Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:45):
The poll the people fucking because you say looking to
a brak.
Speaker 2 (00:54):
Yourself and let don't.
Speaker 3 (00:55):
Say just let the.
Speaker 2 (00:57):
Don't say the plain people.
Speaker 4 (01:03):
You want to.
Speaker 2 (01:07):
Bring yourself the man, I said, and I watched the
time of something. It's like life the sick.
Speaker 4 (01:17):
But I'm not okay, that's that only mind remiss.
Speaker 2 (01:20):
I've been permitting meditating with the mind that you're breaking.
And then if it's love for.
Speaker 1 (01:26):
Life, this word is due with guns the class.
Speaker 2 (01:30):
It's just as my mind. But I hit myself for
I've been charge. Want to make the cript for life
as they just do you under the public talks up
this accident. Man's not at the contents, so I must
pretend to set them up.
Speaker 4 (01:47):
Flow.
Speaker 2 (01:48):
I see the down slow. We're both plain so bout
having done though it's all the same.
Speaker 5 (01:54):
Now, who's the plas to break the pain?
Speaker 1 (02:08):
He's called the doc people fucking when they come, only
say thank you you did you ting come and don
look in the mir free.
Speaker 6 (02:16):
Yourself and let the don to see. Just let the
dona see by and break the pain. He's called the
doctor bot.
Speaker 1 (02:23):
Walking when they come and he saying, don't thank you boy,
you think you ting go and bring your bad look
in the mirror, bring yourself and let the doctor see.
Speaker 2 (02:32):
Just let the Dona scene be.
Speaker 6 (02:34):
Fucking your man free to say damn pool the first
did make the spend on he.
Speaker 2 (02:39):
Motion coming tail setting less again or the brabies. Man,
I look at you the thirsty and it's so wonderful,
but it start your rest. This was all you way
to have to check my pull out by the you
be willing to be with sad in the street, meaning what.
Speaker 6 (02:53):
You need to do a little bit of a sweat
and say when you won't trust you, I'll just trust
make your creaming you pick Crimson, No, lord, you're better.
Speaker 2 (03:01):
Preaching my head at the better patches.
Speaker 5 (03:04):
Resistance is to.
Speaker 6 (03:05):
The wear and rails oftting to cover thing you're a
blinding and then get into preaching.
Speaker 2 (03:12):
They pushing your blog frosting and not to see the
control the head over the stymphasize the lady, my lady,
the more I see you.
Speaker 4 (03:21):
So it just to be wearing before.
Speaker 2 (03:24):
This part of the spirit the child and taking on
the gout this concern and break the pain, the call,
the don't.
Speaker 1 (03:31):
People walking when they come in the saying you nothing
going to bring it. Look in the mirror, bring yourself
and let the doc see. Just let the dotes scene
bis and break the pain before the duck people talking
when they come in the saying you want that you
nothing gonna bring it, not in the mirror, Bring yourself
(03:53):
and let the DNA scene.
Speaker 2 (03:54):
Just let the domo scene. It's a well man. I've
(04:30):
been a baby as.
Speaker 7 (04:32):
One of the team is amos because the fatality has
been a part of the reds all deserved to be bad.
It just spicul got you redrogresses from the love bad
of the wedding, but reassessed things that you been reading
(04:53):
it because I have to learn.
Speaker 2 (04:54):
Some day and they would need a fid.
Speaker 6 (04:59):
Aside though on occasion and the streams relationships.
Speaker 2 (05:04):
I'm trying to stay.
Speaker 6 (05:06):
Away from the compromising sit you wation us had to
live through the sous of blasphemous notion fasting that and
don't bother find a woman what they.
Speaker 2 (05:24):
Say the goat.
Speaker 5 (05:28):
Every time. I love that way.
Speaker 2 (05:30):
I'm feeling like a per same destructions.
Speaker 6 (05:32):
I cannnot shake this feeling that this gray dots of
burdens all.
Speaker 2 (05:36):
That biggest paintings I need double away.
Speaker 6 (05:38):
I'm trying someone not to breaking something to tetation, what
else share dots of burdens, all that biggest paintings, I
may double away.
Speaker 2 (05:52):
I'm trying, So why not just breaking something to the
past thing inside of me? Can I serve you? That's
a fun from my sensation and the woman.
Speaker 7 (06:07):
I call my by like I get talking on the
hardest school, just trying to take my love away.
Speaker 2 (06:16):
With that I don't understand. It's the strength of I
come in a fit that I love to stay. So
how can I gile a these.
Speaker 6 (06:27):
Fighters thors in ur station frustration and strength.
Speaker 2 (06:33):
And then the go and to be rand? Don't win?
Speaker 8 (06:37):
Man?
Speaker 2 (06:38):
I can.
Speaker 6 (06:40):
Know these fight and noise in rc cuai for frustration
and strength and being node and to the.
Speaker 5 (06:50):
Friend the wind, and I can't make it go away.
Speaker 2 (06:55):
Every time I love away, I'm feeling like that the
first distruction has like and I shake. It's feeling and
it's gray.
Speaker 6 (07:02):
And dons of burns, all that vegas paint inside mean
allow way.
Speaker 2 (07:05):
I'm trying, So why not to breaking something to temptation?
Speaker 4 (07:10):
You know.
Speaker 2 (07:12):
What else should yeah.
Speaker 6 (07:16):
Dott of burs all that bangs paint inside mean yallow way.
I'm trying, so why not to breaking something to temptation.
Speaker 2 (07:23):
Every time I goes away, I'm feeling.
Speaker 9 (07:25):
Like I'll go for safe, distrushing as I cannot shake
this feeling.
Speaker 2 (07:29):
And it's great thoughts of burds. All that bgs paint
inside mean gollo way. I'm trying. So why not you
breaking something in temptation? You know, sha.
Speaker 6 (07:44):
Donta burns all that bag it's paint inside, mean go away,
I'm trying, So why not to breaking something to temptation?
Speaker 10 (07:51):
What you talt though the bone and she binds out
of baking, that's what you don't? What is wasting her time?
Taking enough for granted?
Speaker 6 (08:03):
I'm messing with her by what she don't know her
b and she finds out her bad and what she
done goes me racing her time, taking enough up for
granted and.
Speaker 2 (08:17):
Messing with her.
Speaker 9 (08:19):
She go, she go, she go, she told, she told
no wholly bessy with her bond and she come, she go,
she go, she go, she go, w me.
Speaker 2 (08:31):
Messen with her?
Speaker 4 (08:32):
Mi go, she go, she go, she gold, she don't.
She don't want me messing.
Speaker 11 (08:38):
With her b She go, she do you go to
goo me messing with her mom? She don't, she don't
won't that's the way mile.
Speaker 2 (08:54):
Any time I left, I'm like, I ain't like i'll
know her say this tru she a gys like, can
I say this dealing and this gonta hers all that
biggest paintings. I mean go a little way. I'm trying
so are not to breaking something to temptation? She shot
me downton birds all that makes paintings. I may go away.
(09:18):
I'm trying, so why not to breaking someth up be temptage?
And every time I lived up like I'm feeling like
I will wor saying this trus she is I cannot
take this feeling and this gray day down to hers
all that bigas paintings.
Speaker 5 (09:30):
I mean, go away.
Speaker 2 (09:31):
I'm trying so are not to breaking.
Speaker 11 (09:33):
Something up to temptation?
Speaker 1 (09:36):
She sh.
Speaker 2 (09:42):
Gont of burs all that biggest paintings. I may go
a little way. I'm trying so.
Speaker 6 (09:46):
Are not to breaking something up to TEMPTATIONE she can't,
she don't, she don't, she don't, she don't.
Speaker 2 (09:53):
Don't I missen with her. MI she goes, she don't,
she don't, she don't.
Speaker 4 (10:13):
Finally doing this, I think it was I think your
team and my management been talking probably almost a year
to make that.
Speaker 11 (10:19):
Ye.
Speaker 3 (10:20):
So yeah, Well, like I told you earlier when it
came in, I said, I wish you knew how many
people here consume your content. They love what you have
to say, because I think one of the things that's
most interesting about you is anybody can ask you any
question and nobody has a clue what you're gonna say.
Speaker 8 (10:37):
You're so unpredictable.
Speaker 4 (10:38):
I don't. I don't. I don't like to know. I
like to be ambushed in interviews.
Speaker 8 (10:41):
You'd like to be ambushing.
Speaker 4 (10:43):
I don't like to know what's going to be asked.
I like to I like to be ambushed because I
can give you an explanation for everything I've said. You
may not agree with it, but there's a reason behind it, right,
So I'm just not on your saying things. So I
like to be put under pressure.
Speaker 8 (10:59):
And if it's always been like this, yes, sir, since
you were a kid, I fell in.
Speaker 4 (11:03):
The washing machine when I was five years old, I
snuck outside washing I fell in washing machine. I was
five years old.
Speaker 8 (11:08):
Intentionally or somebody pushed you.
Speaker 4 (11:10):
I fell in. I was getting ready to jump off,
so my mother was upstairs sleep. I snuck outside me
and my cousin. We went to the laundry mat. I
was jumping up and down on a washer and fell
in as the cycle was on spin. So I broke
everything from my waist down. So I was I was
immobile for probably almost two years, just laying on my
back in the body cast. At the age of five
(11:32):
years old, I learned how to walk in the body
cash with a full body.
Speaker 8 (11:36):
Cast at five to seven years old.
Speaker 4 (11:39):
Yeah, and then I put my eye out of eight,
eight or nine? How did you do that? Playing with
a homemade sleep shout? So I took a pencil, a
rubber band, got rid of shoot the rubber band and
the pencil flicked back and poked me out. So well,
that's what we did. This is what this is in
fourth worth four worth Yeah so so so I fell
in the washing machine in five had learned how to
rewalk again. So by eight and line out of injured
(12:01):
my eye. I was a very ambitious kid, adventurous. But
in some household they might say that's a bad child.
They won't see the butt down no world, So these
there's adjectism traits that a kid gets. But a jacket
would get placed on him because he's always in the
city breaking stuff. So I was the kid that was
(12:21):
always in the stuff as whether it hurt myself, so
they labeled me as being injured prone. They'll ways go
hurt yourself. I was just a brave hard to jump
off a building. Uh, and that's what boys did.
Speaker 8 (12:31):
And are you from a big family.
Speaker 4 (12:33):
I'm from a big well. I just me and my brother,
but I got a lot of cousins.
Speaker 8 (12:37):
Youah, a lot of cousins.
Speaker 4 (12:38):
Are your older brother or I'm the younger, I'm the baby,
You're you're the baby. I'm the mascot of the family.
Speaker 3 (12:44):
Okay, So then what happened I think at fourteen years old?
You know, you got in trouble at fourteen years old.
Speaker 4 (12:49):
So so I spent from from age eight to nine,
I had nine i surgeries. So I'm like an institutionalized kid,
except I wouldn't situtionalized in prison. I was institutionalized in
the hospitals because I was always injured and having surgery.
So you got I had nine eye surgeries. So I
never really got to go to school a whole school year,
(13:09):
probably up until the sixth seventh grade. I had a
private tutor really up into like the third or fourth grade,
because I'm always in so I was directly taught one
on one. So uh that's why a time you may
say he's seen very educational articularly when I was reading
books at a very early age in life. What were
you reading one of the first book that I can
I can recall reading, but don't remember reading it. But
(13:33):
I know the information about John Brown. So so when
I first broke my when I first broke my leg
or my mother hired this young, pretty white tutor that
used to come tutor me throughout the day. Uh, that's
where I started having crushes on white women from from
this tutor firm tutor. Yeah, happened between I was five
years old. But as a kid, you have a pressure
(13:54):
on your teeth. I I don't even know who she
is to today. She's a ghost. She's like a ghost,
an angel.
Speaker 8 (14:00):
With a beautiful girl.
Speaker 4 (14:01):
Well she all I remember is she was very pretty. Uh.
She was very compassionate of nurturing and kind.
Speaker 8 (14:08):
And so your tutor is the reason why you're like
white girls.
Speaker 9 (14:11):
Uh.
Speaker 4 (14:11):
Dad and my daddy, well you daddy he had a
white woman. Then my daddy had my daddy had had
a white woman. Uh. And the only time that I
can ever remember spending the weekend with my dad. She
was there. He was going to work, so it was
me and her. She was very loving, very kind. Uh
So that's all I knew. So so when my mother,
when we started going into the middle class neighborhood, my
(14:35):
mother worked at General Motives in the early ages, you know,
the blue collar workers, the backbone of America. The middle
class was very vibrant and thriving. So I didn't grow
up in a Section eight community. I grew up in
a middle class neighborhood in Fort Wark, in the suburb
of fort Worth. I was born in fort Worth, but
I grew up in Arlington. Oh okay, yeah, I'm born
in fort Worth, but I grew up in Arlington. I
(14:55):
was still living plan for five years. Okay, So I've
never seen violen. It's in the community. I've never seen
as a kid. As a kid, I've never seen it.
Speaker 2 (15:03):
Wow.
Speaker 4 (15:04):
Yeah, I've never seen my mother get beat up, jump off.
I've never seen it. I've never seen people shoot gun.
I'm gonna start on television. Unbelievable. So what happened at
fourteen watching television? Me me and so let me just
I had a little man complex, small guy, so you
gotta think fall in the washing machine. So my legs
(15:26):
is real, skinny can't play football, has to learn how
to rewalk again. Mom is overly protecting that might hurt
myself again. But I can play football fast and I'm
a brave heart. Then I put my eye out, so
now that limits me from playing basketball. So now they
treat me like a handicap. That's what makes me start rebuilding. Man,
I ain't no handicap. Yeah, because in my mind, because
(15:47):
I lost my eyes so early, the human body can
adjust and adapt. A three legged dog camp so I
became a three legged dog that can still bark and
fight and scrap with the other dog. But I had
a secretly inferiority complex insecure about my eye. So you
couldn't ask me what's wrong with your eye? I sock
(16:07):
you in your eye to teach everybody else don't bother
me a by my eye. I didn't know how to
deal with the insecurity as a kid, right, Uh So
a lot of times I would hide by that, hide
behind it as an excuse. Start some ship, said, man,
he was talking about my eye. So till you were
an instigator, Yeah, I was. Yeah, I was ship starting,
very very much so.
Speaker 11 (16:26):
But h.
Speaker 4 (16:28):
But with no hate. You always got a kid that's
always picked antagonized. I was an antagonistic like I am
on internet out so that was a childhood trade. So
I was very smart, articular in school, always did well. Uh,
but I just couldn't play well with others. I'm a
natural born leader, and because I'm small, I have to
stand up the big guy who thinks good. So the
(16:50):
small guy is always the leader out of the group.
Napoleon was any big guy, ain't order the leader until
you go to prison. Really, Yeah, Trump is tall, you
know what I think? Like you know Trump? Trump is
a winning Trump is a wining Yeah Trump, name three
ball fights? We know Trump then had well, no he
he said in an interview with Logan Paul. He's never
been in a ficial That's what I'm talking about. He's
(17:11):
a winning So.
Speaker 8 (17:12):
You think if you've never been as.
Speaker 4 (17:14):
A man, you don't have no physical strength and ability
to suffit yourself as a man with no weapons. Uh,
you gotta have some kind of skills. Are you a wiing? Really?
What if you got a wife and kids and you
can't and somebody messing with your wife at the rest
run and you ain't got your gun on it, and
you ain't never been punched in a nod How you
know you can take a punch? Talking shit? Interesting? So
(17:34):
you think you think if someone's never been punched in
the face, they're not qualified to be a president. Oh no,
especially when you got world leaders like Putting. Putting came
up in the KGB early days of it. He's worked
his way up through the ranks and it's documented he
have killed people. Trump ain't never killed nobody. We need leaders,
the general of the army and military men to match
(17:55):
our world leader. That's why I don't know nobody to
respect our leader. These are politician men that could play football.
Wasn't high school jocks. That was nerves and barking like
they men to the world they winies. You don't have
no hand in hand comeback stills as a man. But
you want to stand before all these other men who
will trained miss martian artists from Kim on John Man,
they'll kick eye as sure.
Speaker 8 (18:16):
You would rather have Mike Tyson as a president? Know
from shit?
Speaker 4 (18:19):
No, Mike Tyson is stupid. Oh yeah, here, no, I
mean Mike Tyson, Me and Mike, Titans, stupid or Eve
been hitting the head too many time. Oh so, so
I grew up in the boys home. In the boy's home,
I spent fourteen to twenty one. I think throughout those
seven years I probably had twenty fights. Twenty fights or
(18:40):
before then. I was. I was a kid who my
cousin say, wait till my little cousin come over here.
