Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:01):
It is the deal here, we show you twenty twenty five,
and it's a very very sad day for a lot
of reasons. Yes, Look, I personally have personal disagreements.
Speaker 2 (00:11):
With a lot of people.
Speaker 1 (00:11):
I just don't want and I don't necessarily want to
say anything that contributes to an atmosphere that is already pervasive.
But I think you have to be careful with the
things you say. I think that we have made it
easy for things like this to happen, that we haven't
taken it seriously. That we are a nation that is
steeped fomented. We foment violence, we look the other way
(00:35):
like it. Literally, if you look at from the summer
till now, there have been three political assassinations we've had,
you know, Republican and Democrat, and I think it's only
been exacerbated. I think I think that we're watching all
the things that we watch other countries say do that
(00:59):
we would never do here, and we would reference them
like at least you and I get snatched off the
streets and you know, at least not be in the
sad like all those things that we talk about somewhere
else's here.
Speaker 2 (01:08):
Now.
Speaker 3 (01:08):
Yeah, we respect our women.
Speaker 1 (01:10):
Yeah, and I will say this, it didn't happen in
It didn't happen in LA, It didn't happen in Chicago,
It didn't happen in d C. It didn't happen in Baltimore.
It didn't happen in Philadelphia. That didn't happen there.
Speaker 3 (01:24):
No, Nope.
Speaker 1 (01:25):
And I guarantee you all the laws. Yeah, yeah, yeah.
It is, of course the twenty fourth anniversary of September
eleventh territory. That's a weird thing to call it, but
we're going to commemorate all. I mean, everybody remembers what
I remember. I'll never forget a week after nine to eleven,
I was in a restaurant and a pan drops, you know,
(01:48):
the cover of everybody just I'd never seen America like that.
It was its Yeah, So I think everybody remembers with
the happy Birthday they to Rozi p Henson, Happy Birthday
of the Lucris, Happy birth to day Harry Connick Jr. Happy
breath that the Sean Livingston have Birthday, the Elephant Man
have breath, that the Lola Fallana, Happy breath of the
Ed Reid. We're gonna have a show, a great show
(02:09):
for you today, Jaz, We're gonna tell us what's trending,
and we have a little note from the ged section
on the Dal Hugli Show. It is the Dal Hugli Show.
We normally would do this trending. But I'll say this,
I know a lot of people, listen to a lot
of people, and I think we have a responsibility to
(02:31):
at least be judicious in the things that we say.
And I feel horrible that this has happened, But I
also feel like it was so predictable, and I think
that in that zeitguis. In that ecosystem, violence is always
bantered around as some kind of solution. Like I don't
(02:54):
know how many times I've heard somebody say or a
second ammis solution, or they've implied a threat or you
know what I mean. Yeah, it's been so pervasive and
it's only superheated. And I think he was one of
those people that trucked in that mentality. I can hold
two things in my head at one hot. I can
(03:16):
both be empathetic toward his family and even to him,
but also keenly aware of the kind of rupture of
they have helped our society have.
Speaker 4 (03:30):
Well, first of all, I think that this country was
founded with violence. I think when you look down throughout history,
most of the people who were assassinated, if not all,
it was because they were saying things that other people
didn't like. When you look at how Land and things
like that were acquired, they were taken. People used force
(03:51):
violence guns to take what they wanted or to move
you out of their way if you did not line
up with the way that they thought. So when Trump
says let's make America great again, when they have all
of these you know, right wingers who are saying things like,
we want to go back to this in that time,
they're talking about that. So to me, when they see
children being shot as they are saying prayers, when they
(04:13):
see children who are having to run for cover because
the school is being shot up, or trying to enjoy
a movie, I think to them that reminds them of well,
this is the time when we got to have what
we wanted and no one could do anything about it.
Speaker 2 (04:25):
Callous indifference.
Speaker 1 (04:26):
When children are shot and nobody does anything, and I'm
talking about I won't be damned if this is the
thing that makes America look become introspective. When we watch
children be shot, we watch synaglogues be shot.
Speaker 2 (04:40):
And do nothing.
Speaker 1 (04:41):
So I just think that that kind of mentality is pervasive,
and I think he and his ILK have been integral
in this kind of mindset. So I feel bad today,
and I feel bad because I'm having a hard time
reconciling how I feel with how I should feel. I
(05:03):
should feel a certain way because a young man lost
his life in a very tragic way, in a very
callous way, in a very evil way, in front of
his family, in front of his loved ones.
Speaker 2 (05:16):
It was a terrible specter to watch.
Speaker 1 (05:18):
And I want to feel a sense of empathy, But
I want to feel it for a man who expous
empathy as weakness. I want to feel it for a
man who, had that happened to anybody else besides him,
would have thought that that was acceptable for.
Speaker 2 (05:32):
His belief system. I want to feel that way.
Speaker 1 (05:36):
Who has said to a man who says some of
the most heinous, racist, bigoted things I've ever heard, I
think Russe Limball, he's the embodiment of Russ Limball.
Speaker 2 (05:46):
Without the drug problem.
Speaker 1 (05:49):
He's a human being, And on that part, I have
to say that as a human human to human there
is obviously a modicum of compassion I would feel for somebody,
but it isn't as resonant, as deep as it should be,
and that is to my great limit. Every time I
watch you, a white guy in America tells me how
(06:10):
much he loves Christ and how he is a follow
of Christ. I listen long enough to hear him tell
me how much he hates people, and who he hates,
and why they're inferior, and all of the problem with them.
