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May 6, 2025 β€’ 44 mins
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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:09):
Buck, ladies and gentlemen, May I have your attention please?

(01:17):
The show starts in five live eight seven, six, five
four three two one go.

Speaker 2 (01:48):
Well, Hello, Hello, Hello. I want to welcome you guys
to another episode. Of course, I am the visionary Queen Angela,
and I want to welcome you guys back to the
Crew Podcast. Today have another opportunity to share another amazing

(02:12):
authority process a part of the one hundred author movement.
I tell you I do not take it likely. I
do not take this movement likely. Giving these individuals an
opportunity to share their brands, to share the things that
they are doing to create and leave a legacy. Everybody
that follow me, everybody that support the platform, know that
I am all about legacy. I'm all about everybody leaving

(02:36):
their blueprint, leaving something that individuals will be able to
remember you by, because nobody tell your story like you
tell it, So I always want you to be able
to create and leave a legacy. So that's what we're
doing over here on the Crew Podcast. So y'all, I
want y'all to take this opportunity to share this with

(02:57):
someone in your circle of influence, because I'm telling you,
you never know what the next person may be in
need of. You don't know what the next person the
nugget that may be dropped that the next person may
be able to take away to take them into their
next level, into their next new thing. So, y'all, I'm
gonna move out the way, and I'm gonna let this

(03:18):
amazing author, y'all. She is number forty six in the
one hundred after movement. Y'all, we're moving right along. If
you're not attached, I'm telling you you have fifty four
opportunities to get attached to this movement before it's too late.
For twenty twenty five, we're bringing up number forty six.

(03:40):
She's gonna come up. She's gonna tell you who she is.
She's gonna tell you her why and what she's doing.
So I bring up, I introduce to you guys, miss
When to come up to tell you who is and
what she's doing. So let me move on, not the way, y'all.
Let me move on, not the way, and allowed her

(04:01):
to come on in the building. So come on in.
How you doing today?

Speaker 3 (04:07):
I'm wanting angela good morning everyone. I am so happy, great,
great great, I'm so proud and happy to be a
part of the crew and one hundred authors to watch.
I want to say that it's an amazing journey. I've
been watching Angela for a while and I'm so glad
and so greatful to be a part of that journey.
I'm so glad she gave me the opportunity to tell
my story. I wrote two books. Two of my books

(04:30):
are rot was on Amazon, and the other one is
in the process of main publers. My first book was
about my brother Wright, who died in police custody. It's
a strange story, but it all happened to tie into
book number two, which has the infra sound magnetic ways
that Obama called Havana Saint Gergan. He worked a Cuba. Now,
going back to my first book, my brother died in

(04:51):
police custody. I remember the story because on May fourth
of this year, twenty twenty five March, the twelfth anniversary
of his death, we made CNN. We were on in SNBC,
We made associated president all the local newspapers and the
full stories to talk about my brother because his story
was so shocking. And what made his story so shocking

(05:14):
is that he called nine one one three times. They
couldn't find his hotel. Now in the hotel that he
was saying in he was working there on his job.
His job had him there working, so he called nine
one one because he felt wasn't feeling well. He did
a little drinking a little a little cocaine, which is
zero points zeros are one ounces of cocaine in the system,

(05:36):
which even the lawyers and the pathologist said that it's
not enough, more than the four elms glass of wine,
but they tried to make it. Seems that when he
called nine one one, they needed he needed mental evaluations,
so it would take him to the hospital for a
mental evaluation, and they asked him if he could be handcuffed.
So not only did he call nine one one three times,
but they asked him if he be handffed, so he was.

(05:57):
He agreed to it, so he got parenter because of
the Havanas in their frequency, got to the hospital and
then he broke out of the car and he ran
to his sline glass doors and when he ran to
the sline glass doors, they wouldn't open, and he fell
back and he hit his head and they started tasing
him over twenty times. Then there's a beautiful video which
I thought beautiful because it catches the evidence of what

(06:19):
really happened to him on YouTube. And I tell people,
if you really want to know what really really happened
to my brother, go on to YouTube and look of
Lynnwood Lambert. His name is spelled l I n w
oo D Lamberg la m v e r T. And
you can see different videos of me on there with
him on there, and definitely his videos and Halifax, South Boston.

