Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Wake that ass up in the morning.
Speaker 2 (00:02):
Breakfast Club morning, everybody is d j n V just hilarious.
Speaker 3 (00:08):
Charlamagne the guy. We are the breakfast club along the
roaster feeling And for Jess, we got a special guest
in the building.
Speaker 2 (00:14):
Thanks, gentlemen. She's back, Miss Teslin figure Oh, welcome back.
Speaker 4 (00:16):
Hello, Hello, Hello, are you feeling good morning? Good morning?
Good morning? Lord?
Speaker 2 (00:23):
How are you feeling this?
Speaker 4 (00:24):
Feeling good? I am, I'm really feeling good. It's good
to be back back with family. Chopped up. Which y'all
drop some dimes, named some names.
Speaker 2 (00:30):
Okay, yeah, here to get well.
Speaker 4 (00:32):
We're dropping dimes on test, dropping downs on everybody from
top to bottom.
Speaker 2 (00:36):
Let's start right off with the president presidential election. Why
did V P. Harris lose?
Speaker 1 (00:41):
Oh?
Speaker 4 (00:42):
Man, I should have rolled my white board that many yeah,
that many yeah. And the reason why it's important, I
literally have my stuff in order because a lot of
people MV said, you know, she lost because of this reason.
She lost because of that. And it's really in the Midwest.
The tornado requires water, humidity, when you know multiple things,
(01:02):
it's not one reason. And when I hear people saying,
you know, oh, if he just did better, with the
messaging or if they did better with the media. I've
really kind of put together a list of flowchart on
how basically a colossal fuck up from top to bottom.
So you're doing, yeah, we're doing optops, we're doing to
pull out tops. So if we just really take it
from the top, as we all said, Joe Biden should
(01:24):
have never ran. We have to first, you know, start there.
Should have never ran. He said it was a one time,
it was gonna be a one term president. We talked
about it multiple times. He actually volunteered that life to say, hey,
I'm only going to run one term. I'm coming in
just to stop Trump immediately. Then they should have started
building a base immediately right out the gate. Trump was
still campaigning this entire time. We talked about it. We
(01:46):
talked about how it was constant rallies, constant organizing. You
and I talked about it on the Van Jones Show.
We're saying, you guys really have to continue the organizing
year round. And that's why I blame a lot of
the people at the top who have the ear of
the you know, of the candidates and Campaignton's because they've
been told this multiple multiple times so it should have
found a white man right then and there. Who was
going to be next in line to build a white man,
(02:07):
a white man, absolutely young white man, right then and there.
And it's not Governor Newso, by the way, a lot
of people keep saying that govern Newson will get swamped.
Speaker 2 (02:15):
So did think Kamala was gonna win? No, right at
the game? No, no, no, question's a black woman.
Speaker 4 (02:19):
Yeah, absolutely, so that that's number three. So let's first
get that. So they should have establish a bitch and
didn't do that. Governor knew somebody just want to put
that out there. A lot of people like him, great debater,
he would have got swamped. You have to remember he
literally passed to be O K through twelve to have
shared bathroom to a gender. So imagine what conservatives would
have did with that all over the nation, the homelessness
and all of that. So then, yes, number three, America
(02:43):
was not going to vote for a woman of color period.
And know, in the history of black women and white
women allyship a leeged allyship, I have never known a
white woman to give a job to a woman of
color before they got it. That includes even McDonald's on fries,
just not gonna have you ever if a white woman
ever said you know what, I think you're more qualified,
go ahead and take it. They didn't give it to
(03:04):
Hillary Clinton. They were not going to give it to her.
I know there was hope. I know you talked about,
you know, believing in us, but it was never about
us believing in us. It was about us knowing them.
It's not about being qualified. This was when it came
down to saying, they didn't give it to Hillary Clinton,
why would they give it to Harris? So that was
to me an era right out the gate. But we
(03:25):
had no choice because Biden.
Speaker 5 (03:27):
I think Kamalot as a black woman is the only
read well first of all two things the last two elections,
the Democratic Party need to be thinking black women, right,
because if it wasn't for Jim Clyde Burn telling Joe Biden, hey,
I'm not endorsing you unless you promise that you're gonna
put a black woman on the Supreme Court, I'm not
endorsing you. So that's what made him endorse Joe Biden.
He went South Carolina and changed the complexion of his campaign.
(03:48):
If it wasn't for Kamala Harris in twenty twenty I
think a lot of us wouldn't have went out there
and voted for President Biden.
Speaker 1 (03:53):
I didn' vote for Psident Biden. I voted Vice presid
Kamala Harss.
Speaker 5 (03:55):
I also think in twenty twenty four, when you look
at the fact that Joe Biden's presidency was dead, like
completely dead in the water, and Kamala Harris came to
the top of the ticket, raised all of this money,
ended up having the second most votes of any Democratic
nominee ever with seventy four million votes.
Speaker 1 (04:12):
I think that only happens because she's a black one.
Speaker 4 (04:14):
Well, two things can be true at the same time.
There can be some positives that came with that, but
there also can be some negatives. Where we look at
the data, we don't have to guess. We looked at
where white women aligned, We looked at where the Latino
community aligned. We looked at the bottom line data.
Speaker 1 (04:27):
This show Latino men was that was a surprise?
Speaker 4 (04:29):
Yeah, why was it a surprise? No, No, Latinos have
always fifty fifty. They've always When you look at one,
you know, I organized for the Bernie Sanders campaign in Michigan.
I was the only black woman on the ground in
twenty fifteen to helped lift that state. Latino community has
always been divided. When you look at Florida and you
look at the Cuban community, they've always went conservative. When
you look at the Bernie Sanders the left side the California,
(04:50):
they always go left. They have always strategied, and I
ain't mad about it. They've always strategically been able to
have leverage because they go fifty to fifty. You remember
when Joe Biden told black leaders when he won, right
after you said yeah, right in you said, I owe
you black people. Remember when they had the meeting and
they leaked the tapes in front of the Al Sharpton
and all them and say, y'all need to go follow
the Latino community because they're the ones that have the leverage.
So I'm not mad at it, but we need to
(05:12):
talk about it for what it is. There might be
a black and brown coalition in New York. You know,
I've talked about that all the time, but when you're
talking about the set that changed too, they're moving over.
When you talk about the South, when you talk about
the Midwest, and particularly when we talk about the West,
there is no black brown coalition and it's okay for
people to vote their interests. Also, got news for you,
black men are conservative. Doing my Joe Biden whisper black
(05:35):
people are conservative. I don't know why people want to keep,
you know, making that not an issue. So when you're
talking about black men and you're talking about other black
black people with a majority of the country in the South,
majority of moderate I know progressives want to sell a
different story. But black people, for the most part of
Martyr and a lot of them lean conservative. Were gonna
get into that when we get into the messaging. But
let's just kind of go back a little bit. I
agreed that there was some positives to it, but when
(05:55):
it came down to it, when we looked at race,
white women, to me, just like they did in the midterm,
just like they did when they were with Obama. Then
they went with Trump, and then they went back to
Democrats in the mid terms, and then they flipped back.
