TruthArchive.ai - Related Video Feed

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
Kyle Rittenhouse was just 17 years old when he drove across state lines to Kenosha, Wisconsin. The teenager drove from his home in Illinois. Kyle Rittenhouse, who traveled across state lines. The 17 year old from out of state. The teenager traveled across state lines. Carl Rittenhouse traveled from his home in Illinois across the state line to Wisconsin. the 17 year old conveyed across state lines by mom. Rittenhouse's mother did not drive him to Kenosha. Rittenhouse's mother drove her son across state lines. My mama would never drive either one of us across state lines to go to a freaking riot. There are times where you can defend yourself. It's gonna vary from state to state when you can use force to defend your property, but you don't have a right in every state anywhere in the country to merely start you know, cross state lines.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
It took the killing of a white woman in South Minneapolis to recognize police brutality as an issue. The speaker believes police are being militarized, making people unsafe. Hennepin County Attorney Mike Freeman has never charged an officer in a citizen shooting. The speaker claims the United States does not address police brutality because historically, it has impacted people of African descent. Justine Daman and Ja'Marr Clark should still be alive. The speaker hopes it doesn't take another white woman being killed for people to recognize this issue.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
Cal Rittenhouse, a 17-year-old white boy, murdered two or three black kids in Michigan during a protest and was acquitted on all charges. Jordan Penny choked out a black homeless man on a train in New York and was also acquitted. These cases suggest a sense of white power supremacy in the country because white people are not always held to the same extent as black people when committing crimes. Rittenhouse was the same age as the black boy who recently killed a white guy. Rittenhouse murdered someone and was acquitted.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
"Vigilante justice is a completely inappropriate response to the rioting in the street. There is no justification for what happened in Kenosha. Obviously. And vigilante justice is a crime and and should be punished as a crime." "Obviously. In Kenosha this week, tragically, we saw a 17 year old, young man with an AR 15 walk into the protest and kill two protesters, murder them. Back to Kenosha, we have heard crickets from this White House on the right wing 17 year old man who murdered two protesters." The speakers frame the events as vigilante violence and criticize the White House's reaction to the Kenosha incident.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
The system we live in was created by white men, for white men. Its purpose was to build and maintain power and resources, specifically wealth, for them. We see this reflected in society constantly. What we're witnessing now is a new extreme. People are not only defending their whiteness, but violently fighting to maintain white supremacy. They are going to extraordinary lengths politically and economically to ensure the system doesn't change, making it clear that they don't want anyone else to have access or power.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
We are witnessing modern-day lynchings that are unjustly accepted as justice. If we truly believe in equality, it shouldn't be permissible for someone to be killed simply for being black, brown, or anything other than a white male. This troubling trend resembles the racial injustices of the 1950s, where perpetrators often escape accountability for their actions against marginalized communities. We face serious issues in this country related to race, and if we don't address them, they will continue to grow and cause harm.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
In America, we see a pattern of white vigilantism followed by what I call "white tears," especially from men. They act out, and when held accountable, the waterworks begin. White men often get away with this, and it's effective. Even as the right attempts to politicize masculinity, claiming multiculturalism and wokeism are stealing it from American men, they still want to be able to cry.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
"Talk to me about the environment in which a shooting like this happens." "we don't know any of full details of this. We don't know if this was the supporter shooting their gun off in celebration or so. We have no idea about this." "He's been one of the most divisive, especially divisive, figures in this who is constantly sort of pushing this sort of hate speech or sort of aimed at certain groups." "I always go back to hateful thoughts lead to hateful words, which then lead to hateful actions." "And I think that's the environment we're in, that people just you can't stop with these sort of awful thoughts you have and then saying these awful words and not expect awful actions to take place." "And that's the unfortunate environment we're in."

