Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:04):
Every patriot has an obligation to question authority. Those who
are honest are not concerned with your watchful vigilance, and
those with integrity are not concerned with your discernment. Every
American is obligated to voice their concerns and stand up
for their freedoms and liberties.
Speaker 2 (00:22):
One nation on your God invisible, with liberty and justice
for all.
Speaker 1 (00:31):
Ladies and gentlemen.
Speaker 3 (00:33):
We are the men in the arena.
Speaker 1 (00:35):
We are the Patriot Confederation.
Speaker 3 (00:38):
We will liver back down from by.
Speaker 4 (00:42):
We're un freed Americans.
Speaker 5 (00:58):
All right, ladies and gentlemen.
Speaker 6 (01:00):
If you were watching this, that means that it is Tuesday,
the thirteenth of May twenty twenty five. I'm your host,
Bad Billy from Twin Falls, Idaho, joined as always by
John Grovener out of Nashville and New Hampshire. Welcome to
Patriot Confederation. John, how's it going out there?
Speaker 7 (01:18):
It is going, Billy, you know, same old, same old,
the United States of America. Looking forward to Pam Bondy
getting all that Epstein information together and getting up with
good folks. I know she made a statement about that recently,
and they're working on it.
Speaker 5 (01:30):
Man.
Speaker 8 (01:30):
That's what she said.
Speaker 3 (01:30):
The working on it.
Speaker 5 (01:32):
Yes, yes, indeed.
Speaker 6 (01:34):
And Mike our guest this week, of course, so one
of my favorite guests to have on and he hasn't
been on in quite a while. I want to welcome
back the one, the only, my fellow American, Jericho Green.
Speaker 5 (01:49):
How are you doing, buddy.
Speaker 4 (01:51):
Hey, I'm doing great. Thanks for having me back. It
has been a while. We were talking before. I didn't
realize how long it had been. So definitely glad to
be back. I must say. The intro of the production,
it is real nice, guys, that was very nice. I
appreciate you having me back.
Speaker 5 (02:08):
Absolutely, there it looks good, man, it looks real good.
Speaker 4 (02:14):
I see that on you know, insert TV station here.
You know it looks great.
Speaker 5 (02:19):
Absolutely. Oh boy.
Speaker 6 (02:22):
So we got some interesting topics, and which is why
I invited you, Jericho, is because things that have been
happening as of recently, and I want to get your
take on this. So you know, you you've expressed to
me before that obviously you know I you don't strike
(02:44):
me as a man who has fear as you're walking
down the street, But sadly, if you have some something
or someone to fear. You've said in the past, you
it's not likely to be a white person. It's likely
to be a person of color. If I'm I think
(03:05):
I'm quoting you somewhat right, I know I'm not quoting
you verbatim, you know, but as of recently, this crime
is starting to go on the rise, and I'm starting
I don't know, is it just me or am I
seeing an increase of black on white crime lately starting
(03:27):
with Carmelo Anthony.
Speaker 4 (03:32):
I don't. I wouldn't say personally, I don't believe that
there's an increase in it. I think there's an increase
in the coverage of attention.
Speaker 5 (03:41):
So there's an increase in the attention man.
Speaker 4 (03:43):
For sure, because you know, if it bleeds, it leads,
and if the colors of the perpetrator and the victim
line up in the proper order, then it's time to
start printing money in the news industry.
Speaker 3 (03:57):
And if you have, you.
Speaker 4 (03:59):
Know, the ultimate cash cow is a dead black person
white cop. That's just you know, back up the breaks truck.
But anyway, they can sew racial racial or they can
attempt to sow racial division. They can attempt to give
the appearance of racial division. Because you know, you live
(04:20):
in Idaho, John, You're in New Hampshire, so you know,
both coasts are represented somewhat in the middle of America.
Speaker 3 (04:27):
So in my.
Speaker 4 (04:28):
Everyday life, I don't feel any tension. I don't feel
any you know, someone's looking at me because I'm my
skin happens to be this color, or vice versa. I
don't see any of that. I just see people. And
you know, something I learned from my dad. He said,
don't go by what people tell you, go by what
(04:50):
they what they do. And I've learned that more and more.
You know, working with people in business and other things.
People are gonna tell you all kinds, we're gonna do this,
and we're gonna do that when I start making this
kind of money and we're going to get this set up, and.
Speaker 3 (05:02):
Then you know, it doesn't always turn out that way.
So it's all about what they do.
Speaker 4 (05:06):
So in everyday life, when people show you, you know,
small acts of kindness life letting you cross the street,
or if you let that you're driving you let them go,
or something like that they give you a wave or
something like that.
Speaker 3 (05:18):
Just those little things.
Speaker 4 (05:19):
If you really had disdain for a group of people
and you really didn't like them, you're not going to
do stuff like that. You're not going to hold the
door for them, you're not going to wave to them,
you're not going to say thank you. You're not going
to do all those things because you hate this person.
So I don't get any of that. You know, like
most of us, you deal with all different types of
people in different situations. My son plays football, so all
(05:43):
kinds of parents are out there, and it's about the kids,
and you know, it's about life, living life. People don't
have the energy to give to somebody who doesn't deserve it. So,
you know, Carmelo Anthony, it's a perfect situation for the
mainstream media and the and power who want to control
the way we feel about each other or give us
(06:04):
something shiny to pay attention to, you know, while they're
poking a hole in the in the corn silo, just
taking you know, everything we have. So that Carmelo anthe anything, well,
you can't. You can't say anything, and if you do,
you're one of two things. If you're darker than a
sheet of printer paper, you're a sellout. If you are
(06:25):
you know, white people, black people, whatever. None of us
are white or black. But if you're a white person,
and you say anything, you know contrary to the narrative.
You know what you are, you know what words you are.
Starts with ends with the T you know what they're
going to call you. Well, yeah, it's ridiculous. And on
(06:48):
one hand, yeah, you get sick of hearing crap, sick
of everything's racist. But on the other hand, the silver
lining is it's it's lost. Its sting, you know, for
for someone to call you a racist at one point
in time, not too long ago.
