reSee.it - Related Video Feed

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
The speaker states they were charged with sales murder without ever speaking to a detective, police officer, or DA. They claim Kamala Harris appeared at the two most pivotal times in their first trial: conviction and sentencing, suggesting it felt like a celebration for her. The speaker recounts that people describe their story as the worst nightmare, akin to dying. When confronted with a quote from Kamala Harris's book about the role of a progressive prosecutor, the speaker says it sounds like Kamala Harris as a senator now, but it was the polar opposite of what they and their community felt when she was the district attorney of San Francisco.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
The speaker announced the defunding of non-essential programs within Maine's Department of Corrections. This action was taken in response to a male inmate being housed in a women's prison. The inmate in question is described as six foot one, two hundred forty-five pounds, and convicted of murdering his parents and the family dog with a knife. The speaker stated the inmate identifies as a woman. The speaker declared this will no longer be tolerated and affirmed a commitment to protecting women in prisons, sports, and throughout the country.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
This dire public safety crisis stems directly from the abject failures of the city's local leadership. The radical left city council adopted no cash bail. By the way, every place in the country where you have no cash bail is a disaster. That's what started the problem in New York, and they don't change it. That's what started it in Chicago. No cash bail. We're gonna end that in Chicago. No cash bail. We're gonna change the statute. We're gonna change the statute and get rid of some of the other things, and we'll count on the Republicans in Congress and Senate to vote. We have the majority, so we'll vote. Got that done, and that's one of the greatest things that's ever happened to people in this country.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
Marxists, Islamists, and the administration have convinced a Washington DC jury to convict 5 pro-life activists who now face up to 11 years in prison for protesting. Meanwhile, individuals with different political beliefs are being sentenced to 10, 15, and even 20 years in prison. Antifa and other groups have caused chaos in cities like Portland, Minneapolis, and Seattle, engaging in violence, looting, and even taking over parts of the city. This political repression is immoral, un-American, and dangerous. If elected, the speaker promises to appoint a special task force to review the cases of unjustly persecuted political prisoners and sign their pardons or commutations on day 1.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
Project Warlock led to 18 arrests for violent crimes, with suspects often re-offending while out on bail. The speaker criticizes the justice system for allowing repeat offenders to harm innocent people. They call for meaningful bail reform, emphasizing the need for federal government action. The police and local authorities have done their part, now it's time for the government to step up.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
Speaker 0 outlines two priorities: first, go after welfare fraud and rewrite how programs work by requiring states to send biometrics to the federal government proving that the person exists and they're eligible for the services in question, with a focus on fraud “rampant in Minnesota and throughout these blue states through reconciliation.” Second, implement an affordability package to make America more affordable for the hardworking men and women of the country.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
Kamala supports taxpayer-funded sex change surgeries for prisoners. Every transgender inmate in the prison system would have access to that. Kamala supports transgender sex changes in jail with taxpayer money. Kamala even supports letting biological men compete against girls in sports. Kamala is for they/them. Donald Trump is for you.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
The transcript argues that private companies running prisons have a financial incentive to maximize inmate numbers, to the point of suing the state or locality if occupancy drops. The claim is that the profit motive creates pressure on law enforcement to arrest more people and to demand strict enforcement, because a safe city would reduce profits and jeopardize contracts. Private equity owners, and publicly traded prison operators, are described as viewing facilities as occupancy units rather than housing real criminals, with a “bed quota clause” in contracts ensuring jails stay 90–100% full. If crime declines, the companies sue for lost profits, exploring the idea that tax dollars are weaponized against public safety to meet quarterly earnings. The discourse suggests the jails and borderless ownership are a “foreign embassy of corporate greed,” with symbols like county jails and state seals described as misleading. The firms named include GEO Group and CoreCivic, along with security and facility managers such as Serco and G4S, depicted as having no local skin in communities and aiming to harvest beds rather than ensure sovereignty or public safety. The police are portrayed as turned into “delivery drivers for a global supply chain of incarceration,” and the constitution as a lease agreement, with towns becoming occupied territories where occupancy matters most. A second major claim is about “prison gerrymandering.” Under the Census Bureau’s usual residence rule, the bureau is said to refuse to fix the rule in 2026, resulting in inmates being counted as residents of rural districts where private prisons sit, not of their home communities. The effect is described as phantom constituents—prisoner populations that boost rural political power and funding while the prisoners themselves cannot vote. The result is a redistribution of political influence from urban areas to