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
Speaker 0: Listen to this clip, Hannah, of what I said that was so dangerous and controversial. K. Keen Jeffries, a progressive congressman, literally tweeted, while the trial was going on, lock up Kyle Rittenhouse and throw away the key. And he's the same guy that rails against mass incarceration, and I agree with him on some of it. But now, before the trial's even over, they're calling for this guy to be locked up and throw away the key. Like, they've already reached their conclusion. Speaker 1: No. Didn't give him a fair shake. Speaker 0: It's a very ... And they lied about it being a white supremacy thing when it's a white dude that shot three other white people. It's the entire thing is bizarre and it's Out of self defense. Speaker 1: Right. Yes. Speaker 0: In my opinion. Speaker 1: That's most important. Speaker 0: The truth is he defended himself; he wasn't some mass shooter white supremacist, and he should be acquitted. Do you feel bullied? Speaker 1: I I don't. And honestly, I think that was the most milquetoast explanation of everything that went down.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
One month ago today, I witnessed my friend of ten years, someone who I considered a brother, a loving husband, a devoted father, a generational leader, get assassinated on a livestream by a left wing radical. Approximately one year ago, I witnessed the president of The United States get shot in the head by a left wing radical who also took the life of a transporter in front of his daughters and wife. Two months ago, Christian children kneeling and praying in a church Were slaughtered. By a left wing extremist. If it's happening every single week, is it that extreme, or has the Democrat party mainstreamed violence as a political tool? Violence has been mainstreamed by the Democrat Party. It is not extremist. Is any Democrat courageous enough to disavow violence? The Trump administration making America safe again. God bless them.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
Protesters destroying government property labeled as domestic terrorists. 100 days of violent unrest. Authorities call it well-coordinated. A person in a patriot prayer hat shot and killed in Portland. Avoid being a Trump supporter in Portland. Two police officers shot. These are acts of domestic terror. Guard your country and society, or it will be the story.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
If a white teen had killed a black teen, there wouldn't be a GoFundMe set up for him. However, the inverse is happening now, with fundraiser comments showing hatred against white people and rewarding the killer. This situation is a precursor to race wars and societal breakdown. Racial conflict reveals an ugly truth: black people have felt this way forever. Growing up in an all-black neighborhood, there was hatred towards white people, with wrongdoings by black individuals often justified by slavery and Jim Crow. White criminals who commit crimes against police officers never get GoFundMe support, unlike George Floyd and others. Black people have an ingrained racial hatred towards white people that surfaces during incidents like this. Supporters of the white victim aren't motivated by race but by the fact that he was murdered in cold blood. This underbelly of racism from the black community always emerges in such situations. Many black people want to believe the white kid was a bully, which isn't true. Black people have vitriolic behavior against whites that will always surface.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
"On August 22, Irina Zorutsko was stabbed to death on the rail system in Charlotte, North Carolina by a savage career criminal." "This was one of the coldest, most senseless murders I've ever seen." "She had no interaction with this guy whatsoever." "She was sitting on her own business, and he just takes out knife and just decides to stab her." "Based on the information evidence we have, the attacker did say, I got that white girl." "The attacker racialized it in his own telling of this situation." "We saw this in George Floyd, and yet, for whatever reason, the situation has not garnered even a fraction of that kind of outrage or backlash."

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
Speaker 0 asks if you know who the last white girl to be unalive by law enforcement in Minneapolis was before Renee Goode. They claim you don’t know, and that the person who did it was the first Somali police officer in the United States, who were convicted of murder, a conviction later overturned by the Minnesota Supreme Court, and that they served only a couple years.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
Speaker 0: There's no cameras over young white male when the young white male is the real threat to America. And it just hangs. Speaker 1: You know what? You're right. I agree. I agree. You're right about that. Because young white males are gonna be the majority with guns, and if you keep telling them that they're criminals and they should pay for people's bad decisions, you don't wanna see them angry. Tell them that they've never been angry. And I'm telling you, I'm looking at young men, and they're way way more angry than I ever was. Well, they're getting their ass kicked. If they're that angry, why they're only killing each other in their communities? When's the last time you I mean, how many let's look at recently. Speaker 0: That's good question. Why are not killing black people? Speaker 1: No. You know what? What's the point? Because they're they're they're able to understand that the ones that are not the problem. They're not listen.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
The Kyle Rittenhouse story, which unfolded in August 2020 during the Kenosha riots, remains significant. Rittenhouse, then 17, traveled to Kenosha to protect a car lot amid chaos following George Floyd's death. He faced life-threatening attacks and defended himself, resulting in murder charges, from which he was ultimately acquitted. Rittenhouse discusses the challenges he faced, including being labeled a vigilante and white supremacist, and the lack of support from organizations like the NRA. He reflects on his PTSD, the impact on his education, and the ongoing threat to his safety. Despite the turmoil, he remains hopeful about his future and expresses a desire to pursue an education. Rittenhouse emphasizes the importance of self-defense rights and critiques the media's portrayal of him and the violence during the riots.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
In America, we see a pattern of white vigilantism followed by what I call "white tears," especially from men. They act first, then cry when caught. White men often get away with this, and it's effective. Even as some try to claim masculinity is being taken away by multiculturalism, they still want to be able to cry.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
In America, we see a pattern of white vigilantism followed by what I call "white tears," especially from white men. They act out, and when held accountable, suddenly there's an outpouring of emotion. White men often get away with it. Even as some try to claim masculinity is under attack from multiculturalism and "wokeism," they still rely on tears as a defense.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
Targeting a white mayor is effective because it causes significant emotional pain within that community. We are directly confronting the issue of whiteness. Another politician, from the Black First Land First party, incited violence at a rally, urging the crowd to kill white people, their children, and pets. This demonstrates a political leader openly calling for the genocide of white people.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
Warning: the following story contains graphic footage. A white gunman opened fire Tuesday night on people protesting the police shooting of unarmed Black man Jacob Blake in Kenosha, Wisconsin. The attack was carried out by a teenage white vigilante. The shooter is described as a white supremacist, terrorist, and white nationalist. He murdered protesters. "I didn't do anything wrong. I defended myself." The speakers cite "white privilege" and "white male entitlement" as motives, calling it "the white supremacist patriarchy" and "a system of white supremacy." They describe "This little murderous white supremacist" and label it "mass murder." Phrases include "White vigilante," "White fear," "White privilege," "I didn't wanna have to kill anybody that night," and "White tears" with "White male tears." The piece ends: "These are scenes playing out in a small city in America's Midwest."

