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March 21, 2025 • 69 mins
REAL SPORTS TALK, M-F 6:00pm
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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:02):
Charlton Curry, a former NFL player now President and CEO
of Big C Sports Corporation. Mister Curry loves bringing sports
and real life experiences to his worldwide audience. Charlton is
a longtime award winning top radio broadcaster covering all sports
including NFL football, NBA basketball, MLB baseball, as well as

(00:23):
college football, basketball, baseball, MMA boxing, golf, soccer, and others
on many networks and podcasts. Charlton hosts Riveting, the formative
discussions on race, big business, and sports. He is the
co chair of the Sacramento chapter of the National Black
Wall Streets Project, focused on restorative justice and economic empowerment.

(00:46):
Mister Curry is a business development consultant for Resource Development
Consulting and Corporators, the top endorsement in the state of California,
whose focus is to provide information and services to seniors,
agents and recruiter for RDC best line business funding provides
working capital for business owners nationwide and employment for people

(01:07):
around the country, while also often I hope contact mister
Curry today.

Speaker 2 (01:12):
For all your business development needs and move.

Speaker 3 (01:16):
Now streaming on a little Bit TV dimond.

Speaker 4 (01:26):
An thank you anyway at free.

Speaker 5 (01:37):
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C for the NFL Play and gall Time you'll Really
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Speaker 9 (02:19):
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Speaker 3 (03:16):
The good moment, comes to a w.

Speaker 2 (03:20):
Rondo. The board is bando benam to be ja lesk
ready to ramble. Welcome to the show. My name is
Charlton of Big Sea Sports. This is Big Sea Sports.
I go to year worldwide on.

Speaker 9 (03:40):
The Big Sea Sports network on the number one network
in the United States of America, and Big C Sports
has been good at the number one sports view in
the universe. According to me, if people who love the universe,
but a beautiful day in the neighborhood, a beautiful day
in the neighborhood won't to be my won't to be
my won't to be my neighbor. Shut up for I'm

(04:00):
trying to watch March March Patney's. Well, that's not my
problem is yours. You gotta fill out the brackets. I
felt that my bracket. And guess who won the championship,
big ce mix, you won the championship, mother you verse.

Speaker 2 (04:14):
I already knew it. That's why I thought that ticket
with it.

Speaker 9 (04:17):
What a happy happy Friday, mark the twenty first, twenty
twenty five to these show and sponsored by your Northern
California Cattle like Denis home of the old cattle, like
gess gonna bead. There's Canada the world. When you go
buy and chest, give yours. Tell him the sension whether
get Lord's pitch and no beanna get lord Denis pitch?
As you what what did Johnny Cock can see if

(04:40):
you if you're explitch to what push that fast food
a side?

Speaker 2 (04:44):
He said that the gloved don't figure must have writ
It's the.

Speaker 9 (04:46):
Same thing a lot of us know. I heard people
talking about o Zivic. They gonna stick a needle in
their belly. Put a needle in your belly so you
can lose some weight. I learned a long time ago.
Don't put the food in your belly, and that's a
better way to lose weight. Something about the metallicism, it
tends to slow down for those fast food restaurants.

Speaker 2 (05:09):
They just make sure that.

Speaker 9 (05:10):
You more around on the backside of that max syty.
Nothing room with having around the backside. I've seen women
pay for it.

Speaker 2 (05:15):
They get paid.

Speaker 9 (05:17):
They've been paying doctors to make the backside figure. Hey,
whatever happens to just exercising and doing squads. People want
it now. We live in a fast food deciding we
want it now. We want it all now, all freend
level work. I want to say, I'm one beautiful, intelligent
black man coming to you from all over the universe.

Speaker 2 (05:36):
I produced the show, I direct the topics.

Speaker 9 (05:38):
I broadcast all the shows based on the platform provided
by the agency.

Speaker 2 (05:43):
I know we can all use more labor. I'm having
these allergies, my goodness.

Speaker 9 (05:47):
This time of year. There's always a party in my nose.
It's called allergy party, and it gives me man. I
just wish I could get rid of it. I take
my knaves on spray and I just got to adjust
to it. Takes about a month to get to. But
Doll spraad level ward. As I always say, I do
this play.

Speaker 2 (06:03):
By play, curry for three, Yes, get the whole in
your life. You know, sometimes my my sound effects are off.
It could be the alogies.

Speaker 9 (06:15):
I have a sneeze button and I have some allergy
medication in my nasal. It makes me feel a little
bit loopy. But I've gotten you. But that I've gotten
used to it after ten years. Now, all spare eleven war.
If I heard Steven and Smith's son a contract five years,
one hundred million dollars, I said, congratulations, give that brother
some praise, give a praise, prayse praise.

Speaker 2 (06:37):
But God, I said, I wanted one hundred million dollars.

Speaker 9 (06:41):
And they gave it to a black man. They said, well,
you guys look alike. No, we don't look alike. We
do not look alike, if that makes sense, Tom. But congratulations.
They give a black man one hundred million dollars, and
that Potus says he wants to shut down Oh Hootera
says he wants to shut down all radios, all radio
stations and TV stations. He said he'll not tolerate seeing

(07:01):
the black man make that kind of money. So pots
said he want to shut down all media companies. Isn't
that crazy? He started with the kicking the Mexicans out. First,
they had the Muslim Man his first go around, and
Nice kicking out Mexicans. Nice killed diversity ecrid inclusion, which
hurts white women for the most part.

Speaker 2 (07:22):
And he's defunding all the HBCUs. Now he's going after the.

Speaker 9 (07:26):
Department of Education where a lot of young African American
kids get their start in school. If you're going up
to Pelgrats to go to college, Department of Education helps
hand that up. And when he heard that, Steven Is
Smith signed a contract for for one hundred million dollars.
Now Potus wants to shut down all media and say
if you want to be on the air, you gotta go.

(07:47):
You gotta go through Elon, through Elon musk Oh you
think I'm joking, He already said the course can't tell
him what the dude the man said he wants to
shut down media with Steven nism This's signed a contract.

Speaker 2 (07:59):
For one hundred million dollars. He said, I'll not tolerate.

Speaker 9 (08:04):
All of that waste in abuse. That's what he's in
coming after media companies next.

Speaker 2 (08:10):
You don't think it's rude.