rural districts, incentivizing politicians to block reforms and maintain bed quotas, since population counts affect legislative power and funding. The text asserts that more people locked up correlates with greater political leverage for certain politicians, not because of representing the people behind bars but because of representing the capacity of the system. Even as some states purportedly push back, a majority are accused of continuing the practice, especially in Texas, Florida, and Mississippi, where urban communities’ political influence is allegedly diluted by the presence of incarcerated populations. Finally, the “exit” is described as the private prison economy’s pay-to-stay model: upon release, individuals are billed for confinement, sometimes daily costs, leading to debt that prevents reentry into society. If there is missed payment, warrants may be issued, sending people back to jail for being unable to pay. The “Texas two-step” is cited as a tactic to divide profits from medical liabilities by creating two entities—one for profits and contracts and another for medical lawsuits—allowing the profitable shell to continue while victims’ claims are often constrained. The summary portrays a closed loop in which the private justice industry profits from every stage of incarceration, with medical neglect lawsuits navigated to bankruptcy, and the bill ultimately paid by taxpayers. The overall narrative closes by labeling the system a harvest that sustains itself as long as there is profit in the pulse of a prisoner, signaling phase three is complete and asking, “Who’s next?”

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
The speaker criticizes Vice President Harris for supporting the Minnesota Freedom Fund, not for her abortion stance. Harris urged donations to the fund when it bailed out protesters. The fund has since bailed out other offenders, including one who Republicans claim committed a murder in downtown Saint Paul.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
I never imagined I would be charged with sales murder without speaking to any detectives or police. I was just arrested and charged. The first time I saw Kamala Harris was during my trial and sentencing; it felt like she was celebrating my conviction. When I share my story, people say it’s a nightmare, akin to dying. A quote from Harris emphasizes the role of a progressive prosecutor in advocating for the overlooked and addressing the root causes of crime. While this aligns with her current stance as a senator, it starkly contrasts with the justice I experienced under her leadership as San Francisco's district attorney, which felt completely different from her stated values.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
"Did you know the judge that released this guy didn't even go to law school? Yeah. Not even a lawyer." "These magistrate judges that are making a decision to release these people without bail? Yeah. They're they're not even lawyers." "They didn't go to law school. They didn't pass the bar." "They just got appointed to be judges." "No training required." "They don't even have to be lawyers, but they can be judges." "They don't have to go to law school. They don't have to pass the bar." "How the fuck is this a thing? How the fuck do we have judges who didn't even study the law?" "But to be the judge, to be the person overseeing these lawyers, to be the ultimate arbiter of the law, you don't have to go to law school. You don't have to pass the bar." "How is this a fucking thing?"

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
I made it clear to the President that he has no mandate to cut Medicaid. Poor people depend on it for their healthcare. His budget calls for deep cuts to Medicaid, and he needs to protect it. We need to raise the cap on Social Security and protect Medicare. These are vital safety net programs. I'm willing to accept any punishment for speaking out, because it's worth it to stand against the President's desire to cut Medicaid, Medicare, and Social Security. This is about people losing their healthcare in the richest country in the world. Healthcare has become wealth care, and we can't let that happen. I'm also working on articles of impeachment. This President is unfit for office with 34 felony convictions and two impeachments. He has no mandate to cut Medicaid.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
The speaker identifies as a January 6th defendant who was held pretrial for four years. They claim the government wanted them to make a false statement about Roger Stone's involvement, and that they were offered no charges in exchange for the statement. The speaker alleges torture of pretrial American citizens and contrasts their situation with the handling of BLM and Antifa rioters, claiming those rioters received lighter sentences. They mention a $30,000,000 settlement in the Ashley Babbitt lawsuit. They state they have 5,000 pages of documentation available open source. As a result of their experience, the speaker says they lost their wife, child, house, job, and name, but anticipates being "stupid paid" by the government.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
Executive orders focus on cashless bail. 'That was when the big crime in this country started. And, I mean, they kill people and they get out. We're ending it.' 'What this executive order does, it charges your attorney general with identifying jurisdictions all over the country that have cashless bail policies, and then it, withholds or revokes federal funds and grants that are flowing to those jurisdictions to ensure that we're only supporting the people who have reasonable common sense policies around crimes.' 'In addition to the measures that we're taking that are quite similar to what we're doing around the country, in DC in particular, the objective is holding as many criminal defendants in federal custody and subjecting them to federal charges as possible. That means that they'll be held pretrial in federal jail as opposed to just being cut back out on the streets due to a cashless bail policy.' 'Okay. Go on court.'

