. J. Simpson certainly

(20:42):
didn't experience. Like OJ Simpson led one hell of life, folks.

Speaker 2 (20:46):
He was.

Speaker 1 (20:47):
He was rich. He was He was not just kind
of famous, he was insanely famous. He was the Michael
Jordan of football. The world stopped to watch him in
a Ford Bronco run for the police, like this guy
was a different level of fame before the Internet. I

(21:08):
remember when this happened. I remember walking into a Mapco
Express gas station and everybody in the gas station I
want into pay with cash. This is how young I was.
How many years ago this was because I was putting
gas in my mom's car. It was a minivan, a
Ford Arrow Star. I ever remember the car and I
walked into pay and I think she gave me ten

(21:28):
bucks for gas and I went in. It was during
a time when gas was under dollar a gallon. That
should tell you how long ago this was. And I
walked in and I remember, I remember it was on
Summer Avenue in Memphis, Tennessee, and the entire Mapco Express
had stopped and was looking at a box TV, you know,
the big old box TV, and everybody was just standing

(21:50):
there watching O. J. Simpson running from the police on
the highway in the back of that Ford Bronco. And
there were people in there that were for OJ Simpson.
They were cheering for OJ Simpson because he's famous, he was,
He's this Hall of Famer, he's this famous football player,
he's a Heisman. And I didn't know who O. J.

(22:12):
Simpson was before that moment, but I will never forget
when I learned who he was and there were people
that were rooting for him because it was like a
it was like a moment of like, oh, yeah, I'm
behind him because African American and there's things in the past,
and then the narrative started and now look at where
we are. So how many is my question? How many?

(22:32):
How many murderers do you want to let out that
African American to right all the wrongs of America's history,
and for that matter, how many murders around the world
are we going to let out? I mean, if we're
going to fix this thing the way that the left
wants to fix it, the way the Marxists and the
socialists and the communists want to fix it. Their definition

(22:54):
of righting the wrong is getting is letting out people
of a certain skin color only for hainous crimes and
saying that this is a necessary result of a racist
criminal legal system, which brings me back to Black Lives Matter.
That's exactly what the Black Lives Matter movement is. Hey,

(23:15):
we know there's people that do bad things, and when
they do bad things, we want to look at their
skin color and we want to let enough of them
off to get even for the bad things that happened
to people that have the same skin color that they
didn't know in times in the past. So let's just
settle the score for atrocities or events that we never

(23:37):
experienced personally. And that is the Democratic Party.

Speaker 2 (23:42):
Now.

Speaker 1 (23:44):
Black Lives Matter was never about black lives matter. Black
Lives Matter was about getting even right. We're going to
burn down cities to get even. We're going to burn
down churches, We're gonna burn down black owned businesses. I
still don't know how the hell that helped Black lives matter.
That's the part that I didn't understand. Why why would
you burn down your own community. We're gonna burn down

(24:05):
the Windys. We're gonna you know, we complain about there
being food desert and high crime, high poverty areas, but
we'll burn down the grocery store and the quickie marked right,
We'll burn down the places that we do have that
have food. I've never understood that. Hey, we want, we
need places and businesses that can grow a community. But
we're gonna burn down the AutoZone or the advanced autoparts.
We're gonna relute African American clothing stores and still the sneakers,

(24:29):
right in the name of Black lives matter. Because what
we're saying is it's okay for you to be lawless
in your communities, to get even for the past. That
is exactly what a top African American professor is telling
the African American community. It is okay if if a
percentage of you commit crimes because of something you never

(24:53):
were a part of, and then they'll look at you
and they'll say, hey, he's a monster because he murdered people. Right,
but he should have gotten away with it because of racism. Right,
that's what he's saying. Right, you believe they should be
acquitted and that his equitta was correct and necessary because
of something that you heard or read about in America's history.

(25:16):
You lose a country when you have no law in order.
You'll get Fred Goldman he lost his son to a jealous,
psychotic man in OJ Simpson, and he lost his son
because a system said, well, we had another guy that
was beaten who was black, and we don't want more riots,

(25:37):
so we're gonna let him off. There was fear. There
were some people who were afraid. They're like, I'm not
convicting you, o jac because I don't want another right.
I don't want to be the cause of the right,
so we'll let him go. And then there was others like, well,
that's just revenge. So in other words, Fred Goman, sorry,
your son is sacrificial. Am your son's death was necessary
to right the wrongs of something that happened in the past,
and you're just gonna have to deal with it. Someone

(25:59):
put it this way, said a quitto for murder in
cold blood is never correct nor necessary, nor does it
in any way a tone for past sins committed against
members of one's community. It only adds the burden of
wrongdoing for all of us. I don't know who wrote that,
but amen, Amen, he killed two people slashes. A Quitta
was correct, because we care more about racism than anything else.

(26:20):
Social justice will destroy this country. Black Lives Matter and
what they stand for will destroy this country. How do
I know it because we're witnessing it right now. It
is destroying this country. Let me go back three years
ago to play you something. Three years ago, there was
an African American woman who was in misproducer. I can't

(26:43):
it was at Minneapolis. Where was it? Where she was
at Chicago? That's right, it was in Chicago. This is
three years ago, and she was talking about what was
happening in her community with Black Lives Matter movement, and
I want you to hear what she said. Is an
African American woman in Chicago. Listen.

