Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Yet anyway I was working. I completely forgot. And it's
crazy because earlier I was like, yo, myhol today my
friend was like, no, it's Thursday. I was like, oh, okay,
it's fine. Yeah, there's a very body welcome to me.
Kause said is the only place where it's mandatory to
speak politics at the dinner table. It has been a
(00:20):
crazy couple of weeks. It's been a crazy week for myself.
Actually almost died right so that happened. Uh this time
it wasn't by my own hands, unfortunately or very fortunately,
but unfortunately. I wanted to share a little bit with
you all by my experience this weekend or this week
with the Georgia uh more specific I think it was
(00:43):
was It wasn't a Dale. I was in a Dale County,
but I believe it was like Sparks County Police Department
was who pulled me over for quote unquote speeding while
I was on cruise control and then decided to point
a gun at me after I suggested that he showed
me his police scatters. We're gonna talk about that a
little bit. We're also gonna talk about Corey Booker and
his sudden change of heart. We're also going to talk
(01:05):
a little bit about uh about Kelly and Conway, and
we have a I mean, we have a lot to
talk about in general about Trump and he's still crazy.
That hasn't changed.
Speaker 2 (01:17):
So I'm not gonna do allong that to to to
too too much.
Speaker 1 (01:21):
But I actually am going to do another video I
believe tomorrow actually addressing because a lot of people, what
they haven't realized is why Kelly and Conway was even
in a position to to talk to those HBCU leaders
and what they were there for. So that's a whole
different that's a whole different video for a different day. Well,
we're gonna talk about the Kelly and Conway think that's
(01:41):
something that's been irking me. This is a week that
has been irking the hell out of me. So we're
gonna talk tonight about things have.
Speaker 2 (01:47):
Been pissing me to hell off and.
Speaker 1 (01:48):
Y'all does not to deal with it? All right? So
today not today? When was I It was a third Saturday, right,
I was driving going to see my best friend on
her baby shower because she's having a kid, and you know,
I was trying to be the good friend that I
am taking my behind out of Miami, which I should
have never done to go back to North Carolina.
Speaker 2 (02:10):
Aka in the South aka Bathroom bill.
Speaker 1 (02:13):
State, aka the cheat Tar cheating Tar Hill State. They
like to screw people out of money. And you know,
like I should just never meant to go back to
the South, just should have just never went back, right.
A lot of people told me this. Weirdly enough, I
didn't listen to them because I'm stupid. Quick digression. If
you're on Facebook Live, share this video Hearts and Lights only,
(02:33):
you all know the drill. I mean, I know I'm
gonna say some stuff that is gonna pick you off,
but please hearts and lights only, because the algorithms say
that hearts and lights will get your video shared and seen.
Otherwise they will suppress it. So let's do happy faces,
happy faces, hearts likes, all that good stuff. Share the
video wherever you can, all that cool things, all the
school things.
Speaker 2 (02:50):
So anyway, so I am driving doing.
Speaker 1 (02:55):
Eighty two miles per hour, which I ain't seventy technically
is speeding. I will not deny that. But what I
got pulled over for doing was eighty seven in the
seventy which is a weird number. And this is for
those of you who are often pulled over, which I'm
sure there's a lot of you. You know, the significance
of doing eighty seven in a seventy is that if
(03:22):
you're doing twenty or more over, they can't really like
they have to take you to jail and improve right
then and there that Hey, you were caught doing twenty over,
so I'm commiscating your license. You're going to jail, and
you can actually do jail time for doing that much over.
But eighty seven is very believable. It's not like you
(03:43):
gotta It's a very common speed that people who are
oftentimes doing you know, fifteen over are doing, so really,
people aren't gonna question it, except for in this case,
I questioned it because I was on Dan Cruz Control because,
to be quite honest, I was being pretty lazy that day,
so I didn't feel like driving the normal speeds that
I usually drove my vehicle. So essentially, this cop from
(04:04):
a Sparks, Kinnay police department was shining his little scanner
radar on me at the from the top of a
damn bridge. Right, So I'm thinking in my head, first
of all, who the hell are you helping? Who are
you trying to save by flashing a little radar off
the top of a bridge, trying to clock people speeding.