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
A woman was shocked to find out she owes $127,750,000 for her time in prison in Florida due to pay to stay charges. Inmates are billed $50 per day, regardless of early release or ability to pay, leading to insurmountable debts even after release. This system prevents rehabilitation and traps former prisoners in a cycle of debt and despair.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
Senator Harris is criticized for her record as a prosecutor, with concerns raised about putting people in jail for marijuana offenses, blocking evidence that could have freed an innocent man, using prisoners for cheap labor, and supporting a tax bail system that harms the poor.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
The speaker was asked if there is evidence that Maxine Waters, Adam Schiff, and Chuck Schumer have received money directly from USAID. The speaker responded that taxpayer money is sent to government organizations, then to NGOs, which are government-funded but not governed by U.S. laws. Money is sent overseas to NGOs and the speaker is confident that some of it returns to the U.S. and ends up with the aforementioned politicians. The speaker states that it's not a direct route, but that some members of Congress are strangely wealthy, accumulating millions while earning salaries of only around $200,000 per year. The speaker says they are going to try to figure it out and stop it from happening.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
I am concerned about Senator Harris's record as a prosecutor, where she put over 1500 people in jail for marijuana offenses, blocked evidence that could have freed an innocent man, used prisoners for cheap labor, and supported a tax bail system that harms the poor. Thank you, congresswoman. Senator. Translation: The speaker criticizes Senator Harris for her actions as a prosecutor, including imprisoning many for marijuana crimes, withholding evidence, exploiting prisoners for labor, and supporting a tax bail system that negatively affects the poor. Thank you, congresswoman. Senator.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
The speaker states they would have prosecuted Hillary Clinton and even offered to do so for Trump, but Trump declined. The speaker believes prosecuting Clinton would have been the "greatest honor" of their life. They claim to believe in justice, not disliking people, and even feeling sorry for some they've jailed. The speaker asserts that the only way to end "all the garbage" is to jail the "bad guys." They believe that jailing the "bad guys" will scare them and make them stop their actions, at least temporarily.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
Kamala Harris is talking about fixing the economy, which they said was booming. To fix it, they want to give more control to the government to control prices and prevent gouging, even though the government created the problem. They shut down the economy and transferred $3.4 trillion from the lower and middle class to the elites, allowing large corporations to grow while wiping out competition. The speaker claims Harris doesn't mention profit margins, net profits, revenues, or inflation. For example, grocery stores with 2-3% profit margins saw revenues increase due to COVID-related inflation, but their profit margin remained the same. The speaker says the government doesn't talk about reducing taxes, regulations, or insurance costs. Gas stations make 3-7¢ profit per gallon, while the government makes 53¢ through taxes and regulations. The speaker concludes that government policies, not businesses, are responsible for price gouging by eliminating competition.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
The discussion centers on claims that Kamala Harris supports taxpayer-funded sex change surgeries for prisoners. One speaker states that every transgender inmate would have access. Another speaker claims that under the Trump administration, such surgeries were available on a medical necessity basis to people in the federal prison system, calling the Trump campaign ad hypocritical. Trump aides deny advocating for the prison policy and say no gender transition surgeries occurred during his presidency. When asked if they would advocate for using taxpayer dollars for gender reassignment surgeries, the speaker responded that they would follow the law, as Donald Trump would say he did. They also claim Trump spent $20,000,000 on ads to create fear in voters instead of focusing on the needs of the American people.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
