Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Six one seven two six six sixty eight sixty eight
is the number. Okay, just to give you an example
of how vile is just no other way, just how
how ugly and vile and dark and evil really this
music is, I asked Mike. I said, because Mike said
(00:21):
he's heard a few songs and he said, Jeff, he goes,
it's it's unconscionable what they say in these songs. I said, well, Mike,
can we play like maybe just ten or fifteen seconds,
you know, just for the audience to get a taste
of what this music is and what the message it's promoting.
And he said no, really, he goes, Jeff, we can't.
It's fff all nothing but f So all you're gonna
(00:44):
hear is bleep. It's n n N the constant end word.
But he goes, it's calling for people to be murdered,
over and over and over and over. It's a celebration
of murdering people and of dying. He goes, like, you can't.
You're gon beep beep beep, beep beet met people. That's
(01:05):
all you're gonna hear on the air. So that's now,
you know, and if that's what they're listening to when
apparently a lot of them are, and they listen to
this day after day after day after day. They're just
sitting around all afternoon listening to this, and they get
themselves all jacked up, all you know, all pumped up,
all revved up. And then when the sun goes down
(01:28):
and it gets dark, they put on their gang colors
and you know, in packs of eight, ten and twelve,
and they start to hit the streets and they're looking
to kill people, main people, assault people, steal from people.
It doesn't matter, rape, mug maime, kill, it doesn't matter.
(01:51):
This has got to stop. This has got to stop. Agree, disagree,
Darryl in the Great State of Georgia. Thanks for holding Darryl,
and welcome.
Speaker 2 (02:05):
Thank good morning, jeff Uh.
Speaker 3 (02:07):
I'm trying to unpack this. What I'm about to tell
you is for your audience, especially for your black ords.
This is gonna be like air and dirty laundry. Nobody's
gonna like what I got to say. But if the
truth about time, somebody say the truth. Even though I
live in Georgia, now, I was born and raised on
(02:27):
the West Side of Chicago, Okay, I moved down in Atlanta,
back in ninety eight because I got married station overseas
and my.
Speaker 2 (02:36):
Wife would never could take the cold.
Speaker 3 (02:38):
But I can tell you that right now, the problem
with the black community is the black community. And that's
and no one wants to say the quiet part out
loud if our so called leaders have betrayed us.
Speaker 2 (02:53):
Our churches, our joke, because half the.
Speaker 3 (02:57):
Time we call him a storefront church is when I
was growing up on the West side of Chicago. Now
I see it in Atlanta too. As a matter of fact,
I see it all across the country. As I travel,
you know you're in the black community because when you
go down the street, here's what you're gonna see, cut
rate liquors, chicken wing places.
Speaker 2 (03:18):
And beauty supplies places. That's it.
Speaker 3 (03:20):
And storefront churches. You will have five or six churches
in the same block. I mean, obviously they're not doing
the job because if you truly preaching the gospel, you'll
be affecting the community and the community is going to hell.
But the problem is going is really going around is
the fact that since the sixties we have been going
downhill fast. And that's the truth. Because when I was
(03:44):
growing up back in the eighties, I noticed the shift.
Speaker 2 (03:48):
Then we used to.
Speaker 3 (03:49):
Dream of being astronauts, physicists, and so forth like that.
Now if you listen to the young youth, all they
want to do. If they can't be a rapper, they
were going to play basketball. That's it. It's like there's
no other choice. As a matter of fact, I was called, well,
I'm gonna say. I can't say it on the radio,
but I was said. I was told I'm not a
real in word because I'm not very good at basketball.
(04:10):
And I'm like, how stupid is that? So that that's
my qualification? You know, It's like, no, the bottom line
is you have father absenteeism.
Speaker 2 (04:20):
I have known people when I was in Chicago that
was it was ridiculous. The mother was thirty five and
she's a grandma.
Speaker 3 (04:29):
She had six kids by six different guys, and she
did it on purpose because she got more money from
the state. And now, like I said to her, oldest
child was a daughter, and there she was seventeen before
she graduated high school. I wasn no, she graduated, she
was giving birth. That's why I said, she's thirty five
and alreadyr grandma. And it has become the norm in
(04:52):
the black community. That you just have so much fathers
not being there because the state will give the money
and and it's ridiculous and it shouldn't be. And I'm
called the oreo because I did it the right way.
