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October 29, 2025 60 mins

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A lot of people are told to “add the math.” Wise Asia makes a sharp case for why that misses the point—and how the power of 5% teachings lives in simple language, daily action, and social impact. We walk through her path to learning 120 more than once, what she kept, what she discarded, and why titles like “educator” and “enlightener” matter less than the duty to help someone stand in their own understanding. Along the way, we unpack the roots of “all being born,” the risks of grafted methods, and the freedom that comes with keeping the mathematics simple and plain.

We move into the heart of self-knowledge: knowing who you are, why you changed, and how you show it through speech, diet, and conduct. Wise Asia shares why women learning 120 is essential for confidence at home and abroad, not as a contest but as a foundation for dignity and service. She also shines a light on applicable science—doula work, herbs, and preventive care—that turns lessons into living help. The culture thrives, she says, when we resist imitation, stop belittling, and build harmony through honest, useful contributions.

You’ll also hear stories of mentors and firstborns who gave jobs, training, and tough love, plus a reminder to give people their flowers while they can still smell them. If you’ve ever wondered how to navigate tradition without drifting into dogma, how to teach without policing, or how to keep truth accessible without diluting it, this conversation offers a grounded path forward. Subscribe, share with a friend who builds, and leave a review with your biggest takeaway so we can keep growing this platform together.

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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
SPEAKER_05 (00:11):
What's going on, everybody?
Out there is Rob Bryan, LMT, thePeople's Fitness Professional,
aka So Brother Number One,reporting for duty with the
sister the Earth.
Wise Asia.
Before we go into it, before wego into it, I would like to I
gotta play this commercial realquick.
Hold on one second.

SPEAKER_00 (00:30):
Peace family, welcome to NYP Talk Show.
This is more than a podcast.
It's a conscious platform rootedin truth and culture from the 5%
nation, nation of Islam, forestmovement, and faith to grow.
Our mission is to reclaim ournarrative and uplift the African
diaspora with real stories andreal conversations.

(00:54):
Support us through Super Chatduring live shows.
Donations on Cash App, GoFundMe,Patreon, or BuzzSprout.
And by refing our officialmerch, available on our website
and right here on YouTube'smerch shelf.
Every dollar, every super chat,every hoodie builds the

(01:14):
movement.
This is NYP Talk Show.

SPEAKER_03 (01:19):
Yo, who's quiet?

SPEAKER_05 (01:23):
Thank you.
Thank you.
Yo, oh, a code college is in thebuilding terrain hicks for
stuff.
That's so funny.
Terrain, you are.
This is the one video I've seenyou on.
I just spoke about you before Igot on this video.
Funny, funny, funny.
Anyway, as they say in the 5%nature, mind detect mind.
So now uh let's talk about it.

(01:45):
Let's talk about it.
We're talking about how did uhhow was wise Asia taught 5%
culture?
Now, I've heard many things, youknow, and first off, I want to
say this.
This podcast is about thepeople, but it's also about
myself because I'm learningthrough this podcast.
Now, there were some things Ididn't know about the 5% culture

(02:09):
uh when I first started, and Imade a fool of myself online.
I don't know if anybody caughtit, but uh like for instance, uh
I was talking with Sunyaz andthe God Infinite, and they were
talking about uh, you know, thebrown seed, you know, how the
how it works like the brown seedand the different seeds, right?

(02:30):
And um, I'm like, yo, I don'tsubscribe to the different
seeds, you know what I'm saying?
Because I wasn't dealing withthe separation, because I'm
thinking it's about separate,that was kind of like about
separate or it it encouragesseparation.
That's how I saw it.
But then I realized that a lawmade it like that for a
particular reason, for socialreasons.
And I yo, I didn't know thatuntil this podcast, until I

(02:54):
created this podcast.
So now so I'm learning a lotabout the culture through this
podcast.
That's the whole point of it.
So, how did you learn uh thefive percent culture-wise, Asia?

One thing I want to bring up: you do not add the math. (03:05):
undefined
So today's mathematics is wisdomborn to you.
So you don't you don't you don'tadd like today's wisdom born,
all being born, the knowledge,knowledge, all being born back
to wisdom.

(03:26):
A lot.

SPEAKER_03 (03:27):
Can I ask you a question?

SPEAKER_05 (03:29):
Yes, ma'am.

SPEAKER_03 (03:30):
And this is for everybody who does that, all
being born to who is the founderof that?
Because I give you a hint, itwas not a law, and it was not
any of his first born.
And in what year did this start?

(03:53):
Since y'all so stuck on this allbeing born, and and please, I
wait.

SPEAKER_05 (04:03):
I don't know.

SPEAKER_03 (04:04):
All I know is yeah, I know because I do research.
Okay, and see, this goes toshow.
First of all, before I get intothe bill, let's do things
correctly.
First of all, today'smathematics is wisdom born and
the laws free cipher.

(04:24):
That's um, why was Yakub sosuccessful in all of his
undertakings?
Right.
Answer because all his peoplewho were his followers obeyed
his laws, regardless of what hetold them to do, they did it.
If not, they paid with theirlives.

(04:47):
Yakub did not build prisonhouses to imprison his people.
When one fell victim to the law,the penalty was death.
And was it, oh, I missedsomething.
Let me start that again.
The answer.
I said that wrong.
Um, because the people who arehis followers obeyed his laws,

(05:07):
regardless of what he told themto do, they did it.
If not, they paid with theirlives.
That's what I left out.
Yaakub did not build prisonhouses to imprison his people.
When one fell victim to the law,the penalty was death and was
enforced on every victim.
Pardon self, y'all, for thatever.
I'm human.