I'm gonna get him on you, so they'll bring me
over there. Because I was a brave heart as a kid.
Size really don't matter if you're brave, so you don't
have the rationale to be afraid when you're brave as
a kid. So I was a brave heart. How we
got in trouble trying to want to fit in with
(19:02):
the older guys. My mom didn't work when I got
out of school. My mom's going to work. She worked
at General Motion, she worked for night Shield, got it.
She got dinner on the stove. She giving us instructions,
leave your homework out, wash them dishes, don't go outside,
don't answer the door for nobody. I'm going to call
these time. Make sure y'all have some cars. And so
when she got home and we didn't do that, she
wake us U about our sleep. I thought, I told y'all.
(19:24):
So she tried to be a discplanary. But she was
a single mother who had to go to work. When
she went to work, we outside got her with no parental.
Speaker 3 (19:32):
Super video in Arlington in art So who were the
older guys? You hung out with my older cousins, my
brother's friends. And then once I started ravitating in middle.
Speaker 8 (19:42):
School because of the culture.
Speaker 4 (19:44):
So we went from wearing mc hammer pants yep, the
back mc hammer with the Georgio Routini shoe with the
gold tips on them. We went from doing that to
abruptly from one Poka dot shirt, silk shirts, pumps in
the Kennie.
Speaker 12 (20:00):
Draw like to Dickies and killers.
Speaker 4 (20:03):
Now we abruptly did that.
Speaker 8 (20:04):
I remember Dickies. I remember the big keys past.
Speaker 4 (20:07):
There you go. That's that's that's so. I remember seventh
grade I had the Elisee shoes with the with the
refer around them, the Jabbo jeans some some of I
think nineteen eighty nine when Colors came out and we
got introduced to a great movie. Man, what a great movie. Well,
(20:28):
allegidly when we got introduced to that, uh, it's sold
to see throughout America, just like Minutes to Society, Boys
in the Hoods, Scarface, The Birth of a New Nation,
movies like that. Yeah, so so that was one of
those kind of movies. And uh, children shooting on my
skin colors.
Speaker 3 (20:47):
Yeah, interesting, So you're seeing those movies broad bad habits
to good neighborhoods, The Birth of a New Nation.
Speaker 4 (20:55):
Did That's where the truth playing for God and got
even stronger after that movie. So are you hanging out
with troublemakers in Arlington or are you watching you know,
I've never seen. So I'm in a suburb. So you
got to think if five years old, I'm in the
hospital to learn how to rewalk again, I'm getting a
private tutor. I'm not outside playing, right, I'm physically disabled.
Speaker 12 (21:16):
Right as soon as I get ready to play, boom,
I put my out.
Speaker 4 (21:20):
So at nine years eight nine years, So from five
to eight I got a little three year times man.
But two of those years I've learning how to rewalk again.
Speaker 12 (21:28):
So one year I finally.
Speaker 4 (21:29):
Get to play with kids as a regular kid.
Speaker 12 (21:31):
Pot put my out.
Speaker 4 (21:34):
Nine I surgery from the age eight to twelve, so
I get my eye took out like fifth grade I
got the prosthetic Leans put in in sixth grade, but
my first part of my sixth grade year I had
a patch on them that go to inferiority complex. Yeah,
so what were people people calling me? Kids? I don't
(21:55):
hear nothing because I'm gonna hit the third person that
in my out. All you have to do is make
it a jamp out of one before many people. The
police do it, your slave masters do it, the.
Speaker 5 (22:03):
Job do it.
Speaker 4 (22:04):
All you got to do is make example out of
one before many and word travel. Nothing spreads like word
them out many hit him in his eye, man, So,
so who wants to mess with a person that don't
talk and power? So that was my defense mechanism, and
I knew I could get out. I could get away
with it because he was talking about my mom mama,
So I had to say so had I had a
(22:26):
cop out? I learned how to use a cop out
of early age of life. Do you think that's a
common pattern or did you? Did you?
Speaker 8 (22:32):
How did you learn it? Did somebody teach you or
didn't you?
Speaker 4 (22:34):
Just have it? A resiliency and wherewithal from feeling what
you're feeling?
Speaker 3 (22:38):
Did your brother on something have it? Or you had
it more than he did. What's that the ability to
manipulate and feel like a victim's My brother got caught
for everything, he got caught whatever he got caught.
Speaker 4 (22:48):
For doing wrong. I was a very charismatic child, so
charisma go a long way, even when you line what
Bun's your birthday May seventeen, nineteen seventy seven interesting. So
I'm a borderline Gemini, full bloody target. But I was
an honest kid. So if you press me too much,
I would come out and tell the truth. Even to
this day, if my woman said did you do it?
Speaker 11 (23:06):
And you do it?
Speaker 4 (23:07):
If I happened to keep lot, I feel like a coward.
Yeah I did it? Fuck it, Yeah, I did it.
She can get it out of it if you keep
pressing me, got it cowards?
Speaker 2 (23:14):
Lock?
Speaker 4 (23:15):
Does she get it out of you? Quite like? Yeah? Yeah,
I'm a very I'm a brewery young this maker.
Speaker 8 (23:18):
Do you love them?
Speaker 11 (23:19):
Yeah?
Speaker 4 (23:19):
I love it?
Speaker 12 (23:21):
Yeah, Yeah, I love I love mother woman.
Speaker 4 (23:23):
Yeah, I love my mother woman.
Speaker 2 (23:25):
Baby.
Speaker 4 (23:25):
You think I look fat in it? You know you
look fatt in the baby. That's why you asking me?
Why you ask why you?
Speaker 13 (23:32):
Yeah?
Speaker 12 (23:32):
Why are you putting the pressure on me?
Speaker 4 (23:33):
You know you look fatty and then while you're asking.
So some people, some people can't handle the truth. It's
the ugly truth that they can say. What's up everybody?
That she brought Charleston White aka America's favorite Uncle. I
I just signed up to minute. So if you want
to message me, you want to customer ask, you wanna
fuss at me? Even if you want some cansel call
me my minister hear him by well word, you can
(23:55):
mess me directly, own it. I promise, man, I'm gonna
respond directly. I ignore them dms on Instagram. It just
took my Facebook. I don't respond on YouTube. I will
respond on it. I promise. Just call it and see
text me.
Speaker 8 (24:07):
Okay, So we're gonna get back to this.
Speaker 3 (24:09):
At fourteen years old, I read that you were hunging out,
hung out with some people who there was attempt on
murder convicted.
Speaker 8 (24:16):
What happened?
Speaker 4 (24:17):
So my mother, my uncle had just died, who was
a positive influence in our life. He died to gun violence.
My mother had just became pregnant and my little sister
was born. My brother was already in and out of
the juvenile facilities, and my mother was putting my brother
in adolescent home.
Speaker 12 (24:34):
So my mama wasn't waiting.
Speaker 4 (24:35):
For him to be arrisky. When she started seeing behavior problems,
she would put him an adolescent home. That made him
even more rebellious, and he'd be he tired and me.
He got a grown man body, So Mama got to
work and she we got the best life most kids
could have in the middle class neighborhood. So I'm the
little brother sitting back watching who everybody's overlooking because of
(24:56):
my injuries. They don't know I'm a mother, they don't
know I'm a dynamite. Only my uncles know who let
me hang out with them. So, ma'am, I once I
got to become a kid, I was thirteen years old.
I've been in a hospital man, from five to thirteen.
So once I started playing with kids, I was a
natural leader, and I attracted a good and bad children.
(25:24):
My real friends didn't get in trouble. The ones I
went to hang with didn't live in our neighborhood. They
lived in the projects in apartments. So, man, when I
got introduced to what I called it, I'm the seed
of America's gangster rap culture. A little kid who've been
watching Bill Cosby Red Fox Fred Sandford when my uncles
(25:47):
get out of prison. I watched all the black exportation
films from Dolo Might Superfly our penitentiary. So I learned
criminal activity from watching these movies, watching my uncle and
and once I finally got to go out into the community.
Imagery have already been propagated to me. Kid watching television,
(26:08):
Kid watch them. So man, so I'm mimicking what I'm seeing.
So I've never seen a man come out of my
mother's bedroom. I've also never seen a man get up
and go to work.
Speaker 3 (26:19):
You've never seen a man come out of your mama's bedroom.
You've never seen a man go get the work.
Speaker 4 (26:24):
I didn't know men work. I thought I thought men
would like my uncle Curry and my uncle Wayne. Uh,
you know, they pimp on a woman, or they live
around all day, or earn their clothes in the middle
of they wake up late with a joint in their mouth,
fly clean and go nowhere. Uh, you know, the unproductive
black male of the eighties. So that's what I saw.
(26:45):
So I watched all the males in my family go
to prison for my mom's cousins, my mom, uncle's grandmother's brothers.
And I never heard anybody say anything bad about prison
So think about that. I never heard anybody say that
mad about prisoners. They come home and make it sound bravado,
like you mentioned out on something that says for right
(27:06):
the passage. Not only that, you're seeing it on television,
so it's being reinforced either way. So we had a
whole black exploitation era. So by the time so I'm
I'm an injured kid who get to watch out all
the television in the world in the hospital. At home,
we had a v Yeah. So by the time I
get to be a normal kid that can go outside
(27:26):
and play. It's a new cultural gang culture, and it's trending.
I remember we seen colors at first summer. We went
and got banned down and put in my pocket. I
wouldn't got me a pocket knife. I don't know nothing
about this, but what I saw on television, I didn't.
I didn't know how to have six from listening to
rap music. And this is in the fifth and sixth grade.
(27:46):
There was a song by tulave Cup called Hey we
want something, Yeah, so imagine stopping it, rewinded it, stopping
it so you can get every lyric. So our culture
talked us and I say this oftking, and people really
overlook it. It's a rape culture. Rape culture. Yeah, hip
(28:09):
hop is a rape culture. Tell me about it. Or
I put a Molly in her drink and she ain't
even know it. Me and my homies like to play
this game. Some call it am tracked, for some call
it the train. We all would line up in a
single fire line and take our turns waxing girls behind us.
(28:30):
Every time it get to me, I was out of
look because I stick but in and it would get stuck.
The girlgle say stop. I say I'm not. The girlgle
say stop. I say I'm not. But we dance to it.
There's another song. I take her back to the trap
(28:51):
I gave them. I gave her perp and she ain't
even know it. Then she dropped the panties. So when
we watch the frat parties, what was that porky revenge?
Speaker 12 (29:02):
Hey, let's spike the park.
Speaker 4 (29:03):
The girls don't notice bike spots when we see a
bunch of girls, Hey, baby, let me get you a drink.
Speaker 12 (29:08):
Come over, let's have some drink. Drink to do what
and have sick?
Speaker 4 (29:11):
That's coursion. You can't see he has to have a
sober mind. So that's our culture.
Speaker 8 (29:16):
How did it happen?
Speaker 4 (29:17):
Oh, Hollywood Entertainment.
Speaker 12 (29:21):
They because it isn't didn't They romanticized?
Speaker 3 (29:24):
Now they romanticized when you see the videos of back
in the days African American families, suits, the way they dressed, clean, solid, strong.
Speaker 8 (29:32):
What what got into that you're seeing purely as movies or.
Speaker 14 (29:43):
Talking about American culture? American talking about it's true.
Speaker 2 (30:04):
So I with my family, what does I got to do.
Speaker 13 (30:08):
To American culture? Crop kid?
Speaker 2 (30:11):
Great culture? Like, what does he even talk? Is a
Democrat thing? Maybe that's a maybe this is an.
Speaker 13 (30:20):
Maybe I can give that grease because.
Speaker 2 (30:22):
There's an emagirl.
Speaker 5 (30:24):
So from my.
Speaker 13 (30:25):
Person's talking about American culture. Come to the fact he's
talking about ing rightly. He said, rap.
Speaker 2 (30:36):
Music and four keys.
Speaker 15 (30:39):
He's a fraternities and rap music for the same thing.
Rap is a fraternity. But again, maybe this is immigrant.
Speaker 16 (30:53):
Maybe maybe it's possible, it's a possibility, he said, But.
Speaker 13 (31:04):
To trump to the black fist and literally hinted.
Speaker 2 (31:08):
With Horseys and the South Park, he's just.
Speaker 16 (31:13):
Besides a big stop. The only reason I know what
it is like groogle converted white boys. If you watched
it by the house back, there's a big thig like
you have to be. That's like a whole thing with
like that wasn't boys if you watch Morgy, that's like
you understand about like fraternities and like Frank and drakesmen.
Speaker 2 (31:37):
Being indepenures is like hing they did it.
Speaker 16 (31:40):
You guys just be lighting daddies and us again and
all in everybody fucking fucking back then.
Speaker 13 (31:46):
But that's a boy thing.
Speaker 17 (31:49):
That's not a black and a white thing. You know,
he's a scared or intends.
Speaker 2 (32:00):
Man like tenants.
Speaker 13 (32:03):
Don't he this man?
Speaker 16 (32:04):
Don't you the book the last verge just prompting great
buck No, you idiot, he said. American probably gave Greg Belacher.
Everybody knows it then when they go to school parts.
Speaker 13 (32:18):
That little femlie.
Speaker 16 (32:20):
But it fo pray pellonger and I was being probably
get it's the whole army byt Ah.
Speaker 13 (32:26):
That'sund like a feminist. I inspiredly, I can't do it.
I can't know that.
Speaker 8 (32:30):
I can't.
Speaker 16 (32:31):
I quit, I give, I give up, I give't a
mo umentity complained cause now I sound like a feminis
and I'm not.
Speaker 13 (32:38):
That's the one thing I probably.
Speaker 16 (32:39):
Give us and now I sound like a props because
this man, this is probably ran and he's talking to
to Ama man.
Speaker 13 (32:47):
Who's trying this artsy enjoy Pessic.
Speaker 16 (32:50):
Had the sense, so he kensis a prophet, gets a
character because money came back to the community.
Speaker 13 (32:56):
Nobody could fuck about what the fuckings doing. It's an education.
Speaker 18 (33:00):
Just get the fool ends, nobody, get the fucking start
acting rapht and just get everybody's attention. And then what
he's being particular and he's mentioning American propagating grave Coach,
a man who interviewed Kobe and and his millions of viewers,
(33:20):
asked him about the black family.
Speaker 2 (33:35):
Man a love black white.
Speaker 19 (33:38):
Black people's air su percent of the population Hispanish in
the most a second highest as white people. And so
what about he's crown, Why would.
Speaker 4 (33:51):
He would he calling the other biggest part?
Speaker 13 (33:56):
Oh god, what is the world?
Speaker 15 (33:58):
It is not.
Speaker 13 (34:01):
California up, he's domb Oh my god, Philip.
Speaker 16 (34:15):
West Coast gay culture or glass which is offensive on
every level. God knows. On the West Coast, black people
are not the higher. They're not at the top of
the boj able to.
Speaker 13 (34:33):
Go to the gang.
Speaker 16 (34:35):
Everybody will have bit this because everybody knows you best
to him vex you meddle the Jonah, your best, your
vessel BESI isabetic gangster.
Speaker 13 (34:45):
You don't this a no thing?
Speaker 16 (34:48):
And he's in California, so live as a black person
about the gay culture.
Speaker 13 (34:53):
How rap Pulliams was black?
Speaker 4 (34:57):
No?
Speaker 16 (34:57):
It affluence the entire coast, our coast with CAGs, all
of them, just letting people know the other after America,
damn near Hispanics. So how he can forget that in California?
Speaker 2 (35:17):
Just crazy?
Speaker 4 (35:21):
How the world?
Speaker 2 (35:22):
How worlds is everything in black ass? I don't see it.
Speaker 16 (35:26):
I'm understanding Hispanic should be fe the tradition because this at.
Speaker 2 (35:32):
This point is just ridiculous.
Speaker 16 (35:36):
Nobody feel Why don't know Hispanic rappers even a why
know Spaniic GAG members? Even like it's actually offensive? As
what if not gonnersanding reporting gang culture? I acknowledge it
and are gonna be frank? Why wouldn't they be in mentioned,
(36:00):
especially since they running inside not spens anything beyond the
borders California, Vexico and uh.
Speaker 13 (36:18):
But yes, let's talk about and culture black community fro bringing.
Speaker 4 (36:28):
Get up here a group of teenagers that became a
phenomenon like the Beatles, n wah. Not only that you
got this group uh that know things about crack that
the rest of America don't know. They the first crack babies.
Speaker 12 (36:50):
They're the ones tolders and songs.
