Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:01):
Watch up and welcome back to another episode of No
Salers Podcast with your host Now fuck that with your
loaw glasses alone. Yeah, oh like so it's like, uh,
(00:23):
I didn't really like the way he argued you fee
me and like I'll be like, how could you? Like,
why do y'all talk to each other that way?
Speaker 2 (00:35):
Crazy? You know what I'm saying. And it's funny, right
rec in peace Twine Mac Man.
Speaker 1 (00:40):
So yeah, we need a moment for him, man, Yeah, yeah, Man.
Speaker 2 (00:51):
What's up?
Speaker 3 (00:52):
Yeah?
Speaker 1 (00:53):
Man?
Speaker 2 (00:55):
Yeah, that was tough. Man.
Speaker 1 (01:04):
Ooh, it's funny because when I was setting up the live,
I kept just thinking about him.
Speaker 2 (01:08):
Twine.
Speaker 1 (01:09):
We'll be all we've been talking about is going overseas, man,
That's all we've been talking about, is going overseas and
doing the run and where they still had a genuine
affinity for hip hop, you know what I'm saying. And
Twine mac recipes. Twine is somebody that I had on
No Singlings Live. I don't know, probably where we had
(01:31):
like episode twenty four, twenty three or something. He's probably
been on here like six seven, eight times. Just a
really good brother, you know what I mean. Like always
introducing the founder of the adult contemporary hip hop movement.
Speaker 2 (01:49):
My boy passed away.
Speaker 1 (01:51):
I don't really quite know how, and I don't think
that's important as much is man, We're not gonna get
that light anymore, you know what I'm saying. Like that
person that Sean Brighten really make sure people understood how
great hip hop could be, you know what I'm saying.
And it's been tough because you know this this this internet,
make connections with people, man, and you could meet people
(02:13):
that be like Kendrick Spirit, like how we met Trap or.
Speaker 2 (02:17):
You know what I mean, like how I met you
know what I mean? Twin. It's like it felt like
we knew each other.
Speaker 1 (02:23):
We ain't even knew each other longer than probably eight months,
but it felt like we knew each other for years,
you know.
Speaker 2 (02:27):
What I mean.
Speaker 1 (02:27):
And he became like a really dope person. Are tough,
you know, think hip hop with and talk and really
gained perspective of everything.
Speaker 2 (02:37):
So rest in peace, Twine, Mac.
Speaker 1 (02:41):
Four one four you fem me Milwaukee Midwest legend and yeah,
straight up ton of nose ceilings lunch hours where you
could see Twin really articulating, you know what I'm saying,
hip hop and just really being a dope brother, you
know what I mean. Nobody else you know that Nigga
(03:02):
would call me seventh Street?
Speaker 2 (03:03):
What's up?
Speaker 1 (03:04):
Seventh Street? You the only person outside of certain homies
who say that. So you know, it's so many great memories,
you know what I'm saying, And it's fast, life come fast,
and a lot of ideas we got to really get to.
So again, rest in peace to Twine. Mac Milwaukee lost
a real light, you feel me. The Midwest hip hop
and general lost somebody special that saw it a lot
(03:27):
greater than it was than it is now, you know
what I mean. So it's up to us to really
keep that stuff going. Man, And you know, shout out
to his mom and his family. Shout out to only
speech from arrested Development. You know, I mean, I know
they going through it tough. Because if I feel this
way about Twine after eight months, fore me, I can't
imagine what it feels like after knowingy for years and
(03:48):
years and years. Yeah, I know, man, shout out the
Gulf Coast, I know, and it be all of a sudden,
you know what I'm saying. You don't even know like
that fast. You know, Twying ain't here, No more. And
it's like Sunday I was able to kind of, you know,
not really be on top of it. But when I
(04:09):
realized we was gonna have to do this stream and
Twine and Trap are two people that I gave an
open door to the live stream, you know what I'm saying,
Like them dudes got the link and.
Speaker 4 (04:21):
I'm not even sure still has an open door like that, right,
And it's like it's like I'm like Twine, like, whenever
you want to come, Trap, whenever you want to come,
y'all don't got to tell me, you know what I mean.
Speaker 1 (04:31):
Y'all family, Like we we're all together.
Speaker 2 (04:34):
So it's dope, you know what I mean.
Speaker 1 (04:37):
That Trap popped up, you know what I'm saying, And
in my mind, I'm like, Okay, I'm fit to talk
to Twine and it's like, no, I don't get to
talk to Twine no more.
Speaker 2 (04:45):
You feel me.
Speaker 1 (04:45):
So it's like, man, it's tough, man.
Speaker 3 (04:54):
It was really like it was really tough right now, man,
because like I said, it was it was the fact
that we just poked to him at ten thirty, yeah,
and that like yeah, in the group chat, yeah, in
the group checks, and he talked he was overseas.
Speaker 1 (05:12):
Going up yeah, and it was like yeah, tell I'm
like yeah, so he was plugging Inland, I'm plugged Japan.
We got our struggle, like yeah, we're gonna go and
have a ball, bro like.
Speaker 2 (05:21):
You know what I mean.
Speaker 3 (05:22):
So yeah, that shit was wicked. Man, that shit was
every almostof big because I ain't I ain't really felt
like yeah, I don't even like. That's why I fell
back from the clubhouse and all that for like a
couple of days, because it was like it wasn't gonna
be the same without having my man pull up in
the room. And you know what I'm saying. Y number
one time and I went on clubhouse.
Speaker 1 (05:40):
I went on clubhouse and just had to do it
but really couldn't talk, you know what I mean. But
just really the fellowship with everybody who knewing, you know
what I mean. And this is the power of social media,
you know what I mean to really, I know we
misuse it a lot, and you know what I mean.
You see people doing a bunch of silly stuff, but
this is the relationship you can roll with other human beings,
(06:01):
not just black people, but other human beings, you know
what I mean.
Speaker 2 (06:04):
And you could connect on different levels. So I'm glad, y'all.
Speaker 1 (06:08):
Everybody, Shout out to everybody in the chat, Shout out
to everybody.
Speaker 2 (06:11):
No Selings Live Lunch Hour.
Speaker 1 (06:12):
I'm glad y'all really got to experience Twine, you know
what I mean. And and you got to see a
really great person, you know what I mean, who believed
in hip hop in a different way and believed in
black people in general.
Speaker 5 (06:25):
So I'm not straight up he and he only never
told me that, you know, I heard it.
Speaker 2 (06:36):
A million people, so man, yeah, man, yeah.
Speaker 1 (06:43):
So No Sellers Live Lunch Hour every Monday, Wednesday and
Friday at noon specific standard time. We created this this
show to promote the No Selans podcast, which is in
the description below. A new episode drops every two day,
will be one up tomorrow. You can subscribe to the
No Senters podcast the audio on Apple Podcasts or anywhere
(07:07):
you get your podcasts.
Speaker 2 (07:08):
Executive produced by Charlottmagne and.
