Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:03):
As media.
Speaker 2 (00:08):
It has been a week.
Speaker 1 (00:13):
As you can see, the studio is put back together.
But if you may have been able to tell last week,
I was a little stressed out over the stopping wet
floor that was in this room. The crates that were
right behind me. There's still some there. The rest of
them are. I wonder if this will work. Can y'all
see in there? That's where the rest of the crates are.
(00:35):
Those are DJ effect, those crates. This means nothing to
you if you are on the audio medium, But.
Speaker 2 (00:43):
If you are a knowledgeable of.
Speaker 1 (00:45):
Who propaganda is, then you know how much of my
heart still stands with E for effect. He was my Kayibigan,
my pare, my brother, the b boy, Penoi, the kil
a pino, every day leg day snack king, Cole, the
(01:07):
web crip keeper because for some reason he always memorized
the Wi Fi code. Anyway, he passed away in twenty
eighteen and Tita Helen was like emptying out the storage
and she was like, come get these crates. I was like, yes, Tita, anyway.
Speaker 2 (01:25):
Uh drama last week, man.
Speaker 1 (01:28):
But I learned how to drywall, what tools I need
to cut through some concrete, which means if anybody want
to bless me with a Roto hammer. I have Ryobi
I know again, don't judge me, but I have the
Ryobi batteries. So if anybody want to bless me with
a Ryobi Rodo hammer, you know what I'm saying, I
will be thankful for that. Now, not a great concrete
(01:50):
here's this. This is where we are and shout out
shark bites that way because I was gonna have to
solder this mug and try t us me like, praise
the Lord God Almighty, because.
Speaker 2 (02:05):
Never made if I had decider that thing.
Speaker 1 (02:10):
Now, before we get to the pod, I just got
back from Joseph harp In Correctional Institution, a maximum security
prison out in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, with my brother JB.
Speaker 2 (02:25):
I go every year.
Speaker 1 (02:26):
It's with the Live Free OKC and Justice for Julius organization.
They put on this thing called music Fest. They got
a new ward in there and security guy who is
everything wrong with the penal code system? Yeah you heard me,
And it's just doing psychological stuff on these brothers.
Speaker 2 (02:48):
Like let me just give you an example. They have
these this prison. They're allowed to walk.
Speaker 1 (02:52):
The yard a little freely because they've earned it right,
the ones where they still be having riots and stuff.
Speaker 2 (02:57):
That's another prison.
Speaker 1 (02:59):
This one is like, if you're gonna be in prison,
you want to be in this one, right. I mean
we sat down in the little gym on the yard
and watched the game seven of Okay, see like it
was great, you know, but.
Speaker 2 (03:14):
Anyway, the man do little stuff.
Speaker 1 (03:15):
You have to wear certain colored shirts and such, depending
on your level of freedoms you have. Anyway, this guy
just got out the shoe, which is called special handling unit,
which means you was underground, no lights. It's like solitary confinement,
kind of special handling unit.
Speaker 2 (03:33):
The shoe.
Speaker 1 (03:34):
The guy walks out, He's in a gray shirt. New
security dude was like you need to have a yellow shirt,
and this guy was like, I don't have it.
Speaker 2 (03:44):
I I just got out the shoe. He was like
you back talking me, bro, and then like put him back.
Speaker 1 (03:50):
In Like that's psychological, dog like you ain't have to
do like the dude just got out. Anyway, they do
this music festival inside the prison. It is organized by
the prisoners. It's just an incredible event. Is my third
year going. It's just dope, dude. Anyway, So I just
(04:12):
got back from that, getting ready for next fest to
La which is the twenty third at the La County
Fair Momeboy Tycoon, but the twenty second in Atlanta. I'll
be at Emory University. It is free slide through if
you're familiar with Dave Bizan and Paedro the Lion, because
I know a lot of y'all is like ex vangelicals,
(04:33):
so you know exactly who Paijo.
Speaker 2 (04:35):
The Lion is. We'll be there.
Speaker 1 (04:38):
Anything else I'm forgetting Oh new record, your arms are
too short to box with? God drops next month. If
you're on my Patreon, you've already heard it. So this
is a plea for you to join my patreon. All right,
hook politics for Pride?
Speaker 2 (05:07):
Okay?
Speaker 1 (05:08):
Ooh baby, what is you doing? Have y'all seen that meme?
It's been going around. It's an old meme which is like,
this is a black man with dress and he's just
kind of giving you the facial expression our aunt to
give you when you do something real.
Speaker 2 (05:20):
Baby, what is you doing?
Speaker 1 (05:23):
It's when you know what the early millennials would call
cringe baby. I don't understand the play here, baby, I
like I just you watch what is you doing? You
ever watch a person I can only speak from my
heterosexual cis gender.
