Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
And Grand Rising family, and thanks for starting your week
with us again. Later, futuristic researcher Sadiki Bakari will return
to our classroom. Brother Sidiki, an AI artificial intelligence expert,
will analyze some of the fear and trauma based the
media programming is effecting our community. But before we hear
from Brother Sidiki, DC humanitarian and activists Sinclair Skinner will
(00:22):
check in. But before we get to brother Sainclair, let's
get Kevin owing up the classroom doors on this Monday morning,
Grand Rising, Kevin.
Speaker 2 (00:29):
Grand Rising, Carl Nelson.
Speaker 3 (00:31):
These doors are heavy, man, trying to open them and
to continue our way of looking at the world through
an educational standpoint, inspirational and they're motivational.
Speaker 2 (00:43):
How you feeling.
Speaker 1 (00:45):
I'm still learning. I'm still learning, Kevin.
Speaker 2 (00:48):
That's the ticket, broh.
Speaker 3 (00:50):
And you know no doubt about that, as well as
being a part of the teaching experience as well. You know,
you plant that seed so that others might learn. So
we listened to learn, and we're listening to you, mister
Carrol Nelson. What's going on on your No?
Speaker 1 (01:06):
I just I just found out second, you know, I
just found out that you know, people talk about Tesla.
I just found out Oprah owns a Tesla. So there's
Steph Curry, Serena Williams. You know, but you talk about
you talk about Elon Musk, but these folks are son
of the celebrities are on Tesla. So hey, but I
was just looking at something about Larry Elson.
Speaker 4 (01:28):
But go ahead.
Speaker 1 (01:28):
What did you got for us this morning? What's trending?
Speaker 3 (01:30):
Well, it seems to be a great car. Actually, now, look,
I just wanted to ask you. I had a sort
of a debate yesterday. Is the fall equinox September twenty first,
September twenty second, or September twenty third?
Speaker 2 (01:47):
When is the actual you know, first.
Speaker 1 (01:51):
It's actually today, and and I'm not quite sure of
the time, but you can google it. It's a certain time.
I think it's in the afternoon on the East coast,
and that's when actual switchover takes place. So they've got
it down to the second.
Speaker 3 (02:05):
Yeah, well, they say, well often on September twenty second,
the tumbnoll equinox can also fall on the twenty first,
twenty second or twenty third. What determines that it's today?
Speaker 1 (02:17):
I guess it's a speed because you know, because you
have that extra day if it's a leap here, So
all of that is involved as well. And tomorrow actually
be the first full day of fall because we're still
partially through the day. I think through like I said,
they have down the exact second when he kicks in,
and I think it's this afternoon for the East coast.
Speaker 3 (02:36):
Cool man, cool. I want to start on a happy note.
The Commanders won forty one twenty four yesterday.
Speaker 2 (02:45):
Man, it was a great game. Exciting game, that's all.
Speaker 3 (02:47):
You want the game to go back and forth like that,
and with the team maintaining complete control. And according to
Jaden Daniels wasn't able to play. He was, uh, they
sat him down so he could, you know, be well
later in the season. So the guy that sat in
for him, Mark Mariotta, and he was great.
Speaker 2 (03:10):
He was great.
Speaker 3 (03:11):
If you're going to have a backup quarterback, he should
play just like the original quarterback.
Speaker 1 (03:16):
What do you think, Oh? I think it was great too.
I mean you got to wonder he's a backup quarterback
and he's playing like that. Maybe maybe because the team
that he played against, you know, the Raiders. The Raiders
sound that good this year. But he did he did
exceptionally well, even crashing into his coach.
Speaker 3 (03:33):
You know, well, yeah, that was a strange moment in football.
But dan Quinn said, the football is a contact.
Speaker 4 (03:41):
Yeah, the coaches. Well he left him bloody.
Speaker 3 (03:44):
Yeah, yeah, he said, there's a context, bort so sometimes
you you are part of the contact. He took it
in a good stride, he said, just it's just a
matter of wiping it off. But he stood like you said,
he stood there for a while with the blood on
his It was like a badge of courage.
Speaker 2 (04:01):
I guess.
Speaker 1 (04:02):
Well, well, Kevin, let's let's see what they do next
week and they play Atlanta, the Falcons. They don't have
much better team than the Raiders this year. But let's
see see if Jason plays or they still go with Marauder,
So we'll see what happens.
Speaker 4 (04:16):
Okay, either way, they look good.
Speaker 2 (04:19):
Yeah, it was a beautiful day.
Speaker 3 (04:22):
Like I said, man, it really made for a good
spirit in the nation's capital. I mean you could feel
it well on the subway, you know, everybody wearing their
commander's garb, and it was just a happy spirit in
the city. And that coupled with the news of our
f K stadium being reborn and it just you could
(04:45):
feel that vibe.
Speaker 5 (04:46):
Man.
Speaker 1 (04:46):
I'm telling you, I want to ask Brother Sinclair about
that when when he comes on, because I know he's
a man about town in Washington, d C. About the stadium,
because it's been back and forth talk about the stadium.
I know Brother Sinclair's gonna join us. But let me
say this though, Kevin Froud friends up in Baltimore. They played,
they played tonight, They played Detroit Lions in the eight
o'clock games. So we'll get to see how much of
improvement they made since last week.
Speaker 3 (05:09):
Yeah, yeah, because the Ravens usually are a tough opponent,
so oh.
Speaker 1 (05:16):
Yeah, they You know a lot of people say that's
all on paper, so you know, you know, you gotta
put it on the field now.
Speaker 2 (05:24):
It well is early in the season.
Speaker 3 (05:26):
And speaking of Larry Ellison, Trump says Larry Ellison, Michaeldell,
and the Murdocks will be involved in a TikTok deal.
And you know, he said, you know, they're very well
known people, and Larry Ellison is one of them. He's involved.
He's a great guy. Michaeldell is involved. I hate to
tell you this, but a man named Loch clan is involved.
(05:48):
Trump said on Fox News, what do you know.
Speaker 1 (05:51):
About Lulan Murdoch, the murderer family, the people who are
owned factions. But you know what, Kevin, you knew all
along that TikTok TikTok was not going away. It's too profitable,
it's too huge, it's worldwide. Trump is just trying to
figure out how to get his hands, or his people's hands,
her American ands hands on it. And that's what he did.
(06:11):
He figured that way how to do it without you know,
getting involved with with the Chinese, because they go all
all the world leaders are going to be in town
this week, starting this morning for the General Assembly meeting
at the UN, so it's he wanted to get that
done before the meeting, and of course he had to
talk to she about that. So obviously the Chinese signed
(06:31):
off about that. So they still have some ownership in it.
But the real deal on this side of the continent
is going to be in American hands. And that's what
Donald Trump was. You know, he's threatening to shut it down.
People knew he was. He was never gonna that was
never on the table. That was just a threat.
Speaker 3 (06:46):
There's gold and them there social media. That's right, So
let's find out what the expert has things going for
your time. Monday the twenty second, eight past six. He
is Glass skinner.
Speaker 1 (06:57):
Man, Hey brother saying, the grand Rising and welcome to
the program.
Speaker 6 (07:03):
Great to be on and great to start off the
week with. Very exciting week.
Speaker 4 (07:09):
Yeah it is.
Speaker 1 (07:10):
It's a lot of stuff going on in d c
U this week as well, because you haven't event as
well as the Black Caucus going to be in town,
there's several local events as well taking place in the
district as well. But let me ask you this brother
seeing Cleai, because we had a conversation last week about
about the stadium. I actually was on Friday open on Friday.
Some people were critical of the mayor. There's the stadium,
(07:33):
uh but and critical of her because of her work
with you know, getting it done with Donald Trump, because
you remember Donald Trump threatened to scuttle the deal and
people were saying that's that's why she was sort of
you know, tap dancing with Trump to get this steal
done because she wants to this will be part of
a legacy. She builds the stadium, and we taught you
politicians are really concerned about legacy, and if you look
(07:53):
at the legacy from uh from from Marion Barry and
Mayor for Life to to to her, some of these
folks in between, you know, then nondescripted. So I just
wanted you to address that issue for a minute.
Speaker 6 (08:07):
Yeah, I think it's this. You know, you're going to
have politicians that we should be skeptical to all of them.
I'm a mirror abouts I think she's probably the best
mayor in the country. So but that's you know, if
you look at to me objectively, what she's done in
the time that she's done, and what city I would
want to live any place in the United States is
(08:28):
probably only one is Washington, d C. But at least
as a black man who's a professional and doing things
that are trying to be transformation, transformational for our communities.
But when I when I talk about like what she's
done with that land, you know, she's in a particular
role and she doesn't have a county state apparatus a governor,
(08:48):
so she didn't have the same sovereignty to operate from.
So when people they do you know, again, if you
don't like mirror, I think that's fair to say you
don't like her. But I think what happens or you
don't like particular politicians to say you don't like them,
but then they'll from flay and it's come up with
this these narratives. They have actually no direct connection to
(09:08):
the actual politician they hate or don't like. But more
about a structural set up how DC doesn't have literally
self determination. We have no sovereignty. That's why we have
on our license plates, you know, taxation without representation, So
we don't have the means that maybe another city could
have their senator filibuster or even you know, file up
(09:31):
impeachment of the president. We have none of those things.
We have a delegate, but we were paying taxes, you know.
So it's really one of those things where when you
have your hands side. It's very problematic that when I
heard these accusations, you know, if people don't remember a
guy's name name Andrew Brimmer, and I know him because
he was the former chairman of Tuskey University's the university
(09:56):
of this board. But he was also over the control board.
So we've seen in real time in recent history, not
too long ago, where Congress just takes everything away and
then puts their own people there, so you're dealing with
That's not what Chicago has to deal with. Nashville doesn't
deal with that. That's only a DC thing where literally
(10:18):
external people who don't even live in DC can literally
just wipe our leadership away. And when you say Mary Abouzen,
this is the part with any mayor any politician, it's
really you know, when you disrespect or when you make
a critique of her, I think it's fair critique everyone,
but it's literally she represents the people who voted for
and she's been voted three times. There's not been a woman, black, white,
(10:42):
Asian or other Latino has ever been elected three times
in any city, any major city in the in the
United States, full stop. Let's say time. There's no woman.
So that's not just race as gender. No woman's ever
been elected three times anywhere in the country in the
history of the United State. Three times. The meritiths done.
(11:02):
It is in the best city to live it in
the world, Washington, d C. And that's Mirabouser. That's one.
So whatever you don't like about it, there's a bunch
of opportunities to remove her. She won three times. Whoever,
and they talk about these fighters canelo fight that has
happened with the brother. Every person that had an opportunity
to disagree, they put their you know, information out there,
(11:23):
and people chose her three times. So and she was contested,
So it's not like it was a cakewalker her. The
unions put her in there, developers or her daddy. She
literally campaigned from being an A and C commissioner that
was an unpaid volunteer job because her dad was an
ANC and the activist in DC, Joe Bowser, and then
(11:45):
she took her steps it was a city council person,
did her job there well enough for people all over
the city to pick her. Now again, you may not
like who they picked in DC, and it might be
people in DC that picked three other folks and they
she beat those folks three different times. So I'm sure
they're upset if you beat my person three times, and
(12:06):
I was sensitive and in my emotions, I would probably,
but I'm not. I try to be as objective and
logical about this as possible. So what Mira has done
from not just the land that was for the stadium,
which she had to do a deal with the federal government,
even Walter Reed, which was land owned by the government,
the federal government that she's now made useful for the
(12:30):
people of the district. She's done countless these type of
deals with the federal government, no matter who was president,
for the sake of the people to unlock these this land.
If you notice, a lot of the blight that we
see sometimes is land that has not been properly maintained
by the federal enclaim. So even when this race is
(12:52):
a president talks about crime again, the real crime we
know is the drug traffickin from Columbia. Mirror Bials has
no over that. Real traffic is these banks are able
to launder the money. Mira Bowser has no control over that.
So the things that she has control over. I would
compare what she's done with any mayor in the country.
I don't compare it with Jesus or anybody's religious figures.
(13:15):
I only could look at her contextually to every other mayor,
And I'm telling you, no other mayor has a deal
with the issues that she's had to do. From an
insurrection January sixth, with the amount of people's have been
laid off and the impact that that's had on this economy,
having a billion dollars literally stolen by Congress and no
(13:35):
Democrats be talking about CBC, no Congressional Black Caucus outraged.
She's out here fight and she's got a delegate in
Eleanor's Holmes Norton who's up in ags and doing the
best she can. But that's a delas she didn't have
a vote. So again, I think contextually what she's done
is Banana's amazing. And I think contextually, if anybody was
(13:58):
just fair and didn't say I didn't like her, you
would say, you know what, she's made mistakes, the things
that I would do this way in that way. But
most of those people saying that have never done those things,
have never been in the room she's been in, have
never had to deal with the consequences that she's had
to deal with. So I think when you talk about
that stadium deal, I think, unlike many stadium deals like
(14:18):
they did with the National Ballpark, or to use eminent domain,
which I was fully against, you shouldn't use eminent domain
to remove people for something for a private interest. But
in our case, with the current stature, it's already a
stadium and it's going to move from one jurisdiction which
has no tax availability for distinct residence to the district residence.
(14:40):
So it's almost like moving a franchise from one state
to the other to land that's already been set up
for a stadium. So again the traditional anti money grabs
that people often have about these land about these wealthy
billionaires oligarchs, the difference said, this land was controlled by
(15:01):
the federal government. It's literally been dormant in the blight,
not used properly, and it's actually moving the tax base
back to d C for the benefit of d C.
So I think there's different, you know, contextual things that
are different. I'm still against money grabs given away to
(15:21):
wealthy people to put games that distract us. But again,
there's already OURFK stadium there. It's already a metro set
up there. Again, if this allows the mayor or the
citizens to leverage the greed of corporations to get affordable
housing and elevate the quality of the structure infrastructure over there,
(15:42):
I think it's an interesting way to leverage the interest
of private people as well as the public good. Now
is this the panacea, No, it's absolutely not. These these
rich people are gonna definitely get richer full stop, but
to somehow make this build somehow inherently wicked compared to
the deals that are done in America. I just just say,
(16:04):
you don't like mirror Bowser and that think them it
was fair? All right?
Speaker 1 (16:10):
Hold up though, right there, Brother Saint Clair seventeen at
the top of the I just waking up. I guess
the Sinclair Skinner. You want to jump in on this conversation,
reach out to us at eight hundred four five zero
seventy eight seventy six and we'll take your phone calls.
Speaker 2 (16:20):
Next Now back to the Carl Nelson Show.
Speaker 1 (16:46):
Early Morning Fashion. Waking up with us, and I guess
the brother Saint Clair Skinner. It's got a convention cryft
Currency Convention taking place Howard University late this week. You're
going to talk about that. Also, is I Love Black
People campaign, which is ongoing event. We'll talk about that
as well before we go to those issues, though, Brother
Saint Claire, if you had to write her legacy right now,
we're talking about the mayor of Washington, DC and Marion
(17:06):
Buck Bowser, and she still got some years so left
to create or you know, improve on her legacy whatever
that is. What would you say her legacy is so far?
Speaker 6 (17:17):
Yeah, I think she's probably the best mayor currently. Again,
I think it's interesting almost like Crawford and people talking
about Floyd Mayweather. You only can fight the battles that
you have to fight with, you know, when we compare
Tyson and the Muhammad Ali. Again, when you talk about
people in context, if you look at wars, be it
(17:40):
Fdr Woodrow, Wilson, or Lincoln, in these different wars, all
you can be is the I think it's a dilemma.
People talk about it. Do people make history or do
the circumstances make people? I don't know that answer, but
I would say she's been amazing as it relates to
having to deal with things like co IT no previous
(18:01):
mayor had ever in recent history, and of course back
when they had the other one in their teens, DC
wasn't a didn't have a mayor, but literally dealing with
COVID like no other mayor had dealt with COVID Like.
That's a big thing, is the legacy that she had
to keep this city going, literally the capital of the
of the United States going, while that was going on
(18:23):
an insurrection, like literally people were coming up in the
thirty years of the millionaire of Mars where we participated
when I was a student at Howard getting the students
to march down Georgia Avenue seventh Street. Literally, she's dealing
with an insurrection literally, not you know, trying to take over.
If you think about the Black Lives Matter that she
put literally in front of the White House, like people
(18:45):
might have put Black Lives Matter on streets all over
the country, she literally put it under Trump. So she's
been through two terms of Trump, like again, a white
a concern, like really an extreme white supremacist in the
White House again probably says like a Woodrow Wilson type thing.
So literally there's no other mayor that's had to govern
(19:06):
with less sovereignty and more consequences of her action in
her day than she has full stop. But because of misogyny, sexism,
because of racism, her probably her her legacy wouldn't be
the same as if this was a European or male.
And I'm wanting to say that's what I don't agree
(19:27):
with the factors that type of misogyny. Initially, but when
I started hearing the comments and this happened with Kamala,
I heard more people questioning people's mental abilities, like it's
one thing to say, I disagreed to policies like I
was an Adrian fifty supporter. They really didn't call them stupid.
They just said, oh, he was in the pocket of this,
he's in this. But I've heard people question women Kamala,
(19:49):
who's like has more accomplishments than anybody. Again, I don't
support genocide anywhere, but I'm saying to say that this
woman is not smart, just say you big women are dom.
Don't make it that you think this individual that's achieved
more than you have in her lifetime, that somehow you
get to critique her intelligence. And one of the things
(20:11):
that I did was I actually took a poem that
was written and again written about by an executive about
dealing with these issues as a mayor or as a president,
and I was trying to make sure that people understood
her situation. It's called and I named it. The original
one was man in the Arena. I named it our
(20:33):
Sister in the Arena. And it goes real quick. It
is not the critic who counts, not the one who
underestimates her calm or mistakes her dignified composure for weakness.
The credit belongs to the woman who is in the
arena who carries herself with grace under pressure, whose words
are measured but sharp, whose mind moves with the precision
(20:55):
of strategy and the patience of wisdom. She does not
need to shout.
Speaker 7 (21:00):
To be heard.
Speaker 6 (21:01):
She studies, She adapts. She waits for the opening that
others overlook. With tact and diplomacy, she turns obstacles into leverage.
With restraint, she redirects force rather than meets it head on.
Her victories are not always seen in the clash of confrontation,
but in the elegance of outcome secured without spectacle. She
(21:22):
knows the art of timing, the discipline of subtlety, and
the brilliance of restraint. At her best, she's triumph not
only for herself, for those pets. At her worst, if
she falls short, she has done so with the dignity
of one who dared to move with clarity, intelligence, and courage,
(21:42):
never counting among those timid souls who mistake noise for
power or fear for safety dc statehood. Now like this
woman has done something there's no roadmap for without the
You know, China is battling Trump. You got countries battling
Trump with a livereignty, a navy, an army, and intelligence officers.