Speaker 1 (07:10):
God Black Effect and I Heeart Network, who really starting
to push this thing a lot more. It got the
audio version of the podcast up like forty you know
what I mean. So this commitment of really making sure
we hear Monday, Wednesday and Friday.
Speaker 2 (07:25):
Make sure you click that thumbs up button right there
on YouTube.
Speaker 1 (07:28):
You know what I'm saying, it's really a commitment to
be here every Monday, Wednesday and Friday, because there's a
lot of other stuff that I could do, you know
what I'm saying. But we here and I brought my brothers.
Six change around this man, I'm telling you.
Speaker 2 (07:44):
And I brought my brother six.
Speaker 1 (07:47):
Six is from the West side of Los Angeles, from
South Central. I've been knowing him since I first started
putting out music.
Speaker 2 (07:54):
I mete him No.
Speaker 1 (07:55):
Five oh six and we built another relationship. So another
one hip hop brings it together. You know, two people
from the street.
Speaker 2 (08:03):
Meet up and it'd be a kindred spirit.
Speaker 1 (08:05):
This is another brother, you know what I mean, really
heavy into God, you know, even though we came up
the hard way and people thinking you can't be both.
So shout out to my brother six in the house.
Speaker 2 (08:17):
Man, great guy.
Speaker 6 (08:18):
How are you here?
Speaker 2 (08:18):
Man? Yeah?
Speaker 1 (08:19):
Six dude man? And he got crazy perspectives just like us.
I don't know why Peaky covering the camera got over there.
I don't know what's happening. So whatever he's doing, I
don't know what's going on. Loss Okay, so I don't
quite know what's going on, but.
Speaker 6 (08:40):
There are consumption rules for YouTube, and I'm trying to
abide by them.
Speaker 2 (08:47):
Okay, okay.
Speaker 1 (08:48):
Shout out to Royalty, Shout out to Amber, Shout out
to white House. Shout out to Squishy or Realist and
one of my favorite supporters in life. You know, I mean,
somebody who really supports this stream and that just means
the world.
Speaker 2 (09:00):
Shout out to Bella.
Speaker 1 (09:01):
Shout out to Natasha and mess buying them Golf Coast.
What a player west Side was handing it? Man, I've
been working on that music. Devin cut More Life is Precious.
Shout out to Devin cut More, Life is Precious. Mom's
boyfriend dropped dead last week, no warning. Tell your friends
and family you love him while you can. I love
all y'all.
Speaker 2 (09:19):
Man strayed up. Shout out to Ti White out Glasses.
Speaker 1 (09:24):
You heard a lot four unreleased, not any of cohesive
enough to make an untitled unmastered too. I'm sure you
got more than enough music for that. I don't know, man,
that be just living life.
Speaker 2 (09:38):
Man.
Speaker 1 (09:38):
Sometimes it's hard for people to realize, like he don't
wrap his life in just hip hop, you.
Speaker 2 (09:44):
Know, what I mean, he is being a dad. You
know what I mean.
Speaker 1 (09:47):
When I talked to me enjoying his cars, He's trying
to enjoy life and the music had come from it.
Speaker 2 (09:52):
You know what I mean.
Speaker 1 (09:52):
Everybody and hip hop don't want to be your slave.
You know what I'm saying to you, consuming content and
treating it like it's nothing.
Speaker 2 (09:59):
So just staying with.
Speaker 1 (10:00):
Him and when he dropping, you know what I mean,
it'll be there. But I'm sure to be entertaining.
Speaker 3 (10:06):
What you think about God, Now I was saying, you're
talking about that. I was saying about I think about
the clean sleep on the Grammys.
Speaker 1 (10:17):
It's gonna look you open his mouth. He opened his mouth,
you feel me? Yeah, haneh mcgraham exactly. Let's get it open.
Open his Grammy. So I'm hoping he win them all
in the perfect word. It's weird to listen to people
that really are offended that I support my friend, Like
(10:41):
I think there's this weird space where people want everybody
to stay neutral because you like somebody else. And I'm like,
somebody was telling me I was cheerleading, and I'm like, no,
I just support my partner, Like yeah, if you my
partner like I'm rocking with you. I don't really you
feel I don't. I don't have a halfway mark. That's
(11:03):
one thing I would tell you. Game Bang and taught me, well,
it's no halfways. You either end or you not. Yeah,
squishy that part type shit in my twimac voice. That
was a shit too type shit all right, shit shit
feel me.
Speaker 2 (11:18):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (11:19):
So I rock with my people all the way to
the end. So I want him to win them all.
I won't even go to the super Bowl. I want
him to cut everybody head off. That's just how I
support my peoples, and it don't matter what I get
in return. I can't really explain that, you know what
I mean type of mentality to you. If it don't
make sense to you, if you don't just support your
people just for the sake of it, then you know
(11:40):
what I mean, You're in trouble. I don't know what
type of person you is. But I was having this
crazy thought, you know. I mean, before we get off
of that, I told Pete we still got to do
another podcast. We're gonna drop one tomorrow, but we're gonna
do another podcast. It's called The First hundred Days Conversation
about the first hundred days that Trump is in office.
Speaker 6 (12:02):
But over this.
Speaker 1 (12:03):
Whole weekend, I've been really thinking about it, Like like
I talked to Charlotte Mane, I talked to Van. Shout
out to Charlotte Magne. He is okay, Van is okay.
They did not commit suicide. I was genuinely concerned about
it because they were like on the edge. They was like, glasses,
you need to vote, you know, A vote for it
for nobody is a vote for Trump.
Speaker 2 (12:24):
And I'm like, look, I don't care if.
Speaker 6 (12:26):
You California vote for nobody.
Speaker 1 (12:29):
Right, I'm like, but I'm like, look cool, right, whatever,
But shout out to the homies.
Speaker 2 (12:34):
They still alive. You feel me.
Speaker 1 (12:36):
We in the game and we had a great conversation
and listening to them, it made me think of a
couple things. And one of the greatest analogies I realized
is America. And shout out to my brother Manny Ace
Boy many if y'all check out the community or Ace
(12:57):
Boy was worldwide. He's a really dope brother, popping and stuff.
But he had a great point. He always would tell
me how ghetto America was like when he would go
to other countries. He'd be like man, America is ghetto
super And I was like, I didn't like that, but
I got what he was saying. It is a little
(13:18):
too the rules are a little too loose. But that's
the you know freedom. Freedom comes with, you know, people
being able to mess with the food. And some of
this stuff ain't quite what it's supposed to be, you
know what I mean. It's a freedom and a pursuit
of economics that make people get really relentless.
Speaker 3 (13:35):
Right.
Speaker 1 (13:37):
So Aison mom was having it and they get really relentless, right,
So I get it right, and I understand, but it
hit me that Biden and the Democrats have been running
America like Walmart.
Speaker 2 (13:53):
Like Costcos No, like Walmart.
Speaker 1 (13:57):
Right, it's hella cheap, it's horrible customer service, horrible customer service,
it's the bare minimum. Like you ever go to Walmart
like Walmart. Don't get me wrong. Everything is way more
affordable when you go to Walmart. That's how it is
in America, Like everything is affordable, right, so you could
get access to everything, but ain't nobody making no money
(14:20):
so you can't get too much.
