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August 1, 2025 • 82 mins
Like It Or Not with Rebecca Azor - Free to tell the truth and not care who doesn't like it! Bring your coffee or drinks and join hosts Rebecca Azor, DJ XXXclusive and Benjamin Dixon for culture, news, music and dad jokes! Saturday mornings!

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Like It Or Not streams live Saturday mornings on YouTube, Twitch and Facebook. The podcast version of the show was previously published on The Benjamin Dixon Show podcast and earlier episodes can still be found there.
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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:01):
The Black Heritage Day app.

Speaker 2 (00:03):
Download today on Google Play or the Apple App Store.

Speaker 3 (00:09):
Sarah Lewis fun was born on this Hi.

Speaker 4 (00:12):
This is Jeremiah John H.

Speaker 2 (00:13):
Johnson.

Speaker 3 (00:14):
But today let us not forget our death to Tucson.
Enoja McMillan was born on this day in nineteen oh four.

Speaker 2 (00:22):
Marshall Najor Taylor was born in Indianapolis, Indiana, on November.

Speaker 3 (00:27):
Curried on this day, December twentieth eighteen.

Speaker 4 (00:32):
Work that we're doing here is not gonna stop when
it comes to these types of discussions. It's going to
be for us and by us here on this platform
when the media is telling us to look the other way.

Speaker 3 (00:41):
Your support is what helps us move forward.

Speaker 4 (00:44):
Join picture on dot com, forward slash like it or not,
help us grow, like it or not.

Speaker 3 (00:50):
It starts now.

Speaker 4 (00:56):
Good morning, and welcome to like it or not where
we're free to the truth.

Speaker 1 (01:01):
And not here. Who doesn't like okay?

Speaker 3 (01:03):
Okay? I was like, is that mean? I'm not sure?

Speaker 1 (01:06):
Yep?

Speaker 3 (01:06):
And not care? Who don't like it? Amen?

Speaker 1 (01:08):
How are you record? How are you?

Speaker 3 (01:11):
We got a new We got a new angle today.

Speaker 2 (01:13):
Yeah, you know, just trying to get this set up
set up so I can do what I gotta do.

Speaker 1 (01:18):
You know what I mean, it's getting it's a little dark.

Speaker 4 (01:22):
I mean it's actually giving skin like it's dark, but
it's it's the a stack.

Speaker 3 (01:26):
It's it's not a bad lighting. Yeah, it's giving glow.

Speaker 1 (01:32):
Yeah I am shiny, that's what you mean.

Speaker 3 (01:34):
I said, glow.

Speaker 4 (01:35):
Glow is actually a good thing, you know, especially in
the summer. You have a summer glow.

Speaker 3 (01:39):
Skin is glowing. That's what it's giving.

Speaker 2 (01:42):
It is summertime, and the living is not quite easy.
I was gonna say the living is easy, but that'll
be a lie, a lie. What's going on in your world?

Speaker 3 (01:49):
Long summer time and the living issues?

Speaker 4 (01:52):
You know, I'm because I'm the people going to stay
in the streets because I'm Haitian.

Speaker 3 (01:56):
I ain't supposed to know that song.

Speaker 2 (01:59):
You know, since you start, since you started that, have
you seen all of the wonderful videos of black Americans
descendants of enslaved Africans in America?

Speaker 1 (02:11):
First, let me start here.

Speaker 2 (02:12):
Have you heard about the so called protest and boycott
of African businesses by black Americans?

Speaker 3 (02:20):
I've heard about that.

Speaker 4 (02:22):
I haven't really, it hasn't brushed across my page as
far as like it's take taken over, but I TikTok,
like when I go on TikTok to look for recipes.

Speaker 3 (02:31):
For something that's taken over TikTok.

Speaker 4 (02:34):
It's been a very huge discourse where a lot of
people are saying to boycott and I've even seen where
some others are saying to do the opposite, Black American business,
boycott African African solely. But it started with the old
boycott African business because of the whole idea of they're

(02:55):
trying to take over. Remember that while you're grabbing that,
I'm just going to speak not pandor. I remember that
what we talked about the other day on the last
show on Saturday, and we brought up brother.

Speaker 3 (03:10):
Isaac Kurree.

Speaker 1 (03:12):
Yes, and remember.

Speaker 4 (03:16):
We were just discussing like how wrong it was and
gospeling dead and all the things. And there's an update
with that. But the thing I knew that would happen.
People always assume, like I said that I'm if I'm
on the right side of the conversation, I have to
be somebody who is senophobic. They don't assume immediately that
I'm Haitian until they go to my page and they

(03:37):
see the flag. So because I was defending gospel music,
there's no way I can be defending gospel music and
be a Haitian American. So the person came and was
like the you know, isn't it strange? No, So they
went and liked my posts and things of that sort,
and then I went to their page and it was like,
isn't it strange that while we're talking about gospel music,

(03:59):
we really need to talk about how the person who's
saying all these things happens to be an African man.
You know, the guy is African, I think from Ghana
Ghanian background. And he's like, because of that, you know,
we need to start protecting our own gospel needs to
be protected because what's happening is African. You see how
Africans are taking over the gospel world. They're coming over

(04:20):
here and the Americans are flocking to them as the
preachers and as whatever and as. And I'm just like,
because the scam looked different, it might be dressed up
a little different, it's the same thing all the way across.

Speaker 3 (04:32):
That's my opinion.

Speaker 4 (04:33):
I'm like, everybody just the same thing. So it ain't
that they're taking over anything.

Speaker 3 (04:38):
It's I see.

Speaker 4 (04:40):
As the same thing that y'all got a question why
y'all will not remove yourselves from Tdjke's the.

Speaker 3 (04:48):
Road, get off of it, you know, like there's nothing
wrong with tdj's.

Speaker 4 (04:55):
I was an avid tdj's well viewer, you know, and supporter,
and I was any bitty and all the Haitians were
Bennie hen and they were td jakes, and they were
wanted to buy them, and they were you know, all
these people. So don't get me wrong, I know all
these people. But y'all gotta ask the gospel industry why

(05:16):
they ain't move the needle for nobody else to be,
you know, havingny a bit of shine, you know, as
far as let the industry grow and then not be
just TDJS as the sole you know person for.

Speaker 2 (05:28):
Well you know, cause I mean most of the channels
are controlled by whitefol and they only gonna let one
negro up at a time Like that's that's just what
it is.

Speaker 4 (05:35):
And the thing is that's something that should be where
the conversation then that is an important conversation. They want
to skip over that and blame it on Africans and
that was a problem for me. It's like you're doing
exactly what they what they did to enslave folks way
back in the day, and that's choose a black person
to be upset with, right.

Speaker 2 (05:57):
So yeah, so so so they but it's backfired, it's
backfired in the spectacular ways.

Speaker 1 (06:04):
So they try to organize a boycott.

Speaker 2 (06:07):
They being like FBA, which stands for its Fundamental Black Americans,
which is nothing more than a trademark, literally, a trademarked
owned by Tarik Ashey, I'm sorry, Tarika Nashid and and
so these folks are basically, you know, let's just call

(06:29):
them what they are. They're pro black impostors, pro black imposters.
They're pretending to care about the black community, and they're
destroying the Black community and they're trying to do it
by dividing Black Americans from the rest of the diaspora.
And this week's edition was let's boycott African Businesses. Well,

(06:49):
that didn't really go well for them because now it's
gotten everybody, like black folks from all over, you know,
black folks who are descendants of Africans, enslaved people, black
folks who've been hit fossixcess eight generations, like myself. But
they coming out and they are like out here saying, Nah,
we ain't with y'all on this.

Speaker 1 (07:07):
Just listen to a little bit of this one TikTok.

Speaker 5 (07:09):
This is for entertainment purposes only. I gotta put that
in there because what I just said.

Speaker 1 (07:15):
Yeah, so I.

Speaker 5 (07:17):
Just seen this post where this lady is sitting up
on there talking about August first, it's supposed to be
the day that everybody's supposed to boycott African shops. My
first question is, how are you boycotting something that you
don't go to? You have locks in your head? How

(07:37):
are you boycott and African braiders with locks in your head?
Make it make sense to me? Also, how could you
skip over everybody else and jump straight to the Africans?

Speaker 1 (07:52):
How do we do that? You literally jumped.

Speaker 5 (07:56):
Over white racist people, That's what I said, you know,
racist people, racist people, fake ass Indian racist people. You
skipped up all their businesses, came everything she said, but
I went straight to the African.

Speaker 4 (08:10):
Look it got a little crazy right there for me.
But we're gonna be all right, We're gonna pa.

Speaker 1 (08:14):
They just speak their mind.

Speaker 5 (08:17):
They are out here trying to eliminate us and alive us,
harm us and do all this ship to us. They're
not doing that. That's everybody else that you skipped over.

Speaker 1 (08:26):
All, Right, here's another business, here's another one. Hey, I'm
a close with this.

Speaker 5 (08:33):
I noticed that behind this fb A movement, it's a
lot of black men, A lot of this is a
lot of the sisters are behind this.

Speaker 1 (08:43):
But I see the black men are like really doubling down.

Speaker 5 (08:47):
And my thing with y'all is, you guys came on
this internet with your podcast with your ring lights and
Matt and Mike talking down on your own women, your
own African American women.

Speaker 1 (09:00):
Y'all started with them, and.

Speaker 5 (09:02):
Then y'all, y'all you know, going down now y'all hate Africans.

Speaker 1 (09:06):
And then look the Ralph Lauren thing, the Black Rafe Lauren.

Speaker 5 (09:10):
Campaign that you guys are hating on that, saying that
that's not your experience, saying.

Speaker 1 (09:16):
That you grew up stealing Polo. What is wrong with you, brothers, brothers, I'm.

Speaker 5 (09:21):
Talking to the Black American men, what is wrong with y'all?

Speaker 1 (09:24):
Like they're supposed to be leading the women and y'all
not behaving like leaders.

Speaker 5 (09:29):
Because at a time like this, when we are under
attack as a nation.

Speaker 1 (09:34):
Okay, let's not.

