Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
At the time of this report, it is seven fifty
three a m Shannon Sharper's trend and number one on
Google Trend's World. Why you know, because he had them accusations.
And I don't think Uncle Shannon is gay, you know
what I mean? But I I know he wanted to
get that monkey off his back, and I think he
put that on himself. I'm extremely embarrassed that a very
(00:23):
very private, intimate situation. The audio couldn't be heard, and
I'm extremely I'm extremely disappointed in myself. So afterwards he
was bragging about it. Yeah, that was crazy, O Joe.
I was paying that up. Oh Joe, your lord, that guy, Ojo, Yes, sir,
real talk. They put the ad they called these draw
(00:45):
for the Hall of Fame. These draws going to the
Hall of Fame. You know when you have an outstird
of performer. They walked to Jersey, the cleet, the club, Oh,
the drawl going to the Hall of Fame. Yo, real dog. Yeah.
Speaker 2 (00:57):
And they fired Paul Pierce for just having girls in.
Speaker 1 (01:00):
That's what I'm saying.
Speaker 3 (01:01):
And do you practice, Polly, you're interested in probably.
Speaker 1 (01:17):
Going to have two whiles?
Speaker 2 (01:18):
Okay, So they so I'm seeing for the next two times.
You know, for next two times old rapper. Yeah, oh,
for next two times doing some kind of polly you
know what I'm together, Yeah, it's I'm women want to
live together.
Speaker 1 (01:33):
Me personally, I think every black woman needs they own queen.
You know I did like a couple of girl friends.
Speaker 4 (01:39):
Yeah, see now, but see now I'm back into.
Speaker 1 (01:42):
So you got two and they both know about each other,
they both together right now? Then I'm okay with that.
But we gonna have to do some kind of lesbian
checked to make sure this ain't no freak off when
I'm not home. You know what I'm saying. But I
think I better not catch no baby or your open
(02:06):
when I get on. Okay, I don't currently have two women.
I'm gonna have.
Speaker 2 (02:12):
How do you go from not having two women to
having two wives?
Speaker 1 (02:17):
Because you see, me and my wife won't have a
contract because I'm telling her right now. You got one
time to come in here with a Lucy goosey. What's
a Lucy goosey. You know where Lucy goofy is. Come
in here with a pop rubber man. If you want
coming here with some.
Speaker 5 (02:35):
Sex scrumbs, you got one time coming head smelling like
a condom and its marges.
Speaker 1 (02:49):
Okay, Now I think he's regained himself. You know, he
did his little freak thing with the with the that
was a publicity stun You think I believe it was.
I'm leave it was, you know, because he had them accusations.
And I don't think Uncle Shannon is gay, you know
what I mean? But I know he wanted to get
that monkey off his back, and I think he put
that on himself. I think you because when he spoke
(03:11):
to o Cho Sinko afterwards, he was bragging about it. Yeah,
that was crazy. I was saying that up all that guy.
Speaker 2 (03:19):
Yeah, and they fired Paul Pierce for just having girls
in That's what I'm saying, and they did nothing. I
know that he probably had some clearance to do that.
I get that off man.
Speaker 1 (03:28):
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. I mean that don't technically clear
you because you can be by as many of them are.
But I think he Okay, I wouldn't put that on
Uncle Shannon Cooonish absolutely, Uh, Rainbow Ganger, I ain't gonna
put that on.
Speaker 2 (03:41):
I was watching the stream with Aiden Ross and Andrew Tate.
Speaker 3 (03:45):
You familiar with Andrew.
Speaker 1 (03:46):
You're saying Andrew.
Speaker 4 (03:47):
Tate said something I want you to respond to it.
Speaker 2 (03:49):
He said that if there was an all white town
in an all black town. No ill asked you, if
there was an all white town in all black town,
who would want to integrate first?
Speaker 1 (04:00):
The black people will want to That's what he said,
because we are so thirsty for Caucasian validation.
Speaker 2 (04:08):
But he didn't say it for that. He said it
because and I want you to respond to that.
Speaker 1 (04:12):
He said it.
Speaker 2 (04:13):
Because he felt like that the all white town would
be better, like have better gas stations, not based on
current just that in my opinion.
Speaker 1 (04:24):
It was yes, because the white folks have access the
greater capital. But if the black people have equal access
to capital, and we are beyond our self hating tendencies,
I think the white people will want to integrate first,
because if they understand anything about the histories of Black
(04:47):
Wall Street, our independent communities did far better than their
They used to come and learn from us, They used
to come and get loans from us. And when you
look at the inventions of this country, look at all
the shit black people invent. It. Give black people the
wealth and let us do us with the free mind.
