1:42:45

INSOMNIA STREAM: MAU MAU EDITION - 05/30/2026

Display stream descriptionThe stream centers on a historically underreported series of early-1970s murders in and around Chicago that were linked by law enforcement and contemporary newspapers to a black militant organization called “De Mau Mau,” allegedly composed largely of Vietnam veterans. The host narrates several connected homicide cases (including the Corbett and Hawtree family murders, the killings of Michael Gershenson, Kathleen Fine, and William Richter), and describes how investigators tied them together through ballistics, informant testimony, and the claimed ideology of De Mau Mau. He then pivots into a broader, highly opinionated discussion of race, crime, media coverage, and decades of affirmative action and quota policies in education, employment, policing, and contracting. The latter part of the stream is dedicated to reading viewer hyperchats about platform issues (Rumble/Odyssey), personal life stories, possible future IRL events, and the host’s beekeeping and cat ("Churro").
Full Summary
Catalonian Numbers Lady
00:00:00 God
00:00:09 and strength
The Doors - Riders of the Storm
00:01:26 Riders on the storm, riders on the storm
00:01:35 into this house, we're born into this world we're thrown
00:01:44 like a dog without a bone, and actor out alone. Riders on the storm, there's a killer on the road, his brain is squirming like a toad. take a long holiday. Let your children play. If you give this man a ride, sweet family will die. Kill her on the road. Yeah. Girl, you gotta love your man, girl, you gotta love your man. Take him by the hand, make him
00:03:13 understand
00:03:14 the world on you depends. Our life will never end. Gotta love your man. Riders on the storm, riders on the storm
00:05:52 into this house we're born into this world with
00:06:00 dogs
00:06:01 like a dog without a boat, and actor out alone, riders on the storm, I
00:06:30 Riders on the
00:06:32 storm,
00:06:34 rioters on
00:06:37 the storm,
00:06:39 rioters on
00:07:27 the storm.
Rocket Pixie - Baizuo
00:08:00 Love is faith so cheap. How enemies around a caught in the circle is the circle, the cycle of time, because
00:09:29 history Fire. How can you lift when the water is on fire?
00:10:09 Ha, you Rise Rise and It
Devon Stack
00:11:03 welcome to the Insomnia Stream. Me, adjust this a little bit real quick. Here, like that. There we go. I'm your host, of course, Devon Stack. This is the Insomnia Stream Mau Mau edition, Mau Mau edition, about a little known, little known black terrorist group, that's right, a black power terrorist group that shockingly, there's no movies about, no TV shows about. I couldn't even find a YouTube video about them, I had to rely on newspaper clippings, and yeah, it's a..
00:11:52 it's no wonder why.. it's no wonder why after doing a little bit of research here, but you, you would think you would think, despite.. well, you'll see why, you know, you'll understand why Jews wouldn't want to make media on these people, but you'd think that the severity of some of these crimes..
00:12:14 it would have, you know, there at least be like some true crime podcast about it, or something like that. there's not, there's really not, there's really not. I can't find really anything about this, so I.. this will be, unless you lived in, in the Chicago area in the early 70s, you probably haven't heard of this, and even then you might not have heard of this. You might not have heard of this, but let me take you back, let me take you back a little bit.
00:12:46 We're gonna go back in time, remember our little time machine, back to 1972 go all the way back to 1972 when this, when this first became a big story. We're gonna go to the night of august 4, august 4, 1972 You guys ready to get in your time machines? Time machine. We're gonna go to the A Fancy neighborhood, Brighton Hills, Illinois. Brighton Hills, Illinois, august 4. They came in the night, and when they left this small, well, not really, I mean, these are big lots.
00:13:37 These are like, I think, they were like five acre lots with mansions, but quiet neighborhood, not small neighborhood, I guess relatively small in population, quiet neighborhood. And when they left, well, it was quiet when they got there. When they left, there were four people dead. Four people were found dead. The victims were found in the pantry and in the kitchen of a 14 room mansion, and in fact, this particular lot had a.. it was very large.
00:14:14 It was part.. I think the whole development was 30 acres. It was one of the most exclusive communities in the Chicago area, all of the victims have been shot at close range, execution style, by men who drove out from the city specifically to find them. Paul Corbett was a retired insurance executive. He lived in these, this quiet northeast of the city, wooded hills area. His wife, Miriam, was was 58 She was a local pianist.
00:15:00 And composer her sister Dorothy Derry 60 was visiting for dinner, and Marion's daughter Barbara Bond, who was 22 was also home that night until these these visitors showed up and and none of them survived. Three of the victims were shot in the back of the head with a pistol, and the fourth was shot in the chest. The scene was covered in blood. One officer struggling to find the words to describe it, call it wholesale slaughter.
00:15:54 There's the house right there from one of the newspaper reports about it. The Chicago Tribune said it was the worst mass murder in Chicago since 1966 and the Daily News said it is a tale straight from the annals of the Sharon Tate massacre, and kind of like the Tate killings, especially in the context of 1972 it seemed to come out of nowhere.
00:16:42 There was no, no motive. There were no witnesses, just four dead rich people and a house in the hills, but that would change. That would change eventually when cops realized that this wasn't the beginning of a story. They were actually walking into the middle of a story.
00:17:11 It only got serious because, well, to be honest, the people murdered were wealthy and influential once they started piecing everything together, they realized that the the first victim was actually Michael Gershenson, Michael Gershenson, a few months prior, may 3, 1972 He was 19 years old.
00:17:46 He was a sophomore at Southern Illinois University. He was commuting between campus in Carbondale and his family home in Highland Park, the North Shore suburb where he had grown up. He was by all accounts an ordinary guy, not a none. There was not a whole lot of information about him. He was so ordinary, in fact. He wasn't connected to any kind of crime, though. You know, he was a good kid, didn't have a criminal record.
00:18:18 They couldn't figure out what have made him a target. His body was found on the shoulder of the interstate, Interstate 57 approximately 30 miles south of the SIU campus, near the small southern Illinois town of West Frankfort. He had been shot six times. His car was found nearby.
00:18:44 No one saw what had happened, and again there was no apparent motive. They initially investigated it as a, as an isolated murder, and they found nothing, and the case kind of went cold and remained cold until they started to revisit it later after the Corbetts had been murdered.
00:19:11 The fact that he was shot six times stood out to them, because they figured, well, this isn't just, I mean, this is obviously a execution, this is, they, they wanted him dead. This wasn't like a robbery, where he got shot once, or maybe someone driving by took a shot at him with their car, like a road rage kind of a thing. This was a definite murder. It was an execution. The weapon that was used was a 30 caliber carbine, and just so happened to be the same 30 caliber carbine that killed the youngest Corbett, the 22 year old daughter.
00:19:56 The other ones were shot in the back of the head with a pistol. We'll get in that. Go into that in a moment. Next, we have Kathleen Fine. This was about a month later, june 23 1972 This was in Brighton Park, Chicago. Kathleen Fine was 16. She was shot near her home in Chicago's Brighton Park neighborhood, a working-class southwest side community. Not a whole lot is known about her, obviously, because of her age.