I've got married first, then me and my wife had
our children, and I don't I don't run around trying
(05:13):
to speak the King's English in a slang and using
the bonics. So I'm called an oreo. You see, when
you try to do things the right way, you're ostracized.
They're saying you're trying to act white. I'm like, so,
in other words, if you do things the right way,
you're acting white. But if you do things in the
negative light, you're acting what. Well, that's what the in
(05:35):
word means. It doesn't it doesn't pertain to a color.
If you look it up, it means ignorant, uneducated, without knowledge,
a down laden person. That's what it actually means. And
I'm so I'm glad I'm not the in words because
I'm telling you, well, I like to hear some of
your other black collars called it and acknowledge this is
(05:55):
what's going on in the black community. You don't have
the fathers around. That's why you have these little heathens
running around acting the way they're doing because half the
time the mothers aren't too much older than the kids, and.
Speaker 2 (06:06):
They had multiple kids.
Speaker 3 (06:07):
No daddy's around the satisfying as far as like when
I was growing up, I feared my dad. I feared
my mind too, because back then when they say spare
the rod, to say the child. They practiced that and
trust me, and it straightened me out.
Speaker 2 (06:22):
I was too afraid to do anything.
Speaker 3 (06:25):
But another thing about the black community that you're not
gonna like that, I'm I'm.
Speaker 2 (06:29):
Glad to share it with you.
Speaker 3 (06:31):
It's the fact that I had a very negative attitude
growing up on the West Side of Chicago toward.
Speaker 2 (06:37):
White people because this is what our leaders was.
Speaker 3 (06:40):
Saying, all my problems in life and will be in
life is because of slavery and white people. It wasn't
until I joined the Air Force and left this country
and I went over to Europe. I was stationed in
Germany that I started learning different things. Because you know
the states so very well. Your parents from Croatia, so
the state so Jonas. You can actually on weekend pass
(07:02):
as we would drive to the country. I've been in Spain.
Speaker 1 (07:05):
It Daryl, can you please hang on. I'm up against
a break. This is one of the most important, raw,
honest phone calls I've ever had on the air. Okay,
let's go right back to Darryl in Georgia. Darryl, I
just want you to know before you continue, I really
want you to finish your point. I am getting inundated
(07:27):
with text messages and emails, people telling me, Jeff, this
should be the caller of the week, this is the
caller of the year. This is one of the best
calls they have ever ever heard. So I just want
you to know that people are really appreciating your honesty.
And we are getting feedback from some of our black
(07:47):
listeners and they're saying, finally someone is telling the truth.
So Darryl, please keep preaching on my friend. So you
were saying that what you've experienced West Side of Chicago,
that many members in the black community will blame slavery,
will blame white people for their plight instead of just
(08:11):
taking accountability or responsibility for their own actions and their
own lives. And you said you really saw what America
was like and a different perspective. When you joined the military,
you went overseas, you went to Germany. And once you
were in Germany, you drove around Germany, you went to Spain,
you went to other European countries. Please, Daryl, pick up
(08:33):
where you left off.
Speaker 3 (08:35):
Yeah, well, what it is that you get a better
education of what the slave trade was. I called you
about a year ago when they were talking about these
stupid reparations, and I told you back then, I said, Uh,
the biggest problem with the black communities the black community
because slavery. The biggest participants of the slave trade was
(08:58):
the Africans themselves. That's why I don't try to be
like some of these other black people here in America
wearing these African guards with this back to Africa thing.
I say, you can't go back to a place you've
never been. You can't identify with these people. As a
matter of fact, they thought so little of the US.
They sold us off into slavery. And it's gonna sound
real stupid coming from me as a black man, but
(09:20):
thank God for slavery because I could have been born
over there with those idiots.
Speaker 2 (09:25):
You know, look at the.
Speaker 3 (09:26):
Africa is the richest continent on Earth. They have more gold, oil,
precious gems, and precious minerals, you name it, but why
is it to this very day? You see, not one
African nation has built a ship that's seaworthy or built
(09:47):
something other than a dirt hut. I mean, the leaders
over there are steal the money and then they keep
it for themselves. They keep the people on educated, and
the people just go along with it. They happen to
have an A K forty seven in South Africa, run
off all the white farmers and now they're starving over there.