Speaker 2 (05:48):
Head ass right. When I'm witnessing a man.
Speaker 1 (05:53):
Just butcher just shoot an airball, there are times that
I want to come save him. There are times that
I want to come save her, the person you're trying
to jib at, And then there are other times that
it's just like the train wreck is fun to watch,
but there are times that you just like.
Speaker 2 (06:13):
Just just I want to like, oh baby, what is
you doing?
Speaker 1 (06:18):
Why did you what is what is you saying? Why
you ain't think that through.
Speaker 2 (06:23):
Boom baby, what is you do? Woo baby? What is
you doing?
Speaker 1 (06:27):
Boo baby?
Speaker 2 (06:28):
What is you Doooo baby? What is you doing? You
understand what I mean today?
Speaker 1 (06:39):
This is me not being outraged at Donald Trump, although
there are things that are just outrageous. This is me
just being like what what I don't you know the
other meme of the black queer queer person just doing
his hands like what, I don't help me?
Speaker 2 (07:00):
You know?
Speaker 1 (07:00):
Sometimes the beauty of being raised by black women is
the gestures. I guess I understand if you're not a
part of our culture that you would think that these
people are aggressive or mean. I guess it's just like
listening to German, it just sounds like you're angry, you
(07:22):
know what I'm saying. So I assume if you're not
a part of our culture by how direct black women are,
by how expressive they are, and in a lot of ways,
the amount of intelligence that is being spoken to you
at a pace right that if you're not a part
(07:43):
of our culture, you're like, why she talking so fast
and saying all these things, and how it's intermixed with slag,
just the effortless code switch that happens to be the
experience of being loved by a black woman is. But
every once in a while she give you this look
(08:03):
where she just like, I'm trying not to drag your ass,
but this is confusing, and confusing is a nice way
to say you dumb as a bag of rocks.
Speaker 2 (08:14):
O baby, what is you do? Woo? Boom baby, what
is you doing? Boom baby?
Speaker 1 (08:19):
What is you?
Speaker 2 (08:20):
Doo? Baby? What is you doing?
Speaker 1 (08:29):
My mother is probably one of the most sarcastic people
I've ever met when it comes to her kids. Uh,
one time she told me, when I was, you know,
in high school, trying to like every boy in high school,
try to bulke up get into the weight room. She
told me I looked like the before picture in.
Speaker 2 (08:48):
A flex magazine. She said, I was the before picture.
Speaker 1 (08:56):
She used to say, because I got pretty decent grades.
But she used to say that like every once in
a while she was look at my sister. She was
be like, I swear that boy cheating through school because
it ain't no where in the world. So, oh man,
I just imagine not being raised black anyway. That's a
(09:18):
throwaway praise sentence. This is I'm approaching I'm approaching Trump
right now with it like, baby, what is you doing?
And I got three three topics here, two of which
I'm gonna kind of fly through, and the last I'm
gonna spend a little more time on this man in
the Middle East just taking gifts and just falling for
(09:41):
the Oakie dock. Okay, where is Joe Antenna's taking home
this plane? Right, I'm gonna talk about the the the
white jediside in South Africa, which is that funny. And
then we're gonna talk about this Supreme Court case and
(10:02):
how paper thin and fraudulent and how this man won't
just show up on the strength.
Speaker 2 (10:09):
All right, you ready? Ooh baby, what is you doing.
Ooh baby, what is you do?
Speaker 1 (10:13):
Woo?
Speaker 2 (10:14):
Boom baby, what is you doing? Boom baby? What is
you do? Woo? Ooh baby? What is you doing?
Speaker 1 (10:37):
All right, let's start with the fastest one. The fastest
one would be this Middle Eastern trip. Now, you remember,
we have had twenty five years of a war on terror,
which has broken down to, if you are aware, as
a war just on Arabs, a war on Islam. You
(11:02):
know Islam has been they switch. Remember in the eighties,
the villains in every movie was either Russian or Asian,
and then after a while all the villains became Arab, right,
they were our king villains. Now that being said, we
were still taking the stuff. And if there's one thing
(11:22):
that's interesting about American racism, it's not the American racism.
I think I said this before, is like there's two types.
There's the type, the Elon Musk type, which is like
the American type in a sense that's like, I'm not
the type of racists that don't want you around. I
want you around, you just don't get no rights. I
want you around to do things for me. That's the
(11:46):
type of racism that could have mammis right, that can
have black women, black slaves raise your kids, right be
they wet nurses. You know what I'm saying, Like, there's
that type of racism like you my property. It's not
like I can't live around you. You're living in the
house with black people, while at the same time seeing
(12:09):
us as subhuman. Right, there's that type of racism. Then
there's the other type of racism that says, I just
don't want you around at all. I wish you didn't exist.
