MATT WALSH (HOST): You know, I'm the first to say usually when it comes to cases of alleged police brutality, I'm the first to say that, and I've said many times, that if you just cooperate and comply, and if you're a reasonable person and you're reasonable with the police officers, you're almost certainly going to be fine. I mean, almost always, when someone ends up getting shot or hurt during an interaction with the cops, it's because they went out of their way at every turn to turn the situation into something violent and dangerous when it didn't need to be. But there are exceptions to every rule, and here is the exception. And this is an exception made possible by, of course, a female police officer.
And look, I know that there are plenty of male police officers who do dumb things and make mistakes, but this is still a kind of thing that you inevitably get when you start bringing women into the force in the name of diversity and inclusion.
I mean, this is, like I said, DEI in action. This is what happens. And you can just tell — you can tell in that short clip from the bodycam that this woman is very nervous handling the guy's firearm. So how does a woman who's nervous handling a gun end up on the damn police force of all things? How does a woman who doesn't understand the most basic principles of gun safety end up on the police force? Well, it happens through DEI, which is why the eradication of DEI needs to go far beyond the federal government. I mean, it's trickle down to every level of both federal and state and local government and into the private sector, which is the plan, like we talked about in the opening. But, you know, we need to be done with this madness.
And you can say — and I know people will say, well, how do you know that she was hired because of DEI? You don't know that. Well, I know because she's a woman who, by the department's own admission now, is incompetent. She was fired for incompetence. Well, how do incompetent women get jobs like this? They get it through DEI. Right? That's how. So it's absurd.
I mean, if we're being honest, female cops are absurd. It's an absurdity. I'm sorry. It's just ridiculous. It's cartoonish. You've got cops on the force who can easily be overpowered by, like, 50% of the population. And not just 50% of the population, by the way. Like, the the majority of people who end up getting arrested, the majority of people who will go to prison are men. So it's not 50%, really. It's a — with a female cop, that means that the vast majority of the people that she is going to try to arrest during her career can easily overpower her. Easily.