That's a real brilliant move right there. Like I said,
(10:09):
so I don't try to identify with all these things,
because it was when I was in Europe. I learned
some of the history of the slave trade, and I
was like, well and above all that, when desert storm happened,
we were already together. They trained us as a unit,
and I realized something, Hey, if I'm gonna survive if
something happened, which did scud missiles did come out the way,
(10:31):
they were duds and went way away from us anyway,
because they were not very accurate. I'm like, I have to.
Speaker 2 (10:38):
Have what they call the buddy system.
Speaker 3 (10:40):
You have to put those chemical warfare suits and you
have to make sure yours is on the right and
your friends is on right.
Speaker 2 (10:45):
Because if there is a chemical weapon.
Speaker 3 (10:46):
In there and then you're and you're not on correctly
and you breathe that stuff, you're gone. So you have
to rely on the people around you. That's why they
train us in the military of the unit, because those
are my brothers right there, artists of what race, creed, color, anything.
We have to stick together and survive together. And it
was because I was in the military, I came back
(11:09):
with a different perspective. I didn't no longer blame white
people for everything that was going wrong.
Speaker 2 (11:15):
I realized that a lot of.
Speaker 3 (11:17):
The problems I was having I listened to the wrong people.
And I'm going to tell you something that one of
my co workers is so it's not secondhand from a
co worker.
Speaker 2 (11:29):
This was my actual co worker.
Speaker 3 (11:31):
He actually went to Operation Push one of their sermons
political sermons.
Speaker 2 (11:36):
And it was a bunch of bs.
Speaker 3 (11:38):
Because when it come time to take up the donations,
you you don't hear a message of the Gospel.
Speaker 2 (11:44):
You always hear a messa. Keep your eye on the prize.
Speaker 3 (11:46):
And when I read the Bible, the seki seki first,
the Kingdom of Heaven and all things should be added
on to you. So therefore the eye of the prize
is to do the will of the Father God in heaven,
and so that we can go ahead and and be
with him in heaven. Not the o out of prizes
get to the White House. See that was that was
a contradict, didn't make any sense. But this guy actually
(12:07):
went to the Operation Push and every message was political.
And they start at twenty five dollars for donation and
you can't give less than that, and everybody, and then
they start all the way up to the big donors.
And I'm like, so, in other words, everything's about money.
They sell us and tell us to be victims. We
have to be because this is how we get money.
(12:30):
But the truth of the matter is you're Jesse Jackson's,
you're Al Sharpens and so forth. All of them are
about getting money for themselves in the world out They
call themselves reverends because and pastors because they're a fine
example of people God well, some people God called and
(12:50):
others just came.
Speaker 1 (12:54):
Darryl, I've got to ask you, outstanding. I gotta tell you, obviously, outstanding, Darryl,
you said, really it started with the sixties right, And
I think you're completely right, Darryl. What was it, because
you're right. Before the nineteen sixties, you know, black families
were intact. You had a father, you had a mother,
They had a strong sense of discipline. Blacks were rising.
(13:16):
I mean, I knew you had the South, but leave
aside the South and segregation, but I'm talking about you know,
in Chicago, in New York and the North, blacks were rising.
You had a big, strong, vibrant black middle class. Hardly
any crime in black neighborhoods or black communities. Drug use
was almost unheard of. Out of wedlock, pregnancies were unheard of.
(13:39):
What changed in the sixties? What was it about the
sixties that so eviscerated, so shattered the black family.
Speaker 3 (13:50):
It was part of the civil rights movement that accepted
this greater society crap with LBJ, And as a LBJ
was on there's an old recording. Some people may be
able to actually go Google and Shae that if Google
had descrubbed there was a Democratic Operatives.
Speaker 2 (14:08):
On the phone with LBJ. And he said, if you
give me.
Speaker 3 (14:11):
What I need, I have these n words voterfeed the
next fifty years and beyond, and what it was, if
you ever listen to the so called black leaders, I
don't conform to that black leaders. I mean, I'm black,
but I don't consider myself a black leader. I'm a
leader of my family. But I don't leave no community
and I don't try to. But what it was, you
(14:32):
give them more programs Black people in America. We have
more programs than the Native Americans who owned this land.
