Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Like my brother said, please like hit.
Speaker 2 (00:03):
If you're on YouTube, like the show, If you're watching
us on Facebook, like the show, share it, Call your friends,
call your neighbors, let them know the Magnets Twins. I
own the Love Moment podcast tonight and you're gonna be
in for a treat as you always are. But before
we get the festivity started, I would want to thank
(00:24):
our sponsors. They are the reasons why we're able to
do this and what we do. And I want you
guys to know we're looking for sponsors. So if you
want the sponsor the Love Moving podcasts, we're reaching hundreds
or thousands of people now. So if you want to
get your name out there and get your brand out there,
I want you to reach out to myself, Raymon Magnus,
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(00:46):
out to us. We're looking for sponsors. We need sponsors.
We're going to keep this thing going. Partner with us.
If you believe in us, you watch the show.
Speaker 1 (00:53):
Partner with us. Okay, So.
Speaker 2 (00:56):
Tonight, if you're looking for something to do, you may
want to get your up on maybe lift some the
house music or do something and maybe shoot around the pool.
Go down to the Blue Note seventeen fifteen Roosevelt Road
and Broadview, Illinois. When you get down there, tell them
the Love Moving Podcast sent you. If you want to
get maybe relaxed, got a couple ailments, stop down by
(01:18):
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Moming Podcast sent you. If you're looking for maybe a
little vibe and you want to relax and chill, get
you a nice bite to eat, listen to some good music.
Go down to seventeen oh one Roosevelt Road, the View
Restaurant in lounge. When you get down there, you tell them, hey,
(01:39):
the Love Movement Podcast sent me.
Speaker 3 (01:42):
You.
Speaker 2 (01:42):
Maybe coming down Manheim Road going through Broadview, I mean
bell Wood.
Speaker 1 (01:46):
You want you a nice sandwich? Steak sandwich is nice meal.
Speaker 2 (01:48):
Stop over Stacy's Cafe eight forty five manhimh Row. When
you stop in there and you tell Stacy the Love
Moving Podcast sent you. Maybe you down on the other
side and you're in Westchester looking for a nice about
to eat. They have a lot of good daily specials
going on right now. Go over the Tastes for Restaurant
nineteen twenty nine South Mannheim Road. When you get there,
(02:09):
tell them the Low Moving Podcast Central. We also got
the Avenues coming soon in Bellwood. When they're up and going,
we're gonna give you all the information. We want you
to stop in. We want, we need you to support
the sponsors because the sponsors allow us to do what
we do. I got some also other special announcements. This Sunday,
the Village Dispensary is calling a sun having a sunset
(02:32):
sessh down at the View Sunday from six pm to
nine pm. I want everybody to come out, come support
the Village Dispensary, their hometown dispensary. Come down meet us
at the View Sunday eleven sixteen at six pm. If
you have a villa, you've been to the Village Dispensery
(02:53):
and you have a receipt, you're gonna have free entry.
So come out. It's gonna be a wonderful night. Come
out this sun six pm. Come support the village, your spensary,
the Village Dispensary at the View. The Village Expensary also
is running some good sales. You know everybody waiting know
the Black Friday sales. They running some Now you're getting up.
You getting two for thirty four. You get twenty percent
(03:15):
off starting on Thursday eleven twenty all way through Wednesday
eleven twenty six. The view, I mean, the Village Dispensary
is gonna be running a lot of specials, a lot
of sales. Want you guys to get out stop down there,
support and when you get down there, I want you
to tell them the Love Moviment podcast sent you.
Speaker 1 (03:33):
You never know you might see one of us in
the building.
Speaker 2 (03:37):
Support those who support us. That's how our mentality is.
Support to support those who really support us. Thank you
to our sponsors. Again, like my brother say that, we
are looking for sponsors. Reach out to us. Meet us
out there. You gonna see us around. You're gonna see
us in the place to be. So if you see
us there, come up to us, talk to us. We'll
(03:58):
talk back with you. Meet this in one of those locations.
Speaker 1 (04:02):
Uh.
Speaker 2 (04:02):
We want to give an opportunity to our guest host
tonight to introduce herself and give the people a little
bit about yourself.
Speaker 4 (04:10):
Okay, well, thanks for having me twins.
Speaker 5 (04:14):
My name is Phoepee Bradley. Most people know me it's
Policia Phepe Bradley, and.
Speaker 3 (04:19):
I've been knowing these guys since.
Speaker 4 (04:21):
I was a kid.
Speaker 3 (04:22):
We lived on the same block, grew up around.
Speaker 5 (04:26):
These guys, and I've been in Maywood pretty much most
of my life. My mother is a lifelong Maywoody, in
here since long time ago.
Speaker 4 (04:35):
Her parents grew up here. So let's see, what do
you want.
Speaker 3 (04:40):
To know about me. I'm retired.
Speaker 5 (04:42):
I had a career at a couple of utilities, retired
and retired about two years.
Speaker 3 (04:49):
I'm a writer.
Speaker 5 (04:51):
I'm also a small business entrepreneur.
Speaker 3 (04:54):
Entrepreneur.
Speaker 5 (04:55):
I had a product called Pheepee Back. A lot of
you girls supported that and some of you guys, And
I also had a YouTube channel that is on hiatus
for no particular reason, just because I wasn't feeling it.
Speaker 4 (05:09):
So I am pretty much a creative animal.
Speaker 5 (05:12):
Whatever I find interest in, I try to expand on it.
Speaker 3 (05:17):
Usually I have these I don't really call them businesses.
Speaker 4 (05:21):
I call them glorified hobbies.
Speaker 2 (05:25):
And if you treat it like a hobby, you know what,
If you treat it like a hobby, you'll want to
do it every day, and you stay interested and it
stay fun with you. When it started to become a business,
it started to drag you a little bit and you're like, oh,
I gotta do this again. So it always good to
look at it as a glorified hobby. Here's a fun fact,
and I believe we verified this last year. Your mom
is the oldest Proviso East Living alumni right now. I
(05:51):
want someone to check that.