Speaker 9 (08:11):
Look at a lot of media company that I've broken
up against Potus forty seven. Some of those people being
taken up there. I think it was Don Lemon CNN, GJ. Holmes,
but he was that was sleeping with a white woman,
Amy Wobock or something like that. And then there was
obviously Joey Reid loss of spot and they have a

(08:33):
political splant. But also there's another brother, CMO that lost
his spot also and they all started joining the world
of podcast. But yeah, Potus wants to shut down all
media companies and have a centralized media where everything goes
through DOS. Because Steven Nate Smith signed a contract with
a hundred million. Pot said, I'll not tolerate black man

(08:54):
making that kind of money. Yeah, he said he want
to tolerate it. He wants to put his son on
the podcast. He said, you know, he's really tall, tall
and awkward looking.

Speaker 2 (09:05):
Tall and awkward. What was that?

Speaker 9 (09:07):
What was Captive Base that movie that Capti Bass played
was it was it the Shining? It wasn't the Shining,
it was it was in a movie where she was
breaking some guy's ankles. I think it's played as ah
Conedy Bok. She broke his ankles. She was battering his
ankles with a with a stick. Okay, I gotta tell you,
Oh my god, I'm just rolling.

Speaker 2 (09:26):
Oh my gun.

Speaker 9 (09:26):
I was talking to her friend of mine and I
don't know if I should tell a joke, but maybe
maybe maybe it wasn't a joke. He said, it's more
intimate to get a kiss then then to do some
some uh some bumping and grind ad his words, not mintin.

(09:51):
I said, oh man, you must be out your mind.
He said no, seriously, he said it's more intimate to
get a kiss than to do some and gribbing. I said,
that makes no sense. People kiss all the time on
the first date. They don't bumping grind on the first date.
And least that's how you were raised. Now some people
they will bumping ground on the first date because that

(10:12):
is how they were raised. They don't believe in and
taking their time. They want to know right now. Like
one of my favorite TV shows, and I don't mean
I'm not I mean, I'm not embarrassing. Said it's called
a bachelor. They got a guy that makes out with
twelve women, No, it was twenty five women, and then
they all get to watch them make out with him.
So luc Leo says, and I don't know if it's
on the rives or not, but he gets to stick
his tongue down the throat of twenty five different women.

(10:35):
They don't smash on the first kiss. But I hear
this is television and in Hollywood, so I don't know
if it's true or not. But how do you decide
if you're gonna marry some bona if you haven't, if
you haven't done a little bit of bumping and grinding?

Speaker 2 (10:49):
I mean, I'm just heard. And that's from a woman's
point of view. You can't, you can't get married.

Speaker 9 (10:53):
And then to decide to bumping and grind, it don't
make no sense. You might be out of you might
be out of rhythm. So people tend to kiss first,
they get the date, they get to go out for dinner, lunch, breakfast, whatever.
Then they spend more time together. And then they said,
and they decide to go to the next level. And
when he said, you know what, Bixie, he said, he said, kiss.

(11:14):
He is more intimate than bumping and grinding.

Speaker 11 (11:15):
I said, how cand how could be more intimate than
bumping and grinding?

Speaker 2 (11:23):
He said? He said because he said, because he said so.
But I'm not gonna argue.

Speaker 9 (11:28):
But I think bumping and grind is a lot more
intimate then people kiss who they want a kid, you
don't know what's in their mouth, you don't know what
they were kissing them before they kiss you. But the Bachelor,
they have a segment in there, but you can actually
bump and grind if you want to, to see if
you're compatible. I said, what a lot of guys lining

(11:50):
it for that show, But it makes no sense. How
could a man or a woman sit by and watch
the person who say you love suck the tongue on
the twenty five people right in front of you.

Speaker 2 (12:00):
I mean, if that's how you get down, it's called warriors.

Speaker 9 (12:02):
And I was told when I was in college, I said, Curry,
you'll talk yourself out.

Speaker 2 (12:06):
I'm a good time Now. I never really quite knew
with that bitch, but now understand.

Speaker 9 (12:14):
Now understand. All I gotta say is people do what
they want to do. Make sure you're healthy and happy.
You don't know if you start sucking on somebody's tongue.
You don't know what they were suckling on me before
they started putting their tongue in your mouth, and now
you gotta go to the doctor.

Speaker 2 (12:28):
Be careful, be careful people.

Speaker 9 (12:31):
Yeah, I think I think Bubba and the Ground is
a lot more intimate than death marstory.

Speaker 2 (12:36):
That take it with it well. As I always say,
speaking of that, I want to pay.

Speaker 9 (12:42):
I'm as to Exfinity, Comcast TV, and Comcast Spotlight Effect
TV for presenting.

Speaker 2 (12:48):
VX sports through the universe.

Speaker 9 (12:51):
Just like in the Book of Genesis one three what
God said, reparations now reparations for whatever, and then God
said that the lad I want to shine that all
over the world. In fact, I want to shine that
I love, but the universe, Oh, I love paying. I'm
miss dull out veterans crisis sideline because they rually are
experienced up in vetterments and the loved ones get helped.

Speaker 2 (13:11):
If you know anybody that says kissing.

Speaker 9 (13:15):
It's more intimate than bumbling and grind, maybe maybe I
am missing out, Maybe I'm missing out all fair level work.
But if you know anybody going through issues because you
don't have any kissing in your life.

Speaker 2 (13:29):
Are any dumbling grinding in your life? Call eight hundred
and seven.

Speaker 9 (13:34):
Oh my lord, Oh it's the algy Medication for vets
Crisis Hotline eight hundred two seven three ain't two five
five eight hundred two seven three eighty two fifty five.

Speaker 2 (13:48):
That's eight hundred two seven three eighty two fifty five.
Are you get taxed? Eight three eight two five five.
That's eight three eight two five five.

Speaker 9 (13:55):
If you're online, sippy, go to vetermans pricess line dot net.

Speaker 2 (13:59):
That's vetements pass as lying that net.

Speaker 9 (14:01):
And when you do, you want to give it some
praise because we all need somebody to meet on and
it show was good when.

Speaker 2 (14:07):
Somebody's somebody's lean it back, if that makes sense. Yeah,
that's my thread. I'm thinking with it, you know.

Speaker 9 (14:14):
I love the march madness, the one shining moment already
had a couple of upsets what they call bracketbusters. When
you have a field at sixty eight and you get
the chance to play yourself to a championship, that's exciting.

Speaker 2 (14:28):
I love four to three. Yes, get in the whole.

Speaker 9 (14:31):
A lot of good athletes all around the country having
a one shiny moment.

Speaker 2 (14:36):
I don't get into scores because that's not my thing.

Speaker 9 (14:38):
People can watch what they want to watch when they
get home or on their electronic devices. I think a
lot more people now they watch games on their electronic
devices as opposed to waiting until you get home you
have to drive home or drive to a sports bar.