00:20:44 This is in the era before the internet, you know. She didn't leave much of a trail on the world, you know, didn't leave much of an imprint, other than the newspapers talking about how she was murdered. The Tribune reported on October, I forget the date there, but in 1972 that finds murder had been raised by Sheriff Elrod as a possible killing tied to the Corbett murders in October. Again, I'll talk to.. we'll get more into who did the murdering.
00:21:19 They're niggers, by the way, spoiler alert, but you know this, this also added to it became clear after the Corbett murders and all these other murders that they were starting to tie to the Corbett murders that all these victims were white, all the victims were white and kind of random, completely random, especially this, this girl, she was just some 16 year old girl walking around outside, and you know, same sort of a situation she was, she was executed going back to the Corbett family, then we have the most details about this, because it was, you know, that was this was the big case that got all the attention, and this was the most, this was the case I could find the most newspaper articles about, because it was a bigger case. The other cases were kind of, they were almost like footnotes.
00:22:27 I mean, like I said, there's no, there's no books about this. There hasn't been like a lot of research done into this. Actually, I think there's a book about it, but I couldn't find a copy of it, and so this was the only one I found a lot of newspaper reports about, so this one again, Paul Corbett, the retired insurance executive, he was 67 years old, his wife Marion 58 they lived in the 14 room mansion with the secluded 30 acre wooded estate in Barrington Hills, every all the roads were private roads. The properties were really large and fall far apart.
00:23:15 Everyone kept to themselves. There was no like guard house or gate to get in and out of the community, and prior to this night, people didn't even lock their doors. Now, according to neighbors that were interviewed, they said that, you know, everyone kept themselves, and you know, you'd wave if you saw them, or whatever, but it was pretty much, you know, that people lived out there because of the because it was kind of secluded and it was away from the nigger hell city of Chicago. In fact, it was about 45 miles from the city, so it wasn't, you know, right up against the city.
00:23:57 It was quite a ways out, so anyone that had gone to that house from the city was they drove 45 miles to get there. Now this is in 1972 so it's should give you a little insight into our inflation situation. Their 14 room mansion, and one of the articles said that it was valued at $100,000 so imagine that a 14 room mansion 45 miles outside of Chicago with 30 acres was $100,000 in 1972 so just to give you, yeah, do you want to know, like, how the dollar is doing? That should, uh, that should, you know, clue you in a little bit.
00:24:52 There they had a Rolls Royce, among other vehicles, and they actually did. It have an elaborate, or at least it was described as an elaborate burglar alarm wired to call the police station, and that night the alarm was not turned on. Had the alarm gone off, it would have called up the cops and requested assistance, but it wasn't activated. Marion's daughter from previous marriage, Barbara Bowend, who was 22 was there.
00:25:37 She was just visiting, and Marion's sister, Dorothy Derry, who was 60, had been invited to dinner at another home, but she declined because she didn't feel like driving home on dark, unfamiliar roads. She thought it would be dangerous. Well, unfortunately, not as dangerous as dark, unfamiliar niggers, and that's that decision to not drive home on those roads ultimately is what led to her demise.
00:26:13 There was also in the home a small wiener dog, a doc adoption or doc dot shun. How do you say that? Wiener dog, that's how you say it.
00:26:26 They had a small wiener dog, and that plays into the events also on on the night of in question, Reuben Taylor, a nig Donald Taylor, also a nig, obviously Michael Clark, and Nathaniel Burse, all four niggers drove up from a public housing project on Chicago's South Side, so they lived basically their housing situation was was pretty much funded by people like this, people paying their taxes, so that for the privilege, right, for the privilege of having niggers in your city, you have to pay extra taxes, so they have a place to live, because otherwise they wouldn't be able to afford to live there.
00:27:28 And then, what would we do? What would we do without all the niggers living in the city? So, we got to have those, we got to have those taxes, so we can house the niggers, so that you can have niggers in your city. Oh, and by the way, the food that they ate, because they were all on welfare, also, also provided by the white man for the luxury of having niggers in your city.
00:27:55 Yeah, because it's not enough that you give them a place to live, they just starve. I mean, you just put them in this house, they would just starve to death.
00:28:04 So, you gotta, you gotta buy their food too.
00:28:09 So, their food was was paid for, and they decided, you know what, fuck these people, fuck these people that are paying for our place to live and for the food that we eat, let's drive out where they, they've moved out as far away from us as possible, because they know we're like this, they know that we're just soulless, murdering scumbags, and so they've moved far, far away from the city, 4045 minutes or 45 miles away, so let's drive out to that to where they live and and kill them, we're just gonna go kill them, and we know this because the the prisoner review board transcript said that the purpose of the drive out there was to kill Whitey.
00:29:09 It was to go out there, find a house that looked like Whitey lived in it, and ran second and kill him, so So the way they went about it was they walked up to the front door and they knocked on the door and they asked for directions, of course. Once the door was open, they forced their way in. Marion Corbett answered the door, the wife and Donald Taylor pointed a 25 caliber pistol directly in her face.
00:29:49 He asked her, how many people were inside the house? He and the other three niggers forced their way in the four. Family members Paul, Marion, Barbara, and Dorothy were gathered together and herded into the kitchen. The niggers ordered them to lie on the floor in the pantry while Burse and Clark moved through the house, collecting money and jewelry. The Taylor brothers remained in the kitchen, guarding the hostages.
00:30:25 Reuben Taylor, armed with his 30 caliber carbine rifle, and Donald Taylor with his 25 caliber pistol. This is where the wiener dog comes in. The family's wiener dog started barking, as all those little dogs do at nothing, so of course they're gonna bark at niggers with guns.
00:30:47 Donald Taylor, annoyed by the dog, pulled out a knife and started hell hold the dog and started slashing the dog, because again, nigger with no soul, this of course enraged the daughter Barbara Bond, who was lying on the floor. She jumped up to try to get them to stop stabbing the dog with a knife, and Reuben Taylor fired his 30 caliber carbine at her, hit her right in the chest, killed her instantly shortly after Reuben Taylor left the house and guarded outside the front door because of the loud noise that a 30 caliber carbine makes.
00:31:54 Donald Taylor, his brother, remained inside the nig with a 25 caliber pistol, and execution style shot the rest of the family in the back of the head after they finished ransacking the house they got in their car and drove back to Chicago to the free housing and the free food. Later that evening, members of the other members of the Corbett family were, I guess, fortunate enough not to be there, arrived at the house, including Marion's son.
00:32:41 He noticed his aunt's blue mercury Montego parked outside, and the driver's door slightly open. The interior light was on, the keys were found under some nearby bushes. He went inside, and the pantry was flowing with blood across According to him, police arriving at the scene found the bodies.
00:33:07 The upstairs of the house had been ransacked. Valuables, including jewelry, had been left behind in some of the bedrooms. The Rolls Royce and other valuable cars remained in the driveway. The alarm had not been set. There were no signs of forcible entry, and Chief Ralph Hummel told reporters, quote, I don't know what the hell happened, I just know we have four dead bodies, I That was in August and September.
