Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:01):
And so I screenshoted it. They had his name, they
had his account, so on and so forth. It took them
about five minutes. The game is IP address. They gave
me his his his name, government name. He had like
(00:22):
four email addresses, his home address where he stayed. He
lived with his mom. He also happened to work in
a gym. He worked in the gym. He lived in California,
and he worked in the gym. He was a young
and too like he had been. He had graduated from
high school like two or three years ago. He was
working at the boxing gym. He worked second shift at
(00:43):
the boxing gym, or work. He went to work at
like three o'clock in the afternoon at the boxing gym.
But you know, three o'clock is like six o'clock our time.
So on and so forth, and so like, I got
all this stuff, his mother's name, father's name, grandmother's name,
siblings' names, like I had his pictures, graduation picture, pictures
of him in the yard with his family, like all
(01:04):
of this, pictures of his mom, pictures of his dad.
Like it was just crazy. So I got a whole
bunch of information, right, so I said, and I responded
to him. I called him by his real name. For
the sake of this this this podcast, we'll call him Jose.
So I said, oh yeah, I said, yeah, I'm I'm, I'm,
(01:28):
I'm still talking shit, Jose Hernandez. And then he hit
me with the Remember the white men can't jump. When
Raymond walked in the store with the mask and he said,
give me all your money, and the store owner said,
the store clerk said, Raymond, and he said it ain't mean,
this ain't mean. This ain't me. Yeah, that's what he
(01:48):
was on. Jose Jose Harlane Dazz was Nah, this ain't me,
This ain't me. And I said, oh yeah, he is. Man.
And I said, listen, man, if you don't stop fucking
with me, I'm gonna fly out to uh, I don't
know what saying. Bernardine will say, California, and I'm gonna
(02:10):
come to your mama's house at put mama address short
and her picture and I said, man, and then I'm
gonna and then if you're not there, I'm gonna come
to your job at the boxing gym picture of the
gym and when I run across, and I'm gonna keep
and I said something like I'm gonna keep I'm gonna
(02:30):
keep at it until I catch you, and when I
catch you, I'm gonna pull your tongue out and I'm
gonna slap it. Then I said, Jose, listen, there are
people who are not going to There are people who
(02:53):
what did I say? I said, there are people who
don't I won't no problems that I'm want, no issues.
They don't bother nobody. Then there are people who bother
folks and they not gonna bust of grape in a
fruit fight, and if they did the juice to kill them,
Then I said, but Jose, there's also sharks in the water.
(03:15):
It's also sharks in the water, and you have to
be careful about who you bother because there's sharks in
the water and you never know what you're gonna come across.
Jose deleted all of his accounts, and I got I
had all of his accounts because that was part of
the information that I got. Every account on social media
(03:37):
he deleted. He deleted every email address, Raymond deleted everything.
He deleted everything I called him to He answered once,
then he didn't answer no, But then I left. I
left him alone. I quit. But ultimately, what I'm saying
is the world is under surveillance. So the first reason
(04:01):
why the streets are dead and should be dead, is
because the world is under surveillance, absolutely positively under surveillance.
Everything you do, you're being monitored. You're being monitored for
your location, your movements. Everywhere you go, there's a camera
(04:24):
every Do you realize you can't walk in your neighborhood
without being monitored. If it's not being monitored by your
cell phone, how else are you monitored? You're monitored by
the cameras that they put on the street poles. And
if it's not that, every time you walk past somebody's
front door, when you walking on the sidewalk, what do
you hear every time you walk past somebody, walk past
(04:51):
person's house. Everybody got a camera. Everybody has surveillance. The
on the front door, based on the ring cap. The
whole entire world is absolutely under surveillance, and there's nothing
we could do about it. Another reason why I know
(05:13):
that the streets are dead, Hey man, say man, everybody
is a walking media outlet. Now do you understand that,
(05:37):
like everybody's natural course of action is to pull their
phones out. Everybody pulls their phones out at everything. You
can't be anywhere and enjoy any one thing without people
pulling their phones out anymore. You understand. You walk down
(05:58):
the street, you fall on the ground, like you trip
and fall. Somebody has the you look up, somebody gonna
have their camera, they phone out, video recording, laughing. Never not,
are you okay? Let me help you out, none of that.