Can't nobody touch us?
Speaker 2 (05:06):
On that, and so he was speaking about on an
even playing field. So he was saying, without all the
constructs in place, just if we segregated and there was
a black town and a white town, who would want
to integrate first?
Speaker 1 (05:19):
I'll act it like this. Whose culture is more exploitable
and marketable on a global scale? White culture or black culture?
Hands above? The rest is Black culture. What do we
take from them culture wise? Exactly? Very little? What does
(05:39):
the world take from them culture wise? Right? Very little?
European culture in many respects, not completely because I don't
want to be disrespectful, but in many respects it is
a parasitic culture. They got where they got bought exploitation, murder,
and theft. There is no America, there is no British empire,
(06:00):
there is no French empire, there is no Belgian empire
without exploitation, murder and theft. The modern world that the
white man presently controls, although the Chinese are about to
take it over, was built on blood, exploitation and theft.
That is a fact.
Speaker 3 (06:19):
Sure, yeah, That's what I'm saying.
Speaker 4 (06:20):
And then and they always come to get stuff from.
Speaker 1 (06:23):
Us, like we invented the technology that allows cell phones
to be used. We invented the technology that allows the
Internet to be used. We invented the technology that allows
these lights to be on right now. That was Lewis
Latimer who did that. When you look at the most
important inventions in world history, we easily got fifty percent
(06:45):
of easily got fifty percent of, Bro, you ain't getting
there without us.
Speaker 4 (06:49):
Right, That's what I didn't get that, and I wanted someone.
Speaker 1 (06:51):
And that's another reason why I want a moratorium on
sports in the black community, because our boys are so
narrow minded in their pursuit of athletics that they're not
even tapping into the scientific genius. They're not even tapping
into their medical genius. They're not even tapping into their
engineering genius. Imagine how much further we would be if
(07:15):
we just gave athletics a break. Think about that.
Speaker 2 (07:19):
You don't think that, bro, oh man, I don't think
everybody can be a gene You got have you think.
Speaker 1 (07:26):
Everybody can be a genius? You don't have to be
a genius. Do you know? Most medical doctors graduated at
the middle of their class. They didn't become medical doctors
because they were geniuses. They became medical doctors because the
word are committed to achieving. It's achievement. They were hard workers.
I wasn't a genius. I got recommended for mental giftedness.
I failed it. I'll pass it now because I know
(07:48):
all the answers. I get a damn test, right, but
I failed it. You understand I was a hard worker.
My best friend, Mark Recipiece, he died last year. He
was true MG. MG had come to him like this.
We had the same grades. But for him it was easy.
I had to work a little hard. There is a
such thing, and I want my parents to hear A
hard working child, an overachieving child is not necessarily a
(08:13):
gifted child. But that's not a problem because most people
who are successful in this world were not successful because
they were gifted. They were successful because they had the
discipline to achieve their goals. Discipline is twenty times more
important than giftedness.
Speaker 2 (08:29):
Yes, yes, do you think there'll be a civil war
if Trump isn't re elected?
Speaker 1 (08:36):
I believe, and I'm glad you brought this up November fifth.
I don't care where y'all at, but you better be
in a damn house or around black people. If Donald
Trump loses. I think there's going to be white violence
against blacks. If Donald Trump wins, I think there's going
to be white violence against blacks. It's either going to
(08:56):
be either way. Either way, it's either going to be
a victory celebrate of violence or it's going to be
a defeat celebration of violence. So there's going to be
violence against black people or loses either way. November fifth,
I wouldn't be caught around white folks when the election
results are at I truly believe that. I absolutely believe it.
Speaker 3 (09:17):
Even if you win, I see losing. I see that it.
Speaker 4 (09:20):
You know I give winning win.
Speaker 1 (09:25):
You see how the rednecks been beaten up black Trump
supporters at Trump rallies. Somebody just sent me a bro.
They're beating up black people who support Trump at the
Trump rallies. Bro. And one thing. There's a million reasons
why I'm not going to vote for either one of them.
But an additional reason why I will not be voting
(09:47):
for Donald Trump. I do not like the way that
he's weaponizing stereotypes against our Congo Lese immigrant brothers and sisters,
and our Haitian immigrant brothers and sisters. He's inviting violence
against them.
Speaker 4 (09:58):
You talking about they're eating the the dog, the dogs.
Speaker 1 (10:01):
But let me take it. Let me tell how slicky
is though. Let me tell you how slicky is. Why
did he say the same thing about the Latino migrants.
