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October 10, 2023 • 57 mins

Yahki Awakened converses with the BIG FACTS crew about health, African American culture, his transition from toxicity, modern day rap music and more.

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
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Speaker 3 (01:15):
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Speaker 2 (01:18):
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Speaker 4 (01:18):
I be on BBJ.

Speaker 1 (01:20):
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Speaker 2 (01:29):
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Big Facts welcomes today, Yacky Awaken, pulling up the Big Facts,
Big Fast, Big Fast.

Speaker 4 (01:38):
What's up?

Speaker 2 (01:39):
What's up? My brother? What's up?

Speaker 6 (01:40):
You? Good?

Speaker 2 (01:40):
Everything?

Speaker 6 (01:40):
Good?

Speaker 3 (01:41):
Peace? Peace? Piece to the God. It's this piece of
the guys. Mental fai.

Speaker 6 (01:44):
I'm feeling amazing, man. I can't complain for the real good.
I appreciate you all having me on your.

Speaker 2 (01:48):
So give yourself a proper introduction. I'm gonna be real
with you, like a lot of people are calling you
like the new doctor CIV. You know what I'm saying.
A lot of people are making some comparisons in that
fashion or whatever the case may be. But I want
you to give a proper intranceduction of who you are
and what you represent.

Speaker 6 (02:02):
All right, Well, my real name is Jaki Raphai Elohem.
Everybody called me Yaki Awaken. I am a master herbalist
and I am a certified biochemist. I've been doing this
healing work for a good thirteen years now. It started
from me actually healing myself of what they would call
so called incurable diseases. So I had diabetes, I had
scar tissue on my heart. I actually suffered from a

(02:23):
heart attack at the age of twenty one. My kidneys
was failing and I had a bunch of fluid built
up on my kidneys, saying my heart as well.

Speaker 3 (02:30):
I had bad EGZMA.

Speaker 6 (02:32):
I had work they call it vertilago, where you basically
have these white patches on your skin, the usual the
whole nine that you usually suffer from when you're growing
up in the black community, not knowing what fools is,
not knowing what to drink, what to eat.

Speaker 4 (02:45):
You know.

Speaker 3 (02:45):
And I end up healing myself brother.

Speaker 2 (02:47):
Was that Was that particularly just diet you think that
led you to that space or was it like diet stress?

Speaker 6 (02:54):
Just it was just a whole trauma as a whole
environmental factor as well. When you look inside the black
unity and you see, you know, who is building these
institutes and actually building the environment that we're going in,
it's all to go against us. You know, there's a
liquor store on every corner in the neighborhood. I'm from Singles, Missouri,
you know what I'm saying. Grew up there, still stay
there till this very day. But you know there's an

(03:16):
actual liquor store on every corner in Saint Louis. You
got drug dealers all around in the neighborhood. Of course,
you got your regular violin, black on black crime, hip
hop music, I mean, just anything you can think about
that's a part of the culture that we praise and
that we champion today. Is what I grew up in.
So you know, I grew up thinking, you know, selling
dope was cool. I grew up thinking, you know, bringing

(03:38):
home see your brother was cool. Eating all the bad
food was cool. Because these are things that was praised
in the community. And once you start living a life
of toxicity like that, and you're not slowing down and
you drinking, you smoking, you're.

Speaker 3 (03:50):
Running around with the gang every day.

Speaker 6 (03:52):
You're getting into recreational drugs and then you eating these
bad foods they accumulating the body. So man, one day
it caught up with me. Man, I thought I had
bad digestion. I'm like, man, my heart, Man, it's heartburn
because I suffered from heartburn too, And man.

Speaker 3 (04:05):
It just didn't feel like it usually felt.

Speaker 4 (04:07):
Man.

Speaker 6 (04:07):
I went down, ended up calling the ambulance. Ambulance came
and got me, took me to the hospital. They had
hooked me up into something called the EGK. They're like, man,
you actively having a heart attack. And I'm like, I'm
twenty one. It's impossible to be as young because of
what they teach us. You know, they teach you that
you can't have heart disease if you a certain age.
That's you know, that's what they pushing, the narrative they pushing. Man,
I was twenty one having an active heart attack like

(04:30):
I was sixty.

Speaker 3 (04:30):
Five years old. Yeah and yeah.

Speaker 6 (04:34):
The doctor told me, like this your last time. You know,
if you do this again, you might not make it. Man,
I ended up going home sitting down. I was crying
because I had high blood pressure. I had bad hypertension.
My blood pressure literally used to be to twenty seven
over one hundred and one. You know what I'm saying, man, seriously,
So they had me on high blood pressure medication. But
you know, I'm young. I still like the have sex

(04:56):
and everything. My dick couldn't get hard. I had erectile
dysfunction from the me medicine that I was taking at
twenty one, from the medicine cod so I was super,
super messed.

Speaker 3 (05:05):
Up in congestion.

Speaker 2 (05:06):
Man.

Speaker 6 (05:06):
So I was just done after that heart attack and
after looking into that doctor's eyes, you know what I'm saying,
and he was just he just I don't know, man,
I'd have been shot, I'd have been stabbed. I got
metal from here to here, like I didn't really been
in the streets. Like when I say I'm from the
streets of Saint Louis, I really we really from that,
you know what I'm saying. And did nothing ever scare
me until that particular day. Man, that doctor looked me

(05:27):
in my soul. Nobody ever like looked me in my soul,
and he like, man, this show you do this again,
you might not be here.

Speaker 2 (05:33):
Man.

Speaker 6 (05:33):
I got home, Man, I was just done. I'm like, man,
I'm done. I can't take no more medicine. They tried
to give me all these ivy profens and you take
an aspring every day for the rest of your life,
but this won't happen again.

Speaker 3 (05:43):
I'm like, man, I can't keep going through this. I'm
twenty one.

Speaker 6 (05:45):
So I ended up going home and sitting down, and
when I sat down, I had all my medicines on
my table.

Speaker 3 (05:50):
I kicked the shit over.

Speaker 6 (05:51):
I'm like, I'm done with this, and I'm like, dang,
what I'm gonna do because in order to get over
what I'm going through, they offering me more medicines so something,
and just gave me the idea to get on YouTube.

Speaker 3 (06:01):
YouTube is just starting to kick off for real, for real.

Speaker 6 (06:04):
I got on there and I typed in natural ways
to heal erectile dysfunction. I'm a twenty one year old
man like I like to you know, I like to
hump too, So that's the main thing I'm really thinking about.
I'm like, how do I get rid of this NAT so.

Speaker 3 (06:18):
We can speak like that on her cool I'm like, man,
my dick can't get hard, So man, I need, I need.
You know what I'm saying. The thing I'm really focused
on is get my dick back hard. So google. I
google natural remedies for erectile dysfunction.

Speaker 6 (06:31):
This Caucasian white man that popping up, and you know,
I really couldn't resonate with what he was saying. But
YouTube it just came out with this suggestion where after
the first video go out, it suggests another one. Guess
who pop up? You got this tall, skinny man with
a gray beard and a bald head, and he's talking.
I'm doctor sabe Ya. Don't healed sickle cell a, NEMEA, leukemia,

(06:51):
HIV Loopis he going through all these things? I'm growing
up in the community that's been structured by another people
that's benefiting off of us, so they not to tell
us anything to liberate ourselves. So through my program and
the first thing I say is this nigga line. Ain't
no way these are incurable diseases. But I kept listening
to doctor sabe man and it resonated with my spirit.

(07:12):
Me I got addictive personality. So I ended up watching
him for like forty eight hours straight. For real, probably
seventy two hours.

Speaker 3 (07:19):
By the time I got done watching him.

Speaker 6 (07:20):
I knew his wife's name, his children name, I do
about the fig tree in New York.

Speaker 3 (07:24):
I got numbers and everything.

Speaker 6 (07:26):
So I'm calling all around trying to find doctor Sabe
or his wife to see what type of, you know,
natural remedies I can take to get rid of my
heart issues and to get rid of my erectile dysfunction.
I ended up getting in contact with my assistant talking
to them, and she was just telling me how to
change my diet and certain herbs to take. So you know,
I did that, and I started mixing up my concoctions
in my herbs, but it just seemed like it wasn't

(07:46):
enough information for me. So I basically enrolled myself into
a herbology class. Man went through herbology class started learning
by me. I was learning how to wildcraft my own herbs.
They did things like we had to do two hundred
hours of going out and scavenging through woods and finding
your own herbs and breaking them.