(05:28):
Um, what you call it.
And then the one of 36 is didthey receive more gold?
So we took care of culturalthings first.
Now getting back to yourquestion.

SPEAKER_05 (05:43):
I know I noticed you didn't go to the uh one of 14.

SPEAKER_03 (05:46):
Because there is no 29 in the one of 14.

SPEAKER_05 (05:51):
Right.
However, I was taught that, oh,yeah, because you don't add it
up.
All right.

SPEAKER_04 (06:01):
Got it.

SPEAKER_03 (06:04):
Yeah, because everybody does the I ain't gonna
say everybody because I don't,but um what you call it,
wardrobe malfunction.
I'm glad my camera is high up.
Um, yeah, so a lot of peoplefollow other people, and when
you first gain this knowledge ofself, uh you from your

(06:30):
background, a lot of us comefrom religious Islam, whatever.
So we come from this aspectwhere we all have to do the same
thing, we need to look a certainway, we need to um speak a
certain way.
We we have to have a lot toteach that a lot to an

(06:51):
individuality.
That's knowledge.

SPEAKER_05 (06:55):
Because um be yourself, yes.

SPEAKER_03 (07:00):
I have a self-style wisdom that cannot be due.
Listen, you could try to copy meall you want, but it ain't gonna
pace, baby.
It ain't gonna pace.
So you have to understand yourniche.
You have to have this is calledknowledge of self.

(07:22):
You have to know who you are.
If you don't know who you are,you will never know anyone.
So that's taking care of firstthings first.
Knowing and understanding whoare you, what are you, where are
you?
When did you come?
When did you realize?

(07:43):
When did you change?
Why did you change?
How did you change?
These are all questions we needto ask ourselves.
And when somebody says, Y'all, Iwant to get that, why?
Why you want knowledge or so?

(08:03):
Why are you calling to me forknowledge or so?
Oh, because you like what I say,you like how I sound?
Like, no, that's not what thisculture is about.
I can't sound like firstbornprince.
I couldn't, I couldn't, Iwouldn't even waste time

(08:26):
attempting to sound likefirstborn prince.
Even though when I build, somepeople be like, yo, you brought
the god back to life.
Like I heard him through you.
But I'm I'm not um anything Isay, even even when I do quote
him, I give him his homagebecause I don't plagiarize.

SPEAKER_05 (08:52):
Okay, now let's take it back to when did the adding
up the math come into play?

SPEAKER_03 (08:57):
Like I'm not gonna give that answer.
I give it to you in private,okay, but I'm not gonna give it
on here because people gottalearn to do their own research,
and they so busy trying to comeat somebody neck and do your
research, go to the school, gofind you an elder.

(09:21):
Right.
We have we have we have themnow.

SPEAKER_05 (09:26):
Now, you said that a law didn't teach the adding up
of the math.
Now, what what would be thedrawback or the error in adding
up the math?

SPEAKER_03 (09:39):
So, firstborn prince told me that that's grafted
mathematics, and he said youwasting time because mathematics
the mathematics is already inthere.
You already started with today'smath, wisdom born.

(10:00):
That's today's mathematics.
Now you're adding two plus nine,which is wrong.
Today is not two plus nine.
When I say what today's date is,I don't say this is October two
plus nine plus two plus zeroplus two plus you sound like a

(10:22):
fucking moron, you sound like abuffoon, and then look at an 85s
aspect.
So you're saying today is twoplus nine, which equals eleven.
They already confused with thatbecause they were like it's the

(10:45):
29th.
This is not two plus nine, twoand nine already had their
cipher before I got to ten,before I got to twenty.
This is the twenty ninth day,not the two plus the nine day.

(11:09):
And then you're telling themthis is 11, and now 11 equals
two.
What wait, what what the fuckare you teaching me?
How the fuck did we get two from11?
And how do we get 11 from 29?
And how are we saying that 29 istwo?

(11:31):
Like what wisdom?
How much time is wasted on thatinstead of just saying wisdom
born?
I make my I make my actions, mywords and my actions complete
every day through my dietaryrestrictions, through my

(11:56):
vernacular, through my umencounters and socialization
with family and non-family.
How simple is that mathematics?

SPEAKER_05 (12:08):
Simple and plain, right?

SPEAKER_03 (12:10):
And that's what Allah took from what I was um
from what I was taught.
Allah was a big fan of keepingit simple, stupid.
There is greatness andsimplicity.

SPEAKER_05 (12:31):
Indeed, indeed.
So now um the way you weretaught, now, were you taught by
like some people are taught bymultiple teachers or multiple,
okay?
Before we go into that,enlightener, enlightener or
educator?

SPEAKER_03 (12:49):
So first born prince said he was neither because he's
doing his duty as a civilizedperson, right?
And this if if he's my educator,or he's my enlightener, then how
am I on the journey of knowingso?

(13:12):
So he was a huge advocate ofknowing self.
I still called him my educatorbecause you're my go-to in the
history and the foundation ofthis culture.
So he was like, I'll allow it,but it's not what it is.

SPEAKER_05 (13:32):
Right.
So he wouldn't have an educatoror an enlightener to him.
So so what would you callsomeone who is walking you
through 120 and and and teachingyou the culture?