When you're talking about white supremacy and talking about positioning
like what they did with the women suffrage movement, I
just didn't see them doing it for a black woman
over them. They didn't do it with Hillary Clinton, the
(06:17):
only person that ever beat Donald Trump is Joe Biden,
and I agree with, but.
Speaker 5 (06:23):
White women voting for Clinton fifty five percent voting for Biden.
So the white women been showing out white women, White
women have showed three elections well.
Speaker 4 (06:30):
But but they were also comfortable with Joe Biden. Let's
remember Joe Biden is one of them.
Speaker 5 (06:34):
Let's go back to what fifty five percent of white
women voted for Trump over Biden.
Speaker 4 (06:38):
Right to align with white supremacy to a lot, because
this is about white supremacy. This is about would they
rather have their household ahead of you as as a
black man, their husbands. That's exactly something's wrong and people
need to stop these pundents. Get them another They went
against their own interest. No, their interest is their household.
Your interest is your interest. My interest is my interest.
When I keep hearing people say that they went against
(06:59):
their own interests, no, they've actually aligned with their interest,
which is white man, white woman, black man, black woman.
That's the order, that's how it is. Black people on
the side, check bottom line. We need to just accept that.
I know we want to say black girl, imagine over,
we want to say oh, because black this and that
black women can't save this country. We need to stop
selling that dream. Let's get in position and understand what
we can do, which is why I was talking about
(07:19):
the local and state level, and stop trying to sell
this timeshare scam because to me, it was a timeshair scam.
I agree with you that there was really no other
choice because Joe Biden was trash. We get that he
was trash. So once they said, okay, let's rally around Harris.
Now she's a Democratic nominee. Okay, so cool, we're with that.
Black women raised thirty million dollars after Gate. Black men
raised thirty million ours Gate. So now we're having to
(07:40):
deal with who dropped this bag? Who dropped this billion
dollar bag? And that's the issue when we get into
how they spent the money. I didn't think she had
a chance in hell. But once you decided to move forward, okay,
so what do we do with the money? Black voters?
They lost Black voters across the board. That across the
board makes a difference when you're talking about Michigan, makes
a difference in North Carolin. So that's where we're getting
(08:01):
to your concern where you talk about messaging, where the
messaging was all wrong.
Speaker 2 (08:05):
I want to ask you about the money.
Speaker 3 (08:08):
Is it normal for candidates to give so much money
to quote unquote entertainment when you're seeing that they paid
this person to speak and this person to have that back.
Is that normal when it comes to politics?
Speaker 1 (08:19):
Who did they pay to speak?
Speaker 4 (08:20):
Though?
Speaker 2 (08:20):
Well, allegedly, we'll say any people speak, you.
Speaker 4 (08:22):
Get to pay the speed. But the money that it
took to get the set up, the advanced team, the entertainment.
So let's go back a little bit. One hundred days
was impossible even for a white man. In my opinion,
I just want to go back to one hundred days.
Running a campaign was damn near impossible for anybody in
particularly a woman of color. So now we're in this
one hundred day thing. In order to get people to
come out, we do use entertainers, and I push back
(08:45):
on people say don't use entertainers. It's important killer Mike
talks about it all the time. We need entertainers to mobilize.
When you're trying to get that standfield the twenty thirty
thousand people, you have three days to do it. We
actually need our entertainers. The problem, though, env is the
entertainers not necessarily being aligned with organizers on how to
use their voice throughout the year. I would love to
see pliers like work when an organizer throughout the year,
(09:06):
not just election season, so that we can continue to
have this conversation. So I don't want to shit on entertainments.
We need them. But when you have one hundred days
and you're spending more on entertainment setups and not on
the ground, and you have organizations like until Freedom to
make the matter they got and again we can look
at the numbers. The numbers are available online, guy, So
this ain't making it up. When you're giving organizations like
(09:26):
that one hundred and fifty thousand dollars and telling them
we'll make it do what to do, that's a problem.
No war is won by just the air force. I'm
an Air Force veteran. You need the air force. Yes,
you need the big entertainers, you need the media, you
need the podcast that's the air. But you also need
the ground, you need marines, and you need the army.
And they bottom line, took black voters for granted, like
we've been talking about for years. They figure, well, you
(09:48):
know she's black, so that'll be fine. They literally shit
it on organizations one hundred year organizations got seventy five
thousand dollars, one hundred thousand dollars. One hundred black men.
I believe they got like seventy five thousand, hundred thousand dollars.
So what is that saying on how you're trying to organiz,
you know, with black men. So that's an issue when
we talk about this billion dollar back, and not just
because of now envy, but also the infrastructure that we're
(10:08):
trying to build. So midterms in March, and I'm independent,
so I'm just giving you know what it looks like
to build this house. You need this money flowing year round.
They're trying to build now. So your opponent is over
building a house with adding on, swimming pools, adding on garages,
adding on all this and then they come give the
money two three weeks before the election is over. Before
the election, Black organizations did not get money until three
(10:31):
weeks before. Literally they told the churches, yeah, nothing they
can do with it, and then saying we're here, go
two hundred thousand dollars. Make a doe to do. And
what I found this time is the gatekeepers got gate
kept because the streets was never getting the money. So
when they were calling me dropping dives, hot tests, and
we only got these only at that last time, we
got a lot of money. I said, I'm here to
tell the streets and never got any of it. But
now as the gatekeepers got gate kept for the first time,
(10:53):
Derrick Johnson literally calling out the campaign in an article saying,
you guys are not spending money with black media. You're
not money on the ground. We are literally starving. Most
of these organizations had to use this money on their own,
and that makes a difference when you're talking about getting
out the vote.
Speaker 2 (11:08):
Trump didn't use his money as much for entertainers.
Speaker 4 (11:11):
No, he didn't at all. Well, he doesn't get a
lot of earned media get a lot of earn men. Also,
Trump has been organizing and he's never stopped for ten years,
non stop. When you have a rally every month, when
you're engaging people every month, when he's using social media,
when he's using truth, he's okay, Twitter, you don't want
to work with me, cool, I I'll just go start
my own. He has a non stop organizing machine that
(11:33):
democrats just don't do. They don't develop those relationships. They
come in, Okay, we got six months, let's make it
do what to do. So this is the result, and
so people can say, well, that's just ten percent, that's
just one percent, But when you add up those numbers
across the board, it makes a difference. And I also
want to say this, Black Conservitives, I want us to
have more leverage. I also want us to have more
positioning within the Republican Party if you're going to move
(11:54):
over to the Publican side, whereas our leadership, you.
Speaker 2 (11:57):
Know, when it comes to that, she run again? Can
Kamala Harris run again?
Speaker 1 (12:00):
Let's get through our points.
Speaker 6 (12:04):
Way before you go to the next thing. I have
a question because it's about what you're talking about. So
you saw Candis Owens going back and forth Miss Tina
knows about Beyonce and Beyonce being involved in the rally
in Houston to the point that Cannis was making it's
kind of what you're saying. Do you think that how
do you utilize a major celebrity like a Beyonce because
she's not going to be on the ground, and what
(12:24):
should Kamala Harris's campaign have done better utilizing a big
celebrity of that nature, because she's getting dragged for it
because they're saying it looks unauthentic, and Cand's owns is
saying it looks unauthentic and this is why you didn't win.