00:33:52 William Richter. This is another one of these cases where they didn't really tie it all together at first, and I guess because Chicago is kind of a hell hole, they don't make a big deal out of murders, and so not every, not every story, they, they don't, they're not, oh, is this just another nig murder that you know, they don't know if it's tied to like something larger, they don't get a lot of coverage, so there's not a lot known about this one, except for he was an army specialist, and he was killed on the night of september 2, 1972 while sleeping in his pickup truck on the shoulder of Edens Expressway near Highland Park, Illinois.
00:34:38 We know he was a soldier, he pulled over to rest, and he was shot while he was sleeping. The Sun Times reported in October that a suspect named Jackson, who was one of the members of the group we're going to talk about in a second, was wanted specifically for that shooting, and a pawn.
00:35:00 Print recovered from his truck was later matched to one of the other suspects, and but again, like a lot of the details were kind of thin on the reporting, at least that I was able to find the ballistic evidence placed Richter, the Richter murder in the same sequence as the well, we'll get to the next murder, actually, but I'm getting ahead of myself there. So, what is known is that basically he was asleep in his truck, and they shot him several times and killed him, same sort of a deal.
00:35:36 They murdered him while he slept, and that's that's about all there's really known about that one. The next case right here is the Hawtree family. The Haw Tree family consisted of Stephen Hawtree, who was 56 years old, he was a machine designer. His wife, Judy, who was 53 their youngest son Thomas, who was 17. The family lived on Monhe Manhattan Road, approximately one and a half miles west of the Interstate 57 Exchange, near Monty, a small rural community in Will County, about 40 miles south of Chicago.
00:36:36 Their home is a modest split level in a rural, rural small town, the Hatres did not lock their doors again. This was back when white people thought that they could trust the people in their environment, because prior to the great Negro migration, that by 1972 had already taken place. You could, you could trust your neighbors when they were white, and so they didn't lock their doors. No one in the neighborhood locked their doors.
00:37:15 They, you know, there's interviews of their neighbors where they specifically say, quote, Stephen and Judy Hatchery never locked their doors. Thomas Hawtrey, 17, worked at a part-time job at the Huck service station in money on the night of september 3.
00:37:37 He came home from his shift at approximately 11 o'clock at night, he now, what happened inside the Hatchery home between 11pm on september 3 and 1am on september 4 is not really, we don't have the a whole lot of the details, especially not compared to the Corbett murders, there's no confession that specifically explains the scene, and there's no prisoner review board, you know, transcript that talks about how it was unfolded.
00:38:16 Judy Haw trees, mother Jenny Veer Verhoeven, who was 75 years old, reported that she heard a car pull up to the hot trees driveway at approximately 1am on September 4, so that late that night she was the last known person to have any awareness of the house during this relevant window the following morning, Monday, september 4, the mother came to the house, and according to Will County Sheriff Joseph Trins Trisna, she discovered the bodies at approximately 10am Stephen Haw tree, Judy Hatchery, and their son Thomas were found shot to death in the basement of their home, and execution style murder the same way as the Corbetts.
00:39:14 Multiple gunshots at close range, no apparent motive, nothing taken that could explain why they were slaughtered. The television set was stolen, and that was about it. So all they knew was, well, someone came in and murdered all three of them in their basement and took their TV.
00:39:42 Now later they would find that TV at one of the niggers' houses, and they would also do ballistic testing and establish that the weapons used on the Haw tree house were also the same weapons used to kill William Reiter or Richter. On, you know, the guy in the sleep in his truck the day before.
00:40:11 All right, it's also important to note this case was never tried, but we'll get into that in a second too, I Okay, so eventually the sheriff, this is Cook County Sheriff Richard J. Elrod. On October 15, he had a press conference, and he said that there was a black terrorist organization responsible called Day Mau Mau, and said, quote, racial hatred could have been one of the primary motives. I can see no other apparent motivation.
00:41:05 De Mau Mau. Here's the murdering niggers right here, but the name De Mau Mau is actually taken from a Kenyan terrorist organization that used murder and mutilation to fight white colonists in Africa throughout the 1950s and this name was deliberately chosen.
00:41:33 Think of it like in the same way, you know, like the Haitians murdered all the white people, it was the same kind of a deal, the black people in Kenya were murdering all the, or were trying to genocide all the white people in Kenya as well, and this name was lifted from this terrorist group and used by Vietnam vets, black Vietnam vets who didn't like that they had white superior officers, and thought that they were being racist, you know, the white superior superior officers were being racist, and purposely sending them into battle as cannon fodder, and at least reportedly they performed assassinations of white members of the military under this name Day Mau Mau, and we'll get into that here in a second.
00:42:37 A black organization, Chicago Today said with a corps of Vietnam veterans trained to kill in combat and embittered by less than honorable discharges, and no civilian jobs. So, this wasn't a street gang of criminals. They were not burglars who panicked and killed white people that they were robbing, they were trained soldiers, organized and deliberately executing white people because they were pissed off at white people, and they had a private war on white America that white people had no idea was even going on, so they were literally trying to start the race war.
00:43:27 It's very similar to the Zebra killers that we've covered in a previous stream. So six men were taken into custody, all were black members of the Day Mau Mau. They all lived in Chicago, South Side. Their names were Reuben Taylor, that was the guy with the 30 caliber. He was 22 years old. Donald Taylor, that was his brother, who was 21 that was the guy with the 25 caliber. The execution style murder them.
00:44:02 Michael Clark, who was 21 Nathaniel Burse, who was 23 Edward Morin Jr. who was 23 and Robert Wilson, who was 18. All were from Chicago. Most were veterans. Several had been students until they were expelled from they were, this is to give you an idea of how extreme they were. They were expelled from Malcolm X Community College for being too niggardly. I'm not making that up.
00:44:34 They were, they were, they were too niggardly for Malcolm X Community College, and so they were expelled for being too violent in 1972 after beating students and faculty repeatedly. One of the faculty said, quote, "It was pure terror. That was Dr. Charles G. Hearst Jr. The college. President quote, members of the Mau Mau would intimidate and beat up students and teachers again. Never heard of this group before.
00:45:09 Never heard of this group. These were men who had gone to war in Vietnam, got pissed off after being trained, and, and you know, decided to start the race war when they came back, and they knew how to use guns. They've been trained to use guns, they knew how to move around at night, how not to be seen, how to find a target, and how to eliminate it.
00:45:33 And they decided their target was going to be white people by the end of the week, four more suspects were arrested. One, a fugitive, surrendered himself to police in New Jersey, and they continue to arrest people. I think they arrested up to 10 people. The most chilling detail, and this again. This is kind of like the zebra killings in California that was happening not too far apart in terms of time.
00:46:09 This, after they arrested members of the of Day Mau Mau, they became clear it wasn't just some local gang, it was a national organization, they thought that there was possibly up to 3000 to 4000 members across the country, and they were almost all ex-military, and this was several law enforcement agencies that had in different states collaborating, trying to figure out what's up with this Dame Mau Mau group.
