Exactly. I live in IL and am a mod on Nextdoor and have to deal with this disinformation every day. I’ve succeeded in educating and fact-checking these idiots on a weekly basis.
Nearly cashless. Let’s use a little nuance here. I can go over several recent local anecdotes that are enough to get my lefty blood boiling. Our most recent in my neighborhood; a quadruple homicide let out on 10k payable of bail. This is practically a monthly thing in Seattle. Someone gets murdered and they get let out almost immediately to wait their 8-24 month period until trial with very little bail.
it wasnot even a disagreement. he was abusing her and prohibiting her freedom of movement WHILE SHE WAS PREGNANT, and she was fighting against him. he said “watch it” to keep her from being normal and happy by creating boundaries and leaving
Yep. They traffick in misery and anguish. They want people to be miserable and afraid then claim that they will fix it when they come to power. That’s all they want is power then they fix nothing.
It didn't peak, it just went up slightly compared to the previous year. Crime in the US peaked around 1990, and has been steadily declining since then.
As a Missourian, I mentioned literally just the other day how if you compare Illinois gun violence to Missouri gun violence, you will absolutely see Missouri is WORSE! So THANK YOU SO MUCh for bringing that up. Ooo that pisses me off so much how they harp on Chicago.
This has never been about facts. These are people who warp and bend reality to fit into their preconceived notions, and pay it no mind when it completely falls apart in the process. In many cases, that is the explicit goal: to confuse, obfuscate, and otherwise induce instability until nothing feels certain. It is only then that they can assert themselves unchallenged. It is, in a literal sense, Orwellian. They attempt to control the present because it is the only way they can ever hope control the future.
@@freddyrodriguez4732 I think OP is more referring to his reputation as the guy from the “change my mind” meme. his biggest claim to fame (or infamy) is that he’s a competent debater who can take anyone on and “destroy” the libs. I mean, of course him and his audience are all dumb as a rock, but within that echelon he is supposed to be something of an intellectual (basically, a dumb guy’s idea of a smart guy). obviously the whole ‘skilled debater’ thing was a grift all along - the only people he’d debate were like blue-haired college libs who just discovered politics like seven weeks beforehand, and even then he’d use bad faith tactics just to win on optics. that’s the whole reason the “debate Sam Seder” thing took off, because if he had to debate somebody who knew what they’re talking about, he would get wrecked. and he’s still dodging Sam to this day.
A big reason our carceral system is as effed as it is is because slavery isn’t totally illegal in the US. It’s restricted to punishment for crimes. When the Constitution says people have to have committed crimes to be slaves, and the rest of the slaves were freed, what happened? We started coming up with more and newer reasons to incarcerate people to provide the necessary labor. Not the only reason they’re effed, but certainly a big one. Prison labor produces billions in value from people who can’t say no. Specific wording, emphasis added: “ Neither slavery nor involuntary servitude, _except as a punishment for crime whereof the party shall have been duly convicted,_ shall exist within the United States, or any place subject to their jurisdiction.”
Poison labor is not the thing incentivizing locking people up. Well, except in California when Kamala Harris argued against letting people out of jail to help fight forest fires on the cheap. Most places it's just because prisons are easy ways to fund communities and do well with voters in those areas.
@@TheMysteryDriver "...prisons are easy ways to fund communities..." I'm curious how prisons, in your words, fund communities without prison labor being an incentive. Setting that aside, though, a) I very clearly state it wasn't the only reason but is a big one (privatization of that profit structure contributes separate issues from it existing under government control), and b) we are talking about more than a century and a half of history here. Unless you're referencing 100+ year old voting records and polling data, "...do well with voters in those areas..." is something that needs to be interrogated for underlying reasons. How people feel about it in the last 50 years is only part of the picture when the amendment in question was passed and ratified in the 1860s and the tradition of prison labor functioning as effective slavery predates that by a few centuries (including British prisoners being sold as slaves in the Colonies).
@@jlighter1 Prisons are large employers, and are often located in rural areas, where high paying jobs are not as common. So it is a "jobs program" and reform threatens those jobs.
@@jlighter1 because they hire a lot of prison guards, food delivery services, etc. You can find whole communities existing to support prisons and making money off of them without prison labor.
@@TheMysteryDriver I understand that, but that's looking at the wrong end of the equation. That's looking at money coming _out_ of a prison. That's not accounting for how money goes _in._ Yes, there's some funding from the government, but in quite a lot of the prison system, that's not all the money going in. A lot comes into the prisons from prison labor so those guards and food delivery services, etc., can be paid more. The majority of the prison system isn't structured such that money goes in from tax dollars and donations and nothing comes out except people after their sentences are finished. They have to produce to bring in additional funds.
That's because the best version of Crowder is this one which is marginally constrained by needing to not be the most openly racist, bigoted trans and homophobic version of himself possible to make the amount of money he does.