SPEAKER_03 (13:46):
My brother, my sister.

SPEAKER_05 (13:51):
Simple.
Simple, simple, simple.
Okay.
So now, and so we spoke on that.
So now, besides Prince, were youtaught by anyone else?

SPEAKER_03 (14:03):
So you gotta remember, I was taught by Block
before I was taught by Prince.

SPEAKER_05 (14:09):
Right, right, right, right.
And P long.

SPEAKER_03 (14:12):
Yeah.

SPEAKER_05 (14:13):
With some serious brothers, yeah.

SPEAKER_03 (14:17):
So um, what you call it?
I had got a whole bunch of junkbefore I got it right.
I had to learn 120 like threetimes, and I learned two
versions of 120.
And what I mean by two versionsis somebody had wrote earth
lessons, firstborn prince toldme that that that was the

(14:42):
dumbest shit in the world tostudy, because that's a man's
perception of earth, that's notevery man's, right?
So he was like, No, when you getyour God, he's gonna make you

(15:03):
his earth, and that'll be youknow your flow.
So I I had learned that I hadlearned the butt uh uh all these
uh plus degrees, why is waterwet, why is the sky blue, uh

(15:24):
before Columbus, right?
Um this I I I I uh I learned,relearned, relearned,
re-re-relearned.

SPEAKER_05 (15:42):
Right.
So so you could you you'reproficient at the teachings,
right?
So you can like teach a class inthis.
So because you had to relearnand relearn.
So now you learn the earthlessons.
Where did those those earthlessons come from?
Because I've heard of theseearth lessons before.
I think I've seen a copy a long,long time ago.
I just took a glance, but Ididn't get really into it at

(16:03):
all, obvious for obviousreasons.

SPEAKER_03 (16:05):
But uh, you know, brothers, everything comes from
Medina.
Medina got let me tell yousomething.
The great I'm not trying to shiton no other borough.
Don't don't hate me, don't comefrom my next.
But Medina brothers really,really have a strong passion and

(16:26):
and and really are creative, andthey they really love to share
their knowledge, they really do.
And and this ain't no like shadeor sarcasm, it's just my
perception.
Um so and it's coming from aplace of love, so don't come at

(16:46):
my neck, but yeah, they theycame from some brothers from
Medina.
Um and again, this is people'slevel of understanding because a
lot of Earths don't understandwhere they fit in in one's
winning.

SPEAKER_04 (17:07):
Right.

SPEAKER_03 (17:08):
A lot of a lot of Earths are so scared because
they hear these brothersspeaking this number, like
because I'm a social scientistby nature, right?
I was a case manager, I was amica, um, caseworker, mentally
ill, chemically addicted, was myum my clients.

(17:30):
Yeah, that's who I took care of.
So I see one twenty on a socialscientist level.
I don't see, I don't get caughtup in all of the historical
numbers and how these numbersrelate to that.

(17:51):
Like it's very fascinating, it'svery intriguing.
I have a lot of brothers thatare very proficient at.
I'll be like, wow, I neverthought of that.
Like I didn't even see how thenumbers to how tall Mount
Everest were that important andhow they correlate back.

(18:13):
Like I never thought of that.
Like, thank you for that, youknow.
Um, so a lot of women with thatbeing said now.
You got me thinking about MountEverest now, you gotta go build
with um the guy Cahim.

(18:35):
Okay, son's son.
He the one who gave me thatpeace guy.
Um, he the one who gave me thatjewel.
And um I didn't retain it.
I was just impressed.
I was very caught up in thewisdom, and I didn't retain it,
so I can't give it.

(18:58):
Um, but I know the point ofresource.

SPEAKER_05 (19:01):
Right, guys.

SPEAKER_03 (19:02):
Okay, yeah.
He's the he was uh my foundationfor that information, but um,
yeah, so like a lot of women getintimidated, and I really don't
I I get confused where thesewomen are so timid and so um

(19:31):
afraid to build in front ofbrothers, like you the earth,
like why why should you fearyour brother?
Like we family, like I know it'sembarrassing to say something
wrong or ask a question thateverybody knows, and you're the

(19:52):
only one that don't know.
It it feels funny, you know.
Again, we're family, and youshould you shouldn't be scared
or timid of your family.
The only one that should bescared and timid is the goddamn
fucking devil.

SPEAKER_05 (20:15):
Right, right, indeed, indeed.
So you we were talking about theearth lessons.
We're talking about the earthlessons and and where they came
from.
You said they came from Medina,and you were going you were
going down that path.

SPEAKER_03 (20:30):
Now, um Yeah, that's why they created them for those
women who were scared of quotingone's money, right?

SPEAKER_05 (20:40):
But from what I'm I'm learning is that um peace,
earth, from intelligent Raheem.

SPEAKER_03 (20:47):
Peace.

SPEAKER_05 (20:48):
Peace, peace, peace, God.
So um from what I've learned isthat all the earth don't
necessarily have to knowledge120.
However, I learned from thefirst podcast we did on 5%, on
the 5% nation from uh uh theGodborn Justice, he said it's a

(21:11):
requirement for all 5%ers.

SPEAKER_03 (21:14):
So, yes, um Firstborn Prince told me, you
know, a lot of brothers don'tlike to teach a woman 120
because they not show so theydon't want a woman checking
them, and he said it makes nodifference to me.