Speaker 4 (05:53):
I think her friend Marilyn Jefferson.
Speaker 5 (05:56):
Maybe maybe I think was she's still alive, yes, but
I think.
Speaker 4 (06:00):
She's a little older than my mother.
Speaker 3 (06:03):
Yeah.
Speaker 5 (06:03):
I think she's ninety three or about to be ninety
three and my mother's ninety two.
Speaker 1 (06:07):
But my mother's up there, up there.
Speaker 2 (06:09):
But that's great that we have feose are goals, Le's goals.
So let's not belong be prolonged this information. Let's jump
right into it. Our hot topics we're gonna start out
with is this government shut down now it's resolved. And
this Snap problem that was going on that just got
out of hand where so many people were gonna go
(06:31):
without food or some people did go without food.
Speaker 1 (06:34):
You know.
Speaker 2 (06:34):
The problem I'd have with it is the news medium
made it to seem like it was a black issue.
Like when they said snap, they automatically put black people
on the TV. But forty two percent of all SNAP
benefits go to white people, but they never showed them
on TV. They always showed us at the grocery store
complaining about we wasn't gonna get snapped, and it made
(06:56):
it They made it our issue when it really what
it do we well, we're gonnaet affected. Of course, yeah,
we get thirty seven percent of the benefits, but they
get more than us. Another thing they did that if
people don't realize, is most people who get in SNAP
they work.
Speaker 1 (07:09):
Every day for a living. Facts, they work every day.
So we made it.
Speaker 2 (07:13):
People will say, oh, they are just sitting at home.
They're not just getting money for nothing.
Speaker 1 (07:16):
No. No, Walmart as an employer.
Speaker 2 (07:21):
More people get snapped who work at Walmart than any
company in this country.
Speaker 1 (07:26):
Right.
Speaker 2 (07:27):
You got a lot of guys on a military base.
Can it SNAP benefits because they're not paying them enough
to go buy food. So they tried to make it
it was our issue when it really was their issue.
And if the SNAP didn't continue, the Red States was
gonna get hurt the worst. But they made it a
black issue and they tried to do that. And you
notice that the meeting. That's what the problem I.
Speaker 1 (07:43):
Had with them.
Speaker 2 (07:45):
Another fact is thirty eight percent of the recipients of
SNAP or children under eighteen, and that's a if. That's
an alarming rate that we need to talk about. Where
kids when they go to school, they get a breakfast
and a lunch, So when they're out of school, how
they're eating They wasn't They're not eating. So that's why
(08:07):
you see a lot of lunch programs in the Greatest
Chicago Land area in the summer because these kids have
no food to eat. And again, I agree with you Raymond,
that it was always planted out that it was a
black people problem on SNAP, and that needs to be corrected.
And anytime you hear misinformation, you got to stand up
(08:27):
to it and say that's incorrect. The majority of the
people receiving the SNAP benefits in the United States of
America all Caucasian white people and primarily in red states.
Speaker 5 (08:40):
That's why social media the double edged sword. That's why
it's important because on social media you didn't.
Speaker 3 (08:48):
Get away with saying that.
Speaker 5 (08:49):
Every time the perception was that it's just black people
using it, as some welfare mom with a zillion kids
using it, there's always someone that's gonna come back and
say not true. There was a politician from Iowa who
made the ignorant remark that there's ghetto where it was ghetto.
(09:10):
You was saying that women were using it to get
their nails done.
Speaker 4 (09:13):
In their hair done.
Speaker 5 (09:15):
That was exactly, and the receipts popped out everywhere Iowa
where he was from. It he was either Congress, it's
a lot of them in Iowa, Iowa, that's a lot
of the individuals there receiving SNAP and a lot of
them don't look like them.
Speaker 1 (09:32):
So we don't we don't fall for that exactly.
Speaker 2 (09:34):
So they tried to make it. That's the reason why
Donald Trump, that's what I called Donald Trump. It's the
reason why Trump played hardball. He thought the Democrats was
gonna fold. So he said, listen, we believe Democrats represent
black people. We know that black people at the base
of the Democratic Party. So what did he do. I'm
gonna hold SNAP benefits back because I think they're gonna cave,
because they're gonna hurt them, not knowing that it was
(09:56):
gonna hurt more of his supporters than anything. He he
figured he was gonna hurt him. And when they didn't
cave and his people started to come on you saw
on social media. Man, what are you doing. I'm not
gonna better have Thanksgiving. I'm not gonna better eat. They
had to go do something.
Speaker 1 (10:11):
They had to.
Speaker 2 (10:11):
Hey, we gotta find a way to get some money
to these guys.
Speaker 1 (10:14):
Well, we got a caller. First caller to the Love
Movie podcast on Intellectual Radio.
Speaker 2 (10:18):
If you want your voice to be heard, call in
seven o eight two two three eight nine five.
Speaker 1 (10:23):
Three caller, you're on the Love Movie Podcast.
Speaker 6 (10:28):
Didn't have a phone.
Speaker 1 (10:32):
Caller? You online?
Speaker 6 (10:34):
What's up? What's up? What's up?
Speaker 1 (10:36):
How you doing? Go ahead, ask your questions or make
a statement.
Speaker 6 (10:39):
I'm trying to tag it out. If you guys can.
Speaker 1 (10:42):
Hear me, we can hear you. We can hear you.
Speaker 6 (10:45):
Okay, this is my question. For for a long time, Uh,
the black family, especially black female, has been called the
welfare queen.
Speaker 2 (10:59):
Yeah, yuh you know who started that? Caller that was
starting the regular administration worried about.
Speaker 7 (11:05):
Who started it.
Speaker 6 (11:06):
I'm talking. I'm talking about where we are. Where we
are right now.
Speaker 1 (11:14):
Okay, what's what's your question?
Speaker 7 (11:16):
We are right now.