I remember the Browder case. He literally spent more time just in solitary confinement (which borders on torture), than he would have served for the crime he was accused of simply because he couldnt afford bail.
new york is a trash place. the authorities are all psychopaths there. RUN if youre poor..if youre rich, if youre middle class..but if youre POOR RUN LIKE THE WIND LEAVE EVERYThiNG BEHIND JUST RUN That place will take everything from you like it did me
I had a warrant for arrest on misdemeanor case and I turned myself in to clear it up. I gave them my medication to give it to me at bedtime and they just misplaced it and I did not get my pills until the third night in there. I have a mental illness and I think that is not fair to be treated that way because I could have lost my mind and get myself in more trouble just because our system is a mess.
There are issues with cashless bail and violent criminals getting out, but that issue existed in the cash bail system too. A large number of those decisions come down to local District Attorneys and Judges and how they apply cashless bail laws (like those on the books where I am in Illinois). As for Crowder, he should have been cancelled a while ago after the abuse of his wife became public.
I love the "it doesn't matter" excuse... it just shows how bankrupt Crowder's position is. It also begs the question of why is Crowder even bothering with articles, he obviously doesn't read them.
No way back HOME Homeless, young and and broke Broken by the world who loves dollar bills They DNT g a FUCK with me and my jobs Just judging, laughing and be parasite paradise as can be Meanwhile my dad broke and hv full debt he can't afford to pay except I do something to HIM They broke me as d most bangkrupt ever And after I've got my life back they act they are modern solution living at gold golf residences? Gilaaaaaaa And keep sk me to get out even after asteroids Just sick
I am finishing up five years on probation for a crime i didn't commit. A non violent crime in which i had $40,000 and i dont have a criminal record. If i couldn't afford a decent lawyer where was i going to get 40,000 or even 10% of that? "You're a criminal, you've committed serious charges, you need to be locked up. But if you got a few buck, not so much" GTFOH with that 💩
So he's replaced his cute little holster for awkwardly propping up a gun on the desk? Was he afraid that people didn't think he actually has a gun on set at all times?
Ana Kasparian on TYT noted in a story about 3 months ago that one of the precincts that did not report their crime data was either NYPD or LAPD - the two most populous cities in the US. So including that data could significantly alter the trend.
I really didn't understand why crime is going down. With the way corporations and investors keep squeezing the middle class until they can't even afford to live indoors, i can't believe they aren't lashing out more. If you get arrested at least you have a bed inside!
It’s almost like being a toxic troll sitting in a cave hurling insults at the world 24/7 for years on end…..has a net negative on how intelligent, compassionate and content you are.
NYC, by far the largest and most densely populated city in the country, literally has a lower homicide rate than the country at large. So whatever they're doing is clearly working. Meanwhile, take a look at the crime rates in "tough on crime" red states like Louisiana.
Where I’m at a young man stole a Mountain Dew and a thing of M&Ms from a convenient store. Spent five months in jail and ended up dying there because he couldn’t afford the bail. All over $2.50 in snacks.
Associated Press just recently ran a headline that said the biggest issues were “crime, immigration and global warming”. For the AP to say crime is a major issue, when all reliable figures show it declining, is more of a republican talking point than an appropriate headline.
If you were online in the political space in 2016, you might remember how Crowder was "undecided" on Trump until the end because of how crazy he was. Crowder made a moderate deal about finally "pulling the lever" for Trump. Times have changed.
Crime is down because roughly 2/3rds of precincts in the country dont report certain crimes anymore. So yes on face value it looks like certain crimes rates are down but its not true.
Don’t the states establish their own bail systems? So for most charges filed by local DAs with evidence from local and state police, would fall under the state’s bail system. So far very few states have made the move to a cashless bail system. I’m not sure if the executive branch would have the power/authority to change the federal bail system to a cashless bail system without congressional action/approval. Any changes made to the federal system would have zero impact on any of the states.