(21:37):
So firstborn prince 20, youknow, taught me 120.
Um, Allah's most precious jewel.
Um, she told me, you know, Allahgave her 120.
And you know, her feed in 120 iscompletely different from

(21:57):
anybody I ever heard build.
So I could say, I could say yes,it is a requirement, a mandatory
for all five percentages.
A lot of women in this culturesee themselves as Muslims

(22:19):
because only a only a Muslimsubmits to a law, and only a
woman submits to her man.
So this is the problem withbreakups and and um like the the
the little clicks.
That's what I mean by breakups,the clicks, right?

SPEAKER_05 (22:44):
Peace, shaborn intelligence, peace and gone.

SPEAKER_03 (22:48):
So um, this is where you get different clicks because
you have a lot of women runningaround with flags, they don't
even know who created the flag.
Um, and they running around withflags, and they don't know no
lessons, they barely knowmathematics.

(23:10):
Um yeah, yeah.
I've I've had sisters tell mestraight up, I'm I'm there with
that shit.
That's my God.
That's it.
That's it.
I'm here with that.
Uh-uh.
I remember an episode.

(23:31):
Yeah, I'm gonna call people outon this one.
Um, and whatever come come.
Remy Ma was on hot 97 withpapoose, and Charlemagne started
the bill with Pat.
And she was Remy's interceptorand was like, uh-uh, we ain't
gonna do all of that.

(23:52):
We're not talking like this iswhat happens when you don't
teach your woman, right?
Because then your woman doesn'tknow how to conduct herself
abroad, exactly.
The last degree tells you sheneeds to know how to act at home
and abroad, and abroad, becausethere's a difference.

(24:17):
Oh, yeah, for sure.
There's a huge difference, solike some brothers, some
brothers teach.
I forgot what they used to saythey would teach.
I know the one of the the lastdegree in the one of 14 was it,
it's like three degrees theyteach they women.

(24:39):
Maybe like that's all they needto know.
And that's you know, whateverworks in your household, I'm all
for it.
I'm all for black love.
You know, if if you know, I'mgonna say this.

(25:00):
It's nothing like having a manwith knowledge yourself, and
y'all know the same things.

SPEAKER_04 (25:09):
Oh man.

SPEAKER_03 (25:10):
Y'all have that has it that comes with a comfortable
quiet.

SPEAKER_05 (25:16):
Right, y'all just yes, y'all won at that point.

SPEAKER_03 (25:21):
Yes, indeed, yes, yes, and then as a woman, just
on a physical realm of being awoman, the excitement young man
has when he's teaching you andhe's showing you, and he's

(25:43):
letting you enter his world, andhe's being vulnerable.
Like as a woman, because I Idon't know what it is to be a
man, right?
As a woman, though, I see men asvery guarded.

(26:03):
So when a man shows me that partof himself, I feel privileged, I
feel like I'm in a place where Ihave been chosen, you know, I've
been qualified.
This is not for everyone.
So, yeah, that's that'sdifferent, right?

SPEAKER_05 (26:25):
So, so some women, so you would say uh I don't want
to put a figure on it, I don'twant to not a figure, I don't
want to put a percentage on it.
However, you've witnessed a lotof women not knowing lessons at
all.

SPEAKER_03 (26:42):
Okay, I think I know almost every sister that knows
120 in New York City.

SPEAKER_05 (26:54):
Wow.

SPEAKER_03 (26:56):
Okay, because in the 90s I was a real a-ho.
Uh, I was young, I was a reala-ho.
And if you didn't know lessons,I'm uh you wasn't, I I didn't
deem you like, and I was wrong.
I shouldn't, I was making devilwithout even knowing.

SPEAKER_05 (27:20):
Wow, so that's interesting you say that.
We're gonna we gotta unpackthat, but go ahead.

SPEAKER_03 (27:25):
Yeah, because when you separate yourself, you make
devil, it's that quick, right?
Hold on, my nose by me, and andI really wasn't I really wasn't
being a sister to a sister whoneeded a sister.

(27:49):
I didn't understand that.
I didn't have thatunderstanding, and um, now that
I'm older and I look back, I'mlike, damn, you was a real a-ho.
You know, you could have reallyembraced, but it is what it is.
That's how I think I know almostevery sister because I I

(28:12):
searched.
I was like, I can't be the onlyone.
Because Allah's most preciousJew knew 120, Queen Cypher knew
120, O Mala knew 120, um uhAjanine knew 120.
There was like the thefoundation of the original

(28:34):
sisters knew 120.
So I don't know when this uh Idon't know, you know, my God
don't want me quoting.
I don't know when that started.

SPEAKER_05 (28:52):
You know, that sounds right now.
I got I got some names here.
I want to know if you know thesenames.
Now, this is a tree, firstbornearth's tree, uh in Mecca.

SPEAKER_03 (29:05):
It's wrong.

SPEAKER_05 (29:07):
You think it's wrong?
Yeah, Makiba, Kenya, Omala,Ebony, uh, Omina, uh, Domina,
Odessa.
Those are the names I see here.

SPEAKER_03 (29:26):
Yeah, you see how Carmen's name ain't there.

SPEAKER_05 (29:30):
Yeah, no, no, Carmen.

SPEAKER_03 (29:32):
Yeah, Carmen's the first one.

SPEAKER_05 (29:36):
Carmen was the first one.
Oh, the bodhiqua, the bodhiqua,the bodhisqua you was telling me
about, right?
That was the first earth, yeah.
Right.
There's no oh wait, it does sayfirstborn's a Mecca though.
She's from Mecca, that's AbuShahis Earth, Abu Shahiz Earth.