Speaker 5 (09:35):
Even forget that we're under attack as a race, as
a black race, Like these people don't want none of
us here, whether you're African, whether you're African American or black.
Excuse me, Black American, we are not wanted here.

Speaker 1 (09:49):
Let's share one more, one more, one more than we go.

Speaker 3 (09:52):
It's funny.

Speaker 6 (09:52):
I rarely get my hair braided, and I just went
to the African braid and shopping here. Y'all need to
talk about y'all boycott news, folks?

Speaker 3 (09:58):
Why is we boycott for? Please help me understand?

Speaker 6 (10:01):
Like I understand that the Black American girls do know
how to brak hair and stuff like that, but you
can't just walk up in their shop.

Speaker 3 (10:08):
You gotta buy your own. Hell, they be charging three
hundred plus just all.

Speaker 6 (10:12):
These extra add on fees in the African shop. You
got two people on your head. It ain't you know
what you're paying for?

Speaker 3 (10:18):
You know, like it is what it is.

Speaker 6 (10:20):
You can get food, you can get up, take a break, whatever,
Like what is we boycotting?

Speaker 1 (10:25):
And then it's like, y'all.

Speaker 5 (10:27):
Boycott everything else?

Speaker 6 (10:28):
Why the fuck y'all ain't boycott.

Speaker 1 (10:30):
A little lemon?

Speaker 3 (10:32):
Why the fuck y'all ain't boycott Gucci.

Speaker 6 (10:34):
Why we not boycotting that? Like, why y'all not boycotting
the shit that really need to be boycott Like I
don't be understanding it.

Speaker 3 (10:41):
The brains, don't be braining, the don't be thouting because
boycott Bay do y'all see how neat it's funny. I
rarely get my.

Speaker 1 (10:54):
It's that's just like.

Speaker 2 (10:57):
Hoo.

Speaker 4 (10:59):
This is this is literally my second I you know,
and know if I said this to the lady at
the braid, y'all, I said, I ain't coming to y'all
for all.

Speaker 3 (11:06):
We've just be honest with you.

Speaker 4 (11:09):
I go straight to my You know, Black Americans they
know how to put a weave in.

Speaker 3 (11:14):
This is my opinion and my opinion totally.

Speaker 4 (11:16):
But when I got braids, when I'm going to get
braids gonna be Caribbean or African African number one. And
I just came from the Togalese lady and she got meal.
I said, hey, I just want to millium. I just
I want my skin color. She put this color together
herself herself.

Speaker 1 (11:32):
This was this.

Speaker 4 (11:33):
She put different colors of hair together cause I told her,
I want the trend of my my skin color.

Speaker 3 (11:38):
Did in two seconds.

Speaker 4 (11:40):
I came in there with no appointment, no nothing, and
she hooked A sister also didn't when I said, you
know what, I want the hairline braided differently because I'm
not the girl that I just like my neck hadline
to be natural.

Speaker 3 (11:53):
I don't do the.

Speaker 4 (11:54):
You know the things the kids doing the just yeah,
just like that. I don't do the baty boop on
the edge, on the edges. I ain't got enough for it.
So so I went back and she was like, no
matter what she's like, if there's anything that is wrong,
you can always come back. She set us like time
for me, no issue. So here's my thing with that.

(12:17):
You and a lot of them are doing this thing
where they're going. They're booking appointments at the braid shop,
setting up their cell phones and recording one offs and
going off on them and saying, this is why I
don't go to No Africans because.

Speaker 3 (12:31):
It'd be just hood, it be just whatever.

Speaker 4 (12:33):
But you're there because the price, right, you're there because
you can get out quicker. Correct, You're there because it
benefits you in some way, shape or form. But it's
not only with the hair, clothing, you know, all the
other things. Black Americans have the same thing. Why don't
we just support all of us and all of our things,
like you were saying, Ben, because.

Speaker 3 (12:55):
We're boycotting because of.

Speaker 4 (12:57):
A rumor that Todd set up. I'm skidding, a rumor
that Donald Trump set up. And you have to understand that.
And it's not only Donald Trump. This Donald Trump is
the example of the slave masters and the colonizers. So
the same rhetoric that he is spewing out from one

(13:20):
of the highest pulpits in the world, he is taking
pages and the blueprint from the original colonizers. And that
is to separate and make sure that if you can
put something into one of the group's minds, to tell
them that the other group is taking away something from them,

(13:43):
even though they have the same plight, they look exactly
the same, and they come from the exact same place. Yeah,
we can still gain control of them.

Speaker 2 (13:54):
Divide and conquer, Divide and Concker is ancient as history
is ancient. I want to bring up and I don't
know if this is a person to the chat, and
I'm sorry. I normally, you know, I always tell people
stay out of the chat, stay out of chat, but
this one's important, destiny. I'm not even gonna I'm not
gonna knock you. I am gonna knock to read this
is what Destiny said. Then you have no idea what

(14:14):
FBA is. You need to have a discussion with Tarik
Nashid and not just dispair as you man man to man.
It's hard to have a conversation with the man, man
the man when he's hiding from me behind a block
on Twitter.

Speaker 1 (14:26):
Tarik na Sheid been hiding from me for years.

Speaker 2 (14:28):
He unblocked me for like six months, and then I
gave him so much direct hell.

Speaker 1 (14:31):
That he blocked me again. Here's here. I know exactly
what I mean.

Speaker 2 (14:36):
Honestly, I could bring it up in a second and
show you where it's nothing more than a trademark that
he makes money off of. But I think it's important
that we actually understand who the man is behind this operation.

Speaker 1 (14:47):
Here's Tarik Nashid.

Speaker 2 (14:49):
In his own out of his own mouth saying how
he got offered a huge bag from white supremacists to
disparage Africans and immigrants.

Speaker 1 (15:01):
Listen to them.

Speaker 7 (15:04):
They would love for me to join with them to
dump on some black immigrants. There's a huge bag for that.
Let me tell y'all something. I've gotten calls from these
white networks wanting to put me on and give me
a real big bag to get on TV and get

(15:24):
out here and start throwing black immigrants under the bus
with them.

Speaker 8 (15:31):
That a whole tribe of villager people got aids. They
know they just gonna come over here and just get
into Black society. So what would stop them?

Speaker 1 (15:41):
Now?

Speaker 2 (15:41):
The first clip that you heard was him saying he
got the offer right, and he made it seem like, Okay,
I'm too black to do that. Then just like a
little about a year later, this is what he's saying.

Speaker 7 (15:52):
Now, let's think about that.

Speaker 8 (15:53):
Let's put your thinking caps on. They know African immigrants
come over here. They're not going nowhere, but they can.
They gonna come right among black society.

Speaker 1 (16:08):
There you go. So, anyway, you missed the uh I
split it up wrong. But then he came back to me.

Speaker 4 (16:13):
No, you actually, you actually this is you played it
before on the channel. You played both separately, but you
were showing us how he got the bag and then
how what happened when I mean.

Speaker 2 (16:25):
Yeah, listen, I'm not gonna say he took the offer
from white supremacist, but I am gonna say this, why
white supremacists feel comfortable enough calling you and offering you
a big bag to portray black folks. White supremacists no
good and well, they can never call me, they can
never offer me nothing. They can never say Dixon, I
got a huge bag for you to do.

Speaker 1 (16:46):
What to do? What slap you upside of the head? Okay,
I'll do that for free.

Speaker 2 (16:50):
But they felt comfortable enough going to Tarika the sheet
and then shortly thereafter destiny he began. He backed away
from his whole documentary. He did a whole documentary on
Haiti one time. He was payan African at one time,
and now all of a sudden he's a part of
he's he's heading up a boycott against Africans.

Speaker 4 (17:09):
No, it's very much tacomats, very much there. There's there's
a lot of similarities in the grift when one when
when one group of people find you out, you go
to the next and you grift to their beliefs. You know,
you'll you'll grift to whatever it is that you don't

(17:32):
believe in but they don't know about. And so with
tacam X there was I remember a big, large group
of elites that when presented with actual information and evidence
and receipts that talcom X was and Tacomax, if you
guys don't know, is Shaun King.

Speaker 3 (17:53):
But when he was putting out a lot.

Speaker 4 (17:58):
Of when there was so much inform on the wrong
doings that he was doing, they said, we can't bring
our brother down like that. We can't bring our brother
down like that, and they held on. Then he moved on,
and then he was within the church. They said, we
got to cover our brother. And he moved on to

(18:19):
the next and then he became what it was a
Muslim who about Sean and so went over there and
there was so like, so much unfinished business with the
other parties in groups of people that he left. And
there's a big group of white people because of white guilt,
who associate with them. And I think it's easier because

(18:42):
he looks like them. And and and so with that
being said, they get to say, well, Sean King said,
and here it's well, Tarik Nashid said, and you know
we've heard well doctor Umar said.

Speaker 2 (18:58):
And we saw you watched us, I mean you we
watched the progression of doctor Umar from being anti Trump
to being pro Trump.

Speaker 1 (19:06):
And like in what three weeks, like how how you yeah.

Speaker 3 (19:09):
Less than a month and so to.

Speaker 4 (19:14):
Know that these people are getting a bag for whatever
side their own. We watched Kanye West go from.

Speaker 1 (19:21):
George don't care.

Speaker 3 (19:22):
About a black people to black people. You basically chose slavery.

Speaker 1 (19:27):
Yes, white lives matter to.

Speaker 3 (19:30):
White lives matter. Now, wait, we missed an area.

Speaker 4 (19:34):
Then went back to the church and it was covered
by the church and created the whole cult like choir,
and then then left it got all the gospel awards,
all the gospel awards, and left it left that and
then it is now a Nazi, a Nazi. Shot in

(19:54):
the hell Hitler.

Speaker 2 (19:55):
Come on, man, come on, like there there's a progression
and these are the people. Now this does Does this mean?
I want to be clear here, because there's quite.

Speaker 1 (20:05):
A few people who.

Speaker 2 (20:08):
Identify as ados and FBA because they want to delineate
and say I'm a black person who is a descendant
of enslaved Africans in America.

Speaker 1 (20:21):
Right.

Speaker 2 (20:21):
Does this mean that everybody who does that is tarik
na sheet ish?