Speaker 3 (07:00):
You better come with some some facts.
Speaker 4 (07:02):
You can't just call me something like that and get
away with it, because that's a bad thing.
Speaker 3 (07:06):
You know.
Speaker 4 (07:06):
You're telling me that I'm something that I'm not. I'm
something bad that are not. Now, hey, you don't you
don't like the hat I'm wearing. You're racist. You disagree
on my opinion of a football team, You're racist. It's
so stupid, and try as they might, I don't think
it's having an effect on those of us who are
strong minded enough. You know, these are the same people
(07:29):
who believe that Trump is really a racist, he's really
hit he really you know, all the dumb, stupid narratives
they try to push. It's only effective on those kind
of people, So we just get tired of hearing it.
It just gets nauseating after a while. But them telling
you over it, you're a white cis gender white male,
you're a racist.
Speaker 3 (07:48):
You're racist. You're racist.
Speaker 4 (07:49):
That's not gonna make you wake up one day and
be like, you know what I am. It just doesn't work.
We're not weak minded enough for that. They're gonna keep trying.
We get sick of hearing it. We know it's not
true Trump's are racist. But then you have this laundry
list of black folk in his wake who he's helped
and given things to, and Jennifer Hudson and the black
girl that he dated, and then you have people that say, well,
(08:12):
he's a it's a fetish or something stupid like that,
that's why he dated the black lie. Come on, man,
if you hate something, you're not gonna bring it into
your life. I hate live, I hate liver. I'm not
gonna start eating it because I hate it. So if
you hate a group of people, you're certainly not gonna
take one as your your girlfriend.
Speaker 3 (08:32):
So they're gonna keep pushing it. They're gonna try it.
Any won't work.
Speaker 5 (08:36):
You got you got a good point there too.
Speaker 6 (08:38):
So you know, I was just recently on Kevin Hammer's
show because he wanted to cover what's been happening in
South Africa, and I told him all about and a
white African or family back during the beginnings of apartheid.
Speaker 5 (08:54):
But you know, if if they really really, if.
Speaker 6 (08:59):
The white poor Africanors really hated the black people of
South Africa, then answer me this, If they really hated them,
why did the father of that family forbid the rest
of his white family to speak English or speak Afrikaans
for two years and had to and had to get
(09:20):
themselves fluent in Zulu?
Speaker 5 (09:23):
Do you do you do that with a group of
people you hate?
Speaker 3 (09:26):
No, why would you want to communicate with me?
Speaker 4 (09:28):
Why would you want to have anything to do with
them other than you know, in some kind of business
capacity or if they're in some kind of service industry, like,
you're not going to deal with them like that.
Speaker 3 (09:37):
You're not going to take the time.
Speaker 4 (09:38):
And because it's not only learning the language to make
it easier for you, that's a sign of respect. When
you come to when you're around a certain group of people,
or you come to a country or something like that,
learning the language and their cultures and assimilating in whatever
way that's a sign of respect. I have no respect
for something that I hate, or someone that I hate,
or a group of people that I hate. If you
(09:59):
put to me, I even tell my kids this the
world word hate is not even if you say, oh,
I hate this thing or I hate that food.
Speaker 3 (10:07):
That's when you when it comes to people.
Speaker 4 (10:09):
When I say that word I hate somebody, that means
I wouldn't care if they died, Like if I read
so and so died, wouldn't care might even make me
a little happy. So I reserve that word. But to
put the throw around and say they hate us or
and it's a very lazy way, like like you mentioned
in South Africa. Yes, apartheid was terrible, but doing what
(10:31):
they do to these white farmers that they come across.
You know, we've read the stories. At some point you
got to forgive and forget. It's like, hey, you got
me all right, you got me a part time.
Speaker 3 (10:43):
That was crazy. But we need to bury the hatchet.
We need to move on.
Speaker 4 (10:48):
And it will even make you, that'll make you in
a in that situation, even you, you'd look good coming
out of it, even though you were the ones suffering
under a parts. I've or you to forgive, elevate you.
You went through that and you're forgiving. That's gonna motivate
everybody to get started on rebuilding and building a bridge
(11:09):
and getting over it. Same with in America. All right,
Jim Crow, slavery you got me, Hey, blacks only white,
it's only okay, great, that's enough.
Speaker 3 (11:19):
I don't even want to utter to even say that
you're affect.
Speaker 4 (11:23):
I had somebody tell me in my faith in real life,
and they didn't burst out laughing when they said it.
They said that trauma from slavery is passed down genetically.
So even though I've never been a slave, somehow the
trauma of that slavery is you know, passed in. If
this was like a comic book movie, you'd see the
trauma like wrapping itself around my DNA strands, like it's
(11:47):
passed down to me.
Speaker 3 (11:48):
I think that's ridiculous. I don't believe that.
Speaker 4 (11:51):
Thankfully, my parents never saddled me with that that victim mentality.
You know, good my dad, my parents, both of them,
good or bad, it's on you.
Speaker 3 (12:00):
You know.
Speaker 4 (12:01):
My dad he was poor, he wasn't very well educated.
He ended up owning businesses, serving twenty plus years in
the military. So hey, if he can do it back
when he was a kid, times are you know, the
further you go back, the.
Speaker 3 (12:15):
Harder it was. I can certainly do it today a
lot easier, right.
Speaker 4 (12:20):
I hope his struggle wasn't in vain.
Speaker 2 (12:22):
I think what you're saying here is trauma's not passed
on genetically.
Speaker 8 (12:26):
He's passed down generationally.
Speaker 2 (12:28):
Hate is bread generationally, and it takes a lot of
generations to get past the hate of slavery of the day.
Speaker 8 (12:34):
It takes a lot of generations to get past the
hate of the.
Speaker 2 (12:37):
Jim Crow laws because they keep teaching it to their
children and the other way around. So that's the issue
with m Growing up as a kid in Florida in
the nineteen eighties, I group around rednecks used to say,
the South arise again, yet how they wanted their freedoms
and stuff from national government.
Speaker 8 (12:55):
That's what they're referring to. I believe in that, but
I used to hear things like that. That's passed on generationally,
you know about losing the war.