Speaker 4 (36:52):
Mothers smoke crack and your friends can have sex with them?
Are boys in the hood is always hard? Or we
didn't know about strawberry? That's a strawberry, a woman who
sell little body for crack. You know how manybody angers
that ended up doing that? You know how many guys
that was in middle school that's so dope and his
best friend mom was all dope and he ended up
effing his best friend mom and now they hate each
(37:14):
other to this day. Could so so it So it
wasn't just it wasn't just hip hop. Uh, it was
the lyrical content that that children was being able to
have access to. This is before the parental advisory stickness.
Not only that you got this music, which if you
if you want to, if you want to check the
(37:35):
temperature of your youth's mentality, listen.
Speaker 2 (37:37):
To the music.
Speaker 4 (37:40):
So now you got this new chemical, uh that was
made in a laboratory. Black people didn't know how to
cook crack. That's that's a that's a chemist method. Somebody
had to teach them by the way, government talked to
somebody how to do this. We watched the movie Snowfall.
So when they came out of California to come spread
Cracked throughout America. Who they bring the games throughout the South,
(38:03):
these little small country towns who people are fascinated by
California from what we've seen on television, and uh we
we emulated a culture that was more destructive than than
the clue clutch playing in the gym.
Speaker 8 (38:15):
Cross Wow. And you were saying it was intentional, uh
m hm.
Speaker 4 (38:22):
Nobody thought it would become this. It was dismissed as
a bunch of kids from the ghetto rapping. It was dismissed.
Uh No, no one could predict what Crack was gonna
do to Black America. Nobody, nobody could have predicted that.
What even about the Rick Ross, the ochie, not not
(38:42):
the rapper, I'm talking about the real He was a
He was an illiterate man who the government used as
a poem.
Speaker 8 (38:48):
I had him on the podcast, We talked about it.
Speaker 4 (38:51):
You know, he's very educated now, uh. I like the
tenacity that you have to have as an ilitary man,
but you know he's a front. These are poor children
who don't know if I get this, because where we
getting this from? How do I know? If I sell this,
this can put me away from life. And I'm not
hurting nobody. I'm gonna feed my family. The people are
(39:13):
coming to buy what Black men knew when they was
touching dope that this could put me away forever. They
didn't know what it would do. They didn't know what
would do. So a lot of it was out of survival,
some of it was out of greed, but most of
(39:36):
most people started selling drugs out of nature's first room
of self preservation.
Speaker 3 (39:44):
Yeah, it's when I happened to him. He was one
of the biggest struggles. By the way money, I mean,
he was in O g Olgi making a lot of money.
And the week got cot was very interesting and how
it got big.
Speaker 4 (39:55):
But I just pull up a number right now.
Speaker 3 (39:56):
Black Americans are thirteen percent of population, yet they the
account for thirty seven percent of crack users.
Speaker 4 (40:04):
It was given directly to them. Cocaine was a rich
person drug. Crack is the only drug. You say, man,
I got two dollars and you get your two dollars hit.
No other drug you can do that. The weed man
don't do it, the liquor man, don't do it. Crack
was the heroine god don't do it. Crack was the
only drug you can come with a bunch of carters.
That man, I got a dollar fifty. It wasn't a
(40:27):
it's not a extension. It's not a long term high
like acid or molley. It's a short time. But but
the doper mean that it feeds it makes it so dangerous.
How do you address it at this all? How do
you address it now? If just like just like the
first of the guys who created AA and A, you
(40:49):
don't change that method That methods have always worked to
still work today. You can't change nothing if the person
don't want to change.
Speaker 3 (40:56):
Can you reverse the effects of it today? Well this now,
what'd you do it?
Speaker 11 (41:02):
Well?
Speaker 4 (41:03):
Yes and no? Because double it's just like the pandemic
virus was.
Speaker 12 (41:11):
Real big and they pushed it on it.
Speaker 4 (41:12):
They pushed it on them. Well what since ninety to
ninety seven all you heard about was crack babies? All
these shoulders were cracked us to a baby wear? Are
they down? The crack babies done grew up and had babies.
Where are they babies? That what they baby's doing? They're
the violent ones that we see today. That's ten, eleven,
twelve years old. These are the violence. These are the
(41:36):
kids we are afraid of right now, them crack baby kids.
Then if you want to put that on Black America
psychotropic drugs that white people been getting their white kids
EIGHTYHD medication. So and then this is a group of
children who are human, detached from humanity because they're in
(41:59):
the world. So they don't have the same compassion to care,
concern that regular humans should have because we have human attachment.
Speaker 12 (42:07):
They don't go outside to play.
Speaker 4 (42:09):
Most household when I get my plate, I go over there,
you go over there, bombiting. Now we don't eat together,
so it's really no attachment. How are we going to
reverse that? And we don't even have connection with our
own children. How we can't connect with you now? We
too busy fighting over Democrat and Republican and we're losing
our children, not just by violence, by.
Speaker 12 (42:29):
OPI yards suicides. So or how do you reverse it?
Speaker 4 (42:36):
It's starting the mirror. Starting your mirror. When you come
through washing your face, coming out of the bathroom, you
look around in your household and see if the bed
is made up before you say something to your spouse.
Speaker 11 (42:50):
Uh.
Speaker 4 (42:50):
Then once you kind of pick up, but you can
pick up. Then you start directing to your woman and
your kids. Then you come outside, say hey, how you doing, neighbor.
But most people want start in the world, in the
community in my city. Now all start in your home
from the mirror. Yeah, that's how you fix your community.
That's how you fix the world. Fix what you see
(43:11):
in the mirror. Come out, look around the house, fix
what needs to be prepared in the half, go outside
and be neighbor. Pay what's going on, neighbor.
Speaker 8 (43:22):
Very interesting perspective. What's your opending on planning?
Speaker 4 (43:25):
Car and Boody, oh plant planning? Parenthood is I knew Hitler,
I knew Nazi group that's exterminating strictly black people because
the founder of Planned Parenthood, Margaret Singer, said this is
solely to eradicate Eugenus, eradicate black babies. Why we still
got it? Hang around. It does nothing but a board baby.
(43:47):
Most women who need prenatal care don't go there. Most
Black women don't even get prenatal care. The don't even
know they're pregnant the four months in still how on
drugs they were partying off of. So now planned parenthood
should be it should be banned. I would go say
something flammatory, but now it should be banned. Or because
it serves no purpose and no justice to the community.
(44:07):
It claims your servant.
Speaker 3 (44:09):
Right, do you think it's got as big as it's
gott who's supporting it? Because the way it's so, it's so.
Then the way that you know women's rights, it's good
for women and they have a pro choice.
Speaker 4 (44:21):
Man, You know how many You know how much themselves
they get to collect. Man, they get the whole new
forms of life from these aborted embry over and fetises.
They get to do tests like lab rats on humans
(44:41):
with no oversight. We don't know what they do with
those bodies, those babies, so there's no oversight.
Speaker 8 (44:46):
Really, they get to do what they want to do.
Speaker 4 (44:49):
But the originator, Margaret Sanger, this was never set up
to be something good. So how can you change anything's
original design. If you can't go back and change the design,
why abort the babies? Why not try to find the daddy?
Y'all come together, get him some resources to breathe life
and keep life instead of take life? Why kill the baby?
(45:10):
If I get mad at my dog.
Speaker 12 (45:12):
I can't shoot him when I can't feed him.
Speaker 4 (45:13):
But I go kill my baby, You'll.
Speaker 13 (45:15):
Put me in jail.
Speaker 12 (45:16):
If I can't feed my dog, I'm gonna kill him
or abandon him.
Speaker 4 (45:18):
And she can go kill the baby without the father's consent.
She didn't make the baby by ourself. So our government
get this woman and this organization to kill a man's
baby without his pararison. How can you do that? What
world is that? Alright, she's gonna do it behind my back.
Speaker 12 (45:40):
I ain't gota men. What if I want to keep
this life? What if we kill her?
Speaker 4 (45:43):
The next president? You don't know what? We take him
away from him?
Speaker 5 (45:48):
You do that.
Speaker 4 (45:51):
Half the population disagrees with you, a bunny thing that
is half the population disagrees with me. Or because we
live in a society and era all but this group
of Americans looking right and say right is wrong, looking
wrong and say wrong, they're right. I don't know how
much long we can go on, or because we've never
(46:11):
been that kind of country. Even when we got here
with the forefather, they fought over slavery. They just decided yeah,
we know Dowt. They really fought over It's been days
and months and years trying to put a fourth nah,
and it was people say, oh man, we know those
same right. Man, it's a necessary evil. Everybody had been slavery.
But man, they fought against that. The America just didn't
dive in and say, Okay, that's what we want to do.
They really fought against that. Lock themselves in rooms like
(46:34):
they do now right now. They fight No bullshit, man,
them people, really they fought over that. If you really
know history, so you're saying this is something worth.
Speaker 8 (46:46):
Fighting for and.
Speaker 4 (46:49):
Or the rights that we have, the rights that we
had and we knew as children, our children will never know,
so I think it's worth fighting so they can know.
With a summer of nineteen eighty five and eighty seven
in life, when when you have to worry about kids
getting killed by gun, violence never crossed nobody's mind.
Speaker 13 (47:12):
Men.
Speaker 4 (47:12):
We could walk to the mall, go here, and we
never had a pervert kidnapping nobody.
Speaker 12 (47:20):
All the perverse was in the family, wasn't strangers.
Speaker 4 (47:26):
Were looking for strangers. But it's because of this uncles
them the people that's doing it or were looking for strangers.
So h men, our kids don't know what it's like
to be free and have real freedom because they exist
in the metaverse world to have community guidelines don't don't
allow them to have free speech. So what outlete do
(47:47):
our children have that we had where they can have
freedom of expression? They can't. Everybody's defended. So yeah, these
these children are in a box. Like you know, I
actually read the book and saw the movie that the
movie VI fora Vendetta. That's where we're in America right now.
We just had got to the end of the movie.
Speaker 8 (48:06):
Yet how they think this against.
Speaker 4 (48:11):
Good means evil? Loser, your your love, Concker hates and
then another civilization start over again because this group cannot
go on another one hundred years. Everybody's too hateful. Everybody's
too hateful. It ain't just white people, black, everybody hate.
Everybody don't like no, so h only thing ain't hating
(48:33):
is the things in nature. So or no, no, I
think loves coca all. There'll be a small group of
Americans who really love American and love humans and can
appreciate life. After all the destruction and disasters they done
seen done upon earth based on mankind and they gonna
live natural free people like Tarzan.
Speaker 8 (48:55):
Who's evil today? If you were to say evil, where
it's evil coming from?
Speaker 11 (48:59):
Uh?
Speaker 8 (48:59):
The Bible says, and.
Speaker 4 (49:01):
I'm just saying what's been quoted. Evil just in high places,
high places and high principalities. Evil don't exist the war
poor people. But some of the most evil things appear
to happen down off in poverty. Nah, That ain't evil.
Those are conditions and circumstances that have been created, not
(49:24):
by your choice or evil just at the top or
evil gets to decide which military drop bombs. That's evil.
Speaker 12 (49:37):
The destruction and disaster that these men can cause.
Speaker 4 (49:39):
And they never touch a battlefield, that's evil. There's seeing
other people children, that's evil. If they had to sit
in there, they'll think about going to war, if they
had to put on a uniform like General Jordan Washington did,
get on the goddamn horse and fight with these soldiers
Trump all of their stop war. Now Putting, My Putting
(50:01):
is the only one capable and had to work with
all to be a soldier. That's why I respect him
and our love. So when I heard Trump and all
these other weak politicians talking to a real killer like that,
this man, donim kill people. Y'all ain't ever killed. They'll
be killing dryl and he killed callous and cold heard
them the leaders.
Speaker 8 (50:17):
We need killers for the for the nation.
Speaker 4 (50:20):
You gotta killed military. You're generals are killers. You trained
children to kill.
Speaker 12 (50:25):
Why can I, yeah, command.
Speaker 4 (50:28):
In chief of our military be a killer.
Speaker 12 (50:32):
We need killers running us.
Speaker 13 (50:34):
Command in chief.
Speaker 4 (50:36):
Let the president be vice president, but let her command
in chief be a military motherfucker to run this country
and lead to this country. This is how it was
for a long time.
Speaker 12 (50:46):
I know history, and that was praid America pradomeric.
Speaker 3 (50:49):
Meaning when I say how it was, commander in chief
was somebody that was in the military. Commander in chief?
Speaker 4 (50:54):
I thought this was the men. Yeah.
Speaker 8 (50:58):
Interesting, So you're saying you would prefer a leader at
the time.
Speaker 4 (51:03):
Of the sniper over Iraq, I would prefer him a
person like him that done went over and fought for
this country, killed for this country, lost buddies that died
for this country, and come over here and tell them
what's best for this country.
Speaker 8 (51:17):
You'd rather have that sniper be the president?
Speaker 11 (51:20):
Yes?
Speaker 4 (51:21):
Or because he because he can't lead by himself. He
has a visor, he has a captain so he asked men.
But yeah, you need a soldier in the White House.
You don't need a politician. Let your politicians stay in congrige.
But your president is supposed to be a soldier. You
see what that African president is doing over that young brother.
That's the council.
Speaker 12 (51:38):
He's he's a soldier, he's the commander in chief.
Speaker 4 (51:42):
Why do you got a Wall Street boy up there
with a wig on? You need a lieutenant or a
captain with a boss boy in the head. Don't give
a damn about a two pay. But he died for
this country because he done served it. He don't put
years in it, and he done trained and raised this
his country, the state country, and our military spot to
be our presidency. Politicians and shit. And then they gonna fight,
(52:03):
lose legs and limbs and come over here and suffer
without a voice for politicians to dictate to them, and
they're gonna dot man. Now. Shouldn't nobody be able to
dick to a soldier who gonna put his life down
on the line and everybody should handle them with care?
Should you prefer over who we have here? Yeah, tell
me what you like about the oh I like putting
(52:23):
because everybody ain't in Russia. I like Kim on John
because everybody ain't in North Korea. North Korea is about
North Korea. Russia is about Russian America is not about Americans.
America is by what other people interests. Probably seeing money
over there, why they can come over here and get
(52:44):
loans that the average American citizens can't get, get credit loan.
They can come over here and get rights that your
blacks have never gotten. You got an Asian hate bill?
Speaker 12 (52:53):
How that happened for your black people?
Speaker 4 (52:55):
Got them some kind of bill that protects them because
they're the number one people who di I've gone iver
see some kind of protection around black people because they
are dying at a rate, almost like the pandemic.
Speaker 8 (53:08):
What's the top cause of black staying?
Speaker 4 (53:13):
Poverty, single parent homes, in the culture. So I wouldn't
say the culture. We have a sub culture that has
superseded our culture. It's a salt culture that have superseded
the original culture of black people. Black people have always
pursued education to get out. It was never about sports.
(53:37):
So now you've got a sports guy who can have
an ability to get his education, but he'll leave songs
just to go get the money and be broke five
years after he leaves. Statistic wise, without the education, guess
what he ended up in prison. The single parent motherhood
is the the number one two and detriment against the
(53:59):
black community. It's not the absent father. The absent father
is not around. How can he have an impact? His
absence does. But he's more impacted what he see his
mother does and what man's she brings in and out
the life, how she treats him. So most guys who've
been mistreated by their mother grew up the mistreat women.
(54:21):
They don't grow up. They fight men. That's the issue
they got with dad. But it's a lot of guys
got issued with dad and mother because they had a
neglect for mother. So he extremely valid. And there's no
boy Scouts program, there's no early childhood training to teach
emotional intelligence. Mama frustrated. So what typically does a single
(54:43):
mother does when everything is going good and going great.
She don't spank the kids as much. Let a new
man come into a life. She's out more loving and kind.
Let things go bad. She's more frustrated, she's angry, schurts out,
you know, So now you get the emotional respond so
now she's whooping you because how she feels off teaching
you discipline and the correction. And that's about how she's
(55:04):
taking it out on the kids. So most guys were abused.
Most guys when we see these violent people, and I've
worked on many cases murder cases at assisting criminal defense
mitigation specialists, what I come to find out most of
these violent gods have been safety abuse, crid gangster. You
think he is, Yeah, most most people, that's that's where
(55:26):
the violence come from. They're hiding behind the treeing violence
and aggression. But if he don't get the death pending
they try to kill him, he won't ever.
Speaker 8 (55:32):
Admit to it.