I wrote this in the comments of a David Pakman video, but I'll add it here because you, especially Emma, totally echoed what I've been trying to tell people. Sorry this will be a long comment, but a good read; "As a lifelong and multigenerational San Franciscan, my home is not a hellscape. It is not what they tell you, or what they fear. The only person afraid of the "rampant crime wave" in big cities are people who are not from big cities, because it doesnt exist and they are lying to you. Oklahoma City has more crime per capita than does San Francisco, and the crime rate has been consistently decreasing every single year. 15 years ago is when Big Tech moved in and when it started going downhill. Companies like Facebook, Google, Twitter, and Tesla are the ones who ruined SF. (And the banks in 2008-2011 when I was in high school and when Occupy Wallstreet happened. Wells Fargo is tied explicitly to SF history going all the way back to the Wild West.) They exploited all they could at the expense of everyone who lives here. The income inequality and huuuuge gap in wealth disparity is what drives crime and homelessness. Real estate companies and techies moving in from out of state and developing things no one ever asked for, for FAR too much money, is what pushed the middle class out of their homes and apartments, out of the Bay, and out of California as a whole. Tesla only moved out because Herr Musk didnt want to let his employees have sick days or bathroom breaks while in a once in a lifetime pandemic, deal with their policies which are polluting the environment, or follow any safety regulations required of him by the state whose job it is to protect workers and communities over private interests. Texas dont care, so he went there to keep doing what he wanted without anyone telling him otherwise. I'm so fcking tired of Midwesterners telling me what my home looks like, when I never presume to know theirs better than they themselves do. Every city has its good parts and bad parts. No one is perfect, but SF as a whole is colorful, beautiful, and welcoming. Absolutely covered in art, history, and nature. Tim Walz was recently interviewed about his first ever visit to SF. He talked about his daily jog, which he took through the Presidio, a park neighborhood by the Golden Gate Bridge, and said it was probably the most beautiful city he's ever visited. He even called it "exotic," which just tickles me coming from a midwesterner. You should check out his interview. It's wholesome af and makes me proud to call this place home and that our visitors have great and memorable experiences to take home with them and tell their friends what it's really like here" Then some guy said: @onionguy: "SF is, in fact, more dangerous than many other places in America, but it is also a skateboarder’s paradise with lots of amazing food and charm. I went last year and explored the majority of the city. The tenderloin district is, in fact, covered with feces and uncanned beans. There are, in fact, tents covering several blocks in that area. Back at EMB/Pier 7, I watched two cars get broken into at the same time, at opposite ends of a pier lot. Don’t act like SF isn’t next level dangerous. I live in Boston, but I don’t see these things there in broad daylight like I did in several areas of SF. Ultimately, Trump is an idiot, but don’t minimize the current state of SF’s danger. We were advised to leave our car unlocked, empty of belongings and with the windows down; this was told to us by the hotel concierge at our Union Square hotel. I saw many cars with handwritten signs that said things like “Don’t bother, there’s nothing in this car.” There are that many car break-ins in SF. I loved SF despite the danger, but don’t try to convince people that SF isn’t dangerous." Idk what "uncanned beans" means. My Reply: "@oniondude You are, in fact, talking about property crime after the pandemic, which has increased because wealth disparity has increased in the last 4 years because of COVID. Right now, violent crime is, in fact, at an all-time low. Please talk about Boston's reputation as one of the most racist cities in America. Enlighten me on how your place is better. Please tell me about the police and court corruption cases currently being investigated in Boston and Canton. Tell me about your home, not mine. Did you leave the financial district at all when you were here? Go anywhere else that isn't full of tourists? The tenderloin has always been the neighborhood where the homeless and addicted are pushed into to keep the uber rich from having to see them while walking to their high-rise jobs. There are zero public toilets in that area because they don't want poor people inside their nice buildings. Where else do they expect you to go? This is, in fact, exactly what I mean by the wealth inequality. The neighborhoods you are talking about have the richest people high up safe inside and the poorest people out on the streets below. Did you go to the ocean? Because the Sunset neighborhood is like any other suburb. Did you go to the zoo? One of the best rated zoos in the world? Or any of the other world's best parks we have like Stern Grove or Golden Gate Park or the Presidio, like I talked about in my comment? You stayed in a fancy schmancy hotel in the richest and most inequitable parts of town and were told to protect your belongings by a person paid to do so. Were you scared watching car break ins? Were you fearful for your life? No? You weren't robbed. You weren't assaulted by homeless people from their tents because they mind their own damn business. You had a bad vacation because you picked a bad part of town. EVERY city has bad places. Tell me about Boston's worst neighborhood and let me generalize about every other neighborhood that I don't personally know because I never went there just like you are here. Please tell me why St Louis Missouri, has been consistently rated the most dangerous city in America, and why NO ONE talks about that. Coincidentally, in the smack dab middle of the country and not on either of our "elite coasts" full of crime and "illegals"" tl;dr they lie and use fear to control the feelings and ideas of their base. SF is not as bad as they say. No place is as bad as they say. They only say it to manipulate your vote
I'm a San Franciscan now living abroad and I support this statement. It was lack (inability to keep up) or gov regulation on incoming private sector (google, apps, Tesla etc) that destroyed the ecosystem. I find SF a sad shell of itself, but its spirit persists. But I don't find it dangerous. Just the classic wealth disparity crap of taking more and not giving anything in return so that all that's left is desperation
@@lizzirountree93 Thank you. I completely understand what you mean about a shell of its former self. For the past 10 years, it's been almost unrecognizable, like it feels like being bled dry by vampires. You can't crush our spirit, but you can crush us under piles and piles of monied people trampling over everyone. I've been fighting for my beloved but bedeviled City College of San Francisco, which has had 8 chancellors in 15 years, vultures all, and crumbling infrastructure. They fill their pockets, mess things up, and then quickly peace out. It's a symptom of the larger pattern throughout the city and the Bay Area as a whole. Ruined from the top down. Where did you move abroad to? One of my favorite things about SF is meeting expats and foreign visitors, trading with them similarities and differences between places. SF is a really small big city. Small world type intersections and neighborliness full of every kind of person
@@khaightlynn exactly, I v tell everyone that SF is a harbinger of what is to come if government regulation does not step up and keep up! I live in Hobart, Tasmania now. And voting here is compulsory (and the election cycles are barely more than 3 months long!) But airbnb is a major threat to the ecosystem here. When I moved here 8 years ago there were virtually no homeless people, and now there are quite a few, and the rent prices have sky rocketed. (without a major influx in population) just means less rentable properties available to people who actually live here... Regulation is developing but it is reactive 😞
No need to start drama and give her more relevancy. Karens freak the fuck out at other women especially sometimes, and Emma probably doesn't want to get screeched at by pinchy-faced Ana Kasparian.
