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April 19, 2022 41 mins

Is Wakanda Real? Langston and his guest Solomon Georgio (Hulu's Shrill, The Juice Podcast) illustrate this conspiracy theory and look behind the scenes of this Marvel-ous country. 

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Speaker 1 (00:01):
Well, I think that's why we like white people do
next so week like they get like one genner s incests,
you get a fucking dud. Uh. Yeah. With the rest
of us, we're like, don't suck your sibling. Don't don't
like a cousin, sure, but a sibling that's like no, no, man, Yeah,
you're you're being fucking weird. Dog. Just go find find

(00:23):
your sexiest cousins. Cousin, what are you doing, chips in
your racist honey stuff. You can't tell me bang bang

(00:52):
bang skeet skeep skee. You know what it is there
it is. Ladies and gentlemen, Welcome to another phenomenal EP
episode of My Mama Told Me, the podcast where we
we dive deep deep into the pockets of black conspiracy
theories and we finally worked to prove that asap Rocky
cheating on Rihanna is the exact feeling that this world needed.

(01:16):
Everything was chaos before this, Everything Wars, famine, those Valenciaga sneakers,
everything was hell. But now that Asap is going back
and doing a SAP ship and Rihanna can can be
a free thought out in the world. We can finally
come back together as a unit as a community. This
is the conspiracy I'm throwing. I'm your host, Lankston Kerman

(01:41):
as always coming into spicy motherfucker's You know how I misbehave.
Don't ask me to change. I refuse. This is my
personality all the time. But you know who doesn't come
in spicy, or at least not maybe he does. I
actually don't know if that's a fair assessment. I have
a wrong feeling that my guest today, in fact, is

(02:03):
a spicy motherfucker who does come in hot. But I'm
excited that he's here because because he's hilarious. You know
him from so many things. You know him from his
stand up, you know him from his work on Shrill,
his work on doll faces, work on High Fidelity, and
most importantly, you know him from his brand new podcast
with Team Coco called The Juice. Please give it up

(02:23):
from my guests, Mr Solomon Georgio, I can't believe you
just said, all right, you know what, that's fine. I agree,
you agree, okay, and we got honor to be fair.
Rihanna should be single, uh believes not with asap Rocky there.

(02:46):
You don't want Rihanna in a relationship that's not the
Rihanna we signed up for, the hottest billionaire in the
fucking planet. Yeah, you let that be free, you know,
like like at least like like one barb of she
should at least be there. Yeah, exactly. I don't. And
I don't know what that is because he's a gorgeous

(03:07):
man and he seems like a silly billy. But but yeah,
you can't. You can't lock up Brihanna like I feel
like she should. Like it's like a Morris Chestnut, a
young Morris Chestnut that Rihanna in Vince time Travel will
get the young Morris Chestnut to uh finally be the
one man who can lock her down. The conspiracy I'm

(03:28):
willing to get behind. I love that. Well, we can't
talk about Rihanna and her unfortunate situation anymore. We we
have we have very important conversation to dig into today.
Because you came with a conspiracy theory. I'm very excited
about him, really excited that you came with this, and

(03:48):
it's not one that I had ever considered seriously before today.
So this is why it's exciting. You said, my mama
told me what kind of is meal? Yes, but the
way I believe in it is not the standard Wakonda

(04:08):
from Black Panther. I think there is a Wakonda, but
I think it's white people hiding geranium. WHOA. That's what
I believe because the way I watched that movie, I
was like, Wow, you guys really did a great job
of blaming black people for hiding the one thing that
would cure all the world's problems. Yeah, and you're saying
that that, in fact, there is a resources already in

(04:33):
existence that that would cure our problems, and white people
have it, yes in Africa too. Tell me more. I
I don't know enough, so tell me everything. Oh, there's
a white panther. His name is Johnny Depp. But I
feel like there's some like, if anything, I believe that

(04:53):
there's like what kind of to me is just a
sort like it's a heaven heavenly placed in Africa that's
hiding a bit important resource. I can't feel like. I
feel like there's probably like known places in Africa, but
I feel like there's one hard to find, undiscovered spot
because Africa's biggest fuck, and white people found a resource
there that can really help everybody out, and they're just
coming it up. Whoa do you do? You multiple governments?