USAID gave Chelsea Clinton $82,000,000 through the Clinton Global Initiative. $3,000,000 went to her fucking wedding. $11,000,000 went to pay for a mansion, and not a dime of income tax was paid on any of it. But if your last name is Clinton, well, you get a pass. They tell you there's no money for Social Security. They tell you that there's no money to secure our border, to build a border wall. But then they send billions to the Ukraine. No checks. No $82,000,000 handouts. Why the fuck is there unlimited money for corrupt elites but nothing for actual Americans who are buried in ash, who are flooded out of their homes, who are literally standing in the rubble of their lives? This isn't leadership. It's an organized crime syndicate is what it is. It's organized crime in broad daylight. drain the swamp once and for all.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
There is corruption, injustice, and crime in Cory Booker and Governor Murphy's New Jersey, and that will stop. The speaker looks forward to working with Pam Bondi and the Department of Justice to further the president's agenda of putting America First, cleaning up messes, and going after the people they should be going after, not the falsely accused. When asked who they will go after, the speaker says they have to see what's going on. The speaker believes Cory Booker and Governor Murphy have failed New Jersey, citing crime in Newark and Camden as evidence of a neglected state. The speaker states that New Jersey is one of the most populated states for its size, and the neglect needs to stop. The speaker says they will do a bang up job and that it is a great honor.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
Senator Harris has stated she is proud of her record as a prosecutor and will be a prosecutor president, but there are concerns about this record. As a prosecutor, she put over 1500 people in jail for marijuana violations, then laughed about it when asked if she ever smoked marijuana. She blocked evidence that would have freed an innocent man from death row until the courts forced her to do so. She kept people in prison beyond their sentences to use them as cheap labor for the state of California. She also fought to keep the tax bail system in place, which impacts poor people in a negative way.

The Joe Rogan Experience

Joe Rogan Experience #1521 - Josh Dubin & Jason Flom
Guests: Josh Dubin, Jason Flom
reSee.it Podcast Summary
Josh Dubin and Jason Flom, both affiliated with the Innocence Project, discuss the critical issue of wrongful convictions and the broader implications of mass incarceration in the United States. Dubin serves as an Innocence Ambassador, while Flom hosts the podcast "Wrongful Conviction" and its spin-off "Wrongful Conviction: Junk Science," which highlights flawed forensic practices leading to wrongful convictions. Flom shares his background in the music industry and his transition to criminal justice reform, emphasizing the need to eliminate mandatory sentencing and decriminalize drugs. He expresses outrage over the war on drugs, noting that nearly 700,000 people were arrested for marijuana possession in the previous year, despite its legalization in many states. Both guests highlight the systemic injustices faced by marginalized communities, particularly people of color, within the criminal justice system. They recount personal stories of individuals wrongfully convicted, such as Julius Jones, who remains on death row despite evidence of his innocence, including confessions from the actual perpetrator. They emphasize the importance of DNA evidence in exonerating the innocent and the challenges faced in obtaining justice, including the reluctance of prosecutors to admit mistakes. Dubin and Flom discuss the psychological impact of wrongful convictions on individuals and their families, stressing the need for public awareness and advocacy. They encourage listeners to engage in activism, whether through writing letters to local officials, supporting organizations like the Innocence Project, or participating in community efforts to reform the justice system. The conversation also touches on the pervasive issue of cash bail, which disproportionately affects low-income individuals, leading to a cycle of incarceration for minor offenses. They advocate for the abolition of cash bail and the need for comprehensive reforms to address the root causes of mass incarceration. Throughout the discussion, they highlight the importance of compassion and understanding in addressing these issues, urging listeners to recognize the humanity of those affected by wrongful convictions and to take action to support justice reform. They conclude by emphasizing the power of individual actions in creating systemic change and the necessity of fighting for those who cannot fight for themselves.
View Full Interactive Feed