(06:41):
But that's not only it. He also was a part
of the three starture out with Clinton, which is in
my chapter Anthony Big Mays Mason, who are dated from
the New York Knicks from two and a half about
two years and we dated. So my book is amazing.
I think that if you get onto it, you know
that it leads to everything from knowing about the assassination

(07:03):
of President Barack Obama and Michelle Obama on January twenty
first of twenty thirteen to the death of my brother
in twenty or thirteen of May fourth on how that
we got caught into a matrix, but didn't write in
my second book about the frequency which I hear all
the crooked sounds in my ears and everything the military
people say that they hear but I don't get any

(07:25):
benefits from it because I'm not part of the military.
But I lived in that area and knowing the Virginia,
so they have to make that in frequency on me constantly,
and my tongue is stuck to the top of my
mouth because the frequency is pulling to the top of
my head. That's when my hair is short because my
hair falls out. Shot to cut my hair off. But
thank God that he gave me curls, so I got
natural curls. I have natural wavy hair, even though you

(07:46):
can't see it because it's because of how low it is.
But I love it and I get lots of compliments.
So getting back to my brother's story, So he died
at the hospital, and that's what make his story so
shocking is that he called all one to be taken
to the household and they handcuffed him. Then they shackled
him while he was on the ground. Then on top

(08:07):
of that they lie and said that he was grabbing
for their guns. He was grabbing for that taser. He
was biting them. He was on the ground with taser
proms in his chest, shackled by his feet and by
his hands, and then he finally said, okay, I had
two I had zero points zero zero one cocaine on
my system. Then they say, oh, so you going to jail.

(08:29):
So when they picked him up, they jerked the proms
out of his chest. But you know, can abuse your skin,
not only that could send you into cardiac erect because
you rest because you're scared. So they put them in
the back of the car and with the con with attorney.
He was a special prosecutor on its case. We even
had to get a special propecue on the case because
we felt that we weren't going to get the justice

(08:50):
that we need, and they had to. They took too
long to give us the video. They took almost two
years and three lawyers to get us the video of
the hospital and the squa car, and I haven't asked
it for two years for it. It wasn't until I hired
lawyers who happened to be one of President Obama's best friends,
who got us our attorneys from my brother's case. And
that's how I ended up on CNN. That's how I

(09:11):
got this platform, This is how I got this movement
to Not only that, my book is called Winchhall The
Vow Break. So when chall the valve break is about
breaking the laws against police brutality, which I know there's
a bigger picture, but I have to address what's in
front of me because a lot of people don't know
how the frequency works. So it's about when shall the
valve breaks breaking the laws against black people that like

(09:36):
civil rights laws as well as breaking police successive force,
police brutality, workforce discrimination, housing discrimination. It's like, when is
that valve going to break? The thought came into my
head about the book. It's not about a nursery rhyme,
but that's what the poem comes from. A nursery rhyme.
That's what the title I mean. But the title is

(09:58):
not just about it's not about the nursem in rhyme.
It's about when we are finally gonna get some really
from all of this racial presidents, bias, killings, discrimination, racism.
When so my movement is to be a part of
the crew as well as one hundred Office of Watch

(10:20):
because when I write about the frequency in my second book,
which is called Hidden in Plain Sight, and then plain
Site talks about how the frequency is on our community.
Martin Luther King Boulevards, Malcolm X boulevards and streets and
certain ghettos and certain hoods, especially in Chicago where you
see mostly a lot of shootings and things like that that's

(10:40):
going on. You can see a lot of the frequency
being used there, especially in places like Baltimore and New
York City and certain places down in the country. I
know for a fact, because I can see and tell
who's being more affected by, who's not being more infected by.
It's like said to me, we don't have a leader. Well,
I'm meeting now with my book. We're sept about break.

(11:02):
I tell people to buy my book from me because
it's had more pictures in there and have evidence in there.
And the most peculiar thing about my second book about
the frequency called Havana, that biting A signed into law
in twenty twenty one that I can't benefit from because
I wasn't in the military or in embassy or in Cuba.

Speaker 2 (11:20):
It's that.

Speaker 3 (11:23):
I can tell my story, I can tell my brother's story,
and it leads all back to the country on how
they used us to make it seem like they wanted
to drive people crazy for their own purposes. But I'm
so glad that Angela. I'm so glad you gave me
this platform.