(04:24):
You're not trying to save anybody. We all know what
the hell you're trying to do. You're trying to meet
your quota because Tom's hard. You're retirment and kicking in
like you wanted to. Your wife's probably leaving you soon.
You don't really have anything else going on. You have
nothing better to do. Disney World. You can't afford it
because you're on a cop salary.
Speaker 2 (04:38):
Like, there's a lot of things going on in this
man's life.
Speaker 1 (04:40):
They probably I have to meet my quota because otherwise
I just don't feel self fulfilled. So I just happened
to be his target. It wasn't fun because when I
got pulled over, he actually took my ID to my
license and said, uh, he looked at me. He's aid.
For those of you who don't know, I used to
have dreadlocks the year you were in an actually now
(05:00):
almost two years ago, had some pretty long dreadlocks. I
was handsome. Actually, my hair was luscious, it was beautiful,
it was shiny. I looked good. I looked like like
one of those quote unquote, was what are the suburban
whites casts? I didn't look fluggish. I was in a
thug with my dress. My dress were pretty well kempt.
I look pretty damn good at my dress. But nevertheless
they were dreadlocks. It's a balskin headed white guy who
(05:21):
was also a police officer and one of the most
country towns in Georgia, so dreads and dreads right anyway.
So he looks at my id and then he goes, uh, sir,
where you uh were you moving narcotics? And I said, uh,
what am I moving narcotics? Bru Like, if you look
at my car, I couldn't even fit narcotics in my car. Like,
(05:42):
and if there was narcotics in my car, you would
damn sure smell them because my car is not big.
I'm like, no, I'm going to a baby shower. Man Like,
it's not that serious. I said, you know, a misted
officer in my most polite white man voice. I said, uh,
missed officer. If all, if it makes your job easier,
then you can feel free to take a look at
my car, go ahead and take a gander. So I did,
(06:04):
my little hearty. It's a difference between like your hearty
laugh is when like you're trying to be relatable to
those type of people. And I had it hearty with him.
Go ahead, sir, and he looked at my car. Of course,
didn't find anything. Now there was something that eventually ended
up getting me screwed, which is partially my fault. But
as most of you know, I'm in the middle of
(06:24):
a move, so I did not catch it. My insurance
has been a couple of days laps, but it was
merely it was literally all I had to do was
press a button right to actually update my insurance. He
didn't care. He used that as an opportunity to do
exactly what he wanted to do, which was arrest me
for some stupid shit. And was like, I have to
arrest you, son, And I'm like, no, you don't. You
(06:47):
don't really have to. You don't have to arrest me
right now. And he said yes I do, and I said, no,
Y don't, and he said, well, yes I do.
Speaker 2 (06:56):
And I was like, you don't really have to arrest me.
Speaker 1 (07:00):
But you know what, I'm not gonna go back and
forth with you because of these scenarios. Usually it's just
like you get in process, they take down your fingerprints,
and you're out and get your insurance. You go to
court and it's taken care of. But I said, you
know what, though, if you are going to arrest me
because I don't like being screwed over, I would appreciate
it if you showed me, showed me your scanner and
(07:21):
so instead of because I made his job easier, right,
For some reason, I thought it was gonna be like
a common Curtsey thing. I made your job easier. I'd
let you search my car when I absolutely did not
have to because you were discriminating and stereotyping. But I said,
you know it makes your job easier, I'll help you out.
So I asked him to make my job easier going forward.
I would like to know that I'm as actually called speedy.
The man went out of his damn mind. He went crazy.
(07:42):
He jumped back, put his hand on his gun and said,
if you don't get out of the car right now,
I'm going to arrest you for obstruction and put take
Warren's out on your name. I said, well, there, bro,
all I asked to do was to see the scanner.