Why did he say the same thing about the Venezuelans
and the rest of them? Why he only picking on
the black ones? You know why? Because he wants an
open relationship with those countries. And he also knows that
whether he closes the borders or not, American industries will
(10:23):
take their companies elsewhere. If Donald Trump don't, can migrants
sneak across the border? You know why, because if they
are not allowed to pay them under the table, they
will go to Cambodia and Vietnam and get kids who
can work for a dollar a day. Listen to what
I'm saying. It don't matter who becomes president, the migrant
crisis will not stop because it's the only thing keeping
(10:47):
big business in this country. That's why he attacked the
Congolese in the Haitian and won't say a damn thing
about the Mexicans and the Venezuelans because he know he
ain't gonna stop them from coming over here. Do you
think they can run? It's way even more migrants of
Latino origins than Congolese and Haitians, who the two blackest immigrants,
(11:07):
Conglese and Haitians. There's way more than browns than these blacks.
While you picking on a few blacks, y'all, don't let
Congolese in here like that because you know you can't
attack them, because you have no you have no interest
in stopping the migrant invasion of America. Brothers and sisters,
we are being replaced, and if we don't come together
and create a world of our own, we will be
(11:29):
done with in this country within the next ten years.
They will not even mention black people's issues. And that's
one of the reasons they're calling us people of color.
And stop calling yourself a person of color. By calling
yourself a person of color, you're allowing them to kill
the black agenda. You're allowing them to push you into
solidarity with other groups who hate you as much as
white people do. And then the same people you identifying
(11:51):
with people of color, they're gonna use them to silence you.
What do I mean by that? Right now, they're holding
surveys of people of color, A raps, East Indians, Latinos, Asians,
and they're asking and what they think about reparations for blacks.
And guess what. Overwhelmingly these other non white, non black
(12:12):
groups are saying they don't think reparations is necessary. They
think America has moved beyond race. These are the same
people you identify with every time you call yourself a
person of color. And guess what they are overwhelmingly against
your reparations. If you keep calling yourself a person of color,
they're going to be able to vote in issues that
matter to you. Stop it, we better go back to
(12:33):
Black American African Be careful with that people of color.
You're putting yourself in a corner that you will not
be able to get out of. And if you identify
comfortably as a person of color, why does it their
opinion matter about black people since all of you are
a single group people of color? Stop it? Do you
think that?
Speaker 2 (12:56):
Do you think it was true they're eating the dogs true?
Speaker 4 (13:01):
Do you think they can reverse engineer that?
Speaker 1 (13:03):
What you mean over there? Let me tell you what
I do hope. First of all, conglese are the oldest
people on the planet. When you meet a conglese, you're
looking at the descendant of the original man and woman.
They are the spiritually strongest people. Okay, the Haitians, they're
the most revolutionary spiritual people. Imagine, remember what they did.
(13:27):
They defeated thea Polian bonapart as a slave army, defeated
the white man's day. So when you pick with them
two groups, you messing with God's children. Listen, I practice
E five. I don't practice Haitian voodoom. But to all
my Haitian voodoom brothers and sisters, I want you to
unleash the biggest curses on these crackers that you can
(13:50):
measure up by conglese. Brothers and sisters, I want you
to unleash the biggest curses on these crackers that you
can make them pay for all that they said about you.
Unleash them. So, so what did he get this? Shit?
Put the hecks on autumn deal.
Speaker 3 (14:03):
Well, what do you think Trump got this?
Speaker 4 (14:04):
They're eating the dogs.
Speaker 1 (14:05):
They made it up. He wanted to weaponize, made it up.
Oh stereotypes, they said we used to eat animals and
stuff like that. He made it up to weaponize white folks.
Racism gets you voted in office. Racism wins votes. Why
do you think Hillary Clinton called us super predators. Why
did George Bush call out women welfare queens? Racism gets
(14:27):
you vote because white people are racist, all of them.
Racism gets you voting. Donald Trump his energized in that base.
Don't pull white people to make sure they come out
and vote for See. The reason the Democrats want with
Kamala Harris is because in the last election, ten million
more women were registered to vote than men, ten million
(14:48):
more women across race, ten million more women were registered
to vote than men in the last election. So you
see what they're gambling on. They said, even though she's
an East Indian right artificial black woman, We're going to
gamble that Kamala Harris can bring us more women votes
than Trump. There's more women in America than men. If
(15:10):
Kamala can decisively bring to the Democrats more female voters
than men, she'd win. That's what they gambling on. But
here's my thing. I'm not too sure white women want
the brown woman over the white man. Are y'all following me?