Speaker 2 (11:40):
Wow, you just really don't understand that you really just
touched on a lot of stuff that a lot of
people probably have been questioned, have been wondering and just
didn't think nobody wanted to hear, or that nobody even

(12:01):
even care, because that's that's what it seemed like sometimes.
But you touched on a lot of stuff. Wow, your
story is It's amazing. I'm grateful for the opportunity to
just allow you to be able to share. I can

(12:22):
only imagine we're in a month right now that they
recognize National Mental Health and and and to hear that
your brother called because he needed help, he wanted help,
and he recognized that he wanted help and needed help,

(12:45):
and yet they failed him, you know. And that's the
issue that a lot of us he as as black
and brown people, and just let the truth be told
and and and and we see it every day, and
it's it's become prevalent. Like you say, when will the
by break? When will it stop? When will enough be enough? Yes,

(13:11):
you look at a lot of the police brutality and
even the closing down of the housing facilities, and then
you look and you see what comes up in those
areas and how they are just taking different things out
of the area and replacing it with different things. And

(13:34):
you no longer see us there, but you see everybody
but us sitting there, and I see it.

Speaker 1 (13:40):
You know.

Speaker 2 (13:41):
We're getting ready to head to Chicago in June. A
lot of the places that you mentioned are a lot
of the places where a lot of us have lived
for years and then yet we've been ran off and
everything's been taken from us. We see it happening in Philadelphia,

(14:03):
but a lot of them are standing up and they're
not taking it. They refuse to allow them to come
in and take over their property and to take over
their space.

Speaker 3 (14:14):
But it's happen.

Speaker 2 (14:16):
And until we have more people like you. You know,
a lot of people need to hear your book, They
need to hear see the videos that.

Speaker 3 (14:28):
You have out.

Speaker 2 (14:29):
So how how can they follow you to be able
to reach out to you personally to get that movie
and ye your videos, your movement and all of the
things that you have going on. How how can they
support immediately right now?

Speaker 3 (14:49):
Okay, but I can say to people that I do
have a telephone number, I do do I do do
said I do do speakings engagements. Call me my number.
It's eight oh four six, eight seven zero four or
five one. That's my cell number. You can call me
basically anytime. I would say certain hours, it might be

(15:10):
too late, but if it's emergency or something like that
and you need to get in contact with me, feel
really call me. You can also reach me on my
email address. I have two winch other Balbry at gmail
dot com and my personal email address is Bundelt Smalls
zero three five at gmail dot com. And I want
to say I do speaking engagements. I want to give
a shout out really quick to Howard University because my

(15:32):
first book was so good, they wanted me to come
out and speak doing black history mone to talk about
police brutality to the kids. I didn't get a chance
too because they're still working on the library and they're
still working on and I had a book in the
library too, So I give out my books all HBCUs
or that the kids can read my book and maybe
one day somebody had me come out and speak so
I can tell my brother's real story. But that's how

(15:54):
you can reach me. And if you reach me, I
can get you a book. You send me your cash
and I can cash up, you can cash out to
me and I can mail you a book.

Speaker 2 (16:02):
I do that now.

Speaker 3 (16:03):
I mail people their books, and I would be so
grateful on the show Race story. It's very shocking. I'm
back on the scene now and that's why I reached
out to the crew and Angela and one hundred authors
have watched, because I know my book as a story
that needs to be told.

Speaker 2 (16:21):
Definitely, definitely is because we see a lot of what
you're talking about going on, and you see a lot
of people not doing anything, just watching. And I tell
people all the time, if you see something, do something
about it. If you want change, you have to be

(16:42):
that change. We can sit and want change and think
change is gonna just fall out the sky because nothing
new is falling out the sky. Everything we need is
in us. So we have to get those things out
here and get these things in the days of those
that they need to be in. So I'm great people
that you are a part of the one hund movement.

(17:04):
So we are going to.

Speaker 3 (17:08):
One thing.

Speaker 2 (17:09):
Yes, two things. We got, we got, we got plenty
of time. We got plenty of time left. It ain't yet.
We're good. Okay.

Speaker 3 (17:19):
My name is Gwen Smalls. You can follow me on
Facebook is g w E N Smalls s N A
L l S like Biggie Smalls. Cash out number is
dollar sign capital g Smalls with the number seven. So
if you want to reach out the book, I can
order you a book and have it mailed to you
within a few days. I've mailed books Antonio, Texas, Uh,

(17:42):
Georgia Morehouse College. I've sent books all over the world basically,
and I've had a lot of orders on Amazon, but
getting the limited edition. So if you want the full story,
then I would suggest you send it to me and
I can reach out to my printer and get published
and have it mailed to you and and get your feedback.
So feel free to call me, feel free to relate,

(18:03):
drop me online or something on my emails and let
me know what you think about my brother's story, or
even on Facebook. You can go on to my messenger
or you can reach me through on my page. Just
leave me a message and let me know how you
feel about our or because we had the FBI involved,
we had the Justice Apartment involved. They even came to
my house. I had the FBI come to my house,
and you know the crazy thing about it. I didn't

(18:25):
give them my address. I don't know how they got
my address. But they found me, I guess because we
made the news. So they you know, they do what
they do.