Speaker 4 (13:03):
True, but it also you know, it takes somebody, like
with the abuse, somebody has to stand up and say
that's enough. It stops with me. I'm not going to
pass us along. We're not going to continue this. And
and you know, I don't know how that would start.
I don't know who that would come from. Who's going
to be the first domino to fall, But that definitely
(13:25):
needs to happen, and it needs to come from somebody.
Speaker 3 (13:29):
And I don't I'm only using these terms because that's
what we're familiar with.
Speaker 4 (13:32):
But the black community, somehow, some way, where, like you said,
stop teaching it to the kids, stop perpetuating it, stop
just stop. But with doing that comes responsibility. Now we're
no more victimhood, no more it's not fair, no more
white privilege. Now you got to perform. You know, we
(13:53):
took off, we took away, it took off all these shackles,
so to speak, you know, of whatever systemic races have been, whatever,
we're starting fresh.
Speaker 3 (14:03):
Here we go.
Speaker 4 (14:04):
Everybody's lined up on the start line, the same just
like when you're in school. Hey, everybody, get your foot
behind the line. Everybody has to start even here we go.
But now that we're doing that, you have to perform.
Now there's no more excuses. Now you have to outperform, outperform.
The guy who came here with twenty eight dollars in
his pocket. The only English he knows is in some
(14:26):
weather beat up whatever his you know, native language to
English dictionary.
Speaker 3 (14:32):
That's all. He has.
Speaker 4 (14:33):
Twenty eight dollars in a dream and for some reason
they're beating us in leaps and bounds. And we've been
there for hundreds of years. So once we get to
that point, you got to perform, because that's the beauty
of America. It's all on you. No, there's nothing in
the way. Nobody's gonna kick your door in and take
your money. Or my mom used to go to get
(14:54):
her nails done by this Vietnamese family that owned the salon,
and they said that where they they owned a salon
there as well, and whenever they wanted, the local regime,
whoever was in charge, would come into their shop, reach
into their cash register, take their money, slap people around,
whatever they wanted to do, grab it. If your woman's
(15:14):
there or something, grab her whatever they want to do,
and just leave. In America, could you imagine if a
local police department kicked in your door, in your business,
reaching your cash register, squeeze your wife's wife on the
behind and smacked you around. Could you imagine the avalanche
of lawyers that would be begging you for this case
(15:35):
because you can't do that.
Speaker 2 (15:38):
I can imagine I'm gonna whoop some masks, some shit's
gonna happen, scize the language, some something, something's gonna go down,
and they're gonna find out they were acting under the
color of law.
Speaker 8 (15:47):
They didn't have the authority to do what they were doing.
They were acting outside the law. They were the criminals.
In the United States of America, you have a right
to defense.
Speaker 4 (15:54):
Yeah, and you they would pay, and you know, literally
figuratively that would be unheard of. But in other places,
people come from places like that and come here with
a dream and a work ethic and that's it. And
in America, the sky's the limit if you have that.
But if you're constantly told it's not your fault because
(16:15):
of this thing that happened, it's not your fault, leave
them alone, out of the way, help them up, give
them a boost, be quiet, don't talk to them, don't
look at them. I mean, no, that's that's lazy. Because
now you're comfortable in being helped and being shielded and
protected and no, you get down here with everybody else,
get away from like your dad, get out here with us,
(16:36):
get away from here from behind your mom. You need
to come outside and get dirty. You need to come
outside and learn something. So yeah, you get down here
with everybody else. You make it far, You make it far.
If you don't, you don't. But it's on you. And
that's such a that's like using a cheap soap where
it leaves that film on you. That's what it feels
like to me, and I imagine other black folks that'll
(16:57):
subscribe to that victimhood mentality that that's it feels gross.
Don't help me, don't give me extra tension, don't give me,
don't give me anything you don't give anybody else. It's
it's like there's it's like there's something on you. It
just it's disgusting.
Speaker 3 (17:12):
I hate it.
Speaker 4 (17:13):
I can deal with my own failure because I'll talk
to me about it and I'll handle it. But to
know that you were helped in some way, like the
the wall, you're on an obstacle course. Everybody else has
to make it over somehow someway, but they give you
a stool. How do you live with that? How do
you accept how do you go on with your life
knowing that you didn't make it there on your own merit?
Speaker 3 (17:35):
And that's just that's a mind blowing to me.
Speaker 6 (17:38):
Well, I want to touch on something that I recently
saw on social media. We'll do that after our first break,
so we'll be back in one minute. All right, ladies
and gentlemen, we are back, joined, of course, by the
one and only my fellow American, Jericho Green. Now continuing
(18:01):
with the conversation, here, I'm gonna read something to you
that I read on social media. This this could just
because I want to see your reaction, and I have
a feeling I'm gonna get something that's gonna be classic.
This is utterly stupid, nonsensical, but this is the mindset
of a lot of idiots.
Speaker 5 (18:21):
So here we go.
Speaker 6 (18:23):
Since white people enslaved black people, I think black people
should enslave white people.
Speaker 5 (18:29):
It's only fair that.
Speaker 6 (18:30):
Blacks get to enslave whites for a century or two,
since all white people are racist because their ancestors held
slaves slash were racist.
Speaker 3 (18:42):
Mmm. Wow, that's a lot in there.
Speaker 4 (18:48):
Well, First, by saying white people put black people into slavery,
so black folk shore out, but white folks in the slavery. Well,
the first part of that is how did the white
people get the black people? How'd they get their hands
on the Africans to put them into slavery, Because I know,
we enjoy the amenities of modern medicine, but back then
(19:11):
you couldn't just come from England or Portugal wherever they
were coming from, and just.
Speaker 3 (19:16):
Go to Maineland Africa and start poking around.
Speaker 4 (19:20):
You can't do that now. There's a series of shots
you need now before you go to Africa. So those
white folks would have died off from disease because they
weren't used to it, they were't acclimated to it. So
somebody had to bring the slaves to them. They just
pull up to the shore and you know they had
the open your slave markets there, but they weren't going
deep into Africa.
