Episode Transcript
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Speaker 4 (01:28):
What's looked at? Everybody? What's good? Dutch? What's good?
Speaker 2 (01:32):
So a lot has been going on in the media.
You know a lot of people are in their feelings.
Some people are being petty and celebrating everything's going down
in Trump's America. You know, so on social media, I
know that there have been videos of Latinos and Hispanics
(01:53):
getting upset at black people.
Speaker 1 (01:56):
For some reason, they always upset with black people, and
I mean, it's just try to divert the energy when
it's about them to black people. See, the thing is,
we can't as as the citizens of the United States.
We can't get up and say, hey, I want to
go overseas and start a new life like you can.
But there's a process to doing it, you know what
(02:17):
I mean. You got to know somebody, I can't just
even if I have all the money to go rent
a place and a whole none like you know, they
they actually you're just visiting. They when you're going overseas
and you're going to traveling these country, they ask you
how long you staying in their country? For reasons, you
know what I meant, customs and shit. So it's so
it's such such a crazy process. Now you decide you
(02:40):
want to stay there and live there, then there's a
whole other process. You got to go through you got
to apply for dual citizenship because you're a citizen of
one country and another, you can't benefit from both countries.
O kindniss's a kind of rules and regulations to just
living on this free planet that the most high gave
to us. Right. But I say all that to say again,
we can't get up and just start a new life
anywhere in other countries. So the whole no deportation thing, like,
(03:08):
it's not nothing new. Obama say, he was chatting the
same shit when he first came in too, you know
what I mean, Like a lot of presidents, Like if
y'all do a rerun of things that presidents have said,
all these niggas done. Damned there's said the same punchlines
every for eight years. They said the same shit. Will
come on to immigration, you know what I mean, Come
(03:30):
on to sex trafficking, Come on to the drug war,
the gun war, the issues and beef for other countries,
the financial deficit, the depth of the United States is
in the army. It's the same topics that they cover
all the time, and they say the same punchlines, just
just sometimes they just be worded differently. So I can't
(03:52):
say nothing different. But for those who was paying attention
by the last administration that was run into the United
States miracle for the last couple of years, they legit
that mad immigrants, and we watched through the news how
they was like, yo, they got busloads of quote unquote
immigrants coming from the border, and they putting these niggas
up in hotels in New York and all these places.
(04:13):
People was witnessing this shit, you know what I mean,
People were seeing this shit and a I could say
for the last maybe eight years, you know, Mexicans took
over certain areas and getting money. You know what I'm
saying now, it's and I joke about that. I'm not
pointing just at Mexicans, but.
Speaker 4 (04:31):
It's different lat Yeah.
Speaker 1 (04:33):
It's a kind of different Latinos. But outside of Latinos,
you know, there's other ethnicities. Are They got the Russians, Germans,
they got Indians, Asians, those all types of people, Africans, everybody,
you know what I mean, all kinds of shit people
that's getting quote unquote deported. Now. The reason why I
feel like the public takes it so radical for those
(04:55):
who are radical bodies because of the way Trump delivers it,
like he's doing on some you know the way, it's
just the way he says it. And folks, I don't
think they're going after just like a law abiding citizen
who happens not to be legal. They're going after niggas
who got charges for like crimes in the other country
(05:20):
and they ran over here because jail over here is
way better than jail over there, you know what I mean.
It's all kind of like for reasons for a why
people run to America to start a new life. But
again there's rules and regulations to it. You can't just
run over here and do that, because we can't just
run over there and do that. And it gets uglier
(05:40):
because there's people. We live in a capitalistic country, right,
anybody who has a business or who has a lot
of money and they getting money by running businesses and
how people work for them. This is not a hard
concept to think about. If I have a multi million
dollar business that requires labor, I'm going to hire the
(06:03):
cheapest labor so I can make the maxi amount of money,
you know what I mean. A lot of these people,
from wealthy white people to other wealthy Hispanics, the sell
wealthy Asians, and the whole mind they're hiring illegal people
who are not legally documented, paying them off the books
because it's kind of cheaper to do that, and right,
(06:24):
paying them off the books for the low for them
to do specific jobs and get certain things done at
their workplace. And that's where the beef comes in with
the oh, they're taking jobs. See, people will not understanding
what that means. It's not that they're applying for jobs
because they're legal and they're just better suited at the
job than you. That's not the case. They're not legal,
(06:46):
so they could pay them way lower a lower wage
and get double the amount of work done because these
motherfuckers don't play about their jobs because they need the
money way more than your quote unquote American citizen who
is spoiled and take and takes the benefits of this
country for granted. You know, people argue about health care.
(07:09):
Healthcare is very different in many different countries. There's a
guy that was on Instagram and he was talking about
how it took him about three to four days just
to get stitches. He had to get like five stitches.
It took him like three to four days in the
emergency room to get like five stitches done on his
arm because he had cut his armwroken or whatever the
(07:30):
case might be. In America, if you have Medicaid, if
you have any type of assurance that shit is getting
done within the first hour or two, you know what
I mean. Now, Granted, in America, sure, if you lose
a finger, it's gonna cost fifteen racks to get that
shit sold on. In other countries, that shit might be
free because it's like.
Speaker 4 (07:47):
Universal health care.
Speaker 1 (07:48):
Yeah right, you know what I mean. But there's always
it's always a give or take with these things. Oh
we want free health care, Okay, then you're gonna be
waiting for a fucking ever to get the uote unquote
health that you want or the health care that you
need because shit is free. So everybody's taking advantage and
everybody's all fucked up, you know what I mean, Like,
(08:09):
y' I gotta be careful for the things that you
think you think you want. It's not peachy the way
you want it. Yeah that. And on top of that,
you know, Gohad, I.
Speaker 2 (08:24):
Just wanted to state that if you know, families are
getting separated, of course that's not something to celebrate, but
like judge, so people, people are you know, because people
are cracking jokes, you know how un serious niggas are
on social media and they make videos and then you
have nasty people who are like, I'm so glad that
(08:46):
these people are getting sent back to their country, and
I'm so glad that they getting separated from their children
and things like that. You know, it's not something for
me to celebrate. But just going back to your point, like, yeah,
if I could go to Jamaica and just like set
up shop over there like how they do over here, nigga,
I swear I would like, uh like or any of
(09:07):
the you know, Caribbean countries we visit it Like, I'll
go to the Caribbean, let's set up shop, right, That's like,
but l it's not that easy. It's not that simple.
There's different steps you gotta take, and it's like, no shade,
but a lot of immigrants are very uh racist towards
(09:28):
black people.
Speaker 4 (09:28):
They look down.
Speaker 2 (09:30):
Upon us, right, and they are so in tune with
their their modern culture. Cause you know, everybody's culture is modern,
including ours, like y nobody is reflecting like the ancient
culture to who.
Speaker 4 (09:44):
They truly are.
Speaker 2 (09:46):
So that's why I say modern culture. So like they're
so proud of their modern culture, and you wanna just
stay within that culture. You don't even wanna integrate with
other people outside of your culture. Why the fuck did
you come over here? I really don't get it. And
that goes to like all kinds of immigrants, this is
like across the board, has nothing to do with race
(10:07):
or ethnicity, Like if you are so disgusted by us,
or even just you don't want to, you know, be
around other people and shit like that.
Speaker 4 (10:20):
Why the fuck you come over here?
Speaker 2 (10:21):
If you have your own home country where you have
all your customs, your language, your culture, it's all there.
I will never understand it. Am I wrong for that?
Speaker 1 (10:31):
No?
Speaker 4 (10:31):
I don't really get it.
Speaker 2 (10:33):
It's just like even with the black immigrants who want
to look down upon Americans like I don't. If you
love your culture so much, why didn't you guys try
to build up the infrastructure in the economy of where
you come from. You come over here and then you
try to shit on us, and we have a whole
backstory to this entire place that we build. It's just annoying.
(10:56):
That part agitates me. And then as far as the
Latinos who are trying to talk shit about the black people,
I mean, like the non Afro Latinos.
Speaker 4 (11:08):
I don't I don't know.
Speaker 2 (11:09):
I just I don't know why they want to sit
here and try to pull us into this conversation.
Speaker 4 (11:15):
I don't think it's cool.
Speaker 2 (11:16):
You know, if people are getting separated from their children
and people losing their fathers and YadA YadA ya. But
you know, life, right, I don't know that's wrong to say.
It's just it's just life. It sucks. But shit, we
could if everybody could just go wherever fucking country they
(11:37):
want to set up shopping, don't have to worry about
no papers and shit.
Speaker 4 (11:40):
That'd be what's up?
Speaker 1 (11:41):
Shit?
Speaker 2 (11:42):
Yeah, right right, I'll go get a fucking house in Jamaica.
I'll go get house Jamaica. Get a place in Mexico,
like Nigga, I'll go to Mexico. Shit right, We and we,
me and Dutch went to Mexico and there was Americans
out there that was like you know, they they was hustling,
they were setting up shop. Now, I don't think they
(12:02):
had like a citizenship there, right, What you mean the
Americans that we met when we was on vacation, No,
they was from New York too.
Speaker 4 (12:15):
Well.
Speaker 2 (12:15):
One of them was yeah, but they was out there
getting money. Yeah, they was hustling. They was getting money.