(05:15):
It's I've been a narrow down to the Dutch, because
why not they stay great a slavery. Sure they really
were fucking on the forefront of of ruining generations of
people's lives. And Elon must he's de He's definitely in
charge of some sort of funked up ship. Not a
cool guy, you know what. I'm gonna blame him for

(05:37):
not saving the world in many ways, including a secret
stash in a place called I think they made it.
They call it Wakonda as an insult to black people
when they found out about the real Little Conda in
the comic book. Oh so you think, let's let me
let me track everywhere that we're going in this conversation,
because all of this is very exciting for me. You

(05:58):
think that that the the Wakonda of legend, the Wakonda
of at least comic book lure is a almost red herring,
that this is a trick to distract us from the
actual resource that does exist that could solve our problems.
And it's more, it's more an intentional move to make

(06:21):
us go, oh, fictitious, silly that couldn't happen, when in
fact it is happening, but white people are in charge
of it. My brain is very real. White people are
holding near back. Damn. What do you think? And I
love this, I love what we're going with this. What
do you think they Why hold it? Why be so
intentionally like a hoarder with this thing, because it's not

(06:43):
like we're in a state with the planet anymore. We're like,
it's a smart move to be holding onto the fix,
to the to this ship, you know what I mean. Yeah, Well,
it's like what is what's what w to make more
money on the pure the disease, make more mo money
on the disease, like you you can't, you like it's
a last the option for the rich because right now
they're fine desort like being gone in fifty years. I

(07:06):
don't need jack ship to people are gonna live for
twenty years. Sure, So it's like I'm gonna get my
bread and whether y'all get this vibranium or not that
that has nothing to do with me, because I'm getting
hair plugs. Baby, I'm chilling. Well, they're I think they're
waiting for like a fool on right from the people.
And that's when that ship will just randomly pop up.

(07:26):
Oh so like at the point that we are on
the brink of sort of like world ending chaos, they
will use that for healing when somebody's got like when
somebody's like when a bunch of us are like holding
the president down and about that's when they're like, you
know what, y'all ever heard of vibratio? Remember that Ryan

(07:47):
cool is different where listening put put the guillotines away.
Let's let's hear about all right, we're listening, Okay, go ahead,
Well aliens a really I mean to to that point,
And I don't know that I can speak from any
position of validating vibranium itself, but we have seen historically

(08:11):
times where resources were withheld intentionally for the sake of profit. Right,
it's not always clear, you know, they come up with
a lot of different excuses rather as to why they
needed to be withheld previous to this point, but we
do see resources intentionally go unchecked for a while, and vibranium,

(08:36):
to your point, might might be it might fall into
that window. Well, I think, especially like out of the
French Revolution, rich white people got a little wiser how
to manipulate It's manipulated poor people against poor people. But
eventually the poor people get wise enough and revolution is
gonna happen again. And I think this time this is
their their backup before they get their heads chopped off. Yeah,

(08:59):
I and I mean I think the French Revolution is
a great example of like white people having to learn
that lesson. Like they were literally eating liquid gold in
front of the poor and being like, why y'all ain't
got no gold? And then the poor people were like, bitch,
why don't we have any gold? And then murdered things.
And so to your point, now we learned, we go, Oh,

(09:22):
I I gotta chill. I'm I'm gonna stop eating the gold.
I'm gonna I'm gonna pretend like we all are going
through the same thing, even though we're not. But now
they're being they're getting that cavalierness, and I assume that
for me, that means there's a resource somewhere and it
is their idea of what a quotable is. It might
not be I feel like they would still do that
because billionaires are weird like that. Yeah, yeah, there's no way.