00:46:46 Again, it originated with black servicemen in Vietnam, and also those stationed in Germany during the Vietnam War. And again, it was allegedly they were involved in the bombing of white officers, so assassinating white officers during the fog of war, so that they wouldn't, you know, if they didn't like their, their leader, they could just kill him and blame, blame the Viet Cong, they came home, and you know, they were ultra radicalized by the political environment that was going on, and they were just a 3000 strong murder gang, essentially in the United States, that you've never heard of. There was a also I found a couple reports talking about Day Mau Mau attempting to take over the Black Panthers. The Black Panther, you guys have heard of them.
00:47:47 They've also committed murders and bombings and terrorist acts around the same time, but Dame Amow was trying to take them over, and that was, I think, tied to the violence that was going on at Malcolm X Community College. Imagine having the degree from there. Hard to find a lot of detail about it, though.
00:48:09 It's hard to find a lot of detail about it, because again, you have to sift through newspapers, and there's just.. there's a lot of articles about it, but it's.. it's hard to. hard to collate it all and and get a coherent narrative without without spending literally like months on this, so one article I did find was this one where they actually interviewed a a black army vet who knew about Day Now Day Mau Mau because it was apparently rampant in Vietnam.
00:48:52 So, this is from the article. Here, you joined Dame Mau Mau because you had some kind of harsh treatment of a white Anglo Saxon, Williams said the attitude of the group towards whites was harsh, not just harsh. In another article, it says that to get into Da Mau Mau, the initiation was to kill Whitey Whites, there they categorized whites into three categories. The biggest and meanest group were whites, were the or of the whites was the swine.
00:49:31 These were out and out races, as well as the very, very rich Anglo-Saxon type of individual in a position of power. So, out of the three groups, that's the biggest one. The white devil is the biggest one out of out of the three kinds of whites. The second group, William, William said were the middle class whites who are trying to do the right thing, but were hung up with their middle.
00:50:00 Class hang-ups, so base let the white liberals, I guess the third group were okay guys. The okay guys were the smallest group of all, so I guess the Wiggers, the Wiggers were the okay guys. When asked what the Dame Au Mau members thought should be done to whites, they identified as swine. Williams hesitated and said he preferred not to answer. There was some difference of opinion on that point, he said.
00:50:33 I bet Lewis, a friend of Williams, who served in Vietnam from November 1968 until being wounded in May of 1969 said that during his tour of duty the day Mau Mau was just getting started. Quote, I came in contact with a lot of Dame Mau Mau members in the field, he said. I didn't join because I had other things on my mind, like the enemy, Lewis said, however, that he could understand how the number of people calling themselves de Mau Mau members could mushroom in a matter of months.
00:51:12 In Vietnam, you learned that the white man was your friend until you were caught in a firefight, he said. Then the blacks would be in the middle with Charlie in front and whites behind, the whites would say they were shooting at Charlie, but they were really shooting at us. So I guess that's how we fought Vietnam, is we had a wall of negs in front of the white guys that really weren't that useful, so we just shot them ourselves. Why, why would you go through the trouble of even shipping them out there if you're just going to shoot them in a rice paddy somewhere in Vietnam? But I guess that's, you know, that's how Nick Brain works.
00:51:51 Lewis said that, in general, the racial situation in Vietnam was characterized by a pervasive sense of mutual distrust. Quote, that's why people joined De Mau Mau, he said today. According to Williams, who has kept track of friends of his who were members of De Mau Mau, there are Dame Mau Mau groups in every military base in the United States and Asia that has a sizable black population, so so there were all kinds of members of Day Mau Mau in all of these military bases. I think it actually still unofficially exists today, by the way.
00:52:41 Investigators and reporters piecing together the ideology of day Mau Mau from informing accounts and from organizations known history assembly or assembled a picture of a group whose racial hatred had been theorized, justified, and organized into action.
00:53:00 The original Mau Mau in Kenya had framed their violence as anti-colonial necessity, the only language a colonial power would hear. The American day Mau Mau drew the same parallel. White wealth, the ideology held, was built on exploitation of black labor across the centuries.
00:53:21 So again we built this country. Nothing has changed. Suburban homes, like the Corbett Estate, were not simply houses; they were the physical evidence of a system of theft that had never been paid back, taking from them and killing them if it came to that, was not a crime, it was justice.
00:53:53 Or, as Sheriff Elrod had put it, racial hatred could have been one of the prime, could have been the primary motives. I can see no other apparent motivation. All the, all the, obviously, all the, the victims were white. There was no other motive whatsoever that anyone else could come up with.
00:54:19 So, Cook County Sheriff Richard Elrod and State's Attorney Edward Henrahan stood before cameras on Sunday afternoon, october 15. They had six men in custody and warrants out for more. By the end of the week, 10 had been arrested and surrendered. The men were charged with nine counts of murder, they ranged in age from 18 to 23 They were Elrod, and they were Elrod said the core of the De Mau Mau operation in Chicago.
00:54:51 The evidence against them was formidable, two weapons ballistically linked across four separate crime scenes and nine victims. The confessions from an informant inside the organized.
00:54:59 Nation describing in detail the execution of the Corbett family, a palm print from William Richter's truck, and the organization's own operational footprint, the expulsion from Malcolm X College, the known ritual of identification, they had like no shit, they had like this secret black handshake where they would do like a little dance, like I'm not even kidding.
00:55:22 The network of veterans also had their own way, or not just the Seer Handshake, they have their own like lingo for secret communications. We have the ring leaders, Elrod told reporters, we have the primary triggerman now. It's funny, in some of the reporting, especially later on, they, of course, before they completely erased it from the public's memory, they tried to reframe it as well.
00:55:56 It wasn't because they were white, it was a class thing, had nothing to do with race, and in fact there was this retrospective I think from 2020 like one of the only things that were sort of current that I could find on it, where they were, they were trying to completely take race out of the equation, other than the racial abuse that they faced in the military, and but but claiming that even though they were racially abused and they were the poor black people that you know could never, never succeed in any white supremacist society, they didn't choose victims based on race, it was out of desperation, and they needed that TV at the people at the farm houses' house.
00:56:40 They also pointed out I thought this was kind of amusing, so in February of 1972 months before the De Mau Mau killings in Chicago started, a black advocate for black veterans appeared on WGN Radio, which was a radio station in Chicago, and issued a warning.
00:57:06 Barry Wright, speaking on Issues Unlimited, warned that returning black Vietnam veterans have been transformed by their military training and their sense of racial grievance into a potential ghetto gorilla equipped to retaliate against a racist society, so you shut it, you shut a lesson to him, Whitey, it's it's actually your fault, it's actually your fault, because this guy, Barry Wright, he warns you about the ghetto gorillas coming back from Vietnam, they were, they were trained to retaliate against the racist society, society Wright said was provoking a growing element within the black community to use their military skills against those who deny them their rightful place in American society, but unfortunately the warning wasn't heeded, and so Dame Mau Mau had no other choice three months later than to kill Michael Gershenson, shoot him six times because he was a young white guy driving to school, and few months later there were nine people dead.
00:58:37 Apparently, Wright's warning was ignored. Chicago today
00:58:40 said
00:58:43 six men, most of them Vietnam veterans, are being held in connection with more than 10 slayings. There were other, there are other murders too. There's probably more than the nine, but they, they again, like I said, the some of these then never even made it to court because they, they threw the book at Adam with the other cases, and they all got like sentences of like 100 years.