Speaker 1 (20:26):
No, not at all.

Speaker 2 (20:28):
But I think it's important for people to understand the
origins of a movement that you're associating yourself with, understand
the motivations behind it, Understand that it is actually a
registered trademark in Tarikna She's name, and recognize that it's
dividing and conquering. But what's beautiful about it is that
black folks, you know, they're responding now that they say, oh,

(20:50):
we're gonna go boycott African businesses.

Speaker 1 (20:52):
Black folks is like, who gonna go boycott? Who? We
ain't going to boycott. We ain't boycotten African food.

Speaker 2 (20:58):
We ain't boycotten African beauticians of braiders, We ain't boycott
and African nothing.

Speaker 1 (21:04):
Y'all go over there and boycott. But it's video at
the video.

Speaker 2 (21:06):
At the video, I mean literally, I'm seeing like hundreds
of videos of African Americans, people born in America, people
who's ancestors with slaves in America. I'm seeing them say,
y'all over there by ourselves for the rest of us,
we pan African. We are part of the diaspora, and
we tied of the diasper wars.

Speaker 1 (21:25):
And I love to see it.

Speaker 4 (21:27):
Shout out to two tooths braiding here, Selon, who needs
some business because she's in the white area. Two toos
braiding here, Salon and Atworth. If y'all need a braid
of check it out because Cis braids it down and
it's not the type of African braiding salon where it's crazy.

Speaker 3 (21:45):
I know that we're used to those, but this one
is beautiful.

Speaker 4 (21:48):
The atmosphere is nice, it's beautiful in pink inside.

Speaker 3 (21:51):
Check it out. It's called two Tooths.

Speaker 4 (21:52):
I think they're renaming it, but it's two Tooths braiding
here salon in Acworth.

Speaker 3 (21:58):
Uh Georgia, Oh.

Speaker 4 (22:00):
Yes, yes, please go check it out because it's it's
predominantly white. But they're looking to, you know, just expand
and that's that's where they have their business. So please,
if you can tell them Rebecca sent you, you might
get something.

Speaker 3 (22:13):
A little percent of y'all I know the people or
I know the people.

Speaker 4 (22:17):
But that being said, we have to combat this type
of stuff because even if it's just us or if
people say, don't I don't like when people say if
we ignore it, it'll go away.

Speaker 3 (22:30):
Has that worked ever?

Speaker 1 (22:33):
Never?

Speaker 3 (22:36):
I would I wish.

Speaker 4 (22:39):
If we ignored because they've actually used that then whether
we want to admit it or not.

Speaker 3 (22:48):
In the last election cycle, if we.

Speaker 4 (22:52):
Just ignore it and not vote, or you know stand
our ground because commins said this or whatever, it'll go away,
it'll be fixed. And now we are undoing and making
things so much more worse.

Speaker 3 (23:06):
That we're going to.

Speaker 4 (23:09):
Have to do so much more of a cleanup than
what we could have done with.

Speaker 3 (23:16):
Kamala former Vice president Kamala as president.

Speaker 4 (23:19):
And I think we have to understand that speaking up now.
I know that we have to understand that speaking up
actually makes a difference. Speaking up actually makes a difference.
And we know that from a historical standpoint, people lost
their lives speaking up, fighting and all the because of

(23:42):
where were It didn't happen overnight. But with Donald Trump
as president, we're undoing so much that overnight may not
even look like twenty years over there, it may not
even look like forty years. It's so much undoing and
things that he's set in place for years and years
to come that we're going to have to keep calling

(24:03):
it out so that we don't make it normal.

Speaker 3 (24:07):
It doesn't become our day to day. And that is
another thing is taking on these.

Speaker 4 (24:12):
Tired the tired words and phrases and narratives about black people.
We haven't seen a spike like this when it came
to diaspora wars in such a long time. We were
coming to a place where I feel like people were
just like, you know what, this is what it is.

Speaker 3 (24:33):
We got burna boy, we got Shaboozi.

Speaker 4 (24:36):
Shabuzzi's a Nigerian man who sings country music in America
from Virginia. Things like that are not an anomaly. It's
actually this happens all the time in America. We should
be able to accept people as they are, and that's
even amongst black people because we're not a monolith. And

(24:57):
the idea that we're people are coming here to steal,
kill and destroy the Black American culture.

Speaker 3 (25:05):
It's crazy.

Speaker 4 (25:07):
You have people who are claiming fba and atos, but
Pan Africans who are wearing ken tayclothes, who are who
are subscribing to a lot of African ways, but want
to remove them and create what.

Speaker 3 (25:24):
So this is why I say.

Speaker 4 (25:26):
And then we have some people who are to that,
who are opposite and who are calling out Black Americans
and saying all those things about them as well. We
should not be fighting each other after latitos, they in
the mix too. We don't, we don't want to know,
nobody want to be around them. I know Black Nominigrans,
so nobody wants to be around because it's like but

(25:47):
at the end of the day, black is not a
monolith and don't allow people to uh.

Speaker 3 (25:52):
I know so many. Look, I got black friends, I
know so many Black Americans.

Speaker 4 (26:00):
Like I said, growing up, I'm supposed to sit here
and tell y'all, I do not f for Black Americans
because my whole my whole growing up was being.

Speaker 3 (26:07):
Bullied and attacked and talked down to.

Speaker 4 (26:09):
But when I got to Florida A and M University
and I saw those Black American people tell me to
learn more about my culture, dive into my culture. They
never made me an other on campus. They let us
have our own groups and we partnered with everybody else.
It was never a thing that made me feel like
an outsider on that campus. And I realized that what

(26:32):
they're doing outside of where blackness actually thrives separating folks
because I'm here on the highest of seven hills in Tallahassee, Florida,
and the togetherness is crazy. One of my closest friends
is a Nigerian brit that went the first time he
came to America was him coming to a fam you.

(26:54):
The first time I met a Nigerian out of Florida,
Miami day, just like Trick Daddy, was that Fam You,
I met actual Cheroke. You know, I be saying I
got Cherokee. I said, No, I met an actual Cherokee
folk black ones at fam You. So I was like,

(27:19):
this is what they're teaching me.

Speaker 3 (27:21):
Outside is not what No.

Speaker 4 (27:23):
In every class that I had, they were like, yo, Reecca,
you we're going to have you do as a dancer.
In my dance course that I had to take, they
made me do my project on Haitian dance culture and
I learned so much in that. They told me you
do not have to hide you are you? They even

(27:45):
told me, I told you all about this, sorry, Professor
Benn said, Ben Davis.

Speaker 1 (27:50):
You say.

Speaker 4 (27:52):
Professor Benjamin Davis told me the way the world is
going to see you when you leave here is going
to be as an immigrant. And I did not believe it.
And he said they're gonna make it tougher on you.
So he had to train me with suck. Lose the
accent v accent that I had, you know, lose it.
We're gonna work on that. We're gonna do all these things,

(28:14):
and here we are, and you're telling me when I
leave this, this this beautiful world that I know where
it's almost like Wakanda for me. It's almost like Wacanda
for me. They're telling me to look at the people
that I grew relationships with from all sides of the
world and tell them, because you're this, I can't f
with you.

Speaker 3 (28:33):
Mm hmm.

Speaker 4 (28:33):
You're taking from me. You're this for me, you're that,
and that is not the truth. We should be aligning
with one another. There's gonna be arguments. We're gonna just
like any other group. People want to be superia. But
you know, let it be more of the horoscope argument.
So the Leos are better than the Taurus or whatever. Right,

(28:55):
love who you are because America wants us to hate
who we are, so loving who we are has nothing
to do for us to look at one another and say,
I'm better than you are black. Come on, I'm better
than you're black. I'm better than you were black.

Speaker 1 (29:08):
Yeah, yeah, enough of that.

Speaker 2 (29:10):
On a share, this is a British Nigerian man who
is for the first time becoming aware of HBCU bands.
Now ban he's watching is all coorn A and m
oh oh no, I'm sorry. All corn State University and
all corn State University was the first black band that

(29:30):
I ever saw. They came marching down the streets of
brick Caven, Mississippi when I was seven years old, and
the drum majors were tall, and the girls were beautiful
and the music was jamming. And then the drum majors
did this what he's about to see. They did this
leap thing and they start flying through the air and stuff.
I was hooked on HBCU bands ever since. This video
just came out twelve days ago, and it just shows

(29:51):
you how like the diaspora like, we recognize each other
when we allow ourselves to recognize each other, right when
we can see the beauty and the brilliance in each
of our individual, unique cultures, but we also see how
all of our unique individual diasporate that diasporic cultures are.

Speaker 1 (30:10):
The same and connected and intertwined and have.

Speaker 2 (30:12):
Some of the same similarities. But just watch him as
he sees it for the first time, because it reminded
me of when I saw it for the first time
as a little black boy in Mississippi.

Speaker 1 (30:41):
What's this story, people? I'll probably go about fifty comments
and Eddie, you have to check this out. Apprenticed is
like HBCU buns want to such for those lows of them.
So this is our come States alcohol much in the
versus Jackson State's soub I have known crew.

Speaker 3 (30:57):
What is gonna be? Well, yeah, let's go. That's a
ring right now, war.

Speaker 1 (31:06):
Broum.

Speaker 3 (31:24):
This is its Corbiel's spice on it.

Speaker 1 (31:26):
It's Corbio A little.

Speaker 3 (31:27):
A little, we got ways all come state, okay, anyway,
go ahead, go ahead.

Speaker 4 (31:36):
Movies and takes us. Listen when you go to an
HBC Now, this may not have been Florida A and
M University, and it may not have been b c
C now b c U, right, but when you see
an HBCU band coming down the street, now, if it
ain't fam, it's an experience, an HBC experience.

Speaker 3 (31:58):
There's none other than that.

Speaker 4 (31:59):
If I ever were to go back and teach media anywhere,
it would have to be at an HBCU.

Speaker 3 (32:05):
Because of the the the the togetherness. A man who
is all the way in London or in the UK, an.

Speaker 4 (32:16):
African man who has never seen the culture, but he
sees it, the HBCU culture, and he's so impressed.

Speaker 3 (32:24):
And this is just a little taste of it.

