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June 24, 2025 111 mins

6.18.2025 #RolandMartinUnfiltered: Judge Blocks $600M EPA Cut, Hegseth Dodges, Galveston Vote Fight, NH Racist Email & FAMU/TSU News

A federal judge ruled that the EPA's decision to cut $600 million in environmental justice grants was unlawful. 

Pete Hegseth dodges tough questions on Capitol Hill about deploying military force against Americans.

In Texas, a redistricting battle in Galveston could wipe out Black voting power. Simone Leeper from the Campaign Legal Center joins us with the latest legal fight to stop it.

Plus, a New Hampshire lawmaker sends an openly racist email blaming African Americans, NOT guns, for violence in America. 

Florida's Board of Governors confirmed controversial Marva Johnson as Florida Agricultural and Mechanical University's 13th President. 

And Tennessee State University secures millions in state funding after years of financial neglect. 

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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:14):
So that's Thursday, June eighteenth, twenty twenty five, coming up
from Roland Mardin unfilter extreaming live on the Black Star Network.
A federal judge rule of the EPA's decision to cut
six hundred million dollars in environmental justice grants was unlawful,
not a shot. Well, the absolutely unqualified Defense Secretary Peter
Heckseth dot his tough questions on the Capitol Hill and

(00:36):
he gets ringed out by Senator Tammy Duckworth, who served
and she lost limbs in the military. Oh, I cannot
wait until y'all see how she tore him to shreds.
You were going to absolutely enjoy well, be a fed chair,
said Donald Trump's terrors are gonna hurt the economy.

Speaker 2 (00:59):
And then what happens?

Speaker 1 (01:00):
Well, that idiot Trump, how he's outside celebrating the erection
of a flag poet the White House. He sounded like
a drunk uncle with dementia when he was talking.

Speaker 2 (01:15):
It really was bad. Listen to him. What did we
play some of y'all? What was said about this here?

Speaker 1 (01:20):
Also, why is the Country Academy while the GRAMM is
changing their rules? Beyonce wins Best Country Album and now
all the folk getting mad. So now they got a
new traditional country album. Yeah, I got a couple of
things to say about that. The Texas with districting Capala
and Galveston, it could wipe out, wipe out black voting power.
We'll talk with smong Leopard with the Campaign Legal Center

(01:42):
about that. Also, new Hampshire law maker Sension openly racist
email blaming black people for shootings in the country. I
guess he forgot all the white folks who own guns.

Speaker 2 (01:53):
Plus in Florida, their border governess Fade. The complete is done.

Speaker 1 (01:57):
They unanimously chose Marvra Johnson's a new president. Then the
Florida and M University and guess what, she's still grossly
unqualified for the job. Plus Tennessee State secure as millions
and funding will tell you about that as well. It's
time to ring the punk a rolling marked on Pilcher
on the blackstud Network.

Speaker 2 (02:12):
Let's go.

Speaker 3 (02:13):
He's got whatever the best, He's on it, whatever it.

Speaker 4 (02:18):
Is, he's got the fact the fine.

Speaker 2 (02:21):
Now Wena believes he's right on time. It is rolling
best belief.

Speaker 3 (02:25):
He's going putting it down from Boston houst to politics
with entertainment, just bookcase he's going, it's rolling Monte.

Speaker 1 (02:42):
Yeah, rolling, He's.

Speaker 4 (02:49):
Broke, he's pressed, she's real.

Speaker 2 (02:51):
Good question.

Speaker 5 (02:52):
No, he's rolling Monte Folks.

Speaker 1 (03:18):
Tomorrow, Texans and foks across the country will be celebrating
June tenth. Of course, they'll be doing so in Galveston,
where one hundred and sixty years ago General Granger and
a number of black troops showed up there to enforce
the Emancipation Proclamation. Well, what's been happening is a battle
for voting rights in Texas. Republicans there have been trying

(03:38):
to strip black Latino voters of their voting power by
trying to change the constitution of the Galveston County.

Speaker 2 (03:46):
Galveston Commissioner's Court.

Speaker 1 (03:48):
October twenty twenty three, federal judge ruled the Galveston Counties
redistricting map, which would deny Galveuston's black Latino voters of representation.

Speaker 2 (03:57):
Also comprised nearly half of.

Speaker 1 (03:58):
The county's population, said they did not ecal opportunity to
choose a candidate of their choice, saying in valley the
section two of the Voting Rice Act.

Speaker 2 (04:07):
Well, four years, that's been.

Speaker 1 (04:08):
A battle going on there over this the campaign that
Legal Center has been part of the ongoing lawsuit challenging
what's been happening there small leapers the Senior Legal Council
over districting. At the campaign at Legal Center, she joins us,
right now, this is absolutely crazy and what we have
to understand. Look, I'm born and raised in Texas, born
and raised in Houston, not far from Galveston, and what
this is about. Republicans systematically want to screw over black people.

(04:32):
Right now in Terran County where Fort Worth is doing
the exact same thing. They want to get rid of
one of the black districts and go from three to
two Republican control to four one.

Speaker 2 (04:44):
That's the same thing happening in Galveston County. Correct, that's right.

Speaker 6 (04:49):
It's basically it's going from having one seat in which
the black and Latino community had the opportunity for thirty
years now to elect their candidate of choice and have
their seat at the table and the county commissioner's court,
and now they stripped that away by cracking those voters
across the various damas.

Speaker 1 (05:07):
That's not right there for people don't understand that phrase,
explaining that what cracking.

Speaker 6 (05:11):
Is absolutely basically it's when you have a large number
of voters, in this case Black Latino voters who could
make up the majority in a district, and in this
case have for over three decades, I made up the
majority of a district where they had the opportunity to
elect a candidate of their choice. And what they've done
is divide up those voters in the new lines that

(05:33):
they've drawn and split them up so that they no
longer make up a majority in any of the seats
for the County Commissioner's Court. And so now they don't
have that seat at the table which has been so
important to that community for so long.

Speaker 1 (05:47):
Now, when you say that seat, what's the present representation?
How many commissioners are there in Galveson County? How many
are Republican, how many are Democrats?

Speaker 6 (05:56):
But when we look at this, we don't necessarily look
at it just in terms of republic demonstrat What we're
really looking at is the candidates of choice. Right, And
at this point we went from having one seat of
the four in the Commissioner's Court and then there's also
the county judge. There was one seat in which the
Black Latino community for thirty years have been able to
elect their candidate of choice, and now they have no seats.

Speaker 7 (06:19):
No.

Speaker 1 (06:20):
Obviously, the reason I'm saying that because the reality is
it does come to so.

Speaker 2 (06:25):
Right now, of the five members.

Speaker 1 (06:27):
Of the Commissioner's Court for elected, got the county judge,
how many of them right now?

Speaker 2 (06:31):
How many of them are Republican? How many are Democrats?
Right now?

Speaker 6 (06:35):
On the ideological lean four or all five including the
county judge, would be Republican and then none would be Democrat,
or in the way that we look at it, you know,
none are allowing that minority community to elect their candidate
of choice.

Speaker 1 (06:48):
Now previously, now that's this is the current map. So
previously what was the makeup? Was it for Republicans? One Democrat?

Speaker 6 (06:57):
That's right, And it's one of those situations where you think, oh, well,
you didn't have a majority anyways, right what did it matter?
But what we see is that in this community this
seat has been so important. I'm from Florida, so I
know what kind of an impact hurricanes can have. In
twenty seventeen, a Hurricane Harvey rolled through and devastated Galveston County.
Having that representative made all the difference in terms of

(07:19):
communication and advocacy and really having a seat at the
table in the halls of the county government.

Speaker 1 (07:26):
Right, And so again I understand from your organization's standpoint
you look at this as just what the law, you
look at the racial whole deal. But I'm also a
factoring the politics. The reason they are doing this is
because they don't want there to even be one Democrat elected.
That because based upon African American Latinos and how they vote,

(07:48):
they likely are going to vote Democrat. So by breaking
this up and splintering them, you now be able to
create a fifth Republican seat. And so right now it's
I have to nothing Republicans versus Democrats.

Speaker 2 (08:02):
Correct, that is correct.

Speaker 6 (08:04):
But I do want to be very clear that here
what we're alleging and what I think the fact that
ry clear is that there was not a partisan gerrymander.

Speaker 4 (08:11):
There was a racial Oh.

Speaker 1 (08:12):
No, no, no, no, I understand that. I understand that was done. Yea, yeah,
understand that because first of all, that was the case
in North Carolina. And the reality is the Supreme Court
is already a rule if they don't have jurisdiction, which
is bs for John Roberts, they don't have any jurisdiction
over partisan jurymandering. That's a state issue, but the Supreme
Court still can rule on racial jurymandering. So we saw
what happened in the case in Alabama where they create
an opportunity district. We saw what happen in Louisiana where

(08:34):
they created an opportunity district as well.

Speaker 2 (08:36):
We saw how the Court is actually ruled in the favor.

Speaker 1 (08:38):
Of African American Latinos regarding Section two, and like that
strand is still available. The reason I am trying to
explain to the public what's going on here, what they
are doing is what you're alleging, they are doing racial jurymandering.
And the goal of the Republicans in Galveston County is
they want total control, and by cracking this district, they

(09:00):
are saying, we're gonna splinter Blacks and Latinos. So essentially
you're not going to be able to let the person
of your choice, and more than likely the persons of
your choice is going to be a Democrat. In Tarrant County,
the same thing. There are two black members of Tarann
County Court. They want to eliminate one of those to
go from a three to two Republican to two Democrats

(09:21):
and three white members in two black to go four
Republicans and one black.

Speaker 2 (09:27):
So that's really what their strategy is.

Speaker 1 (09:29):
And it really comes down to racial gerrymandering, and that's
what it boils down to regarding this here, has a
Supreme Court ruled on the maps in Galveston County.

Speaker 6 (09:41):
The Supreme Work hasn't ruled specifically on the maps in
Galveston County. The Supreme Court was involved in that. The
District Court had said, you can't proceed in the twenty
twenty four elections based on these discriminatory maps, and that
was appealed up to the Supreme Court, and unfortunately, the
Supreme Court allowed the election to move forward under maps

(10:02):
that were identified by the District Court as means spirited
and egregious.

Speaker 1 (10:07):
And that's and AND's and that is that because Supreme
Court sort of has this ridiculous damn rule that, oh,
it's too close to the elections for us to be
able to consider this. So therefore, even though the court
is the district Court is ruled that it's illegal, leave
it in place and then we'll decide after the election
for future election whether it's illegal or legal.

Speaker 4 (10:29):
Yeah, that could certainly be a factor.

Speaker 6 (10:31):
And when we have these sorts of things, we don't
want to read too much into the tea leaves on,
you know how what the court considers about what we
call the merits of the case, you know, the actual facts,
right if they're not issuing a written opinion giving their justification.
But that is something that has been a huge problem
in terms of saying, oh, it's too close to the election,
even when in actuality it's not.

Speaker 1 (10:50):
Yeah, because same thing has happened in other jurisdictions where
they were frankly elected people under the illegal maps, but
the Supreme Court allowed them to continue. All right, So
from a court standpoint, where do you stand with this here? Like,
what is it in the appellate? Is it going back
to Supreme Court? Because you're in limbo right now? What
are the elections in Galveston County? They're in an off

(11:11):
year like this year or the next year in twenty twenty.

Speaker 6 (11:14):
Six, So it was in twenty twenty four that the
election went place underneath the discriminatory map two years of
four year terms that is going to be two year terms.

Speaker 2 (11:26):
Got it, So that was in twenty twenty four, correct, now?

Speaker 6 (11:29):
I think actually I'm going to be completely honest with you.
I'm blinking on it right now, and I don't want
to give it wrong information.

Speaker 4 (11:34):
I apologize now.

Speaker 2 (11:35):
Know where about it, I can easily find it.

Speaker 1 (11:36):
So so we're talking about and so if you're talking
about and so where does the where does the court
case stand?

Speaker 4 (11:46):
Right now?

Speaker 6 (11:47):
The court case is back down at the district court level.
So the district court judge ruled under a set part
of our claims that we made right. So there's the
parts of the claims that are moving forward right now
about intent. It's about the discriminatory intent and the racial
Gerrymanderin previously, the judge had ruled on what's called vote dilution,

(12:09):
which is basically the effect of the maps, the fact
that the maps actually in effect took away the opportunity
for black and Latino voters to elect their candidate of choice.

Speaker 4 (12:21):
And the district court.

Speaker 6 (12:22):
Ruled in favor of the black and Latino voters, and
that was up to the appellate court at the Fifth Circuit,
and they did something which was truly horrible, which is
they went against their own precedent, their own cases that
they had previously decided and held that there's a single
race limitation on the protections of the Voting Rights Act

(12:44):
as it relates to those effects claims.

Speaker 1 (12:46):
I'm sorry, the single race limitation.

Speaker 2 (12:49):
What the hell is that?