(09:47):
Bezols is like being humble about it and like, no,
I'm gonna call it something else. He's like, I'm gonna
call it what the funk I would call it. Listen,
and they like, they do a great job at pointing
out that the black and in the in Black, they
do a great job call out how the black American
mindset is the poisonous mindset. Like kill Monger was such
so quickly to be a villainized for pointing out that, hey,

(10:08):
you didn't help American black people, and it's like, okay,
and now he's the enemy. I see what's going on
in the movie. M wait, so in that film, because
I've I've had very mixed feelings throughout about who was
the villain and who was the hero. For you, kill
Manger remained the villain. No, he was not the villain
you're saying he's not that it was he he was

(10:31):
asking for them to spread their resources everywhere. That's how
I felt, where, well, yeah, he should, he was. He
was right to point out that this should have been
done before I even showed up here. Mm hmm. That's why, Like,
that's why, that's why I agree with him fully. But
also the movie did a good job at making that
the villain which should not have been the villain that's
the right mind kill Monger is the right mindset to have. Yes, yeah, No,

(10:54):
his approach was not okay approach but Eric, Eric, you
can't behave that way Eric. But on the other hand,
I do think his logic was coming from a pretty
sound place of like, motherfucker, y'all could cure everything that's

(11:14):
wrong with the world, and you're keeping it for like
eight Africans in a in a bubble. All right. I
watched the movie up time like this. I actually got
this mindset through David Boy because we we he was
at first. I was like, that seems cute. Give give
something for the African disport in this country, and he's like, noh, ship,

(11:36):
He's like, this is what's wrong with that movie? WHOA
Boy was at the forefront of being like, no, this
isn't okay, that's not how it is, that's how it should.
I do think as you're sort of talking this through
it is, it is reminding me that we are also
in this period where the billionaires are attempting to uh

(11:56):
to colonized space. Do you know what I mean? That
like the Elon Muss of the world, the Jeff Bezos,
that motherfucking from Virgin they're all in in the middle
of like creating their own space programs and going out
to the fucking moon and ship, and some of me
wonders if, maybe, to your point, that resource that they're

(12:18):
sitting on is going to be such a utility that
they are not afraid of the potential repercussions of being
in a place where a vacuum, where they don't have
the essential resources of the planet. I don't I think
all these all these white mothers, like, I don't think
I think they know that they're not gonna live in space.

(12:39):
I think what they're doing is just just stutting on us. Really. Also,
they don't even go to space. They just brush the
atmosphere and come back down. Yeah. They just go where
it stops being blue and gets a little blue black,
and then they like fall back down Like that's not
that's not space travel. That's you just going to be like, Oh,
get a little chilly, let's go, let's go back home. Yeah.

(13:02):
For a while, I think, uh, to your point, a
part of me was really worried about like, oh no,
this this pending space race and like all the things
that are coming. And then William Shatner went up there
and I was like, no, we'll be fine. That motherfucker's
years old. It truly cannot be as scary and dangerous

(13:22):
as they're suggesting. Everything is uninhabitable. There's nothing about anywhere
near us that can be like turned into anything for
like hundreds of years. We can't unless unless you're sitting
on some version of vibranium that allows you to do

(13:42):
exactly that. That is true, and that is where my
conspiracy comes in, and I should believe in it. Yeah,
you really bailed on your own conspiracy pretty quickly. Oh
I bailed on ideas many times, and I'll do it again.
And I don't believe in myself. Let me as do
this before we go to break. I'm curious to hear
this was the prompting of this theory for you the

(14:07):
movie itself, for reading the comics, or was this something
that came from a different source, Like is this something
you've believed for a longer time. It's sort of like
a combination of ideas and but like it's like based
on like just this doing the show and then just
me wanting to like this is something like I kind
of have, like I formed it together and I believed
it because it's like it's if even though it's not true,

(14:30):
there's a variation of it that is true. Yes, that's
because that's only conspirat theories I will willingly deal with.
Like I just like if it's just's if it's ridiculous,
I'm like, I'm out. But I can't believe that. I
don't believe in the illuminati. I know we know every
rich person that and like every rich person with all
the power, we know who they are. They're not they're
not secret, like right, like we see them manipulating put

(14:53):
money in the way they want to put it in. Like,
but I do know that like when it comes to resources,
that's what has to be kept secret. Yeah, yeah, And
I will say to that point, we do know every
rich person. But I think part of where I start
to and I don't necessarily know that I'm bought in
on the Illuminati per se, but I am bought in
on the idea of secret meetings and sort of like

(15:13):
intentionally private conversations that then become public problems, if that
makes sense. And so for me, it's less of me
presuming that they like put on cloaks and like sit
around a big fucking candle and you know, drink baby blood.
But I do think that they very well do like

(15:34):
buy some office or or meet in some office in
the sky that none of us can afford to be
in and have a real conversation where they go, well,
who we gonna kill this year? And they go, yeah,
let's let's aim at the medium skin niggers this time.
And yeah, I mean, whatever the funk? Uh that conversation
looks like we got all the dark ones out the way.