Crowder is doing his best to increase crime rates, with his domestic violence
Queue Starship Troopers, “I’m doing my part!”
@@rtyler94 Crowder says that while in a dress while chasing a pregnant woman with a rolling pin and a bag of poisonous dog medicine.
he's still burning over rejecting $17million a year.
"he's doing his best" to not be himself
As well as Trump with his 34 felony convictions and 54 additional felony counts.
Watch it!
Still waiting for Crowder to grow a pair & debate Sam Seder. ⚾️⚾️
Oh no, Sam Seder, what a fucking nightmare!
It would be the best thing for him. Sam shouldn't even bother at this point.
One of the funniest moments in political YT history, in my opinion.
@@user-em6ie2be7x I'm sure he will when he's desperate enough.
Yeah, I’m not going to be holding my breath.
No state is allowing capital crime suspects out on cashless bail. Fucks sake
Exactly. I live in IL and am a mod on Nextdoor and have to deal with this disinformation every day. I’ve succeeded in educating and fact-checking these idiots on a weekly basis.
There's that VOICE AGAIN! SYLVESTER THE SHAT! why isn't anyone talking about this? He can't even TALK RIGHT.
Me too. The Republicans around here go crazy about cashless bail.@@FrostyFlakes00
Nearly cashless. Let’s use a little nuance here. I can go over several recent local anecdotes that are enough to get my lefty blood boiling. Our most recent in my neighborhood; a quadruple homicide let out on 10k payable of bail. This is practically a monthly thing in Seattle. Someone gets murdered and they get let out almost immediately to wait their 8-24 month period until trial with very little bail.
@@tjnucnuc So us the links.
Maybe crowder should worry more about his abuse he committed against his wife.
and fetal twins inside her at the time
Are they still married? I really hope not
He is. Republicans deflect, deflect, deflect.
He needs to come out and live his truth
He never will.
Creepy racist liar is his truth.
He's already got his gender reaffirming surgery and takes his gender reaffirming steroids
You mean "the TrUuUuUtH"?
Nah, we don't want him on our team.
The fact that a "man" who aggressively tells his wife to "watch it" in a disagreeement but still has a huge platform is SCARY
He’s a r@pe apologist also.
Because his audience members all wish they could do the same.
Conservative family values: Man in charge and others obey.
He also pulls his junk out and puts it on his male employees as a "prank". Nobody who listens to him cares, they love pigs and think it's cool.
it wasnot even a disagreement. he was abusing her and prohibiting her freedom of movement WHILE SHE WAS PREGNANT, and she was fighting against him. he said “watch it” to keep her from being normal and happy by creating boundaries and leaving
Not only wanting people to suffer, but openly hoping for it and even needing it to.
he does believe in threatening ww in order to maintain supremacy. it’s par for the course
Yep. They traffick in misery and anguish. They want people to be miserable and afraid then claim that they will fix it when they come to power. That’s all they want is power then they fix nothing.
I forgot Crowder even existed.
Me too
I remember that time in my life…so much better when I forgot he existed. 😂
I always forget about this people till i watch a youtube channel that i follow.
Right? He hasn't been relevant since his very healthy marriage was put on full display.
Everyone should forget him.
Not a surprise that crime peaked in 2020. Crime is a result of desperation, which is why the high crime areas are almost always low income areas.
Once they understand this simple fact then we truly can lower crime.
It didn't peak, it just went up slightly compared to the previous year. Crime in the US peaked around 1990, and has been steadily declining since then.
@@williamjameslehy1341i think they meant “peaked” in terms of a local maximum, not an absolute maximum
What? Are you saying that Trump is lying about his lying? Stunned.
Well, he is also rambling about his rambling 😊
As a Missourian, I mentioned literally just the other day how if you compare Illinois gun violence to Missouri gun violence, you will absolutely see Missouri is WORSE! So THANK YOU SO MUCh for bringing that up. Ooo that pisses me off so much how they harp on Chicago.
Crime is higher in a lot of rural areas these people have just been fed a steady dirt of fear and it has warped their minds
St. Louis has more crime than Chicago.
@@basedgamerguy818 But St Louis and MO Kansas City are super violent. So is Jefferson city and Columbia. The rural parts are really safe overall.
@@TheMysteryDriverwell, “safe” in terms of gun violence. plenty of hazards for kids growing up there
@@wesshiflet2214 no more than anywhere else
Crowder: “Here is a claim”
Crowder after the CNN factual claim: “It doesn’t matter”
Is this supposed to be some high level intellectual?
*is this
no. he isn’t not even to his fans. they crave stupidity and he responds to it
This has never been about facts.
These are people who warp and bend reality to fit into their preconceived notions, and pay it no mind when it completely falls apart in the process. In many cases, that is the explicit goal: to confuse, obfuscate, and otherwise induce instability until nothing feels certain. It is only then that they can assert themselves unchallenged.
It is, in a literal sense, Orwellian. They attempt to control the present because it is the only way they can ever hope control the future.