So I don't know how that worked. But shit, I
don't know. Y'all have better quality of air, better food,
all these other things. Y'all want to come run over
here to the great land of Babylon, the poisonous land.
(12:38):
I don't understand it, but you know whatever, That's how
I feel.
Speaker 1 (12:43):
And like I said, we think they got it better
due to the quality of life that they have. Some
of them realize they have a good quality of life,
But we don't know how it is being a kid
growing up out there. We don't know the struggles it
is out there. Probably is a whole other animal that
we're again just taking for granted. Case systems probably and shit,
probably don't got much in other countries like we have.
(13:04):
We have a plethora and abundance of these things.
Speaker 4 (13:08):
That's not where everything like.
Speaker 2 (13:09):
The only place that I could say that we saw
out of the Caribbean, and I know there's probably a
lot more. As far as these quote unquote third wards,
it was Dominican Republic. The areas that we saw were really,
really poor. I'm talking about the projects is a fucking
luxury mansion to what we've seen, right, they was living
(13:31):
in shacks with no electricity. I'm not even kidding you
on a fucking mountain that's in dr and Dominican Republic
in the areas that we saw.
Speaker 4 (13:42):
So I get it. But it's just like, damn, y'all
can't build up y'all own I don't know, you know
what I'm saying. I don't know. I don't know.
Speaker 2 (13:53):
So I know that there's different struggles in these different countries,
and like you said, there is a level of privilege here,
but damn, that's all.
Speaker 1 (14:04):
I got to say.
Speaker 2 (14:05):
Yeah, on top of the immigration, you know, initiatives and
stuff like that, people are also in an uproar when
it comes to UH Trump cutting the I guess the DEI, right, Yeah,
so he eliminates diversity, equity and inclusion programs within the
(14:28):
federal UH agencies, and so I guess because he did that,
certain corporation kind of s kind of like follow soup,
like for instance, Target, And then you have all these
black people that are just kind of in an uproar
and they don't really understand what DEI is and and
how like really LGBTQ and other people mainly benefited from it.
Speaker 4 (14:54):
And at the end of the day, like I don't
care who's in HR.
Speaker 2 (14:58):
If they see their you black, of find out you black,
and they have some type of prejudice against the black people,
you're not going to get the interview and you're not
gonna get the job regardless.
Speaker 4 (15:09):
It's just simple.
Speaker 1 (15:09):
Some people's fell to understand, like, yeah, these companies would
say that it's an equal opportunity employment, but we all
clearly have seen examples how it's never really an equal opportunity.
How did the equal opportunity if you know, if I
if I'm a manager of or I'm the hiring I'm HR,
(15:30):
and my friend who's clearly not qualified for the job,
applies to the job, and because that's my friend, I'm
gonna get him in there. I told him I would.
Is that equal opportunity throughout all these rights and people
and people do that all the time. Okay, this is
this is a movie or I think it a movie,
or I think it's a movie. With a guy, you know,
the mattress guy. He was he was selling mattresses for
(15:52):
this one company for years and then he thought he
was going to be the manager fire it was furnish.
Speaker 4 (15:57):
The movie The Man and the Three b.
Speaker 1 (16:01):
Yeah, and then then yeah, and then the boss comes
and he gets to meet the owner and he's like, yeah,
you know, think he about to get this position. He's like, oh, no,
I want you to train my son. You know what
I mean, nothing.
Speaker 4 (16:15):
About the business.
Speaker 1 (16:17):
Nothing, And he wanted this dude who knew everything for
years to train his son who knew nothing. Again, where's
the equal opportunity employment? So moving forward? Is de I thing?
It was just like it didn't matter, like you're saying
with most people, and you said that only the mainly
like LGBT type people and things like that benefited. So
(16:38):
when I was talking about it with my friends about it,
like when it came around to how they benefited. If
you talking to a legitimate court nigga right, LEI and
this is clearly a man, but he wants you to
call him ma'am right, but you keep calling him sir.
He goes to h R. Now you getting in trouble
(17:01):
because you won't, you know, suppress your brain to lie
to it.
Speaker 2 (17:08):
Not anymore because I think that Trump did. He said
nigga is only two genders.
Speaker 1 (17:13):
Yeah, we're not.
Speaker 4 (17:14):
We're not doing this mental illness.
Speaker 1 (17:16):
Shi it no more no, And they were very upset,
and I thought that was I mean, I thought that
was the best thing. But it was like that, I
wish that this would have happened a few years ago.
I was just say it.
Speaker 4 (17:30):
Wasn't gonna happen under Obama because.
Speaker 1 (17:32):
You know with the geishas right, Michelle said in the interview,
not an interview, but on the stage that oh, this
process helped me become a woman, helped me become a mother,
something that was fighting for with someone with some section.
Speaker 4 (17:48):
Hear what Michelle is saying.
Speaker 1 (17:51):
Yeah, you know what I'm saying.
Speaker 4 (17:52):
So that went over people's heads.
Speaker 1 (17:54):
You know. Anyway, it's just so much like layers to
this matrix been coming around to just the surface level
of the conscious folks.
Speaker 2 (18:07):
Also, Michelle is not the first tranny, first lady. A
majority of them are, Okay majority, I'm Millennia could be
a fucking nigga. If I analyze that bitch long enough,
I could probably say that's a nigga too, to be honest.
Speaker 1 (18:20):
Right, So, but real though, like right now, it's going
to be an attack on the subconscious and the conscious.
For the last four years, they tried their best to
make us accept false They've been making us accept things
(18:40):
that are false, right, But like it was really anti
out these last four years. And I speak on the
terms of like the stupid ship on the surface level
of the legitimate question shit right, the LGBT shit, the
thing I just told you. You got a guy who's
clearly a fucking man, and he wants you to call
him a girl, you know what I mean. And they
want us to keep on line to ourself please other people.
(19:01):
Now we're back in this absolute truth era because remember
you know, for the last year or two, we had
people who's exposing a lot of shit, you know what
I mean, walking through the truth. Now we're back in
this absolute truth point where things could either be accepted
as truth or they're going to be lying more than
(19:24):
ever because everybody's guard is down thinking that this is truth,
you know what I mean.
Speaker 2 (19:32):
So I'm glad you mentioned that because I see a
lot of people in the quote unquote truth community who
are advocates for Donald Trump.
Speaker 1 (19:40):
I don't know why they both he really is.
Speaker 4 (19:44):
For them, And I'm like, this is a little scary
because it's like.
Speaker 1 (19:47):
Whoa niggas was bringing this up about how a lot
of the conscious community is now Republican. Like a motherfucker,
the Republicans adopted the conscious community and that was because
of the conspiracies wrapped behind Trump. And we've seen the
things that he said come to fruition. But it's not
even that it came to fruition. These niggas is telling
you to play because they have to tell you the place.
(20:08):
That's their job to tell you the place. Trump and
they all play for the same team, y'all. Niggas saw
y'all seen them clips that was on social media at
the one of them presidents forgot the man. Yeah, his funeral,
and we had what you had. You had all of
the presidents passing president in the same room next to
each other. You know what I mean? What makes you
(20:32):
think that these people do not play for the same team.
Like that whole funeral was very Masonic. The whole funeral
is a whole ritual, you know what I mean. Like
the whole funeral felt like some Confederate flag, like just
some old Confederate flag ship, you know what I mean.
Speaker 4 (20:48):
And I don't know.
Speaker 2 (20:50):
They think that, oh Trump, like you know, years ago,
Trump saving the children, like nigga.
Speaker 1 (20:55):
This niggas picture he's on, what are we doing here?
They're both evil. I think that these people are any
different from the next person.
Speaker 2 (21:08):
I'll Trump's the one no man that's in office that
is for us.
Speaker 1 (21:14):
People when when it comes to politics, especially the mainstream
media politics, folks, please don't don't, as people say, subscribe
to that shit too hard because it's all false. Trump
been telling niggas this shit is fake news for the longest.
His two pays switch colors every interview. I'm that serious.
(21:40):
He's been telling us that it sh is fake news
for a while. We can't keep y'all, can't keep on
sitting here just trying to believe the okie doks. And
and that is where I'm met with most people like you.
Driving around town. People got the Trump one flags up.
You know what I mean? I know that's white people
save you.
Speaker 4 (21:58):
Whop and let's people and a lot of people.
Speaker 1 (22:02):
Listen, man, I don't care what race you are. To
come around to again, politics, that ship is just this
all media and it's just placed there to to to
keep you confused. Donald Trump has a few stocks. He
has a Trump Media stock. Think about that. Why would
(22:23):
Donald Trump need a quote unquote Trump media stock because
you know there's there's stays places that they're running with him.
They're taking the clone and they're running shit with him.
Speaker 2 (22:36):
That's another thing too, Like you said, that's a clone
the media, there's plenty of it.
Speaker 5 (22:43):
They joke about, Oh, whe's Donald Trump? Will we be
going to get that tales of Trump? The two Donald
Trump's they say that, like it's true. It ain't just
Biden with the mask, but Biden's cares.
Speaker 4 (22:55):
Are real scary.
Speaker 2 (22:56):
You can you know that ain't the original person that
we've seen. I don't know what they got going on.
And then Kamala's neck and shit look like the mask slipping.