Speaker 3 (14:22):
Right.
Speaker 2 (14:22):
A bunch of people got attitudes like you did.
Speaker 1 (14:24):
It to them, Like every time I go to Walmart
to save like two dollars a peek, because like, I'll
be sitting waiting on something and they got everything locked up,
everything locked up, so I have to wait forty five
minutes just to buy something. And I realized, like, I'm
not saving any money at all when I'm at Walmart,
because whatever money I felt like I was saying, if
(14:47):
I was saving, if it was locked up, I'm gonna
spend my time there, yep.
Speaker 2 (14:53):
And that's true.
Speaker 6 (14:54):
It's funny because I stopped going to Walmart for that reason.
Department I lived one block from Walmart and one block
from publics, and Walmart became such a disaster. I'm just like,
this is for three dollars. Fuck it.
Speaker 3 (15:11):
So you know, we don't have Walmarts in New York City.
They don't allow Walmarts in New York City. Yeah, you
gotta go outside of New York City in order to
get to Walmart. You gotta go to Long Island or
like Upstate or something like that. But in the New
York we didn't. We didn't let them come in. We
got targets and all that ship like that, we got
(15:31):
castles and all that shit. They didn't allow Walmarts to
come into New York City.
Speaker 6 (15:35):
Though, I think the only one in actual LA and
it's in the valley.
Speaker 3 (15:40):
Yeah, so it could be similar to like you're saying.
Speaker 1 (15:44):
And they run it just and that's how they're doing it.
Just be a bunch of people up in here, just
random people just doing ship people stealing. That's how America
has been, bro like it's been. The employment is kind
of shaky. They don't really care about you that the
bosses don't care about you if you work there, you
(16:05):
know what I mean?
Speaker 2 (16:06):
Everything about America has been like Walmart. And it's funny.
I was looking at another dude and.
Speaker 1 (16:11):
I had this thought and a dude called him Walmart
Americas and I was like, I get what he's saying.
Speaker 2 (16:16):
Like I thought I came.
Speaker 1 (16:17):
Up with it, But it's other people who feel like
America is coming across very walmart ish. And listening to
Van and listening to Charlotte Mane, I understand it feels
like Walmart is a necessity because people are not doing good,
Like you need to have things priced cheap enough so.
Speaker 2 (16:41):
You know, things are priced cheap enough so people can afford.
Speaker 1 (16:50):
Yeah, but if you're also not paying people then people
really can't afford nothing anyway. And I was listening to them,
and then when they were complaining, all I got from
their complaints was, Trump is Sam's Club right where you
gotta have some money to save money. I mean that's
(17:13):
the whole point of Like if you go to Sam's Club,
you know what I mean, It's like, you gotta.
Speaker 2 (17:17):
Have money to save money.
Speaker 1 (17:19):
Like I think I paid one hundred and forty dollars
for the membership. It's like, I have to make it
my business to save some money, so I gotta drive
over there and take advantage. And I'm lucky enough to
be in the position, right pete cuz to where I
got some money to pay the membership. Now, Sam's Club
is cool. Costcos is cool. Sam's Club is cool, but
(17:42):
it ain't it ain't perfect right right, It's you still
like when you go get the gas, the gas is
way cheaper, but you would be having to wait that
shit to be like thirty minutes sometimes, real feel me
like inside, don't get me wrong, they got really good produce.
I love shopping there and buying stuff, but you gotta
buy a lot of stuff. Like it's almost set up
for people that are businesses, Like you can't go in
(18:04):
Sam's Club and get a roll of paper towels cause
you can't just go in Sam's Club cuz and get
like a carton and strawberry. It gotta be the five
pound carton strawberries you go buy there. You can't just
get like dinner for tonight, because you gotta get the
slab of short ribs for like everything about it is
set up for a business person. You mean, you get
(18:27):
the chips. You gotta get five bags and the big
chips to save some money. And to me, that's Trump's
idea of America where it's like, if you are in
the business of doing business, you will flourishing.
Speaker 2 (18:41):
Trump's America.
Speaker 1 (18:42):
You gotta add some money or you better have like
a mentality to get some money here because if you don't,
you know, I mean, it's not gonna be easy.
Speaker 2 (18:52):
Now in the.
Speaker 1 (18:53):
Perfect way, I realize the sweet spot is probably Target
ta Ja yeah, Taja Mart is right. It's like Target,
like Walmart still have some bad quality stuff in there.
It'd be TVs made by like some off company, you
know what I mean, yellow light TVs. You'd be like
(19:17):
it'd be like a fifty five is TV for thirteen dollars.
Speaker 6 (19:20):
I feel like to go to Target and I really look,
I need that eight percent of the inventory is identical
that Target. Yeah. Like, I'll go to Target and be like,
I'm gonna get something, you know, slightly better quality, and
I go. It's like they source the exact same stuff.
Speaker 3 (19:41):
And Walmart is Amazon department store. You said, who, Yeah,
it's like Amazon department store. Department store. That's like Amazon
do shit though you can find the same thing, but
it's a boy, different people and shit like that.
Speaker 1 (19:53):
Shout out to Squishy. I ain't going to Walmart. I
quit going to Moremart. When I see man walks pit
Bull through the stoor, wise, oh my god, there's something
that Walmart. But I'm also complaining about Sam's Club too,
And the reason is Walmart and Sam's Club because they
really are Sam Wharton. It's all Sam Wharton, you feel me.
(20:13):
But like another thing. When I go to Sam's Club,
it's always like the lady she might not ask ten
people about their membership, but every time she see my
black ass walking there, she asked me about my membership.
Speaker 2 (20:27):
And you know it, you know what it really be.
Speaker 1 (20:31):
She be looking like he got a membership, Like, lady,
you can't nothing without the membership. Ask me for my
membership when I walk in the store. That's how it
is in Trump's America. You know you're finna deal with
some subdue racism, maybe even over the top racism, but
you're really gonna deal with racism even at Walmart.
Speaker 2 (20:50):
Two.
Speaker 1 (20:51):
The white man just not gonna help you. You be
calling this night, hey, brother, could you get somebody open? Yeah,
there's there on their way. I've been here fifty minutes, Bro,
I've been here fifty minutes. Bro, Why the hell and
my waiting on this whatever? I thought I was getting
some night quill for it, this eight forty nine. I
should have went to damn a. It just take you
(21:14):
out of fifty cent. I've been here an hour and
thirty minutes, and I understand why people have been driven
away from Walmart. Walmart is actually a horrible experience. I
ain't gonna lie about that neither. Walmart's a horrible experience.
And it's never a time it's a good experience. It's
(21:36):
like they always trying to save money, and they get
worse and worse. You already didn't have good customer service.
How do you have bad automated customer service. It's automated,
it's still a long line and it's a bunch of
people in machines not working. Brother, Like, just get your
that's to me, the Democratic America. Everybody come in there.
Everything is good. It's not good, bro, y'all gotta work harder.