Speaker 3 (19:39):
They could not.
Speaker 4 (19:40):
It was impossible, impossible, they could not do it. So
again the laziness of believing what you're told, you know,
being plugged into the matrix the white people enslavedy. They
leave out the part where somebody had to bring the
slaves to the white folks, who apparently were the only
people engaging in slavery. Somebody had to bring them to them.
(20:02):
So that's like saying the fox ate the hen. So
the fox is bad, but you're leaving out the other
hen that opened the gate for the fox to get
in there. How about that guy who's worse. Who's worse
the fox who ate the hens or the hen who
opened the gate for the fox?
Speaker 3 (20:21):
I think the hen who opened the gate for the fox,
I'd be a little bit worse.
Speaker 4 (20:25):
So, but you can't do that because those two narratives
can't live in the same space. You can't have the
Africans take responsibility because that means the white people weren't
the only people putting black folks into slavery.
Speaker 3 (20:36):
And you can't have the white folks.
Speaker 4 (20:37):
We have to hang this yoke around your neck only
because then that means everything else they probably told you
about white folks is a lie too.
Speaker 3 (20:45):
And really, after.
Speaker 4 (20:47):
You know what I call the sweet and sour sniffles
a few years ago, when things got all haywire, we
couldn't leave the house.
Speaker 3 (20:55):
After that, you really start questioning things.
Speaker 5 (20:58):
Absolutely, was was there even slavery?
Speaker 3 (21:02):
Was there? I don't know? And if there was, I
do all this for a fact.
Speaker 4 (21:06):
It wasn't the way they tell you, because what they
tell you is again playing in this victorhood mindset. You
just picked cotton and tobacco and sugar, that's it. You
didn't work on docks, You didn't build houses. You didn't
work in a doctor's office or the libraries, or building
wagons or blacksmithing, or working on the docks, building boats, fishing.
You didn't do any of that. You were just in
(21:28):
the house or in the field. That's it. So if
you didn't come from anything, we can't expect you to
be anything. So you know, boom black in America, so
hard in the police, blah blah blah blah blah. Because
if you come from something, then why didn't you turn
out that way? If you come from people who were
ship builders and all these other things, then what's wrong
(21:48):
with you?
Speaker 3 (21:49):
They didn't.
Speaker 4 (21:49):
There we go again with the expectations. Now I expect
more from you, but I can't get more from you
and have you be a victim too. So I can't
tell you the Africans sold slaves to the white folks,
because then the white folks wouldn't be the only bad guy.
So it's ridiculous. And again I'm so thankful I wasn't
(22:11):
saddled with this as a kid and had to have
my red pill moment.
Speaker 3 (22:14):
Victimhood had no place in my home growing up.
Speaker 4 (22:18):
And but that's all they tell us, that's all they
tell us about slavery.
Speaker 3 (22:23):
Well, all these horrible things and hung and all that,
and it just wasn't that bad.
Speaker 6 (22:28):
Well, also a lot of people don't know is that
once emancipation blocked, the proclamation had passed, a lot of
slaves turned into employees. So they stayed there on the
plantation and they, you know, so they could still they
(22:48):
still needed a roof over their head and money in
their pocket, so they stayed on the on the plantation
and got paid by by their once owners.
Speaker 4 (23:00):
But that can't be true because then you can't sell
me all the horrors of slavery. And it didn't end
until eighteen sixty five. My mom chased our lineage back
to I think eighteen hundred, and on my mom's side,
they had they were free by eighteen twelve. That's fifty
years you know before you know, at forty nine years
(23:21):
before the Civil War that ended slavery. So what's going
on here? Either we were shackled and beaten until eighteen
sixty five, or you're not telling me the truth. It
wasn't like that, and did those things happen? Of course
we're talking humans here. Humans are absolutely disgusting sometimes. But
to tell me that all of it was like that,
(23:43):
I think most slaves were a more of an indentured servant.
And like you said, it came a structure, It came
a consistency. It was like having a job. They had
homes on the property, sometimes off the property. There was
a level of dignity and respect. It wasn't hey boy
all the time. There wasn't a boss hog on the porch,
you know, cracking a whip all the time.
Speaker 3 (24:04):
So but again, I can't sell you that dream and
the pipe dream.
Speaker 4 (24:09):
Of you were just a downtrodden, beaten you know, all
these other horrible things, black person until the sun came
through the clouds in eighteen sixty five.
Speaker 6 (24:19):
Well, here's another situation that I'm dealing with here, jerk
on that. I know I'm getting a little bit personal
here on the show, but I'm sorry, it just fits
the conversation that we're having. Is my own daughter, Sadly,
she was she wasn't really raped but she was manipulated
(24:43):
by another boy she's known for about her her same age,
and she ended up getting pregnant at thirteen. Well she
you know, good thing was that we found a family
that wanted to adopt the baby, and we we have
(25:03):
an open adoption. In fact, I just watched my grandson
have his first communion last last weekend, so you know,
we're still involved with his life, even though we've given
up him up for adoption to a family who were
not able to have children. But my daughter number one,
(25:24):
she you know, she's she's now grown, she's moved out
of the house. She's rerinten from a lady who hates
President Trump and and tries tries to tell tries to
tell her all the benefits of DEI and why it's
so good and all that, but not only that. You know,
she did go through some trauma after the pregnancy, but
(25:45):
she's right now, she's not moving forward and tells people
she's traumatized from the pregnancy.
Speaker 5 (25:52):
It was nine years ago. It's time to move on.
Speaker 6 (25:56):
But you know, she's going to see this counselor, and
I'm I'm having my doubts about counselors and psychiatrists. And
all that constantly always wanting to tell you something is
wrong with you and keep that victim mentality drilled in
your head so they can line up their pockets. And basically,
(26:16):
you know, back in my day when I saw a
psychiatrist or whatever, a shrink or whatever, they help you
with your problems, but teach you how to move on
so in the future you can learn accountability and responsibility.
Speaker 5 (26:32):
That seems to be going out the window.
Speaker 4 (26:36):
I think it's it's almost out the window. It's has
like one foot left end, it's almost out the window.
