ADDED (12 Sep): So... the post above has been taken down. Not sure if by Nate the Lawyer, or by YouTube, but I suspect by Nate, as he was kind of riffing and he may not have wanted an emotional riff to be his lasting take on Charlie Kirk's assassination.
Nate talked about his journey from a "far left Leftie", to his conservative self today, how he was vilified by his ex friends, called a "Coon" a "House Negro" and worse. He talked of the defeatist and victim culture within the American Black community, and his personal experience of it. How Black parents set their own children up for failure. How they were complicit in the failure of Black Americans in tertiary studies, in his own area of the Law. He addressed the Black vicitmhood narrative of white people murdering Blacks, the narrative of the police hunting and killing Blacks. All of it not true, not borne out by the statistics, said Nate in his riff.
The statistics show a very different story. Nate showed the stats. He said no one on the Left wants to acknowledge that, let alone discuss it.
In short, Nate said a lot of stuff that was beside the point, which was the killing of Charlie. I'm guessing it was Nate himself who took it down. There's now no hint of it on his channel.
Back to the story...
Following on from my post earlier today. I've been looking at this all morning, my time. The senseless death of Charlie Kirk. A good man. A very good man. On the same day as the 911 WTC attacks 24 years ago.... When it was 9:02pm our time that the first plane flew into the Tower.
Charlie Kirk was clearly much loved, as we see in the various videos I referenced in my earlier post. I never met him, but I feel I know him as much as anybody who didn't know him personally and saw him only on the internet.
Nate the Lawyer, IRL Nathaniel Broughty, did have contact with Charlie.
In the course of his talk and ruminations and reminiscences Nate gets sidetracked and makes some interesting observations about why he thinks Black American Culture and Black Americans don't do so well at College, then at their careers. Watch for it. Around just before half way.
Nate's experience:
Admitted to the New York State Bar
University Police Officer
Assistant District Attorney
Law School Lecturer / Professor
Director of the Law School Pipeline Program | Black Male initiative