(30:00):
Okay.
Nah, that's not there.
You do you recognize any any ofthose names?

SPEAKER_03 (30:07):
Yeah.
Omar's firstborn prince.
Um Kiba, I heard was super duperfire.
Yeah, I know that's rumor.
I told you it was rumor beforeyou read it.

SPEAKER_05 (30:29):
So is it is it wrong just because Carmen is not
there, or is it any more?

SPEAKER_03 (30:35):
The order is not a hundred percent.
Yeah.

SPEAKER_05 (30:42):
Maybe maybe maybe the way I was saying it.
So the or if we if we start fromthe root, it would start with
Odessa.

SPEAKER_03 (30:50):
Yeah.

SPEAKER_05 (30:51):
It would start with Odessa.

SPEAKER_03 (30:52):
It would start with Carmen.

SPEAKER_05 (30:56):
Okay.

SPEAKER_03 (31:02):
I think um, you know who's good at this, Taneta.
I'm not good at at these trees.

SPEAKER_05 (31:09):
Okay.

SPEAKER_03 (31:10):
I'm not, I'm I'm not even gonna lie, that's not my
niche.
Um, because I I I'm really notinterested in people that I'm
not engaging with.
That's me.
Like, if I didn't meet you and Idon't know you and I ain't been
with you, like I don't careabout your stories.

(31:35):
I don't even, yeah, I don't evenreally care about too much stuff
that happened in the 60s.
I'm not a history box, I'venever been.
Um I mean, there's certainpivotal things you need to know,
right?
You know, but as far as likelittle uh I don't really, you

(31:58):
know.

SPEAKER_05 (31:58):
Right.
Well, so let me just reiteratethat for uh for for the
listeners.
So this tree that I have, thefirstborn Ursa Mecca, the root
it starts with Odessa.
That's the first person, thesecond person is Dominya,
Domina, and uh the third personis omina, fourth, ebony, fifth,

(32:20):
omala, sixth, kenya, seventh,makiba.

SPEAKER_03 (32:28):
So we're just fire, and she knew 120.
All the original Earths knew120.

SPEAKER_05 (32:39):
Okay, right.

SPEAKER_03 (32:41):
All the all the old you don't start getting this
earth, don't know 120 to likethe late 70s and the 80s and the
90s.

SPEAKER_05 (32:54):
Right, okay.
I wonder what happened there,but I mean we weren't there, so
that's neither here nor there,right?

SPEAKER_03 (33:01):
Um, I mean, they still here, you know.
I don't I I be looking theearth, big headed brothers, uh
necessary for women.
Okay, I see that, yeah.

SPEAKER_05 (33:19):
But um, yeah, I am of um I am of the mind that the
earth just mentions seeing it asbeing beautiful when a woman has
the same knowledge as me, ofcourse.
However, I think God choosingwhat degrees, if any, and how
much degrees they give.

SPEAKER_03 (33:39):
Okay, so like um I I bug out, right?
I bug out, yeah.
I meet sisters, and they've beenhere forever, and they don't
know student enrollment, youknow, like I'm like, so what

(34:06):
have you been doing?

SPEAKER_05 (34:08):
All this time, right?

SPEAKER_03 (34:10):
Because you you be, and then you don't have history.
Like I take one or the other,you know.
If you don't know lessons, okay,because the law had um very five
percenters.

(34:31):
So all right, you don't know nolessons.
Cool, you don't know lessons.
You've been here from day one.
You helped lay the foundation,right?
Okay, give me some history.
Tell me some things I I haven'theard before.

(34:52):
Have me see something I neverthought about, you know.
Let me walk away from youfeeling enriched, empowered, you
know, like yes, that sister,like wisdom understanding.
I have a picture with her.
Pull that up.
Can you pull it up?

(35:14):
She has on um yellow.
Well, you know what wisdomunderstanding looks like.
I have on like a purple thing.
We standing up, we hugging.

SPEAKER_05 (35:25):
Hold on.
Let me.
Hold on.

SPEAKER_03 (35:39):
I only got three females.
I only got wisdom, cypher, andum the problem is the way I had
to download everything.

SPEAKER_05 (35:52):
You're gonna have to you're gonna have to get that
another time, but uh let me see.
Nah, I don't it's I only got onephoto.
One photo of an earth, you andthe earth.

SPEAKER_03 (36:07):
Let me see who you got.

SPEAKER_05 (36:09):
Let me see.

SPEAKER_03 (36:13):
Asian.
That's Asia me.
Okay, right.

SPEAKER_05 (36:18):
So who's Tarneta's mom?
Yeah, that's Tarnetta's mom,right there.

SPEAKER_03 (36:25):
She got the knowledge.
That's the first born earth inMedina.

SPEAKER_05 (36:31):
And she knows 120.

SPEAKER_03 (36:34):
Yeah, she knows 120.

SPEAKER_05 (36:36):
I need to I'm missing out.
Like, this is like this is likethis, yo, I'm missing out.
Yo, I see I'm working too much,man.
I need to start building withthe fam, yo.

SPEAKER_03 (36:52):
Yo, this is crazy.
Shit, I heard hey, I heard Iwasn't present, so I heard of
Ajamine calling a brother at aparliament a nickel.
Some shit, some shit like shutup, nickel, or yeah, Asian to

(37:19):
kick your ass all up and downwith 120, her 120.
Because she got her 120 in agroup setting.
See, I know a little bit moreabout Asian than other earths
because I'm with her daughtersand her ex-husband.
So I know a little bit about herfoundation more than any other

(37:45):
because of that.