You know, it's it's like, how many.
Speaker 2 (14:40):
More programs do you need?
Speaker 3 (14:42):
Stop blaming people for.
Speaker 2 (14:44):
The white man for what we don't do. We have
the opportunity.
Speaker 3 (14:48):
I mean, I left my neighborhood on the West Side
of Chicago because I knew there was something better, because
I did not want to be like everybody else, because
I knew if I didn't get the neighborhood, I would end.
Speaker 2 (15:01):
Up Because by the time I graduated high.
Speaker 3 (15:04):
School, about a third of the guys I grew up
we were already dead or in prison. I mean, and
that's no joke. And I've known those guys, but they
had to. But most of them did not have a
mother and father. Even though my father died when I was.
Speaker 2 (15:19):
Ten, I had bigger brothers. One of my brothers, you know.
It was a prison guard.
Speaker 3 (15:24):
And he's my oldest and my second oldest. He came
straight from Vietnam. I mean, he's much older than I am.
He was in a motorcycle gang. Next thing I know,
he's a Chicago cop. I'm like, hi, Now, hell, he
become a cop. You know, It's like he was a
crook last week, you know, running from the police and
on this motorcycle.
Speaker 2 (15:39):
So but now he's a cop.
Speaker 4 (15:41):
You know.
Speaker 3 (15:42):
But they they were recruiting back then. They needed people
form the community. So I was always afraid to do
something stupid.
Speaker 1 (15:50):
So basically, your older brothers became almost like a surrogate
father for you, Darryl. And in that way, with them
and your mom, they instilled in you these values and
this discipline and order that has served you so well.
And then of course you joined the military and it
really transformed your life. Daryl. This is a message of empowerment,
(16:12):
which you've now just said, of personal responsibility to me,
of optimism, of hope, that this is the land of opportunity,
and regardless of your skin color, you can rise if
you just pull yourself up by the bootstraps and you
nailed it. Just be a god fearing, patriotic, hard working,
(16:32):
law abiding citizen, Darryl. Honestly, best call of the year.
And you know we have the best callers in the business,
but this was raw, This was real. You don't hear
this on almost any other show. And it takes a
very special man to speak the truth, and you're a
very special man, Darryl. I want to thank you for
(16:53):
your service, and truly, God bless you. And please, Daryl,
you've got to call more often. Seriously, my brother from
another mother. You've got the call more off than Darryl. Darryl,
thank you once again. Six one seven two six six
sixty eight, sixty eight. Okay, let's put it on the table.
Daryl says, Ultimately, the black community has nobody to blame
(17:18):
but themselves. Is he right? Is he right? Okay? This
is from Sheriff Jerry, a good friend of mine, on messenger,
and here's what he writes to me, Jeff, all of
this is such hypocrisy. The left will say in court
to the judge, we know that the male brain isn't
(17:42):
fully formed until twenty four years old, so they can
use the younger age miners fourteen, fifteen, sixteen years old
as a justification to lower the punishment for whatever crime
they commit. But when the left wants to have uninformed,
gullible children as young as fifteen or sixteen become voters,
(18:07):
then the left says they're smart young adults who have
as much right to vote as anyone. So, Jeff, which
is it? That's a great point. That is an absolutely
brilliant point. So you see, when they want to give
teenagers a slap on the wrist after I don't know,
they murder somebody or literally kick their face in, then
(18:29):
it's wow, their brains aren't formed yet. But come on,
they don't get formed fully until twenty four to twenty
five years old. But when it's time to lower the
voting age to sixteen or fifteen or fourteen or whatever, hey, hey,
they're just young adults. They have their same rights as
adults though. Well, so which is it? Are they not
(18:53):
fully formed and underdeveloped or are they fully formed and
fully developed? Like pick a lame man? Six one seven
two six six sixty eight sixty eight is the number.
Barbara in Baltimore. Thanks for holding Barbara, and.
Speaker 5 (19:12):
Welcome, good morning, and thanks for taking my call, Hi,
Barbudos to Daryl Darryl everything. Everything he said, and I
told you a call screener that I was going to
say things that people were not gonna light.
Speaker 6 (19:28):
Everything that young man said is true.