I don't know, Okay, but yeah, tying this alt with
the immigration, he also is trying to pretty much in
birthright citizenship. So just cause you know, you have a
(23:20):
child born here and the parents are illegal, that don't
make the baby a citizen anymore. So he's he's working
on that. He's trying to do that. People feel like
it's unconstitutional life, Like I said, just like it's just life,
Like let me go. A lot of countries they do that,
(23:44):
though it's not just America. He says some stuff like, oh,
it's just America that does it. No, it's a lot
of countries that if you have a baby over there,
the baby's a citizen automatically. But you know, i't know
what else, what they else they got. He's also trying
(24:05):
to ban like the transgender youth ship as far as
you know, like the babies on such changes and things
like that.
Speaker 4 (24:11):
But like I said, all that's good ship to me.
Speaker 1 (24:14):
Mm hmm.
Speaker 2 (24:14):
That is good ship to me. So there's that with Trump.
Anything else with Trump.
Speaker 1 (24:20):
I just reading like some funny not funny shit. But
it's just about the DEI situation, right. For some reason,
he he was trying to say that that helicopter crash
that happened, that crash into a American Airlines.
Speaker 4 (24:36):
Airliner, I'm so happy you brought that up.
Speaker 1 (24:38):
He was trying to say, like, oh, it's the it
was it was the DEI programs fault because what yeah, yeah,
because former President Obama and Joe Biden and the former
US Secretary Transportation Department of Secretary of the Transportation there
(24:59):
he said they hired in the army and airlines in
federal a the airlines and the FAA, which is a
Federal Aviation Administration. They have low standards, right.
Speaker 2 (25:12):
And so boom, they're trying to say that the pilot
was a person of color or so okay, white okay,
so what's.
Speaker 4 (25:21):
Wrong with he was a little bit.
Speaker 1 (25:22):
Of ques No, just white okay, So well boom, now boom.
The helicopter was a military helicopter. So this was the
act of the government, whether people want to believe it
or not.
Speaker 4 (25:35):
That's government running this back.
Speaker 1 (25:36):
Because I'm glad you brought the Trump said the FAA
another story, determined that the workforce. The workforce was too white.
They actually came out with the directive too white, and
we want the people that are we want people that
are competent. So he's saying that because they hired within
(25:57):
the army and they kind of racism, probably only hiring
white people who don't give a fuck about shit, because
I guess certain white people that's within these levels of
military they have certain common issues, maybe some alcoholism and cocaine.
Speaker 4 (26:15):
What does guy do with I.
Speaker 1 (26:16):
Don't, Well, the whole the d I was this whole
race thing, you know what I mean. So he's like, well,
they're saying, He's like, well, this whole company is too white,
you know what I mean. So we go, so people
trying to wrap white privilege and shit. But he's like,
but they're too white and they're sucking up. It's what
Trumps trying to say.
Speaker 4 (26:31):
Haws.
Speaker 2 (26:31):
It tied to him trying to when he illuminated.
Speaker 1 (26:35):
The d He's blaming the DEI on the reason why
the helicopters and ship cracks.
Speaker 4 (26:40):
I don't understand. But it's a white person.
Speaker 1 (26:43):
If you said, I think he's trying to line shit
together without saying everything, trying to let niggas know that this
is all set up.
Speaker 2 (26:50):
No, No, that don't make no sense to me. I
don't understand that one. But just to give people a
rundown of the story. As far as the plane, so
it was a commercial passenger plane that was bound for
a Reagan National Airport and like that said, it collided
with the US Army black Hawk helicopter over the Potomac
(27:12):
River and it was just outside of Washington, DC. And
it happened Wednesday, Wednesday, the twenty ninth, And they said
that there was sixty four people on board the aircraft
and three people in the helicopter, and no one is
(27:34):
believed to have survived the collision. They said, this is
the deadliest aviation disaster since two thousand and one. Are
they trying to say the nine to eleven two thousand
and one?
Speaker 1 (27:46):
Okay?
Speaker 4 (27:47):
Interesting? Oh wow, that's crazy.
Speaker 2 (27:50):
Well, nobody really talking about it, and we're gonna compare
this shit to nine to eleven. But I guess why
because they think it's an accident. Ain't, no damn accident.
None of that shit makes any sense. I know that
they mentioned that. I think there was a US Olympic team,
right or was it an Olympic team that was on
the flight.
Speaker 1 (28:10):
I don't think so. I don't have that doubt that
I heard that.
Speaker 4 (28:15):
I looked that up real quick. Helicopter. I think I've
seen that.
Speaker 2 (28:25):
No, my bugging out, Maybe I misread that. Okay, here's
the here's the correct They said it was fourteen members
of the figure skating community, so I don't know if
they are Yeah, US figure skating. It was fourteen people
from that, so I don't know that's.
Speaker 1 (28:49):
They to me?
Speaker 4 (28:51):
They were coming from Kansas.
Speaker 2 (28:55):
What is it?
Speaker 4 (28:55):
Waia, Kansas? Whichiki Wichichah? How you say it?
Speaker 2 (29:02):
Anyways, there you go, there was coming from which it
took Kansas to Washington, d C. I don't see it's
it's similar to like what happened recently to last year.
Was it last year when it came to the bridge.
I think it was in the DMV area too, right, Remember,
(29:24):
like it was like a ship that hit the bridge
and we was like, what the fuck? And when we
looked into that, there's a lot of symbolism, right, And
then I think you looked into some of the dates
and we've seen and now that.
Speaker 4 (29:35):
This ship was staged too.
Speaker 2 (29:37):
Now this I ain't gonna say it's stage, but I
think that ain't know dan Quinki in that that black
Hawk landed into that damn American Airlines flight. And then
on top of that, I think they just I think
American Airlines just sacrificing people. There were some niggas who
died in Charlotte the same week, within the same week,
to be honest, did you hear about that?
Speaker 4 (30:00):
Let me see. Let me pull up this article. Let's see.
Speaker 2 (30:11):
This is flight attendant with ties to Charlotte among the
sixty seven fear to be dead. See, there was five
people with ties to Charlotte. What because you know what happened.
There was a worker who was struck by an aircraft
tug at the Charlotte Airport, and they trying to say
(30:32):
that there's some type of connection with the Charlotte people
to the niggas who just died off of this crash
between the you know, the American Airlines plane in the
black Hawk helicopter. That's weird. Why would there be a connection?
Speaker 4 (30:47):
You see? You see what I'm saying. That don't why
they even try to say there's a connectionaire. That don't
make no sense. And a lot of people are like,
we need a google who the hell else was on
that flight cause it seemed like it was a hit.
Speaker 1 (31:00):
Yeah, it was a direct hit.
Speaker 2 (31:04):
Five individual ties to Charlotte, North Carolina perish in the
Washington DC plane crash.
Speaker 4 (31:11):
Hmm.
Speaker 2 (31:12):
And then like I said, there was somebody who died
recently because they got struck at the Charlotte Airport.
Speaker 4 (31:22):
I don't know, man.
Speaker 2 (31:25):
Sounded like a whole lot of sacrifice and going on. Yep,
I'm trying to see the number game.
Speaker 1 (31:35):
Yeah, man. Also with the DEI situation on, they said,
critics claim that DEI programs prioritized minorities to the exclusion
of more qualified candidates and treat them as anti white,
anti mail, ideologically ideologically driven, woke policies that serve as
(31:56):
racial discrimination against white Americans, and some of you been
saying they contribute to anti Semitism support say anti DEI
advocates see only white men as capable and intelligent and
assume all women and people of color, no matter how qualified,
are only in a position of power due to quotas,
(32:18):
and warned that the roadback threatens to reverse their progress
minorities have made in the workplace over the past six decades,
That's what they're saying. What you think, Yeah, man, well,
you know, I would like to know what you guys
think about the whole DEI situation. You know, is it
(32:43):
is setback? You know, is it going to fuck things up?
You know, because like again I've read that little that
little paragraph. But if you know, if people who know HR,
you know, people who are aware how some companies are,
so you're damn right they do hire black people or
other people for a quota. Yes, I've been in plenty
(33:06):
of jobs where they're like, hey, man, if you could
get somebody who speaks Spanish and they stay here for
at least six months or more, we'll pay you a
five hundred dollars bonus for finding that person to come
work for us. All right, yeah, man, we get we
get a little bonus if we get somebody who gets
hired stays on for more than four months and they're black. Okay, yes, folks,
(33:30):
if y'all don't want to believe that, that's very true.
They do have quotas to meet. Now, does that mean
that these companies are looking over quote unquote qualified white
people because they got to keep a quota. No, if anything,
they're trying to hire just a few more fnic people
to quote unquote meet the quota.
Speaker 4 (33:51):
There's a thing like because I've been on the hiring end, right,
and I know what it's.
Speaker 1 (33:56):
Like to be Have you been on a hiring end
of a corporation.
Speaker 4 (34:00):
I work for a corporation that's probably for.
Speaker 1 (34:02):
A private business. I'm talking about like a like a
mass corporation, like a like a well you.
Speaker 2 (34:07):
Know the answer, you know the answer. Are you trying
to discredit my experience? I'm just saying, I got it,
I got it. I got somebody I can say that
I can ask it.
Speaker 1 (34:17):
Is you can't. I'm just saying, though, I'm just yet.
I'm just saying there's there's levels to the thought process.
That's the ones who, yeah, we have to hire a
bunch of people for the quotas. And then there's the companies.
Speaker 4 (34:28):
Like yours talking about you don't even know where I.