Speaker 4 (55:34):
So when you start learning mitigating factors about certain cases,
you start to see a parallel and a correlation to
sexual abuse, of physical abuse, of child neglect, and and
and in a in a mother the mother, the mother
created Jeffrey Dahmo. It wasn't the father. The mothers create
(55:55):
the cold hearted cats seem to be children that's coming
out of the community. The mother fretch that she gives
him the anger. Matter of fact, she gives him the
fumel for the abandonment to turn in anger because he
never heard nothing good about a black man when he
turned on, telling me a black man that'll been killed.
He watched Tyler Perry move and fucked up black man
(56:16):
everything he told. He a little more trying to reflect,
so he gets his weight up with his hate and
he pay everybody back when his visit.
Speaker 8 (56:25):
Charles him.
Speaker 3 (56:26):
How did the single mother happen? Like if you look
back and say, well, it happened after.
Speaker 4 (56:30):
This white feminism, white legs, ambitious, tired to call y'all bitchy,
but you get the picture. Or yeah, yeah, they came
and fucked up Americas, or or they fucked up the ecosystem.
They said, plenty of fish in the sea. It ain't
no more feminism. Now you got women want to play
(56:51):
quarterback against Tom Brady. Ain't never been the case. Men,
I grew up, watch and leave it to beaver his
mama in the house. Or now you got high divorce
rates from extra marrige her fait because you have men
and women all in the workplace together, who fuck lord
and co workers, high.
Speaker 12 (57:12):
School people and coworkers.
Speaker 4 (57:15):
You got a woman at home. Every woman got a
work boyfriend. She might not be sleeping with him, but
they have an emotional attachment. They go out together. She
say that's her friend, but they secretly like it that's
her work boyfriend because she never gets to see his flaws.
She see him dressed up every day, smell good. So
this is her ideal man in her mind. She got
(57:37):
into that boyfriend somebody she like. He fitted all the time,
a person. He listened, She listened to we watching ash
and titties. She want to hear something to validate her.
Most of us are to be to validate her emotions.
It's not a man job to validate your emotion. Look
in the mirror and invalidating yourself so you can come
out and be what I need you to be. So
(57:58):
the single parent mother home came from feminism. I don't
need a man. You gotta deal though, even the one.
Speaker 12 (58:07):
Even when y'all get together, y'all.
Speaker 4 (58:08):
Can't have the best pleasure without that man's love. That
man's log is very good. So our women separated from us.
They got rights and women suffrage nineteen twenty. They demanded,
(58:31):
they demanded to be by themselves, taught for it, fought for,
fought for it. Yeah. Then now they say they can't
find a good man. Yeah, Feminism takes away a good man.
Speaker 3 (58:47):
Okay, so politically you got Trump, you got Obama. What
do you think about Obama? How much did Obama do
for the black community.
Speaker 4 (58:54):
Nothing?
Speaker 3 (58:56):
Oh, you don't think that a lot of good for
the black comm didn't nothing. He didn't change your life positively.
Speaker 12 (59:01):
He changed He's spent eight years. He's spent eight.
Speaker 4 (59:05):
Years giving the homosexual community all of our civil rights.
We still need a little bit more. So doctor king them.
Fight wasn't for integration. It wasn't ready to take the
gym pro signs down. The initial fight and it lasted
for a while. The initial fight was equal rights and
(59:28):
equal protection under the law. The Asians now have equal
rights and equal protection because they have an Asian Hate Bill.
You can't do nothing to Asian. The Jews verywell protected.
Black Americans not so so. When I look at Obama,
he had an opportunity, but he wasn't raised with a
Black American, so he don't connect with us. He don't
(59:51):
relate to us because he's not a Black American.
Speaker 12 (59:54):
He come from an African.
Speaker 4 (59:55):
Man who had a baby with a white woman overseas
and raised by his white grat in white racist granddaddy
and his loving white grand mama. He grew up the
La school. They white women like who you date. Obama
Michelle was a political move for him, you feel, so
he would never got elected. Hey, he had a white woman.
That's why Kamala couldn't get elected. Ain't nobody to vote for,
(01:00:16):
no black woman with no white man coming from our culture,
each with their own coin if you want to lead us,
each with their own coin. White America would never pick
a white Why you think that boy got kicked out
England with that black woman. You gonna come bring this
to our blood line. No Vietnam man that while Mama
(01:00:38):
and said you don't vote her, have no body with
their people. You stay over here. Red birds and bluebirds
don't fly together, but they vote bird each with their
own kind. Can't be mad about that. So Obama could
not relate to the Black American struggle coming from the
NI GZ E R slavery. He's not a seed of
(01:00:58):
a slave, So why would he cry with us? He
wouldn't cry with his people, homosexual us. His people men
getting him his piece style. You saw what man? Listen
you think, yeah, he gave them the world did him
his people? How you recognize your kind by the action.
(01:01:20):
Homosexual got actions. That's how you know that homosexual he
with his kind.
Speaker 8 (01:01:26):
You're saying, brank Omama's gay.
Speaker 4 (01:01:29):
I'm speculating well, based on his mannerism.
Speaker 12 (01:01:33):
He wasn't tough enough in the white hair.
Speaker 4 (01:01:35):
George Bush was tough, Andrew Jackson was tough. George every
motherfucking body was tough except him. Get along, go along, Come.
Speaker 12 (01:01:46):
I mean, we don't need no president to get along,
go along. We damned need a dictator.
Speaker 4 (01:01:54):
So uh nah man, I'm Trump all day because America
needed something that he had never had. They needed somebody
that wasn't a politician, couldn't get a soldier ship. We
got a con man, got a many man who played
all kind of role. He don't have been in every role.
He done have been in every face of every ethnicity,
in every culture from what the sixties to now, from
(01:02:17):
being on Apprentice to Dibbling and Daddy Row and hip
hop's done. Keen my tysle Michael. So man, this man
is a black icon us.
Speaker 8 (01:02:24):
Oh you're calling not a con man? What do you
call a common William?
Speaker 4 (01:02:28):
Let me just break this down. A con man is
not a crook. A con man is a short term
for a confidence man. Ah, God, what you're saying? Okay, yeah,
they just confidence man, even.
Speaker 8 (01:02:38):
Though he's never been in a fight before. You're ok
with your brother.
Speaker 4 (01:02:43):
One time I got to ask, could I level half?
Because I'm a confident man, say hell, y'all can level
that half? Took me out something to do it? Could
I do it?
Speaker 10 (01:02:51):
Now?
Speaker 4 (01:02:51):
Didn't know if it's damn hard, underpriced myself. But I'm
a confidence man, so I believe I can do anything. Man,
if you mess with me, I believe I can whoop
John Cenner physically.
Speaker 12 (01:03:04):
Probably not, but you can't tell this little mine I can't.
Speaker 4 (01:03:09):
As impossible as it seen, I think I can. I think, man,
That's what I tell myself in any situation.
Speaker 8 (01:03:15):
Who fed this to you as a kid?
Speaker 4 (01:03:17):
Will you ever like?
Speaker 15 (01:03:19):
No?
Speaker 2 (01:03:19):
The books?
Speaker 4 (01:03:20):
The Little Red Kaboo books with the Little Red Kaboo
about the train.
Speaker 12 (01:03:23):
That's it all the story that they tell you as
a kid. So, man, I had toys, but I.
Speaker 4 (01:03:31):
Read books because it was a form of traveling as
a kid.
Speaker 8 (01:03:34):
This fuck.
Speaker 4 (01:03:36):
Tell I think I can? I think I can. I
think I've been a little Red Kaboo. So they tell
you things as kids, So they tell you things as
kids that trick you. Sticks and stone may break my bone,
but word will never hurt me. I make myself believe
that affirmations man, So you so use your sayns and
(01:03:57):
forkloords and things that you hold on throughout life from people.
There's many stories that children can get out of these
kind of books. But now they got gay stuffs in books,
so kids can't get this kind of inspiration and motivation
when they feel like the little bit of read and caboos.
Speaker 3 (01:04:10):
You see the video that's said they're posting a world
star to gay. Couple of girls are at Barnes and
Noble and they see the book staff for kids.
Speaker 8 (01:04:18):
Have you seen this the gay BC?
Speaker 4 (01:04:19):
That's why I brought that up. You ever at the GABC?
I never?
Speaker 7 (01:04:23):
Yeah.
Speaker 4 (01:04:23):
So I was a kid when the book fair came
to school. This was like birthday day for me. Mamam
gonna go give me ten dollars, twelve dollars and some
lunch money. I'm gonna bypass lunch. They'll get all the men.
So I was an avid book reader as a kid
because in school back in my day, if you couldn't
turn a black backflip and recess if you couldn't play
(01:04:46):
sports at a you know, act letting inclined. You have
to be smart?
Speaker 3 (01:04:51):
Are you?
Speaker 4 (01:04:51):
Are you? You ain't nothing in the popular crowd? So yeah,
so my intelligence have I always been tool for me
to use to connect.
Speaker 8 (01:05:01):
With other people.
Speaker 4 (01:05:03):
Good free I mean that mindset of yours, that's that's
a it's a unique mindset.
Speaker 3 (01:05:09):
And it's good to see that rot. But if you
can go to world Stars Instagram account. If I just
want to show this because I wonder what he thinks
about it when you see this. If you go on
the World Star there's a couple literally at Barnes and
Noble and then while they're there they see all the
gay books for kids.
Speaker 4 (01:05:28):
They'll go ahead play this clip. I think Charleston's gonna
like it. Can hear.
Speaker 20 (01:05:34):
Barnes and Nobles and there's a kid's book section of
gay kids book section and this shit is crazy?
Speaker 4 (01:05:40):
Look at those.
Speaker 16 (01:05:41):
Okay, there's the gav SE's right, bye by binary for kids,
Bye by binary with a mohook on a baby.
Speaker 4 (01:05:50):
Gavc's you're not ready, I'm almost Yeah. What A is
for Arrow and east be is for Biden. This is crazy,
We're Gavid this is crazy. Indoctrination starts inroom. Pause right there.
Indoctrination starts in the classroom or school is not in school,
(01:06:13):
your children are being indoctrinated. Education is in the home.
Your children are not being educated. They're being programmed and
propagated by this thanks to Barack Obama and Joe Biden.
One of the first thing that Joe Biden did when
he became president is he took a transgender male and
put them over a human and Health department. Fuck is
wrong with him? They don't bash nobody.
Speaker 3 (01:06:36):
You don't think that's normal, Like this person looks normal.
You don't think Rachel Levine looks like a normal person.
Speaker 4 (01:06:40):
That look like Sergeant Dick van Dyke. That's Sergeant Dick
van Dyke. You can't make me believe that. Ain't say
that's out. You can't make me believe that. Ain't no
real Sorge. Man, that's aweened you think, man, that's why
Ukraine need help. That's why you Ukraine need help. They
(01:07:01):
elected an actor fighting against a real warrior. That ain't
no funck. They ain't no warrior.
Speaker 12 (01:07:07):
They been sucking on the navy boat.
Speaker 8 (01:07:10):
You think Rachel's been sucking up here and you know if.
Speaker 4 (01:07:12):
She dressed like that's it. You don't get like that
without sucking, rubbing fur together.
Speaker 12 (01:07:17):
Yeah, get us men now been out.
Speaker 4 (01:07:20):
Listen. The worst thing we could have done to our
military is don't ask. Don't tell. Now we ask it,
and you tell us, cause we don't need y'all out
on that battlefield. We need y'all fush, sexually frustrated, blowing
hooksh We don't need y'all nuts on flat hug at
each other. So no, you don't get into this military.
(01:07:40):
Get a gay military to work with the National guards
passing out food and water bag But Tom overseas, motherfucker
should not be gay. The Russian military rain gay, China
military rain gay me. And we got some shit on
our hands to fight. We don't need that.
Speaker 12 (01:08:00):
That should be a home ac teacher.
Speaker 4 (01:08:02):
Put homeack back in schools and let them teach home
at as a man. I don't know if that's as
a man though. Shall let him, but just call him
mister Levine or say him he wants you to call
him her Man's all my mama told me. She said,
(01:08:23):
the devil is the master of deception. The devil is
the master of deception. What's more deceiving than that a
man looked like a woman acting like a woman, but
it's nationally a man still a man in nature.
Speaker 3 (01:08:37):
What's more deceptive than that? In the devil like you
don't find this attractive because this was a big hit.
Speaker 13 (01:08:44):
Jail.
Speaker 4 (01:08:44):
We used to kick their ass in school, but they
gave ashy. Now you can't get you can't gave bashing words. See,
this is what's wrong with America. It should be bullying
should be allowed.
Speaker 12 (01:08:53):
That's what made America tough. You taught this kid how
to go outside and defeat his bully.
Speaker 4 (01:08:58):
Now he's running the CEO. Think he's been bullied? I mean,
this is is this guy?
Speaker 19 (01:09:04):
Is this?
Speaker 4 (01:09:04):
What is this right?
Speaker 8 (01:09:05):
Listen?
Speaker 4 (01:09:06):
It ain't It ain't. No gay person who hadn't been
sexually violated had to turn game. Is this the guy
from the movie Coneheads from back in the days? Or
is this no?
Speaker 11 (01:09:14):
No?
Speaker 8 (01:09:14):
I'm being serious?
Speaker 11 (01:09:15):
Is this no?
Speaker 21 (01:09:16):
This was an employee within Joe Biden's administration, the Office
of Nuclear Energy. He was the or she They were
caught remember stealing luggage at the airport?
Speaker 4 (01:09:26):
Do you remember that's? Yes, that's person. I thought this
was Conehads go to conheads go to cos. I don't
know if you remember what Charles Christiano tor from Marckie Mark.
Are you kidding me?
Speaker 3 (01:09:37):
You totally threw me off rock if you put him
right next to each other. I thought it's the conan's
main character. Look at that, maybe a little bit not
as much of a cone on the top. It's a
little bit too flat. So this isn't you you think
this is inappropriate?
Speaker 4 (01:09:51):
Yeah?
Speaker 8 (01:09:51):
Oh yeah, he had.
Speaker 4 (01:09:53):
I fought. I fought man, I fought black women. You
did well for for I game community. I don't fault
white people for they white community, or you fault I
fought our black women or for our gay community. I
blame him because nobody accepts homosexuality in the Black community,
homosexuality and gangsterism. Nobody accept this more than a Black
(01:10:17):
community than black women. For most of their sons, the gaye,
the gangsters, they're not in between them. That's why we
stand up for guys like George Floyd and not kids
like Tommy Rice.
Speaker 12 (01:10:27):
We support our gangsters. Let what our gangster nippers get killed.
Speaker 4 (01:10:30):
About the police.
Speaker 12 (01:10:30):
We let a good person get culled.
Speaker 4 (01:10:33):
We actuly. I won't even know nobody let a gay
person happen. Black women are mad. Black women are the
only fashion of our community to treat the gay man
like he's a girl. And she raised her son to
be like the gay dude or the gangster dudes she dates,
so they don't let the black men have access to
his children. As soon as the baby's born, she gets
(01:10:55):
named it in My baby and my baby. In order
for him to.
Speaker 12 (01:10:59):
Even have rights, he has to go through the.
Speaker 4 (01:11:01):
Government system to put tank support on himself, then ultimately.
Speaker 12 (01:11:04):
Restricts him and puts him.
Speaker 4 (01:11:05):
In an in and out of jail bag mode. So
when we look at the gay community, I remember America
used to be a if more you thought it was
for slavery. I remember time in the eighties where they
would let advertising play commercials on children's cartoons. On second,
they don't target children. Their targeting children. I tell people
(01:11:33):
all the time, if you're standing up talking to kids,
you're gonna lost them. They're kneeling down, whispering kids. You're
a gay secrets. So if we're not kneeling down looking
at babies third grade, second grade, out of eye and
talking to them on their level, that's what their weakness
at because they're sneaking this shit in cartoons that we
can't see. We're not looking at their level.
Speaker 12 (01:11:54):
A giraffe and.
Speaker 4 (01:11:54):
An ant don't have the same view.
Speaker 12 (01:11:56):
These are ants with.
Speaker 4 (01:11:57):
These giraffes laying on their belly teaching them about homosexuality,
which is, this is a Christian country, an Obama nation
to God. So how can your leader? How can your leader?
So you think the Obama administration and Joe Biden for this.
It was a long time coming on the Democrats behalf.
(01:12:19):
So what the Democrats said, Our black people ain't good
for us no more. The niggas won't even vote no more.
Speaker 12 (01:12:28):
They have the Lord's voter.