Speaker 3 (08:03):
Down drying them out.

Speaker 6 (08:05):
So I did all of that, mixing my own concoction,
and I went on one hundred and twenty day all
liquid diet. I probably messed up three days. I was
two hundred and sixty five pounds when I started. Literally
within the first week. Everybody think I'm exaggerating. Man, the
first week of me being on nothing but juices, watermelo, juice,
all melandet. Man, I literally lost like sixty pounds. Man,
I lost like sixty weeks and it was crazy. Look,

(08:27):
I lost so much weight. I lost so much waste. Right,
because weight and waste is the same thing. Because if
you look at what toxemia does to the cells, you
create something called adipost tissues, right atti post tissues, or
what they call it dipocites, is these fat cells and
it's basically cholesterol plaque that builds up around them. So
what the body does, the body is so smart. The

(08:48):
body instead of having all of those different types of
toxemia go into the blood stream, the more toxic you
taking you eat, you create these newer diposite cells or
these fatty cells, and what they do is they engulf toxemia.
So the more weight you contribute to, the more weight
that you bring onto the body is because you have
so many toxins. So the moment you start detoxing, getting
rid of the toxemia. You lose the weight with it

(09:10):
because the only reason why the fat cells are there
in the first place is to engulf the toxemia is
in the poison for it won't damage the bloodstream because
if you chase your blood potential hydrogen of what they
call blood pH you die of something called acidosis. So, Man,
I went on there's one hundred and twenty day juice fast.
The first week, I lost sixty pounds. Man, I lost
so much weight my skin was flabby and shit. So

(09:32):
then I had to figure out how to tighten my
skin back up. You know what I'm saying, how to
do lift low weights, but do more reps. So I'm
doing two hundred you know what I'm saying, I'm just
using a weight bench bar. I'm not even putting weights
on it. I'm lifting that motherfucker about two three hundred
times every rip to tighten my skin back up. I'm
going after my thyroid, my paar of thyroid to tighten
my skin back up. But it just showed me how

(09:53):
much toxins I had in my body. I'm one hundred
days in on all juice, still shitting out turns this
big and I'm like this, all this stuff is in me.

Speaker 3 (10:02):
Remember I'm twenty one, no, twenty one years of.

Speaker 6 (10:05):
All of that accumulation and equagulations of just mucous build
up of crystallization, calcium, all the bad foods I've been eating, alcohol,
snorting cocaine, just out here living this wild life. It
catches up to us. So I realized that we can't
keep violating nature. Eventually nature is going to violate your ass.

(10:27):
So I heal myself. Man, Once I heal myself, my
mama seen it. I went to the doctor. I didn't
have no more squad tishoe on my art. My kidneys
was functioning at one hundred percent. They were talking about dialysis. Man,
twenty one, kidney's now functioning one hundred percent. The doctor's wold,
they don't know what the hell happened. They asking me
who did it? They want to know the names. I'm like,
I did it myself. They laughing at me, thinking I'm playing.

(10:49):
So they just wrote it off as a miracle. So, man,
my mama end up healing.

Speaker 4 (10:52):
My mama of.

Speaker 6 (10:53):
Hypertension, high blood pressure. She had some things going on.
Went to my sister, healing my family. I was a
part of a gang black monster game. Yeah, Yet to
my brothers out there in Saint Louis, ended up healing
a couple of brothers that was in the game that
I was with. And then Man, this man had reached
out to me on Facebook. It was a basketball player.
Ended up healing a basketball player. Can't say his name. Man,

(11:13):
And he paid for my first seminar. Man, and he
gave me a lot of money, paid for my first seminar,
told me he believed in me.

Speaker 3 (11:20):
I kicked off my first seminar.

Speaker 4 (11:21):
Man.

Speaker 6 (11:21):
We thirteen years later, man selling millions of products, have
hundreds of thousands of healing testimonies, and we thriving. Man,
trying to reconstructure the community that these people then took
from us.

Speaker 4 (11:33):
So you think by you getting sick you found your purpose?

Speaker 2 (11:36):
Man?

Speaker 6 (11:37):
Just straight Well, So I found my purpose in prison
for real. The sickness slowed me down, but I still
kept doing things after that.

Speaker 3 (11:43):
Prison is what really made me like, man, what is
you doing?

Speaker 6 (11:47):
So I think both of them put togethers what really
put me on my path to greatness.

Speaker 3 (11:51):
Because I thought I was gonna be a rapper.

Speaker 6 (11:52):
I can sing, I can rap, I could play instruments,
I could play the piano by ear.

Speaker 3 (11:57):
You know what I'm saying. I'm going on tours. I'm
opening up for people.

Speaker 6 (12:00):
I thought my lifestyle was your typical nigga growing up
in the hood.

Speaker 3 (12:04):
I'm gonna be a famous rapper.

Speaker 2 (12:05):
Man.

Speaker 6 (12:06):
That heart attack hit me and they put them clings
on me. Man, it changed my whole projectory of life. Man,
my whole projectory of life. I'm like, this can't be
what it is. And I tried my artist to like
get away from it. And that's why I always say,
a true helo don't a true healer.

Speaker 3 (12:21):
Don't choose to be a helo nigga. You run away from.

Speaker 6 (12:24):
A responsibility like this, I was running, man, the most
hot kept pulling me back, kept pulling me back. And
I remember I had this dream while I lost everything.
I lost everything. I used to go, I'm a part
of the he bred community. I used to have a congregation.

Speaker 3 (12:36):
It was like twosands of two thousands of us.

Speaker 6 (12:39):
We used to read the Bible. Keep shibot all of that. Man,
And I remember, Man, I used to I was living
double lifestyles. I used to teach the Bible talk about
how you not supposed to degrade women but then I
go on the road and go somewhere and open up.
At this point of my manager was the same manager
as k Stylish booting me down. This one booting me
down was popping. Man, I'm literally shit. By day Saturday,

(13:01):
I'm talking about how you have to uplift the so
called black woman. She is the godd and she's the queen.
You know, she's the nurturing people to the children. Without her,
the family structure will collapse. But then Sunday, I'm at
the club talking about watching show ass off.

Speaker 3 (13:17):
You know what I'm saying.

Speaker 6 (13:18):
So living, I'm living this double lifestyle, man. And I
remember my brother was like, Man, you're gonna have to
give up something you can't be.

Speaker 3 (13:28):
Yeah, you have to give up something, man. Yeah.

Speaker 6 (13:31):
And that day I really just gave up everything. I said,
you know what, I'm finna pursue this. I see what
the most I was doing to me and took everything
from me. From me, let me just pursue this healing journey.
So I, you know, went end up getting my certificate
or certification about chemistry, and man, I just been taken
off since then.

Speaker 4 (13:48):
Man, how many people you lost do to people's thing?

Speaker 3 (13:51):
Like man, this nigga cul cool man.

Speaker 6 (13:53):
Literally, uh, all my all of my homeboys I grew
up with. It's a few of them that changed over though.
So it's a bittersweet moment because of a lot of
brothers like this nigga crazy or they nigga's a Muslim
now not a Muslim whatsoever, don't even really believe in
the religion. So I lost hundreds of people. Man Like
I used to run with a gang that was like
eight hundred brothers. You know what I'm saying, We should
step in the club and fill the whole club up.