I think they talk that femin this crap, But when
they go into that election, boo, because nobody knows who
(15:32):
you're voted for, it's completely secret. Then white women gonna
pull that thing for Trump. They're not going for Kamalaras.
Speaker 2 (15:38):
Do you so, what is the motivation behind.
Speaker 1 (15:42):
The victory violence? Because white people have always celebrated through
abusing blacks. Do you realize that our pain is their
original pastime. Yeah, they would go out and randomly get
a black person and hang them and skin them and
burn them and make their kids watch them. Violence against
(16:05):
black people is the original amusement. It's the original sport.
It's the original pastime of America. And then they would
skin us, and they would make purses out of our skin.
They would make shoes out of our skin. They would
make Bible. Y'all don't know that even after you died,
(16:25):
you were still valuable. They said that black people's skin
was a better leather than any animal they could find.
And that's why when you go into some of these
antique shops in Tennessee, look at some of the leather.
You see that might be one of your ancestors' skin.
Speaker 2 (16:43):
Goodness, Yes, that's heavy man, Yes, heinous, pinousity, humane, yes.
Speaker 1 (16:52):
And this is whose ancestors you won in your child's DNA.
When you lay down and make babies with them.
Speaker 2 (17:00):
Do you think that and we're about almost done, so
we'll fit the close.
Speaker 1 (17:04):
Out in just a second, and there were done.
Speaker 2 (17:07):
Whoever won a photo weeken, Yes, for sure, child support.
Speaker 1 (17:12):
It needs to be overhauled. Child support needs to be overhauled. Now.
Don't get me wrong, it costs money to raise a child.
I didn't say it should be eliminated. It need to
be overhauled. I am of the opinion that child support
should go on a card the same way welfare payments
go on the card, and you could only use them
(17:33):
for certain things. I see too many women using child
support to take care of themselves and not the child.
Something needs to be done about that. There also need
to be some limits and polls, because, especially with these celebrities,
I'm seeing men pay out too much money. Kanye West
has the highest child support in American history. I think
it's a quarter million dollars a month. Okay, and to
his credit, he ain't complained because he's a billionaire can
(17:55):
afford that. But something got to be done. And I
think a big reason why black men are not committing
to our women. One of the big reasons why we
don't see more marriage is black men are afraid of
what will happen if this relationship goes south. Alimony push
child support. That can destroy your black man. Even if
you middle class, you've got a good income, that can
break you down. So if we want to heal the
(18:17):
black family, were going to have to heal that child
support system as well. You have you ever been on
child support? I'm on child support now for my thirteen
year old, child support for my twenty two year old.
Uh see.
Speaker 4 (18:28):
And that's where it's coming from.
Speaker 1 (18:31):
Remember I didn't say it should be done away with.
You follow me. They need money. I was put on
child support because I didn't marry the mothers of my children.
They both wanted to get married, and what I said
was I didn't dismiss it because I would love to
be married to the mother of my child. But your
pregnancy is not going to dictate family. What we're going
to do is, let's continue to date and explore this.
(18:54):
If they would have been patient, they would have been
married in twelve months. Because I am that type of man,
I couldn't let them know that. But they were so
arrogant in feeling like I was obligated to wipe them
up that they showed me their true colors too. Soon.
And I saw the type of woman I was dealing with.
Not to say there's anything wrong with her, but I
saw how they were with me, and I said, she ain't.
Speaker 3 (19:15):
The one who can walk You having any more children?
Speaker 1 (19:18):
Will I have any more children? I would love to
have a son, but there's no way to guarantee a son,
you know what I mean. But you could go through
all that a little doing, none of that in vitro type,
you know, but a surrogate. Now. I would like to
have a son, but because you can't guarantee it, I
might pass it up, but it's not out the question.
I think that'll be interesting.
Speaker 4 (19:37):
A small doctor, Umar, that'll be very interesting.
Speaker 5 (19:41):
You a teacher, We're gonna come out of his mother
Black Queen Faber.
Speaker 3 (19:46):
Nobody are you?
Speaker 1 (19:49):
Do?
Speaker 3 (19:49):
You practice?
Speaker 1 (19:50):
Polly?
Speaker 3 (19:50):
You're interested in going to have two wives?
Speaker 1 (19:53):
I don't currently have two women I'm going to have.
Speaker 2 (19:55):
How do you go from not having two women to
having two wives?
Speaker 1 (19:59):
I don't think it'd be that difficult. I think most
men in our lives, we've often dated more than one
woman at a time. It ain't enough of us to
go around, you know. It's something we do.