Speaker 6 (11:17):
So at the end of the day, the Snap program,
let me finish, Let me finish, y'all you trying to
run me down, let me finish at the at the
end of the day. Right now. The SNAP program has
a whole lot of different people that are part of
the program. And I asked the question the other day.
Speaker 7 (11:39):
About if you on the SNAP recipients.
Speaker 6 (11:43):
Are job eligible. So now are they if they're a
job eligible, are they stealing money from the people? What's happening?
Speaker 2 (11:55):
Well, caller, thank you for the call. We're going to
answer the question. We appreciate you calling in again. Everybody
call in. Let your voice be heard. Seven o eight
two two three eight nine five three men, So that
for your caller. Are are Are we gonna have some
some fraud in the program? Yes, but if you've noticed,
if you if you go back and look again, this
(12:16):
is government data. Less than one percent of fraud is
happening in the SNAP program. Did it used to be
a lot of fraud could have been, but they have
tightened up, tighten up their requirements and tighten up. It
is some people getting snapped could be working, of course
there is, but you know where you get more wasted
when I hear that again, that is a right wing
talking point to punish and say black people are lazy
(12:40):
and just want to stay at home and collect money.
Where we see more wated. The Defense Department ice budget
went from two billion to forty some billion dollars. We
see wastell ballroom. Does the one billion dollar jet that
they're gonna have to try to convert to right, we
(13:01):
see waste there less than one percent. Let me say
this again. If you don't believe me, you look it up.
Less than one percent of the Snap program. They came
back to find fraud. So again you find people on
there should be working, of course, but the vast majority
of people on Snap work. So let me let me
(13:21):
also add to this, what is they living wage? When
the minimum wage in the Red States is seven dollars
and twenty five cents. Where can you work and live
making seven dollars and twenty five cents in the United
States of America.
Speaker 5 (13:37):
And we're talking about food? I feel like Alan, we're
talking about food. We're talking about food that people need
to survive. Even if people are selling their snaps the
person that they sold that, you guess what they're buying food.
And in this country, as much money as this country
takes from taxpayers, why can't.
Speaker 3 (13:57):
We feed people?
Speaker 1 (13:58):
It's not like.
Speaker 5 (13:59):
They're getting ten thousand dollars a month. A lot of
people are getting you know, maybe.
Speaker 4 (14:03):
Five six, seven hundred dollars a month.
Speaker 5 (14:05):
Most people that the few that I know who get it,
they're getting under.
Speaker 1 (14:08):
To two hundred dollars exactly.
Speaker 5 (14:10):
I mean as much as we pay into this government,
as much fraud with dose remember.
Speaker 1 (14:16):
A straight fraud program.
Speaker 5 (14:18):
A lot of the stuff that they said that they
were clearing up and we found we saved money here,
A lot of that stuff wasn't true.
Speaker 4 (14:25):
It was fraud and the amount of money that was
spent to fund that.
Speaker 3 (14:29):
But we want to talk.
Speaker 2 (14:30):
About too less than And here's another I'm glad you
brought that up, Felicia. Uh, they go look at what
the average stat payment is in this country. It's not
five six hundred or one thousand dollars, about a couple hundred
bucks as yeah, go look and see what.
Speaker 1 (14:43):
So they may ask you something.
Speaker 2 (14:45):
You go to jewel today and you take two hundred
bucks in there, you're coming out with maybe three three and.
Speaker 1 (14:50):
A half bags.
Speaker 2 (14:52):
So when you were saying people saying, oh, they usually
eating steak, they getting no, no, no, no, they're buying food.
They trying to keep the kids fed and if we
as a society, as a country tell people that we
cannot feed them, what are they're saying as us, right,
But we know who's saying it. The right wingers, Donald Trump,
(15:13):
the maggots and all these guys. Theyare ones don't want
to believe that people should be fed. That's absolutely correct.
The next thing that been brought up with the government
shut down, it casts a big light on black economics
and how the funding into the black community has been cut.
(15:34):
It is an attack. They cannot deport black people, No,
they can force us try to be in Jim Crow
segregation and poverty. So they want to cut all of
the funding and all of the avenues to bring black
wealth up. They want to take it away. What was
the number one way black people gained wealth in this country,
real estate exactly, but that has been under attack. They
(15:57):
cut the funding for hood and they have put in
more roadblocks for black people to get assistant from the
government to get housing. First time home buyers got to
jump through more hurders. This is not by happenstance. This
is a design plot to keep black people down and
in poverty. It's in Project twenty twenty five. See again,
(16:21):
it's the reason why those who went to college don't
follow Donald Trump. If you can think and think for yourself,
you understand the okie dope.
Speaker 1 (16:31):
Right.
Speaker 2 (16:32):
So if a man I shouldn't say it, I want
to say it. I won't say all this follows are ignorant,
but I'm gonna say a large majority of them are.
Speaker 1 (16:40):
It was in Project twenty twenty five.
Speaker 2 (16:43):
Again I keep saying, they said the two worst decisions
ever made by the Supreme Court was in nineteen sixty
four Civil Rights Act and in nineteen sixty five Voting
Rights Act. Project twenty twenty five said we have to
dismantle those but not only that, we got to cut
off in any way that these people can can get
themselves up into the middle class.
Speaker 1 (17:05):
What do they do? They make it harder to forget alone. Right.
Speaker 2 (17:08):
Yes, they take programs and we start an incubator up
and we said we're gonna only loan the black people.
They take us a court and say that's illegal. That's
that's that, that that is racial. And for years that
was settled law to say we're gonna we allow that
because nobody in this country have been discripinated against the
four hundred and.
Speaker 1 (17:24):
Sixty six years. But black people exactly.
Speaker 2 (17:26):
We got another caller caller, police call in seven way
two two three eight nine five three. Welcome all calls tonight.
Remember the Magnus brothers. Wont the heat, so bring the
heat call of your life.
Speaker 6 (17:39):
You know what, this is a lot of this stuff
that a lot of this stuff are distractions, and they're there.