Speaker 1 (34:30):
Was about to go with, I don't go ahead. I'm
gonna let you go ahead.
Speaker 2 (34:33):
So people are gonna hire whoever they want to hire,
whether it's people that they feel like they'll be able
to get along with, or just people that they feel
like will actually be the best fit for the job.
I feel like it really just comes down to those two.
(34:56):
On my end, you know, I don't know what's going
on with the new kids and how they're being prepped
when it comes to job interviews and whatever the fuck
the new schools are teaching these people, because you know,
when you're in college or even in high school, you know,
they'll tell you how to prepare your resume, how to
prepare for an interview. I realize that a lot of
(35:19):
people they out here trying to research who's interviewing them.
That's weird, though, shit to me, because it's not about
how the fuck you can relate to me. It's about
you know, you knowing about this company and what you
can fucking do for the company. So to me, I
think that's odd that niggas is coming to interviews trying
(35:39):
to relate to people. But so y'all can't get upset
if companies hiring specific people that they feel like they
can relate to. When y'all out here as a fucking
applicants trying to sit here and get dig up information
on the nigga that you're sitting here and doing an
interview with, you don't think that's weird. But apart from that, right,
because that's that's the other end, like you're trying to
(36:01):
figure out a fake ass weight to get hired just
versus off of your own experience or just let your
work speak for itself. So it's the same. It's like
it's the opposite end of the coin, that makes sense.
But apart from that bullshit, I literally work for a
company who is ninety five percent Korean, right, fucking Korean company.
(36:29):
I know that I was hired because I am black,
not because they was trying to fill a quota. It's
just because they actually need people who represent a specific
you know, demographic. So even going back to your point Dutch,
when it comes to the major corporations. Right, my products
(36:50):
are a specific niche that's geared towards black people or
people of color. Right, but say, for instance, like a
pepsi or I don't know, or even like a Nike. Right,
you know that it's not just white people wearing Nike.
(37:11):
It's not just white people drinking pepsi. It's all kinds
of people that are consuming these products. So say, for instance,
as far as like marketing, they're going to want to
have a diverse marketing team or department so that that
when they are doing their campaigns that may have to
(37:33):
specifically target a specific group of people. Right, Like they
have these meetings like oh, our numbers are down when
it comes to Latino women communities, like they have the
whole consumer behavior down to a tea, market research down
(37:53):
to a tea. We have to come up with a
campaign that's going to increase ourselves within this demogra that's
just normal shit. So are you going to get a
white person, a non Hispanic white person to try.
Speaker 4 (38:12):
To come up with the campaign?
Speaker 2 (38:14):
Are you gonna get somebody who is actually Hispanic or
Latino that knows their culture, knows their people to come
up with the campaign tell me Dutch.
Speaker 1 (38:27):
It depends, but I'm probably gonna go with the Spanish person.
Speaker 2 (38:30):
Of course, you're gonna have other people that's going to
assist that could be from other races or ethnic groups,
but they might have the lead.
Speaker 4 (38:38):
And it's just simple as fuck. It's just like even I.
Speaker 2 (38:41):
Think it was an episode of Blackish because I think
that Anthony what's his name, the comedian.
Speaker 4 (38:49):
Anthony what's his name?
Speaker 1 (38:50):
Anderson?
Speaker 4 (38:51):
Anderson?
Speaker 2 (38:51):
Yeah, he I think he's like he's in marketing and
on that show. And even with him, it was a
diverse company. But when it came to certain in things,
when it came to like maybe products that are more
geared towards black people, or they're marketing towards black people,
they would have him be the one to lead those
type of campaigns. I don't know why y'all understand what
(39:12):
I'm trying to say. Okay, they're gonna have people who
know the culture come up with certain ideas. I mean,
some of them don't do that because you have plenty
of white companies who are marketing towards black people, black
hair care products. You think it's a black owned business,
That shit ain't a black owned business. Shit white or
Asian owned, and they out here doing it. I know,
(39:35):
I'm in the shit, you know what I'm saying. But
they'll have people where there's no black representation. So when
it comes to the DEI, it's just like people are
gonna hire what they need, right, They're gonna hire what
they need. They're like, well, whether whether it be a
quota that they got to, whether it's a quota or.
Speaker 1 (39:51):
Not, we need a black person, but not only be
going to get a black person and get a smart
black person exactly.
Speaker 4 (39:58):
It really just would That's what it's simple as it is.
Speaker 1 (40:01):
If I wanted to market towards white people, for like,
if I wanted to focus on that for like a year,
and I couldn't figure out the best marketing strategies to
market to the white people because I'm black and I
don't relate to white people to really know what the
fuck they like. Hey, I might look for a white
person who knows white people, you know.
Speaker 4 (40:17):
So simple as that.
Speaker 1 (40:20):
Brands do all the time. Hey, we want to get
some more black people to rock our brands, Let's go
look for black artists to throw our shit on. Some
more black people could see our ship.
Speaker 2 (40:29):
Now outside of marketing because we're talking about what we know.
Like if it's just something regular, like a regular line worker,
and they discriminated, and that's fucked up, you know, because
everybody's doing the same thing. It don't require a particular
knowledge of a culture to do the job because anybody
could do the job. So that's different. And I think
(40:50):
that's how people are looking at shit. But you know,
I don't know, I don't know.
Speaker 4 (40:58):
Yeah, you just gotta do what you gotta do do
we can't.
Speaker 2 (41:01):
Now this is where white people might say victim mentality
type of shit, which I don't like when they say
that shit. I really do hate it. But it's just like,
you just have to do what you have to do.
We all working, right, We've all got hired. Right, I'm
assuming that most people who are listening to us you
worked a job before you got hired.
Speaker 1 (41:21):
Yeah.
Speaker 4 (41:22):
I don't think you got hired because you were black.
Speaker 2 (41:24):
Somebody gave you an opportunity, Yeah, because it's as simple
as that. Maybe some opportunity, even if there was opportunities
where they didn't fuck with you because you was black
or whatever ethnicity or race that you are, right, Yeah,
there was a reason for that. Most high blocks things.
People don't look at it like that either, Like why
would I want to be there if they ain't.
Speaker 4 (41:43):
Fuck they don't. I don't want that, Like I.
Speaker 1 (41:45):
Don't want to be a right at a place that
don't want me there exactly.
Speaker 4 (41:49):
It's so simple.
Speaker 1 (41:50):
I don't care how qualified I am. I don't want
to deal with that exactly.
Speaker 4 (41:55):
That's how I feel.
Speaker 2 (41:57):
Anyways, Off all of that, anything else event will happened
before we get into our little story time.
Speaker 1 (42:07):
Celebigs just being weird.
Speaker 4 (42:10):
Niggas is sick. Everybody's sick.
Speaker 1 (42:12):
They're packing up. They packing up, academics. Oh yeah, four
or four for be saying where shit to a young
fifteen year old kid on his stream grooming a little kid.
Niggas is weird. All them niggas is weird, pedophiles. The
niggas are getting sick. But you can get into the
episode though, Okay, okay.
Speaker 2 (42:32):
Let's get straight into it. So we are in episode
to fifty eight, and I guess we can call this
the Spirit of Animals too, because we had to show
episode two nineteen the Spirit of Animals.
Speaker 4 (42:48):
And really it's gonna.
Speaker 2 (42:49):
Be like a little brief story time for you guys,
and we wanted to share our experience this past like week.
Speaker 1 (42:58):
Two weeks, yeah.
Speaker 4 (42:59):
Pretty much two.
Speaker 2 (43:00):
So we just want to talk about animals. I know
we talked about animals in the past. You know, most
highest creatures, Y'a's creatures are really beautiful, and they all
serve a purpose here on this earth, right, whether it's
like the little bugs that we don't like to like
the biggest things in the sea right that we don't
(43:22):
even see, Like, every creature here has a purpose and
you know, they all are under y'all's guidance.
Speaker 4 (43:31):
And we have.
Speaker 2 (43:32):
To remember that y'all created all the living creatures before
he created us. And then even you know, there was
a point before the fall of the Fall of Man
that we were actually one with the animals, speaking the
same language as an animal.
Speaker 4 (43:51):
And we've talked about.
Speaker 2 (43:52):
That before too, Like we know that birds can talk
to us, right, people will say that they're just mimicking,
but no, that's like that's evidence there that animals are talking. Right.
There's even people who will capture their dogs kind of
like mimic human words or sounds like trying to speak
(44:12):
to them. So we know that there's an intelligence there
and as far as all these different movies and TV
shows that are mainly geared towards children, how they always
have the talking animals. That's for a reason, because we
did used to talk to animals like it was a
normal thing.
Speaker 4 (44:31):
So let's just get into the story time. Go ahead
to such. You tell stories better than me. Take it
to the BEGINI man.
Speaker 1 (44:41):
So one to last week. I'm welcome my dog, right
walcoing the dog. It's like it's late at night, it's
like maybe like seven, and it's cold out too, it's
like twenty degrees outside, real cold outside. And before I
got like all the way off my property, my dog
was like pulling me, like real aggressively towards something. I
(45:02):
look over and it's a little white and I'm looking like, oh,
who little joua was this? I'm thinking that probably longs
to one of my neighbors and everything. So, you know,
I called to come here, buddy, come here. You know,
first she's kind of scary of coming to me, but
because of my dog being there, he was more interested
in my dog. So he comes up to my dog
and they doing they little no doggie dance that they do,
(45:24):
and they snip each other go back and forth and everything.
