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July 30, 2025 190 mins

Join us for an enlightening session with Master Herbalist and Metaphysician Doctah B! He will delve into the intricacies of the nervous system, explore emotional imbalances, and reveal how toxins are the hidden culprits behind many major diseases. Before we hear from Doctah B, don’t miss Sports Editor Dr. Edward Robinson, who will preview the highly anticipated NFL season and spotlight the thrilling WNBA face-off between Angel Reese and Caitlin Clark—bringing back memories of the iconic Bird and Magic rivalry. In addition, Chicago activist Pastor Anthony Williams will unveil details about his Civility March, set to begin this Friday, fostering important discussions about our community.

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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Check came. But let's go and find out what's going
on with this classroom door that Kevin is standing in
front of with the keys jangling. Good morning, Kevin grand Rising,
there's Kevin there. Hopefully we haven't lost Kevin.

Speaker 2 (00:18):
Uh yeah, yeah, Carl, I'm here.

Speaker 3 (00:20):
It just takes a couple of minutes to put everything.

Speaker 1 (00:23):
Together, finding those keys.

Speaker 3 (00:28):
And I don't know about you, but when you create
a new password, man, it's the changes the world. I
know when you have to change the password. And I
don't know how many people use this, but you know,
I have rules that I use to create new passwords
so that they're easy to remember. And now the new system,

(00:49):
they wanted a different style, a different sty out rule
of creating a password, so it's different to change your
whole format from a decade to now. I'm trying to
use a phrase, but remembering where the capital letter is
and where they exclamation point is it throws you off

(01:11):
a little bit.

Speaker 2 (01:12):
But that's why I was slow this morning.

Speaker 3 (01:15):
Yeah, it's a wonderful Wednesday, worry free Wednesday, though I
call it the thirtieth of July, when we made it
through another month with heat waves and thunderstorms and all
of that.

Speaker 2 (01:30):
But how are you feeling.

Speaker 1 (01:33):
I'm still learning. I'm still learning, Kevin, I'm still learning
this morning.

Speaker 3 (01:36):
Yeah, that's right, The cal Nelson Morning Show. University continues
with no graduation.

Speaker 1 (01:41):
Insight, right, continuous, just continuously learning.

Speaker 2 (01:47):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (01:48):
But you know that's what Needly Full of taught us.
You know, that's what life is all about.

Speaker 3 (01:51):
Yeah, just keep keep learning, keep learning. That's that's right, man.
And because life will give you a pop quiz without warning,
it will man. Speaking of pop quizzes, Man, the tsunami
waves reach Hawaii and West Coast hours after a magnitude
eight point eight earthquake off of Russia.

Speaker 2 (02:12):
You seem to know more about that.

Speaker 1 (02:15):
Yeah, they've did discontinued. It's they've downgraded now to an
advisory because it was a warning, which means, you know, hey,
seek higher ground in Hawaii, and then it was also
up for the entire West Coast, and the folks out
there were concerned, you know, because they thought it was
really going to reach them. Apparently it's not going to
reach it. If it does, it's gonna, you know, be
great for surfers for the for the most part, on

(02:38):
the West Coast and probably in Hawaii as well. It'll
be great for surface. But but you know it's not
as a magnitude they expected when they first announced it
late last night or for our time or early in
the evening at West coast time.

Speaker 3 (02:52):
You and you're saying great for surfers, because what the
waves are gonna be.

Speaker 1 (02:57):
The waves they're gonna do all these huge waves. You know,
the surface like these these waves to ride those waves.
So that's what that's what they're anticipating. You know, they're
gonna be a lot of them out there on the
West coast, uh today.

Speaker 2 (03:11):
Taking their lives into their own hands.

Speaker 1 (03:14):
That's the fund And then why too, they'll be they'll
be surfing because of these huge waves. Man. They like
to ride the waves. And the higher, the stronger they are,
the better for the surface.

Speaker 3 (03:25):
Okay, well, painting then, I guess that's that's to say.
And speaking of athletes, Olympian Dominique Dolls is expanding her
gyms across the d m V.

Speaker 2 (03:39):
She's opening one in Rockville.

Speaker 1 (03:41):
This morning, and oh good for her.

Speaker 3 (03:44):
That seems to be yeah right, she's laying out her legacy.
And I don't think running a gym is that easy.

Speaker 1 (03:52):
No, it's not. But what it is that people are
more concerned about staying in shape these days, so she
should do pretty well. You know, people are all concerned.
You know, before it was just an avant god, it
was just you know a few Celebrits who were doing it.
But I think everybody now wants to stay in shape,
so she should do well.

Speaker 2 (04:10):
Well, I know I do.

Speaker 3 (04:11):
I make it a point man, you know, to try
and you know, stay fit and observe what you eat mostly,
you know, and observe your environment. Don't let the environment
you know, necessarily oppress you. And so yeah, you're right.

Speaker 1 (04:31):
Yeah, the only thing is that many of the gyms
took a hit during COVID, like many other businesses, because
you know, the gyms are swear, did you sweaty and
towels and the more confined space. You know, they took
a hit and many people, myself never went back to
the gym after COVID. But yeah, she should do well
because most people are now going back to the gyms.

Speaker 3 (04:53):
Yeah, yeah, there's a thought there. And then of course
the home equipment picked up.

Speaker 1 (04:59):
During people started working out at home.

Speaker 3 (05:02):
That idea and let's move along then, and there was
another great story I wanted to share with you. Pardon
me fishing around this morning.

Speaker 4 (05:14):
Man.

Speaker 1 (05:14):
All right, let me ask you if you saw this
story about Donald Trump he's quote unquote seriously considering her
pardon for for puffy sentence.

Speaker 2 (05:22):
I didn't say anything about that.

Speaker 3 (05:24):
You know, I've I've got a PhD In looking things
up on Google, though, So.

Speaker 1 (05:31):
Yeah, check that out because uh, he's uh Diddy has
been asking for one before, and you know they were
friends and then the Wrinklers though the fifty supposed he
wrote a letter to Trump and tell Trump not to
pardon Diddy. So you know, all that intrigue is going on,
and and you wrap around this in the backdrop of

(05:53):
the Epstein uh story that's still you know, hanging over
the White House. You know, you'll see see if he
does that, because then you know, people say, well, yeah,
what's the deal with you guys? The party days with Epstein,
Diddy and all of that. That that probably may draw
more attention to uh, to Trump and his friendship with
with Epstein, But we'll see how it works out.

Speaker 2 (06:16):
You sure that's a real story, man, I saw.

Speaker 1 (06:19):
Oh yeah, it's well look on the X please. That's
that's you know, that's a trumpet organ Come on, man,
that's that's that's it's stay musk.

Speaker 2 (06:32):
You know.

Speaker 1 (06:34):
AX is kind of like Fox News. Come on, go
to Deadline, Hollywood Deadline. You see the story. That's that's
Hollywood News.

Speaker 3 (06:42):
Okay, here Deadline according to Deadline dot Com. Okay, and
they got the the commercial there. I think they're catching
on to how we do the news here, man. Oh yeah,
throw in these obstacles.

Speaker 2 (07:00):
You know.

Speaker 3 (07:01):
Trump is now seriously considering parton for Sean Combs ahead
of sentencing. White House officially says nothing. See the White
House officially says nothing.

Speaker 2 (07:14):
But isn't Trump the White House? No, he's not the
White House? Right?

Speaker 3 (07:17):
Donald Trump is weighing and giving Sean Combs a full
presidential partner ahead of convicted Bad Boy Records founders sentencing
last year, nearly two months after Trump publicly entertained the
notion of partnering in the Oval office, a comprehensive get
out of jail card for Combs is being seriously considered.

Speaker 1 (07:38):
Oh yeah, and Puffy has asked for to be released.
He asked for bail. It's just two days ago he
asked to get bail before sentencing. So we'll see. Just
dropping Trump's name, we'll see if that if that influences
the people who are gonna sentence him. So we'll see
what happens.

Speaker 2 (07:57):
Man.

Speaker 1 (07:58):
And he probably would have gotten it if it was
for Epstein, because all this brings back. You know, you're
gonna pardon Puffy. Epstein's a partnering crime. She's asking for
a partner as well, Gilane Maxwell, So you know, all
of these other things coming into play, and and and
Trump has been trying to get away from the Epstein
cloud for the last two weeks. And even with the

(08:20):
help of Congress, you know, they adjourned because because there's
too much pressure and they wanted to call her for
you know, to find out what she knows. So hey,
this this that may be the only hold up in
Puffy or Sean Diddy Combs, who everyone to call him
getting his presidential partner. We'll see how he works out.

Speaker 3 (08:37):
Though, well, I say good for him, good for him.
There's we need positivity in life as much as possible.

Speaker 2 (08:47):
I suppose.

Speaker 1 (08:50):
Kevin being facetious again. All right, Kevin, thank you sir.

Speaker 3 (08:53):
Yeah, I'm still searching for the number of our first guests.
So you're gonna have to You're gonna to fact that too, man,
still wor okay, this brand new, this brand new password. Man,
And let that be a warning to everyone listening. Make
sure you keep your new password posted somewhere, you know.

Speaker 1 (09:13):
And and and they they they they sent me that too.
And when I was going, okay, what Kevin is talking
about the company, if you know, every now and then
they ask you to change your password, and they give
you these restraints, you know, on how to formulate your
password and what you should do. And it's really, you know,

(09:33):
for the folks on the outside, it's really intricate the
way they want you to set up the passwords. It
really is, because because I had to do it, you know,
and I was like, oh no, and I got lost
how to call tech support to help me out.

Speaker 3 (09:48):
Well, the thing is is that, you know, just for sake,
continue the conversation. I had a method that was designed
by a tech company, you know, dare I say, ten
years ago, and it works. It was a fool proof system.
And yet now the new system that they want you

(10:09):
to do and is a whole different system, almost as
if they said, Kevin, you can't use your formula anymore.

Speaker 2 (10:16):
You know, that's what it feels like.

Speaker 3 (10:18):
And of course everybody takes it personal, but it feels
like they're saying, no, no, create a new system.

Speaker 2 (10:24):
Here's what we want.

Speaker 3 (10:25):
You to do now, and it's not as memorable as
and of course that's the point of a password, right
you want to make it not.

Speaker 2 (10:33):
Easy to crack.

Speaker 3 (10:35):
So this one is out there, man, it's out there.

Speaker 2 (10:40):
So pardon my delay this morning.

Speaker 1 (10:45):
Yeah, you know, it's interesting, Kevin, because you know, they
want you to come up with it with you know,
and sometimes the computer will ask you if you like to,
they'll create a password for you. Did you get that
as well.

Speaker 3 (10:54):
I don't go with those because now those are real abstract,
you know, tracked symbols and numbers and digits and and
there's nothing to correlate with, you know, with who you
are or you see, because to me, it's got to
have some relevance, something that makes it make sense for me,

(11:15):
you see. But if it's you know, two plus seventeen
and hashtag, you know.

Speaker 1 (11:22):
But you know, you know, it brings you know, before,
just what was life before we had to have passwords?
You know, and just think about all the passwords that
you have to have, I mean just just about everything.
You've got to have a password, and then you've got
to figure out how to remember all these passwords.

Speaker 5 (11:39):
Yeah.

Speaker 3 (11:40):
Before and before we had passwords, what there was the
yellow page book that the phone number that they would
throw right on your on your front porch. And now
people are worried about identity then, but back then they were.

Speaker 2 (11:53):
They were giving away your identity right.

Speaker 1 (11:56):
And now every person has about two or three more
than one phone number because you got your you got
your phone number, and you got facts received number, and
the facts is going out of style, you know. And
just everybody's got a phone now, you know, trickles down.
That's your identity, your phone.

Speaker 2 (12:14):
Well yeah, yeah, it's good.

Speaker 1 (12:17):
Yeah. Your phone is also your camera, your recorder. It's
just so many things in there, your address book, your
roller DEXs and everything's rolled up into the phone these days.

Speaker 3 (12:29):
Thanks to Steve Jobs, thank you what an innovation it was.
You made it to the telephone is your personal assistant
and everything. And meanwhile we got Pastor Anthony Williams, thankful,
good here to share.

Speaker 2 (12:43):
But that's his opinion. Thank you for your time card.

Speaker 1 (12:47):
Thanks Kevin, work on that. Pastor at fourteen, after the
top of the family Grand Rising Pastor Williams. Why you,
brother Nelson, how are you feeling this morning? Sir?

Speaker 5 (13:00):
Hey, Uh, we're both hands great.

Speaker 1 (13:06):
Uh tell us about because you're having a march coming
up shortly, can you tell us how that came about?

Speaker 5 (13:13):
Uh? Well, August is National Civility Month, and America does
not really acknowledge nor celebrate the significance of what this
month is all about in terms of civility. And so

(13:33):
this coming Friday, the beginning of Civility Month, August, the
first we are going to have a major press comes
to announcing our Civility March walk through Illinois through the
month of August, and we will be going around the state,
you know, talking about civility, the impact that it has

(13:56):
on our communities, et cetera, et cetera, et cetera. The
key thing about stivility, it is the chief solution to
addressing the disease of bilence in this nation.

Speaker 1 (14:10):
Now, not only if you saw the reports, but this
is shown that crime is being is dropping in our
major cities across the country. Do you think people, especially
in our neighborhoods, are pastor with them? Do you think
people are are waking up to the fact that, you know,
what you've been talking about civility and people are talking
about brotherhood, and you know, do you think people are

(14:31):
you know, I guess the clashes between individuals of simmered
down a bit. Are you seeing that in Chicago for example.

Speaker 5 (14:39):
Well, it's always good to hear about that type of progress,
But we need more because you continue to see each
and every day some violent, horrific event take place in
this country. And so, but the key thing is that
civility needs to be a part of it. We need

(15:02):
to be aware, that needs to be more awaredness. We
want to bring more awaredness to what civility means, to
the consciousness of the people. You know, our decisions need
to understand that we need more policies that are our
civility based, not politically based. And so civility is a

(15:23):
wonderful instrument, a wonderful tool, a wonderful practice if we
put it into practice, if we get our institutions to
retool themselves based around policies of civility. Because of the
current climate and the current administration, you know, they are

(15:44):
uncivil and very violent towards American citizens. Right now. That's
why civility is so necessary in terms of us connecting
each other, our humanness, what it means to be human,
and the right to respect all people.

Speaker 1 (16:04):
Right and hold that though right there, we've got to
take our first break. Oh, we come back though, Pastor Williams,
can you explain what civility is? We always have some
new listeners and we're hearing you for the first time,
but you've been on here talking about civility and some
people want what is he talking about? What does he
mean by civility? Can you explore that when we get
back in family too, you've got a question for Pastor Williams.

(16:24):
Reach out to us at eight hundred four or five
zero seventy eight seventy six and we'll taket phone calls
next and Grand Rising family. Thanks for waking up with
us on day Wednesday morning, it's a hun day or

(16:45):
that means we're halfway through the work week of our
guest from Chicago. We have Pastor Anthony Williams. He's an
activist in the Windy City and he's been telling us
about civility. He's been on here several times talking about
civility and August is civility month. So before we left,
I was asking him if you could find civility for us,
for the folk, especially folks. You're hearing you for the
first time, Pastor Williams. What is civility?

Speaker 5 (17:07):
Well, civility for me, And there's other disfinitions by others
if you look it up. But civility for me is
as a psychological, sociological, spiritual concept, psychologically respect for one's self.

(17:32):
When one respects oneself, one respects others, You have manners,
you have values. All that comes with self respect and
self respect for others. It's it's the it's the mindset
of being able to I'll use I'll use a term

(17:58):
that trist use love God would all your heart, mind
and soul, and your neighbor as yourself. That's civility. But
it starts with self respect and self Yeah, it starts
right there. It starts right there within your own heart.
That I can have a conflict with a neighbor, but

(18:20):
yet I can find resolved. That's the form of civility.
Just self respect the neighbors. We can agree to disagree.
So that's very important for one's psychological health in terms
of how one feels about themselves. Some people can be
uncivil towards themselves. When you talk about the sociological component

(18:47):
for civility and you look at government, the role of
government is for us to be a civil society. But
when you have uncivil vote leadership, authorwardy, you have an
uncivil society. Casing point what you see as relates to

(19:10):
the Trump administration, he is uncivil and this energy, this
air he puts out creates this uncivilness, this uncertainty, and
this unstableness that we are facing in America today. America
right now is very is very sick right now. That's

(19:31):
why civility is so important that we must be a
civil society. If our government is not giving giving a protection,
giving direction, and giving correction by way of correct laws,
then we're uncivil. That's the role of government. And you

(19:52):
have an uncivil government that pushes this high behavior. It
goes to the partments because let's face it, human beings,
impressionable creatures. They see something and automatically people start doing it.

Speaker 6 (20:07):
And so oh, let me tell me.

Speaker 1 (20:09):
Here, though, a pastor twenty four minutes after the top
of the our family just waking up, Pastor Anthony Williams
is with us out of Chicago. It's an activist pastor
in the Windy City here and next month, August, in
a couple of days, we're going to start August Is
in August is Civility Awareness Month, and Pastor Williams has
been on a crusade to push civility in this country.

(20:29):
But my question to you, how can you talk about,
you know, America being civil when America was founded on violence?
As h Rap Brown said, you know, it's almost as
finances as a cherry pie. It's part of the American fabric.
It's built in. This is how the country is founded.
You know, you get when you talk about civility and

(20:49):
people will say, probably thinking you're challenging their rights to
the Second Amendment. What do you say to folks who
believe in that when you talk about civility, you know
you're talking about, you know, stepping on the Second Amendment rights.

Speaker 5 (21:02):
No, I'm say anything about anything with guns. I'll say
any about guns. I don't never tell the person to
put away their guns. But a legal gun owner is
basically a civil person, and they're not getting the gun
to just go out here and random to shoot people.
First of all, violence is a disease, and our elected

(21:27):
officials have yet to come up to grip with the
idea that there's a solution and it lies and civility.
But you had to expose the disease. My experience and
what I've learned over the years and addressing this issue
is that if you're going to deal with violence, then

(21:49):
you have to develop policies of civility. To civility, but
you've got to acknowledge that you're violent and violence is
just not gun violence. That's where we get all confused.
The word violence means to violate, to violate. That's why
you need civility to start people from violating. You know,

(22:11):
what we are experiencing is not normal, should not be normal,
and should not be accepted in any civil any civil society.
If we are to evolve as a civilization, as a nation,
as the world, if we do not address the issue
of violence correctly in this nation, we're doomed and it affects

(22:31):
all institutions. So we know America was built on violence.
That has to be a radical change and the institutional
attitudes right now, we see the violation of a government
trying to push us back into segregation. If they could
trying to erase history. Well, that's a violation and that's

(22:53):
uncivil behavior. So you have to call it the.