Speaker 4 (01:12:29):
Turn around all of our democratic community. We need to
do another Southern strategy again. Remember they said the party
switched through the Knicks and Southern strategy. The Democrats are
a very clever slave match, very clever slave match. So
they did something like a southern strategy. It was a
(01:12:49):
gay strategy. Had they not done this, the country will
be read. They went and recruited the gage and then
they went and got the black women to stand with
the gaze, and they got the feminines, white women that
want to ride motorcycle with big titty to stand with
the black women, and they got an army, and not
(01:13:12):
only that, they got a game off you. It's violent
and dangerous and they let you.
Speaker 12 (01:13:16):
Know they'll do something to you and sexually violate you.
Speaker 4 (01:13:19):
And if you go against them, if you offend this group,
if you slightly offend them off with your head, they
will cancel you. They're bullies. It's like only thing matters
to them. They got a pride month. Who promotes a
head of sexual month?
Speaker 12 (01:13:36):
So I'm saying, oh, fuck them, fled up, fuck them.
Speaker 4 (01:13:43):
They can't make babies, no way, So how can we
carry on with people who can't reproduce? And one of
our reasons for being here is to reproduce in multiplepoder earth.
They gonna stop civilization, take their rights, put their ads
back in the closet, make ordinances law and say you
ain't coming outside, boy with your nuts taped.
Speaker 12 (01:14:04):
Up under you asked me and tight shorts on. Lady,
you ain't gonna.
Speaker 8 (01:14:10):
Look like this.
Speaker 4 (01:14:10):
You got to let us know. I'm a man, I'm
a boy on that you're deceiving me.
Speaker 3 (01:14:19):
You need some real good quality taped on them, because
if some of these guys got some.
Speaker 4 (01:14:24):
Long feet, yeah, and they draw, Yeah they got feet
and they draw the roll it up tape. I need
to tape this up.
Speaker 8 (01:14:33):
You just got the visual and I went there and
realized there's a business for it.
Speaker 4 (01:14:37):
Yeah. Yeah, so in tape, say what's up?
Speaker 13 (01:14:41):
Everybody?
Speaker 4 (01:14:42):
Iss bought Charleston White or AKA America's favorite Uncle. I
just signed up two minutes. So if you want to
message me, you want to cust me out, you want
to fuss at me, even if you want some canseling,
call me. I minister hear him by well word, you
can mess me directly on mine. I promise, Man, I'm
gonna respund directly. I ignore them dms on Instagram.
Speaker 12 (01:14:59):
They just took my face.
Speaker 4 (01:15:00):
I don't respond on you too. I will respond on that.
I promise. Just call me and see text me.
Speaker 8 (01:15:05):
You give me the you give me the feeling that
you watch a lot of w NBA.
Speaker 4 (01:15:08):
It's that true.
Speaker 21 (01:15:09):
Like you.
Speaker 4 (01:15:11):
I saw, I mean you like you don't like WM
them lesbian chicks and them them most w NBA women
ugly if they just start getting chu.
Speaker 8 (01:15:20):
You don't think ain'tl Reese is like acuted.
Speaker 4 (01:15:23):
But eighty percent of the of the NBA league is
uh a tall or giraffe looking women like Britney. Yeah no, no,
most most tall women at tall they can play basketball.
Speaker 12 (01:15:36):
They need go together. They long feet, y'all.
Speaker 4 (01:15:39):
Can't have damage? Man, five nine five eight. How you
gonna play with that big old woman like that? And
she manly? And that's why they can't say a ticket.
If they hired more sexy women in the w n
B A, they would do NBA. No, But don't nobody
want to see a bunch of men and looking women
running up and down the court. Send them to the
military league to play over there against Russia. But now,
(01:16:01):
I man, that's not entertainment.
Speaker 12 (01:16:04):
That's the worst investment of the NBA.
Speaker 4 (01:16:05):
K I've ever done.
Speaker 8 (01:16:06):
Is sheer type?
Speaker 4 (01:16:09):
Uh? Yeah, yeah, she fucking it ain't bout type. It's fuckable.
It's just now you're yeah, yeah, you don't look you
know a guy with lord stamps as the fuck? So
when when you can read the fuck sometimes you ain't
got you just lorder your stamper.
Speaker 8 (01:16:23):
I see what you're saying. Very strategic, got it?
Speaker 4 (01:16:27):
Got it?
Speaker 8 (01:16:27):
I mean she's not superstar right now? Yes, she in
the kind of a uh but.
Speaker 4 (01:16:31):
I like the one that quit the w n b.
I can't think of name and went the only fans
and make way more than that.
Speaker 12 (01:16:37):
See, I think I think them to They.
Speaker 4 (01:16:38):
Should be NBA search sex workers legally like Vegas. I
think the w NBA should be the sex workers like
the strippers hears for the rapper the wn The NBA
guys's supposed to be able to go to the w
n B A and sleep with all the women in
the league. This one right here? Is this the one
that went to only fans? No, hell, she too fat?
Speaker 6 (01:16:58):
Now?
Speaker 4 (01:16:58):
This one her was bad? Now she too chuck y'all.
Speaker 8 (01:17:00):
Too chubby, Josh to chubby?
Speaker 4 (01:17:02):
Yeah, yeah, in fact, girl cheeks really yeah, in fact,
girl cheap?
Speaker 8 (01:17:05):
How can you tell? Can you zoom in a little
bit and see if they.
Speaker 4 (01:17:08):
Look at chubby cheeks?
Speaker 2 (01:17:09):
The cheek you do like.
Speaker 15 (01:17:11):
You do?
Speaker 6 (01:17:12):
Like that?
Speaker 4 (01:17:13):
I can't think of her cheek.
Speaker 12 (01:17:14):
Oh, but she's just quitting like she's attractive, very attractive.
Speaker 4 (01:17:19):
Who is this one? This one?
Speaker 10 (01:17:22):
Is that her?
Speaker 4 (01:17:24):
Yeah? That's her? Leah Cambi, Yeah that's all right. Yeah
is that the same chick?
Speaker 11 (01:17:28):
Yeah?
Speaker 4 (01:17:28):
Okay, yeah, that's her. Yeah, yeah, that's her. Maybe you
know what that probably wasn't that all that was that
was them field of them girl like to get because
she's doing only fans now, so she's doing a lot
more over the lips, so she probably had to get filled.
So you don't like big cheeks up there, But I'm
more over olive all kind of guy.
Speaker 12 (01:17:47):
Okay, I grew up watching Popeye.
Speaker 8 (01:17:49):
And look that's your type right there, the Liz.
Speaker 2 (01:17:57):
Oh then she too me.
Speaker 4 (01:17:58):
Man's like a big man. Yes, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Speaker 8 (01:18:02):
You're surprised.
Speaker 3 (01:18:02):
I thought you were going to be like a big
supportive proponent of WNBA, like telling us to watch it.
Speaker 4 (01:18:07):
But they supposed to be playing what she got on,
right y'all. They should have a uniforms for them to
work play lunch. Yeah yeah in hills, run up and
down the click clacking in the hill with them them
balls bouncing and the mother balls jiggling and wiggling going
in for a layup. You know how many men to
tune in of this?
Speaker 3 (01:18:24):
The falls would be some ethic falls man coming down
on those high hends, fires.
Speaker 4 (01:18:29):
Too is and what so. But they're not being creative.
They trying to. They think these women can dress like men,
run up and down the court, dribble like man, shoot
like men, and they're gonna attract them or audience. Even
women like Whole.
Speaker 8 (01:18:43):
Even women, even women like Hole.
Speaker 4 (01:18:45):
That's why they get drunk and at the club they
gonna act like Hole and they clean up real quick.
Even women like to watch Hold That's why we watch
some of our favorite shows them Hold on Her entertaining.
These lesbian women are not entertaining. Don't get some hole.
They can play basketball.
Speaker 3 (01:18:59):
They go both with Luther. Chris did a song about that,
knowing like different area coach.
Speaker 8 (01:19:03):
Yeah, it was very Uh.
Speaker 4 (01:19:05):
I just think it'd be much more entertaining knowing that
these are freaky women and they went whatever playing basketball.
Have you ever been to a game? Yes?
Speaker 8 (01:19:15):
One, and it was bored really courts no no no.
Speaker 4 (01:19:18):
I took some kids. Uh uh. This organization I usually
partner with name six or one Tickets used to donate uh,
tickets and stuff to my my youth orps. So I
used to take the kids out the projects to them
w NBA games because it didn't cost much to feed
them popcorn and stuff like that. They don't have hot
popcorn price like the NBA. That's how you know they
ain't worthship, so their popcorns cheap yeah. So in the
(01:19:40):
Jersey they don't invest into a lot of them women.
Speaker 8 (01:19:43):
Kin Clark's some pretty good right now.
Speaker 4 (01:19:44):
She's saving them. If it wasn't for Caitlyn and I
ain'tel wouldn't nobody being in this ship? Yeah, I think
Kaitlyn Clark.
Speaker 8 (01:19:50):
So you're a fan of Kaitlyn. Yeah, yeah, she's fun
to watch.
Speaker 4 (01:19:54):
Uh. She's a wholesome white woman playing basketball out now,
Larry Bird with my type, good white boy. That was
to Kevin McHale. Now that ain't my type. Woman, men
and a woman ain't got no bidiness, squeaking her tennishoe
up and down the basketball. Now she pulled build a
tru leader, got it? Yeah, y'all I'm old school in Maryland.
(01:20:14):
Uh yeah, yeah.
Speaker 12 (01:20:15):
Men were men and women was afraid of men.
Speaker 3 (01:20:18):
Did you hear about the devastating news that Fox fired
the Joy Taylor the sports She.
Speaker 4 (01:20:24):
Wasn't good for me. She was trying to be too cute. Man,
We need real journalists.
Speaker 8 (01:20:28):
You don't think she's a real journalist.
Speaker 4 (01:20:30):
No, men, no, hell no, men. Uh she too pretty?
Oh she yeah?
Speaker 11 (01:20:37):
Yeah?
Speaker 4 (01:20:37):
No men, yeah she yeah.
Speaker 7 (01:20:39):
No.
Speaker 4 (01:20:39):
She didn't get there because she was the best journalist
in the in the company. What are you saying she
was fucking to get to the shop as most good
women do. Nancy Pelosi done, and everybody do it. Every
woman with a smart brain on the job find some
kind of way to skip the line. Who want to
work hard? We work smarter, not harder ladies.
Speaker 3 (01:20:57):
So you're saying that's whites very wide. So she's a
wise girl. February she got fired.
Speaker 8 (01:21:04):
So what does that say?
Speaker 4 (01:21:05):
You hirt real easy?
Speaker 3 (01:21:06):
If they know what she did to get the job,
and maybe she wasn't doing a lot of it lately,
she probably stopped.
Speaker 4 (01:21:10):
You know, they give us out the self. Yeah, once
you niff them up here with you, and they still
shoulders and sold you with you. They think they equal
to you. I can do what a man do.
Speaker 6 (01:21:18):
No, you can't.
Speaker 4 (01:21:19):
You can't find me. I find you. So now they
get tricked. They got an ego too. But she can
get a job easy. You hear about what she said
about prostitution. I'm cures to know what you say about it.
No heard she was speaking one.
Speaker 8 (01:21:32):
Yeah, she talked about prostitution.
Speaker 3 (01:21:33):
She said, Uh, if you want to play the clip, right,
I think there's a clip off her talking about prostitution.
Maybe this is where you guys would agree on something,
Joey Taylor, if you want to is this, yeah, go
ahead play this clip?
Speaker 4 (01:21:47):
Was easy to get a job? Do you think that
America is trying to be better?
Speaker 2 (01:21:51):
Of course not?
Speaker 4 (01:21:53):
No, no, I know, yeah, I don't either.
Speaker 20 (01:22:00):
I think there's also a I think there's a massive
attack on femininity. Like the idea is that the masculinity
is actually what's being attacked, right, Like everything is watered down,
everything is softened. Now you know, everything is feminine. I
actually think femininity is under control. I think that a
big part of the reason why this is happening is
(01:22:22):
because women got too close to power. Okay, how so,
I mean the audacity that a black woman would won
for president? I mean this was this, This was this
was their last their last stand.
Speaker 4 (01:22:32):
They're like, hold on, listen, we we let you in board.
By the way, was a black woman he ran for president?
That was an Indian one?
Speaker 20 (01:22:40):
I think non was he getting male lonelies are are
deteriorating society.
Speaker 4 (01:22:46):
I think it's a massive problem. What do you think
that one? I think we should legalize prostitution. Okay, I
have been standing decades and I think she won. She
just made us. That's a confession she's visiting. She won't
a legalized prostitution. Why don't she be the candidate for it?
Because I agree with her? You know why I agree
with them? Because I know she the souls with pussy before.
That's the only reason you agree with this stuff. No
(01:23:06):
woman in her right mind who ain't never sold nobody
would co sign a woman being a prostitute on their
holes and bitches dudes. A real woman and a real
lady would never say we I think prostitute.
Speaker 8 (01:23:18):
Should be legal.
Speaker 4 (01:23:19):
She would say, hey, I think we should provide services
for the women and find other ways for them other
than problem. But a whole goes support a hole. Why
they get on the phone and tell each other to
be there when they fucking the same guy. That's why
two holes and two bitches could get on the phone
hate one of the other, because they fucking the same
guy ensure intimate insformation that hurts each other for him,
(01:23:40):
they relate to each other.
Speaker 12 (01:23:42):
Two red birds. A bluebird wouldn't have said that. So
she's a red bird.
Speaker 4 (01:23:50):
She's a red bird. Now I'm more for a hope prostitute.
I'm more for a hope, because a woe is using
her body and in herself which to advance herself in life.
She might end up becoming a millionaire housewife like Anna
the colesmell. Oh, she became a billionaire. She was holing.
(01:24:10):
She wasn't prostituted, but it was love she loved.
Speaker 12 (01:24:15):
She loved him, but he loved her.
Speaker 4 (01:24:17):
All men love good hole. Even Jesus loved one kept
Mary Remagnum with him in his twelve disciple. No other
woman got to walk with the Savior other than this horror.
So holes are more like angels or prostitutes of sex
workers carrying demonic spirits.
Speaker 12 (01:24:34):
Holes got God's spirit.
Speaker 4 (01:24:36):
Of them, and they ushered a man. They catered to men,
and they don't cause men problem. Women, ladies and bitches
are more of an opposition to a man than a whoys.
She w a road for God. God confused what you
said about Jesus. He kept a whole Mary Magnum.
Speaker 12 (01:24:51):
So when you read Jesus' story, other than the prostitute he.
Speaker 4 (01:24:55):
Met at the well, he don't really fuck with women
his host, but he kept one particular a woman with
him and his twelve disciple to witness all these miracles
and she was poor, she was a white or trust
a hope that better hope. That's what the Bible describer is. Okay, man, Oh,
(01:25:19):
prostitution been around since this time.
Speaker 8 (01:25:22):
So you're saying she wants to joy, wants to bring
it back from Fox. What do you think?
Speaker 4 (01:25:30):
Yeah? I think what a woman do with her body,
she should pay taxes for it. But you can't regulate
it if she's selling what she's setting. And she made
market make up five for ten ninety nine for that,
pushing five taxes on you. Right, But but other than
saying we need laws to put in place to make
this legal.
Speaker 7 (01:25:49):
H.
Speaker 4 (01:25:51):
Could be one way to pay off the national death
Yeah yeah, yeah, yeah, he pay it off one year. Yeah, man,
don't know say it like that, sugar sugar kind, don't
even say it.
Speaker 11 (01:26:00):
Like that.
Speaker 4 (01:26:04):
In one year, in one year. No, she's a very
nice looking lady.
Speaker 16 (01:26:07):
She is.
Speaker 3 (01:26:08):
Yeah, so she's your type. So if she liked myself,
if she would slide in your DMS, you would respond.
Speaker 4 (01:26:12):
I'll fly in them all. Yeah, yeah, I'll fly in
them all. And she's like the top two. Yeah, we're talk.
Speaker 3 (01:26:19):
She's not gonna know, she's not no job now so
maybe don't be surprised if it happens all of a sudden.
Speaker 4 (01:26:24):
Call me, Jorge. Oh, I got the right kind of
instructions for you. Your proper instruction motivate people.
Speaker 8 (01:26:31):
She's got time.
Speaker 16 (01:26:32):
Yea.
Speaker 3 (01:26:33):
Bill Belichick was a bad man. Proper instruction motivated people.
But for the first ladies like do you you watch
your first things?
Speaker 5 (01:26:39):
Like?
Speaker 4 (01:26:39):
Uh, I like the Kennedy lady yea, like ya like
miss Jackets she smoked a lot of cigarettes. Oh that's
our right devil sexy back then, Yeah, yeah, sexy.