(15:55):
Let's get those mediums. Look as a mid tone, I'm
very fake. When they started to focusing, we're gonna get
shot at eventually. Look, the war between the light skins
and dark skins has like the mid tones have been
lost in it. Sure, And when people start focusing on us,
that's when it's real. That's when it gets that you

(16:16):
guys are the majority. Somebody you get you gotta stand
up for something. Yes, all right, we're gonna take a break.
We'll be back with more Solomon Georgio and more. My
mama told me we are not so fresh. No no, no, yeah,

(16:47):
we're back here with more Solomon Georgio more. And my
mama told me, we're still talking about the possibility that
there is a Wakonda out there, but not the Wakanda
you were thinking of. It's more of a white knda
and that is sty laments pitch And I don't know,
I truly don't know. Do you think that in this
white conda, in this sort of this sort of like

(17:08):
sourcing of of stuff, do you think that they that
there are people that live there. Is it like a
white nation or are they there? There are black people
there and they're just there. I don't think there's a
white nation, and like white people aren't like if they're
having a resource, they're not gonna do the work of
maintaining it, right, Sure, Oh we're gonna do our own

(17:33):
work for once. Yeah that the Beers company wasn't exactly
digging the holes themselves, you know. So I do believe, Yeah,
there's black people there that were just born there and
like probably generations now that are just like waking up
every day and being whatever, doing the work they're supposed
to do. Because but I think probably treat them better
than the standard slaves in the past. I feel like
there's some sort of savories still having Africa's white controlled

(17:54):
mm hmm. Makes there's lots of like having Africa's white control.
I mean look slavery. Apparently there's more slaves today than
there was during the trans Atlantic slave trade. So you know,
we didn't beat the game. We just changed the rules
of the game and made it a lot weirder. We
moved it away. Yeah, well, yeah, we don't see it

(18:16):
as often anymore. That's a trick. If you don't see it,
it never happened, and truly, and that's that's what it
means to be an American at its core. I I
believe that that if you don't see it, that ain't
your problem. It's a it's a beautiful slogan that we
should put on one of the lines on the flag.
It didn't happen here, so it never did happen. All right.

(18:40):
Let's talk a little bit about this Wakonda thing, and
it's specifically the research that I did. I approached it
very differently than I think your theory, and I love
your theory, but I'll still unpack some of the research
that I didn't see if some of this perhaps crosses
over for you. One of the things that I tried
to think about is is there in fact a nation

(19:02):
in Africa, specifically a nation that that feels closest to Wakonda,
right to the Wakonda of fiction. And there have only
actually been two African countries in history that have never
been fully colonized. Two. That's fucking crazy. I'm from one
of them, Okay, So number one, Ethiopia is one of

(19:27):
the two, and then Liberia is the other one that
that remains untouched by the white devil at least, and
untouched is is a little bit of a heavy word
because it's been touched, but they didn't get to keep
them mother. Yeah, we were occupied during World War two
by Italy, but we're one of the oldest civilizations in Africa,

(19:48):
but yet we are still ones that were never colonized. Yeah,
Liberia is created by the Pan African movement, so there's
a lot of black Americans that came in and settled
that made Liberia. So it's actually the newest of the
African nations. Oh, I didn't know that. Every time I
hear Liberria, I just think of Liberian Girl by Michael
Jackson and that song. Uh you know, so I figured

(20:11):
I figured, yeah, the white man was like, we can't
touch that. Michael. Michael made it sound so pretty, We'll
leave it alone. You know it's I think it's like,
uh yeah, Pan African Movement feel so bad because it
is actually an integral super rights leader. But I forgot
the name of and I'm sure somebody who listens to podcast,
but like Nigga, you should have known better. Yes, absolutely