Speaker 4 (22:56):
Way it is.

Speaker 5 (22:58):
When you start calling things by proper names, people will
do better. So you need civility to keep a society stabilized,
to keep a society moving forward. That the fact that
we can agree to disagree, but at the same time,
I would respect you just as long as you don't
violate me. So I'm saying any by way of common sense,

(23:23):
any intelligent you cannot continue to live like this in America,
with the type of uncivil behavior that's going on in
our society. So it has to be addressed properly. But
what you have to point out to America, when we
address violence correctly, that's where civility comes in. That's the solution,

(23:45):
because you got to recognize violence as a disease. And
that's a scientific fact that the scientific community, the epidemiologists,
the medical community said, this is what this is going on.
It's a disease.

Speaker 1 (23:59):
Again, Pastor Williams twenty eight after the top of the family,
just checking in or just waking up. Actually it is
Past Anthony Williams out of Chicago, August is a Civility Month,
and this is you know, many of you have heard
him before. He's been pushing this. But past I don't
hear that from the elected officials. I don't hear that
from the pastors. I don't hear from from the aside

(24:20):
from yourself. I'm not hearing it from the clergy. What's
missing here? Why? Why? Why are the silence on discussing this?
And we saw, we saw what happened in New York.
That happened a couple of days ago, shoot out in Manhattan.
There was another one in California. It seems like, you know,
right now, when these things happen, we're so anaesthetizy. We
just we just Usually it's just oh somebody got shot,

(24:42):
oh how many Okay, and we move on. Why aren't
Why isn't it being disgusted at a higher level? I
guess that's my question to you.

Speaker 5 (24:49):
Well, because of the fact that you know, virus is
big business man, virus is big in America is probably
the most violent so on this earth. We glorify violence,
We love it. Everything we do is built around violence.
That's the problem in America. We love violence too much.

(25:11):
We can't wait for the NF NFL season start, So
folks who start banging each other. I mean, you know,
case in point, what you saw in New York the
other day. You the man walking the NFL headquarters say,
I checked my brain out. I played football. I think
I got ct he or whatever they call that disease

(25:32):
that they get from. Can't discover the disease until you're dead.
So were violent culture. We're vioting culture. So we had
to slow it down. We really had to slow it
down and talk about the importance of civility and the
importance of saying, you know what, I can never be

(25:52):
what I to be till you become what you are
to be. That's it. That's it. Staying in our lane,
learning how to be come on, cool and collective. If
you're in a conflict, uh, don't start cussing. You have
to think about what you're thinking about. So it's very
important right now that we be sound minded in our

(26:13):
thinking because of the times that we're living in. Don't panic.
Don't panic now. For many of us and in faith
based community, we know that we believe that God or
all Lah will see us through. Yes I believe in
that too. But at the same time, everybody don't believe
what you believe. But I think everybody can agree that

(26:34):
we can be civil, that we can't allow the type
of behavior that's taking place and no manners in a
society where we don't respect each other. Well, you know,
we can just rob and rape and do what we
know that's that ain't cool. That ain't cool at all.
So but to get people to civility, we got to

(26:54):
let we gotta let them know. Okay, how we get
is recognizing there's a problem out there called violence and
the reason why things are so unstable because this disease exists,
and we need a national plan of civility in this nation.
And so it don't take nothing to do right, brother Nelson.

(27:16):
You know, so all this first we're going to be
on the steps of Saint Mary Assumption's Church in dunk And, Illinois.
That's Pope Neo's boyhood church, which is closed now, which
will probably become an historical landmark. But the symbolicness is
that because this Pope has been very clear in terms

(27:37):
of his civil actions, in terms of his comments on
what's going on in the world, the violence that's taking
place in Gaza. You know, I like his social justice positions.
We're similar that and so what better place to talk
about walking through we want to do use Illinois because
the goal is is that we were pushing for the

(28:00):
state of Illinois to develop an eleanor Office of Civility.
But what happened the time and the politics got in
the way. So it's time for us to push it forward.
By the way in Illinois, Brother Nelson at South Suburban
College where I'm a trustee, when I first came on board,

(28:22):
i shared it with them, you know, this whole concept
of civility and a document into the curriculum, the culture
of the culture of the school. And right now they
have for a whole month, South Suburban College will be
celebrating Civility Month with various activities. So you just got
to keep working, you know, it's always right.

Speaker 1 (28:45):
And let me come here again at twenty eight away
from the top of our doctor, Pastor Williams, because you
mentioned you're going to start the church, the church where
the current pope start with a story in Illinois. But
the churches, it's in the ironic. Some churches, well, many
churches have secure they have off duty police officers patrolling
the sanctuary. Is this indicative of what this country's called about.

(29:08):
You go to church and you're working with it and
are not you're gonna get shot or someone's gonna pop
up one off on the pastor or or the mom.

Speaker 5 (29:17):
But hey man, it's everywhere, it's everywhere. You can't you
ain't safe even in your own home. See if we
can't accept this type of behavior, and if you don't
intelligently speak off to it, an off of solution is
going to continue to do what it does wrong, gonna
do wrong until you stop it. And my objective is

(29:37):
that I want you use a perfect example, the ugly
history of segregation and how we were able to move
from the back of the bus at the front of
the buses black folks, is because of non violence. You
say what you want to say. The highest form of
civility is nonviolence. King understood the strategy and the tactics

(29:59):
of what that would do, but the objective was to
change the law, and that was accomplished by him and
his cohorts. Fast forward, here we are facing this strange monster,
looking at the storm that's going on in the matha,
looking at the sicknesses around us. So how do we

(30:21):
approach the status quot how do we address this, So
we start talking about civility. See when you start making this,
when you know when you used to put that energy
out there, man, it's gonna come back, right. The resistance
is gonna always be there. But I say to people,
do you want what's best for you and your family?
So we had to be a civil society. Folk can't

(30:44):
just be running a monk. But that's come with self
respect and respect for others. No one is better than another,
that's it. We're all flesh and blood and we will die.
So do the best you can while you're on this earth.
And so we've got to be civil. When we see
the behavior patterns, the normal, the more rays of the society,

(31:08):
you see the sickness. So we gotta incurbage people to heal.
And civility is a chieve measurement towards killing.

Speaker 1 (31:19):
Got you twenty five away from the top of that away,
Pastor Anthony Williams, past Pastor Williams. But it comes to
conflict resolutions. You know, you might just brush somebody or
step on their toe accidentally, and they want to fight,
They want to start to throw down in that moment,
in that instant, because it's a micro second that you

(31:40):
have to think, should I swing? Should I walk away?
How do you deal with that? Do you teach that
to people how to handle that kind of behavior when
they're confronted with stuff like that, or because it's a
micro second, you got to make up your mind immediately
what you're going to do. You're one second away from
probably getting shadows, starting to fight, or one second walking away.
How do you deal with that? Conflict resolution is ship.

Speaker 5 (32:03):
You had to you had to disengage from from the conflict,
and you have to flip it. You have to turn
to something else. You had to walk away. Now, if
a person becomes physical, then you got to I'm pretty
sure most people, you know, I wouldn't tell people hit
down and take a beating. But the key thing is
is that what you want to do is be You

(32:24):
want to destabilize it, immediately, refuse it right away, and
and that. But it's a discipline, you know, it's a
it's a it's it's a it's a mental reflex like anything.
It's a discipline like getting up and showering in the
morning and brushing teeth, the blah blah blah blah, you know,

(32:45):
et cetera. It's a discipline, and so we had to
put this discipline in our curriculum and our institutions, et cetera,
et cetera, et cetera. I'm never telling anybody, and not
to defend themselves, but I'm telling people that in things
like that, you have to be able to know how
to disarm it.

Speaker 1 (33:08):
All. Right, hold up, thought right there, We've gotta step
aside and get caught up with the latest news, trafficking,
weather in our different cities. Family just waking up. I
guess is past Anthony Williams August is civility awareness a month.
He's given us the lowdown on it. You've got some
questions about civility. Why you should be you know why?
He says? Do you supporting him because he's and he's
going on the march as well to on the score
of the effect that the civility can do as far

(33:30):
as violence is concerning this country. What are your thoughts though?
I want to hear from you at eight hundred and
four or five zero seventy eight to seventy sixth and
we'll take you phone calls after the latest news and
traffic update.

Speaker 5 (33:40):
It's next.

Speaker 7 (33:41):
Now back to the Carl Nelson show.

Speaker 1 (34:04):
Thank Grand Rising Family, thanks for waking up with us
on this hun day. We're halfway through the work week.
It's actually the last Wednesday in July twenty twenty five
with our guest, the Pastor Anthony Williams, and he's talking
about civility, of course, because this August is Civil Civility Month,
Civility Awareness Month. Let me get that right, and this
is what he's sharing with us this morning. You want

(34:25):
to get in on this discussion, reach out to us
at eight hundred four five zero seventy eight seventy six
before we go back to him, let me just remind you.
Coming up later this morning, we're gona speak with Master
Oberlist and also metaphysician doctor b will be here. Before
we hear from doctor B, though, I want to talk
sports with Baltimore sports editor doctor Edward Robinson, and tomorrow
clinical psychologist doctor Jeromey Fox will join us. So if

(34:46):
you are in Baltimore, make sure you keep your radio
locked in real tight on ten ten WLB, or if
you're in the dmv R on FM ninety five point
nine and AM fourteen fifteen WL. All Right, Pastor Williams
tell us about what's some of the answer that taking
place for Civility Awareness Month in August.

Speaker 5 (35:05):
Well well at Souft Suburban College where our served as
a trustee, that they've got a number of things going on.
They've got kind of discussions on civility. They've got people
coming in and conducting forms in terms of you know,
how we interact with each other, so the how it

(35:28):
affects the our social structure, our everyday life, et cetera,
et cetera. You know, the key thing about civility is
that it develops one to think what a sound mind
we as human beings, our paradoxical creatures were messy creatures,
and so sound mindedness is ververy having a clear mind

(35:51):
of having ay. It raises one's consciousness and raises one's energy.
It makes one aware of the world that they live in.
And you see, you see the attributions in the beauty
in all human kind. But I will never forget my
blackness is I understand the position of the community from

(36:14):
whence I come from. And of course historically black folks
have been the most civil people in this country. We
had no choice. But right now when we see America
in the state that is in, we must address the
problem correctly by way of civility. But we have to

(36:35):
point out first that violence disease infectious but not contagious.
We had to continue to do simple education with people
what this violence is, what it means, what the word
violence means it self. It means to violate. So in America,
a nation that was built on a violence structure, is crumbling.

(36:58):
So the key thing is that we must we must
institute policies of civility because every institution in America has
violated black people in this country. I mean, America has
been extremely viding to black folks in this country and
that's they documented it. So here we are. We see

(37:21):
what's going on in America on limping and so we've
got to step up to the plate. So we're pushing civility.
These are elected officials. You all are too uncivil. This
is not the way government operates. This is not the
message you should be sent into the public. Shouldn't be doing.

Speaker 1 (37:39):
This, though, since you went to the political aspect of
it at thirteen away from the top, they are you
still considering running for office?

Speaker 5 (37:47):
Oh yes, I'm in candidate for the United States Senator
in the state of Illinois, and I can assure you.
As a matter of fact, I sent you the clips
and we're very fortunate to have we have a psychological edge.
They're not talking about that as Illinois because we got
a different type of message. And I tell people, I

(38:08):
open up. I say one of the reason why I'm
running is to do good. And number two, I address
the issue of violence. It's the number one problem of
the twenty first century. And if we don't address this
issue of violence correctly, we're doom. Nation in America is
a very violent place, and that's why it's so important

(38:30):
that we exercise civility. We just can't keep ignoring what's
happening because we're in a story.

Speaker 1 (38:37):
Yeah, letk what you went back to. It's centrigion now
that you're running for office. But you're out there in
Illinois Chicago area. You've got I know one of the
Jackson members of his family are thinking about running. Danny
Davis also thinking about running. The accongressman. Uh and they
have not a name, my identification. Are you concerned about
that they have some competition there?

Speaker 5 (38:57):
No, No, I'm running for the United States Senator Danny
fa I believe is getting ready to step down and
represent them. Leshan Ford is someone I believe he's supporting.
I support represent lashan Ford. I've heard the tales about
the return of Jesse Jackson Jr. In the second congressional

(39:19):
district that I live. I hope that's not true because
he was there for seventeen years and dead nothing. He'll
do nothing if he returns. That's nonsense. Right now, we
need civil minded leadership right now. We need committed people.
And don't worry about the money. If it's in your heart,

(39:40):
go do it.

Speaker 4 (39:40):
Have a plan.

Speaker 5 (39:41):
And you got to be different, So you can't be
the status quote candidate using their tactics. You have to
be different. You can't fight that fight. And so we're different.
And so yes, I talk about civility. I talk about
things that they can't talk about. And then thank God,
I'm in a state like Illinois. That's why we can

(40:03):
do what we're doing in the state of Illinois. That's
why we got the Ellinoris Health Reform Bill passed in
twenty twenty one, in which I introduced Governor J. B.
Prisker to sign the bill. In the state of Illinois,
violence has declared a health crisis, So you know that's
just a part of the work. But the work's not

(40:23):
done because now the key thing is is to get
people to understand that we've got to move towards civility.
We've got to move this nation towards civility. It's got
the record, it's got to come to terms with his behavior.
I mean, America is a sick place now, it's very
unhealthy place. But yet those of us out here, there's

(40:45):
a lot of people out here doing a lot of
great work, a lot of sound minded civil people doing
a lot of great work. And I encourage them to
keep doing the work. We need civil minded people to
raise the consciousness of his sick nation. Doing our little part,
and we're we're going to go through the state of
Illinois talking about stability what it means, but still educating

(41:07):
people while we're talking about civility. We talk about civility
because we want to be able to demonize, vilify and
destroy violence, call it for what it is. We're not
looking to build utopia, but we've got the cool us
out and thus far, when I look around the country,
we have been the most solution orientated on the task

(41:31):
of talking about violence as a disease, all.

Speaker 1 (41:36):
Right, not away from the top hel Let me ask
you this because a tweet saying a question for you.
A pastor with him said they want to know about
the church breaking. Did they actually break into your church?

Speaker 5 (41:47):
Oh uh, that happened. That happened back in the fall,
I think sometimes, Yeah, you know you talked to me
about before you know, we were blessed. We had insurance
and people from the community so kind, you know, helping
ones apart in Lutheran Church where I served that so
it was okay. As a matter of fact, they might

(42:09):
have did as a favor.

Speaker 4 (42:12):
What they do.

Speaker 1 (42:12):
Well me, it's this Was it the church breaking or
was it the what happened to your son that it
prompted you to get on this jump into this lane
about civility and nonviolence.

Speaker 5 (42:24):
Well, the bottom line is is that in my journey
and dealing with the issue of violence, I got a
grant from a place called wheat Ridge Ministry. And nobody
at this time in twenty eight you know, people with
this all over the place just talking about it was
the gun. It was the gun and the gun. So

(42:45):
this this grant allowed me to begin to research and
pull information from the CDC in terms of what this
is because you know, you got to tell people what
is by this? You know, what does it mean to people?
I mean, I don't care what a person's educational status is.
They see it, they see it with just they see

(43:05):
it with one brush. Violence is because the guns. Uh huh, No,
it's not. Violence is because it's a disease. And the
word violence means to violate and anytime you violates someone.

Speaker 1 (43:27):
Have we lost Pastor Williams? Hopefully we haven't lost it.
Sounds like his phone his line dropped years. Yeah, because
it won't ask him about violence. Because you know, when
we talk about violence, where we think about you know,
guns and that and fires, but also violence is domestic violence,
also emotional violence as well. It covers a lot of areas.
And I know Black ones for a Positive Change that

(43:49):
they do a big thing about violence. They have a
whole month dedicated to nonviolence. So maybe he can hook
up with them and you know, and help them and
their crusade. But again, if youtures join his family, sticks
away from the top, they out. I guess the pastor
Anthony Williams out of Chicago and he's doing a march
for civility. He's going to march because next month is
Civility Awareness Month. He's been banging his drum about civility

(44:12):
for quite some time. Pastor Williams, you're back with us.

Speaker 5 (44:16):
Oh yeah, I'm back with your brother.

Speaker 1 (44:18):
Yeah, go ahead and finish your thought.

Speaker 5 (44:20):
No. No, there's a lot of people doing great work, man,
to address the issue of violence. But what they all
of them don't know are some of them refusal though
or don't want to know, is that you can't solve
a problem unless you know what you're fighting, and you're
dealing with the disease. Once you start talking about it

(44:42):
as a disease. Look, when I talk to anyone, no
matter what their age is, and when I point out
to them and show them that this is a disease,
their whole attitude changes. Their whole attitude changes. So we've
got to educate the public that violence is a disease

(45:04):
and sexious but not contagious. How you cool it out
is with civility.

Speaker 1 (45:09):
But I ask you this that five ways in the time.
It's not a get out of a jail card. He says, Oh, man,
that was violent because I got the disease. You know,
I'm a sexual produit because I got a sexual disease
or my thief because I'm a kleptomaniac. Is that given
an excuse for violence.

Speaker 5 (45:29):
No, we ain't gonna You don't let it. You don't
let it get that extreme. It's not that extreme because
people still have to be accountable for their behavior. But
we know more than ever before, the mental health of
America is not healthy. Right now. We see people doing

(45:49):
strange things every day every day. But see when you
begin to implement policy, it has an impact on people's
behavior all the time, all the time, all the time.
So the thing is is that, but when we've gotta

(46:10):
we got to stop being so in love with violence
in this country. That's our biggest problem. America's is the
most violent place probably on theirs, America and being Russia.
So here we are and the in this paradox, and
we can't just allow this to continue to us that

(46:32):
it has to be addressed. You have to call it
by his name. That's it, that's just it called it.
This is what's going on in America right now.

Speaker 1 (46:41):
And my question is the pastor how are you going
to change the hearts and minds of people who've it's
so part of American culture, you know, people. I've seen
people who relocated. These are some Europeans and one of
one of the things they said they didn't want their
children to be shot in school, so they because there's
so many school shootings at the time, they moved to Europe.
How are you going to change people's minds, because that's

(47:05):
as I mentioned that America's created on violence. But I'm
looking at the clocket. We've got to check the traffic
and weather. I'll let you respond when we get back,
but we got to check the traffic and weather out
different cities three minutes away from the top of the family.
You want to get in on this conversation about violence
or civility. It passed the Anthony Williams reach out to
us at eight hundred and four or five zero seventy
eight to seventy six, and well take your phone calls.