@@freddyrodriguez4732 I think OP is more referring to his reputation as the guy from the “change my mind” meme. his biggest claim to fame (or infamy) is that he’s a competent debater who can take anyone on and “destroy” the libs. I mean, of course him and his audience are all dumb as a rock, but within that echelon he is supposed to be something of an intellectual (basically, a dumb guy’s idea of a smart guy).
obviously the whole ‘skilled debater’ thing was a grift all along - the only people he’d debate were like blue-haired college libs who just discovered politics like seven weeks beforehand, and even then he’d use bad faith tactics just to win on optics. that’s the whole reason the “debate Sam Seder” thing took off, because if he had to debate somebody who knew what they’re talking about, he would get wrecked. and he’s still dodging Sam to this day.
A big reason our carceral system is as effed as it is is because slavery isn’t totally illegal in the US. It’s restricted to punishment for crimes. When the Constitution says people have to have committed crimes to be slaves, and the rest of the slaves were freed, what happened? We started coming up with more and newer reasons to incarcerate people to provide the necessary labor. Not the only reason they’re effed, but certainly a big one. Prison labor produces billions in value from people who can’t say no.
Specific wording, emphasis added: “ Neither slavery nor involuntary servitude, _except as a punishment for crime whereof the party shall have been duly convicted,_ shall exist within the United States, or any place subject to their jurisdiction.”
Poison labor is not the thing incentivizing locking people up. Well, except in California when Kamala Harris argued against letting people out of jail to help fight forest fires on the cheap. Most places it's just because prisons are easy ways to fund communities and do well with voters in those areas.
@@TheMysteryDriver "...prisons are easy ways to fund communities..."
I'm curious how prisons, in your words, fund communities without prison labor being an incentive.
Setting that aside, though, a) I very clearly state it wasn't the only reason but is a big one (privatization of that profit structure contributes separate issues from it existing under government control), and b) we are talking about more than a century and a half of history here. Unless you're referencing 100+ year old voting records and polling data, "...do well with voters in those areas..." is something that needs to be interrogated for underlying reasons. How people feel about it in the last 50 years is only part of the picture when the amendment in question was passed and ratified in the 1860s and the tradition of prison labor functioning as effective slavery predates that by a few centuries (including British prisoners being sold as slaves in the Colonies).
@@jlighter1 Prisons are large employers, and are often located in rural areas, where high paying jobs are not as common. So it is a "jobs program" and reform threatens those jobs.
@@jlighter1 because they hire a lot of prison guards, food delivery services, etc. You can find whole communities existing to support prisons and making money off of them without prison labor.
@@TheMysteryDriver I understand that, but that's looking at the wrong end of the equation. That's looking at money coming _out_ of a prison. That's not accounting for how money goes _in._ Yes, there's some funding from the government, but in quite a lot of the prison system, that's not all the money going in. A lot comes into the prisons from prison labor so those guards and food delivery services, etc., can be paid more. The majority of the prison system isn't structured such that money goes in from tax dollars and donations and nothing comes out except people after their sentences are finished. They have to produce to bring in additional funds.
6:56 Steven Crowder: "Here's the truth - it doesn't matter."
This quote will come in handy.
Please put "iT d0E$n'T MaTtER" on the soundboard.
whoopsie!
And the truhuhuuuuhuth! 🎷🎺
Why does Trump sound like Daffy Duck?
It's been like that for weeks. Something's wrong I think.
Didn't have his dentures in.
I thought it was Sylvester the Cat
suffering succotash
Duck season
I try to find the best in people.With Crowder I just can't do it.
That's because the best version of Crowder is this one which is marginally constrained by needing to not be the most openly racist, bigoted trans and homophobic version of himself possible to make the amount of money he does.
Agreed. Some folks are just suckers…Trump is a definite 🐓 🍭, though!
Someday Crowder will succumb to father time and that will be a good thing.
You should stick to finding the best in PEOPLE, it's obvious you'll fail if you try to find the best in Crowder.
I remember the Browder case. He literally spent more time just in solitary confinement (which borders on torture), than he would have served for the crime he was accused of simply because he couldnt afford bail.
new york is a trash place. the authorities are all psychopaths there. RUN if youre poor..if youre rich, if youre middle class..but if youre POOR RUN LIKE THE WIND LEAVE EVERYThiNG BEHIND JUST RUN That place will take everything from you like it did me
I always love when you guys cover crowder, pool, and the like!
It's the best way to keep young men off the nazi pipelines
Source: something Donald Trump said in an interview.
It’s always guys like that who claim they want the smoke then play victim when somebody busts their lip open…
Yup, right wingers are, and always have been, massive crybullies.
“That won’t work for ME!!!!”
That doesn't work for me EITHER
Chowder's brain is still in recovery mode from seeing Sam's face just once.
Crime is down in his house since his wife moved out and the spousal abuse has stopped
Do those crime figures include, oh, I dunno...spousal abuse, Crowder?
I have become the one who quotes FBI crime stats, now.
I did a law school study about hate crimes; you also have to understand how “crime” is reported in the US. It needs to be standardized.