00:59:09 One of them, let me see, that I go back to my notes again here. So, here's what we got as far as the, the people who were involved, Reuben Taylor, that was the guy with the 30 caliber that car buying that that killed the young girl who was trying to save her doggo. He was convicted of four murders, armed robbery in connection to the Corbett case. He got 100 to 150 years for murder, plus 20 to 60 years for armed robbery.
00:59:46 He was denied parole repeatedly, then granted parole in 2018 by eight to four vote. So he's out, the guy. I, that shot a young girl who was trying to save her dog from being slashed with a knife. He's out, as of, I mean, if he's still alive, I'm assuming he was, what, 2021 in 1972 So he's, you know, he's an older, he's an older nig, but he's out on parole, Reuben Taylor, Chicago area, he's out on parole, probably doesn't run too fast.
01:00:31 Donald Taylor convicted, that's the thing, not only do obviously we should get these guys should have the death penalty, but even when you give him 100 to 150 years, plus 20 to 60 years, he's out on parole after 40, like less than even one of the sentences. Anyway, Donald Taylor, his brother, was convicted. of the four murders alongside his brother. He obviously was the one that put the, he physically shot three of them with his 25 pistol.
01:01:18 Also, he's the one that was slashing up the dog, he also got over 100 years. He died in prison in 1991 I'm not sure what. I just found a.. it just said that he died in prison in 1991 Michael Clark was also one of the niggers at the Corbett's house, was convicted in the same case.
01:01:56 He got 40 to 120 years on and they also gave him a 200 year sentence for the Corbett related offenses, he was paroled in 2019 so he's out Michael Clark, Chicago area, probably an old guy. He was paroled in 2019 by 11 to two vote. That's according to the Chicago Sun-Times.
01:02:34 Just saying, he's probably in the Chicago area. Robert Wilson convicted in Lake County for murder and armed robbery of William Riker, the richer, depending how you want to say it, that's the guy in the truck, and the attempted murder of another guy, that, oh, I forgot, they, they also shot another guy at the side of the road, but he got away, one of the, one of their MOS was they were driving, you know, reason why there's two dead guys at the side of the road.
01:03:07 They thought it would be a fun this back when truck drivers were white.
01:03:11 They thought it'd be a fun tactic to shoot truck drivers as they slept at the side of the road, and then they could also steal shit on their truck, because if there's anything niggers love more than killing, it's stealing. So he got six or 60 years. Let's see here, I can't find any information about him being paroled or discharged, but I think I think he, he's probably out already, if these other guys are, so that's, or I'm sorry, I skipped one. Michael Clark got 40 to 120
01:04:00 years, uh
01:04:03 Oh no, I already did that one. Yeah, he got paroled in that. 2019 Robert Wilson, that's the one I couldn't find the information on, but he's probably out. He's probably already out. Darryl Petrie, or Patrick, they spelled the two different ways.
01:04:19 He was convicted in Lake County for murder and attempted murder and armed robbery, he got 120 years, and then I saw one thing, I saw something that said he was paroled in 2005 but it was just like a, it was a internet post, not like a newspaper, so I'm not sure if that, if he was, but the chances are, if these other guys, if the guys that were shooting, actually putting the bullets in. People's heads are out.
01:05:00 Then this guy's probably been out since 2005 So that's Darryl Petrie, or Petrie. Then they charged those other guys. They had Nathaniel Burse was named as one of the people in the Corbett invasion. His charges were dismissed after he and Edward Morin died in jail, the Daily Herald said that Burse was killed in Lake County jail while being held for another, another crime. I don't know the details on that.
01:05:37 I'm hoping the Aryan Brotherhood or something like that did it, but it might have just been death by Neg, you know, who knows. So that's the guy that died in prison, and he was, he was one of the guys at the Corbett house. Edward Morin Jr. was indicted for the Richter Davis case, but he also was killed in Lake County jail before, so the charges were dismissed, so you know, he, you know, they couldn't put him in jail, so again, hopefully Aryan Brotherhood, but probably Nigs, then Garland Jackson, let's see here, he was Did that's the one I couldn't find a whole lot of information on. Look at my notes here. Yeah, I didn't. I didn't find any.
01:06:34 I found that he was arrested, but I didn't see anything about him actually going to jail or even going to court, and then William Jackson, same thing, I think that he was, he was like the rat, because they had, they talked about him being kind of like a leader of Day Mau Mau, but I don't think he was ever charged with anything, so he might have been like the snitch, not sure, so yeah, that was the De Mau Mau gang in 1972 You had a bunch of blacks that came back from Vietnam who apparently during Vietnam were killing white officers and maybe even not when they're in Vietnam, there's rumors that this assassination of white officers also took place on the base in Germany, and then they came home and started trying to start a race war and just started killing random white people, and they had at one point, at least, according to the newspapers that I found, and these were quotes from law enforcement that wasn't just like some guy said, these were law enforcement officials saying they had members in all across the country, and up to 3000 to 4000 members, so who knows what else was going on.
01:07:56 This is just one of the cases I came across. Now, one of the disgusting things I also came across in literally this on the same page, on the same page of the story that I was looking at for this murders.
01:08:10 There's this paper, this, this story right here, packed sign to give minority workers jobs, so as, as, as these blacks were going around committing terrorist attacks on white people, just murdering what white people who were paying for their housing and paying for their food. The white people were also passing laws to make it illegal to hire white people.
01:08:37 So this article here, this says Chicago union and contractors representative signed Wednesday a voluntary agreement to, you see, and then the unions were, they didn't have to do it by law, they were doing it on a voluntary basis to provide 10,000 minority group workers with jobs in the Chicago area construction industry by the end of 1976 a US Labor Department official described it as the most extensive such plan funded by federal money.
01:09:10 Well, they got federal, I guess it was voluntary, but they also got federal money to subsidize it, because the federal, no, they knew you'd lose money by by hiring non-whites, because they would do a shittier job, so the feds would subsidize the contractors to make up for any losses for hiring niggers, but the minority group or federal funded money, but minority group represent representatives, while expressing confidence, forecast dire consequences should the plan fail to meet its goals, it's never enough.
01:09:43 The plan was worked out in 10 months of negotiations headed by the Labor Department. It provides for strict administrative procedures and an employment timetable to guard against a lap similar to that which doomed the first Chicago plan.
01:10:00 Whose director is awaiting trial on charges of embezzlement of $100,000 Wonder what stories on that. It was signed by officers of nine contractors associations and 15 local building trades unions who had a current membership of more than 41,000 people. It requires that minority groups work workers or minority group workers be hired by contractors and admitted to unions on the same basis as members of the majority.
01:10:33 I'm sure on the same basis. Its primary focus is to place minority group members in unions' apprentice programs with emphasis on those who are older than the average white apprentice and those who fall below the average formal education level or IQ or intelligence or work ethic.