(20:32):
they will and fund them honestly, you know what I mean, like,
we ain't got time to be doing Black History Months.
I don't remember everything. I do like the idea that
if this came out during Black History Months, you would
feel terrible. You're like, damn his Black History Months. I
should maybe some good vengeance for you, just keeping the
fault just next February. This motherfucker's gonna get it. Yeah,

(20:58):
So so I want to I'm hack a little bit
of the Ethiopia part of it because you said you're
from Ethiopia. You you are of Ethiopian descent, and that's
exciting for me because it actually in the reading that
I did, it looks like Ethiopians across the world sort
of our self identifying as sort of like the Wakandans

(21:20):
of of fiction that they're saying that that it is
very clear based on their own research that Wakanda was
based on the inspiration for from an arrogant, arrogant country. Yeah, yeah,
we were never colonized version pool that we rub it in. Yeah,
they're not approaching this with a lot of humility from

(21:42):
the reading all parents there. So, so one of the
things that it looked like, uh, they sort of point
out is that during the late nineteenth century, when European
countries basically decided to divide the entire continent, the largest
continent net it's worth noting for their own taking, Ethiopia

(22:03):
remained untouched. And during the Middle Ages specifically, it was
sort of considered like this mythical Christian kingdom of great
wealth surrounded by all of these hostile Muslim states hidden
in the mountains. So it's it's like kind of had
this haven quality that what Konda suggests it has in

(22:25):
the actual film. Yeah, because Ethiopia is one of the
first Christian nations, I Meanian Ethiopia too, of them, like
we beat the Roman Empire, both of us by seven years,
and damn, it's always been a sort of surprise. But
unfortunately there's also it was a source of issues for
the Ethiopian Muslims and the Ethiopian Jews because they were
there and everyone was like, oh, you're all in charge now. Sure. Yeah,

(22:48):
it was a Christian nation, not a a nation filled
with Christians, which meant I assumed that a bunch of
people got their asses would yes for not being Jesus Christ.
And one particular reason we were never fully colonized. We
were definitely a trading spot for a long time. But
also more importantly, when the European countries started doing a

(23:09):
big sweeping cauization, the country that was assigned to us
for a callization was Italy, and uh, it was after
they been they failed for for a long time, so
we got Italy after Rome was fully done and barely
getting a shipped together. So they managed to colonize one country,
and then they came to Ethiopia and we were like, nah, yeah,

(23:30):
only strong enough. Yeah, So I I read about that
and it's this. The first attempt were one of the
more major attempts, and I assume they attempted a whole
bunch of times previous to this, but one of the
major attempts at colonization from Italy happened in eight six,
and one of the main reasons that the twenty thousand
Italian troops that came into into Ethiopia and that we're

(23:53):
only fighting ten thousand Ethiopian troops. So y'all were outnumbered
like a motherfucker fighting these Italians. But one of the
main reasons you were able to beat them off was
because the emperor men a leak in my saying that
name right the same Yeah, so that he had already invested,
apparently in modern weaponry. So when the rest of you know,

(24:16):
these other surrounding nations where they were still sort of
fighting in more traditional tribal ways, he was like, no,
I'm getting fucking guns and I'm gonna blow y'all back out. Yeah.
That's because they did. That's they still like, like like
a lot of them, like, oh, these all these are savings,
Like he's one of those civilizations. So when we found
out modern weapons something we trade, we immediately did that. Yeah.

(24:41):
So they showed up thinking, you know, we'll ride in
on our horses and they'll be terrified of us. And
he's like, dog, I got a machine gun, Like we
know how to use these, and yeah, this is not
We're not dumb dumbs over here, which I do think
to some extent again and supports this sort of like

(25:02):
this suggestion of a technologically advanced nation, and a lot
of the reading that I sort of fund found is
saying that Ethiopia in particular is not necessarily a super
technologically advanced nation. But it seems like there were periods
where y'all were sort of at the forefront of some
ship that these surrounding nations were not. We were on