The type of racism that was the founding of Oregon
that was like Oregon didn't want to be a slave
state because they just don't want to live that close.
Speaker 2 (12:30):
To black people.
Speaker 1 (12:31):
Like that type of You understand what I'm saying, And
to my mind, this is the difference between Trump and
Elon And I guess I lost my office pool. As
to when he would get ejected out of the White House.
I thought it was gonna be bay Sinco de myo.
So I guess I lost that, dang it. Anyway, the
(12:55):
type of racism that is like I don't want you around,
but I'll definitely take your products is where those two
types of racisms meet, right, And that, my friend, is
how we look at the Middle East because we like
(13:16):
that all tay there right now because they got money,
Oh you got money right now. That being said, with
Syria and the Assad family being gone, right, with our
Baghdadi being gone, right, with Usama bin Laden being gone,
(13:40):
with Saddam Hussein being gone, just a new world down
there now. This world isn't necessarily just as interested in
America as the other ones were. But these new niggas
they playing a new game, and I'm not mad at them. Now,
(14:01):
Qatar is a very interesting place. We're gonna stop in
here because Qatar is the one that's offered this man
a plane. Now, Qatar is interesting because remember, Qatar is
the one place that is at the negotiating table between
Hamas and Israel. Qatar wants a two state solution and
(14:23):
a permanent ceasefire. That's what Katar wants because Qatar is
not stupid. Qatar understands that we are killing our own people.
Whether Israel like to believe that or not, you follow me,
But Qatar know how to play the game. You know
how I know Katar know how to play the game
because in Qatar, which is why it was so big deal,
(14:45):
such a big deal to have the world cup there is.
You know, if you ethnically Katari, he ain't gotta work
or they just makes so much money. Everybody that works
there is either slave labor or just imm a like
it's bad. Nobody's a hero in this like it's like
it's bad, you know, but they just got so much
(15:08):
bread that if you can be if you could prove
that you ethnically an aboriginal Katari, your three thousand dollars
a month stupend.
Speaker 2 (15:17):
Niggas don't work.
Speaker 1 (15:22):
So you know what that means. That means they know money.
Here's where America went wrong. Where's a lot of places
where America went wrong. This meant if Katar knows money,
they know how to speak American. Follow me now in
(15:45):
the Industrial Revolution and then moving on to the big Carnegie,
the big factories, the big factory workers of America, and
how America built its grit through steel and you know
all that good stuff of the manuf factoring, all the
stuff that Trump imagines was when America was great, right
quote unquote. There was a purposeful shift in our economic policies,
(16:13):
and it was America thinking, okay, well this isn't the
future because the people getting rich are not the ones.
You don't build an economy on the people at the factory.
You build an economy on people owning a factory. So
then you get this concept of neoliberalism in this you know,
(16:34):
in the global market and having a supply chain that
goes across the world. What we wanted to do our
economic model was we don't want to raise our kids
to work in factories. We want to raise our kids
to own the factories. Right, So we put our emphasis
on stem, on business, on mathematics, and we was like,
(16:55):
we'll let China build the factories. We want to run
the company. Right, so you get business degrees. You focus
on things like that, what leaves our what leaves our schools,
shop leaves our schools.
Speaker 2 (17:10):
Right, then we don't stop so so you don't learn trades.
Speaker 1 (17:14):
We at our brains in America look down at trades.
Trades are for the people that can't go to college.
Right is the tone that most of us was raised with. Right,
Trades are what infacially unionized trades. That's what gang members
who didn't go to jail or were out of jail
now and just got GEDs who didn't die in the streets,
(17:36):
they plumbers, They truck drivers. You know, they carpenters. They
steal workers and I tell you what they make it
six figures. Right. We didn't build constructions done by immigrants.
We just grew up in an era where we saw
that as say it with me, working class. We did
(18:02):
this to ourselves. We said no, no, no, no, no, we're
in We're in the front office. That's what America. America
runs the front office. We let the pores build the stuff.
Speaker 2 (18:13):
China said.
Speaker 1 (18:16):
That because y'all really like stuff, which gets us to
where we are. Now, what this have to do with Qatar?
Qatar on that same move, we don't build stuff, the
pores do. Now America talking about we want to start
building stuff again, because that's not sustainable.
Speaker 2 (18:37):
You just you can't. You can't build.