Speaker 8 (01:26:48):
For the for the Oh, so she's she's your first lady.
Speaker 4 (01:26:52):
Yeah, yeah, she's my first lady.
Speaker 13 (01:26:53):
Her and all.
Speaker 4 (01:26:55):
I love Nancy too. I love Nancy Reagan. I love
Nancy Reagan because she brought the damn program in school
drug abuse resistant education. This is your brain and this
is your brain on drug So yeah, no men, so
no man. She was very uh classy, very classy. So
those two ladies, that's their class. Michelle Obama had some
(01:27:18):
grason in class about herself as well. Uh, but she
would make it known that she don't like people by
facetoo expression, a woman don't give off snow signal or nothing.
She's always modest and composed or another first lady h
Thomas Jefferson and and and I can't.
Speaker 8 (01:27:36):
Jefferson.
Speaker 4 (01:27:37):
So his wife, his wife and in his other they
started out his friends ended up becoming enemies and then
became friends again by way of the wife's writing to
each other.
Speaker 12 (01:27:46):
So he was two buddies who was guided friends.
Speaker 4 (01:27:49):
So they fell out.
Speaker 12 (01:27:49):
So it was Thomas Jefferson another one.
Speaker 4 (01:27:51):
So just through history from Jefferson's wife and his friend's wife.
And then when I saw the Kennedy's Mama Kennedy, the
old dad. Now, then when I saw Barbara Bush, Uh
do strong women? Yeah yeah, yeah, you're you're not. The
(01:28:13):
strong women are the ones who whispered in those men's
years and they get weak. Uh they have and a
positive way. You can't be a you can't be a
throwing in your husband side. And he's president. She's tough.
Speaker 2 (01:28:24):
Yeah.
Speaker 4 (01:28:24):
So so I so I watched the movie, I read
the books.
Speaker 3 (01:28:27):
H we have a guy here that that's that's his
fantasy crowl Homberto. He is crazy about Barbara Bush. He's
mosters vice computer. You go by his computer like the screensaver.
Speaker 4 (01:28:38):
He must usually lay on the floor and look up
under the Grandma Madrid Black TV.
Speaker 12 (01:28:41):
Yeah, I gotta figure out.
Speaker 4 (01:28:43):
Yeah, he gives me.
Speaker 5 (01:28:46):
Yeah.
Speaker 4 (01:28:46):
So now so I understand the role that the first
lady or how powerful she can be in shaping the
nation and totally and really bringing peace.
Speaker 12 (01:28:56):
So so if if if, if boy, if Trump had
right kind of woman.
Speaker 8 (01:29:01):
Oh you don't think he does.
Speaker 4 (01:29:03):
Nah? Stop, they don't even like each other. Come on, man,
you can't fly nod another woman in from another country
and treat her as your equal like you would treat
a woman over here.
Speaker 12 (01:29:12):
You brought over her to mistreat her.
Speaker 4 (01:29:14):
No man from America goes overseas and get a woman
and brang over her and treat her love. He met
her here, nah, he man, but she still was a
farm they met somewhere else.
Speaker 8 (01:29:22):
He can kill like a you know man, he ain't.
Speaker 4 (01:29:24):
Man, listen, it's like a male on the bride. Stop it.
He done had too many wives. He don't.
Speaker 12 (01:29:30):
He don't been married so many times at this point.
Speaker 8 (01:29:31):
This is a male all the bride.
Speaker 4 (01:29:33):
That's why now today when they walk together, he needs
a little bit back there. You know how a nigga
treated a woman as he even got tired of he
don't hold his hand no more.
Speaker 8 (01:29:40):
He keep the umbrellas.
Speaker 4 (01:29:41):
She don't get she got a hold on them. Brother,
So she ain't even standing with him no more.
Speaker 8 (01:29:45):
So it's obvious he always holds you.
Speaker 4 (01:29:48):
I see, I've seen one he did. He they must
she must didn't give him none at like because you
don't always treat your Yeah, it's okay conversations.
Speaker 8 (01:29:56):
Oh but you can tell you you do think she's beautiful?
Milania is oh yes, or I so listen.
Speaker 4 (01:30:01):
So there's pictures of Millennia and Trump and P Diddy
back in the mid nineties, and P Diddy and Trump
and if uncle Trump gotta look at each other, Melniat Millennia,
I'm sorry, I uncle say go.
Speaker 12 (01:30:15):
Throw the body.
Speaker 4 (01:30:16):
They can't tell me. They wouldn't fucking label stop. You
can't tell me the tenacity Diddy has sexually and his history.
All these people went to this party.
Speaker 12 (01:30:24):
Why you think they why you so it's a more pictures.
Speaker 4 (01:30:27):
Watch how wat's how they look at it?
Speaker 8 (01:30:30):
Always at parties.
Speaker 12 (01:30:32):
No, that's a Disney party, that's not a Diddy party.
Speaker 4 (01:30:36):
So listen. Then there are so many pictures with Trump
and Diddy. Or why you think Trump said the mistreating mob.
Speaker 12 (01:30:42):
I look into it because they buddy, they party buddies.
Speaker 4 (01:30:45):
Trump been hanging with niggas forever, and you can't tell
me did They ain't been freaky diddy And you think
he ain't slide that pole up against that girl? Hey,
how you doing? And Trump and let her feel it?
Speaker 12 (01:30:55):
And then now they may and I contact with each other,
and Trump will freak you.
Speaker 4 (01:31:00):
You can't be a billionaire or not be a freak sexualist. Man,
I know reality. I know men. These men party together
or fuck together? Why they party together? Why we party
with the people we parted with. It's somebody that we
want to fuck if we're being real. Oh, he's innocome.
Can't tell a man he can't whoop his woman. And
(01:31:21):
she don't call the police. If my neighbors see me
kicking my wife, an they ain't got no bend in
the button there, baby? You all right? If she said no,
I'm all right, leave us alone. Now see how the
hell pop? Y'all join in?
Speaker 12 (01:31:34):
But cash it never holler for help. You can't ben there.
Speaker 4 (01:31:38):
Men. You can't tell me I got a billion dollars.
Speaker 8 (01:31:40):
I'm just trying to run away.
Speaker 4 (01:31:43):
She was standing a high dollar bag during the sexual
freak out we all agreed upon. She done got mad
behind closed door.
Speaker 8 (01:31:51):
I don't know what video you've seen.
Speaker 4 (01:31:52):
Pull up the video, man, I see she's still in
his bag, sitting by that bag. She steps a thiff bits,
give me my bag? Where you gonna you're thinking, give
me my ship? You give me my ship? Then you
get all back here up.
Speaker 8 (01:32:05):
You think this is okay?
Speaker 11 (01:32:06):
Yeah?
Speaker 4 (01:32:08):
Man, that's this woman. How can you tell that man?
He can't do that to man? That's that ain't my daughter?
Why I can't say bad becoved daughter? Yes, so listen,
I also got some friends who they women. Is okay
with that being happened because they in this toxic relationship.
This is not a normal relationship that Americans thinking about.
This is a drug en shoes, both of them using
(01:32:31):
drugs at a high level of the ship in the ghetto.
This is normal. But they're doing this and rich people.
This is not normal. Rich people do it on in shide.
Rich people beat their wives on their shide. He just
so happen to.
Speaker 12 (01:32:44):
Catch up, and he didn't beat it.
Speaker 4 (01:32:46):
He said, give me back my ship, kicked up and
drug her back here there and they finished sucking ain't
nothing like fighting and fucking the makeup best thing.
Speaker 3 (01:32:54):
That ever you will.
Speaker 4 (01:32:55):
They may song the back, we break up the makeup.
That's how all that is. You wan't see her coming
back out there. Run she said, it's another woman.
Speaker 19 (01:33:03):
Now.
Speaker 4 (01:33:03):
They were having sick. She went back in the store,
back and having shakes. You she didn't come out there room.
Speaker 12 (01:33:09):
The male probably said.
Speaker 4 (01:33:10):
She called the boy she paid. She been having a
fun like a mother flucker. So she was compensated for
what y'all sold. Was a guy's name punished or something
like that. So she was talking, she got he got
a sledge hammer or so. So she was compensated for
what we saw. She was compensated for what we saw.
(01:33:31):
So they put together this, Yeah, plus another twenty coming from.
Speaker 8 (01:33:35):
The hotel, another twenty that came.
Speaker 4 (01:33:37):
Out of the trial. So imagine this. Everybody been knowing
about this. Why was they signing for so long? Because
this is there's always been.
Speaker 12 (01:33:46):
Rumored, this ten years old tape.
Speaker 4 (01:33:48):
They been knowing about this.
Speaker 12 (01:33:50):
The father was on a goose home, the fans was
on a goose home, and they blew a case.
Speaker 4 (01:33:56):
So they went and put together this big mafia type
because Shi Rico trial for a guy and his wife
being freaky, his girlfriend being freaky, and they in agreement
with this. Was he wrong for flying in male prostitute?
No throne with flying somebody in the asht I thought,
that's what rich people do, the asshit How they get
(01:34:18):
there to you?
Speaker 13 (01:34:25):
What walk through?
Speaker 12 (01:34:46):
How you fly your girlfriend?
Speaker 4 (01:34:48):
Uh, your other woman on the side that you don't
want your wife wanting to buy?
Speaker 12 (01:34:52):
How is supposed to get to you? And you ain't
supposed to give him no money?
Speaker 4 (01:34:55):
Y'all get through fucking you take care of my little
mone this mother little bitch. I'll be fun. I play
to take care of. Does she do that? So how
can I gover say this is a sex worker? The
people ain't never identified as sex worker. They freaking having sex.
So now our government get the rule in the bedroom.
It's a clurecase of government ruled in the bedroom? What
I did outside that hotel? The jewelry said, not guilted?
Speaker 3 (01:35:17):
You think he recorded all those guys that he think
has got you tape on all those feet.
Speaker 4 (01:35:20):
The FBI got the tape and they seized the house.
Oh no ship. They seized all of his computers, and
they made it seem like he had a Costco house
full of baby off. He only had a couple of battles.
Our government painted a blurred picture about this man.
Speaker 12 (01:35:35):
Is it a horrible guy?
Speaker 8 (01:35:36):
Yet?
Speaker 12 (01:35:37):
Should he be in prison?
Speaker 11 (01:35:38):
No?
Speaker 12 (01:35:39):
Should be held without no bond.
Speaker 15 (01:35:40):
No.
Speaker 4 (01:35:41):
Every one of us know a guy who slaps his
woman and we don't say shit to him about slapping
his woman. What Uh he alive somewhere hiding prior to
his death, that was already attempts made upon his life
in jail. How is it a coincidence? And he ended
up in jail? Uh with a suicide, but the autopsy
(01:36:04):
report said his his larynings was crushed. You can't do
that with suicide. Mama got choke you to do that?
Speaker 2 (01:36:09):
Oh?
Speaker 4 (01:36:11):
Why don't the media through Epstein like they do Diddy?
We know everything we know Didd he like to put
calm on his nipples from men. Him and Cassie like
to suck to com off.
Speaker 12 (01:36:22):
So, oh this is detailed? Why we don't know details?
Speaker 4 (01:36:25):
Boy? Else?
Speaker 13 (01:36:28):
This case disgusting, pervert?
Speaker 2 (01:36:31):
All this information.
Speaker 16 (01:36:36):
Pass our specifically that because I have a goblin of
a goblin defend is that I have no interest? But
that's you for I'll get it in consopt of information
that I don't even know. I don't need to know
that this man is ejaculated rump all himself in this.
Speaker 13 (01:37:00):
Why would this woman brought this on the records? You
got paid three billions dollars and you said I want more.
You're married, you got kids?
Speaker 19 (01:37:12):
Now?
Speaker 13 (01:37:13):
Like fuck that.
Speaker 14 (01:37:23):
Nothing?
Speaker 11 (01:37:24):
Brother?
Speaker 13 (01:37:25):
Why is the publicly why?
Speaker 5 (01:37:28):
Why?
Speaker 13 (01:37:30):
Why they the same you?
Speaker 4 (01:37:32):
But they were don Where are the children were? There's stories,
we're the testimonies. Why don't we have open access to
Jelle's testimony and her cooperation with the government.
Speaker 9 (01:37:45):
You know why?
Speaker 4 (01:37:46):
Because most of the people went to the island was
politicians and powerful people on Princess of Wales, all them
types the real freaks, the evil people. The evil people
who can go to an island and have access to
children that nobody knows have been kidnapped in the world.
The evil people. Those are our politicians. They're gonna poor people.
Those are our people on drugs. Those are not gang
(01:38:07):
bangers just doing this. Gang bangers hurt their own people.
But it's a group of people that take our children
and they disappear and powerful people have access to them.
There's a there's a movie that I questioned to this day,
it's called Sounds of Freedom, Pride, Freedom about excuse you
and sad? I cried watching that movie. I kept walking,
I was saying, Oh, man, I said, why don't know
(01:38:29):
why they promote this movie from Hollywood? Why don't our
government promote the movie? Why do our governments been so
much biddings in Ukraine? And why we got some real
lawful sexual importation and sexual abuse? Could they in on
it too? So at the end of that movie, it
says that child sex trafficking has surpassed drugs and guns
(01:38:51):
in the world. You don't need to reply, you don't
need to you don't need you don't need to re
up with a kid you catch them in five it's
a sex slave till it die unless somebody free it.
So you asked me a question earlier, How does the
kids survive that with no hope? Agony is the resiliency
(01:39:15):
of a child that'll add those loves through our life.
So na man, So I think our government all that
everybody full of shit. I worry I hadnessay, I think
everybody's planning we really ignore the conditions of our children.
In America, we have some of the most drug addicted
children ever in the history of human existence. Today, more
(01:39:36):
of our children go to bed hungry or living abuse, neglect,
and is exposed to more violence than any other group
of children outside of these third world countries. But there's
not a lot of resources or all of the age
things put into development. More things are being taken from
the kids and given to the gays in the politicians,
in the interest groups. America American citizens is being robbed
(01:39:59):
by politicians who put capitalism for citizenship, capitalism over citizenship.
So that's why, that's why you hear the media terms,
terms and words are powerful. What Hitler used to exterminate
the whole group of people. The Consumer Reporting Credit Act
(01:40:22):
stripped us of our citizenship because if you go pull
our credit, you can go get access to.
Speaker 3 (01:40:28):
Me the most.
Speaker 4 (01:40:28):
So you have stripped me of my citizenship. And the
media now identifies Americans as the American consumer, not the
American citizens. The American consumer. Everything's about a consumer report capitalism.
It ain't talk socialism, but that's they really want. Capitalism.
Speaker 3 (01:40:48):
Capitalism superseded racism, Capitalism supersisent racism.
Speaker 8 (01:40:52):
Yeah, tell me why.
Speaker 4 (01:40:56):
If you get enough money, they don't look at you
like the color if you is that a good thing?
Speaker 8 (01:41:01):
Isn't that a good thing? Isn't that a good thing?
Speaker 4 (01:41:03):
Yeah? But what about the people who can't access to capitalism?
A lot of people don't start off with the capital
Most Americans won't get it and won't start off with it.
According to what we're looking at today's America, eighty seven
percent of millionaires are self made.
Speaker 8 (01:41:17):
The most of billionaires, a lot of them inherited the money.
Speaker 3 (01:41:20):
Sure, you can put a number to it, but millionaires
eighty seven percent are self made.
Speaker 4 (01:41:26):
They had a different school system to talk critical thinking,
but they dropped out. It's not the same America that
can repeat that again with this group of kids who
can barely read own above their grade level, who don't
have a worldview, who don't know economics because economics are
not in school. They don't know banking because they haven't
been given a piggy bank to put a quarter here,
(01:41:47):
they don't get it allows to learn.
Speaker 12 (01:41:48):
How to save, they don't get out.
Speaker 3 (01:41:50):
So access to information is more available one in person
today if they really wanted to go find out and
learn for themselves. With just YouTube alone, you can get
access to doing almost anything, selling, coding, chat GBT can
learn how to code.
Speaker 8 (01:42:07):
You have so many methods of learning today.
Speaker 4 (01:42:10):
Uh not when you're in doctrinators, you don't. Our children
have been doctrines at that part.
Speaker 8 (01:42:14):
But you need to go to school to be broke.
Speaker 4 (01:42:16):
Well, YouTube can only teach you the basics. They don't
teach you the basics. The people that go watch YouTube
can barely read.
Speaker 12 (01:42:24):
The people that can go whych YouTube are trying to
fix them? They might not eat later, so they don't
have the.