Speaker 2 (18:34):
But they found me and they came.

Speaker 3 (18:36):
To my house. And when the special prosecutors came to
my house, they were appointed by President Obamba too. I said, well,
brother Obamba, my whole family is trying to help me
out with my brother's case.

Speaker 2 (18:47):
So he came.

Speaker 3 (18:47):
He was one who was going to be the head
prosecutor in the case, but he told me he couldn't.

Speaker 2 (18:52):
And this is the irony of this.

Speaker 3 (18:54):
He said he couldn't prosecute my brother's case because of
the nineteen forty five I believe it was of mister
Bobby Johnson. I believe his last name is, but I
call him Bobby because he was in Georgia. They could
be forty five and he was trying to help people vote.
So then he was trying to help people vote. You know,

(19:15):
he stole a tire. So one of the sheriffs, just
like when Derwin with with I can't think of his name,
I said his face. He just died when he put
his knee on his neck and George Lloyd was George Floyd.
They knew each other. So Barbie when he got so
pissed off and Bobby stole the tire, he dragged they

(19:36):
chained him and dragged him around the court Georgia Courthouse,
and he eventually beat him with the billy club and
Bobbie died. But because they didn't prove it was racism,
was still Rice's being violated. There was no way that
it had to be within a reasonable doubt. So that's
how the reasonable doubt came into park was still Bobby's law.

(19:57):
It had to be within a reasonable doubt that you
can improve that. They changed my brother twenty times because
of racism and not because of anything else. Well I
don't know what else, because he was handcuffed and shackle
so he could not have done anything to depend himself.
And he was laying on the ground real needing from
the back of his head from hitting side of the wall,
so I don't know what that is. And then to
die in the back of the squad car sitting and

(20:19):
sitting in the emergency room session of the hospital, which
is shocking to me. I just wanted to add that.

Speaker 2 (20:33):
So wow, Well I'm just gonna let you know that.

Speaker 3 (20:40):
Is one of the hosts.

Speaker 2 (20:44):
Over over she does you definitely may want to connect
with her as well, like you're just gonna have. You

(21:05):
have forty five other authors that it's on a journey
just like yourself, trying to get their message out. So
you have an opportunity to connect with them to share ideas.
And you have individuals that's in your area, because all
of us are not in the same place. You have.
I'm here in Georgia. You have we have some in

(21:28):
New York. We have Shannette who's out in California. You
have some down in Texas. We have some out in
South Carolina, Maryland.

Speaker 3 (21:42):
We have.

Speaker 2 (21:44):
Virginia. Yeah, we have Virginia. We have a couple of people.
We have a couple of people from Virginia. We have
the dmv V area together, all that wrapped up together.
We have Indiana. We have we got, we got, we
got the US sold up. We we we out here

(22:06):
trying to make a difference. We're out here trying to
get We all have a message. You know, we've all
been given a message. We've all been given a task
to do something. We've all been tasked to make a difference.
You know, it's not by chance.

Speaker 1 (22:22):
You know, we.

Speaker 2 (22:24):
We sometimes questions why things happen to us, but it's
not by chance that a lot of the things that
happened to us happened to us. They we are catching
up with our destiny, that thing that we are are
supposed to do. You know, somebody got to go through it,
so why not why not us? And through what's going

(22:47):
through it, we're able to share with other people. So
we may not understand it in going through it, but
when we get through it, we're able to help other
people that may need us. Because we got to understand
that the Bible didn't write itself, that everybody that we

(23:08):
read their story they actually experienced that they went through it.
So how will people know what we experience because we
can't change the Bible. But he says that we would
do greater works, and for people to know the greater works,
we got to be able to share those things. We
got to be able to put these things out so
people know our story if we're sitting on our story

(23:29):
and not telling them. So I'm grateful for you. I'm
grateful for your willingness to want to be a part
of the podcast, to want to be a part of
the movement and to be a voice because a lot
of us we experience things and then sometimes we just
think that, oh, it's just happening to me. Nobody else

(23:51):
is going through this, nobody else is experiencing this, when
there are the other people that are experiencing too, and
they need to know that, hey, they're not alone. And
if you don't tell your story, nobody will know. Nobody
would know what you're experiencing. Nobody would know what your
brother experienced, Nobody would know you know, and they could
be going through the same thing you know. And all

(24:12):
those things that you are observing, all those things that
you know that you have that you know people need
to know about if you're not sure.