That's all I asked. Wasn't a lot I didn't say hey,
we're gonna go to court right now, or hey I'm
not going to get in the car with you, or
I didn't say anything like that. I was being very
(08:04):
cooperative and all I asked to do was for him
to prove that I had been speeding. And this man
lost his damn mind. Sure, guy like five six five seven, bald,
white guy, country guy. And when he put his hand
on that gun, in my head, I was like, so,
for those of you who also don't know, I am
(08:25):
foreign military, and when you put your hand on your
gun towards me, I usually don't take it that well.
I was keeping about as call as I could be
in that situation, but I called his chief over me
and his chief had a little discussion. I was just
very honest with him. I said, look, man, I don't
know exactly who you were supposed to be convincing that
(08:46):
you were helping, because for those I said, you have
no idea who I am. You don't know what I do.
You don't know anything about me. You're profiling based off
of my ID and you're my age, but you don't
know who I am. I said, I have my own
radio show. I get a few thousand views of whatever
(09:06):
I'm doing that week, I said, and if I report
something like this, it's probably going to be a little
bit more than a few thousand views. So how am
I supposed to convince my audience that is predominantly mixed,
that is predominantly educated and aware, and it's very open
to sharing and creating more awareness when it comes to
issues like police brutality and abuse of power. How am
(09:27):
I supposed to look them in the face, or look
anybody in the face for that matter, and say, yeah,
the police are here to help you when you're clearly
only arresting me. Because when I ask you for proof
that I am doing what you said I am doing,
and his response, and I'm assuming what his and your
response is going to be as well, was oh you can,
(09:48):
you can look at it when you go to court,
get a lawyer. You can do. But they know, damn well,
nine out of ten times poor people cannot afford to
get out of that situation. They know that you're gonna
go and you're gonna take us. You're gonna they're gonna
if it was for speeding, say if you're doing fifteen
(10:09):
sixteen overs, they're gonna be like, well, you get a
public defender. Okay, And if you get a public defender,
what happens next? You know what happens next, You gotta
take a driving class. If I'm poor, I can't afford
to take a damn driving class on a Saturday. That
is a whole eight to ten hours, depending on who
you are. For some people, that's two separate jobs.
Speaker 2 (10:27):
That's a whole that's half of a paycheck.
Speaker 1 (10:29):
For some people, that's their rent money, that's their cell
phone build money. That's a lot of money for someone
who is working their ass off already to take off
just to fulfill some damn driving course. Uh, and the
worse situations that can happen. But and then they're like,
well you can pay for a lawyer. Yeah, because who
has four hundred dollars or five six hundred dollars to
pay for a damn lawyer if you're in the most
(10:51):
southern part of Georgia. And so at this point, I'm
appealing to the chief because this is a big deal,
and I'm just like, look, you're not helping anybody. This
is not helping anybody. You're pulling over people over for speeding,
not even clarifying how they were showing them that they
were speeding. You know, like having cops pull like guns
(11:12):
out on people who who respectfully request to see verification
of their speeding. That's not helping people. I said, there
are drug dealers out here. There there are rapists, you know,
sexual predators, and you're worried about this pretty handsome, brown
skinned guy with a really nice haircut, kind of well spoken,
(11:34):
very educated. You know, some pretty good looking tattoos. Okay,
a nice car.
Speaker 2 (11:40):
Uh, but you know you're worried about me.
Speaker 1 (11:43):
And there's all these people out here doing these bad
things and you're worried about me, Like, bro, come on,
And I mean once I explained this to him, he
kind of took a step back, realized what, you know,
realized the situation I put kind of put it in
the perspective for them. Thank god I could articulate myself
that well, because otherwise it may have not ended up
(12:04):
that well. So they take me in and process me
and allow me to bail out, but it could have
went in a total opposite direction. But what was scarier
to me was what I found out when I got
to the jailhouse. The in processing officers were telling me
how Sheriff's had left because the jail house pretty much
(12:26):
became seventy percent populated from people who were just going
through driving issues. People were being in process for suspending license,
staying four to six weeks because they couldn't afford bail,
which is probably why they couldn't afford their license to
begin with, or they couldn't afford their new registration because
in Georgia you have to pay ridiculous seven percent of
(12:46):
your vehicle's fair worth in taxes, which actually Georgia determines.