Speaker 6 (12:50):
Yes, a great question, right, And so basically you have
in this case, the black and Latino community together, they
have a common co unity, they have common candidates of interest,
they have shared concerns, and together they're able to come
together to elect a candidate of their choice. The Fifth
Circuit has said that you can't bring claims ontohalf of

(13:14):
more than one racial groups.

Speaker 1 (13:16):
Okay, oh wait wait wait wait wait wait wait wait
wait wait wait wait wait wait wait wait wait wait.

Speaker 2 (13:20):
I'm sorry wait a bitute wait.

Speaker 1 (13:23):
Y'all are suing on the basis of racial jerrymandering. They're
trying to say, hey, if you go sue, you gotta
sue only for black people and only for Latino people.
You can't sue for black and Latino people together.

Speaker 6 (13:43):
So they haven't said that yet and hopefully they will not.
About racial gerrymandering or racial intent in the maps. What
they did say is that if you're talking about the
effect of the maps, the fact that it takes away
voting power for these combined racial groups. They said, in
that case, you could only see on behalf of black

(14:04):
or Latino voters. And we understand that this is it
imposes a racial purity test on the protections of the
voting right.

Speaker 4 (14:11):
Zac it makes no sense. And the vast majority of
courts have not made.

Speaker 6 (14:16):
That decision, and indeed the Fifth Circuit previously had said
that that made no sense. Unfortunately, that's the ruling that
they've made. And so now we've taken this case back
down to the district court level, the original core, and
now we're moving forward and having the court asking the
court to rule on our claims of racial jerry nandering
and discriminatory intent.

Speaker 2 (14:37):
Okay in redistrict.

Speaker 1 (14:38):
Okay, So, folks who are watching and listen, I need
youry to understand something here and.

Speaker 2 (14:45):
You can't do this.

Speaker 1 (14:46):
So just so, guys, do me a favor. Get me
out of the two box, put me in a one box.
So let me explain this here, because see, I don't
want her getting in trouble because she is to go
before the courts. So I'm gonna say this. I'm gonna
go back to our guests. The Fifth Circuit Court Appeals
is one of the most conservative appeals courts in America. Okay,

(15:07):
hard right wingers, if y'all study, we cover this what
happened Louisiana.

Speaker 2 (15:12):
They kept going back.

Speaker 1 (15:13):
And forth, back and forth, essentially trying to help the
people in Louisiana as having an out to create the
Opportunity District, and basically Supreme Court was like, no, this
has been decided, and they kept trying and trying again.
So for people who are listening and watching, understand that's
what the Fifth Circuit is. They are more Republican appointed

(15:35):
jutterals in the Fifth Circuit than any than than anyone else.
Very few folks are pointed out democrats, and so you
have to understand the radical ideological bit of the Fifth Circuit.
So that's why they're doing the actions that our guests
just described.

Speaker 2 (15:53):
Now I'll go back to simone.

Speaker 1 (15:54):
So I don't I don't need you know them trying
to say, oh my god, you were doing this show,
you were calling us out. But I can call them
out because that's exactly who they are. So the thing
that the benefit and hopefully and again we've seen this
in other cases and where this Supreme Court shockingly has
consistently even though we saw the attack of Section four

(16:16):
with Shelby b versus Holder this Supreme Court, and it's
hanging by a thread, still going Hey, guess what.

Speaker 2 (16:25):
Section two still stands.

Speaker 1 (16:27):
They've actually ruled in several other cases against racial jered
manding under the guise of Section two. That gives you,
I hope, some hope that if it goes all.

Speaker 2 (16:41):
The way up, they were ruling your favor before the
next election.

Speaker 6 (16:46):
I mean, I hate to read tee these, but what
I can tell you is that this has been described
as a text book case of racial jerryman right by
experts at court, and so it's very clear the evidence
is out there.

Speaker 4 (17:00):
The district Court judge.

Speaker 6 (17:01):
Has made the findings that would demonstrate that this is
racially discriminatory. This is racial gerrymandering. And I do want
to clarify it as four year terms for the count.

Speaker 2 (17:13):
Yeah, I was just just checking.

Speaker 4 (17:14):
I apologize.

Speaker 1 (17:15):
I've already checked the elections in twenty twenty four, so
the next elections in twenty twenty eight. But they if
they do rule, I mean, and if they do rule
that these maps are illegal, can they order a special
election or or will folks will black Latinovols there frankly
have to wait until twenty twenty eight.

Speaker 4 (17:35):
They could order a special election.

Speaker 6 (17:37):
Absolutely, there's also staggered terms, right, so based on the
numbering of the district that affects the year in which
the election is right and so you know that's another option.

Speaker 4 (17:47):
There's no reason that this.

Speaker 6 (17:48):
Community should have to wait any longer and go any
longer without that representation that is so pivotal.

Speaker 1 (17:55):
Absolutely, Simone Leeper will show appreciate it. Thank you so
very much for joining us.

Speaker 6 (17:59):
Thank you very much for having me.

Speaker 1 (18:00):
Folks want to bring in my panel right now, talk
about this here joining me right now.

Speaker 2 (18:05):
Robert Pattillo, Uh.

Speaker 1 (18:06):
He is a civil rights attorney, also a congressional staffer.

Speaker 2 (18:11):
Joining us from Atlanta.

Speaker 1 (18:12):
Rebecca Carrothers, EXECUTI Vice President, Ferry Election Center out of DC.
Eugene Craig, CEO X Factor Media out of Baltimore, Maryland. Rebecca,
I want to start with you. I mean again, we
see what's happening in Galveston County. We've been covering what's
happening in Arran County. What was so shameful in Arran
County is that the that terrant county, the government hires

(18:32):
this conservative firm out of I think it was Virginia
to redraw their maps. And we played the video how
the county judge would not let them testify and commission
commission Listen, Lisa Simmons.

Speaker 2 (18:45):
Like, tip of well, hold up, were.

Speaker 1 (18:47):
Paying for this, The taxpayers are paying for this. So
how y'all gonna not let them testify in public to
answer these questions? And Bay she was like, where are they? Oh,
they're in a room somewhere else. And the county judge judge,
and so it was like, wait a minute, it's up
to them whether they testify or not. This is what
Republicans are doing. They hold a three to two majority

(19:07):
right now in the town county Court. They want to
read district the seats right now. We're not even in
the like this is the middle of a census year.
Because the judge and the county judge, that makes it
perfect clear I want another Republican on this court.

Speaker 2 (19:23):
This is the stuff that they are doing.

Speaker 1 (19:25):
They are raising about it, and it is specifically to
take out a black county commissioner.

Speaker 8 (19:33):
So we're only just to remind your audience we're under
a very extremely fractured Voter Ranks Act, which means that functionally,
we kind of have a piece of Section two left.
Section three has fallen, Section five has fallen.

Speaker 4 (19:44):
So what does that mean?

Speaker 8 (19:46):
As an example, with Campaign Legal Center Fair Election Center,
we do joint litigation with them. We just litigation with
them in the state of Alabama, which we were successful,
where the state of Alabama decided they were going to
remove tens of thous of people off of the rolls.
It was largely minority voters in Alabama going into the
twenty twenty four elections. It was a violation of a

(20:09):
HAVA Help America Vote Act, which says you.

Speaker 4 (20:12):
Cannot make certain changes within ninety.

Speaker 8 (20:15):
Days of an election. So what we're seeing when there
is no voting rights Act that's that's valid in this country.
We're seeing especially in what has been previously suspect areas.
So a lot of it is across the South, not
just the Confederate South, but the Jim Crow South. We
also see in different places in the quote unquote North

(20:37):
where there has been local jurisdictions that racially have made
decisions based upon race in a negative way to make
sure that voters aren't able to elect the candidates of
their choice.

Speaker 4 (20:50):
What we're seeing in Texas.

Speaker 8 (20:51):
Is especially egregious because they're saying, forget the ten year
cycle of where we have the census, that next year
we do redistricting, we set the districts, and then for
the next decade that is indeed how people vote based
up on those districts. Instead, we're seeing a constant at
ever present on redistricting fight, and we are hearing very
partisan things.

Speaker 4 (21:12):
We are hearing even from the.

Speaker 8 (21:13):
White House, from the Congress, even telling Texas on the
congressional level, Hey, you need to do redistricting because we
need you to send more Republicans to Washington, DC. That's
not the way this thing should work. So right now
we see the way voting, we see the apparatus to determine,
whether it's redistricting determining political districts, or even the apparatus

(21:37):
of who gets to vote. We see it extremely heavily
politically charged. That is not the way it's supposed to be.
Voters decide who represent them. Politicians aren't supposed to decide
who their voters are. But what we're seeing is a
very blatant and naked attempt on keeping power. Because if
all things were equal, if we were making sure those
who are eligible are able to vote.

Speaker 4 (21:58):
If we were making.

Speaker 8 (21:59):
Sure that we had fear maps and how people are
able to vote, Congress will look different. And that's what
certain people in this country do not.

Speaker 2 (22:08):
Want, Eugenie.

Speaker 1 (22:09):
Look, this is all about a naked power grab. And
again that decision of the Supreme Court that was led
by Chief Justice John Roberts at, Oh, we don't have
any say so in partisan Jered Manning. That's left up
to the states. And so the authority there is are
the state supreme courts. That's what opened the door for
the Republicans say, in places where we run the state

(22:31):
Supreme Court, Yo, we're just going to change the maps.
The problem is the Supreme Court, federal government still has
control when it comes to racial That's why when you.

Speaker 2 (22:43):
Said, when they had a previous Supreme previous court case.

Speaker 1 (22:45):
In North Carolina and they lost one of these, Reverend
Bishop Barber kept telling the white folks in North Carolina,
do not sue on the basis of partisan Jered Mandary.
He said, you have to sue on the basis racial
jair Man. And they ain't listen, they lost that case.

Speaker 7 (23:02):
Uh.

Speaker 1 (23:03):
And so that's the only glimmer of hope that we
have because in what they're doing is they're trying to
play games with it.

Speaker 2 (23:09):
But clearly in the Galaxy.

Speaker 1 (23:10):
County case, in tann County, they targeting black people and
in Latinos as well, the Saint partisan it's race, It's right.

Speaker 9 (23:21):
And then look during your opening segment to the segment
we ran down Louisiana, Alabama, North Carolina, you're seeing the
Saint Jerry manner in Georgia.

Speaker 10 (23:31):
I mean even see I've seen it in New York's
a degree right.

Speaker 9 (23:34):
You know the fact that Congress from lolling Congress.

Speaker 10 (23:38):
But it does come down the race.

Speaker 9 (23:39):
And what they've also understood is that you know, because
of the race, the race that Black people vote for
Democrats and the race that Hispanic people vote for Democrats,
if you're able to fracture that voter, you're able to
make sure that Democrats aren't able to get elected or
just common sense public figures aren't able to get elected.
And that's what the fight is going into the twenty
sixth election intellection and then lead into the twenty thirty census.

Speaker 1 (24:03):
Robert I made it all playing right here. This is
our power and their whole deal is if we can
sit here and roll back, take this seat, this seat,
this seat again, shove all these black folks in one district.
That's what they're doing. The same thing happened. This was
the South Carolina case where they said how they were

(24:25):
pushing they were removing black people out of Nancy Mac's district,
pushing more of them into Congressman Clyburg's district to make
that seat more black.

Speaker 2 (24:35):
And for years.

Speaker 1 (24:35):
I remember Cornell Belcher came on my Washington Watch show
on TV one and he made this point and a
lot of black people got upset. He said, black people,
we have got to stop. He said, we got to
be smart about our politics. He said, we've got to
understand the power of black voters. He said that we're
so fixated on black representation as opposed to democratic representation.

(24:59):
He said, then we're gonna lose. And people were like, man,
what are you talking about. We want more black people.
He's like, no, He said, your black people can have
more power if all of a sudden, twenty five percent
of this district is black versus sixty five percent of

(25:19):
this district being black. Let's just take or let's just
take sixty five percent here he's saying, Yo, if fifteen
or twenty go over here, this is still a majority
of black district. And a lot of people were really
upset with that. And we saw that play out in
Texas when the Republicans in Texas targeted the white Democrats

(25:39):
and so what they did was and this is when
the Democrats actually fled the state to try to stop
this thing from being passed, and it didn't work. This
was the first and another second time. And I remember you
had a black state representative, Ron Wilson, who went along
with their particular plan because he thought he was going
to win the congressional seat that was created to Houston that's.

Speaker 2 (26:00):
Now occupied by Congressman Al Green.

Speaker 1 (26:03):
Well, guess what, he got his ass whooped, Then he
got his ass whipped and lost his state seat and
later had a stroke.

Speaker 2 (26:09):
So he had a politics.

Speaker 1 (26:10):
And so black people said, no, we saw what you
were doing wrong. You were full of shit by aligning
with Republicans. And what happened They took out all white
Democrats and so the Texas Congression delegation expanded to be
more Republicans by taking out the white Democrats because they
were packing the black people in the black districts. And

(26:31):
so that's what people are saying. You have to be
paying attention to the games that they're playing. Oh no, no, no,
we're going to put more black people in your black district,
So you're good. What that's doing is preventing black people
from deciding that second district.