Speaker 3 (24:21):
That's why, right, that's why we really hitting in playing
sight because it's hidden well knowing and so unlet's I
tell people there is a frequency out here. They've been
using on us for years. Still in our land, we
just to find our neighborhoods, dumbing down some of our
kids and education picking who they want to be in sports,
like Michael Jordan's trying to keep us having a leader,

(24:42):
so we only have like our shopping and Jesse Jackson,
trying to keep US limited and voting rights acts, trying
to overturn all those laws that benefited us, and just
they started with affirmative action. That should tell you right
there that they've been working on something behind the scenes,
using this frequency that they have on me to use

(25:03):
other people as their vessel to get do the devil's work.
And that's why I wrote hitten and plain site so
people can know it's hidden. You can't see it, I
can feel it because it was on me so much
that people noticed it. So they didn't make me too
fat that people couldn't see that, but they have made
me bigger though I'm eating a lot and creating a lot,

(25:23):
because that is also a symptom too. It's a small
symptom compared to change the votizer and the civil rights laws,
but it's still a symptom, so making me fact that
it stopped me from talking because that you can see.
And here it is compromised a little bit because I'm
used to flowing and being happy and people say, oh,
you got such a glove. I was just told the
other day you got your glow back. To getting your glowback,

(25:46):
I'm like yeah, because I'm determined to finish my book
and not let anyone shut me down. And I became
homeless because of it, so that I'm in a building,
because I'm in a shelter. Even though they find me
housing and they pay for my rent every month, I'm
still in a shelter because I wrote a book, because
I expressed my first to right amendment, which I have

(26:08):
that first to right amendment, to tell my story and
to tell my people and brown people my story because
I see and know what they've been doing to them.
They did it to me since I was a little girl,
but the pain didn't start tre two thousand and two,
after ninety eleven, so I know that it's hidden because
they don't want us to know. So you write and
tell your story. Don't ever feel like, well, nobody wants

(26:30):
to know if I was rapes. Nobody wants to know
about incests. Nobody wants to know if I did drugs,
Nobody wants to know if I did alcohol. Yes, they do,
because I'm writing about all of that in my second book,
because that's what the frequency does. It destroyed people lives
and destroy people families, and I'm writing about that to
make sure that people know, don't keep blaming people in
your family for bad things that happened to them that

(26:52):
they're blaming you for. No, the frequency did that. My
sister just shold me over the weekend when I was
in Washington, DC and my dad thought our family was cursed. No,
it's not cursed. We got the Kennedy curse. That frequency
that seems to screw up our lives and try to
blame us for it. And like I said, I believe
there's a whole lot of people in jail shouldn't be

(27:13):
in jail.

Speaker 2 (27:14):
That's my person it is. I know a lot of them.
I know a lot of them. I advocate. That's one
of the things that I do in HNET. That's that's
her thing. That's her show. That's what it's all about.
Let's let's talk about. That's all she talks about is
social injustice. She has her co host has been wrongfully

(27:35):
incarcerated now thirty four thirty five years. But he's getting
ready to see the other side and he's gonna be
able to tell people, you know, really what has been
going on behind those prison walls and what these people
are really doing and how they're just holding people and
have no reason to hold them. You got people over
there that should have been free two or three years ago,
but they're still holding them so that they can get

(27:57):
the piece of paper every morning. He just said, Oh,
we gotta sign off on a piece of paper when
we go sign in. Why because you gotta sign in
so that then people can get paid. Because if you
don't sign in, if you don't got that signature, then
they can't put that down on their thing, so they
can't mark you present if you're not showing up, so
they don't get their dollars. But then they got to
feel their bads and this is what's happening. You know

(28:19):
this if you go back and you look at it,
and you really look at it, and this is what
they've been trying to keep people in the blind for years.
The prison system was nothing design. It was not designed
to really keep people in check and to keep people
in line. It was designed to house runaway slaves. That's

(28:40):
what they the prison system was designed for. Then. But
when they decided that they was going to let us
go free, then they realized that they had to come
up with a plan to utilize those fit and to
keep us in slavery. It ain't nothing that they just

(29:02):
thought of something that if you just look back over
history and just look back over your lives and just
look back over your family's history, you'll see it. You'll
see how it was designed from from what they say
freedom to now which will never free. Because if you
got if you got anybody incarcerated, if they're working, they
don't get paid. And what they're doing, they putting all