(47:25):
After the traffic and weather update, it's next around rising family.
Thanks of waking up with us on this Wednesday morning,
hump Day. We're halfway through the work week and two
minutes after the top day with our guest from Chicago
past Anthony Williams. He's been on a crusade for civility.
He's going to use this crusade now to move in
at least attempt to get into the US Senate. He's

(47:48):
going to use an move into politics with it. And
we were talking about civility because August it's a civility
awareness month. So my question to him before we left
for the traffic update was, how are you going to
you know, how do you intend to change the hearts
and minds of people which you know, violence of this
country is built on violence. We look at AI now
coming in. We look at the computers of the games

(48:08):
that these youngsters are playing, and they are all so
many of them are very violent games that they're playing,
and it appeals to them. So how are you gonna
make that change, Pastor Williamson?

Speaker 5 (48:18):
Education, Education, education, and collaboration. Those two things are essential.
You know, people are always putting out their propaganda, right,
but people always putting our propaganda every day. So you've
got to put a message out that's distinct and clear.
You got you got you gotta villainize violence. You gotta

(48:41):
let people know. Look at y'all, this is a disease infectious,
but not two changes. It's a disease and it's affecting us.
It is a second, our total existence because we won't
acknowledge it for what it is. That's why we have
the CDC, which they're trying to do. They're trying to

(49:01):
dismantle and and just give you a false information. That's
why you have the medical community and say this is
what this is. So when the CDC in the medical community,
long before Trump declared this the disease, public officials should
have been on it, but they want on it because
they're agenda was something else. The thing is America. If

(49:25):
we live in America, we need to keep we need
to make it healthy best we can. I ain't looking
for you topia. I know that we live in a
sinful world, because that's the real issue. But at the
same time, our children do not deserve this uncivil world
that we're living in where you've got a person in

(49:46):
the White House or whatever you call that place preaching hate,
being uncivil, and every action a senator Congress uncivil. So
there got to be an example. All we need is
want to and I think we've got it in Illinois,
and because we have an education and INSTITUTIONE sell you
need is one example in the state of Illinois and

(50:08):
South Suburban College, the institution has made a civility a
part of the curriculum, and they understand in order to
be able to educate the students, it's so important that
they be able to have a civil reflex, you know,
and it strengthens you as a person, but also as

(50:29):
a citizen.

Speaker 4 (50:31):
Citizens.

Speaker 5 (50:32):
Citizens are stepping up everywhere now, resistant and standing, because
if you want to republic to stand, then you've got
to do what you need to do. We're doing our part,
and I'm saying, hey, ho, hey up, let me do
my little part right here. And my little part is
to expose violence as a disease and to continue to

(50:54):
push people towards an understanding of why they should be
civil and why must live in a civil society.

Speaker 1 (51:03):
All right, at six, after the top that I'll be
we're getting ready to speak with Professor Robinson about sports.
Before we do that, though, you're having a march for awareness.
Can you tell us give us the information about the march?

Speaker 5 (51:15):
Oh yeah, August the August, the first we will be
announcing our Civility March to the state of Illinois. As
we begin the march, the first place we're going to
go is we're going to end up at is in
Hopskin Park, pen Brook, Illinois. Now that's a predominant black

(51:36):
farming community. But you'll find something interesting. For twenty seven years,
brother Nelson, they've been doing the Markers Guarding Festival twenty
seven years and people come from around the world and
the Caribbeans and around the country, and they've invited me
down there to be a special guest speaker. And that's

(51:57):
a great honor man to be able to say something
as it relates to Marcus Garvey and the topic that
they want me to be speaking on, which is truth.
And so I'm looking forward to that. And then we're
moving into East Saint Louis de Corn, Illinois. You know,
rural parts of Illinois. You know, talking with farmers. You

(52:18):
know farmers are concerned because you know the state of
Illinois's corn and so you've got to go and talk
to people and share the message in terms of you
know where they at. But our message is that we
want this nation to move towards civility. And that's not

(52:40):
acting much, but we know you have to point out
why they should go there and why should we should
go there. It's because of the type of violence that's
worth facing. The economy, our educational system. Everything is being
violated right now, and so in order to stop it,
then all which are to do is put this message

(53:01):
out and say this is the problem right here and all.
And I tell everybody, guess what, everything I'm seeing google
it up. But putting into action is the thing. And
so we're putting it in action. And we've been proving
that we've been successful by getting the bill passed. But
you've always got the resistance. But uh, you know, you

(53:21):
never go weary of doing what it's right, bug Nelson.

Speaker 1 (53:25):
I don't, all right, So how can folks want to
help you? How can they reach you? Do you have
a website? Email address, Pastor Williams.

Speaker 5 (53:32):
Yeah, I'm gonna make it real simple. People can call
me Civilly at seven O eight six nine oh five
three three nine seven o eight six nine oh five
three three nine. And uh, if you want me, you
can google me up and all that information you ask
for a pop write up. So I can't even remember
that stuff. I'm becoming a senior citizen now, man, we

(53:57):
all are.

Speaker 1 (53:58):
But thank you, thank you, Pastor Willing, and thank you
for the you know, because you really sincere about this
violence issue and you've been on it for quite some time,
so I really thank you for doing that for us.

Speaker 5 (54:11):
But hey, I want to thank you man, because you
got to understand. You're the first radio host of a
national syndicated show that has talked about this issue and
bringing this issue to the public attention most folks don't.
I asked the congressman that he knew that he knows
that this month existed, Civility Month, And he asked me,

(54:34):
was that such a thing? I said, We'll tell your
staff to google it up. And I told him go
back to Congress and pass the resolution on civility. Man.
He looked at me like I was talking Chinese because
he too busy beating up on Trump. That ain't why
I'm at. People got to survive out here, People got
to live out here. They don't need no nonsense. People

(54:54):
need stability right now. People need things to be civil.
So just thank you for allowing me to give insight.
But what you did today is so historical because our people,
particularly blacks, we just need to know. Take this civility Month,
use it to your positive advantage. We gotta be civil.
Both got the line, be cool, stay in your own lane,

(55:17):
Calm cool, collect that's the vilagy.

Speaker 1 (55:21):
All right, thank you, pastor, and thank you and thank
you for doing that, and thank you for shining the
light on civilian and call this violences in this country.
And hopefully you'll be successful in whatever you do. So
we'll check in with you and see how that racis,
that Senate race is going on.

Speaker 5 (55:35):
Oh, thank you, brother, it's going to be falln We're winning.
Thank you, God bless you and the listen not this man.
Bless you wanted for station and miss Cathain Hughes. God
bless you, brother. Thank you so much for what you
do for us.

Speaker 1 (55:47):
All right, Pastor Anthony Williams out of Chicago. It's tiring.
Attentions to sports Now, Professor Edward Robinson's joined us. Professor
Grand Rising. Welcome back to the program.

Speaker 8 (55:57):
Friend Rising, Carl, to you and your audience.

Speaker 1 (56:00):
Let's let's get into it because you know, yeah, we're
in the dog days of summer. This is you know,
the major sports is being played right now is baseball
and for some people that baseball is too boring, too
slow and all of that. And we can talk about that.
How do you think they can speed that up? But
the NFL training camps open Uh, what's your You know what,
how do you see first the Ravens and then the

(56:24):
Washington football team, the Commanders. How do you see them
doing this year? If they drafted, well, how do you
see what's the outlook?

Speaker 8 (56:33):
Yeah, so I'm gonna get into it. Let me start
by saying, the last time I was here, I picked
the Golden State Warriors to win the NBA Championship and
I was wrong. So I want to start there. So
I always have to admit when when things don't go well.
But football season has definitely arrived, and I'm better at

(56:56):
picking Super Bowl champions if you remember, I picked the
Eagles last year and I was correct. So we're gonna
get around to several topics this morning. But the NFL
preseason and is upon us.

Speaker 5 (57:12):
Uh.

Speaker 8 (57:13):
Teams of open training camp and uh, there's several interesting
storylines around the league. I want to start with the
Philadelphia Eagles so we can go to the NFCS. I
want to start with the defending champions.

Speaker 4 (57:27):
Uh.

Speaker 8 (57:27):
They return after you know, beating Kansas City last the
Kansas City Chiefs last season in the Super Bowl. With
the Eagles, there's always pressure on the team to repeat.
Philadelphia fans will look look at their team to kind

(57:47):
of go back to back, but the landscape will be
different for them this this this season. The running back
Sequon Barkley is back.

Speaker 4 (57:57):
UH.

Speaker 8 (57:58):
His name is an instant credibility. He rushed for two
thousand yards during the regular season and it's almost five
hundred yards in the playoffs. He's just a beast on
the field. Philadelphia quarterback Jalen Hurts returns which is you know,
he's leadership toughness. But they have a new offensive coordinator,

(58:24):
Kevin Petullo uh batulo is. He's been their passing coordinator,
but now he's getting his turn as offensive coordinator.

Speaker 2 (58:37):
Uh.

Speaker 8 (58:37):
He's been there four years under the other coordinators, but
it's his turn to call, uh call the offense and
he's he's there in the leadership bro. They're gonna have
to adjust to that. The question will be whether they
remain a primary run team or we see more passing
from the Eagles. You know we will see. I'm gonna

(59:02):
say in the NFC East, and I want to talk
about the Washington Commanders as you as you asked the UH,
I see uh positive direction again for the Commanders. They
finished the regular season last year twelve and five. Uh,
they reached the conference round of the playoffs before losing

(59:24):
to the Eagles.

Speaker 4 (59:26):
Uh.

Speaker 8 (59:28):
I got to say this team that their success was
one of my favorite stories from last season. Rookie j
Jayden Daniels. He infused life into that team on the
field and then they had new ownership. Uh that it
can infuse life off the field. So can they?

Speaker 1 (59:52):
So let me ask you this A fourteen and a
half that top alf family just checking in with discussing
sports professor Robson out of Baltimore, and we're going to
talk about the NBA as well and the w n
b A and all some other sports as well. Uh.
Right now, I was discussing the Washington Commanders, UH and
their quarterback. Do you think he what about this sophomore
jinks that they have? You know, usually we see them

(01:00:12):
come as rookies, they have an exceptional year and so
much is you know, I guess required or expected of
them the second time around and they fall short. Do
you think you think he's going to fall into that trap?

Speaker 8 (01:00:25):
So that's a that's a great question.

Speaker 9 (01:00:27):
I think.

Speaker 8 (01:00:29):
They're gonna have to do everything to protect against against
that slump. Sophomore slumps are real. Uh what Dame show
was really special last year and people got wrapped up
into it. He was just so consistent and accurate. The

(01:00:49):
team made one of the what I think was a
bold all season move by picking up offensive thread Deebo Samuels,
and I think he's gonna have an opportunity to help
Daniels stayed consistent. They they've uh, they're gonna pair Samuels

(01:01:10):
with Terry mclauren. Mclauren is the All Star or WAT
should say, Pro Bowl wide receiver currently he's I guess
he's holding in is what they're calling it, because he
showed up finally after four days of camp. But he

(01:01:31):
is holding in, you know, over a contract dispute.

Speaker 5 (01:01:36):
Uh.

Speaker 8 (01:01:36):
He wants more money, like I guess everybody, and he's
he's likely to get it. The general manager, Adam Peters,
will have to kind of work that deal out. The
They will want mclauren, you know, he's a veteran, seven
year veteran. They will want him on the field to

(01:01:58):
uh to one be a target for Daniels, you know,
to avoid that token. So he's gonna have to have
people to throw to. And I'm eager to see.

Speaker 1 (01:02:11):
How that hold that through right there, because yeah, those
are the off field things that are going on with
the Washington Commander family. You got a question about sports,
this is a person needs to direct that question too.
Is Professor Robinson out of Baltimore. Reach out to us
at eight hundred and four or five zero seventy eight
to seventy six. I will take your phone calls next.

Speaker 7 (01:02:35):
Now back to the Carl Nelson Show.

Speaker 1 (01:02:58):
Thank Man Rising family, thanks for rolling with us on
this Wednesday morning. I guess he's Professor Edward Robinson out
of Baltimore. He's discussing sports with Professor Robinson and wanted
there and we're going to talk about it all. We
want to talk about the n b A and also
the w n b A, and of course we talk
about Angel Reese from from Baltimore and her arrival with
Kate and Clark. We're gonna talk about that also. Uh,

(01:03:18):
we're going to talk about Dion and Dion and his sons.
It sounds like a singing group, but Dion's got some
health challenges. We're going to talk about that as well.
And his sons are you know, whether or not they'll
make it in the NFL this season because all the
preachers of the camps are open now and that's why
we're having the discussion with Professor Robinson left off before
the break. We're speaking about what's going on in Washington,

(01:03:40):
d C. With the commanders. So I'll let you pick
it up from their professor. Professor Romster still with us, Kevin,
we lost the professor. Apparently we may have lost the professor.
So okay, we're gonta. We gotta give the professor back
so we don't have it, you know, because interesting to

(01:04:01):
see what was going on because he talked about, uh,
the commanders. What's interesting what's going on in Cleveland? Cleveland
as where Shade Santa is Dion's son.

Speaker 8 (01:04:11):
Four.

Speaker 1 (01:04:11):
They got four quarterbacks on on there, and the question
is can he will, will he be, will he make
it or not? That's that's that's the question that people
are talking about, you know, because he was the fourth
one selected and the owner came out and says that
he wasn't his choice. The owner says, you know, shouldeo
wasn't his choice? That was the general manager's pick. And
you know, and his other son is playing for Tampa Bay.

(01:04:33):
So we'll see how that works out as well. Also,
this rivalry that the in the w n b A
between Angel Reese and Caitlin Carr. Some people say it's manufactured.
Is trying to be They're trying to do what the
NBA did with Bird and Magic to try to bring
that back with Some people say it's that was that
was real rival that was a friendly vibe. Some people
think that this is not friendly. So I want to

(01:04:54):
get the professor's idea of these two ladies really dislike
each other or is it interest doing it too? And
it's the league because you saw the All Star Game,
the ladies were saying they're on to pay they need
more money. But the league is not making as much
money as the NBA. And that's a problem that goes
with all the women's sports. They don't make as much
as male sports teams or whatever configuration there are, and

(01:05:17):
whether it be soccer, softball, baseball, whatever, they just don't
make us money as money and that's and that's a fact.
But anyway, Professor, we're left off and you're talking about
the Washington Commanders.

Speaker 5 (01:05:29):
Yes, So.

Speaker 8 (01:05:31):
Terry mc lauren is the Pro Bowl wide receiver that
I think is the difference maker along with Jing Daniels
on that team, and he's holding in for a updated contract,
but he's also he has an ankle injury that's put

(01:05:54):
him on the physically unable to return lists. Selfishly, I
want to see him come back as soon as possible,
just because I think together that Daniels leaves just every
target available to him in this to avoid a sophomore slump.
As you asked about I Daniels, He's threw four over

(01:06:18):
thirty five hundred yards and twenty five touchdowns last year.
It was really fun to watch for a team that
had just performed so poorly over the past ten years
or so, to see them turning around last year was exciting.

(01:06:38):
A different name called within this the NFL teams along
with the elite teams. Of course, you have the Chiefs,
but the Commander's coach Dan Quinn says he likes the versatility,
particularly defensive versatility, that the team has. They brought in

(01:07:03):
linebacker Von Miller, who's a fifteen year veteran played with Denver,
Los Angeles and Buffalo most recently. I like what von
Miller says because he knows what he does.

Speaker 6 (01:07:20):
He's a.

Speaker 8 (01:07:22):
He's a pass rusher. And he says, they're gonna they're
gonna let me rush. That's what I do. I can
still roll out of the bed at thirty six years
old with my house shoes on and still rush the passer.
So I think it's gonna be fun. I love when
guys talk like that, and that's that's what I want

(01:07:43):
to see.

Speaker 1 (01:07:46):
Well, let me tell me here that's interested that he
said that it's a lot of confidence for an older
guy as far as they're playing in the NFL twenty
five After the top there with Professor Robinson, I want
to talk about Dion Dion Sanders because he came now
that he had the bladder cancer and we wish him well,
and you know, people were saying that it's a good

(01:08:06):
thing he wasn't playing in the HBCU because now he
was at a major university and they had the medical
apparatus there to help him out, which he wouldn't have
had if he was still at Jackson State. Your thoughts
so the.

Speaker 8 (01:08:24):
I don't know anything about Jackson State's medical facilities versus Colorado's.
I don't want to just assume anything and what you know,
it could be in a local facility that I don't
know anything about What I want to say about this
is this is an important story for the for the

(01:08:53):
black community because it involves going to see a doctor
and having a uh, just a checkup. Sanders, you know,
had surgery to remove his toes in twenty twenty one.

(01:09:19):
He had two toes removed in serious surgery at that point.
So he had a CT scan in April that that
where they discovered a cancerous tumor in his bladder. And
it was just a routine checkup where he discovered that.

(01:09:41):
And that's important just too African American males, our community
in general. Is that just just you know, consistency and
visiting your doctor is what's important. And they they found
that tumor and where they were able to uh remove

(01:10:07):
remove it. He had surgery on May the ninth. He
spent two months recovering at home. Uh and he said
just recently that he's prepared to coach this season, you know,
despite the breakers of the college football you know season,
it's it's it's a tough, tough grind for a quarterback.

(01:10:32):
But I just wanted to stress that he was able
to have a diagnosis and catch this and he gets
regular routine CT scans because he had blood clot issues. Uh,
and this is nothing. It's just pertains to Dion. This

(01:10:54):
is this is everybody. Of course, he obviously has great
health insurance and and he's got a lot of support
around him and facilities and resource. But the resources that
you have used them if you want to take something.
You know, sport is an example to us of many

(01:11:15):
different things. And if it's the discipline of a coach,
like saying it is just going to promote and you know,
health care and he's going to talk about it. For
him to be as open as he has been about this,
I just applaud him on this because I thought.

Speaker 1 (01:11:34):
And I want to talk about it. Suns though, because
I think that we had the conversation thirty It's thirty
minutes off the top there foamidly just getting up. I
guess there's a professor Edward Rominson out of Baltimore's sports editor,
former sports editor. On the papers there are discussing sports.
The NFL training camps opened, and I think we had
this discussion by Shador. Shador dropped in the draft and

(01:11:54):
now Cleveland picks him up and understand he's like fourth
and the depth tak and he wasn't the the list.
The question for you, the owner says, he wasn't my choice.
He's this is the owner now, it wasn't my choice.
It was a general manager's choice to pick him because
we already got three quarterbacks. How does how do you
relate to that? If you if you're your door and

(01:12:15):
the owner says, well you you man, you know I
wasn't digging you. You know it was up to the
GM who picked you and publicly says that do you
think that's going to impact his chances of making the
team because he still hasn't made the roster yet.