So eventually I got the chihua wa to like trust me.
He comes. He kind of walks up to me, let
me pet them, and kind of grab him, and I
bring him an house. I tell the relators, hey, look
I found I found a dog.
Speaker 2 (45:41):
Now let me tell you my point of view. He's like, hey,
give me a piece of bread. I'm trying to get
the neighbor's dog. That's literally what you said. I was like, oh, okay,
I'm thinking that a dog is off leash and owner's
there trying to you know, dog. So I'm like, okay,
let me give him a piece of this little cake
that I had. And he come inside with the dog
(46:02):
and I'm like, what is this?
Speaker 1 (46:05):
Yeah, who is this dog? And so the dog was
familiar with my dog for a little while. So then
I'm like, I let me go outside and try to
find an owner. I'm thinking that the owner got to
do on his block. So I literally go walk. I
walked the whole block. It's cold outside. I'm walking with
this dog. I'm holding him my arms try and keep
him warm. And I'm walking down the road and I
see some of my neighbors outside with their dogs. So
(46:25):
I'm like, hey, do you guys this y dog? I
know what his dog belongs they know who dog this is,
And all my neighbors was like, oh, nah, we used
to this dog. It's been over and on this side
of the fence and everything. He keeps running away from me.
I seen that dog earlier. I don't know who dog
that belonged to. Probably belongs to the elderly person that
lived on his block, so benefit the doubt, I'm thinking
(46:45):
it does. I'm still walking around looking for this dog's owner.
So I done walked around my whole damn complex looking
for this dog's owner. Whoever was outside, I was looking
for people that was outside looked like he was looking
for something.
Speaker 4 (46:59):
Ain't nobody looking for.
Speaker 1 (47:00):
Right, Ain't nobody outside looking for nothing? Right? So anyway,
I end up bringing the dog back to the house.
So now the dog guys spend the night with me.
That was a long night with this dog. But my
dog and that dog just keep going back and forth,
trying to play with each other. Just who's trying to
dominate the others? Just they just doing animal shit. They
can't help themselves, right. Anyway, the next day comes and
(47:25):
I'm like, damn, I really want to find the owner
of this dog. I don't want to get this dog
to a shelter. I don't want to get this dog nowhere.
I mean, let me go to the vet real quick
and get this dog skinned to see maybe he does
belong to somebody. So I go get to get him
scanned the dog and got no no chipping him, no, no,
no one know when the dog belongs. The ve veterinarians,
they're saying, hey, there's some rescue people that can come
(47:46):
get the dog, or you can bring it to a shelter.
The shelters out here, they're not not all of them
are kill shelters. So that's a plus for those who
don't know, a lot of shelters will kill off these
cats and dogs when they get too full, or they
kill them off of the animal is you know, badly
injured and the surgeries for the animals costing too much money,
you know what I mean.
Speaker 4 (48:06):
Or if they just like some wow, or they're just.
Speaker 1 (48:09):
Too aggressive, they can't be adopted this dog is, or
animals just traumatized, they're just gonna kill them all. For
those who don't know, like some people I heard like
gruesome stories of you know, people will bring straight casts
the pet smart. The niggas will kill the cats in
the back, you know what I mean. Like, it's just
really fucked up what people do the animals. Anyway, So
(48:33):
the next day, after I take the dog to the vet,
I'm supposed to go to work. I call out of work.
I'm too tired. I'm like, man, I'm just gonna take it,
take a sick day real quick because I want to
find this dog's owner. So on my way back from
the vet, something in my heart told me to go
to this one little complex that's like right next to
(48:54):
the place that I live. I said, let me just
check this one little complex. So my neighbor said that
this dog was like on this side of the fence.
This is like the closest other area next to where
I live. And for some reason, the dog got kind
of excited or like he's like his energy like kind
of went up when I went to that area. So
I'm like, maybe he belongs in this area. Let me
just try. So I get out the car, I open
(49:17):
the door. The dog hops out the car and he
walks up to a door. So I'm like, all right,
I think this is uh, maybe the no the house.
That was the first time. In fact, I went to
the complex the second time around. Like I said, again,
I'm kind of skipping the story. But the second time around,
when I went from the veterinarians place going back, I said,
let me try this complex one more time. I'm pulling
(49:39):
into the complex and by the grace of the mosa,
the husband, whoever this guy is, he owns the dog
and he says to his girl, there goes your dog,
like very angrily, but he's taking out the garbage or whatever.
So I'm like, oh, this must be the area because
I guess he's seen the dog on my lap. So
I pull up the dog. He you know, he gets up.
(50:00):
People used to tell a little bit and I hand
it and now I says this your dog, and a
girl is like yeah, but she wasn't excited for me
to be bringing a dog, because almost as if there
was like kind of annoyed that I brought the dog back.
So I'm like, this your dog. They're like, yeah, this
is Bruno. The dog name is Bruno. So I'm like, okay,
Bruno the chihuawa And it's crazy to me and me
and the realers both knew that his name had it
(50:20):
end with some type of old woman knew it was
too so you too calling him Tito Rosco anything spinnish
type shit that spinish people just named chihuahua. This nigga
name is Bruno, all right, very common name for chihuahua.
The way I was like Tito, So I handed him
the dog. The lady didn't seem too excited when I
(50:41):
gave her a dog, but she took the dog. Say
his name is Bruno. She said, thank you for watching
the dog. If you see my dog, just look out
for him. I said, man, can't least put a collar
around his neck. She said, okay, well she never did it,
right anyway, That was last week. So fast forward a
whole week later, right, same day though, same day of
(51:02):
the week. It's a Wednesday this time, and that time
it was a Tuesday. This was a Wednesday, right, No,
this that was at the Wednesday. He has a Wednesday night.
So again, bas forward, here's another Wednesday. So again, so me,
me and the realers we go do a quick activity
early in the morning. We kind of, you know, we're
not in our seeing regular schedule. We kind of did
little things a little different this Wednesday morning, right, But
(51:23):
when I king we came back home. It's all right,
I'm gonna walk the dog. Because now it was like
abound nine, nine thirty in the morning, it's daytime. I
go outside, I start walking my dog and I looked
down in the block. What I see, little white, red dog.
I said, Bruno again. I says that, Bruno again, like Bruno,
(51:45):
and he looks at me and he walks away, says, hey, hey,
Bruno could be here, buddy, where you going? And then
he stops that. I think when he realized it was me,
and I got down a little bit. He ran to me,
just ran, you know what I'm saying, ran over and
see my dog do the little dance with my dog,
and he's just so happy to see us. And I'm like, wow,
there's this dog again. Now this time, I know he's
going to follow me back to the house. So I
(52:07):
went to finish walking my dog with him. You know,
him and my dog just kind of walked together. They
peed and pooped everywhere what they had to do together,
and he followed me all the way back to the house. Right,
So I get him in the house. So baby, Lookal's back.
Oh my god, Bruno again. Bruno's back again, out again.
Speaker 2 (52:22):
From my perspective, I'm just like, who hell this dog?
And I'm like, we don't know what this dog. I
have PTSD from past when it comes to dog fights
and dogs being territorial, dogs being jealous, dogs doing stuff,
and this little Bruno, he really was selling himself like
(52:44):
if we ain't have a dog. He was really like
he knew how put on a show like I'm gonna
do all the cute shit, try to get home, even
though he had one right, guys, but he was doing
a lot like if we was interacting with our dog.
He was out here trying to jump in our laps
(53:05):
and just be like you don't even know us, and
you trying to.
Speaker 4 (53:08):
Be jealous of the dog that lives here.
Speaker 2 (53:11):
He was doing stuff like that. So I wasn't really
happy with Bruno. Bruno was cute.
Speaker 4 (53:16):
He grew me towards the end, but I was just like,
Bruno can't say because we have a dog.
Speaker 2 (53:21):
Yeah, But I was like from time to time after
that first week, I was just like, I wonder where
Bruno is cause when you told me the story about
those people, I was like that shit don't sound right.
Speaker 1 (53:30):
And I feel that people was giving like something was
I don't know, something wrong with them, but they they
just didn't give a fuck about the dog. So boom,
this like this is the interesting story though, so they said.
I found Bruno that morning. He comes over to the
househol a little bit, and I was like, all right,
I'm gonna bring him to their owner. Canano. The owner lifts.
I go over to the home. I knock on the door.
(53:53):
I hear footsteps, but no one comes to answer the door.
So I'm like I'm stood out there for maybe like
five ten minutes for the dog. The dog is looking
at me like he doesn't want to go there. The
dog kept looking my leg. I'm like, you don't want
to like this jolts. He just kept looking my leg.
I'm like, okay, So then I come back home. I
(54:13):
tell my baby baby they don't answer the door. I'm
gonna go back over there. In a little while.
Speaker 4 (54:16):
I was telling him, don't take us to those people
because they don't.
Speaker 1 (54:19):
Don't care what.
Speaker 4 (54:20):
They don't care.
Speaker 1 (54:21):
About saying that, but I'm like, they gotta care.
Speaker 4 (54:23):
I was like, so now that.
Speaker 2 (54:24):
We know that Bruno came all the way back over
here and he's been outside, we don't know if he's
been outside, he could be sleeping in the streets all
this week.