(25:23):
par with every civilization for a long time. Yes, we
were a leading country until World War two and after
that like not like like that's a civil war that
went on forever that really caused ethiop coome a fool country.
It was the first world for generations. So the two
oldest civilizations right are Mesopotamia and Kingdom of Cush and

(25:45):
the chemo Cush is the Fiolpian one. So we're talking
about since the dawn of time. And also the oldest
humanoid was ever found Swell was Lucy also found in
Ethiopia as well. So my bloodline as old as fun
and back the dawn. Oh ship, you can trace it
back that far? No, we can. I can't trace it back,
but we know that the old skeleton has found there, right, No,

(26:08):
I know she was bad dog were not familiar, so yeah,
my bloodlines stayed in the same place. That that also
supports so much of the sort of like I guess,
creation and advancement of other parts or or sort of
the things that we now take for granted. Like I

(26:30):
imagine that Ethiopia in that same way is responsible for
like the invention of like types of mathematics, types of architecture,
types of sort of like structures that exist in our
actual society. That that at this point, it's existed for
so long. You can't go specifically they did it, but
these motherfucker's probably did it, you know what I mean? Um,

(26:53):
I feel like it's like a bunch of stuff that
was created around the same time between all of the
Middle Eastern part of Africa and the Middle East too.
And but there's there's things like that we know we
for sure invented, Like coffee was invented by Ethiopians. And
when you think about something like coffee, that's like a
fucking when you you become like a trade center with

(27:13):
that because that's like and that like that spreads throughout
the entire world. Now one specific source, now everybody, there's
not a nation on this on this planet. Probably there
are probably a few, but there aren't very many nations
on this planet where they're not. Coffee isn't an an
important essential resource, so that's that's huge, So vibratium is coffee.

(27:41):
Long stories, aren't we invented vibranium and at one point,
why couldn't coffee be like an amazing resource? I think
I think the story is like a goat farmer like
just saw how his his goats were all buzzed up
eating cherries from the plant that happened coffee being But
I do think I think at that point that the

(28:01):
vibranium right has probably been something else at different points
throughout history. So at one point, vibranium was just salt,
It was fucking spices and ship and certain nations had
the thing that everybody needed, and it took trade and
it took colonization and all these other things for other

(28:23):
people to gain access to it. That said, coffee probably
represents that same idea that at one point it was vibranium,
and now vibranium is everywhere for everybody to to access,
although we probably still steal it and kill people for
it and quietly pretend like we don't know the a
Mental wars are over our culture that we pretend don't exist.

(28:45):
Uh they do, Yeah, they do. But now the wars
are about oil and that's the dumbest it was, like,
that's like that resources the worst of the resources. I
think that's what got like, that's how that's the downfall
of humanity is that the resources we're fighting over is
like the the one that's the worst. For m M.
That's actually a really astute observation that like, if we

(29:07):
were still fighting over salt, we probably would be able
to manage this a lot better than if we're fighting
over something that truly is melting our planet at its core.
And people people like, you can get salt anywhere, you
can make salt, same as spices, Like spices were so
fought over like and people are like, oh, I just
had to create environment to make these spices. And then

(29:31):
we got to that point. Now we don't fight over
that ship even though literally murdered millions and it's a
reason causation he would happen. But like, what if the
source that it can be taught to recreate, then the
fight for that source stops happening. Mm hmmm, damn, you
woke up wise today. So I don't know if this

(29:53):
is your wisest day, but it's got to be top
ten for you. It's one thirty in Minneapolis and I
had like three coffees. So all right. So here's another
argument that people make for Ethiopia potentially being the source.
Right that the Black Panther, the character Black Panther who

(30:15):
was created by Stanley a very brave white man. Uh.
It first appeared in nineteen sixties six. Right, The character
first appeared in comic books in nineteen sixties six, which
was three years after Ethiopian Emperor Hailey Selassie visited the
United States and President JFK treated the world to like

(30:36):
the spectacle of sort of like this African royalty and
his centuries old lineage. So it it sort of works
in in tandem, right where in theory stan Lee sees
him visit the United States, the United States goes Yo,
this dude's kind of regal and dope and comes from