Speaker 4 (32:25):
Because one thing about HBCU is our bands are bigger
than the football team. Do you want to see the
ban if your if your football team sucks with the
stadium is packed, that's because we're waiting for him to
eat up the opponents in the band.

Speaker 3 (32:44):
You know, this is what we look forward to and.

Speaker 2 (32:48):
See.

Speaker 1 (32:51):
I know, guys, that's what they want to stop.

Speaker 3 (32:53):
They we see that with Marva Johnson over there at FAMU.

Speaker 1 (32:58):
Who is the Larva?

Speaker 4 (33:00):
She's Marga Marvel who is and not only Marga Marve.
They put another Ron de Sant disappointee on the board
of trustees just the other day. And this woman that
they put on is saying how much Marga Marva has
helped her.

Speaker 3 (33:17):
I don't care.

Speaker 4 (33:18):
Somebody said, not all skin is kin or not all whatever,
not all kin focused skin folk, and that is very factual,
well and true. Not all skin focus can right. They
needs on feel like they needs ain't gonna high enough.

Speaker 1 (33:33):
But what what don't even try? Because I could put
fam you next it.

Speaker 2 (33:38):
Look the way he paused it, just by happenstance that
that's higher than a ninety degree angle them boys are
stepping now. They don't always step, but then when cooking
drum ages always step though.

Speaker 1 (33:48):
Go ahead, Rebecca, that's all right.

Speaker 3 (33:51):
We're gonna be quiet on that one March March.

Speaker 2 (33:54):
Than the HBC March Band. And believe or not, I
was drum major in high school. So I take this
very very seriously.

Speaker 5 (34:00):
Good.

Speaker 3 (34:00):
I know, I know, and that's why I'm gonna leave that.

Speaker 4 (34:05):
But you know, I feel like we they want to
take this away for the very same reason we just
discussed at the beginning of the show, Because the more
they can divide and conquer, the better.

Speaker 3 (34:17):
If you only if you take away.

Speaker 4 (34:19):
HBCUs or if you go to HBCUs and you figure
out why there's so much togetherness. I told you outside
in Palm Beach, all I know and all I had.

Speaker 3 (34:29):
Was Haitian friends.

Speaker 4 (34:30):
All the Black American people were taught to taunt us
and to fight us, and we were taught to protect
ourselves from them.

Speaker 3 (34:37):
And when I.

Speaker 4 (34:38):
Got to FAM, you, I didn't know anything about anything.
I would have never felt, you would have never guessed
I experienced what I experienced back home or in the
outside world outside of what FAM you taught me, outside
of the culture of FAM You. They didn't care if
you were Haitian. They didn't care if you were from
the UK. They didn't care if you were African. They
didn't care if you were a black American. You ain't

(34:59):
come the class. The professor was shutting the dot.

Speaker 3 (35:03):
You ain't do your work. It was probably gonna have
to retake the course.

Speaker 4 (35:08):
You was gonna be in the same line with everybody
else at the Financial Aid building. You was eating the
same fried chicken on Wednesdays. That family said you was
gonna eat with the mac and cheese, and that was
on period. We accepted the culture because they accepted us,

(35:31):
and that's all that I needed to start eating fried
chicken because I never ate it before I got the family.
So I never ate greens, I never ate nothing, no
soul food until I got to Fam You. And they
was like, you gonna eat this waffle in the morning.
I'm like, there's no Haitian spaghetti, there's no no You
eat this waffle in the morning, and you're gonna make

(35:52):
it yourself. There's a waffle maker right there, and before class,
you're gonna make your own waffle.

Speaker 3 (35:59):
They literally have the cast iron waffle maker. We was
in there making our.

Speaker 2 (36:05):
Hey, you go, you're gonna have to be You're gonna
have to learn to survive at HBCU.

Speaker 1 (36:09):
That's that's that's the truth.

Speaker 2 (36:12):
Look, but you know what, I didn't get enough time
in my HBCU. I didn't get a chance to graduate
from Bathune Cookman. But the two three how many years
I was there?

Speaker 3 (36:20):
If you were there, that you mean you went there?

Speaker 1 (36:23):
That was it was.

Speaker 2 (36:25):
But what I remember was and I wasn't. I wasn't
the age. I wasn't of the mindset to really take
everything I could have taken. I appreciated it. I appreciated
the HBCU experience. I appreciated the marching band. I was
there for math and marching band. Tell me how that
adds up? Well, I can tell you now, but back
then I couldn't. I was there for math and for

(36:46):
marching band, and but I was on the campus of
Mary McLeod Bethune, right I. I I knew I was
learning who she was because they were teaching that to us.
But then I didn't really sit and absorb the history
of the land that we were sitting. I didn't really
sit and absorb the professors who were trying to tell us,
to teach us about African history and the diaspora, and

(37:08):
and you know how he turned into African American history,
Like I didn't really just sit there. But if I
ever had a chance to teach it now to be
because you know, I, you know, I'm flowd to be,
not glowed to be a student, but I've learned too
much and there's too much to share, Like I would,
I would genuinely value the chance to train up a
whole generation of young Black folks to appreciate the subtle

(37:31):
things that we miss because we're so busy in college
just trying to live, and so you miss some things.

Speaker 1 (37:37):
While you're there.

Speaker 2 (37:38):
But if I had a chance to do it all
over again, Like there's nothing like going to an HBCU
exactly because of what you said, Rebecca, because it's like
it's African people from all over the world who show
up there. Like you're not just You're not just black,
You're diasporic black. Like you're making all the threads of
how you as a black person connect with the Nigerian,

(38:00):
You as a black person connect with somebody from Ghana,
how you connect with somebody from Haiti and you're learning
about Haiti's history while you're learning about you know, African
American history, and you connect the dots. And what they
don't want us to do is connect the dots enough
to see that we have never been each other's enemies.
There's never been a reason for us to oppose one another.

Speaker 1 (38:21):
But there you go.

Speaker 2 (38:22):
You have negroes like doctor Carlmackwkar probably cuts me out.
You have Black folk like Tarik Nashid, who is invested
literally in dividing us. And I'm just so glad to
see the dias for a stand up and the tribe
stand up and say boycott who African food. Ain't nobody

(38:45):
boycotting that. Ain't nobody boycotting their stores? What we're gonna
do If we're gonna boycott anybody, I'm keep it a hunted.

Speaker 1 (38:52):
If we're gonna boycott.

Speaker 2 (38:53):
Anybody in the black community, we need to boycott all
of the people in our community who come and take
our money and take it out of the commmunity. All
of the all of the beauty supply stores in the
black community, not nary one of them are owned by
black people. They are overwhelmingly owned by Koreans and Asians.

Speaker 1 (39:10):
Not no hate, no hate to them, as hate to them.
I'll just walk to this also our community. Well, who's who?
You said? Also? Who?

Speaker 3 (39:17):
Also?

Speaker 4 (39:18):
I'm here and uh in the area down the street,
there's a uh in the predominantly white area. I don't
know why they're coming to these predominantly white areas might
be more affordable.

Speaker 3 (39:27):
But there's a black owned.

Speaker 4 (39:28):
Here so called Groove Groovy Groovy. I just want to
tell you that in Georgia, check it.

Speaker 1 (39:33):
Out, owned by black Vote.

Speaker 4 (39:34):
It's owned and operated by a black couple that you
will always see standing at the front.

Speaker 3 (39:40):
They're working together.

Speaker 4 (39:42):
If somebody comes in there, she's at the front, he'll
hear the thing.

Speaker 3 (39:45):
He'll come behind.

Speaker 4 (39:46):
Her with a bag and just be waiting there for
for you to grab your little item and head on out.

Speaker 3 (39:51):
Okay, So just want to say that.

Speaker 4 (39:53):
So I said two two's air Brandon's line, and I
said Groovy's beauty.

Speaker 3 (39:58):
Uh and and here store you know in north.

Speaker 2 (40:02):
And so here's the thing, here's the thing like and
I'm I'm very particular. I think every marginalized community of
every race should be working together. However, when you have
come to our community and you set up shop and
you take money out of our community, put nothing back
into our community, and you're racist towards us when we

(40:25):
come in and you follow us around your store, just
like it was any old, regular white supremacist store. That's
who we should boycott. So every Asian owned beauty supply
store in the black community, no, we really need to
muscle them and say, hey, if you want to stay here,
you need to be fifty one percent owned by Black folks.
All of the all of the Arab store restaurants that
come and fry chicken and it tastes good and we

(40:47):
love them, and they all own by Arabs, love y'all,
but you want to keep taking money out of Black community,
fifty one percent need to be owned by Black folks
because we cannot keep letting our wealth go out of
our community. Now, if we going to boycott anybody, boycott them,
don't be racist towards them, but just make a business
decision to save money that is taken from Black folks,

(41:10):
specifically from our soul, food, from our hair, to our clothing.

Speaker 1 (41:15):
That money circular needs to circulate in the Black community.

Speaker 2 (41:17):
First, and then if after what six months, it wants
to go out right now, it don't stay in the
black community for six hours.

Speaker 1 (41:26):
The dollar does not.

Speaker 2 (41:27):
Stay in the black community for a whole day before
it leaves a Black community. So and then, and then
one last thing, when you consider that black folks in America,
what we spend is more than gd than the GDP
of entire nations. What black people spend in the United
States of America is more than what many nations have

(41:48):
for their entire GDP. But none of that money stays
in the black community. Boycott those businesses.

Speaker 3 (41:56):
I think for sure.

Speaker 4 (41:59):
I see a video earlier and I said, okay, so
I'm glad that this is being talked about. They were like,
the Asians are fried chicken, and this is the best.
The woman was saying, this is the best recipe for
a fried chicken. And they was like, yeah, you know why, right,
Because when a lot of the African Americans were deployed
in those Asian countries, they had to, you know, teach

(42:21):
them how to do that for the Black Americans to
eat and for them to come together and be able
to feed them and things like that, and that became
a recipe passed down from Black Americans to the Asian community.
And so I think that we people. Fried chicken goes
way back to the motherland. But the recipe we can't

(42:44):
lose them, okay, And when we're gonna talk about them,
we gotta talk about where they came from, who put
it together, how it came about, and that one we
got to say fried chicken the way we know fried
chicken to be. It didn't come from Kentucky, fried chicken
from the colonial kernel.