But that's crucial. You have to take away personal responsibility
because then we can give you a boogeyman and then
you can come to us for the solution. You know,
we create the problem and we have the solution to
sell you. You know, it's classic, classic, you know, drug dealer mentality,
(27:00):
you know drug company mentality.
Speaker 3 (27:02):
You know, in hand in hand with the food industry,
you make them sick.
Speaker 4 (27:05):
We got the cure, and that's you know, that's how
it is. They create this boogeyman and the only one
who can stop it. Because you often find a lot
of the people who have this mentality, you know, they
they like they believe in big government. The government can help.
More government interference is going to help everything. If there's
a problem in the inner city. More government, more money,
more programs, more buildings, you know, which just comes with
(27:28):
more money and more corruption. And that's not it. You
have to lean on yourself. And if you're leaning on yourself,
then you're not leaning on them. So what happens to
things that we don't use? You know, it ends up
in the garage sale. I haven't used this thing in
two years. I'm going to get rid of it. And
that's their kryptonite. They have to be here, they have
to stay relevant. And what's the bottomless well that they
(27:50):
can always throw their bucket in and pull it up
overflowing races? Ugh? You know, yeah, some kind of is
a sexism, racism, or masogyny, patriarchy. They're all in that
bucket of slurry that they always go into because there's
(28:14):
gotta be there's either a big enough portion of our
population who really believes that, or there's a big enough
portion of our population who's paying attention. And by that
I mean a lot of us are living life. We
don't really we don't allow things like that to shape
our lives or how we feel. We take it in,
(28:35):
we filter it, and then we apply it as necessary.
But there are those out there who and you've seen them.
I actually had some in my family. Whatever CNN and
MSNBC was saying that was gospel. Did you hear what Trump?
Did you hear what Trump said?
Speaker 3 (28:52):
What he say? What he do? Oh? Man, he punched
a nun in the face on Fifth Avenue.
Speaker 4 (28:58):
You didn't see that, really, because I think I probably
would have heard about that, you know.
Speaker 3 (29:03):
Oh.
Speaker 4 (29:04):
He said that that people in the military are losers. Really,
the sitting president of the United States said that everybody
in the military is a loser. Yep, he said, you
can grab it. Those people exist, But are there enough
of them? Is that why they're continuing to push it,
(29:24):
push this message or are they gonna push it regardless?
Speaker 3 (29:27):
I don't know.
Speaker 4 (29:28):
But that victim mentality is strong because it's comfortable. It
takes away the personal responsibility. Lay down, get comfortable. It's
turned the lights down, make it warm in here, and
play some nice white noise.
Speaker 3 (29:38):
Some waves crashing will take care of you. Man. It's
not your fault. It's him that your dad. Huh, yeah,
it's him.
Speaker 4 (29:45):
He didn't hug you. He would tell you can't hang
out with your friends, don't smoke dope. Yeah, stupid dad,
Well your dad he was a Republican. Everybody in the
Republican Party they're racist, And yeah, that's right, they're racist,
because no, you don't have to take responding from responsibility
for nothing. All your problems, they got a boogeyman for it.
And all you have to do is lay back, hand
(30:05):
over your personal sovereignty, vote for us forever, and we'll
take her from here. You drift off into your progressive
sleep and everything they feed you, every group they tell
you to be against, every group that they tell you,
who's coming back the reincarnated this person and hitler, Oh
my goodness, talk about a word that I don't want
to hear for the rest of my life. Goodness. And again,
(30:29):
that's another word that if somebody referred to somebody as that,
that meant something. You're calling this dude hitler? Whoa where's
where's your proof? Because that's a heavy accusation. But now, hey,
you driving Tesla, you're a hitler. You liked a tweet
Trump sent out five years ago. Guess what, you're a hitler?
(30:49):
So come on. Oh, I'm so sick of it, but
I mean it must be only do it because it works.
Speaker 8 (30:56):
Yeah, you know what, they may always beware of the
CUsing finger.
Speaker 4 (31:00):
Yep, that's how it is. They're telling jumping up and down,
telling you Trump's racist. Look at them, you peel one
layer back. Oh my goodness, I know you said what
you know, So it's so ridiculous. But again, they're not
betting on us, they're not targeting us.
Speaker 3 (31:17):
We're We're hopeless to them.
Speaker 4 (31:19):
Our brains are too fortified with you know, just calm,
even if you have common sense. Common sense is sunlight
to them. They common sense. You're gonna see through ninety
percent of this. So you if you have that, let
alone multiple layers, life experience, and all these other things
they're not. They're gonna move right past us. Their alien
ship's gonna fly right over us. And you know, abduct
(31:42):
one of those idiots who's you know, who's mad at
their dad even though he provided a great life for
you and didn't abuse you and loved you and supported you.
Speaker 3 (31:51):
But you didn't let me do what I wanted to.
Speaker 4 (31:54):
Plus these new liberals I'm hanging out with, they tell
me you're the bad guy, your own father. Yeah, that's right.
I can't talk to you no more shaving my head.
Now I'm a lesbian. Now I'm a unicorn. Now I'm
a kitchen table. I don't know what I am, but
you better call me it when I come to the house.
Speaker 8 (32:11):
Beforehand. How dare you not even though you never met
me before?
Speaker 9 (32:16):
Yeah, and that's the medical dictionary defines a male, you know,
having male genitalia and producing sperm and things like that.
Speaker 8 (32:27):
Just the medical profession can understand what a man is.
Speaker 5 (32:31):
A woman can do that too, didn't you know.
Speaker 4 (32:34):
Well, John, Yes, okay, a male has a penis and
testicles scientifically, but that is if the parents didn't cave
to the pressure, and that kid doesn't have genitals or
doesn't have penis and pesticals anymore. Because you know, your doctor,
(32:54):
your kid shrink told you, you know, if you don't
go along with this, they're going to harm themselves.
Speaker 3 (32:58):
So what do you want?