They're they're sharing that their distractions to take away our
rights as a person, at our rights as a group
that we have had. So tell us what the distractions
(18:01):
that they're doing.
Speaker 1 (18:03):
Thank you called the call.
Speaker 2 (18:04):
Call it okay, distract. It's not only distractions. See, they
don't have.
Speaker 1 (18:09):
To do distractions. Now they're going right in and tell
us what they're doing. They don't do distractions.
Speaker 3 (18:15):
They want to just like with Trump.
Speaker 4 (18:17):
Yes, today they're talking about the Epstein.
Speaker 1 (18:19):
Stuff that was coming out right.
Speaker 5 (18:22):
No one cares about that because nothing is going to happen.
Speaker 4 (18:26):
Distractions are of the past.
Speaker 3 (18:29):
It's in our face.
Speaker 4 (18:30):
If you don't believe it, then you know.
Speaker 2 (18:33):
You get what you They don't have to distract now
Trump and then Epstein files he's supposed to had twelve thirteen,
fourteen year old girls. He's a pedophile. We know it's
a known but guess what, nothing's gonna happen with that.
Speaker 1 (18:43):
They don't have to distract because it's bigger than Donald Trump.
With a distraction.
Speaker 2 (18:47):
What they was trying to do, what they were when
they was running ice out here and grabbing up people.
What they want people to do is you get used
to seeing somebody grabbed up and drown in the van.
It was no coincidence and it wasn't happistance that they
would in Brownsville. Now, most of the ninety nine percent
of black people in Brownsville was born in Chicago in
the United States of America, so they can't be deported.
(19:08):
But it was a reason why the fb I was
over there and action the people you got warrants. News flash,
ninety nine point nine percent of black people do not
have warrants and are not criminals. But they were over
there for a reason. People don't realize it's the reason
why they want to get rid of the fourteenth Amendment.
What the fourteenth memmen do. After the slaves were free,
the Southern States went and said, well, listen, these guys
(19:32):
are not citizens. I mean a lot of them was
brought here, but they and so they had to put
in the fourteenth Amendment. If you're born, or US so
or US possession, anything the US have, you are automatically
US citizen.
Speaker 1 (19:44):
Why do they want to get rid of the amendment.
Speaker 2 (19:45):
Don't mean it's not because oh were trying to stop
the legals from coming here and have a babies. No, no, no, no,
that's not why. Because they know six clowns on the
Supreme Court, they have six justices, six votes. And if
they got rid of that, some southern state, red neckt
state is going to go to court and the gonna say, well,
(20:06):
black people are not citizens or the United States. Because
if you, if you vote, if you rule that clause
in the fourteenth Amendment illegal, say it it's not lawful.
They're gonna come back and say we can get rid
of them, and they're gonna try to round us up.
And it's all in Project twenty twenty five. It is
the citizen's birthright that we talk about. If they can
(20:27):
get rid of that in the fourteenth Amendment, then they,
my brother's right, Court's gonna go and say, guess what,
these people are not citizens. Therefore they don't have any rights,
and we can put them back into slavery. This is
why voting matters. This is why you have to be
active in your community. This is why my brother and
I are born believers of the honorable Marcus Mosiah Garvey
(20:52):
and do for self. The distraction is they have made
social media so much that we will, we believe to
buy Gucci, Fendil, with Aton, everything, Coach. Those brands do
nothing for black people. They put no money back in
the black community, but yet we wanted a status symbol.
Speaker 1 (21:11):
We spend a.
Speaker 2 (21:12):
Trillion dollars a year, but yet we own less than
ten percent of our community. That's a problem.
Speaker 1 (21:19):
Is a stretch.
Speaker 2 (21:20):
Ten percent is a stretch, right, So it's right, that's
a distraction. Here's what the biggest distraction. I was twenty
twenty four. I'm watching on social media and I see
black people saying Kamala Harris wasn't black. I couldn't believe,
and she wasn't gonna do nothing for us. When I
heard that, I said, you know what, they did a job,
Janet Jackson, You guys hero, Janet jacks That's why Janet Jackson.
(21:46):
I was so Michael Jackson probably rolled over this grave
and if.
Speaker 1 (21:50):
I saw, I saw Janet Jackson.
Speaker 2 (21:52):
She come to Chicago, I would personally run her out
of Chicago.
Speaker 5 (21:58):
He's a Trump supporter, that's her right hand man, and
he influences her.
Speaker 4 (22:03):
I was so disappointed in Janet to say.
Speaker 1 (22:06):
That about a black black woman.
Speaker 5 (22:08):
She was humiliated by Justin Timberlake and the NFL. And
I can't think of the guy. His name is Leslie somebody.
He was the CEO of CBS.
Speaker 1 (22:19):
I know you're talking about Connie.
Speaker 2 (22:22):
Connie No, no, no, no, she's she was I want
of correspondent.
Speaker 1 (22:27):
On the show.
Speaker 4 (22:28):
Well, this guy he tried to he vowed to.
Speaker 5 (22:32):
Ruin Janet's career, and he did. And who stood behind
Jane people, particularly black.
Speaker 4 (22:39):
Women, And for her to do that, I lost all
respect me too.
Speaker 1 (22:44):
Yeah, she could never perform ever again.
Speaker 3 (22:46):
And not well, I would never.
Speaker 1 (22:48):
I would never support her. She could never. She should
be black ball for the rest of her career.
Speaker 2 (22:52):
To get up there and say something like that, she's
And I kept telling people, if you believe that Donald
Trump is gonna do more for black people, couple of hairs,
you need to go to Lake Michigan and jump in
the water and hope you drown, because that's what you deserve.
We don't wish harm on nobody. We want to keep
everybody safe, but but they deserve it. It's some people
that it's not with us, and those people should not
(23:15):
be allowed it. To cook out, to barbecue, to get together,
you need to be passed aside. So our main topic
for tonight, our main topic for tonight, and we want
to hear from you. We call in hear from you
eight nine five three. What was the question, Raymond? Does
a successful woman need, need or want or want a man?