It makes me sad that a man, they were so young,
that had his whole life in front of him, literally
(06:30):
was killed by people who had some of the same
mindsets he did, people who believed some of the things
he did. It makes me sad that a man lived
his life and literally died with a lie on his lips.
Speaker 2 (06:48):
I know that I am flawed. I know that I'm human.
Speaker 1 (06:51):
I want to be better, but it is so hard
for me to feel a sense of compassion and a
sense of impathy. Who told me it was weak? I
watched him say the most heinous things in the world.
So I will leave it with this. I am going
to do my best to find a place in my
heart that I can reconcile this with myself. But I
can honestly say this. I hope he died believing what
(07:15):
he was saying. That's a little note from the ged
section on the d O. Hugley Show.
Speaker 2 (07:20):
She's jazz, she smiles. It's the jazzy report.
Speaker 5 (07:26):
I'm a d L.
Speaker 2 (07:27):
Hughley saw.
Speaker 4 (07:29):
The Vatican just dropped a bombshell that could reshape life
for lgbt Qia plus Catholics.
Speaker 2 (07:35):
The new part all alphabet.
Speaker 4 (07:37):
Yeah. The new Pope, Pope Leo, who has stirred debate
since his election, declared that he will follow a pastoral
path rooted in openness and welcome. In twenty twenty three,
underreporter scrutiny, he acknowledged that his views had evolved and
the doctrine hasn't changed, he said, but we're looking to
be more welcoming and more open to other people in
the church.
Speaker 2 (07:56):
So that's woke. That's being woke. Yeah, some people like it,
some people don't. Well, some people do and some people don't.
Speaker 1 (08:03):
I think that God would want everybody included, right, man,
I can't heaven that they think they got here. Man,
it's gonna be segregated to you ever know what I'm saying?
I mean, I can't imagine the world with me and
Charlie Kirk in the same place in heaven.
Speaker 2 (08:19):
I can't imagine it. Well, I guess the destination would.
Speaker 1 (08:23):
Be right question because because to me, why is it
that they lawed people that hate people?
Speaker 6 (08:29):
Like?
Speaker 1 (08:29):
How is it Russe Limball got a presidential mesical freedom
and Charlie Kirk what did he do?
Speaker 2 (08:34):
I don't know what.
Speaker 4 (08:34):
They've really elevated him. You saw where Advance said we're
going to fly him on Air Force.
Speaker 1 (08:39):
Right, Yeah, of course they didn't do that. For John McCain.
They didn't go to this funeral.
Speaker 2 (08:46):
He wouldn't.
Speaker 1 (08:47):
He turned away when the ship was being that method.
They didn't do that for the pope. He's not gone
to certain people's funerals because he didn't like that. What
did he do? Besides what did he do that you
think that this thing birds of a feather flock together,
and I just the fact that they find this level
of heroism and humanity, I just I don't. I don't
(09:09):
see it now. I don't want to be angry with it.
I'm like I said this earlier, I'm angry because I
want to feel something that I'm having a hard time
reconciling myself not feeling it makes me feel bad that
I don't feel like a young man lost his life.
Speaker 4 (09:23):
No, I saw and then to see the videos of circulating,
it's hard to watch this. Don't agree with anything that
he said, but I certainly do not believe that any
type of violence should right.
Speaker 1 (09:31):
That's America, that's America. He felt violence was necessary. He
out of his own Yes, you died at the altar
of your belief and I just hope that you believe it.
How are you feeling today, ladies and gentlemen, because you know,
I just I know how I'm feeling, and I get
(09:53):
a chance to express myself oft I want to.
Speaker 2 (09:55):
I want to know how you feel.
Speaker 1 (09:55):
I'm going to say, take some calls and see I
do would like I would like to say this that
I want you to express yourself, but I want to
do it in a way that we can air it.
Speaker 2 (10:09):
Respectful.
Speaker 1 (10:09):
I mean, you can be I don't care if you're disrespectful,
because well, in my estimation, one thing might be disapprob
I want you to be honest, but do it in
a way that you would do it if you were
if people are at work heard you. You know what
I mean because people at hear me say this, well,
all of the stuff that didn't air, they actually hurt me.
(10:29):
Say correct. But there's a thing called an editing. But
and a mark and a wand that have tried to
keep us on they can because it was either me
tell the truth. For me, it would either tell the
truth or not do a show today. Yeah, that's how
I feel. I'm that convicted about this. So how are
you feeling about today? What do you think? How does
(10:51):
it make you feel? Eight seven seven two two two
four six.
Speaker 4 (10:55):
On Twitter at DOO Huge Radio or on Facebook THEDO
Huge Show on the website is the do hugly.
Speaker 2 (10:59):
Showed all right, we getting to your calls directly.
Speaker 1 (11:01):
It's to show I always said that I would refuse
to see my humanity to people because of external circumstances.
Speaker 2 (11:10):
I've always said that, But I find myself.
Speaker 1 (11:12):
Ceding my humanity to people because of extinguad circuss I do,
and that makes me feel bad. The one thing that
you can control is how you emote about things.
Speaker 2 (11:22):
But I feel like a lot of the things that.
Speaker 1 (11:27):
Have that are happening right now that I'm directly opposed
to all the ways of this country, like how you can.
First off, let's be clear, Charlie Cook, Charlie Kirk wasn't assassinated.
Speaker 2 (11:38):
He was shot. He was shot. He wasn't a political figure,
he was an influencer. He was shot.