But Beyonce is not going to be outside like you
get what I'm saying.
Speaker 1 (12:40):
Like they filled the stadium in Houston to Beyonce.
Speaker 4 (12:44):
Yeah, you have to feel the stadium. And I'm an
organizer first before I'm a pundits. So when we use
people like that to tell Hooy never knocked on our doors,
I kind of discredit what they're saying. She has to
find talking points to talk about her opponent, period, point blank.
When it comes to Canis owns, I use Killing Mike
as an example. You know our brother Killer Mike. He's
an organizer first. He's always been an organizer before he
was a rapper before, Daniels says, he's an organizer. So
(13:06):
when you go to Atlanta, Georgia, and you don't call
Killer Mike to take you to the same spots that
they took, the same Chick fil A that they took
Trump to, the same the West side of Atlanta had
zero signs on the ground. When you don't utilize a
Killer Mike. They got barbershops all throughout Atlanta, and he's
literally made himself available.
Speaker 5 (13:25):
You could have been sitting in a bank HC Food
right by the way. And to Ted's point, Killer Mike
did make himself available.
Speaker 4 (13:31):
He made himself a fact. This is a fact. And
you shit on that and you think that's not important.
When an organizer who literally has him and Tip has
literally put mayors in office, that's telling me how you
feel about your black outreach. Oh, they'll just do it
because she's black. Well, I got news for you. The
black vote went the opposite direction. It went the opposite
direction because people are getting tired of being taken advantage of.
(13:53):
They're being tired of not having this conversation year around Charlemagne.
And so when you guys did I'm just gonna go
ahead and say it. When you did the thing in Michigan, Yeah,
Zeke new Ara of Detroit sitting right there in the things.
I asked them, Hey, campaign have reached out toll you
me laughing, said no, he said none. To me. You
can't organize in Detroit and not think you need to
(14:14):
talk to a Zeke or a new Ara of Detroit.
That man not only is organized in Detroit, all over
the country. So when you think that people are just
going to do it just because thirty three percent of
Detroit is living below the poverty line. So what is
that telling you? You had Rashida to leave, who organized
the Arab American community that literally voted for Trump. Literally,
Dearborn voted for Trump. And then you had the black
(14:36):
vote that was depressed, meaning just not even interested, saying
fuck it, you know the government, it's hurting my pocket.
Speaker 1 (14:42):
Voted for Trump.
Speaker 4 (14:43):
Dear Born. Well, you know they had the one hundred thousand.
They had one hundred thousand people go to the point,
this ain't being talked to about enough. One hundred thousand
people went to the polls to say we are uncommitted.
Remember she just sleep literally did a video and said,
Joe Biden, we ain't fucking with you until there's a ceasefire.
We ain't fucking with you. That was doing the primary.
Your number one opponent was a Democrat elected official in
(15:08):
Michigan that was literally basically telling voters sort to sit
out and had them go to the polls to vote
I am uncommitted. So that same Dearborn, which she represents,
she represents Detroit as well, Dearborn voted for Trump. You
look at that, you look at the two three percent
of of the black votes. They couldn't get out of Detroit.
(15:28):
So now you're talking about how you can win Michigan.
Those are the things, you know, the people are not
looking at. And Michigan had a lot of leverage, but
he won all swing states, you know, so it wasn't
just Michigan. But that's a real problem. You got black
people starving in Detroit. You got Dearborn asking for ceasefire.
You got the labor union and this is how we
won Michigan with Bernie Sanders. You got the labor union.
They won't strike all last year and the year before that,
(15:50):
so those people were pissed. You have the college students
who were also pushing you know, anti war and removed
college debt was an issue. So those four or five
constituents in Michigan made the difference on why you lost.
So it was a number of things, you know, it's
not just one thing over the other. It's a number
of things.
Speaker 6 (16:06):
I know.
Speaker 4 (16:06):
The podcast was important. It is important to have podcasts.
It is important to be able to reach thirty million
people at one time. But if you're doing that and
you're telling organizations like Until Freedom are organization similar that
here go one hundred thousand, and you need to go
to seven states and make it work. When you have
the Church of God in Christ. Think they got one thousand,
two hundred thousand and said, hey, go go make a
do what to do? It was impossible?
Speaker 5 (16:26):
You know what I'd like to see. I agree, you know,
I think you got to hit them both right. You
got to have a ground game, man, you got to
have a mean digital game. I would like to see
some of the grassroots activists on the ground. I would
like to see them start adapting the social media as well,
because I feel like those organizations need it.
Speaker 4 (16:42):
Yeah, for sure, the partnership. It's not just you know
one thing. I think a report today said one in
every three people get their news with social media. I
think it's actually higher than that. So we're not partnering
in social media and having that ground game to be
you know, to double it up. It's dead in the water.
But you still have to have people knocking on those doors.
(17:02):
And bottom line, they should have just bought boats at
this point when you got one hundred days, some of
these nonprofits that are out here, somebody in Detroit, you
could have funded them. You could have the same way
Trump had Kwame Kapatrick, you know, the same way they
had Harry O. People, Oh what Harry Old doing? That
make a difference. So people was looking for partons in
clemencies and all that Democrats have pardoned far more than
Republicans have. I asked Governor Westmore, why are you not
(17:24):
talking about I think it was what close to two
hundred thousand people that he partoned for marijuana. Why are
y'all not talking about that? Why is that not something
y'all talking about? So when Trump brings a trick trick
from Detroit and people don't shave room, Who's trick trick?
Speaker 6 (17:36):
Oh?
Speaker 4 (17:36):
No, where is Detroit?
Speaker 1 (17:37):
No?
Speaker 4 (17:37):
Damn well, who trick trick is? So when people see that,
they're like, well, shit, I don't know what to believe
that one two percent of falling off makes a difference.
Trump capitalized on the lost man, something I've been talking
about for fifteen years straight, the hood, which were the
lost man, men who felt like they were not being heard,
people who felt like they were not being understood. Again,
I'm talking to civic about black people. I'm not talking
(17:59):
about this working ass because that translates to white working class.
I'm talking about black people who felt like they were
not being heard, were not being understood, and Trump capitalized
on that. People asked, oh, why did he use Ambrose? Well,
guess what she's from where?
Speaker 2 (18:12):
Right?
Speaker 4 (18:12):
That's a swing state, So you don't have to like
his shave room. But that was very strategic. It made
sense to have ice worar Vesso, you know in Detroit,
even though in the shave room, who is he? I
don't know? He is Detroit. That one or two percent
made a difference. Why didn't you reach out to Kawomei
Capatrick because he a fela? Is that why you don't
think it was important to at least, if nothing else,
minimize your enemy. There's two things you do in a campaign.