Speaker 2 (43:02):
And now when I when I when I'm when I'm
when I'm desperate, and I just just got to give
you pieces.

Speaker 1 (43:06):
I've had occasion to eat from the Colonel.

Speaker 3 (43:09):
No a lot.

Speaker 4 (43:10):
My best friend is from where the colonel has made
the chicken. Well, the recipe sits, but I have taste
my best friend's mother's.

Speaker 1 (43:18):
And it's better.

Speaker 3 (43:19):
And it's better.

Speaker 1 (43:21):
Let me let me tell you what's.

Speaker 3 (43:23):
Banita out there in Kentucky. Her fried chicken is good.

Speaker 2 (43:28):
Let me let me tell you who getting close. Let
me tell you getting close. And it's a damn shame
we're up here talking about fried chicken. But it is
what it is. Public explited chicken.

Speaker 5 (43:39):
Wa.

Speaker 3 (43:39):
I told you Papa's got me over there.

Speaker 4 (43:41):
That's doing Folks at that company, you're going there and
you smell a.

Speaker 3 (43:45):
Chicken from the dail, and you'll be like, now, who
in there cooking the chicken?

Speaker 4 (43:49):
And then you see the lady with the big elbow.
You see how what the what? What the the hair net?

Speaker 2 (43:56):
They do then colonized somebody's recipe and took in the public.

Speaker 5 (44:00):
And up.

Speaker 7 (44:03):
Listen.

Speaker 4 (44:04):
I'm like, okay, go a piece of fried chicken. You
can't afford no food.

Speaker 1 (44:09):
You go straight, You.

Speaker 2 (44:11):
Got you an get you one, get you get your
two piece for what like seven dollars with you.

Speaker 3 (44:17):
And the kids.

Speaker 4 (44:17):
You don't gotta go hide and sit in the car.
You can come out of the car with a good
nine dollars bom and and they may have one up
in price.

Speaker 3 (44:26):
And that's all right. But the chicken at publics.

Speaker 1 (44:30):
I know you can ask for a sample.

Speaker 3 (44:34):
Listen on your brakes. And I knew.

Speaker 4 (44:36):
I knew about this on the on my breaks when
I was working in corporate. I'm not even to have
a dollar to my name. I would drive on over
and in the little you know, in the little window,
I'm like, I think you know what I haven't had?

Speaker 1 (44:51):
What is that?

Speaker 3 (44:52):
They's like, that's a tender man? Could I Could I
try that one?

Speaker 1 (44:56):
Did they give?

Speaker 3 (44:58):
Can I try that? The Dippens Temple? Look, this is delicious?
You know what I'm looking with? Something else?

Speaker 1 (45:10):
Delicious? Look look all I'm saying.

Speaker 2 (45:14):
All I'm saying is if we can boycott anybody, boycott
the folks who was extracted like and then I mean,
honest with you, that's every big box store right like
they are literally designed to come and take every from
Publics to Walmart to all of them.

Speaker 1 (45:26):
But it makes absolutely no sense.

Speaker 2 (45:28):
And what's beautiful about it is that the people who
try to organize a boycott against Africans have awakened the tribe.
The diaspora is speaking out, and black folks who are
tired of FBA and Adolphs doing this dividing and conquering.
They are speaking out video after video after video. So

(45:49):
it's good, thank y'all for trying to divide us, because
now everybody is aware of it and they're pushing.

Speaker 1 (45:55):
Back and the tide is turning.

Speaker 4 (45:57):
It still rapping about you pointing out that over there,
because that Kroger is not the it's not the best.

Speaker 2 (46:04):
It's okay, it's that Roger and you get a deal.

Speaker 4 (46:09):
But I will say during the summer months, it's gonna
be the white man that's real country flipping over a
rack in the front.

Speaker 3 (46:20):
He's gonna be flipping that rack, that rack of fact.
He gonna he gonna be flipping it over.

Speaker 1 (46:26):
And listen, you know what it is. You know what
it is. I tell you what it is.

Speaker 2 (46:31):
It's because poor white folks are working at publics and
oppressed white folks are because they oppressed because of capitalism.
Like they still might have some racism in them, but
they say they are living paycheck to paycheck and they
just getting by, and that soul gets filled over into
how they spend that chicken battery struggle when.

Speaker 3 (46:49):
They're the struggle there. Listen to me.

Speaker 4 (46:52):
The Kroger that I'm next to you, it is by
those people that you speaking of then, and uh, I
will say the day the same people that controlled the
waffle houses that y'all love to eat from.

Speaker 1 (47:05):
Yeah, there's some solidarity there.

Speaker 3 (47:10):
Was toothless, but he was flipping that thing over. Okay.

Speaker 4 (47:14):
So I got a story about yesterday. Yesterday was my
nephew's birthday. We took them out to eat. A shout
out to Jadaiah Jadaia.

Speaker 5 (47:22):
I love you.

Speaker 4 (47:22):
Happy birthday, my baby. It was my nephew's birthday. We
took him out to eat. We had a racist experience
when I took him on the run that I go
on every day. It was two white men in a vehicle.
They actually gave us a ticket for parking where we
usually park. For me to just find out that the
city's just insured some parking sharks. So if you park
somewhere to go into a trail, they're going to take

(47:43):
a picture of you walking into the trail and put
a ticket on your vehicle and then send you the picture.

Speaker 3 (47:46):
Of you walking to the trail.

Speaker 4 (47:47):
Very strange anyway, So I felt so bad about that.
Then we went to a I'm not gonna name the restaurant.
I went to a black breakfast restaurant in Marietta, and
they had a amazing time, but we noticed that there
were white workers at this black owned restaurant, but a
black cook, black cook on everything he could do all

(48:08):
the things. My baby took am out of his burger
and I said, hey, baby, you all right?

Speaker 3 (48:13):
He's like.

Speaker 4 (48:15):
And I said, what's going on? And behind his burger
was just little spots of mold. And our food was good,
though you know, but there was spots of mold, and
that man was that. When we made the complaint, the
white woman was like, I've never been in the We
can hear their conversation.

Speaker 3 (48:31):
I've never been in a position where I had to
take food back.

Speaker 4 (48:34):
And then at that point we was like, hold on,
white lady, Now we was gonna go off.

Speaker 3 (48:38):
But now you back there.

Speaker 4 (48:38):
Talking to the only black cook who has no help
in the here, and you're saying that you've never been
in a position where you had to take food back.

Speaker 3 (48:46):
All of our food is actually good.

Speaker 4 (48:47):
But my baby, they must he much have just took
out the food and wanted us to eat and did not.

Speaker 3 (48:51):
See that there was a molded bread inside.

Speaker 4 (48:53):
Now when we went outside to when we were leaving,
because we started drama that they come to check and we.

Speaker 1 (49:00):
Said let's get out of here.

Speaker 4 (49:03):
Because we said let's get out of here. Everybody good,
get you to go plates let's go. So when we
got out there, I saw the man. I thought I
left my phone there with the kids went somewhere else
with their with their dad and their uncle, and I thought,
let me go back and look if I left my
phone around the area.

Speaker 3 (49:19):
The man was outside as toothless as they come.

Speaker 4 (49:23):
Everything just struggling, ain't He left the He left the
kitchen and went to the outside. People had walked in
there and waiting for food. He said, I don't give it,
damn hot.

Speaker 3 (49:35):
Ton, That's what he was.

Speaker 1 (49:37):
The phone'm saying.

Speaker 4 (49:38):
That's I walked up and said, hey, I just want
to apologize and that the food you were making was good.
It's just that there was a molded bread, and we
wanted to make sure that y'all know there could be
a batch of bread out here that you may be
molded and you may not know.

Speaker 3 (49:48):
We understand that.

Speaker 4 (49:49):
I said, I seen you back there on your own,
cooking and making sure that the food was coming to us.

Speaker 3 (49:54):
I said that to him, He's like, but I cooked
the good though, and that's that.

Speaker 2 (50:00):
And you did, and you did, my brother, you go
with me, my goodness.

Speaker 4 (50:09):
The struggle, and all somebody wants to know is that
I made your food good, loo, because I know how
my mama taught me.

Speaker 3 (50:17):
I know how I'm in the kitchen and fried.

Speaker 4 (50:20):
Chicken and everybody is sitting here disrespected, disrespected me. White
folks want to come back here and tell me, he said,
hoof tone, nobody eating in the smug. He left and
walked out and sat outside. The lady came to me
with white tears. At first, I was like, I'm so sorry.
I eat never It's like he's mad back there, and

(50:40):
I'm like, you know, you don't come to me.

Speaker 3 (50:41):
With that, white lady. You don't come to me with that,
white lady. I will not. I'm not.

Speaker 4 (50:47):
Yes, we have more the bread, we got the ticket
conf as we should, but you white lady will not
come to me with that. I watched this black man
back there by himself, not not another nan cook back there,
another nan cook that and he you could tell, is
somebody who was working to make sure he gets a
check and maybe that comped check would have hurt him. Yeah,

(51:11):
and that's where my problem lined. And she was like,
make sure you call the owner and let them know
what he did.

Speaker 2 (51:15):
I'm not call the owner and say he did a
great job. Y'all need to get.

Speaker 4 (51:20):
My brother and me was had in the car and
we talked about it, and I went and told that
man he told you, he said, I know my tone
is bad with the with the what what the man
that we said, But her tone was rude. You had
the nerve to come in there after my long damn
cooking for everybody.

Speaker 3 (51:34):
I'm cooking for everybody.

Speaker 4 (51:35):
I said, oh, certain, you cooked the good you cooked great,
it was delicious.

Speaker 3 (51:39):
That's all he wanted to know.

Speaker 4 (51:40):
As long as he made me feel good about how
my food tasted, that's all. And that's that's the that's
that's what that soul in the food gives.

Speaker 3 (51:52):
And even with the I ain't talking about Nashville soul.

Speaker 4 (51:55):
I'm talking about the people who are not even in
the little the we know, the folks Who'm talking about
the white folks that's in the back with the.