And this isn't something that only happened in Georgia. Like
I said before, this is stuff that happens in Michigan,
it happens in North Carolina. It's ironically all the states
that just happened to be Republican, where they go out
of their way to ensure that you're driving a vehicle
can literally be the determining factor of whether you can
(13:09):
or can't pursue your livelihood. And you got to save
up all year just to pay seven percent tax on
your vehicle, which is absolutely ridiculous. Seven percent taxes on
a vehicle. It's crazy. So if you're driving an Audi
in Georgia, I am so sorry because you're about to
drop three four g's on your vehicle taxes every time
(13:32):
you want to register your car. But it is not
the people driving the audis that have to worry about this.
If you'd have a twenty sixteen Toyota Corolla, you're still
going to pay close to one thousand dollars on your
vehicle just to drive. That's for some people in Georgia.
That's two month's rent that you're paying on a vehicle
(13:54):
just to drive. So it just kind of shed light
on a situation that a lot of people already knew
it was pretty bad, and that in South these Republican states,
they have a lot of work to do and they're
essentially just taxing poor people. And the people who end
up suffering, of course, are the ones who who can't
(14:16):
afford to do these like it's not like these people
are getting pulled over and they're doing like these luxury
like oh, I'm on the way, I'm on the way
to Disney World or something to that, something to data
feel like, No, they're going to work, getting pulled over
on the way to work, getting pulled over picking up
their kids from school. And it's sad, it really is.
(14:36):
But onto some positive news Around that same time, a
good friend of mine named Jordan Sheraton had contacted me.
A lot of you all know him from The Young Turks.
He's the investigative reporter who was reporting all the information
from Dapple or the North Dakota Access Pipeline for those
(14:58):
of you who are unfamiliar with that. UH became very
famous for calling out Donna Brazil from CNN, instrumental in
creating the situation that essentially ended up leading her to
be fired because he put her on blasts. That was
one of the what was one of my favorite nights.
I remember watching that video. Her face was like, oh
(15:19):
my what what? But what we got to think about
all the Russians. We're not we're not focused on the
right things. Russians and Putin's out here hunting bears, and
you know, it was pretty hilarious. But so Jordan contacts
with me to contact me as well as I think
a lot of you all noticed, he has his own
He's creating a independent journalism YouTube page, website, the Whole
(15:40):
nine Yards, and he asked me to be one of
his reporters. And so that is what I am doing
now on the side, you know, along with my own
my network as well. So that was fun. So now
I got like eight bosses between Ed and Jordan and
myself and my mommy. You know. But it's a it's
a good I'm happy. I'm extremely happy, and it's I'm
(16:04):
excited for the opportunity. And i just want to thank
Jordan for bringing me on. Uh, we're gonna we're gonna
shake some heads. You're gonna roll some heads and shake
some shake some legs, and piss some people off. Because
me and Jordan both have an affinity for pissing people off.
I don't know why we enjoy it so much. Mostly
politicians had a crook it. We really like doing that.
We we we get a good little hearty out of like, hey,
(16:26):
you see me call that one guy? Man? Did you
see me call all that one guy? Damn bro? But
you see what I did to her? Yeah, we're exposing everybody,
exposing everybody and not getting paid enough for it. Anyway,
that's a different discussion for a different day. So, but
speaking of exposing people, I'm sure a lot of you
people have seen my video earlier addressing Corey T. Booker,
(16:51):
the Democratic Golden Child as it were. Uh, and it's
It's funny because I said this to Jared and Liz.
For those of you who don't know, jareda. Lizz are
the ones who are in charge of Beconley Law firm
conducting the DNC fraud suit. I had this conversation with
Jared and Lizz the day of the Democratic Convention. When
I heard this man talk, I said, oh shit, they're
(17:14):
about to try to run him for president because they
realized via Hillary Clinton how well identity politics can work.