Speaker 4 (32:59):
A living transgender kid, you know, or the worst and
a lot of parents go for that, you know, fifteen
year old girls getting double mass eectomies and all this
crazy stuff. And then yeah, you know, of the kids
snap out of it, so to speak. So now what
you allowed, you allowed me to do. You allowed somebody
to do this to me, And now I'm not like
(33:21):
that anymore. Dad, Mom, why'd you do that? Why'd you
let them give me those drugs? Why'd you let them
do those surgeries on me? I want to have a
family now, So you're telling me a teenager change their mind.
Speaker 2 (33:31):
No, children easily susceptible to emotional manipulation and suggestion.
Speaker 8 (33:38):
But I think Billy needs to get to a break care.
Speaker 6 (33:40):
Yep, we better do that because we have a little
bit more to talk about right after this, So we'll
be back in just under four minutes. All right, ladies
and gentlemen, we are back once again. We're joined by
Jericho Green. Now, Jericho, I want to uh touch on
(34:03):
on something here that I sent.
Speaker 5 (34:05):
I sent a text message to you a few weeks.
Speaker 6 (34:08):
Ago, as as well as a few other people as well,
of what I'm what I'm really concerned about, And I
just want your opinion to If you think I'm overreacting,
tell me. But you know, I'm looking at the situation
of Carmelo Anthony and Austin Metcalf and what a tragedy
(34:29):
that was I mean, did.
Speaker 5 (34:34):
Was was anything said? What kind of struggle happened?
Speaker 6 (34:37):
I all I all I know is that, uh Carmelo
Anthony went to the track meet.
Speaker 5 (34:44):
Armed with a knife.
Speaker 6 (34:46):
And to me, that's that smells bad intentions already from
the get go. Then he entered he enters the tent
of a school, an opposing team. And when I was
a kid, we did not go near the opposing teams.
We shook hands on the on the track before we
started the race, and we shook hands when the race
(35:07):
was over, and when we wanted to hang around and
bs we did it in a neutral space to where
we weren't on our our team's ground, you know. So
he I don't know if he was told to leave,
if he was asked to leave, however it was. I
know that his reaction was touch me and see what happens,
(35:30):
which is a sign of premeditation right there. And uh,
you know, next thing, you know, he's getting a knife
plunged into his heart and they're comparing him to Rosa Parks.
They they can't use gofund me, so they go to
Gibson go and raise half a million dollars and basically
(35:55):
he's being hailed as a hero. He did nothing wrong.
You know, he's got and he's his family buys a
new house, in a new car.
Speaker 5 (36:05):
It's like they're.
Speaker 6 (36:06):
Getting rewarded for his bad behavior. And then of course
you also have what's her name who? I mean, what
she said to that kid, she didn't need to use
the end word to that kid, that that was a
bunch of craps.
Speaker 5 (36:21):
She didn't need to do that.
Speaker 6 (36:23):
I mean, I would have gotten her face if I
was there and and voiced my disapproval.
Speaker 3 (36:29):
You know.
Speaker 6 (36:30):
But uh, I feel I just this is where I'm
asking your opinion, Jericho, because I feel we're at a
lose lose situation. If he's found innocent, then uh, you know,
where's the justice. Where's the justice for Austin Metgeff's family.
You know, it's there's nothing there and there it's it's like, uh,
(36:53):
maybe a further open season on Americans. I'm not just
gonna say white people. I'm gonna say Americans, on people
like you and me. You know, if he's found guilty,
oh boy, la riots, summer of love here we go,
(37:13):
cities being burnt down.
Speaker 4 (37:17):
Well, I mean there's a reason to feel that way
because We've seen it happen before, you know. But there's
the difference.
Speaker 3 (37:25):
You know, if.
Speaker 4 (37:28):
If he's found innocent, then you know there's gonna be
a much more pragmatic way, much more mature, well thought
thought out way to deal with it. If he's convicted,
you know what's gonna happen. And that's the difference. And
that's the bad part is black folks are excused to
(37:50):
act like that. Like the mayor of DC said, after
was it Freddie Gray, No, Eric Gardner, he was the
one in Baltimore. She said, let them riot, let them destroy.
That's the quote, let them destroy. Why would you say that?
Why would you That's that's such a that's how you
treat a toddler, you know, kind of let them, let
(38:12):
them get out of their system, let them bang their
fists on the floor and scream for a minute.
Speaker 3 (38:16):
They'll tuck her out.
Speaker 4 (38:17):
They'll get tired, you know, they'll they'll come back in
there once they're inside of their system. So that's the mentality.
It's almost okay. It's expected. It's certainly expected for black
folks to react that way, you know, very juvenile, very immature, childish,
to lash out like that instead of if it was
(38:37):
an Asian kid, you know, and he was found guilty,
Is there any fear of the Asian community burning anything
down or destroying anything. Nope, no way in hell. We've
never seen that before in our life. There's no way
that would happen. But if a black kid gets convicted, yeah,
it's a very real possibility. I guarantee you you'll see
a lot of police departments approve in overtime. You'll see
(39:00):
a lot of streets getting blocked off to funnel the traffic.
You'll see some riot gear out there by the courthouse
and across the country.
Speaker 3 (39:06):
I guarantee you that.
Speaker 4 (39:08):
So it's horrible because obviously that poor kid lost his
life over something so stupid and trivial.
Speaker 3 (39:17):
I think it was just pride. I think.
Speaker 4 (39:21):
Carmelo Anthony got embarrassed and that's how he lashed out.
That's what I think it was. But there's no excuse
for that. You have to have better control over your emotions.
And you know how hard you got to stab somebody,
To stab him in the heart. You know, the heart's
not on the outside, it's behind you know, some protective
armor plating, the chest plate and stuff. You gotta stab
(39:43):
pretty hard. It's not an accident. He didn't run into
the blade. He didn't like Oh, I went like this,
and you know nicked and Arterie like, you stab that kid.