Speaker 2 (14:51):
I love going to sports bars.

Speaker 9 (14:53):
And I leave a lot of people at a sports
bar that will have their phone looking at whatever they
want to watch on their phone, and sports parts a
large green TVs.

Speaker 2 (15:02):
But whatever works for you, it has to work for you.
But I do appreciate March badness.

Speaker 9 (15:06):
It makes me happy that one shining moment, that one
shiny moment.

Speaker 2 (15:11):
But you know, and I'll talk about that also on
Stacy Sports.

Speaker 9 (15:14):
But I want to make sure that I elucidate the
subject of what's going on with our liberty and justice
for all. I love elucidating the subject with other bright
minds and they can tell you things that are important
to me.

Speaker 2 (15:28):
Because potents want to destroy the Department of Education. That
helps a lot of kids of color. It helps a
lot of people.

Speaker 9 (15:36):
It helps it start, It helps people who not adequately
equipment financially. They feed their children, a lot of kids
talking to some teachers, a lot of kids. They get
their health his meal from school, from school, breakfast and
lunch and now destroying the Department of Education.

Speaker 2 (15:53):
Wants to get rid of that.

Speaker 9 (15:54):
And then some opponents are proponents that say, oh, it's
going to be better off when the states decide how
they feed fund their schools. A lot of states are broke,
a lot of states are broke. They take that money,
they get helped from the federal government. All that money
that's gone to Elon Musk is going away from those schools.
Now they're not cutting his budget. He makes eight million

(16:14):
dollars lay on government contract, eight million on government contract.
They're not talking about cutting that. And people in red
states are clapping that he's cutting their health care. Their
medicare going up to Medicaid. It takes an act of Congress,
but he's already said he can usap the power of Congress.

(16:35):
He said he can usap the power of federal judges.
And a lot of those guys, they've lost their spine.
They've lost their spine. They don't have one watch how
they sit down. They all humped over. They've lost their
spine to a thirty fourth time convicted felon. Who would
have ever thought that would happen in the United States
of America. Are Supreme Court they've bend over for a
thirty fourth time convicted fellow. Think about that, he's coming

(17:04):
after media next, Oh you talk freedom of speech?

Speaker 2 (17:07):
Was freedom of speech challenging?

Speaker 9 (17:11):
Everything wants to get rid of media companies that don't
kiss his backside. So there's only be Fox News and
Foe's News or Doge News unless someone starts filing for impeachment,
which has gone away. I think that's about three hundred
thousand petitions signed by some lawyers to impeace report is
forty seven for constitutional violations. Even the deportation of citizens.

(17:33):
If they don't look pale and white, they're in trouble.
They have not deported any pale white looking people, only
people with skin melanin. Look at those pictures. There's nobody
pelling white being reported, nobody. And now he's coming after
media because a lot of media are afraid to tell

(17:54):
the truth. And so until you're tell your comedy been
brought up by dos When you think all that money
is going from that, he got out of the United
States Treasury so they could buy up more media and
more medical research centers and clamate change companies that make
sure the environment's safe, water saved, air safe, then shut

(18:16):
them down, the EPA being shut down, now coming after
Department of Education so people can be more dumb and
not questioning anything, and next buying up media companies so
they can have the news reporter the way those ONTs
are reported.

Speaker 2 (18:31):
So you thought he was just coming after the Mexican town.

Speaker 9 (18:34):
One shining moment, one shining moment. People are stuck on
March madness. It hasn't even been ninety days. You ever
have a ninety day relationship with anybody and you got
heartburning after the first date. Could you imagine what the
woman felt like when you kissed Donald Trump? He had

(18:54):
to pay one hundred and thirty five thousand dollars.

Speaker 2 (18:56):
To go to bed with him. That and she was
and she was a porn star.

Speaker 9 (19:03):
A porn star, says, Shue, you not I sleep with
m unless he came up with one hundred and thirty
five thousand dollars. I touched it out, Natha, you looks
diaper not included. I said, diaper not included. But now
he wants to shut down media companies and we still
want to watch touchdown.

Speaker 2 (19:22):
Hoo Bros. Three boy play oh Man Wall They he's
going all the way.

Speaker 8 (19:28):
Yep.

Speaker 2 (19:29):
So Steven A. Smith. With that one hundred million dollars,
you better get it, get it out of the get
it out of.

Speaker 9 (19:34):
The bank now, because they want to define the banks
also make everything privatized. He wants to destroy the Department
of Education to put that money into private, private education.
How many people can afford private education that are just
getting by? That affects a lot of people of color,
and those the dumb people in the thirty seven states

(19:55):
that voted for him overwhelmingly, a lot of those are
poor states. They can lose the education. How can someone
vote for the man that chopped off your feet. It's
just the foot, food lines, growing price of groceries growing up.

(20:16):
And people are sitting around saying, well, he's getting new
Mexicans out of the country, but he's cutting Apartment of Education.
That's where your kids go to school, That's where they eat.
Going after the medical health care industry, that's where people
go when they get sick, to hospital. You could up
medicaid in medicare that pays doctors, and especially in those

(20:37):
rural communities, they don't have privatized insurance. So what do
the poor people do when they get sick and can't
afford their insulin. I met him lady today in Lyne
at the grocery store. I said, you look like you
must be a doctor. She said, yeah, I am. I
thought I was just guessing, but I was right. I said,
so what do you study? And she said a word

(20:59):
I couldn't understand, like indew chronology. I said, what is that?
She says, study of kidneys, diabetes and kidney function. I said, oh,
I knew that already, already knew that. And I said,
how's that industry for you? She said, oh, it's getting
words a lot more people getting sick. Stress causes illness also,

(21:19):
And I said, well, here's my card if you want
to buy another house.

Speaker 2 (21:22):
I help people with loans. She said, oh, thank you.

Speaker 9 (21:26):
But if she is serious, though, more and more people
getting ill, stress levels going up. You ever dd someone
in a relationship in the soul narcissistic like malignic narcissist.

Speaker 2 (21:35):
Everything you do is wrong, everything you see is wrong.

Speaker 9 (21:39):
And then he goes out and spends one hundred and
thirty five thousand dollars for someone to give him a
little bump.

Speaker 2 (21:43):
And grind that.

Speaker 9 (21:44):
That's at about thirty seconds from what I understand. And
now he goes and kisses his wife. What do you
think she's got? The one is she had that hat
over her head, the anobody kind of bumps that she
has all over her body.

