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April 8, 2025 49 mins

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
You scared people, Huey.

Speaker 2 (00:01):
The Black.
Panthers scared people.
Anytime the black man attemptsto change the slave image, he
will scare white people.
So the Black Panther Party, Ithank you.
When you said that we scaredpeople, that means that we were
creating a positive black imagefor ourselves peace, peace, and

(00:40):
welcome back to freedmanman'sAffairs Radio, the Freedman's
Network.

Speaker 3 (00:51):
Yeah, we back.
Vaughn Black is back and rightout the gate.
Before we get started, I wantto express gratitude for you
tapping back in with us again,attitude for you tapping back in

(01:11):
with us again.
April 8th 2025.
And the math for the day isbuild, destroy To construct or
deconstruct.
That's what we're working withtoday.
That said, family, how are you?
Let me get these levels right,let me just get these levels
right, and we're going to getright into some things, not

(01:34):
going to stay long at all today.
I know I always say that, buttoday especially, we're going to
be quick because I'm working onsome things and I got to run
out of here, out of the studio,so we're going to stay for a
short visit and just talk abouta couple of things.
And, yeah, that's what it'sgoing to be.
I like this little tune.

(01:56):
Let me, let me, let me rockthis a little bit.
Got that bouncy feel to it.
Yeah, yeah, man, I surely hopeeverybody's doing well and in

(02:18):
the best of moods.
I'm in a good mood, and rightlyso, rightly so.
What are we going to talk abouttoday?
I didn't plan nothing up here,and that's another reason why
I'm not going to stay too long,because really didn't map
nothing out and off the gate.
Let me apologize, because Itold you last week that Divine

(02:39):
Prince from the United StatesFreedom Project would be up here
today.
He's not up here with me today.
He will be back up here with metoday.
He will be back up here with usnext week, next week.
I didn't look at the schedulebefore I spoke and I told you he
would be up here today, but no,no, no, no, he's not here with

(03:00):
us today, but he will be backwith us next week.
We're going to come, we'regoing to come up here and I'm
going to let brother go.
I'm going to let him go.
Yeah, family.
So that's what it is.
Over the this past weekend, theyhad the big, the big protest

(03:22):
around the country.
Let me turn this down a littlebit, turn the volume down.
And the big, the big protestaround the country.
Let me turn this down a littlebit, turn the volume down.
And the big protest over thecountry.
We here in the grassroots callit the million mail march, the
million mail march, but inactuality, the technical term
that they used was the.

(03:43):
How do they call it?
Oh, hands off, hands off aprotest that they did around the
country and it got coverage.
It got coverage.
It didn't.
It was, it was some places, itwas a lot of people, it was a
lot of people in some places.
However, it didn't.

(04:05):
It didn't get the traction Ithink they were looking for
because it was seasonless, itwas no season in it.
They didn't really have anyprinciples, uh, any defining
arguments that they were making.
It was just a big Trump badTrump bad type of thing, because

(04:31):
it was geared at Elon Musk andDonald Trump.
Well, president Trump and ElonMusk I should say it that way,
in that order, right?
So it didn't?
It didn't gain.
I don't think it.
It there was some big in someplaces there was, there was a
lot of people, I think in Bostonthere was a huge, huge turnout

(04:55):
in Boston and it's all good.
You know, people should be ableto be able to go in and uh say,
state how they their concernson certain issues, but this
thing didn't seem.
It had no, no specific agendato it.

(05:16):
It was just a trump bad type ofthing.
You know, re-resisting trump.
Let me, if I can find, let mego to um state of daniel he did
can find.
Let me go to State of Daniel.
He did something.
Let me let me go to him.
And I thought this wasinteresting, that he did Hold on
.

Speaker 4 (05:33):
Young gentlemen were approached at the National Mall
yesterday by a reporter and heasked them why are you here?
Why do you think PresidentTrump is a fascist?
Well, as if it wasn'tembarrassing enough that they
couldn't answer his simplequestion of why are you here?
What are you protesting?
It turns out that they wereactually given a printed out
sheet of talking points bywhoever actually gave them the

(05:53):
sign.
That's right.
Some unknown entity gave themwhat was clearly a mass produced
sign, along with talking pointswhich the gentleman didn't even
bother to read before attendingthe protest.
Take a look.

Speaker 5 (06:06):
So what makes Trump a fascist?
What makes Trump a fascist?
He does things without um.
Yeah, talk loud.
I don't have my mic on.
No, I'm not really good atinterviews, sorry.
No, I'm not really doing it tobe something, sorry.

(06:26):
He just does everything hewants and you know, not
following laws, or you know he'sa convicted felon.
You know, that's all I know.
But your sign says he's afascist and I'm just curious
what makes him a fascist?

Speaker 6 (06:42):
One of the things is that he's trying to control the
media.
Right, Say that again he'strying to control the narrative.

Speaker 5 (06:49):
How is he trying to control the media?
Doesn't every president try tocontrol the narrative?

Speaker 6 (06:56):
They try to control their own narrative, but one of
the things that Trump has done,for example, is renaming the
Gulf of Mexico and then notallowing the Associated Press to
come into the White House.
Basically, you know, trying toget.