Speaker 1 (11:45):
The political figures, the two congressmen, the one that was
killed in Minnesota, they were they were they were assassinated
because of their political views.
Speaker 2 (11:52):
I don't even know why he.
Speaker 1 (11:54):
Was shot, but but I do know that, like and
he was okay with people being shot, even the way
he parsed out there was thirty thirty thousand people died,
half of suicide, you know a lot of them suicide
that shouldn't count, and the rest of like that, that
was the way he shuffled the deck chairs of human lives.
(12:19):
And I think he never thought it would be him,
because what thirty one year old riche white dude, Why
would you have extra security in Utah? And you know,
I know it wasn't us. I know who it was
because I know who it wasn't. The only black dude
who could have got shot him and got away in
Utah would have been Karmelone.
Speaker 2 (12:35):
He ain't been there in a couple decades.
Speaker 4 (12:37):
What they've shown a picture of the suspect that I
think that they're looking for.
Speaker 2 (12:41):
He's certainly not one of them.
Speaker 1 (12:42):
Trying to find a white guy in Utah is like
trying to find a grain of rice in a bowl.
Speaker 2 (12:46):
Riz It literally is.
Speaker 7 (12:50):
It was.
Speaker 2 (12:51):
It was.
Speaker 1 (12:52):
It was the arrogance of I'm among my people. I
don't need all the security.
Speaker 8 (12:55):
You.
Speaker 1 (12:56):
While you were talking about the danger that we that
we uh, you know, the specter of black crime and criminality,
you were killed by somebody who looked just like you,
and you died forwarding that lie about black people.
Speaker 2 (13:12):
What do you How are you feeling today saying this?
You know, I actually feel bad.
Speaker 4 (13:21):
I feel bad because and I had this conversation with
Lena earlier, never she did.
Speaker 2 (13:31):
I.
Speaker 4 (13:32):
You know, my thing has always been I think you
should be allowed to speak your mind. I think you
should be allowed to believe whatever it is you want
to and I think whatever your opinions are, you will
suffer whatever consequences or positives that come out of that.
Right now, that's not to say that I think violent
should ever be met it because I do not. I mean,
(13:53):
we've had this conversation on the show about should people
be able to say the N word. You can, but
you don't know what's going to happen after that, That's
what I mean. But I mean for me, violence should
never be the answer.
Speaker 2 (14:05):
And I thank you.
Speaker 4 (14:06):
Even though I did not like this guy. I didn't
like anything that he said. I didn't like any of
the stuff that he pumped out to all of these
young listeners. I hated it, but I didn't hate him
as a human being. And I think what happened to
him is a tragedy. And I think once you start
saying it's okay to shoot someone because they don't agree
with what you say, I think you're opening Pandora's bot.
Speaker 1 (14:27):
I think I was a panda. Doors box is open
like a mug, Harry, and let's stop calling it. Hate
is not political speech. He was a hate monger. That's
that's not political speech. And I still don't believe he
should have lost his life. He was no angel, he
was no choirboy. Isn't that the first thing they.
Speaker 2 (14:45):
Said about us?
Speaker 1 (14:47):
All Right, So we're going to get to your calls directly.
It's the Dial Hugy Show. It is the Dial Hugley Show.
We're asking how you feel in the day we were
making a point off air. Trump seems to hate rose
O'donnald more than the people tried to kill him. Right,
I haven't heard I heard about Rosie and Tom Hanks's
ad nauseum, never about the President's tried to Kim, not
(15:07):
at all, or never about he is a thing. If
you look at this last year and two months, We've
had two attempts on a presidential candidate. Right, We've had
a bomb left at a Democratic governor's office. We've had
a shooting at a synagogue. Right, We've had now an
(15:27):
assassination of an influence. I mean, I'm a murder of
an influencer. And here's the thing all of this, the
juxtaposition is, in this politically charged climate, we have a
president of the United States who got on there and
blamed it on somebody before you even knew who it was,
and a week before that took away protection secret server
protection from his political oppointment. So it's hard for me
(15:50):
to feel compassion, it really is. I'm struggling with it.
I want to feel that way, but given all the
things that happened here, I'm really succumbing to being American.
Speaker 2 (16:02):
I really am the way of being the I'm acting.
Speaker 3 (16:05):
Just like they.
Speaker 2 (16:06):
Yeah, Skip, what do you think?
Speaker 5 (16:09):
I am very much like you. It's like I want
to be more sympathetic, empathetic. I want to be talking
about you know, today is the anniversary of nine to eleven,
and there were some true heroes who lost their lives
right on this day, many many years ago, and I
would like to be honoring their memory. And there, you know,
(16:31):
our first responders and our other people who actually you know,
fought to save lives and didn't matter what religion they were,
what race they are when they were in those buildings
that that went down in a beau But uh, you
know that that's you know, so it's it's it's unfortunate
those clips are coming back and you're seeing what he
(16:52):
taught about Martin Luther King. He didn't think Martin got
bad about Martin Luther King. He talked who was sad?
Speaker 2 (16:58):
Who was murdered? Right victim?
Speaker 1 (17:00):
You know, he look at all the show Laura Lumer
makes about did you tell what I saw? Don't tell
me about my lack of compassion, and don't tell me
about how clear I am, and don't tell me to
do better. She a couple of days ago celebrates, she said,
congratulates the George Floyd for being five years sober. Look
how evil they are. Look at the things that that
that what's what's fruit bad?
Speaker 2 (17:20):
What's the fruit?