SPEAKER_05 (37:48):
Yeah, tell us a little bit more about Asiamine.

SPEAKER_03 (37:53):
Ajamin was not to be played with.
She had solid, liquid, and gasesfor that ass.
Like Azamine, I never had anargument with a I've never had

(38:16):
an argument.
All the people I sent youpictures of, I never had a
dispute with them.
Um, you know, they got in my assbecause I was young and there
were things I didn't know.
Um, so yeah, they they taught mecorrectly, but um it was never

(38:42):
done in a way to belittle me orembarrass me.
It was always done with I'mshowing you what's right for you
to be greater than me.
Don't listen to me and try to beme.
I need you to be greater than Iever thought I could be.

(39:05):
So, yeah.
But I was talking about wisdomunderstanding because wisdom
understanding didn't teach 120.
Wisdom understanding toapplicable things, um doula,
right?
A lot of the earths that aredoulas are under wisdom

(39:27):
understanding tree.

SPEAKER_05 (39:29):
Wow, um, before hold that thought, hold that thought,
hold that thought.
We gotta do this every now andagain.

SPEAKER_00 (39:36):
Peace family, welcome to NYP Talk Show.
This is more than a podcast,it's a conscious platform rooted
in truth and culture from the 5%nation, nation of Islam, Moorish
movement, and masonry.
Our mission is to reclaim ournarrative and uplift the African
diaspora with real stories andreal conversations.

(40:00):
Support us through Super Chatduring live shows, donations on
Cash App, GoFundMe, Patreon, orBuzz Sprout.
And by repping our officialmerch, available on our website
and right here on YouTube'smerch shelf.
Every dollar, every super chat,every hoodie builds the

(40:20):
movement.
This is NYP Talk Show.

SPEAKER_05 (40:25):
Yeah, we back, we back, we back.
So now you you were saying, uh,yeah, go ahead.

SPEAKER_03 (40:31):
Wisdom, yeah, wisdom understanding um didn't teach
her female students months whenhe taught them applicable
science, like um being doula andhome remedies through herbs,
healing remedies, um, umpreventive.

(40:51):
You know, if you're alwaysputting this in your body, these
things won't happen.
Um so yeah, see, I don't mindwomen like that.
I love women like that.
Um you're an asset to thenation, yes, yes, but if you you

(41:16):
know just don't have nothing tooffer, I'm why am I socializing
with you?
Like my brain is butt so big,and why am I storving you, yeah?

(41:37):
Like, what am I making a filefor you for?
Like, what am I gonna do withthis data?
Right, absolutely.
So, yeah, like you're useful toyour God.
All praises due.
I love it.
I love black, I'm a fan of blacklove, so that's peace, that's

(41:59):
good.
You're not useful to me.
So I'm moving right alongbecause I was fine before I met
you.
You was great before you met me.
We continue, you know, notinteracting is not going to
destroy us, right?
Indeed.
We're gonna keep being who weare.

SPEAKER_05 (42:21):
So now I gotta bring this up because this brother I
used to see every time, notwell, not every time I was at
the law school or at aparliament.
In fact, I used to see him a lotwhen I went to a parliament,
right?
I know this brother right here.

(42:44):
From the martial arts from themartial arts world, yes, jujitsu
master.
Yes, yes, yes, nasty.

SPEAKER_01 (42:54):
Yes, nasty he taught me how to fight.
Wow, he taught me how to fight.

SPEAKER_03 (43:01):
Yeah, I know how to fight for him, and I took his
program and gave it a whole newname.
He loved it.

SPEAKER_05 (43:11):
He loved it.
I forgot the guards.
Is it Jamal, Jim, Jamel?

SPEAKER_03 (43:15):
Uh-huh.

SPEAKER_05 (43:16):
Jamel, right?
Jamal or Jamel?

SPEAKER_03 (43:21):
Jamel.

SPEAKER_05 (43:23):
Jamel.
Jamel.
This brother right here, nicewith his hands.
Every like he like if he wasalive right now, like he would
be like, yo, what you doingright now?
What you training?
What you like?
Every time I saw him, it waslike, yo, what you training on
now?

(43:43):
What you working on now?
I see, and then he would show mesome stuff.
I would, we would trade, wewould trade martial arts stuff
back and forth.
Uh-huh.
Good, good, good brother.
Always had a smile on his face.
Always had a smile on his face.
But you know, you had thispicture in there.
I was like, oh my God, man.
But what made you put?

(44:05):
Yeah.

SPEAKER_03 (44:06):
Yeah.
He gave me my first job.
He was the first person in thisculture to um give me a job and
train me.

SPEAKER_05 (44:19):
Wow.

SPEAKER_03 (44:19):
And he trained me for free.
I didn't pay.

SPEAKER_05 (44:23):
So what did because I know he was a jujitsu
practitioner.
So what did he show you?
Did he show you like Tai Sabaki?
Did he show you how to get outof holes?

SPEAKER_03 (44:33):
So he had a curriculum of um collective.
And what did he call this?
He called it.

(44:54):
I was like, why baby?
I got hands, shoulders, knees,and toes.
Stop playing with me.
And he fell out and loved it.
So that's what I call I forgotwhat he called it.
But um this picture right hereis his later years.