(14:14):
So a lot of them ain't around the more a
bunch of them dead. But it's a bunch of brothers
I came up with that's listening to the information. Now
they called me crazy back then. That's hitting me up
and like, bro, you've been right. So it's a bittersweet
moment to see them come back around. But man, I
don'et lost a lot of people, especially the drugs and
just death and gag violence, you know what I'm saying,
So just your typical nigga shit, and I'm just tired

(14:35):
of the typical nigga shit. I used to Yah, We'll
keep you focused. We'll keep me focused. It is looking
at the community. You know what I'm saying. It's something
called the Tyrone maids rat experiment. Y'all need to look
that up. It's called the Tyrone's Maids rat experiment. It
went down in nineteen forty. He ended up getting it
from another psychiatrist in eighteen forty. It's called the Tyrone

(14:55):
Maids rat experiment. And what they did was they took
a few hundred ratchs, right, and they splitted them, and
they divided them. And what they did was they created
an environment for both of these rats to live in.
And one subject, they took about one hundred rats, and
they put it in an environment where it had cleaned water.
They put it in an environment where it had a
right amount of space for the ratskin, you know. Get Basically,

(15:17):
if they wanted to be by themselves, they could. They
made sure that it was good food in there that
didn't have any type of poisons put inside the foods.
They even gave them space to breathe, to go upstairs, downstairs.
They just gave them this abundant environment. They put these
rats in there. And mind you, these the same rats
with the same genetical molecular structure when there's nothing different.
They both came from the same mama, the same daddy,

(15:39):
the same family tree.

Speaker 4 (15:40):
Right.

Speaker 3 (15:41):
So they took these rats, they put one in a
good environment.

Speaker 6 (15:43):
Then they put the other one hundred rats in a
bad environment where they didn't get water. If they did
get water, the water actually had acids in it. They
made sure they didn't give them the regular food. I
think they gave them like cat food or something like that,
with a bunch of pellets that was inside of them.

Speaker 3 (15:57):
Right.

Speaker 6 (15:57):
They stuck them on top of each other, and they
made sure that the space was very very small.

Speaker 3 (16:02):
They never cleaned any poop out of the maize.

Speaker 6 (16:04):
They never cleaned they pissed out of the maize, and
they left them in there. They left them in there
for four months, and they watched how they behavior changed.
They went back and they got the actual rats that
came from the good environment and they put them in
the maize. They ended up going through the maize very
very fast. Then they ended up going to get the
rats that they put in a bad environment and put
them in the maize, and they didn't know how to

(16:25):
even make it through the first section of the maize.

Speaker 3 (16:28):
So he like, maybe this is a coincidence. So he
did it. So what he did was he switched the rats.

Speaker 6 (16:33):
He took the rats that was smart, that made it
through the maize, that was in the good environment, and
he put them in a bad environment. Then he took
the rats that was in a bad environment. There was
dummies that couldn't make it through the maze at all,
and he put them in a good environment. He waited
four months, then he took them back out. The same
rat that was good and smart, that was in a
good environment, that he put in a bad environment.

Speaker 3 (16:53):
Now they couldn't make it through the maize.

Speaker 6 (16:55):
The same rat that was in the bad environments there
was dummies that couldn't make it through the maze. He
put them in a good environment. Now they making it
through the maize and making it through life.

Speaker 3 (17:02):
Just fine.

Speaker 6 (17:03):
So he said, damn, it ain't the genetics, ain't it
ain't who these people is as individuals.

Speaker 3 (17:08):
It's the community.

Speaker 6 (17:10):
It's the environment that you put these biological entities in
that changes the way they interact.

Speaker 3 (17:15):
With the environment and with themselves.

Speaker 6 (17:17):
Did you know he did another six month experiments on
the same rats that he left in the van environment
that's what they started doing, killing each other.

Speaker 3 (17:24):
Some of the male rats.

Speaker 6 (17:25):
Started humping other male rats homosexuality. Look the other rats
that was at the at the bottom that didn't have
the food.

Speaker 3 (17:32):
These niggas went.

Speaker 6 (17:33):
Upstairs to the other rats and started robbing them for
food and water.

Speaker 3 (17:37):
I said, damn, this sounded like.

Speaker 6 (17:38):
Your typical projects. Don't just sound like the PJS. This
is a real rat experiment. So it made me start
a question. I had to sit back and really rub
my chin. They turned it to robbing homes. It's a
survival it's a survival mechanism at this point. Now check
this out, though, Goddess, it was a selective group of
female rats.

Speaker 3 (17:57):
And I really want you all to look this up
when y'all get home. They watched this. It will fuck
your mind up.

Speaker 6 (18:02):
The female rats, they started pampering themselves. They used to
let their children just do what the fuck ever, they
started pimpering themselves.

Speaker 3 (18:09):
All they was worried about hood rats.

Speaker 6 (18:12):
These was the hood rats. The hood rats, right exactly.
So the hood rats gonna quote that the hood rats.
All they did was pamper themselves. The only thing that
they worried about was they First they worried about they wait,
they never they didn't worry about their children. Theymore, they
weren't worried about the mama papa rat. The only thing
that they focused on was their actual selves. And then

(18:32):
the father rats started going to other different parts of
the actual rat experiment cage and started.

Speaker 3 (18:37):
Like bullying on the younger children.

Speaker 6 (18:40):
It was crazy, man, Look it gets so deep when
you really start watching it. Even rape rapists started happening
in rape with the older male rats in the community
started raping the younger males in the younger of the
younger female rats.

Speaker 3 (18:54):
Same thing that happens in the.

Speaker 6 (18:55):
Ghetto, where where a young girl would get touched on
by they uncle or young mail or get touched on
by their uncle or they auntie.

Speaker 3 (19:03):
This happens.

Speaker 6 (19:03):
So it's like, damn, is this rat experiment that's going
on in tyrone rat mais experiments the same shit that's
going on with us in these communities. And then you
have to ask yourself projects in the projects, and who
built these communities.

Speaker 3 (19:18):
We didn't build these communities.

Speaker 6 (19:20):
We ain't put the liquor stores in these communities, We
ain't put dope in here. You got something called Russian
ak forty sevens. Niggas ain't never been in Russia. You
got Japanese SK's. We ain't never been in Japan. We
got gardnads that come from We got all these different
things in the community of America that's outside of America.

Speaker 3 (19:37):
When niggas ain't never left the block, how was they
getting there? This shit was set up.

Speaker 6 (19:42):
So once I realized, like, damn me and my people,
it's in a rat maize. This is a project we
were being psychologically experimented on, That's when I said, Okay.

Speaker 3 (19:52):
This is my motivation. It's trying to break the psychological
change over people. Yep.

Speaker 6 (19:56):
So once I fully got myself up out of it,
my whole mission is I'm gonna die for this ship.
Everybody that I come in contact with is gonna hear
this message. And my message is wake the fuck up
Black America.

Speaker 4 (20:09):
Mm hmm. Else, what about them fate will Nigga Like.

Speaker 3 (20:19):
Yeah, boy, it's a lot of them.

Speaker 6 (20:21):
And I blame that on the environment too, because we
have to realize, you know, you have something fact, you
have something called trans transgenerational epigenetic inheritance, right, it's called
transgenerat transgend, transgenerational. You know this just come down through
the genealogies of people. It comes from your ancestors. EPI

(20:42):
means to be beyond genetics, is above your genetic cold.
So transgenerational epigenetics is basically when you take on the characteristics,
whether it be gifts, whether it be talents, whether it
be spiritually or whether it be mentally manifestations of those
who come before you.

Speaker 3 (20:58):
You see what I'm saying.

Speaker 6 (20:59):
So fuck niggas is not a nigg Fuck niggas is
not a new thing. Fuck niggas been around since the
din of ages. You see what I'm saying. So we
just have to understand that we can't keep blaming. So
I see a lot of people. I see a lot
of people blaming the black community for the black issues
and problems. Now, there do become a point where we
start getting this information out so much. But if you

(21:22):
look at the beginning of this, we didn't create these communities,
we didn't create this environment. We are still suffering psychologically
from things that happened to us hundreds and hundreds and
hundreds of years ago. So when you see a fuck nigga,
a fuck nigga is just a nigga that stuck.

Speaker 3 (21:36):
Between the two.

Speaker 6 (21:37):
He don't know how to truly choose, so his only
way of manifestation and operating through the matrix is being
a fuck nigga to himself. Usually, fuck niggas is not
fuck niggas to the nigga that's next to them. They
are fuck nigga to themselves.

Speaker 3 (21:48):
First. You know what I'm saying, And that's why I
don't get.