Speaker 9 (17:22):
Can?
Speaker 1 (17:23):
Look at the things she said about the young man
that was jogging and got he was. Look at all
those things.
Speaker 4 (17:29):
But they also have selective memory. Now, but that's why
it's called selective. You remember what you want to. Yeah,
you deny everything else.
Speaker 2 (17:37):
And I don't want to be hateful as they are,
but I'm getting pretty good at it.
Speaker 3 (17:42):
You know, when you tell me that black women don't
have the mental.
Speaker 5 (17:45):
Capacity, they don't, you know, So when you when you
say that out of your like, you know, come on,
come on now, come on. So so I you know
I do not takes a lot of energy to to
to hate and be negative.
Speaker 2 (17:58):
So I just but that's why I work out.
Speaker 1 (18:01):
That's why I work out because I want the strength
to strength on.
Speaker 7 (18:10):
Now.
Speaker 1 (18:11):
I just I think this, I just I hate that
I feel this way, but I can't deny I feel
this way. I want to be I want to be
more compacite. I'm a decent human being.
Speaker 2 (18:24):
You want to be able to turn the other cheek.
But sometimes you can't. Yeah, all right, Uh, that goes
out to Atlanta. Listen, now it is the deal you call. Sure,
we're asking how you feel in the day.
Speaker 1 (18:35):
The power of life and death is in a tone, Yes,
it is the power of all. Then you were at
that place saying the things you're saying. Believe in the
way you did, and that your life was taken by
all the things you didn't describe. The only thing you
got to worry about is black people, is gangs, and
(18:56):
transgender people and immigrants. He said, don't call them immigrants
because they're lawbreakers.
Speaker 2 (19:02):
And here's the thing.
Speaker 1 (19:04):
You support a man who is a felon, who is
either is a pedophile or is protecting one right without question,
either one of those things. And they're saying, you know what,
I know, black people, they can't have a close associate.
If you have a friend who is charged with a
crime and you are impictures in close proximity with our people,
(19:25):
with that man and some of the victims, you are
not that man's best friend.
Speaker 2 (19:29):
You are code dependent.
Speaker 1 (19:31):
So at the very least all of these people claim
to love Christ and who are Christians, are allowing all
these other things to permeate in the ZiT guys, all
of them, you know, even him. First he wanted the
Epstein relief, Epstein File's belief, and then he chilled out
a little bit after.
Speaker 2 (19:50):
They talked to him.
Speaker 1 (19:52):
You know what, You know what I mean because because
I don't know why, and I never I don't know
why that man did what he did, but I know
three words. Let me know it wasn't a black man Utah.
And at large, how you feeling, Julius, what you got going?
What do you think?
Speaker 3 (20:12):
Well, it's basically a general disgust though about the whole thing,
because one political violence or violence of any kind, accomplishes
really nothing other than a response, and none of us
want that. I mean, we've gone through this before, We've
(20:32):
seen it happen, we've seen the results of what happens
when you do it, and it achieves nothing. So it
seems that there's been a narrative to try to push
things to a tipping point, and our job is to
keep it from tipping because.
Speaker 2 (20:50):
This but let me, let me let me push back
a little bit.
Speaker 3 (20:53):
Junior's book.
Speaker 1 (20:54):
They did this survey, and we talked about this maybe
a couple of years ago, that over seven of a
political quarity in this country believes that political violence is acceptable, correct, right,
and another thirty percent of another political party, So they
think that violence is acceptable. It's a it's a it
(21:15):
is a reasonable part of the political discourse. So that
tipping point is tipped, That tipping point is tipped. It
is the parlance of America.
Speaker 3 (21:26):
Oh and it's been that way for a long time.
Speaker 2 (21:27):
That's what I'm saying.
Speaker 1 (21:28):
So I just, I just, I just I just think
that we are in a place it's stays Avou all
over again.
Speaker 3 (21:36):
It really is, because the how many.
Speaker 1 (21:38):
Presidents they've tried to shoot, oh yeah, on how many
elected officials that have been murdered yep. And to think
about black people, you could get killed as a black
person or have assassin death threats for just voicing your opinion,
for just having a job. Hank Aaron, they wanted to
kill him for breaking the home round record.
Speaker 3 (21:57):
Yep.
Speaker 1 (21:58):
So the question we're asking how you feel today, Junius,
you were I'm gonna let you expound.
Speaker 2 (22:02):
I'll cut you off because it's my show.
Speaker 1 (22:05):
But that is that's why that But so what what
do you think?
Speaker 2 (22:10):
Why what we're expounding? What were you saying?
Speaker 3 (22:12):
Well, no, you asked me how I feel, and right
now I'm sick and tired of being sick and tired,
and I'm singing tired or the same thing happened over
and over and again. We'll we're dealing with hate speech
that got us to a point where something like this
would happen. But now we're at a point where we
got to watch what we say. So it's not to
exacerbate these but it could be the most innocuous things
(22:34):
you say. Here's the thing.
Speaker 1 (22:35):
I'm willing to accept that all deaths like these are tragic.
Speaker 3 (22:38):
Yep.
Speaker 1 (22:39):
There are people who accept that it's okay to kill
somebody if they pass a counterfeit twenty yep, or if
they were selling loose cigarettes right r yeah, right, or
if they were protesting, and guy, there are people that
that is a that is a premise that people forward.