SPEAKER_05 (45:11):
This is why he was yeah.
This is his later years becausewhen he was younger, he was
built.
He wasn't brawling, but he waslike he was in shape shape.

SPEAKER_03 (45:21):
Yes, yeah.

SPEAKER_05 (45:22):
He was in shape shape.
So this is this is this is moreof a like a uh a re a recent
picture before he before he uhbefore he returned, yeah.

SPEAKER_03 (45:31):
Um I and I don't know why I don't have a picture
with him as much time as I yo.
Let me tell you something whenme, yo, this is a funny dude
right here.
So I had a God for like poweryears, right?
And he knew him, he knew a lotjust so he sees me in the 2000s,

(45:55):
and I'm not with the God nomore.
So I'm like, nah, me and theguard, you know, we broke up,
it's no big deal, you know.
Yo, he actually saw the God, hewas doing construction in Lower
Manhattan, and it just sohappened the guy was walking by,
he stopped working to run up tothe guard to curse the guard out

(46:16):
for breaking up with me.
Oh wow, and I don't know, Iwasn't present.
He never told me.
The only reason I know isbecause the guard called me, and
he was like, yo, you you toldJamal we broke because
technically me and the guardnever broke up.
We never said the don't call me.

(46:38):
We never had that, we justparted ways, and we come
together for reasons other thanphysical intimacy, you know?
That's always gonna be the God,you know what I mean?
He's never showed me any side ofhim that wasn't righteous, so we

(47:01):
always gonna be peace.
But Jamel, I don't know whatJamel told him, but it made the
God call me like the next day.

SPEAKER_05 (47:11):
But you know what?
He was just a good person,period.
Like he was dangerous, but agood, good, good, good God.
Like that was a good guard.

SPEAKER_03 (47:20):
Now his I I saw him after, and I was like, yo, you
could you he's like, Yeah,that's right.
How ain't the you know first?
Crazy brother.

SPEAKER_05 (47:32):
Now I gotta bring this picture up because um I
remember it like it wasyesterday, and I always bring
this up, and it's probably gonnabe like a broken record.
I was in front of our lawschool.
I think it was Dark Him in frontof our law school.
Doc Kim, if you see this video,and if I'm not writing exact,

(47:53):
please let me know as youusually do.
I asked Doc Kim about I wassaying I want to do a podcast in
our law school.
Doc Kim directed me in the lawschool, I I think to Umar Law.
I start building with Umar Law.

(48:16):
And and and Umar Law basicallygot me in to teach, not teach,
but have the podcast in the lawschool.
Now, what what what makes mewhat makes him stand out to me
is that he was real helpful andhe was just a good person.

(48:38):
He was just a good person,civilized, civilized.
You know, um when you whenyou're around him, no nonsense,
straightforward, that's it.
Nothing hidden, no hiddenagendas.
It is what it is, no barking, nothis is what you need.

(49:04):
If I got it, okay, here that'swhat it was, which now how you
see it.

SPEAKER_03 (49:12):
I mean, that's how it should be.
We should support one another.
And if something fails, weshould be able to be like, hey,
this is not working.
Let's shut this down, come back,take some time to yourself,

(49:33):
rebuild this thought, and comeback.
You know, and there should notbe no ego, uh-uh.
We should support, give theperson the opportunity and and
the uh the space, the timethat's required for them.

(49:54):
And if they shine, they bloomand blossom, they boot bloom and
blossom.
If not, hey, you only need it tobuild.
You gotta take it back toknowledge so that way you could
take it to boon on your nextattempt.

SPEAKER_05 (50:12):
Indeed, indeed.
So, what were your thoughts?
What what what were yourexperiences with umala?

SPEAKER_03 (50:19):
Oh my, I have so many wonderful memories with
umala.
Um, he gave me a reference so Icould start working because I
didn't have three references.
So um he was one of myreferences.

(50:43):
Um he was a supporter ofeducation, um uh just
everything, you know.
Just just I I thought Umala wasreal cool.
Um I never really saw him andPrince together.

(51:06):
Now that I think about it, Inever thought about that before.
I don't remember him and Princebeing together.
Um but um Umlaw, I I I love mesome Umala.
He was cool, he was good.
Um so it's funny how people aretreated when they're alive in

(51:38):
this culture versus when theydie.
All of a sudden everybody comeout of nowhere and be like, oh I
loved him.
That was my brother.
Like give people their flowerswhen they hear, they can smell
them.

SPEAKER_05 (51:54):
Right.
That's a fact.
That's a fact.
So now um we we're gonna we'regonna uh oh we're gonna continue
to build on uh how you how youwere taught the culture.
We're gonna do like a series ofthese because we gotta keep
building on this.
So now um let's talk about howwere you walked through 120

(52:20):
before we before we cut out.
Let's let's build on that realquick.
How would you walk?
If somebody says you gotta bewalked through 120, is that is
that someone standing over youmaking sure you know your
degrees, or how is it go?

SPEAKER_03 (52:38):
I mean that's that individual, whoever advocates, I
don't advocate that.

SPEAKER_05 (52:45):
Um you don't advocate people walking you
through 120.
No, so you say basically youhere's 120, you be you know,
quote that now.
How do you know the person knows120?
They gotta quote it in front ofyou.
The person you gave them thatain't my business.

SPEAKER_03 (53:09):
Okay, okay, that's not my business.
If you take this and turn itinto toilet paper, that's your
business.
What you do with this don't haveno but I gotta steal from Jay-Z.
What you eat don't make me shit.
Right.