Speaker 5 (19:31):
I commend him, encourage him, especially now he's in Georgia,
do some getting involved politically and make some changes in
the black community wherever you can, because he is definitely
on point. My thing right now would be just following
up with everything he said, because.
Speaker 6 (19:52):
It's all true. But a solution is.
Speaker 5 (19:56):
What I think would be. Uh, it's what's in order.
And in the black community, all these young people that
are being slapped on the wrists and sent home here
in Baltimore, it's ridiculous. The crime is I mean, it's
it's all over. It's not just isolated big cities. This
is happening in every state in this country. They need
(20:18):
to activate a junior r o OTC. Putting them in
jail with hard and criminals is not the case. You're
gonna end up with a bunch of raped kids. That's
what's gonna happen in jail. Let's be fair, frank about it.
That's what's gonna happen in jail, and they'll come out
worse than what they went in by the.
Speaker 6 (20:35):
Junior r o OTC mandatory when they when they when
they are first arrested. I have continued, I've just wondered,
why hasn't anyone come up with this for these young people.
Put them in military schools, expand the junior r OTC.
That's where they go they do the crime, that's where
(20:56):
they'll do that minimum two years. It'll save so many
of them, just like the military saved so many black
men back in the seventies and the eighties, well before
they you know, when the draft was going on. Not
talking about Vietnam, that's another story, but mandatory two years
(21:17):
in the military has saved so many black men, young men,
black and white, but particularly young black men. And that's
what that's going forward. As far as what to do
with them, that would be something that would be constructive.
Speaker 1 (21:34):
Barbara, I got to say, that is a really, really
good idea. And just to quickly expand and get your
take on this. You mean, so have them go to
essentially military school for two years, three years whatever it is.
Almost have like a drill sergeant, right, get them up
early in the morning, teach them discipline, force them to
go to school, force them to serve their country, force
(21:57):
them to do community service. In other words, they'll come in,
you know, teenagers and maybe with a very bad influence,
but they'll come out men and instill a sense of
pride and patriotism, correct and order and discipline.
Speaker 5 (22:12):
Correct, absolutely order and discipline because they don't have that.
What Daryl was saying, as far as the home, you
got single women bring in raising single women, it's very
difficult for single women to raise young men, and especially
when they're young and immature themselves, and you know, they
(22:34):
still have a tendency to have the boyfriends in and out.
The boys lose respect for their mothers and they lose
respectful women. With what's happening, it's to me, it's the
only solution that I see, And I think President Trump
is the man who could get this done, and I
mean get it done very quickly, very quickly. We've got
(22:54):
the manpower, We've got soldiers who could actually run these things,
so you know, we've got what we need to get
it done and maybe reopen some of these or expand
some of the bases, the military bases. It would it
would not be that difficult, and it would not take
that much money to do it. It would just the
will to do it and enforce it. And he needs
(23:15):
to federalize DC. That should have happened the day after
he was inaugurated. It would have made a difference, because DC,
it's it's an embarrassment to the country to have a
capital that people can't walk safely in the streets.
Speaker 6 (23:31):
It's that's embarrassing.
Speaker 1 (23:33):
Barbara. Let me ask you this. I think you're dead on.
I think you're dead on with the ro OTC. You're
obviously dead on with federalizing Washington, DC. What Charles Payne
was talking about yesterday on Fox and I rarely watch Fox.
I just hop into catch it. And so I'm like, really,
drill music, what the hell is that?
Speaker 6 (23:53):
He is so worth listening to.
Speaker 1 (23:55):
He's smart, He's very smart. I agree with you, very smart.
And I'm like, so I started to look in to
drill music. I'm like, ay yai yai hai yai yai.
So I mean and apparently I was looking into statistics.
Most people who sing drill music either end up being
shot or end up shooting somebody themselves. Most people who
(24:16):
listen to it, many of them end up either getting
shot or shooting somebody themselves. Or both, Barbara, Why aren't
black community leaders from pastors to it doesn't matter, black teachers, parents,
Why aren't they condemning this music. It's as close to
(24:39):
incitement as you can come. Where forget the F bomb
and the N word and all of that. It's literally
it's be a man, go out and shoot somebody. If
you're not a man unless you kill somebody, so go out.