Speaker 2 (20:08):
Very few men they separately though we're talking about Polly.
Speaker 1 (20:13):
Ain't this poly don't mean they live in the same how, Okay?
Speaker 2 (20:15):
Okay, So so I'm seeing for the next two times,
you know, for next two times old rapper.
Speaker 1 (20:20):
Yeah, oh, for.
Speaker 4 (20:21):
Next two times doing some kind of Polly.
Speaker 1 (20:23):
You know together. Some women want to live together. Me personally,
I think every black woman needs they on queen them.
I do. I don't want to live togeinst boss talk.
Yeah yeah, my wife said we want to live together.
Then I'm okay with that. But we're gonna have to
do some kind of lesbian checked to make sure this
ain't no freak off when I'm not home, you know
what I'm saying. But I think I better not catch
(20:53):
no baby or you'll open when I get off. But
I think they're gonna be in two separate homes though,
you know what I mean, because I got to.
Speaker 3 (21:01):
How you gonna run two homes at you?
Speaker 1 (21:02):
Like? Well, remember now, my wives are activist wives, like
I need you to understand that they're more helpmates than wives.
So soon because let me tell you why. I'm gonna
tell you why why does the pastor always end up
sleeping with the help Because in many respects. She became
(21:24):
a wife by doing so much for him and holding
him down so much, she earned the intimacy. Are y'all
following me? Any man who works that closely with an
unmarried woman, if she's doing that kind of work, sooner
or later, they're going to cross that line. That's human nature.
I'm not even gonna play with it, you understand, because
(21:46):
my two main assistants will be the wives. So I
ain't even got to go through all that. Because here's
my thing. I value marriage so much that I do
not plan to cheat when I do it. You see
what I'm saying. I'm not cheating.
Speaker 2 (21:58):
I'm not doing so you think some people planning shed
I get married, but I'm still gonna do.
Speaker 1 (22:02):
But most men married because they want to shut the
woman up. But he don't plan to curb his sexual appetite.
See how quiet, isn't it? And marriage does not cure promisecurity.
It slows it down for a year and back out
(22:22):
there Thurston and the women do for that matter. Because
I'm gonna tell you something to being a school psychologist
working in the schools with the teachers, I think one
of the reasons why I didn't get married so fast
is the amount of married women who openly pursued me,
and some of them were just married this year. I'm like,
(22:43):
you are a newly waing and you trying to give
me the sin of buns already? You feel me like, Yo,
you got to know who you marrying out here, brother,
because I'm like, there's a man somewhere who loves this woman.
Is she all in the school psychologist's face? Yeah?
Speaker 4 (23:03):
Man?
Speaker 1 (23:04):
Yeah? Would you could you see yoursel mary for security,
not for monogamy? Yeah?
Speaker 2 (23:10):
Yes, And a woman has told me that. Yeah, yeah,
a woman has told me told me that for security.
Speaker 1 (23:18):
Yeah, but with polly like because you see, me and
my wife won't have a contract because I'm telling her
right now. You got one time to come in here
with a lucy goosey. What's a lucy goosey? You know
where the lucy goofy is. Come in here with a
pop rubber band if you want.
Speaker 5 (23:38):
Coming here with some sex crumbs in you got, what's up?
Come ahead, smelling like on condom marriage?
Speaker 1 (23:49):
Now?
Speaker 4 (23:49):
Would you would if Shoki wanted to be with you?
Speaker 1 (23:52):
Would you entertain that? I would entertain it because I
believe in the redemption of the spirit.
Speaker 4 (23:56):
When I seen you kiss her, I say, he.
Speaker 1 (23:58):
Likes I kissed him the cheek, Dough.
Speaker 2 (24:00):
She's beautiful, don't nobody is beautiful but the lips they
used on everybody. Doc, You ain't gonna give me that.
You ain't just kissing every woman.
Speaker 1 (24:08):
You see on the cheek. I kiss all the queens
on the cheek. That ain't true.
Speaker 3 (24:11):
I've been around you for how since eighteen?
Speaker 2 (24:15):
Since eighteen, Doc, Sugie was looking extra good.
Speaker 1 (24:18):
That's what I'll tell you. And so I'm and I'm
thinking extra good in Miami?
Speaker 4 (24:21):
Did she what do you think that she's like?
Speaker 1 (24:26):
I guess that's personal. I'll leave that out.
Speaker 2 (24:28):
You know what I'm saying, because it feels like something's
there with y'all, and it doesn't feel like you're scared
to I respect the fact she respects me so much.
Speaker 1 (24:38):
Yeah, that she don't want to waste my time unless
she ready.