01:10:52 Said Donald M. Irwin, Regional Director of the Department of Labor, it is funded the first year by 1.7 million, and again, that mansion, that 14 bedroom home in 1972 was $100,000 So, 1.7 million might not sound like a lot, but when you realize a 14 bedroom mansion on 30 acres with where the guy who lives there has a Rolls Royce, was only $100,000 1.7 million, that's that's a lot of money in federal money, most of which Irwin said will be used to reimburse employers providing on the job training to applicants, so again, not only are we paying for NIGs to live somewhere, we're paying for them to eat, we're paying for them to take your job and to get this quote unquote on the job training program, all the while they're murdering us.
01:11:45 The program will be administered by the Chicago Urban League, which is charged with dispersing funds and screening applicants. And I'm sure there was no graft whatsoever. The first Chicago plan was started in the January of 1970 with a federal grant of more than $400,000 Again, think of the mansion, for that's for those mansions. Its goal was to find jobs for 4000 minority group workers and the building trades.
01:12:10 So there you go. This was on the same page as, like, Niggs killing white people. Is you got this, this bullshit right here. Now it's funny, because also when I was looking up this, this case, I was trying to find it's real, it's kind of hard tricking AI, and to tell you about telling you about under-reported cases to research, and sometimes you word it in a weird way, and it comes, it gives you a response other than what you were thinking, but funny enough, I kind of got something that on accident that I thought like a nice little list that is appropriate.
01:12:50 It kind of goes along with that article here, so I asked for, because the way I phrased it, the AI thought I was asking for court cases of that basically went against white people that would be seen as yet the yet the phrase it all stupid something I said something like along the lines of reverse or perceived reverse racism or something like that and it came up with this list of things that like some of these, I might look into further, but this is around the same time period, right? So our beginning in that same time period, 1973 to 1974 This is just I'm going to rattle off the list here.
01:13:33 UC Davis Medical School rejections, Allen Bach incident, white applicant with top scores rejected twice, while 16 spots were reserved for minorities with lower qualifications under explicit racial quota.
01:13:47 So, again, this started in the 1970s 1970s Kaiser aluminum training program exclusion: white worker denied craft training slot reserved exclusively for black employers or employees, rather under union affirmation action plan, so the same kind of a thing that we're talking about here.
01:14:04 So, while at the same, you want to know how white replacement happened, or how non-whites got into positions of wealth and power. It's because of this stuff right here, and it had its.. it wasn't just lifting up, if you will, you want to use the leftist language, it wasn't just lifting up the minority group, it was because there it is a zero sum game.
01:14:26 It was necessarily depriving whites that would have normally, under normal circumstances, if it was merit-based, would have had these positions.
01:14:33 It was depriving them of those positions and therefore their wealth and their power. 1986 Jackson, Michigan teacher layoffs, white teachers laid off out of seniority. Order preserved racial balance in faculty under affirmative action policy. So they were firing white teachers, so they could have to make up, and then, you know, replace them with non-white teacher teachers in Michigan.
01:14:57 1980s Richmond v. Virginia Contracting White owned plumbing company lost city contract because it could not meet 30% minority subcontracting quota. This is something that goes on to this day. Many people don't know about this, but local municipalities, in fact, I know for a fact this goes on in the southwest.
01:15:23 I worked at a television station back.. well, actually, it's been some years now, but we did a story on these, these like rising stars and minority-owned businesses or something like that, and you come to find out after the interview that these minority owned businesses wouldn't exist if they didn't have contracts with the city, and because the city had to go with, if you, so let's say you're the city of Rio Rancho in New Mexico, I don't know specifically if it's Rio Rancho, but there's lots of cities like this, right, where they have to, for some reason, they have to repaint a government building, and so what you do is you post that, you know, all these contractors that do painting of buildings will bid on this job that you post, you'll post that.
01:16:21 Oh, we need to, we need to paint this building, and so everyone bids on it, and whoever has the, the best proposal, like it's not always the lowest price price, but it's like whoever has the best price for the best value, you know, the person in charge of granting these contracts is that's the way it used to work, that's who got to paint the building.
01:16:45 Well, beginning in the 1970s if you were a business owned by a Hispanic, you know, like a Mexican, or a, you know, like a nigger, you would get it, wouldn't matter, your proposal could suck, you got the job, and so that sort of thing was has been going a long time.
01:17:07 This is just one example that was in the early 80s when it came to plumbing. 1995 federal high, it was also federal government to not just local municipalities.
01:17:19 1995 federal highway bidding disadvantage white owned firm lost federal contract edge due to disadvantaged business enterprise racial preference favoring minorities, so they created in the federal, at the federal level, something called a disadvantaged business enterprise, where not only would they give these non-white companies the job, they would, they would subsidize them, so they would be paying these guys, and again, it's a zero-sum game, they get the contract, which necessarily means the white guy who would normally do that job doesn't get the job, so he doesn't, it's not that like there's another job that we made for the retarded black, yeah, hey, retard, we made up a fake job for you to do, so that you can feel like you're helping, no, that the actual job is done by the non-whites, and they get that money, and they get those connections, 1992 UT Austin Law school rejections for white applicants with superior LSAT and GPA scores were rejected in favor of lower-scoring minority candidates under racial preference system.
01:18:30 Again, this has obviously been going on for fucking decades, but this has a cumulative effect. Not only do you have businesses unable to get the contracts because of this shit, you have people unable to get jobs, you have people unable to get accepted into schools, and this, this has been going..
01:18:52 What do you think happens to the white race in America after.. well, I mean, at this point we're.. we're over 50 years into this shit, after half a century of, I mean, you'd want to talk about systemic racism. There it is. Late 90s, um, law school denial, white applicant rejected under holistic review, where race heavily weighted outcomes against non-preferred groups. That's a nice way of putting it, 1989 Piscataway, New Jersey teacher layoff decision.
01:19:26 White tenured teacher teachers were laid off explicitly to maintain racial diversity in, in certain departments. 2003 New Haven Fire Department exam discard. Now, I think you guys might remember this. I think this was like a thing in the news. I remember city refused to certify promotional test results to avoid disparate impact on minorities.
01:19:54 In other words, the fire departments, and there was another case of this, I want to say, like around 2016 or. So there was a test you had to take to become a firefighter. Well, because non-whites are fucking retards.
01:20:07 I mean, it was a, it was a hard test for whites to pass, and so blacks and Mexicans weren't fucking passing the test, and so they had, and one of the, in fact, when they got rid of it, they said it was because no blacks ever qualified, so zero blacks had ever passed the test, so they got rid of the test, so they could have stupider people as fire firemen.
01:20:34 And there's another example where there's only x amount of firemen, and now the white guys that would be better, it'd be better for everybody, it'd be better for, you know, getting fires put out, and be better for white families to have a fireman as a dad that, you know, has good insurance and money.
01:20:49 Now he's out of a job, so they can hire Tyrone to, to fucking, you know, sit around and and play with Dalmatians all day. Ah, you know, you have, yeah, I'm gonna go through this whole list. There's, there's a ton of these 1970s Detroit police promotion denials, white officers passed over for promotion under court-ordered or mayoral racial hiring plans favoring black candidates.