(30:56):
like this history that we don't know, and then also
really potentially creates this character from that that it makes sense,
but unfortunately how say got played and it was the
downfall of the Ethiopian Empire. So yes, it doesn't look
as much as I understand that Ethiopia being what kind
of sounds great Ethiopia, most of its downfall was caused

(31:17):
by internal fighting and civil and civil wars, which is
happening currently right is a sort of in the middle
of a civil war. Even now it's yeah, the and
it's it's so I'm from Ticket Eye, which is the
current place that's being sucked over. But it's it's a
very difficult situation because when we were in power, because

(31:38):
we were in power before, and we also did a
good chunk of killing as well, So a lot of
back and forth on the genocide between the two culturals
from Ifiobia's split up in Ethno states, and that is
not a good way to split people up. So like
the like, like the capital, like atis Ababa, like everybody

(31:59):
there's together, no one's fighting, but you know, like any
other country, the states in the middle of nowhere, separated
by ethnicity are gonna rile up. Yeah. No. And then
in an interesting way, it feels like while that is
sort of like the downfall, as you're saying, of sort

(32:19):
of Ethiopia is at least like it's its greatest successes,
it also does feel like it has at least a
quality of some of the things that we saw in
black people that like some of that in fighting is
maybe reflective of that same sort of breakdown, right of
like the big monkey motherfucker wanting to fight to Challa

(32:40):
is not the Yeah, yeah, conceptually false to what you're describing. Yeah, well, damn,
I guess I was born from Wakonda. Dang, dang devastating.
Drew flipped on me real quick. Al Right, we're gonna

(33:05):
thank one more break. We'll be back with more Solomon
Georgio and more, my mama told me. And we are. Yeah,

(33:29):
We're back here with more Soloman Georgio more, my mama
told me. Talking, we're still talking about the possibility that
Solomon is is born and raised of what condi heritage,
that he is in fact secretly what CONDI? Has this
at all changed your position on the white what the
white vibranium, that the ownership of white No, I feel

(33:54):
like that still exists. I think we got played as
a country. Damn. That's what happened. Is that that sources
now underground in ethiop Yeah, and I'm gonna find it.
I want to find this white haven and this precious
resource because it's there. You gotta you gotta get I
feel like it should be along the Nile, and we
are like whether the Nile ends. So it's somewhere down

(34:18):
that from from Egypt to in et of it. It's
one of those one of those three countries you gotta
get back home and you gotta flex. You gotta flex
on them. You gotta be like, I have a Comedy
Central half hour. Treat me with the respect that I deserve.
Let me let me source this country for its actual resources.
Let me give you. That's a way to get respect
in ethiop Like, I gott a comedy s the fuck

(34:42):
is Comedy Centro. Oh boy, damn, I was gonna flex
mine when I went there. Now, good luck to you
in that journey. So we talked a ton about Ethi Lpia.
But as it turns out, Ryan Coogler Films director of
Black Panther, actually says that the the greatest inspiration for

(35:05):
Wa Kanda was not in fact Ethiopia, but came from
a Southern African nation called Lesothough. Are you are you
familiar with Lesothough? No, I'm not familiar with that at all.
This Yeah, so apparently it's super close to South Africa.
I think it borders South Africa, and it's often referred
to as Africa's Kingdom in the sky. It's the only

(35:26):
country in the world to be entirely above one thousand
meters in elevation, and it has the highest lowest point
in the entire world at fourteen hundred meters. So lets
also also boast three hundred days of sunshine a year.
So it's basically like this high ast paradise in South Africa.
It sounds hot as hell, yeah, but here's here's what's

(35:51):
also crazy. Because of the high altitude of this country,
it's also one of the one of only two places
in the entire continent that can house this resort. So
it's hot as fun. But they also have mountains where
you can go fucking skin and ship. This place is
pretty crazy, all right. These have some fancy Africans. We
don't have a conversation with them in Africa. Yeah, they're

(36:16):
doing it all They they ski, they got sunshine, they're
truly living that that California bullshit where they go you
can go skin and go to the beach and the
same day, like apparently you could just do that out there. Okay,
that's just wild and I can't, I gotta, I gotta
go to this place. It's it's pretty popular. It sounds
like similar. This is another great argument for it potentially