(22:04):
She's dealing with this from a very small, you know,
vantage point. Yet she's got forty thousand employees that depend
on her making the right decision, over seven hundred you know,
residents that depend on her, and that's a very weighted
while she's doing this with a baby Darter she adopted,
(22:24):
like literally, like she's not married. She's a single mom
like many people listening. But now she's a single mom
who has decided that she wanted to live a life
where she supported a black child, a little girl while
being the head of this this government. She chose, I
mean a lot of people, because of the situations, have
(22:45):
been had babies, but she chose to bring in a
baby in her life and live like this. So I'm
just saying, you know, you look poundful pound when they
talk about Crawford versus these other fighters, I would say,
poundful pound looking at me, You're gonna be hard pressed
to give me a resume of situations that these other
(23:06):
leaders have gone through and what the outcomes were. And
look at how difficult her you know, the number of
things she had to deal with and be like this
sister doesn't warrant some level of consideration as being quite
well for the day and suited for her position. And
again it's because she's had the rest. She's dealt with
(23:27):
Trump twice. So when I hear people talk about what
she should do, I try to look at their resume,
and much of it is on social media, not in reality.
Speaker 4 (23:37):
Correct.
Speaker 1 (23:38):
Hold, I thought right there, twenty seven minutes off the
top of the voice, you hearing his brother, Sinclair Skinner
brother Saint Clair actually was supposed to talk about this
cryptocurrency conferences that he's hosting at Howard University later this week,
and also that I Love Black People campaign that he started.
But we start up telling about you know what happened
with with the mayor of Washington, DC, Marrion Bowser. Now
that the fact of the stadium is going to be built,
(24:00):
Donald Trump a threatened to scuttle the deal. But once
they got over that hurdl and some people were saying
she was just tap dancing till that was she got
that passed, and now she's the staves been bill. So
maybe we'll see her different in a different light, if
you will. Justice is joining us from Las Vegas. He
calls it the Mississippi of the Western Grand Rising Justice
year on with brother Saint Clair.
Speaker 7 (24:20):
Yeah, whole tap, Saint Claire, whole taps, no doubt. Brother.
Speaker 8 (24:24):
Yes, you started off the show with a great vibe.
Speaker 9 (24:27):
You talked football.
Speaker 8 (24:28):
There's sixteen black quarterbacks starting in the NFL.
Speaker 10 (24:32):
Did you know that?
Speaker 8 (24:33):
That's one thing? Yes, sir, But here, sir, here's the thing,
former District residence. Nobody's talking about taxation, about representation, that's
number one. You say, so many people coming into the
District of Columbia this week.
Speaker 11 (24:47):
What is gonna come out of the Congressional Black Haukis?
Do we have any leverage with the Congression, Lou Black Haukis,
because it seems to me that we had ninety two
of them vote for the resolution.
Speaker 7 (25:00):
Charlie Kirk, have.
Speaker 8 (25:01):
You heard that call?
Speaker 4 (25:04):
Yes, I have.
Speaker 1 (25:04):
And reporter Ebana mcmarsh who worked with us here at
WL she's going to be on later this week to
talk about the caucus. But yeah, I heard, I did
hear that? Go ahead?
Speaker 4 (25:14):
Justice?
Speaker 7 (25:15):
So my question is are we relevant?
Speaker 8 (25:18):
Are black people relevant in America to day?
Speaker 11 (25:21):
If we have a legislative caucus, are they relevant?
Speaker 8 (25:25):
Will we meet with any heads with any states, will
we point out our agenda.
Speaker 7 (25:31):
There's something to think about car Hopefully you can expound.
Speaker 10 (25:35):
On that this morning.
Speaker 1 (25:38):
All right, thanks Justin, brother Sinclair, you want to hit that.
Speaker 6 (25:42):
Yeah, I think he's right on. I think, first of all,
we are amazing. That's why they spend so many trillions
of billions and gazillions of dollars to try to undermine us.
I mean, if we were insignificantly, really no need to
spend this kind of money to try to destabilized. And
they didn't pick the district to attack just because of
the fact that it proximity to the Whitehouse. If this
(26:03):
was a city that was you know, again almost all
European heritage, they wouldn't do these things. So it's the
attack is on black people. But the brother's making the point.
I think everybody who's out here should find a way
to run for Congress. There's no reason to have We
used to have loyalty to the CBC existing office holders
(26:26):
because of a thing called seniority. And what we said was,
you know, they've been there since nineteen sixty something something,
and now they can be the ranking member in this
committee and that gives us access all they gave access
to was the lobbying groups, and they didn't give us anything.
So that's fair. Like I think people don't look at
the experiment that we've taken place in the so called
(26:48):
participative representative democracy. We went from not being able to
vote in many places to voting and being able to register.
I still remembered like I was in Alabama my first
campaign was Jesse Jackson's second one in eighty eight. You
had to register to be a campaign, I mean a
(27:09):
voter registration. You had to go literally to the Justice
of the Peace to get registered, to allow people to
sign up with you to help them. And then the
Motor Voter Bill came out and allowed people to register
the vote when they were getting their DMB registration. We've
done a very long way in participation in a very
(27:29):
short period of time, and with that comes the level
of political maturity. You know. I was, you know, again,
engrossed in the fact that Obama was the first black president.
Now what I missed is that he didn't have a
black agenda, and when we would put force our black agenda,
he would tell us that it's not the right time,
or if that's too controversial. I've seen in my lifetime,
(27:51):
a lot of things I never thought would be acceptable,
like even with the sanctuary cities and marriage. There's a
lot of things when I was young I never imagined.
But the things that ended up being too controversial was
having representation in DC, like even be able to make
as a stake, just have some full voting for our delegate.
(28:11):
That would be actual representation. And let's get a senator.
Like there are things that could have been done by
the Democratic Party. But what we don't realize is that
on one side we got liberal racists, liberal white supremacists,
and then on the other side we have conservative white
supremacist idea. I list to call it the ideology. I
don't want y'all think as a person that stands in
(28:32):
a room somewhere coming up with this is an ideology.
So a black person can operate their operating system out
of white supermase ideology. And when we allow liberal white
supremacists to ideology to control us, it makes us more
vulnerable to the conservative white supremacy ideologists. So in many ways,
(28:52):
when we allow these democrats to use us, and now
it's even getting worse. I see some very extreme people
try to conspire and say George Soros, but even in
DC said a lot of these people that aren't even
from DC and they use us, our community to be
a punching back for conservatives. Even with this Charlie Kirk,
those black folks, I didn't know who this guy was. Contextually,
(29:14):
I didn't know who he was. But there's people using
us to talk about this, and they'll have a black
faith talking about it for their own means. I think
it's the level of almost like a European tribalism that
we're seeing. And I'm not going to get in between
people's tribal disputes like that. I think it's something that's
being played out in a way that is quickly not
(29:35):
saying the demise of a system, but it's probably a
system that should have a demise. And I think when
Brother talks about the Congression of Black Caucus, it's been
an instrument of that same ideology, or that white supremact ideology,
where we're told that our issues should go in the background,
but they have no problem voting for genocidal policies. Just
(29:55):
think about it. Reparations is too risky to talk about,
but we can vote for genocidal policies like whatman is that.
So again, I think there's some real issues that we
can control by this saying we're no longer going to
participate by supporting the current person who's in Congress that
represents my district has been Jerremander to be black. I'm
(30:16):
going to now replace them. And you're telling me about seniority.
I try that. I looked at that experiment. It's failed
to generate any substance of change in my quality of life.
So I'm gonna pick someone else. And I think one
of the reason is why the Dems have been so
silent about what's going on in DC and the at
tax on the city and the mayor, is that they
want us to be so outraged with Trump that we
(30:38):
come out and vote in the midterms. So just be
careful when people are playing these games. They're going to
create these I don't think they're these they're not red herrings,
they're not false flags, but they're going to create mishift
that gets us to say, oh, I'm going to do this.
But at the consequence of the residents of DC we
should have had even did Democrats know that Elder Holmes
(31:02):
doesn't have a full vote. There's too much they could
have done to make sure when we had control of
both houses as Democrats and the White House, to make
sure the Home Rule at least gave us real representation.
The Democrats failed to do that, not because of the mayor,
not because of the citizens of the DC, but because
they're blatant disrespect. I would say, a white suterminous ideology
(31:27):
that makes us subordinate to some other people in a
democratic party. That's our problem.
Speaker 4 (31:32):
I hear lefought right there.
Speaker 1 (31:34):
Let me jump in because you mentioned, yeah, no problem,
brothers sing, because you mentioned, you know, genocidal, what's going
on in gossip.
Speaker 4 (31:43):
You have referenced that.
Speaker 1 (31:45):
And today the United Nations General Assembly is going to
meet and Britain, Australia and Canada they're going to formally
recognize a Palestinian state. And that has left menal Is
just to say he's upset. Let's put it that way,
because this is going to happen at the UN. We
mentioned the black hau Becaus have mentioned earlier. We came
and have this week so many meetings, so many pivotal
(32:07):
meetings are taking place in Washington, DC, and this of
course at the UN in New York City. But this
is what's going to happen. And they waited till Trump
left the UK before announcing that the Britain is going
to support Palestinian state and net Ya is already upset.
So we'll see if Trump, you know, Trump has used
his bullypoop it if you will, to tell people like
(32:28):
if they do business with China, we're gonna put tariffs
on them. Let's see if he hear how he responds
today when they formerly on the on the General Assembly
four when Britain, Canada and Australia, and We'm gonbe some
other countries will jump in and say we're not supporting
the genocide has taken place in Godzip. Let's see how
we respond to that, because this is going to be
interesting to watch this week. So I'm glad you just
mentioned that. But listen, we've got to take our first
(32:50):
look at the news, traffic, and weather in our different cities.
When we come back, I want to talk about the convention,
but also Kareem in Baltimore has a question for you.
Family YouTube can join our conversation. Brother Sinkly Skinner, We'll
just reach out to us at eight hundred four five
zero seventy eight seventy six and we'll take your phone
calls after news that's next and Grand Rising Family, thanks
of waking up with us on this Monday morning here,
(33:10):
this is the twenty second day of September twenty twenty
five against his brother Sinclair Skinner. Brother Sinclair is a humanitarian,
is also an activist. He's the architect that I Love
Black People campaign. Is also going to talk about a
cryptocurrency convention that just havin at Howard University later this week.
Before we go back to the mis remind your con up.
Later this morning, we want to speak with futuristic researcher
(33:31):
that would be Sideka Bakari. He's going to discuss the
or actually analyze AI, artificial intelligence and some of the
fear and trauma based media programming that it's impacting our community.
And later this week you're going to hear from psychologist
doctor Jordy Grew. Also, brother Zachi Breudi from the Universal
African People's Organization will be here and also DC activists
and pastor the Reverend Willie Wilson as well. So if
(33:53):
you are in Baltimore, make sure you're radio's locked in
tied on ten ten WLB or if you're in the DMV.
We're on FM five point nine and AM fourteen fifteen
w L. Brother Chris, I mentioned Kareem is calling us
from Baltimore. Is on line to Grand Rise and Kareem here,
Brother Sinclair Skinner.
Speaker 9 (34:10):
All right, how you're doing a better call? How you're
doing better Sinclair? Or how many to ask? I wanted
to ask you a question in reference to doctor John
Henry Croft used to talk about how we were as
a collective, we were politically immature, and I wanted to
ask you, how can we strategically put ourselves in positions
(34:34):
so that we can move as these as pawns, these
not as pawns, but use a strategic pieces in this
game that we are playing, with the with the society
in this in this place that we live. That makes
any sense?
Speaker 6 (34:51):
Yeah, I think it does. I think I think you're
writing about I think with John Hendrick fark Shaid was
correct about the political maturity. I think we're quick study. Though.
I think if you look at you, I think this
level set this other people who've engaged white supremaci ideology,
many of them were exterminated. I'm talking about the indigenous
people here, and I know the resident systems that are
(35:13):
part Cherokee and chalk talk. But they literally decimated the
people in North and South America. Like people speak Spanish
and Mexico, Spanish is a standard language. So these people
are totally decimated and they're gods. They don't understand their roots,
where they're from, any of that. You look at Australia
the same thing. But the one thing I would say
(35:33):
about us, we've never stopped our resistance. I'm not saying
those other people deserve to go, but we're still here.
The fact that we're having a conversation with this amount
of agency. Many people don't have the agency to even
have the conversation. So I just think that we also
need a level set the victory. Like they try to.
They try to destroy us, and we're still here. They
throw in the kitchen sink at black people, chemical warfare,
(35:56):
biological warfare, kinetic warfare, everything they pride were They still
seeing us in the grocery store with them, So they
literally have failed. They're doomed. I don't think it's about
us learning their game. Their game is coming to It's unnatural, ungodly,
it's a historical This is probably the last five six
one hundred years as opposed to tens of thousands of
(36:19):
years in which our people assumed the proper place in
the world without all this problematic violence. They try to
normalize that as if the world has always had people
killing like this. It's hard to develop any technology if
everybody's just trying to kill each other. The people who
built the pyramids weren't capitalists, they weren't socialists, they weren't Christians,
(36:39):
they weren't muscile like. There's literally we come from people
that have been able to do that, actually create the
languages that other people have bastardized and manipulated. We created
the science, the math, these are like you know, and
again it's not because we're better through primacy. We're the
first civilized people. It's not black superiority. We've been practicing
being human beings sometime. So there's certain things that we're
(37:02):
going to contribute first and develop maybe a little bit
because of the actual time span that we've done it.
I think the issue now is how do we knowing
that this thing is doomed, this enterprise, And I think
part of this goes back to the Black Blockchain Summit.
You know, people always ask me how much is bitcoin
going to be worth? The question to me is what
is the dollar going to be worth? And have your
(37:23):
edged yourself with something that's not contingent on the dollar
as a means of exchange in the international space. I
think bitcoin is that. So in many ways, it's not
about is this going to rise? Asides as the stock
if the stock market is based on the US dollar,
based on the eurosystem as it stands today, I would
question you just say, well, where's the United States going
(37:45):
to be in twenty thirty and is it going to
be like it was in nineteen ninety one or is
it going to be someplace very different. We got to
be mindful of that because again I think sometimes too
often we're making decisions based on the last five years
as opposed to the next fires, which could be vastly different.
So I just think that the question you're making is, yes,
(38:06):
we need to keep continue to mature. But I do
love our spiritual maturity. I don't care what religion with group.
There's a spiritualness I've noticed about our people that allows
us to be empowered and overcome even the most wickedest
circumstances and our connections spiritually. When we see a black
person on TV that we don't even know there's a
(38:26):
spiritual connection. They do something silly, we cringe. I've seen
other cultures they don't see the same connection. I think
there's some things that's very interesting about us, our resiliency
and our continues to like even us talking about Palestinians.
The Palestinians ain't talking about the drug war against our people.
I'm gen x like no one came to save us
(38:47):
when they were dumping cracking our neighborhoods. But in spite
of that, we had the humanity to think about other
people and other places. Always, even our grandparents where they
change the quota system to allow more of these folks
to come to try to get sex work. Our people
didn't say, just give freedom to our individual families. We said, look,
this is and just it's wrong. I've noticed that there's
(39:10):
a behavior type like that, and I think, again, we're
not going to fight fire with fire. Would the brother say,
Fred Hampton, We're gonna fight fire with water, and water
is a real force, it's not a game. I'm sorry
they could get that. We looked as individuals for a
(39:31):
larger collective individ think that you know what your neighbor,
and knowing your neighbor allows you to build that collective
for a larger goal. Is that one great? We can
never do that? Yeah, I think that even with the
I love black people taking what they did with the
Green Book. I think geographical borders are all fixed political
(39:54):
construct but the state of Nevada is is a construct
with the United States, is the con Structure's No, when
we limit ourselves to these so called nation states, you
think about much of the world was more and more
like a city state. Most places were based on a
focal population, not orders. So again, I think our connection
(40:14):
when I travel abroad, I've been in many places with
our people. Being Pan African is not enough. I oftentimes
meet people with common interests. I'm a pilot, I mean technology.
I think we're finding and continue to build our community
around common interests and a collective. Not Pan Africanism like
you've got a PhD in Africana studies, but more like
(40:35):
we're family. We can disagree when we have different experiences,
but we can work collective. Look at you watch that
Like the five figures on the hand, we can be separate,
but the thumb is definitely different from the pinky but
we can work collectively of the hand. I think knowing
the truth about the United States that we know now,
even with the so called black president. Now we throw
through all these experiments, with the CBC having tenure and
(40:59):
having ranking status, we've realized that none of those things
have given us the ends that we were seeking. I
think that's fair. I don't think we were foolish to try.
I think that that's a part of the thing I've
learned with this tech startup world, like failure is a
part of success. You're gonna have to keep going through
these reps like and tell, Okay, we try this, but
what you gotta do is we see it doesn't work
(41:19):
with the feedback, do something else. Don't get stuck on now.
I mean I should call it it. Don't just keep
doing it over and over and think of something going
to change. I think we've tried some reason, and I
think reasonably. My parents integrated schools with me and my
brothers and my sister, thinking that the government said they
were going to change. They were willing to be a
(41:40):
part of it. They weren't dumb. The schools looked better
than the schools they went to. They saw the books
weren't all patted up, but those new schools were had
an operation system based on white suprem's ideology, and they
harmed us and our parents didn't know. And it was
a very sophisticated machine, you know, to make me heavy
set and eatn McDonald's. McDonald spends a billion dollars a year.
(42:02):
You deserve a break today, like they It's not like
we're just idiots. It's like they're literally parking us and
spending Like even the stuff with TikTok, they letting you
know that instead they trying to get a back door
in a TikTok. They no longer gonna play those games.
They're gonna say, look, give us a piece of TikTok
so we can use it to control and manipulate our people.
We're not gonna let you do it. We're gonna manipulate
(42:23):
our people like these are like even the guy getting shot,
Like all these things are being done now where they
would do suddenly JFK things. Even Lincoln. If you ever
look at the Conspiracy of Lincoln, where literally his vice
president was a Confederate sympathizer. They literally signed the peace
deal in Virginia right outside of DC and within seven
(42:46):
days they had killed the commander in chief like he
was assassinated by the Confederacy.
Speaker 7 (42:52):
They lost the law the war.
Speaker 6 (42:53):
But they lost the battle and won that overall piece.
So I mean, this thing has been operating at a
level where they're not telling us in our school books
what the actually is happening. We're literally from a narrative,
and as we understand and get the what's going on,
we should just be building things that can replace this
thing because it's doomed.
Speaker 1 (43:15):
Let me tell me for a second, brother Sincla, because
you mentioned several things here, but tie this all in
what you're talking about, because Brother Sidiki is going to
help us with this too. With the Black Bitcoin summit
that you have in late this week at Howard and
we talked about TikTok, and we talked about algorithms that
the United States now controls the algorithms in this country,
(43:36):
at least for TikTok. How important is it for us
to attend or have somebody tend the summit that's taking
place later this week.
Speaker 6 (43:45):
I think it's very important just to be exposed to
what technologies as a tool can be used to help
our liberation, to help us deal with the system of
rights of pervis and this ideology. I think again, the
dollar and its dominant is coming to an end. The
(44:05):
question is what is next now, Even if you don't
think bitcoin is next, it's I think it'd be fair
enough to say, look and see what they're talking about.
Maybe you can come up with something better. Fine, but
don't ignore it Like that part. I mean, we not
shouldn't make decisions out of ignorance. We should be making
decisions out of being informed. And one of the biggest
(44:25):
the first thing we have in the uh uh the
conference on that Friday is Economics for Techies, and we've
got doctor Jarrett Ball, who's really been very critical of
this whole you know, financial this wealth stuff, black wealth stuff.
He really takes a very clear critical review of even
(44:46):
how we see wealth and wealth building in the United States.
