Kenny Mac
51K posts

Kenny Mac
@MrSuperMac
Possibly your biggest fan



BREAKING! Pope Leo to Marxist Revolutionaries in October 2025 meeting: "I am here. I am with you." During the 5th World Meeting of Popular Movements last October, the Vatican played host to a gathering of openly-declared communists, revolutionists, and pro-abortion, pro-LGBT activists. lepantoin.org/wp/pope-leo-to…


How Chud WINS on Self-Defense In Nashville Shooting! LIVE at 11 AM ET! youtube.com/live/kYlV406-H… Dalton Eatherly, known online as "Chud the Builder," recently shot a man named Joshua Fox in Tennessee. Chud has built a reputation for deliberately provoking confrontations in public spaces—calling Black individuals racial slurs, making inflammatory remarks designed to agitate, and seemingly looking for conflict, all for the purpose of creating social media content. That pattern makes context critical as we analyze the shooting confrontation with Joshua Fox. This is a case where legal analysis requires walking a difficult line. Whatever one thinks of Chud’s antics, he has all the same rights of self-defense against unlawful attack as the rest of us—no more, and no less. The outcome in this shooting depends entirely on facts: Did Chud reasonably believe he faced imminent threat of death or serious bodily harm? Did he provoke the confrontation and acquire a legal duty to retreat in what is normally a stand-your-ground state? Provocation complicates a self-defense claim but doesn't automatically eliminate it. We'll break down the known and speculative facts, the applicable law, and explore the various legal outcomes. The purpose of all this? So you have a better understanding of the legal boundaries for the lawful use of force. Join me LIVE at 11 AM ET as I break it all down! Episode #1323. youtube.com/live/kYlV406-H…









Streamer Chud the Builder visibly reacted after a judge set his bond at $1.25 million in court. The 28-year-old, Dalton Eatherly, is facing an attempted murder charge after a shooting outside a Tennessee courthouse. Judge Reid Poland III said the high bond reflected “how many people were in the courtyard” and the seriousness of the felonies, with Eatherly now facing a possible 15 to 60-year sentence. 🎥: @WSMV






