(18:34):
Minimize your enemy, maximize your friends. You didn't even reach
out to that man for a conversation. Whether you like
what he did in Detroit or not, the man still
was elected, His mama was elected. He comes from a
very long lineage you know of folks in Detroit, and
I think that's even it's worth having the conversation. So
Trump was able to appear as if he was one
of them, which he was not. By the way, he's
a white man who obviously, if black man could have
(18:56):
never gotten away with what he got with the Fellas,
but he was able to appear as if he was.
He was able to appear that connection. Why didn't they
talk about what Governor Newsom did in California removing the
gang enhancement, removing the gang INHS you got homies who
are literally getting on the yard for the very first time.
If you do the crime due to time, no problem
with that. But in California, most people are affiliated with
the gang just by based on where you live. So
(19:17):
Governor Newso has passed great legislation that has allowed people
to come home, that has allowed people to actually get
on the yard for the very first time. I got
ten thousand homies right now in LA that were organized
for the next governor just based off that one thing.
They didn't talk about those things envy because they sit
in this elitist positioning, you know, of let's just not
talk about that, you know, let's just fell let's go
(19:38):
hide and go low. And Trump was able to capitalize
on that. That made a difference when you're talking about a
ten percent Yeah, I think.
Speaker 5 (19:42):
I think it's hard for them to capitalize on something
like the new some thing because it is something that's
regulated to California. Like the first step back was a
federal a federal law that people act that. He did
a phenomenal job of showing, look, I bought this person home,
and I bought that person home, and like there was
other people on social media that would talk about, ma'am,
my people just came home because of the first step back.
I actually think the first step back people don't really
(20:04):
credit that enough. They want to talk about stimulus checks
and PPP loans. But when you can actually see one
of your homies come home from prison, that's a big deal.
Speaker 4 (20:14):
Yeah, and we saw what happened in real time. But
I just wanted to push you back Libit on how
you capitalize against that, How you can capitalize when you
look at what Governor Moore was able to do the
federal when they took the federal for the marijuana.
Speaker 1 (20:27):
Yeah, simple possesson marijuana.
Speaker 4 (20:28):
You show the connection. So yes, that was federal, right,
but Governor Moore was able to actually utilize that. Without
that federal partnership, it wouldn't have happened. So it does
trickle down. But the Democrats never connect the dots to
show you this is how it actually works. Federal was
able to help the state. State was able to have
the local and so on and so forth. So there's
ways to do it. They just don't do it, Charlemagne,
(20:49):
because they feel as if, you know, let's focus on
these imaginary voters. Let's spend all this money on white women.
Let's spend all this money on Yeah. So Trump was
able to capitalize on that. Just another Remember this is
about margins in the swing state. So when you got
one or two percent that's saying I'm sitting on the couch,
or one or two percent of saying I'm going in
a different direction, it makes a difference.
Speaker 1 (21:11):
Oh yeah, especially when you look at the election.
Speaker 5 (21:12):
I mean, I think what Trump had seventy six point
one million votes, Harris had seventy four and it's just
all those margins. She lost by the margins in a
lot of those swings seats.
Speaker 6 (21:20):
So what you think about Trump's cabinet, and I it's
his choices for his cabinet right now, because I mean,
these are the people that are gonna have to be Yeah.
Speaker 4 (21:26):
I don't think nothing. I think Republicans, ran Democrats, ran
is gonna be a dictator. Guess what they want a dictator.
We've been saying this forever. We've been talking about this
day of bipartisanship, and let's just get it through Congress,
we said, Charlotmane. You know I said a many times,
like with the the George Floyd to Act reducing college debt,
(21:46):
do an executive order. Everybody said, you can't do executive order.
You gotta go through Congress. Republicans are gonna change it back.
If you get in, they're gonna change it back. Guess
what Republicans don't give them about changing the back? They
changed backro versus. What about changing back a whole bunch
of shit Obombacare and everything else. Democrats refue use to
work as a dictator. They want a dictator. Everybody's saying,
oh man, he's gonna be a dictator, right, that's why
(22:06):
they want. Oh, yes, he's gonna take migrants out. Yes,
that's what they wanted. People need to stop saying that
online is driving me crazy. Oh latinos, oh man, oh man,
y'all about to see. They want the immigrants, people who
are legal, who will coming up to the country legal.
They are literally telling you, Yes, we do. We don't
support illegal immigration. So people they're thinking they're saying something
on social media, y'all gonna see No, they want a dictator.
(22:28):
The Democrats ran on democracy, they ran on dictators. Shall
gonna be a dictator day one? That's exactly what they want,
a dictator. Somebody's gonna push the line, somebody't gonna give
DMN back what Congress is talking about. Somebody just say
I don't I don't care what the rules are. I'm
gonna do what I want to do. They want a
gangster period.
Speaker 1 (22:43):
Yeah, I agree with that.
Speaker 5 (22:44):
I wouldn't say dictator, but they want somebody that don't
give a fuck, and it's going.
Speaker 4 (22:47):
To He said he was gonna be a dictator on
day He said.
Speaker 1 (22:50):
That on day one.
Speaker 5 (22:50):
But I think what people mean when they say they
just want somebody that's gonna say, you know what, as
long as things are getting done for the people, I
don't care how it gets done. Like John Stewart did
a great break monologue last night, and he was just
like Democrats always follow the norms and Republicans don't follow
the norms.
Speaker 1 (23:06):
They gonna find those loopholes to break.
Speaker 4 (23:08):
Which is kind of like dictatorship. Though he said he
gonna do what he want to do.
Speaker 2 (23:13):
That's what politically, you ain't gonna play us.
Speaker 4 (23:16):
So I mean, that's saying I'm gonna do this, and
if you don't do it, it's gonna be hell to pay.
If you don't do it, you know, I'm gonna make
sure you don't win. If you don't do it, I'm
gonna call you out. We talked about this with Joe Manchin.
They let they set up. Now, Joe Manchine, see this
to a Republican. We've been talking about this. This has
been going on for the last fifteen years. This loss
was not just what happened in the last one hundred days.
This has been at least from my experience two thousand
(23:38):
and seven. I can name year over year over year
on what what happened, on how we got And then
another thing I wanna bring up on this messaging abortion.
Democrats ran on reproductive rights and democracy failed right out
the gate. You had states like Arizona in the bottle
that had abortion on the ballot. So democrats mindset is,
let's put abortion on the ballot and that's gonna bring
(23:59):
you know, so people know, get out to vote. Gotv
that's how you get out to vote. Oh, they're going
to go to the polls now that abortion is on
the ballot. Well, Wich, you did meet ballhead. You actually
allowed Republican women who were pro choice to actually vote
for abortion and still vote for Trump. There's no rule
that says if you support pro choice that you won't
vote for Trump. So Republican women in Nevada and Arizona
(24:23):
literally have the opportunity to bring abortion back and still
vote for Trump. So Democrats shot themselves even in the
foot if you were expecting women to go vote for
reproductive rights because you gave them an out, and then
that was a mistake out the gate. Look at Michigan, Michigan.
You can get an abortion in Michigan, So that gonna
land anywhere. I know people want this idea, especially black voters.
Coul We like to take care of everybody and old
(24:45):
what about them in Texas? But the average person is
voting their personal interest, that's it. And if I could
get an abortion in Michigan, wou't matter to me if
you get it in Arizona or Nevada or whatever it was.