01:21:15 You know, a lot of these cases that, that I'll use footage of, like when we talk about some of these serial killers and things like that, and you get like the obviously retarded black police chief, you know, sound bites, where you guys have seen these streams where he's like, I don't know, but we go and get that guy, and it's like, you think, how the fuck did this guy become police chief, shit like this, shit like this, and well, and by the way, while at the same time, so you have blacks murdering whites because they're whites, you have the government making sure that white people can't make any money, they can't get an education, they can't get a job, and then you have movies at the time telling white people that well, this is normal.
01:22:01 This is okay. This is okay. All the propaganda with all the white guilt and all the weird representation were like every fucking cop movie for the entire decade of the 80s was like a black guy with a mustache for some reason. Let's see here. 2000 St. Louis police academy position denial.
01:22:24 White sergeant explicitly told not to apply because the role was going to a black woman for diversity. 1990 Philadelphia police consent decree enforcement. White applicants and officers repeatedly denied entry or advancement to meet racial quotas and posed by federal oversight, so that was the other thing too.
01:22:45 You had Jews at the DOJ, then if you're white, I mean, if your police department had too many white cops, they would, they would sue you for discrimination, they would do that stupid Jew math, and never, you know, it's funny, Jews, the king of the group, that's that they like to complain when you point out that 2% of the population does x amount of whatever, right? They are, oh, that's just because we're good, but then they've been suing white people over the same fucking numbers for well, since at least the 1960s and so that's what you have, you have these racial quotas in these police departments, and that's why you have so many fucking black cops.
01:23:28 Let's hear 1974 South Boston bussing implementation of, well, that's that's a whole thing. You guys know what the bussing, you know, white students forcibly bused long distances to lower performing schools under court order sparked immediate protests.
01:23:44 Okay, so we have that they're attacking white children now at this point, and this happened all over the fucking country. It wasn't just in Boston, it started, I think, in Boston, and then you had 2007 Seattle race-based school assignments, which is something similar.
01:24:03 White students denied preferred neighborhood schools due to racial tie breaker policies aimed at balancing enrollment. So it was basically bussing led by a different name. 2000 start of the Zimbabwe Fast Track land reform, which was the. oh, wait, this is Zimbabwe. Why the fuck is the tongue about Zimbabwe? It goes off the reservation here on these lists on a little bit here. We're gonna skip over the Zimbabwe shit. Ah, let's see here.
01:24:34 Oh, there's more stuff here, but I'm looking more for systemic stuff here at see here, anyway, there's there's a lot of stuff that a lot of is not the systemic stuff that I'm talking about, so yeah, that's that's the, that was the situation as early as the 1970s This stuff's been going on since before you were alive, and white people can't fucking grow a pair, and, and stop it. And what, in fact, there's a lot of white people now saying, "Well, it's okay, we still can't stop it, because now it's time. Now we have to, we have to team up with them to fight the Jews or something.
01:25:23 Anyway, so that's the story. A little short tonight, because I just spent so much time just trying to find more information on this fucking case that there was no information about, but the information I was able to find. there we go. Slaughter at home, slaughter at home. Illinois family herded into kitchen, murdered by robbers. Well, not really murdered by niggers. This is the house in Barrington Hills. Four, we're slain anyway.
Clip
01:26:36 White fucking power, I
Devon Stack
01:25:58 We're gonna go and take a look at Rumble rants. Well, actually, first I'll look and see if there's love and a vision. Must be here. We have one in on Odyssey. I still have, in fact, set up power. It's been a real busy week for me. Things will settle down a little bit next week, but I just haven't had a chance to catch up with a lot of stuff that's been going on, trying to get a lot of things done, especially got a bunch of bee stuff left to do before it gets too fucking hot. Let's see here, we got love and division, love and division. Let's see here, what am I doing here?
01:26:51 White power love and division. Wow, compared to so many TV shows made about white supremacists, where no one gets killed, by the way. I'm looking forward to the day when the Jews allow us to live apart from people of color. Well, you know, it's funny. One thing I've noticed with, like, is again, this isn't a unique case. There was the zebra killings. There's been a couple serial killers, the black serial killers, where we've covered this.
01:27:18 There really isn't, like, a white supremacist version of this, I mean, there have done me wrong, there have been like white supremacists that have gone out and done, you know, have killed people just because, you know, random non-whites, that's obviously happened, but not like organized and planned like this, where it goes on for months, and they're, and they're just systematically randomly killing white people, you know, for a while before the cops catch wind of it.
01:27:50 Whereas there's several cases of this, of blacks doing this, at least I'm sure there's, there's cases of Spics doing it too. All right, let's hear. Thank you very much. There, love and division. Then we got let me go over to Rumble. We got real Starfish Prime, says Captain Stack.
01:28:13 Last week's Rumble rant didn't charge my credit card. Hopefully it only happened to me, but everyone else should double check their charges didn't charge your credit card, huh? Well, maybe, maybe you got off easy, maybe, but yeah, I mean, I'll look and see. The accounting side of these things is always a mess, especially with Rumble. They don't have, like, a clear easy way of just looking at it, but I appreciate you, you coming back.
01:28:45 And then Real Starfish Prime again says more currency units to make up from last week's missing donation. Well, I appreciate that. Then we got Dag Tastic says Insomnia Stream, Meow Meow, Churro Edition soon, uh Well, I seen him yet today. He, he came in last night, actually. I think he came in this morning too.
01:29:10 He's turning into a grumpy old man, like he's been through some shit, and some of you guys, you guys know, but he's starting to look a little scraggly, like he's he's definitely seen some shit, and he's, he's been grumpy. He's been grumpy for a couple weeks, little testy, I mean, you know, not like he hasn't, like, scratched me like that, but he's been a whiny little bitch. But he's been out all day today.
01:29:36 I haven't seen him since this morning, but you never know, partially I think it's because my door, it's now too hot to like leave my door open, so my door is not open, so maybe he doesn't hear me when I'm streaming anymore.
01:29:54 Then we got anti-democracy, nada, and anti-de. Democracy nada, anti-democracy nada says me and some friends rewatched your Black Epstein stream a while ago, because we read about Larry King in the 10th chapter of One Nation Under Blackmail, but nothing came of part two. I'm shocked you didn't make part two about Craig Spence, who was a partner of Larry King. One Nation Under Blackmail has more info on him.
01:30:44 Oh, well, maybe I'll.. I don't remember. That was a long time ago. I don't remember. Maybe I'd started. I get this. There's times where I fully expect to do a part two of something, and then I get distracted by something, but I'll add that to my notes. I haven't read One Nation or Blackmail, so maybe I should add that there.
01:31:17 Y'all, check that out. I'll check that out. All right, next we got Fred Flinstone says, 'Hey, Devin, do you have Odyssey comments restricted for new accounts? Been trying to hyper chat on there, but can't catch the replay in the morning.
01:31:34 Yeah, it's because if we don't, apparently when you talk about Prairie Niggers, they try to bot the chat and destroy it, so we had to put a limit on there, so you know, yeah, Rumble, there's always Rumble, maybe we can, maybe we can limit, I don't know what the, the when we have the, the time limit for how new you have to be, but maybe we can lower that. I kind of, I don't know, Odyssey.
