Video URL: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PE5ztBd05co


the jurgen experience and so in that situation and i'm probably kind of giving away too much information because the video's not out yet but i think it's necessary so the guy walks in he says he's robbing the place he hasn't shot anyone yet but he starts arguing with another person and the other guy is supposed to be like a new conceal carrier and then the guy stands up he's like yo what is your problem what are you doing he's kind of angling towards his gun but he's not he hasn't gone for it yet the other guy has a gun too the guy who came in to rob the place but he hasn't pointed his gun at anyone he hasn't shot anyone so at that point theoretically speaking you could argue that's just mutual combat yeah right so which one can i shoot who's actually endangering who right right so i ended up shooting a guy who came to rob the place the problem is i shot him in the back too but that was from the standpoint of when i decided to shoot i know how to shoot so i dropped four or five rounds just naturally right into the guy he he's like oh [ __ ] he turns around because he's getting shocked as i'm shooting him so he turns to run so is it like a laser that sets off like a half a haptic feedback so you're wearing a vest right it's called a stress vest so you're wearing a stress vest until it sends out sends out a later laser every time you hit that person and it shocks you and does it shock you like a taser does it shock is it as bad as you want it to be really so you can you could get it to the point where it mobilizes your body i don't think it gets that high i think it gets to the point where you're like okay get this thing off me have you ever been tased no i haven't either but i've watched people get tased and i'm curious because some people can just [ __ ] handle it they can't are they usually high i don't know good question i think sometimes they're high but how does that stop your body from shutting off due to the electricity that is true that i don't know because i've seen people just get zapped and they just stand there and

they just pull the [ __ ] right out of the body now this is one video guy did that um the cop was being very patient with the guy um and he he's at them nothing and he's like all right he's at him again he dropped really second time he dropped so i don't know what plays what part you know yeah i don't understand that's outside of my wheelhouse honestly my friend dana white um he uh went for one of his shows they they all got tasered and uh they felt like they their body just shut off like they just fell over see i'm not the funny thing about this i had to stress fest on too so when i was doing it so the whole time i'm like i don't want to experience this yeah so yeah so if you hit you turn it yeah hmm yeah yeah i'm i'm curious to what that's like i'm sure it's horrible you know i mean i'll put it like this when i shot him he yelled [Laughter] our food is pretty bad yeah but you know from that perspective i still ended up shooting him in the back hmm now is that legal um because he's not you are not in danger you're just acting almost like as law enforcement or or as protection so in that particular case once we broke it down my shooting was justified right um but it just goes to show you how thin that line is between justified and unjustified and it doesn't it also like well in that situation was there cameras involved because it's in a store yeah but what if you're in a school like in the school situation like if you walked in and shot that guy who was killing those kids and you shot him in the back clearly you'd be judgmental because you're that's in defense of a third party okay right um so at that point all bets are off like whether i shoot you in the back front side but i guess the argument that could be made in my particular situation is he was retreating right right because he was running out that's why i shot him because he turned to run away and so it was basically it happens really quickly right and the split times between my trigger pull pretty fast so it's like right you know that time period he can

turn and catch one in the back but you get an aggressive enough prosecutor that's the argument they made if i was a prosecutor that's the argument i would make you know about the um the case in austin um where a guy was not he was not charged for a long period of time but it was at a one of the protests during the pandemic and this guy apparently was military and he was an uber driver he was uber driving yeah so he pulled down this road i think he was following his gps and he pulled down this road and all of a sudden he's faced with the the people that were blocking the road and this guy pulls an ak-47 out and points it at him and he shoots him he's a veteran i mean he's he's used to being in you know live combat situations and he just pulls out his gun and shoots him and shoots him did he get charged he did get charged i don't know let's find out what the status on that was because all my friends that are law enforcement or military were furious that he got charged because this guy literally pointed the gun at his face yeah like he's standing there pointing the gut what are you gonna do it's like how do you know if the guy's gonna kill you or not like it's unreasonable to point a gun at a person in that scenario do you know what that's you know what that speaks to what edu [ __ ] education dude like i i in my videos i say this time and time and time and time again we have over 400 million guns in this country man you're not getting away from the guns you're not and if you take them away from legal people that have them legally only people are going to have them yeah are the people that have them exactly and so if we understand that this is the country that we live in we have a second amendment we understand the culture in this country why do we not spend just even a decent amount of resources on a federal level and we'll say local level to teach people the dynamics involved with firearm ownership let me ask you this um one of the people one of the things about people that are pro second amendment is

they don't want to change any of the restrictions or any the way it's set up right now they want to keep it exactly the way it is in terms of what kind of background checks exist or they don't want to add any sort of additional checks any sort of additional restrictions why is it so easy to get a gun license because efficiency but why is it so hard to get a driver's license because people suck at driving but don't people suck at shooting some do a lot of people a lot of people do the difference though too is we're talking about a constitutional right versus a privilege when i had got a concealed carry permit i had to go through an extensive examination and which also involved showing that you are proficient at shooting why don't people have to do that well because we are talking about a constitutional right right so the standard is a lot different than say okay we're giving you the privilege to drive this car on the road so like with the car i can own any car i want if i private property i can drive all over that private property without any education without any instruction or any of that stuff now the moment i want to step out into the public with this car and drive it on public roads that's when i have to get licensed get registration and all of those things okay i see what you're saying so if someone wants to have a gun and they want to take it somewhere then they have to go through these examples generally speaking so like but not it used to be the case in texas now no now we have constitutional carry which means that you don't have to go through those those procedures in order to carry a firearm so here's the story uber also released a statement unfortunately we are unable to comment on pending litigation this is about the guy who is an uber driver as we've released uh in the past this incident is not related to the uber platform says for now this gentleman perry remains indicted on multiple charges including murder in this case in august his attempt to get the murder charge dropped was denied um from what i understand this is uh has to do with the district attorney in austin that they uh you know we have a lot of very liberal district attorneys in this