Speaker 2 (21:56):
Nobody knows.

Speaker 9 (21:58):
But when a porn star will charge you one hundred
and thirty five thousand dollars to lay down with you
for twenty seconds, you know something wrong with you.

Speaker 2 (22:10):
And then people saying he's doing a good job until
he comes after their jobs.

Speaker 9 (22:14):
It's a fact. Hey, that's my story up ticket. But
they give me some praise, Give me some praise, praise, praise.
I'm not tolert Finn and sick offense. But you know,
also I want to I want to give a quiz.
I do a quiz almost every show with Big C
Sports podcast, and it's just what I do. I left
giving out a quiz. Pay attention to the test so

(22:35):
you could pass the test. So my friend who told me,
he said, he said Big C kissing is more intimate
than bumping and grind And I said.

Speaker 2 (22:44):
I don't believe that he said it is. He said
he said his wife told him. I said, oh, oh.

Speaker 9 (22:58):
You can anywhere, and that you said you can have
d you get kids, you get kids when you have
a headache.

Speaker 2 (23:04):
Isn't that fine enough for you? Honey? Aren't you satisfied now?

Speaker 1 (23:10):
Now?

Speaker 9 (23:10):
Buffling ground has always worked and it helps you live
longer too. Don't let somebody tell you how long you
can live. Get out there and exercise, give exercise of
some praise.

Speaker 2 (23:19):
You gotta get it. Praise, praise, praise.

Speaker 9 (23:21):
Don't let anybody tell you that you can't live longer
because you don't get enough exercise, and that max this gem.
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(23:44):
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Speaker 2 (23:52):
Get us some praise. I'm not done yet, but give
it praise. But I'm not done yet.

Speaker 9 (23:56):
You don't give it praise anyway, Your family and spouse
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Speaker 9 (24:57):
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You gotta avoid probate people life insurance and vetements, benefits,
aid and attendance.

Speaker 2 (25:46):
Avoid the list. Listen to this.

Speaker 9 (25:49):
Avoid the look back period. There's no look back test
in California and other states there are. You gotta be
protected from those topdog law dot com Top dog law.
I was driving one time on Interftate eighty coming from Bello.
I heard topdog law dot com. If you've been hit
in in an accident and you can for your figures

(26:11):
and you can't for your legs, and you can't for
your ass six, you need topdoug Law dot Com become
because they come after think assets of anybody that hurts you.

Speaker 2 (26:21):
A trust protects your assets. What about fixed assets maxible
to trust protect that?

Speaker 9 (26:26):
I'm glad to ask, because a trust protects your bank account,
your checking account, your savings account, your money market account,
your certificates of deposit, life insurance with cast values, your
fixed indectinuities. What about variable assets sieble to trust protect that?

Speaker 2 (26:40):
I'm glad you asked.

Speaker 9 (26:42):
A trust protects you from the top dug law dot com,
Topdoug law dot com.

Speaker 2 (26:46):
All they say, we only want to kiss you know,
they want to kiss your bank account.

Speaker 9 (26:52):
But it protects your real estate, your qualified money or
irrais or four one ks and other investments avoid capital gains.

Speaker 2 (26:59):
That say, for example, you buy a house for.

Speaker 9 (27:01):
One hundred thousand dollars and then one year later that
house appreciates to one million dollars. Well that's a nine
hundred thousand dollars cappitle. Again, you appoint that with the trust.
Give that some praise, I said, give it praise, praise, praise,
because the minders are ruck within the waves.

Speaker 11 (27:16):
Pig say, you always talking about trust. I got a
friend who does trust been during the seven years, and
and why would we always go with the RDC team.
I say, that's a good question. I'm glad you asked.
Make sure your attorney puts in.

Speaker 9 (27:28):
Your trust that they can trigger your long term care
and titlements. Ask them if they even know where it
is before you give them some money. A lot of
people charge between five thousand and ten thousand dollars for
a trust. The RDC team is a lot more affordable.
Eight hundred seven seven two eight sixty two four eight
hundred seven seven two a sixty two four eight hundred
seven seven two eighty six twenty four.

Speaker 2 (27:51):
We have endorsements of the late James Gomez, who's James Gomans.

Speaker 9 (27:54):
He advised for California governors and let the change in
California nursing homes. He also was a c the California
Association a Helpless at least any served and Golden Ones
board of directors for twenty one years. Does your lawyer
have those endorsements?

Speaker 2 (28:12):
Oh, they don't.

Speaker 9 (28:13):
Well, how about this the late Robert Carlton, who's rid
of Carson. He was the top legal counselor for cal Pers.
Cal Poor is one of the largest employers in the
state of California. California is the World Fifth Watch's Economy.
Does your estate planner have those endorsements the RDC team does.
How about George Jones Esquire, who's just Judentes, the chair

(28:36):
of the California Black Chamer Commerce also California Black Chamercrumbs Foundation.

Speaker 2 (28:41):
He endorsed the RDC team.

Speaker 9 (28:44):
How about Attorney Scott Tipadau, Who's Gott Tipadau, one of
the topest state planners in California.

Speaker 2 (28:49):
He endorses the RDC team. But not only that.

Speaker 9 (28:55):
We have Leon Woods Who's Leon Leon worked with many
of the top blobbies in the state of coup on you.
He endorses the RDC team. But not only that, we
have missus Sheyyel Brown, who's Huel Brown.

Speaker 2 (29:09):
You don't know.

Speaker 9 (29:11):
Your trust attorney didn't tell you. She's the chair of
the California Department of Aging. You can't get much bigger
than that. You know she endorses the RDC team. Does
your attorney have that endorsement? The ARDC team does.

Speaker 2 (29:26):
What about Rayela Cruz loose rayde la Cruz. He's a
CEO or Resource Development Consulting, Inc.

Speaker 9 (29:32):
Been doing his thing good than thirty five years, with
the highest endorsements in the state of California, and also
the government's handbook.

Speaker 2 (29:40):
Does your lawyer have those endorsements?

Speaker 9 (29:42):
But not only that, we have Alice de la Cruz,
who's Alas de la Cruz. He's the founder of American
Veteran Benefits.

Speaker 2 (29:49):
You veterans know what that means. He endorses the RDC team.

Speaker 9 (29:57):
But not only that, we have Doubleue who's the Blue
She's the Payout committee for the National Black Wall Street Project.
Also she works with c Jack, a coalition for just
in Equitable California. She's also a business development consultant with
the RDC team and Best Line Business Funding.

Speaker 2 (30:15):
But not only that, she has her own economics awareness
talk so called let's eat.