Speaker 4 (24:42):
I think the poly thing is interesting. You like thick women, right?
Speaker 3 (24:48):
What's up with the sexual appetite?
Speaker 1 (24:50):
And you got a sexual appetite too, though. I just
like my woman, Kurby Ah, that just like me, Kurty.
Speaker 4 (25:00):
I Woo five five.
Speaker 1 (25:03):
Butter prown sugar chocolate, walnut, almond butter.
Speaker 3 (25:07):
Scott fud Man, what so what what what's your?
Speaker 1 (25:11):
Nina Glatta African lemonade?
Speaker 2 (25:14):
What African woman? He said, African lemonade. I ain't never
heard of that one.
Speaker 3 (25:20):
What's your what's your next?
Speaker 4 (25:21):
Couple of what's your?
Speaker 3 (25:22):
What's next?
Speaker 1 (25:23):
For umar? Uh? The school obviously, but in terms of stops,
you know Dallas Howard University students. They're putting on a
comedy show in Arlington to kick off the homecoming weekend.
That's gonna be on the sixteenth. Then I'm off the
London come back from London. We have our Gnat Turner
of November eleventh NAT Turner Martyrdom celebration. But that turner
(25:44):
was hanged November the eleven, so every November the eleventh
we honor him in the NAT Turner Army. If any
of you have never been to the NAT Turner Trail
to experience that tour, consider coming with us. Nat Turnerlibrary
dot com is the website. Fly into Richmond, Virginia, Newport News,
Virginia or Norfolk. Those are the three closest airports. They're
(26:05):
all an hour away from the not turn of Land
and it's a great time. And then after that, shure,
it's almost time for the Quansa tour. I don't know
who where I'm gonna go this year for Kwansa, probably Atlanta,
probably Houston, probably Memphis or Nashville. But I'm gonna make
a couple of stops.
Speaker 2 (26:21):
Yeah, because we couldn't move this to November to give
them in more time. He was like, man, I want
to try to keep it in October. So we had
about eight nine days and I just made it.
Speaker 1 (26:30):
But I'm on my victory lap, God willing, because once
the school opened, I ain't gonna be able to travel. You
know what I'm saying, I'm gonna have to come to me.
I've been coming to y'all. Y'all gonna have to come
to the school, and y'all gonna love it because we're
gonna have so much going on, so many activities, so
many programs. You know, we will have a day where
we just pamper the sisters, the brothers. We do they
feet and give them massages and feed them and it's
just gonna be heaven on earth. That's what I'm calling FTMG,
(26:53):
because although it's a school by day, it's gonna be
a Community Healing Center by night, right, and we're gonna
do everything so some of y'all, y'all gonna be up
there all the time. Find out the quickest way to
fly to Philly. Philadelphia is twenty minutes from the front
door of our school. Delaware is Philly's backyard. So y'all
need to get on the airline. See if there's any
flights that go straight. I'm pretty sure American goes straight
(27:14):
to Philly because y'all gonna be spending a lot of
time up there. Some of y'all might even want to
buy a little investment property up there, And if you
do decide to do that, make sure you go to
Wilmington Landbank dot gov. That's the site where you can
get all the cheap properties. Some of y'all know how
to fix up properties. Wilmington Landbank dot gov. A lot
of people that already moved up there. I'm meeting people
(27:35):
every day dot We here now with the kids waiting,
you know what I mean. So I gotta open this
licause it families, that's what they won't it. They definitely want.
I think we're going to be the next Black Wall Street.
I think Wimen's gonna en up beating. I think I'm
gonna attract so much energy. It's already predominantly black city
that I think we're gonna end up Wilmington, Delaware gonna
be the next Black Wall Street.
Speaker 2 (27:54):
What made you consider doing a twenty verse one the
twenty versus one?
Speaker 1 (27:58):
First of all, I never even heard of it until
a brother texts me said, but you can consider doing
the twenty verse one, So I posted it. I always
ask my supporters because they know more than me. This
somebody else invited me. This is somebody else invited. So I said,
if I'm gonna do this twenty versus one, I might
just do it my damnself. Get twenty Curvey queens right,
and just do the twenty verses one. I might do
it if they pay me right, because I know that's
(28:19):
gonna get bookoo views, you feel me. So they're gonna
have to come with some real money for me to
do that. But I think I'm just gonna do it
myself because I know what I like. You know what
I'm saying, natural hair, I'm gonna do it. I'm gonna
do it my way. Oh yeah, you know what I mean,
because man Drewski did it his way, you know what
I mean. But I'm gonna do all natural queens and
everything like that, and I'm gonna do it classy. It
ain't gonna be no hood there, right, It's gonna be classy.