Speaker 8 (01:12:30):
No, I don't. I think they're going to keep him
on the roster. They have a lot of questions there.
Uh in in Cleveland around quarterbacks. Uh, he's battling for
backup bid its with Dylan Verbert Gabriel. I'm sorry, Joe

(01:12:56):
Flacto and Kenny Pickett are you know, fighting and competing
for the job in week one? But that quarterback carousel
can turn quickly. What he is doing is is you know,
even if he finds himself leading a practice squad or uh,

(01:13:17):
he's in an NFL, the job is too to remain
silent to learn all you can and you know, get
the experience in an NFL locker room, and he's gonna
grow if he you know, they he and his dad

(01:13:39):
and their team seem to be confident in his talent.
The next thing is they're gonna have to, you know,
when he's called, they're gonna have to showcase what that
talent is. What I've seen coming out of that camp,
and I'm not close to it by far, just watching,
you know, as a as a you know, kind of

(01:13:59):
keep back of all of this is that he can compete.
Like there's no guarantees for anybody in the NFL. Man,
the NFL is is relentless.

Speaker 1 (01:14:10):
Why did you ask you this though, Professor at twenty
nine Away from the top. Do teams carry four quarterbacks
going into the season or is he usually three?

Speaker 8 (01:14:19):
It's usually three, usually three, but Cleveland has had issues
with quarterbacks, so they may decide to carry an additional
one that they if they drafted. You know, I have
no idea. I'm just gonna be candid about what their

(01:14:42):
thoughts are around you know this. They they drafted him,
you know, so is it, well, what's your plan? That's
that's for them?

Speaker 1 (01:14:54):
To show for trade. Could they holding him out for
making hoping somebody needs a quarterback before the season starts
and use him as bait. You think that's I think.

Speaker 8 (01:15:04):
They could have. I mean, I don't think that they're
gonna use that for trade. I think they may. They
legitimately want to see if he can compete, and if
he's not any good, they could release him if they
wanted to keep him around for practice squad. You know,

(01:15:26):
he's just he's gonna have to make the team. I
don't from what I've seen him, should do. I think
he has talent that they that they can grow.

Speaker 1 (01:15:42):
So how do you explain, well, professor, how do you
explain why he drops so so late in the draft?
It was it personal? Was it because of his dad?
You say he's got talent. We know he's got talented
collegiate level, but can he make it of the program?

Speaker 8 (01:15:55):
Combination of all of that, and I think it h
What we talked about previously was that teams made decisions
based on need, and you know who was selected. They

(01:16:16):
decided that cam Ward was a better risk than Shador,
that his skill set was more far along, so he
was drafted number one overall, Tennessee Titans. And then there

(01:16:39):
was only two quarterbacks selected in the first round, so
there were other quarterbacks that came after cam and before Shador.
You know, there was a lot.

Speaker 1 (01:16:54):
Well here again at six at twenty six, a way
from Tle you mentioned cam Ward. He may be in
the start of slot because the Titans quarterback is injured.
How much of the pressure is you come in into
a rookie you're gonna you know, you've started in the NFL,
They're going to be a starter on the NFL. How
much how much pressure is on a person like that?

Speaker 5 (01:17:14):
Oh?

Speaker 8 (01:17:14):
Yeah, this is so? What is he's receiving the majority
of the first team reps in preparation for to start
Week one. I've been watching this, but there's a lot
coming at this young man. As you know, he's he's
in a pressure cooker space for an NFL rookie. Uh,
he's there. There seems to be bringing him along with

(01:17:42):
a direct approach. He seems to be taking it on
a stride. He's I don't think that he is there yet,
but they're gonna we'll see doing some of those preseason games.
Just how close he is to being ready for day

(01:18:04):
one of the of the regular season. But I love
his maturity. I just think that he is confident, mature.
What I'll be watching for is telltale signs of his
arm strength, his pocket awareness, and his accuracy, but his

(01:18:28):
poise coming out of the University of Miami. I love
this this young man in terms of uh, he says,
just be yourself. That's that's what he's That's what he's
telling the media. You know, he's focused on himself. He's
keeping his circle small. He says, he's got his parents
and he's got his his his dog, you know, and

(01:18:51):
that's who's who he's surrounding himself with. And I love it.

Speaker 1 (01:18:57):
A break, I let you respond when we cut back
from the break, we got to take a look at
the traffic and the news in different cities. But do
you see another Jaden Downels? Do you think he has
that potential to put the Titans on the map. We're
telling family, just telling about the Heisman Trophy win a
cam Ward out of Miami. He's projected to be the
starter for the Tennessee Titans because their current quarterback is injured.

(01:19:21):
And I'm just wondering if you see the qualities that
Jayden Daniels has in Washington. Do you see those same
qualities in cam Ward to make a difference. And I'll
let you respond that when we get back. If I'm
checking the news and the weather in our different cities,
it's twenty three minutes away from the top they our family.
You two can join our conversation with Professor Edward Robinson.
Reach out to us at eight hundred four or five

(01:19:42):
zero seventy eight to seventy six of the ticket calls next.

Speaker 7 (01:19:50):
Now back to the Carl Nelson Show.

Speaker 1 (01:20:11):
And Grant Rizing family, Thanks for rolling with us on
this Wednesday morning. We're talking sports with Professor Edward Robinson
out of Baltimore. We left and we're discussing the NFL,
and I just want to remind you, you know, these
are the dog days of summer Baseball's are the major
game that's being played. Everybody's waiting for the football season
that started officially. The training camps are opening and it
starts with the Hall of Fame game, which is actually tomorrow.

(01:20:34):
The Chargers in the Lions are going to be playing
in Canton, Ohio kickoff the season. And before we go
back to you know, let me just remind you coming
up late this morning, we're gonna speak with doctor B.
It's a metaphysician. We're gonna talk a lot of issues
with doctor B, also a clinical psychologist. Doctor Jeremy Fox
will join us tomorrow. So if you are in Baltimore,
make sure you're radios locked in tight on ten ten WLB,
or if you're in the DMV, we're on FM ninety
five point nine and AM fourteen fifteen WOL. All right,

(01:20:58):
the professor before left, we're talking about whether or not
cam Ward can have a season. But during the break,
it's just reminded me that the fact is we don't
know his defense. He's O line. He's got to have
protection if you if you're gonna have a great season,
like Jayden Daniels, your thoughts on that you lost, Professor.

Speaker 8 (01:21:21):
I was gonna say, it's not gonna be all on No,
I'm here, Carl.

Speaker 10 (01:21:30):
Can you hear me?

Speaker 1 (01:21:32):
Yeah, go ahead, Hello, you can hear go ahead, professor, Hello, Hello, professor,
we can hear you.

Speaker 8 (01:21:47):
I was gonna say that cam it's not gonna be
on cam Ward to uh lead. Yes, I'm I'm I'm speaking.
It's not gonna be all on cam Ward to to
lead this team. He's Uh, he's got to have the

(01:22:08):
pieces around him to have a season as like the
Commanders did a season ago. But I think his maturity
throughout this whole, all of this process has been very impressive. Uh.
And I'm interested just to see how he holds up
when when when when the lights come on and it's real,
it's time to go. He performed stellar during his time

(01:22:33):
at Miami, and I just want to see how his
maturation is as the season begin. Also, you remember Ward
was taking ahead of the Heisman Trophy winner Travis Hunter.
He's he's another story that I've been following. You know,

(01:22:56):
he's the two way player out of Colorado who's just
a special, special talent. He was selected by the Jaguars
Jacksonville Jaguars number two overall in the draft. The Jags
negotiated with Cleveland to get to get him, and apparently

(01:23:18):
he is as advertised. Reports and footage out of Florida
show him making plays and practice. He's been practicing with
both the offense and defense, which is a question everybody
wanted to know whether he would continue. He made his
reputation in college as a two way player, but people

(01:23:40):
doubt if he'll be able to do that in the NFL,
but he's he's been working with both the offense and
the defense. He said, he's working out of two playbooks,
which is just awfully impressive. He's working more with the
offense or working with the offense first, they say, because

(01:24:02):
that's kind of where his learning curve is.

Speaker 1 (01:24:05):
Ah, well, let me jump and ask you this though.
Do you think his size will be a problem because
I've heard that, you know, some of the some of
the teams were concerned Professor about his size. Did you
hear me, Professor Robinson?

Speaker 8 (01:24:24):
I don't see a problem. This guy is is putting
on muscle. Yes, I'm answering, Carl. I'm sorry.

Speaker 9 (01:24:33):
Can you not hear me?

Speaker 1 (01:24:34):
Yeah? I can hear it, but there's some sort of delay,
so that that's a problem. So just go ahead and respond.

Speaker 4 (01:24:39):
Can you hear me?

Speaker 1 (01:24:41):
I could hear you, sir Kevin, Wait, so you have
a problem with Professor Robinson. I'm not sure what it is.

Speaker 4 (01:24:51):
His size doesn't.

Speaker 1 (01:24:59):
All right? It seems to have a problem with this.
We're gonna have to figure out where I have this
because I still want to talk about basketball. Because he's
not not hearing us. Uh, consistently. I don't know what
the problem is. It seems to be a delay in
the system here. I'm not sure if he's listening to
us on the radio or on the telephone, but where
it seems to be a delay or in a few
seconds delay in radio doesn't sound great. Professor is still

(01:25:21):
with us. Okay, it seems that we have a problem
with the professor because I wanted to talk about the
basketball as well, because there's an issue too with Lebron
where the Lebron is gonna stick we stick with the
Lakers or talk about him moving on and this will
be his last season and whether it's gonna you know,
you're gonna stay or move. And also with with the

(01:25:42):
w n b A the rivalry that this and we
don't know if it's concocted or it was organic or
or it was it was just contrived between Angel Reese
from Baltimore and Caitlon Clark and they're trying to revive
it to trying to make it kind of like the
back in the day in the NBA we would Bird
and Magic back in the day. But they said that

(01:26:03):
they detect something different between this rivally between these ladies
Angel Reese and Caitlin Clark and were back in the
day of those you remember when Bird and Magic were
playing the Celtics and the and the and the Lakers.
Professor Romster back with us yet I'm not hearing professor.
But anyway, and if you've been following the.

Speaker 8 (01:26:25):
W n B A this, hopefully you can hear me.

Speaker 1 (01:26:30):
I can hear you. I can hear you all the time.
But there seems to be a delay, Patu, Professor. That's
the problem that we have here because it takes a
while for you to respond when I ask a question.
So there's a delay. Can't have delay in radio, So
that's that's the problem. Again, there's a delay. So I
guess we'll just keep on talking. Uh yeah, because.

Speaker 8 (01:26:51):
Anything that is on my end. But I.

Speaker 1 (01:26:58):
Again, realism, so some issues here and trying trans uh
get these issues the problems that we love to hear
what the professor has to say about this rival, because
those of you who have not even been following the game, uh,
you know, have seen it on the news and they're
trying to make you know they like they did with Bird.
Bird was the Great White Hope, and you know, and
with Magic coming in and the competition between both of

(01:27:22):
these players, and they seem to the The w n
b A is trying to do that with with and
they're doing they're doing really well as far as ratings
are going up that have gone up. People are watching
them because of Cayton Clark, and there's some of this
arrivally as again, I don't know if I would love
to get the Professor's idea whether it was contrived or
this is something that the league is putting together hopefully

(01:27:43):
to hype it up. Some more people be watching. But
a lot of people are watching these ladies playing. And
I got to tell you some of these some of
these ladies can really they can play. Now, you know,
they can really play. Got me watching some of these
games and and they and they can and they're really good.
They really you know. I don't know why some people
would think they're not entertaining, but the games have been
really good. And there is a rivalry there with between

(01:28:06):
Canton and Clark and and uh and Angel. Professor, if
you can hear me, I want to get your thoughts
on that rivalry.

Speaker 4 (01:28:15):
M Yes, I love the rivalry.

Speaker 8 (01:28:24):
I think it's it's natural, it's a it's a carryover
from their college days. Uh, I think the league is wide.

Speaker 1 (01:28:40):
We've lost the professor again. Uh, maybe has some issues
with his phone, but but he's right. It was a
carrot from the college days and people are already taking
sides in it. And and uh, both of them are
sort of injured the games. The games, I wouldn't say
they're rough, but there, you know, it's it's basketball, it's
you know, they played the game somehow, you get injuries

(01:29:04):
a part of the game. And I know that in
the the rookie season, and some of the media was
saying that they were ganging up on Caton Clark because
quote unquote she's white. She's a star player in a
black and predominant black lead, And there was no evidence
to that that they were, you know, going going after her,
uh because of racial because of her ability. So that

(01:29:26):
was that was another issue which makes this interesting. There
wasn't there with Magic and Bird. There was was just
two guys going at it who exceptionally talented, and you know,
you got a bit Larry Bird could play. He could play,
he could play as his magic goes well, and Magic
was up to the task. And it made for some great,

(01:29:47):
uh great basketball games and we'll see what happens with
with with the w n b A, because it's it's
a whole different thing with the w n b A.
There's there was somebody got weig got pulled off in
the game, and you know, somebody through a sex object
on one of the games. You know, So it's a
whole different thing. That's the stuff that you don't see
in the NBA. Stuff you don't see when and the

(01:30:08):
Fellows are playing in the in the women's League, and
and some people think that, you know that there's the
feud is really these two players really dislike each other.
And that wasn't the case with with Magic and Bird.
You know, the Magic and Bird even their families got
together during the league. They got together. Bird mentioned that

(01:30:29):
his mom used to teach him about Magic, you know,
all the time, that Magic was her best player. So
that that was that was interesting that it was friendly,
it was and it was very very competitive. Justices was
a competitive that we're see now with Angel Reesa and
Kaitlyn Clark. And and I think there's this whole thing
that we're seeing here with we're seeing we're in a

(01:30:52):
different political era now with with with you know, Donald
Trump and all of that and we know what's happening
and the MAGA crowd and they're behind Caitlin Clark. So
this is the different it's a whole different setup now
than it was when when Magic and Bird were going
at each other. But it still makes for great basketball

(01:31:14):
and hopefully, you know, uh, both of these ladies who
would get back on the court again and help the
w NBA. Another issue with the w NBA is that
during their All Star Game, they all they ad T
shirts and paid them worth. It's something to that effect.
They want to score the fact that they were not
being paid. They're not being paid. They think they're not
being paid as much as they should be paid because

(01:31:35):
you cannot, you know, they cannot get make as much
money as the NBA because the NBA makes more money.
So obviously the players make more money, so that you know,
they got more sponsors, and sponsors make more money. But
the latest thing they deserve, they think they're getting peanuts.
But the league is growing. They're adding more teams and
coming up next season they're gonna add some more teams
and later on to some more cities are jumping in

(01:31:57):
and adding more teams as well. So it is growing
and young people are getting involved in basketball. They've already
played basketball, young ladies, I should say. And again some
of these ladies they can ball. They're really really great.
They're really good at what they do. And it's not
just Caitlin Cork and Angel Reese. They got a lot
of outstanding basketball players. And you can watch the All

(01:32:17):
Star Game. You'll see that it's not just those two,
but those are two who get the more. I guess
the spotlight is on both of them, and some people
trying to make it a racial thing, but for them,
it's just ball. It's just basketball, it's just balling. That's
what they underdo. Anyway, we got to step aside, so
hopefully we can get Professor Romson to get his view in.
It's three minutes away from the top there I take

(01:32:39):
I find a look at the traffic and weather not
different cities. Family, you want to get in on this
conversation or join us later when doctor b come checks in.
Reach out to us at eight hundred and four five
zero seventy eight seventy six and we'll take all your
phone calls.

Speaker 2 (01:32:51):
Next.

Speaker 7 (01:32:57):
Now back to the Carl Nelson Show.

Speaker 1 (01:33:18):
And Grand Rising family. Thanks for rolling with us on
this Wednesday morning. We're talking sports with Professor Edward Robinson
out of Baltimore, and we left and were discussing the NFL,
and I just want to remind you, you know, these
are the dog days of summer Baseball's are the major
game that's being played. Everybody's waiting for the football season
to start. Officially, the training camps are opening and it
starts with the Hall of Fame game, which is actually tomorrow.

(01:33:41):
The Chargers in the Lions are going to be playing
in Campton, Ohio and kick off the season. And before
we go back to you know, let me remind you
coming up late this morning, we're gonna speak with doctor B.
He's a metaphysician. We're gonna talk a lot of issues
with doctor B, also a clinical psychologist. Doctor Jeremy Fox
will join us tomorrow, So if you are in Baltimore,
make sure you're radious, locked in tight on ten ten
WLB or freely d MV right, FM ninety five point

(01:34:02):
nine and AM fourteen fifty w L all right. The
professor before we left, we were talking about whether or
not cam Ward can have a season. But doing the break,
it's just reminded me that. The fact is we don't
know his defense. He's o line. He's got to have
protection if if you're gonna have a great season, like
Jayden Daniels, your thoughts on that you lost Professor Robinson again, I.

Speaker 8 (01:34:28):
Was gonna say, it's not gonna be all on No,
I'm here, Carl, Can you hear me?

Speaker 1 (01:34:38):
Yeah? Go ahead, Hello, you can hear go ahead, professor, Hello, Hello, professor,
we can hear you.

Speaker 8 (01:34:54):
I was gonna say that cam it's not gonna be
on cam Ward to to uh lead. Yes, I'm I'm
I'm speaking. It's not gonna be all on cam Ward
to to to lead this team. He's uh, he's got
to have the pieces around him to have a season

(01:35:17):
as like the Commanders did a season ago. But I
think his maturity throughout this whole, all of this process
has been very impressive. Uh. And I'm interested just to
see how he holds up when when when when the
lights come on and it's real it's time to go.
He performed stellar during his time at Miami. Uh, And

(01:35:42):
I just want to see how his maturation is as
the season begin. Also, you remember Ward was taken ahead
of the Heisman Trophy winner Travis Hunter. He's another story
that I've been founded. You know, he's the two way

(01:36:04):
player out of Colorado who's just a special, special talent.
He was selected by the Jaguars Jacksonville Jaguars number two
overall in the draft. The Jags negotiated with Cleveland to
get to get him, and apparently he is as advertised.