So that's how we kick it off. This is this
is a conference talking about so called crypto but again
I'm leveraging. We're leveraging this to make sure we're empowering
our it's black blockchain something, it's not blockchain black something.
So the black is first. That's like without that everybody
(45:08):
knows coming to this conference, the things about black people's
black communities plural. So whatever you're talking about, if you're Asian,
whatever you've set you playing, the conversation is going to
gear to how do we solve problems in our communities,
not some place else. And so we start off with
economic techies, economics for techies, So we level set the
(45:31):
realities of real money, hard money, what this economy is
built on, what Wall Street really is, and then we
go into bitcoin one on one to literally let you know, Okay,
now you've kind of got a better context of economics.
And again, I'm a mechanical engineer by profession. It wasn't
until I got into this industry that I started understanding
(45:52):
more about economy, the monetary systems, why people are seeing
the changes, even why Trump is so interested in crypto,
what he's doing with this debt ponzi scheme called the
dollar and the Treasury bills. I wouldn't even got into that.
I actually failed out of the NBA program at Howard.
I was takeing tired of school. I'm not going to
(46:13):
go into that, no excuses, but literally we're going to
talk about the econnery first, then we're going to go
into the bitcoin one oh one. Then we're going to
do a fireside a brown bag lunch and because the
title of our theme of our conference is peaceful solutions,
the violent world problems peaceful solutions, and we're going to
have a sit down with myself. This is ten years
(46:37):
of our start.
Speaker 1 (46:38):
Joe hold that though right there, Brother Saint Claire, we're
going to change the traffic and weather at different cities
when we come back, I'll let you finish. Give us
the rundown. And brother say Coo in Baltimore wants to
get in on the conversation. You two can do the same.
Family reach out to us at eight hundred four five
zero seventy eight seventy six and we'll take a phone
calls after the trafficking weather that's next and ground rising. Family,
thanks for waking up with us on this Monday morning,
this twenty second day of September. This is the last day,
(47:02):
half day, if you will, of the summer, the fall equinox.
This afternoon and tomorrow be the first full day of
fourth anyway, this is when the sunlight and is equaled
in the day and the nighttime. That's all that means.
Eight hundred and four or five zero seventy eight seven
six to join us on. Our guest right now is
brother Saint Clair Skinner. He's having a black Bitcoin summit
taking place at Howard University late this week. Before we
(47:23):
left for the traffic and weather update, brother Saint Clair
was giving us the information about what's going to take place. So,
Brother Saint Claire that you finish your thoughts.
Speaker 6 (47:30):
Yeah, so, and then at noon we're going to have
a brown bag lunch where we talk about something very
important to us. We started off everything we're doing in
the cryptal space for remittances. So we were the first,
and this is bit Laurie. We were the first literally
bitcoin startup to get a remittance license explicitly to use
(47:52):
bitcoin to remit cash and that was in Zimbabwe. This
is under Robert Mugabi. We were administration. We were able
to back in nineteen twenty seventeen with my co founder
Christopher Mappmander who's Howard grad is myself and also from Zimbabwe,
we were able to allow people to use bitcoin to
(48:15):
remit cash into Zimbabwe which was again being squeezed by
so many so called the US and other illegal sanctions.
And then we were going to have a conversation about
that at the brown bag lunch and the use of
these technologies to allow us to move money without using
rustern Union and money Gram and these other money grabbers.
(48:39):
And then from there we have something very powerful, and
this is I think very important. We got Commissioner Woods
from the Department of Insurance, Securities and Banking in DC
again because d C still has a strong population of
the smartest people in the world. Many of our leaders
(49:01):
are still black there, and the commissioner over the Securities
in banking, we probably have the only black commissioner leading
institution like that, if not the only one of the few.
And we're gonna be talking about crypto scams, and there
are scams like this is one of those things I
don't I tell people. I think it's fair to be
(49:23):
skeptical of crypto and bitcoin and all that. I just say,
be skeptical of all of it, though, be skeptical of
that paper dollar in your pocket, or that plastic card
with a cassette strip, Like we don't even use cassettes anymore,
but that brown strip is literally the same cossett strip.
So literally, be skeptical of all these things. But that
skepticism to me should should fuel your desire to learn,
(49:47):
like we should be lifelong learners. So Bitcoin wasn't out
when I finished the university, so I had to keep learning.
And one of the things I try to do is
make informed decisions, not ignorant ones. So literally scams, we're
going to go through all the scams. And then while
we're doing that with the scams and regulations and new
regulations on AI, we have some brilliant college students going
(50:12):
to be doing a pitch competition where they literally are
using their brilliant brains to come up with new solutions
to old problems in our community. And this year's theme
for the pitch competition that we have so that they
can participate in and give us their wizard their brilliance
is building scalable solutions for the future of black communities.
(50:36):
We're not monolithic, we say communities with a S. So
we're literally gonna have a pitch competition with several students
pitching ideas on how we can use new innovative ideas
in order to solve old problems in our community. And
we have an eight thousand dollars eight thousand dollars worth
of prizes for the pitch competition and that's CAD as
(51:00):
well as because you know we're in the space, we
have developers that we're going to have on Paul to
help them with the development of their ideas or designed
So that's that's on Friday, and then and while we're
doing that simultaneous in person, we also have a virtual
track of our conference going on for those who are
(51:21):
interested in things like blockchain and reparations and responsibility. What
do we build tech that how do we build tech
that hills. We got topics like education for liberation and
blockchain technology, decolonized learning, digital deeds, securing property rights with
blockchain like we have literally And then Saturday we have
(51:44):
another round of in person and we're going through to
some of these same topics. We have the commissioner from
the US Patent Trademark Office System Valencia, who's a Howard
of Love, is going to be talking about how to
control your intellectual property. We have someone for the SEC
coming to talk about how these cryptos relate to the
(52:06):
securities and how they're regulated. And then we have people
like Lamar Wilson who's a super dynamic brother in the space,
cloud messador, Reggie Middleton. We have countless luminaries throughout our community.
Greg Kidd has a new product based out of Oklahoma.
You know, he's of European descent, but has a very
(52:28):
powerful message directly to our community. So we literally leverage
brains from all over the world to come and talk
about the same problems that we're dealing with, but giving
us opportunities to seek outlood tools. And we on our panels,
we oftentimes have people who are in the social scientists
like political science, sociality, psychology, practitioners like lawyers, but on
(52:51):
that same panel we have people in applied sciences. We
have people who are computer engineers, developers, electrical engineers, and
we put them together and we talk through these things
to talk about how we leverage these new things in
a way that actually can help us every day, How
to secure these things, how to make sure people don't
rob us. I got hacked for like fifty bitcoin back
(53:12):
in twenty eighteen. These are real things that can happen
to you. It was through a thing called a simswat
where they stole my phone number. So I'm just saying
these are things that are real. We're going to be
giving you opportunity and because y'all are listeners to one
of the most prolific, amazing, innovative shows and minds in
(53:32):
the world. Right now, Brother Carl, we have a promo
code Carl Nelson twenty five, So you tie into promo
code cal Nelson twenty five and get a little something
off and then students are free. We can't talk about
what we're trying to be innovative in the future and
you're charging students. So we think that again, we have
an essay contest how to use technology to stop gun
(53:56):
violence for high school students. So if they're out there,
go to the webs black Blockchain summit dot com, Black
Blockchain summit dot com. You got somebody who's in high school.
They're gonna apply. It's a five hundred dollars to the
students who wins, and five hundred dollars to their uh
uh institution of learning. So we got that right now.
Speaker 1 (54:18):
Let me tell me here and ask you this though.
At ten half the top of that, do you see
do you see bitcoin as a hedge against what's what's
probably down the road for this country's economy or the
world's economy.
Speaker 6 (54:28):
Yeah, I think it's definitely an alternative. Again, all these
these conversations, there's nothing, there's no silver bullet. I think
the best powerful thing is our unity, pay affking. Unity
is the best hedge against all this demonic crazy stuff.
But I think as a tool, UH just pose the dollar. Uh.
(54:48):
People talk about gold, they talk about different things. I
think bitcoin is much more uh a solution than the alternatives.
But I do think the real so it's really our
collective work. I think a Jewish literary talked about it.
We shouldn't the colonizer has all the money. We shouldn't
(55:10):
try to make money our solution. We have resources, we
have talent. We should collaborate with each other in ways
that doesn't put us at a disadvantage, but it takes
advantage of our advantages. So I think as a tool,
I think it's an alternative to the dollar as a
tool of exchange. But I think the real power is
(55:30):
our collective What you see in so called you know,
with the whole Palestine issue, Like you look at the
Arab countries, they're not unified. If they were unified, this
stuff wouldn't be able to happen. But literally they divide
them with these families and all these things, and they
still sending oil. Turkey still sends oil to Israel. So
(55:51):
I mean, I don't think what we need to do
is realize is it's us anyway. You know, Man makes
these other things.
Speaker 7 (55:59):
God made us.
Speaker 6 (56:00):
So the solution problem is gonna be in God's hand,
which for us. So let's not make it too tricky,
like these are all tools for us to use. But
it's always been about us collective, not something outside of us.
Speaker 4 (56:13):
You like that.
Speaker 1 (56:14):
At the time that I mentioned, brother, say Whu's waiting
for us? In Baltimore's online to Grand Rising Brother sayt
coup you're on with brother Saint Clais Skinner.
Speaker 6 (56:23):
John Bo.
Speaker 12 (56:25):
Can you hear me?
Speaker 7 (56:26):
Yes, sir?
Speaker 13 (56:30):
Uh?
Speaker 12 (56:31):
You know Professor John Henry Clark said, we're Africans, we
have no friends in the world, and we have to
save ourselves. I can't help but get the feeling that
you sound like you think that we are all one
and we're gonna all come together and live happily. Ever
(56:51):
happen that's been tried. It didn't work, truly.
Speaker 6 (56:56):
I didn't say That's not what I'm saying. I'm saying
that we meaning like whoever you think your WII is,
I don't know your wik Okay, I don't know you,
but my Wii is my family and the community that
I that I serve. I know it ain't gonna be
the dollar or the bigcoin. It's gonna be my relationships.
They're gonna allow us to continue this resistance. I ain't
(57:17):
saying I'm gonna organize with everybody. I said, with my
relationship with the people that I determine to be interested
in the common interest in the Pan African way, I'm
gonna work with those folks. But again, common interest. That's
on principle. I don't want nobody who's a liar and thiefs.
So you can be pet aftercan if you're a liar
and thief, I'm not with that. So on principle, we're
gonna organize with people with common interests and we're not
(57:39):
gonna get caught up on you're gonna use the dollar
or the big coin. We're not gonna let people divide.
If you want to call yourself a Kabulan warrior, you
want to call yourself, whatever you call yourself, I'm gonna
call you what you say you want to be called.
But we're gonna make sure we protect each other. And
again that's not everybody. I just sold your on principal.
You gotta be on principal, and you've got common interests.
If we don't, that's not would organize them with. So
(58:00):
that's not what I said.
Speaker 12 (58:03):
All that is irrelevant if we don't survive physically right now,
our very existent as a people in this country is
being threatened by white supremacists in the spirit of the
neo Nazis, So all that other stuff that you've been
talking it's irrelevant if we don't survive, if we don't
live right if we are physically exterminated or attacked like
(58:25):
the Nazis, the German Nazis did in Europe during World
War Two, If the Francis come for us like the
Nazis came for they're victims, especially the so called six
million Jews who were murdered, who ended up in the
concentration camps. If they come for us like that, all
(58:46):
that stuff you talking about is irrevant material because we
won't be alive and the protectionately wrong.
Speaker 6 (58:52):
They've done more to us than they did to the
Jews and we're still here. I'm just saying, if you
look at it honestly, like factually, We've done literally more
than it was done to the Jews in those years
less than ten. They've been doing more to us than
they did there, and we're still here, and that's their problem.
And I just think, again, the reason why we're here
is because of our collectiveness that we came together and
(59:15):
then allow them to destroy us. And you're right. So
if you're not here now, I'm not going to say
I have to stay here. I don't think we have
to stay here. I think again, I'm not here talking
about the afterlife. But again, I'm not stuck on the
material of North America. So it seems like you're talking
about North America. God didn't purs us to be in
one place. We were the first ones to circumnavigate the world.
(59:36):
Who I am is dominion over a whole globe, and
the world's not flat. So I don't have to stay here.
I can be I can actually be here in multiple places.
I own property in multiple countries. It's okay, you don't
have to be Like I said, it's not a curse
where you're due. Actually, colonialism is what stopped our movements.
None of these barriers that you're talking about places are
(59:57):
really real. These are constructs. There's no such thing as
the United States beyond the political says. So again, I'm
just saying, when you talk about the truth of this,
you know there's a lot of truth out here. We
disagree agree with the premise you're trying to make the
premise like somehow we haven't gone through the worst. I
would say, we've gone through the worst and we're still here,
and we still have agency, and they can't defeat us.
(01:00:18):
They're doomed and they know it now and they're turning
on each other. This is European tribalism we're seeing. So
I don't think we're doing I think the future is
bright for us. This world is it just might come
to the end. But the way this current world is
is very problematic and toxic. I think we're gonna survive
beyond this current existence, thankfully, and we're gonna The question
(01:00:40):
is are we going to create something better or are
we gonna literally wait for somebody else to create it.
I say we start creating and continue to create something
right now.
Speaker 7 (01:00:49):
But we can do right.
Speaker 1 (01:00:51):
Because I think that this gives us the opportunity to
introduce to the family who those who don't know about
your campaign I Love Black People Campaign because I think
what you're showing is a wider version of what most many,
well many black people see beyond the shores of the
United States. As you mentioned the barriers that it's not
the physical barriers, it's the mental barriers. And don't see
(01:01:13):
us as a global people, but you see us as
a global people. And that's and so people can only
you know, they deal with what's in their circumference of
their mind and their physical mind. That's what they think.
That's why they many people, many of our folks who
don't get it and attack Pan Africanism, and that's because
they're at that level. But once you understand that the
(01:01:33):
broader context of where we are as a people globally,
it's unlimited. We're not alone family. So anyway, we got
to take a short break. I want you to expound
on that. Also the program, you know, I Love Black
People Campaign, how's that doing? How it works? And I
think if more people understood how it works that have
a different concept, they wouldn't think about we can't win
or the world's against us. We got a whole army
(01:01:56):
of folks who look like us waiting for us to
to get behind them, So let's steal with that when
we get back seventeen at the top, they have family.
Our guest, his brother, Saint Clair Skinner. He's got a
conference taking place at Howard University lav this week. We'll
get back to that as well. You want to get
in on this conversation though, reach out to us at
eight hundred and four five zero seventy eight seventy six
and we'll take your phone calls next and Grand Rising family,
(01:02:18):
thanks for waking up with us on this Monday morning here.
I guess his brother, Saint Claire Skinner. Brother Saint Claire's
having a black Bitcoin summit taking place in Howard University
late this week. We'll talk get back to that in
a moment. But also he's the architect of it. I
love black people campaign for the New Listeners, Brother Sinclair,
how does that work.
Speaker 14 (01:02:37):
Well?
Speaker 6 (01:02:38):
Again? Creating a global safety net to protect our communities
from the harms and humiliations of racism and afrophobia. And
we define as the phobia as the irrational patred of fear.
People proceed to be of African descent, And we say
proceed to be. When these people do it, they don't
(01:02:59):
ask you where you say, they just treat you the
way they treat you based on these other things they
have nothing to do with, even science. You know, we
know race is a construct. It's not biological contextually, but
it is a construct. And because even if race is
not real, racism is and we've been getting killed because
of this construct. So we're literally taking the Pan African
(01:03:23):
friendly safe spaces throughout the world and identifying them through crowdsourcing,
through people who are concerned about the welfare of our people,
and eight key categories to human life, and that's accommodations, food, transportation,
like the original Green Book, but we expanded that to
include healthcare, childcare and education, legal finance, and beauty. So
(01:03:51):
we have eight key categories that we're asking folks to
download the app and share the black friendly, pan African
friendly place. And when I say pan African friendly and
contextually in the States is maybe a little different, but
globally we deal with the issues of tribalism. You know,
we don't live in some Panacea pretend world. We know
(01:04:14):
that there were brothers and sisters actively involved in the
slave trade. We know that there was black overseers on
the plantation. So I've never did This is not about
people who just look like you and think that this
is going to be great. No, no, we're clear on principle,
you can't be a liar, cheater or a thief. So
(01:04:34):
that's you know, on everything before we start talking about
Pan African are you a liar cheater or a thief
like this would be clear on principle. That's how we're organizing.
We're not organizing with folks who don't see the value
of our humanity and who try to objectify us. So literally,
our context is the people who would be willing to
share information about places that will treat us well. So
(01:04:54):
those are our cute but when we build, as we're
building this, it benefits the blow Black community. They may
not be Pan Africanness. So literally, our secret sauce are
the Pan Africanness that have come on early to help
us identify these Pan African places throughout the globe. And
now we're probably over thirty some thousand places that have
(01:05:16):
been recommended, and they're recommended and even if you see
something that's already recommended, but we say is the ones
that have been recommended to most will ultimately have priority
over those that haven't. And we don't allow people to
put negative. It's only if the black friendly or not.
You just say black friendly. Yes, if it's not, you
(01:05:36):
just move on to the next one. Because this is
not about us attacking a particular business. Because again, if
this place over here is racist, that's fair, but I
still need to get those services. Where do I go?
So we're focused on the solution. Where is the place?
Who are the people and they may not even be
black honed. These are the people who are treating us
with dignit into respect. You could be someplace like in
(01:05:58):
Denmark and you get sick and Openhagen. It may not
be a black black doctor, but it might be a
Mongolian doctor and she's the one that all the brothers
and sisters in that area go to. And now you
can get some information to help you make a better
decision on your health because you can't google or put
in chat TVT black friendly, Pan African friendly. Because the
(01:06:19):
people who create the large language models of those things
of what white supremacist ideological people misogynists. So this is
made by us for us and creating a global network.
And what we ultimately see out of this is that
if we connect the Pan African schools throughout the world
pan African crimic schools. We could create our own what
(01:06:41):
school system of virtually just like to have Airbnb without
owning any hotels or Uber without owning any cars. Just
imagine we had a global Pan African school system connecting
educators throughout the world and educational institutions that are Pan
African friendly. Suppose we have healthcare institute throughout the world
(01:07:01):
where we create our own healthcare and network pan African
friendly UH clinics and doctors. These are the things that
we can leverage technology they do and connect in ways
that we couldn't do before. And so we're very deliberate
and intentional or even legal. Like people talk about there's
no international Pan African or international Black law firms, no
(01:07:21):
international no African law firm globally. Well, we can actually
create a global network of these law firms by connecting
them together by people crowdsourcing these Pan African law firms
in Washington, DC, or in Caapala, Uganda, or in London.
Speaker 1 (01:07:40):
And don't wait until people right right, and don't wait,
don't don't wait till you need them to start looking
at they should sign up. Now, how can we sign.
Speaker 6 (01:07:49):
Up yeah, go, there's an Apple app store. You can
go to Google Play download the app. It's free. We
would never charge our people to uh to be safe,
download the app. And we have many committees already set up.