It's heart you're trying to kill. Everybody knows that your
heart's about the organ. Everybody knows what happens if you
can stab him the heart. He's seventeen years old. You
knew what was going to happen. But why he took
it to that. I think it was embarrassment. I don't
think that he got jumped. It doesn't matter. People say, well,
(40:06):
he touched him. So if you touch me, if you
shove me, I can murder you. If you grab my arm,
I can murder you. So if somebody thinks I'm somebody else,
Let's say you got a buddy and you guys mess
around with each other. So if some guy accidentally spins
me around by my shoulder and thinking I'm somebody else,
I can kill him. That's ridiculous, that's nonsensical. But that's
(40:29):
how you would treat a child. You would understand why
a child would lash out with violence because they don't
have the mental capacity to express their feelings. So that's
why they start hitting. Oh, that's okay. We understand that
because it's a child. Well, we understand because it's black people.
They're not mentally, they're not equal to us mentally, and
(40:52):
it's not their fault because of slavery. You know, two
hundred years ago, Jim Crow, seventy five years ago, you
remember out their fall. So let them act stupid, let
them right, let them burn things, let them be violent.
They're treating them like children. That's insulting. If your wife
(41:12):
put her hands on her knees and got down on
your level said honey, would you like some dinner? Yeah,
you want some dinner? How long would it take you
to be like, what the hell is your problem? Why
are you talking to me like I'm a child? Because
you're not a child. That would piss you off. You
would be offended. H Are you talking to me like that?
Do I look stupid? Am I acting stupid? But you
(41:34):
have a whole And this is a section of black folks.
This isn't all black folks. It might even be most
black folks. For everybody in the sound of my voice
know that it's not all black folks. This subset to
believe that crap to go along with that crap who
are more than happy to assault white people or say
terrible things about white people and think that it's okay.
(41:55):
Know that that's the low IQ childish, that's the shallow
end of the pool. That's who that is. That's absolutely ridiculous.
There's nobody in my household growing up who would agree
with that. My parents would be outraged if somebody tried
to put them under that umbrella of black folk. It's
sad because he's gonna get convicted. So that's two lives.
(42:17):
I mean one you can still visit, but his life,
you know, quote unquote is over. He's not going to
get out of prison. And Austin, you know, can't visit him.
He's gone forever.
Speaker 5 (42:30):
And what a line.
Speaker 4 (42:32):
What a missed opportunity for Carmelo Anthony's family when they
had that moron who's representing them. There's no way he
graduated high school, no way. This guy is an idiot.
So the dad comes to the press conference and they
ask him to leave. Why that was an opportunity for
(42:53):
you to extend an olive branch. Have a seat, mister Metcalf.
Imagine the image of Carmelo Anthony's dad shaking, mister Metcalf's hand.
I'm so sorry for what my son did. I'm so
sorry that that happened. We didn't raise him that way.
I don't know what happened, but I'm so sorry and
(43:13):
he needs to pay for what he did. But I
imagine if they hugged each other, well, that takes all
the air out of the We're gonna flip out if this,
even if he got convicted, if that moment happened, you
can't do anything. Because the father of the kid who
got convicted has made peace with the other kid's family.
They're praying for each other there. Who even knows a
(43:34):
friendship could blossom out of that. But that was a
real missed opportunity for them to have peace. That would
have taken the sales out of any summer of love
crap nonsense that they have planned.
Speaker 3 (43:46):
Who knows. I don't know if they're gonna leave palette.
Speaker 4 (43:48):
Of bricks out this time, But that was a real
missed opportunity for the Carmel, for the Anthony family.
Speaker 3 (43:55):
And the dad is an idiot.
Speaker 4 (43:56):
Number one for letting that idiot get up there and
speak for his family, and number two letting his wife
get up there and talk for the family. What are
you Who's running this family? Who's in charge of this family?
You get up there, you represent your family the right way.
You extend the olive branch, you support your son. But
you gotta pay. What you did was wrong. I don't
know why you did it. Hopefully we can figure that out.
(44:18):
But what you did was wrong. You have to pay
the price. We'll be here for you.
Speaker 5 (44:22):
Absolutely.
Speaker 4 (44:23):
You owe that man an apology. I owe one first
because I raised you, I made you. So there's you
know this is my responsibility too. But what a real
missed opportunity. I was so stupid.
Speaker 6 (44:36):
Yes, we're gonna take our final break and we'll be
back to wrap things up in one minute.
Speaker 5 (44:47):
All right, ladies and gentleman, And keep that in mind.
Speaker 6 (44:50):
If you're anywhere near Tulsa, Oklahoma, the Red Bill Expo
is well worth it. Even if you can't make it
to Tulsa, you can go to Redpillexpo dot O RG
and watch the presentation live. So it's it's definitely worth
people worth listening to. Yes, indeed, so we're.
Speaker 5 (45:13):
Just wrapping wrapping things up here with Jericho Green.
Speaker 6 (45:15):
It's always a great pleasure to talk to him and
it's always entertaining, the pick back peering on YouTube. Listen
to your videos, you know, that's what I have to
do most most of the time. I have to listen
because I got I'm I'm busy doing something else. But man, you,
(45:36):
as far as I'm concerned, you have had the most
intelligent things to say about people like Jasmine Crockett and
ill haan Omar and uh oh man, just the idiots
we have feeding this ideology ill han Omar, now white
(45:57):
men is to be feared, you know, that just feeds
this problem. And we have this you know, I mean
it's not just Carmelo Anthony. We I mean we also
got you know, the father and son and yeah, we
got just less than ten minutes. And we never did
get into that too. And I forget their names, but
(46:18):
the son who got killed for being an idiot, yeah,
you know, and father takes vengeance on an innocent retired cop.
But you said the you said the father had of
him had something to say on that note.
Speaker 4 (46:35):
Yeah, So the eighteen year old Hinton, he's the one
who had the stolen car and pulled his gun on
the cop and got wasted. Then his dad and it
was right after he was basically viewing the body cam
footage at the police station, leaves from there and then
murders the retired officer. So the grandfather, the kid who
got shot, the father of the idiot who murdered the officer.
(46:59):
The family had a press conference, press conference, and it
started just like you think it would. The mom's up there,
you know, stereotype. Her mom is a stereotype, saying all
the stereotypical things about the way black folks feel about police,
and they're scared. The grandfather gets up there and he says,
(47:20):
you know what, he said, my grandson's when I watched
the body cam footage I taught I saw two scared
people in that video, my grandson and the officer. He said,
the officer did not want to kill my grandson. He said,
my grandson was doing things he wasn't supposed to do.