Speaker 11 (26:47):
Here, Absolutely correct, and I want people to remember that
your first day of political science class and college, they
tell you that politics answered the question who gets what
when it's about the public distributing the public gould hoods,
and they based out a pun who has the most
people behind them. And so when we're talking about voter
suppression large as a big subject matter, folks have to

(27:10):
understand that there's two ways you can do it. What
you were just describing as packing. You put all the
black folks into one district that have super majority black districts. Therefore,
with the exact same population, I'd say there's ten congressional
seats up for grabs. You're going to have one supermajority
black district and then nine lily white districts with that
same population. Then there's dilution. If we take that same

(27:32):
majority black district and cut it up ten different ways,
where now each district only has about a ten percent
Black population. Well, now you've also diluted that vote because
now you don't have the power to actually elect people
within those districts. That's the second only you do voter suppression.
So this is why it's so crucial that we pay attention.
Not just on the federal level. Black folks will turn

(27:53):
out for a presidential election, we will turn out for
a Google manatorial, a Senate election, those sorts of things,
but these state elections going into the second half of
this decade, because when we go into redistricting in twenty thirty,
we will not have the protection of any version of
the voter voting rights at to nineteen sixty five. There

(28:14):
will be absolutely no remnant of it on the books.
The Supreme Court as exists right now is only waiting.
They're chomping at the bit for a case to bubble
up to them so they can get rid of the
last remnants and kill the voting rights at dead. And
the civil rights at won't be long after that. So
when we're going into this twenty twenty the twenty twenty

(28:35):
six mid term to the twenty twenty eight election, we
as a community have to make it a bedrock principle
that anybody who strolls into our neighborhoods and says they
want our votes has at the front of that list,
not just renewing its supporting the voting rights at to
nineteen sixty five, passing a new version for twenty twenty five,

(28:55):
passing a new voting right set, not just the John
Lewis voting rights. That we have to take it to
an entirely different level because the fight is completely different.
You've been saying, I've been saying for two three years now.
Read Project twenty twenty five. Page five hundred and fifty
five of Project twenty twenty five talks about using the
military to go into cities to put down mass demonstrations

(29:18):
and limit free speech.

Speaker 2 (29:19):
And we just saw them do it last week in
Los Angeles.

Speaker 11 (29:23):
They are telling you in choreography that they are doing
every single thing in Project twenty twenty five, and they're
doing it quick, faster, and in a hurry. And one
of the things in there is getting rid of every
federal protection around voting, allowing these local jurisdictions to pack
and to dilute the black vote. And we will see
the US Congress and every House representatives around the country
looking a lot closer in eighteen sixty five than nineteen

(29:45):
sixty five, and we don't make that our priority going
into the next election.

Speaker 1 (29:49):
The thing for me, Rebecca and again, and I guarantee
that somebody who's watching this city going see there you go,
there you go, you talm about support them Democrats. There
are two parties in this country. There are Republicans and
their Democrats. And the reality is most black people vote Democrat.

(30:12):
So when you're talking about voting power, you're talking about
who are you likely going to elect, who has control
of purse strings. In Texas, when the hurricane hit the
last hurricane, Governor Greg Abbott said, I don't give a
shit about then Houston mayor Sevesta Turner. I'm gonna give
a dimn about a county judge. I don't about the

(30:38):
county judge. The name is Hidalgo. I don't care about her.
He withheld one billion dollars in federal money from Harris
County because Harris County is a is a Democratic county.
He penalized them because they were blue. And guess what,
Harris County has a lot of black and Hispanic people.

(31:00):
So I'm gonna need people to stop black people, stop
being stupid simple simons. And who then go a head, Hey,
you go trying to be a shield. To understand that
when Texas, when the censes happen, the population in Texas
expanded because of black and Hispanic people. And what the

(31:23):
Republicans do They added mostly Republican congressional seats. No on
full well, they ain't voting for those two they know that.
So how many these black people understand that their whole
deal is you get caught up in the d versus
are the donkey versus the elephant, the blue versus the red?

(31:45):
But the Republican strategy is to freeze black people out
of political power, which now means you can't control budgets,
you can't control dollars. And that's what politics boils down to.
It boils down to the delivery of resources on the city,
school board, county, state, federal level.

Speaker 8 (32:06):
You know, another way the frame is, isn't black people
voting Democratic or black people not voting Republican?

Speaker 4 (32:11):
But understanding the power and the process and the history of.

Speaker 8 (32:14):
Black political power and why black people vote the way
in which they vote. When we look at when blacks
initially is black men specifically got the right to vote
post Slavery. Largely black folks then register as Republicans, the
Party of Lincoln, but there was also a radical Republicanism
agenda that was going through going through the Congress at

(32:38):
the time. We saw at that point that Democrats were
largely this segregationists. They were the party of Jim Crow.
But then we started to see a switch. We started
to see that the Democratic Party decided, hey, we're going
to be the ones to pass They said they were
going to be the ones to pass civil rights, they
were going to be the ones to pass voting rights.
So at that point, especially with the northern migration patterns,

(33:01):
we started to see that black folks largely start to
vote Democratic. To be clear, black people do not vote
for Democrats because they love the Democratic Party. Black people
are extremely pragmatic, extremely rational. So to all the people
say that black people are on the plantation or that
they are sheep, you have to understand the pragmatism. Black
people have in the last about fifty to fifty five

(33:23):
years have voted overwhelmingly Democratic is because they believe the
Democratic Party has delivered things that the Republican Party has
enunciated or indicated that it would be willing.

Speaker 4 (33:33):
To deliver for black people.

Speaker 8 (33:35):
So one thing that I would say about black voters
highly sophisticated. They are voting based upon their interests. In fact,
they are the only and most consistent voting block in
this country that is willing to vote based upon their interests.
And what just so happens is that the way black
people vote tend to be in the best interest for
their entire country.

Speaker 4 (33:55):
So we have to frame it out.

Speaker 8 (33:56):
It's not just a partisan lens, but it's a rational
choice lens in which how black people decide to vote.
And what we're seeing in this country right now is
that there are people in this country who do not
want black people to have political power.

Speaker 4 (34:09):
Period.

Speaker 8 (34:09):
If black people were largely Republican, there will be people
in this country who would not want black people to.

Speaker 4 (34:14):
Have political power.

Speaker 8 (34:15):
Because if black people are largely Republican in this country,
we would see that Project twenty twenty five will probably
be the opposition party to all of those mass black Republicans.
Just so people understand how this thing has happened, how
this thing has worked the last two hundred years in
this country. It's about a dilution. It's about an elimination

(34:36):
of black political power.

Speaker 1 (34:38):
All right, Then, got to go to break. We come
back for more lots to talk about right here on
Rolling Unfolcus on the Black Study Network.

Speaker 12 (34:48):
Next on the Black Table with me Greg Carr, a
very different take on Juneteenth with the.

Speaker 2 (34:54):
One and only Doctor Sinata.

Speaker 12 (34:58):
We'll explore the amazing foods, remedies and rituals that are
a part of our history and the Juneteenth Holidays.

Speaker 13 (35:05):
So it's our responsibility to return the healthier version to
our folks instead of just the red liqueurs marketed to us,
the red sodas and the other things. I mean, why
does the kool aid man have to sound like Louis Armstrong?

Speaker 12 (35:21):
An enlightening and tasty out of the Black Table only
on the Black Star Network.

Speaker 2 (35:37):
Hey, what's up? Geetoy in a place to be? Got
kick out to Mama's University creator.

Speaker 14 (35:42):
And that could producer Fat Tuesday's a hip hop comedy.

Speaker 15 (35:45):
But right now I'm.

Speaker 14 (35:46):
Rolling with Rolling Martin, unfiltered, uncutting, unplugged, and undamned believable
him Well.

Speaker 1 (36:23):
On Monday, it was the National Institutes of Health Grants.
Now it's the Environmental Protection Agency A federal judge has
ruled that Donald Trump administration acted unlawfully when it withdrew
six hundred million dollars in environmental justice grants intended for
low income and minority neighborhoods. Judge Adam Abelson of the U. S.
District Court for the District of Maryland rule that the
epi's termination of these grants violated the Administrative Procedure Act.

(36:47):
These grants were part of the Thriving Communities program, which
aimed to address pollution in areas that are disproportionately affected, such.

Speaker 2 (36:55):
As black and rural communities.

Speaker 1 (36:57):
The EPA had tried to discontinue the program signing a
policy ship under Donald Trump.

Speaker 2 (37:02):
However, the judge determined.

Speaker 1 (37:04):
That this action was illegal and contrary to the intent
of Congress. This right here, Eugene, is another example of
how unlawful this administration is. And again we're gonna keep
saying this. This is why federal judges matter. And this
is also a direct attack on black people. The federal

(37:26):
judge in Massachusetts on Monday said the same thing. He
had never seen his level of racial discrimination coming from
the federal government in forty years that he's been on
the bench, and I'm gonna keep saying this until people
wake the hell up. Donald Trump and MAGA and Republican parties,
they want to defund Black America. They want to destroy

(37:48):
the civil rights and the economic rights infrastructure of Black America.
They want to destroy these grants when it comes to
black health, and want to destroy the grants when it
comes to the environment. So they don't give a damn
about the drinking water or the air quality where black
people are. Donald Trump pulled out that lawsuit, canceled the

(38:10):
lawsuit in Louisiana against those petrochemical companies in cancer Alley
where black people are dying. They called it an the
legal dei settlement in Lowndes County where black people had
sewage backing up into their lawns. And you know who
ain't saying shit is black Republicans in Congress. And all
of these skinning and grinning negroes who I call the

(38:33):
help who went to the Black History Month reception at
the White House, they ain't saying a damn thing. You
don't hear Michayla Montgomery, Joseph Pion King Randall, you don't
hear Terrence Williams.

Speaker 2 (38:46):
You don't hear any of these.

Speaker 1 (38:47):
Folks, Sharise Lane, you don't hear none of these people
speaking up.

Speaker 2 (38:52):
For black people.

Speaker 1 (38:53):
Daryl Scott ain't saying nothing for black people. I can
go Byron Donald's, Tim Scott burgess own wish Lee Hunt.
They don't give a damn about black people. They are
simply black folks with black face, and they are operating
during the bidding of white conservative Republicans.

Speaker 9 (39:14):
I mean, listen, it's literally just me, Sophia and now
son Michael Steele. But the thing is this, right, I
want to go back to that Judges point at the
end of the Buyden first term or last term, at
the end that that last quarter, right people, Oh my gosh,
what is Sleepy Joe doing?

Speaker 10 (39:29):
You know, what is Biden doing?

Speaker 9 (39:31):
You know, x Y and Z that last three to
six months he was fighting to confirm Judges Why because hey,
as a last safeguard, as a last safety net to
a Trump administration, you have the courts that you know,
but they're still hanging on by a threat because the
Trump administration is actively ignoring you know, orders come out
of federal courts at this point.

Speaker 10 (39:50):
But as the.

Speaker 9 (39:50):
Last safety net, as the last fail safety, they confirmed
as many judges as possible and still wanted to confirm more,
you know. And the thing is this, it's Team Trump's
agenda to defund Black America, to do much much harm as
possible to Black America, and then turn around and say, oh,
the Democrats are the reason why things are messed up. Well, no,
that's not true. It's literally just not true. But but

(40:13):
it's important for you know, people like me and you
particularly definitely people like me, you know that are Black
Republicans to speak up, speak out, and be loud about
fighting for things that affect black people directly, whether it
comes to education, whether it comes to the environment, whether.

Speaker 10 (40:28):
It comes to economic opportunity.

Speaker 9 (40:31):
And look, you know, I always say that a lot
of these new age Black Republicans they aren't Republicans, they
aren't Conservative, They are maga folks. There are people that
came up through the age of Donald Trump. He has
some folks that existed before Donald Trump but then capitulated
Donald Trump and maga And I say, look, it's literally
just me at this point, me, Sophia and Nelson and
my Steel.

Speaker 10 (40:49):
But you know, we're.

Speaker 9 (40:50):
Gonna keep fighting for black folks and the interest of
black people I'm just.

Speaker 2 (40:54):
Not gonna sit silently by.

Speaker 1 (40:58):
Robert and and and allow these people to front and
play games with us.

Speaker 2 (41:06):
Who's your guy in Atlanta? The radio guy?

Speaker 1 (41:09):
Where is the ass at? What's his name, Shelley? What's
his name?

Speaker 2 (41:15):
Yeah, yeah, you're right, right, No, no, what's his name? You're right?
It's Shelley Winter.

Speaker 1 (41:19):
Shut No, no, no, no, his by the whole question. No, no,
his whole question, Shelley Winter. Do you see Shelley Winter
calling them out on this anti black agenda?