Speaker 1 (54:31):
And this is not this was the thing. So now
that was the first time. Guys, when I went on
that went on Wednesdays just passed in the morning. Now
I'm three in the morning. When I first ago went
to go see they was holling. No one answered. I
came back with Bruno, me and really Sean figure out
what we're going to do, Like can we keep them,
We're going to give him to a shelter. She's like, oh,
let's just figure out shelter situation, blah blah blah. Right, So,
(54:52):
but beep, deep down inside, I don't want to give
I didn't want to give him to a shelter because
I just know how some shelters give it up. Even
though I knew that he would be adopted, I just
didn't want to give him so sheltered though, something about
it in my heart just didn't want to do it.
So I'm like, you know what, I'm gonna go try it.
I'm gonna go try again around like eleven thirty is right,
So I go over there to the area. I try again.
(55:15):
No one answers the door, so I put Bruno down.
I just put him down. I said, listen, buddy, I'm
gonna leave you here. And I'm just gonna leave you here,
you know. I mean, this is where you're at. You
seem like you know what you're doing. I'm just gonna
leave you here. Bye. Right. I put him down in
like the backyard area where he kind of lives, and
he kindly walked away from me like he knew what
(55:37):
he was doing. He just walked away, so okay, and
I looked to see where he was going. He went
like in the back of the yard and then he
tucked his little body under the fence. I say, oh,
that's how he's getting in the complex, and I mean
where we live. I'm like, that's what he did, climbing
on that little fence. It's hmm. So, but back in
my mind, I'm like, you know, I feel like he's
back in my complex again. I don't want him to
(55:58):
get lost. Let me go back in my complex and
just try to get him. So I'm talking to my mom.
My mom was like, oh, get the dog. Don't let
him just run off like that, because you know it's
gonna be your conscious that you didn't get them to
the people just go get the dog. Getting wait, so
I'm looking for him, looking for him. I don't I
don't see him no more. I'm like, all right, he
wants to have just went by his business. He's a
he's a street dog. You know what he doing, right?
(56:19):
He must win by his business. So I come back
to my side of the defence. I come back to
my complex, and sure enough, as I'm driving into my complex,
little Bruno is power walking towards my house. I'm like,
oh my god, this dog knows how to get to
my house. All right, so I get him again. I
(56:39):
wait a little while. The realists I'm being the realist,
is hungry. She's like, yo, get some breakfast. And then
we've been I think your breakfast. Go take the Bruno
to a shelter. I'm like okay.
Speaker 4 (56:48):
So I was like, don't take him back to people
because they don't care.
Speaker 2 (56:50):
Care.
Speaker 1 (56:51):
So I was like all right. So I thought about
getting the breath and saying no, what, I'm gonna try
one more time because I was so determined to get
this dog back to his people. So I go back.
I knock on the door. A guy peeks to the window.
I'm like, yo, do I want Do you want your dog?
He's like, yeah, hold on. So he comes downstairs and
(57:14):
he's like hiding behind the door. I'm assuming this guy
must be like unclothed or whatever. I don't fucking know. Right,
he's doing they clearly doing something weird. So I hand
him the dog. He tells me thank you and everything,
and he closes the door. Yeah, he's a bruno him.
Thank you man, good looks, and he closed the door.
Speaker 5 (57:33):
Right.
Speaker 1 (57:34):
I ain't think nothing of it. I just left it alone.
So well, at least I gave him back to his owners, right.
I came back home because I ain't feel like going
buy no breakfast that morning, so I said, hey, I
went back to the house. The owner took the dog.
We're good. So she said, okay, cool, heast's back with
the owners. Right. So I'm on the phone my boy
that he.
Speaker 4 (57:53):
Ain't tell the story, right, I was like, why would
you give him to those people? That's exactly what I said.
I said, why would you give him back to people?
Speaker 1 (58:01):
So anyway, I'm on the phone with my friend and
he jokingly says, that dog gonna be back at your
house next Wednesday, same time. Sure enough, within five minutes
from him saying that my dog starts barking at the door.
I'm like, I'm looking, like what my dog barking at?
I look at the door. You know who the door
gots Little Bruno scratching at the door. I'm like, these niggas,
(58:26):
don't let the dog out again. I just I just
handed the dog to them. The dog came back to
my house within ten minutes. These people clearly did not
want that dog. And that was my conclusion. They don't
want this dog. So we let Bruno in and Bruno
hung out with us all day that day, and eventually
he was able to find a home for him with
(58:49):
one of the really's family members who was able to
take little Bruno in. And that's the little brue. That's
the story of probably found little Bruno. I'm hopefully a
new home, you know what I mean. Yeah, And that
was it. It was a little little ratchuala.
Speaker 4 (59:06):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (59:07):
And I mean the moral of the story was the
spirit of the animal, because it's like, to me, my
testimony is, I'm an animal person. I love animals. I
love animals. I just love animals. I think that they're
so dope, they're so unique, they're innocent, little creatures. Right,
and the Most High put me outside that first time
(59:29):
for a reason. That's how I felt, because the Most
High didn't let me give up so easily in finding
this dog's owner the next day. The most how I
put into my spirits just to feel comfortable with calling
out of work to figure out where this dog belongs,
and then for me to find the dog a week later.
(59:51):
And I missed one key fact that I really made
me feel like they didn't want the dog, because that
third time when I found him, I was looking around
and one of my neighbors happened to be walking around.
They said they saw little Bruno outside the night before,
and I was like, wow, I found this dog early
in the morning this morning, about nine thirty. For all
(01:00:12):
I and my neighbors said they saw the dog out
there last night. For all I know, that dog was
out there all night looking for me. I felt like
he was literally looking for my house and he couldn't
find it because whre I found him, that was like down,
like a few houses down. He was sniffing around like
he was looking for hours, and you know what I mean.
And the fact that he found our house the third
(01:00:33):
time on his own after I handed him to his owners,
like the front door, a front door, here's your dog,
because they always don't live in the same little complex
I live, and they lived in a whole other complex,
like outside our complex. Like he gotta climb through a fence,
and he got to pass at least like ten houses
before he gets to my house. Little Bruno was able
(01:00:54):
to find himself exactly to my front door. To me,
that was all the power in the spirit of the
most hai yahweh working himself in different ways through through
his creatures, you know what I mean. For all, I
felt like he wanted me to find that dog a
home or give that dog a home in my home,
(01:01:15):
because you know, it was just like why why is
his dog here? You know what I mean? Why he
keep coming? Why did I find him? Why did he
keep finding me? Why? It's not ironic that because I'm
doing I'm not doing things on a set schedule for
this dog to find me. I'm this whole couple of days,
I'm just doing shit that's just out of my normally
quote unquote schedule of doing things. And I'm bumping into
(01:01:35):
this dog over and over again. And then I happen
to be all from work and he happens to be
finding me. It's just too much. It's just too much
sins for me. I don't ignore the signs when they're happening.
As they're happening, I try to embrace the signs and
not panic and try to do the right thing out
of the goodness of my heart and everything. Now, the
realist wasn't she wasn't with it she wants. She ain't
(01:01:55):
really want nothing to do with the dog that she wants.
She was cool with the dog, but she that very
first night. Because of how dogs could be. Territorial is
a very stressful situation, especially when they kind of grow
up together. Just new dogs is like having a new
baby for like two or three days, Like it's really annoying,
really stressed with niggas will keep you up, they want
all night. They fucking annoying until they finally they get
(01:02:16):
comfortable with you and it's okay. But you know, I
just feel like the most hort I really wanted us
to find that dog a new home, or that dog
probably would have ended up dead industry somewhere.
Speaker 2 (01:02:28):
Yeah, So I have some family members down here, and
I contacted them. I was like, y'all know anybody who
want a dog. And you know, my family did find
somebody who wanted a dog. And we don't really know
much about the people, but who knows what they're going
through that this dog might bring a life things like that,
So it really do work out that way. Animals always
(01:02:51):
be right there with us. I mean in the Apocrypha,
in the Book of Tobit, when Tobias was being a
company on his journey with the angel Raphael, he had
a dog that accompanied him, you know, on his journey.
So it's just like, dogs are there. Animals serve a purpose, right,
(01:03:14):
and it's you know, y'all uses the animals. Y'all will
use animals to cloth like not clothes.
Speaker 4 (01:03:20):
Feed his people, right. We got the birds dropping like
bread down and feeding like y'all uses his creatures to
help us. And we're supposed to be like one with
the creatures. We have authority over these animals.
Speaker 2 (01:03:37):
And so it was cool to see because nothing is coincidence, right,
there's always a lesson and things that happens, especially things
like that, because that ain't no oh, we just happened
and run into Bruno again. Like, and the crazy thing
is it's like, even though I wasn't really too keen
on Bruno staying with us, especially that first night. I
(01:04:00):
was happy that you know you was you was able
to find the owners, But then when you told me
that story how they.
Speaker 4 (01:04:05):
Didn't really care about the animal, that kind of bothered me.
Speaker 2 (01:04:09):
And so leading up to him reuniting with Bruno, I
always kept saying, like, remember I was telling you, I
was like, what did Bruno?
Speaker 4 (01:04:18):
Yeah, kept saying that.