(29:25):
our babies in prison. They you look at the childhood,
the juvenile the amount of juvenile lifers we have, so
those that's all they're doing. They you look at even
the housing situation. We talk about Section eight, we talk
about public housing, we talk about all these different housing. Okay, okay,

(29:49):
they did away with it, fine, but why did y'all
start it in the beginning. Y'all started it in the
beginning to separate the family. Because the first thing they knew, Oh, no,
man can't stay there. We're gonna give you housing. Can't
no man say that? How you gonna tell me my
kids father can't stay there if we're married, why my
little husband can't be here? You you you started so

(30:13):
then you blame it on the family. You want to
blame it on our generation. No, it was not our fault. Kings,
we love y'all. No kings. Society have failed y'all. They
did that. They broke the homes up, they separated, they
introduced welfare, they introduced with they introduced all this stuff

(30:33):
that they knew that we were gonna be dependent on.
They wanted us to be dependent on everything. But the
one that created us and the one that he gave
us head of that's supposed to be head of the house.
The man is supposed to be head of the house.

Speaker 3 (30:47):
The man is supposed to be the.

Speaker 2 (30:48):
One that's supposed to make sure that his family is
taken care, that his wife is Okay, that's what the
man is supposed to do. But when you take that
away the way and you're putting them in prison, giving
these people life, which back then was about twenty thirty years,
and then you locking them up, you know, gave them

(31:09):
twenty thirty years. They in the elderly they can't do
nothing now. So now you've taken all of their life.
And that's what they're doing. They're given all our kids
forty sixty years. They've given them ridiculous time. They over
sentizing our kids, and it's our kids. You look at
the ones we're talking about babies, were talking about a

(31:32):
lot of these adults that are just keep doing the
same thing over and over and over and over again.
They've cursed them with that, They've given them that, and
they pretty much said, Okay, we're gonna keep We're gonna
give you this, and you go out there and you
recruit people. That's what they're doing. I mean, we can
just see what they're doing. They put these drugs. We
look at what they did in the eighties. They put

(31:53):
the drugs into our communities. They brought it right in
because ain't none of us got no plane, Ain't none
of us got no no, no no, and none of
us got none of us got none of the resources
to go out here and do none of the stuff
they doing. We look at the prison sism now, nothing
has changed. They just upgraded as we elevated, as we

(32:15):
move forward. All they did was do the same. So
now you go to prison. You may not be on
drugs when you go to prison, but nine times out
of ten, you're gonna be on drugs when you leave
there if you make it out of that. Because their
goal is not for you to make it out of there.
They don't want you to make it out of there.
I hear these stories every day. You go and look

(32:36):
at some of the videos that we have over on
the Crew podcast. You're looking at some of the interviews
that I've interviewed these guys behind prison walks. You know,
this is nothing like this whole podcast network. You can
go and you can listen what you just said today.
It's just a tad bit of what has been happening

(32:57):
over these last three years through this podcast exactly exactly.

Speaker 3 (33:01):
We only we only know ange know we we we shouldn't.
We could only know what they really have been doing
with this frequency for years and years and years. Like
you said, even though they have they're taken different colored
people in jail. The still main focus is us because
if you look at anything, even from health care, if
you look at healthcare, we're the ones who are predominately
with high blood pressure, diabetes, all those illnesses, strokes than

(33:26):
anybody else.

Speaker 2 (33:28):
Everything everything. We we go back and we even think
about the AIDS epidemic and how did this really get
out here? But then now you listen to these people
talk about how they was putting stuff in water, how
they was putting stuff in this this, this and this
and this and this and this and this. Right, it

(33:50):
makes you wonder, It really makes you, yeah, like a
lot of the stuff that has really taken place in society. Yeah,
it will, Yeah, really wonder what what we have been
a part of. And you know, really, what are we doing?

(34:10):
How are we making a difference, and what what are
we going to do to make a difference, Because you're
looking at these people with these different illnesses and all
these different diseases like it it's sick.

Speaker 3 (34:27):
Go ahead, Yeah, Like they're trying to tell us one
thing and they're doing another. It's like they're telling they
don't tell them right what is it? They don't tell
your left hand what the right hand is doing. That's
what they're doing. So while they're using the frequency to
make us, they're busily making all these commercials and vaccines
and medications and having us come out and test on
it in public. So they give you all these medicines

(34:48):
so to give you pills to make you better, and
then you have to give you pills to make you
feel better from the pills they gave you that made
you sick. I know someone that was taking seventeen a day.