Then they bring up guns, and i just say you don't care about gun laws
"You have nothing to fear but fear itself". The chicken littles will always be checking under the covers because of the boogie man.
I can't see Crowder without thinking of the time Sam Seder showed up on H3 Ethan's debate with Stephen.
“OH NO ITS SAM SEDER”😂😂😂
Why's Trump sound like Sylvester the Cat again, suffering succotash. 💦
Denture lisp.
Minor side note: the number of REPORTED rapes decreasing is not necessarily a positive indicator.
Isn't "Cashless bail" just another way of saying "Signature Bond"? If so, signature in bond has been around for decades.
am i the only one who’s always thought Mr Chowder seems violently angry all the time? he seems unstable
At this point I'd love for any interviewer to ask a Republican what is better while they are in control...as far as I can tell the answer is "nothing"
i mean, they usually just lie
It’s really great when you guys talk down to people really helps bring everyone together especially people in the middle of the country.
I'm in the middle of the country and want to know who talked down??
I had a warrant for arrest on misdemeanor case and I turned myself in to clear it up. I gave them my medication to give it to me at bedtime and they just misplaced it and I did not get my pills until the third night in there. I have a mental illness and I think that is not fair to be treated that way because I could have lost my mind and get myself in more trouble just because our system is a mess.
There are issues with cashless bail and violent criminals getting out, but that issue existed in the cash bail system too. A large number of those decisions come down to local District Attorneys and Judges and how they apply cashless bail laws (like those on the books where I am in Illinois). As for Crowder, he should have been cancelled a while ago after the abuse of his wife became public.
Violent criminals aren't afforded cashless bail in the US.
Bad take my guy.
A vulnerable public is a compliant one. Without the fear of crime there's less complacency.
Emma is the best 🙂
Emma, will Tim's justice warrior friend debate you again on crime? Maybe this time they can invite Crowder to make it 3V1 to give them a better chance
I love the "it doesn't matter" excuse... it just shows how bankrupt Crowder's position is. It also begs the question of why is Crowder even bothering with articles, he obviously doesn't read them.
Don't worry the next thing they're going to do is say that there is a decrease in crime because there's an increase in gun ownership.
Or the stats are "woke". Any way to distance themselves from reality.
I grew up in a really violent area , it was really bad
6:56 “here’s the truuu-uu-uuth: it doesn’t _matter!”_ omg this better become a regular drop on the show haha
Crowder is still around?
Does anyone still care what Steve thinks?
No way back HOME
Homeless, young and and broke
Broken by the world who loves dollar bills
They DNT g a FUCK with me and my jobs
Just judging, laughing and be parasite paradise as can be
Meanwhile my dad broke and hv full debt he can't afford to pay except I do something to HIM
They broke me as d most bangkrupt ever
And after I've got my life back they act they are modern solution living at gold golf residences?
Gilaaaaaaa
And keep sk me to get out even after asteroids
Just sick
Is there a conservative podcaster that doesn’t dress like they’re in the running for Deadbeat Dad Monthly’s Man of the Year?
Crime is so high in California the police threaten to charge you if you report anything that's not life threatening.
Thanks Emma
I am finishing up five years on probation for a crime i didn't commit. A non violent crime in which i had $40,000 and i dont have a criminal record. If i couldn't afford a decent lawyer where was i going to get 40,000 or even 10% of that? "You're a criminal, you've committed serious charges, you need to be locked up. But if you got a few buck, not so much" GTFOH with that 💩
No surprise that mr chowder didnt quote domestic abuse statistics.
It's hilarious when they mention places like San Francisco or Santa Monica, if you've been to these places recently you know nothing is going on
Crowder is an ongoing crime 😅
What's wrong with cashless bail? We have cashless bail in the UK for minor crimes. Not a problem
The "I did not know that" guy sounds like the most gullible man ever.
these decreases dont matter because theyre still UP from the previous period. like in 2010
More crap dribbling out of trumps mouth
So he's replaced his cute little holster for awkwardly propping up a gun on the desk? Was he afraid that people didn't think he actually has a gun on set at all times?
He might've lost the sponsorship 😆
Ana Kasparian on TYT noted in a story about 3 months ago that one of the precincts that did not report their crime data was either NYPD or LAPD - the two most populous cities in the US. So including that data could significantly alter the trend.
I really didn't understand why crime is going down. With the way corporations and investors keep squeezing the middle class until they can't even afford to live indoors, i can't believe they aren't lashing out more.
If you get arrested at least you have a bed inside!
"Force is the only thing these people understand" is the only thing these people understand.
Did Trump sound like his lips had been stung by bees?
good shit guys
It’s almost like being a toxic troll sitting in a cave hurling insults at the world 24/7 for years on end…..has a net negative on how intelligent, compassionate and content you are.
“Make the lie big, make it simple, keep saying it, and eventually they will believe it.” ― Steven Crowder
I’ll never forget Khalif Browder
New York is one of the worst places in the US on bail reform. Lol.
Oh, violent offences.
In NY, taking a pair of shoes in a lobby is a violent offence.
NYC, by far the largest and most densely populated city in the country, literally has a lower homicide rate than the country at large. So whatever they're doing is clearly working. Meanwhile, take a look at the crime rates in "tough on crime" red states like Louisiana.