(23:41):
We're gonna ask you if we're gonna be that's what
that's if you know what, that's what you get with
the Magnets tween, that's what you get. We're gonna talk
about one thing, then we pivot right to another one.
We like to say, hey, listen, you're gonna you're gonna
get a lot of surprises. We're gonna chose stuff out
of left field. So we're gonna ask a question again,
and this we want the ladies. We have a beautiful
young lady here. She's gonna give us an opinion. But
we want the ladies to call in and want the
(24:03):
guys to call into the question of the night, does
a successful woman want and or need a man. So
we want to the ladies to call in seven o
eight two two three eight nine five three to love
Move with podcasts on Intellectual Radio. Please call in give
us your opinion. We can give you our opinion, but
(24:26):
we want you to call in give us your opinion.
Tell us what you think. Okay, yeah, I'm gonna give
mine after you give yours.
Speaker 4 (24:37):
All right, ask me the question.
Speaker 2 (24:39):
Felicia, I'm gonna answer this question. Does a successful woman
need or want a man?
Speaker 3 (24:49):
Let's see that right.
Speaker 5 (24:50):
There is not a yes or no can be answered
you that way, and I'm.
Speaker 3 (24:54):
Gonna tell you why.
Speaker 4 (24:55):
Okay, Okay, it's subjective.
Speaker 1 (24:57):
Okay, it depends on the woman.
Speaker 5 (25:00):
You can have a woman who is highly successful, but
if her personality is that of wanting the comfort of
a man or the companionship of a man, whatever, then
she does need it because that's her personality and that's
what she wants. Now, if you get another woman who
is equally successful but may not crave that, may not
(25:21):
want that, may not have the.
Speaker 3 (25:25):
Mentality for that.
Speaker 5 (25:26):
Because I know a lot of you guys think that
the women are masculine.
Speaker 3 (25:29):
Now in boss Seed and all that, type of stuff.
Speaker 1 (25:32):
Yeah, well you said that.
Speaker 3 (25:34):
Oh, I know.
Speaker 5 (25:36):
She may not crave that type of situation. So it
is subjective. It is depending on the woman, so you
can't say yes, no. It depends on every person who
answers that's the answer.
Speaker 1 (25:51):
Kind of. I agree with that a little I agree
with that a little bit.
Speaker 2 (25:55):
And also depends on a woman, and also depends on
what type of man she get it. I was talking
to a protege of mind today and he said he thru.
I asked him the question, and he said, a lot
of women, successful women don't really want a successful man.
They want to have a man that they could they
take care of so called well we call a bomb,
(26:17):
and they like to take care because I have seen it.
Speaker 1 (26:20):
They won't have seen it.
Speaker 2 (26:21):
And I know a lot of guys out there in
the YouTube and Facebook land have seen a woman successful
and she got a guy at home.
Speaker 1 (26:29):
Who not worth two nickels. He's a bump, right.
Speaker 3 (26:32):
Maybe she's views that as control.
Speaker 5 (26:34):
Maybe that she thinks if I'm taking care of him,
he's not gonna leave, or he's not gonna cheat, and
he's gonna do what he's gonna do. But this girl,
I don't want a broke man. I want a person
who is holding.
Speaker 1 (26:47):
Their own right.
Speaker 2 (26:48):
Well, I said, you want to be equally yoke like
what they would say, like you like, I mean, but
I mean I've seen that. And I'm like, okay, how
would she have It's perplexing, right, six figure woman doing well, successful,
great mindset, and she's dating with a bomb, taking care
(27:09):
of them, not taking care of them living and and
I'm saying to myself, what is it?
Speaker 5 (27:14):
You got to go back to childhood. I'm telling you
a lot of stuff. And if I ever talk to
you guys again, We're gonna always go back to child
A lot of things go back to your childhood, how
you were raised, what you saw coming up, a lot
of your mental state, a lot of you know, how
you were raised, if you were in a situation where
you had no control or uh, you saw how your
(27:37):
parents interact, or your or your parents because maybe you
were raising a single household.
Speaker 4 (27:43):
A lot of that.
Speaker 5 (27:44):
I saw a quote today and it was you know,
it just resonated with me.
Speaker 3 (27:49):
Adulthood is nothing but dealing.
Speaker 4 (27:51):
With your childhood.
Speaker 5 (27:53):
We spend a lot of our adulthood working through and
being who we were as children.
Speaker 1 (28:01):
That's an interesting quote.
Speaker 5 (28:03):
So it was really a quote thought I'll say, okay,
so yeah, but a woman who's doing that, it runs
a little deeper than that. You got to look and
get to the root of it is. You know, maybe
he's blowing her back out.
Speaker 2 (28:16):
Yeah, yeah, well a lot of times that's it. Two
that they're looking for that also, But then you think
about that you can find, but you can find it
blow it back out with a successful guy. I mean, uh,
you know again, I hear women. I always say this,
and I've been saying this. You're going to say, they
want six feet six inches and six figures, right, And
(28:37):
I always tell him I have two of the three.
Speaker 1 (28:39):
I'm not six feet, six feet.
Speaker 3 (28:41):
Six inches and six inches of what.
Speaker 1 (28:45):
Well, all you gotta do is put your mind.
Speaker 2 (28:47):
I'm not gonna tell you because we on a we
have a family friendly show, so we're not gonna get
like that. But I always said we got two or three,
two or three. So I believe that a successful woman,
it depends how she was raised.
Speaker 1 (29:02):
You're right.
Speaker 2 (29:02):
If she had a strong father in the household, guess what,
she's not gonna look for a weak man.
Speaker 1 (29:08):
She's not. She's gonna she's gonna want a.
Speaker 2 (29:10):
Man who's equally yoke with her, and it's just what
she's gonna look for. So but if she didn't, and
maybe she saw and I'm not paying nobody out there,
maybe she saw mama jumping around with me and the
man and so her mind, Now that could work two ways.