Speaker 2 (01:04:19):
I kept saying that Bruno is good, and then then
you just walk in the house. I'm sitting here in
the bathroom trying to get myself ready, and he holding
a little rat dog and I'm like, Bruno. But it's
so funny now because the sad thing is you can
tell that they definitely taught him something because the dog
was housebroken, and on top of him being housebroken.
Speaker 4 (01:04:43):
He did respond to that name, So that really is
the name that he knows. That's their dog.
Speaker 1 (01:04:48):
But they just didn't they just didn't care about that dog.
I felt like the guy kept intentionally letting him out,
and I just assumed the guy didn't want the dog
no more.
Speaker 2 (01:04:57):
So if you don't want you dog no more, it's okay,
It's just why don't you re home your dog, or
just take them to the shelf, do do something like.
Speaker 1 (01:05:04):
Why just or have you seen me coming back? Like
just say to me, Hey, you want the dog, you
can have them, man, You know what I mean. There's
people out there who just don't want their dogs, and
one because they can't handle the responsibility. You know, my
mom used to My mom used to do things like
my mom used to buy dogs, not like Cecily, but
my mom had bought a few dogs in my lifetime,
and then she realized, yo, I can't handle the responsibility
(01:05:24):
of all these dogs. And she ends up giving them
to a friend of hers and everything just so she
keep seeing the dog every now and then. But half
the time, that's what the friend needed, you know what
I mean, The friend needed the dog, Like, oh my god,
thank you for giving me this dog. You know, this
is I'm lonely and this is what I need, you
know what I mean. So, but again, Bruno was a sweet, sweet,
sweet little juaa. He just wanted to be cuddled and held.
(01:05:46):
I could tell that dog just literally he just wanted affection.
He just wanted somebody to He's wanted a person just
love one and love him. You know, such a sweet
little animal and the spirit of animals. It's a very
unique thing when you are tapped in and you and
you really fuck with them, you know. And I feel
(01:06:07):
like people when you when you people's characters. To me,
I judge people of for how they would treat the animal.
Speaker 4 (01:06:14):
Not another person, a human being.
Speaker 1 (01:06:17):
Fuck people, sometimes I'm gonna keep it a buck. Human
beings ain't shipple. Human beings a violate the shadow you
so quick and ruin your whole fucking life of a
dog with it, you know what I mean.
Speaker 2 (01:06:25):
And that's why, like even with this story, it's kind
of sad because we know that there's homeless people who
literally have nowhere to stay in the wintertime, and it's
unfortunate that like you can't trust other humans like that
because you don't know, Hey, let's this this strange man.
(01:06:47):
Let's let this strange man stay in our home, and
then he's gonna try to end up raping me or
doing some crazy shit.
Speaker 4 (01:06:52):
You know what I'm saying.
Speaker 2 (01:06:53):
Like people are just it's sad, but like humans are
kind of unpredictable. Yeah, grown Like if it's a child,
that's if everybody would cheat a child accordingly and try
to help a baby.
Speaker 1 (01:07:05):
Yeah, I see that people. Yeah, if I seen a
child like I think that if I seen and even
nowadays that you got an easy one.
Speaker 4 (01:07:15):
Careful with that too, and that's.
Speaker 1 (01:07:17):
So fucked up, but you know what I mean, but genuinely,
like if there was like a homeless kid or a
kid is like, hey, mister, I need help right now.
What's wrong? This is what's going on? And this is
what I mean. I can find my mom something something
I'm lost. I need some help with X Y and Z. Yeah,
I would help a kid, even an a dot, you know,
(01:07:38):
I mean, I would help an a dolt. I've helped
plenty of homeless people in my lifetime. Yo. Man, I'm
not even trying to bother you, but I genuinely need
some help right now. Do you have X Y and
Z to help me out? Can you at least guide
me where I could go? You know what I'm saying, But.
Speaker 2 (01:07:53):
Especially lying and lying drugs for real, for real, because
you'd be like, I buy you, fool.
Speaker 4 (01:07:59):
They don't want the food, they want the money.
Speaker 1 (01:08:02):
And again, you know, animals just they just don't they're
not trying to harm you. You know, I could tell
you could tell a lot, by a person's character, energy, spirit,
by the way they interact with an animal, how an
animal would treat them low key in my opinion, if
you've got to fucked our spirit, animals is gonna growd,
(01:08:23):
bark at you, snap at you. They ain't never gonna
try to come to you because they know you don't
fuck with animals. Like there's people who I've seen it with,
like different girls all my lifetime who I don't even
like animals. I don't really like dogs. And then you
get around my dog and my dog don't fuck with
you at all, and you want to try to fuck
with my dog because you're not intimidated. Boyut my dog?
My dog great? Since your spirited, you don't like animals,
you know what I mean, you don't like us, stay away?
Speaker 2 (01:08:45):
Well, they sense the different spirits that are evil and
things like that, right, maybe just deeper. Because I wasn't
happy with Bruno, but Bruno was.
Speaker 4 (01:08:53):
He wanted to be on my la. He was getting
a little jealous if I was at to.
Speaker 1 (01:08:56):
Our dog, because you know, Bruner didn't care. I think
Brun like like you said, Bruno was trying his best
to do the most doggiest showcase to stay. And I'm said,
I don't think they brutal wants leave. You know, we
gave him to somebody who I know is going to
take care of him. I didn't think he wants to
stay with us, you know what I mean. I think
Bruno was choosing us as his people.
Speaker 2 (01:09:20):
Well, there's reasons why. You know, there's dogs that are
literally blind seeing dogs. They take care of their owners.
There's dogs who are trained that if their owners having
an attack, they know how to go get the pills,
or they know how to do certain things. You know,
there's like certain people who have seizures, right, there's dogs
who are trained for that. People with their emotional support
(01:09:40):
people probably think it's corny, but like you said, it's
unfortunate that, you know, we live in such a society
when it comes to human beings that we can't lend
the same hand, even though I feel like a lot
of us have done our best to try to feed
homeless people, or give money to people who might need it,
or do certain things for certain people. But it's unfortunate
(01:10:03):
that it's just not that same level of trust. Because
like a chihuahua, even if the chiwhahwa turns on us.
It's a chihaa ain't gonna win this fight.
Speaker 4 (01:10:11):
Like you know what I'm saying. You can know what
I'm saying, Like if the chiuaua.
Speaker 2 (01:10:14):
Was to go crazy and try to attack us, like, okay,
that's something we could defend, but I don't.
Speaker 4 (01:10:22):
I don't know. It's interesting, just different things. I was
wondering too. I was like, why is this happening?
Speaker 2 (01:10:30):
I personally took from this lesson that y'all's gonna shake
up certain things. Get too comfortable with the routine, y'all
gonna throw something in there. We're not supposed to be
so comfortable with a certain routine.
Speaker 1 (01:10:45):
It's true, though, mean I don't. I don't like uh.
I like routines. I like structure, but I don't like
a con structure. I do like structure. I see that
structure is necessary, but I don't. I don't. I don't
like the structre go to work, go to work, gotta work,
come home, sleep, wake up, go to work, repeat, repeat.
I don't like a repetitiveness of like a constant, repetitive,
(01:11:09):
same action over and over again. That shit is like,
it's so psychologically mind blowing to me because for years
in my life. I was so used to just always
having something new going on. I lived to the for
the new adventure of every day, you know what I mean?
Like you, I would wake like waking up and like
being in your early twenties, you waking up and going
(01:11:32):
to school knowing that there was going to be an
adventure every four months. Your adventure is going to change
in school. Why because you getting new classes, new professors,
new teachers, new students, new experience every four months at school.
And then on top of what you're doing at school,
you know, you're accomplishing different goals, so you you know,
you're passing your test, you're getting in different projects, you
(01:11:53):
getting different recognitions. It's always a constant new adventure or
new level of excite. And then after that, you got
you know, you go from school and you go to
work and you're working that now at the time, work
in retail. So that's constant new things happening because you know,
the retail spot got new clothes, new merge, new new
customers is coming, and you're meeting new people, et cetera,
(01:12:16):
et cetera. And then on top of that, me being
who I was I was, you know I'm doing I'm
just doing shit. I'm always doing shit, so it's always
constant new things stimulating the brain that's happening, which made
me was motivating me to always wake up and want to.
Speaker 2 (01:12:30):
Go that's at Yeah, that was the time of my life.
Speaker 1 (01:12:36):
And then when I had to adjust to I wouldn't
say a calmness of just repetition, but you had to
adjust because not everything is going to be like that
anymore because due to the change that's happened, and like
you grow get older, you know, COVID happened for crying
out loud, So the whole world mindset just shifted and changed,
you know, adjusting, And that was kind of difficult for
(01:12:58):
me because I'm like, damn, I'm so used to things
being fun and new and exciting because it's such a
it's a it's a big world out there. It's such
an adventure. But you know what, let me, let me
get into a more disciplined mode where I did have
a little bit of a repetition of a thing that
I did all the time to help build myself. And
then when it's time for me to go be I
(01:13:19):
guess spontaneous or to go be you know, just to
go do something different. I could do it on a
on a higher level, you know what I mean, I
could do it without thinking too much about it, you know,
things like that. But I feel like that that's just
where I met in life with a come around to
you know, just just saying just agreeing with you when
(01:13:40):
you're saying how the most how has to throw us
off your equiliver room sometimes to keep you on your
tippy toes, because you can't be too too comfortable in
the same constant thing. I know, I don't like being
I don't like being comfortable. I feel better being a
little uncomfortable. That has to be a little bit of
level of uncomfortability because that keeps you on your toes.