So our chat groups are called teams, and we have
people actively talking about how to organize schools, organized legal
(01:08:13):
support throughout the app. We have many and then one
of the chat groups is the Black Blockchain Labs. So
if you are coming to the conference, make sure you
download the app. If you have any questions or concerns
about what's going on with the Black Blockchain Summit, we
have a chat group. That's what we're saying is we
(01:08:34):
don't need to use Elon Musk, his x Z or
whatever he got. We don't need to use Zuckerberg's media.
We have the same developers they got, Like our developers
are smarter now, not to say they're better. So we're
literally saying that we can create our own system, but
let's not create a system just about singing and dancing. Again,
(01:08:56):
I'm not attacking TikTok or Instagram anything, but I'm you know,
at this point in life, you know, if we're not
talking about something constructive, I'll just spend that time with
my wife, hanging out and doing what I like to
do with my wife. But if we're going to come
together and meet in the commons, meeting in the place
that we share ideas, our ideas is going to be
about how do we build something better than we were
(01:09:18):
born into. We're going to leave something better that we
were born into. So this is a great way to
do that. And it is also has that social chat
feature that allows you to help us continue to connect
this global safety net that we're creating with your support.
Speaker 1 (01:09:33):
All right, eight hundred and four five zero seventy eighty six,
twenty seven minutes off the top out I guess is
Brother Sinclas can it And we're having is having the
Black Bigcoin Summit that's taking place at Howdy University. When
does it start, Brother Sinclair.
Speaker 6 (01:09:46):
Oh, it's a twenty six and twenty seven, So it's
gonna be Friday, starting out at registration deuks nine o'clock
in the morning. We kick off at ten o'clock on
Friday at Howard University and the black Burn Center, So
the Blackburn, the Student Union, Blackburn Center. We're going to
be there on Friday and we're going to be there
(01:10:07):
on Saturday. You can get a ticket just for Saturday,
if you want a ticket just for Saturday, or you
can get a ticket for both days. And we got
Sankofa Cafe providing food. So shout out to Sankofa always
being good. And yes, we always try to take some
of this crypto money and put it back in the neighborhood.
Speaker 1 (01:10:27):
And help us out here because you know, many of
the folks who listen don't understand about cryptocurrency. Can you
explain to the folks are the nephatized like myself and
how it all started? Is it to fee out money?
Is it something we can hold or is it something
that's on the internet. And you know, help us because
if people can't feel touch and see that, they don't
(01:10:50):
beieve it's real.
Speaker 4 (01:10:50):
So help us out. How do we deal with that?
Brother Saint clare.
Speaker 14 (01:10:54):
Well, I tell people, it's just like what we deal
with these pictures we have. There was a time we
had to go to seavs to develop these pictures and
you know, again they were like you said, they were
tangible things, but you'd have to go on vacation, take
pictures and pray that the people's.
Speaker 6 (01:11:11):
Eyes weren't closed, pray that there wasn't a problem with
you know, lariness, and then you go to CBS and
check out your pictures. Now that those pictures are taken
with your digital camera or your phone, where literally if
the picture don't look right right in real time, you
can change it and say let me just redo this picture. Well,
(01:11:32):
that data, that digital information that you're looking at now
for your picture. Now, just imagine now if we could
create a system where the data that you have is
encrypted and can't be copied those pictures that you take. Now,
be careful who you send them to, what you take
pictures of, because people can literally take those pictures and
(01:11:55):
put change them up and do all kinds of things
to them, and they actually copy them and all that.
But with bitcoin, it can't be copied, I mean, it
can't be counterfeited. So when again the creator of a
bitcoin stocia lacam or they don't know who that is.
It's a pseudonyms like doctor Seuss. Doctor Seuss really wasn't
(01:12:18):
a doctor, and Satoshi really isn't probably Japanese. It's probably
a black woman. But with that being said, she was
able to create something that wasn't able to be counterfeited.
And so when you say the word blockchain, it's only
the block that they're referring to are blocks of data
that are connected together, and they literally are now encrypted
(01:12:39):
so that now you can't copy them, but you can
use and exchange them all over the world. And the
thing that was novel was that it wasn't something that
was controlled by one centralized company. That's why they used
the word decentralized because literally it's not operated by one company.
It's literally being operate by many nodes of miners all
(01:13:03):
over the world. And we say minors, those are just
people using their computers to keep this system afloat. And
the question would be, well, why would they let people
use their computer like that. Ah, They made the use
of the power of their computer incentivized by giving them
an award, a reward, excuse me, a reward, and the
(01:13:26):
reward was a digital token, a digital debt, some data
that's encrypted called bitcoin. So it literally is almost like
a self fulfilling thing where the actual system that the
blockchain proof of work blockchain works on is incentivized by
the people who give their computers and their energy and
power to maintain the system. And as they use their
(01:13:49):
computational power of their computer. They're rewarded with a bitcoin
for their transactions excuse me, for their computation the power. Now,
the reason why they call the miners, the way it's
set up is you're not guaranteed a bitcoin. So literally,
these miners just like somebody digging for gold looking for it.
(01:14:11):
Every time you put a super Earth, you're not guaranteed
to have gold in it, so it's mining right. So again,
this is such a great concept that everyone is trying
to process faster. So they're trying to give you more
computational power, more electricity to get the first bitcoin by
making the transactions happen faster. So the incentive of keeping
(01:14:33):
the system going is actually receiving a reward in bitcoin
to keep the bitcoin system alive to provide these decentralized transactions.
So you have all these people running their computers trying
to get the bitcoin, keeping the system up all over
the world, not just in China, not just in Japan,
(01:14:54):
not just in the United States, but literally all over
the world. Now, one of the problems that came though
people started trying to be faster and faster. You first
use what they call CPU like a typical computer. Then
there was a gaming processing in it, right, like the
more powerful and now they have like these things they
call them miners apic minors, where they literally have you know,
(01:15:16):
farms of these things. And now people are trying to
figure out how can I use as much competition computational
power from a computer at the least amount of expense,
So they go places that are very close to like
renewable energy sources like or dams and places. So that's
(01:15:36):
when you hear people say, well, it uses a lot
of electricity. What do you think about that, I'd say, well,
if you're going to use digital tools, yeah, it's gonna
use electricity. But if you think about it, you know,
the email uses electricity, but it really replaced cutting down
trees the right letters. So what's more energy the emails
(01:15:58):
that you're sending or cutting down a tree to make
an envelope to then't make a letter with ink with
an ink pen. That's may reply. Like if you really
play out systems, the current legacy system is much less
efficient than a digital system. So if you're talking about
money or comparing bitcoin two currencies of the typical countries
(01:16:20):
that are made of paper and coins well, how do
you get coppered. You got to dig a mind, you
got to transport it, then you got to process it.
All those of labor and excuse me, energy intensive, processing,
very intensive. So to compare the digital world as it
relates the cost of energy to the physical there's not
even a comparison. It's really a misnomer. And then I
(01:16:43):
think the other issue that we have now with these
banks and with these governments involved like Trump is you know,
bitcoin is one thing, but they have these other you know,
tokens and other u with other blockchain based tokens that
people are using stable coins and things, and some of
those have some of the same problematic backgrounds that I
(01:17:07):
think again as the US dollar. But these are the
things that we're going to be discussing as they relate
to our communities at the Black Blockchain Summit at Howard
University September twenty sixth and September twenty seventh. I think
it's very much worth your time and energy. And we
also have virtual tickets, and you can't come in physically.
(01:17:29):
You can get your virtual ticket and be able to
review it from wherever you are. The downside with the
virtual ticket is that not only you don't get some
messankofa food and we got some great cash fish riders.
Another brother does some great job tatering, so you know,
but you don't get the in person interaction and what
(01:17:50):
we created. This is our eighth annual Black Blockchain and
we have this is our first year. This is our
eighth conference and we've kicked it off. We did a
bus to it. We call it the Black Bitcoin Transatlantic
Bus Tour. We started back in two thy seventeen. But literally,
you get to meet the folks that you see on
YouTube and the people that you have heard on the radio,
(01:18:12):
you get to see them in person. And I think
that's a powerful thing. I think we missed that personal touch.
So a lot of people talking about what do you
learn from the CBC. I think what you see here
is something where you're going to be learning everything you
do and that's the important part of it.
Speaker 1 (01:18:31):
Hold I thought right there, brother Sinclair, we got to
check the news again. I'll let you expound on this
conference is coming up at Howard later this week and
also tell us now that is it still too late
to get in because we hear the government is going
to get involved in bitcoin. I want to get your
thoughts on that family YouTube conjron our discussion with Sinclair
skin It. Reach out to us at eight hundred four
five zero seventy eight seventy sixty and we'll take a
(01:18:53):
calls after the news that's next and Grand Rising Family
sixteen minutes away from the top of it. Thank you
for starting your week with us. I guess the brothers
Claire Skinner. Brother seint Clare's having a Black Bitcoin summit
taking place at Howard University this weekend. It's also the
architect of the I Love Black People campaign. Before we
go back to him, the let me just remind you.
Coming up later this morning, we're going to speak with
futuristic researcher Brother the Sideka mccari. A lot of things
(01:19:15):
that we discussed earlier with brother Saint Clair. Brother Sidiki
is going to take that up as well. It's going
to share some of the fear and trauma based media
programming that's impacting our community right now. Later this week,
you're going to hear from psychologist doctor Droydgrew, Brother Zachi
Brudy also join us from the Universal African People's Organization
out in Saint Louis and also DC actress pastor the
(01:19:36):
Reverend WILLI Wilson will be here. So if you are
in Baltimore, make sure you keep it radio locked in
tight on ten ten WLB, or if you're in the
dmv 'or on FM ninety five point nine and AM
fourteen fifty w L. All right, brother Saint Claire, the
question for you before we left for the news update
was now the government's looking at a cryptocurrency, it's still
a good time for us to get involved.
Speaker 6 (01:19:57):
Yeah. I think we will make sure that the conversation
at the conference is open to a various amount of opinions.
So let me just say this. There's different people, and
we have people with different viewpoints on this. I'm a
bitcoin maxilluence. That means I'm really I don't do the
other things. But we allow people to have conversations, not
(01:20:18):
allow It's an open form in the sense that we
allow you know, free thinking thoughts as relates to different
viewpoints on stable coins, you know, these centralized coins and
the bitcoin itself. So for us, for me, I look
at bigcoin like the Internet, and then some of these
other tokens are more like the intranet, like I don't
(01:20:41):
know if you remember like when the first Internet came out,
they had the Internet that just connected people in one company,
like you know, that was okay, but the real power
of the Internet was the fact it was global. I
think some of these projects, and I call the projects,
what you'll see is a lot of these things are
startup ideas that you know, real human beings that you
(01:21:01):
know or can meet, actually created. So I've never mystified
like these developers, you know, have hired plenty of them.
I learned the code in very you know, in the
old old days, almost darn near machine language like Fortran.
So these people are just normal people who this is
their profession and they can create software code and that's
(01:21:24):
just literally lines of instructions, you know. So it's one
of those things where we have people come with all
kinds of backgrounds that also involved centralized or technologies that
are closely connected to the US government. And we have
people talking about products projects that are trying to be
(01:21:47):
anonymous and trying to protect privacy and identity. So there's
there's a host you know. I think the biggest thing
is just making sure you are in the room to
ask the questions and be engaged to actually understand and
then go back and be able to share that information.
And I think in our converdence is really different than
(01:22:08):
most is that we really do pay a lot of
attention to making sure that our people don't get scammed.
There's a lot. I mean, of course, there's still more
scams being done in US dollars, there's more drugs being
moved in US dollar that banks have facilitated more illegal
trafficking of humans, guns and drugs than anything would dickhorn it.
(01:22:29):
These are facts. These are the banks that we use today.
You couldn't move drugs from all over the world without banks.
They're not doing it. They're doing it using banks. So
let's be clear on that. With that being said, having
an alternative and looking at other ways for us to
exchange value store value, I think is a great opportunity.
(01:22:50):
And you get to talk with people who can help
you protect yourself.
Speaker 1 (01:22:54):
Got you twelve away from the top. Bob's in Buffalo.
He's online too. Has a question for your grand rising
Bobby only sinner.
Speaker 15 (01:23:02):
Yes, blessed little family, my mother, If you will, I
wish you well in the in the conference. For those
of us who are not there in your locality, how
do we register, what hours of the day will it be?
And another question not related to your conference. But last
week it was a sister I believe on a brother
(01:23:24):
or sister who talked about accomplish that it happened. I
think last week in the DC area, Will a real
Pan Africans please stand up? I was going to even
have a report on how that conference was.
Speaker 6 (01:23:38):
Okay, I didn't go to that conference that's you're referencing,
so I'm not going to talk about that, but I
will say, you know the black blockchainsummit dot com and
actually sign up for a virtual ticket so that you've
can experienced the conference virtually. So that would be my
(01:23:59):
best thing to you. And then what we are developing
is right now is a thing we're calling Bitcoin Campus,
where on that same website you'll be able to type
in topics and it will pull up old conference conversations
(01:24:20):
based on topics. You know, with technology now you don't
have to go through a whole video. You literally can
transcribe it and get the information to the exact location
where they say a particular word. So you can definitely
see our old conferences as we build out. But what
the powerful thing that we're called in the Bitcoin Campus
(01:24:44):
is because different topics that you might be particularly interested.
You can actually go directly to our website and get
those questions answered through the voices of the different conference
attendees that we've had in the other seven conferences. So
if you want to get the latest, greatest, and the
(01:25:07):
best thing to do is to go to the Black
Blockchain Summit dot com and get your virtual ticket. If
you use Carl me Nelson twenty five, you'll get twenty
percent off on your ticket. And then if students attend
for free. We don't have a virtual ticket for students,
but for those who are attending in person, if you're
(01:25:29):
in a university or in school, you can attend for free.
So and you know, to be candid, we've never turned
anybody back, you know, one of those things where again
we got to keep the lights on. But you know,
this is this is important for our people. And I
grew up in a time where the Internet came out,
and many people in our community, you know, I started
(01:25:50):
college in eighty seven, so many people hadn't heard about
the internet. My dad was in the US military, he
was in you know, we had an Apple to each
computer back in eighty three. So I was raised in
the family where my dad was already in the computer
space with the big, real, real Honeywell computers in the
(01:26:11):
Air Force. So we want to make sure that other
family members and community members don't miss out on this
information so they can make informed decisions, not you know,
in fear decisions.
Speaker 1 (01:26:25):
All right, let me tell me here for a second,
brother sin clear, and thank you Bob for your call.
Brother Sinclair. Do you see a time will come where
we no longer huse fiat curncry. We don't have dollar bills,
We don't care any kind of money. We just use
a crypto currency. Everything is digital. We could buy go
to the store, go to you know, pay your bills,
crypto councry. Is that on the horizon? Do you see
(01:26:46):
that coming?
Speaker 6 (01:26:48):
Yeah? I mean it's even what they're talking about. Like
with autonomous cars, which you see about these cars that
only had drivers. They'll be able to fuel law or
recharge an electric station using a digital currency transaction with
no need for any human interaction to provide that translation
(01:27:11):
of value to energy. We're looking at some projects now
with solar in our different communities throughout the globe, or
how we can leverage solar power and be able to
exchange the energy for a token of value, so that
if you want to basically sell your energy back to
the grid, you could do it through bitcoin. So's there's
(01:27:35):
things that can be used to be more efficient we
can't imagine. A paper dollar is the most efficient way,
just like a paper picture. So that it's going to
be the future. I think it might be something more
advanced than what we're seeing now. I think that's the
part I think that you don't you're not interested in
(01:27:56):
bitcoin anything. Is just realize how fast the world is.
Not just moving faster, it's accelerating in its speed. So
I'm embracing that and want to make sure our people
have an opportunity to decide which way they should go
with it. And I think that part's the part that
is exciting, because there's gonna be some brains they get
exposed to this that are going to come up with
(01:28:18):
ideas we can't even imagine. So I just want to
make sure that it's not just one group of brains
of Europeans and Asia. I want to make sure our
community is exposed to this and make decisions that are
ten times better than the current ones we talk about AI.
The fact that so much of this is being done
by the same people who brought us, you know, aparthid
(01:28:39):
racism and xenophobia that Jus wanted, Like, okay, we got
to make sure that any of these technologies we're aware
of and understand so we can actually you know, create
the antidote in a way.
Speaker 1 (01:28:55):
Well, let me jull me a six away from the
top of day. I would come up on the trafficing
weather updates soon, but let me because you do a
lot of business in Africa, how are the African countries
that because did they miss out on the analog age?
Did they just leap right into the digital age? How
far have they progressed? Are they moving or or they're
behind us when it comes to crypto country and the
(01:29:16):
digital revolution.
Speaker 6 (01:29:19):
Well, you know, I think in many ways we still
are dealing with an unbearable colonial circumstance. We call it
ne or you can call it new. I think it's old,
but literally, you know, so much of the divisas and
the restrictions of movement of some of our amazing people,
and these Europeans have been able to cherry pick some
(01:29:39):
of the best and brightest out of our countries on
the kind of Africa. Even in our community, we always
have that Africa having the brain drain. But because of
the conditions of many of our black communities in the
United States and we wanted to escape. My dad went
to Vietnam to escape the projects in Saint Louis. So
you know, there's still a brain drain in all our
communities that you live in these other communities, while the
(01:30:03):
continuation of the urban decay. I think the biggest issue
I've seen is that like it's not the brilliance is
there is being extracted. Some of the advances that you
see with European owned companies are being done with the
brains of black scientists and black engineers, and they continue
to use the best and brightest in US and from
(01:30:27):
their interests while it drains us. I think the big
thing that I see is how do we connect globally
so that we unlock the power of the brains of
our people. Like even the stuff about being oppressed, like
trapped in the brains of someone who's being oppressed could
be the cure to cancer, but the colonizer never cared about.
There's a book called Open Veins of Latin America that
(01:30:50):
Hugo Chavez gave Black Obama before he was killed, and
it talked about how so called colonialism didn't develop anything.
It actually underdeveloped because anytime you go, the most powerful
part of the horse's body is its back. That's why
we relegate courses to be beasts of burden, because the
(01:31:10):
most powerful, useful part of his body is his back.
I used to you know, but the most powerful part
of a human being is there. I used to think
it was a brain that someone taught me that, especially
since I've been married. The most powerful thing is really
your heart, because your brain is not why you got married.
You got married because your heart. Letting you relegate a
human being to a beast of burdening cotton, digging gold,
(01:31:34):
you just eliminated its most powerful contributions, his brain and
his heart. And so they went around.
Speaker 1 (01:31:42):
Well, hold the thought right there, that's pretty deep. We've
got to digest that their heart. Thank you for sharing
that with us, brothers seeing clear, But what are you
We're gonna step aside, get caught up with the traffic
and we'rey're out different cities. But I want you to
talk about the fact that Donald Trump is putting restrictions
on people come into this country. We're talking about high
tech folks as well. How's that going to impact our
brothers and sisters on the continent. How's the where are
(01:32:02):
they going to go? Do they need to come stateside
to get to advance in the digital world. I'll let
you respond to that when we get back. Family, you
two can join us in our conversation with brother Saint
Clair Skinner. Reach out to us at eight hundred four
or five zero seventy eight to seventy six and we'll
take your phone calls after the traffic and weather together.