@@williamjameslehy1341 NYC is pretty tough on crime.
It's their identity
Amazing that he thinks that crime can't be going down right now because of stats from 5 years ago. Is that really how his brain works
The funniest thing about this is that two criminals are complaining about crime.
They want every one to believe their lies. Truth has no sides, just facts.
Doesnt Crowder have some drag to go put on?
Nah, he’s too busy workshopping his hilarious ethnic routine.
Where I’m at a young man stole a Mountain Dew and a thing of M&Ms from a convenient store. Spent five months in jail and ended up dying there because he couldn’t afford the bail. All over $2.50 in snacks.
Why did he die? So much is missing from your story bruh
@@EGarza-mk2mk died in jail to police brutality and negligence.
Sam should debate Crowder.
...."cath...leth bail"
weird to hear Crowder's LONGLEGS impression as he shriek-sings "iT dOeSn'T mAtTeR!!"
The way pod cast Bro's combat truth with "trust me bro" - 😂
Associated Press just recently ran a headline that said the biggest issues were “crime, immigration and global warming”. For the AP to say crime is a major issue, when all reliable figures show it declining, is more of a republican talking point than an appropriate headline.
Who stole the kishka guys. If some one fesses up i swear i wont call the cops.
Criminals don't get bail. Bail comes _before_ a conviction.
"Crowder desperate" is all that's needed.
Did he take out his teeth during this interview? He sounds like he was doing a Sylvester the cat impression
Turf wars, surf boards, ride the crime wave 🌊🏄♀️
If you were online in the political space in 2016, you might remember how Crowder was "undecided" on Trump until the end because of how crazy he was. Crowder made a moderate deal about finally "pulling the lever" for Trump. Times have changed.
Crime is down because roughly 2/3rds of precincts in the country dont report certain crimes anymore. So yes on face value it looks like certain crimes rates are down but its not true.
Are you telling me the police are lying about things?
It's always interesting to see a party that has to try and create issues because there are no real issues that they care about fixing.
If 1 car is stolen in June, then, in July, 2 cars are stolen, that crime increased 100percent. So tired of be afraid talk.
Trump sounds like Lou Holtz in that interview
'It doesn't matter' is a great drop.
It will change. Crime is gonna get real bad. Watch! The Country is falling apart.
We should be able to bail people with a given number of signatures instead of cash.
cold feet crowder song on my playlist
Don’t the states establish their own bail systems? So for most charges filed by local DAs with evidence from local and state police, would fall under the state’s bail system. So far very few states have made the move to a cashless bail system.
I’m not sure if the executive branch would have the power/authority to change the federal bail system to a cashless bail system without congressional action/approval. Any changes made to the federal system would have zero impact on any of the states.
Civilised countries have cashless bail.
I think the beard oil Crowder uses is lead based only way to explain him.
Someone has been checking out some sneakers!
Cold Feet Crowder is a fair guy though. If Donnie was in the White House I'm sure he'd have said exactly the same.
I wrote this in the comments of a David Pakman video, but I'll add it here because you, especially Emma, totally echoed what I've been trying to tell people. Sorry this will be a long comment, but a good read;
"As a lifelong and multigenerational San Franciscan, my home is not a hellscape. It is not what they tell you, or what they fear. The only person afraid of the "rampant crime wave" in big cities are people who are not from big cities, because it doesnt exist and they are lying to you. Oklahoma City has more crime per capita than does San Francisco, and the crime rate has been consistently decreasing every single year. 15 years ago is when Big Tech moved in and when it started going downhill. Companies like Facebook, Google, Twitter, and Tesla are the ones who ruined SF. (And the banks in 2008-2011 when I was in high school and when Occupy Wallstreet happened. Wells Fargo is tied explicitly to SF history going all the way back to the Wild West.) They exploited all they could at the expense of everyone who lives here. The income inequality and huuuuge gap in wealth disparity is what drives crime and homelessness. Real estate companies and techies moving in from out of state and developing things no one ever asked for, for FAR too much money, is what pushed the middle class out of their homes and apartments, out of the Bay, and out of California as a whole. Tesla only moved out because Herr Musk didnt want to let his employees have sick days or bathroom breaks while in a once in a lifetime pandemic, deal with their policies which are polluting the environment, or follow any safety regulations required of him by the state whose job it is to protect workers and communities over private interests. Texas dont care, so he went there to keep doing what he wanted without anyone telling him otherwise. I'm so fcking tired of Midwesterners telling me what my home looks like, when I never presume to know theirs better than they themselves do.