So when you're running on reproductive rights, which I think
was a mistake, and just the Marracy people didn't give
a damn about democracy we're talking about when I was
sitting in twenty eighteen, those first question you asked me
(25:05):
out the gate, what do people think about say the
don't give it down his whiteo's Whitehe don't give it
about no insurrection. They'll do it again. This is what's
been happening in this country four hundred years. So the
messaging was wrong at the gate. We talked about that,
not running, on the economy, not running. But I still
think though even if she should have ran on all
of those things, they still was gonna vote for. They
still would have rather voted for Joe Biden have dead
weekend at Bernie's.
Speaker 5 (25:26):
You know, they.
Speaker 4 (25:28):
Didn't even win Scranton. They didn't even win Scranton. Joe
at least won sprinting. Harris lost Scringt.
Speaker 1 (25:36):
I think I think Joe would got like sixty five million.
Speaker 6 (25:39):
Book said, Okay, So, if if what you're saying is true,
what was all because I felt how you how you
feel now, It's how I felt in the beginning, and
then when I saw the excitement and the money moving and.
Speaker 4 (25:47):
All of that got a chance.
Speaker 6 (25:49):
Yeah, what was all of that then?
Speaker 4 (25:53):
I didn't think it was but.
Speaker 1 (25:57):
Doing anything. We're not giving you no more money.
Speaker 4 (25:58):
Joe have no choice, that's right, yea. So let's be
clear they did not have a choice because George. Yeah,
they said they didn't have no choice. So two things
to be true. At the same time, they had to
put Harris in no doubt about that. I'm not disagreeing
with that, but I still don't think they would have
voted for her. They just wouldn't. They're just not going
to give something that they didn't get. First. Did she
do the best that she could? Yes? Did she do
everything they told her to do? Yes? Did she have
(26:19):
one hundred days to do it?
Speaker 6 (26:20):
Yes?
Speaker 4 (26:20):
This is not about shitting on her. This is about
setting up a woman to fail in one hundred days
to do the damn near impossible. I think Joe Biden
should have took that l. He's the one that said,
you know, he was gonna run. He's the one that
set up there the entire time. They didn't build the bitch,
let him take the l. Why now are you putting
it on that Yeah? I thought it was like the friendly.
Speaker 2 (26:52):
Cana. Would you advise her to run again because.
Speaker 4 (26:55):
It's again we gotta stop with I don't know what
this subsession we got with federal I'm gonna keep push that.
Let them have it. Let's talk about especially Republicans now
saying give it to the state if you really want
to make real change in your community. I know it's
not as sexy. I know it's not as exciting, but
it really is at the state level. It really is
at the local level. If you believe in you want
to fund the public schools, you can do at a
(27:17):
local level. You say, you know what I want, charter schools.
I want to be able to educate our own You
can do that at the local level. Why are we
so infatuated with this White House. I don't get it.
Why not be an Atlanta council with sixteen other people
in Orlando with six other people to be able to say,
I'm gonna write a check to the Black Business Investment Fund,
you know, to be able to say, hey, here's some
money to go start a business. You can pass reparations
(27:37):
at the local level. So I don't understand this obsession
that we have with this federal thing. And I'm gonna
be honest with you, Lauren. Black women, a lot of
times we get caught up and it's wanting to be validated,
so damn bad. So when the excitement was there, when
everybody's like, oh man, we can do this, we can
do this. Black girl masage, we do this, we can
do this.
Speaker 2 (27:53):
Do this.
Speaker 4 (27:54):
Validation of needing to be affirmed, need to say you
are qualified enough, you are good enough. A lot of
that played into it. A lot of that played into it.
But let's not forget three thousand black women did a
petition and said, Joe Biden, keep your ass in. They
ignored that and went with the money. To Charllet Mane's point,
they didn't have a choice.
Speaker 1 (28:13):
I agree with you, especially about the state thing.
Speaker 5 (28:15):
You know, there's something else Trump said that man landed,
and I was I'm still trying to figure out how
did he land this because it's so hard to get
people to focus on this the abortion thing, right, He
told them I wanted to be in the hands of
the state. So whenever you would have conversations with people about,
you know, abortions on the ballot, they'd be like, no,
Trump just wants it to be in the hands of
the state. I've never seen a politician convinced people on
(28:35):
a national level it's going to be local and that's fine,
and they buy into it.
Speaker 4 (28:41):
Well, Trump can get anybody to buy anything he say.
I mean, he's a total man. Press have never been
equipped to run against Trump. Let's just name it. You know,
they've never been equipped to run against them. He's too petty,
he goes too low, he don't give a damn what
y'all talking about the entertainer first, and so they've never
been equipped to go against this man. Never. But to
your point, charlemage is for those that understand the states' rights.
(29:03):
And when you go back to Reagan, the reason why
black people are again said, is because what it does
is to disenfranchisse, disenfranchisse, It disenfranchise us even more so
if you're saying, Okay, in Oklahoma, you can't get access
to health care, but you can get access to healthcare
in California. Very liberal. These are folks that can't just
pick up, you know, and go to California to get
(29:25):
what they need, don't have the money, So it affects
poor people in a very bad way. The states' rights,
but conservatives, they like states give it to the states.
Their mindset if you don't like it, move somewhere else.
But none of us had not enough of us have
the resources to just move, you know, to somewhere else,
to just move where things you know may be favorable
to you. So as black voters were always trying to
carry the lease of these and everybody else and think
(29:46):
about everybody else. But the reality is, Charlemagne, people are
only looking at what's in front of their doorstep. And
if I can do X y Z in Michigan, if
I can have a successful business with zero regulations in
Atlanta when cod it happened, when Governor Camp, you know
a lot of we don't like Governor Camp, but Atlanta,
Atlanta was still thriving. Black business was still thriving. Georgia
(30:07):
was still thriving. So when people look outside their door,
when remember when the Santas reduced the gas, when they
was talking about you can't do nothing about the gas
when gas was so high, he said, oh no, I
can do something about it. This is why I talking
about state. So when people remember that, even though there's
more liberal, more Democrat voters in Florida, people remember what
affected their pocket and that Republican governor made a difference
Kemp and Georgia made a difference was passing out Kemp cards.
(30:29):
He did the same thing Trump did when he signed
his name. He gave them Kemp cards. People remember that.
So you can have a state with a republic Democrat
governor like North Carolina, but they still went with Trump
because they're looking at how does it trickle down. You
can have a state that flipped and went blue, but
have a governor Kemp who's a Republican. People like their governors.
(30:51):
People don't have to like Texas. You don't have to
like Texas in New York, but your money gonna go
far in Texas as any felon in Texas they working
in oil fields. Eighteen dollars is now twenty five dollars
an hour, thirty dollars an hour. That makes a difference.
So even if they don't like Republicans, even they don't
like Trump, when you're looking at how that affects your
money daily, it makes a difference. And that's where they
lost as far as really trying to understand, you know,
(31:11):
the economic conversation, especially with black people.