He's full of shit, completely and totally. It was very obvious.
He actually has no substantive policies that he's pushed through
or he's pushing through. He doesn't do anything but accept money,
sit there, look pretty, and keep himself in the closet
(17:35):
because he's gay ass hell and refuses to come out,
which nobody understands. Why if you're a Democrat, what's wrong
with coming out and being gay? Like you're on the
right side of the team for being gay. It's not
like you're a Republican. Jeffrey Conda is in a lot
of ways, but different discussion. So Ever since then, this
(17:55):
man has been being plastered all over CNN, all over
the MSNBC. They even went so far as to say
like it was a big deal that he Corey Booker
calls for a uh what is it? He calls for
an investigation into the problems with North the North Counter
Access pipeline. Have the protest has been treated wrongfully? We
(18:18):
all know they had been had been treated wrongfully. This
wasn't news. If you were there. I was there, Jeff
was there, Ed Higgins like, we've seen it. We've all
seen it. We know they've been treated wrongfully. Tlcy Gabber
had been there, Bernie Sanders had gone there, Jill Stein
had gone there, and none of them were getting exposure
for going to the North Dakota Access pipeline. None of them. However,
(18:41):
Corey Booker simply mentions the North Dakota Access pipeline boom
put all over the news. Uh, every time he threw
a singular insol at Donald Trump, which is very easy
to do, boom put all over the news, right, every
time he flashed his smile, boom put all over the news.
So I'm not stupid. Neither is the American public. At
(19:01):
this point, we know exactly what that means. So of
course you can imagine it was sweet victory whenever Bernie
Senter's introduced that pharmaceutical legislation. Corey Booker forgot what it's
like to be in the spotlight, and he forgot how
damn powerful Bernie Sanders influences. And when he voted against
the bill to essentially import pharmaceuticals to allow them to
(19:24):
be cheaper and more accessible to the general public, he
voted against that because he has pharmaceuticals paying for his elections,
and he got exposed real fast. Presidential dreams crush just
that quick. Every time the man posts a video, anytime
he posts a picture, anytime he says, if he flashes
that little cute smile he got, he boomed Cory Bucket,
(19:46):
you're a trader, you're a corporates, you're this, you're that,
And it's just beautiful to watch. I love it because
people are just not playing it anymore. It's awesome. But
every time that he tries that, he's getting slammed. So
he realized this. So the pressure is on Corey Booker.
So what does he do next? He finally says, you
know what, I'm going to vote for this bill now
(20:07):
I've changed my mind. What is that? What is that
phrase that Hillary Clinton like to use y'all. I've I've
evolved on the issues. I've evolved conveniently not that everybody's watching,
and I know I can't get away with it. I've
evolved a lot. Yeah, I don't believe that, pretty black
nobody does. You're full of shit. Like to be quite honest,
(20:30):
I don't believe he's evolved. I don't think that he
actually cares about pharmacy. He's still taking the money and yeah,
he can. He's essentially trying to protect his presidential big
because he knows that he's not going to win. Nobody
legitimately views him as a presidential candidate that could beat
Donald Trump. In fact, I legitimately don't think. I don't
(20:52):
think that he actually has the policy experience nor the
rhetorical experience because he's he's a he's not that great
of a speaker. Like he's not. He's good. He can
be charismatic, but when you're talking about long, extended periods
of debates and when you can't just stand up there
and small and yell out a crowd, when you actually
(21:13):
have to engage them and be personable, Corey Booker is
not that, And so I don't think he would beat
Donald Trump actually in a one on one general election,
regardless of the fact that he's black. People are kind
of over that. Now, Yeah, it was okay when Obama did.
Speaker 2 (21:30):
Obama was actually a smooth.
Speaker 1 (21:32):
Operator, Like he had a beautiful family. He's a beautiful
guy's damn self.
Speaker 2 (21:36):
Like he was playing basketball out here. He was out
here shooting in the gym, like.