Speaker 2 (41:30):
Is he saying anything? You see?

Speaker 11 (41:32):
I don't know what I was saying with me and
Shelley had to stop talking because I'm Haitian, and he
repeated the whole trump Haitian tat cats and dogs.

Speaker 2 (41:41):
So I cut everyone out of my life.

Speaker 11 (41:42):
I don't care if I've known you twenty years if
you say the Haitians eat cats and dogs. And I
gotta go look my Haitian mama and look at the
picture of my dad Haitian grandmama in the face. I
have to make a moral decision as to whether or
not I can associate with individuals of that name.

Speaker 2 (41:57):
What does he go by? W does he go by? W?
I N T? E R or w y n. This
is weird, but that ship ain't weird. I'm asking you
a question. It's the strange thing we're doing. You know,
you know how to spell his damn name? How to
spell his name? It w y n te r.

Speaker 15 (42:16):
Good.

Speaker 1 (42:17):
Now, keep going with your comment run down on people
on this show. No, hell, yeah, no, no, I ain't listen.
I ain't listen listen. I ain't trying to sit here
and play nice with these people. Because here's my whole deal.
I know black Republicans, Okay, eu Jeans a black Republican,
Michael Steels, a Black Republican. Uh, our dear friend Chris
Messler who passed away, was a really good brother. I've

(42:40):
known black Republicans my entire life, and those are it
would brook black Republicans. These are people who are conservative,
but they actually love black people.

Speaker 2 (42:48):
Want to talk to l Roy Sailor.

Speaker 1 (42:50):
They love black people, but these negroes they love trying
to talk about how y'all on the plantation DMNs ain't
doing nothing for y'all. And when he's white, maga folk
target black people with anti black agenda. All of negroes
quiet now, if you want credibility with me call them.

Speaker 2 (43:10):
Out when they do something wrong. And so that's why
I asked for his name, because.

Speaker 1 (43:14):
I'm gonna look for his damn social media and I'm
gonna see what his ass gotta say.

Speaker 2 (43:18):
Gone right ahead.

Speaker 11 (43:20):
The point I wanted to turn back to is a
point about environmental racism and why this EPA decision is
so important and when progresses. When liberals use terms like
environmental racism, it loses a lot of people. If you
grew up in a neighborhood where there were some big
ass power lines somehow high voltage polls, it went over
your house and now all the kids don't act right,

(43:42):
that's environmental racism. If you grew up in a housing
project like I did, you looked up the black window,
back window, and there was a big ass landfill right there,
full of who knows what kind of chemicals and stuff
that we were breathing in and went into the water supply,
and that's where all the black neighborhoods were. Mental racism.
If you were in a community where there was a

(44:03):
giant Let's say you're in Philly and there's a factory
with an eternal flame burning methane. When you go by
on the highway and that smoke comes down onto a
neighborhood inhabit it mostly by black and brown people, and
now the test scores are lower there than they are
on the other side of town. That's environmental racism. So
I want folks to understand that when we talk about

(44:23):
some of these terms, it sounds like they don't have
anything to do with you. Or when Donald Trump and
the Conservatives talk about deregulation of business, yes, it sounds
great to have deregulation. Deregulation also means they can put
lead back in the paint. Deregulation means they can put
us bestos back in your addict. Deregulation means they can
dump those chemicals directly into stream that's upstream from your

(44:46):
water supply, and that doesn't impact them. So we have
to be educating these conversations, ensuring that we are fighting
these fights and operating in a matter that we're not
just simply saying, well, does it directly impact black folks?
We have to ask the question, how will it impact
our communities and our country rip large.

Speaker 1 (45:04):
See I'm sitting here looking so your boy gone ahead?
Book Shelley ass on the show, because I want to
ask him directly these questions because under his Twitter bios
has never scared black and conservative. Well, I want to
know if he's saying anything against against these policies, because
Rebecca there absolutely positively anti black.

Speaker 4 (45:27):
Look, there's a lot of quiet people.

Speaker 8 (45:29):
I mean, you can add on Angelus Stanton and other people,
but also we have to call out some of the
Democrats who have asked twenty twenty eight aspirations as well.
You know, if indeed black people are the most consistent
and largest voting block or the base of the Democratic Party,
then where are the twenty twenty eight Democrats as well

(45:51):
and talking about the anti blackness that's coming out this administration.

Speaker 2 (45:54):
Well, I'll be honest, I don't give a damn.

Speaker 1 (45:56):
I don't give a damn by any twenty twenty eight
Democrats because hell, we ain't even got the twenty twenty six.

Speaker 2 (46:01):
Yet, you can't, folks. My deal is.

Speaker 1 (46:04):
I think that's part of the problem. Folks spending too
much time on twenty eight. They ain't paying no attention
to twenty twenty five.

Speaker 4 (46:11):
But that's the point.

Speaker 8 (46:12):
The very people who are now going on social media
saying where is Barack Obama?

Speaker 4 (46:17):
Why is he standing up and talking about this moment.

Speaker 8 (46:19):
Well, guess what, Barack Obama is not the leader of
the Democratic Party. So for those who are trying to
be the leader of the Democratic Party, then they also
have to understand that there's a call to action for
them to use their voice in this moment. Don't wait
until twenty twenty six or twenty twenty seven and then
all of a sudden you want to be the champion
and tell black folks, hey, you need to show up
and vote for the Democratic Party. My point is, these

(46:42):
people who are trying to line up and figure out
and machinate with how they're going to what position them
and do their positioning for twenty twenty eight, that leadership
needs to appear now, because if it appears now, is
actually authentic leadership.

Speaker 4 (46:55):
So one thing that I.

Speaker 8 (46:56):
Would say to black voters stop, look and listen and
see who is actually championing your issues right now. Stop
look and listen and see who is willing to call
out the anti blackness, anti black policies that we're clearly
seeing from this administration. This isn't a oh maybe they
don't meet it. No, like we've talked about since last year,
this is project twenty twenty five.

Speaker 4 (47:18):
One thing that I want to note.

Speaker 8 (47:19):
When I was going into the elections last year, I
was in Alabama at event. I was talking to a
voter about Project twenty twenty five, and one of the
things they said back to me is, this is Alabama.
We've been living in Project twenty twenty five. I don't
think the rest of the country is ready for what
is getting ready to happen to the entire countries. I

(47:39):
do want to acknowledge that there are people, there are
black folks living in states where they've been under this
type of framework. They've been under this type of government,
but now we're singing it nationally.

Speaker 1 (47:52):
See the reason, y'all I'm a little froggy about this
here is because I'm just not interested, uh in these
lame ass people uh getting away with their bs. I mean,
I'm just when I say I'm sick and tired, and
I'm sick, I'm being sick and tired.

Speaker 2 (48:12):
I am. I had a.

Speaker 1 (48:14):
Conversation earlier today with somebody. We were talking about issues
of faith in the poor, and I literally said, I said,
you know what, it's.

Speaker 2 (48:23):
Times some folks just roll up on, just roll up on. Uh.

Speaker 1 (48:30):
Ralph Read's Faith in Freedom Conference, because you know, they
had it every single year, and it's amazing they have
it every single year.

Speaker 7 (48:36):
Uh.

Speaker 1 (48:37):
And it ain't never conversations about faith in freedom like
it ain't never conversations about faith. And I look at
their agenda and I'm like, yo, where the faith stuff at?
Where the faith stuff?

Speaker 7 (48:48):
Uh?

Speaker 1 (48:49):
And in fact, I'm trying to sit here, uh and
I'm gonna have to reset. Give me a second, I
don't have to reset my rocal here, so so control room,
I'm about to send this y'all.

Speaker 2 (49:00):
Need you try to pull this up?

Speaker 1 (49:02):
And being Shapiro Ben Shapiro punk ass you know I can't.
I can't stand laying people. And being Shapiro is one
of them.

Speaker 2 (49:13):
Uh.

Speaker 1 (49:14):
He posted this tweet y'all that got my attention. And
see this, This is why I'm doing roll call of names,
because see, I don't want to use phrase words like they.
I don't want to say them. I want to put
a name on it. And I want to challenge them
to see if they have the guts uh to actually

(49:37):
say or do something.

Speaker 2 (49:39):
Uh.

Speaker 1 (49:39):
And and because they always running their mouths about stuff,
and so let me know when y'all have it so
Ben Shapiro, he posted this tweet U y'all, and he said, uh,
it was We're gonna shot in the second. It was
an honor to meet His Holiness, uh, the Pope in
Vatican City today and to thank him for standing up

(50:02):
for Biblical values in a chaotic world and to present
him what they signed two thousand and five White Sox
World Series baseball I had in my collection.

Speaker 2 (50:14):
We're both fans.

Speaker 1 (50:22):
Let me explain to y'all why Being Shapiro is a
punk ass. Okay, So I'm about to explain to y'all
why Being Shapiro is a punk ass for this lame
ass tweet. Because Being Shapiro, you thanking the Pope for
standing up for quote, Biblical values in a chaotic world?

(50:47):
Does that include gaza? Does that include the poor? Does
that include the Catholic Church being against the death penalty?
See exactly which Biblical values are you thinking the Pope for?

Speaker 2 (51:09):
See right now with this big beautiful bill.

Speaker 1 (51:13):
That bill is a shameless, despicable attack on poor people
in the working class, Being Shapiro, where you're thinking of
Pope talking about them? See, I'm tired of these performative
performative so called Evan Jellicos, Christians, folks who claim to

(51:40):
be people of faith, whether they Jews, whether they are
Buddhists or Hindu, a Christian, a Muslim, whatever.

Speaker 2 (51:48):
You want to call it. All I want to know
is which Bible are you talking about? Are we're talking
about all sixty four sixty six books? We're talking about
just the four Gospels? Which one we're.

Speaker 1 (51:58):
Talking about New Testament or Old test but we're talking
about both.

Speaker 2 (52:01):
See that's my problem with these people. And see I
think part of the problem.

Speaker 1 (52:05):
Is is that people of consciousness.

Speaker 2 (52:09):
Are unwilling to name them.

Speaker 1 (52:12):
Now I'm talking about you got to name them, You
got to call them out by name, You got to
look them in the eye and say you are a
trifling ass.

Speaker 2 (52:26):
So called Christian.

Speaker 1 (52:29):
Because see Ben Shapiro, if you gonna thank the Pope
for quote standing up for biblical values in a chaotic world,
I'm gonna need you to specify specifically what biblical value.

Speaker 2 (52:42):
Because see, here's the problem with folk like Ben Shapiro.

Speaker 1 (52:46):
And this is the problem with MAGA, And this is
the problem with the Republican Party, this is the problem
with Paula White, this is a problem with punk ass
doctor Field. This is a problem with punk ass Drew Pinsky.
This is the problem with punk ass doctor i Us.
This is a problem with sorry ass Ted Cruz. This
is a problem with all of these soul called Christians.

(53:10):
Y'all think this is Golden Corral. It's a buffet. I'm
gonna pick a live bit of this. I'm gonna pick
a live bit of that, and I'm gonna skip some
of this. Y'all don't want to deal with.

Speaker 2 (53:24):
Jesus did not talk about anything.

Speaker 1 (53:30):
At a greater rate than the poor. So which party
that claim to love Jesus? They got some of the
biggest crosses. Which party is fighting on behalf of rich
folk in the country. When you support Robert made the
point earlier, when you support cuts to the EPA because

(53:54):
you don't give a damn about water quality, You don't
give a damn about any of that. Please, by all means,
tell me who exactly are you supporting? Because oh, I'm sorry,
I thought y'all was some Jesus loving people. Don't y'all
run around quoting Genesis and on the first day the Lord,
don't y'all love talking about how God made this, God

(54:16):
made the earth? Everything comes from God. So everything comes
from God. Then why are y'all abusing the very thing
that God created? Why do y'all say that environmental racism
doesn't exist? Why do y'all say that climate change is
not real? Why do y'all's response to anything about climate

(54:38):
on the environment that's gonna cost too much?

Speaker 2 (54:45):
But y'all say, y'all love Jesus. I'm really confused.

Speaker 1 (54:49):
I remember the white past we played the video limony
of y'all can try to chase that down.

Speaker 2 (54:53):
The white pastor I think it was in North Carolina.

Speaker 1 (54:55):
Who called out all of these right wing white conservatives
for buying that punk at, sorry, trifling, trash trump Bible.
And he did with Lee Greenwood that combined the Bible
in the Constitution that a white pastor had the audacity
of the unmitigated gud. And he was right to call
them out by saying, you don't sit here and wave

(55:20):
your Bible as a constitution.

Speaker 2 (55:22):
And he said, you are sworn.

Speaker 1 (55:26):
As a Christian as a believer on the Bible and
not that document.

Speaker 2 (55:32):
But that ain't what we're dealing with. We're dealing with
some fake people of faith.

Speaker 1 (55:38):
We are dealing with some folk who worship a deity
who is a devil in Donald Trump. You got Franklin Graham,
fake Christian, not even a real pastor, because the real
person of faith in the.