Speaker 3 (52:04):
That's making illegal drinks from.

Speaker 1 (52:07):
Whatever moonshine soul. Yeah.

Speaker 4 (52:12):
Remember man who that man that we work with, and
I would never eat his food. I was just about
to tell I was going to bring him up. You
didn't eat that man's red beans and rice.

Speaker 1 (52:20):
You came to me and was like, Becky, you need
to eat.

Speaker 4 (52:23):
I said, no, I'm sorry, I'm not doing that day.
My son was like, I was like, I'm okay, everything
is fine. And what we worked we used to work
then like twelve hour shifts, thirteen hour shifts, and I
just wasn't eating I either I couldn't afford it, even
though we were going viral every single day. Either I

(52:43):
couldn't afford it, or you know, I just I couldn't
leave to go get any food because we had to
have the show out at a certain time. And that
man came with his container with the red beads and rice.
Then we can't hear you.

Speaker 1 (53:00):
I tried. I tried. I said, you can't cook no
red beans and rice. You.

Speaker 2 (53:05):
Maybe it was racist for me to say, I say,
you're white, you can't possibly cook red beans and rice
like my people from Louisiana. That man came up there
with some of the best damn red beans and rice
I had ever had and have ever had ever since.
And then I realized it's because he was poor and
he knew how to squeeze every bit that he could

(53:27):
of goodness out of what he had, and he put
it in the red beans rice.

Speaker 1 (53:30):
I'm sorry you didn't get a chance to taste.

Speaker 5 (53:31):
It, and.

Speaker 3 (53:33):
You forced me to taste it. You put it on
a little thing and you said just try it. Remember
you came to me like a slave in the night.
You cornered me. Remember, he was like, I'm.

Speaker 2 (53:44):
Like, okay, because you would trying to be you would
try to be.

Speaker 3 (53:49):
Boogie is Bugie hungry and poor. Uh look look white
people's hands.

Speaker 2 (53:59):
And and then and you ate out because then after
that was that event, the birthday event for the other
guy's wife, and they all everybody brought in dishes.

Speaker 1 (54:07):
And we ain't gonna talk about.

Speaker 3 (54:09):
Remember we brought in dishes.

Speaker 1 (54:11):
What a time. Not that we ain't gonna talk about.

Speaker 2 (54:14):
But when he brought in his dish, the guy who
cooked the red beans rice, I ate everything that man
cooked and.

Speaker 4 (54:20):
Ben and I did not touch the other person's wife dish.

Speaker 1 (54:23):
Yeah, because some some stuff don'tk a shume it was
a German?

Speaker 3 (54:27):
Was it Okay?

Speaker 1 (54:28):
It was? It was, it was, we said, and it
wasn't bad because it was German and.

Speaker 3 (54:34):
It was not.

Speaker 4 (54:35):
But and came in a beautiful I love the way,
a beautiful up in the glass container, like beautiful china.
Where did all the the china that we don't use
in the black household?

Speaker 3 (54:45):
She brought it in.

Speaker 1 (54:46):
That that's like eight, yes, seven eight years ago now.

Speaker 3 (54:50):
Yeah, nine, I want to say, but she said, we
looked at it. It came around the room.

Speaker 2 (54:59):
And then and then oh, the white man, is this
the other white man, the white man from the South,
Because that's what it is. You get you a white
person from the South, or somebody who's been from Appalachia
or somebody who's been struggling up north, and and you
might get you some soul food. You might actually get
your some with.

Speaker 3 (55:16):
Some sol in it.

Speaker 4 (55:17):
And and it's that you know, and to wherever you
go when you expect. Because if black people can accept
what they got going on over at over at waffle
house when they're drunk and letting folks talk over, they
talk over their food, fight a little bit, come back

(55:40):
inside with their cigarette, come back and fight in a
little bit more over the food and then be like
sausage and you come get it and you and you're
still eating in there while people fighting, you can eat
the red beans and rice from your fellow friend. Now,
I don't know any white person. I'm do not have
any white friends that are like real white friends in

(56:03):
my life, like that are tangible.

Speaker 1 (56:06):
Friends, like outside in person.

Speaker 4 (56:09):
Yeah, yeah, in person friends. But and if I'm saying that,
and you probably are one, and I forgot about you. Sorry,
we haven't talked in a while, maybe, but I haven't
had anyone, you know, anyone cook for me in that
way except for that. And you know, it's one of
those things where you don't eat at everybody house.

Speaker 3 (56:27):
I've seen, I've.

Speaker 4 (56:28):
Seen even you know. But the new black folks is coming.
Some of y'all letting the dogs and cats in the kitchen,
some of y'all letting turtles walk over the dishes, letting
rabbits hop up on the counter, nibble a little bit

(56:48):
at the potatoes and walk away.

Speaker 1 (56:50):
What are we doing here? What's going on? What did
you talk about? Who's doing that?

Speaker 4 (56:55):
Just go on TikTok and it won't go under any
bridge to go feed the people?

Speaker 1 (57:02):
Wait wait wait, wait wait wait, hold on, state of being.

Speaker 2 (57:04):
You cannot have been with us long enough to hear
us repeat these stories.

Speaker 1 (57:07):
Get out of here, get.

Speaker 3 (57:09):
Out, tell the story a million times time.

Speaker 4 (57:12):
Because that was at least twice a year, at least
twice a year, at least twice a year. But the
best part about it is when I put them on.
Remember when I was like, I put you onto these wings,
and you sai, wings is good? And I made remember
when they used to be like, what are we gonna
eat today for lunch? When they didn't want us to leave,
and I'll be like, oh, I want some of limon
pepper wings.

Speaker 3 (57:32):
And it was from a hole in the wall spot.

Speaker 2 (57:34):
Oh do you know how many times I visited that
place after after.

Speaker 1 (57:39):
You put me onto that I used to drive. I
used to drive from the airport up to that spot
to get those specific wings. Go ahead.

Speaker 4 (57:47):
The wings were incredible and I and and like they
got me. They caught me off guard one day I
went in there for Asian food but then they had
chicken wings.

Speaker 3 (57:57):
But it's a hole in the wall spot.

Speaker 1 (57:58):
And they rude as every rude baby rude.

Speaker 3 (58:01):
They don't talk to you. They be in the front
like you don know when girl, sir, but they rude.

Speaker 4 (58:10):
They was so good and then they they and then
how they be telling you like you didn't ask for
a drive rubbing and ask you whatever I said, can
I get you know the hot sauce? They will take
a contentent leg it's seventeen years old, squeeze it on
top of it and I was like, oh my god,
but we ate it. So remember that day when we
we ordered it and we ordered like tubs of it.

Speaker 1 (58:30):
Yes, they paid for it.

Speaker 4 (58:32):
We ordered it and we took up, we took our
pieces home and they're like, oh, we're good.

Speaker 1 (58:35):
We're like, oh, well, thank you. I fed my kids
off for two days.

Speaker 3 (58:38):
What about they said, yeah.

Speaker 4 (58:43):
So it's like, I don't know what it was, but
my stomach was really hurting after that.

Speaker 3 (58:47):
I bet you it was.

Speaker 2 (58:49):
I bet you it was because they get to eat
whole They could to eat whole foods, they could eat
all none processed food.

Speaker 1 (58:54):
No hgu hguos.

Speaker 4 (59:02):
Listen what a time that was putting them on the food.
And you know, then you put me on the food.
I came to your baby shower and all I had
was the food y'all cooked. You came to where my
sister had cooked the yeah fish in the soup it was,

(59:24):
but you had but you also had the pass wars,
the fish and the yeah and that was good and
those things.

Speaker 3 (59:30):
So listen, when the photo is good, the food is good.

Speaker 4 (59:33):
The recipes must not be lost, and the recipes must
be credited to the person who made the recipes do
the thing it was gonna do.

Speaker 3 (59:40):
But some people who learned the recipes might not have
a melanate of the hand but still.

Speaker 1 (59:46):
Be all right.

Speaker 2 (59:46):
It might still be all right, because what I believe,
what it is, I honestly believe when it comes down
the food, and you ain't got nothing, but you know
some flour in the kitchen. Look, you know how to
make that flour taste extra good. You know that you
gotta do, you gotta and it ain't gonna be healthy
for nobody, but you just got to take it on
the chin and say, we can't eat healthy this year,

(01:00:09):
but you're gonna eat.

Speaker 1 (01:00:11):
And as long as you're gonna eat, you go outside
and run around the house a couple of times. You go.
You know you'll be okay, get get a little bit older,
you go.

Speaker 2 (01:00:18):
When you get older, you can afford to buy some
whole foods. But for right now, you know, and I
think a lot of people have that experience, so we
might be surprised how good food is.

Speaker 1 (01:00:26):
But even if though, and I think that's why the
ef them wings in the Arab community to be so good.

Speaker 2 (01:00:30):
But it's not in the Arab community. It's in the
black community owned by Arabs. But they be putting the
right They be putting that season and on it, that
stuff to make you calls, cough and sneeze if you
get too much on in it.

Speaker 1 (01:00:40):
But man, look here, I ain't gonna lie.

Speaker 2 (01:00:43):
It's good, but it need to be on fifty one
percent by Black folk, and that's what we need to
put our energy.

Speaker 1 (01:00:49):
Not against the Africans.

Speaker 3 (01:00:52):
Yeah, not against Africans, and not against each other.

Speaker 1 (01:00:55):
Lord, we've been on for a whole hour already.

Speaker 4 (01:00:57):
We have been before we get off. I actually wanted
to come out something. Most recently, there was a mass
murder New York in New York, and people are making
the mass shooter a vigiliante. And I have a problem

(01:01:17):
with that in this case because, like I was saying
on on my on my threads, we gotta be careful
with putting out misinformation.

Speaker 3 (01:01:25):
I had quote threaded. Is that what the kids called it?

Speaker 4 (01:01:29):
I don't know, but I had quote threaded somebody who
said the Blackstone shooter got the CEO of Blackstone. The
media keeps lying saying he was targeting the NFL, but
he was targeting the CEO instead.

Speaker 3 (01:01:40):
The media is trying to stop the next.