He did something wrong. And he said, I pray for
the officer's family, and he said, I pray for my family.
(47:42):
But he says, you know, prayers out to the officer
who was involved in the shooting. I know he didn't
want to do that. And he says, you know, my grandson,
you know, lost his life. But he was lost in
doing something he wasn't supposed to be doing. And I
was like, what, roll raggy, Like, that's not how That's
not how these press conferences go. Usually they get up there,
(48:03):
it's a bunch of women and kids. Maybe one or
two guys, but it's always a bunch of women and kids.
I wonder why where'd all the men go? So it's
always a bunch of women and kids. He didn't do anything.
He was the light of the the He was the
life of the party. When he walked to the room,
everybody smiled.
Speaker 3 (48:19):
Blah blah. He wanted to do this.
Speaker 4 (48:21):
He was rolling in college in the fall. And they
show you a bunch of old pictures, pictures that we
all have, you know, playing soccer or your kindergarten graduation. Yeah,
we all have that picture. Show me his Instagram feed,
show me his Twitter feed, his x account, show me
his snapchat. That's what I want to see. Oh, the
guns pointed at the phone, at the camera, and the
(48:42):
drugs and the gang signs. There we go. That's who
was out there that day. It wasn't the little five
year old boy you're trying to sell me. That sounded weird,
but it's the it's the the gang signs blowing weeds,
smoke gun pointing at the camera. That's how I want
to see. And they try to sell you that crap.
(49:03):
And you know the police are bad. They usually have
what's his name, Ben Crump, you know, the usual suspects
up there, the shark swimming in the water to take
the case, and you know, the city of whatever. But
for the grandpa to come out there and say and
to basically take responsibility for what his grandson did, that's
unheard of. If that exists, they bury that footage because
(49:24):
I've never seen that before. That's what needs to happen.
That's the opportunity that was missed with the Anthony family
right there, to take responsibility and stop anything bad that
could come of it. Because you know these you have
to not only see the opportunity and know it's there,
but you have to take it, even if you know
it doesn't scratch that vengeful itch you may have wanting
(49:48):
to do something. But that's part of being a man,
is not giving in to those bad thoughts and those
bad actions. Sometimes you got to grit your teeth, take
a second, and then say what you're supposed to say
and those other feelings either deal with them later, or
you know, shove them down into your chest and they'll
(50:08):
come back to see you in the form of a
heart attack. But you have to do that. You have
to shoulder that responsibility. You have to bite that bullet.
You have to tell that part of you that wants
to get vengeance to shut up and do.
Speaker 3 (50:23):
The right thing.
Speaker 4 (50:24):
Nobody's gonna thank you for it, nobody's gonna cheer, nobody's
gonna care.
Speaker 3 (50:29):
That's what you gotta do.
Speaker 2 (50:32):
Your father of don't forget his name, the the kid
that got stabbed in the heart. He was the one
that stepped up and said he'd forgive. Yeah, beginning, he's
the one that stepped up and said he forgive. He's
the victim in the case.
Speaker 3 (50:46):
Yep.
Speaker 6 (50:48):
He ain't never gonna get back until until the next life.
Speaker 4 (50:55):
The worst thing life can throw at you, the absolute
worst thing is what his kim, his other son. You know,
the ripple effect that goes throughout their life, their family
and friends and all that everybody's dealing with. That that's horrible.
And yes, the father came out and did the right
thing and took responsibility, but it also had to come
(51:16):
from the other father. That was the missing piece that
the mister Metcalf was half of it, mister Anthony was
the other half. And if they came together, none of
that stuff would happen. It would be a great example,
and it would be a great response and rebuttal to
all that crap we're getting from the mainstream media in
(51:36):
Hollywood that America is this evil, racist place. Well, I
just saw two men who both are about to lose
their kid, one in a much worse way. They came together.
Now what now, what's America?
Speaker 3 (51:50):
Now? How is it racist? But they didn't do that.
Speaker 5 (51:53):
He didn't do that.
Speaker 3 (51:54):
He kicked him out instead, like a you're used.
Speaker 5 (52:00):
Yeah, you know, but uh.
Speaker 6 (52:04):
I want to encourage people because we're almost out of
show here, but I want to encourage people to go
to Jericho's channel listen to what he has to say,
especially when you want to you want to hear more
about someone of the likes of ilhan Omar, Jasmine Crockett,
Latitia James. Jericho's got He's got the best things to
(52:26):
say when it concerns those idiots right there, Al Green.
Speaker 4 (52:31):
What I'm more on, don't say those names together, Billy,
I just.
Speaker 3 (52:37):
Ate thank you.
Speaker 6 (52:39):
Yeah, all right, but yes, if people want to follow
on you on YouTube, what's your channel?
Speaker 4 (52:47):
Oh, Jericho Green, just search Jericho Green all the platforms.
Billy has it going across the bottom there. I appreciate it.
Thanks for sharing my videos on x T man, that's
very cool. But yeah, Jericho Green anywhere. I should be
the first one to pop up and thank you guys very.
Speaker 3 (53:01):
Much for having me.
Speaker 6 (53:03):
Absolutely absolutely and on tap for next week, John, we
got a mutual friend, Colonel Chris.
Speaker 5 (53:11):
Wyant will be joining the show.
Speaker 6 (53:13):
I don't know if he'll be back from South Africa,
but yeah, he is scheduled.
Speaker 5 (53:18):
To be next.
Speaker 8 (53:20):
I think I know that guy.
Speaker 5 (53:22):
Yes, indeed, indeed, and.
Speaker 6 (53:27):
Jericho, as we always say.
Speaker 3 (53:30):
I'll try to be done with the Left, but they
just won't let me.
Speaker 6 (53:35):
Yes, thank you very much for tuning in to Patriot Confederation.
God save the Republic of the United States of America.
Speaker 1 (53:45):
We will live back down from the bank for the feed.