Well it shouldn't have been or they shouldn't. I can't
believe they both. There's that premise, right, yeah, right, So
(22:59):
either all lives matter, as if they are wanted to say,
or they all don't. Because if you only care about
people that you relate to, that you look like that
you have a commonality. Way that's not humanity, that's not
Christ said, that's tribalism. Yes, we're going through the phones.
Speaker 6 (23:14):
I would like to say that I have the emotional
maturity that d L does with being conflicted about it.
I like to think that I would have the capacity
to maybe forgive someone for their ignorance, but I can't
forgive someone for hatred, And so with that, my feelings
are like, I don't care. I really don't care.
Speaker 10 (23:35):
Simply put, you live by the forward, you die by
the forward.
Speaker 11 (23:39):
I had a lot of mixed feelings, kind of confused
to the whole situation. I truly just appreciated hearings, Dyeah,
because you're trying to put my thoughts in the perspective of,
you know, trying to feel empathy for someone.
Speaker 12 (23:54):
That did not have show empathetic feelings towards other situations.
I think I want to be able to show empathy
and have it, but not seeing it enough. And I'm
confused and having missed feelings because this is taking presidents
to the news cycle, taking presidents on our social media fees.
(24:15):
Where for an individual that has spreading misinformation? So yet,
where's that same vorocity towards those children that were killed
in the trains going to school to pray. The children
that are suffering and in Gaza are just so much.
So we're not focused on that. We're spending a lot
of time on an individual that was against a majority
(24:40):
of us.
Speaker 9 (24:41):
I got a lot of thoughts, sir. I'm not trying
not to take all of your time, but you know
I had a lot to say today on social media,
and you know, as elementary teacher, I just need the
same energy for the school shootings, of the churches that
have been getting shot down, and you know all the
other victims. You know, if we have selective outrage with
who we choose to be raised that when we should be,
(25:04):
you know, outraged at at all. You know, murderer is murdered,
so I'll just believe it at that for y'all. Y'all
have a good day.
Speaker 2 (25:10):
So we're gonna go through the valls.
Speaker 3 (25:11):
What do you think?
Speaker 2 (25:12):
How you feeling today?
Speaker 13 (25:13):
This is expected. You live by the sword, You got
by the sword.
Speaker 8 (25:17):
He's a Christian.
Speaker 7 (25:18):
The Bible says you read what you sow.
Speaker 2 (25:20):
You so violent?
Speaker 7 (25:20):
You read violent. You know, we didn't have a violence.
Speaker 14 (25:23):
This country was family go on violence and all this
is not gonna bring us, any culture together, it's gonna
make greater divide.
Speaker 7 (25:29):
I feel absolutely nothing.
Speaker 14 (25:30):
But more frustration.
Speaker 2 (25:32):
That's all I feel as a.
Speaker 14 (25:33):
Black woman in this country. I feel like this country
hates me. I feel like this administration hates me, and
it's has been a very stressful time. So I don't
feel any sympathy about that. I mean, it's a terrible
thing that happened.
Speaker 7 (25:45):
But he sold this and he read what he sold.
First of all, my condolencens go out to his family,
his wife who's now left to raise their children buysing
by herself, and since the children who will get a
chance to grow up with a father and the home. However,
you know, this is a tagic This is a tragic
(26:06):
and fat event. And I don't wish this on anybody
because violence is definitely not an answer. But this man
died at the at his own tongue lashing, if you will.
This is what he promoted. He promoted hate and different
things of that nature, same thing as the person that's
in the White House trying to run this country, the
same thing that he's doing. In a roundabout way. You know,
(26:27):
the media is taming him as his matyn. You know,
he's not a martyr. He is basically someone that is
very controversial. He everything that he said and does everything
to conflict with race, religion, and so on and so forth,
find of flags that have staff and different things of
that nature. Is actually very sicken, especially on a daylight
(26:48):
today when it is nine to eleven, and I have
seen minimal coverage regarding nine to eleven today. But everything
about this man was is so disrespectful and the slap
in the faces of the people.
Speaker 10 (26:59):
That lost love. I'm kind of like DL hugely when
it comes to that, because it's hard to have empathy
for a guy who just felt so bad about people
in general, and especially people of colored I mean, or
like I see, I just heard y'all say that they're
supposed to be flying him on Air Force two and
(27:19):
all of this. Are they doing all of this because
they feel guilty about what's happened, because this young man
was wanting them to investigate into the f Steam file,
So maybe it's got something to do with that. While
everybody feeling trying to play like they feel some type
of way now or they feel bad and they really
was just trying to get rid of them, who knows.
Speaker 13 (27:41):
I really feel sorry for the children. My heart goes
out to them. I don't feel too down. The only
thing I feel is for my brother, whose birthday was
today and nine eleven. But as far as I'm concerned,
it's too much hate in this country, and until we
get rid of that, which he probably won't, then it's
(28:02):
gonna be more shooting, more mass killings, more of everything.
So we have to eliminate the guns that eliminate a
lot of things. But my heart goes out to the children.
Speaker 8 (28:14):
We should not have selective outrage, and we can't have
empathy for someone who thought empathy was a made up term.
Why should we feel sorry for someone who was so
divisive within the communities, and why should we care. I mean,
I'm not saying he should have died, but I'm saying,
at the same time, you died doing what you were doing,
preaching hate, and you got what you got. You said
(28:35):
there should be some gun deaths, and you are just
an example of what you say. So I don't have empathy.
I don't feel bad for him. His kids for sure,
because they're gonna have to see that later on to
know who they dad really was. His wife, because she's
still gonna have to deal with the aftermath. But for
him personally, we don't need another person speaking like that
if we're trying to have unity within our communities. So
(28:59):
no empathy for someone who thought empathy was faking.