It keeps you grounded, keep you sharping. When you get
(01:14:01):
too laxed, you know, you define, you start slipping on
your pimping.
Speaker 4 (01:14:04):
You know what I meant. The most think about.
Speaker 1 (01:14:08):
Yeah, yeah, your mind drifts because you're so comfortable in
your day to day activity where you just don't see
something different happening, or when something different does happen, you
just fucking crash out in a panic and you just
lose your ship because something one little different thing just alters,
alters your day and you got like your whole fucking
day is ruined, you know what I mean? Like I
(01:14:30):
like when you're from New York, at least you should be.
You should be so used to something different happening, like
like hell when I when I when I worked in this,
when I worked in the Bronx for a time my life,
like I knew if I don't get on this month
train by five o'clock, I know something's bound and happened
by six and I know my whole day gonna be
(01:14:51):
shattered by six thirty because of how the train traffic is.
Someone's doing something stupid on the subway, But that was
the adventure of something constantly new, keeping you on your toes.
Everybody will says the train fing up. I know if
I get off this stop right here, can hop on
a bus. No different strategic things. People who don't go
through it, they will just be throwing off like, oh
my gosh, I don't know what to do. This is
the beauty of always keeping yourself on your tippy toes
(01:15:15):
and keeping constant new things happening in your life because
it keeps you just sharp and pointing on your toes.
Speaker 2 (01:15:21):
For me, I like new things that I control versus
things that just like throw at me and it's just life.
But that's life. That's but I feel like that's my
own lessons that I have to go through with the
most high. But I like things that are new, like oh,
with me and you traveling somewhere new. Like I like
things that I know what's going to happen, but I'm
going to experience something new versus.
Speaker 4 (01:15:43):
This shit just happened. But that's just life.
Speaker 1 (01:15:45):
And I love that this shit just happened. And shita.
Speaker 2 (01:15:51):
Through all kinds of stuff, especially with my family. I
lost my father shortly after even just moving down here,
so I've been through a whole bunch things. Like It's
not like I'm not accustomed to going through things. I
have my own testimonies. I'm just saying that I like
a structure. I do like new things, but I like
(01:16:11):
things I guess that I know is gonna come versus
the unexpected. But that's life though life is the unexpected,
So I understand that.
Speaker 1 (01:16:22):
Yeah, Like the best part about life is to unexpect
the shit that happens. And that's just how I am.
I like a certain level of I guess some people
will call it chaos. I call it just life, a
certain level of life, lifing because it could be good
or bad, and it's not always bad, you know what
(01:16:42):
I mean, Especially when you go about your days and
the most positive thing. Yeah, bad things happen, but you
don't try to think about negative things as people say
manifesting or whatever the case might be. You know, when
you always moving on a positive spectrum, random positive things
will always happen to you. Well, not always, but it
will happen to you, you know what I'm saying. Just
or just if you like I said, you and moving
(01:17:02):
in the most righteous way. I have moments where I
would do my good deeds, whether that would be helping
out an old person reach something on the top shelf,
or maybe carrying somebody's groceries to the car, or or
giving a ride to somebody, or even giving somebody so
homeless person some money like they really needed it or something.
I try to do little good deeds throughout the day
(01:17:25):
because I felt like the Most High will continue to
bless you in different ways as long as you continue
to do the right things. Because there was one story
where I remember this guy said he told the story
about the Most High came to him in the form
of a really homeless looking man. And because he helped
that homeless looking man, the Most High blessed him in
abundance because everybody turned that turn turned their cheek to
(01:17:47):
this homeless man who was the Most High. And in
another form, you know what I mean. I'm not saying
that every homeless nigga's God. I'm just saying that you
never know what the Most High is going to do
for you when you help out, when he sets you
up in a position to help out his children, which
are us, You know what I mean. And that's just
how I look at it, and a gift for all.
(01:18:08):
I'm not saying help out every homeless person, but you
never know when a homeless person is going to be
the blessing that the Most How was use a blessing
to him, and the Most How is looking to bless
you next. And you never know how that in the
form that's gonna come. And speaking of blessings, I'm gonna
wrap this up. I just want to say, people, I
talk to my boy about this. How people we pray
(01:18:30):
for things all the time. People pray, I pray every day,
me me and the realists pray before work, we pray.
We pray every day before I go to work, we
pray before we eat, you know what I mean. And
I start to believe I've beenn't believe in the things
that I say. Will come on to the prayer because
I see how things happen in my life, and I
(01:18:51):
would be like, you know, it's really scary and a
beautiful thing when you notice it. And you have to
be careful for the things that you pray for, and
you have to notice that when you are praying for
things to happen, they're not They're never going to happen
the way you expected it to happen, but it will happen. So,
for example, if you're praying for a come up right
(01:19:16):
or I pray every day, I hope the Most High
that Most I is not not going to just give
you money. You're not gonna wake up you're gonna have
millions of dollar in your bank account, you know what
I mean. But the Most I will do things to
set you up to get that money that you've been
looking for. He's not even gonna put a lot of
money in your pockets. You're probably gonna be very irresponsible
in ruining your life with a lot of money. But
he's gonna do certain things to put you in a
(01:19:38):
position to obtain what it is that you're looking for,
to keep yourself afloat or whatever it is. You ain't
gonna put what you can handle in front of you.
But again, people pray for things and then they get
mad at how they come about. So if you're praying
for I wish I could get a quick come up, this,
that and the third right, and then next thing you know,
(01:19:59):
you getting harassed by the police. The next day, right,
you're thinking, You're thinking your life is just going to shambles.
What the fuck is going on? I'm getting harassed by
the police. I got falsely arrested, this, that, and the
third and the most how puts a random person in
your life who tells you, oh, you got falsely arrest
Oh that's a lawsuit. Yours doing nothing about lawsuits. But
now now you got a little education about lawsuits. And
(01:20:20):
now you're suing the police department for falsely arresting you.
And now you done came up a couple a couple
like a couple of hundred racks real quick off of
a false arrest that you probably had no clue about
but you didn't even realize that that was the most
high working to help you out. You just had to
go through this thing that you went through, this just
traumatizing situation in your life in order to get it,
(01:20:42):
because you was probably doing other shit in your life
that he needed you to stop. You know what I mean.
Let's let's say let's say you premium. Let's say and
this is a testimony from somebody right that that that
I came across when I went to court one time,
and this pestivotia was powerful. He has said he was
a struggling alcoholic. He had caught a DWI at the
early age. But he was always drinking, always being risky
(01:21:05):
drinking and driving. But he wanted his family to forgive
him for certain things he was going through. All this
crazy stuff he was going through in his life. Well,
he really needed with some money though he wasn't going
to get it from nobody else, and that's the reason
why he was drinking himself away. So he had got
caught up with the police, not of some drinking shit
on some other shit, but because he got caught up
(01:21:28):
with the police, it caused him to become sober. Now
him becoming sober from drinking had caused him to figure
out how to handle his situation with the police, which
in return helped him win a settlement and helped him
get a couple hundred grand off the police department that
year and changed his whole life around. You see what
(01:21:49):
I'm saying. He needed to He was struggling with alcoholism.
He was able to overcome that because he kept getting
caught up it, became sober off of one thing and
was able to fight them and get money for something
else that he really needed. It all the way hand
in hand. The Most High's gonna work with you different ways,
That's what I'm saying. And he's gonna when he's gonna
(01:22:10):
make you stop doing something. He really needs to stop
the focusing to get what you really need to get.
When you pray for things, folks, remember it's not gonna
happen in the way that you think is going to happen.
But while it's happening, you have to learn to own it.
You need to learn to h embrace it and go
with the punches, you know, because it's really just what
(01:22:31):
you prayed for. You having relationship problems or whatever, And
the Most High's gonna do something to make your relationship tighter.
You're gonna put you and your girl in the situation
it's gonna make y'all tighten up your relationship.
Speaker 2 (01:22:43):
Or even if you're praying for you to change a
certain behavior a certain way, the most he's gonna keep
throwing scenarios are certain let certain spirits even just work
through certain things to get to a level where you
said that you're trying to change something. We yet you
keep failing with your reactions with certain things.
Speaker 4 (01:23:05):
It be that deep. You'd be like, you know, like
you were trying to break certain habits.
Speaker 2 (01:23:09):
You're trying to just do better. There's gonna be scenarios.
You're gonna be tested. You're gonna be constantly tested when
you're trying to change and do better and try to.
Speaker 4 (01:23:19):
Elevate within your life spiritually. That's just how it is.
Speaker 2 (01:23:24):
It's not an easy walk. It's constant hurdles. It's a
long ass marathon with constant hurdles and certain things that shot.
You might fall in a dish, but there might be
a ladder. It's just gonna be a whole bunch of things.
You know, it's a lot when it comes to this walk.
But That's pretty much it. We just wanted to share
(01:23:45):
our story and just give our thoughts on what's going
on currently in the news and Trump's America.
Speaker 4 (01:23:52):
But did you have anything that you wanted to close
with that?
Speaker 1 (01:23:55):
Nah? I don't know one close it all right.
Speaker 2 (01:23:58):
Hope you guys enjoyed that little stories time. Love y'all,
much peace out, Barack at the Barocktha