Speaker 4 (01:01:42):
Wave of Luigi man Gionne esque vigilante fever. Oh as
my camera shut off, But I said, and all I
said was yesterday's Blackstone mass shooting victims were employees, security staff,
just doing their jobs. A shooter who had died by
suicide was mentally unwell. Let's be clear, he was not

(01:02:03):
a vigilante. Stopped trying to bend over sideways like y'all
did with Luigi.

Speaker 3 (01:02:07):
And no, he did not.

Speaker 4 (01:02:08):
Kill the CEO of Blackstone. That's misinformation. It was a
senior exec. Twisting this into a folk hero moment is
dangerous and disrespectful. Don't let lies go viral while victims.

Speaker 3 (01:02:17):
Are being buried. You guys are sick.

Speaker 4 (01:02:20):
The reason I have a problem with this is because
this is a mass murder.

Speaker 3 (01:02:24):
Somebody was mentally unwell.

Speaker 4 (01:02:26):
But I also have an issue with the narrative that
they're going to try to create every time something like
this happens. And this is where I say this is
lazy leftist work when you just want to make these
mass shooters who may be killing people who are not
good or who own companies that are not good. But
so the people who were at the door, like the
Haitian man who was a security guard who was unarmed,

(01:02:49):
is that person when I said I said somebody died,
somebody wrote me a leftist person and said, yeah, they
were bad people, and I said, we can this is
going to be a problem if we're trying to move
in the right direction, trying to create a Luigi out
of everybody. Yeah, it's not going to be the way
to go. It's not going to be the way to go.

(01:03:11):
Let me get my battery as you.

Speaker 2 (01:03:12):
Take over then, Yeah, I'm just reading this. He was
absolutely not a vigilante. This is from Devil's Advocate Productions
broke this down to Pascal from the Pascal Show on
his space on this space on Tuesday. This guy was
simply mentally unwell and was unable to purchase a gun,
same as it ever was. Yeah, you know, listen, we

(01:03:33):
there there. There's going to be rare occasions where you're
gonna find me, you know, giving somebody a shout out
for a vigilante style justice. I didn't even give a
shout out to Luigi. I kind of I think I
might have wanted to. I just out of discipline, didn't.
But I'm not looking for We don't take the system

(01:03:56):
down with vigilante justice with violence.

Speaker 1 (01:04:01):
Nobody does violence better than them, y'all.

Speaker 2 (01:04:05):
And I think people need to realize that we can't
win this fight with violence because they are the masters
of violence. They will drop a nuke on a city
when they didn't really have to, right, they will genocide
an entire people right in front of your eyes. So

(01:04:25):
if we think we can win this with violence, then
we're sadly mistaken. Now I'm not on the other side
of the spectrum to say no violence at all. No,
you come down my street and you present a threat
to my people, my family, my tribe, my church, my
kin folk, my allies, then we're gonna meet violence with violence.

Speaker 1 (01:04:43):
It's just what it is. Whosoever win, let them win. Right.
But to go out and provoke violence with people who
are masters of violence and just waiting for a chance
to use their new bomb that they've been working on, No,
that's not wise.

Speaker 3 (01:04:59):
Yep. And then to this, you know, to say that
the people who were murdered.

Speaker 2 (01:05:05):
Were just people just because they worked there.

Speaker 4 (01:05:07):
That's that's insane. That's an insane take. And I've seen
that so many times. And let me go to the
post because I want to let you know how many
people reposted the missing and it also was in so
much misinformation was included in that post alone.

Speaker 3 (01:05:23):
So just to.

Speaker 4 (01:05:28):
Like this is shared over three thousand times on threads.
That's a million times, cause you know it's full black
folks on threads.

Speaker 3 (01:05:38):
Forty seven thousand views.

Speaker 4 (01:05:40):
Oh okay, I'll there, forty seven thousand views and it
it's so interesting how this person was very adamant and
hasn't taken it down, and that bothers me the most.

Speaker 3 (01:05:54):
Let me go to you right now and send it
to us, because I gotta do six star apps to
do it because I don't got access to my.

Speaker 4 (01:06:04):
I don't have access to the my Twitter anymore. From here,
I know the password.

Speaker 1 (01:06:08):
Oh okay, no problems.

Speaker 7 (01:06:10):
Uh.

Speaker 1 (01:06:10):
And you can't drop it in the because you're not.

Speaker 3 (01:06:12):
No, I'm at the dropping right now.

Speaker 1 (01:06:14):
You could drop it in the stream.

Speaker 4 (01:06:16):
Stream yard, but it's it's a process. Had a DM
it to myself on the phone. When it comes to
my computer. From the computer, I'm able to grab that,
and they're putting it in the streaming yard.

Speaker 3 (01:06:26):
Amen.

Speaker 1 (01:06:28):
Amen, here we go. So did you see it now?

Speaker 3 (01:06:34):
M the Blackstone shooter.

Speaker 4 (01:06:35):
This is what she said, and and everybody in the comments, man,
if you look, it's like people were I'm obsessed with
this vigilant to eat the rich stage of oligarchy may
there be a Litluigi for every CEO in the world.
I knew it, but he was too precise. He's an
ex P I two, that's a private investigator, instantly identified

(01:06:56):
and neutralized threats on the first floor, went straight to
the thirty third and got a damn executive of Blackstone.

Speaker 3 (01:07:01):
Yeah, this wasn't a mass shooting. It was a hit.

Speaker 4 (01:07:03):
Did you actually did he actually get him? I've seen
I've not seen the Blackstone CEO dead headline because it
wasn't true. We do we know of Blackstone in itself
as a subsidiary of black Rocks. Seems way too They
started going into everything, but this was a mass murder.
We got to get the guns out, gun control. Let's

(01:07:23):
start see here. It always, you know, flips with who
the murderer was. And then the first thing that I saw,
which was if not immediate, a few minutes after the
news dropped of the active mass shooter. Basically they wanted
to say he was a nigga, and then people instead

(01:07:46):
of just saying, oh my goodness, there's a mass shooting
going on, were working hard to say he is not
a nigga. He is not you know, white, he is
not this he's Hawaiian. And here's where I say black
people are not a monolith. The Rock's dad is a
black Hawaii man. Yeah, but it doesn't matter. There's a

(01:08:09):
mentally unwell man in the streets of New York in
a building right now, murdering people. People are having to
burycade themselves, send their last text messages to their people
because they happen to work inside of this building. Get
the guns off the street, and there's never gonna be

(01:08:29):
a time. And of course, being mentally unwell as a
thing too. If y'all want to just stick to their
why are we taking away mental health care for people?
There's so much things that we can go with. But
the first thing is we need to kill the CEO
because it happened.

Speaker 1 (01:08:48):
Well, he didn't kill but he didn't get the same.

Speaker 3 (01:08:50):
Say, and the CEO wasn't even murdered, was unharmed.

Speaker 2 (01:08:53):
Right, he didn't kill the CEO. He killed an executive, okay, so, but.

Speaker 4 (01:08:58):
Killed the security guard killed him. Are you not thinking
about those things? Somebody is mentally unwell but got access
to a gun because they are.

Speaker 3 (01:09:09):
They have they can get access to a gun.

Speaker 4 (01:09:12):
They have the ability even if they're mentally unwell, there
was no check, there's no there's nothing going on.

Speaker 1 (01:09:17):
There's no.

Speaker 4 (01:09:20):
Proper gun control in this country. Where this story should
have aligned there, it went straight into let's make sure
he's not blacks, to make sure he's not white, and
then let's make him a hero. This, this story is
not a little even though luigi.

Speaker 3 (01:09:36):
Story bothered me.

Speaker 4 (01:09:38):
But at the same time, Luigi went after what he
went after, right then kill nobody else in the in
the process.

Speaker 1 (01:09:46):
Didn't kill a comrade, didn't kill a working class on it.

Speaker 2 (01:09:51):
Look, did not kill a working class individual.

Speaker 1 (01:09:56):
Here.

Speaker 2 (01:09:57):
And I'm gonna read this comment from Beatrix. Can't be
peace of love when somebody's boot is on your neck.
That's a false dichotomy. Nobody said be peace and love.
I'm saying you gotta be strategic and if your actions,
while they may feel good, it's going to cause Okay,
let me, you know what, Let me do this because

(01:10:18):
oh do I do this the same day because I'm
getting ready to drop something on Israel and Hamas and
I'm getting ready to drop something and I need and
I honestly need everybody's help. I need everybody's help to
get the word out because Hamas hasn't existed since at
least March of twenty twenty four, a year over a year.

(01:10:40):
It's just logically impossible. It's impossible based on the words
of Israel itself, and I've tested it and run it
through simulation after simulation. It's just we've been lied to
for over a year. They have us chasing a ghost.
They have Israel has created this whole phantom that doesn't

(01:11:00):
really actually exist as an excuse for them to be
able to still commit genocide. And I'm able to demonstrate
it in many, many different ways. I'm gonna drop it today,
and I need.

Speaker 4 (01:11:10):
People better because the way that people are, Like Ben,
don't be saying nothing you can't back up, nah.

Speaker 1 (01:11:16):
No, no, no, I've been. I've been.

Speaker 2 (01:11:18):
I haven't done anything anything else but that for the
last I haven't put out anything else because of that.
I mean, you know, you know I wouldn't say it
if I wasn't Yeah yeah, yeah, yeah, but I got
But but I got to contextualize what I had to contextualize,
Like I'm I riote for Palestine and I have since
day one before this, before October seventh.

Speaker 1 (01:11:41):
Well, let me tell you something.

Speaker 2 (01:11:44):
If your strategy for your liberation is to give demons
every excuse they need to genocide you, and you give
them the moral high ground to do it. Then that's

(01:12:05):
a bad strategy. And this ain't the first time I've
said this about Hamas. People would like to venerate them
and say I won't condemn them and stuff. Let me
tell you why I condemned them when they existed. They
don't exist anymore, Because how do you make a move
that doesn't change your position? It only makes it worse.
It doesn't change it for the better, It only makes

(01:12:26):
it worse. So much so that what Hamas did on
October seventh was a give me. It was a benefit.
Its benefited Benjamin Nett and y'ah who's so much so
that it couldn't have been planned better if it was
planned by Benjamin Netting y'ah, who himself, matter of fact,
Benjamin Netting y'ah, who knew about it because Egypt warned

(01:12:46):
him about it a year in evand Egypt said in
their security and their intelligence briefings that there's something coming
and this is the timeframe that you can expect it
on Benjamin Netting y'all, who ignored it and matter of fact, Manett.
Y'all who allow funds from Cutter to go into the
hands of Hamas and what they did on October seventh

(01:13:08):
didn't do anything to help the Palestinian people.