Speaker 1 (31:14):
What else we got on the list because I know
you've got some money.
Speaker 4 (31:16):
I got a lot on the list. I kind of
want to just deal with Michigan quickly because I do
have some concern with that. I mentioned Rashida Talied, and
I'm not mad about you know how she was able
to organize her voters, but I do have some concern
for Detroit. I do feel as if Detroit does not
have the voice that they should have. That Rashida Sali
(31:40):
was able and she should I think she she went
hard in the paint for she's a Palestinian woman. I
expect her to. I have no issue with that, but
I do feel like Detroit kind of got crashed out
a little bit that there's not representation. Detroit is one
of the blackest cities in the country, and so when
you had a few enough to say, you know what,
but I just don't want to be a part of
(32:01):
the process anymore. And that entire conversation was on GAZA,
and I know there's a talking point of progressive is
going to come in and tell you that the polls
say that black people are concerned about GAZA, and yes
we are, we do. We are very compassionate. But if
you ask the average black person, Black American on what
they're most concerned about, they're talking about again their own
front door. They're more concerned about what's happening here over
(32:23):
what's happening in geopolitics right, so to be able to
be to be a single issue vote. I don't have
no problem with Rashida to lead, none at all. But
when you have three black women who ran against Rashida's
leave in twenty twenty two, all three of them combined
still didn't have even half of rashida to leave passed.
So she has the votes, she has the power. But
I feel Detroit is not getting there, just doing at
(32:44):
least being a part of the conversation, and I hope
that changes what she got on that list. I think
that's it list you. I've got some nails with that
to go over.
Speaker 1 (32:51):
You know. I wanted to ask you about Hakeem Jeffreys.
Speaker 5 (32:53):
Hakim Jeffrey said this week that he sees he says
Democrats are set up for a major comeback.
Speaker 1 (33:00):
You think that's possible.
Speaker 4 (33:01):
What's the comeback? Let me let me know you come back.
What's the comeback?
Speaker 6 (33:06):
I've never seen that that mixtape, but they still do
it anyway, and then they don't could.
Speaker 4 (33:09):
I don't think so. I don't think first of all,
and I forgot. I want to name a couple of
names because a lot of people ain't name the names.
I do encourage people to go look at that list.
And the two names that kept popping up over and over.
Quentin no dispect. I've never met him, you know, but
he was in charge of the bag. And also Cedric Richmond.
Now you remember when Cedria Richmond came on the Breakast
Club and said hold him accountable. Remember that.
Speaker 5 (33:28):
In a couple of years I've been I don't even
listen to after when Cedric made that statement on Breakfast
Club and said, hold him accountable. If anything doesn't go
to way it's supposed to go in to buy an administration.
Speaker 1 (33:38):
And then he just disappeared. He left his position. We
didn't even know he left his position. I don't I
ain't pay static no attention.
Speaker 4 (33:46):
Well he literally told Grassroot Organization, y'all just want the
money to just say that. Yeah, we're saying that where's it,
And I'm saying it's completely I didn't ask for no check,
don't want no check, not interested no check. I was
telling you what the people said, you.
Speaker 1 (33:55):
Ain't get none of the million.
Speaker 4 (33:56):
I don't, but they told Black.
Speaker 6 (34:02):
People like the money, don't like like you need money
for things like why is that such a like a
falsehood or something.
Speaker 4 (34:08):
Like, Well, no, they know they they got it and
just didn't come to black folks.
Speaker 5 (34:11):
It didn't go.
Speaker 4 (34:13):
Yeah, Sharp didgets We got five hundred thousand. Yeah, Roland
got his ship too. Roland, what's having Roller? Can let
me hold something?
Speaker 3 (34:19):
But that money went out and they're still in the negative.
Speaker 4 (34:23):
And study's strange. They do it every year. They've been
doing this like this. They do it every year. And
it's again, it's not just on the entertainers, these white
liberal consultants who run this party. Because they do and
then they tell the black folks in charge, the gatekeepers
of the gatekeepers to tell them, okay, give them one
hundred thousand, give them one hundred and fifty given to it.
They kept lying saying all the money coming to money coming.
They literally didn't give it to them three weeks until
(34:44):
three weeks out. So now now you wonder why you
lost the black vote.
Speaker 3 (34:48):
They literally giving them this money for so like for instance,
rollingd Ont and a reverend.
Speaker 2 (34:52):
Now what do they use that money for?
Speaker 1 (34:54):
It?
Speaker 2 (34:54):
The only reason I said that because you just said
that rolling with advertising advertising.
Speaker 1 (34:57):
Yes, I don't know what that, I don't know what.
Speaker 4 (35:00):
Well revenue they gave we really name the names they
gave the National Action Network. They gave a donation to him,
donations of a quarter million dollars. Yes, and so, uh,
that organization is an organization, you know, the worst year round,
I guess, you know, allegedly for and I'm not saying that,
you know, to be funny, but you know, for outreach. So,
but again, it can't just be on just reven ol.
(35:23):
You know, it's not just on you know, No, no,
I'm no, I'm saying I'm going to be clear. You
can't just continue to keep spending money just on revenue.
You know, these organizations, Why are you not again, why
are you not connecting with these grassroo organizations who are
literally struggling literally struggling to give them the money so
that they can organize year round, you know, in order
to keep people engaged in bottom line by votes. That's
(35:45):
what they did with the Latino community. They put in
the mid terms, they put thirty different community centers in Florida.
Wasn't just about vote and they was coming in trying
to figure out what they could give health care, trying
to figure out what resources they could get, trying to
figure it. You literally took care of the community. That's
where that money is supposed to go. And it's not
just for advertising. Advertised is important, but it's more than that.
You literally are supposed to buy votes, guys. That's how
(36:06):
it works by votes. That sound crazy, Yeah, well to
buying votes. When I say that, I mean if you
got a nonprofit in you in the hood, and I
give you three hundred thousand, and I'm telling you, use
that three hundred thousand throughout the year to do job training,
use that three hundred thousand throughout the year to do
resume buibling, to use that three hundred thousand to put
people in a better position. Now people can feel it
and say okay, and then that organization has a responsibility
(36:27):
say this came from the Harris campaign, this came from XYZ.
This is how we got what we got. And then
now people can say, okay, I feel it. Like with
the first step back, they feel it, they can see it,
they can touch it. And Republicans that have just did
a better job with that. It's not that Democrats don't
have the receipts. They just don't talk about the receipts.
Their messaging has always been poor and raggedy as hell,
which is why I left in twenty ten. So it's
(36:49):
not that they don't have the receipts, they just don't
talk about. They don't feel they have to. They feel
they know it all, and turns out they didn't know
shit at all. They knew it all and knew absolutely nothing.
They didn't listen to any advice that people gave them.
They say they knew what was best. They said, we
got this, and turns it out you didn't have it.
Speaker 1 (37:04):
I'm gonna be honest to us. I don't know how
much well I take that back.