It can make her say, well, you know what, I
don't want want to do that. Let me find somebody
that I can settle down with and we can grow together.
(29:33):
Or it might again you said childhood, and she might
sell this is accepted behavior exactly because she was raising that. Well,
the guy who was with us not gonna say if
it's her daddy or not. The guy who was around
was a bomb and my mama went to work. Therefore
this is accepted. It's gonna change them either or. But
(29:54):
I say this, if you're gonna be in a relationship,
here's a misnomer. It's fifty to fifty. That's lie. It's
one hundred, one hundred, right, I'd say that too. You can't.
I'm not gonna give fifty. I'm giving the one hundred.
Either you the chicken or the pig. When you have breakfast,
the chicken lay the eggs, but I'm the pig because
(30:14):
if you gotta eat bacon, somebody got to die. The
sacrifice gotta be made. So if you give in fifty percent,
then I'm gonna hold back my fifty. I'm gonaive if
I'm gonaive what you get. I'm gonna give what you give.
But I'll give one hundred all the time. It's a
hundred hundred. And that's a problem. And we want to
re establish the black family again. We want to re
establish this upbringing.
Speaker 1 (30:34):
You're right from my childhood.
Speaker 2 (30:36):
The trauma some of our children go through. It's unbelievable.
When kids can tell you what the switch is on
the gun, they can go get the gun. It's a
problem when I'll never forget this. I'm gonna leave key
parts out. But the young girl was sitting in church
and young girl said, ooh, I still got my mama
weed in here. And she had her mama weed in
(30:57):
her little purse because her mom had to go someplace
and say hold my weed. And the girl walked around,
going to school, going every place else and came to
church and had her mama weed in her purse and
gave it to her mama say her mama. Hear weed back,
and I said, don't nobody see the problem with this?
So I feel sad for the little girl because her
mom is ignorant. The household is wrong. But that's on us. Now,
(31:22):
that's what we need successful black men and black women
to be positive role models and gives back.
Speaker 1 (31:29):
Right, you got to teach your children.
Speaker 2 (31:30):
And so your kids with women got to say if
they have kids and they see could be the dad
at home, might be the baby's dad at home and
dad's a bomb, But mama getting up and going to
get it.
Speaker 1 (31:41):
What are you showing them? What are you raising? What
are you showing the kids?
Speaker 2 (31:45):
So I'm like you demon, And I always tell a
person listen, I'm gonna give what. I'm gonna give a
drum I come. My nature is to give one hundred percent.
That's my nature. But now if you give it seventy
five and I'm given a hundred, that's a problem.
Speaker 1 (31:57):
Have you given fifty? I want to give a hundred.
Speaker 2 (31:59):
It's just like you give him fifty percent, you go
to jail and the baill is one thousand dollars. I'm
gonna give you five hundred and give you five hundred
because you gave me fifty percent, and I'm gonna give
you half. So I'm gonna give you that five hundred.
Now you gotta get that five other five hundred any
way you can, because if you're given one hundred, then
I'm gonna give you the full thousand.
Speaker 1 (32:18):
Get you. I just said a thought.
Speaker 2 (32:19):
You know why some women, maybe successful women do they
need to want a man. Probably why they want the
guy who we labeled as a bomb. You know why
he can't tell them what to do. See another good
point me and mother put me in again. If we
had a good conversation today and this is what we
were talking about.
Speaker 1 (32:35):
Again.
Speaker 2 (32:36):
I didn't say I agree with it, but he said
this here the woman make more money than you, she
makes you feel less than a man.
Speaker 1 (32:43):
Sometimes. Why I'm not saying this, I've saw this, but
that makes right. You can't tell me what to do.
I make more money than you.
Speaker 2 (32:51):
Now most of the time. If a man make more,
he keep that. He don't care about that. But if
she do, she could be litter. This guy, he can't
go nowhere. Where's he gonna go?
Speaker 6 (32:59):
He's trapped?
Speaker 1 (33:00):
Where you going?
Speaker 2 (33:00):
You get back over there and sit down. You're not
going out of the house right now. That's why Oprah
never married Stepman because she made too much. Stepman didn't
want to be put up with that because she would
have told him Stebben, I'm worth two billion dollars.
Speaker 1 (33:11):
What you gonna tell me?
Speaker 2 (33:13):
What Stepman's gonna say, Tucker's tail, go back in the
room and do what you have to do. So that's
why Jermaine did pre cheated on Janeity. I'm sorry, that's that. Maybe,
So maybe it's that I'm not saying that. I'm not
saying I agree. I'm not saying I'm just throwing it
out there that maybe, hey, listen, this guy can't give
me no pushback because what is he gonna tell me
to do.
Speaker 1 (33:29):
This guy don't have anything I can control him.
Speaker 2 (33:33):
And me And to play that game too with women
sometimes too, they'll play that game so they I could control.
Speaker 1 (33:37):
She depended on me.
Speaker 2 (33:38):
But the question tonight is does a successful woman need
and or want a man? If you got comments, concerns inboxes,
call in let us know because after the show we
get a lot a lot of people saying what they
should have said, what they should have said, would have said.
We if you want to inboxes. We're not gonna say
(34:01):
your name. You can call in, keep it anonymous. We're
not gonna say your name. But after the shows we
get a lot of commentary of you should have said this,
or I would have said this, or I don't believe
in that. We have these conversations. They're difficult conversations. People
run from horror conversations. And remember the Magnus Twins want
the heat. We don't duck smoke. We're gonna ask the
(34:23):
difficult questions and we want you to call in and
give it to us because we're not ducking any heat.
We're gonna make our opinions known, and so we're gonna.
Speaker 1 (34:33):
Let you know what we're thinking. You let us know
what you're thinking. We're not ducking any heat.