Speaker 1 (29:01):
All right, we gotta get to you. We got more
of the DAL hugely show coming up with that boy Trade.
This is DL huge show that boy Trade. Here, let
us know what life is like in an ABC with
My Life on the Yard.
Speaker 2 (29:31):
I love my PC.
Speaker 15 (29:35):
What's good, y'all? This is that boy Trade back again
with another episode of My Life on the Yard and
so I look at it.
Speaker 2 (29:40):
Ste You're right.
Speaker 15 (29:42):
Next time y'all hear from me, I will be twenty
two years old. That's crazy, bro, Like, this is that
senior year really transitioning into real life adult stuff, Because
when you're twenty one, it's like you're just being allowed
to do the real adult stuff. You're just allowed to
get in the clubs for real. You're just allowed to
(30:05):
get your own drinks and whatnot. Even though you're allowed
to do all this stuff, now you still feel like
you're new to this. You still feel kind of like unexperienced.
But now it's a year.
Speaker 2 (30:16):
In the game.
Speaker 3 (30:17):
Now at this point, it's.
Speaker 15 (30:18):
Crazy work, but it doesn't feel like I'm rushed. I
don't feel any pressure about it. I know a lot
of my boys when we talking about yo, man, we're
getting old, like this is senior year. When we get
to talking about it, a lot of my guys they
like voices kind of anxiety about actually becoming grown, you
(30:39):
know what I mean, Like when we're younger, our freshman year,
we were thinking, Dude, I can't wait to be a senior.
Speaker 2 (30:46):
I can't wait to be grown for real and to
be allowed to do boom boom boom boom.
Speaker 15 (30:49):
But dude, when you get down to that nitty gritty
of really being grown, there's a lot of responsibilities that
come with that, bills and stuff like that.
Speaker 3 (30:57):
You feel me.
Speaker 2 (30:58):
But the good part.
Speaker 15 (30:59):
About it out it is that I feel like our
HBCU more House has really prepared us to take that
next step into being grown ass man, just giving us
the skills to be able to navigate the craziness of
professional life, family life, literally any kind of education that
you would need to be a successful man, like the
(31:20):
things I've learned at more House through such stuff I
learned from my professors, to stuff that I learned from
my older.
Speaker 2 (31:30):
More House brothers.
Speaker 15 (31:32):
It's all stuff that I'm going to take with me
for the rest of my life. But anyways, that's all
I got for you all today till next time. This
has been that boy tray. This has been my life
on the yard inside look HBC life.
Speaker 1 (31:42):
All right, it's Sadial here call show your twenty twenty
five min is you remember I'm going to be in
Nashville this Friday, Saturday and Sunday at Zaaney's.
Speaker 2 (31:49):
Check me out.
Speaker 1 (31:49):
If you take a notion, I resent the inference. I
resent a lot of things like they go. It's hate
speech by itself, didn't do that. There's one group of
people trying to make it easier to get the guns
in the hands of people. They don't care if they're
domestically violent, they don't care if they're challenge I guarantee
whatever it is, it's the two things I know. It
ain't a black dude and whoever it is probably legally
(32:10):
had that gun. And the people who were in that group,
including Charlie himself, made it easier for them to have
it and advocated them having it.
Speaker 4 (32:18):
Yeah, but that turned around and blamed black and brown
people for the very crime that they keep talking about
that runs rapidess.
Speaker 2 (32:25):
It's so crazy.
Speaker 1 (32:26):
That's because they you know, whenever he was talking about,
you know, in Hughes, Houston as example of the crime,
did he talk about tex Do you know that up
until twenty fifteen, twenty twelve, most of the gangs in
the in the country were white? But they it has
a different picture. Did they talk about was it white
on white crime? Charlie was shot by a white guy?
(32:47):
Was it white on white crime or was it just crime?
Donald Trump was attempted to be assassinated by white guy.
Was it white on white crime or was it just crime?
Those two Democratic senators, a congressman was shot by a
white guy. Was it white crime or was it just.
Speaker 15 (33:01):
So?
Speaker 1 (33:01):
When he would he would forward the nurtionis the most
dangerous thing is black people.
Speaker 2 (33:05):
But not for him that day.
Speaker 1 (33:10):
That's what I'm saying. That's what I'm saying. It is
the people people forget Frankenstein wasn't the monster. He just
created it. You take an angry nation and you arm them,
and you do that as an implied threat. I'm guaranteeing
you that guy had a legal gun and before today
he was a good guy with a gun, I would
(33:33):
have been categorized. And how you callously and indifferently look
away when it's happening to anybody else. You have a
you know, on the on the floor, on the floor
of Congress, you have a moment of silence for him,
but never for any of the people who've been killed
on a daily basis. Our flag should fly half match
(33:53):
just because of the sheer number of people that a
murdered here. Yeah, and if all lives matter, they this
shouldn't be This shouldn't be a conversation.
Speaker 2 (34:01):
But they don't. They don't wearying all right.
Speaker 1 (34:04):
Now, welcome to the show the military man Jamal Kingsley.
He's here exposed racism hitting in our everyday lives. Hello,
my brothers and sisters. This at Jama Kingsley, the militant man,
here to expose racism hidden in our everyday life.
Speaker 2 (34:20):
Why is it when you go to Vegas.