And it's as close to yelling fire in a crowded
theater as you possibly can. Why aren't black leaders condemning
(25:02):
this and saying no, our kids should not be listening
to this poison, this, this garbage. Where is the pushback, Barbara?
Speaker 6 (25:12):
Well, there aren't any black leaders. I can't think of
one so that I could call high name as far
as a black leader, uh.
Speaker 5 (25:20):
In the community. You know, the Jesse Jacksons and the
al Charlatan race baiters are there there to just be discounted,
But there aren't any leaders.
Speaker 6 (25:33):
The leadership has to come from in the home.
Speaker 5 (25:36):
God leading that house, and a man in that house
leading these children, his family. And those are dynamics that
are not going to change overnight. They're not going to
change overnight. And that's why at this point, you just
got to do you know, it's the hand with Dell.
They got to deal with it. And to me, getting
(25:58):
these kids, these juveniles, when they commit crimes and when
they know that this is going to happen.
Speaker 6 (26:03):
This should just become like regular. This is just do it.
Speaker 5 (26:08):
Where they're going into a junior R O t C Program,
They're going away from their communities. They're going away to
become real citizens because they're not going to.
Speaker 6 (26:19):
Get it otherwise. And there's no leadership. There is no leadership.
You know, leadership is in the hale strong women, could
you know, raise men? Yes, and very well.
Speaker 5 (26:30):
I mean you look at Ben Carson's mother couldn't even read,
and look at.
Speaker 2 (26:35):
What she did with her boys.
Speaker 6 (26:37):
But those women are rare far between. We need, we
need some decisive action. And I just hope President Trump
can do it. I think he's the only one that can.
And forget what the Democrats start yelling and squirreling about,
because that's all they do anyway. Just need to do it.
Speaker 1 (26:55):
Barbara Amen has always dropped the mic. Amen. I love it,
love it, love it. Barbara, thank you very very much
for that call. Six one seven two six six sixty
eight sixty eight is the number Morris in Boston. Thanks
for holding Morris and welcome.
Speaker 2 (27:14):
Hey, good morning, Jeff. How you doing good?
Speaker 1 (27:16):
How are you Morris?
Speaker 2 (27:18):
You know I'm doing all.
Speaker 7 (27:19):
Right, but this really strikes a chord.
Speaker 2 (27:21):
And it's funny.
Speaker 7 (27:21):
You know, I get up and do my morning business
and I always flip through social media, and the first
thing I saw this morning was a video of a
youth a black youth football league, and this kid couldn't
have been any older than six or seven, runs to
the end zone, scores a touchdown, turns around and starts
dry humping the goal line, you know, like, you know,
(27:43):
simulating that he's having sex with a goal line. And
if that wasn't bad enough, next thing you see are
the two coaches come over and start doing the same thing.
And I'm just saying to myself, these guys, these kids
have no no example. And you had said earlier, you
know democrats, uh, you know, they they they want to
keep the miners out of trouble. But it's funny, right,
(28:04):
they want to keep these kids that are committing crimes
out of trouble, but they don't do anything to help
the kids that are getting raped and molested. You know,
those those people, you know, they're they're walking free that
are doing that to those kids. But it is you
drive down any through down any road in Mattapan, Roxbury,
people sitting on their porch is hanging out little two
(28:25):
year olds listening to that that music that you were
just talking about. When when I was raising my kids,
we were listening to the Wiggles. We were listening to
you know, you know, Hot Cold Spaghetti whatever the songs
were like. We were not listening to Let's go down
and shoot them up and.
Speaker 2 (28:42):
End word and and that.
Speaker 4 (28:43):
And you see these kids, I see them when I
go to the mall or wherever. It's just like, man,
they you know, they're they're they're trying to dress like thugs.
They're trying to look like thugs. They're trying to act
like thugs. And they don't have a chance. And there's
no father in the home at all.
Speaker 7 (28:57):
And you know, so a lot of times when I'm
raised in my kids, I said, what would my dad
had done in this situation?
Speaker 2 (29:02):
My dad was a great man. They don't have that.
Speaker 7 (29:06):
They don't have that, I think, Barbara Man, you know
those two calls caller of the weeks for sure in competition,
because Barbara nailed it.
Speaker 2 (29:15):
That idea.