That's next and Grand Rising family, thanks for starting your
week with us. And our guest of brother, Saint Clair
(01:32:23):
Skinner is having a black Bitcoin summits take place at
Howard University at the end of the week. We'll tell
you more about that before he leaves us. Before before
we left for the traffic and weather update, my question
to you was, how is the new regulations by Donald Trump.
He's polacing restrictions as part of his so called America
First and people coming here and it's actually targeted people
of color, if you will. How has that affected our
(01:32:46):
brothers and sisters on the continent. How and how in
this digital race. Where are they where do they land?
Speaker 6 (01:32:54):
Yeah, you know directly impact. You know, I got folks
that work with us throughout the world, the black watching
some of it, and they can't come to the conference.
Or I had one situation where a guy got a
visa and they held his fast forward and they only
gave him a visa for three months, and they held
his fast forward for a month, and so he only
(01:33:14):
had two months to travel. Like when you got to
think about traveling like that, just the amount of friction
or difficulty that adds to all your decisions to be
successful as a person. This if you can afford to
go somewhere, which still is a barrier. Imagine if you
(01:33:36):
had to plead to a government to go to their
country to do some type of international business. So again,
I think the structure of these systems before Trump was
already racist. Does this stop? Like I think Trump highlights
the apocrisy or the contradictions, but he didn't cause the contradictions.
(01:33:56):
And because we allow these liberal races or these liberal
white supremacists in the Democratic parties, because we compromise ourselves
to those those people. When you get these you know,
extreme or very outrly racist people. We're more vulnerable. We
should have addressed the issue of visus and people's access
(01:34:17):
when you had these so called democrats we voted for
in office. Again, that doesn't take anything away from this
white supermass in chief that we have. I just want
to say that we got to stop making peace with
people just because they come to the barbecue and they
dance or sing or have a few people. The agenda
(01:34:37):
has to be about DC's statehood, not the rhetoric. You
invite me to dance at your event. That's not how
coming to the CBC and being in a fish fry
is not substance. Now, can we use these vehicles for
our own you know, agenda? Absolutely? I think every person
who cares about DC should be educated, the folks that
(01:35:00):
are coming in town right now for the Congressional back
caucaus about what it means to have home rule. What
we're talking about when we're saying stated, there should be
something being passed out to people to let them know
how they can go back home and that they may
have as much power to determine the future of DC
as the people who actually live in it, because they
(01:35:22):
actually do have representation so because we don't have representation,
there's things that we just with all the mayors in
the world, aren't going to be able to do in DC.
But all those folks when they go back to Chicago, Cleveland,
Saint Louis, if they make sure that whoever they vote
in the midterms is somebody who's not going to stand
by and let us deep promote to death by these
(01:35:43):
wicked policies, and then somehow the system, the one person
standing up for us is the one who's being critiqued. Again,
everyone loans beyond criticism, but for her. Political opponents and
people who are you know, are anti her try to
somehow blame the victim for their circumstances. You know, rapists
called caused by the rapists. Well, hell, oppression is caused
(01:36:06):
by the oppressor. Just because we don't have the sovereignty
doesn't mean they should be trying to take advantage of
us full stop. So they can actually go out and
tell these folks who are coming in town for the
congression by caucus, you know annual, you know, legislative council,
they could literally come and tell them, please make sure
you add to your agenda your number one issue might
(01:36:27):
be reparations. Your number one issue might be gang violence
or gun violence, but put in your top five d
C statehood and make sure whoever you vote for in
the mid terms for your elected representative, comes back to
d C and make sure that our solignty is on
(01:36:48):
the agenda will stop.
Speaker 1 (01:36:50):
That's all I got you six half that top a brother,
Sidiki's on deck. What we get to in moment par
question Jim for you about the Black Bitcoin Summit this
week end, up coming to the studio if they want
to know, if there's any consideration for seniors who want
to attend, if.
Speaker 6 (01:37:05):
There's any considerations, just saying, send us an email, send
us an email. Let me just tell you we want
all our people to get access to this information.
Speaker 2 (01:37:14):
So it's not like that.
Speaker 6 (01:37:15):
So yeah, send us the email. We'll see what we
can do on the case, on a case basis. Like
I said, this is not about keeping our people out,
you know what I'm saying. We definitely sell tickets and
support the cause, but the real power is the brains
that come. And again, you can do it virtually from home,
but I love the in person because you get to
(01:37:36):
interact and these synergies and break bread with systems and brothers.
I think it's a great opportunity for that.
Speaker 1 (01:37:43):
All right, give us the details now before we let
you go about the summit that's going to take place.
When where how can we get involved?
Speaker 6 (01:37:53):
Black blockchainsummit dot com, Black Blockchain summit dot com at
black blockchainsummer dot com. A real catchy phrase, Satoshi is.
Speaker 9 (01:38:05):
Black dot com.
Speaker 6 (01:38:07):
They can go to Satoshi is black. They probably don't not,
but I'm not gonna make that hard, or they can
call us. Our office in Washington, DC is two O
two five five eight five to one four three two
o two five five five to one four three and
uh looks hope to see everybody there. You can use
(01:38:28):
your cal Nelson twenty five to get your discount. We
definitely appreciate you, big brother, and all you do and
everyone who listens.
Speaker 1 (01:38:39):
All right, thank you and thank you for the kind
words brother seeing Claire, thank you for sharing that with us,
and thank you for putting this on for us.
Speaker 4 (01:38:44):
Folks.
Speaker 1 (01:38:45):
We've got to get involved because a lot of times,
right at the time we figure it out, the trains
left the station. All this left for us of the dregs.
So we need to get it on the front end
of some of these things that are taking place. This
is what Brother Sinclaire is helping us out with.
Speaker 4 (01:38:58):
Again. The the email addres us real quick.
Speaker 6 (01:39:01):
Yeah. Email is an info at Black Blockchainsummit dot com.
Info at Black Blockchainsummit dot com. It's our eighth eighth annual.
This is awesome. Howard University, Black Morren Center Friday ten
to five and then on Sunday it'll be ten to six.
Make sure you come out and be a part of it.
Speaker 1 (01:39:24):
All right, Thank you, Brother sin Claire, Thank you for
putting this on for us, and thank you for that
I Love Black People campaign as well.
Speaker 6 (01:39:29):
Oh yeah, download the app I Love Black People. Go
to the Google Play, go to the Apple app store
I Love Black People, And we got the website I
Love Black People dot com. So right on, right on.
Thank you, Brother Carl. Appreciate you, Appreciate you. Appreciate you.
Speaker 1 (01:39:45):
All right, Brother Sanklas Kinner have the event to the
Black Bitcoin some of it at Howard University this weekend
before we go to brother Sindeka. Though earlier Kevin and
I were speaking about how busy this weekend is going
to be, not just for Washington EC with a congression
Black Caucus and several events taking place in the district,
but also at the u N The General Assembly meets
this morning. We told you earlier that Canada and Australia
(01:40:07):
and Britain they decided to recognize a Palestinian state. Well,
just moments ago, China and Russia said they belong they're
back in the Palestinian state as well. Because net Nyaga
went perplexing. I think that's the word to use when
you've heard that, you know, these major countries Britain, Canada
and Australia or white countries are going to recognize the
Palatine Stillian state. He went to zik. Now China and
(01:40:30):
Russia say we too, back of Palestinian states. So I
just want to get your key. Folks are informed what's
going on in the news. Ten half of the top
of the hour. Brother Sadeka Bakari, Grand Rising, Welcome to
the program.
Speaker 7 (01:40:42):
Greetings, brother, how are you.
Speaker 1 (01:40:44):
I'm still learning, brother Sadekia, I'm still learning.
Speaker 7 (01:40:49):
Excellent.
Speaker 1 (01:40:50):
But let's let's get into it because you know, we
talked about artificial intelligence quite a bit with you and
some of what's going on in the in the country
right now. A lot of people there's a lot of
fear trauma as well. Some people don't understand what's going on.
They don't know what move to make that you know,
it seems like they're overwhelmed, emotionally overwhelmed and what's going on.
(01:41:12):
Even with the news that I just mentioned about recognition
of a palace and state and what's going on at
the U n It's going to take place, uh this
this morning actually in New York and the United Nations,
and people wanting where do we fit into this?
Speaker 4 (01:41:25):
How do I fit into?
Speaker 8 (01:41:26):
How's it?
Speaker 1 (01:41:27):
How's all this going to impact me? Because some people
are looking at it as somehow the media is conspiring
against them and confusing them because hearing different different, different
different energies coming at them at the same time. So
help us unpack all of that, brother City, What should
we be doing?
Speaker 7 (01:41:45):
Yeah, So I do my best to help us unpack it.
It definitely needs to be unpacked. This is why I
do my courses, my classes, I write books, I do
one on ones I can sell people. For me, is
more about each one teach one approach because I do
want to stand from a standpoint of the masses of
people Black people. Most importantly, there's a huge programming taking place.
(01:42:08):
People are ignorant, I'm clear about that, not because they
desire to be obviously, but because they are being programmed.
You mentioned the media, so yes, media manipulation exists, media
propaganda exists. These things are intentional. The events that's taking
place in the last two weeks or so, from a
(01:42:29):
standpoint of psychological operations, staged events, false flags, these are
all events that cause particular attributes in people. So what
have we seen the last two weeks. We've seen whining, complaining, stagnation, confusion, Right,
anxiety and depression the two major ones because of this
(01:42:52):
thing that happened in Utah. So anxiety and depression is
something that we see that has been very prevalent, especially
on social media. Right, So people have had many opinions
and feelings and things of that nature. Were all that
is part of psychological psychological operation or PSCYA. It's the cycle.
(01:43:12):
So people need to understand this cycle. And I'm going
to break down this cycle and how it works and
how it operates because it's what is initially being used
to continue to program people. Now, what I mean by
this can be in many different aspects. So when we
say when I say emotional, I'm referring to, whether it's
(01:43:33):
staged events like what just occurred in Utah, whether it's
it's these lynchings that's taking place all in the South,
whether it's the death threats and things or borom threats
and things of that nature at the Black universities, whether
it's the programming of racism that we continue to have
(01:43:55):
to endure. All of these different things are part of it.
Whether it's the political piece that the liberals versus the conservatives,
the right versus the left, all these different things. Yet
it's not about truth. So all of these things are issues.
Whether it's the religious piece, whether it's the educational piece,
whether it's the piece dealing with war. You mentioned Palestine.
(01:44:15):
So all these different things a part of the programming
and the purposes that thought right there.
Speaker 1 (01:44:23):
Because she says it's psychological operations psyops, and we keep
hearing that phrase quite a bit. Could you define what
is the operation? How can we detect? Because obviously you can't.
How can the listeners are listening, how can they decide
or detective? This is a SYOPS operation.
Speaker 7 (01:44:39):
So I will give people the literal definition from the
Department of what was once the Defense now is now
the Department of War.
Speaker 13 (01:44:48):
All right.
Speaker 7 (01:44:49):
So psychological operation is the intent to convey selected information
and indicators to foreign audiences to influence their emotions, motives,
objective reasoning, and ultimately the behavior of foreign governments, organizations, groups,
(01:45:13):
and individuals. The purpose of psyops is to induce or
reenforce foreign attitudes and behaviors favorable to the originators objectives.
All right, Who's the originator? The government is the originator?
Or media. When you say media, you're saying government. They're
(01:45:33):
one and the same. The foreign audience is you the listener,
or groups or organizations that's you, us the listener. Just
so people understand what that means, all right. So it
is a method and means of programming. That is what
the psychological operation is. I've been on the show. I've
talked about the many other things that go with this
(01:45:56):
psychological operation. So I've talked about repetition. Repetition is how
it's used. I've talked about controlled opposition and how it's used,
how they use the left against the right, or the
right against the left, liberals against conservatives, and so on
and so forth. Predictive programming, so in other words, they
set you up for programming that's going to happen in
the future. They use the distraction. So what's been taking
(01:46:21):
place the last two weeks are definitely aspects of distraction.
They use problem reaction solution. That as a formula and
method that they use in regards of programming. They create
a problem, they know your reaction because they already programmed
you to react a particular way, and then the solution
is the solution that's created by the people who created
(01:46:42):
the problem. And then the people who reacted to the
problem will think that this solution is going to benefit
them in regards to the problem that was created for them.
All right, Terrorism, that's an example.
Speaker 16 (01:46:56):
The COVID situation is an example problem reaction solution.
Speaker 7 (01:47:01):
All right. So that's something that we're dealing with double speak, right, Hold, I.
Speaker 4 (01:47:06):
Thought right there.
Speaker 1 (01:47:07):
Well, let's step aside for a few months. Hold, I
thought right there. I let you pick it up on
double speak when we get back family. I hope you're
taking notes on our guests. He's a futuristic researcher. He's
the guy we rely on when it comes to AI
artificial intelligence, and it's been used against us on a
constant basis.
Speaker 4 (01:47:22):
What are your thoughts.
Speaker 1 (01:47:22):
You got a question, reach out to us at eight
hundred four or five zero seventy eight seventy six and
we'll take a phone calls. Next and Grand Rising Family
Facts for rolling with us on this Monday morning. Thanks
for starting your week with us and our guest and
futuristic researcher brother Sideki Bacari. Hey give us a favorite
call up a couple of friends and telling the brother
Sideki's on the radio explaining what's going on right now
in the country, and I'll appreciate it. They'll thank you
(01:47:44):
for it, brother Sideki. Before we left, you talk about
psyops and you now tell us about some of the
some of the I guess the bye products if you
will of psyops and you talk about double speak, I'll
let you pick it up from there.
Speaker 7 (01:47:56):
Yes, yes, double speak is one of those methods when
you deal with people who are speaking for the government,
whether it's the president's senators, congressman, whomever, they master what's
called don't speak. They're also charismatics one way or another.
They're trained to be able to speak a particular way.
They tell you one thing, they do another thing. This
(01:48:17):
doesn't it doesn't matter if it's the left or the right,
Democrats or Republicans, it doesn't matter. Something that brother Skinner
said earlier, he's absolutely correct from a standpoint of all
the things that you're seeing now that everyone's blaming Trump
or the Republicans for these are all things that's been
ushered in by Democrats. This is why it's important for
people to study and understand history before they just start,
(01:48:42):
you know, having so many opinions and things of that nature,
especially when you're dealing with these different aspects of human experience.
There's a history that brings us up today. So in
understanding that, we would understand exactly what the government is
and what it isn't. It doesn't matter if it's Democrat
or Republican. The bottom line is would you rather have
an your throat or a gun to your throat? But
the bottom line is you have something against your throat,
(01:49:06):
all right, So we need to understand that. So charismatics,
people who are trained to speak. Those people are also
people you may see in the news media, entertainers, those
type of people who ultimately are representatives for the government
and what the government's objectives are. Again psychological operations, and
(01:49:29):
there's many other things the way they brand.
Speaker 4 (01:49:30):
No, hold up right there, before you move on that.
Speaker 1 (01:49:33):
You talk about people are speaking for the government or
pseudo speaking for the government. Are they doing it intentionally
because they believe in what they've been fed, or they're
doing it because they're getting paid.
Speaker 7 (01:49:45):
Either way, they're programmed either way, you understand what I'm saying.
Either way, it's about programming, because even if it's about
doing it simply because they're being paid to do it,
they're programmed to think that way, you understand what I'm saying.
Regardless their program, no matter how we look at it,
their program, there's no excuse to take or to make
(01:50:09):
government priority over the people's priority, or integrity or morals
and values. And I know that's a whole other conversation
just based on the programming and black people taking on
European concepts and European belief systems and European lack of ethics, morals, integrity,
and so on and so forth. So I know that's
an entirely different conversation to begin with, because now we're
(01:50:31):
dealing with euro American culture, so to speak, or Western culture,
which is foreign in regards to who we are on
the spiritual level, a level of the soul and things
of that nature.
Speaker 1 (01:50:43):
And I thought again, I mean, ain't note another piece
here twenty three off the top. Do you think our
people have a hard time at digesting that understanding that
we are some of us still still clothed in the red,
white and blue.
Speaker 4 (01:50:55):
Still can't.
Speaker 1 (01:50:58):
I guess to disengage from that because you know, this
is why we're being taught, and we've been in grade school,
you know, take the pleasure of allegiance and all that
is that part of the brainwashing. So how do we
free our minds?
Speaker 7 (01:51:11):
Absolutely? So that's the reason I'm going to break down
this cycle, right, So I was getting into the brain hacking,
the brainwashing, information overload, thought reform, things of that nature. Ultimately,
it's all predicated on the mind, right, our thoughts or
some will just simply say the brain because that's the
physical manifestation of the mind or part of it.
Speaker 6 (01:51:33):
So the brain.
Speaker 7 (01:51:34):
So we have to focus on that.
Speaker 6 (01:51:35):
So we.
Speaker 1 (01:51:39):
Hopefully we have lost to brother Sadeki, sound like is
is call dropped there? Kevin? Can you check that for us?
Twenty four minutes after the top of that, it's going
really deep with brother Sidiki. So I mentioned it's a
futuristic researcher.
Speaker 4 (01:51:52):
This is what he does.
Speaker 1 (01:51:53):
If we start off for investigating AI artificial intelligence, which
is the background of what's going on, and they like
to keep us on in the dark when it comes
to situations like this, and this is why brother sneakious.
He shines a light on all these issues that are
going on right now and some of us have You know,
some people, some people in our community don't understand what's
going on there. They're concerns. Some people want to run,
(01:52:15):
and some people say they should stay and fight. Some
people don't understand if can we win or we've been
hearing all these kinds of things that were going on.
This is why doctor George Grew's going to join us
later to explain to us what the psychological are. Great,
I'll let you finish your thought then, because I was
just telling folks is doctor Grew, Doctor Jordia Grew is
going to join us later this week. But go ahead
and finish your thought.
Speaker 7 (01:52:37):
Yeah, So, why we feel the way we feel, the
emotional aspect of it, the hormonal aspect of it, all
these things are connected. They're being triggered. People need to
understand that this goes back to the psyops, the stays events,
crisis events, false flags, things of that nature. All right,
(01:52:58):
Crisis actors are used for. This is what to program people.
All of this is important before we get to solutions
and all these different things, because people want to deal
with solutions, but they don't want to deal with the
healing part. They don't want to deal with the trauma.
They don't want to deal with the fear. And then
they wonder why they stay in constructs of oppression, thinking
(01:53:18):
that those constructs of oppression is going to free them.
Speaker 6 (01:53:21):
It's not.
Speaker 7 (01:53:22):
Okay, So it's a cycle. Now what do I mean
when I say it's a cycle when we deal with
trauma and fear? It is a cycle that deals with
us on every aspect of our being. So it's not
just psychological. It's also emotional, right, It's also anatomical so
(01:53:43):
to speak. It's also cellular and molecular. It's also bioelectric,
it's all of these different things. Is part of how
trauma and fear affects our bodies. All right, Now, what's
being used to do it? The media. This is the
reason we mentioned the media. The media is used specifically.
Speaker 16 (01:54:02):
To create false narratives and to of course create fear
based programming and trauma based programming and emotional programming, which
creates pathological behavior.
Speaker 7 (01:54:15):
Now, what the media is doing is triggering that trauma
and that fear, and this trauma in fear goes back
far beyond you the person, It goes back to your
parents and on and on and on and on. So
this trauma is triggered, the fear is triggered through media manipulation. Now,
through that media manipulation and that triggering of fear and
(01:54:37):
trauma and other types of stimuli, now people begin to
now go trauma bond. This is what you see all
over social media. What just happened the other week? What
did you see? Trauma bonding? So now you have people
dealing with grief and dealing with empathy and sympathy and
all these different things, and if they should have these things.