Speaker 6 (21:50):
People that talk about other people or tap people that
down other people. You ain't doing nothing but down in
these things in yourself. All of us live inside of
our own heads in the first place, If I take
all the senses away from you right now, brother, what
would you be if I took away your eyes sense
and you couldn't see us, you'll hear senses and you
couldn't hear me. Yo, taste sense, you can't taste your food,
your touch sense, you couldn't feel what the fuck was

(22:12):
going on in this environment?

Speaker 3 (22:13):
What would you be? You will be nothing but pure consciousness.

Speaker 6 (22:16):
What gives consciousness actually life, and what gives consciousness the
way to experience reality is these bodies.

Speaker 3 (22:24):
So they have found out a way to hijack our bodies,
and they do it through dominus down through the music.

Speaker 6 (22:29):
They do it through dombinus down to the foods that
were eating, and they do it through poisoning or water,
and they do it through literally pushing us in certain
communities and keeping us from expressing ourselves or traveling outside
of these communities. There's more niggas that's in jail mentally
outside of the actual jail cell, than there is niggas
in jail that's actually inside.

Speaker 3 (22:47):
The prison systems.

Speaker 4 (22:48):
Oh go.

Speaker 6 (22:51):
So, like I said, wake the fuck up, Black America.
That's what we're here for. In me and this is
a message to all of us. We need to start
holding everybody accountable. Everybody wants me to come on these
shows and talk about food. It's deeper than the food.
It's deeper than the food. It's deeper, you know what
I'm saying.

Speaker 3 (23:15):
Talk about were all.

Speaker 4 (23:21):
Let's do it.

Speaker 3 (23:23):
Let's do it so you know.

Speaker 6 (23:24):
So, I just think we need to start holding each
other each other accountable.

Speaker 3 (23:28):
Uh you know, from the rap music on down, we
see that.

Speaker 6 (23:31):
The rappers, uh is, they have a lot to say
and they are the ones who mold in the shape
in the community, especially the younger brothers and sisters that
that's growing up you know, in this generation today, and
we see that they're living their lives based off of
what these rappers are saying in their lyrics and what
we are seeing, you know, me healing a bunch of
rappers and being around and my manager and my brother can.

Speaker 3 (23:52):
Attest for that.

Speaker 6 (23:52):
We heal a bunch of rappers from a lot of
diseases that's going on in the community. But we see
that they're not even living these lifestyles that they put
in and the music. But the younger ones is listening
to this shit and they're portraying it, and they're manifesting
these things into their daily reality, and they're the ones
suffering from this shit. So now we need to start
holding them accountable. Until you change your lyrics and until

(24:14):
this shit start promoting life in the communities. We're not
buying another one of your damn motherfucking digital downloads, and
we're not coming to none of your concerts.

Speaker 3 (24:23):
I bet you the lyrics were changed then.

Speaker 6 (24:25):
Same thing with the black women in the community, Same
thing with the black males. We have been de industrialized
and we have been separated as a unit. We only
can function properly is when we together as a community.

Speaker 3 (24:36):
Why you think gang banging works so.

Speaker 6 (24:38):
Well for niggas because fpgen transgenerational epigenetics, inheritance. That's what
we did when we was in the lands of Africas.
That's what we did. We are tribal people, that's what
we did in ancient Americas. All we know is clan,
so we do it good. Is just since these people
have put these things in our environment, we are operating
with them wrong.

Speaker 4 (24:56):
So how do you.

Speaker 5 (24:57):
Think, How hard do you think it'll be to take
that stand, like you said, to threaten these rappers and
these artists and these public figures with the abandonment of
the support if they don't start pushing a better message.

Speaker 3 (25:12):
So I think it'd be so me.

Speaker 6 (25:14):
I don't want to say it's gonna be hard, because
I know that words are powerful and we can manifest
things just by the tonation of our voices and our sounds.
I will say it will be a little difficult, But
I think that if you find you have to find
men that's not afraid of death, because that's what they always.

Speaker 3 (25:29):
Use against us.

Speaker 6 (25:29):
Death and a negro will sell they sould for death.
A negro would sell out they brother for death. A
negro would sell out their lifetime soul partner and friend
for death. So I think once we start teaching, I
think it's gonna take education. We need to revamp the
education platforms and the education schools and teach what true
education is. You know a lot of people think education

(25:51):
is just going and learning your ABC's, your one, two, three's,
and your math and reading fundamentals. Now this fundamental shit
that we do need to learn, but it's things that's
on top of their truth. Education is meeting the needs
for your tribing for your people. So like you have
to look into your community and see what the problem
is and what's going on right now. One thing is
so called black on black crime. And the reason why

(26:11):
I'm saying so called because black is the color of
men your shirt.

Speaker 3 (26:13):
Of course we're not black.

Speaker 6 (26:14):
We're copper melanated aboriginal beings from the Americas.

Speaker 3 (26:18):
And some is track.

Speaker 6 (26:20):
But I think the first thing is education. Education is
meeting the needs of a people. So we have to
look into the community and look at all the things
that the people need or things that are destroying and
crushing the community. One of them is black on black crime.
So then you have to get to the root cause
why where is this coming from? And why is black
people robbing black people? Obviously you robbing somebody because you
need something and there's a system that's in play that's

(26:43):
not giving it to you. So now you have to
start creating these institutes and these systems that create programs
to give people. Because if a brother need five hundred
dollars a pay his rent, and he putting on his
black gloves and his black mask and he got his gun,
he going out to get it. If I can be
an intercess or a mediator between the point of him
going to the victim and him picking up his gun,
if I can meet him right here and like, look, nigga,

(27:04):
here go five hundred dollars.

Speaker 3 (27:06):
You want to keep this coming.

Speaker 6 (27:07):
That's how you keep this coming in what is the
likely chances of him still going to risk his life,
being away from his children, going to prison for the
rest of his life, going to kill a victim, and right,
he ain't gonna do it.

Speaker 3 (27:17):
He gonna take the five. He's gonna be like, look,
show me the way. So that's education. Education, You gotta
have that five. Yeah, yeah, yeah, so.

Speaker 6 (27:32):
But see, and that's why they're so when you whenever
you're build in a community. There are certain structures and
there's certain functionalities that going to play. Every community have
to have food.

Speaker 3 (27:44):
Yeah, look so, but look there's a war coming. Yeah,
there's a war coming.

Speaker 6 (27:49):
And in this war it's gonna be the righteous versus
the evil, and as as fucked up as we don't
want to accept it, it's gonna be a lot of
us versus us.

Speaker 3 (27:59):
Now and so something like that.

Speaker 6 (28:00):
I'm cool with that because this is for the future
survival of my children, of my community, of my people.
You either got to get with that shit or get gone.
So we can't act like the inevitable is not gonna happen.
You know, the more and more consciousness is rising. You know,
brothers and sisters are speaking out. This is becoming a
new rap shit. This conscious shit is becoming a new wave.

(28:21):
Herbalist is popping up everywhere. Thought leaders, critical thinkers is
popping up everywhere.

Speaker 3 (28:26):
You see little bitty.

Speaker 6 (28:27):
Malcolm X's and Lewis very Coin's running around this motherfucker rappit.
So the more and more reraised this high energetic frequency,
the more and more the low energetic thought forms is
going to be thinking of ways to come back.

Speaker 3 (28:38):
This is spiritual warfare.

Speaker 6 (28:40):
So civil war is coming between the so called Black
righteousness people and the so called Black evil people.

Speaker 3 (28:48):
That's coming.

Speaker 6 (28:49):
So for the ones that got they man made up
and can't get right, I'm just here to say this message.
I have over one hundred thousand vegans that don't eat meat,
that don't drink, that don't smoke, that read every day,
that work out, that that that actually practice combat training,
that know how to use a gun, that know how
to use their mind. They dick, it's not they god.

(29:10):
They belly is not their god. You don't want to
go to war with a nigga who know who they
truly is. So get your mind right or don't you
see what I'm saying.

Speaker 3 (29:22):
But the war is coming. The war is coming.

Speaker 2 (29:25):
So you're saying before, before, before dealing with anything else,
we gotta and I like that, we gotta deal with
us whatever we have to.