Speaker 2 (34:37):
If you got some call in now seven way two
two three eight nine five three Now movie podcast on
Intellectual Radio. Now we are when we say we're not
ducking heat, construct constructive conversation. We're not threatening people, we're
not promote enviolence. No, let's have a constructive debate. Let's
have good dialogue because maybe our opinion may not be
(35:00):
he correct. Maybe you have a better opinion, a better
point of view. And guess what we can coalesce around
that and we move forward together. But we're looking for
the smoke. That's why we have certain conversations, certain topics,
and we'll stand in the fire. We won't run, we'll
take the shots, will take the hits, but debate us
(35:20):
have good conversation. That's what the Magnets Twins stand on.
Speaker 5 (35:24):
I think a lot of independence that women have now,
I think it brings them a lot of peace.
Speaker 3 (35:33):
So they may not want or need a.
Speaker 5 (35:36):
Man because sometimes relationships take a lot of work.
Speaker 2 (35:39):
It does exactly, so why so if the human humans
crave companion companionship, yees so, so I know humans crave companionship.
Not to say you need it, but sometimes we crave it.
And I understand what you're saying. Relationships, like anything in life,
it takes work. The more you work at it, a
(36:00):
better issue become. But you're saying women value independence because
they don't want to put in work to have a relationship.
Speaker 5 (36:07):
At some point, I think at some point, I'm a
woman of a particular age, and I find that once again,
I live on social media.
Speaker 4 (36:16):
I'm ashamed to say that I should get off a lot.
Speaker 5 (36:19):
Of the feedback that I see in the common section.
That's where you find the goal. There you go in
the common section. A lot of women at a particular
point in their life, they want.
Speaker 1 (36:28):
To call her. You're on a love movie podcast, call
her you on live.
Speaker 7 (36:36):
Hey. Hey, this is Chris Brown Brown working well together
in the Hey, Damon Raymon and Felicia Bradley.
Speaker 1 (36:53):
I see this.
Speaker 6 (36:54):
You look like.
Speaker 3 (36:59):
That's a whole different topic.
Speaker 5 (37:00):
Got cut off on my hair, and I feel like
I have low self esteem.
Speaker 1 (37:04):
And know you know you don't. She's beautiful, right, Chris.
Speaker 2 (37:09):
She's beautiful, right, Chris. So we're gonna switch to our
listener letter tonight. So I listened a letter tonight. Inboxes,
we keep we take people names out, we keep you anonymous.
I'm gonna read it, Hey Twins. People often tell me
(37:30):
I'm a good person with a good heart, But the
truth is I've made some serious mistakes that I'm not
proud of. On the surface, I have a solid job
and they look like I have it all together. But
behind the scenes, I've hurt people and stepped into things
I regret. I've made poor the shit decisions. Financially, I've
(37:52):
been unfaithful, and I've developed habits. I'm not proud of
even the gifts I given my girl friend wasn't honest
and she doesn't know. I'm at a point where I
want to change generally. I'm trying to figure out the
right things to do. Should I take accountability and be
honest with my girlfriend or should I step back from
(38:16):
everything and start over. I'm trying to figure out the
healthiest path towards becoming a better person. So obviously this
is from a male because that's what that's what I'm getting.
That's a tough that's a good question. I mean he haven't.
I mean again, they don't really go into detail, and
they send us these these dms. I would like to ask, like,
(38:39):
what poor decisions have he made? I know he said financially,
Like what did he invest in something he should invest in?
Did he blow his money or something he should have
spent it on? What mistakes is he talking about? We
all make mistakes in life, right is how we bounce
back from him? You know, if I could talk to
the young man, I would ask him.
Speaker 1 (38:58):
You know what, what what did he do?
Speaker 2 (38:59):
Because if we go again, he didn't go into detail
that I made this mistake, I made that mistake, but
it's good, he said. Should I take accountability? Yes, you
should take accountability. Should you be honest? Always honesty is
the best policy. But now it depends what you did.
Let me just say this, it depends what you did
to tell your girlfriend. Sometimes you might have to take
(39:21):
some things to the grave with you. Keep it to
yourself and don't have to tell everything. So just remember that.
But if it's something that you think gonna make you
a better person in life, always take accountability.
Speaker 1 (39:30):
That's number one. If you make a mistake, own it,
own up to it.
Speaker 2 (39:34):
Uh and be honest. One thing I always say, bram
On Magnus does not lie. I'm gonna tell you the truth,
even if you don't like it. I don't want you
to lie to me. I want you to tell me
the truth, be honest with me. I'm gonna be honest
with you, and I'm gonna be truthful to you because
I have no reason to lie.
Speaker 1 (39:48):
So you don't have to do that. You don't have to.
Speaker 2 (39:51):
I understand property you had to do something you didn't
want to do and you had to tell her something
you didn't want to tell her. So but it's a
lot of details missing. I really can't tell him what
he should do, but I would tell him, first, take accountability,
hold up few mistakes, and see what happens.
Speaker 1 (40:03):
What you say for the before I give mine what.
Speaker 5 (40:05):
You say, I say, I agree with most of what
you've said. The part about should I step back from everything?
Or should I tell my girlfriend? If you step back,
the girlfriend's gonna want to know why you step back.
You know, if you go sir, if you stop coming around,
she's gonna want to know why. So I would say,
be honest, tell your girlfriend what's going on, how you've
(40:29):
been feeling, and that you're ready to move forward now.
Speaker 3 (40:32):
If she sticks with you, cool.
Speaker 5 (40:33):
If she doesn't, then you are ready to start over
and start over, you know, on that path that you're
trying to be on. But it does depend on what
you did, because if you like Jeffrey domand then yeah,
we might.
Speaker 1 (40:49):
Not want to tell you that's a good one. Yeah, yeah, right.
Speaker 3 (40:53):
We need details.
Speaker 1 (40:54):
If it's anonymous, give us details, give a details.
Speaker 2 (40:56):
Maybe you spend the rent money or or the mortgage money.
Crack that track could be and spend money you shouldn't have,
and she made her lose a job or whatever, So
he need more.
Speaker 1 (41:05):
We need more details.