Speaker 16 (34:23):
And play black jack, somebody's always sitting at the table hollering,
hit me, You trying to hit somebody when they black
slavery is over, massa, put the whip away. Think about it,
my brother, And why is it black pepper burns your
mouth and makes you sneeze, while white sugar is so
(34:46):
sweet and tastes so good. It's the white sugar that
gives your diabetes and a killer. Think about it, my brother.
And why is it we always get afraid of dark
cloud and dark sky. All the storms are coming. Run
for cover. A dark cloud ain't never heard nobody. Everybody
(35:09):
knows it's the white lightning that I'll kill you. Think
about it, my brother. This has been Jamal Kingsley, the
militant man. And until next time, stay woke and think
about it, my brother. Now decide what you need to
know with the one only Sybil Wilkes. It's Sybil Wilkes
with what we need to know.
Speaker 17 (35:28):
Police believe they've recovered the weapon used to assassinate Charlie
Kirk as a manhunt for the shooter intensifies. The conservative
activists died after being shot in the neck Wednesday while
speaking at an outdoor turning point event at Utah Valley University.
The Utah Department of Public Safety says they've recovered a
high powered bolt action rifle and have good video footage
(35:50):
of the suspect, who appears to be of college age.
Fox News reports the FBI found apparent messages on the rifle.
Former Presidents Joe Biden and Barack Oboma. While reacting to
the tragedy, Mister Biden said he and his wife Jill
are praying for Kirk's family and stressed that violence has
no place in this country. Mister Obama called was shooting
despicable and said it has no role in a democracy.
(36:12):
Charlie Kirk was shot Wednesday while addressing hundreds of students
at the university.
Speaker 2 (36:17):
He was thirty one years old.
Speaker 17 (36:18):
The Jeffco School System he is canceling some classes following
a shooting at the Evergreen High School. A male student
opened fire at the school Wednesday, wounding two others before
turning the gun on themselves. Jefco Public School Superintendent Tracy
doln released a statement yesterday saying she was heartbroken and angry,
adding that no child should ever have to face that
kind of danger. Multiple historically black colleges and universities across
(36:42):
the nation are on lockdown after receiving threats to the
individual campuses. Classes at Alabama State University, Hampton University, Virginia
State University, Clark, Atlanta University, Southern University, Spelman College, and
be then Kirkman University had been disrupted due to shelter
in place orders for students and faculty. Officials at the
(37:03):
university say activities have been suspended and students and staff
have been instructed to remain indoors or avoid campus until
further notice. The exact threat post to the HBCUs is
unclear at this time, but university officials encourage community members
to be vigilant. To subscribe to my free daily newsletter,
please visit Civilwilkes dot com for all the new twenty
(37:23):
four to seven Go to Newswes.
Speaker 2 (37:25):
Dot com on Civil Wilts. Be informed, be empowered.
Speaker 1 (37:29):
Hey jazz Man, all right, we're gonna keep it going.
The DL you can show fully fun is coming right
back to DL. Show it is the deal you can
show your twenty twenty five addition, remember that if you
were in Nashville, I'm gonna be this Friday, Saturday, Sunday.
Speaker 2 (37:42):
Hey Brian Saney, so make sure that you come.
Speaker 1 (37:43):
To He's gonna be in that Europe out Neverbrian with
his son, who got U is gonna be playing hockey
in the Europe.
Speaker 2 (37:49):
We have Brian's son, Yes, Brian, I don't think that's
the name, Brian. So okay, we go with Skippy. Were saying,
sauth of gofair, What did you say? I think you
know a lot of this.
Speaker 5 (37:59):
You notice we've done the whole show and have not
mentioned the Epstein Files. I think you know, I don't
want to be the one who started conspiracy theory. Why there,
you know, just like I don't. I don't know, I
don't know. I don't know what happened, but I know
that somebody didn't want us talking about the Epstein files anymore.
They did so much is delaying sent it getting together.
(38:22):
They tried to say it's a hoax, and now we're
not talking about it for some reason.
Speaker 1 (38:26):
Well, well no, after here we talking about.
Speaker 3 (38:31):
Like we can't talk about two subjects at the same
God forbid.
Speaker 16 (38:35):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (38:36):
I just I think that the truth of the matter
is either he is a a pedophile or be a
betting one.
Speaker 2 (38:44):
That's it. Those are only two choices. And I think
that they're going to try to this is not the time. Yeah,
it is, we can do.
Speaker 7 (38:52):
We can.
Speaker 1 (38:53):
First off, the only reason it's taking that long because well,
first off, it's got to be hard to find a
white dude in Utah.
Speaker 2 (38:59):
It's got to be on a white campus.
Speaker 15 (39:01):
Yes.
Speaker 1 (39:02):
But the other thing I think is that the people
who are looking for him, Pam Bondi and CATS's Matteil,
they literally shouldn't be head of security at a junior college.
They literally shouldn't be. So they'd have had three or
four people in and what they did. You know, obviously
you do that, but they let everybody know they did it.
Speaker 2 (39:23):
Yeah, but then they had to remember the head of
the FBI, I said, we got him. Then they have
to walk down again.
Speaker 1 (39:29):
They Yeah, but they never they never speak to any professional,
wouldn'ess spoke like, what is his experience to be the
head of the FBI.
Speaker 2 (39:39):
He's a brown dude who loved Donald Trump. That's enough all.
Speaker 3 (39:44):
You can't look you directly in the eye.
Speaker 2 (39:46):
Right.
Speaker 3 (39:46):
Well, on the good new side, the Supreme Court just
allowed them to racial profile, so they can just stop
every white guy in Utah and and find out.