Speaker 6 (29:32):
Do before we deal with And it's supposed to be
like that anyway, every community deal with themselves.

Speaker 3 (29:37):
But so called Black America.

Speaker 6 (29:39):
When you look at the Jewish community, they have a
Jewish police station, they have Jewish banks, they have Jewish priests.
I mean, So this is what I was trying to say,
whenever you build any community, it has these four fundamental principles.
Everyone have to have an education system or what you
would call a school. Everybody have to have a hospital
or what you would call a healing mechanism.

Speaker 3 (29:58):
You see what I'm saying.

Speaker 6 (29:59):
Everybody else that will have to have economics, meaning you
have to have your own bank. And then, last, last,
but not least, food and water. Do we own our
food and water?

Speaker 3 (30:08):
No, we don't.

Speaker 6 (30:10):
Half of us is just now getting into black forming.
So we need to learn how to grow our own food.
We need to learn how to siphon our own water
from the geo depths of the earth. We need to
learn how to build our own education institutes. We need
to learn how to use money or use a way
of exchange, because money ain't even really the way of exchange.

Speaker 3 (30:26):
We can do bartering trading.

Speaker 6 (30:27):
If I'm growing one hundred thousand apples and you grow
on a hundred potatoes, where do we need money at?

Speaker 3 (30:32):
Let's make an exchange. So and that's why education is
so important.

Speaker 6 (30:36):
These are things that we need to start putting back
in the community before we can get our identity back.

Speaker 3 (30:40):
The problem is brouh. We don't know who we are.

Speaker 6 (30:43):
We don't know who we are, we don't know where
we are, we don't know what we are, we don't
know why we are, and we don't know when we are.
When we start answering those questions, it's gonna make us
not only look at ourselves different when we look at
our reflections, but it's gonna make me look at you,
you and you different.

Speaker 3 (30:58):
The love is different.

Speaker 6 (30:59):
Me knowing that I'm a god, me knowing that I'm
a king, that I come from royalty, I automatically look at.

Speaker 3 (31:04):
You like you're God, a king that come from royalty.

Speaker 6 (31:06):
Right, That's why I greeted you peace, goddess, no matter
what you're going through and how you operating, because we
see gods can fall and operate out of their lower
selves and sometimes but if I keep reminding you who
you are, just maybe prayerfully and hopefully, that's going to
ignite something deep within your self conscious mind to make
you change your fucking reality.

Speaker 2 (31:24):
I mean not always in life, But now do you
stray away from and all that stuff?

Speaker 3 (31:30):
No?

Speaker 6 (31:30):
No, not at all, because again, so again you you
speak how you feel. You know what I'm saying sometimes
me being in a situation or environment like this, knowing
Big Facts, Me and my manager, we watch it. We
went through everything, me saying, me saying nigga, will have
a nigga listening sometimes, But right after I hit you
with that nigga, yeah, King Peace, God, now I'm reintroducing

(31:52):
something else to you. You know, I speak two languages.
I speak English and I speak fluent Hebrew, read and
write and everything. So you know, I'm realizing that the
words is not always the powerful thing that comes from
your mouth. It's the expressions with the intentions. So you know,
Big Facts deal with a lot of rappers. The Big
Facts deal with a lot of hip hop news, hip

(32:13):
hop TV. Y'all have a very very large platform, and
it's a bunch of younger generations that listen and love
the trap, that love all of so they identify with nigga.
So I'm gonna say nigga to catch your attention, but
I'm gonna let you know you not a nigga, You
a god. You see what I'm saying. So you got
to learn how to You got to learn how to
swag shit out sometimes and be able to identify where
you had read the room and then that's when you deliver.

Speaker 2 (32:35):
Who do you think like that's a people that people
should look to for knowledge, like maybe a nineteen Keys
and others like people.

Speaker 3 (32:43):
Shout out to nineteen Keys. He's from Saint Louis as well.
South side. It's another Saint Lewis brother.

Speaker 4 (32:47):
Brother.

Speaker 2 (32:47):
There's another Saint Lewis brother right there. So somebody like that,
maybe spit a few of those names.

Speaker 4 (32:52):
I got you.

Speaker 2 (32:52):
And if you're comfortable or uncomfortable, no't matter, but maybe
there's a few names that you feel like, hey, we
should stray away from that type of energy and that
type of knowledge.

Speaker 3 (32:59):
I got you.

Speaker 6 (32:59):
So the first the first thame you said, the first
thing you said was a nineteen Keys. That's a good
brother to get a lot of you know, he's a
critical thinker.

Speaker 3 (33:08):
That's a good.

Speaker 6 (33:09):
Person to learn how to analyze and learn how to think. Uh,
doctor Amos Wilson, y'all look him up. That's a psychiatrist,
a black so called black psychiatrist. Amazing doctor John Henry Clark.
That's another one.

Speaker 2 (33:21):
Man.

Speaker 3 (33:22):
Got literature out here.

Speaker 6 (33:23):
Books out here show you how to move and groove,
how to operate within your environment. Of course, Malcolm X
look up a lot of his lectures, Doctor Khali Muhammad.
These are another brothers that you can look up and
look up and look into. Yeah, sometimes you gotta know.
Sometimes you gotta gotta you gotta make sure.

Speaker 3 (33:43):
Yeah, so uh them them are them are people you
know that.

Speaker 6 (33:46):
I think though, and I think you know, reaching nineteen
keys is most definitely a good one. But even for me,
I will even go higher, like who talked your nineteen keys?
You know what I'm saying, who taught your yall keys?

Speaker 3 (33:58):
Which is me? Them the people I'm trying to get to.

Speaker 6 (34:00):
So everyone I just named or older ancestors that is
no longer with me, Like who I was personally talked
by is doctor Like Leila Africa. You know what I'm saying,
made the most high rested saw whet give him a
moment of silence to him and doctor Saber real fast
I shave, So you see what I'm saying. So the
whole thing is go try your hardest to always go
to the source of things. Not saying Keys is not

(34:21):
the source of his own knowledge. He's smart enough and
he's intellectual enough to take the knowledge that he got
from experience and then from these other teachers and make
his own thin up out of it. But you know,
I really like reaching deep into the depths of knowledge.
And them the ones that got the great beards man,
it's something about them brothers that's just hard and they
like concrete man, and they gonna be here forever and never,
just like me and Keys is making our mark now

(34:42):
and our name is gonna be mentioned millenniums after were gone.

Speaker 2 (34:46):
And there it was some people maybe I don't know
musically outside of music that she's like, not necessarily that
we're hating on their message or hating on them, but
some people that you just like, you might tell your
sees or your family, like, now we need to kind
of stay with us.

Speaker 6 (34:58):
Anybody that's talking about degrading the black woman, anybody anybody
that's talking about chilling your brothers and sisters, robbing, doing drugs,
popping Molly's doing Zan's no matter who it is.

Speaker 3 (35:12):
I'm not here to discriminate anybody any name.

Speaker 6 (35:17):
So now the next question need to be this, then
once we take that away, because some people, even if
this message reach a million, only about one hundred gonna
really take heed to what we're saying. So now once
we take them away from that environment. You have to
put something in place back there. There's an actual brother.
His name is Free Soul. He's a conscious artist, one

(35:40):
of the he's from Philadelphia, one of the dopest artists
that I don't ever heard with the consciousness. He spelled
his name f R three three s O L.

Speaker 3 (35:48):
You know what I'm saying.

Speaker 6 (35:49):
He didn't pay me to say this or do this.
This was all based off of your question. That's somebody
that raps amazing. It's another brother from Detroit named Courtney Bell.
Courtney Bell from the Detroit He been running around with
six nine a lot lately.

Speaker 3 (36:02):
You know what I'm saying.

Speaker 6 (36:03):
It's another conscious artist that don't speak about degrading the
so called black goddess, that don't talk about killing his
brothers or sisters, that don't talk about popping Molly's raping,
and don't talk about these because these things is what's
molding and shaping the minds of the youth.

Speaker 3 (36:19):
You see what I'm saying.

Speaker 6 (36:19):
So like we have to understand there's a quote that
says food for thought, it's more than just what you're
putting into your body. It's what you're putting into your
seven senses. We eat more than just food, you know,
you eat your environment. So if we can change the environment,
we can change the projectory and we can change the
way that we're living in this reality.