(22:01):
But again, I'm not advocating for Sam's Club because I
know what that feel like. The liquor locked up in
that cage, and shit, the lady be sitting right there,
need you to get my liquor. Why's my liquor in
this cage?
Speaker 2 (22:16):
Can't steal it?
Speaker 1 (22:20):
I get so man and I'll be just counting. And
like I'm telling Charlotta Mane and I get their p life.
Like I get it. I'm not in a politics. See
in the politics, Van in the politics. And it's like
they keep wanting me to be excited about the trickle
down effect that black people get. Everything is minority. Why
(22:41):
it ain't just black? You know you didn't did people Pete.
They know they did people wrong, They know they did
black people wrong. Why can't they just be like, you
know what, this is just for y'all because y'all died
and I know why, Pete, Because in the back of
their mind they do not want to apologize for slavery.
Speaker 2 (22:58):
Because it would have you'd have to repair.
Speaker 1 (23:00):
But again, man, even when he was telling me, he
was like yo, he was like glasses men. No, you
know Trump has a support of white nationalists, like white nationals,
white Christian nationalists. I'm like, but it's different when you
got the Democrats running the country like there is no God.
(23:23):
People would prefer a white god versus no God.
Speaker 6 (23:26):
Yeah, those two are so detached from reality it's obscene.
I'll be blunt. They're so fucking wrong. It's scary how
fucking wrong they are.
Speaker 1 (23:37):
And I, Pete, I don't said it's incredible, would prefer
a white God, a white Jesus versus no Jesus. And
you look at just the whole Democratic Party running their things, right,
they running their things.
Speaker 2 (23:53):
They be doing stuff they don't even got to say
out loud.
Speaker 1 (23:55):
Trap mm hm, Like you don't got to say you
had a cross dresser at the Kenny Garden.
Speaker 2 (24:03):
Why is there pictures?
Speaker 1 (24:05):
Okay, if you want to teach Kenny Gardens about that,
you feel me cool, But why are you running your
campaign on this? And this is what I'm like, they
just run on the dumbest shit. You're running your campaign
on kids being able to get a sex change.
Speaker 2 (24:23):
Why is that a part.
Speaker 1 (24:24):
Of the campaign. Why can't you just pass that law
and silent you know people don't like that. And that's
to me where like the Democratic Party lost to the
Republican Party this time, some of the stuff they be
running on be dumb and it's all condensed, heightened emotional points.
It don't be nothing, and the Republicans run on the
(24:45):
same thing, but it's one thing, and it's people actually
voting because they don't want Like it's a ladio eighty
a d. Shout out to miss missus Hargrove right, and
she was saying she like her main reason for voting
Republican is because she didn't want to have Tampa in
the in the in the boy's bathroom. Why the hell
(25:05):
would you even advertise you gonna put tampons in a
boy's bathroom?
Speaker 2 (25:09):
Why is that a party O campaign? It starts to
look godless.
Speaker 6 (25:16):
I think the reality of it is it's the whole
thing is an all or nothing, buy in principal concept
that that party runs. So that's like a litmus test.
If we can get you to buy in to the
fact that men and women can change back and forth
on their own whims, we certainly can get you to
(25:38):
buy into this fundamentally flawed economic policy to understand the
first place. But it's wind people up emotionally and get
them to buy into everything, and they pick the farthest
thing away as the line de sand and go Okay.
If we can emotionally whip you up to do this,
then our system is working up because we could sure
(25:58):
ship what you up to bind it all the other crowd.
That's what it looks like to me.
Speaker 2 (26:06):
How does that work? What do you mean?
Speaker 1 (26:09):
Like why would that work? Like why would you be
able to run your camp? Like look, look why white
people sometimes make decisions. No white person want to be
seen as racist, right, that that's how white guilt business works, Right,
I get it, old white person want to be seen
as racist.
Speaker 2 (26:26):
But it's like that don't mean and it was something
to see was saying to me.
Speaker 1 (26:31):
We were talking about that, and then they started saying
this like like marginalized group, and I'm like that's not
like that's just a lazy connection, you know what I mean,
Like to make everything a marginalized group.
Speaker 2 (26:46):
Oh bro, stop talking like that, Like why is.
Speaker 1 (26:49):
There these really general number talking points versus you're speaking
to human beings.
Speaker 6 (26:55):
Because that's their motors Aferandi, it's divide to a point,
you know, divide to fifty one percent and unify fifty
one percent. That's why you had like queers for Palestine,
Palestine where it's illegal to be queer. So like that's
(27:16):
that system, that's that program mentality.
Speaker 2 (27:19):
We need to make that a real movement.
Speaker 6 (27:21):
Yeah, you didn't see all those marches, no where they at.
Well now they're not happening as much, but they were
happening in metropolities all over the place, college campuses and stuff. Yeah,
there's a lot of that that's crazy. But yeah, Nonetheless,
it's like pick an apparatus and then convince as many
(27:43):
different people that it's against them as possible and unite
all the people. So if you were to specifically say black,
then you might not get all these other groups to
buy into that because they feel excluded. So we have
to do this like inclusive exclusivity type of you know,
manipulation scheme to get as many that's like, okay, you're
(28:07):
less three percent group people trans yes, black yes, Blatin yes,
women yes, all these. Anybody that can convince the system
is up against as a group blanket wise rather than
like nuts and bolts wise, they'll take it. So that's
largely how that probably works. And then they say quote
people of color, quote, marginalized communities, quote whatever. You know,
(28:29):
they couple a new term every six months when the
you know, old terms don't test out so well with
the focus groups because you've pressed the button so many
times and nobody cares about it anymore when they hear
the noise.
Speaker 2 (28:41):
People the color is one of my favorites.
Speaker 7 (28:44):
No, but that's like, you know how it started off,
like the LGBT. First it was just gay, right then
they start adding to it and add to it. It
used to be lgb yeah it's gay. Was just you know, boom,
it was gay.
Speaker 2 (28:58):
You straight? You gay?
Speaker 7 (28:59):
Now they adding all these letters to it because they
don't hold that same effect like it did back in
the eighties. Now, you know, you add more and more people.
So I hear what p be saying in that, Yeah,
that's America for you, though.
Speaker 2 (29:16):
I don't get that. It's like the fact that this
works is crazy. Disa point, does everybody sleep.
Speaker 7 (29:27):
America's like Hollywood, right, It's like you film this movie
and when you show the movie, like subconsciously people know
this is a whole bunch of nonsense behind the scenes,
like how do they do this? How do they do that?
But you don't pay attention to what goes on behind
the scenes. You just pay attention to what's really on
the screen, and you be so entertained by what's going
(29:48):
on on the screen you don't care about nothing in
the background.
Speaker 2 (29:53):
And it's just you know, but you gotta be.
Speaker 1 (29:58):
Look, I get it. Both cam pains Republican and Democrats.
They have to cater to emotions, right. I'm not saying one.
I'm not saying either, Sam Walton company is they both
do the same thing.
Speaker 2 (30:11):
They cater to the emotion of things.
Speaker 1 (30:12):
Right, Like we talk about the whole idea of immigrants,
and like that same talking point, they took our jobs.