Speaker 5 (07:07):
What are your feelings about him renaming the
Gulf of Mexico as the Gulf ofAmerica, when a majority of the
Gulf is, in fact, on the coastof America as opposed to Mexico?

Speaker 6 (07:16):
I mean, it's kind of pointless.
People call it the Gulf ofMexico, don't you think?

Speaker 5 (07:22):
it could have a positive tourism impact
potentially.
Tourism has been down heavily.
So I don't want to get into atourism debate.
My question is the sign saysthe fascist Trump regime must go
, and so I'm just curious whatmakes him a fascist?
You pointed out that maybesomething about his relationship
with the media.
He wants to control it, butagain you're calling him a

(07:43):
fascist.
What makes him a fascist One.

Speaker 6 (07:45):
How?
Again, let's your specific.
You're calling him a fascist.
Yeah well, what makes him afascist?
One of the core tenants offascism is creating an enemy
right and blaming those columnson what's that?

Speaker 5 (07:51):
Paper gave me.
Yeah, who gave you that?
Gave me the sign.
It's a free sign.
Oh, they, someone gave you thesign and then they gave you the
handout.
So are you reading it now tosee?
Try to answer the question.
I see that.
Can you hold that up?
Yeah, but I mean, can I seethat?

Speaker 2 (08:05):
Can you hold that?

Speaker 5 (08:06):
up.
I'm just not, no, I'm justcurious, you can have it, I can
have it.
Yeah, you can have it Alrighty.
So where did you get the sign?

Speaker 7 (08:13):
All the way in the gatekeeper's house.

Speaker 5 (08:17):
Okay yeah, it was just pretty cool.
And that's another one, onethey gave you two pieces of
paper.

Speaker 8 (08:21):
Can I have that one too, yes, you can have both.

Speaker 5 (08:24):
Oh okay.
So what brings you guys outhere today?
Uh, just because I saw peoplewere hanging out with people.
Yeah, same thing as everyoneelse.

Speaker 4 (08:33):
Executive I can't imagine going to a protest and
not knowing exactly what I'mprotesting and not knowing, like
, just the most basic talkingpoints.
If you're going to call someonea fascist, at least number one
know what the word means andnumber two know exactly why
you're calling someone a fascist, because that is a serious
accusation.
Well, they had a whole bunch ofarguments anyways.

(08:54):
Number one the very first issuethey brought up was the
convicted felon talking point,which proves that that's exactly
why the Democrat Party engagedin lawfare in the first place,
because they know the power ofperception and imagery in
today's political discourse.
They knew that the convictedfelon talking point would stick
and do more damage than anythingelse that Trump could do.

(09:17):
Next, they talk about PresidentTrump supposedly banning the
Associated Press, which is nottrue.
Yes, the Associated Press isrestricted from the Oval Office
and from Air Force One.
That definitely is retaliationand you can have your opinions
on that.
But it's not as if they'rebanned from the White House or
banned from covering PresidentTrump completely.
They're just banned from thatup close access in again those

(09:39):
two places the Oval Office andAir Force One.
It's not as if that seat wasremoved.
It was just filled by anothermedia outlet.
You could go down their entirelaundry list of arguments and
easily debunk them.
Each one is so tired, sooverused, so fragile that the
entire pinata of arguments couldbe broken.

Speaker 3 (09:59):
Okay, family, yeah, so you get the idea they had to
rally nationwide.
Well, protest, I shouldn't sayrally.
They had protests nationwideand a lot of these people don't
even know what they were outthere for.
They really they had no idea.
That's why I let the clip playto let you hear how unsensical a

(10:26):
lot of this stuff is.
These people are angry.
They don't have an answer forwhy this man's back in the White
House Now before let me addressthis I'm not a Trump supporter.
I didn't vote for the man.
I don't care for either party,as I come up here often and
express that I am a policy voter.

(10:50):
I'm conservative, leaning in mythought and in my values.
I'm conservative leaning.
However, I am not tied to anyparty.
I am a thinker, free thinker inand of myself, and also I am
more policy driven than anything.

(11:12):
Now, if the democrat candidatehadn't had a policy that I favor
or policies, plural, that Ifavor, I, I would vote and and
lobby for and advocate for aDemocrat.
So it doesn't matter, I don'tcare about either party,
independent, whatever.
I'm registered as anindependent voter.

(11:35):
So I just wanted to clear that,which I often do up here.
But sometimes you got toreiterate these things, because
people will take something, aclip of what you said, and say
he said this, he said that, youknow, he's, he's, he supports
this, he supports that.
And no, I don't support anyparticular candidate or any

(11:55):
party.
It's about policy for me,that's just for me.
So that said that.
Right, they had these, theseprotests around the country and
it was seasonless.
When I say seasonless, therewas no flavor in it because we
weren't a part of it.
I'm talking about thefoundationals, the, the, the

(12:19):
freedmen, black America.
We weren't really a part of itand there's a couple of videos
where there are some black tokenpeople or I should have said I
used the word token, let me saythey may, more than likely, were
tethers and or or democraticshill leaning people, democratic

(12:41):
people if they were black andthey were out there invisible,
but for the most part, blackpeople did not participate.
As I was looking on theFacebook, black people were
studying, doing the line danceall around the country.
You know, let me see if I canfind some of the line dance.
Hold on, hold on, oh man, youknow, speaking to that, speaking

(13:06):
to that, I think, to give myopinion to the line dance, they
got this new thing with theboots on the ground thing.
These people, you know, it'smulti-generational and it just
goes to show the creativity ofour lineage.