Speaker 3 (36:36):
Man.

Speaker 4 (36:37):
Shit, what about.

Speaker 2 (36:40):
In some type of fairness, they say, if you knew better,
you do better. What about the people who have not
been exposed, They haven't been awakened on, They didn't have
a trauma that you had to enlighten them, Like, what's
your approach?

Speaker 6 (36:51):
My approach to that is doing what we're doing now,
coming here on these airways and just spitting the raw
fact truth and hoping they get it. And if they don't,
hope that they experience that they receive because everybody gotta
deal with the universe, just hoping that that won't be
their last experience. Maybe it be a scare straight tactic
like it was with me, because we all need to
bump our heads. I don't believe in, you know, having

(37:12):
children out here and you're just giving them your wealth.
I believe that you need to work your children hard.
I believe that you need to be hard on your children.
I believe that the world is hard. I believe that
society is hard. So in order to truly truly raise
a high quality man and a high quality woman. They're
gonna need to experience some type of struggle in life.
So you know, I'm not here to stand between you

(37:33):
and your corma. I step out of the way and
let you get that because hopefully, going through that traumatic
korma experience, you were able to rearrange the way your
neurological aspects is actually manifesting out here, and you can
truly truly start walking in your true path and in
your true nature.

Speaker 4 (37:49):
They say anything else when I got real, often say
I'm really kind of stuck listening to you. Thank you, dope,
thank I appreciate that. What I find to say is
they give that to this food.

Speaker 3 (38:05):
Yeah, let's do it.

Speaker 4 (38:05):
I know the niggas he wants you to tell. You
know what I'm saying.

Speaker 6 (38:07):
I want to get some of that shit like what's
the best like peels and shit like vitamins that you're
supposed to take likes a vegan. So as a vegan,
So what happens is when you when you on so
for instance, everybody talk about the protein protein protein protein
is a myth. When you look at a protein, a
protein is what you will call a complex amino acid structure.
We don't need proteins. First, we have to establish that

(38:27):
so called black people, who I will call the indigenous
Aboriginals of.

Speaker 3 (38:31):
The Americas, which would beat us.

Speaker 6 (38:33):
A lot of us think that we from Africa, and
a lot of us is not from Africa. We've been
here for thousands and thousands and thousands of years.

Speaker 3 (38:39):
When you look.

Speaker 6 (38:40):
At our biology and our molecular makeup, we're totally different
from any other species on planet Earth. Our blood is different,
our DNA is different. Our bone structure, we have more
bones decity than any other race of people, more bone dysttery,
Our noses a wider, there's a more neuro Our ears
are smaller than theirs.

Speaker 3 (38:59):
Everything about us, it's totally different.

Speaker 6 (39:00):
We have something called milano sites or malana in sites,
what you'll call melanin or carbon. They only have something
called fio melanin. So once you realize that we are
a specimen of a people, we are literally the chosen
people of the Creator or who we call God, then
that's gonna automatically have you. Okay, If we are special people,
that means we need a special type of food. The
one thing we don't need is what you will call

(39:22):
complex amino acidstructures. We need simple amino acidstructures. And these
things come from your fruits and your vegetables. I don't
want to get on here and push that we need
supplements or we need peels, because we don't. What we
need is holistic food to have all the vitamins and
all the nutrients and the bioflabonoids that's in it.

Speaker 3 (39:38):
So we need to.

Speaker 6 (39:38):
Focus on growing our own food. Now people don't have
their own land, so they're gonna have to go shop.
Go shop at a local farmers' market. Make sure that
you know the history behind your food. But this goes
back into the community women. Men don't know the history
behind a woman, and they hit them the same night.
They don't ask who their mother is, who their father is.

Speaker 3 (39:55):
They hit them raw, have a whole baby bomb and
fuck their whole life up.

Speaker 6 (39:58):
We're doing the same thing with the foods where we're
not testing the foods. We're not wondering who the mother
and the father of this food is. We don't know
if it's been hybrided, if it's been homosexually hybrid.

Speaker 3 (40:06):
It's the same thing with the weed. You know what I'm saying,
homosexual man, vegetables, fruits, all of that. Yes, yes, you
literally can.

Speaker 6 (40:13):
Yes, you can hybrid and do certain genetic selections with
the embryums of plants or plant embryoms, and with male
plants in the way the pollinators go and pollinate that
create a specific hyghbrid that can mess and tinker with
your DNA and your genes. So, you know, processed food
equal a processed nigga, Organic food equal organic king. So

(40:36):
you asking a question about you know, vegetable about basically
vital minerals, what you would call vital a means you
will literally get them holistically from your fruits, your vegetables,
and your herbs.

Speaker 3 (40:46):
So I just give y'all few of.

Speaker 6 (40:47):
Them organically organic kale that don't have any herbal sized,
insecticized and pesticize on there.

Speaker 3 (40:54):
It's good.

Speaker 6 (40:54):
It got calciummentum, it got magnesiummentium, it got potassiumental that
it'd be for you.

Speaker 3 (41:00):
You see what I'm saying.

Speaker 6 (41:01):
You have other things fruits, berries and melons. Fruits are
very very energetic. If you actually look at the energetic
things of fruits and vegetables, when you look at them,
they yield energy So anything that's living or they have
a biological impression or blueprint in life, has an energy
market that.

Speaker 3 (41:19):
Comes from it. One of them is fruits.

Speaker 6 (41:21):
If you look, if you eat every ten units of fruits,
it actually yields twelve thousand anstrums of energy.

Speaker 3 (41:26):
That's the unit of measurement.

Speaker 6 (41:28):
That's twelve thousand ancients of energy that you get when
you eat every ten units of fruits. When you eat
every ten units of vegetables, that give you nine thousand
ancras of energy. And the reason why I'm talking about
energy is because energy is important. That's how we're able
to sit here and talk. It's called ATP identity triphosphate.
This is what gives you the vitality for life. It
gives you the will to live. You know, it gives

(41:48):
you purpose. Without this ATP, you can't produce energy, and
you can't move signals that moves and fold.

Speaker 3 (41:54):
Amino acids that give you life. Right, So check this out.

Speaker 6 (41:58):
If you get meat and you actually measure the ten
units of meat, it only measures three thousand ancients of energy.
You see what I'm saying. So we just went from
three all the way to nine. When you get to
vegetables all the way to twelve when you get to fruit.
So everybody asks, what'sct the perfect food to eat? It's
gonna be your fruits and your vegetables. And then if
you look at the anatomy of our bodies, the anatomy

(42:20):
of our bodies do not look like felines. They do
not look like cornivores. Cornivores are actually horizontal. We are vertical,
We are upright people. Cornivores are vertical. They sit loaded
the ground. Cornervores have long knines. Cornivores also have big
stomachs that have higher hydrocoloric acid in their stomachs. Our
coloric acid in our stomach can't even break down these

(42:40):
complex amino acids that you call protein.

Speaker 3 (42:43):
That's why a lot of people that.

Speaker 6 (42:44):
Eat meat got bad digestion, they get bad heartburned because
a lot of that meat turn into something called puke
to faction. When you eat fruits and vegetables, they go
through a process called fermentation.

Speaker 3 (42:54):
You see that.

Speaker 6 (42:55):
So if you look at us, what I did was
I went into nature, and I looked around, and I said,
who looks like me?

Speaker 3 (43:00):
Who's the closest thing that looks like me?

Speaker 6 (43:02):
And what are they eating? I looked at the cats.
They don't look like meat. They was eating what meat.
I looked at the cows and all the herbivores. They
don't look like me. These three ton animals, they eat
nothing but grass. Everybody asks, he bears close, very closely assimulated.
But what I found was that damn gorilla man. And
when you look at the gorilla, the gorilla by nature, yes,

(43:25):
the primeate keena.

Speaker 3 (43:27):
Prime keenum, or naturally frugivores.