I don't quite know what jobs you want. You're gonna
have those jobs back. I don't know what jobs they took.
Speaker 6 (30:28):
I don't think that's that's a misrepresentation though. That's why
I go back to saying to the counter narrative talking
points are typically wrong, and in these cases, they're extremely wrong.
Like I did some research earlier because I was interested
and I thought it might come up. But people aren't
mad because an immigrant took their job. They're mad because
(30:49):
you're paying them to be here. So like the aggregate
cost for illegal immigrant programs in the state of California
thirty one billion, with the total aggregate value of all
agriculture sold in the state of California forty seven billion.
That's freaking absurd. And the numbers expand out in that,
(31:14):
you know sector to the national one hundred and thirty
one billion last year spent on illegal immigrant programs. That's
a ton No.
Speaker 1 (31:20):
I agree, but I think you I think you're going
into the depth of the thought. But you do have
people saying they took our job.
Speaker 6 (31:29):
Some I think there's more people saying they're saying they
took their jobs and people saying he took my job.
Speaker 1 (31:37):
Well, I just don't think America. You know what's funny, Pete.
Speaker 2 (31:41):
I think.
Speaker 1 (31:45):
Poor Americans are not coming to terms that rich Americans
sold them out.
Speaker 2 (31:51):
I think I've told you that.
Speaker 6 (31:53):
I think they kind of are. Now that was kind
of the point of this whole thing.
Speaker 1 (31:56):
Well, I don't even think it's the point of this
whole thing, because why would you vote for if it
was if you realize rich Americans sold you.
Speaker 6 (32:03):
Out because he's the anti system guy. It was a
system paradigm vote sure, it wasn't an individual because.
Speaker 2 (32:10):
Rich Americans are against Trump. Yeah.
Speaker 6 (32:13):
And similarly, like rationally speaking, do you think Joe Biden
was running the executive branch with an iron fist? No?
Do you think that Kamala Harris was going to have
any say in the room. No, neither of them were.
So what it is is, I don't like this system.
(32:35):
It's extremely powerful and entrenched. It's not working for me.
Somebody has to stand up against this shit. And that
guy said, all stand up against it. No, you don't
have the balls. Oh really, they're trying to throw me
in jail. I got shot in the ear. He is
the only guy who stood up in black. It was
pretty much just the cores, the orphans of the team.
Speaker 2 (32:55):
He looked like Tupac right now, bro, like people bust.
Don't even he screaming fight.
Speaker 1 (33:01):
He do look powerful and he come right out just
talking crazy and some of this stuff.
Speaker 2 (33:07):
That's what I say. But it's it's like.
Speaker 1 (33:11):
I definitely don't understand why would poor Americans vote for him?
Speaker 2 (33:17):
If you understand every like I get the concept.
Speaker 1 (33:21):
Me and Peter have talked about this, and we go
do a whole extra podcast this week.
Speaker 2 (33:25):
We're gonna do a whole extra podcast.
Speaker 1 (33:26):
We're gonna double up on the podcast this week where
we talk about the first hundred days, the first hundred
days being, the first hundred days being uh like, if
there was a mass deportation, if there was a tear
(33:50):
of a huge tear of hyke, you know, sixty percent,
some crazy number. It's like to me, right, the hustler
and us. And this is why I said, it don't
really have nothing to do with us, because it don't
matter who went off. Is we really got to get somebody.
We gotta really trick somebody out of the money. But
to me, I see it as an opportunity. But even
when I talk to Van and See, they don't see
(34:12):
it as an opportunity. I mean, they don't see it
as that they see it as. And it could be
it could get tight because true, if there could be
a labor shortage, you know, things that we are spoiled
to have based off of people coming into this country
and doing those jobs for minimum dollars? But is that
(34:32):
right in the first place, Like, just because somebody's okay
with it?
Speaker 2 (34:38):
Is that right? You know what I mean?
Speaker 1 (34:40):
Like, that's what I was telling to see, Like, if
it's a conversation about crime and righteousness and wrongness, how
could you be okay with taking advantage of somebody else?
Speaker 6 (34:51):
And if it costs a trillion dollars every eight years?
I mean, the biggest issue of this election was inflation,
the fact that the cost of everything, the value, the costs,
the value of the dollar got pulled out of the
dollar at a faster rate than the wages could compensate
for a keep up with it a parallel life.
Speaker 1 (35:09):
So let me ask you a question, Pete. This is
your this your forte. You're you're like, like see, and
and and Van are my black experts when it comes
to policy and and and to some degree economics. You're
you're like my mainstream American person, even though you're not
really that mainstream even.
Speaker 2 (35:26):
Yeah, you know, you're not.
Speaker 1 (35:30):
What is the ultimate goal When they are saying like,
how do like what's the end goal when you do this?
Speaker 2 (35:41):
Do what?
Speaker 1 (35:44):
Like, what's the end goal for allowing people to come
into the country. What's the end goal? Like, what's the
democratic end goal? Like, okay, give me, give me the
democratic perspective, and then give me the Republican perspective.
Speaker 2 (35:59):
What is they're the same.
Speaker 6 (36:05):
It. Here's what's funny this and this is that this
is the whole denial thing of the Democrat Party and
and and there's a there's a right of center media
joke that makes fun of it. It says it's not happening,
but it's good that it is. I've heard that a
thousand times for like ten years, where they'll have they'll
think tank a bunch of crap, they'll release them the media,
(36:27):
they'll celebrate the idea of it, and then people don't
like it, and somebody an opposition will accuse them of
it and they say it's not happening, and then they'll
go back to saying we need this to happen even
though it's not happening, and they're doing it. So what
it comes down to effectively their goal and you can
see it in the Again, I'll go back the truths
(36:51):
in the court documents. Truths in the court documents. There
were several states in the eleventh hour that filed motions
to get unverified citizen voter ballots approved. So if you
can bring in ten million people, strategically place them in
what was it, Patterson, Ohio? Wherever that one skill, I mean,
(37:12):
critical areas, get them through the DMV, get them motor
voter registered to vote. The process then of litigating your
way all the way through, cleaning all of that up
is nearly impossible. You can pass in the meantime rapid
(37:34):
bills to give various upgrades in status and fast tracks
to citizenship and the goals to get because they're eroding
support across the demographic board. So if they can bring
in ten, twelve, twenty million new people that are social
program dependent, that come from a culture and a political
(37:54):
environment that is centralized, power paradigm oriented, that they were
basically importing political support and voter majority. Yeah and clear, clear.
Speaker 2 (38:12):
Daylight shout out to the homie kelvin.
Speaker 1 (38:16):
The only reasonable answer to that is poor people vote
Democrat at a higher clip.
Speaker 6 (38:22):
Sheeesh.
Speaker 1 (38:23):
So, so the whole gangs in New York thing is correct?
What do you mean you remember gangs in New York
when they was bringing people in so like, So if
you don't remember what gangs in New York.
Speaker 6 (38:37):
Pretty much like Yeah, with the Irish German immigration wave
turn of the late nineteenth century or.