(13:28):
The rest, everybody's buggingout over this and that or DEI.
They're bugging out over gasand food and there's something
to discuss in those areas, butwe don't let these things bother
us.
This is why we didn't reallyparticipate in all of these uh

(13:49):
protests, because we likewelcome to the club.
This is something we used todealing with high prices.
Struggle, the struggle, thestruggle.
This is something that we use.
Welcome to the club, come in,so we don't get excited.
You know, like I said, folks isdoing out here doing the line
dance.

(14:09):
Hold on, let me see.

Speaker 11 (14:19):
Can I find any of that?
It's cute, right?
Well, that was the after.
This is the before me learningthe steps.
With any line dance, you've gotto have the steps right.
This is me just looking crazytrying to do the counts, but I'm
figuring it out.
I'm picking it up a little bitmore.
The tempo the ladies there areawesome.
They had it down pat.

(14:40):
And this is me when I wasfeeling myself until I got to a
part where I kind of missed theturn.
You'll see it there.
It is up this way after parkinglot.
I am ready, ladies.
Thank you so much.
I'm taking this with me to thenext cookout, the next cruise
deck party, all of it.
Man, that thing, that thingpopping all over the country.

Speaker 3 (15:01):
Family is popping all over the country.
Family is popping all over thecountry, that boots on the
ground thing, and I love it.
It's a beautiful thing.
It's cross multi-generational,from the little kids to the old
senior citizen folks to, youknow, mom and grandma and

(15:22):
grandpa they're doing it.
It's a beautiful thing and itjust speaks to the creativity of
our culture and our lineage.
So you know, you remember wewas battling back here with the
thing with the creation of hiphop and all that.
Don't let nobody come and tellyou about us Nothing about us.
This is why I do the researchup here every week us, nothing
about us.

(15:42):
This is why I do the researchup here every week and I talk
about things that we've createdin our lineage, in our culture,
and this is why this is why thisis a beautiful thing we're
doing and it's not a.
It brings people together.
It brings the culture together.
Like I said, it's crossmulti-generational.

(16:03):
You got little babies out theredoing that thing, man.
It's cross multi-generational.
You got little babies out theredoing that thing, man.
It's beautiful.
I love to see it and I love tosee our people having a good
time and enjoying each other,even though we in the middle of
a struggle Things.
You know, the market, what wasit?
Last Friday, the market took aserious dip and people were just
it was all over the place andeverybody's scared and worried

(16:27):
and we out here, boots on theground.
Now you know me by now.
You should know it's a time anda place for everything I'm
about.
I love folks having a good time, but when it's time to take
care of business, we take careof business and we stand on it.
That hasn't changed.
However, we're not going to letthese minuscule things well,

(16:52):
they're not saying that they'reminuscule because these are big
events.
The stock market takes a hugedip last week and things are
going on around the countryprotests and different things.
So we do take these thingsserious.
We do take them serious, but wedon't let that define who we
are.
It's not going to control us.

(17:13):
You're not going to control us.
We've done that enough.
We've done that enough and I'mgoing to change gears for a
quick second and come back to it.
There was an incident, Ibelieve, in Texas.
Let me see, can I find a storyabout this these teenagers in

(17:34):
the state of Texas, carmelaAnthony, was charged.

Speaker 4 (17:40):
Where a father says he forgives the teen accused of
fatally stabbing his son at ahigh school track meet.
Police are now revealing whatled to the terrifying moment.
Here's ABC's Andrea Fujii.

Speaker 12 (17:51):
New details about the killing of Austin Metcalf,
the student stabbed at a highschool track meet near Dallas.
According to the arrestaffidavit, 17-year-old Carmelo
Anthony has confessed to thekilling, saying he was trying to
protect himself.

Speaker 11 (18:05):
He knew how much I loved him, how much I'd do for
him anything.
I'd do anything for him.

Speaker 12 (18:09):
Hunter Metcalf says he held his twin brother, Austin
, as he was dying.

Speaker 13 (18:14):
I tried to whip around as fast as I could, but I
didn't see the stab.
But then I look at my brotherand I'm not going to talk about
the rest.

Speaker 12 (18:23):
It happened at the district championship meet in
Frisco.
Hunter says his brother hadasked Carmelo to move his seat
because he was sitting under thewrong tent.
A witness says Carmelo repliedtouch me and see what happens.
And when Austin grabbed him,carmelo allegedly pulled a knife
.

Speaker 2 (18:39):
They asked him to move and when Austin grabbed his
backpack to take it, he stabbedhim in the chest and killed him
.

Speaker 12 (18:47):
He's now charged with first-degree murder.