Speaker 2 (55:56):
Family ain't him. It's Anne Lutz.

Speaker 1 (55:59):
And if Ann Lutz had other body parts, then she
would have taken over her daddy's religious empire. But because
Billy Graham believed in giving it to the sun and
not the daughter, he gave it to Franklin when the
real person who should have had it was Anne Lutz.

Speaker 2 (56:17):
But I'm just gonna lead that alone.

Speaker 1 (56:22):
Franklin Graham questions Barack Obama's faith, but he praises this
multi married cheating on every wife, got three four five
baby mamas, no integrity, no credibility, is a massive liar,
But Franklin Graham holds him up as the epitome of

(56:45):
we need to pray. We need to pray for Donald Trump. Yeah,
we need to pray that Jesus hit himself, hit him
in the head. We need to pray that somehow he
gets hit with a lightning vote and somehow Jesus is
infused in his body. Because we know you ain't worth
nothing if you can't even hold the Bible right. These

(57:09):
people that support Donald Trump, who call themselves people of faith,
they are demonic. They are empts for the devil. And
I'm ana call it like it is. They ain't people
of faith. They don't believe in the Word. And so please,
Ben Shapiro, don't give me this crap. That will thank

(57:31):
you to the Pope for standing up for biblical values in.

Speaker 2 (57:34):
This chaotic world. Name on. See, we need more white
pastors like this one right here. Come on, y'all, thank you.
Let's go plan it.

Speaker 16 (57:54):
The persson that don't read and pray, we'll get politics
mixed up with.

Speaker 2 (58:02):
Church.

Speaker 16 (58:04):
They start mixing and meshing together. That's why some of
you bring politics into the church. You think that politics
is spiritual stuff. Politics is of this world. You think
it's your duty to be political.

Speaker 2 (58:25):
About this, that and the other.

Speaker 16 (58:26):
No, your duty is to serve the Lord, your God
with all your heart, mind, soulbody and strength, and love
your neighbor as yourself. Don't be talking to me about
my spiritual responsibility to vote. I don't have a spiritual
responsib responsibility to vote. I have a civic privilege. Don't

(58:52):
be telling me that voting is spiritual. See, that's what
happens when you don't read and pray. When you don't
read and pray, you say, wow, there's a Bible out
now that includes the Constitution and the Bill of Rights.

Speaker 2 (59:14):
Isn't that wonderful?

Speaker 16 (59:16):
No, No, it's disgusting, it's blasphemous.

Speaker 2 (59:23):
It's a ploy. Are you kidding me?

Speaker 17 (59:26):
Some of you are so encouraged by that. Let me
tell you something. The Gospel is not an American gospel.
It is the Gospel of the Lord Jesus Christ.

Speaker 2 (59:47):
But Pastor I bought the Bible. Really, you're telling me.

Speaker 16 (59:54):
That you're encouraged because someone took a government US constitutional
document that says we are of the people, by the people.

Speaker 2 (01:00:08):
And for the people, the people, the people, the people.

Speaker 16 (01:00:13):
And you have put it right beside the Word of God,
which is eternal, unchanging, which says of Him, by Him,
through Him, to Him, from Him are all things. And
you're going to put those together and be happy about it.
God forbid. Now you can get mad if you want to,
But I'm going to tell you something. If you glory

(01:00:35):
in that kind of thing, you don't have a prayer life.
If you glory in that kind of mess political mess,
you do not know what the Word of God says.
I'm gonna rare back and tell you something. This is
not my home. This world is not my home. I've

(01:00:57):
been sent out just like the seventy were sent out.
You've been put here and sent out just like the
seventy were sent out. We've been put here as strangers
and pilgrims, and we are passing through.

Speaker 2 (01:01:09):
I am just walking through.

Speaker 16 (01:01:12):
I'm just renting an apartment for a little while in
this strange.

Speaker 2 (01:01:18):
And foreign land. No, sir, my real.

Speaker 16 (01:01:21):
Citizenship is in heaven, from which we look for the
Lord Jesus Christ, who's gonna change.

Speaker 17 (01:01:30):
Our vile body that it may be made like come
to His glorious body.

Speaker 1 (01:01:38):
Eugenie, Real simple, there are a few white pastors with
the guts to say that.

Speaker 10 (01:01:46):
Listen, across this country.

Speaker 9 (01:01:48):
You have the evangelical church at this point that it's
started to hit the Republican Party. That's the reason why
Iowa kicks off the primaries and presidential cycles.

Speaker 10 (01:01:57):
You don't have tony white pastors that are.

Speaker 9 (01:01:59):
Walking around that level conviction, that level of conscious consciousness.

Speaker 10 (01:02:04):
The issue.

Speaker 9 (01:02:04):
Also, He's right, these passes aren't reading their Bibles, and
they're selectively preaching from their bibles. You know, we we
have the all the infamous pictures of all the megachurch
leaders and the high name you know UH faith leaders
and faith inquotations. You know, their hands extended out over Trump,
praying for him, but they're.

Speaker 10 (01:02:25):
Not praying for him to do right by you know,
people that are.

Speaker 9 (01:02:27):
Hurting in this country across the world, aren't praying for
him to do right and solve conflicts of you know,
people across the world in this country.

Speaker 10 (01:02:34):
And that's that's that's what that's what it's been.

Speaker 9 (01:02:37):
You know, you kicked off the second with Rody's Faith
and Freedom U Coalition and the annual gathering I wouldn't
even call it. I would call the indoctrination in tyranny
UH annual gathering. And that's what it is. You know,
you're not going to hear you know, Ben Shapiro, who's
not even a Christian, you know, be able to define
what Christian values he's hoping to pope, you know, is
standing on and getting the business clear on because you

(01:03:00):
know he doesn't even believe believe.

Speaker 10 (01:03:02):
In them himself.

Speaker 9 (01:03:04):
And so you know, we're we're living in a really
really weird time. That's kind of always existed, but now
in our forefront for X y Z reasons.

Speaker 10 (01:03:12):
But you know, it is reinforcing.

Speaker 9 (01:03:15):
It does feel good to see, you know, particularly white pastors.

Speaker 10 (01:03:19):
You know, we have Black pastors have always spoken to.

Speaker 9 (01:03:24):
The the the one, the truth and conviction of the
of the Bible, to the the truth.

Speaker 10 (01:03:31):
And conviction of the faith.

Speaker 9 (01:03:33):
But the freedom that the faith gives right Black liberation
theology is a thing, you know, and it's it's sad
that you know, when Barack Obama, you know, got elected
during that whole cycle that you know, the Black faith
got dragged through.

Speaker 10 (01:03:48):
The white media.

Speaker 9 (01:03:50):
But you know it is, you know, well hardened to
see a white pastor standing on business when it comes
to the actual faith of Christianity.

Speaker 1 (01:04:00):
Is not interested for a second, Rebecca, in giving these
people any space to breathe.

Speaker 8 (01:04:12):
I was gonna say, I beg you that pastor claps
on the twos and fours and not the ones and threes.
But who knows, you know, Eugene kind of hit on
this like hearing faith and freedom. I would never intend
something called that if you're not talking about liberation, because
the Bible talks about in Christ there is.

Speaker 2 (01:04:32):
I mean I'm talking five, Rebecca.

Speaker 1 (01:04:33):
They ain't got nothing about faith and the poor on
the agenda, like not may a year.

Speaker 8 (01:04:43):
Look like I think I've shared on the show that
I grew up Kojak Church Count of Christ, so very
much Benecostal.

Speaker 4 (01:04:49):
I was fourth generation Kojak.

Speaker 8 (01:04:51):
Until in college I started to go to some non denominationals.
And what's interesting is that also growing up in the Midwest,
I grew up around a lot of white Evangelicals because
Kojak to some extent is black Evangelicals, especially before the
bishop shared out of Detroit era of Kojak, and.

Speaker 4 (01:05:12):
My dad was a minister.

Speaker 8 (01:05:14):
I remember my dad asked me, what's your favorite passage
about Jesus? And I was like, you know, Matthew twenty
one And for those of you all aren't familiar, that's
the Jesus who fussed and cussed in the temple, who
went and he overturned the tables, beat people's behind, pushed
them out the temple and say that you are a
bunch of corrupt grifters. Get out of my daddy's house.
And So, when I think in terms of the Gospel,

(01:05:37):
when I think in terms of freedom and liberation, it's
not what Ben Shapiro and the rest of those milk
are trying to sell. In fact, my viewpoint is that
they're trying to sell white supremacy in the frame of
trying to use.

Speaker 4 (01:05:50):
Biblical quote unquote book biblical words.

Speaker 8 (01:05:52):
And even when people say, oh, I believe in biblical principles,
what does that actually mean? How are you living that
out the doesn't the Bible say true religion undefoult is
taking care of the poor, taking care of the widows.

Speaker 4 (01:06:05):
Taking care of the fatherless.

Speaker 8 (01:06:06):
Those are the tenets of what religion is supposed to
be if you're actually following what the Bible actually says, which,
like you said, many of these people aren't. Instead, they're
subscribed to a cult that's rooted in white supremacy. Just
like if I ever walk into a church and the
picture of Jesus is blonde and blue eyed, I'm leaving.
That's a cult. It is white supremacy. It's not even

(01:06:29):
quote unquote biblical. So, you know, people got it all
the way mixed up in this country, especially understand of
how black theology plays into this, especially of those who
descend it from slavery, who were forced to deal with
spirituality in terms of a slave master's Bible, which didn't
have any of the liberation texts in any of the

(01:06:52):
freedom if you're going to use freedom, but I prefer
using liberation. So black people in religion, and even to
Eugene's point, the way in the Barack Obama presidency, especially
the first term, how the Black church was really skeward,
especially around black liberation theology.

Speaker 4 (01:07:10):
I view black people, we're spiritual.

Speaker 8 (01:07:12):
Are we necessarily this Christianity thing that has evolved in
rooty and white supremacy. No, so it doesn't even it
doesn't even fall on us that way like we experience
We experience spirituality different, especially for those who are still
connected to our ancestral home. So it's cool. I'm glad

(01:07:34):
this minister called it out. But then what we need
all the Southern Baptists to call it out. We need
all the Southern Baptists to stop being so segregated, stop
being so anti black, because they're ultimately the ones who
put all of this in the White House. They're the
ones who put the people like Marjorie Taylor Green and
the rest of those ilk who are very much anti

(01:07:57):
poor people, anti diversity, anti women, anti all.

Speaker 4 (01:08:02):
The things and the people that you hung out with them.

Speaker 2 (01:08:05):
Well, Robie, what we also need.

Speaker 1 (01:08:06):
We need black preachers to be a hell of a
lot more proactive and confronting these folks, challenging them to
their faces at their conferences, at their events, and not
just in the pulpits.

Speaker 11 (01:08:19):
You're absolutely correct and just kind of to Rebecca's point.
And for my etymology nerds, I see you, I hear you,
I'm here for you. Look at the word religion itself
and that kind of Latin prefix R e G. What
are some other things that have that same prefix, regulation, regiment, regality.

(01:08:40):
What do they all talk about control? How do you
control a group? Do you control them through regulation? Do
you control them through being a royal through regality, control
them by putting them into a regiment where they're doing
the same thing all the time, or do you control
them with religion?

Speaker 2 (01:08:58):
It all goes into the same thing.

Speaker 11 (01:08:59):
And plitical leadership has known this for decades that the
easiest way to control people, to get them to vote
against their enlightened self interest, to get them to not
ask any damn questions is through religion. Bob Marley said,
some people say, great God will come from the sky
and take away all your pain and make everybody feel high.
But if you know what life is worth, you'll know

(01:09:21):
is here on earth because they want to control you
into believing that your goal, your reward comes later. But
they will enjoy the fruits of their labor. Now inside
of the buildings, they'll have gold, they'll have marble, they'll
have all the trappings of the world, and then tell
you to go out and suffer in order to support that.

(01:09:43):
It is that same way in politics and in religion.
So when people understand that, they have to start thinking
logically about what's best for themselves as opposed to simply
what either the regulatory bodies, the political bodies, or the
religious bodies are telling you what's best for you while
they're not doing the same thing.

Speaker 2 (01:10:00):
Listen, I ain't letting nobody off the hook.

Speaker 1 (01:10:03):
We got to call folk out, uh, And that's what
we're gonna do. They tell about naming and claiming, I'm
gonna name it and call it.

Speaker 2 (01:10:10):
Going to break. We come back, y'all.

Speaker 1 (01:10:12):
I got a whole section of I might have to
bring back crazy ass white people because I got full
stories where these people truly have lost their minds quick break,
break it down, support the show you whin I bring
the fuck fan Club. You want to give you a
cash out to strip cure of code. You see it

(01:10:32):
right here. You can also, of course see it checking
money order to make it pay with the Rolling Martin
Unfiltered send it to pelbox five seven one ninety.