(01:36:27):
Reports and footage out of Florida show him making plays
and practice. He's been practicing with both the offense and defense,
which is a question everybody wanted to know whether he
would continue. He made his reputation in college as a
two way player, but people doubt if he'll be able

(01:36:48):
to do that in the NFL. But he's been. He's
been working with both the offense and the defense. He
said he's working out of two playbooks, which is awfully impressive.
He's working more with the offense or working with the
offense first, they say, because that's kind of where his

(01:37:10):
learning curve is.

Speaker 1 (01:37:14):
Well, let me jump and ask you this though. Do
you think his size will be a problem because I've
heard that, you know, some of the some of the
teams were concerned, professor about his size. Did you hear me,
professor Robinson.

Speaker 8 (01:37:30):
I don't see a problem. This guy is is putting
on muscle. Yes, I'm answering, Carl, I'm sorry. Can you
not hear me?

Speaker 1 (01:37:41):
Yeah? I can hear it, but there's some sort of delay,
so that that's a problem. So just go ahead and respond.

Speaker 4 (01:37:46):
Can you hear me?

Speaker 1 (01:37:48):
I can hear you, sir Kevin, Wait, so you have
a problem with Professor Robinson. I'm not sure what it is.

Speaker 4 (01:37:58):
His size does.

Speaker 1 (01:38:06):
All right? It seems to have a problem with this.
We're gonna have to figure out where I had this
because I still want to talk about basketball. Because he's
not not hearing us, uh consistently. I don't know what
the problem is. It seems to be a delay in
the system here. I'm not sure if he's listening to
us on the radio or on the telephone, but where
it seems to be a delay in a few seconds
delay in radio. It doesn't sound great. Professor is still

(01:38:28):
with us? Okay, it seems that we have a problem
with the professor because I wanted to talk about the
basketball as well, because there's an issue too with Lebron.
Where the Lebron's gonna stick We stick with the Lakers
or talk about him moving on and this will be
his last season and whether it's gonna you know, you're
gonna stay or move. And also with with the w

(01:38:49):
n b A, the rivalry that this and we don't
know if it's concocted or it was organic, or or
it was it was just contrived between Angel Reese from
Baltimore and and Caitlin Clark. And they're trying to revive it,
trying to make it kind of like the back in
the day and the NBA with Bird and Magic back
in the day. But they say that they detect something

(01:39:12):
different between this rivally between these ladies, Angel Reese and
Caitlyn Clark. Then we're back in the day of those
you remember when Bird and Magic were playing the Celtics
and the and the and the Lakers. Professor Romster back
with us yet I'm not hearing, professor. But anyway, and
if you've been following the w n b.

Speaker 8 (01:39:32):
A this, hopefully you can hear me.

Speaker 1 (01:39:37):
I can hear you. I can hear you all the time,
but there seems to be a delay. Pat Professor. That's
the problem that we have here because it takes a
while for you to respond when I ask a question.
So there's a delay. Can't have delay in radio, So
that's that's the problem. Again, there's a delay. So I
guess we'll just keep on talking. Uh yeah, because.

Speaker 4 (01:39:59):
That is on my end.

Speaker 6 (01:40:00):
But I.

Speaker 1 (01:40:05):
Again some some some issues here and trying trans uh
get these issues the problems that because I love to
hear what the professor has to say about this rival,
because those of you who have not even been following
the game, uh you know, have seeing it on the
news and they're trying to make you know, they're like
they did with Bird Bird was the Great White Hope
and you know, and with Magic coming in and and

(01:40:28):
the competition between both of these players, and they seem
to the the w n b A is trying to
do that with with and they're doing they're doing really
well as far as ratings are going up, there have
gone up. People are watching them because of Cayton Clark,
and there's some of this arrivally as again I don't
know if I would love to get the professor's idea
whether it was contrived or this is something that the

(01:40:48):
league is putting together hopefully to hype it up. Some
more people be watching, but a lot of people are
watching these ladies playing. And I got to tell you
some of these some of these ladies can really they
can play, now, you know, they they can really play.
Got me watching some of these games, and they can
and they're really good. They really you know, I don't
know why some people would think they're not entertaining, but

(01:41:09):
the games have been really good. And there is a
rivalry there with between Canton and Clark and and Angel
Racer Professor, if you can hear me, I want to
get your thoughts on that rivalry.

Speaker 6 (01:41:21):
I begin to study, and I begin to learn about
how the body works, how it functions naturally, and begin
to eat proper foods and change my friendships and everything.
Everything changed. And then I got extremely healthy and I
was now wealthy, right, not in money, but just in
life force, you see, that's really important. And I got

(01:41:42):
into this because I was looking to save my life
and also helped my mother who had a nervous system
disorder which they called MS. So I was looking to
help her too. So in fact, you know, I started
making products to help my mother and I and that's
how I got into this whole thing of natural health.

Speaker 1 (01:42:01):
Wow. And along the way, you met Dick Gregory.

Speaker 6 (01:42:05):
He had. About nineteen ninety six, I was doing a
lecture at this place called The Good Life, and Dick
Gregory walked in and he said, oh, wow, you're really good.
And he said, I like the way you tie fun
and jokes and comedy with the you know, the teaching
of health. He says, I want to take you under
my wing. But what was interesting. Dick Gerby came back
about six months later and he walks in. And I'm

(01:42:27):
mad at this point because I had read this book
called Murder by Injection, and I read all this stuff
about the dark side of health and how iatrogenesis, which
is the medical system caused disease, was the number one
cause of death on the planet. And I was angry.
I was angry at where how the fertilizers were being

(01:42:48):
made out of floor ride, and you know, all these
things were nervous system antagonists, and the food industry was
controlled by the same people that controlled the drug companies,
and it was one big system. I was really angry.
So I started wearing army pants and army boots, right,
but I had on a muddcloth vets because I was
supposed to be conscious, right, but I had on an

(01:43:09):
army hat and I was mad, and Dick Greggy walked
in and he looked at me. He didn't laugh at
none of my jokes because I didn't have any, And
he sat there for a while he looked at me,
and at the end of the lecture, he walked up
to me. He says, man, look, this is probably the
last time I'm gonna see you. I said, why so
they gonna kill you? You got a target on your back.
I says, what do you mean? He says, Man, all

(01:43:29):
that anger and all that fire, He says, that's fear,
And he says you are creating more fear in the
people than health. He says, you used to be funny.
You used to have jokes, used to make this comedy.
He says, laughter is very important. And because you're angry,
you're becoming a target for those people who are out

(01:43:49):
watching this system. And you keep talking about you can
cure and all those words. You don't use those words.
You don't act so fiery. He says, So, if you're
going to stay on this course, I won't be seeing
you again because you won't be on the planet. That
blew my mind. So I went back to you know
the times when I would talk and tell stories and
make it fun because health can be fun. You know,

(01:44:10):
the stories are you know, and stories and myths and
things like that. They go deep into the subconscious and
they say, hey, look it's gonna be okay, it's gonna
be easy. You see, it's not so bad because it's
it's musical, it's it's it's a satire. All of those
things actually calms a person down when they're learning important information.

(01:44:32):
So I went back to you know, you know, conscious
comedy basically, and at that point, dig there, hold that thought.

Speaker 1 (01:44:38):
Right there, Doctor B. We gotta take a short break,
but I won't you kind of tell this story family,
because then and if you've got a question, you got
you got some con cels health for concerns, speak to
doctor Be. He can reach out. He can help you.
At eight hundred and four or five zero seventy eight
seventy six. I wanna take all your phone calls next.

(01:45:09):
Thank grind Rising family, and thanks for stunning your Wednesday
with us. And I guess doctor B. Doctor Bees I
mentioned he's a herbalist, a master herbalist and also a
metaphysician before we left for the break, and he was
telling us how he got started and how Dick Gregory
changed his life. So doctor b I'm gonna let you
finish telling that story for us.

Speaker 6 (01:45:30):
He would call me and he would meet and we'd
have these special meetings and there was no lights, you know,
no people, no crowds, and he would just sit and
talk to me for hours about life.

Speaker 5 (01:45:42):
You know.

Speaker 6 (01:45:42):
He never talked to me about civil rights, He never
talked about human rights. He talked about how we had
to be in connection with our cosmic self, our original self,
and the universal God and be in alignment with that frequency,
that rhythm in order to live. So we had a
very special relationship. But it changed when he was diagnosed

(01:46:06):
with cancer. I don't know if you remembered when he's
got limb. He had lymphoma, and Carl, you were having
a us come down to Florida to do a talk.
I think it was for your radio show, you something
you were having, and Dick Gregory told him I had
to be there. So when I got there, you know,
it was you, Carl and Dick Gregory and another man.

(01:46:28):
And this man had this medicine or this water that
was from some sacred holy water, the original formulation. And
I remember he was giving that to Dick Gregory to
help with the cancer. And that day I had a
sinus headache and Dick Gregory looks at me and he says, man,
you got a sinus headache.

Speaker 1 (01:46:48):
Huh.

Speaker 6 (01:46:49):
I said, well, how do you know that? He says,
I can feel it. I can feel the energy from
your head. Man, you're having a traffic jam in your
brain and that's what's causing your head. He says, you
got too much information coming to you. He tells. The
other guy says, man, give doctor be some of that stuff.
So I took this little look like water and I
remember sniffing it up in my nose and suddenly, man,

(01:47:12):
I saw colors and lights and everything changed right at
that particular point, and I was like, what is this stuff?
And they said, this is life force. This is the
energy your body needs. This electrifies your nervous system and
your immune system so they can begin to work correctly.
And that was the day Dick Gregory told me that
he had, you know, this lymphoma, and he wanted me

(01:47:34):
to be on the team of people to work with him.
So I began to formulate special products just for Dick Gregory.
That changed my life because we became much closer. I
became one of his herbalists and he became my true mentor,
and that relationship really changed everything. And Carl, you had

(01:47:55):
a lot to do with it, because you were the
one that brought us all together when we used to
have those meetings in Florida. So I thank you for that.
But that was a beautiful thing.

Speaker 1 (01:48:04):
Wow, what a story, you know. Let me let me
ask you this though, because what I learned from you,
doctor b and Greg was the fact you were telling
people about telomares long before the other folks were talking
about tellimars. Can you first tell us how you got
that information about telomares and then explain to our listeners
what are telomeres and how we can take advantage of

(01:48:25):
using them.

Speaker 6 (01:48:27):
Well, I learned about telomeres because I started studying this
substance called humic acid. There's two of them, there's humic
acid and fulvic acid. And I met the guy who
was the number one scientist on this subject in the world,
and he began to talk to me about how to
use this this substance to actually regrow, he to repair

(01:48:51):
the genes. And he was saying that the number one
thing that we that we needed to repair or to
protect was our telomeres. So I wanted to deep research
at that time about telomeres and realize that telomeres they're
like little antennas that hang at the bottom of our DNA.
So you have your DNA looks like shoe strings, right,

(01:49:12):
they're twisted, and at the bottom of those there's little
like fibers. Those fibers are called telomeres. Those fibers are
like antenna that pick up information about what's going on
out in the environment and what's happening in the gene pool.
So they're like telephones. That's why I think they call
them telomeres because they're telephones, but they send messages back

(01:49:36):
and forth to the gene and tell the genes how
to express themselves. So wrapped around those little strings is
something called the telomere cap. The telomere cap holds those
little strings together so they don't break off. So just
imagine the little plastic that's on your shoe string. With
that little plastic at the bottom of your shoe string.

(01:49:59):
If it breaks up off, you know, the shoe string
begins to fray. What's the same thing with the genes.
The telomere cap keeps the telomeres from fraying. When the
telomeres begin to fray or break off, they send a
message to the cell saying that we're dying. We're not
gonna be here long, so we don't have a long lifespan,

(01:50:19):
you see. So the cell begins to slow down. The
genes begin to slow down and their production of life
force energy, so that vital life force slows down. Because
the gene is broken, the the antennas on the gene
are not working correctly, so the cell does not reproduce itself,

(01:50:41):
it doesn't repair itself as fast. It begins to slow
down and age. So the body right once the genes
in the body are getting the message that there's a problem.
There's not clear communication between the external world and the
internal world. We begin to die, we begin to deteriorate.

(01:51:03):
So these tellomerors are very important for who we are,
how long we live. In our life expectancy. We keep
hearing about our life expectancy based on what they tell us. Well,
the life expectancy of a black man in so many years,
and a life expectancy of those words. Life expectancy has
to do with what somebody expects to happen based on

(01:51:26):
the past, based on what information and data the medical
system has, you know, conjured up basically on people.

Speaker 5 (01:51:35):
Right.

Speaker 6 (01:51:36):
But there's another level of this life expectancy. What do
you expect because you create your life expectancy if you
believe that something happens at a certain time or a
certain age, right, once that gets etched into your memory,
that becomes your new that becomes your new life, your
new outlook. So you believe in aging. You believe that

(01:52:00):
eighty years old is old age, when in fact, eighty
years old is really about middle age when you look
at the ancient, ancient people who lived a long time.
But what determines your aging has to do with your stress.
It has to do with your nervous system. It has
to do with what you're looking at. It has to
do with what you believe, how you talk, how you walk,

(01:52:21):
and how you act. Once you have opted in and
you believe that everything is stressful and it's getting worse
in the world and things are bad, and you fear
is your main paradigm. Guess what. The telomeres begin to
break off and they say, listen, this is a this

(01:52:42):
is not a friendly place. This is not a happy person.
It's not a joyful person. So look, let's begin to
age prematurely because this is not a good place to be,
you see. So we expect what we expect, and our
life expectancy has to do with what we're focusing on.
In fact, a lot of times, Carr, we're projecting. We're

(01:53:03):
projecting our life. We're giving signals to our body that
things are bad, or things are good, or things are great.
One of the things we don't do enough, and this
helps your telomeres is celebrate. When you celebrate, that means
you are kinesthetically, which means you're feeling the joy of success.

Speaker 7 (01:53:29):
Right.

Speaker 6 (01:53:29):
You're hearing success and you're seeing success, even if it's
only in your mind. When you celebrate, you are being
grateful and telling your body to vibrate itself. You celebrate
has to do it vibrating the cells because we've completed something,
we're successful at something, and it could be anything, even

(01:53:51):
if it's small. The more you celebrate, you vibrate yourself,
which tells your tell this is a beautiful place to be.

Speaker 4 (01:54:03):
We extend.

Speaker 1 (01:54:12):
Hopefully you have a lost doctor b sounded like his
line dropped twenty nine after the top of they are.
Doctor B's explained to us what are telomars? And like,
like I mentioned, he was one of the first persons
I heard talking about tellmars. Have doctor B, you're back
with us, and and and you know, he was talking
about years and then after we heard other folks start

(01:54:33):
talking about telomars. You know, the other folks, you know
who I mean. Doctor B was out there a long
time talking about tellmars And hopefully he'll give us. He'll
tell us how you can that's that's the fountain of youth.
That's what the that's that's how make you live longer.
And he'll put all the pieces together and uh connect
the dots for us so that you can engage and

(01:54:54):
know because your body, you're in charge of your body,
and you know, and a lot of these doctors they
want to give you pharmaceuticals. But there's a way how
to you because as doctor B, as a metaphysician, will
teach you, it's it's not just about the pills that
you take, or or even the herbs that you take.
It's sometimes it's about the people that are around you.
Is that energy Sometimes you have this negative energy or

(01:55:18):
or low vibration. Folks that uh we had a uh doctor,
doctor Dell Blair, you should talk about that. It's just
don't surround yourself with low ended vibrating people say. We're
all vibrate on different levels, you know, so you've got
to find people who vibrate on your level. Do not
go down lower to you know. And you know what
I'm telling people who are always angry, people always cursing,

(01:55:40):
people always doing all kinds of negative stuff, attacking each other,
fighting with each other, just you know, never nothing pleasant
to say, you know, just something negative. And they reveled
in that. But doctor b you're back with us, Yes, yes, yeah,
go ahead and tell us about you. Explain to us
how we can how we can extend our telemares as well.

Speaker 6 (01:56:01):
So as I was saying, celebration is important. And when
you celebrate, you vibrate yourselves and you send a message
to the environment of your body. The environment is what
is creating the expression of your genes. If you don't celebrate,
I mean, even your small successes, then your body begins

(01:56:24):
to go into atrophy. Your cells begin to die, you
begin to calcify, you begin to age. Unless you find
time to create what we call celebration. Now, what's interesting
is you usually celebrate when they you know, they tell
us to celebrate. They have these specific days of the

(01:56:44):
year you're supposed to celebrate, but those days are days
that have to do it commerce. They have to do
it making money for the system, so you got to
buy stuff and all this. But celebration has nothing to
do with buying anything. It has to do what you
buying in to yourself and letting yourself know that you've
completed something. Now, I was looking. I went to a

(01:57:06):
therapist once and they asked me this because you know,
I used to deal with a lot of depression. And
the verse question they said, was one of the last
time you celebrated And I couldn't remember. And they said, well,
did you celebrate graduating high school? I said, well, no,
I was in the band, so I didn't walk the stage.
I had to prepare to perform. So when do you
celebrate for yourself with yourself? And I couldn't answer it.

(01:57:28):
They said, well, there's your depression. We don't celebrate even
if you celebrate a small success. What it does, Carl,
is you begin to vibrate in your core and your
solar plexus, your solar plexus, or your gut is the
largest bundle of nerves in your body. It's in your gut.
That bundle of nerves has actually more nerve endings than

(01:57:51):
your brain. And the information leaves your gut and goes
to your brain and gives you a sense of what's
really happening. But it has a lot to do with
what's happening in your gut. But when you last, when
you clap, when you dance, and you have joy, and
you're thankful and grateful for whatever you have, it sends
a message to your brain that this is a great

(01:58:12):
place to be. Your brain sends a message to your hormones,
your indocrine system, which sends a message to your genes,
which sends a message to your telomeres that says, hey,
this is a beautiful place to be. Let's live more life.
All of a sudden, your telomere cap begins to tighten
because there's this substance called telomerase. Tell them RaSE is

(01:58:35):
an enzyme right that actually protects the telomere cap. If
you have too much telomerase, then the cap begins to
erode and wear. Now tell themerase is created and secreted
at a time when you're either understressed or you're at
rest or enjoy So it regulates the amount of telomerase

(01:58:58):
in your system. Now, when you celebrate often and you
eat food that is giving you energy, cause certain foods
stress out, you're tellomeres, which stresses out your genes. And
once your genes begin to become stressed out, they begin
to express things like cancer and heart disease and liver disease.

Speaker 8 (01:59:18):
And many of the diseases.