Speaker 3 (18:49):
Just because the kid was mad.
My son is not here anymore andI don't understand it.

Speaker 12 (18:55):
Austin is being remembered as an honors student
with aspirations to play collegefootball.
Despite the shocking loss,Austin's father says he chooses
forgiveness over anger.

Speaker 2 (19:06):
I forgive the other person because the forgiveness
is not for him.
The forgiveness is for me, so Ican have peace.
His life is destroyed.
My life is destroyed.

Speaker 12 (19:16):
The arrest affidavit says, as Carmelo Anthony was
being arrested, he asked ifAustin was okay.
Anthony is being held on amillion dollar bond.

Speaker 3 (19:27):
Okay, you heard that family.
Now, here's the thing.
Here's the thing.
This is what we got to watchout for.
This is what we got to watchout for.
Now, camilla Anthony is theblack teenager that was charged,
arrested and charged withmurder.
One right, the Austin Metcalfkid.

(19:48):
He's a white kid, he's a twin,he has a twin, and the twin was
there when this happened.
Now, at this event, at thisevent, they were at some kind of
competition in some stadium orwhatever, and the young brother,
carmella Anthony, was sittingin a seat and this white kid,

(20:15):
austin Metcalf and it'sunfortunate that this happened.
This is unfortunate.
We're not saying this was goodthat it happened.
It's unfortunate.
Anytime that a parent has tobury a child.
It is always a tragedy, nomatter what color, where you
come from or whatever.
Okay, that said, now they hadthis competition and the kid,

(20:40):
anthony, camilla Anthony, wassitting in his seat and this
other kid, metcalf, approachedhim about him, about moving,
said you're sitting in the wrongplace.
Now, mind you, there's storiescoming out and I didn't play it
up here, but I read.
With stories coming out, theseseats were not assigned.
This is the one.
I'm white and I say so.

(21:02):
Now, they won't report this.
That was an ABC News clip thatI played that was reporting on
this and you know they fluffingit up like this kid.
Now, from what I understand,this kid allegedly the Metcalf
kid that was stabbed he hasinvolvement with drugs.

(21:24):
Right, they're not reporting onthis?
Now let's go back to GeorgeFloyd and the Derek Chavin.
The officers of Derek Chavin,let's go back to that.
They dug up everything theycould on George Floyd.
He was on drugs.
He was on fentanyl, themechanics on he died of he was
on drugs.
He was on fentanyl, nemecanison he died of fentanyl.

(21:46):
He died of fentanyl.
He was passing counterfeitmoney and he was high on
fentanyl.
You remember that, right?
Okay, now this kid and thetoxic.
From what I understand now thetoxicology report has come back
there was some type of substancein his system.

(22:07):
Right, they're not talkingabout that.
Here it is.
They went and charged, theyarrested him and charged him
with murder one right, murder inthe first degree.
This is manslaughter, at bestit's manslaughter.

(22:27):
How is he charged with murderone, first of all, self-defense.
Because let's go back toanother case.
Let's go back Back here somemonths ago, jordan Neely, right
here in New York City where Ireside, jordan Neely, right here
in New York City where I reside, jordan Neely right was Daniel

(22:50):
Penny was killed by Daniel Penny.
Now this coward ran up behindNow Jordan Neely hadn't touched
anyone, he hadn't harmed anyone.
He hadn't harmed anyone, hehadn't done it.
He was on the train having anepisode, yelling and screaming
because he's a special need.
He was special needs and he washaving an episode.
He probably didn't take hismedication.

(23:12):
He was homeless.
This, that and the third.
This coward ran up behind him.
This dude was trained inmartial arts in the Marines
right.
Dude was trained in martialarts in the Marines right Crept
up behind this young, homeless,thin man and put him in a yoke
hold and choked him to death.

(23:33):
But they said that wasself-defense because Jordan
Neely broke the public peaceagreement contract.
He was making noise, he wasscreaming and talking to himself
, like a lot of people do on thesubways in New York City.
Not just on the subways.

(23:54):
You walk down the street peopletalking to themselves.
Sometimes they're talking inthe airpiece or whatever.
They're talking on the phone.
Sometimes they're just talkingand have a conversation with
themselves because they aredisturbed in some type of way or
another.
Anyway, daniel Penny was triedunder self-defense.

(24:18):
They said he was justified inkilling this man.
This coward ran up behind him,crept up.
This did Jordan nearly neverknew what killed him or why he
was being killed.
He never knew but it wasself-defense now did.
From how I understand this thing, this kid, metcalf, approached

(24:40):
Carmelo Anthony, the youngteenager Carmelo Anthony.
He, the young teenager, carmeloAnthony.
He approached him, told him hey, listen, you got to move, man,
you're in the wrong seat, you'rein the wrong seat.
The guy was like listen, man,go about your business, leave me
alone, don't tell me where tosit, whatever.
They exchanged words and hewent to grab the kid's bag and
the kid told him look, don'ttouch me, don't touch my stuff,

(25:08):
don't touch me.
And he proceeded to do what hewas doing.
He's persistent on moving himfrom that seat.
And that kid Anthony allegedlywent in his bag and pulled out
the knife and joked him Rightand got up out of there.
He left and subsequently thisyoung teenager Metcalf died from

(25:33):
the injury.
Now they charging him withmurder in the first degree.
Now, remember Daniel Penny whenhe killed jordan neely, I think
that week they, right away they, they.
There was a fundraiser for him.
He got a two million dollar warchest that for that very same
week from donors for his legaldefense and the good thing about

(25:57):
our brother here is not as muchas that.
But they did a goundMe for himfor his legal defensive fees,
because I think he's being heldwithout bond and they've raised
some reports are saying $60,000.
Some are saying $80,000.
I'm going to donate to hisdefense or whatever, and I urge
you to do so, to go online anddonate.