Speaker 2 (41:07):
I take a different purpose. Sir, you can never tell
that you have been unfaithful. You said I've been unfaithful.
I agree, volunteer information. That is not if you in court?
What rule number one? Don't talk to the policeman our attorney,
(41:28):
and don't only ask the questions. Only answer the question
that's asked of you. Is the sunshining yes? Don't say
nothing else.
Speaker 3 (41:34):
Sir.
Speaker 2 (41:35):
You cannot say that I've been on faith. You cannot
tell her that you have been unfaithful. To do that,
so I suspect some of the gifts that you've given
her you got them, ill gained, either stole them. They
might be bootlegs. Some woman gave him to some woman
gave me you gave her. You can't tell her that.
You gotta keep that to yourself. Do not say that
(41:57):
now you want to change good. You come to a
fork in the road. Some accountability is required. Some things
you're just gonna have to regrettably forget. I agree with you, Felicia.
If he step away, it's gonna ask too many questions.
What's going on?
Speaker 1 (42:13):
Right?
Speaker 2 (42:13):
Then? People the women intuition not they want to dig
through everything. Let me now she want to look at
the bank account right not because you say you made
some poor decisions financially. Something happened, you spend money on something.
Maybe she not paying attention. Maybe you living real good
right now. But if you pull away, she want to look.
Now you got to explain even more. So be accountable.
(42:34):
Say listen, I want to change here. Go something that
black people never really talk about. Therapy.
Speaker 1 (42:41):
Go get you some help.
Speaker 2 (42:42):
Brother, Maybe y'all go together, get some couples therapy, or
you just go individually so you can get yourself better.
So when you do approach your girlfriend, you come into
her correctly, and you can own up to some of
the things. But don't you ever never, never, never, never,
never ever ever ever tell her you have been unfaithful.
Speaker 1 (43:02):
Don't volunteer that.
Speaker 5 (43:03):
Wait a minute, I said that I agreed, but I'm
sitting here thinking I agree to a certain extent.
Speaker 3 (43:09):
If you've been caught, you're gonna keep lying.
Speaker 1 (43:13):
It ain't listen to the grave.
Speaker 2 (43:14):
Now listen, if fellas, if you see you coming out
of the hotel, you what you tell her?
Speaker 1 (43:19):
That wasn't me? Who you gonna believe your eye or
your line eyes, It wasn't me. You take it to
the grave. It wasn't me. I don't know you. It
wasn't me. That's what Eddie with me. It wasn't mean,
it wasn't me. So it wasn't me, sir.
Speaker 2 (43:34):
We don't We don't have all the details. Our consensus
is yes, take accountability. One, take accountability. You did the
right thing. You came to your common sense and say, hey,
I need to change better for my life. Right number Two,
seek some help. Go seek a therapist to get yourself
some help. Three you're gonna have to have a hard
(43:55):
conversation with your girlfriend.
Speaker 1 (43:57):
Four you need to stop cheating. Right, You just need
to stop cheating.
Speaker 2 (44:02):
If you got gifts for her, she ain't gonna get
him back, trust me, she gonna hold on to them,
right right, So lo again, if you want to, you
can d m us Raimon Magnus, Raymon Magus a Facebook.
That's our name on Facebook, Instagram, the icon, the legend Raymon,
the legend. You can dm us. We will. We want
(44:22):
you to send your letters to us. We're gonna always
keep it anonymous. Give us some detail we're gonna give you.
We're not right, We're not always right. We're gonna give
you what our opinion is and what we think you
what we would do, not what you should do. You
gotta do what you want to do, so but keep
the letters coming in. We like this segment. It's a
(44:42):
popular segment. A lot of people look forward to it.
We look forward to it. We looked like before we
sign off. Felicia gives people your contact information as in
social media handles where they can find you what they
can reach out to you at oh.
Speaker 5 (44:54):
On Facebook, I am Phoebe Bradley. On IG I don't
know what I am. I think I'm feepe Bag seventeen
or every dayp and my YouTube channel was every Day Pepe.
Speaker 2 (45:08):
You can reach me at Deimon Magnus on Facebook. On Instagram,
I am Underscore d A, I C O N. I
am the Icon, so reach out to me. If you
reach out to me on Instagram, send me that message.
I'll send you the Snap information so you can follow
me on Snap. It go down and the details on Snap.
(45:30):
And I'm Raymon Magnus once again, one half of the
legendary world fow World Faginus Twins. You can reach me
on Facebook at that's my name, Raymo Magnus on Instagram. Raymon,
the legend reaches. I want you to reach out to
us again. We need sponsors. We want you, guys, if
you believe in us and you watch the show and
you want to get your name out, your brand out
(45:52):
to a big reach, a nice, big audience, reach out
to us. Become a sponsor, Join the Love Movement team.
Big things are coming in twenty twenty six. You want
to be part of it. We're looking for you to
be part of it. We want to thank Feefe. We're
gonna have her back as a guest host with us.
It's been a nice I don't want you guys to
give us feedback because I'm telling you sitting here now,
(46:13):
we had a nice time with her. Time she'll be back.
You'll definite, definitely percent of that. We're gonna have her back.
Speaker 1 (46:23):
Now.
Speaker 2 (46:23):
She's been ti because we're gonna have a back Listen.
You heard she said being tanged because we're gonna have
a show coming up. Well, we're gonna make sure she
on and it's not gonna be tanged. It's gonna be
you know, gonna be reckless exactly. So we want to
thank you guys for listening, uh tuning in tonight the love,
move of podcasts or intellectual radio. Tune in next week,
(46:44):
and I wanna leave with these words. I was watching
my old soul train. I'm gonna leave it these words tonight, love,
peace and soul.
Speaker 1 (46:57):
M need something to get into pretty girl day. This
is one I have fun too. I don't want to
World one. It's funny. How to come through, turn out,
turn up with best friends?
Speaker 3 (47:14):
About you we follow?
Speaker 2 (47:15):
She wants to