Speaker 1 (38:41):
Whatever, you had those you had those wild built Americans
who were you know, like I guess they represented Republican
Republicans or conservative at that time. And then you had
the Tammany kind of party where they were bringing people
in because they knew they would vote Democrat.
Speaker 2 (38:57):
They talked about this on Hollywood films.
Speaker 6 (39:00):
Say the California Like, look at the radical political swing
that California has had in forty years. It's the blueprint
for Texas. Colorado is another example. But you're absolutely right.
Speaker 2 (39:17):
And it's all to win elections.
Speaker 6 (39:20):
Yeah, they're a power obsessed apparatus. Nothing they do is productive.
It's all power.
Speaker 2 (39:27):
That is crazy.
Speaker 1 (39:29):
Again, they would throw away the future of the of
what they believe this country is, or just because they
feel like somebody eventually will still run.
Speaker 6 (39:37):
They'd rather be in charge of a B class country
than not be in charge of an A class country. Guaranteed.
Speaker 2 (39:46):
That can't be true. People, Why not.
Speaker 6 (39:48):
If you you'd rather be in a competitive market or
be guaranteed rich?
Speaker 2 (39:57):
Mm like see that?
Speaker 6 (40:00):
Yeah, if you're guaranteed rich, who gives a ship with
the next guy, particularly if he's already poor, who cares
about his opportunity. I'm guaranteed rich. He was poored yesterday. Yeah,
and I feel like what this election was about something
that you said earlier. People who are poor on welfare
don't want to always be on welfare. So a lot
(40:22):
of people took a flyer and said, there's a chance
that I can transcend this situation with that guy, or
they're offering me ten more dollars a week. Who gives a.
Speaker 1 (40:36):
Shit shout out to Kim Israel. Trump and Elime will
bring the mark of.
Speaker 2 (40:43):
The beast, they might.
Speaker 6 (40:46):
I don't know what that means.
Speaker 1 (40:48):
Yeahs, I just want to believe that Trump and e
Line would bring the mark.
Speaker 2 (40:57):
Of the beast.
Speaker 6 (40:58):
What's the mark of the beast?
Speaker 7 (41:00):
Supposedly, well not supposedly, but you know they look at
how you have the remember how years ago they used
to talk about the chip and the forehead or you know,
you have to have this this mark.
Speaker 2 (41:20):
To do anything like.
Speaker 6 (41:22):
The inverse of the stripe on the sleeve for Jews
in Germany.
Speaker 2 (41:26):
Yeah, gotcha.
Speaker 1 (41:29):
I mean, I just don't see how you can look
at these two specific white men versus the last white man,
and think mark of the Beast.
Speaker 2 (41:40):
That's what I don't get.
Speaker 6 (41:41):
Well, I'll be very frank when we're talking about Joe Biden.
He's a little older, he's not quite such a strong guy.
So his mark, he might have a mark of the Beast,
and it might be sort of a depends problem.
Speaker 1 (41:58):
So Revelations thirteen six team that's through seventeen, which states
he causes all both small and great, rich and poor,
free and slave to receive a mark on their right
hand or on their foreheads that no one may buy
or sell except one who has the mark or the
name of the Beast or the number of his name.
(42:19):
I can understand what that is because Elon is into
that type of technology, and in theory, it's in your hand, right.
Speaker 7 (42:27):
You could have said that about what's the old boy
that did the Apple iPhone on Steve Jobs. I mean,
you can say, you know so, I mean I can't
really pinpoint a specific person. I understand the concept, but
pinpointed down to a specific person. I mean, it could
be Eline, or it could be somebody else, you know.
Speaker 6 (42:46):
And all the big tech companies have already acknowledged the
fact that they provide car and blocks backdoor access to
all their data to the intelligence agencies.
Speaker 2 (42:55):
Shout out to my brother age boy, Manny, ain't no
market the beasts coming.
Speaker 1 (42:59):
Y'all got to stop this razin. I don't think many
really believe in God or something. I know he was
Muslim at one time, but I don't think he will
he good to me.
Speaker 3 (43:08):
I like that.
Speaker 1 (43:09):
Yeah, But that's also why I think people voted Republican
this time. Is like I said, like she's saying Trump
and and Kim is saying Trump and and Eli would
bring the.
Speaker 2 (43:25):
Market the beast.
Speaker 1 (43:26):
But everybody else in every religious country is looking at
the last party and the last leadership.
Speaker 2 (43:31):
Like this is that type of evilness, you know what
I mean?
Speaker 1 (43:36):
They like you, You you manipulating genders, right, this is
the belief right you you're letting anything happen. You don't
have a moral standing. And that's what I was telling
Charlotte Magne and Van I'm like, bro, people would take
a white guy versus no God at all. And it's
just I don't think people like I think they tried.
(43:57):
They gave it a try, right, they gave it a shot.
You know, black people don't have the number to really
rule an election as a whole. But we have the
loudest voice in my mind to rule an election as
a whole. We can influence people to do things when
we all collectively come up. And I think a lot
of poor and lower middle white class people decided to
(44:19):
listen to us. They said, they decided to listen to us.
And they said, Okay, who do you guys want us
to vote for? Who do you guys want us to
vote for? And we said anybody but Trump? And they
took Biden. And then those poor and lower middle class
white people looked at their pockets at the end of
(44:40):
this the last election, and said.
Speaker 2 (44:42):
Hell no, this.
Speaker 1 (44:45):
They looked at how their money was spending because this
election is all about poor white people. I mean, that's
still the majority in America. A bunch of lower middle class,
poor white people. They're running the election. And they listened
to us. In two thousand, we.
Speaker 2 (45:00):
Were screaming, don't vote for Trump. You know, everybody that was.
Speaker 1 (45:05):
Not a poor white, lower middle class person was like,
don't vote.
Speaker 2 (45:09):
For Trump, and they listen.
Speaker 6 (45:10):
I got a stat for you. In twenty twenty, do
you know how many people voted for Trump nationwide? How
many seventy four million in twenty twenty four. Do you
know how many people voted for Trump nationwide? I mean
seventy four million in twenty twenty. Do you know how
(45:33):
people voted for Joe Biden eighty one million. Do you
know how many voted for Kamala Harris?
Speaker 2 (45:40):
It had to be seventy sixty nine.
Speaker 6 (45:42):
Seventy one million. So Trump's number changed literally a couple
hundred thousand, and in what is deemed as the most illegitimate, incoherent,
free for all election in the history of time, ten
million people decided this is an important election this time.
Speaker 2 (46:08):
I was one of them. Ten million. I don't know.
I don't know. Man, shout out.
Speaker 6 (46:17):
There's never been numbers like that.
Speaker 2 (46:20):
About the same.
Speaker 1 (46:21):
Kim is rocking the chat. Trump just said it won't
be any more voting. Kim, don't believe that silly stuff.
Let's just talk, uh shout out to the homie Fast
Fats in the chat.
Speaker 2 (46:32):
What's having the fats?
Speaker 1 (46:33):
Christianity was a brainwash program the Corrus slaves into Obama.