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
The speaker claims to possess video footage, not available to public media, showing Kyle Rittenhouse with an AK-47 shooting three people in the back.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
There was a shooting near 27th and Wisconsin on Wednesday. Gunshots were exchanged, and a man with a long gun was seen on camera. I returned gunfire and was fatally struck at the scene. Unfortunately, I managed to injure another officer before I died. Why does it matter if someone is gay or trans? Everyone is quick to judge my nephew without knowing what he was going through. This doesn't excuse my actions, but I was a good person. It's unbelievable how white men can commit mass shootings and walk away, while I was killed. People are joking about my shooting skills, but I served in the army and could have killed many if I wanted to.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
We currently have a white supremacist in the White House, supported by others with the same ideology. The majority of violent crimes in the country are committed by white supremacists, yet they continue to hold positions of power. These individuals were involved in the January 6th attack on our democracy and are now undermining it from within.

The Megyn Kelly Show

Rittenhouse Two Years Later, and Markle's Story Questioned, with Richie McGinniss & Maureen Callahan
Guests: Richie McGinniss, Maureen Callahan
reSee.it Podcast Summary
Megyn Kelly opens the show discussing a provocative article about Meghan Markle in the New York Post, which she plans to explore later. She introduces Richie McGinnis, a video producer known for his frontline reporting during significant events like the BLM protests and the January 6 Capitol riot. McGinnis shares his experience covering the Kyle Rittenhouse incident in Kenosha, where he transitioned from observer to participant as a witness in the trial. He recounts his background, studying Arabic and Middle Eastern history at Georgetown, and how the events of 9/11 influenced his career path toward journalism. McGinnis describes his time at the Daily Caller, emphasizing the open atmosphere that allowed for diverse opinions. He reflects on his political evolution, noting a shift from supporting Barack Obama to becoming a free speech advocate. He discusses the challenges faced by journalists covering protests, including accusations of bias from both sides of the political spectrum. The conversation shifts to the Rittenhouse case, with McGinnis detailing his interactions with Rittenhouse before the shooting and the misinformation that followed. He emphasizes the importance of his eyewitness testimony, which contradicted the narrative pushed by some media outlets. McGinnis expresses concern over the media's role in shaping public perception and the consequences for individuals involved in high-profile cases. As the discussion progresses, McGinnis shares his reflections on the moral complexities surrounding the events in Kenosha and the individuals involved, including Joseph Rosenbaum, the first man Rittenhouse shot. He aims to convey the human suffering experienced during these incidents, regardless of the individuals' backgrounds. The conversation concludes with McGinnis discussing his departure from the Daily Caller to pursue independent journalism, focusing on authentic storytelling and engaging with diverse perspectives. Kelly then transitions to a segment about Meghan Markle, introducing Maureen Callahan, who critiques Markle's recent comments and behavior, highlighting her tendency to exaggerate her significance and the disconnect between her narrative and public perception. Callahan discusses Markle's comparison of her marriage to Prince Harry with Nelson Mandela's legacy, calling it narcissistic and tone-deaf. The segment critiques Markle's media presence and the implications of her statements, emphasizing the need for accountability in public discourse.
View Full Interactive Feed