Speaker 7 (29:15):
There's there's something called outward bound that I know a
couple of kids that went through it, and they came
back pretty well, straightened out, and that was just like
a tough camping trip. You stick these kids in the
military academy where they'll have a father figure in the
form of a drill instructor. They'll grow to learn to
respect that man. And you know, you do your punishments. Okay,
(29:36):
Oh you don't want to listen, start running. Oh you don't,
You're not going to run. Okay, we'll find something worse
for you to do. She's one hundred percent right. You
throw them in jail, they're just going to get raped
and they're going to come out even worse.
Speaker 1 (29:48):
No, I got to tell you more. She really convinced me.
I got to tell you she Look, she's a dying
one of you know, one of our key callers. I mean,
she's just a dynamite caller. And Morris, I want to
go back to something you said, because I think you,
along with Darryl and Barbara, have really put your finger
on it. You need a strong father in the home
(30:09):
and Barbara's right. There are exceptional women that can raise
exceptional boys. But that's the exception. It's not the norm.
It's hard. It's very hard. I know. Biggest single women
have told me daughters maybe, but you know, I mean Morris, look,
you went through it. I went through it. My Ashton
now is fifteen. He's almost as strong as I am.
(30:29):
Really all kidding aside, he's fifteen, he's you know it is,
he's the teenager. But big head, big shoulders, broad shoulders,
he's getting muscular now. He doesn't fear his mother, just
just no fear. She can hit him till the cows
come home. He's gonna laugh at her.
Speaker 2 (30:47):
It is just so.
Speaker 1 (30:49):
You need a strong hand, You need a strong father
in the house to impose discipline, to instill some fear,
set an example. And even now he's a good kid.
I'm not saying a bad kid. He's a very good kid.
But whenever he gets fresh, whenever he starts talking back
to his mom, whenever he starts picking on his sister,
I raise my voice, you know, I give him heck
(31:13):
and he fears me because I'm a man. And that's
the only reason. And okay, he fears me, He respects me.
And so if you don't have that father figure in
the house, you can't control teenage men, teenage males in particular.
And I'll never forget this, Morris, and I'll give you
the last word. The great conservative historian, I think, the
(31:36):
greatest historian that ever lived, Paul Johnson famously said, the
most dangerous weapon in the world. He goes, if you
understand history, it's not a nuclear bomb, it's not a
Sherman tank, it's not an AK forty seven. It's a
teenage male sixteen, seventeen, eighteen years old. Look at all
(32:01):
the wars going back since the beginning of you know, humanity.
The most dangerous weapon is a teenage male. You give
them a sword, you give them a knife, you give
them a gun, you give them whatever, and they will
rampage and kill and murder and maim and destroy like
no one else can. And that's just a fact. And
(32:24):
you know, to prove it, he just said, Look, let
me ask all of you. It was at a conference
he said this, and he's asked the honest. He goes,
let me ask you this, okay, because I don't care
what the race is. Forget the race forget the skin color.
You're walking down after an evening with your friends. It's
about eleven twelve o'clock at night, and as you're walking down,
(32:47):
you see on the one hand two couples, a man
and a woman, or you see four teenage males. What
scares you more? What scares you more? There's two men there,
two adult men, two women adults and four teenage males?
What scares you more? And you could tell the whole
(33:09):
like four teenage males? You go, You see my point?
A teenage male is the most dangerous weapon in the world.
That's why you need a mother and a father. Obviously,
that's why, but in particular a strong father. And that's
why I thought Barbara and Darryl nailed it, and you've
(33:29):
nailed it. In the end, there's only so much government
can do. You can throw all the education money, all
the welfare money, all the money in the world, it
doesn't matter. It comes from the home. It starts in
the home. We used to understand that. We don't understand
that anymore. Final word to you, Morris.
Speaker 2 (33:53):
Yeah, you know, Jesse.
Speaker 7 (33:54):
It boils down the consequences and you know what went
down in twenty twenty took away all consequences, right. People were, oh,
it's not their fault, you know, slavery, whatever it may be.
Consequences disappeared in twenty twenty. Not that there were a
lot of consequences before, but there were there were consequences.
This is when they had the no bail and you know,
(34:16):
let murderers out for a dollar whatever it may be.