(26:21):
Be careful, go online anddonate.
Be careful, make sure you dothe research and that these
GoFundMes or these fundraisersare legitimate, because when
things like these happen, youhave the jackals and the wolves
that come out and prey on peopletrying to do the right thing
and they'll set up a phony pageor whatever and have you donate

(26:44):
money to them and they'll takethe money in pocket.
So be careful with that.
But yes, if you can donate tohis defense to get him some
high-powered lawyers, becausehe's being charged, as I said,
with murder, one and this is atbest, it could be manslaughter,
at best is really self-defense.
And the reason why I say it'sself-defense is because y'all

(27:07):
have set the standard for whatself-defense is.
Jordan Neely was killedunknowingly.
He didn't even know why he wasbeing killed, didn't even know
why Didn't.
He didn't touch anybody, didn'tharm anyone.
But they said that Daniel Pennywas justified in the murder

(27:31):
because Jordan nearly broke thepublic contract of peace,
because he was making loudnoises, talking to himself and
shouting.
So that means anybody.
If I can go out here right now,somebody's having an episode
and they're walking up and downthe street and they're yelling
and screaming, which I've seenpeople do, I got a right to go
up, creep up behind him andchoke him out or kill him in

(27:53):
some way, form or another, andI'd be justified and I won't get
a day in jail for that.
Correct, that's what you'retelling us.
Let's go back to Cal Rittenhouse.
Remember him, right, calRittenhouse?
This dude crossed state lines.
First he was on a videowatching the protest.

(28:14):
This is around the George Floydprotest.
He was on video saying how hewish he was out there because he
would have his AR-15 and he'dbe out there.
You know, doing unalivingpeople.
These n words, that's the wordhe used.
But anyway, they didn't allowthat in in the uh, in the trial.
They, they did not.

(28:34):
They did not allow the video.
But, however, this dude end upkilling two people out there and
he crossed states.
So he drove across a couple ofstate lines to where these
protests were going on and heended up unaliving, I think, two
people, two white people,protesters.

(28:57):
He was threatening to do it,trying to do it to some black
folks.
That's what he went out therefor.
But it ended up there were somewhite folks out there
protesting, some whiteprotesters, and he ended up
unaligning them.
They let him go Self-defense.
Now this dude crossed statelines with assault rifles.

(29:20):
Right, that's premeditatedMurder.
One is usually under the aus.
That's premeditated Murder Oneis usually under the auspice of
premeditation.
That's usually what you getMurder One for.
It's premeditated.
You plan to do that.
You went home, you got a gun.
You had a fight.
Whenever you ran home, you gotyour gun.
Or you was at the dice game andsomebody did something and

(29:40):
cheated you.
You went to your car and gotyour gun and came back and shot
the guy.
That was premeditated.
You had time to plan that outand think about it.
But with Daniel Penny it wasself-defense, right, they've set
the precedence for this.

(30:01):
So this is the same thing we'reseeing with this case with our
brother, camilla Anthony.
It's self-defense because heforewarned the young man to not
don't bother me, leave me alone,don't touch me, don't tell me
where to sit, leave my stuffalone, don't touch me.
And the man the young manproceeded to carry out his

(30:23):
request for him to move and hegot end up getting jugged and
subsequently, uh, expiring fromfrom his injury.
So we're saying it'sself-defense.
Now, these are the things wegot to be outraged for Meanwhile
family.

(30:43):
Meanwhile, we still don't havea hate crime bill to federally
protect us against this type ofviolence.
Now, they're not talking aboutMetcalf from what I can demise
from many different accounts, hehad a drug problem.
They're not talking about that.

(31:05):
But George Floyd he was passingon fake money, he was high on
fentanyl and this and that andthat and this, even though,
despite the man's knee being onhis neck for nine minutes on
live TV, on national, worldwideTV, and everybody saw it.
The only reason why thatChauvin is in jail right now is

(31:30):
because people turned up andturned out around the world, not
just here in America.
Around the world, people sawthat.
That's the only reason why,other than that they'd let him
walk, they'd let him walk.
I don't want y'all to everforget that, okay.

(31:51):
So, yeah, yeah, like I said, Idon't want to stay up here too
long.
I don't want to stay up heretoo long.
I just got a couple things Iwant us to to hear, and I'm just
skipping around because I hadnothing really planned for today
.
I really didn't have anything,uh, a program really scheduled
out.
I just got.
No, I had to come up here andtalk to see how y'all doing.

