'Loot all that s**t!': Leftist supports looting, says if blacks looted 'every store' in the country, it wouldn't come close to 'debt that America owes us'



The host of a new show on YouTube — "Burn It Down with Kim Brown" — recently told her viewers she supports looting and that even if black people looted every store in the country, whatever material gains were acquired would pale in comparison to the "debt that America owes us."

What are the details?

Fox News' Tucker Carlson highlighted Kim Brown's show on his program earlier this week with a clip that's now gaining some online traction.

"For the record, I support all that s**t," Brown said on the clip. "I support them looting the damn Dollar Tree. I support the looting of ... what other s**t did they loot? ... like the Advanced Auto Parts. I remember last year they looted Target. I support all that s**t! Loot all that s**t! Do you know why? Because black people and marginalized and oppressed people could loot every store in this whole f***ing country for 200 f***ing years — it would not even come close to the debt that America owes us."

Tucker Carlson highlights a BLM activist’s show "Burn it down with Kim Brown" where she expresses her support for l… https://t.co/KlKwPqR743
— Ian Miles Cheong (@Ian Miles Cheong)1618882243.0

Another cut of the video shows Brown saying, "Tear all that s**t up! Tear it up! Because really ... that's the only language this country understands."

Carlson mocked Brown and the platforms her show is on, noting he assumes they haven't considered censoring it and that he doubts she's feeling any heat.

"We're pretty sure the FBI isn't at Kim Brown's house tonight," Carlson said. "We're confident that '60 Minutes' isn't planning some extensive hit piece on her — no, those are reserved for Florida governors. In America's many newsrooms, Kim Brown is not considered a threat to anyone — she's considered an ally. Who's the threat? It's people who didn't vote for Joe Biden; they must be hounded into submission by the American news media."

Looks like she loves the attention

In case you're wondering who Brown is, at the moment her fame appears to be quite limited. Her YouTube videos garner only a few hundred views each, there's no blue check mark next to her Twitter handle, and she only has 756 followers as of Wednesday afternoon.

But since Carlson ran her clip, all of that may be changing:

Thanks for helping us almost meet all of our April goals Tucker! Still need 5 more patrons though! Join today to pi… https://t.co/MT821hGmlF
— 🔥Burn It Down With Kim Brown🔥 (@🔥Burn It Down With Kim Brown🔥)1618899055.0

"Thanks for helping us almost meet all of our April goals Tucker!" she tweeted Tuesday. "Still need 5 more patrons though! Join today to piss off Tucker Carlson!"

Brown also shared on Twitter that she was invited to appear on Fox News' "The Story with Martha McCallum" but declined, saying that after Carlson used her clip that she's been "called every kind of n***** c**t ghetto whore terrorist on every social media platform" and that she'll only be interviewed if it's a paid appearance.

And in defense of her "loot all that s**t" clip, Brown tweeted that "looting is the American way. Ask Indigenous nations, black entrepreneurs/homeowners, Iraq, and the African continent. America loots like no other."

Ben Shapiro warns media are ‘paving the way for riots’ with their ‘skewed coverage’ of Derek Chauvin trial



Ben Shapiro, editor emeritus of the Daily Wire and lawyer, says that the media's coverage of the Derek Chauvin trial will end up causing riots.

Chauvin has been accused of unintentional second-degree murder, third-degree murder, and manslaughter in connection to George Floyd's May 2020 death.

His trial began last week.

What are the details?

Shapiro on Wednesday, according to the outlet, said that the media are largely "ignoring the prosecution's difficulties" and only reporting one side to the public.

"If you watch the actual Chauvin trial and then watch the media coverage of the Chauvin trial, the gap is stunning," he said. "The media are paving the way for riots by ignoring the prosecution's difficulties — and his acquittal is not a remote possibility based on those difficulties."

Pointing to a recent Washington Post headline that read, "Trial to resume after training officer says an unauthorized neck restraint was used on George Floyd," Shapiro argued that the story only served to detract from "the actual takeaway from the use-of-force expert's testimony."

Shapiro then addressed recent testimony by Los Angeles Police Sergeant Jody Stiger, a paid witness for the state, whose testimony "undercut the prosecution's case on several points during cross-examination, according to Law of Self-Defense Attorney Andrew Branca."

"The use-of-force officer admitted that Chauvin's procedure (use of body weight and pressure) was a lesser use of force than adopted in the past, that it wasn't a chokehold, that use-of-force standards change based on drug use or physical stature of a suspect, that he had personally restrained suspects until EMS arrived, that some suspects quickly regain consciousness and thus sometimes suppression is necessary despite appearances," Shapiro explained.

From the Daily Wire:

Prosecutors are attempting to make the case that Chauvin and three other officers killed Floyd through excessive use of force, while the defense alleges that Floyd's drug use and heart problems played crucial roles in Floyd's fate.

The defense is attempting to establish that Chauvin's actions, restraining Floyd with a knee on his upper body for nearly nine minutes, would not have resulted in Floyd's death without complications from those existing drug and heart problems. Prosecutors have admitted that Floyd had a history of substance abuse, but are arguing that Floyd's past drug use would have built up his immunity enough so the drugs in his system at the time of his arrest would not have had a major effect on him.

Prosecutors, in order to convict Chauvin on the more serious second-degree murder charge, will be tasked with proving that Chauvin was in the process of committing felony assault on Floyd during the detainment.

As previously reported by Blaze Media:

In order to prove the second-degree murder charge, prosecutors will need to prove that Chauvin was committing felony assault on Floyd, which will require proof that his actions in subduing Floyd were objectively unreasonable and outside the scope of his authority as a police officer. They will also have to prove that his actions were a "substantial causal factor" in Floyd's death. Alternately, the jury will be permitted to consider lesser charges of third-degree murder, if jurors find that Chauvin's actions were reckless and caused Floyd's death, or manslaughter, if they find that his actions were negligent and caused Floyd's death.