Speaker 6 (43:31):
So I said, damn, the primeate closely assimilates with the
so called human body. Right, And I looked at the teeth. Now,
they do have canines longer than ours. But the reason
why they have long canines is for battle, you see
what I'm saying. So they evolved to grow them. But
when you look at them in a natural nature state,
especially when they're in the low plains and not high
in the mountains, they eat fruits and they eat berries,

(43:51):
or sometimes they eat bamboo juts and stuff like that,
but they do not eat meat. And then you look
at them, they're the most muscular, some of the most
strongest primates.

Speaker 3 (43:59):
In the act. She will jungle.

Speaker 6 (44:01):
So where did they get their protein? What about a
horse or cow that don't eat meat. All they eat
is hay and grass or what you were or what
you would call, uh, what you call horsetail grass or
horse shaving grass, what you know alf alpha sprouts.

Speaker 3 (44:14):
They can get up to three tons, but they don't
eat meat.

Speaker 6 (44:18):
So we just, you know, I just don't want us
to get very very stuck on the vitamins and stuck
on the capsules before we work on the diet. If
we can change our diet into a living and start
eating correctly, we won't even need the.

Speaker 3 (44:29):
Capsules or need the vital minerals.

Speaker 6 (44:32):
But what I'm gonna do for y'all, though y'all said,
I really really do funck with y'all energy, Me and
my manager gonna we're gonna ship ship y'all a lot
of stuff once we leave and we have it overnight.
It and I got man, I got this new I
got this new uh capsule out called coherence Man. And
it's with all of the b complexes that we was
talking about before we started this transmission. And it got lions,
mains mushrooms in it, corterceps mushrooms, res sheet rayshet mushrooms, trumpets,

(44:56):
everything in there.

Speaker 3 (44:57):
For your brain.

Speaker 6 (44:57):
It actually grows new dent dripes and melon and neural
transmit emitters inside of your brain to have you focus
your memory gonna be like, how y'all think I'm up
here spitting like this? I'm on that coherence? You know
what I'm saying? Straight up?

Speaker 3 (45:11):
Brother? So I'm how old do you have to take?

Speaker 1 (45:13):
You?

Speaker 4 (45:14):
Man?

Speaker 6 (45:14):
I take like four a day, na beato my manager
to go crazy with him.

Speaker 3 (45:17):
We go crazy with him today? And how old are
you not be? Fifty eight?

Speaker 6 (45:21):
Man? Memory I'm talking about you can see you can
see the difference now, Like he used to be looking
for stuff, well, he'd be having.

Speaker 3 (45:27):
His phone in his hand, be like where my phone at?
Phone in your hand?

Speaker 6 (45:30):
I'll beat like his whole way he's manifesting and thinking
is totally different. So it's called coherence. I'm gonna send
y'all some of that. All natural. That's all we do
is all natural. So if you want, if you want
to have certain types of vitamins or what should I say,
certain vitamins, that's missing that we need to be paying
attention to in the Americas is we're very magnesium deficient.

(45:51):
I'm talking about number one and magnesium, and magnesium plays
a very crucial role in the body because every cell
in your body needs magnesium, especially the nervous system, because
of what it does do is it relaxes the muscles.
Most people that have hypertension or how blood pressure have
a magnesium deficiency because what happens is magnesium act as
a catalyst and it relaxes or what you would call
dilate the blood vessels. Now and then they have too

(46:14):
much calcium and calcium magnesium suposed to go together. That's
why I don't believe in supplements or basically what you
would call isolated chemistry, because you start playing God. I
call myself God, and I'm not saying I'm the most high.
I'm saying I'm a reflection of the most how, which
makes us gods and goddesses. So when you take magnesium,
you have to take it holistically with calcium that you
can't get that in supplements.

Speaker 3 (46:35):
You got to get that from whole food. Do you
see what I'm saying.

Speaker 6 (46:37):
But what calcium does is it's called contractility.

Speaker 3 (46:40):
That's actually what constricts the blood vessels.

Speaker 6 (46:42):
So when you see somebody that suffer with hypertension, they
got high blood pressure all the time. It's because they
missing magnesium and their arteries or their blood vessels is
not able to relax and let that blood flow properly
through their veins, so it creates this pressure or the
force against the artery wall, and that's what raises up.

Speaker 3 (46:59):
The blood pressure.

Speaker 6 (47:00):
So simply healing how blood pressure is getting more magnesium
into your diet. Same thing with zincs, same thing with coppers,
same thing with golds, same thing with selenium. Most of
our so called diseases that we're suffering from is because
we are mineral defiicient. And the reason why we're mineral
defishient is because these people are purposely stripping our soil
of minerals. So now remember us talking about education. That's

(47:22):
something that we need to start providing to the community.
How do you get minerals back into the ground. You
have to start doing agricultural forming or permacultural forming, electrocultural forming,
figuring out ways to literally break down their soil again,
figuring out ways to get worms back into the soil,
figuring out ways that decay what you would call fruits
and vegetables and herbs, and putting them back into the soil.

(47:44):
That way, when the new spring come, all of these
minerals are back into the ground that they strip from it.
So we need to be teaching them how to land,
you know what I'm saying. And there's no coincidence that
land and landing is the same word. You know what
I'm saying. They say, we landed on this planet Earth
we call rock. Well, if you landed, how can the
hell keep you land if you don't even own land,
you know what I'm saying. But we own in Benzes
bent Lee's. But we go into an apartment building. You

(48:06):
see what I'm saying. There's something coming and we acting
like we don't see this shit coming.

Speaker 3 (48:11):
We see.

Speaker 6 (48:13):
Me either. It's either nuclear fallout. I think that's the inevitable.
Nuclear fallout is at the end. But before that, there's
a lot of things leading up to it. We see
that food scarcity is crazy, like a lot of people
haven't been watching, like check Georgia.

Speaker 3 (48:27):
Start looking up the food scarcity.

Speaker 6 (48:28):
How we missing certain things that we usually got, They
not on the shelves no more. Then we see all
of the ports been shut down since they created bricks
and Russia and all these different wars and rumors of
wars that's happening, so we're not finna be able to
get things in from other countries. Y'all know that most
of our stuff actually come from China. China the backed
out of the US. They now dealing with a whole bunch.
They dealing with Africa, They dealing with North Korea now,

(48:51):
so life as we know it within a couple of
years will not be the same no more. But we're
too busy doped up off the medicine. We're too busy
doped up off the junk foods, doped about the alcohol
and the drugs, that we're not seeing what's coming. And
if you're a wise man, you should be able to
look at what's going on inside of this earthly ram
and prepared. So I'm just here to tell y'all, look,
wake up, let's prep because some shit finish hit the fan.

(49:12):
And guess what when they close these grocery stores, because
they finished start doing these little exercises now, because y'all
see the new COVID just roll back out right, y'all
peat that it's back is back. The new COVID just
rolled so they finished start doing certain exercises. Imagine the
imagine the us get cut off and ain't nobody got
food that sounded like the tyrone?

Speaker 3 (49:33):
So what happened?

Speaker 6 (49:34):
If you own your own land and you're not a form,
you're not a plunch your own seeds. We have something
called a seed sovereignty program where we give away a
bunch of seeds. We just got into contract with a
bunch of HBCUs and college universities where we gonna be
supplying thousands of seeds to them what every six months?
So like, we need to start getting into the ship.
That looks whack is what we need to be promoting
and pushing. The only reason why it looks whack is

(49:54):
because the rappers and the actors and the celebrities, it's.

Speaker 3 (49:57):
Not making it look good. We control our own narrative.

Speaker 6 (50:00):
We just gotta make it look good the same way
we make looking you know, tricking on women and degrading
women and killing our brothers and sisters. How we promote
that and make that shit look good.

Speaker 3 (50:10):
We need to.

Speaker 6 (50:10):
Stop doing that and then do the necessities and the
basic things that we need as a people.

Speaker 3 (50:14):
We need to start promoting those.

Speaker 6 (50:16):
Same things, and we will see that the whole consciousness
will shift.

Speaker 3 (50:20):
Seriously, How you put value on that though, how you putting?

Speaker 4 (50:24):
That's what it is.