(32:15):
I had to come up here and seehow y'all doing and let you know
that I'm still around, stillhere.
And salute to everyone listeningall around the globe, all
around the states.
Salute to all of you Aurora,colorado, greeley, colorado,
united Kingdom, the BritishIndian Ocean Territory.

(32:38):
Salute to everyone whose tunesin every week Keep coming back.
Like I said, devon will be uphere next week, but I want to
play a few things just to giveus some things to think about
here.
Hold on, as I opened up withour brother Huey Newton.

(32:58):
Hold on, I got some otherthings up here.
I'm going to let you hear.

Speaker 9 (33:07):
Okay and this is from our sister that she was
pardoned by donald trump.
Hold on, we've been hearingwhat the democrats say for so
long and it sound good and itfeel good, but we watching what
they do and they ain't doingshit.
We hear what trump say.
It sound crazy, but when Iwatch what trump do and I go
back and I look at real factsabout how this man went to court
every single day with MichaelJackson.
How him and Don King was super,super cool.
How this man was on the Wu-TangClan album.

(33:28):
How a Jennifer Hudson familywas murdered.
He put them up in Trump Towerfor six months, protected them,
didn't charge them a dime.
How he sent his private jet togo get Nelson Mandela out of
prison.
How he gave Rainbow Push andJesse Jackson a million dollars
to get started to get activatedin the black community.
How he gave me and KwameKilpatrick pardons to restart.
I hear what people say and Iwatch what they do.

(33:49):
I hear people saying they madabout Trump, about the Central
Park Five, and I get that.
But then I know Trump passedthe First Step Act which can
free close to 20,000 people tothis day, including big Meech
getting out on some of thatsentencing reduction.
That ain't got nothing to dowith Kamala.
That's Trump in the First StepAct.
But then I hear what Biden'ssaying.
But I know Biden, responsiblefor the 94 crime bill and the

(34:09):
crack cocaine disparity, thething that took all the real
niggas off the streets this iswhat Trump's First Step Act was
in retrospect that Trump's FirstStep step at overturn that 94
crime bill.
That's why we see all the realones come home.

Speaker 10 (34:24):
That's why we stuck with a generation of little
nines, she just put chills on myback right now.

Speaker 9 (34:26):
All of this was strategic Wipe all the real men
off the street, push this agenda, because if the real men were
in the home we wouldn't see thislike this.
So you watch your mama be thispillar of strength, you he
modeling behavior to go back topsychology, and then we watching
agendas on TV.

Speaker 3 (34:43):
Yeah, family, she right, they letting a lot of
real ones home.
Some of these brothers beenlocked away 25, 30 years and
they touching the streetsbecause of that first step back.
They touching the streets.
Lou Hobbs, walter Johnson, he'sbeen home not even a year yet.

(35:05):
He's been home a few months, 27years.
They're letting a lot of theseguys out because of that first
step back, right.
So sister was right, sister wascorrect in that, and we got a
few more things we're going toplay up here.
I want to play for you a fewmore things.
Hold on just a second, we'llget right to it.

(35:27):
Hold on, hold on, hold on andwe're gonna let you get out of
here after that.
This is important, family, thisis important.

Speaker 8 (35:34):
Here we go or every black actor gets to a certain
point, gets taken out, whetherit's michael or crosby or arch
Kelly or Prince.
They all either die undermysterious circumstances or they
become troubled and die of anoverdose or some medication, or
they get done for some sexcrimes or whatever.
I mean in R Kelly's case, everysingle one of those children
were basically sold to himallegedly sold to him by their

(35:57):
parents.
You know, and this is you know,we'll talk.
Yeah, maybe that's aconversation for another day,
but you know like there's somuch of that in the
entertainment industry, butthere are no prosecutions of
white artists.
There are no prosecutions ofcountry artists.
Nobody.
Madonna's never got in troublefor her 16-year-old boyfriend.

(36:19):
Yeah, why haven't we got Eminemyet?
No, where's Eminem?
Could it have anything to dowith this?

Speaker 6 (36:24):
It's the country stars we're thinking of.

Speaker 8 (36:26):
Yeah, country star, okay, yeah, I'll tell you after
the show.
No, I mean Eminem woke up oneday, an angry lesbian and with
very left-wing politics.
I wonder why that might havebeen who knows, who can say, but
it's only ever.
Black artists who get theirreputations absolutely ripped to

(36:49):
shreds in public get accused ofthe worst thing that a person
could be accused of right, andalways when they get a little
bit too big for their boots, alittle bit too outspoken, a
little bit too edgy or a littlebit too quote unquote
uncontrollable, too edgy or alittle bit too quote unquote
uncontrollable when they won'ttake their meds, when they won't
do as they're told, when theywon't shut up about Israel, when
they won't shut up aboutcontracts, when they won't do as

(37:11):
the establishment and as thearchitecture, the machinery the
industry wants them to do.
Suddenly they're guilty ofunderage sex with kids, people,
traffic, all the rest of it.
Well, I mean, maybe the truthis that the whole industry does
it, maybe the truth is thatnobody does it.
Probably closer to the firstone.
But these selective prosecutions.
I'm not a big, you know.
I'm not a big like civil rights.