Speaker 11 (30:22):
You can google it an excess Sgramental dot org and
KNU BU ninety six point five and.

Speaker 2 (30:27):
Then and eat private dot net. But not only that,
we have Charles McCurry.

Speaker 8 (30:34):
Isn't that you, big cee?

Speaker 9 (30:35):
You know that's right? I say, you know that's right.
I'm the CoA chair of the National Black Wall Street Project.
I work with Cjack, a coalition for just an Equitable California.
I'm also a business development consultant with the RDC team
and also Bestline Business Funding.

Speaker 2 (31:00):
And I endorse the RDC team, but not only that.

Speaker 9 (31:06):
Rumor has it on the number one sports shoewd talking
sports and asset protection in the universe. You've gotta get
us some praise.

Speaker 2 (31:15):
I said, give it praise, prays praise because of mine
and your ass sets are terrible thing the weeks. You
don't want to waste your access on anything. That's my
story that I'm taking with it.

Speaker 9 (31:24):
You know, I've been saying God is my witness, and
you know I've never missed a show sat starting Big
C Sports back in twenty and fifteen. Now we have
people who miss practice. I'm not talking about the game.
I'm talking about practice. I was saying, the goal with
what I'm doing with the RDC team and best line
business funding is they have a thousand brokers by twenty

(31:45):
twenty five.

Speaker 2 (31:46):
Right now, I'm about four hundred, like four hundred and ten.

Speaker 9 (31:51):
I'm probably gonna reach over one thousand by summertime because
I'm helping people get work. You know, sometimes when I
talk to people, they say, oh, you know, I don't
know if I underst and that, well, I just say, hey,
no worry. If you know anybody looking for work, I
haven't called me eight hundred seven seven two eighty six
two four. What no it BISA eight hundred seven seven
eighty six twenty four. If you know any business owners

(32:13):
that's looking for money, you know we have access to
money to the brokers. I know the SBA loans, residents
of loans, cash advanced loans, heart money loans, factory loans.

Speaker 2 (32:26):
But the best process that I'm having over thirty years
of doing this business. Who's that biz? It's best line
business funding.

Speaker 9 (32:34):
A business loan ortern of the company approves in less
than an hour with the same day funding items needed
to qualify, four months bank statements, five thousand dollars minimum
monthy revenue in your business checking account, six months in business.

Speaker 2 (32:48):
Get that some praise. I'm not doing it yet, but
get that part praise. I'm not doing it yep, but
still get that for some praise. Bestline business funding.

Speaker 9 (32:59):
We specialize and unsecured working capital up to five million dollars,
no collateral, no appraisal, no tax, will turn no W two,
no profit and loss again, no appraisal.

Speaker 2 (33:16):
Early payoff discounts.

Speaker 9 (33:17):
We can find in as little as a day, not
those sixty to ninety days that a lot of lenders.

Speaker 12 (33:22):
Take.

Speaker 2 (33:22):
Yeah, that's something you gotta get that some praise, I say,
give it, praise, praise, praise, Yeah, but I don't know.
I don't know if it works for me.

Speaker 9 (33:30):
Listen, if you want to get the loans that that's
gonna take you sixty to ninety days and may decline.
You find out what best line business funding where the
agent's only company.

Speaker 2 (33:38):
Find out in a couple of hours. If you're approved,
and you.

Speaker 9 (33:42):
Can still go after those loans that take two and
three months and an appraisal and tax return and you're
a profit and loss statement.

Speaker 2 (33:52):
You can go after those loans. But you can have
you some money. Now.

Speaker 9 (33:57):
I was telling a real estate real estate people get
it right. If in not real estate. Sometimes it takes
them four or five times to hear the understanding. There
are times when you're driving around on dim near hills
and you get a flat tire and keep usay man,
I just have this mischion. These tires are two hundred
and fifty dollars each, and so you want to get
to another I don't want to just advertise the missilan
and they ain't pay me, but maybe maybe they will

(34:19):
try paying BC. But you know, In the meantime, you
got to drive maybe fifty miles to go find another
tire company that can give you that same tire.

Speaker 2 (34:27):
Two hundred and fifty dollars a lot of money for
one tire with best line. It's the same thing. It's like,
have you had you have this spare tire, you take
this spear, you put it all.

Speaker 9 (34:35):
You can still keep driving on down the road. But
some of you, if you're in real estate and you
need money, now, there's no better company none.

Speaker 2 (34:46):
I talk to a lot of real estate groupers. Ah, big, see,
we gonna get some liftings and sell some real estate.
I say, that's great.

Speaker 9 (34:54):
In the meantime, if you know business owners, as you're
out there doing the door knocking and sending up mailers,
owners need money too. And business owners you know most
of them they own a house, are you? I said,
business owners? They own a house are too? Why not
talk to them about can we help you get some

(35:15):
money for your business? And when you do that, you
can all also say, oh, by the way, do you
know anyone looking at them buy or sell a house?

Speaker 2 (35:24):
Book there? It is.

Speaker 9 (35:28):
It's like a kiss. It's easier than bumping and grinding.
Don't they take as long as give that you do
it about two seconds bumping and grind. It takes a
lot more than two seconds, if that makes sense to you.

Speaker 2 (35:42):
But that's my story. I'm taking it to give me
some praise. It's happy Friday.

Speaker 9 (35:46):
Before I get it through some March badness. I love
bringing your Big Seed Sports. I got a lot of
great things coming to bix Seeds Sports. But I want
you to hear from some bright minds about what's going
on in the world. A real talk and real people.

Speaker 2 (36:00):
Liberty and justice for all. Listen up with the own avenue.

Speaker 8 (36:05):
Is no wonder.

Speaker 1 (36:14):
Forty three year old Jasmine Crockett is still unmarried. She
has made significant sacrifices to defeat Elon Musk. Jasmine Crockett
has remained single, which is clearly an extraordinary thing. She
has an impressive resume, but her romantic history is completely blank.
In fact, the reason Jasmine has stayed unmarried is because
she feels repulsed by people like Elon Musk. Musk has

(36:35):
thirteen children, but he treats his partners poorly. In his
disregard for the contributions of women made Jasmine uncomfortable, which
changed her views on marriage. Jasmine believes that marriage requires
mutual respect between spouses, but many men hold prejudices against women,
viewing their value as being solely in having children and
doing household Before entering the House of Representatives, Jasmine worked

(36:57):
as a lawyer, helping vulnerable groups fight for their rights
and working to break down societal prejudices against women. After
entering the House, she found that the expectations for women
there were even harsher, so she didn't want to marry
a politician. Although Jasmine's life is lonely, her idea wondering.