Somebody gonna have their phone out and they gonna be
recording you falling. You get into an altercation with somebody,
(06:21):
somebody's recording. If you happen to be a person who
is a popular person or a celebrity, or you know,
somebody of any type of status, people are gonna have
their phones out. And it's like you could be like
I'm talking about regular people like you could be regular folks,
like just regular folks. You might be a you might
(06:44):
have a position of prowess in your respective city. Right,
and you go somewhere and you go to an event.
What's gonna happen? Somebody gonna want to take a picture
with you? You feel me, little oh goofy me will
walk around and be in certain places or whatever, and
I'll come across somebody and it's a no disrespect to y'all,
(07:08):
no disrespect to anybody that supports the platform. But somebody
will see me and say, Junior ah man, let's get
a picture. Like the world is a walking media outlet.
Everybody is independent media outlets, no matter what. It's crazy,
like that's just where we are in the world. And
(07:29):
so anytime that you're doing anything, think about it. Think
about how much we are in a place now where
you can get on social media and you can see
real live shootouts. They just had one in my city
where they were having a real live shootout and people,
these youngins were out there recording the shootout, bullets whizzing
(07:51):
past them, their heads in the phones. The world is
a media outlet. Think about how much criminal shit you
see day in and day out on the World Wide Web.
Things are just happening, and what happens, somebody's recording it,
not stopping it, not intervening, not not contacting the authorities
(08:13):
with their phone. Instead of contacting, Instead of using their
telephones to contact the authorities to help resolve the issues,
people are using their phones to record whatever's going on.
The world is a walking media outlet, Like can I can't,
(08:34):
Like I really want to stretch out on the track
right there. But the world is a walking media outlet
like it's it is. It is crucial, like it is crucial.
Reason number three, Like I said, these are no order
and they kind of off the top of the head.
(08:56):
But reason number three is, heymen, everybody's telling. Are they
gonna tell? They gonna tell, They gonna tell. Everybody's telling
because there's no consequences for telling anymore. There's no consequences
for snitching. Somebody would be the man when they the
man before they go away, they're having their way in
the streets and whatnot. Then they'll get popped and they
(09:19):
go away for a little while. Then they come back
far before they should be back, and there's no and
then they go right back to being the man, like
there's no consequences for telling. You used to tell, and
you used to be ostracized like you used to tell.
And this is just the we're talking about stuff that
went on in the streets. You feel me. I'm not
(09:42):
I'm not a street person. I'm not a street cat.
I'm a square. I was an athlete and a scholar.
I ain't a hood just from the hood. Shout out
to Andre three thousand but when you used to tell,
like things used to happen, like you would have to
get somewhere, like if you told, you'd have to get somewhere,
(10:05):
like you could not go back to the streets that
you're from when you told you feel me mofuckers used
to tell, and then they used to move to Atlanta.
How do you think everybody got to Atlanta? They was
people was telling somebody in you know, Ohio, get in trouble,
you know, get popped, go down for a little big tail,
get out. Then they moved to Atlanta and start a
(10:29):
record label or something like, nah man, like you got
your ass, you got to move around. And then not
just that too, like people used to have to like
you had to move around, and then your people had
to move around, like you couldn't just nah if you
told nah man, you used to have to be stiff.
Man used to have to stand on that used to
(10:50):
have to be stiff. Now nobody's stiff no more. The
streets are dead, like nobody's stiff no more. They telling,
they foting like they literally foting like I feel like
we need to we need to get some more. Let's
get some more. They telling, people are telling they gonna
(11:15):
tell it on you in order to save themselves. Like
it's all when you all running around the streets and
everybody you know is gang, A gang is gang gang.
It's a whole lot of gang gang ship. When you free. Yeah,
but when the when you hey, man, when them cuffs
(11:35):
come out, them bars start to close, them holding cells,
then you gotta go see the judge that bond or
bond denied you, feel me? Then they get to they
get to telling you what that sentence about to be.