(53:31):
I'm not here parenting you.
This is called knowledge ofself.
Know who you are.
If you can have the time and thediscipline to study these
lessons, to keep coming around,keep calling me.
You're supposed to be callingme.

(53:51):
Hey, I see this.
What does this mean?
What does this word mean?
What does this phrase?
Uh I memorize this, but I don'tsee anything, I don't feel any
different.
I don't, whatever your thoughtsare, it should be.
I'm not.
Why am I chasing you?

(54:12):
I know 120.
I know who the true end ofregard is.
I listen, in simplistic, I knowthe black man is God, I know the
black woman is the earth, I knowthe babies are the greatest, and
the white man is the devil.
That's all I need to know.

SPEAKER_05 (54:33):
That's about sums it up, right?

SPEAKER_03 (54:38):
So if you don't know that and you heard me and and
that intrigued you, then youshould be coming to me.
You should be going to theschool because I'm gonna direct
you.
Hey, 21, 22, 7th half.
That's where you need to go.
You got questions?
21 22 7th half.

(54:58):
Go there, go to the law schoolin Mecca, go.
There's good.
Um trust me, somebody is gonnabe there to entertain you.
Somebody, and if you're notcoming to parliament, you're not
going to the law school, youhave no initiative, you have no
love, you have no interest,you're faking the funk.

(55:22):
So I have no time for that,right?

SPEAKER_05 (55:28):
Right, right.
So basically, it'sself-knowledge.
You don't have to have nobody ontop of you riding you about
knowing the knowing the degrees.
You know what?
So I'm glad you said thatbecause what happens is every no
matter where I went, theydirected me either to the

(55:50):
minute.

SPEAKER_02 (55:54):
Yeah, they had a flood um in the bathroom.

SPEAKER_05 (55:59):
Hold on.
Yeah, so no matter where I went,I was always directed to the law
school, the parliaments, the thebasic standard places where gods
and earth would be, and thereyou socialize and you get all
the answers that you need.
You know what I'm saying?
So I totally get that.

(56:20):
Yeah, I hear you now.
Yeah, yeah.

SPEAKER_03 (56:22):
Hold on one minute.
I gotta tell somebody something.
Hold on one minute.

SPEAKER_05 (56:27):
All right, all right.

SPEAKER_03 (56:28):
Oh, they gotta, I don't gotta tell nobody nothing.

SPEAKER_05 (56:31):
Oh, okay.
I was about to go to commercialon them.
I was about to go to commercialon them.

SPEAKER_03 (56:39):
But yeah, I'm sorry for interrupting your bill.

SPEAKER_05 (56:44):
It's all good, it's all good.
So, yeah, um, so it it it makesa lot of sense.
Makes a lot of sense.
It makes a lot of sense, butdon't you think the way that
that style of of teaching or notnecessarily teaching or
maintaining the culture makes ita bit too loose where people get

(57:05):
lost and they don't know theykind of like you know, make
devil because they playing withthe teachings, right?
So they'll go, this is how Ilearn 120, I learned 120 on my
own, and then I mix and I dothis and I put this with this,
and then now you see that rightnow.

SPEAKER_03 (57:21):
We got people who are five percent and our masons
are bloods.

SPEAKER_05 (57:26):
No, I'm not talking about no, I'm not talking about
that.
I'm talking about they're taking120 or a law's teachings,
they're taking something else,and then they're blending it
like this.

SPEAKER_03 (57:38):
Yeah, yeah, I see that.
Listen, that's going on.
What they call themselves Muslimgods, right?

SPEAKER_05 (57:48):
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.

SPEAKER_03 (57:50):
So that goes on now.
That goes on now, but again, J ZLine, what you eat don't make me
shit, right?
What you do, you get the penaltyor the rewards for your actions,

(58:11):
right?
Ezekiel chapter three, right?
Right.
So once you know and understandwho you are, what other people
do, listen, what you do withthis has no bearing on my life.

(58:33):
Right.
I can't tell my landlord I knowour supreme.
And he, oh, you know oursupreme.
Oh, well, you ain't gotta payNovember rent.

unknown (58:46):
Right.

SPEAKER_03 (58:47):
That's that's not how the world works.
I supreme gotta walk into hisown knowledge.
Wise Asia has to be the bestwise Asia she can possibly be.

SPEAKER_04 (59:00):
Right.

SPEAKER_03 (59:01):
And and this is how we impact communities, and this
is they like y'all, them two arenot trying to sound like each
other, and they have a greatharmony, they come together with
what they know with their pastexperiences, they figure things
out together.
That's when people see thebeauty in socialization, and

(59:25):
that is what is attractive, notsitting there chastising
somebody and belittling.
That's unattractive, that'srepellent, that is
counterproductive to what thisnation is about.
You should have a place, whetheryou know one's funny or not, you

(59:47):
should have a place ofcomfortability and being who you
are.
For sure.
Yeah, whether you attract thecrowd or not, you there should
be a A place for you.

SPEAKER_05 (01:00:01):
Indeed.
Now, I don't mean to cut you,cut your wisdom.
Um, we got another podcastcoming up.
Let's keep doing this.
How was wise Asia taught 5%culture?
We're gonna keep building onthis.
On that note, thank thank you,Earth, for coming out this
evening.
Peace to the gods and the earthout there, the listeners on

(01:00:23):
Spotify, etc.
And we are out of here.
Peace.
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