Brett Cooper
đ€ SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
And obviously I was not involved in my brother's death, but I think about losing a sibling at such a young age, that following you, the things that, you know, transpire in your family, your parents' marriage, like every single facet of her life changed after that tragedy.
Understandably, it has followed her throughout her entire life.
She's now 55 years old.
She's still tearing up when she talks about it.
Obviously, it is an awful, tragic, traumatic thing.
In one interview, she said, I felt the pressure to be perfect, to make my parents forget by being two daughters instead of one.
I'm sure that there was survivor's guilt.
I'm sure in my subconscious, it's like I have to make up for that loss and I have to do something to improve other people's lives or have an impact to double my own, which is a little crazy.
So, I just want you to think about that and what she's saying, and then think about what drives so much of progressivism, of leftist ideology.
Which, as Alia Beth Stuckey says, toxic empathy.
This idea that everyone around you is oppressed, is a victim that you have to save.
You have, you know, your white savior complex, as they say.
out of your way, even if you are compromising the well-being of the economy, of our society, of culture, you have to save these people.
It's like Jennifer, the way that I see it, she's walking through life trying to create problems or make them up in her head so that then she can solve them to feel like she is benevolent and doing good in the world.
Maybe so she can make up for that loss with her parents, for the world at large, with God, I don't know.
And so what I'm trying to say here is that if this woman sounds over the top and nauseating in her arrogance, in her desperation to be the person solving all of these made up problems, it's probably because she is.
Like she has twisted up so many things in her mind that she can compare her tragic, objectively traumatic and tragic six-year-old accident to juvenile prisoners in San Quentin.
which is a notorious maximum security prison that has historically held death row inmates.
It was the only prison in California that did executions.
It was the worst of the worst, like Charles Manson was in San Quentin.