Speaker 5 (37:07):
I do know there was a lot of people out
there that was giving genuine good advice. But what I
realized is the people who was out there giving genuine
good advice was the people who were really doing it
out of the goodness of their heart. A lot of
other people I heard talking, they was really upset they
wasn't getting no money right, and so a lot of
the stuff that they were saying was literally just based
off when y'all gonna give me some money.
Speaker 1 (37:25):
When y'all give me some.
Speaker 5 (37:25):
Money, everybody that I heard actually giving good advice was
not getting paid by the campaign, right, And those are
the ones who aren'tetting listened to.
Speaker 6 (37:32):
Why Why can't though, why are you not giving me
some money? Be a call sign to real Like if
you got enough people saying we need, we need, we need,
it's like, okay, we need to figure out why do
I saying we need? Like that's common sense to me
as a politician.
Speaker 4 (37:44):
Well you should be paying for it. The goodness of
the hard shit is over with. I mean, like, I've
done get this so hard for a long time and
it's basically gonna make you a full time over driver
at the end of the day. People got to get paid.
But yes, people have their own interests on why they
were trying to get X, y Z, and they pissed
because they didn't get the money. A lot of these
people that you're that you're talking about, they got paid
last time. They wasn't saying shit about the streets. But
(38:04):
now that they got get kept, now was oh man,
what's going on? You know, I've never had so many
calls and people say, oh man, we didn't get this
and get that I'm saying streets bending it, you know,
I'm talking about those grassroot organizations. They never were getting
the money. So yes, people have their own special interests
on why they're trying to get it. But it's a
billion dollars. Pass it out. If we're gonna run this scam,
this time's your scam, then let them then, yeah, give
(38:25):
it out. There's nothing wrong with that as well. So
whether they was it was a goodness of the hard
or good advice because they had an interest, they weren't
listening to anybody. Charlotte Mane. The they really do believe
that they have all of the answers, like literally all
of the It was.
Speaker 5 (38:37):
So wrong about everything, Like when they had that whole oh,
black men aren't going to show up and vote for
the vice president, and you know President Obama was out
there waving his finger at us. It's like, no, y'all
should be focusing on these white women, right right, Like
those are the ones that haven't shown up the last
couple of elections.
Speaker 1 (38:53):
The Latino men.
Speaker 5 (38:54):
I didn't hear them putting the real emphasis on that either,
but the Latino people didn't show up for them. So
it's just like I I just saw them make mistake
after mistake and another thing I would say is you had
a presidential campaign that had trouble connected with the working class,
right because they had a bunch of consultants who got
backgrounds with these giant companies. Do you think that they
should just bring people on these campaigns that are literally
from the.
Speaker 1 (39:14):
Grassroots, And to me, those were the best ideas coming from.
Speaker 4 (39:17):
Yeah, okay, that's exactly what the best idea is. Coming
to another point. I'm glad you're about that. Uh, Charlotte Mane.
Also a lot of friends groups, you know, people that
were giving them hell online that they ignore that they say, oh,
that's just you know, Oh, that's just them talking. Oh
that's just them talking. That's right, again, minimizing your enemy.
So there were groups online that are literally talking to
(39:38):
fifty thousand, one hundred thousand people every week. You don't
have to think that's important. But when you got groups
online saying reparations are not sit on the couch, don't
do this, don't do that, and you're ignoring that group
as a real constituency, and you're saying, oh, don't worry
about it. They just on line. Well over time, because
again a lot of these people and they rock with
(39:59):
me talking about this year around. See why you're just
talking about this last one hundred days. They're talking to
one hundred, one hundred and fifty thousand people every week,
every week, every week, every week, and nobody pick up
the phone to say, hey, can I have a meeting
with you? Can I at least see what you're talking about?
Can we at least have some kind of common ground?
When Democrats in California threw black folks under the bus,
you know, wanted reparations, nobody thought it was worth even
(40:21):
having a conversation with the folks online that are giving
you hell. When you look at people, I'm just gonna say,
the Hamy Teradona shit giving them hell online every day.
Nobody think you to call and say, hey, y'all did
a whole rally on reparations in DC. Let's have a conversation.
What can we do to at least hear what you say?
So when you do that, that just continues to motivate
them to keep saying over and over and over they
(40:43):
ain't fucking with us. And that makes a difference. When
you talk about one and two percent in these mind.
Speaker 5 (40:48):
I agree with you wholeheartedly, and I think it's about
when you do it. To your point earlier, everybody who's
thinking about running in twenty twenty eight, they should start
campaigning now.
Speaker 1 (40:56):
Don't wait until the year of the election to start
reaching out.
Speaker 5 (40:58):
To these different people, cause it looks fake, It looks
it looks like it's not authentic, looks like you don't
really care.
Speaker 1 (41:03):
Start making those connections now.
Speaker 2 (41:05):
But let me ask you a question.
Speaker 3 (41:05):
Do you think it should be that like Charloamage said,
or do you think we should take a page out
of Canada's book and out of Francis book where it's
like there's a cap, there's a specific time limit, you
know what I mean, because people get fatigued and after
a while people like f all this issue. I mean,
do you feel like we should go warranto that because
now it's almost like big bak take a little.
Speaker 1 (41:22):
Bait, you know.
Speaker 5 (41:22):
I mean as far as campaign campaign concerned, oh should
be shorter campaign.
Speaker 3 (41:26):
Short campaign Canada to have a specific time limit, whether
it's three months or a certain amount of money that has.
Speaker 4 (41:31):
To Yeah, it has changed. It used to be six months,
one year, two years. Congress has to run every two years.
The minute they're getting off is their campaign and then
trying to raise money. So no, we are in a
year around. Donald Trump has changed this and will forever
be changed. This is a year around effort, year around resources,
year around. That's why I do my training, push the line,
(41:51):
nonpartisan training, year around. Getting people in position. That's a project.
Twenty twenty five is all about. People can think it's
fake or not fake, but that's all about putting people
in position. Putting people at the commissioner left and putting
people at the state level, putting people at the state
if they're not investing year around. If you're if you're
gonna bring plies into the game, then plies partner with
somebody like myself or somebody like unt Free, somebody else
(42:12):
to help bring this noise you're around. Because what happens
is the day after the election you go, you go
back to talking about what you're talking about before, and
now you got to start the machine all over again.
Speaker 1 (42:20):
I've ain't said nothing from the car since the election
about stuff.
Speaker 6 (42:27):
Well, he did say he had woke up. Remember he
said he missed the election night, but he woke up,
and so he did say that.
Speaker 5 (42:32):
I ain't seen him talking about Starbucks and women feet.
I ain't seen them talking about.
Speaker 4 (42:37):
It, right, and that's the man I love. I ran
for office in twenty eleven in Orlando. First person I
reached out to was Plies. I talked to his manager.
He said, you know, applies don't due politics. He not
in politics. So to see him doing this now, and
reached out to him again. Since then, by the way,
reached out to his manager to say, why don't you
help me get these people trained. You have a voice,
(42:57):
get these people train. In two thousand even and said, many,
come on, let's do something with thee hundred years, the
one hundred years record that he got. Let's do something bad.
Massivecarceration in Florida. So when I watch him doing that
every day non stop, his heartbreaking to me. Because we
do need our entertainers, but we need them to I
don't expect them to do the work year around. Entertainers
like getting applauses. And see this work is about getting bulls.