Speaker 6 (01:59:19):
We have have to do and how we feel about life,
how we accept, how we talk. Now, if you're hanging
around people and you're in that crowd that always talks
about how bad it is, Carl's what the body says.
It's not good. Nothing is good. We have nothing good
to say, nothing to celebrate, So ourselves are not vibrating

(01:59:41):
in a way that says express and give us more life,
be more healthy, be more wealthy, be more wise. That's
why one of the things that Greg Gregor really taught
me was to be to have more fun. To make
it fun when you're speaking, when you're talking to people,
tell the stories. Make it funny, because that's what gives

(02:00:01):
people life. Because when you laugh, you pump the seven
fluids through your body. There's seven oceans, seven different types
of liquid in your body. When you laugh, you pump
your diaphragm at a certain frequency, and that tells your
body to rejuvenate itself. Just laughing, having some fun, walking

(02:00:22):
sometimes it causes your diaphragm to pump a certain way.
And when that diaphragm begins to pump the fluids, it
begins to clean the fluids of your body. It begins
to bathe the cells, to wash away the toxins, because
just depression and sadness and grief and anger, all that
stuff begins to flood the body with these chemicals that

(02:00:43):
actually degrade the system. It's like acid eating away at
your nervous system. That acid, right, because we always hear
about acidic foods, but we got acidic activities, acidic attitudes.
You know, we become acidine because we're just mad because
we keep listening to the how bad it is. So conversely,
when we begin to look at how we're joyful, we're

(02:01:06):
thankful to be here right now, we're breathing. And if
you were to turn off some of the news and
some of the social media, even for a day or
even for certain times, of the day. You would begin
to think differently because all of those devices are prompting
you and programming you to look at the worst things
they are in life, when in fact things have to

(02:01:29):
be positive and negative at the same time. It has
to be everything is connected to its its opposite, So
no matter how bad things are, also on the other
side is goodness and greatness and joy. So we have
to begin to live in this place called joy and
have some fun and celebrate our lives. That's one of
the things that helps you. Telemeres the other.

Speaker 1 (02:01:51):
Thing right there, Doctor Mab. We've got to step aside
for a few months. We'll come back. We got some
folks want to talk to you. But that space that
you're telling us that we should all be in, do
you need help? Can you do it solo? Can you
just be happy by yourself? Or do you need somebody
else bear to make you happy. I'll let you explain
that when we get back from the shortbreak. Family. You
two got questions for doctor b reach out to us

(02:02:12):
at eight hundred four or five zero seventy eight seventy
six and we'll take all your phone calls.

Speaker 7 (02:02:17):
Next Now back to the Carl Nelson Show.

Speaker 1 (02:02:44):
Bank Grand Rising Family. Thanks for sticking with us on
this Wednesday, this hump day that means we're halfway through
the work week. Happy Wednesday to you with our guests,
Doctor B. Doctor B is a master herbalist, is also
a metaphysician. Before we go back to you know, let
me just remind you come tomorrow clinical psychologist to draw
me fox You know if doctor Foxham is best selling
workbook Addicted to White the Oppressed in League with the Oppressor,

(02:03:05):
a shame based Alliance. I like that last part of
shame based Alliance is going to be here. So if
you're in Baltimore, make sure your radio's locked in tight
on ten ten WLB, or if you're in the DMV,
we're on FM ninety five point nine and AM fourteen
fifty WL. Doctor bave got some folks who want to
talk to you. But my question before the break was
this space that you're telling us that we should all
try to get into, is it something you can do solitary?

(02:03:28):
Do you need friends? Because you also told us about
stay away from people with negative energy. You low vibrational
people that you told us about, just ignore them and
stay away from them. Ignore them like the plague, so
being can you do this solitary? Can you and lengthen
your telemares by yourself or do you need help?

Speaker 6 (02:03:48):
It can be done by yourself. But it's also good
to have groups of people who are celebrating together because
when we vibrate together, we pulled together in won this.
So yeah, find people or groups of people who are
celebrating something good, you know, even if it's somebody's you know,
this is their Earth's Day or whatever, and you laugh

(02:04:10):
and have fun again. It leads for a short period
of the day. You can also do this by learning
certain deep breathing you know, exercises, because when you breathe
really deeply, it turns off the past. Because a lot
of our sadness and our issues it comes from the
idea that the past was really rough and today is

(02:04:31):
going to be rough. We expect it, we're creating it,
you see. We expect the life of today to be
like yesterday because somebody told us that history repeats itself,
when actually it really doesn't. It never happens the same again,
no matter what happened to you, it won't happen the same.
And the information we've received from the past is important.

(02:04:53):
But you can't always drag it into today. So for
at least a certain amount of the day, you've got
to tap into having some fun or breathing, or tap
into the inner child, because see the child inside of
all of us. The child is joyful. It wants to
play games, it wants to challenge and run and do

(02:05:13):
different things, and and and play sports or whatever you
did as a child. Right, those good things, those good
times during childhood are important. The average adult lives life
as an adult based on the conclusions of a child.
That means that the average person has these ideas in

(02:05:35):
their mind that come from childhood. But a lot of
times we're only reaching back into the struggle or the
pain or the trauma of childhood when most of us
have times when it was good. So if you could
go back in your mind and find one good place,
one good time, and bring that to your mindset and

(02:05:56):
feel it, hear it, and see it in your mind
as if it was happening now your body, your subconscious
and your conscious mind, it breaks away from the past
and it records the new information right now, which says,
I'm a child again. I was successful. It could have
been just getting an ad It could have been doing
one thing, completing one thing as a child where you

(02:06:19):
felt really good, that inner child, when you bring that
child into your mindset today and you smile, because when
you smile, those nerve endings and those muscles that it
takes to smile fires off chemicals through the body that
says we're celebrating, we're joyful, we're happy. And guess what

(02:06:42):
it does is it tells the serotonin, which is created
in your gut, to begin to emit into the system.
The vibration of serotonin is the one that says, we
are satisfied, we have done something great, we are amazing.
The serotonin, when it is in the system, that's the

(02:07:02):
one that says sends a message to the telomeres and
every cell, even your bones. It says, you know, this
is a good life because you only need a little
bit of serotonin, a little bit of success to fuel
you to move on and create something new, because you
can create something new every day, but it happens in
your mind.

Speaker 1 (02:07:22):
Now.

Speaker 6 (02:07:22):
Someone once told me one of my clients is, well,
I have no good memories of childhood, as I can't
even remember about childhood because I was born into a
family of strugglers. I was born into a family of fighters.
We've been at war. Nothing is good from my childhood,
so I can't do that, doctor b Okay, But let's imagine.
Let's imagine a good time. Can you even imagine it?

(02:07:45):
Can you create it in your mind. Let's play a
game like a child, and just imagine that something is good.
Once you step into imagination, be clear, imagination is just
as powerful or more important than science. It is the

(02:08:06):
most important thing using your imagination. If you just take
the word imagination and take it apart, and look at
all the words you could make from imagination. So one
of them is I am a nation of genes. I'm
a nation of genies. So your genes are your genies.
What do you do? You tell your genes every day
what you desire. So when you find a place to create,

(02:08:30):
even in your imaginative mind, that something is good, one thing,
just pick one thing, it fires off all of these
these all these hormones. You get serotonin, you get all
of these energies that say this is a great place
to be.

Speaker 1 (02:08:49):
And now hold that thought right there, doctor me. Got
some folks got questions for you. I don't want to
leave them out of this discussion here thirteen away from
the top. Let's start. Let's go in North Carolina. First,
call her brother Kwame is online one brother, Kwame grand Rising.
I'm with doctor B.

Speaker 4 (02:09:06):
Grand Rising. Brothers, Doctor B. What is something I can
tell my family and friends that's natural that can clean
their kidneys or repair their kidneys.

Speaker 6 (02:09:16):
Well, you can't just repare the kidneys. You've got to
repair the kidneys, deliver the spleen and all of those things.
And one thing is they've got to drink enough water
to flush the system. But water itself is not gonna
work correctly unless they put a bit of sea salt
in their water. So just a pinch, just a few
granules of sea salt and water, especially if it's spring water.

(02:09:39):
It's got to be spring water too. That begins to
give the body the minerals and the frequency that it
needs to tell those organs to release some of the toxins.
We also have to open up what we call the
channels of detoxification or the channels of elimination. So that's
the skin. We got to sweat. Sweating is very important,

(02:10:01):
so we can walk until we sweat, or getting in
a hot shower or hot bath. You know, those things
are important, but really to repair the kidneys, we got
to make sure that we won't have parasites in yeast
and microplastics in the systems. That's the big thing is
these microplastics, the yeast and the chemicals we create from

(02:10:21):
our mindset. The kidneys are affected by fear. The more
fear you have, the more reduction in kidney function. You
have a lot of folks haven't related that yet. The
kidney is connected to fear. And if you're living in
fear and you're feeling inferior and you got an inferiority complex,

(02:10:42):
those kidneys are gonna shut down. So this is why
we created a whole program. We created what we call
this elevated total body program that help detoxify the entire system,
including the kidney deliver in the spleen. And when you
do that, you open up the channels of elimination because
those are filters. All of your organs are filters, and

(02:11:02):
they're filtering the toxicity of what you're eating. So during
this time, you're not eating toxic foods. And also at
this particular time, you're giving your bodies the nutrients and
minerals that it needs. To repair itself. So anybody who
was looking to do those things, would, you know, try
something like our elevated Total body program that's at elevation

(02:11:23):
time dot com.

Speaker 5 (02:11:25):
All right, all right, well, so thank you Carl, have
a great show.

Speaker 1 (02:11:30):
I thank you. Quality call us from North Carolina. Let's
get closer to DC. Brother Bahama's joining us. He's online.
Three Salama laka, my brother and grand rising. You're on
with doctor B.

Speaker 4 (02:11:40):
Well lacolm salam, sir, your guest doctor B is I
mean he's on it. Uh this morning. I recently got
a new client and her name is doctor Georgia Dunstan. Uh.
Have you heard of her, doctor B.

Speaker 6 (02:12:00):
No, I haven't.

Speaker 4 (02:12:02):
Okay, doctor Georgia Dunean. Everybody should write that name down.
She's on YouTube. She's the founder of the Genome Lab
of Howard University.

Speaker 2 (02:12:12):
Okay.

Speaker 4 (02:12:12):
The genome is the study of your complete strand of DNA,
and she's been studying it like her whole life.

Speaker 1 (02:12:20):
Right.

Speaker 4 (02:12:20):
So in one of her lectures that totally changed my
entire life. When I heard what she said, it's like
it gave me a new spiritual toy to play with.
I kind of knew about the toy. But when she
said what she said, I'm gonna tell you in a
second it I knew exactly what to do in order

(02:12:42):
to play with this toy. You know what I'm saying.
And the toy is this, She said. Your genome is
a servant. It does not judge you whatever you speak
of or think of. It moves to give you that experience.
So everything the doctor is saying about environment and people

(02:13:02):
talking to you and all of that is completely true.
She said. The genome is voice activated. Yes, okay. Now,
so after she said this, right now, you know, I'm
in the nation Islam, and you know, we we get
out and we patrol these drug neighborhoods and other and
you know, we get into scuffles with people, and you know,

(02:13:24):
as a lieutenant, I had forty six men underneath me,
and I used to converse with my mentor who was
the first officer, all the time. And what we've noticed
is when the brothers got into fights, the brothers who
said a lahu akbar before they got into the fight
always were much more successful then the brothers who just

(02:13:45):
you know, got into it and started, you know, scruffling
with people and whatnot. Now, she said, the genome is
voice activate.

Speaker 1 (02:13:52):
Brother Mouhammad Akma, what does that mean?

Speaker 4 (02:13:56):
That is the greatest?

Speaker 1 (02:13:57):
Okay great?

Speaker 4 (02:13:58):
Yeah, okay, so uh she said, uh, the genome was
voice activated. And she also said that only a small
percentage of your DNA is used to make your body.
So that's proof that we're really spiritual beings. And like
the brother was saying about the uh the teller of
the DNA, the genome is a communication device. Yes, like

(02:14:25):
of you, Carl is the same as ninety nine percent
of me, so we could communicate on a whole different
level than over the phone and the radio and all
that kind of stuff, you know. And and that's why
when when you speak or pray on a certain subject,
what you're doing is you're sending out to all the
DNA that you have a need, and.

Speaker 6 (02:14:45):
Then somebody with similar DNA to you is.

Speaker 4 (02:14:49):
Gonna bring you the answer to your prayer. It's gonna
come from a person. It's not gonna fall out the sky.

Speaker 1 (02:14:56):
And so like I give it to respond to that
because sounds like the law of attraction.

Speaker 4 (02:15:03):
Well, to give an example, when I get off the phone,
I got into a scuffle with this guy who attacked
me over here on Central Avenue and sheriff rode and
every time I tried to fight this guy, he would
try to he would kick me with these big motorcycle boots.
And so in the back of my mind, I said
to myself, oh, you haven't said a loud walkbar. It's

(02:15:24):
a true story. As soon as I said at liwalkbar.
But Carl I turned into Bruce Lee out there. And
I'm not a martial arts like. I don't have any
black belts or anything. And I, you know, God blessed
me to be successful. And after listening to doctor Dunston,
what I realized is I tapped into the memory of
all the warriors and fighters that has survived battles and

(02:15:48):
pom battles in my DNA. And that's why in the
Holy Koran it says it wasn't you that slew them,
it was me that slewed them at your hands. Because
when you call on the geno on which is voice activity,
you summons all the knowledge that you have that's in
your DNA already to serve you and give you the

(02:16:12):
experience that you desire, which is health, economically, socially, spiritually.

Speaker 6 (02:16:20):
Your geno serves you to give.

Speaker 1 (02:16:23):
You the we're come up on a break and I
want to get doctor be a chance to respond. Well,
thank you, brother Mohama, thank you for sharing that story
with us. Doctor b.

Speaker 6 (02:16:33):
Your word is your bond, your bonded, glued or stuck
to what you say. Your words are extremely powerful. The
tone of your voice, the frequency, the rhythm and the
melody that you speak on changes matter. Do words matter?

(02:16:55):
Your words are going into the quantum field as ways
of energy, right, And when you speak something and you
say something, after a while, those waves of energy turn
into particles, they turn into matter. Almost everything here is
created based on how we sound. That's why in court

(02:17:17):
they ask is he of sound, mind and body? What's
your sound? We are instruments. We're part of an orchestra.
So it is it's not just your words that come
out of your mouth, it's the words that you're thinking
in your head. The words and the sounds is that
you're thinking in your head, and the reality that you

(02:17:39):
think is actual and factual has a lot to do
with your outcome. So, like the brothers say, when we
think together, we get together with people.

Speaker 9 (02:17:48):
Right.

Speaker 6 (02:17:48):
You change the energy when you go to war, or
when you go to work or when you go to play,
what you're saying and what you're thinking before you get
there becomes your actual thing. That's what you create it.
That's your gift to the world. So words are very
important because we were taught to speak the language of disempowerment.
I can't, I won't. It's gonna be hard, it's gonna

(02:18:11):
be rough. Well, you know, doctor Bee, you blah blah
blah blah blah blah blah. And we always talk about
the problems because that's a that's a symptom of oppression
that we've been through. And after you've been oppressed for
so many years, you can become oppressive. You'll even protect
the oppressor subconsciously and not realizing you're doing it, and
become like the oppressor because you think the oppressor is

(02:18:33):
the winner. So you talk like them, you act like them,
when in fact that's not who we are. Who we are.
We have to let that go and tap into this
inner child. You know, I'm gonna be in Brooklyn this
Saturday at this bookstore called Nicholas Books in Brooklyn, and
I'll be talking about this inner child's experience that we
have to create. So that's this Saturday. So you know,

(02:18:55):
get on my email list at elevation time dot com,
elevation time dot com and we're gonna send out a
newsletter later on talking about the nervous system and also
give you the dates that we have coming up for
this different functions, but one of them is this Saturday
at Nicholas Books in Brooklyn, and I'm gonna be talking
about this very thing. We gotta tap into the child

(02:19:16):
within us.

Speaker 7 (02:19:18):
How old I thought?

Speaker 1 (02:19:19):
Right there, doctor bab, we gotta step aside for a
few moments. It's two away from the top of the oist.
Maybe that's why Michael Jackson was the way. He was
just thinking of eight hundred and four or five zero
seventy eight seven. SI, it's got some tweet questions for you,
doctor b. We'll do all of that when we get back. Family,
you want to reach us, we'll take it. Calls next,
you'recking with.

Speaker 7 (02:19:38):
The most Submission the Carl Nelson Show. You'recking with the
most submissive, right.

Speaker 1 (02:20:06):
Man, Rising Fanta, that's rolling with us on this Wednesday
morning with I guess he's a metaphysicians, a master herbalist.
His name is doctor B and he's not a medical doctor,
but he's more a metaphysician and a master herbalist, as
you mentioned, as you've heard him before discuss that. Doctor
B got some tweet questions for you. Twitter wants to
know something about Reynard's disease. What can I take for Raynard?

(02:20:28):
Are you familiar with that?

Speaker 6 (02:20:30):
Well, that's one of the things that I had, was
Reynard syndrome. And Reynard syndrome is when the capillaries right
begin to slatten. Like your capillaries are the smallest blood
vessels in the body, at your extremities, at the skin
and the eyes and in places that are you know,
it's hard to pump blood through there because the openings

(02:20:51):
are so small. Some of these capillaries can only plant,
will only pass one blood cell at a time. They're
so small. You have rain od syndrome. They begin to
close up and flatten, so you don't get enough blood
flow through those capillaries.

Speaker 9 (02:21:09):
So you itch.

Speaker 6 (02:21:09):
You know, you have this thing. I used to itch
in the middle of the day. I would just you know,
I couldn't, you know, you couldn't. You couldn't soothe this itch,
and I'd have to tap on my body in certain
places to try to get the blood flow, but my
blood vessels were collapsing. Your blood vessels begin to collapse
when you're under huge amounts of stress and you don't

(02:21:30):
have enough calcium and iron. Calcium right, which you can
get from certain foods, like you know, one of the
highest amounts of calcium is in sesame seeds. Sesame seeds
they have the right type of calcium. Because if it's
calcium what they call uh, there's many different forms of

(02:21:51):
every mineral you see. So if it says oxide calcium oxide,
that means it's like a rock. Your body can't digest it.
The calcium that you're going to get from plants is
going to be a nascent or a type of calcium
that your body can recognize because it's very small particles
of that particular mineral that have been you know, they've

(02:22:13):
been pulled up from the soil from plants, so you know,
green leafy vegetables and things like that. You're gonna get
your calcium, also your iron and your magnesium. Magnesium is
important because it relaxes the blood vessels. It relaxes the
blood vessels so that you can get more blood flow.
But I actually had that and it was really bad.