Every city has its good parts and bad parts. No one is perfect, but SF as a whole is colorful, beautiful, and welcoming. Absolutely covered in art, history, and nature. Tim Walz was recently interviewed about his first ever visit to SF. He talked about his daily jog, which he took through the Presidio, a park neighborhood by the Golden Gate Bridge, and said it was probably the most beautiful city he's ever visited. He even called it "exotic," which just tickles me coming from a midwesterner. You should check out his interview. It's wholesome af and makes me proud to call this place home and that our visitors have great and memorable experiences to take home with them and tell their friends what it's really like here"
Then some guy said:
@onionguy: "SF is, in fact, more dangerous than many other places in America, but it is also a skateboarder’s paradise with lots of amazing food and charm. I went last year and explored the majority of the city. The tenderloin district is, in fact, covered with feces and uncanned beans. There are, in fact, tents covering several blocks in that area. Back at EMB/Pier 7, I watched two cars get broken into at the same time, at opposite ends of a pier lot. Don’t act like SF isn’t next level dangerous. I live in Boston, but I don’t see these things there in broad daylight like I did in several areas of SF. Ultimately, Trump is an idiot, but don’t minimize the current state of SF’s danger. We were advised to leave our car unlocked, empty of belongings and with the windows down; this was told to us by the hotel concierge at our Union Square hotel. I saw many cars with handwritten signs that said things like “Don’t bother, there’s nothing in this car.” There are that many car break-ins in SF. I loved SF despite the danger, but don’t try to convince people that SF isn’t dangerous."
Idk what "uncanned beans" means.
My Reply:
"@oniondude You are, in fact, talking about property crime after the pandemic, which has increased because wealth disparity has increased in the last 4 years because of COVID. Right now, violent crime is, in fact, at an all-time low. Please talk about Boston's reputation as one of the most racist cities in America. Enlighten me on how your place is better. Please tell me about the police and court corruption cases currently being investigated in Boston and Canton. Tell me about your home, not mine.
Did you leave the financial district at all when you were here? Go anywhere else that isn't full of tourists? The tenderloin has always been the neighborhood where the homeless and addicted are pushed into to keep the uber rich from having to see them while walking to their high-rise jobs. There are zero public toilets in that area because they don't want poor people inside their nice buildings. Where else do they expect you to go? This is, in fact, exactly what I mean by the wealth inequality. The neighborhoods you are talking about have the richest people high up safe inside and the poorest people out on the streets below.
Did you go to the ocean? Because the Sunset neighborhood is like any other suburb. Did you go to the zoo? One of the best rated zoos in the world? Or any of the other world's best parks we have like Stern Grove or Golden Gate Park or the Presidio, like I talked about in my comment? You stayed in a fancy schmancy hotel in the richest and most inequitable parts of town and were told to protect your belongings by a person paid to do so. Were you scared watching car break ins? Were you fearful for your life? No? You weren't robbed. You weren't assaulted by homeless people from their tents because they mind their own damn business. You had a bad vacation because you picked a bad part of town. EVERY city has bad places. Tell me about Boston's worst neighborhood and let me generalize about every other neighborhood that I don't personally know because I never went there just like you are here. Please tell me why St Louis Missouri, has been consistently rated the most dangerous city in America, and why NO ONE talks about that. Coincidentally, in the smack dab middle of the country and not on either of our "elite coasts" full of crime and "illegals""
tl;dr they lie and use fear to control the feelings and ideas of their base. SF is not as bad as they say. No place is as bad as they say. They only say it to manipulate your vote
I'm a San Franciscan now living abroad and I support this statement.
It was lack (inability to keep up) or gov regulation on incoming private sector (google, apps, Tesla etc) that destroyed the ecosystem.
I find SF a sad shell of itself, but its spirit persists.
But I don't find it dangerous. Just the classic wealth disparity crap of taking more and not giving anything in return so that all that's left is desperation
@@lizzirountree93 Thank you. I completely understand what you mean about a shell of its former self. For the past 10 years, it's been almost unrecognizable, like it feels like being bled dry by vampires. You can't crush our spirit, but you can crush us under piles and piles of monied people trampling over everyone. I've been fighting for my beloved but bedeviled City College of San Francisco, which has had 8 chancellors in 15 years, vultures all, and crumbling infrastructure. They fill their pockets, mess things up, and then quickly peace out. It's a symptom of the larger pattern throughout the city and the Bay Area as a whole. Ruined from the top down.
Where did you move abroad to? One of my favorite things about SF is meeting expats and foreign visitors, trading with them similarities and differences between places. SF is a really small big city. Small world type intersections and neighborliness full of every kind of person
@@khaightlynn exactly, I v tell everyone that SF is a harbinger of what is to come if government regulation does not step up and keep up!
I live in Hobart, Tasmania now. And voting here is compulsory (and the election cycles are barely more than 3 months long!) But airbnb is a major threat to the ecosystem here. When I moved here 8 years ago there were virtually no homeless people, and now there are quite a few, and the rent prices have sky rocketed. (without a major influx in population) just means less rentable properties available to people who actually live here... Regulation is developing but it is reactive 😞
Cold Feet upset ? Say it ain’t so.
Why no mention of TYT and Ana Kasparian, when talking about people peddling the lie of a rise in crime, and cashless bail?
They have already addressed Ana and Cenk lies on crime.
TYT fans and staff have also called them out.
Stop defending Crowder Cry baby Clownfederate
No need to start drama and give her more relevancy. Karens freak the fuck out at other women especially sometimes, and Emma probably doesn't want to get screeched at by pinchy-faced Ana Kasparian.
implement cashless bail, up GPS trackers.