Speaker 1 (21:41):
I mean, he's probably gonna be in this damn Celebrity
All Star. The NBA Celebrity All Star came next year. Like,
let's be honest, Obama was a different type of guy.
Corey Booker is no damn Barack Obama or else. He
would be a lot more smooth about how he went
about things, that's for sure, because Obama it took him
a whole eight years for him to get caught doing
(22:01):
some of the things that he was doing. So no,
Corey Booker, nobody believes you at all, even in the
slightest Like sorry, I know, I know you thought that
you were going to get away with that. And that
whole evolved word political evolution has lost all meaning after
(22:21):
Hillary used it over and over again, and then the
CNN pundits kept using it over and over again, and
you're allowed to evolve on the issues. I don't care
about you evolving. You know who evolved on the issues? Literally,
quite literally, Tulca Gabbard actually evolved on the issues.
Speaker 2 (22:37):
And once she did.
Speaker 1 (22:37):
Was she gave up her vice chair position on the DNC,
one of the most powerful positions you can have in
the Democratic Party. Oh damn, They're obviously more powerful than
being president, right. She gave it up to support Bernie
Sanders when no one was looking, No one knew who
she was, no one. She literally has nothing to gain.
I mean she does now. But at that point in time,
(22:58):
it was looking like Hillary Clinton was going to win
it all. It was looking that she was gonna be
the first female, the first political powerhouse female to come
out and speak against Hillary Clinton, sitting beside Debbie Washerman Schultz,
who was her little lap dog, Hillary clinton little lap dog.
And she evolved on the issues. She used to be
a little bit is slimophobic. I'm gonna keep it hot
(23:19):
with you if you don't know she was for a while.
She got over that. Her being in the military did
obviously affect a lot of the way she thought. When
she removed herself in that situation, spoke to more people,
gained more political experience and social experiences, and interact with
a lot more different a lot of different types of
people with different political opinions toci. Gabbard evolved when it
(23:40):
was not when it was convened, but when it was necessary,
when she had a tough choice to make, she made it.
Speaker 2 (23:46):
That's not Corey Booker.
Speaker 1 (23:47):
Corey Booker, dumb ass had at a spike a lot
on him. Didn't even think, oh yeah, if I vote
against his bill, everybody's gonna know about it. And it
happened because he's doing whatever politically expedient. He's doing whatever
they pay him to do. No, I don't think he's changed.
If you has me my opinion about that, and some
people have, actually, I don't think I need to tell
you all. He's you know, obviously not right. Okay, So
(24:07):
moving on, Kelly and Conway sitting in her little skirt
thing on her knees in the couch with all the
HBCU leadership there, people have been misconstrued. I made a
status saying that if you're if you're not dealing with
(24:29):
this in a way that is only talking about professionalism
in front of a group of well established leaders.
Speaker 2 (24:36):
That's it. That is the only insult that should be.
Speaker 1 (24:39):
Thrown in the way of Kelly and Conway. If I
hear one thing about her skirt, if I hear one
thing about her opening and showing her legs, if I
hear one thing about her fee being a couch that
has anything to do with it, just better be about
her fee being in the couch and nothing to do
with the fact that she has heels on digging in
the couch. And it's just not later. But here one
thing about her class, because we all know that classes
(25:01):
just coded code words for lady like or not being
lady like. If those are all sexist references, those are
all misogynistic references. And people are trying to pretend because
you know how sometimes liberals can be really hypocritical, and
they like if you say anything like they can't they
(25:24):
pretend that they can't be presidents, that they can't be discriminatory,
that partisan politics can't influence the way they think as well.
But these rabbit insults coming at Kelly and Conway, if
you don't think they are sexist, and the way they're
being presented that you are blind, you are blind. No,
I don't like Kelly and Conway. Nobody likes Kelly and Conway.
(25:44):
Kelly and Conway doesn't like Kelly and Conway. But she
was sitting obviously trying to take a picture. Everyone was posing.