Speaker 2 (01:10:39):
Six Washington d C. Two zero zero three seven.

Speaker 1 (01:10:44):
Zero one nine six PayPal Are Martin unfiltered, venmo r
M unfiltered, Zel rolling at roland S Martin dot com.

Speaker 2 (01:10:50):
Rolling at Rolling Mark unfilter dot com. Be right back.

Speaker 18 (01:10:57):
This week.

Speaker 19 (01:10:58):
On the other side of change of a democratic part,
what are the barriers preventing us from seeking true liberation
and including more voices in that process. They overlook black organizers,
young black people, the work that we do all throughout
the year. But then when the election cycle comes around,
now all of a sudden they want to.

Speaker 4 (01:11:16):
Listen to us, listen in fultation marks.

Speaker 19 (01:11:18):
Now all of a sudden they want our labor and
our contributions. And it's just like for me, I'm at
the point where it's like, no, we're not doing that.

Speaker 8 (01:11:25):
In only on the other side of change, on the
Black side network.

Speaker 2 (01:11:34):
Hello, I'm Paula J. Parker, Judie Proud of the Proud Family.

Speaker 1 (01:11:38):
I am Tommy Davidson, I play Oscar on Proud Family,
Louder and Proud. I am jeal Marie Payton, voice of
Sugar Mama on Disney's Louder and Prouder Disney Plus.

Speaker 4 (01:11:48):
And I'm with Roland Martin on Unfiltered.

Speaker 2 (01:12:04):
Lord.

Speaker 1 (01:12:04):
I really get some of my best laughs these days
when he's whiny, crying ass Trump folk who are undocumented
when they get sent back somewhere else and.

Speaker 2 (01:12:18):
Ye voting for Trump.

Speaker 1 (01:12:19):
I don't know what to do with South Florida woman
has now joined the group.

Speaker 2 (01:12:23):
She's regretting. She's regretting for voting.

Speaker 1 (01:12:27):
For Trump because her daddy got his ass snatched by
ice and now he about to get deported.

Speaker 2 (01:12:38):
Rolled her crying ass.

Speaker 20 (01:12:42):
No one deserves to vote do something like this behind bars.
He was up in Florida for more than half his
life and worked for the same construction job for many decades.

Speaker 15 (01:12:55):
Abidia that goes without him, Here is a day lost forever.

Speaker 18 (01:12:59):
This is about being human, about love, connection and presence.

Speaker 4 (01:13:03):
The one thing he needs the most is the one
thing that we're being kept from giving him. Which is us.

Speaker 18 (01:13:09):
I feel that it would be immoral and inhumane to
let a man who is suffering, who is terminally ill,
spend the little.

Speaker 7 (01:13:16):
Time he has left in pain and isolation. Please don't
DNA cell.

Speaker 4 (01:13:21):
Please delay vital memories.

Speaker 7 (01:13:25):
Both of pain and isolation. The American flag stands for compassion, kindness, liberty,
and justice for all. We're all human, and today I'm
asking for one human act of compassion to please let
my dad come home.

Speaker 21 (01:13:39):
That I can to deny as a question for condition
that when I voted for Trump, I supported the very
system that allows kind of cruelty to happen.

Speaker 15 (01:13:52):
I've spent the last few days reflecting, and I feel
like it came through some sort of revelation. I question
my beliefs, my choices, and my role in all of it.

Speaker 4 (01:14:04):
My vote wasn't just a mistake.

Speaker 15 (01:14:06):
It was the ultimate betrayal of the very people that
I come from. I feel like, living in South Florida,
surrounded by Republican voices, I was brainwashed into thinking I
was one of them. I fell for the propaganda, the
normalization of cruelty, and I believe the lies that gave

(01:14:28):
me a false sense of security and belonging. I was
convinced that voting for Trump was for the economy or
against crime, when in reality, I was supporting a man
in a movement that dehumanizes people. He basically built his
platform on targeting immigrants, writing hate, and pushing policies that

(01:14:48):
ultimately broke families apart. I regret my vote so so
so deeply, and if I could go back and change it,
I would. I'm reading, listening, learning and unlearning everything that
I thought I knew. And to anyone who is feeling
the same regret as I am, I want you guys

(01:15:10):
to know that there's still a way for us to
move forward, but it starts with honesty. First, to every
single person who has been affected by the choice that
I made, I am so so sorry. A lot of
you aren't going to forgive me, and I'm really not
expecting anyone to, but I just want everyone to know

(01:15:32):
that I'm going to move forward with more compassion, continue
educating myself, and fight for those who can't fight for themselves.

Speaker 1 (01:15:48):
Which one of y'all want to come on that bullshit,
y'all go ahead.

Speaker 2 (01:15:53):
I am so.

Speaker 22 (01:15:55):
Tired compassion of faith in liberty and Joseph's froll oh n,
I've had a revelation.

Speaker 9 (01:16:08):
That, well, listen, as a president Republican in this R
and V family, I'll be the one that let her
know we don't give an fuc k. You decided to
opp up with Donald Trump, and we're offering out of
all of it. You know, we tried to tell you.
We tried to tell you what's coming out of pipeline.

(01:16:30):
We try to tell you go Reproject twenty twenty five.
We tried to tell you that, hey, you know, you
saw the results in the first administration, so it told
me we worse than the second administration.

Speaker 10 (01:16:38):
We tried to tell you we did we did our best.

Speaker 9 (01:16:41):
And you know, her and a lot of other you know,
Hispanic folk said, you know, vive la Trump. And now
they're crying because you know they're Buela's. Their moms, their dads,
their brother their sisters, their cousins are being snatched up
by you know, literal mass men. But at this point
in time, and because it's Wednesday and the kids probably

(01:17:02):
watching it, you don't get that.

Speaker 10 (01:17:04):
Maybe next time your vote right, you're gonna have.

Speaker 2 (01:17:05):
To deal with this.

Speaker 1 (01:17:08):
I'm just gonna go ahead and make me a program
I'm just gonna make me a protein. Shit rap gonehead, gonehead.
I can't even you know all that bullshit.

Speaker 2 (01:17:18):
And god, I'm just around my Republicans.

Speaker 7 (01:17:22):
I was.

Speaker 1 (01:17:23):
It was brain washed like like yo, like yo, dumb ass,
can't read.

Speaker 11 (01:17:29):
Look Roland, as the resident Haitian on the show, I
have Haitian family members in Florida who voted for Trump
and are dealing with similar situations currently.

Speaker 2 (01:17:37):
And what hold up? What the hell were they thinking
when he.

Speaker 5 (01:17:41):
Said he's sitting ass back.

Speaker 1 (01:17:43):
Last time he was saying, Haiti's eating cats and dogs,
and they dumb ass his voter farm.

Speaker 2 (01:17:50):
Do you ain't got to tell me?

Speaker 11 (01:17:51):
I tried to tell them, and they ain't believe these
things were taking place.

Speaker 2 (01:17:56):
And now they see.

Speaker 11 (01:17:57):
But to all those individuals out there who are hearing
and who were realizing maybe he wasn't playing, who are
thinking to themselves, well, maybe wouldn't We wouldn't be going
to ward if he ran by June, and maybe wouldn't
have troops in the streets of major cities by the
end of May. And maybe he went in crasty economy
in a hundred days. Maybe you thought that he was
joking about that. Well, now you know what you understand,

(01:18:19):
and guess what, the doors of the church are open.
You are welcome back, come back home, because we need
you for the midterms. We got to stop thinking about
what happened in twenty twenty four and start thinking about
twenty twenty six and all y'all people who will regret
your vote, there's time to come forward. Tell your story,
tell your testimony, encourage more people to turn out. We

(01:18:41):
have to increase those numbers. Elections are about addition, not subtraction,
so we have to bring those people back in.

Speaker 2 (01:18:47):
So if you realize you made a.

Speaker 11 (01:18:49):
Bad decision and may have accidentally voted for Hitler in
nineteen thirty three, you're welcome to come back. If we
still have elections in twenty twenty six, we need you.

Speaker 1 (01:18:58):
Rebecca, I'm just gonna channel Bernie Mack.

Speaker 2 (01:19:03):
I don't give a book. I mean, I'm not.

Speaker 4 (01:19:09):
Here to go back and forth with people who think
they're Spanish.

Speaker 8 (01:19:12):
Auld said of Indigenous you know, I mean, that's a pathology,
that's a choice. I think instead of doing some of
this performative stuff, some of those people should just take
that to the grave. If I don't know how you voted,
then you know what, child, take that to the grave
and you know, sorry for you.

Speaker 4 (01:19:28):
I hope you and your family figure it out.

Speaker 2 (01:19:32):
Let's go down.

Speaker 1 (01:19:32):
Next story, racist white man in Massachusetts. His ass about
to go to jail because he decided to throw a
rock that impacted some black folks.

Speaker 2 (01:19:45):
So what do he do?

Speaker 1 (01:19:46):
He threw a rock at do some rocks to the
black father and his daughter while they were fishing.

Speaker 2 (01:19:50):
Last month, he.

Speaker 1 (01:19:51):
Appeared before the judge to face the charges against him.
Now he's sixty seven year old. His name is David McPartland.
He's charged with assault with a dangerous weapon and an
assault to intimidate in connection with the May twenty six incident.
Searon Brown's ten year old daughter were fishing on a
local lake when this white man, lay identified as McPartland,

(01:20:12):
came out of his home and told him they couldn't
fish in the area. But that's when Brown recorded the
brief interaction where McPartland called them a racial slurt. Brown
then called the police. According to court documents, McPartland ad
menage to throwing rocks and said, quote, he slipped out.

Speaker 2 (01:20:26):
A word that maybe shouldn't have. The judge entered not guilty.

Speaker 1 (01:20:31):
Plead on mcpartler's behalf, and he was released on his
own reconnaissance. His scheduled to appear in court next month. Now,
come on now, Robert, Oh, I don't know what happened.
Nigga just slipped out. I don't know what happened. It
was the ga.

Speaker 2 (01:20:47):
I don't know what happened. It just ooh, it just
just slipped out. It just slipped out. Man.

Speaker 1 (01:20:55):
I hope they slipped your ass in jail.

Speaker 2 (01:20:58):
I don't care if you walking in that cane.

Speaker 1 (01:21:00):
See, I'm just And now the daddy. The daddy upset
because his daughter. She no longer entered into ficial She
don't want to go near the water because this racist
white man in Massachusetts.

Speaker 11 (01:21:13):
I want people to remember a couple key words and phrases.
So or encounter yourself in a situation like this, you
want to call law enforcement immediately. You want to say
the following words, I am under active assault. I'm asking
you to step away. I'm going to have to invoke
self defense and make sure the police hear this. At
that point, you can officially whoop that person's ass. Actually,

(01:21:36):
you're defending yourself from an individual who was assaulting you
with rocks. You don't know the nature of the rocks.
You don't know what their intentions are. He doesn't know
what happens a minute that he decided to commit a
felonious assault upon you. And for this reason, you're legally
entitled to beat the brakes off the happy ass because
if you get yourself from that situation, occasionally you'll have
to find out about consequences. And class is important for

(01:21:59):
us to appreciate the word of the day, which is consequences.

Speaker 2 (01:22:03):
Okay, look, I ain't no lawyer, so this is how
the call should go.

Speaker 1 (01:22:09):
Hey, now, one one, I'm gonna need y'all to send
the cops and send the ambulance because a white man
is through some rocky men and my daughter. I'm about
to whoop his ass right now for self defense, so
he gonna need an ambulance when I'm done with his
punk ass.

Speaker 2 (01:22:26):
That's how my call gonna go. Okay, all right, so
let me go on this one here.

Speaker 1 (01:22:30):
White woman in California loses her damn mind. Call some
black movers niggas. Now she mad because they recorded a video.
Post it on TikTok. It's got more than tep two
million views.

Speaker 2 (01:22:49):
Roll it.

Speaker 4 (01:22:50):
I'm just walk I can't get out.

Speaker 2 (01:22:53):
I lived here, I can't get out of my fucking out.

Speaker 4 (01:22:56):
You want to talk here?

Speaker 13 (01:23:01):
Yeah?

Speaker 23 (01:23:01):
I think a simple can you move your truck please?
It would have sufficed, right, Glad? I recorded that?

Speaker 1 (01:23:10):
Okay, so here's the details here. Okay, the black guys
were moving. They were the truck was blocking the street
or dropping the block in the driveway. She comes out
and says, acting the food needs y'all to move. They said,
no problem, We'll move the truck, but she had to
get a little extra then caused in the N word.

(01:23:31):
Well what then happens? They post a video on TikTok.
Her ass got real famous, real fast. Then her dumb ass,
what has she decided to do? She decided to hit
them up? Can y'all take the video down? She got
rid of all of us social media as well.

Speaker 8 (01:23:50):
No.

Speaker 1 (01:23:51):
When I saw the story Rebecca, I was like, no,
I think she needs to be more famous. Roll that
shit again.

Speaker 4 (01:24:00):
I'm just walked up.