Chauvin's attorneys have indicated that they intend to argue two separate points to the jury. First, they intend to argue that Chauvin's actions in detaining Floyd were reasonable in the context of the full circumstances. Also, they intend to argue that Floyd either contributed to or caused his own death by swallowing a large quantity of fentanyl in order to prevent officers from finding it during his arrest. The autopsy report on Floyd's death blamed his death on "cardiopulmonary arrest complicating law enforcement subdual, restraint, and neck compression" but did note that fentanyl intoxication and recent methamphetamine use may have made his death more likely.

Three other officers who were involved in Floyd's death have also been charged criminally and are awaiting trial, which is currently scheduled to begin in August 2021.

Black Lives Matter activist threatens 'all hell is gonna break loose' if 'George Floyd's murderer is not sentenced'



A Black Lives Matter activist with a huge social media following threatened that "all hell is gonna break loose" if former Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin "is not sentenced" for the death of George Floyd, the Daily Wire reported.

Maya Echols — a model with nearly a half-million TikTok followers — made her statement in video that she apparently took down, the outlet said. But the clip has been preserved for posterity:

“Justice” apparently now means people riot in the street if they don’t get the conviction that they want...😳 https://t.co/yeZ62Y6fWN
— Kelly Campagna (@Kelly Campagna)1617628753.0

"If George Floyd's murderer is not sentenced, just know that all hell is gonna break loose," Echols said. "Don't be surprised when buildings are on fire. Just sayin'."

What's the background?

Chauvin's high-profile murder trial began last week and is expected to last a month.

He's accused of unintentional second-degree murder, third-degree murder, and manslaughter in connection with Floyd's death. Video of Chauvin kneeling on Floyd's neck for several minutes during the course of his arrest went viral last May, resulting in nationwide outrage, protests, rioting, and destruction that lasted all summer.

According to the Associated Press, there is concern as to whether Chauvin can get a fair trial with pressure on jurors and "with some potentially fearing the consequences to the city and country should they reach a verdict others oppose."

More from the AP:

A high fence installed around the courthouse for the trial is a daily reminder for jurors of security concerns. On some days, protesters gathered just beyond it, holding signs that read, "Convict Derek Chauvin" and "The World Is Watching."

Jurors are well aware that Floyd's death led to months of protests in Minneapolis and cities nationwide. They're aware, too, that thieves took advantage of demonstrations to break into, ransack and sometimes burn down stores. [...]

Numerous people expressed unease about serving on the panel for Chauvin's trial during the more than two weeks of jury selection. At least one who became teary-eyed was excused, as were others who were visibly unnerved.

Others displayed no such apprehension. A Black man in his 30s who was ultimately put on the jury wrote on a questionnaire that the Chauvin trial was the biggest case of his lifetime. And he added: "I would love to be a part of it."

'I don't care if the whole city burned down'

Echols certainly isn't alone in her sentiments. Days after Floyd's death — when nationwide riots were in full swing — Ashley Gantt, a Black Lives Matter leader in Rochester, New York, spoke in front of a crowd and the media and declared she didn't "care if the whole city burned down."

"If there was looting, if there was things on fire, that is not what is important. What is important is why these things happen," Gantt said, before telling reporters that they're responsible "to make sure that's the story that's heard."

She appeared to justify violence given that civil rights laws were passed after the rioting that broke out after the death of Martin Luther King Jr. in 1968.

"I am just tired of you guys not putting the correct narrative out there," Gantt added. "I don't care if the whole city burned down. We need justice. And that is the story that needs to be told."

Ashley Gantt: 'I don't care if the whole city burned down. We need justice.'youtu.be

The Daily Wire said Gantt later tried to soften her words, saying that "of course" she does not want the city set on fire, but she does want people to understand that when it comes to "sustainable change, sometimes we have to do whatever it takes to get it."

Breaking: New filings show medical examiner found 'fatal level' of fentanyl in George Floyd's system



New filings in the case against the former Minneapolis police officers involved in the death of George Floyd show that a medical examiner said Floyd had enough fentanyl in his system that it could have been lethal.

The report from the Hennepin County medical examiner released on Tuesday details his comments about the results of the toxicology test on Floyd.

"That is a fatal level of fentanyl under normal circumstances," the report read.

However, the report reiterated the medical examiner's opinion that there were a multitude of causes contributing to his death.

"[Dr. Andrew Baker] said that if Mr. Floyd had been found dead in his home (or anywhere else) and there were no other contributing factors he would conclude that it was an overdose death," said the June 1 memo, according to KMSP-TV.

The release was a part of a request from the attorneys representing Tou Thao, one of the former Minneapolis police officers facing charges in the death of Floyd, 46.

An independent autopsy of Floyd ordered by his family found that he died from "asphyxiation from sustained pressure," and it reported evidence of "neck and back compression that led to a lack of blood flow to the brain." That finding was released in June by an attorney for the family that also claimed that no other medical issue contributed to his death.

Thao, along with two other former police officers, is facing charges of aiding and abetting second-degree murder. Derek Chauvin, the former officer recorded on video kneeling on Floyd's neck, was charged with second-degree murder.

A previously released report from the same medical examiner's office found that Floyd had also recently used methamphetamine before his death.

The controversial death of Floyd on May 25 led to Black Lives Matter protests erupting all over the nation, some of which turned into violent rioting and looting. Critics of the law enforcement system said the case was emblematic of the racist bias in society.

Here's more about the case against the former Minneapolis officers:

Who Will Oversee Case Of Four Ex-MPD Officers Charged In George Floyd's Death?www.youtube.com