Speaker 2 (34:59):
I really do do we really look at the commercials?
Do we listen to the commercials? Because if we look
at the commercials and listen to the commercials, we would hear,
we would hear all these different side effects. And I'm
listening to this stuff, and I'm like, really, okay, if
I'm listening to all of these soild effects and I'm
hearing all of this stuff that this could do to me,
then why would I even want what it might be

(35:21):
able to help me to be able to do if
it could cause all of this stuff? Like I'm listening
to everybody run and say they took this COVID, this vaccine,
these boosters, and oh they took the one, the two,
the three, the different, all the Okay, I took not now,
not one of them, not not not one of them.

Speaker 3 (35:45):
That's good. But let me say this to you. My
cousin Henry at a Last Open played in the movie
then More to Life of Henry at Elast And I
think you know that if you're following me on my page,
that's my cousin. They took her DNA and they stole
it while they was killing her at John Houghton Hospital
in nineteen fifty Rebecca School booked their More Than Life
with Henry in the Last and Over bought the rights
to the book and made the movie. I tell people,

(36:08):
look it up. It's Henry at a h E n
ri E t T A Last Lacks in Mortal Life.
Now they sold it, but they put it in monkey pops,
HIV drugs, cancer drugs, al over, the la polio. I'm like,
I was a little girl getting polio vaccine to go
to school, and I didn't know they was putting a
little piece of my DNA in a little piece. I
tell people, it's a little tiny piece, but it made

(36:29):
sense because that's my family, that's my cousin. I would
be a little piece, And they sent it to the
moon in nineteen sixty four. They tested at all them baumbs.
So they make these vaccines. They was even trying to
make a vaccine for the astronauts in case they go
out into space and get sick, that they can have
a vaccine using her DNA. They don't want people to
know that she's black. So that's why I me and
my cousin out on our stomach grounds. They made it

(36:50):
a holiday in the state of Virginia every October third.
Every October fourth, because that's the day that she died.
So I want to invite everyone out to her black
tied denter carty at Virginia U in a university which
is an HBCU, which is supporting because of the losing
our HBC used in our education system as it overturned
her laction. So I want to say that we are

(37:11):
So you were saying you could get the vaccine, and
that's okay. I'm proud to be a part of all
of that that I'm a part of that vaccine through
my DNA. But I understand how you feel because you
don't know what else they putting in at yeah.

Speaker 2 (37:25):
Because they put too much in there. And then you
look at some of the different things that they are
putting in there that they don't tell us, Like I
like with all the medicine, if you you got side
effect for this, like you got people that's got different things.
I listen to my friend and Cheryl, she's on here
right now. Cheryl has she said cancer, she has loopids,

(37:50):
and then in having both of those, she has had
to take all different types of medication and one medication
may lead to this, one medication may lead to this,
and then you got different side effects and different things
that kind of and kind of act with different things.
So I'm like, we just they really don't know what works.
They really don't know. Everything is a practice, and we

(38:12):
really look at their license, We really look at the
things that hang on they walls. It tells you exactly
what they have the right to do their practicing. They
really don't know. So if they can practice, I can
practice too. I can practice with natural things. I can
practice with some of these things that you know I
can read read up on too, you know. So that's
the route that I choose. But I don't knock nobody

(38:33):
for nothing that they do. And I ain't gonna say
what it is because I don't want them to take
the video down because they will do that. But I
don't knock nobody for for, you know, taking care of
what you need to take care of physically and taking
care of you. But you know, we we we got
to look for other routes and other ways and and

(38:56):
and and testings. We have to be willing to step
out in the water and look at other dings and
look at other routes. So that's what we're doing over here.
I believe in connecting. I believe in collaborating. I believe
in creating and community building. So we are a community
over here at the one hundred Author Movement. We have
people from all walks of life. You have some professors.

(39:20):
We have some professors right here amongst us. We have
one from the University of the Virgin Islands. Her name
is doctor Chen. She is a holistic doctor as well.
She does a lot. She travels around the world because
you may see her in South Carolina one day, and
then she may be back over there in the Puerto

(39:41):
Rico or the Virgin Islands, or over in Dubai, or
you may see her in Africa. But she is also
one of the costs over here on the network. She
has a show called ass Speaks, so she brings people
on and they share. She's on the first and third
Thursday of the month. We have a variety of people

(40:01):
that's a part of the one hundred Author Movement. I
can say most of the hosts here on the network,
y'all we authors. We believe in sharing our story. We
believe in getting out there and getting that message out
there and being a part of the change. One of
our motto is being the change that we desire to see.
We believe that change starts and is with us. What

(40:23):
would your legacy be?