Speaker 4 (27:02):
My point was that black kids in Chicago get killed
every single day.

Speaker 1 (27:07):
Where is the Black.

Speaker 4 (27:08):
Lives Matter in Chicago? Where are they? When black people
keep black people? They don't come on and do this drop?
The only tell you this.

Speaker 1 (27:16):
Chub is one in white person because.

Speaker 4 (27:17):
She's the other the redist.

Speaker 1 (27:20):
They're the resdist because white white cops.

Speaker 4 (27:24):
Is room for a white coup to kill a black person,
that's for sure.

Speaker 1 (27:27):
But if it modesty shouldn't matter at all times. So
what are you fighting for? What are you fighting for?
You're by the way, she's yelling at the Black Lives
matter woke white people who are out there claiming that
they're in favor of black lives matter. And this is
an African American woman yelling at all the rich white
kids and the white woke parents who were out They're like, yeah,

(27:49):
black lives matter, keep listening. I'm not here to fighting justice.

Speaker 4 (27:54):
Ballence, it's not about blacks. You're in the corn world.

Speaker 1 (27:58):
That's world, okay, sit.

Speaker 4 (28:01):
Just so they're ble out pressed.

Speaker 1 (28:03):
I am black, I'm not oppressed. I a re agree.
I'm an individual person.

Speaker 4 (28:08):
What about a systemic issue where I am black? If
whore we want it to be of I have a like.

Speaker 1 (28:14):
I do what I want.

Speaker 4 (28:15):
You have the excus this is the country we have
the e skins.

Speaker 1 (28:17):
You want to do what you.

Speaker 4 (28:18):
Want, you do it. Stop Stop forcing on people to
accept that they're pressed.

Speaker 1 (28:22):
They are not.

Speaker 4 (28:22):
I am not oppressed. I am black.

Speaker 1 (28:24):
Stop making people accept that they are pressed.

Speaker 4 (28:27):
You're forcing a rhetoric into your mind which is not true.
That's my point. Violence is wrong, period. It's not about blacks.
You agree that white skill black whites too.

Speaker 1 (28:35):
Right.

Speaker 4 (28:36):
Have you seen any white person coming out and saying
white life matter or white thing? No violence is wrong?

Speaker 1 (28:41):
Literally do all the time.

Speaker 4 (28:42):
Every time there's a black eyes matter, brother bro white problem,
it's a balanced problem. The black skill blessing black neighborhoods
every single day. I've never seen a black lives matter
in those neighborhoods.

Speaker 1 (28:55):
Never.

Speaker 3 (28:56):
Never.

Speaker 4 (28:57):
You know what I said, what in the black personcure
of black minus that wonder Buddhist comps?

Speaker 1 (29:03):
Do you know what it's? Other fishes? I know that
snitches get stitches. That's what she just said. Every day
Black Americans are killing Black Americans and black neighborhoods, and
she says in those neighborhoods, I don't see anything that
says black lives matter. Yeah, you guys show up here
because you've been indoctrinated at the university level by these

(29:25):
university professors to believe that we are going to fundamentally
change this country. Because you've been indoctrinated to believe that
America is evil and therefore the only way to fix
the evil in this country is to let people like O. J.
Simpson or other black men who are killing other black
men out of jail for hainus crimes against society. And

(29:49):
when you have a lawless society, this is what you get.
You get lawlesses everywhere, folks. You get laws lessness everywhere.
You get lawlessness on the streets, you get lawlessness in
the in the poorest neighborhoods. You get death and destruction

(30:10):
of African Americans at record numbers by other African Americans.
You get lawlessness at our southern border. You get lawlessness
with people breaking into this country. You get lawlessness with
fetnol and drugs and all of this because there is
no longer a moral compass in this nation. And that

(30:33):
was their whole plan all along. Their plan all along
was to get rid of right and wrong, get rid
of moral values, get rid of God, get rid of
of a belief in higher power. Everybody becomes their own God,
everybody becomes their own value set, everybody is offended by everything.

(30:54):
You find your own truth. Right. That's this liberal, woke ideology,
and it's just drowing this country to the point where
we now have the leaders of the African American community
sang on a day, sang on a day when OJ
Simpson dies, Well, yeah, he was a murderer. He absolutely was.

(31:15):
He was a cold blood and murderer. However, it was
a necessary evil or good. I guess I don't know
right to let this evil man go. I want to
quote it exactly this say, professor who's a leader in
the African American community. O. J. Simpson was an abusive
liar who abandoned his community long before he killed two

(31:36):
people in cold blood. His acquittal for murder was the
correct and necessary result of a racist criminal legal system.
But he's still a monster, not a martyr. Make sure
you share this podcast please on social media so that
others can hear what's happening. And make sure that subscribe
follower auto download button and I'll see you back here tomorrow.
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Host

Ben Ferguson

Ben Ferguson

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