Speaker 2 (01:24:01):
I can't get out.

Speaker 4 (01:24:03):
I lived here, I can't get out of my fucking out.

Speaker 2 (01:24:11):
Yeah.

Speaker 23 (01:24:11):
I think a simple your chuck please would have sufficed, right,
Glad I recorded that?

Speaker 10 (01:24:20):
M hm.

Speaker 2 (01:24:22):
Hm ain't that something said, hmm, you stupid nigga.

Speaker 1 (01:24:27):
That's the quote, uh that that she actually used. Uh,
And so I can't for some reason, I can't pull
a hypath today.

Speaker 7 (01:24:36):
Uh.

Speaker 1 (01:24:37):
But the white woman in the video, Rebecca, her name
is Kaylee Buchanani, b U C h I G N
A N I her ass.

Speaker 2 (01:24:46):
The left the state. She's her ass then left the state. Y'all.

Speaker 1 (01:24:52):
She's dyed her hair purple so she can't be recognized.
She's gotten rid of all of her social media. This
is the quote that she said on zoom to this
Kiron Channel four. I'm sorry for what I said. I'm
sorry I wanted to hurt you.

Speaker 2 (01:25:10):
But it's not because I'm a horrible person. It's because
I've been struggling recently.

Speaker 1 (01:25:18):
Buchanani says she's received death threats Rebecca and had people
harass her about what she said in the video.

Speaker 2 (01:25:26):
She also said that even her parents are getting phone calls.

Speaker 1 (01:25:30):
Quote, Rebecca, I had to change my number, turn off
old social media, have people calling me giving me death threats,
multiple people a day calling me, harassing me, telling me
what a horrible person I am.

Speaker 2 (01:25:42):
My parents still get phone calls I'm sorry. It's above
me now.

Speaker 8 (01:25:52):
I mean, I guess her parents should raise her better.
I mean she learned that from something. I mean, yeah,
she fled the state. Those boots are made for walking
as she walked up, walked up out of that state.
I mean, come on, like, don't let this president. Don't
let all this rhetoric that you are hearing a TV
confuse you. Like people aren't dealing with this, just like

(01:26:13):
last week we talked about some of the changes in
the military. Like, look, people could say what they want,
they can do all this anti DEI and say we're
gonna remove me Eggar's name and all Ever's name and
all that stuff, but the rank of foul is still
primarily black folks and and some brown folks. Like every day, regular,
regular people aren't putting up with this. So whatever Kurt,

(01:26:36):
y'all think you're getting from the president, you don't got
the president's security.

Speaker 4 (01:26:41):
And y'all need to just leave people alone because people
are fed up.

Speaker 24 (01:26:44):
Leave us the f alone. We don't bother nobody, We
don't want to bother y'all. Just leave us alone. But
if you bother us, you might have to move.

Speaker 1 (01:26:56):
Jane, I got one more as said, you're gonna this
one here. She was asked the question if the N
word is something that she says often. She says, quote, no,
I do not hold up here comes. I grew up
with a lot of black people. And then she went

(01:27:17):
and with the music we listened to. Sure, maybe in
a different form, do I say it that way?

Speaker 7 (01:27:27):
No?

Speaker 2 (01:27:27):
I don't. It was merely just he hurt me. I
wanted to hurt him. It had nothing to do with
me being a racist. Gone gone, So.

Speaker 9 (01:27:42):
Right, this is what I want them brothers to do. Right,
I'm pretty sure you got some folks that support you.
I want when them cash apts come through, I want
her to relive this forever. So when those cash apts
come through, that's what I want you to do. I
want you to go over to one of these little platforms,
all right. I want you to take gotta add and
I want you to just run that video that fifteen

(01:28:05):
seconds of her calling you a N N I G
G E R.

Speaker 10 (01:28:09):
So she can never escape it no matter where she goes.
And the ass is chief.

Speaker 9 (01:28:15):
I want you to make sure she never escapes it
because you know, one more time, it just it just
roll right.

Speaker 10 (01:28:20):
Off her lips.

Speaker 9 (01:28:21):
She knew what she was doing, she knew what she
wanted to say. You know, it was her entitlement. She
thought she owned the street. You know, when we're time home,
Bro said, all you had to do was ask me
to move the truck. We would have moved a truck
for you. But you know, if she had to strut
away and thinking she was some kind of bad ass
to call the nigga, And what we're not gonna do
is make sure, you know, think she could just you know,
ease on that out of it by you know, elite

(01:28:43):
social media, and then I'm gonna domp hair. Sorry, just
starting twenty five maybees right, think the doctor's so secary
and everything.

Speaker 1 (01:28:49):
I'm not, I'm not.

Speaker 10 (01:28:50):
I'm not advocating for it as a victim. I'm not
advocating for it.

Speaker 9 (01:28:53):
But but listen, I just want white people to stop
calling black people niggas so then you don't have have
to deal with to find out part.

Speaker 10 (01:29:01):
Of the funk around.

Speaker 2 (01:29:02):
But I love how she like, well, you know it's
in our music.

Speaker 1 (01:29:05):
You know, I can imagine what was her little neighbor again,
I can imagine her little trifling ass.

Speaker 2 (01:29:10):
Uh, hold a little bit go back.

Speaker 1 (01:29:12):
I can imagine Kayley sitting here like, well, you know,
I ain't mean it that way. You know, I kind
of meant it, you know, I said it, but I
ain't quite said in the form. Can you imagine Kaylee
uh doing this here?

Speaker 2 (01:29:36):
Girl? Come on, I'm y'all. They really getting on my
damn nerves.

Speaker 1 (01:29:43):
Okay, Hold up, I gotta give y'all tell y'all died
about this one here.

Speaker 2 (01:29:45):
Hold up, we ain't done.

Speaker 1 (01:29:47):
Okay, let's see we done done with the Trump person
would have done it? Oh, racist ass rock thrower with
own racist ass Kayley.

Speaker 2 (01:29:55):
Now let's go to this one here, New Hampshire Republican.
He blames black people. We the problem for all the
gun violence in America. That's right, y'all.

Speaker 1 (01:30:06):
Travis Corcoran wrote his email in response to receiving an
invitation from a gun say that, y'all.

Speaker 2 (01:30:13):
Can nobody see that we should have blowed? Come on? Okay,
come on now, y'all should have come on, my lord,
have mercy. Okay.

Speaker 1 (01:30:23):
He wrote an email in response to receiving an invitation
from a gun safety organization to participate in National Gun
Violence Awareness Day. He posted both the email from the organization,
and his response email on Twitter saying quote, I get
emails from gun grabbers, I respond or check this out,
he said, Rachel, thanks for writing. Some people say that
I'm on the spectrum probably and I think that's likely correct.

(01:30:45):
Three indications of this are am averse to change in
changes in clothing. I tend to wear black T shirts
every single day. Be I'm quite interested in data and statistics.
See I'm unconcerned about the popularity or social respectability of
the conclusions that I read and opinionsized spiles with regards
to gun violence. I've done a deep dive on the topic,
and all of the data die read indicates that violence

(01:31:08):
isn't associated with the presence of guns, but with the
presence of African Americans. Blacks commit violent crimes at five
to ten times the rate of whites. This is one
reason that they're such an amazingly tight correlation between states
with the majority white population and states with extraordinarily low
crime rates. I agree that awareness is important. People need

(01:31:32):
to understand facts if they're going to push for the
correct policies to reduce violence.

Speaker 2 (01:31:36):
You have my players that I will wear a black
T shirt on Friday.

Speaker 1 (01:31:39):
June sixth, to help make people aware of the fact
that crime is predominantly caused by African Americans and not
by guns.

Speaker 2 (01:31:47):
Have a great week.

Speaker 1 (01:31:49):
Well, I mean, I'm just curious now, Robert. I know
yo as love guns like I drink protein shakes. But
what's real interesting to me here is every time is
a mass shooting, if I had to go to a
Bitton market, I put my money on a white man.

Speaker 11 (01:32:11):
You know, you can take even further, Roland, because what
happens is we're dealing for question of definitions here because
they say gun violence because they want to skew the
statistics towards black people. Now, if you say, well, how
many police officers shoot people per year and does that
count as gun violence? There's violence, there's a gun, but
because they wear a uniform, that doesn't count. Inside of

(01:32:32):
those statistics. How many people a year are killed by
white militaries worldwide using guns, using bombs, using rockets, et cetera.

Speaker 2 (01:32:41):
Does that count?

Speaker 11 (01:32:43):
Are we to say that because of the European World
Wars from nineteen hundred to nineteen forty five, one hundred
million people died because of that. Can we simply say
that Europeans, by their varied nature can't handle guns, and
the gun violence is correlated with that. These are the
sorts of ridiculous things that we end up fighting against,
and these are the arguments that we are losing when

(01:33:04):
we allow these conservatives to change the American educational system,
when you allow them to come in and start saying,
we got to get rid of CRT, we have to
get rid of DEI and education. We have to make
sure we're doing this patriotic American version. What they're talking
about enshrining white supremacy in the consciousness of the next generation.
They fear that the next generation does not believe nothing

(01:33:27):
in the mythology of America and the holiness and divinity
of white Americans, and that's why they are changing this
from the youngest going forward and calling anything else woke.
This is nothing less than a fight from the minds, bodies,
and souls of the next generation. And going back to
the last story, this may not be the worst time
for it to return to that conversation about why exactly

(01:33:48):
we have the N word and so much to music
and entertainment at America in the nineties, we said the
F word for the gay community all the time. We
ain't heard that in public in five ten years. We
used to call women the B word in music all
the time. Now instead of doing that, we call that feminism.
We will never hear them make a song called them

(01:34:10):
other j words talking about the Jewish community the way
they have songs saying that other in word or any
other group. So black votes saying the inn word have
made white people a lot of money over the course
of the last fifty years. It may be time to
revisit that conversation to ask, well, why exactly is that
the last taboo that's allowed to be part of popular culture.

(01:34:30):
You can't say to our word anymore with regard to
people with disabilities, but we allow them to skill make
millions and billions of dollars by us using that word.

Speaker 2 (01:34:41):
Eugene is white boy crazy.

Speaker 10 (01:34:44):
Listen, listen.

Speaker 9 (01:34:46):
I'm gonna just give them some quick advice as a
former vice chair of a Republican state party.

Speaker 2 (01:34:51):
Just resign.

Speaker 9 (01:34:53):
Just resign and go off to the sunset. If you
decide to fight this, if you decide to make it
a biggest story of what oarty is, it's just going
to hurt you down stream. You shouldn't said it.

Speaker 2 (01:35:01):
Uh.

Speaker 9 (01:35:02):
The statement is asked a nine because hey, you know
he said, oh, majority whites. Well, guess what, there's no
there's no state in this country or territory that's majority black.

Speaker 2 (01:35:10):
There's no state that's no state this majority black. All right.

Speaker 9 (01:35:14):
And then most importantly, we know that violent crime more
like more times than not, is an issue, is an
issue proximity of poverty the two piece, and so I
mean on the eve of Juneteenth, I think that's a
great argument for you know, reparationism and whatnot, and say, hey,
if you actually want to deal with fiveent crime, build
poverty and the proximity.

Speaker 10 (01:35:33):
But we also going to talk about violent crime.

Speaker 9 (01:35:36):
There are more white gun crimes in America than there
are black gun crimes in America.

Speaker 10 (01:35:42):
That's just the fact. By virtue of population.

Speaker 9 (01:35:45):
You know, you can talk about densities, but when it
comes to actual numbers, the numbers are still going to
be the same. So, you know, do need is just
to resign New Hampshire GOP, which is one of creates
the GPS and whatnot.

Speaker 10 (01:35:58):
They need to kick them out the party.

Speaker 9 (01:36:00):
And on his way out, because hey, things like this
are going to define me going forward.

Speaker 2 (01:36:05):
Rebecca gone right, Head.

Speaker 4 (01:36:08):
Two things.

Speaker 8 (01:36:08):
If black people were really committing such a horrible rampage
across this country and using all these guns and doing
all the violence in this country, then guess what white
people would do in this country. They would make guns illegal.
If that's what was happening. That is not what's happening.
The second thing, if we're gonna talk about New Hampshire, Okay, cool,
New Hampshire I think is less than one percent black.

(01:36:29):
So please tell me why all those Native American women
are disappearing and being.

Speaker 4 (01:36:36):
And being assaulted. Ain't black people doing that? So maybe
you need to focus on.

Speaker 8 (01:36:41):
That particular issue in your particular state. And says speak
in behalf of people which you probably don't even.

Speaker 2 (01:36:48):
Know, the folk crazy, uh, And so we're gonna call
them out. We're gonna call them out. It's a bund
oft stuff we didn't get to. But I gotta go
ahead and play this here. There's nothing better to me
than seeing Pete Higg said, get his ass just slapped.

Speaker 1 (01:37:07):
All around, I mean just smacked all around. A courtesy
of Senner Tammy Duckworth. This is a great five minutes
and thirteen seconds, Rolette.