But ladies, if you haven't heard, I do have my
(28:40):
own podcasts coming out. Reality show. It's gonna be called
a Date with a Doctor, And what we're gonna be
doing is exposing black female entrepreneurs. But the setup is
a date. So you're gonna come in, we're gonna have dinner.
We're gonna expose a black chef, male or female, right,
put their business out there. They cooked, we're gonna eat,
(29:01):
and we're gonna talk. We just having a conversation about life, love, politics, relationships,
and then we're gonna do one slow drag, especially if
you curve that right, and then we're gonna go for
a walk, and that's going to be the end. And
we're probably gonna do about two of them a month.
It's going to be a website, an email. So if
you got to own your own business, I don't care
what it is. I don't care if you sell cupcakes
(29:21):
on the side. You just have to have a business.
Because we want to promote you, right, this is all
about showing love to our sisters. You got to be
an entrepreneur. You gotta have natural hair. I cannot you
cannot have a date with me if you're hearing natural.
So maybe you got to get an afro wig. Do
what you gotta do, right, and you cannot be a
bunny hopper. Okay. And if you are a chef and
(29:45):
you say dot, I don't want the date, but I
do want to be one of the chefs for the date,
we can help you get your get your chef business
out there too, so you can do it either side.
And brothers, you can also be a chef too, you
know what I mean. So all that information gonna be
coming soon. I'm looking you're gonna have to come to
meet up. Most of the date with the doctors will
be held in the Philadelphia, Delaware, southern New Jersey, northern
(30:08):
Maryland area. Basically, just find the flying to Philly and
we're going to do them there. We will do some traveling,
but most of them are going to be local because
I'm gonna be by the school. But I'm really looking
to expose natural black women. That's the other thing you
gotta be all natural from head to toe, your eyelashes,
your ass, your breasts, everything gotta be is not natural.
(30:30):
I don't know about that no more, because the last
time I saw her, it looked like she undid some things. No, no, no,
did some things.
Speaker 3 (30:40):
As long as they unknew it they did for you.
Speaker 1 (30:42):
It's school nonew that she was money organic? I think. No,
what's the sister who took out? What's the light skinned
black china? Black china? You feel me? She took out
all that, You know what I mean?
Speaker 4 (30:55):
So you cool with this is a good conversation.
Speaker 2 (30:57):
You cool with get having it done, But just revert back, baby,
And I except I believe in redemption.
Speaker 1 (31:03):
If you I believe it, I can deal with you. Yeah. Yeah,
date with a doctor you got to be.
Speaker 3 (31:10):
It's gonna be dope.
Speaker 1 (31:11):
Man. You got a network for that. You're looking for
a network. I'm still exploring. I just want to get
that first one taped right. It's a real simple thing,
but it's powerful because I want to talk to All
we see from black women on mainstream media is sex, materialism, ratchetness.
I want to give them the other side of black women, calm, cool,
(31:34):
professional collective who got more to talk about than fingernails
in here, y'all feel me all natural black body, natural
black hair having a decent conversation across the table from
their brother.
Speaker 2 (31:46):
Yeah, that's gonna be a dope experience. Man, It's gonna
be definitely dope.
Speaker 1 (31:50):
You know. Like I say, I appreciate you if you
need me to come in and do a motivational word
for the women or the men, or the elders or whoever.
You know, I don't charge for that kind of stuff.
Text me for the So you go.
Speaker 4 (32:00):
You about to shut down all these YouTube dudes.
Speaker 1 (32:03):
Honestly, I don't care about them, like I really like
when you focused on your mission. You don't care about
that stuff. Let them do whatever they're going to do,
you know what I mean.
Speaker 2 (32:12):
So you don't feel do you get asked about it
by your real fans and stuff?
Speaker 1 (32:16):
Don't do they be? Like the most frequently asked question
for doctor Umar, they asked me it's the other way
the other day in Toronto, Canada. How do you keep
going given the state of mind all of our people
are in, and how do you keep going giving the
amount of detraction you get from your work from the
(32:36):
uto being struggle streamers. Three things. Number One, I was
born to do what I'm doing. I don't think it's
an accident. Number Two, I have a relationship with the
Creator that I like to cultivate every day. I need
to get better with it, need to be more consistent
with my spirituality. All of y'all do, Okay, all of
us do. So. I'm living my life. I'm living my mission.