Speaker 1 (18:40):
You can't build a civilization like that for that long
because then you start needing everybody else, you start needing
the work. Let's be hood about it. How you gonna
sell drugs If you can't make drugs. Drugs come from Mexico,
they come from south of the border. You better get
being cool with Spanish. Jose, you better know that Paco
(19:04):
and them, You better you better be nice to want
Carlo you don't make the cocaina that's in Columbia. You
don't know nobody down there. Then your little drug cartel done.
Speaker 2 (19:19):
Right.
Speaker 1 (19:21):
That's the supply chain, the thing with the drug, with
the drug and the manufacturer, which is what's different than
I wish coffee understood. This is the beginning of the
supply chain got all the power we we see. We
think that the end of it does, but this is
what we experiencing. The beginning really got the chips. So anyway,
(19:47):
the qataris oh, they speak American, and to speak American
is to speak hood. It's very simple, pimper, what does
that person want? Not what are you saying you want?
Speaker 2 (20:06):
What do you want?
Speaker 1 (20:35):
So if you read somebody like Trump, see this is
where a lot of these professional commentators miss. This is
why you need hood politicians. You understand what I'm saying
because we've seen a man like him. I know the politics, haven't.
He just want to shine. And when you get a
(20:57):
man that want to shine, you can get him to
do what you want. And the only way to do
that is just to help him shine.
Speaker 2 (21:04):
That's how it works.
Speaker 1 (21:04):
I'm gonna give an example of knowing how to read
this stuff. From my homie jab that I want to
get him in trouble here, but I'm gonna try to
keep this as vague as possible. Essentially, there was some people,
some young men that were looking for their mom.
Speaker 2 (21:20):
Right.
Speaker 1 (21:22):
Then word got to him that his mom, their mom
was strung out and was turning tricks. Right, so he
offers to help the family find him. So Blase Blad
whoopie woop finds out what where she is, and rather
(21:44):
than going in there and being like, oh, I'm a rescuer,
he speaks hood. He was like, well, let me ask
one of my peoples who her pimp is, so that
when I walk up in there there's no problems. So
he finds out who the pimp is. Heyja black whoop
the wool kids is looking for it, blah blah blah.
(22:05):
He's like, pimp's are like, yeah, dude, you gotta do
so all good. You don't need to know the end
of the story. The moral of it is. Why he
is such an effective organizer is because he understands the
neighborhood he lives in. You follow me, you have to
understand what the other person wants. And Trump wants to shine.
(22:28):
Trump don't necessarily necessarily want to be king. You want
to look like a king, You want to be treated
like a king, right, I want you to cower in
front of me. I have a problem when you call
me on my bullshit. And I only respect people that
won't bow to me. I want everyone to but I
won't respect you unless you could show me. You know,
(22:54):
I tell nuts hang as low as mine. I hate
to talk like that, but that's kind of how you
that's how you move. So the qataris say, well, I
don't have anything to prove. We just have stuff we need.
We hear you don't like your plane, We'll give you one.
Speaker 2 (23:14):
You give me. You can give me a new plane.
You give me a new plane.
Speaker 1 (23:17):
This is listen man, listen man, that kingpin, that boss
gonna put a chain on your neck. Listen everybody from
the look look are you?
Speaker 2 (23:27):
You? You from the block?
Speaker 1 (23:30):
Somebody I've just spoke to at the scratch Bastard Bastard
barbecue out here in LA was like, because I talk
about there are there are people I can call. There
are connected unks, pops, ohgs that I could talk to
if a real street situation started developing. But that favor
(23:55):
has interests and that interest rate. That's the way he explained.
And he was like, I don't know if I can
afford that interest rate. And I'm like, you preaching. I
try to do this, I try to say. I was
like that text, don't send that text unless you can
pay for what comes with it.
Speaker 2 (24:13):
What are you talking about? It's free? Show up?
Speaker 1 (24:17):
Like what am I stupid? I'm gonna turn down a
free plane like my nigga. You know that's not free?
Speaker 2 (24:24):
Baby? What is you doing?
Speaker 1 (24:27):
He talking about he gonna raise the sanctions off of Syria.
He talking about like I really like homeboy, you do
feel me? Young?
Speaker 2 (24:33):
Cute?
Speaker 1 (24:34):
Right?
Speaker 2 (24:34):
He in Saudi Arabia?
Speaker 1 (24:37):
Like you think these people are showering you because they
respect you, Like I know you know, sir, where are
your antennas?
Speaker 2 (24:47):
I know you know that this is not free?
Speaker 1 (24:55):
And his people in them their defense is well, the
difference between Trump and the Biden family is we telling
you these ain't backroom deals. This is front room deals.
So we ain't got nothing to hide. Just like when
he said, hey listen, I'm gonna have a third term.
(25:18):
Hey listen, I'm gonna be a dictator. Just the first
day though, why.