country they just uh repealed the guy in san francisco to screams and cheers of people who are dealing with unprecedented crime and homelessness there and give me a start in san francisco oh you're the one who told me about it you're the one who explained to me the whole homeless situation and we've talked about it multiple times and and credited you with explaining it you know since you're a lawyer and you understand like the you understand like the inner workings of the machine in a way that i probably don't be honest with you you know what got me to understand it wasn't me being a lawyer it was me being on the ground and seeing the [ __ ] and talking to the people that's what really set it off for me because when i was with the nra we were doing these many documentaries going to these different places and talking to the people on the ground they were explaining stuff to me you can watch the video you see it in my face like i'm like the same way you reacted the same way i reacted when i first heard it i thought it was a funding thing i thought like do we need more money for homelessness and then when i realized that it's a business it's like a light bulb went off when you explained it to me i was like of course it's like everything else when you showed me the numbers and the people in la making 260 thousand dollars a year to deal with the homeless situation and it's not going anywhere i'm like that person has a [ __ ] great job you know i actually analogize that to the issue with gun violence in the inner city how so so it's a theory um do i have concrete data to affirm it nope but i think to a degree a lot of these leaders and politicians in here in the city need that violence in the inner city to continue as a way to justify the necessity for them being in place in the positions that they're in like what kind of position so um if you think about the vast majority of the gun violence in this country is from the inner city overwhelmingly so the numbers are crazy like when when people talk about gun

violence in this country maybe we should start with that right gun violence in this country when you look at gun deaths a gigantic percentage of them are suicides yeah right i would say about 65 63 to 65 are suicides okay so when we're talking about gun violence i mean i am not clearly i'm not in favor of suicide yeah you know obviously i want people to get help and and live happy lives but this is not my main concern my main concern is people harming other people so when we look at the numbers of gun violence it's always exaggerated because they don't include the fact that that is uh they're starting to do it now they didn't before yeah how do you hear about it on fox news yeah like they legit i remember because this was like at the the genesis kind of of my my 2a advocacy when i was looking at the numbers because i kind of initially just took the numbers for what they were and i just assumed because you hear gun violence you see you hear gun deaths you're thinking people shooting at other people in middle street and dropping debt right and then i started looking into the numbers and i started realizing wait 63 to 65 percent of suicides and like point out it's not that i don't care about suicides but then i also backdoored and i said okay well let's look at the suicide rate just as a whole in america versus other places that have strict gun laws and i remember when i was on bill maher and i was sitting at the round table we kind of started getting into that discussion and you would think considering we have as much as many guns as we have in this country in the hands of civilians you'd think on the surface we'd lead the world in suicides we don't not even close so that begs so that stands for reason that the issue with suicide isn't a gun thing it is purely a mental health thing yes right so that's why i'm able to okay let's set this aside and now deal with what's remaining then you have a very small percentage that are accidental gun deaths right um we're talking about like maybe totality in a year a thousand and what percentage is that i think it's

like if i remember correctly it's like three to five percent okay or something like that so and we're almost at 70 then yeah we're at like 68 and that's including and then there's another percentage that includes officer shootings whether it's officer shooting a criminal or criminal killing an officer right um so we can put that here over here as well because that's a different dynamic what percentage are officers that's sitting somewhere in about the also two to three percent i'm probably flipping it i don't know if the accidental gun deaths are about two to three and the officer is like five if i'm not mistaken um but we can find out we could jamie will pull it up so we could get an accurate assessment of it but to get to where we want to go is essentially homicides with firearms that's where we want to be and generally speaking that you've got a range of about eight to twelve thousand people every year die from actually being shot by another person that includes mass shootings everything right and then what percentage of those are gang related so because the whole gang related because now what's happening is they're taking a lot of the gang-related shootings and including them in mass shootings it's just kind of like what happened in philadelphia recently right they called the philadelphia shooting and just happened recently a mass shooting what was the philadelphia one uh it was basically there was a shootout between i don't know how many people it was but um there's a there was like i can't remember exactly where in philly it was but essentially i came a lot of people got shot um and they called it a mass shooting it was street violence that's what it was it was it was two parties going at it and they call it mass shooting i can i guess you could argue why that that's considered a mass shooting but it's not but in our minds we think about it a mass shooting is somebody you have an individual or multiple people who want to go and kill as many innocent people as possible right right we're not talking about people who are shooting each other over disputes this was a dispute that took place in the public

between two people with guns essentially and then so they want to call that a mass shooting and i'm like that's not fair because the way the deal with these types of things is it's different the same way you don't include the suicides in the homicides because there are different reasons for why they're happening right and so a lot of the vast majority of the gun violence the homicide aspect of it is from the inner cities that's where it's coming from it's these kids literally when i say kids i'm talking like 17 18 19 20 21 year olds they're shooting each they're shooting at each other now i'm not dismissing that and saying that it's irrelevant and that we shouldn't be we shouldn't factor that in what i'm saying is it's a totally different reason for why it's happening it's not a gun issue it's a social economic issue because if you take those same kids that look like me right i know a lot of i know i know a lot of black people of color who live in the suburbs of america and they're not running around committing drive-bys and bmws they're not so what's the difference there they have access to guns the same way these kids have access to guns and these kids have access to guns illegally in the inner city the difference is prolonged exposure to poverty but nobody wants to have that conversation the reason they don't want to have that conversation because it is admittedly hard to deal with it's hard it's convoluted and it's difficult