(32:58):
I'm living my purpose. When you know why, you can
put up with almost any What did y'all hear what
I just said. When you know why you are here,
you can put up with almost anyone. Ninety five percent
of all suicide of victims never found they purpose. If
they did whatever caused them to take their life, they
would have got through it. Purpose is king. Knowing why
(33:21):
you live will get you through anything. Purpose a relationship
with God. And number three, I know I make a difference,
man Like. The one thing that has kept me is
when you get an elder, send you a text message
like seventy or eighty and be like, hey, I almost
gave up on black people until I found you. I
(33:44):
had an elder. He texted me, y'all, he said, you
the only reason I haven't given up on black people.
He said, if you are a fin fraud, I swear
I'm done with us. That's what he said, you know
what I mean. Or you get somebody run up to
you and say you're the reason ye sun ate in jail.
I've had couples come up, You're the reason we didn't
get a divorce, like some of the stuff people have
(34:06):
told me, Like are they really talking about me? I
had a couple come up, we named our son after you.
I had a brother text me today he got my
face tattooed on his leg, you know what I mean.
So the way I touch people, it's hard for me
to believe that there isn't a calling on my life.
Speaker 2 (34:26):
Right and you knee deep man, you've been doing this
stuff whole life.
Speaker 4 (34:29):
Yeah, that's what I'm saying.
Speaker 1 (34:31):
Who are you outside of this same person? It's no difference.
Speaker 2 (34:35):
If you had to stop this today for like health reasons,
would you be a psych collegist?
Speaker 1 (34:40):
I was. I would still be helping people. My mother.
Thank God for my mom. She raised us to be givers.
We would never take hers, you know what I mean.
We were always givers. So that's gonna be with me.
I've been that way my whole life.
Speaker 2 (34:52):
But you know how like athletes have trouble walking away
from the game, like you know, their identity is kind
of rapping.
Speaker 1 (34:58):
Though Frederick Douglass died with his Marcus Garvey died with
is who didn't. All of our leaders died with their
shoes on, you know what I mean? Before they time,
many of them, but they all died on with their
shoes on. I'm doing the same thing. I'm doing this
till the ancestors called me back, and when I come
back in the next life, I do it again. That's
why you got to finish good, y'all, because you're coming back.
(35:18):
Most of us don't achieve God consciousness in one lifetime
eighty to one hundred years. You're going to be back.
So make sure you leave good, because they say that
the way in which you left this life sets up
how you come back in the next. And some of
y'all won't be back for a century, some of y'all
won't be back for two centuries. For some of y'all
coming back the next week after you die. And some
(35:40):
African coaches they believe that when you are near your
last your soul can actually incarnate in a newborn so
you can literally go into your new body before you leave.
If that's how quick you're supposed to come back. Wow.
See the Christians you know, and I love my Christian
brothers and sisters. They say, only through belief in Jesus
you have eternal life. Uh uh, you had eternal life
(36:03):
when God sent you here. You're either gonna keep coming
back eternally to you fulfill your purpose, or you will
achieve it and be merged with God forever. But eternal
life is your birthright regardless. It doesn't require you to
believe in any religion or any savior.
Speaker 4 (36:18):
What set you on this path though?
Speaker 3 (36:19):
As a young man?
Speaker 1 (36:21):
It started for me in the third grade. We lived
in Jacksonville, North Carolina. I didn't have a big brother,
so I said, I wanted to be a big brother
for other kids because my father, he was a pretty
stern father, and I ain't had nobody to talk to.
So I said, when I grew up, I'm gonna beat
the person that everybody could talk to you. That was
third grade when my parents divorced. Then we got back
to North Philly. The elementary school that I was in
had a black history class. This wasn't required by the
(36:44):
school district. It just so happened that this principle and
that principle made this happen for my school. So I
had black history in fourth grade, black history in fifth grade.
Sixth grade, my father takes me to my first family
reunion in Baltimore. That's when I found that I was
related to Frederick dou wa Us, you know. And I'll
never forget that family reunion yard because I almost drowned
(37:05):
in the days in hotel swimming pool. I jumped in
the deepest pool of water, can't swim a lick. And
guess who saved me, A big breasted snow bunny. She
came right over there. My sister came, but she said
I almost pulled the honder, so she left me and
(37:27):
the bunny came and I saw two big white titties
and I just grabbed them. And I'm here today black power.
Wherever that snow bunny is. I want to say, thank you, ma'am.
You saved the future prince of pan Africans. I know
you wouldn't have done it if you knew back then,
but you saved the future prince.
Speaker 4 (37:47):
Ladies and gentlemen, Doctor Marjus Black
Speaker 1 (37:52):
Listen, so