(01:54:58):
Then you see the media coming in and the media
now and as well as people now discussing how black
people should we have empathy and sympathy and compassion and
all these different things. So what happened to you know,
the guy in Utah and all these different things. So
now you see the programming that comes in again with
(01:55:21):
this notion of a quote unquote oppressor determining or attempting
to dictate how we should deal with these particular psychological operations,
how we should feel about what happens to white people,
or whatever the situation is. And now we end up
part of the situation when we have absolutely nothing to
(01:55:42):
do with white on white crime, We have absolutely nothing
to do with these government undertakings and the war that's
taken place in the government with white people. See, these
are the things we don't understand based on the programming.
So again it is a cycle of programming. Now there's
aspects of that as well. Again, this is about mindset.
(01:56:04):
How to control how you think, how you perceive things.
This is what this is about. How you deal with
things emotionally, to control that, to program that. That's what
this is about. Because one thing's for sure, as always
state the war is on and for your mind. If
they control your mind, they control your thinking. If they
(01:56:27):
control your thinking, they control your talking. If they control
your talking, they control your actions. Period, they control your mindset.
This is why people can't get out of the construct
of democrat versus Republicans. They can't get out of the
construct of Stockholm syndrome, which I can deal with. Stockholm syndrome.
You define edifying your oppressor. You define and edify everything
(01:56:51):
that the government or your oppressor says is whatever it is.
If it's success, well this is what success is.
Speaker 16 (01:56:58):
Or if it's intelligence, this is what intelligence is.
Speaker 7 (01:57:01):
And this is the process, right, all these different things,
all right, it's based off of programming. So let's look
at it. Stockholm syndrome I just mentioned and just told
you what that is, all right, Cognitive dissonance. Well, cognitive dissonance,
this is what the majority of black people suffer from.
When you start dealing with facts and when you start
(01:57:21):
dealing with truth. When you start dealing with those type
of things, they hold on to their belief systems. They
hold on to their opinions, whether it's rooted in misinformation
or ignorance or not. They hold on to that based
off of the programming that I'm talking about. So what
happens is now they become triggered. It's someone listening right
(01:57:43):
now to the show who's triggered about what I'm saying
because I'm telling you the truth about white people in
their system and how it operates. It's somebody who's triggered
right now, that's cognitive dissonance, and that's Stockholm syndrome. How
dare him say someone about something about white people that
that person doesn't feel is true? All right? That's cognitivistionness.
(01:58:04):
You also have confirmation biased people will do everything. You
mostly see this with religious people and political people. People
will do everything in their minds in their power to
confirm their belief system. That's confirmation bias. They only want
to hear what confirms whatever their programming is. That's confirmation biased.
(01:58:27):
If someone listening right now who is attempting to continue
to validate their belief systems that are not validated in
fact and truth, there is someone listening who has a
problem right now. I can guarantee you that controlled opposition.
Controlled opposition is using one side of the poll against
(01:58:48):
the other side of the Poe left versus right. You
see that politically, all the Democrats think that the Republicans
are demonic and satanic and crazy. Yet the Democrats are not.
But we know that's not true all of them. We're
dealing with those very same type of issues. It doesn't
matter if it's a democratic House or whatever, or if
it's a Republican. The bottom line is black people, we
(01:59:11):
still see the same results.
Speaker 8 (01:59:13):
All right.
Speaker 7 (01:59:14):
Predictive programming, which I mentioned, they use these particular type
of events, the stage events, the psyops or psychological operation,
the false flags events, and things of that nature to
keep people programmed for future events, so to speak. All right,
that's what it's for. So what happened in nine to
(01:59:35):
eleven was imperative for what's happening now. So hopefully people
understand these things and understand what I'm saying. But this
is a cycle and it's pathological behavior. People need to
understand you think the way you think because you have
been intentionally programmed to think that way.
Speaker 1 (01:59:56):
How let me jum me a twenty eight away from
the Trump First, you've got to understand or come to
that realization that you've been programmed. How do we get
to that stage? Because unless you understand that or believe that,
the rest of what you're saying that will not resonate. So, brother, Sidiki,
how can you get folks to understand that? And it's
nothing to be ashamed of because we've all been programmed,
(02:00:16):
and that's the other way we are. We're programmed to
hate each other. But how do we get our people
to accept that and then move on from that, because
once you accept that, I think it can make some progress.
Speaker 7 (02:00:26):
Yes, that's a major problem. That's why, or issue or hurdle.
That's why I mentioned for me, I understand, I have
to deal with people or one by one, so to speak,
each one, teach one because people. I just explained why
people will hold on to these belief systems the way
(02:00:47):
they do. The program is so deep called it's I
mean this one, it's so deep. I can't even explain
in the English language how deep this program is. But
again it's seeping into people's sells. You understand what I'm saying.
This programming is deep. It gets into the subconscious mind,
(02:01:09):
it gets into the central nervous system, it gets into
the neurological self. And once that happens, people aren't dealing
with their quote unquote God's self or their divinity, the
essence of their spirit and who they are, their soul
and the power of the soul and what comes of
the soul, the imagination and intuition. These things are now
(02:01:32):
having blockages because of the trauma and because of the fear.
All right now, people will live their entire lives and
not deal with trauma and not deal with fear. Fifty
sixty year olds who have never dealt with childhood trauma,
it's going to be difficult for them because of ignoring
these things. People will literally fight you truth and nail.
(02:01:53):
That's how deep the programming is. And as I always discussed,
what happens is that's now brought into other settings, so
that person is not just affecting themselves. They're affecting their families,
their children, their spouses, They're affecting if they're in group dynamics,
organizations and things of that nature. It's all being affected
(02:02:14):
by this inability to admit and be honest in regards
to the needing for and of healing and the unresolved trauma,
unhealed trauma and fear that people are dealing with. And
I don't care who you are, I don't care how
much you know. If you are in America, and especially
(02:02:35):
if you were raised here in the United States, you
are heavily dealing with trauma and you are heavily dealing
with fear. Just the fact that you watch television twenty
four to seven for decades, you have been subjected to
trauma and fear, and it's premeditated and it's intentional. So
(02:02:56):
before we even get to solutions, people have to first
admit these things, and then once these things are assessed,
people can now begin to deal with these things because
it shows up in every aspect of their life. That's
why I have the list that I give people so
people understand what it is, so people can see it
(02:03:17):
in their lives over reactions. Right, everything is an issue
self sabotage, immaturity, entitlement, pettiness, anxiety, depression, which we've seen
a lot of, especially the last two weeks. Passive aggression,
stubborn whining, complaining. We saw a lot of whining and
complaining over the last couple of weeks. Hormonal imbalance. This
(02:03:37):
is directly related to trauma. Right, uncontrollable reactions. People just
crashing out, And people don't understand why people are crashing out.
They're crashing out because of trauma. It's not resolved all
right now. This is also be very clear, we're dealing
with the brain here, We're dealing with the system, nervous
(02:04:00):
system here. So what you deal with fear, for example,
fear is related to us and hold I.
Speaker 4 (02:04:06):
Thought about that.
Speaker 1 (02:04:07):
We've got to step aside for a few moments or
twenty three minutes away from the top day, I'll let
you pick it up and talk about Fear family. I
hope you're enjoying this conversation with brother Sadeka Baccari and
as I mentioned, call up a couple of friends and
tell them to listen to Brother Sidiki because and they'll
appreciate it.
Speaker 4 (02:04:19):
They'll thank you.
Speaker 1 (02:04:20):
You're going to learn a lot of stuff this morning
with brother Sadeka Baccari. You can reach us an eight
hundred four five zero seventy eight seventy six. Don't take
your phone calls next Annie, Thanks for starting your week
with us at nineteen minutes away from the top of
the away futuristic researcher brother Sadeka Baccari. Before we go
back to elements, remind you later this week you're going
to hear from psychologists doctor Joy Degru, also Brother Zaki
(02:04:42):
Britty from the Universital of African People's Organization in St. Louis,
and also DC activists. Pastor the Rev. Willey Gilson will
be here, so if you are in Baltimore, make sure
you keep you radio locked and tight. On ten ten
WLB if you're in the DMV run I FM ninety
five point nine and AM fourteen fifty WL. All right,
brother SIDEKI. Before he left, he was talking about fear,
(02:05:02):
and I want you to explain what that is and
also the role of the religious folks too, the faith
community when it comes to fear, because there are the
ones who are given another message and how should we
decipher what that message is because the son seems like
they've given us a comforting message if you will, so
explain how this fear aspect came about.
Speaker 7 (02:05:23):
Well as far as far as religion. And I would
think that we're talking about Christianity because the majority of
black people are Christians and this is no disrespect to
them and what they do and what they quote unquote
believe in in the book that they choose to deal with.
But the bottom line is the Bible's many different things.
One of the things that it is is is it
(02:05:44):
is a book that is relegated and entrenched in fear.
The greatest aspects of the book is about fear. So
I'm not going to get into that, but that's the
bottom line. People can take that however they take it.
But just the notion that have in hell is a
fear program. Just the notion of sin is a fear program.
(02:06:04):
And I can go on and on with this notion
of fear and how it is relative in the Bible
and how it's being used to control people in the
religion of Christianity. So that's easy work, that's not a
difficult thing to do, but it's definitely used from a
standpoint of keeping our people in constructs and relegated to
only doing particular things as opposed to doing other things
(02:06:27):
that's outside the framework of that religion or that book,
And that is important to know. But I was getting
into fear and trauma in this relationship to the body
because it is fear and trauma is a technology. And
I know people don't think of things like this, but
understand that fear is a technology. Due to fear and trauma,
(02:06:50):
your body operates a particular way. And there are results
that comes out of a person being programmed into fear
based programming, trauma based programming, in that fear and trauma
based programming being triggered through media manipulation and many other
types of stimuli, whether that's memories and things of that nature,
but even memories to a degree can be controlled and
(02:07:15):
tapped into through fear based and trauma based programming. So
that's important to understand. So even when we look at say,
let me just be general, the central nervous system, ninety
nine percent of people have a overfunctioning and a milfunctioning
central nervous system. Now, if you have a overfunctioning and
(02:07:35):
milfunctioning or a dysfunctional central nervous system, well, nervous system,
the key word is central, meaning it is central to
your entire body. So when we say central nervous system,
you're talking about the brain, the spinal cord. Then all
the nerves and nerves endings that are connected to the
brain and the spinal cord. That's what you're talking about.
Speaker 6 (02:07:57):
Right.
Speaker 7 (02:07:57):
So the majority of people it's not functioning correctly, which
means the regulation of emotions, the regulations of organs, the
regulations of hormones, the regulations of just everyday bodily function
is off. So we need a whole overload of deprogramming
(02:08:19):
and reprogramming for the central nervous system alone. All right,
the subconscious mind, that's another aspect of us that needs
to be deprogrammed and reprogrammed. The subconscious mind deals with
obviously repetition. It deals with habits, It deals with patterns,
It deals with pathology. What you do the most, that's
(02:08:41):
what it deals with, what you hear the most, what
you see the most. Programming, It takes it in. You
regurgitate it, or it regurgitates it over and over and
over and over again.
Speaker 6 (02:08:54):
All right.
Speaker 7 (02:08:55):
It needs to be deprogrammed, in reprogrammed. The neurological system
needs to be programmed and reprogrammed when you're dealing with
neurons and things of that nature, needs to be reprogrammed, reprogrammed,
all right. Bottom line, these are the things that will
assist people to now be able to deal with the solutions,
(02:09:17):
as people call it, to be able to understand who
we really are as a people, our power, because now
we begin to remove what makes us think we are powerless,
that programming, what makes us think, if we went all
the way back to the fifties and the sixties, what
makes us think that white people milk is any better
(02:09:37):
than black people milk? Right, if sitting at the counter
with white people is more effective important than us sitting
at the counter with our own people. So again, we're
talking about sixty seventy years of programming to where we
still think that we have to be accepted by a system.
Instead of overstanding our own power, our own divinity, our
(02:10:00):
own ability to create, we think that we have to
take what they took from us, that now we have
to infuse ourselves with them in order to be successful
in whatever it is that we're doing. And even when
we deal with AI, that's a that's even when we
deal with AI and technology and all these different things,
we're the ones creating a lot of this technology. It's
not coming from them.
Speaker 1 (02:10:22):
But again I thought right there, I I want to
ask you about TikTok and so hold, I thought right
there before I do that, though, Brother Siniki, Sister Odwa
is calling from the Gambia in Africa has a question
for her. She's online one grand rising, Sister Odwa, I want.
Speaker 12 (02:10:41):
To ask this question.
Speaker 17 (02:10:44):
Over the the last two weeks, it seems we've had
a number of mentioning black men found hanging some trees.
Can you explain to me how it is this behavior
that we we know historically white folks have been mentioned
black folks.
Speaker 6 (02:11:04):
How is it that they can say it's a suicide.
Speaker 17 (02:11:10):
Or I was frightened by a black man who had
the telephone in his hand, and I felt the need
to kill them. What is going on in their psyche
that they're.
Speaker 6 (02:11:24):
Able to do that?
Speaker 7 (02:11:27):
Kay, excellent question. Now in their psyche, right, I'm missing
to you in the air, off the air. Excellent, excellent,
thank you. So in their psyche, there's only we can
only get into their psyche so much to a certain degree.
I've said this, I continue to say this. We are
(02:11:50):
dealing with psychopaths. If people don't know what the psychopath is,
just do a quick deep dive when you can, all right,
psychopaths have no remorse. Cyclepaths can fit in in any
type of environment. This is what psychopaths are. Psychopaths make
you think that they are loving, compassionate, humane people. That
(02:12:18):
psychopaths are able to do these type of things like
the dots on the cyclepath is very interesting, all right.
So people need to really see what a psychopath is.
How they hide their aggression, yet they're very aggressive. You
don't see it until you see it, all right, So
look up what a psychopath is to really understand what
they are. They're narcissistic, they're all those different things rolled
(02:12:39):
up into what is a psychopath? Now, when we continue
to witness these lynchings and things of that nature, and
they keep telling us it's suicide, and it's all these
different things. This is why I tell people to study history,
all right, So I post it the one of the images,
(02:13:02):
which I don't like to do, but the situation called
for it. I posted one of the images of two
black men being lynched with the white crowd or the
white mob celebrating it ritualistically. And it's important that we
understand this because this is about ritual, these current and
(02:13:25):
staged events, these psychological operations. It's about ritual. Then it's
about siphoning your energy. That's what this is about. If
you notice it happens around a particular time, when these
things happen, I told my class a month ago, be
aware of what's happening, be aware of the distractions, be
aware of the psychological operations, be aware of the staged events.
(02:13:48):
Now how did I know to be able to tell
my class this a month ago? Because I understand when
these things happen. I told them, coming into September eleventh,
some things are going to take place. Get caught up.
Now we know what happened coming into September eleventh, we
know the things that took place. We know that what
happened in Utah happened the white on white crime or
(02:14:10):
whatever that situation was, because in essence, none of us
really know anyway, we don't know what really happened. We
may never know what really happened. All right, Just because
you think you saw something, don't mean that's what you saw.
That's what people need to understand. All right, you think
you saw something that, don't mean that that's actually what
it was. Whole nother conversation. So again, we're dealing with
(02:14:34):
psychological operations. We're dealing with media programming and media manipulation.
So this is why they would have a message of
saying that this black man committed suicide. This is the issue.
We keep hearing that that's not really something that black
(02:14:55):
men do. We know that, but we do know historically
that's something that white men do, string up black men,
black women, babies, all kinds of things that's pathological. So
this is again about manipulation. There's been a lot of
stories that's come out that are untrue. Again, propaganda, media manipulation,
(02:15:17):
false narratives. All these things are to keep a conversation going,
to keep people emotionally entrenched. How they desire for you
to be emotionally entrenched while actually something else is going
on that the masters of people have no ideas happening.
Speaker 6 (02:15:33):
So all this is science.
Speaker 7 (02:15:35):
Again, problem reaction, solution. So when we deal with the
lynching of this man, this brother, we are now dealing
with again keeping people in the racial construct having these
conversations about race, which white people will never have. Honestly,
they will never admit who and what they are from
(02:15:57):
a standpoint of psychosis and things of that nature. They
will always put the blame on black people and tell
us we're acting like victims and we're doing this, and
we're doing that, and racism is an excuse and blah
blah blah blah blah. Look at all the games that
we've made. How can racism exist? This is all pathology,
This is psychosis. This is a programming. So now even
to the point where you have black people saying the
(02:16:19):
same thing, this is programming that I'm talking about. So
this is these are the reasons why we would hear
these things and why these things are happening. All right,
I always say, no one, no one on this planet
is dealing with what black men are dealing with no one.
Speaker 1 (02:16:39):
Well, let me jump in here, ause you mentioned what
happened in Utah and something seems like they've been trying
to pull us into that incident in all different kinds
of ways.
Speaker 4 (02:16:47):
How do we deal with that?
Speaker 1 (02:16:49):
And some people are sucked into it and they've watched
what happened and they've got an opinion on what happened,
and then suddenly they're trying to get it, get us involved,
getting us to react, and just thankfully most of our
folks are just like, Hey, that's not our fight. Where
do we stand on all of this? Brother Sadiki?
Speaker 6 (02:17:09):
Where do we stay or where do we should?
Speaker 1 (02:17:12):
Should we should we get involved? Should we just sit
it out? Just watch them?
Speaker 7 (02:17:18):
Why should we get involved? What does that have to
do with us? Nothing? Well, ultimately it will. Everything that
this country does ultimately has something to do with us.
So even with that situation, what did it have to
do with us? Well, what we saw the outcome again
figuring out a way to make black people to scapegoat
(02:17:40):
for what white people do. I've yet to hear white
on white crime from a standpoint of any national type
of media, mainstream type of thing. You don't hear white
on white crime. You never hear that term because it's
not about criminalizing white people. It's about criminalizing black people,
mainly black men. Even though we know when you deal
(02:18:02):
with the most heinous crimes, obviously white men are at
the top of that. I mean, it's not even close.
It's not even close. When you look at what black
people do, it's normally crime out of poverty, needing, not having.
(02:18:22):
That's normally what the crime is that we're dealing with. Normally.
Speaker 4 (02:18:29):
Yeah, we had four.
Speaker 1 (02:18:30):
Members of this bitiness right, we have four members of
the Congression Black Caucus, including Hakeeen Jeffy is voted to
honor this. This is the person who's who I guess
they eulogize if you will on Sunday. So they have
they been duped to it try to pull us into
all of this because they're supposed to be our leaders
from the Congression Black Caucus. And I'll tell you, I'll
(02:18:53):
let you respond that after this shortbreak because I look
at the clock here, family, you two want to join
our conversation, brother Sadeka Bakari, like I said, a call
up a couple of friends. They'll appreciate, they'll thank you.
Because you're gonna learn some stuff. But reach out to
us at eight hundred and four five zero seventy eight
seventy six and will take your phone calls next and
Grian Rising family, thanks for staying with us on this
Monday morning and thanks for starting your week with us again.