Speaker 2 (25:24):
Y'all never believe this man. This is what he do. Baby.
Speaker 1 (25:34):
Okay, so you take this plane right while while telling
the rest of America that you believing in America made
that you putting tariffs on everything except for your jet.
Speaker 2 (25:46):
That's what you're doing right now. It's just temporary.
Speaker 1 (25:49):
And then after that, Oh, you gonna donate it to
the Trump Museum. That's what you're gonna do, the Trump Library.
After you've done being a president. You gonna give it.
You're gonna give it back.
Speaker 2 (25:59):
Trump.
Speaker 1 (26:00):
You're gonna you're not gonna keep it. You're not going
to keep it. You That's that's what.
Speaker 2 (26:05):
You're telling me right now. The man that had boxes
in the.
Speaker 1 (26:10):
Bathroom, you're not gonna Why do y'all keep like where
is your antennas? Where's your antennas?
Speaker 2 (26:17):
And where is yours? Trump? Sir?
Speaker 1 (26:20):
You a hustler too? What like how much of your
booty have you gave to these people? You think you're
gonna a smarter on, You gonna out hustle them. Maybe,
But baby, I look, okay, you saw a nice shiny
thing this You know what this Every time they they
(26:41):
bring out they they bring out they.
Speaker 2 (26:43):
Bad at chicks. You do you feel me? They bring
out that that that that good equator, Melonie, they bring
it out on you. Brother. You understand I'm talking about
what you don't like me. You don't think I'm cute?
Speaker 1 (26:58):
Okay, Homie, Okay, Hey, you out here trying to you're
trying to smash the the bottle service lady. Okay, because
it always worked. We're gonna see, brother, We're gonna see.
I don't know where your antennas is. Speaking of where
your antennas is? Can we talk about the white genocide
(27:20):
in South African?
Speaker 2 (27:21):
Next? Baby? What is you baby?
Speaker 1 (27:54):
What is you do?
Speaker 2 (27:55):
Baby? What is you do? Baby? What is you doing? Okay?
Speaker 1 (28:00):
Now I can fly through this one because Molly on
Weird Little Guys, which is another show on our network,
has done like a four almost five part series on
this on the people, the names, the origins of it,
what they're talking about, all the codes and how it
got to America. So I don't have to go through that,
(28:25):
but I can give you this.
Speaker 2 (28:27):
Okay.
Speaker 1 (28:30):
Trump already shut down a refugee program, right and we
kind of already knew that he preferred white people. I
don't like this is at this point if you don't
want to believe that. It's because you don't want to
believe that. Because in the same conversation with the Shithole
Nations when he was talking about Haiti, when he's talking
(28:51):
about how the Haitian immigrants eating pets right in that
those are two different conversations obviously, But like in the
Shithole Nations conversation, the next thing he said is like,
how come we can't have people from Sweden, my nigga,
you prefer white people?
Speaker 2 (29:11):
Like this is what you saying.
Speaker 1 (29:16):
Anyway, the Afrikaans in South Africa got the same problems
that we do with the Confederates. You have to remember
that apartheid just ended, like it was only a couple
of years ago, in the nineties. A parthsid fell in
(29:36):
the nineties. Our civil rights movement happened in the sixties.
Theirs was in the nineties, much more recent, right, but
they lost they were it's not always it's not a
complete one to one, but you have to remember these
people were the colonizing force. They're only twenty percent of
(29:57):
the population. They came in over the course of a
couple years, I mean like one hundred years, claimed control
of all land and ran the government and decided on
this apartheid system. Now you may or may not know
what apartheid is. It just means a part right. So
(30:20):
apartheid had four sections. I got to see some of
this with my own eyes after it fell when I
went to South Africa. So you had top of the
food chain, the Afrikaans Dutch descendant white people. You have
the Blics black people right, who were the indigenous population. Obviously,
(30:45):
you have Indians from India which were in their scenario
of Africa the slave labor. And then you have the colors.
That's if you're sort of any some sort of mixed
version of that. With Melani my home boy DJ Easy
shout out, he would be considered a colored or a mix.
(31:08):
And they talk about zone and laws like they had
to live they could only live in certain parts, only
go to certain are there was beaches they couldn't go to.
And when you was colored, let's just say you just
happened to have kinky hair. Dad a pencil test like
this stuff is absurd, Like if you're my age, you
had to go through this. They'd stick a pencil in
(31:28):
your hair and if it fell, you were cool.
Speaker 2 (31:33):
Didn't fall you too black. We drove by a.