Speaker 13 (37:13):
You don't like being called racist in here. You hate
when we use the word racist, You hate being attacked,
You hate when we bring up race and everything. But
then when we have an opportunity to show that we're
not racist.

Speaker 8 (37:26):
You lift me down every time.

Speaker 2 (37:28):
Every time.

Speaker 13 (37:30):
And I sit here and we talk about our families,
we talk about our kids, we go on trips together,
and then we talk about not funding statement, not using
on state doesn't go to white supremacy programs, and then
we're table it. You want to talk about some stuff,
Let's talk about how they just took almost seven million
dollar from the College of Charleston because they want to

(37:51):
help black kids, Let's talk about it. Let's talk about
all the members that are in the state budget right
now to defund all the black programs that are going
across the state.

Speaker 2 (38:00):
Let's talk about it.

Speaker 13 (38:02):
Let's talk about ap African American Studies that was banned
from the state. Let's talk about it. Let's talk about
the attacks that you've got going.

Speaker 3 (38:10):
On people who don't look like you.

Speaker 13 (38:12):
Let's talk about it. Why do we continuously do this
to our kids? Why what is it that you're doing.

Speaker 2 (38:21):
What are you showing your kids that public funds can
go to white supremacy programs.

Speaker 13 (38:27):
We just had an issue at USC for all those
kids felt scared that, in fact, we just.

Speaker 2 (38:33):
Had to pay your front on our steps last week.

Speaker 13 (38:38):
What are we doing here? Tell me what we're doing.
Don't try to explain to me why I thought it
was this or now it's that, Nah, Jermaine, we want
to see equality. We give you an opportunity every single time,
and here we go. Here I was in the band,
I was way to go, just like y'all are.

Speaker 2 (39:00):
There we go.

Speaker 13 (39:01):
Every single time you get an opportunity to show something different,
you show us who you are.

Speaker 9 (39:08):
You know, for those of you who think that it's
okay to defund the Department of Education and Votus forty seven,
a thirty four time convicted felon. He wants to make
it a state issue. And a lot of states are
anti African Americans, anti diversity, equity inclusion the Department of Education.

(39:30):
They're there to become an equalizer in ferdin not equality
if you get rid of the Department of Education and
leave it up to the states. A lot of the states,
remember those thirty seven rest states. They don't have a
lot of people of color in those states anyway, and
they want to defund that. So what does that do

(39:51):
for African Americans and other people of color and even
poor white folks. And you want to get rid of
the Department of Education so can be given to private schools.
A lot of white families they canted for private school
be Potus knows what he's trying to do.

Speaker 14 (40:06):
Listen to this, And I told y'all yesterday about that
racist Confederate Confederate memorial that's on the state grounds of
Texas Capital.

Speaker 9 (40:15):
Excuse me, one second touchdown, oh three point play, Oh man, Willie,
he's going all the way.

Speaker 2 (40:24):
Just let I'm gonna use worse stuck on sports.

Speaker 3 (40:27):
When I was leaving today.

Speaker 14 (40:29):
On the other side, uh, there's a memorial regarding Texas
African American history.

Speaker 4 (40:36):
Uh.

Speaker 14 (40:37):
But but something is really interesting though, because on one
side of it they salute two men of African descent
who helped Texas win independence from Mexico, and you're gonna
hear me talk about in the placard.

Speaker 3 (40:53):
It also shows how they were.

Speaker 14 (40:56):
They were free black men, but then they had severe
limits on them operating with hell sound like they were
in prison. So I want you, I want y'all to
see this because I need you to understand. This is
why history is so important, This is why factual statues
and memorials are so important. Because if you don't and

(41:18):
let me just say this real quick, and I mentioned
this yesterday and I'm gonna try to be as well,
I can't even do that, so y'all, y'all people who
don't want me to cuss, I'm gonna let y'all just
turn it down for ten seconds because I just I
got no I got no other way to say this

(41:39):
because it actually ticks me off. So if y'all don't
want y'alln't hear me, because I want you'll turned tea
down five four three two one. I am sick of
these fucking idiots who say when a black statue is raised,
it's performative, or they say it's symbolic.

Speaker 6 (42:03):
I'm sick of you assholes.

Speaker 14 (42:06):
Why because we have been subjugated to racist statues and
memorials in history. I landed in the Austin airport, I
go to bagist claim, look to my right.

Speaker 3 (42:21):
You know why I looked to my right. I didn't
take a photo this time, because I always do.

Speaker 14 (42:25):
But there's a statue of the late Congresswoman Barbara Jordan's
in the Austin airport. When I go through Atlanta, I
always see that placard, that that plaque of mayor Mayor
of Jackson.

Speaker 3 (42:42):
When I go through one of the rum my biggest
terminal e.

Speaker 14 (42:44):
Being Houston, there's a there's a bus of Congressmen Mickey Levin.

Speaker 3 (42:50):
When I travel, I always stop.

Speaker 14 (42:54):
When I go through Washington, DC's train station, I always
stop and pay respects to that statue of labor leader
A Philip Randolph. I'm always every no matter where I go,
I do that because these are monuments to our people,

(43:15):
our history, and what we have to understand is that.
And while you're gonna send this video. On the second,
while I was standing there, When I was standing there, the.

Speaker 3 (43:26):
White girl came up with her family.

Speaker 14 (43:29):
There was a Latino girl would look like to be
her grandparents, and he and I had a conversation.

Speaker 15 (43:36):
About the racist He was telling me about how the
Texas Rangers basically stole his grandfather's laying, made them get
off the property and leave right think we have.

Speaker 14 (43:47):
That history as well, So he and I would have
this conversation about this memorial. This is why this stuff
is so important. While we must.

Speaker 3 (43:55):
Erect these statues and memorials, because.

Speaker 14 (43:57):
These people they want we what we have right now,
and it's all tied together by stripping these pages and
getting rid of these stories and these monuments.

Speaker 3 (44:08):
They want the framing to be one of white meess.

Speaker 14 (44:13):
They want to say, no, we're not going to talk about,
you know, the first female combat pilot, because we don't
want women to know about that historic woman.

Speaker 6 (44:22):
It was a white woman. They don't want that.

Speaker 14 (44:24):
So these people, they want a world Donald Trump, Peter
Heak said JD.

Speaker 2 (44:31):
Vance.

Speaker 3 (44:32):
They want a world where it's all about.