Speaker 4 (01:42:30):
Most Americans are poor. They don't have the luxury to
learn from YouTube. Their escapement reality. I think sometimes if
you give them an out, they'll run with it. Remember
earlier on when you said when you were a kid,
Oh look here's the app. Before you can even understand
life as a kid, they putting a fucking phone in
your hand, okay, to entertain you because you're getting on
(01:42:52):
the adults with them. So now you're going to a
school system that's on the parents, though, but the condition
don't allow the parents to teach, right. So this is
what I was taught. It takes a village to raise
a child, not a parent. It takes a village. Do
you believe that? Yes, I believe that whole hearted. I
was raised by the village because my mother was at work.
So I had a juvenile worker. I had a court worker,
I had a school teacher. My mama's at work. I
(01:43:13):
had a neighbor say, boy, I'm gonna tell your mama.
I had a village, mister London and Board had I
had a village. And I said, yes, ma'am. When somebody
the comploy your fans up, I pull them up. I said,
fuck you menched, I pulled them k could I understood
the village.
Speaker 12 (01:43:27):
So you want this group of children who.
Speaker 4 (01:43:31):
Mark Zuckelberg and Steve Jobs don't even give their kids
these phones for our kids to take this phone, and
you can make so much money off this phone, but
you ain't gona learn it watching YouTube. I spent five
years getting millions of views on Facebook, and nobody around
me knew how to monetize. Nobody. That blew my mind.
(01:43:53):
That blew my mind that nobody, all these people with
phones waking up and getting on social media sites don't
know how to monetize.
Speaker 8 (01:44:00):
Hold you media pay, I make money right now.
Speaker 4 (01:44:03):
I got a comedy tour, so I've been on I've
been on tour for a year or each each interview
you have ever seen me done within the last four years,
I get paid ten thousand dollars preterview. We haven't paid you, No,
y'all don't know. Yeah, So like the other podcast on,
so I wouldn't I wouldn't go on a big platform
as big as this or unless unless it's a mutual benefit. Right. So,
(01:44:25):
so I understand some things is not about money, but
it's certain platform because what I have to go entertain
in the conversation together.
Speaker 3 (01:44:34):
So, man, so did I tell you also know how
to get eyeballs? I mean you you go on to show,
You're gonna get eyeballs?
Speaker 4 (01:44:40):
Yeah, And so the most I've been paid is forty
thousand dollars for an interview, got it? So so I
have I have a clothes, I have a I have
a website that says merchandise. So between men, I probably
do forty fifty thousand dollars a month and just you
know shit and just interviews. And then I stream with
Aiden Ross. So that's another stream of revenue that comes
out so better.
Speaker 8 (01:44:58):
But what happened with you and Michael Jordan? Is it true?
Like the story?
Speaker 21 (01:45:01):
No?
Speaker 4 (01:45:01):
No, that's a bullshit.
Speaker 8 (01:45:02):
This story that he broke up a fight or something.
Speaker 12 (01:45:04):
Now they say he broke up a fight between me
and wag one.
Speaker 4 (01:45:06):
No, no, no, no, I ain't never met Mike.
Speaker 8 (01:45:09):
So that's just just just the story they told us
that trovotion. Okay, I saw that story.
Speaker 4 (01:45:13):
I'm like, what is it? What is that story all about?
Speaker 16 (01:45:15):
You know?
Speaker 4 (01:45:15):
With so so, let me just explain how I got
in the company because I didn't want to get stuck
online with the persona like the rapper does in characters. Yeah,
because the persona became so polarizing, or because we're so
cultural influenced by entertainment. Sometime we think Denzel Washington is
Denzel Off training day. So I started realizing people was
(01:45:38):
overlooking what I do in real life because they were
so into this character. So they meet me in personal,
they're not into Charleston. They want the internet persona. So
I had to figure out a way, uh to take
that persona uh in that internet character and evolved into
something that's less offensive. Uh, let's look intoward black people
(01:46:01):
instead of making them cry. Make him laugh because I'm
coming with some brutal truth, making off a crop. And
it was offending people. So uh, Paul Mooney said, the
greatest joke ever told was told as the truth. The
greatest truth of a toad was told as a joke.
So I learned to make it funny so we can
all laugh. I like that, said Paul Paul Mooney. Respect Yeah,
Paul Mooney said, the greatest joke ever told was told us.
(01:46:23):
The greatest truth of a toad was told as a joke.
The greatest joke ever told was told that the truth.
That's why comedians have always had a past, because they
come and speak our reality and truth in such a
way maybe offense. So that's why I wanted to bring
satire comedy back. Andrew Dyce, Clayton Man, Glenn beck Howard
Stern or Mall Mabel all these a satire comedy guys
(01:46:47):
who the shot jocks? Beck, Glenn Beckett sat all day in.
Speaker 12 (01:46:50):
The shot John So shot John?
Speaker 4 (01:46:55):
What Man? I meant? So I'm during the Man during
the Hillary and Obama man. I was tuning in the
Glen Big. He's a shot job and he's good at it.
You like him?
Speaker 8 (01:47:03):
I love who do you listen to? Who do you watch?
Speaker 4 (01:47:06):
I watched a lot of Fox News or I watched
a lot of Trump. Have you met him? I was
supposed to do the interview with him with him and
Aiden Ross, but I had some I had some some
bogus charges on me at the time, so I couldn't
pass a secret Service clearance. But I ultimate end up
getting the charges dropping. So I was attacked. I was
attacked by a game member in the barbershop. He hit
me in ahead with a gun and uh, with a gun. Yeah,
(01:47:28):
bob a sleep, So I wake up to it being
hitting Ahead with a gun. So uh, and he a
well known killer game member and so I went to
the car to retrieve my gun. And this is off camera,
but I come back through the building, uh, trying to
secure the building, not knowing where it at. And so
my local police department charged me with two aggravated assaltfoam
after being attacked get.
Speaker 8 (01:47:48):
Out of here.
Speaker 6 (01:47:48):
Yeah.
Speaker 4 (01:47:49):
So it took me, man, I spent a lot of
money to me, So they just dropped all the charges.
Speaker 3 (01:47:52):
This isn't for it's in four work. So you've never
met the president, Okay, So who would you want to meet?
Who are the guys that you want to meet? There's
people you would want to meet, who would it be.
Speaker 4 (01:48:00):
Uh, the leader of the of the National Rifles Association,
the leader of n R Yeah, and and and I
want to meet the leader the Grand Wizard of the
Tlue Club playing you just sit down and talk to him. Uh,
we'll become human free, we will become friends. Or because
I can connect with anybody on the human level. White black, Uh,
we don't have to be the same color. We got
(01:48:22):
the same experience as boys man being Americans.
Speaker 15 (01:48:24):
Uh.
Speaker 4 (01:48:24):
And I know American history, and white people don't have
to like you. But if you know history, can conversate
with them.
Speaker 5 (01:48:32):
Uh.
Speaker 4 (01:48:32):
They'll tolerate you if nothing else, just to debate you,
and they'll ultimately become fond of you. So or talking
and conversating.
Speaker 5 (01:48:42):
Uh.
Speaker 4 (01:48:42):
I want to meet people that black people think is
against us to come back and say if they're really
against us. That's how it became a Republican in Texas
after the after the George George Zimmerman and Trayvon Martin verdict. Uh,
I didn't want to join the hateful Black Lives Matter group.
I got a loving mother who says God has no
respective person. So my mother I don't know hate. I
(01:49:04):
come from a loving home. I don't know. Hate had
to come play like I'm hateful to fit in a
group of people that's hateful. So I didn't want to
join a Black Lives Matter group with anger. You never did.
I never did.
Speaker 8 (01:49:15):
I hated it.
Speaker 4 (01:49:15):
And plus, I ain't following three legibian bitches. No, well
not no stud bitches. I might follow a bisexual woman, yeah,
but I ain't following three studs. You ain't followed, yeah.
So I wanted to see. I wanted to prove the.
Speaker 12 (01:49:28):
Black people because here I am.
Speaker 4 (01:49:30):
I got a youth organization that has been highly recommended
to all two hundred and fifty four counties throughout the
state of Texas. This is white people that's doing it.
I got a I'm part of a national organization called
Incarcerated Children's Advocacy that work. These are white people bringing
me to Washington, d C. To help me change laws
and legislats. So I'm saying, man, let me see. So
I dressed up one day and went to this Republican
(01:49:52):
Executive committee and I was the only young black there,
mind full of gold teeth, and I kept trying to
speak on the microphone, and I ran into gregbit Uh,
one of his one of his age. He said, what
do you want to say? I said, man, I remember
this party.
Speaker 8 (01:50:05):
Used to embrace niggas.
Speaker 4 (01:50:07):
He was a young white boy, so we could talk
to this language. He hip hop, white boy, you used
to embrace niggas. I wanted to get him back to
embracing niggas. But I noticed the police was starting to
profile me, and come over here and try to see
what's going on. He gave me his card. So the
next morning I called down to the Terran County Geopeople
Republican Party and spoke to a gin Hall and Shelley preacher.
I said, ma'am, I came to i'm a, i'm a
(01:50:27):
I'm a conservative nigga who just so happened to vote Republicans.
I'm trying to see all their offended by what I'm
saying rather than listen to what I'm saying. Come, I'm
delivered it very articulate with manners. I said. I went
to the a meeting last night and I was shown
as a black man mouthful of gold team and I
can bring votes in from over here. So they invited
me to come down and uh uh, they adopted me.
(01:50:50):
They took in my youth organization, so I couldn't here
I am. I got. I'm working in the black community,
fighting against black people, but I got all these white
people that they say racial Republicans. They're sawing into me
from the Terrance Star Republican Women's Club. I'm building relationship
with judges where when black people get in trouble, I say, y'ahn,
he worked for me over there. Oh he does choice
(01:51:11):
of proofs. So I'm build in relationships because why would
I be a Democrat And there's hardly any democratic judges
and all my people need judges with a mouthpiece. So
I found out that white people aren't really racist. They prejudice,
they presidice. We are all presudice. We're all at no
(01:51:33):
centric ideology that think it's better than others. We just
don't understand each other. So I start bringing niggas around
these white Republican people with dreads and tattoos who had
murder cations, and they see redemption in these people because
they hear the stories. So now we're all partner together
to work with children. We're doing reading programs. So I
(01:51:54):
let the divisiveness of America's culture and temperament at the time,
George Floyd killing. So yeah, man, I didn't want to
be connected to hate because I was starting to hate.
But I wouldn't hate white people. I was hating black people.
I was watching black people shoot up a ninety three
year old woman house by mistake, and nobody said nothing.
(01:52:16):
I was watching kids get killed, and you have a
fundraiser to try to bury the kid. But the gang
he died for ain't helping bury The.
Speaker 12 (01:52:23):
Black church he's trying to be buried is extorting.
Speaker 4 (01:52:26):
The mother for more money. So man, I ain't like that.
So I went I was getting burned out because I
was a struggling father trying to help the community. I
became a change I wanted to see. I'm a pre
law student in the Texas Western University, just started a
youth organization. Car broke down and riding the bus to school,
(01:52:46):
people ride by seeing So I'm embarrassed by being on
the bus stop. Can't take my kids nowhere. But I
got a heart to help the community. So at some
point you become frustrated and angry, as most community leaders do,
the lack of support, or I figured out a way
how to selll SUSTAM organization. I didn't have to apply
for no grants. I knew how to sell barbecue, shake
down the drug dealers, stop the prostitute, say y'all can't
(01:53:07):
say a nope. And so I was shake down the community.
I'm on college police on y'all, why I need to
add white people? And I'm helping us. So black people
became our greatest enemy, helping their children. But I'm the
ones getting their kids out the juvenile system. I'm the
ones setting up to getting people licensed back reinstated. I
turned away from everybody. I was having a mental breakdown every.
Speaker 2 (01:53:31):
Day all day.
Speaker 4 (01:53:32):
Man, you're talking about for almost seven eight years, and
I'm speaking in legislation. I'm doing trains for us to
talk Department of Homeland Security, and I'm trying to maintain
my GPA. Y'all had a mental breakdown. And but this
is would cause the breakdown because I was used as
a political poem from the the powers, the power structure.
(01:53:59):
They needed a voice like mind, that was dynamic, that
challenged the black preachers, and I challenged them and I
shamed them. So white people grabbed me and made me
a poster child. They used me to as a voice
piece to go out into the black community, to bridge
the gap between law enforcements in the black community. So
at the time they had the federal government had just
(01:54:19):
issued out a national initiative to six cities that probably
could be the next Baltimore riotse So Fort Work was
one of those cities. It was called twenty first twenty
first century Community Policing. So they kind of wanted to
bring back beat cops where the cops know the neighborhood
put more, this is fort Work. So they had this,
(01:54:39):
They had this program that the police department developed by
way of this national initiative that was called Procedural Justice.
Procedural Justice was a new training aspect that was brought
to new law enforcement to kind of have them more
race sensitive, right, And they needed a black voice to
to go out. So I was one of the main
voices that they used.
Speaker 8 (01:54:58):
But what do you in Dallas, right, have you done
anything about TDJ?
Speaker 4 (01:55:02):
He for TDJ for his church. He not for the community.
Speaker 8 (01:55:08):
He's for this church, not meaning members of the you know, he.
Speaker 4 (01:55:11):
Means the Potter's House, right, meaning a member. He for
his church. That's his business. He not for Dallas.
Speaker 12 (01:55:19):
We don't see him nowhere doing nothing his church and.
Speaker 4 (01:55:21):
Nothing now they got a prison re entry, but that's
for the grand funding for his business.
Speaker 3 (01:55:26):
Do you think he's a net positive to Dallas? No,
to the black community, No, TDJS No.
Speaker 4 (01:55:31):
What do we do other than preach a good message
to make our mothers feel good? Only come back home
and still drink wine and feel better, playing up pussy
with the rose to feel evemo better. So all he
is a feel good preacher or.
Speaker 5 (01:55:46):
No man?
Speaker 4 (01:55:47):
The Bible says what you do for the least of those.
I don't see no preacher, no church really doing for
the least of those other than the poor church. And
that's amongst the least of those. You cannot take your big,
beautiful church building out on the hill away from the
people and think you can still reach the people. They
can't walk to that church. And matter fact, this church
is so extravagant, it's atm machines all over this motherfucker.
(01:56:10):
And when it's time to pay times, poor people are
excluded out of the Black Church. What do you mean
they're excluded? The preacher make you feel like if you
ain't got a solo scen who got a solo seed.
They make you feel like if you ain't got no money,
to give. God don't need my money, He needs my confession.
So you're know, the Black church full of shit that
(01:56:31):
go for TJ to all of them?
Speaker 8 (01:56:32):
What is my craflow for the shit?
Speaker 4 (01:56:35):
Obsolete to the black people? They have an audience like
I got an audience. If I lose a page, my
audience can't follow me like they're following. They're not for
the community. I started from the community and develop a following.
Speaker 3 (01:56:48):
You don't think TV Jakes is and that positive to
community is still like you know he preaches others.
Speaker 12 (01:56:53):
What does Why is a preacher? How's a preacher?
Speaker 3 (01:56:55):
It would go back to what you said earlier when
you said hip hop or the movies with them to
the bad communities and they would convert. So what if
somebody doesn't live in Dallas and they live in Kansas,
they live in New York, they live in Arkansas, they
live in London, and they watch them, they're like they
just like the way he delivers his message. Isn't that
and that's positive?
Speaker 11 (01:57:13):
No?
Speaker 8 (01:57:13):
Tell me why what does it do?
Speaker 4 (01:57:15):
It makes you feel good for the moment, It makes
so so church, make you feel good for whenever I
do lose your pastor you go back to the same problems,
same conditions, and most people lives don't transform. You don't.
Speaker 8 (01:57:29):
Can people make decisions when they give their life.
Speaker 4 (01:57:32):
Now they got I think. I think when people get
their life to God, they're going through something, They dealing
with something.
Speaker 12 (01:57:37):
Soon as shit get back right, They sneaking.
Speaker 4 (01:57:39):
And having unmarried to sticks. They still getting drunk, they
still masturbating and still watch the pool. I think everybody
is full of shit when it comes to God, because
you're gonna do something against God every day. Stop trying
to be Yeah, but I ain't trying to live for God.
God gave me a chance of free will. I don't
want to be a guardly man. I want to fuck
a bunch of women.
Speaker 8 (01:57:56):
So all you make that decision.
Speaker 4 (01:57:58):
Yeah, yeah, yeah, I get God on the bed, but
right now I'm living for me football, I believe.