Speaker 1 (31:39):
Beach one time in Cape Town and my boy was like,
my dad used to work at that beach, but we
couldn't go to it because we were colored. Like literal segregation. Outlandish,
like actual outlandish. Now, obviously, if you're in a system
where you were at the top of the system, you
(32:01):
don't like not being at the top of the system.
No one likes to admit that they were the problem.
But what's crazy about how Desmond two tu in them
worked was in the Truth and Reconciliation project in the
sense that they didn't exact revenge. They looked for restoration
and reconciliation. It's so like the best possible way to
(32:27):
end something like this, and y'all still mad. Now, there
was a law that passed recently that was essentially the
best way to understand it is imminent domain. Is if
there's a plot of land, there's already laws around in
the same way we have laws around reservations to where
(32:48):
it's like, okay, look, we can't take y'all's land.
Speaker 2 (32:52):
This is ancestral tribal land. That's different.
Speaker 1 (32:57):
But then there's like farm land that they say listen,
just you could y'all could pull up the law if
the land ain't been used for a certain amount of years,
like y'all not really using this land, and this land
can be used to further states purposes, then the state
(33:21):
has the right to come take it. So you talk
about land you're not using, there's no profit on it.
That's guys, that's imminent that's that's just basically imminent domain.
It's a law we've had for hundreds of years. They
(33:43):
turned that into white South Africans are getting their land
taken from them.
Speaker 2 (33:50):
They are now oppressed. So first of all, that's not
your land.
Speaker 1 (33:55):
Number One, right, but we could sit that aside for
a little bit because you've been living on it for
a second.
Speaker 2 (33:59):
Number to every country do this, like what did you
talking about? Now?
Speaker 1 (34:07):
This genocide that they're referring to again, I am going
to refer you to Molly's podcast on Weird Little Guys
whereh he breaks the whole thing down. Either way, it
is a lie, but somehow that lie made it to
tuck across in his mouth into Donald Trump's ears, and
(34:27):
Donald Trump decided I don't like refugees except for y'all
and fifty nine South Africans.
Speaker 2 (34:36):
Showed up in Dallas. Baby, where is Joe aunt Tennis?
Speaker 1 (34:40):
These people is huh so ling you what.
Speaker 2 (34:48):
Don't you, sir?
Speaker 1 (34:51):
Normal South Africans, so normal white South Africans is like,
it's not even a it's not even a big deal.
You know how many white South Africa kinds I know that.
Speaker 2 (35:00):
We're like, yeah, we grew up in apartheid. It is trash.
I'm so glad it's over.
Speaker 1 (35:06):
No one's taking your no one's what are they? Luckily
for us, white South Africans think about them the way
we think about ours, where we like, I don't know
what the hell wrong with y'all? That's that's them. But baby,
(35:30):
why sir? You you being? You being played because niggas
do how to play you.
Speaker 2 (35:39):
Now.
Speaker 1 (35:43):
Lastly, the birth rices and right to you process case.
Speaker 2 (35:51):
Next next time.
Speaker 1 (36:30):
This some legal mumbo jumbo, but it's important. Okay, here
we go, the birthright citizenships thing. The courts have already ruled.
Shut the fuck up to Trump, nigga. You can't change, sir.
If you're born here, you can. It's the fourteenth Amendment.
(36:53):
You can't erase it. It's been one hundred and twenty
seven years.
Speaker 2 (36:59):
Shut the fuck up.
Speaker 1 (37:00):
Okay, the creep into a full autocracy, although we smell
like it at least the courts right now.
Speaker 2 (37:11):
Okay, now that's it. But then there's the other part
of this.
Speaker 1 (37:19):
Argument that has to do with what they're called universal injunctions,
as referring to the right to do process. Now also
in that amendment or in the fourth, fifth, and sixth Amendment.
These are things that we've talked about before, which is,
do you got a pulse, are you a homo sapien?
Speaker 2 (37:42):
Are you within our domain? Then you have the right
to do process.
Speaker 1 (37:47):
The law states, even if I'm about to deport you,
I need to tell you of your rights and give
you a chance to get a lawyer. What Trump and
them been doing was just like telling these venezuelans in
England and documents in English with about fifteen minutes to spare,
Oh my bad, you get here's the paperwork. The law says,
you get to have a niggas don't know. You can't
(38:09):
read it, you don't know, you ain't got time. There's
no way to get the lawyer that even if the
lawyer was on call, like I can't get there in
fifteen minutes. So in these cases of these individual cases.
They started suing because they was like, they didn't get
a fair trial. You can't just deport them. First of all,
(38:33):
that niggas a citizen. Number two, that Nigga's on a visa,
you can't just so they started bringing lawsuits, like class
action suits, and in twenty two states, injunctions were put in.