This work is not about applausing. They only want to
(43:19):
be no disrespect. But entertainers like responding to the applause.
So the minute you start booing them, the minute you
start saying I don't like you. What we saw with
ice Que when he took a chance and went out
there and talked about, you know the state of Black America,
and people started booing him and out Wing's seeing Ice
Ques since ethon, so you know that, and people they
can't take it. And then they say, oh, I don't
blame you for leaving, but I do, though I love
(43:41):
it left. I blame you though, because homie, you donet
set up here and got it. I done reached out
to Q two, you got everybody excited. I don't expect
you to do the work year around, but partner with
people that can because we need we need people like
that Gloyala. Come talk to your home girl like glorially
need people in her ear too to know she got
a he I love a story. Why why are we
(44:01):
not connecting her with people that actually know her story?
Sexy red or we don't need sexy Red, Yes we do.
She'll hold di moved. Maybe y'all don't know how to
talk to it, but she can go partner with some
of the homies that not even on the list at all,
not even on a voter list. When you bring ten
thousand people into the fold, fifteen thousand people on the
fold is not even on anybody's list that nobody's real.
That's how you win these elections. That's why Trump was
able to make that difference on people who were not
(44:23):
engaged at all. But in order to do that, you
have to do it year round. You cannot do it
no ninety days before the campaign. It's never gonna work.
Speaker 5 (44:30):
Because I agree with you, I think I think what
we're saying is because I think that's what people think.
People think that entertainers are the leaders that are generals.
Speaker 1 (44:37):
They're not.
Speaker 5 (44:38):
They're the soldiers, right, and you want them to be
the soldiers right to go organize the people, to bring
them back to the actual general the people to actually
do them.
Speaker 4 (44:45):
Absolutely, yes, absolutely, And y'all can have the mic. We
ain't trying to take the mic from like we get
it to get the mic, but pass it on to
people that are really, really really trying to do it.
I will do the heavy lifting, the organizer will do
the heavy lifting. Our platforms are never going to be
as big, you know, as a cube or a glow
reala or a sexy grade. And I don't want to
encourage discourage them to get out because that's also what's
happening because now they even't put their cloud on the line,
(45:07):
and then now you got in a table like I'm
not getting that shit again.
Speaker 2 (45:10):
Man.
Speaker 1 (45:10):
Fucked, especially when.
Speaker 4 (45:13):
Exactly because you don't put them in position to make
it seem like, oh, all we got to do is
have Beyonce get up and talk and it's all that
and now you got her look like you said of
the candid's on people calling her out people and that's
not on her. It's not on Beyonce. It's not on
these But you do need people to get people to
the stands, but it's on it's the year around organizers
that they just refuse to do. So I want eye
entertainers to stay in the game. I just want you
(45:33):
to partner with organizers that really actually give a damn
about this work because we really do, you know, year
around and we don't have enough killer Mike's in my opinion.
Speaker 1 (45:41):
Tell them how to connect with you, and you'll push
the line.
Speaker 4 (45:44):
Movement, yes, push the line politics until something happens. And
thank you guys for supporting that. When we did, I
guess was two years ago when I came to the
Breakfast Club, we had over three hundred people. You know,
they came to Atlanta on their own dime, to learn
how to be candidates, to learn how to be operatives,
to learn how to be organized. It's a non partisan
training that I created. These people flew from all over LA, Dallas, Houston,
(46:06):
New York. In the room, you know, three hundred people.
That's why when people tell me, don't nobody want to
do this, they're not interested. That's not true. Jay was
there in the fact that she came to the training,
came all the way from DC. These people were outside
at six am in the morning in the rain to
learn how to do this. They want the training. They
want to know how can I change on the local level.
(46:26):
But we just don't have enough support to get around.
So I'm asking people to text. Push the line all caps,
push the line to sixty six, eight sixty six, And
I'm trying to get partners, guys. I'm trying to people
over fifty cities have said can you bring the training here?
But I'm teaching people in the training how to organize,
how to organize if you want to be a candidate,
if you want to be an operative, if you want
to be an organizer, whatever it is you want to do.
(46:46):
I believe my training is one of the best. And
the reason why is because it truly is a military mindset.
It truly is cutting through all the bullshit. I've been
to all the trainings. I've been in Congressional Black Caucus training,
a White House training, Yelle Women's school, law school, I've
been to them all, and all of them sell a
bunch of bullshit, respectfully. You know, they come in and
tell you, you know, you're gonna have a stab, You're
(47:07):
gonna have this and that. My train is really designed
to tell you know, Lauren, it's really just gonna be
you with twenty dollars. How can we you know, move
from that? So people are hungry, they want information. I'm
trying to get people to partner to help me do
more of it because I can't just do it, you know, myself,
out my own pocket. I can't. I don't want to
charge people. People don't have the money to pay for it.
So we're just trying to, you know, keep building up
(47:28):
that momentum and hopefully be able to do any people
that to join. And you also looking for ye I
may write me a check out.
Speaker 1 (47:34):
You mean, I make a donation right now? What you need?
Speaker 2 (47:38):
I know.
Speaker 4 (47:38):
Charle let's give one hundred and fifty thousand.
Speaker 2 (47:42):
We can go.
Speaker 1 (47:42):
That's a lot. We can help get you that now.
Speaker 4 (47:47):
Dollars holiday, And I do want to say that. Also, Wisconsin,
I don't know if y'all notice, largest black mail incarceration
in the country, the highest black femicide rate. Yes, more
black women are murdered in Wisconsin then anywhere. They didn't
give any money to Milwaukee at all, So now you're
expecting that's what you were expecting. And also Wisconsin is
(48:10):
one of the most the least diverse state in the country.
So now you're gonna run a former state attorney in
Wisconsin where black men are locked up more than you know.
This is true. Whether you like it, we got to
deal with what it really is. They weren't trying to
hear any any of that. They shit it on Wisconsin.
They shited it on Milwaukee. They used to do hip
Hop Week there every year. They don't have the budget
to do that anymore. They were trying to bring sake,
(48:31):
how tess and how can we come down get out
the vote. They couldn't get twenty five hundred dollars together
to say, let's get the vote out. They went to
the white voters in Wisconsin. So these are the kind
of things, guys, that we just have to put on
the table. I know people saying teds, move on, just
deal with it. No, we have to call this shit out, guys,
because if we continue to mismanage this money, then we're
not you know, actually getting the help you know that
we need. And it's critically important.
Speaker 5 (48:53):
If I text pushed the line to this number, that's
still work, all right. Text pushed the line to six
six six, No, six six eight sixty six. Text push
the line to six six eight sixty six to join
the Texas email list for push the line right.
Speaker 2 (49:07):
Thank you, We appreciate you for joining us. Thank you.
Speaker 4 (49:09):
Let me go through my list.
Speaker 2 (49:10):
It's all goodness. Tsant figure out. It's the Breakfast Club.
Good morning.
Speaker 1 (49:13):
Wake that ass up in the morning. The Breakfast Club