(36:39):
being the Wakanda that was mentioned in the film. There's
very little mixing in this nation. It's a super homogeneous nation.
In fact, percent of the country is made up of
a people from the boss. So though ethnic group, percent
of these people are all that one thing, Just like
Wakanda where they were used to sort of like leave

(37:01):
the nation intermixed with anybody outside of it. They're all
they all do the same ship, you know what I'm saying. Look,
no one shows strong genetics when it comes to incests
like Africans do. I'm like five generations, Steve, and I'm
still six ft four. Hey, if you gotta funck your
cousin to make sure that they're you're not inviting, I

(37:24):
think that's that's a solid choice. Here's Here's the last
piece of information I'll tell you about Losotho is that
it it has practically on renewable electricity thanks to the
Losotho Highlands Water Project. The network of Damn's exports water
to South Africa and provides almost all of Losotho's power

(37:46):
needs through hydro electric energy along the way. So these
motherfucker's are living clean, they're living high, their skiing, and
they're fucking their cousins. It sounds like paradise. That sounds
like the best place in the world. And they only
got occupied by by Brittain for a little while. It

(38:07):
sounds like, I don't think Brittain like got to stay
there too long. Oh that's our caries like them to
walk up a hill. The Brits can't help that. Yeah, No,
it's they're like, I can't breathe up your dog, you
can have it. I don't know. I'm gonna go fuck
my ugly cousins on the ground where I can't. Uh now,
I want to. I want to go to this place. Yeah,

(38:29):
it's pretty cool. I I don't know what their day
to day looks like. I didn't I didn't dig far
enough to know if like, oh, it turns out that
they their lives suck. They just have a bunch of
like sexy ship on paper, but it sounds pretty dope
on paper. Yeah, I'm gonna I'm gonna, I'm gonna dig deep.
And they're like they're like, we just kill outsiders like,

(38:50):
oh okay, that's why, that's why I can't go ok
that makes perfect sense because like, yeah, all these these
are a murderhouses around here. Good luck, I will say.
And I've heard and that this is just from my research,
and I've heard they respect Comedy Central half hours there
so so different than Ethiopia. They'd be very welcoming to

(39:11):
you and I with our twenty one minutes of TV
time on a dyeing network. I choose to believe that,
to believe that is true that they watched my half hour, yeah,
and they were like, we gotta we gotta build this
nation up, we gotta make it beautiful for when Solomon
finally decides to join us. Oh man, they no, no,

(39:35):
no countries currently doing that right now. No. So so
I say all of this to say, it seems like
some of the sourcing was pulled from multiple places, right that.
I imagine that there are elements of Ethiopia, there are
elements of of Lesotho and all of these things, and
probably other places as well across the the African diaspora.

(39:56):
That said, I don't think any of this refutes the
potential white people are doing exactly what white people have
done for generations by sourcing material and and hoarding it
and keeping it from everybody across the world. Yes, I
saw it's all here. It's very it's all very true. Yeah,
I agree with you. There's a good here's a good
points of research is strong. Thank you so much. That's

(40:20):
all I needed to hear. I'm gonna stick to my guts.
Is well, I'm gonna. I think it's a fair choice.
And and frankly, I think we did it. I think
you nailed it. Could you, Solomon? Tell the people where
they can find you and what cool ship you have
going on? Um, yeah, I'm Solomon Georgio all across the board.
If there's another Salomon Georgio out there, you can take
them down for me. I respect that Kim kill kill

(40:43):
him dad taking to Wakanda, But yeah, I yeah. Just
check out the podcast The Juice. There's a few eupisodes
out and more coming out soon. And that's all I've
been doing lately. So hell yeah, So follow Solomon and
and listen to The Juice. It's with the team Cocod Network.
As always, you can follow me at like st Kerman
and please if you decide to send us drops your

(41:05):
own conspiracy theories, whatever the fuck. Yeah, you all send
crazy shit, Send it to my Mama pod at gmail
dot com. I would love from to hear from you. Otherwise,
that's it. By bitch Chips in your kneels. Quala Bears

(41:27):
are racists. Money stuff I can't tell me
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