Speaker 2 (39:56):
It's gonna be a busy day. Yeah, A right for man,
let me tell you, but it's legal.
Speaker 1 (40:02):
Go for Yeah, we're gonna start with the cast of
Big Love, and then we're gonna get to everybody else.
Speaker 2 (40:08):
Well versus the first Big Love.
Speaker 1 (40:09):
Then the Osmans, then Gladys Night, She is A She's
a more like we gotta do all that go to the.
Speaker 2 (40:17):
Uh well.
Speaker 1 (40:17):
You know, if I almost anything on eBay, we gotta
to prove it. Jazz and give us Five of the
weirdest things ever sold on E by E baby Samanthic Grossman.
Speaker 4 (40:25):
Number five, Britney Spears alleged pregnancy test. This is a
pastic five pea stick first five thousand dollars or a
dead rabbit.
Speaker 2 (40:35):
Number four of the.
Speaker 4 (40:36):
Top five weirdest things ever sold on eBay. William Shatner's
kidney stone dollars made a ring out of six before.
Number three of the top five weirdest things ever sold
on eBay. Pharrell's infamous brown for Dora he wore in
twenty fourteen to the Grammys sold it for forty four
thousand dollars. Damn he could have bought the hat store
(40:58):
for Yeah, for for Dora. Number two of the top
five weirdest things ever sold on eBay. Justin Timberlakes, half
eaten French toast, half half even one four one thousand dollars.
Speaker 1 (41:09):
Yeah, Okay, Yeah, I've known restaurants where French sols is
one thousand.
Speaker 4 (41:12):
Dollars and the number one of the top five weirdest
things ever sold on eBay. Clippings of Justin Bieber's hair.
Oh twenty eleven, somebody bought it for forty thousand dollars.
Speaker 2 (41:24):
Jesus Christ, all right, I know somebody who wanted to
buy me here.
Speaker 15 (41:29):
Oh what.
Speaker 2 (41:34):
Don't cut? Don't cut the ball speaking a cut. That's
going to do it for King Jones.
Speaker 3 (41:39):
Deal.
Speaker 2 (41:39):
You will show your twenty twenty five show.
Speaker 1 (41:42):
Remember that if you are in Nashville cash vegas, cash vegas.
Speaker 3 (41:47):
I just called it good cash vegas. That don't even makes.
Speaker 2 (41:50):
Sense because it's what we want it to be. Whatever
it is. Gamble is not legal in neither is prostitution vegas.
All the bridle I was there, I'm pretty sure some
of that is. It didn't happen.
Speaker 1 (42:05):
Yeah, you know there's a big wall where you could
take picture with those white wings. Yeah, but they should
be great with all the Senate it goes on. So
remember I'm going to be there this Friday, Saturday, Sunday,
two Friday, two Saturday, and two Sunday at that saying
these come check me out.
Speaker 2 (42:20):
Jazmins Sanders, what the hell did you learn today? Yeah,
I didn't know.
Speaker 4 (42:24):
I kind of I'm kind of mad that I missed
out on this. But apparently apple bottom jeans are back.
Did you know this?
Speaker 17 (42:30):
No?
Speaker 4 (42:30):
I didn't know it either, But apparently lot of you
know the rapper UH teamed up with Apple Bottoms and
they dropped a collab at the beginning of August, and
apparently they're all the.
Speaker 2 (42:39):
Rage again Apple Bottom. You know I hate that song?
I don't know that kind of like true Religion jeans
or big.
Speaker 1 (42:45):
Do you know why I hate this song? Z? It
was the first song I danced to and dance with
the stuff. That's why I hate this.
Speaker 2 (42:51):
Let me google that real quiz. I'll write that I
remember we were trying to spend that girl. Remember that
was it.
Speaker 5 (42:59):
Let's say they gotta change it because now with all
these bbls now, it's got to be like watermelon bottoms
or something.
Speaker 3 (43:04):
Apples don't work no moment, you.
Speaker 2 (43:06):
Can't do it, So skip my man, cheat them. Would
you like say you know what?
Speaker 3 (43:10):
I just want to say.
Speaker 2 (43:11):
You know, nine to eleven, A lot of applegot, Yeah,
a lot of.
Speaker 5 (43:16):
First responders lost their lives and a lot of people
innocent people lost their lives. So just you know, remember
that as we go throughout today and then tomorrow we
can talk about the steam file.
Speaker 1 (43:26):
You know what true to form, Uh to your point,
true to form, there was a shooting in Utah of
a white nationalist and of course they threatened black HBCUs. Yeah,
you see, gonna take the funding, take the funding, fam
What did John C. Smith have to do with anything that?
Like what I mean, what did more House have to
(43:50):
do it? Like nobody black.
Speaker 2 (43:52):
Was even there? Isn't that crazy? Wow?
Speaker 1 (43:56):
On the next deal you can show if you're not
going to happy I know, worries when to bring the
party Street TV hugely ass part if.
Speaker 2 (44:01):
Plus, we're gonna give you another hot news song on
My Day Butt of the Week.
Speaker 1 (44:04):
Obviously we're gonna have another episode where people get to
tell you exactly what they think of me called I'm
Getting after Tomorrow and there's not a damn thing you
can do about. It's a deal you can show. We
will definitely see on another side. Calm my favorite show
bus operator pull, let's stream we got to go.
Speaker 2 (44:19):
It's the deal you can show. See you on the
other side.