Speaker 1 (01:13:13):
Now, y'all could fight me on that. Y'all can say
whatever you want to say on that.

Speaker 2 (01:13:16):
The reason I tied to this is because you do
not give demons the moral justification to run their violence
on you the way they have mastered. It's not about
being peace and roses in love. It's about being smarter
than them and not putting a gun in their hand

(01:13:37):
to shoot us with.

Speaker 1 (01:13:39):
And the more and more and more.

Speaker 2 (01:13:40):
We see people try to take vigilantia. You can't kill
enough CEOs.

Speaker 1 (01:13:45):
You can't. You can't because they're gonna replace They got
a new CEO already. The strategy has to be far people.

Speaker 4 (01:13:53):
Yet the jobs immediately go up and they'll put it.
They'll put it on indeed, So looking for a new
position or looking for a new touch and such. So
I'm glad that you are covering because I think that
it'll be good to put some some some context to
it for a lot of people.

Speaker 1 (01:14:12):
Oh no, I'm dropping all of it today all today.

Speaker 3 (01:14:15):
Look, that's good, let's.

Speaker 2 (01:14:16):
Get off the because that's why, that's why they couldn't
do the show yesterday, had to put the final touches
on it. It's it's just it's they've been running a sham.
They've been running a scam on on us, and and
every part of Zionism, every part of Israel has to
has got to come down because of what they did.
And so yeah, let's we could wrap up so I
can get to work and get get to publishing it.

Speaker 3 (01:14:37):
But not been telling me to get off the show.

Speaker 1 (01:14:40):
No, no, I'm just I'm just saying, well, well I am.

Speaker 4 (01:14:43):
I'm heading to a funeral, so I will not be
here on Saturday. I'm gonna head down to Florida for
a day or two. And yes, yes, yep, so I'm
leaving on this evening, so I won't be on Leftis
Mafia on this evening and I won't be on the
show on Saturday morning. So I dragged been out of bed,
uh for us to you know, do a show on

(01:15:05):
this morning.

Speaker 3 (01:15:05):
But it was good to get to speak with you guys.

Speaker 4 (01:15:08):
And then I know it's great for you to even
tease what you're about to drop. I think that's great
so the people who are watching now make sure you
will be on the lookout for Ben's latest work, which
is going to be uh nice revelation about MAMAS and
how it doesn't exist according to Ben, So I would
I would definitely be watching on my way.

Speaker 1 (01:15:27):
Home, stayed according to I got to cover my butt
before I wait.

Speaker 3 (01:15:32):
Sure, I watch it first and then we go.

Speaker 4 (01:15:35):
But I but even now you break it down right now,
I could absolutely see how that could be for sure,
because that is not just a who moves just like that.
America moves look like that too. They make us follow
a ghost forever and the whole time.

Speaker 1 (01:15:54):
They made it up.

Speaker 2 (01:15:56):
Here here, here's your best evidence, right, just one of
seven different categories of reasons why they cannot exist. That
and by the way, this is also I want to
say this. The West and society in general has allowed
and accepted Israel using artificial intelligence to automate select targets,

(01:16:22):
automate drones. The drones just go out there and kill them, right,
That's what we This is the Lavender program. If the
West accepts artificial intelligence being used to kill Palestinians, then
the West cannot deny when every major AI platform from
Rock to chat gpt, to perplexity, to claude, to deep seek,

(01:16:47):
to all the rest of the body. All of them
are different Ais. And I've tested and every single one
of them. All of them say it is logically impossible
for Hamas to still exist past March of twenty twenty four,
based on Israel's own words and based on the conditions
and the material conditions of their surveillance on their on
their siege, on everything else, It's just not logically possible.

Speaker 1 (01:17:11):
There must be some other explanations.

Speaker 2 (01:17:12):
And so if the West has accepted AI being used
to kill Palestinians, then they can't turn around and say, oh
it's Ai.

Speaker 1 (01:17:19):
We don't like AI. We're gonna no no. AI has confirmed.

Speaker 2 (01:17:23):
Six of them have confirmed that it's just not possible
for Hamas to still exist.

Speaker 1 (01:17:29):
And so what they have done over the past year
has been nothing. If it's been more than.

Speaker 2 (01:17:33):
A year, right, so March, so like a year and
four months has been nothing but propaganda. And they have
killed since then, twenty thousand people they have killed just
since then.

Speaker 1 (01:17:44):
So yeah, let's see, let's let me.

Speaker 2 (01:17:46):
Yeah, I'm gonna drop it today, and I'm gathering a
couple people in discord. I'm gonna let you all.

Speaker 1 (01:17:51):
See it first.

Speaker 2 (01:17:52):
I'm gonna lead you all review it first, and then
once you see it and you review it, I need
your help getting it out.

Speaker 1 (01:17:58):
So so what it is?

Speaker 3 (01:18:00):
I love that.

Speaker 4 (01:18:02):
Well, if you guys haven't already, please make sure you
have shared, like, oh, we gotta do the super chats.

Speaker 2 (01:18:09):
Oh yeah, super chats and and your cash app drop
your cash at Oh.

Speaker 4 (01:18:13):
Let me go ahead, you guys, absolutely please, please please
in this moment, if you can go ahead and send
the super.

Speaker 1 (01:18:23):
Chests while you pull that up.

Speaker 2 (01:18:24):
Hey, Combo had a convo with Ben talking with DJ
Exclusive next Tuesday on this space. I'd love to have
a convo with you too, Rebecca, either my show like
it or not or left to spile DM DM. I'll
set y'all up on a DM and you got to
get back on Twitter. But Sharon Miderson said, be careful
what you consume, folks will lead to burning house. That

(01:18:44):
was during the context of the FBA Adults conversation. Absolutely right,
Beca's fam.

Speaker 5 (01:18:50):
You l O L.

Speaker 2 (01:18:50):
Unfortunately I went to f A U. I wanted to
go to Fam you, but I didn't have the funds
to go. I'm ashamed to say I marched in the
white band.

Speaker 1 (01:18:57):
That's okay.

Speaker 4 (01:18:58):
You were the example in that that white and I
know that she was given full on HBCU within the
white Man.

Speaker 3 (01:19:03):
They was confused, like you doing all that.

Speaker 2 (01:19:06):
And listen, yeah, I actually so I left my HBCU
and went to f a U and and got my
bachelor's and my master's from f AU.

Speaker 1 (01:19:15):
So shout out to the owls down there in Big
rat Uh.

Speaker 2 (01:19:23):
A symptom, a symptotic behavior, says, speak on that public's chicken. Ben,
I feel so like that this this extra extra black
on that one.

Speaker 1 (01:19:31):
That's the.

Speaker 2 (01:19:33):
And then your Becca's voice, y'all send Becka some some
some love, Send us some love to help her get
to these the traveling she's got to do. She's going
going to mourn and lay her best friend's father.

Speaker 3 (01:19:47):
Ye uh we were like two and then and then uh,
this is yeah.

Speaker 1 (01:19:52):
Something to how old was he if you don't mind
me asking.

Speaker 4 (01:19:56):
He was only and is I want to say late sixties,
ended up having cancer but was able to survive at
least for five more years.

Speaker 5 (01:20:08):
Wow.

Speaker 3 (01:20:08):
And so that was that was good.

Speaker 4 (01:20:12):
Shaking up my father who I'm going down Also in
the midst of help warning my friend's father to take.

Speaker 3 (01:20:18):
My dad to a doctor's appointment.

Speaker 4 (01:20:21):
So in the midst of this, y'all know, your girl
ain't in a place where I am, you know, working anymore.
I'm free, Rememberrobbie, stay it all the time. But I'm
handling everything on my own. So if you guys can,
please please please send your girl a cash app at
Backla's Voice. I will be heading home. I will be
back to make sure I love on y'all and drop
some new content for you guys. And I wanted to

(01:20:42):
thank you guys for one last thing, for getting your
Girl to ten thousand subscribers. I want to do something
really special for you guys, so I'm putting that together
as well. I just need the time to edit it
and get all the things done. But thank you guys
for your support. Your girl finally is at ten Okay.
I just remember two years ago I wasn't even using
that page and I was at what one hundred and

(01:21:03):
seventy and now I'm at ten k subscribers.

Speaker 3 (01:21:07):
So I really appreciate you guys.

Speaker 4 (01:21:09):
And if you can keep pushing the channel, keep pushing
the work, support financially would be great again, that's Beca's
voice on cash app. But just watching actual commenting, just
whatever it is, just engaging with the channel for the algorithm.

Speaker 3 (01:21:24):
I want to see more of our faces in the
places outside of whatever they call on corn bread too
or whatever. I just found out about that myself and
shout out to that.

Speaker 4 (01:21:32):
But I want to see us in every space around
the internet just because our work is good.

Speaker 3 (01:21:37):
Don't want it to suppress us.

Speaker 4 (01:21:38):
So please definitely what Ben is about to drop, support
that as well.

Speaker 3 (01:21:44):
All right, thank you guys.

Speaker 4 (01:21:46):
So anything else been no, that's it, all right, all right,
I love you guys, mean it. I'll see you guys
on the other side next week. Happy August. Here is
not gonna stop when it comes to these type of discussions.
It's gonna be for us and by us here on
this platform. The media is telling us to look the
other way. Your support is what helps us move forward.
Join picture on dot com forward, slashank it or not

(01:22:08):
help us growth.

Speaker 3 (01:22:24):
Starts jam shirt.

Speaker 1 (01:22:37):
Reds or it's in the house. You know, she got
a funny story to tell talking politics culture, a real
life being spun. I live in life in the at
yel
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