(02:22:34):
I mean, this was during the time I had, you know,
a whole slew of illnesses based on my environment from
what I was eating, how I was thinking, how I
was talking, and what I was ingesting. So when I
changed all those things, you know, that particular situation went away.
So that's something else that our elevated total body program
addresses is the blood vessels, so they can become open

(02:22:56):
and round and clear, and we don't have sticky blood.
It's the blood cell sticking together. Then they can't move
through those capillaries.

Speaker 1 (02:23:03):
Very well, all right, got another tweet question for you.
Five after the tweeter says ask Gus, why is it
some people look much younger than their age? And it
goes on to say, I know two people both the
same age, but one looks much younger. Is it the genetic,
the food? Is it environment? The way they think? What?

(02:23:23):
Is it a myth that everyone in life? A myth?
Let me get this right. It's a myth that in
life everyone will not age? Or is it not a
number or just a word?

Speaker 6 (02:23:38):
Well, first of all, age has a lot to do
with your mindset, how you think. Age has to do
with how you experience the world. If you are listening
to the mainstream and what they tell you about aging
or things like. You know, they have these rules that

(02:23:58):
they say, well, you know you're going to get older
at forty years old, docment me. You know what begins
to happen as sixty year needs go out. And people
believe this because this is indoctrinated in their system, right,
so that now they believe it, they follow blindly these ideas.
You have to create youth within yourself. So one person

(02:24:20):
they think youthful. They're always being creative, they're always improvising,
they're doing things that actually binds them to life. If
the other person is always ruminating on the disagreeable for
the disappropriation and the problem in the past, the disagreeable past.

Speaker 5 (02:24:41):
They age.

Speaker 6 (02:24:42):
Also what you eat has a lot to do with it.
A lot of the food that we have eaten traditionally
is aging us. It is eating us. The food is
eating us. Then the next thing is parasites. The number
one thing that contributes to aging and illness is parasites.

(02:25:03):
Then comes mold or fungus, right, and then mental deficiencies.
Everybody has parasites. But when you are detoxifying from the parasites,
and you do that every season. And not just physical parasites, Carl,
I'm talking about mental parasites, which are ideas and feelings

(02:25:26):
from the past that are eating you alive in the
today moment. Think about that, there's ideas that's eating you alive.
They're like, you know, vampires, sucking your life for us
because you wake up and you think that everything in
the past is going to attack you today, and you
actually draw to you the disagreeableness that you believe your

(02:25:46):
world is being created by your beliefs, by your outlooks.
Once you change that, you change your perspective. Everything changes.
So one person is probably eating better and thinking in
a very procreative way. They're creating life force, and the
other person is usually living under stressed and duressing mentally,

(02:26:10):
physically and spiritually. When you begin to walk and talk
and eat for life and not just because you're hungry,
and when you begin to turn off some of the
disagreeable news and find sometimes to celebrate, tap into the
inner child, and be around people who are walking the
same road, because no matter how bad it looks, it's

(02:26:33):
also good at the same time, depending on your point
of view.

Speaker 1 (02:26:37):
All Right, I got a tweet for you. Doctor B
eight after the top of the tweeter says, I have
what's called floaters. Does he have anything to help me
on my floaters?

Speaker 6 (02:26:48):
If the floaters are a little round things, this has
to do it just It could be cellular debris in
the eyeball, which is kind of normal. The body always
has debris. Everything is always has waste material. If there's
quickly little lines, many times those floaters are parasites. If

(02:27:09):
you watch them, you can see they're moving, they're navigating,
it's swimming. It's crazy. These things are living things, living
in the tissue or in the liquid in the eye.
If you've got floaters in your eye, that means you've
got parasites throughout your whole system. One of the things

(02:27:32):
that people say when they do our twenty eight day
you know, total Body of Parasite Clans program, and they say,
you know, the floaters went away because you're changing the
frequency of all the tissue and all the fluids of
the body. That's what you have to do. And there's
two different types of parasites. There is the parasites of

(02:27:52):
the digestive system, but the floaters in the eyes are
not part of that. Community. The floaters in the eye
are considered systemic parasites. Systemic parasites live throughout the system,
so they're in all your organs. Those parasites are the
most detrimental to your health. So floaters, if they're the

(02:28:15):
squiggly ones, those are worms. Those are things that are
living in your body, eating your tissue, also causing eye issues,
and they're in your everywhere. They're throughout your whole system.
So that's why I say, you know, doing just a
colon cleansing type parasite cleans is great, that's great, we
should do that, But a systemic cleans is totally different.

(02:28:40):
A systemic detoxification changes the cellular frequency of every part
of your body. We're at a time car where there's
more biological warfare or warfare devices or vapors or issues
in the air than ever because they drop bombs on people,

(02:29:01):
they drop things these what they call you know ethno
specific you know weapons, bio weapons to kill off certain
groups of people or certain groups of animals or bugs
or insects. That's now in our environment. So we're all
breathing that. It's in our water, you see. So those

(02:29:22):
biological entities have now taken over the average human. So
we eat and we think based on these things and
their survival. So when we detoxify our body, I'm talking
about systemic detoxification. That's when we begin to take back
the terrain, clean up the body, and those things begin
to disappear.

Speaker 1 (02:29:42):
All right, let me ask you this. You eleven half
the top. They have family. I guess it's doctor Be.
As I mentioned, Doctor Be's a master herbalist and also
a metaphysician. Doctor b Is there a difference between parasites
and toxins.

Speaker 6 (02:29:53):
Yes, parasites are living entities. Those are entities that they
actually think or they actually have us thing that they do,
and their thing is to live besides you. That's what
I call parasites means life beside you, and they actually
live in rhythm with you and eat your best nutrition.
They eat your minerals, they eat your tissues. That's what

(02:30:15):
they do. Now. Toxins are things that may not be living.
They may be things that comes from from drugs or
from chemicals for kim trails or microplastics and all of
these things that we're inundated with every day. The cleaning
products that we use, those air fresheners. All of those
things are toxins in the air, toxins in the water,

(02:30:39):
even toxins in our clothing. If your clothing is made
out of polyester, is made out of any of those
unnatural fibers, they're actually eroding your life force. They're eating
you alive. You see. But now when we use you know,
fabrics like one hundred percent cotton, we use of flax

(02:31:00):
or what they call linen, you know, when we use hemp,
when we wear those clothes, they actually give your body energy.
They don't take energy. So we've got to also look
at what we're wearing and your genes right, check this alcoholic.
You know, your genes are what you're wearing. Like you said,
I'm going to go buy a loop pair of genes
or the genes in your body. You're wearing them, you

(02:31:22):
put them on. As the brother said earlier, your genes
are not responsible for your everyday health. Only a small percentage,
less than ten percent of your gene expression comes from
your family line. The rest of it comes from your environment.
How you act, what you do, what you use, how

(02:31:43):
you act, how you pray, how you think you're creating
out of what they call jump DNA a program. The
jump DNA is not jump DNA. It's an open program
that's waiting for you to act and live. We're actually
creating our lives and we can recreate our lives at
any moment the minute we change our minds. And when

(02:32:04):
you change your mind, you're going to change what you eat,
You're going to change how you act. You're going to
change what you wear, You're going to change who you
hang out with. You can do that now. You become
the change you're looking to have in this lights, you
have to becoming.

Speaker 1 (02:32:18):
All right fourteen half the top day our family with
the metaphysician and master herbalist, Doctor Bae, Doctor Bee. I
want to go back to the music because that's what's
where you started. And the music some of the music
today's young people are engaged in very negative. The energy
is just it's just a turnoff. The cursing and all
that many thing. They can't do a song with that profanity.

(02:32:39):
I want to get your thoughts on that. How does
that manifest itself? Because the music of today's young people
is different from music when you were coming up and
you and I were coming up.

Speaker 4 (02:32:50):
Well, see all of.

Speaker 6 (02:32:51):
This is a part of co and tail pro, the
counterintelligence programs from the sixties where you get people to
self destruct, people to do things that are actually a
part of self harm, create a type of schizophrenia in people. Now,
if you look up the definition of schizophrenia, it's not
what you think. Schizophrenia is you believing in things that

(02:33:14):
really are impossible, or going along with some things that
can actually hurt you and doing self harm to yourself.
Self harm is what you're eating. But what you're eating
also is your music. Because music is a consumable product.
When you hear it is going in your body and
it's creating chemical reactions. It's creating a vibration that tells

(02:33:40):
your body whether we're safe and things are good, make
more healthy cells, or are we in fight or flight.
If we're in fight or flight, the immune system shuts down.
Your body begins to shrink, It begins to calcify and
crystallize because it's trying to make itself smaller because whatever
is attacking it, it doesn't want to be noticed. We're

(02:34:02):
being attacked by the music. We're allowing ourselves to be attacked.
Because the music is a war. It can be used
as a weapon of love or weapon of love. But
it's a part of population control. So if you look
at how music was changed, and music was changed by
what we're accepting, what we're listening to. When we were

(02:34:23):
in you know, the sixties and seventies and even parts
of the eighties, the music was about something that could
help us through our lives. Any song from the seventies,
they're about what life force, you know, waves of energy
and possibility and imagination. Then we get into, you know,
a time where the music was more about you know, struggle,

(02:34:46):
more about pain, more about fighting, more about you know, competition.
See Carl you remember Man, the groups in the seventies,
they weren't competing with each other. They were doing what
they did. And a lot of times you were doing
what you did because you loved it and this is
all you had. It took you away from your problems.
Now it's about mind control. Get the people to self destruct,

(02:35:09):
because when you get the people to self destruct. On
the way to self destruction, they eat terribly. They consume
more processed sugar, they consume more alcohol, they consume more
psychotrophic drugs because they're trying to anesthetize themselves or make
themselves feel better about the condition that they're listening to.

(02:35:31):
The situation that we're listening to now that people are
have agreed and allow themselves to be part of is death.
The rhythm, the rhythms and everything are death marches. I
study music really deeply. That's my first study. A lot
of the rhythms are death marches or war dances.

Speaker 1 (02:35:52):
Yeah, that though, doctor you gotta step aside for a
few moments when we come back. I got some tweeters
on moves case and Cally's got a question for you family.
You who can join our conversation with doctor B. Hit
us up at eight hundred and four or five zero
seventy eight seventy six and we'll take your phone calls
next and Grandizing family, thanks for rolling with us on

(02:36:28):
this Wednesday morning with our guest that doctor B. As
I mentioned, doctor B is a master herbalis is also
a metaphysician, and we're discussing various issues today. And we've
got some folks who got questions for doctor B before
we left for the breakdown. Told you the as sister
Kitty and CALLI send a question for doctor B. She says,
could you ask Doctor B what we can do to
protect ourselves from the chemical spray to control the weather.

Speaker 6 (02:36:51):
Well, you can't really protect yourself from them. What you
can do is depoxify from them. There's always toxins in
the environment. Even before all these chemicals and things were
being used, we had chemicals from nature and pollen. All
kinds of things are always attempting to do what they do.

(02:37:14):
It's up to your body's health. It's up to your
immune system, the health of your skin, the health of
your nervous system, the health of your mindset. Now, if
you're looking in the sky and you see these planes
with these Kim trails right, and you think, oh my god,
there's Kim trails. They're going to kill us. They're trying
to kill us. Guess what happens? You begin to die.

(02:37:37):
Now if you look at the kim trails and you say, oh, wow,
they're skywriting. Wow, that's fun, all of a sudden, your
immune system comes online. When you feel that you are
at fourt you're at a child mindset. When you're in
a child mindset, and it's not going to hurt you
because you have boosted your immune system. Us by being

(02:38:00):
in joy and celebrating and thinking in a very creative
or positive way and improvise and change the frequency of
what you're thinking. I know this sounds crazy. You actually
create a force field when you're in love mode. You
create an energetic bubble around your body, around your biosphere.

(02:38:23):
You see, your biometrics change is based on what you believe,
what you're allowing in.

Speaker 4 (02:38:30):
Now.

Speaker 6 (02:38:30):
I'm not saying that the kim trails are not dangerous.
They are, but so is some plant vapors. You know
what I'm saying. It's parts of the earth that's emitting
raydon and all kinds of things are happening. But what
is very powerful and what has always helped us is
our mindset. What we eat. If you're eating food that

(02:38:51):
has already weakened your immune system because your mindset is
I'm just hungry and I'm gonna eat some trash. I'm
gonna eat a bunch of sugar and a bunch of
chemically laden foods, then all of a sudden, you are
now you're going to weaken your system because of your mindset.
Your mindset is the most powerful thing that you have.

(02:39:15):
That's why we got to tap into that. And you know, KRL,
what's really interesting, I realize that right now, we're in
any emergency space because there's so much mass distraction, so
many concepts of mass destruction going on around us every
day that people are in fear. People are stressed out
more than ever. They're watching the president and what he's doing.

(02:39:37):
They're looking at the news, they're listening to their friends,
they're looking at social media. Those blue lights coming from
the cameras, I mean, the screens. All of that is
weakening our immune systems. But when your immune system is
enjoy mode, when you're in love mode, your immune system
works one hundred percent. So I realized, I said, what

(02:39:57):
can we do? People are in so deep right now,
We're caught so deep into this hole. We need to
change our mindset. That means your subconscious has got to
be balanced. So, you know, many of the years that's
been my specialty, helping people rewire right and remind their subconscious.

(02:40:19):
So we created a group subconscious shift or what we
call alignment. It's called the Core Access Experience. And what
we've been able to do with this process, a group
of people gets together and we say, what would you like?
Each person picked something that they really would like to
achieve in life. You pick one thing and you write

(02:40:41):
it down in a special way, which is called a
language syntax, and then we take you through a process.
It's a type of a guided meditation using sound. I'm
using frequencies and sounds and live instruments that actually take
you into the stat of state or take you into

(02:41:03):
the imaginative part of yourself, and we create a whole
paradigm in your mind and we're able to go down
in your subconscious basement and remove much of the debris,
the cargo, the jump that's been sitting around in your
basement in your mindset, that some of it you don't
even know about because it was passed down to you.
It was a hand me down from your parents. These

(02:41:25):
are ideas and feelings and you know, all of these
things that are basically trash that need to be taken out.
And in this process CAR what we do in a group,
we're able to help people and we relieve a lot
of the stress, a lot of the problems that they
have in their minds. And the key to this CAR
is in this process, we don't need to know what

(02:41:46):
your problems are. This is the most powerful change technique
I've ever seen. We've been facilitating this it's called the
Core Access Experience. Everyone who's done their lives change. I'm
not talking about just a change for a couple of weeks. No,
this is a change for good because we've tapped into

(02:42:09):
your subconscious and what we call the collective subconscious is
what the group all together shares. That's why you got
to be careful who you're hanging out with, because your
subconscious connects to your subconscious, and their fears and their
problems become yours, or their joys and their happiness and
their goodness and their success can become yours too. So
in this process we create something that brings on the serotonin.

(02:42:33):
It tells your body we're doing really good, and we're
around people in a group who are doing really good
and were successful. So this is called the Core Access Experience.
Now we've got one coming up on the seventeenth of
August here in Atlanta. We did one last month in Atlanta,
and the calls have been coming in like crazy, like,

(02:42:55):
oh my god, my whole life change. Doctor, be what
did you do well? What did you allow your self
to do by being involved with something? And you know,
it's like having ten years of therapy in one session
and Not only are we going to do that, we're
also going to have a meat and greet. It's going
to be food, so food comes with it, healthy food,

(02:43:16):
and you're going to be around people who are people
who are all moving to the same goal together in tandem.
So this is a life change opportunity and a life
a life giving opportunity. So make sure that you know
if you can make it to Georgia on the seventeenth
of Atlanta to be involved with a group you know,

(02:43:37):
subconscious alignment. It's called the Core Access Experience. It's going
to change everything because we need to do something drastic.
Now we're so far right now, caught into this system.
We're in like a black hole, and now most people
can't get out of it. They're in it so deep
this process.

Speaker 1 (02:43:56):
Yeah, I thought, right, then, I'll let you give all
that information for you, Levi. We've got folks that want
to talk to you, doctor B. And I also got
some tweet questions for you as well. Twenty eight after
the top of the our Family, let's go to Memphis.
Marcus is waiting for us. He's online one Grant Rising
Marcacy with doctor B.

Speaker 9 (02:44:13):
Yes, Grand Rising, Carlos, I mean Carl and Grant rising.

Speaker 4 (02:44:17):
Doctor B.

Speaker 9 (02:44:18):
You know, doctor B, doctory what you're saying there. You
know it's some powerful stuff, you all, it's some powerful
stuff because that is the solution.

Speaker 7 (02:44:27):
What you're saying.

Speaker 9 (02:44:28):
The areinal black folks. You should you should be overwhelmed
with what you're doing, because that what you said, dear,
is the solution. And you know the significance of that.
Did I go seventeenth? That is Marcus God his bird, Dear, No,
you know you said something that was that I was

(02:44:49):
listening to you. You said about the child in all
of us. And one thing I learned from doctor Elmos Wilson,
he said, one thing he said the psychologis said, Look,
your past is always with you. You know, each of
us as individual, you know your past is always with you.

(02:45:10):
Your one history and one's experience makes up one psychology.

Speaker 5 (02:45:17):
You know.

Speaker 9 (02:45:17):
So our history, the individual history and the experience growing
up is a part of your makes up the individual psychology.
And what you said about the music, about the death march,
you say, it's reflected by look how many martial things

(02:45:37):
they have had in this country. They said, over two
hundred muchal things since the beginning after years two hundred close.
So while you keep doing what you're doing, doctor b
you had a solution. And I hope our black folks
you should. You should be overwhelmed because we need this,
this institution all over our clothes with this. I was

(02:45:59):
part of our Marcus garveyhan bucking the nineties. And there
is a snag that is creative when you're in a goop.
I have never felt that since. And then I remember
there is a synergy when you have ten black forks

(02:46:20):
in one group putting their heads together. There is a
synergy dea that I have never experienced it again, you
know after that leaving that group. So thank you that
can keep on keeping on.

Speaker 4 (02:46:34):
Thank you.

Speaker 6 (02:46:35):
Brother all Right said, what he's talking about is affinity.
It is a type of affinity. Affinity is when something
is attracted naturally to something else.

Speaker 1 (02:46:46):
Right.