What an injunction says is that you have to stop
doing what you're doing now. A universal injunction says, I
(38:56):
know that we're a state, we're a lower court, but
you can't do this nowhere else. Okay, that's a national
or universal injunction, right.
Speaker 2 (39:06):
Which is one state.
Speaker 1 (39:10):
Saying because of what we ruled, you can't do this
everywhere else. And in some cases there has been arguments
that says, wait, hold on.
Speaker 2 (39:23):
How come you able to do it? How come you
able to say.
Speaker 1 (39:27):
What the rest of the states can do when you
just your own state, you're not the Supreme Court.
Speaker 2 (39:34):
Why do you get to say to do this?
Speaker 1 (39:37):
And this is the argument that John Sowers is bringing
to the Supreme Court. Twenty two states, ninety different cases,
ninety different lawsuits. They've said in the lower courts over
and over, you can't do this this is universal injunction.
Jonathan Sowers John Sowers is arguing at the Supreme Court,
(40:03):
can they do that? How is it will agree? He's like,
will agree in those individual cases that you're right, we
can't deport them, But you don't get to tell me
about somebody else. You're not allowed to rule on a
(40:23):
case that's not in front of you.
Speaker 2 (40:26):
Follow me. This is the legal job.
Speaker 1 (40:28):
These the cases that you're talking about. This case, Yeah,
you're right, I can't. I can't do nothing about Wuan Carlo.
But if Maria Pause come through, Maria Pase, ain't Wan Carlo.
You don't have a right to tell me what to
do with Maria Pause unless Maria Pause brings a case. Right,
So they saying, well, unless the Supreme Court says that
you allowed to do this, which I don't think they will,
(40:50):
and they clearly can't that y'all allowed to do this,
then every person who comes in front of us needs
the lawyer up and have a lawsuit to tell us
whether we can't do this or not. Because the Supreme
Court has not ruled on whether we can legally do
this birthright citizenship thing or deport you without due process.
(41:13):
Supreme Court ain't even said nothing about it, So why
should the States be able to say something about it?
To which you should say, what you mean the Supreme
Court ain't said nothing about it? Well, the Supreme Court
is like, what's already a law? I don't understand why
I need to say anything about it. Well, this law
is being challenged by the president's actions.
Speaker 2 (41:30):
Now.
Speaker 1 (41:31):
The only way for this to get to the Supreme
Court the issue itself. This is what I mean by
off the strength is if a case is brought on
the merits. On the merits just means on the strength
is what you're doing legal. But that's not the case
in front of them in this place. Trump, I understand
(41:51):
what you're doing.
Speaker 2 (41:53):
You're good. You you're good.
Speaker 1 (41:58):
Because this is a technical here is what he's coming
to the Supreme Court saying, and the Supreme Court has
to kind of be like hmm. I've given you many
examples of how the Supreme Court's job is to be
nerds is to be like, well, actually, it's well, what if?
What if? Their job is to what if you to death? Remember,
(42:19):
their cases are not about the case. Their cases are
about do you got the right to bring this case?
Speaker 2 (42:25):
You're following me.
Speaker 1 (42:28):
So Sours's argument is are universal injunctions constitutional? Because it
seems like they're overstating states authorities. Why should one state
be able to dictate what another state says? You shouldn't
be able to do that. They step in on y'all's authority.
(42:51):
Right now, the Supreme Court listens to this thing, and
remember that they want to hear pros and they want
to hear cons and they gonna ask this person questions.
Right here's my favorite. The Supreme Court's response was, Okay,
first of all, before we go any further, we're gonna
(43:13):
judge according to the case that's in front of us.
But I just want to say, off top off, rip
from the jump. You're fucking wrong about birthright citizenship. You're
wrong about due process.
Speaker 2 (43:28):
You are wrong. What you are doing is illegal.
Speaker 1 (43:33):
Now having said that, that's not the case we talk about,
but just no, right, you got other people, You got
other people. It is surprisingly enough some of these people
that are a Trump appointees being like, yo, when can
we talk about the merit, which is what we talk about?
When can we talk about off the strength off the
(43:54):
strength of what you what you trying to? When can
we talk about what you're trying to do you ever
gonna bring that case? They was like, hell, no, why
would I bring that case? You know why they wouldn't
bring that case because they lose it. You just you
just told me I'm gonna lose that case. Why would
I bring that case? And you just told me I'm
(44:15):
gonna lose it? Aby Cody Barrett was like, Hey, so
whatever we rule, are you gonna follow our You're gonna
follow our rulings.
Speaker 2 (44:35):
The Trump sour saying, maybe, nigg can you.
Speaker 1 (44:40):
Imagine your child look at you in the face and
being like, well, if I like what you said, I'll
follow it.