(02:19:13):
I guess there is Brother Sideka Butkari, Brother Sidiki is
a futuristic researcher. It's giving us an update on what's
going on in our community right now because of fear
and trauma based media programming that's taking place, and a
lot of folks are confused, so Brother Sidiki is cutting
through all of that confusion. Before I go back, and
let me just shout out a sister who called from
West Africa, the Gambia, Sister Odwall. Please listen tomorrow because
(02:19:36):
Brother Zaki Burruti from the University of African People's Organization
is going to introduce us to their ambassador from the Gambia,
So make sure that you're listening to us. That conversation
take place tomorrow. But going back to Brother Sidiki, Brother Sideki,
we mentioned that Keem Jeffries who is nothing like his uncle,
doctor Lenna Jeffries and some other members of the Congression
Blank Caucus spoke out about it, and I'm not going
(02:19:57):
to mention the name.
Speaker 4 (02:19:58):
We all know his name.
Speaker 1 (02:19:59):
But when you mentioned a und saying given energy, So
we're not going to do that yesterday? Yes so so,
brother Sidiki. Are they under control of the How do
you see that move by those members of the Congression
of Black Caucus.
Speaker 7 (02:20:16):
Well, I don't. I don't know what they're doing. I'm
not I'm familiar with the Black Caucus, but I'm not
really familiar with the Black Caucus. If you understand what
I'm saying, are there no black men to honor? I
mentioned Stockholm syndrome for a reason, the edification and deification
(02:20:36):
of your so called oppressor. Listen, politics is politics at
the end of the day. But again, there are no
black men to honor. And and like you said, we
don't want to mention this person's name because it gives energy.
I've listened to the speeches and things of that nature,
and I don't know how black people can listen and
(02:20:59):
come out of that saying that this person was not racist.
But I do understand because that's what we're talking about.
We're talking about the programming because once white people say
a particular thing. Black people fall right in line. They
think the same because they've been programmed to. They don't
want to speak against white people in the government because
(02:21:21):
they've been programmed to it's dangerous. All these different things.
So when we talk about situations with the Black caucaus,
that's not surprising. And look, I'm not speaking ill of
the Black Caucus. I'm just saying there's no black men
to honor. Why are we honoring white men? I think
those are valid questions. I think they're very valid questions.
(02:21:43):
We have enough work we need to do in the
black community as black people. Why are we concerned with
honoring this person? And what are we honoring this person for? See,
these are question is that people have to ask, you know,
what is the ultimately what's the purpose of the Black caucus.
(02:22:06):
My understanding is the people out here who was attempting
to get reparations, it was a black caucus who actually
blocked them from being able to do that. Obviously it
would be under the eyes of white government, obviously, So
(02:22:27):
I mean, these are things we got to ask ourselves.
But again, I've explained why these things happen, and it's
easy work. I can do it over and over again.
This is just a surface level snapshot from a standpoint
of dealing with trauma and fear and how it affects us,
the programming and how it affects us, you know, all
these different things and the need for white validation and
(02:22:51):
credibility from the white establishment and things of that nature.
We want to take the pictures in the photo ops
and you know, do all these things look what I'm doing,
when in essence, you're doing nothing but assisting them in
their process, in their program because they always have a
plan that's outside of the black person or black people
that's working with them. They're always using them as a
(02:23:13):
pond for what it is that they need to do
politically or whatever other situation is happening.
Speaker 6 (02:23:19):
And I don't know how we haven't learned that.
Speaker 7 (02:23:21):
In all these well I do in all these decades.
So yeah, there's something we're going to have to We
got to tighten up. We really have to tighten up
as a people. Everyone's not going to make it, but
those of us who do know, we really need to
tighten up. We need to deal with our trauma, We
need to deal with our fear. That's the only way
we're going to really be able to move how we
(02:23:42):
need to move. The whole program is predicated off of
fear and trauma.
Speaker 16 (02:23:49):
Period, right, No, I thought right there.
Speaker 1 (02:23:52):
Five after tompay O, the Truth tell us checking in
from Cleveland has a question for you or a commedi
is online? One grand Rising, mister Truth, your only brother
Sadeka Bakari grind Rising quite.
Speaker 5 (02:24:04):
The brother said hey, bro, listen, I'm taking a course
min a psychology course, right and we're studying the subconscious
and constience mind. Of course. Excuse and I come across
this guy man the name Edward Burnet. Have you heard him?
Edward Brene? They called him, Yeah, they called him the
(02:24:27):
father of public relations and propaganda. But anyway, he wrote
a book called Propaganda back End, I think nineteen twenty
eight or nineteen nineteen. Anyway, I mean one of his
and just people understanding that basically most things you read
here and all that you consume is propaganda. But this
is one of his famous quotes. He said, conscious and
(02:24:49):
intelligent manipul He said, conscious and intelligent manipulation of the
organized habits and opinions of the masses is an important
element in demoocratic society. And that the engineering of consent,
the engineering, and that the engineering of consent is the
very essence of the democratic process because it allows the
(02:25:12):
freedom to persuade and suggest to achieve socially constructive goals.
But he was a brilliant white dude. He might have
been evil, but he was brilliant because he was. When
you read about some of the things he manipulated. Man,
this dude put in campaigns that was just it was amazing,
but it was evil at the time. So I just
(02:25:35):
wanted to say that. But yeah, so most things. I
don't think most of us understand how much propaganda we
get on a regular base.
Speaker 6 (02:25:43):
You know.
Speaker 8 (02:25:43):
But thank you.
Speaker 7 (02:25:44):
I take you absolutely correct. Yeah, thank you. Brother. He's
absolutely correct. My brother from Cleveland. He's absolutely correct.
Speaker 16 (02:25:52):
Though.
Speaker 7 (02:25:52):
He's correct, Carl. No one had a gun to your head,
as far as COVID was concerned. No one had to
gun to anyone's head to go take the jab. That's
exactly what that quote. He just read the same. So
they manipulate you again, problem reaction solution or the Hagelian dialectic, right,
(02:26:12):
So they're manipulating people to get the result it is
that they desire by the people agreeing to it through
manipulation though. That's what the media is, that's what the
government is. That's what propaganda is. That's what Stockholm syndrome is.
That's what controlled opposition is. That's what cognitive dissonance is.
(02:26:36):
That's what thought reform is.
Speaker 4 (02:26:40):
But you know what, let me jump in.
Speaker 1 (02:26:41):
Here, brother Sadika, because and then what they do. They
come and they regirtuate what they read or they thought,
and they're saying it with such authority. And I always
tell them, we can spot your talking points, you know,
evenether it be on the democratic side or the Republican side.
That's what we tell people, to free your mind and
think for yourself. But I seem some of our folks
(02:27:01):
have a problem with that. I have an issue thinking
for themselves. They're waiting for somebody to say something of it,
or there's somebody who they like or their friend of
the close franted is telling them things and they don't
research you, They don't look it up because they like
that person and not knowing that the person may be
trying to get you on their side, knowing the view
the issue or the person they're trying to get you
(02:27:21):
to dislike, maybe something that you really like and dig,
but you refuse to do your own research. So address
that for us before we speak with Theodore in Baltimore.
Speaker 7 (02:27:33):
Well, that whether we deal with it from a grander
scale or a minimal scale, that goes into Stockholm syndrome
as well as cognitive dissonance. That's what that goes into,
cognitive disiness, holding on to a belief system running from
the truth, not wanting to deal with the truth, but
holding firm to the belief system which is not truth,
(02:27:57):
not factual, so on and so forth. So hold on
to that and then Stockholm syndrome. When you deal with
these systems or this information or quote unquote knowledge is
coming from ultimately white people. Now I can give you
an example. As long as I've been dealing with AI
technology and all the things that I've been dealing with,
people continue to send me videos from white people talking
(02:28:20):
about what I've been talking about for twenty years to
document it, have written tons of books on it, thousands
of presentations, and all the other things that I've done
are foremost scholar as a black person on those particular
topics dealing with technology. They still send me information over
and over again from white people it's just, oh, look
(02:28:42):
what this person is saying, like it validates what I'm
saying because now white people are saying it. That's how
we think, that's how we operate. We edify and deify
all that is white. It is what it is, and
people do it not understan that they're doing it. That's
the programming. That's the programming, right. So, and I'm using
(02:29:07):
myself as an example. So if I break down certain
knowledge dealing with AI or whatever it is what we're
dealing with today, if I break down certain knowledge, it's
difficult for black people to accept it. It's difficult. Let's
look at a person like astral Qrasi. It's difficult to
say a person for black people. Some it's difficult to
say a person like astral Quasi is brilliant. It's difficult
(02:29:29):
to say other guests that you have on for black
people to say that that person is brilliant or that
person is a genius. But a white person will say
the very same thing, and people act like this person
is from another world. Those are the aspects of programming
that I'm talking about. And this affects us in our
(02:29:49):
everyday life based on our pathology, how we move how
we operate, how we think, all of it, all of it,
and again this limits us from being able to tap
into the essence of who and what we really are,
to really tap into our power. It's limiting belief system,
(02:30:11):
limiting constructs, limiting ways of culture, limiting ways of life,
limiting ways of creation, limiting ways of manifestation. Is all
limited reality or illusion. That's what we end up ultimately
dealing with.
Speaker 4 (02:30:30):
And thank you for sharing that with us.
Speaker 1 (02:30:31):
Eleven Now at the top that I've got some folks
who want to speak with you and also want to
talk about the TikTok issue too, because now the US
is controlling the algorithms of the TikTok at the game. Yeah,
I want you and we're getting that momentary. But let's
the folks have been holding for you. One of comment
I got questions for you. Let's starry lying too. Theodore
is a calling from Baltimore. Grand Rising. Theodore, you are
(02:30:53):
on with brother Sadiki Bakari.
Speaker 13 (02:30:55):
Grand Rising Brothers. How are you all today? And I
hope you're doing well. A lot of you're saying is
absolutely true, But I think the majority of our people
they know what's going on, they know what's going in
a reference to there's the guy who got murdered and
his attitude. And I was looking the other day at
(02:31:16):
a Bible and I saw a scripture of Romans fourteen
nineteen I think it is and it says, wherefore let
us seek out the things of peace and things which
edify or build us up. That's the exact description of
the opposite of what he was doing. But yet they
they still they're professional Christians. Those Christian nationalists are professional Christians,
(02:31:41):
and they are done. They're not. They are not. They're not,
I won't say worthy, but they are not upholding the
tenets exactly what Jesus taught. They go against him. And
yet they use the word if I said, I know
missus ad I know miss Sadiki, I know call I
(02:32:03):
don't personally know thee but I mention their name. And
that's all the vadication that people who on the other
side don't do any research in the very book that
called the scriptures. They don't and they don't care because
they have some type of innate in as you would say, sir,
(02:32:28):
they have some type of innate mechanism that causes them
not to think they're wrong when they are wrong, and
the tragic thing about it is that they rule this nation.
But let me tell you something. Most of us, the
majority of us, the overwhelming majority of us, know what
(02:32:50):
you're seeing is true, and they know how politics works.
And most of us are not i would say, hypnotized
still by being addicted to white but in some ways,
in some ways we are. And I am glad that
you are pointing these things out. And I'd like to
(02:33:13):
say also a question the ability of a person to
do well for himself and his family in spite of
the things he knows. That takes a lot of energy.
And I'm saying that for the athletes, many of these athletes,
if they did band together to do something, and so
(02:33:37):
many of them are on the download, they're doing that
helping people with organizations and stuff.
Speaker 11 (02:33:44):
But do you think that that sit.
Speaker 13 (02:33:49):
Having to maintain themselves to get the financial and economic
stability that they need. So you think that's something they
can they should they should? Can can you to do
on the side or should they do it more openly?
And I'll hang up and listen to your answer.
Speaker 7 (02:34:07):
Thank you, Okay, excellent. As far as athletes and entertainers
and things of that, nature. My physician has always been
there's far more people that are not athletes and entertainers
as far as us as black people. There's far more
everyday working people, entrepreneurs and.
Speaker 4 (02:34:31):
Hello, Yeah you're alive.
Speaker 7 (02:34:35):
Yeah, I'm here. Are you there?
Speaker 4 (02:34:37):
Yeah, we're here.
Speaker 7 (02:34:38):
Oh okay, I thought I heard the phone ring. Okay.
So there's far more of us in these other segments
or sectors than there are athletes and entertainers. The issue
is not what the less than one percent of athletes
and entertainers in the black world choose to do or
(02:35:00):
don't do. The issue is the ninety nine percent that
do nothing. That's the issue, and I want to make
that clear, or the ninety five percent that does nothing.
So if we start talking about pooling money and doing
all these different things, where you have ninety ninety five
ninety nine percent of people who aren't doing anything in
regards to that, So that's more of my concern, not
(02:35:23):
those less than one percent. So let's just make that clear.
Let's stop looking outside of us to what someone else
should do, and let's start looking in the mirror at
ourselves to what we should do. That's the reason I'm
doing everything that I'm doing to assist our people and humanity.
That's why I'm doing it, so for all of that, right,
(02:35:44):
I know, I.
Speaker 4 (02:35:44):
Thought right there.
Speaker 1 (02:35:45):
Because we step aside for a few months, we'll come back.
Scott wants to talk to you. Also want to tell
us about how people can reach you, because what you're
doing is you deal with them on a one on
one basis because some people need that extra help. You know,
you can hear it in the classroom, somebody smart enough
to go to the professor say hey, could you explain
this for me. That's what I did with doctor Welson
(02:36:05):
when she talked about racism white supremacy. I'll be honest,
I didn't get it the first time, so I had
to call her up and to break it down to me.
So well, I know that's what you do as well.
Brother Sideki, we'll get into that when we get back
seventeen after the top they our family. You can join
us too with this conversation at eight hundred four or
five zero seventy eight seventy six. We'll take your phone
calls next and Grand Rising family, thanks for starting your
(02:36:26):
week with us. At twenty one minutes after the top
of the hour on this Monday, morning. I guess there's
a futuristic researcher brother sideka. But Cary, I'll let him
tell you how you can get involved. You want a
personal one on one and to understand some of the
situations that he's explaining to us this morning. We'll do
that before he leaves. But let's go to line three.
Scott's calling us from Bowie's been holding for a minute.
Scott Grand rising, you're on with brother Sidiki. Scott sill
(02:36:51):
with us. I'm go ahead, but I'm sorry, Yeah, I
can hear now, yea, I say, good morning.
Speaker 10 (02:36:57):
Thanks for the conversation. I agree with Rozadiki, but I'm
just coming from it from a different perspective and just
want to get your guys thoughts. Definitely, programming is involved,
but I think the issue that we have as a community,
we're pointing out problems that are obvious. I think it's
the organization. I think one we organize. We have the
(02:37:20):
we have a habit of tolerating that can't get rights,
and the people in our community that just have no
passion or intellectual curiosity to do what's right and follow
steps that will help the group. We keep waiting for
them to hop on the boat to our own detriments.
(02:37:40):
Just want to get your guys take on it, because again,
force similation is no longer forced. People are jumping because
they want to assimilate. They don't read, as you mentioned before,
and I think we're just too tolerant of each other.
Those that just don't want to hop on the boat.
Sometimes you gotta lead people for them to understand. Hey, listen,
this is where we're going and maybe you'll see it
as we take those steps further.
Speaker 7 (02:38:01):
So just want to get your door funey, Okay, excellent.
Number one, it's indirectly forced covertly when we talk about
the programming, the media manipulation, the trauma based, fear based programming,
the trigger trauma. And let me say this is not
as common as people think. People understanding and knowing that
(02:38:24):
programming exists is not as common as people think. I
deal with people every day on a one on one
basis dealing with these specific things that we're talking about.
People are not as informed as one would think people
are about the programming because of the programming. Next, let's
talk about organizing. Now, from a standpoint of organizing, what
(02:38:46):
is the organizing based off of people who are in trauma.
People who are fear based program people who are triggered
by all of the things that I already mentioned are
attributes of fear based and trauma based programming. Right. Again,
this is much deeper than we think. People have been organizing.
And I know that because I've been an organizer and
(02:39:07):
I've been dealing with activism for thirty five years. So
people are doing that. What the issue is again is
the people who are doing that in many cases have
unresolved and unhealed trauma and fear. Let me explain something
(02:39:28):
to people.
Speaker 8 (02:39:29):
When you deal with.
Speaker 7 (02:39:29):
Trauma, for you can be forty fifty, sixty years old
when that trauma is triggered, say memory, When it's triggered,
that trauma may have taken place when a person was
ten years old. When that trauma is triggered, that memory
of trauma is triggered, the person that's forty fifty or
sixty don't deal with that trauma. Is if they're forty
(02:39:51):
fifty or sixty. They deal with that trauma as if
they're a ten year old. They deal with that trauma
based on the timeline that that trauma took place with
them emotionally, So all of the emotions that come with
that will be part of that at the age of
forty fifty sixty. So this is what we have to
understand and deal with. And then we're dealing with that
(02:40:13):
trauma being triggered intentionally. This is what is taking place again.
That's why I mentioned the cycle. Now, brother, I hear
what you're saying. You're correct when you say we need
to organize or apologize. I don't need to cut you out.
Speaker 10 (02:40:29):
I just wanted to know about be able to respond apples.
Speaker 7 (02:40:31):
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah yeah, And we do need to organize.
He's absolutely correct, But that first starts with a person
organizing him or herself so that person can bring into
a group setting or situation or organizational group so to speak,
or organization so they can bring in wholeness as opposed
(02:40:52):
to bringing in the things that I've already mentioned. The
cognitive dissonance, you can't tell them nothing, the confirmation biased
they're stuck in their belief systems, the Stockholm syndrome. They
still edifying and define white people and white establishment, corporation, education, politics,
(02:41:15):
all these different things. So in order to get to
self determination, self reliance and self collectivism and all those
different things. We have to deal with our healing, and
it's difficult because we are already in this situation where
war has been declared on us and at this point
(02:41:35):
we are not fit as a people to deal with war.
Speaker 1 (02:41:42):
That's pretty deep right there. Twenty six after the top, Now,
brother Sindika and folks contact you for help. What's the
most complaint that they have? What's the biggest issue they have?
Is it fear or is it the trauma?
Speaker 7 (02:41:56):
Well, they're one and the same. If you have if
you're dealing with fear, you dealing with trauma. If you're
dealing with trauma, you're dealing with fear. So there can't
be one without the other. But I assist people to
be able to get to the core of what it
is that they're dealing with, and once that happens, we
can now do the things necessary so that person can
(02:42:16):
move in their divinity, so to speak, so they can
go through the process that they need to go through
in order to get to the next level in their life,
whatever that means. If it has to do with goals,
if it has to do with creating, if it has
to do with them tapping into the warrior side of themselves,
if it has to do with low self esteem, confidence,
self sabotage, insecurity, whatever it is. We're able to get
(02:42:41):
to the next level and focus on the particular things
we need to focus on again. Deprogram, reprogram, reconstruct, rewire,
realign the central nervousness and the subconscious mind and neurological
self deal with these particular aspects of the body that
needs to be dealt with in order for or healing
to occur psychologically and as well as the other aspects
(02:43:05):
as well. That's primarily what we're doing. That's the one
on one, but of course there's a course to the
new book is Trauma a Motherboard of Technology, So that's
the new book is complete. We have a course coming
up very shortly, so people who want to be involved
in that course can be involved. In that course. We'll
be dealing with some of the things that we talked
about here on this show. We'll be dealing with the
(02:43:28):
epicenter of fear and trauma, what that looks like in
regards to the imagdullah part of the brain, bio signatures,
trauma and fear based programming of course, which we've been
talking about, trauma, epigenetics and bloodlines the major aspects of
trauma and what they mean. We'll get into trauma response
and stimuli, like all these different things, trauma as a technology,
(02:43:52):
trauma as ritual, how it affects us on the daily.