Speaker 14 (44:35):
White men, and we black people need to stop this
bullshit of oh, well that's just symbolism.

Speaker 3 (44:43):
Oh we need a check, we need this. Well how
about you try to get both.

Speaker 14 (44:49):
Why don't we have to piss on black monuments and
black statues and black plaques to go, well, h that's
just symbolism.

Speaker 3 (44:57):
Well how about some of y'all.

Speaker 2 (44:59):
And here's a the deal.

Speaker 14 (45:00):
I'm just go ahead and say that every one of
you assholes who say, oh, it's symbolism, I want.

Speaker 3 (45:06):
To see your voter registration card.

Speaker 14 (45:10):
I want to see how many elections your punk ass
voted in and see it's a lot of people out
here who love talking shit and they don't go vote,
but they always got something to say, and so it's
sort of crack, sort of just gets on my nerves
when they do that.

Speaker 3 (45:29):
So I want to play this video for y'all because
many of you men never have seen this, but.

Speaker 14 (45:34):
I want you to understand that this is why this
show matters and why we do this because there are
black museums all across this country, small medium laws, there
are black monuments to statues, and I every single one
of you should make an effort and when you visit a.

Speaker 3 (45:52):
Place and you you you seek out, you take a photo,
you do whatever, and you share it.

Speaker 14 (45:59):
Because our people need to understand that our history is
damn sure just as important.

Speaker 6 (46:06):
Watch this. So, folks, I'm here on the Texas ground.

Speaker 14 (46:10):
So remember I told you about that Confederate memorial that's.

Speaker 16 (46:15):
Literally right there, so right across from this African American
history memorial.

Speaker 8 (46:21):
You so what you see with this particular.

Speaker 17 (46:26):
You see how they have uh pictures of allanto we
had Texas statehood, and how people of Africa sent fought
for Texas Revolution.

Speaker 6 (46:40):
So you got hundred arnold, yes, Samuel mccullor, so you'll
see right here, Well they have this battle for.

Speaker 18 (46:47):
Texas independence from Mexico. May out of course this particular history.
Now keep in mind the Texas Revolution was about slavery.

Speaker 19 (46:56):
I want to free themselves from Mexico because of Mexico
had actually gotten a.

Speaker 6 (47:01):
Live slavely uh.

Speaker 20 (47:03):
And so there again there are people who are who
are people of African descent who are fighting alongside uh
these folks, the Texas Army.

Speaker 8 (47:15):
Uh.

Speaker 6 (47:15):
And they actually were fighting for the segregationists, all right.

Speaker 18 (47:20):
And so here you have this monument again to these
African Americans who people in Africa to say who fought.

Speaker 6 (47:27):
So that's why you'll see right here.

Speaker 17 (47:30):
Hendrick Arnold and Samuel o'colla played important roles in Texas
Revolution and information.

Speaker 6 (47:35):
In Republic of Texas. After Texas became the independent, books
were considered.

Speaker 19 (47:39):
Free blacks, but they were they were placed under severe
legal restrictions.

Speaker 6 (47:43):
So isn't that isn't that amazing if they actually fought
for the state.

Speaker 16 (47:49):
Uh, and they actually they actually were restricted, you said,
how crazy itess this?

Speaker 6 (47:56):
And so this is the reality of what it meant
to be black in these slave territories.

Speaker 18 (48:02):
Now when you go on the other side of this
particular monument, then you're gonna see the focus on emancipation.

Speaker 21 (48:10):
So this is a beautiful monument here. So you see
here the depiction of people, the slave people with African consert.
You see of course the cotton right there. You see
they got this Texas capitol here.

Speaker 18 (48:26):
So then you go down here to see these placards
where they lay out exactly when the first people African
the cent first came.

Speaker 6 (48:34):
Then you see right here slavery.

Speaker 18 (48:36):
Thuring the Mexican National era, and so this monument actually
details that particular history.

Speaker 6 (48:42):
So I'm gonna give you a wider view of this.
And so when you look at this amazing monument and
what it looks like, and so what they've done up.

Speaker 18 (48:53):
Here, So zoom in here, so you see they have
this black woman holding the Emancipation Proclamation.

Speaker 6 (49:03):
Give you a better view of her, so you see
that in her hand.

Speaker 16 (49:07):
He said.

Speaker 18 (49:08):
Then of course when you come down here, you see
all of these different images right here as well. Now
we go back down here.

Speaker 6 (49:19):
I told you we had slavery doing.

Speaker 18 (49:22):
Well, first of all, go back over the slavery doing
the Mexican National Area.

Speaker 6 (49:27):
So this details slavery there in details again more slavery
during the Republican early statehood.

Speaker 19 (49:36):
Of Texas, of African Americans, of people of African descent
here in Texas. So you see they got all different people,
Bessie Coleman, George Joint, Villa of farcurgand they got all
of this.

Speaker 16 (49:53):
And so this monument was fart for the folks here
to erect in in order to set the record straight
when it came to Texas history.

Speaker 6 (50:07):
And so and because at the end, and it shit's.

Speaker 20 (50:09):
Right across from that memorial over there to those white
domestic terrorists who won, who kept these folks over here.

Speaker 6 (50:18):
Who wanted to keep people in slave. So understand what
Texas independence is all about.

Speaker 22 (50:24):
Texas independence, Okay, right there at Texas capital fourteen feet
higher than the US capital. Texas independence was all about
maintaining the institution's right.

Speaker 14 (50:38):
There must be something who consais to be a person
in African descent who fought.

Speaker 6 (50:45):
But Texas's independence when the goal of Texas getting his
independence was because they wanted to keep slavor.

Speaker 5 (50:57):
This is a problem taking civics out of educational way,
out of the classrooms. That was Thank you for showing that.
It almost made me current. This is not the only
start that we're here. We fight so hard for independence
that I can go at.

Speaker 23 (51:14):
Even here in North Carolina.

Speaker 8 (51:16):
What we've did.

Speaker 5 (51:19):
It's important for us to understand and know our history
because if we don't like what's going on right now,
you go along with people who want to repeat it
ugly part of our history. So again, thank you for
showing that. But it just I'm a little bit knocked
down from it because we go back and forth with

(51:41):
your people about the importance of like what's going on
right now. You know, they don't want to bring up
the part how Trump is literally just gutting our civil rights,
our voting rights.

Speaker 8 (51:52):
They don't know that. But if you bring up something.

Speaker 5 (51:55):
About money, they know about that, and the fact that
the white racist asked me and can throw money at us,
at our people and get their attention instead of what's
going like the negative part, like this, Okay, we're gonna
give you some money, but at the same.