Speaker 6 (46:39):
It don't even make sense older than that, it.
Speaker 2 (46:42):
Even makes sense Fast. That's just crazy Fast.
Speaker 1 (46:44):
It's not how Christianity started, that's just madness.
Speaker 2 (46:51):
I don't know, like I hear, I hear like I
hear a lot of.
Speaker 1 (46:54):
Opening things that Trump be talking about, but I don't
pay that no attention again, and he's appealing to a.
Speaker 2 (47:03):
Demographic to.
Speaker 1 (47:06):
To Charlemagne's point, it does have a very fascist sound
to it.
Speaker 2 (47:11):
But I think.
Speaker 1 (47:13):
More or less he understands people respect power, He understands
what he's projecting his power. I don't think want to
rule his country longer than the four years he got
to rule it. I think this is a personal thing
for him to do it. But I doubt at the
end of these four years he like, I'm not ready
to go.
Speaker 6 (47:29):
Do you think he intends to make everyone who runs
against him go to court to get on the ballot,
because everyone, every person who ran against Joe Biden ended
up in a courtroom trying to get on the presidential ballot, everyone,
not just Trump, not just Kennedy, everyone. Do you think
he'll try to arrest and have criminally charged, convicted, and
sentenced his political opponents? There were Trump people who served
(47:50):
time in prison from his camp, from his actual staff.
Speaker 1 (47:54):
Yeah, shout out to Tim what's his name? That dude
is something else do you think he would try because
people do say that, People do say he has the
mentality of a dictator or.
Speaker 6 (48:10):
You know what they say, they say he's gonna cook
for retribution. What does that mean? It means we did
all this corrupt, crooked, criminal ship and he's gonna do
it back to us.
Speaker 2 (48:20):
Do you think he's gonna try to stay in the
White House long of it? Four years?
Speaker 1 (48:23):
No, you don't have any doubt, Like if you had
to have a percentage, like.
Speaker 2 (48:28):
Let's say zero.
Speaker 1 (48:30):
This weekend, Mike Tyson fights This weekend on Netflix, Mike
Tyson fights Jake Paul. What chances do you give Jake Paul?
What percentage of chances do you give Jake Paul to win?
Speaker 6 (48:41):
That's a coin flip to me.
Speaker 2 (48:42):
Fifty you give Jake Paul fifty chance to win the fight?
Speaker 6 (48:47):
Yeah, yeah, I I really don't know until I see it.
I really don't know.
Speaker 2 (48:54):
Zero what's in chances to win the fight? Eru's entertainment.
So that's entertainment.
Speaker 7 (49:02):
If it's just a for real fight, it's a real fight,
it's entertainment, not a real It actually goes.
Speaker 2 (49:07):
On their record, it actually can.
Speaker 5 (49:10):
Record.
Speaker 2 (49:11):
He's almost six nights about his record right now.
Speaker 1 (49:13):
Mike always gonna care. Mike Tyson is one of the
ten greatest.
Speaker 6 (49:16):
Head didn't care about his record in this last fight
for real, when he sat down in the corner of
the fight and earlier came up all the microphones.
Speaker 2 (49:25):
No, he's talking about when he fought Kevin McBride. But
that's a young he was not forty. No. No, the
guy he fought was a young, big.
Speaker 1 (49:35):
White heavyweight fighter who had an amateur career, who had
thirty fights by the time he fought Mike Tyson and
an amateur career.
Speaker 2 (49:42):
And that guy just beating Tyson.
Speaker 1 (49:45):
I'm not disagreeing, but he just beat Mike Tyson because
it was just his time and Mike was past working out.
Speaker 2 (49:51):
Jake Paul is not a fighter. He's a zero chance.
Speaker 1 (49:55):
Trump has a better chance to stay in the White House,
and Jake Paul has a chance to win this fight.
Speaker 2 (50:01):
Yes, zero chance, zero chance.
Speaker 6 (50:04):
I'm forty one. I know how different I am at
forty one physically than I was at thirty five.
Speaker 1 (50:15):
Yeah, but none of us are Mike. I'm not you,
and you're not Mike Tyson. Jake Paul.
Speaker 2 (50:20):
Jake Paul is still not a better athlete than Mike Tyson.
Right now, I'm not.
Speaker 6 (50:24):
Worried about that. I My concern is if Jake can
backpedal for long enough.
Speaker 2 (50:30):
He's not having the.
Speaker 6 (50:30):
Confidence in Mike's respiratory. Respiratory.
Speaker 1 (50:34):
He don't need respiratory. Mike Tyson has been fighting twelve
round fights. He's probably fought seventy of them. Like he's
fought so many he knows more about boxing than Jake
Paul is. Jake Paul has zero chance. He's not gonna
win this fight at all. It's not possible.
Speaker 2 (50:49):
It's victory.
Speaker 1 (50:50):
His moral victory is surviving being there for the last
eight round. They reduced the fight down to two minute
rounds like women rounds. They're making them wear really big gloves,
like training gloves. They've doing a million things to give
him a chance. He has zero chance in winning the fight.
He only has a chance to survive. Mike Tyson is
(51:11):
one of the greatest ten heavyweights in the history of boxing.
The type of athlete he is dog is so far
out of this world. Jake Paul on his best day
is not as good as Michael Jackson. Excuse me, Mike
Tyson at fifty eight. You had her at the first
time either or Yeah, Mike is zero chance, Jiggy, I
(51:31):
don't know what you're talking about.
Speaker 2 (51:32):
Age is a difference.
Speaker 7 (51:33):
It's not a reason I give him a chance. It's
just because he has no chance.
Speaker 2 (51:38):
He Mike Mike Jake plus zero.
Speaker 1 (51:40):
Jake Paul couldn't beat Tommy Fury who never had an
amateur career and barely started fighting. He cannot be a
real fighter. Jake Paul came up Evander Holyfield, Riddy Bow.
He can't rip no professional fighters at that level.
Speaker 2 (51:53):
No, I don't like in a fight. Fight No, but again,
just the number one that's on Netflix. That's entertaining. What
does that mean that's entertaining. It's a fight, Yeah, but
it's entertainment. All fights are entertainment. Some of them dudes
getting the ring and they really have an issue with.
Speaker 1 (52:10):
They don't, No, they don't. It's all entertainment. It's all
for money. But that don't change somebody getting hit in
the face. Don't all cannot fight, y'all?
Speaker 3 (52:20):
Got it?
Speaker 1 (52:21):
What I love about marketing and especially in boxing, it's
at its best when it could capture your imagination.
Speaker 2 (52:27):
The fact that people think Jake Paul has a chance.
Speaker 6 (52:30):
Is crazy to me.
Speaker 1 (52:31):
You have to be absolutely insane to think a guy
who can't fight a novice boxer.
Speaker 2 (52:37):
He couldn't beat Tommy Fiery, a novice boxer, A guy
who don't.