01:32:06 I'm going to stick with Odyssey as long as it's around, but I don't, I don't think Odyssey. I'm just being honest here, guys. I don't think Odyssey is the future. I'm not saying Rumble is, but honestly, hasn't really done like a lot to the platform to attract more people, and they haven't really been updating it.
01:32:28 I mean, the updates they've made have been kind of annoying, actually. It's on it's on my side, like what I see when I'm setting up streams, they've just made it more annoying. I don't know, I mean, like I said, I'm gonna stick with it. I hopefully it gets better. I think that the possibility that something else comes along that's that's better is more likely than Odysee really catching on.
01:32:52 But, oh yeah, I'll keep using it. I'll keep using it, you know. Hopefully again, I hope that it does get bigger and better. I just don't, that doesn't seem to be the trend. All right, then we got Yo, Jimbo Rockford says, in 1978 the Jew demon year, my feminist mother left my blue collar small town father and took my brother and I, so she could go play girl boss in Houston, bitter custody battle later.
01:33:25 And I is there a part two, yeah? I guess there is. Spent the next 40 years in DFW. Tomorrow I am leaving Texas and moving back to rural Missouri to take care of my elderly father. My mother has co or copd, and my visit today is probably the last time I will see. Is there another?
01:33:53 I'm assuming there's another part to that, right? I don't see the last part of that. I'm assuming you mean the last time you'll see your mom, ah, or maybe you'll see that area of Texas. Well, I'll tell you what, rural Missouri is pretty nice.
01:34:13 I got family in rural Missouri, and they all seem to like it. I think about going to rural Missouri sometimes because of the family I've got out there, and it's good for bees, and it's way better than here for bees, so yeah, hopefully that works out for you. I haven't spent a lot of time there, but I hear nothing but good things. All right, then we got Truffle Bee, which truffle bee says any disclosable progress regarding regarding IRL events.
01:34:48 I'm trying to bank some time for travel. Keep up the good work. Not yet, but that is definitely in the works. I. Um, I would think pretty soon there'll be more news about that, or maybe not. Maybe I think that the plan is to keep it not advertised until.. I mean, we'll give you enough time to figure it out, but yeah, that's that is.. that's still in the works.
01:35:20 A lot of that's not really something I'm focused on right now, but there are people working on that right now, and it's possible Arvill mentioned something in October.
01:35:35 It's possible I'll be able to do that. It depends on some B things, so I might be, that's that's a possibility, a return to land thing in October, but I'm not sure about the dates running. Purple Catman says thanks, Devin. I guess if your Africanized bees had dads, they would be much nicer.
01:35:57 That's what I'm hearing on social media about the team takeovers, about the team takeovers. I don't, gonna be honest with you, buddy, I don't get that. That's what I'm hearing about on social media, about the team takeovers. I don't know what the team takeovers is, so, so you might have to clarify the team takeovers, if that's a sports ball thing, I have no idea we're talking about.
01:36:26 Oh, then you correct teen takeovers, that makes a lot more sense. Ah, yes, ah, yes, the teen takeovers, where teens commit mass random violence and theft. Yes, yes, they will continue until someone does something about it. Corsica says, imagine how fast those teen takeovers would get shut down if they were middle-aged, pissed-off white man takeovers. Well, exactly, or would they? Or would they?
01:37:01 Words are words, says best stream on the internet. Well, I appreciate that. And then we got Rocco d2 says thoughts on Blade Running in USA, i.e. taking down flock cameras. Well, I cannot, I cannot condone illegal activity. Certainly not the descr destruction of private or public property.
01:37:34 That's about all I can say about that. All I can say about that. Randall Flagg says I've been assigned to work in the ghetto for my job doing assessments. It's so terrible, words do not do justice to what I see. Thank you for taking care of Churro. I see so much animal abuse.
01:38:01 Yeah, yeah, the blacks.. well, I mean, tonight we talked about the Wiener dog. Blacks are not kind to the animals in the same way that white people are. They are missing something, I believe it's a soul, is what it's called. Alright, guys.
01:38:18 Anyway, like I said, it's a short one tonight, short and sweet. Hope you guys have a good rest of your weekend. Well, I'm gonna have a big one this, this.. well, if I can finish watching, I'm still.. I told you guys I had that thing, that's like several days of video. I'm still working on that. I should have something for you, hopefully this weekend I'll be able to catch up with that.
01:38:41 In the meantime, you guys should check out the new Rocket Pixie song that I played at the beginning of the of the show. It's, I'll, I'll put the link out on Twitter probably tomorrow, and, and, well, on Telegram too. And there's a, there's more, there's more where that came from. In the meantime, you guys have a good rest of your weekend for Black Pilled. I am, of course, Devon Stack.
Reporter
01:39:10 40 seconds after she walks in, a man jogs up to the door. The young woman you're watching is walking back to her own apartment building. It's just after 1030 at night. She's coming home from a festival downtown. She's smiling. She's relaxed. Watch her glance behind her.
01:39:29 She doesn't know she was followed 40 seconds after she walks in. A man jogs up to the door. He looks through the glass. He sees her on the couch inside. He waves to get her attention. They talk for less than a minute. Then she opens the door and lets him in. She would never come out alive. Her name is Pava LaPere. She's 26 years old.
Pava LaPere
01:39:55 You see, I had my life entirely mapped out, a blueprint. For how I was going to make a change in the world,
Kevin - 911 Caller
01:40:04 there's a dead body on the rooftop of 306 West Franklin.
911 Dispatch
01:40:09 Exactly what happened, Kevin?
Kevin - 911 Caller
01:40:11 We filed a missing person report for our my friend and boss this morning, and we just checked the rooftop of the building. I'm looking at her.
911 Dispatch
01:40:22 Okay, is she awake?
Kevin - 911 Caller
01:40:24 No,
911 Dispatch
01:40:26 is she breathing?
Kevin - 911 Caller
01:40:27 No.
911 Dispatch
01:40:29 Please tell me, why does it
Kevin - 911 Caller
01:40:32 like she's it?
911 Dispatch
01:40:38 You gotta get closer, Kevin. Why is it like she's it? Come on, Kevin, you got this.
Kevin - 911 Caller
01:40:50 She, her face is.. she looks like she's been dead for a couple of days, and she's partly naked. I think she was being killed.
911 Dispatch
01:41:00 I'm sending you help, Kevin. All right, are you okay? I'm okay. All right,
Interrogator
01:41:05 let me ask you this. Let me ask you this. Were you at 306 That is the address, right? Yeah, 306306 West Franklin Street. You gotta answer me that. Okay,
Murder Suspect
01:41:18 so my own sister, like, that's crazy.
Interrogator
01:41:28 That's crazy.
01:41:30 Let me tell you, what's crazy, what's crazy is this young lady was a pillar in the community going into her apartment trying to make her life better and the lives better for everybody around her. She fought for Black Lives Matter, she fought for police and justice, right? She fought for all of that. She was an advocate for all of that, and the very thing, and the very people she fought for, she died at the hands of this guy right here. She died at the hands of this guy, the guy that she would advocate for, the guy. So that's what's up. Eco man technology stands against systemic racism, bigotry in a police state that criminalizes black bodies. That's what she promotes.
01:42:35 That's when she