Speaker 2 (44:47):
Nigga. Maybe, man, what they I mean, we'll see.
Speaker 1 (44:56):
It depends on what you say.
Speaker 2 (45:04):
It depends on what you say. Is bow, what did
you do it?
Speaker 1 (45:14):
So he's trying to argue that until the Supreme Court
says what we're doing is wrong, every individual case needs.
Speaker 2 (45:25):
To come to us and argue on the merit of
its own case right now.
Speaker 1 (45:31):
The problem is the Supreme Court has thought often about
these universal injunctions. Should should one state be able to
just should should it? I don't know, but either way
he is a Trump team stepping back and saying well, listen, man,
(45:51):
I'm the president. If I say this is what I'm doing, nigga,
you're a state, Like, why should y'all Why should y'all
be able to understand? Are they able to stop me
to do this?
Speaker 2 (46:02):
One monkey? Don't stop, no show. So then one of
this one of the one of the.
Speaker 1 (46:06):
Justices gave an example of like, okay, so let's just
say a president, after you decides I'm gona take away
y'alls guns, and then a state jumps up and says, my, nigga,
you can't just take away our guns. I'm gonna stop
this with a universal injunction until it gets to the
Supreme Court, We're gonna stop this. So, according to your argument,
(46:29):
you saying that every single American who had their guns
taken needs to have a lawsuit against you against that
other president. According to your logic, because you're saying if
we in universal injunctions, then that means that every everybody
look goes around, comes around because everything you do, they bus,
(46:51):
we bust all the stuff that you want to do,
all the things that you're making legal for you. You
ain't gonna be the president forever, my nigga, maybe maybe
until you die. Because guys like I said, he gonna
have a third term unless it does. But that's the
world you imagine it. You trying to get freedoms for yourselves.
(47:12):
You're trying to pass some stuff for yourself. You remember,
you don't live forever. You changing laws right now, you're
breaking stuff that when that tool is in somebody else's hand,
My nigga, like, you're gonna have some serious problems. You
have to remember you an elected branch. We here we tenured, bro.
(47:34):
We gotta look at the whole picture. We gotta look
at when you leave. Okay, now, according to your argument,
you done said you you immune, You done said you
don't like staate injunctions.
Speaker 2 (47:53):
Oh you've gotta remember. Okay, what if it wasn't you
in there? So you could see on.
Speaker 1 (48:01):
Two things happening in the Supreme Court, you could see
like who knows what they're gonna say, but you can
see two things happening here. Part of it is that
thing where it's like the worst guy you know makes
a good point, and that's about universal injunctions to where
it's like he's got a fucking point. There is there
is something to this, but maybe that needs to be
(48:25):
judged individually. But I just need you to know off
the strength of your argument. If we're gonna talk about
just the strength of what you're trying to do. The
answer already no, So Trump ain't stupid?
Speaker 2 (48:43):
Why would I?
Speaker 1 (48:44):
Well, then why would I bring this to you? If
I already know you're gonna tell me no, I'm gonna
figure out a way to get what I won't while
sidestepping this because it's not like he's gonna listen to
the courts anyway. But I don't think he won't the headache,
you know what I'm saying? Well, baby, what is you doing?
(49:05):
Because sir, you unleashing a cracking.
Speaker 2 (49:12):
I don't know. I'm just wrapping for me.
Speaker 1 (49:16):
Still a hood politics, y'all. Y'all, All right now, don't
you hit stop on this pod. You better listen to
these credits. I need you to finish this thing so
(49:37):
I can get.
Speaker 2 (49:38):
The download numbers. Okay, so don't stop it yet, but listen.
Speaker 1 (49:43):
This was recorded in East Lost Boyle Heights by your
boy Propaganda. Tap in with me at prop hip hop
dot com. If you're in the Coldbrew coffee we got
terraform Coldbrew you can go there dot com. And use
promo code hood get twenty percent off get you Coffee.
This was mixed, edited, and mastered by your boy Matt
(50:05):
Alsowski Killing the Beat Softly. Check out his website Matdowsowski
dot com.
Speaker 2 (50:09):
I'm a speller for you because I know M.
Speaker 1 (50:13):
A T T O S O W s ki dot
com Matthowsowski dot com. He got more music and stuff
like that on there, so gonna check out. The heat
Politics is a member of cool Zone Media, executive produced
by Sophie Lichterman, part of the iHeartMedia podcast network. Your
(50:33):
theme music and scoring is also by the one and
overly Mattowsowski. Still killing the beat softly, So listen, don't
let nobody lie to you. If you understand urban living,
you understand politics.
Speaker 2 (50:44):
These people is not smarter than you. We'll see y'all
next week.