It looked like she was They were looking at her,
so obviously she was sitting that way for funk, for
a functional purpose. Okay, but these comments about her skirt,
about her legs being open, the means about her sitting
(26:06):
on Trump's face, the means about Milania and Trump need
to watch y'all, heir because he's trying to Those are
sexist memes and the fact that feminists have not been
standing up for her is absolutely sickening. That is exactly
why a lot of people be calling feminists feminazis, because
y'all pick and choose the type of sexism you want
(26:26):
to argue against. Whenever the sexism politically aligns with your goals,
all of a sudden, you want to critique it and
critique it and critiquet. But whenever the sexism is politically
inconvenient for you, you want to pretend that it's not happening.
When we have never ever seen a male put in
the news because of the way they were sitting down.
(26:49):
There's no reason that that main discussion of that meeting
should have been about the way Kelly and Conway had
decided to take a picture for a damn brief second
the news should have been talking about is the reason
that that many HBCU leadership, that much HBCU leadership was
all in one room with Donald Trump in his administration,
(27:12):
which apparently was positive. Apparently they had something to do
with the fact that they were donating millions of dots
at HBCUs. So no, that is not okay, I don't
want to yes's it was unprofessional and okay, we get it.
People do unprofessional shit all the time. Barack Obama had
his feet chilling on the desk during an important briefing
(27:35):
as well, so did George W. Bush disrespecting the hell
out of the over office furniture. But it only gets
blown up when it's Kelly and Conway. Of course, you
can thanks CNN and NBC for that. Uh. Like I said,
I'm not saying some of the attacks aren't warranted. It
was unprofessional. I don't think anybody disagrees with the fact
that it was unprofessional. But once again, when you start
(27:57):
talking about her skirts, when you start talking about her,
her opening her legs, the sexist and misogynist means of
her sitting on Trump's face, or her exposing herself to
trumpa front of Malani. I mean, I've been seeing all
this crazy stuff and nobody that I would usually expect
to jump to the defense of a woman in that
(28:18):
being put in that being portrayed in that light. Nobody's
defending her.
Speaker 2 (28:24):
I shouldn't if.
Speaker 1 (28:25):
People are so. Somebody had the absolutely nervous say, you're
a man explaining this to me, and I just wanted
to honestly say, you shut the hell up, because if
you think that me telling you to value this woman
as a professional, like I said, professionality should have been
the only complaint. And if it was merely professionality, it
would have never been blown up in the light that
(28:46):
it had been blown up. If it was a male
who if it was Pitts who sat like that, it
would not be in the news. We would not still
be talking about this. It would not be exposed at
the rate that has been exposed. There wouldn't be means
everywhere about it.
Speaker 2 (29:01):
There wouldn't be anything about it.
Speaker 1 (29:03):
It'll be like, come on, pens fiction Actually act right,
and it would have been that. It would have been that
we would have moved on. But it's a woman, and
the attacks are sexist. Period. Yes, there are some legitimate
attacks about her professionalism, but there shouldn't be a week's
worth of attacks about a woman's professionalism in a situation
that lasted all of three to five seconds for her
to take a picture. Okay, so yes it was sexist.
(29:26):
You don't like it. I don't really give it. Damn,
don't watch me. I don't care. It doesn't matter. So anyway,
that is it for this evening. I'm sorry the show
is being cut short. I was at work. I'll be
quite honest with you, guys. I thought it was Thursday.
My friend lied to me. S told me it was Thursday.
It's actually Friday. Blaming her shipping all of the blame
away from me, so don't blame me. A fantastic day,
(29:51):
have a fantastic evening, and be safe out there is
getting real. Spreen break is coming. For those of you
who will be in my Miami.
Speaker 2 (30:00):
Hey, hit me up, I will be here.
Speaker 1 (30:03):
I will be working for those of you who don't know.
My other job is party promoting, So in club promoting,
so if you need something to do while you're down
in Miami, hey, I am also your guy. Have a
fantastic evening. Thank you once again, Jordan, and shout out
to Truth Against the Machine. If you have not, go
follow their Facebook page and follow their YouTube page and
(30:24):
have a good night. I will talk to you later. Bye.