(37:33):
Let's defend black people.
Let's take a big guy.
You know, I don't even reallycare for the music that much.
I like yay as in, as a singularinstance, because he's an
artist in a slightly differentleague, in a different caliber,
um, than the rest of them.
I don't really listen to themusic from from, you know, from
the rest of that, that genre, tobe honest with you, um, uh.
But even I cannot deny that theprosecutions are targeted,
selective and gruesomely unfairin the way that they are played

(37:57):
out in public, uh, and and themanner in which the juries are
tainted and poisoned beforehand.
But you know, this guy's likeon trial and Netflix decides
that.
I mean, come on, they murderedMichael Jackson 100% and someone
gave Prince fentanyl.
They murdered Michael Jacksonafter he started talking about
Jews and I'm not going to saythat what he said about them was
right or wrong or whatever, butit is a fact of history that

(38:22):
first of all, they released therecordings of a phone call where
he was complaining about Jewsin some not very pleasant
language and I think he had asimilar problem with Jewish
people, sort of universalized toJewish people in general, which
some people will certainlythink is unreasonable and unfair
.
But I think he had a similarproblem with Jews that maybe Ye
has with Jews, that maybe theother black artist has with Jews
, which is that if you've beenin the business for 30 years,
there are a lot of people calledGoldstein and Raffensperg.

(38:45):
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, michaelJackson's face.
Yeah, yeah, we can't use thoselyrics.
No, we can't use those lyrics.
But you know, for 30 yearsthere have been certain surnames
on the contracts that you findout two years later, later,
actually, oh, you can't do that,you can't do that and we own
this right.
After 30 years of it, you startto think, well, maybe it's all
of them.
You know, it's not anunreasonable.
Let's put it like this it's notan unreasonable, it's not, it's

(39:12):
a, it's a, it's a relatablebigotry.
Let's say, let's say that youknow anyway.
Look, the point is that MichaelJackson was taken out right
after he started making thesestatements.
Right after he started talkingabout this particular kind of
person, suddenly he wasunreachable, and so, first of
all, they leaked a voicemail toscare him into shutting up, and
then, when he didn't, suddenlyhe was dead.

Speaker 3 (39:30):
Yeah, family, you heard that Selective charges.
They're selective on what theywant to charge you with.
Back to the young kid, carmeloAnthony.
Right, they charged him withmurder one, murder one.
This is a manslaughter case,really Self-defense.
But he's charged with murderone because we say so.

(39:52):
How dare you?
You know, how dare you?
Yeah, that's where we at withthis family, that's where we at,
we're going to stay with thesethings and these stories.
Hold on, check out our youngsister here.
Check out our young sister.
This is for all of thesegoofies out here doing these
protesting and these what theycall these things, these

(40:15):
boycotts and all of thisfoolishness.
Hold on, listen to this all ofthis foolishness.

Speaker 13 (40:20):
Hold on, listen to this People, black Americans, if
y'all care so much aboutdiversity and inclusion, let me
know when y'all ready to boycottthe corner stores and the
beauty supply stores and thecurry outs?
Let me know, because thoseaffect us more directly than
what y'all talking about.
Okay, we didn't benefit fromdei.

(40:42):
That don't have to do with us,okay?
So let me know when y'allreally ready to boycott the shit
that matters, the shit that'staking over our communities,
have been taking over ourcommunities the liquor stores
you know, I'm saying the theshit that's ran right down the
street by somebody who don'teven look like you, by people
who wash over your shoulder whenyou go in street, by somebody
who don't even look like you, bypeople who wash over your

(41:02):
shoulder when you go in there,by people who accuse you of
stealing sometimes.
Let me know when y'all ready toboycott shit that matter, not
target.
Target that then gaveopportunities to black creators.
There are black creators whohave their products in target.
Why the fuck are we trying toboycott target?
What are y'all doing?
You know what I'm saying.

(41:22):
We need to start with the s***in our own communities that
affect us.
How about we boycott some ofthese churches that take people
money and don't do s*** for thecommunity.
Let me know when y'all arereally ready to boycott the s***
that matters.
Other than that, I got s*** togive from Target.
You know what I'm saying.

Speaker 3 (41:43):
I'm about to go shop right now.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, Iconcur 1,000% with that, 1,000%
, I concur with that.
Let us start boycotting what itreally means right here in the
community I live in,predominantly black.
Granted, it's a predominantlyCaribbean community, but it's
nonetheless, nonetheless andthis is good.