Speaker 1 (52:42):
Have amateur career, he don't have anything he has like
he was a reality TV show guy, like nine or
ten fights, he couldn't beat him. He's I don't care
if Mike Tyson's fifty eight. Mike Tyson a like me
when I'm fifty eight. Mike Tyson is still greater. I
think he just ran a five to one the other
day in a forty Like, what the hell do you
do when you see this type? He's not that type
(53:04):
of old man like glasses like some old man like.
He's still the quickest person Jake Paul will ever see
in the ring.
Speaker 6 (53:14):
Sure, and I don't think they're blood testing Mike. I'll
be very frank.
Speaker 1 (53:19):
And even if they did it, then it wouldn't matter,
because how the hell do you stop or slot when
you don't even fight other boxers. It's different fighting the
old basketball player or fighting some old UFC fighter.
Speaker 2 (53:30):
You're not fighting a.
Speaker 1 (53:31):
Guy who can do the dance like he's not he
doesn't know the guy that could do a dance.
Speaker 6 (53:37):
There's very there is a very herschel Walker like potential
outcome for this, and it's going to be bad.
Speaker 1 (53:45):
Bro, Tommy Fiery was young. I think age different is
the main issue. Shout out to Kelvin. It's not Tommy
Fury can't beat Mike Tyson would knock Tommy Fury out
right today, Like top biggest.
Speaker 6 (54:00):
What's he actually? What's his actual size?
Speaker 2 (54:02):
I don't even know.
Speaker 1 (54:02):
I don't really six foot one, but he's a light
heavy way like one seventy if he's been fighting at
one seventy five?
Speaker 6 (54:09):
Really, yes, and it was so much bigger than that.
Speaker 1 (54:12):
No, and then now you go to go fight the
fucking heavy a fucking three times a two time heavyweight chance.
Speaker 6 (54:16):
Mike looks like he's about two thirty five.
Speaker 2 (54:18):
Because he is, dude.
Speaker 6 (54:20):
Yeah, he's not small, that's sure.
Speaker 1 (54:22):
Like you not even you never even been punched by
somebody like this, Like I don't care if you were
in sparring. Bro, the sheer, quickness and ferocity when Mike
approaches you. You have to know how to dance like
you like boxing is a dance. It's not really a fight.
Speaker 2 (54:39):
It's a dance.
Speaker 1 (54:39):
It's all about how people move and conduct theyself around
the ring where they keep their hands at So you
learn the most by dancing with different dance partners.
Speaker 2 (54:49):
Jake Paul ain't fought nobody that dances.
Speaker 1 (54:53):
Nate Robinson is a basketball player, the Brothers from the Bay,
what's timing me from the baby?
Speaker 2 (55:00):
UFC dude, what was it the football player? No, the
UFC dude fight UFC yo.
Speaker 1 (55:10):
They don't know how to dance like they know how
to punch. They could position themselves, but they don't know
the boxing dance. Even Tyrone Tyrone or Tyron Woodley, they
don't know how to Mike Tyson is the king of
the dance you even at fifty eight, He's going to
move better than everybody you fought.
Speaker 2 (55:29):
He's going to punch harder, he's going to move quicker.
He's going to move.
Speaker 1 (55:33):
Better than every last person you fought. There is not
one person that Jake Paul has ever fought that dances, punches,
and is as quick as Mike Tyson. At fifty eight,
he's probably three times faster, three times or five times
more powerful, and ten times more quicker.
Speaker 2 (55:53):
At the age of fifty eight.
Speaker 1 (55:54):
There's not one guy he fought that's as quick as
a fifty eight year old Mike Tyson. Tyson was one
of the quickest people in the history of human fucking beings.
So I fifty eighty still quicker than Jake Paul. I
think he would whip Jake Paul in a foot race.
And you're gonna put him in there. And you can
see they make it every rule, bro, They're making every
(56:17):
rule to make this man last. A win for Jake
Paul is to survive eight rounds with Mike Tyson.
Speaker 2 (56:24):
That's a that's it.
Speaker 6 (56:26):
You know why the two minute rule helps Mike more
than Jake.
Speaker 1 (56:30):
No, it helps Jake because guess what, once he catches
up to him, you have time to get out the ring.
It's not He's not even gonna have a better endurance
than Mike Tyson.
Speaker 6 (56:39):
That's the that's my concern that that I'm not so
sure about that that goes quick. That's like you know
what they say, like the power is the first last thing. Yeah,
that's the first thing to go.
Speaker 1 (56:51):
But the type of endurance he would need to survive
Mike Tyson, Like people keep talking about Mike.
Speaker 2 (56:58):
If Mike Tyson was fighting against.
Speaker 6 (56:59):
It's all the circulatory system.
Speaker 1 (57:01):
If Mike Tyson was fighting against Big Baby Anderson, he'd
get killed. My Big Baby Anderson's a professional boxer, never
won a title. If he was fighting against Chris Ariola,
shout out to do me, Chris, he'd be in trouble.
If he's fight Lewis Ortiz, who's like forty two in Cuba,
he'd be in trouble. Them dudes would knock Mike Tyson out.
(57:23):
This guy, who don't punch at a heavyweight level, he
don't fight other boxers, is not beating Mike Tyson.
Speaker 2 (57:29):
I don't know what the hell people talking about, even
talking about his win. I'm like his win. Jake Paul's entertaining.
This dude is over there scoring twelve and fourteen rounds
right now. That's my only, only, the only reason I
give Jake Paul any shot. Jake Paul has no chance.
Speaker 1 (57:50):
Trump has a better chance of getting the third term
than fucking Jake Paul has a winning this fight.
Speaker 6 (57:55):
I think he has a better chance of doing it
if he wanted to. I don't think he wants to.
His whole saying is restoring order, so to speak, Right
part of order is normal elections. He wants to normalize
election rules, and he wants to basically roll back the
massive expansion of executive branch federal agencies that seem to
run rampant. That's basically the only two things he wants
(58:17):
to do as far as government shit goes. He wants
to clean up some economic problems, but most of that
just comes from rolling back the encroachment by executive agencies
all over the economy.
Speaker 2 (58:28):
Yeah, I can dig it. I don't know.
Speaker 1 (58:32):
It's gonna be a good We got two more days
to talk about this. Wednesday and Friday at noon.
Speaker 6 (58:37):
It's make America great again, not make America Germany for once.
Speaker 2 (58:43):
Take America Germany for once. It's crazy.
Speaker 1 (58:47):
Took on every Monday, Wednesday, and Friday at no Click
that thumbs up button going to description. Subscribe to No
Sillans Podcast for me, Apple Podcasts, anywhere you get your podcast.
We got a new one going up tomorrow. It's a
really great one. We're gonna do a couple extra ones
for this week. I'm gonna get pizza to step in.
We gonna do some extra ones to really start talking
(59:08):
about how this money and what opportunities should look like
over the next hundred days.
Speaker 2 (59:13):
For y'all, we oft this thing. Man good looking out.
Speaker 1 (59:20):
For tuning in to the No Sellers Podcast, Please do
us a favorite, subscribe, rate, comment, and share. This episode
was recorded right here on the West coast of the
USA and produced by the Black Effect Podcast Network and
now heard Radio Yeah