When you take consequences out of the equation, you have
to have consequences accountability, whether it's at work, whether it's
at home, in relationships, whatever it may be. You mess up,
there's gonna be consequences. And there are no consequences for
these kids in the home with the law, and they've
(34:37):
been given a free pass because of some made up
nonsense that they're being held back. Every single group, the Chinese, Indians, Spanish,
they are able to pull themselves out of this hole.
But for some reason, the Democrat Party has been able
to latch on to Black America and keep them down
(34:58):
by saying you can't do it. I mean, think about
voter id laws, Jeff. They literally went out there and
said black people are incapable of going out and get
an idea to vote, and they exploited the black community,
not because they actually believed that black people are incapable
to go out and vote, but because they wanted to
make it possible for people who are here illegally to vote.
So they exploited the black community, made them look like
(35:19):
morons that they can't even get a license or an
idea to vote, just to make it possible for illegal
to vote. So they just exploit these people. And it's
not going to stop, Jeff, It's going to take generations
to clean this up at this point. I mean, seriously,
like I said, take a ride through Boston, take a
ride through through downtown Baltimore, New York. I mean, there's
no changing. You're not going to put them all these
(35:40):
kids in a military academy and a lot of them,
you know, are eighteen, nineteen, twenty years old. Their lost causes,
there's nothing that's going to fix them. It sounds horrible
to say that, but it's not. Maybe one or two
in a group are going to come out of it,
but the majority of them are just going to end
up either in jail, dead, or living on the streets
or living off our path dollars and that's it.
Speaker 1 (36:02):
Morris, I don't have much time left before the break.
But I want to ask you this in all sincerity,
not that you would do this, but I just want
to make a hypothetical and get I think it the
clinch to your point. God forbid. You're sixteen, seventeen years
old and you decide to go out with your friends,
(36:22):
a pack ten of them, and you start mugging people,
beating people, car jacking people, and you say, here this
big balls guy, okay, Edward Chorustine with his girlfriend and
you're like, hey, you know what, we'll slap her around,
we'll beat the hell out of him, we'll steal the car.
(36:44):
And you're kicking him in the head literally whooa. And
you're the one kicking his head in, and the cops
arrest you, and your dad gets a call and said,
I want you to know. You know, mister, I'll just
call you Morris Jones. Mister Jones, your son Morris say,
you know, he just, you know, helped beat the hell
(37:04):
out of a nineteen year old guy and wanted to
steal his girlfriend's car and was actually kicking his head in,
literally literally kicking his face in. What would your father
have done?
Speaker 7 (37:17):
Even want to think about it? Just the thought of
what he would have done to me makes me shiver.
And you know what's funny you say that. Like my son,
he's nineteen now, and you know, seventeen eighteen, he was
getting like you were saying, Ashton, you know, getting a
little disrespectful with his mother. And I said to him,
I said, hey, you know, when you mouthed off to mom,
you're mouthing off to a big guy's girlfriend right now.
And what's going to happen when you mouthed off to
(37:38):
a big guy's girlfriend. He's going to kick the crap
at you. I said, So you keep talking to mom
like that, you keep doing what you're doing. You and
I we're going to go out back and we're going
to fight like men. That's what's going to go down.
And he would always he always get what does that mean?
I go, It means I'm going above the waist And
he knew exactly what it was.
Speaker 2 (37:57):
It stopped it.
Speaker 1 (37:58):
No, I know what Ashton? Okay, Dad, I'm sorry, Dad,
I'm sorry, Dad. Morris, dynam My call, Dynamite, call Morris,
thank you very much for that really nice call. You
know it's true. I mean, it's just a fact that's again.
You may be blessed with a very good, you know,
teenage son who you know doesn't mouth back or or
(38:19):
you know, be fresh with his mom or his parents,
but you know, most teenage boys are not like that.
They need that firm hand. And he Morris nailed it.
They've gotten no consequences, and there's going to be severe consequences,
firm consequences, consistent consequences, and then they eventually grow out
of it, and they do, but that those values stay
(38:40):
with them, that's the point. And they become men and
they realize, well, that's how you're supposed to behave, and
that's no, I'm going to be responsible for my behavior
and my actions. So but you you let it go,
and they become very dangerous, very fast,