Speaker 25 (01:37:20):
In response to my colleague from Oklahoma. I believe the
Secretary of Defense has just responded last week and admitted
that the one billion dollar mission that he led against
the Houties who do not have a Navy, has not
restored the transit of yes fly commercials vessels through the
Red Sea, and in fact has resulted in the loss
of two f eighteen hornets to the tune of two

(01:37:43):
sixty million dollars apiece, as well as I believe the
last count was seven Reaper drones to the tune of
another two hundred million dollars. You are blowing through money
like my fellow cadets and I did in our first
liberty after Basic camp. Luckily I didn't end up with
a question tattoo. Your failure is Missus Secretary, since you've
taken office has been staggering. You sent classified operational information

(01:38:07):
over signal to chess Thump in front of your wife,
who by the way, has no security clearance, risking service
member lives.

Speaker 2 (01:38:12):
In the process.

Speaker 25 (01:38:13):
You blew the one billion dollar fight against the huties, whom, again,
as my colleagues says, has no navy, and yet you
lost all of those aircraft. You've created such a hostile
command environment that no one wants to serve as your
chief of staff or work with you in other senior
lead deald leadership roles. But what we should all be
talking about more than all of this, is that you

(01:38:34):
have an unjustified, un American misuse of the military and
American cities, pulling resources and attention away from core missions
to the detriment of the country, the war fighters and yes,
the war fighting that you claim to love. I don't
know if this is because you are too inexperienced and
incompetent to understand the real threats facing out country, or
if it's because you are just an unqualified yes man

(01:38:54):
who can't tell the President how to keep Americans safe.
You're focusing on renaming for Confederate generals. You said just
now to Senator King that to a man and to
a woman, we would rather be associated with the old
Confederate names. Well, I am one of those women. I
served at Fort Rucker, Alabama, a base that was named
for a trader who took arms against the United States

(01:39:16):
of America led troops to killed Americans. It was renamed
for Mike Novasel, a Medal of Honor recipient who, in
his citation for the Medal of Honor includes that he
saved twenty nine American lives to include hovering backwards in
a helicopter towards an enemy bunker where a wounded American
was laying and saved that and saved that person, including

(01:39:39):
after being taken fire himself. I know a little something
about what it takes to fly a helicopter when you've
been hit by enemy fire.

Speaker 10 (01:39:46):
That was hero.

Speaker 25 (01:39:46):
I'd rather be associated with Mike Novasel than a failed
Confederate trader. I don't know whether you were inexperience or
too incompetent, but I wonder when you were actually focused
on our nation's war fighting mission. We know that California
is just a deliberate, systematic, political, dangerous campaign led by you.
We should not be using our may military to pay

(01:40:08):
cops against Americans. General Kaine, as chairman, A key part
of your job is to coordinate military planning across the
Joint Force. Is the department currently incorporating into any military
plans expanding the use of the reserve forces to include
the National Guard or active duty troops to support domestic
law enforcement, including in other locations in the United States.

Speaker 2 (01:40:29):
Center. You know we we care no general.

Speaker 26 (01:40:34):
Well, it's it's it's not really a yes or no question,
Madam Center. We plan all kinds of different things. I
think it is not aware of any I'm not aware
of anything. But the reason why I'm answering is the
tags may be looking at something that I'm not aware of.

Speaker 25 (01:40:48):
What are you doing at your level? You're not aware
of that being happening at your level, because we know that.
On his first day, President Trump directed US Northern Command
to revise its Unified Command Plan to add new planning
requirements to combat and I quote no activities. A series
of follow up executive orders continue to readdirect DoD priorities
to supporting domestic law enforcement, including one in April that
tells good and I quote use national security assets for

(01:41:11):
law and order. In other words, do law enforcement's job.
I'd like to enter these executive orders into the record,
Mister Chairman, is.

Speaker 2 (01:41:19):
The objection without objection? So wordry heck seth.

Speaker 25 (01:41:22):
You say you are forced focused on warfighting and warriors,
these are your words. Yeah, you are diverting untowed DOOD
resources and attention to fundamentally non military mission of domestic
policing across the country. We have qualified police officers who
are trained for that mission. They know those streets better
than the Marines who deploy to Los Angeles, who normally
focus on the Indo Pacific. And you recently approved seven

(01:41:44):
hundred more troops in three other states to do admin
and logistics works for ICE. You say, all of this
is valuable training, but I would much rather have our
troops do tough, realistic training relevant to high end combat.
Instead of typing in spreadsheets for ICE. They should be
conducting live fire maneuver exercises. Instead of patrolling American neighborhoods
and standing in front of federal buildings, they should be

(01:42:05):
rehearsing call for fire emissions. We have local police who
can stand in front of those federal buildings. And the
list of distractions goes on. You are encouraging the dd
workforce to go work for DHS and increasing numbers. You're
pulling the military away from facing foreign enemy.

Speaker 2 (01:42:19):
So literally say.

Speaker 25 (01:42:20):
Things like death to America, and you're putting troops with
weapons aimed at Americans. It's a secretary, let the military
get back to its real job. Stop forming them to
do DHSS. And if you want to be the DHS secretary,
maybe you can apply for that job when you're fired
from this one due to your incompetence.

Speaker 2 (01:42:40):
Damn, Rebecca, she read his ass for fill.

Speaker 4 (01:42:46):
That was the clip I needed to see going into Juneteenth.

Speaker 8 (01:42:49):
I mean, what what more can you say? Look, she
is a true a patriot. She served honorably in our
nation's military. When we talk about experts, that's what expertise
looks like. So we saw a clear someone who is
not an expert but has the position. And then we
saw an expert. We saw someone who is very thoughtful

(01:43:10):
when it comes to policy, especially around our military. Our
military is never supposed to be deployed in US cities
towards towards American citizens. That is something that our military
that's even within the purview of our military. And so
what we're seeing is an administration that's using very constitutional

(01:43:31):
measures for political advantage. And so Americans ought to be
extremely upset with this, with what's going on, and I
wish more Americans would truly understand all of the unconstitutional
things that we're seeing that's happening.

Speaker 4 (01:43:46):
In this moment.

Speaker 2 (01:43:47):
If this was good times, Eugenie, it'd be like, damn down, down, Eugenie.
If you're gonna respond your ass can't be on me.

Speaker 9 (01:44:01):
Sorry, you're not gonna have a mutant up, all right,
you meet up, meet out, But I mean it's it's
it's talk about getting the business clear. I mean, she
since she told him, she said, listen, we grew here.
You flew here and don't belong here, and we're still
gonna be here after they get your ass at bout
of here. You know, you know, Senator Duckworth, you know,

(01:44:21):
we appreciate her services country and her contained services country
because look, you need people like her that literally have
the lived experience to be able to actually, you know,
deal with and out of control you know, Pentagon executive
branch in real time. You know, you know, I believe
she outranked him in service. I know now of course

(01:44:44):
he's you know, sec death, but you know the thing
is this, you know, he will eventually be fired, you know,
when he whether it's a boxed response to our eventually
response to Iran or something else.

Speaker 10 (01:44:56):
Trump will eventually get rid of him.

Speaker 9 (01:44:58):
But it'll be members like it'd be there's like Samton,
Duckworth and others that will still be standing Chong Affords.

Speaker 10 (01:45:04):
But she told, she told him, said, listen, you knew here.

Speaker 9 (01:45:08):
You know we grew here, you flew here, and you
know we're still gonna be here when they get you
ass about in here.

Speaker 1 (01:45:14):
Bobline here, that's the kind of heat. Look, he'd been
a pompous ass on Capitol Hill all week, Robert. That's
how you need to put that food in his place.

Speaker 2 (01:45:26):
Oh yeah, non.

Speaker 11 (01:45:27):
For people who didn't watch the entire hearing, that was
the entire hearing was like that with people reading the
riot that and this is why I encourage people to understand,
don't look at the people the top of the Trump cabinet.
These are actors. He literally pulled half of them off
of TV. They don't know anything about it. They are
just there to go look on camera and do things.

(01:45:49):
Dig down into the documents and find the undersecretary's find
the technocrats you've never heard of. Those are the people
who are really running the government. Do you really think
they put the drunk guy from Fox and Friends Weekend
in charge of a one trillion dollar budget. No, So
when I say that this is important, you have to
look at what the current US policy is with regards

(01:46:09):
to Iran. The reason that we are massing aircraft carriers
in the region, bringing third aircraft carrier from the streets
from Malacca to the Persian Gulf. The reason we are
repositioning as many as fifty area refueling tankers from the
east coast of the US to European command. The reason
two months ago repositioned nineteen B two self bombers from

(01:46:31):
Missouri to re Dieo go Garcia in the Indian Ocean
is because very clearly we're about to go bomb the
hell out of Iran and Inraiel has already started taking
out the early warning radars, taking out the command and
control centers, assassinating much of their high level leadership, taking
out Hezblah and the Huthis and Hamas who are their

(01:46:53):
pronxeas in the region. But folks need to understand that
Iraq and Iran are not the same thing. Iran has
a space program. Iran has one of the most powerful
drone armies known to mankind. So and so they were
selling drones to Russia the last two years. If you
think we're simply going to go in and in two
weeks remove them the same way so dom during densert storm,

(01:47:15):
that is not going to take place. And before this
administration runs us headlong, we do another twenty year in
Takaway in the Middle East. We need to be asking
serious questions about what exactly is happening, what it will mean,
and whether or not we should be spilling American blood
yep for war that Netti Yaohu started.

Speaker 2 (01:47:33):
Bottom line is way to go.

Speaker 1 (01:47:36):
Sener Tammy Duckworth, Rebecca Eugene Rabbits Shill appreciated.

Speaker 2 (01:47:40):
Thanks you a lot.

Speaker 1 (01:47:40):
Hey, folks, we don't have a show tomorrow. Tomorrow's Juneteenth.
We normally do a show on Juneteenth, but we're gonna
be broadcasting live on Saturday from Richmond, Virginia at the
Virginia Commonwealth Dinner, so the Blue Commonwealth Gala. We'll be
broadcasting live beginning there. The VFI reception is at five ipm.
Will be live beginning at five pm. So he can't wait,

(01:48:03):
so you definitely want to check us out. Then tomorrow,
I'm going to be in Charleston, West Virginia for a
June team speech taking place tomorrow at Saint Louis. I'll
see y'all Saturday. Excuse me Friday in Saint Louis. I
was literally just looking at my itenerary. So Saint Louis
I'm going to be at the Jubilee Project going to

(01:48:23):
be at It's going to be at the JFK Community Center,
three fifteen Howder Show Rod Flora, sand Missouri. It's going
to be on a Friday. So that event meeting Greek
VIP meeting Greek is going to be at noon and
then my keynote speech as well as far outside chat
it's gonna be at three fifteen pm to look.

Speaker 2 (01:48:42):
Forward to that. So lots of stuff going on.

Speaker 1 (01:48:45):
So folks, hey, if you want to support the work
that we do, John breena Fuck Fan Club goals get
twenty thousand our fans contributing on average fifty.

Speaker 2 (01:48:51):
Bucks each a year. So four I was in nineteen
since some month thirteen cent today. Support the work that
we do.

Speaker 1 (01:48:56):
Of course, if you want to contribute to a cash out,
here is the strike here code right here for strike
and so you can use a cure code if you
want to. Of course see and checking money order to
go to first bout, making it out.

Speaker 2 (01:49:08):
To Rolling markin unfiltered, make it payable to Rolling Mark.

Speaker 1 (01:49:10):
E's getting the bill about five seven one ninety six
Washington d C two zero zero three seven das zero
one ninety six paypedals are Martin Unfiltered, Venmo, r M Unfiltered, Zo,
Rolling At, Rolling s Martin dot Com, Rolling At Rolling
Mark unfilter dot com. Download the Black stud Network app
Apple Phone, Android Phone, Apple TV, Android TV, Roku, Amazon
Fire TV, Xbox One, Samsung Smart t V. You of

(01:49:33):
course also can be sure to get my book White
Fear Have the Brownie of Americas Making Wife Pols Lose
their Minds available at bookstores Nation. Why get the audio
version I read on Audible. You can also, of course
support us with by getting our swag. I'll be sure
to get out Rolling Martin Unfiltered Blackstter Network swag. By
going to Rolling Martin dot creatordass Bring dot com you

(01:49:54):
can get our shirts especially don't Blame me a but
at black Woman you can get all of that at
Rolling Martin dot Creator ass don't forget. You can also
of course go to the support our black owned companies
go to shop black Start Network dot com. Shop black
Start Network dot com to shop our marketingplace for those products.
And of course what should also get the app fanbase

(01:50:16):
that's right down on the app fanbase Android, Apple and
of course if you want to of course invest get
more information at start engine dot com. Forward slash fan
base folks that said y'ally well, have a fabulous June
team and we're gonna keep bringing a fuck as we
always do. Now it's type of truth talks
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