Speaker 22 (01:58:04):
It it hold on what Brookway? How about get you
on to death? Ben like hold up, put his punk
through the picture. Let a dog your dog cutting up
what I'm about to hit the grave? So God to
by this contract agreement done be raising hell.
Speaker 16 (01:58:27):
So to the boy about to die, nothing about it,
the whole thing, Like, alright, we got to raise him
for many nine years, but now I'm about to go.
Speaker 13 (01:58:37):
So how about coming up there when you bring hell? No,
I'm know what the fuck you doing it on earth?
Speaker 16 (01:58:43):
Gonna stand there out of spike, but not gonna look
at go up hell doll up at the go up here,
go to hell, hell doll, cause it's brook where you
wanna go staying on earth.
Speaker 13 (01:58:53):
And a call up.
Speaker 16 (01:58:53):
Yes, ain't down about him, and he's gonna trap be
trapped yourself.
Speaker 12 (01:59:07):
I get the same blessings if I believe.
Speaker 4 (01:59:09):
If I don't. The sun shines on the bad, just
like the rain fall on the good. Good things happen
to bad people like bad things happen to good people.
God ain't got nothing to.
Speaker 23 (01:59:21):
Do with that.
Speaker 3 (01:59:22):
You think this is the right example on the way
to live your life because you're saying you want to
do nothing.
Speaker 4 (01:59:27):
Man, Listen, you live your life different things. Let me say, yes,
I think it's the right mission, because ain't nobody dictate
to you about your life. God gave it to you,
is what I'm saying.
Speaker 19 (01:59:39):
Though.
Speaker 3 (01:59:39):
So what I'm saying, you're right. You can do whatever
you want to do. I don't think God is real.
I think God is questionable, but then that's a different conversation.
You just told me you said God is real.
Speaker 4 (01:59:48):
That I said, I believe in God based off what
my mother said.
Speaker 8 (01:59:51):
But you don't believe God.
Speaker 4 (01:59:52):
I read Revelation and I read Genesis. Now I don't
believe God is real because I just told you. By
children being sick, traffic, where's God for them? Though? By who?
Speaker 16 (02:00:02):
Why?
Speaker 4 (02:00:03):
Whoever? I don't know.
Speaker 8 (02:00:04):
By the people, by what people, by the people, the.
Speaker 12 (02:00:07):
Government, whoever.
Speaker 4 (02:00:08):
So if God is real, why he don't stop those people?
If God is real? Okay, okay, okay.
Speaker 12 (02:00:14):
So that's why I don't think God.
Speaker 4 (02:00:15):
Is real because if God is real, why hadn't white
people suffered from what they did to slavery? If God
is really real, then for you, you're so you're conflicted. No,
and I'm not conflicted. I don't believe people know God
to tell me God is really real.
Speaker 8 (02:00:28):
So originally you said you believe I.
Speaker 4 (02:00:31):
Believe in God. That don't mean I think he real.
I believe in the Boogeyman. I don't think it's real.
I believe in God the spirit. I don't know that around.
Speaker 8 (02:00:39):
Do you have faith?
Speaker 4 (02:00:41):
No, I ain't got I got faith in me. You
got faith in you, because everything I heard about faith,
I think it's bullshit.
Speaker 8 (02:00:45):
So let me tell you who is the biggest man
in your life that let you down?
Speaker 23 (02:00:49):
No, no, real right, Okay, no, they don't believe that. Okay,
(02:01:23):
No man's ever let him up.
Speaker 4 (02:01:25):
I've never been connected to a man father, never been
connected to him to.
Speaker 2 (02:01:29):
Be let down.
Speaker 8 (02:01:30):
Did you ever meet him?
Speaker 11 (02:01:31):
Never?
Speaker 4 (02:01:31):
So that's the biggest less that's not that's not let that,
but you never met him. I had uncles and granddaddy
to replace that let down. You ain't knowing them.
Speaker 8 (02:01:37):
But there's difference.
Speaker 4 (02:01:39):
Out of sight is really out of mind. There are
many kids who father is gone and another replacement.
Speaker 12 (02:01:46):
Have stepped in and filled the void of a father
a kid.
Speaker 4 (02:01:49):
No, no, no, no, no, no. Listen, if you've never
seen your daddy, you'll have attachment to it. That's bulls. Yeah,
but that's a different that's a childhood abandonment. That's a
childhood abandonment issue that you hold in secretly.
Speaker 12 (02:01:59):
That don't you as a disappointment. You never expected nothing.
Speaker 3 (02:02:02):
To be disappointed, not as a So I'm listening to you,
and it's it's not your fault. I'm not sitting here
saying anything down, man, I'll give a.
Speaker 4 (02:02:09):
Damn watch you saying. I'm telling you, I ain't never
been connected to a man. Listen, I had a granddaddy.
I had an uncle who kept me with him. I
don't know.
Speaker 12 (02:02:16):
That's not my daddy. The presidence of a man is
the fault, not the title.
Speaker 8 (02:02:20):
Yeah, but when a man craws up. Eventually you said.
Speaker 4 (02:02:24):
Something, list when I grow up, I have no connection
to a man.
Speaker 12 (02:02:27):
So no, man, I ain't been hurt by a man.
I had no connection to a man to be hurt.
Speaker 4 (02:02:33):
No expectation, no nothing.
Speaker 3 (02:02:35):
You know what you said at the beginning of the podcast,
you said something very powerful. You said, you know, when
you were a kid, you and your older brother, he
was a big guy, and he was in and out
of jubie. And then your mother ended up having a daughter.
I think you said he later on life she ended
up having a daughter. And then mom worked for GM
and she worked after you guys got home, so she
would prepare your meal. She would tell you to do
(02:02:57):
the homework, and she's gonna call at these times. You
guys better be home or else. And if she came home,
and if you guys didn't do what she told you
to do, she'd wake your ass up and talk to
you now, is but exactly that's what I'm saying.
Speaker 4 (02:03:09):
But because there wasn't a man, she couldn't check you
to raise boys.
Speaker 8 (02:03:13):
I was raised by you.
Speaker 4 (02:03:15):
Fuck you talking about I'm telling you I got uncles
and granddaddy. You think my grandaddy they ain't around checking
my brother and we had men. No, no, no, But
I've never told you it wouldn't. No man, You're assuming
I got a bunch of uncles and granddaddy so so
so if you know about so so so, I had
the presence of a man, right. I ain't the black
kid that grew up poor. I had a plenty of man,
well to do kid.
Speaker 3 (02:03:35):
I had my own room with You know what I
love about you, Charleston. Let me tell you what I
love about you and I have so much respect for you.
Is you know when we were when I was a
kid and I was, uh, we didn't have a lot
of money. We're like a you know what do you
call it? Section eight and welfare kids.
Speaker 4 (02:03:52):
I don't know what it like to be.
Speaker 8 (02:03:53):
But I'm telling you, I'm telling you, I don't know
what I'm telling me.
Speaker 3 (02:03:55):
From my perspective, but from my perspective when I was
raised that way in La Glendelle, and we would have
people that would come over and they would say things like, hey,
you know, let us get you this for Christmas, let
us get you this and all poor, this is poor
that I hated it. I couldn't stand people looking down
at us as if we don't have anything, as if
(02:04:17):
we don't have any money. I hated it. I couldn't
stand it. So I went to the army, and then
eventually I ended up making my own money. I didn't
want to be in debt to anybody. I didn't want
any favors. I didn't want any of that stuff. Your
level of the mentally, how powerful words have been in
(02:04:39):
your life?
Speaker 4 (02:04:40):
Let me just say you sang hip hop so at
the beginning, I come from love, love, concers all. So,
I got a loving mother. Yeah, we live in a wonderful,
affluent background. When I get hurt, I'm centered around love.
I'm growing up in a hospital with loving nurses. I
don't know my daddy not here. I got no beloved.
(02:05:00):
I got my uncle. I'm his favorite nephew. My name
is Charleston. My nickname is Blue My uncle was a pimp.
I was born in nineteen seventy seven. There's a movie
called Come Back Charleston Blue, nineteen seventy six. My uncle
named me. That's my daddy, So I always try to
be a pimp, pimp on whole prostitute. My daddy actually
(02:05:21):
don't from.
Speaker 8 (02:05:21):
My valid so is what I'm saying.
Speaker 4 (02:05:24):
So I had men. I had men, so I don't
have no abandonment. I was a kid who grew up
in a hospital city, like a dog who'd been inside
finally got to.
Speaker 12 (02:05:35):
Go outside and play as a kid.
Speaker 4 (02:05:37):
Nigga, I'm happy. I'm not. I'm not. No, I'm happy.
I just never been a kid before, and I'm attracted
by what's wrong. So now I mean I wasn't. I
wasn't hurt. That's the excuse most people I could use.
That's not my excuse. I chose to do what I
did because I thought that was a part of my living.
So my uncle would paint pretty preachers of prison to me.
(02:06:00):
So when I got to school, that re said, I
was telling my friend what I wou was gonna do
when I'd get the prison based off what they done
told me. So it wasn't disappointment. It was a badge
of honor. It's a badge of mama. As most black
people killed with cold heart, it seemed like it's not cold.
They brought that badge of wama and I wanted it.
(02:06:21):
One eye, small frame, couldn't play football. I wanted to
be a part of something, and I found something to
be a part of it. And it was everything I
was looking for coming from them negative uncles. In my
working mother's home. Her presence is gone. We just got
a perfect environment, great environment, but we got this negative
images to see that matches what we see on television.
(02:06:43):
She's still around. Yeap, Mama's still around. Retired from General
Motives or became a foster parent for like thirty years. Dallas.
Speaker 8 (02:06:49):
Yeah, still in Dallas.
Speaker 4 (02:06:51):
Brother brother just come home from prison after doing thirty
one years for murder. He committed when he was seventeen. Now,
my brother was angry. He had a disappointment in his father.
He was daddy, show up, daddy, shild I never had
dad to show.
Speaker 8 (02:07:02):
Up to disappointment.
Speaker 4 (02:07:03):
Yeah, So he was angry.
Speaker 2 (02:07:04):
I always angry.
Speaker 4 (02:07:05):
So I remember we were about.
Speaker 12 (02:07:08):
The General Motives art too.
Speaker 4 (02:07:10):
Plan had transferred to people from Texas to Monroe, Louis Ama.
I remember watching TV one time, I probably about ten
years old, and I don't know where. My brother looked
at me and said, when I grew up, I'm gonna
kill somebody.
Speaker 13 (02:07:22):
I ran after.
Speaker 4 (02:07:23):
I told my mama cat. My mother spanked him out
of frustration. How old was he? Uh, he probably was twelve.
Speaker 8 (02:07:29):
What was he watching when he said, Oh, we were watching.
Speaker 4 (02:07:31):
Rambow movie and he said verd blood. He said. He
just looked at me out of know where. I said,
with a sincere looking. It scared me as a kid.
He said, when I grew up, I'm gonna kill somebody. Man.
I ran dow after Harry.
Speaker 2 (02:07:43):
I ever told my mother.
Speaker 4 (02:07:45):
Because mothers have to work with very little support back then,
and that's a lot of support. She didn't have the
luxury to sit down and try to understand where the
root came from. Right, So he dealt with a lot
of disappointment. He grew angry. I grew up with love.
Speaker 2 (02:08:02):
Just want to fit in.
Speaker 4 (02:08:03):
I didn't want to be the baby I want to
be treated I was. I was a baby. I was coddled,
but I was a braveheart.
Speaker 12 (02:08:10):
I couldn't wait to break for you.
Speaker 3 (02:08:13):
All all goes back to the conversations we had when
you're talking about how things happened with the African American community,
when we talked about Cracker, when we talked about mindset earlier,
father policies, all.
Speaker 4 (02:08:27):
Of a lot of that.
Speaker 8 (02:08:28):
And today, how old you are you?
Speaker 4 (02:08:31):
I just turned seventeen, so your brother's home. He turned
fifty one, so he just got out three years ago.
You got three years ago, seventeen years from seventeen, You
guys are still close. No, you don't know your brother
after thirty year old.
Speaker 8 (02:08:44):
That's what I'm saying that now I don't want to
be close.
Speaker 4 (02:08:47):
Did you see him, Yeah, don't see him in prison?
Speaker 8 (02:08:49):
And when you when he came out, what was the conversation, Like.
Speaker 4 (02:08:52):
I don't know you, knick, even though I've been seeing you.
We've been seeing each other in and out of prison
for third so we'd see each other. But at some
point I stopped going to go see my brother in
prison because I'm not your mother and I'm not your father. Yo,
Mama love you enough nigga to keep going to go
see you. I won't stay with my kids. My kids
ain't down here. Why do I have to subject myself
to be treated like that now, so I ain't gonna
(02:09:13):
see I ain't seeing no money on his books because
come out here to us. You got a family out here.
So when he got out, he got out on the
right track. But he's institutionalized and and he thinks you
know everything, so you have to put your hand back
because you can't correct the food makes.
Speaker 3 (02:09:30):
Sense, Charleston, this has been a blast talking to you.
Definitely will you will be invited one hundred percent back
again in the future. We got a lot more talking
to do. But I got a meeting of five minutes
later and there text me left and right right now.
Appreciate you for coming up.
Speaker 4 (02:09:43):
Bro, you ain't my bride. You are they arched? What
does that mean? They ain't threaded on it?
Speaker 8 (02:09:51):
Are they threaded?
Speaker 4 (02:09:52):
He's too perfectly dumb.
Speaker 8 (02:09:58):
I got a true Middle Eastern.
Speaker 4 (02:10:00):
I'm sitting say what's up?
Speaker 13 (02:10:06):
Everybody?
Speaker 4 (02:10:06):
This is what Charleston White, a k A. America's favorite uncle.
I just signed up to mine. So if you want
to message me, you want to cuss me, act, you
want to fuss at me, even if you want some
cancl call me I minister? Hear him by well, word.
You can mess me directly on it. I promise, man,
I'm gonna respond directly. I ignore them dms on Instagram.
They just took my Facebook. I don't respond on you too.
I will respond on that. I promise. Just call me
(02:10:28):
and see text me.
Speaker 2 (02:11:00):
Wanna know you that text?
Speaker 11 (02:11:01):
You give about it?
Speaker 2 (02:11:02):
Give about last?
Speaker 4 (02:11:04):
Some said save ten s last, give a pop?
Speaker 2 (02:11:07):
Can give a buck?
Speaker 4 (02:11:09):
That sada as a bed tack und you put ship
with the conjoint print that.
Speaker 15 (02:11:14):
A ten to?
Speaker 4 (02:11:14):
What a cad?
Speaker 9 (02:11:15):
That the party?
Speaker 2 (02:11:16):
The number bout it? You don't understand the party, not
the pison the body? Then what then the money?
Speaker 9 (02:11:20):
Times?
Speaker 2 (02:11:21):
How did different about the eighteen PSI pot? Take what
that different than you get us?
Speaker 4 (02:11:26):
Don't know what the fuck do teleport?
Speaker 2 (02:11:29):
And what the pop?
Speaker 4 (02:11:30):
That's all.
Speaker 11 (02:11:37):
He can.
Speaker 5 (02:11:47):
Thank you what.
Speaker 4 (02:11:52):
You think about lady gets about black success?
Speaker 2 (02:11:55):
Say take the soul you give about packing. It's about
land hold, not some my father, lady Bett, you.
Speaker 12 (02:12:02):
Give a fucking give a butt mad.
Speaker 2 (02:12:04):
So six day tener so you would give a buck?
I said, I'm gonna let you be ten.
Speaker 4 (02:12:12):
Can't bucking the bock?
Speaker 2 (02:12:14):
Also rat bo shop talk The Mine of.
Speaker 1 (02:12:19):
A Pearl set bock to the b also rag both
time balk is a b the pirl side.
Speaker 4 (02:12:31):
I don't think that.
Speaker 2 (02:12:52):
I'm gonna use Mamma and nity. You think i'ma tell
us a.
Speaker 5 (02:12:59):
Give up.
Speaker 2 (02:13:00):
My numbers are. I'm just not coming to number and
many must give a more time.
Speaker 11 (02:13:12):
You like.
Speaker 2 (02:13:27):
Big, my big, you can give up.
Speaker 4 (02:13:54):
I can give up man something same thing you man,
you give about past.
Speaker 2 (02:14:00):
I'm not saying I'm not gonna learn you.
Speaker 4 (02:14:02):
Bet test you can about you the girl from.
Speaker 11 (02:14:05):
Them success they tell you did on that you give
a part from a girl.
Speaker 5 (02:14:10):
Come man, I'm not
Speaker 2 (02:14:11):
Sound that was gonna learn you better