Everything You Need to Know About the Minnesota Assassinations and Tim Walz Destroying His State

Everything You Need to Know About the Minnesota Assassinations and Tim Walz Destroying His State

From 🇺🇸 The Tucker Carlson Show, published at 2025-06-25 16:55

Audio: Everything You Need to Know About the Minnesota Assassinations and Tim Walz Destroying His State

Minnesota's Chaos: A Story of Murder, Mobs, and Media Lies

  1. The Main Idea in a Nutshell

    • A journalist argues that the media and politicians lied about the George Floyd case, which wrecked the city of Minneapolis, and that this culture of dishonesty continues today with a new, bizarre political murder case.
  2. The Key Takeaways

    • A Bizarre Murder Spree: A 57-year-old man named Vance Belter is accused of assassinating politicians in Minnesota while disguised as a cop, but his background is full of contradictions and doesn't make any sense.
    • The "Real" George Floyd Story: The journalist claims George Floyd actually died from a fentanyl overdose and a heart attack, not from being murdered by police officer Derek Chauvin.
    • Media and Political Lies: She argues that politicians and major news outlets intentionally pushed a false story about a racist white cop to spark outrage, which led to riots that destroyed parts of the city.
    • A Journalist Gets "Canceled": For being married to a police union leader who asked for "due process," the journalist, Liz Collin, was harassed by mobs at her home, taken off the air by her news station, and ultimately lost her job.
    • Fun Facts & Key Numbers:
      • Fact: The man accused of the murders, Vance Belter, had a handwritten "hit list" with 60 names on it.
      • Fact: The riots following George Floyd's death damaged or destroyed over 1,500 businesses.
      • Fact: George Floyd's family was awarded $27 million by the city of Minneapolis during the jury selection for the officer's trial.
  3. Important Quotes, Explained

  • Quote: "> They showed up with, uh, piñata effigies of myself and my husband and beat us in our driveway."

    • What it Means: Protesters came to the journalist's private home with piñatas made to look like her and her husband, and they smashed them on her property as a threat.
    • Why it Matters: This shows how intense and personal the situation became. It wasn't just a debate online; a mob came to her home to physically intimidate her and her family simply because they didn't agree with the popular story.
  • Quote: "> Is there any evidence that George Floyd was was suffocated by Derek Chauvin? No, there's much more evidence to support that that in fact had nothing to do with that."

    • What it Means: The journalist is directly stating that the official evidence, like the autopsy report, shows George Floyd died from a drug overdose and a heart condition, not from being choked by the police officer.
    • Why it Matters: This is the core of her entire argument. If true, it means the story that fueled nationwide protests, riots, and major social change was based on a lie, and that the police officers involved were wrongly sent to prison.
  1. The Main Arguments (The "Why")

    • In a simple, numbered list, here are the main reasons the journalist believes the official story about George Floyd is wrong:
      1. First, she argues that the official autopsy report says George Floyd died of "cardiopulmonary arrest" (a heart attack) and had a lethal amount of fentanyl in his system. It did not list suffocation as the cause of death.
      2. Next, she claims the police body camera footage shows Floyd saying "I can't breathe" before he was on the ground, and that he actually asked to be laid on the ground himself.
      3. Finally, she points out that the trial for the police officers was deeply unfair. The jury wasn't isolated from the news and was likely scared by the mobs protesting outside. Key evidence, like the police training manual showing the officers used an approved technique, was not allowed in court.
  2. Questions to Make You Think

    • Q: If the police officers were just following their training, why were they sent to prison?

      • A: The podcast argues they were convicted because of massive public and political pressure. The media created a simple but false story, politicians went along with it, and the jury was too scared by the riots and protests to find the officers innocent.
    • Q: Why did the journalist, Liz Collin, lose her job?

      • A: Her husband was the president of the police union. He made a public statement asking people to wait for all the evidence in the George Floyd case before making judgments. Because of his statement, mobs protested at her home and demanded her TV station fire her. The station took her off the air and eventually she left, even though she had nothing to do with what her husband said.
    • Q: Who is Vance Belter, the man accused of the new murders in Minnesota?

      • A: The text says his story is extremely strange and confusing. He's a 57-year-old father of five who worked odd jobs but was mysteriously wealthy. He had a "hit list" of politicians and a bizarre confession letter. The podcast suggests his background is so weird that we may never get the full, true story.
  3. Why This Matters & What's Next

    • Why You Should Care: This story raises big questions about whether we can always trust what we see in the news or hear from our leaders. It shows how a single story can change the country, and why it’s so important to ask questions, think for yourself, and look for facts, even when it’s not the popular thing to do.
    • Learn More: The journalist in the podcast, Liz Collin, created a documentary detailing her investigation and what she believes is the true story. You can find it by searching for "The Fall of Minneapolis" on YouTube and other platforms.

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