Speaker 6 (50:24):
But we make value, so we create value. Right, there's
really no such thing as value. Value is based backed
off of morals and beliefs. If we can change the
beliefs and moral of the people, that will create value.
If you look back in the Bible, the shit we're
doing is very looked down upon. But guess what is
looked up upon a version. A version in the Bible
was worth unlimited amounts of moneys.

Speaker 3 (50:46):
You know what I'm saying.

Speaker 6 (50:47):
You got a vision daughter, and you want to marry
my daughter. I'm gonna need twenty cows. I'm gonna need
about forty five acres of land. I'm gonna need all
them goats you got here.

Speaker 3 (50:55):
You see what I'm saying.

Speaker 6 (50:56):
So if we if we just bring that back and
show how virginity equals a righteous woman, women ain't just
gonna be giving out pussy like that no more.

Speaker 3 (51:06):
You see what I'm saying. Like seriously, but we just
talking about the value system though, we're saying what's gonna
bring value back.

Speaker 6 (51:15):
Whatever we put our attention on is what brings value.

Speaker 3 (51:18):
You see that.

Speaker 6 (51:19):
I remember a point in time where Louis for Time
didn't mean nothing. Niggas didn't know nothing about Louis for Time.
It was but a rapper put it on. A rapper
put it on, y'all. Fift Look, fifteen Sacks. I didn't
know nothing about fifteen Sacks until Yo, God, he said
Gucci Louis product. You know I shop at Sacks. I'm like, damn, Jay,
we need to go to Sacks. Nigga, I don't know
anymore what I'm going to Sacks to buy, but just

(51:41):
based off of a powerful voice in the community mentioned
is something broad?

Speaker 3 (51:45):
It what cool? Value?

Speaker 4 (51:48):
Yeah?

Speaker 3 (51:48):
So so we bring value to shit.

Speaker 4 (51:50):
You're right about that, though.

Speaker 6 (51:52):
So if we get enough people supporting my message, enough
people support nineteen Keys message, enough people supporting all those
who's coming up saying the same thing, enough people, enough celebrities,
enough musicians, enough rappers, enough singers, enough people that got
these podcasts because y'all the real powerful ones, because they
come in to.

Speaker 3 (52:11):
Y'all to get interviewed.

Speaker 6 (52:13):
Enough people pushing this narrative, Man, this shit will change overnight.
The whole value will be flipped straight up. We just
need to really start voicing what's really real. It's too
much fake shit going on on these airlines, and there's
not enough people talking about what we talking about right now.
And that's the reason why I appreciate y'all because y'all
didn't have to have me on here.

Speaker 3 (52:31):
Y'all don't have to do that, you know what I'm saying.

Speaker 6 (52:32):
That's why I'm glad we're doing this right now, because,
like I said, this is gonna reach so many people,
but the people that didn't need to really get it's
gonna get and it's gonna ignite them, and they're gonna
be doing the same shit fifty years from now from
what I'm doing now.

Speaker 3 (52:44):
And that's how we need to do this.

Speaker 6 (52:45):
I'm not saying this shit can happen overnight, but I'm saying,
brick by brick, step by step.

Speaker 4 (52:50):
How dangerous is this? Though? What you do?

Speaker 2 (52:51):
Man?

Speaker 6 (52:52):
How many times I don't they don't try the government
to try to kill me a couple times already. They
try to sue me for selling Look, they try to
sue me for selling neutral they call pseudo pharmaceuticals. This
is what they called it. In the paperwork. It said
pseudo pharmaceuticals. And I'm like, if anybody's selling pseudo formaceuticals, y'all.

Speaker 3 (53:09):
You know what I'm saying. I'm selling RBS.

Speaker 6 (53:11):
But man, they follow us around the IFBA always follow
us around. I get many Hey, I'm just saying, but
many many death threats.

Speaker 3 (53:23):
You know what I'm saying. I get those a lot.
But you know what I'm saying.

Speaker 6 (53:25):
Like I said in the beginning of this transmission, I'm
willing to die for this because I gotta die.

Speaker 3 (53:29):
Anyway. I was talking to not Be yesterday. You know,
we just talking. We always go through our.

Speaker 6 (53:33):
Daily things where we just spilled spell our hearts to
each other to make sure that we're on the same level.
And I was telling him about how my age. I'm
thirty five, right, and I was telling him that the
average man only lives seventy two years old, the average man,
the average woman eighty four.

Speaker 3 (53:48):
Right.

Speaker 6 (53:49):
This average Now me, since I'm healthy, I don't eat meat,
I don't be drinking, smoking and doing all of that stuff.
I just gave myself an extra five years because I
still got toxicity in me any though, even though I
cleansed my body. You know, this is a lifetime detops
I spent twenty one years fucking my entire life up.
I'm only thirty five, y'all do the math, nigg I
got some more cleansing to do.

Speaker 3 (54:09):
Deeply, you see what I'm saying. So I just gave
myself an extra five years.

Speaker 6 (54:13):
I did the math, right, So I did Basically, I
did thirty I did seventy four, seventy two, take away
thirty five. It left me with I think forty forty
five years something like that.

Speaker 3 (54:25):
Don't quote me on it. But then I did the days.

Speaker 6 (54:26):
Okay, how many days, it's forty five years, whatever that
came up to. It gave me one hundred and sixty
four thousand and twenty five days. That's how much time
averagely I got left. I don't have time to be
bullshitting back and forth arguing with no woman. I ain't
got time to be beefing with my bro I got
one hundred and sixty. Matter of fact, that twenty five,

(54:47):
that twenty five left, because that's twenty four hours in
a day.

Speaker 3 (54:50):
So that left.

Speaker 6 (54:51):
That was yesterday, So one hundred and sixty four thousand
days left.

Speaker 3 (54:56):
What the fuck are we doing? What are we doing?

Speaker 6 (55:00):
So it just brought things into perspective for me, what
really matter? Why are we are here to experience. We
are here to create these experience, to learn this information
and bring it back to the source and the creator.
Why we're doing that, We are making genetic copies of
ourselves who we call our children, and we're putting them
through them same things. Like we have to start preparing
that way, we don't have to keep coming back into
these realities and have.

Speaker 3 (55:21):
To learn and relearn and rebuild.

Speaker 6 (55:23):
How about we learning, we build, and then we leave
something back for our children can already have as a
gift when they get here. And we can't do that
doing what we're doing now. Everybody saying do it for
the culture, right, if you actually look at the root
word the culture is to cultivate. Cultivation is what you
do when you form. Cultivation means to grow. Is this

(55:43):
culture growing or is it disintegrating and destroying itself within?

Speaker 3 (55:48):
It's the latter.

Speaker 6 (55:49):
So is this truly a culture because there's no type
of cultivation that's coming from it but rappers getting killed,
rappers getting all types of std Trust me, I know
you see that. Rappers not being in the household, having
all these children not being able to be in a
household with their families. You know, all these rico cases,

(56:10):
drug cases, brothers and sisters getting locked up, degrading black women, Like,
is this growing? Is what we're doing right now having
a positive outcome on the community.

Speaker 3 (56:23):
No, So we can't say that that shit is culture.
We can't. So it's like, when is we gonna be
real with ourselves?

Speaker 6 (56:31):
Like, I know this shit is hard to accept what
it is, but it's like, when is we gonna grow
some nuts and be like, you know what, We're too
old for this shit, Like it's time to really really
change the narrative. And not only that, we got the
power to do. So what we're gonna do about it?

Speaker 4 (56:48):
Shouts out to Yakhilwaken.

Speaker 2 (56:50):
We appreciate your words, man, Any finding words for the people?
Any finding words for the people?

Speaker 4 (56:54):
Man?

Speaker 6 (56:54):
Oh yeah, man uh, I love y'all, I need y'all,
And I just hope you love yourself, need yourself more.
If we can come together as a collective consciousness and
as a community to start eating better, to start treating
our bodies better, treating each other better, for we can
truly truly take back our consciousness and get what is
already rightfully ours, which is the Americas, this whole planet
to be.

Speaker 3 (57:14):
Honest with you.

Speaker 2 (57:16):
Is W dot Big fatspod dot com salute to you
would appreciate.

Speaker 5 (57:20):
It's big facts.

Speaker 6 (57:26):
Capt Bitch
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