Speaker 6 (02:46:47):
They found during the hundredth Monkey of Theory, they found
that when they taught certain monkeys in the rainforest to
wash their their yam or their food before they ate it.
They taught one monkey that by the end of the week,
all the monkeys on that island was washing their fruit
or their food. They didn't all see this one washing

(02:47:08):
the fruit. They begin to do it because they have
an infinite connection with each other. Then they noticed that
monkeys on other islands also begin to wash their fruit
within about twenty eight days or a certain amount of time.
And all the animals are connected through this grid, this
infinite grid that connects us. So when you're around people

(02:47:30):
who are doing the best they can to not survive
but thrive, when we speak in the words and the
power of success, right, when you do that with a
group of people, you wire together, you fire together, you
begin to change the actual dynamics and the space in
the material of the space time continuum. We are all connected,

(02:47:55):
but you have to dis dislocate yourself from folks who
are going the hill and the hand basket and create
heaven on earth. And that's why we created that one product,
Heaven on Earth. I think I sent you some years ago, Carl,
that helps you get your mindset to a place where
you create heaven on earth. You're not waiting to get
to heaven. You have become heaven because heaven is a

(02:48:17):
place within our mindset. It's not a place that you
get to when you die. It's a place that you
create while you're living.

Speaker 2 (02:48:27):
Got it?

Speaker 1 (02:48:28):
Twenty seven away from the top. Day I got some
more folks want to talk to doctor B at eight
hundred and four or five zero seventy eight seventy six.
James is coming from Washington, DC. James on line three
Grand Rise in James Jawn with doctor B.

Speaker 11 (02:48:42):
Ye know, good morning. I have a question, like I'm
eighty one years old and I've been exercising for a
very long time. My question is, people always tell me
that I look much younger, like I'm sixty, but I
don't see that. Why is there anybody keep telling me that?

(02:49:04):
But I can't believe that what I see.

Speaker 6 (02:49:07):
It's because you've been taught, and I believe in yourself
and what you see. You've been taught that your eyes
are lying. But if the people are telling you, then
you need to take that in and realize that they're
actually telling you something that is true that you cannot see.
A lot of people can't see how successful they are.
They can't believe it because to tell lie vision because

(02:49:29):
the world, the church, or the group that they're in
doesn't believe in growing young. You're growing young. Can you
remember being eighteen? You're eighty one now. If you can
remember being eighteen, and for check this out for twenty
one seconds every day. Imagine you doing something at eighteen.

(02:49:50):
Do you know your body does not know the difference.
Your subconscious cannot perceive that we're not truly eighteen. Your
subconscious is being programmed by way you believe and what
you follow blindly with. So if you just go into
a meditation and just breathe deeply, wait for twenty one
seconds a day being eighteen, your body begins to rejuvenate yourself.

(02:50:13):
Your telomeres begin to repair themselves, and you become younger
and younger.

Speaker 11 (02:50:19):
Thank you dogs. I mean I maintained the same size.
I just gain a lot of weight, you know, like
as you get older, you know, you take on a weight.
But I'm weighing the same and every time I do
my lab work, it's coming out real good. So I
don't know.

Speaker 6 (02:50:42):
I know you you're hypnotized. You got to break out
of that. You are getting young. I am becoming younger
and younger. Just say it every day and imagine you
being at the place where you're successful. Just remaine. Imagine
you are young, Imagine you're creative. Imagine you're wealthy. Imagine

(02:51:03):
that the love that you desire you're attracting because you
have to be at first. You can't attract love and
wealth and all that when you're thinking that you're poor, broken, lonely.
You see, because the average person wants to get healthy,
but illness still got them. They want to get they
want to get rich, but poor still got them. They
want to get black, but the white still got them.
Because everything is connected, but it depends on how you

(02:51:26):
drive your ship. As the captain of your ship. Your
mind is extremely powerful. You're very creative. So be young.

Speaker 1 (02:51:36):
All right, thank you for that, Thank you for that call.
James and I concur with doctor B said, be young,
Doctor B. God tweet question for you tweeter, says doctor B.
What causes eye sty and is there a natural way
to treat an eyesty to advance its healing.

Speaker 6 (02:51:54):
Skies have a lot to do with the blood, the
consistency of the blood. And if your blood is not clean,
then nothing is clean. And very sensitive tissues are in
your eyelid, so that sky is your body collecting toxins
from that area. And that's what tumors are. Tumors are

(02:52:15):
actually saving people's lives. What do you mean they're actually
collecting all the toxins and locking it into a container
so it doesn't just flood your body. So a sky
is you have a lot of toxins in your vision,
in your eyes, in your head. So we've got to
clean the body, the entire body, because the sky is

(02:52:37):
a small symptom of something larger going on in the body.
Any one symptom is connected to everything. That's why twenty
eight days of detoxification from parasites, toxins, and mold and
even microplastics is really important. So some folks say, well,
you know, I put a cold compress on it, you know,
and all those things do help, but it's giving you

(02:52:57):
a signal that something else is going on your body.
And here's here's the code that you should always remember.
Whatever's happening in the top of your body is a
symptom of what's happening in the bottom of your body.
What's happening in the bottom of your body is a
symptom of what's happening in the top of your body.
So we treat the whole system with food, you know, herbs, cleansing, detoxification,

(02:53:19):
and that is what the body is doing trying to
save you from something.

Speaker 1 (02:53:23):
All right, Hold up, for ahead, doctor Bab, We'll come back.
Tweeter says Dion Sanders was recently diagnosed with bladder cancer.
They wear no signs. What herbs can we take for prevention?
I'll let you respond to that when we get back.
Family you too, you got a question for doctor b
hit us up at eight hundred and four or five
zero seventy eight seventy six. We'll take your phone calls next.

Speaker 7 (02:53:46):
Now back to the Carl Nelson Show.

Speaker 1 (02:54:11):
To stay with us all morning long. And of course
if you missed any of the programs, you can download
a copy of the podcast. Just go to the website,
said Wldcnews dot com or w lb Baltimore dot com.
You get all the information. All the past programs are
on there as well. And if you're taking us takes
along just to use the you know, download the app
and you can roll over us or wherever you're doing
throughout the day. Got some great programming you line up

(02:54:33):
on both stations throughout the day. Uh, I guess is
doctor b Doctor b He's a master herbalist. He's also
a metaphysician and doctor b Uh before we left for
the break, had a question to tweet us and I'll
just read a tweet again. It says Dion Sanders was
recently diagnosed with bladder cancer. There were no signs. What
herbs can we take for prevention?

Speaker 6 (02:54:53):
First of all, a lot of illnesses start in the mind,
or in the energy field or in the email motions
that we have. Things like bladder cancer and kidney disease
have a lot to do with fear or being pissed off,
having anger and not being able to release the anger
or be become frustrated about certain things in life. So

(02:55:16):
we'd have to know more about his actual life to
see where that came from. What did he eat all
of those things. What we can do to be to
be more healthy is to have the knowledge right of
what to eat, how to eat certain chemicals and things
in the in the that we buy that we used
to clean the house, all of those things.

Speaker 11 (02:55:37):
Have to be inspected.

Speaker 6 (02:55:39):
And you know, Kyl, I'm gonna do something tomorrow. Tomorrow's Thursday, right, Yeah, Tomorrow,
at seven pm, I'm doing a free webcast and for
the first time, I'm going to mention certain products that
can actually help certain diseases. Now, in the past, we
were very careful to do this because we were being
under the we were under the watchful eye of the hidden.

(02:56:00):
But guess what, Tomorrow's a special day. There's an opening
happening in the cosmos tomorrow. So we're going to actually
give out a lot of information about diseases and things
that you can take or do or activities that you
can be involved with to help alleviate you from moving
towards the place they call cancer you see, or towards

(02:56:21):
high blood pressure, heart disease, and ask me how to
reverse some of these things. So that's tomorrow night at
seven pm. Now, the easiest way to do this is
to go to elevationtime dot com and get on the
email list. At elevation time dot com, get on the
exmail list. We're going to do a newsletter. It's coming

(02:56:41):
out this evening around five, six, seven o'clock and on
there will be all the information you need. And we
have a really good article about the immune system that
we've written, educational piece stake break down some of the
things that you need to look at, not the immune system,
but the nervous system and how it's connected to everything.
So go to elevation Time, get on the email list,
and be at our free webcast tomorrow night, but also

(02:57:05):
on YouTube. You can go to DOCTA d O C
T A H the letter B serious s I R
I U S. That's DOCTA d O C t A
H the letter B serious s I R I U S.
Go to YouTube. Punch that up. And what will happen
is you'll be able to, you know, be on that

(02:57:26):
free webcast that's happening tomorrow evening at seven pm. So
we're going to answer a lot of those questions that
we weren't able to ask or answer in the past.
And we're going to be very clear, and I'll direct
you towards some things that can help you create heaven
on Earth and your mind, body and spirit.

Speaker 1 (02:57:42):
Gotcha fourteen away from the topic, doctor, but we can
get a chance to discuss emotional imbalance. What is man?
What do you mean when you talk about emotional imbalance?

Speaker 6 (02:57:51):
Well, you know what happens is is we have a mood.
Something happens and it causes a mood. If you hold
on to a mood for seven day, that mood turns
into a temperament. A temperament means that something is heated,
is bonded and shaped in such a way whereas actual material,

(02:58:13):
when it was just a mood, it was an idea.
When it becomes a temperament, it becomes recorded into the tissue.
So now the issue is in the tissue because you
have resonated and vibrated so strongly with this issue that
your body begins to program it. The subconscious mind is

(02:58:33):
called the body mind, is programmed into your system. The
subconscious is not in your head, it's in your tissues.
So once we hold on to that temperament, check this out,
that thing for twenty eight days, it becomes hardened into character.

(02:58:54):
What started out as a mood turns into a temperament.
You become tempermental, and that temperament is going to your
brain mental and now it's a character. That character that
you have hardens like a cast, and you're locked into

(02:59:14):
this belief because you didn't let it go. What you
could do is, when you have a mood you're upset
about something, you're gonna need to create the opposite. The
only thing that can change any emotion, because emotions tends
to stay in the emotions right tend to stay in motion,

(02:59:35):
or I should say emotions tend to stay in motions
until acted upon by an equal or opposite force. So
when you have a mood, you got have to find
some kind of activity, and this is what we teach
at elevation time. You're going to have to do something.
There could be a body movement, there could be something
that triggers you into releasing the mood, or walking or

(02:59:58):
grounding on the planet, or eating something or drinking something,
or doing some activity that reverses the mood and it
begins to turn the energy down. Otherwise, the adrenaline comes
online cortisol. Now we're in fight, fight, fight, flight or freeze.
And when you stay in fight, flight or freeze, your

(03:00:20):
your immune system and your energy field and your emotions
are an imbalance. That imbalance is going to create a disease.
Money diseases are caused by your mindset or what I
call mental parasites. When you have mental parasites, they're like
bugs eating you alive. If you have automatic negative thoughts,

(03:00:44):
automatic negative thoughts are like ants. They irritate you. If
you automatically think every day that something is bad, something's
after you. That becomes your character, but it's not true.
You're creating it. If you believe in the news. When
you realize that they've never told you the whole truth

(03:01:05):
about anything. So let's create some joy. So in our
core Access experience that we're doing on the seventeenth of
the next month, we teach you a body movement. If
you do this body movement, it changes everything. It's actually
comes from martial arts and yoga. They're called moodras. They're
movements that you do that signals your body to release

(03:01:28):
or vaporize the issue that you think you're having because
it's all in your mindset. You will learn how to
laugh right when everybody else is crying, you learn how
to laugh. And when you laugh, you change your dimension.
You go from one world to another. You've done a
timeline jump, You've changed dimensions. So there are several things

(03:01:49):
that you can do. We're going to be teaching those.
So come to some of these events and we'll talk
more about that tomorrow night too on our free webinar.

Speaker 1 (03:01:56):
All right, I'll let you give all that information before
you leave it. Mine away from top. Say, I got
some more folks want to talk to you. Michael's in
Baltimore's online One Grand Rise and Michael the question for
doctor b.

Speaker 10 (03:02:06):
Oh Okay, then good morning to your doctor b y
because and the reason why I'm calling is I called him,
you know, a couple of weeks to go and talk
to another female doctor and she told me exactly she
was gonna get back in touch with me, but I'm
never get you know, she never called back. So but
the reason why I'm calling is man, and it's serious
problem with my right legs and all this turning, getting

(03:02:31):
darkness all halfway up my raid and I'm trying to
figure out what the hell is going on because a
doctor but the doctor me and us, he tells me
that that's all I need to do is just take blood.
Then is but I'm asking of what's causing all this?
He said, the blood is not circulator. Get your laid
like it should be. And then all of a sudden,
I'm having the same problem with my left day just
starting to ask, start to change and colors just like

(03:02:53):
my wife. And they said, my knees are all falled
and my left knee swelling up over me. One time
I had a trouble with deck with it was blood
fluid in my knee. You know, it's coming back and
starting the bubble.

Speaker 5 (03:03:05):
Me.

Speaker 10 (03:03:06):
I don't know really what to do. I've been putting
ice on it and everything. But I think I need
to do more than that.

Speaker 5 (03:03:11):
It was really.

Speaker 10 (03:03:14):
It's really upsetting me though. I don't know what to do.
I'm sixty, I'm still healthy, you know, sixty nine and
just turned sixty nine. I'm about almost at the same age.
I try to eat right there, everything you know, an
exercise and everything. We just try to have faith, you
know the right things.

Speaker 1 (03:03:30):
You know, just believe me in an interesting time, Michael,
let's give me a chance to respond, because eight minutes
away from the top down, go ahead, dought.

Speaker 6 (03:03:37):
To b Well, this is a serious circulation issue. Soow
you if you can come to that free webcast tomorrow,
you know, or get on our email listen, I will
send you some information about this. And if you go
to my website also there's a phone number you can
call and you can set up a consultation. See a
lot of folks need a consultation, and I haven't done

(03:03:57):
them in a couple of years, but I just started
doing personal consultations again. But we could get deep into
your issue because it has more to do with your
you know, how you live and how you eat. It's
so many things how you think that are causing an
issue of circulation. So go to Elevation time dot com
and get on our newsletter list, or also get the

(03:04:19):
phone number off the website and give us a call.
We'll set up a consultation.

Speaker 1 (03:04:22):
All right. Sending away from the top of that, another
two question for you. The three says greetings, Will you
asked doctor be is he saying that our feelings and
emotions caused many of our diseases?

Speaker 6 (03:04:35):
Yes, it's the belief. It's the belief. See, a lot
of us have gotten gotten away from the universal god
idea that life actually is working for us. We're actually
here to do something. We forgot what we came here
to do. We have a natural type of creativity, a
natural talent that we're all here that we were born with.

(03:04:58):
But a lot of us are not doing it. So
you're not live in your purpose, you see. So if
you're not living your purpose, the body says, you're not
you're not you're not righteous, you're not believing, you're not following,
you're not living, you're not walking the path. You are
talented and we're gifted to do. So we got to
get back on our natural path. That changes everything. Our

(03:05:19):
mindset is everything.

Speaker 1 (03:05:22):
So it all starts in the mind. That's what you're saying.

Speaker 6 (03:05:26):
Everything starts in your mind. Everything your world, right is
not the see there's not the world you know. You
keep talking about the world. The world is your world.
The world. World doesn't mean earth. That means your paradigm,
how you see things, how your projection you see. Not
everybody sees the tree the same, Not everybody sees life

(03:05:46):
the same. It's how you look at it. It's how
your program But those programs can be changed, those.

Speaker 1 (03:05:53):
Programs because we rest the clockette. So what if if
you're with your friend or your your spouse or or
your girlfriend, whatever or boyfriend does not think the same
way that you think, what do you do you quit?

Speaker 6 (03:06:08):
Well, you could quit, or you could just stay crystallized
right and stay in your mindset and not have to
join in with them. We don't have to join other
people's mindset. You could be in a relationship with something
and not be and as hard as a challenge, but
not be into what they're into. You've got to be
into you. You've got to have love for yourself, not

(03:06:30):
look for love, but become love. You've got to create
heaven on earth for yourself, by yourself, with yourself, no matter.

Speaker 1 (03:06:37):
What got you. So give us again. How can folks
Richie and tell us where the events is taking place?
You said you've gone to be in Brooklyn. I know
you mentioned that, and you've got an event taking place tomorrow.

Speaker 6 (03:06:48):
So tomorrow, go to elevationtime dot com. Elevationtime dot com,
get on the newsletter list because this evening we're going
to send out a newsletter that tells you about all
the events that's coming up. And there's a lot of
information about the nervous system in that newsletter on So
that's tomorrow at seven pm Eastern Standard Time to free webcast.

(03:07:09):
You can also go to a doctor b serious on
YouTube to tap into that. On Saturday, I'll be in
Brooklyn at Nicholas Books in Brooklyn, so I think it's
also called Nicholas Brooklyn. You could look it up like that.
And we're going to be doing an Inner Child Experience workshop,
very powerful. So that's this Saturday in Brooklyn, New York.

(03:07:31):
I've never done anything in Brooklyn. This is my first
time doing something in New York. It's going to be amazing.
And on the seventeenth of August, the most powerful event,
the most powerful technique, the most powerful exercise that we
could possibly do. It's called the Core Access Experience. It's
a group subconscious alignment where we change everything and that

(03:07:55):
possibly is going to be a part of what changes
your whole life. See also, it's going to be a
meet and greet. We got a VIP type, you know,
a time where we're gonna be talking and meeting with
certain people and there's gonna be a lot of folks there.
We're gonna eat together, celebrate together, and teach you how
to change everything, because if we don't do it now,
we're going to hell in a handbasket. Either go to

(03:08:17):
Hell in a hand basket or create heaven on earth.
And make sure that you're ready to detoxify your body.
Get the Elevated Total Body program at elevation time right
now and detoxify, especially before we go into fall, because
this fall is going to change everything because of what's
happening in our environment. I can't talk about that a
lot right now, but be ready, don't wait to get ready,

(03:08:40):
Stay ready and get rid of the mental, physical, and
spiritual parasites and ideas right now. And that's what that
Elevated Total body program does, and also learning the exercises
that you can do every day to be totally in
control of your life. All of that is online right now.
Let's not look at what the word is telling us,

(03:09:01):
look at what we're creating. We must improvise the artists,
be beautiful every single day and create heaven on earth
in yourself.

Speaker 1 (03:09:11):
Right now, got it, Doctor B. Thank you for sharing
all this information with us this morning, and thanks for
all that you do over these years. Thank you, sir,
Thank you.

Speaker 6 (03:09:19):
And travel light. You don't need all that luggage, most
of it's not yours.

Speaker 1 (03:09:23):
Good advice, Family classes dismissed for the day. Stay strong,
stay positive, please stay healthy. We'll see you tomorrow morning,
six o'clock right here in baltimorrow on ten ten WLB
mostly in the DMV on FM ninety five point nine
and AM fourteen fifteen wol

Speaker 2 (03:10:00):
He pilot in the Finnish pariert to he Pau
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