And and you know you gotta judge that's about to
(11:56):
run wild with the gears. A man, let me go
in my head and figure out what I can tell
these people. I gotta tell that you. I gotta give
them shumping, you feel me. They don't want my little case, man,
I got to give them shopping. And these folks, now,
are they here to give you sharping? They ain't gonna
give you something. They gonna tell man, like that's just
(12:20):
the truth. Like then they're going to tell the streets
are dead, man, the street shit is dead. You're gonna
they're gonna tell it. Everybody's telling they gonna talk. They
gonna go right back home. A lot of them gonna
continue working with them people. You understand, they're gonna continue
working with them people. They gonna continue giving them information,
(12:43):
so on and so forth. And it's it's just because
there's no I won't talk about it no more. There's
no consequences. They get to come out and still be cool.
You feel me. They get to come out and still
be the men they tell the man, the streets are dead. Avan.
(13:06):
Another reason why I know the streets are dead, and
this is a big one, like this is the when
I think about it, like this is the one, Like
this is the big joker, this is the final boss,
Like this is the boss of all bosses. You feel me,
like this is the boss of all bosses. Think about this,
and you probably never thought about it. That's why you
had to come to the Culture Collective Thoughtcast episode five.
(13:31):
You had to come pull up on your player partner
Junior the truth and we had to because this is
where we exchange ideas, right, and so you might have
never thought about it like this, And it's cool because
I'm gonna give it to you. I'm I'm gonna give
you what I got. The other reason why I know
the streets are dead, man is because let's move that
(13:51):
bookmark that we put in earlier. The drug trade is dead,
like the street drug trade is dead. It's dead. It
is changed. You understand what I'm saying. So what are
you saying, Junior? Are you saying that people aren't getting
high anymore? Because that's not true because we see people
(14:14):
getting high all the time. We see people getting high
all the time. All you gotta do is look and
you see them, you know what I mean, people getting
high And I'm like, yeah, that's cool, Like I get
it right. But I also understand. Remember, we had this
big old opioid crisis. Before the opioid crisis, we had
(14:35):
you know, Crack. It was the Crack epidemic. And the
way they handled the Crack epidemic and the way they
handled the opioid crisis was two totally different things. Like
it was two totally different situations because it was two
totally different demographics. But have y'all realized, like all of
a sudden, the opioid crisis has kind of dimed down,
(14:57):
y'all y'all haven't noticed that, Like I haven't paid attention
to the opioid crisis. The people falling out, dropping dead
and overdosing and all of that. Have y'all not paid
attention to. It's kind of dwindling down. There's not a
whole lot of attention on it anymore. So on and
so forth. The street drug trade is obsolete, and it's
(15:23):
so obsolete, like I told you all. When I look
and I see somebody that sells drugs in the street, right,
and when I see drug transactions, I'm like disgusted. You
feel me, Like when I see drug trans street drug transactions,
because I see them every now and again, you feel me.
You know. Still, I'm still from where I'm from, and
(15:44):
I tend to move around here and there, man your business.
But when I see like hand in hand transactions, I
see people who literally still sell drugs. And the new
drug dealers in the streets actually look like the dope fiends.
And then the dope fiends actually look like halfway regular people,
and so on and so forth. But it's just the
mere fact that you realize like the street drug trade is.
(16:06):
It's nah, nah, it's like filthy, you like ah, And
I'm gonna tell you why. Because there's a new drug dealer,
and the new drug dealers they wear white lab coats.
I said it. Do you know how crazy you gotta
(16:28):
be to actually buy drugs in the street in twenty
and twenty five? Do you know how crazy you got
to be to buy your opioids from the streets in
twenty twenty five, when all you have to do is
get a prescription from the doctor. They are writing prescriptions
(16:53):
for opioids, y'all, they are. Let me let me let
me say this. I probably better chill out, man. I
think I might might be going too far. Y'all think
we're going too far, y'all, let me know in the
chat if we're going too far. Let me know in
the comments section, if we're going too far. In the
year of twenty twenty five, the biggest drug dealers in
(17:21):
the world wear white coats, and they have stetoscopes, and
you gotta wait to go see them. You gotta get appointment,
go see them, and then they'll write you a prescription
for opioids. You don't have to run around the streets
(17:43):
trying to find hope. You can legally get it and
guess what your insurance will pay for it.