We'll get into timelines as far as trauma's concerned, and
we'll get into trauma as far as trauma being parasitic,
because when you deal with trauma, trauma is a parasite.
So we'll get into the aspect of that and what
that really means. We'll get into the energy side of it.
We'll get into the central nervous system as a supercomputer,
(02:44:14):
like we'll get into the Olympic system. We'll get into
all these different systems and how it affects us in
dealing with trauma and fear. We'll get into hormones and
what that means, the hormonal internet, hormones being used to
trigger oppression. So like we'll deal with all these different
things of neurological matrix and what that means. So that's
(02:44:36):
primarily what we'll be dealing with in that course. So again,
so people can email me, it's my name, Sadik s
A d I k I Bakari b A k A
r I SADQ Bakari. That's one word, Sadkekari at hotmail
dot com. So you can email me. For those of
(02:44:58):
you who want to take the course or do the
one on one, you can email me for that. If
you do the course, the book is going to come
with the course. It's a book package. The book package
will come with the course, all right. If you just
want the book package, then let me know that. If
you want the one on one, which is me and you,
is not other people involved, it's just you and I
(02:45:20):
let me know that. If you want to do all
of it, then let me know that and we'll we'll
get all that ironed out. If you have questions, whatever,
just email me and we'll go from there.
Speaker 6 (02:45:31):
I'm also on.
Speaker 7 (02:45:31):
Facebook and Instagram. My name Sadiki Bacari again spelled s
A d I k I b A k A r
I Sadiki Bakari. That's Facebook and Instagram. So I would
love to see the callers get involved and you know,
go to the next level, because this is the this
(02:45:52):
is the starting point where Carl is doing is so important,
Like he's he sparked so many people and I know
that because I'm one of those people. So his show
has sparked so many people to go to the next
level of their lives, to go deal with certain types
of information and knowledge, to go see these scholars lecture
and do presentations and seminars and all the things that
(02:46:15):
you know his guests do, to organize, to be involved,
to be activists, to do all these different things. So
most definitely we got to always, you know, honor and
give the proper credit to Carl.
Speaker 1 (02:46:30):
All right, and thanks for the kind words there, brother Sidiki.
But brother Sidiki, with the TikTok deal just announced, you've
always been telling us about these algorithms. It seems like
that we knew they were not going to destroy TikTok.
It's too big, too powerful, to make too much money.
But they're going to control the algorithms. Can you this
is the deal that Donald Trump up with some of
his wealthy friends to buy into TikTok. Of course, the
(02:46:53):
average person, you're not going to get a piece of TikTok,
but we're still going to be on TikTok. Those of
you who are on TikTok, So explain to us, brother Sadeka,
what they mean when they're going to control the algorithms.
Speaker 7 (02:47:06):
So technology is about control, if you have For those
of you who have not figured it out yet, technology
is about control, all right. To have technology, you need
an algorithm, all right, in one shape or form, whether
it's algorithm as you think of it, zero one, one,
zero one, whatever, whatever, whatever, or just understanding that algorithm
(02:47:32):
is just about how something is set up in order
to have a result, all right. That's primarily what an
algorithm is. So an algorithm is how your whatever it
is that you use it can be your blender. The
way it works is algorithmic. So everyone understands. You blinking
your eye is algorithmic. You being able to walk its algorithmic.
You being able to think is algorithmic. So everyone understands,
(02:47:54):
and we're on the same page. All right, So understand TikTok, Facebook, Instant, all.
Speaker 11 (02:48:01):
Of these.
Speaker 7 (02:48:03):
Social media configurations or infrastructures are rooted and based in
binary codes, in algorithms, all right. Binary codes produce algorithms,
all right. Now, the purpose is control. So the whole
show we've been talking about programming, the algorithm is being
used to program you to think a certain way. In
(02:48:25):
order for you to think a certain way, they have
to keep certain information from the masses of people as
much as possible, and keep certain information going to the
people as much as possible. That does what it does
exactly what the definition I gave you in regards to
psychological operations is right to influence foreign audiences, all right,
(02:48:51):
that's what the psychological operation is, mind control techniques, all right,
to persuade, to change, to influence, that's what it's for.
They use the media to do that, all right. So
it's done this way now through algorithms.
Speaker 6 (02:49:07):
So where is.
Speaker 7 (02:49:08):
Everyone at on social media? The majority of people are
on social media? So what is the easiest way to
now program the majority of people? So it's not just
the television or the news so to speak. Now it's
also social media. So now it's two times instead of
one time. All right. So that's the purpose. The purpose
(02:49:29):
is to control your thinking. Again, the war is on
and for your mind.
Speaker 4 (02:49:38):
Period twenty six A wave on topic.
Speaker 1 (02:49:40):
I'm telling you again, is that why your advice you
said we shouldn't put our personal information on the on
social media? We should keep that is because that's the
engine that keeps these folks knowing where we are, what
kind of flowers we like, what we like to eat,
where we like to go to vacation and all you know,
where we're at home or not, kind of car we
(02:50:00):
drive and all that information. People just just put it
out on the init But you've been telling us that
we shouldn't do that.
Speaker 7 (02:50:07):
Can you explain as least as possible? Like Instagram, your
location shouldn't be on Instagram, your location shouldn't be on Facebook,
your location shouldn't be on your digital phone. Nothing. You
shouldn't have your location. Why do you have your location
on all these devices? For what you're helping them? And
(02:50:28):
I mean they'll still be able to figure out where
the hell you are, but at least make it simple.
I mean, at least don't make it simple, right, So
that's what I'm saying, like, don't put all your personal
information on social media? Like why are you putting pictures
and of your children and all these different things on
social media? Now you've just created a footprint for these
(02:50:48):
dvan people to know where your children are, where they
go to school, the park, where they're at, all these
different things. But see, this is the attention horrorsha, right,
So it's about attention. So people got to tell everybody
what they're doing where they're at. Look at me, Look
at this picture, Look where, Look what I'm doing. Look
(02:51:09):
who I'm with, I'm at the concert, I'm here, I'm there,
I'm doing all these things. But that's part of the
uh psychological manipulation that we have now.
Speaker 1 (02:51:24):
And brok right right, we're cut up on a break
when we come back. Because you've done a lot of
research into the hip hop community and the music and people.
Some people who are outside of the community wonder why
our young people gravitated to it, Why why is it
so appealing to them? But you your research so that
many of them have been programmed. It's not really something
that they they really like, but they've been programmed. So
(02:51:46):
if you can break that down for us, who's programming
these young people to do things that detrimental to us
as a as a as a group of people, our
family because we don't see other we don't see other
artists putting down there people like that and and singing
and making songs and you know, you know, speaking about
our women there women at least or talking about themselves
(02:52:08):
in a negative manner. So explain that, fir us. When
we get back from the short break. It's twenty four
minutes away from the top. They have a family who
got a question for Brother Sidiki reach out to us
at eight hundred four or five zero seventy eight seventy six,
and they take the wrong calls and Grand Rising family,
thanks for flowing with us on this Monday morning, thanks
for starting your week with us. Or here on these
(02:52:28):
twenty second day of September twenty twenty five with our
guests that brother Sideki Maccari, Brother Sidiki is a futuristic researcher.
As as you know, you heard the conversation so far
and Brother Sidiki the question and doctor Wilson talked about
some of our young people and the negative issues, the
stuff that's coming out of their mouths, and it reverberates
around the world. So people think that's how we as
(02:52:49):
black people are Black Americans are. We're using the language
that they use, putting down each other. And you know,
just a lot of the N words just tossed around
at these young people because you've some researching have they
been programmed? Are somebody else pulling the strings? Because we
don't hear this from any other any other group. Put
down there people like like some of our young people
not all of them, but just some of them.
Speaker 7 (02:53:09):
Your thoughts, Yeah, well, first, their parents were programmed, so yes,
it's systemic, we understand that, but we can't forget that
these fifteen twenty five year olds or whatnot are dealing
with parents that's been programmed for twenty thirty, forty fifty years,
(02:53:31):
when these children have been programmed for what ten fifteen
years or these young adults ten years fifteen years, So
we got to deal with the parents also, all right,
what's going on in the homes is not just the system. Yes,
it's predicated specifically from the system, and I'll never take
responsibility and accountability from the system, but the system itself
(02:53:54):
will never take responsibility and accountability.
Speaker 6 (02:53:57):
So this is a very broad con station when we.
Speaker 7 (02:54:00):
Start talking about hip hop and programming and why these
young adults are acting the way they're acting the way
that they are acting. Again, it's going to come back
to the cycle that I talked about earlier in the
show period, and that programming starts in room because usually
(02:54:20):
the mother is already successfully programmed, the father is probably
already successfully programmed, So that programming starts with the sperm
and it works its way through that birth process. See,
we don't talk about it from that perspective. We talk
about it once these children are now twenty five year
(02:54:42):
old men or women, right, who have these particular types
of programming and things of that nature. However, it ends
up looking trauma, fear, all these different things that's taking place. Well,
that's an entire process that even started before the a
man's firm, right, It started with that man's mother and father,
(02:55:06):
that mother's mother and father, right, and generational. So it's
a very very broad it's a huge discussion. But again
that discussion is going to come back to healing. Listen,
healing is revolutionary. People talk about revolution and all these
different things. You want to be revolutionary. Heal yourself because
(02:55:29):
if you heal yourself, you can really be revolutionary as
opposed to just talking about being revolutionary. You heal yourself,
you won't have fear in regards to what it is
that you need to do as a person or what
we need to do as a people. If you deal
with your trauma now, you can't be controlled and be
on the string like the majority of our people because
(02:55:51):
of unhealed, unresolved trauma as decades old, centuries old. So
that's where it's at. So until that takes place, we're
going to keep having these same conversations about the left
versus the right, Republican versus Democrat, same conversations, religion, same conversations, edification,
(02:56:12):
dentification on degrees, and all these different things. That does
nothing for us as a people. And I'm not discrediting
people who get those things, but I'm just saying it's
not benefiting us as a people ultimately, and if we're
talking about revolution, it's definitely not benefiting us as a people.
So these are the things we have to deal with.
These children are the focal point you're putting your and
(02:56:36):
let me say this cautiously because I understand what we're
dealing with as a whole. I understand the system. You're
at work eight ten twelve hours a day, all right,
So you can't really take care of your children. So
you have to put your children in daycare or a
school or whatever the situation is, and that's really where
they're raised because you're too tired after working eight ten
(02:56:58):
twelve hours a day to really give you your children
the time. Men, your children really need to nurture your
children to be who we really are as opposed to
their mimicking who we are not because that's where they're
spending most of their time. So this is what we're
dealing with. So as long as our children are in
their schools, as long as we continue to depend on
(02:57:19):
the system for us to function, we're going to keep
having these same problems. We're going to keep banging our
head against the wall. We're going to keep going through
wanting to be accepted. We're going to keep going through
cognitive dissonance. We're going to keep going through stock Colm syndrome, confirmation,
biased controlled our position, problem, reaction solution, all the things
that I've laid out, the Hegelian dialectic distraction, all of it.
(02:57:43):
It's pathological, over and over and over again, repetitious. That's
what we're dealing with. So the change starts with you.
If you're listening, the change start with you. Stop looking
at everybody else. For everyone else, the change starts with you.
This is what I'm for to assist people in doing that.
So if you don't like anything I said, that's fine,
(02:58:05):
but understand I'm here to assist you. If you desire
to get to the next level, I'm the one that
can assist you to get to the next level. I'm
the one that can assist you with overcoming fear. I'm
the one that can assist you with dealing with your traumas,
and I'm not talking about coping. All the system can
do is teach you how to cope. That they can't
teach you how.
Speaker 16 (02:58:24):
To flourish, because the intention is not for you to flourish.
The intention is for you to be controlled by the
trauma and the fear.
Speaker 7 (02:58:32):
So you can keep going to them to learn how
to cope.
Speaker 1 (02:58:37):
Oh, thank you, because that's what we talk about here, solutions.
But back to the music industry for our young people,
and of course it's not all of them, just as
a minority then, but they make the loudest noise and
they get the most attention. Is that in itself a
psyops operation?
Speaker 7 (02:58:53):
Absolutely, the music, the entertainment industry, Hollywood music industry, all
of it and all that comes with it is a
suckubyss of parasitic, demonic, satanic energy. That's what it is,
and it needs us to function. That's what the music
(02:59:14):
industry is, or the entertainment industry or Hollywood.
Speaker 16 (02:59:17):
Holly Wood is based.
Speaker 7 (02:59:19):
Off of hollless Wood. The Hollless wood was used in
order to create or conjure magic, spell casting, all those
different things. It was a wine. That's where you get
Hollywood from. So when you deal with Hollywood, what are
you dealing with? Illusions? You're dealing with magic, You're dealing
(02:59:40):
with ritual, You're dealing with witchcraft, but on the disagreeable
side of it, because rich craft, ritual and all those
different things don't have to be something that is negative
and disagreeable or satanic and demonic. That's the side of
it that they choose to deal with because that's who
they are. They're cycle pass.
Speaker 1 (03:00:02):
But how do we get the ten away from the topic?
Are young people to understand what you just said? Did
they get in because they only seen it on the
superficial level. They only look at the fact they want
to hear the songs on the radio or in the clubs,
and they're getting paid a lot of money and they
like to flash, and the cycle continues. So how do
we get our young people to break that cycle?
Speaker 4 (03:00:20):
Brother Cidiki, Well, they can't.
Speaker 7 (03:00:22):
Just be people like me telling them. Their parents have
to Their parents have to learn this information and this knowledge,
this has to be something that our children are understanding
early early age. That's what needs to take place, not
(03:00:42):
when they're twenty one. Now they're trying to get into
the industry and that's where they focus, and they've already
been programmed to think the industry is what it is. No,
there needs to be conversations as early as they're able
to say music industry, as early as they're able to
say rapper or singer or musician or whatever it is.
(03:01:04):
That's the issue. And I'm not telling people, of course
not to be artists. I'm an artist. But it doesn't
have to be done that way. That's what I'm saying.
It doesn't have We don't have to depend on the
system and white people to do things. This is what
people need to understand. I've written eighteen books independently, eighteen
(03:01:25):
my classes, my courses. You don't have nothing to do
with white funding or anything.
Speaker 6 (03:01:30):
I do it and my team we do it.
Speaker 7 (03:01:34):
So it can be done. You just have to have
to have the desire to do it and know that
you can do it. But again, what does that come
back to mindset?
Speaker 1 (03:01:46):
Yeah, and let me ask you this stuff, because we
always talk about solutionship, any success stories, any the people
who have taken the courses that they can. You share
any of the changes that you know they've made, whether.
Speaker 7 (03:02:01):
It's the courses, whether it's the one on ones all
over the world, their success stories. I'd rather people tell
you the success stories themselves, but yeah, all over the world,
nothing but transformation. You take my courses and do the
one on one. As long as you do your part,
you're going to get the results. It's that simple. You
(03:02:22):
just have to do your part.
Speaker 16 (03:02:26):
Period.
Speaker 7 (03:02:26):
Any of my students, my clients, they'll tell you what
I do is proving, it is documented. This is not
something I'm trying. You understand, this is not something I'm trying.
This is something that we know works over and over again.
And the system can be duplicated. It's the empowered technology
mastery system or empower technology.
Speaker 6 (03:02:48):
For sure.
Speaker 7 (03:02:49):
It is duplicatable, meaning when people work one on one
with me, or what people learn from my classes and
getting the books and things of that nature, you can
duplicate that through your children, or through your spouse, or
through your nieces and nephews or whomever it is, or
just another group of people who you may be teaching.
Because what I deal with is not just dealing with
(03:03:09):
fear and trauma and those types of things. But I
deal with leadership. I deal with a lot of different
things because of my life. My teachers, the Astraquasis who's
still with us, the Mary Baraccas who's an ancestor, the
Steve Cookley who's an ancestor. They taught and trained me
very well, does Zeno Wilson Debriano, who.
Speaker 8 (03:03:30):
Is still with us.
Speaker 7 (03:03:31):
Like so these are different types of people in different
areas who mastered their area.
Speaker 4 (03:03:38):
They taught me, well, how did you get in? What
made you take this road?
Speaker 7 (03:03:47):
What made me take this road is what I've learned
through organizing and activism. The major pitfall that I kept
running into, and I don't care what organization I was
dealing with, I dealt with tons of them. What I
can y running into is the lack of personal growth
and self development and healing. So what does that mean?
(03:04:07):
That means that what did people bring into those organizations,
those meetings, the activism, and all those different things. They
brought in their insecurity, their low self esteem, their self sabotaged,
their jealousy, their envy. That's what people were bringing into
those infrastructures. So if you're bringing those things into the infrastructures.
What does that do to the organization? You see what
(03:04:29):
I'm saying. Every time we're going to run into the
same situations because of that lack of growth and in
those organizations, ninety nine percent of the time, they don't
have anything functioning in those organizations to deal with people
and their traumas and fears and the need for healing
and personal growth or transformation. So that's what hut me on. Okay, Yeah, because.
Speaker 1 (03:04:54):
We run out of time, I want you, I want
you to give you your information and if you'ld do that,
let me just share address. Stud and the Ambia called
and tomorrow we're going to have the ambassador to the
University of African People's a onerzation. She's the ambassador to
that group who's going to join us from the gambit.
It's going to join us tomorrow. But Sadiki, how can
folks reach you?
Speaker 7 (03:05:16):
Yes, Sadiq Bacari at hotmail dot com, Sadik s A
d I k I b A K A r I.
That's Sadiq Bakari at hotmail dot com, Sadeki Bacari one
word also Facebook, Instagram, same name Sadiq Bacari s A
d I k I b A k A r I
(03:05:37):
sad Q Bakari Uh Facebook, Sadeq Vacari Instagram. So send
me the emails. Let's get you enrolled in the courses.
Let's do the one on ones definitely. Let's make sure
you get these books and things of that. Appreciate your carl,
I appreciate the listeners. This is all in love. Don't
take anything I say personal. This is about love. This
is about us moving forward. This is about us being
(03:05:59):
great as you know that we've always been historically.
Speaker 4 (03:06:02):
And before you go the title of your latest book.
Speaker 7 (03:06:06):
Trauma a Motherboard of Technology. And you have to get
the book from me. I don't put my books on
Amazon or any of those places, so you have to
email me to get this work directly from me, and
email one more time real quick. Sadik s A d
I k I b A ka Ri Sadiki Bacari at
(03:06:30):
hotmail dot com.
Speaker 1 (03:06:32):
All right, thank you, brother Sidiki, thanks for all the
information you shared with us this morning. All right, family,
that's it for the day. All righty, class is dismissed.
Stay strong, stay positive, please please stay healthy. We'll see
you tomorrow morning six o'clock. Right, here in Baltimore on
ten ten WOLB, and also in the DMV on FM
ninety five point nine and AM fourteen fifty wol