(42:04):
I'm talking about for everyhood, for every, anywhere where
black people at, whether they'refoundational or from the
diaspora or whatever, butespecially the foundation is who
I'm talking to, because that'swhat this program is centered
around.
This program is centered around.
I was having a conversation withsomebody and out and out and I

(42:26):
can't understand for the life ofme, on a Friday or Saturday
night, why is these Chineserestaurants packed with people,
these little filthy Chinese, uh,eateries, takeout eateries,
filthy, and I know they'refilthy and I'm telling you
they're filthy because when Iworked in the beverage industry,
I used to deliver to theseplaces and you get access to the

(42:46):
basement and to the back rooms.
You get access.
They're filthy, nasty places,but they're packed on Friday,
saturday night because peoplewant them fried chicken wings
and french fries and egg foo.
Young I I was having aconversation with with my lady

(43:07):
one time and and she made a goodpoint.
But also I was saying how, how,in the hell, all of these
eateries in the blackcommunities?
You got, you got, you got theAsians.
You got the Arabs at thePopeyes they running most of the
Popeyes.
You got, you got, you got theasians.
You got the arabs at thepopeyes they running most of the
popeyes.
You got the the east indiansand stuff right in these crown

(43:29):
chickens and texas chicken,little chicken spots.
Who fries chicken and fish andshrimp and seafood and stuff
better than black folks, betterthan we do?
Found that.
Who does that better than us?
That's where these othercultures get the idea from.
They like the fried stuff.

(43:49):
Let's go make it and put it inthere, and the ingredients and
the oils they cook and the stuffand it's straight garbage,
straight garbage.
It's killing us.
But who fry these chicken, fishand shrimp and french fries and
stuff better than we do?
Who does that better than us?
But yet you go to these placeson a Friday, saturday night and

(44:14):
you can't even get inside thoseplaces because they're packed
with black people.
You got people getting chickenwings out of the Chinese
restaurant and they're cookingthe food in soybean oil, filthy
stuff.
They're cooking it in the samegrease over and over and over,

(44:36):
and they're packed.
Come on y'all, we got to getout of this and we got to get
better.
We got to get better.
Yeah, do I want to go into that?
I want to go into it.
Yeah, let me play.
Let's hear it for my brother.

Speaker 1 (44:49):
Let's hear it for my brother.
Great one.
There will come a time whenblack people wake up and become
intellectually independentenough to think for themselves,
as other humans areintellectually independent
enough to think for themselves.
Then the black man will thinklike a black man and he will

(45:11):
feel for other black people, andthis new thinking and feeling
will cause black people to sticktogether.
And then at that point you'llhave a situation where when you
attack one black man, you areattacking all black men, and
this type of black thinking willcause all black people to stick

(45:33):
together.
And this type of thinking alsowill bring an end to the
brutality inflicted upon blackpeople by white people, and it
is the only thing that willbring an end to it.
No federal court, state courtor city court will bring an end
to it.

Speaker 3 (45:49):
It's something that the black man has to bring an
end to himself family, familythat said we're gonna wrap it up
and we're gonna get out of here.

(46:09):
We're gonna let you go.
We're gonna let you go.
In the words of big king, youmust respect life, love justice,
cherish the freedom and, mostof all, family, treasure the
peace.
Y'all go in peace and keep thepeace and come back.
Divine going to be up here withus next week.
Divine going to be back hereand y'all hang on to your seats

(46:33):
because we're going to bespitting some fire.
Take care.
We out.
Freedmen's Affairs Radio.
Peace, now it's love Verse hate.

Speaker 7 (47:06):
Time for my people to eliminate that hate Less love,
because it's our people that wethinkin' of.
Now they say we play a hatin'Cause we hate the black on black
and the fact we can't standwhen we act like that, self-hate
killin' us more than a popo orcrack.
I tell my peoples with the gutsit ain't about all that, we'll
be right back Murdered if theycaught ya Niggas swung from

(47:29):
trees like a breeze Do summerleaves Swaying back and forth,
failed attempts to make it north.
Millions of people died, justso that we can survive.
So this knowledge I provide,cause these facts can't be
denied.

(47:49):
Nowadays it's new waves.
60s it was the smack.
80s it was the crack 90s.
It be the gat Time to recognizehow uncivilized we got.
Get wise and unify and not fallvictim to the plot, cause it's
love Versus hate.
It's time for my people toeliminate that hate Less love,
because it's our people that wethinking of.

(48:11):
It's love Versus hate.
It's time for our people toeliminate that hate Less love,
because it's our people that wethinking of.
What will we make our exodus.

Speaker 10 (48:25):
What will the guns bust the other way, instead of
at the brother next to us?
That's all that they expectfrom us.
Police stand by.
Don't believe the lie thatthey're the ones protecting us.
Project to see how poverty'saffecting us.
Robberies we lust objects ofhigh quality, so we think we
slowly sink into the quicksandWith no support, like a bike
that doesn't have a kickstand.

(48:46):
We stay in court, smoke newports and fail to support our
seeds, with no thoughts for theyneeds.
We fought for the cheese andall it got us was a grave or a
bid as a slave.
We live in the land of thebrave.
Where the home isn't free,grown niggas be.
In the land of the brave.
Where the home isn't free,grown niggas be in the zone
trying to act out the TV.
We cracked out and greedy witha lack of respect.
It's time to come correct.

Speaker 7 (49:07):
It's time to come correct.
It's love versus hate.
Time for my people to eliminatethat hate Less love, because
it's my people that I'm thinkingof.
It's love versus hate OutroMusic.
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