Speaker 1 (40:25):
What?

Speaker 2 (40:25):
What would you leave? You know, my Chris Paul, but
who who can Chris Paul ain't doing nothing for me?
Shout out Chris Paul. But he what would my legacy be?

Speaker 3 (40:36):
You?

Speaker 2 (40:37):
He got his own legacy, He got kids, he he
has a wife, he has a family. So he's building
his legacy. So what will Angela's legacy be? You know,
my nephew. But they all got a legacy, they twins,
but they they two separate entities and they got to
have they got to build their own legacy. One is
building his. He's the first fire chief. Shout out toy Quinterriot.

(41:02):
He's a new fire chief in Belton, South Caro in Greenville,
South Carolina, Greenville area. He is one of the youngest
fire chiefs for that fire department. And he's the first
black fire chief at the fire department. So signed out
to my nephew, y'all, yeah, that come from my blood.

(41:22):
That came from my bloodline. And he is active in
his community. He's out there, you know, teaching these young
babies about fire and about fire prevention, and you know,
let them know that, Yes you can. My baby's only
twenty seven years old and he's doing it. He decided,
he decided before he graduated high school that this is

(41:43):
what he wanted to do. I remember when he came
to my dad's house, and I remember him walking. He
got on his feet, he put his shoes on, and
he walked up the street to the fire department and
he went up the I don't know what he told
them people, but he went up there and he came back.
He had one of the walking talkies and he had
one of the Neon shirts and he put that shirt
on and he said, I'm going back up there. And

(42:04):
he come up there every weeken to my dad's house,
and he did that, and y'all, my nephew's doing his thing. Now,
y'all can do it. If y'all want to dres.

Speaker 3 (42:13):
A way.

Speaker 2 (42:17):
I want to say, and share your stories. Don't sit
down on your stories, y'all. We all got gifts and talents.
And he said that he will make room for you.
He said he will put you in front of great
men and women. So y'all getting for a great men
and women. Go ahead, sweetheart.

Speaker 3 (42:34):
Yes, I want to say thank you again. I do
have to go, I have an appointment, but I want
to say thank you for allowing me this opportunity. It's
just an amazing opportunity to get out and tell my
brother story and my story hitting the plain sight because
people will not believe that we got the US government
doing crickets. They've been doing us as a cold war
to their own American citizen, and yes, they want us

(42:55):
to defend them in every war that they create. So
I want to say thank you, Angela, thank you to
everyone who's supported my podcast, thank you to everyone who
supported my books, my story, and I love you guys
so very much.

Speaker 2 (43:06):
Well, thank you, thank you, thank you, and I pray
that you have a great day.

Speaker 3 (43:10):
Oh, thank you.

Speaker 2 (43:11):
Thank you guys for joining me on today. I pray
that you guys were blast by something that was shared
on today. And if you would note that she is
a part of the one hundred author movement, she's going
to be joining us here on the podcast as well,
so we're looking forward to that. She's going to be
taking up the Wednesday spot that we have on second

(43:32):
and fourth Wednesdays at eight pm. So we look forward
to being able to be a vessel to share so
make sure y'all tune in, make sure that y'all go
over and follow. If you are not following us, y'all,
please make sure that you are following us. We are
on YouTube, We're on twitch, y'all. We're on old platforms
that you can hear a podcast you forty two, Spotify,

(43:58):
iHeart Radio. Y'all can even hear us on your Alexa.
So it's really no excuse for not being able to
get this amazing information and being able to take yourselves
to the next level. So I encourage you guys to
go over follow us and check out some of these
amazing authors. That's a part of this movement. Again. I
am the visionary of this platform. I am perfectually known

(44:23):
as the Queen Up Collaboration across these platforms, y'all, y'all
can find me anywhere. All you got to do is
google Queen Up Collaboration Angela Thomas with and I promise
you I'll pop up somewhere. It may be some stuff
you may not want to see, but hey, it's me.
I don't hide nothing. I don't keep nothing from the public.
I am who I am, but every day I just trive.
I strive to be the best version of myself that

(44:45):
I be. I only want you to know that you
didn't get dropped out the sky, that you gotta purpose, y'all.
I love y'all, and I pray that your day, your
day is blessed. Y'all have a great one.
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