Speaker 6 (52:11):
Time, we're taking your rights away.

Speaker 8 (52:12):
But that was twelve hundred dollars.

Speaker 9 (52:15):
And just keep in mind, there are people that say
they got twelve hundred dollars checks that was by Biden administration,
but Trump got in office by the time they were
paid out. So for some of the black men and
women that say they voted for Trump because they got
a twelve hundred dollars check, he gave a white prositude
a porn star one hundred and thirty five thousand dollars

(52:41):
for thirty seconds, and you voted for him because you
got twelve hundred.

Speaker 24 (52:44):
Dollars a lot to some people, But that shit doesn't
last your freedom, your civil rights, women's rights.

Speaker 6 (52:55):
Thats worked more than anything.

Speaker 3 (52:58):
So that's what happens when it takes scenics out of education.

Speaker 14 (53:07):
This is on us, and this is where we're going
to have to make sure that we're telling the story.
Our kids understand it. Their kids understand.

Speaker 25 (53:18):
It because their desire is for this generation, of the
next one and the next one and all in the future,
not to truly know, as Paul Harvey always said, now
the rest of the story.

Speaker 9 (53:36):
Listen.

Speaker 26 (53:37):
You know, this is something that I think a great
deal about, and you know, I would I would go
as far as to say that as Americans, we don't
appreciate history, right, And what the what the mogels are doing?
They are mythesizing, they are they are making up stuff
about their greatness, right, I mean, that's that's what drives

(53:59):
by supremacy, is just made up myth And so when
I think about that, I think about, Okay, what's gonna
what's going to get younger black folks interested in this history?

Speaker 8 (54:09):
You know?

Speaker 26 (54:10):
Is it is it to tell these kind of stories about,
you know, the people that fart for their freedoms, you know,
to be to preach, to preach at them, right, to
kind of uh talk at them more than trying to
figure out how to make this a vibe. Essentially you know,
like I, I think that this is an opportunity for

(54:33):
some level of a new Black renaissance to emerge, where
it's more inclusive, where we include all the things, you know,
not just the high brow black things. But I definitely
do think that this is an opportunity to figure out
how to engage with the generations of black folks that
we have lost. You know, they're just not interested in

(54:55):
these things. I can still recite Langston Hughes one that
I was residing in the fifth grade, you know, but
that's just not the world that we live in.

Speaker 6 (55:05):
So how do we meet this moment?

Speaker 26 (55:07):
You know, how do we talk about black history as
it sits inside of American history, as it is the
foundation of American history. How do we talk about it
beyond preaching? How do we talk about it beyond last type.

Speaker 3 (55:22):
That's what we need to figure out.

Speaker 27 (55:23):
And I gotta go, oh, absolutely, you know, to your
original point. You know, this isn't a zero sum game.
Sometimes we get caught up in that. Are people who
want to say we all need symbolism, we need action.
Republicans leave no stone unturned. We start off the show
talking about the dismantling of the Department of Education. People

(55:44):
should go to Project twenty twenty five dot observer. It
shows that there are over thirty agencies in which Product
twenty twenty.

Speaker 3 (55:53):
Five has objectives.

Speaker 27 (55:55):
Forty one percent of Project twenty twenty five objectives are
already met or in progress. And so the idea that
we can only do one or two things at a
time the only thing, the idea that we can only
ask for one or two things at a time, is
completely a foreign concept to our opposition, and they are

(56:20):
winning and fighting every single battle. That our side is
too busy failing people. We only to be focused on that.
We need to be focused on that. Like Terrence Woodburry
said earlier, we have focused on that king. Now can
one hundred percent of us focus on one hundred percent
of things? No, but know your strength and know your lane.
This show has a huge lane that's filling and telling

(56:41):
our stories and helping us not leave so many of
these stones untarred. And so anybody who is against statues,
anybody that's against our history, is against us, or is
for us repeating the mistakes, reinventing the will when we
already have the blueprint and helping the other side.

Speaker 6 (57:00):
Hand there you go.

Speaker 14 (57:03):
So yeah, well, first of the first reseason recently, one
thing he didn't do, you didn't tell people when it
comes on.

Speaker 6 (57:12):
Spolks. There have been a lot of different lawsuits against
Becauge uh and the organization that is leading one right now.
The changes that have been taking place.

Speaker 28 (57:23):
Uh, we've seen how our folks to being impacted by uh,
the precisions in the Maga administration.

Speaker 6 (57:32):
Uh, we've seen what they are doing.

Speaker 28 (57:34):
And so full Fair Houses is pursuing but or with
dogs of those branch cuts. These things are happening before
our very eyes.

Speaker 2 (57:43):
Uh.

Speaker 12 (57:43):
And what people need to be aware of is that
these things are going up to continue. Of course, DisCrit
views who is uh no stranger to this show. Uh,
stay centered out of Pennsylvania. Got glad to have a
year just talk about this losses.

Speaker 23 (58:01):
How politically important is it? Roland, It's extremely important and
thanks for having me on at this I gotta say this.

Speaker 29 (58:09):
I'm in the Germantown section of Philadelphia where a couple
of Republicans decided.

Speaker 23 (58:14):
To coven a meeting having an appreciating appreciation conversation about
what they're doing in Washington, DC.

Speaker 29 (58:22):
So you know, we had to respond to that, But
that's a whole other conversation for a whole other day.

Speaker 8 (58:26):
Brother. So what has happened, very simply is.

Speaker 29 (58:29):
That those eliminated suspend it about thirty million dollars in funding.

Speaker 23 (58:37):
The fair housing rights organizations all across.

Speaker 29 (58:40):
The country, about seventy different organizations receiving about sixty eight.

Speaker 23 (58:45):
Different grants all across the country to do the.

Speaker 29 (58:49):
Good work to enforce the fair Right fair Housing Rights
Bill that was passing the law in.

Speaker 23 (58:55):
April of nineteen sixty eight.

Speaker 29 (58:57):
And these organizations have a response to abilities to educate
communities and work through discrimination issues and get them reported
and get them addressed through the legal process. What has
happened is that those has essentially eliminated all of their
funding estimated these organizations, and now these organizations don't have

(59:18):
any funding to.

Speaker 23 (59:19):
Do to work to protect against discrimination.

Speaker 29 (59:23):
And what it basically means is that my Trump and
the whole crew believe it's okay to discriminate in housing
in all throughout the.

Speaker 8 (59:34):
United States of America.

Speaker 29 (59:35):
And the lawsuit was introduced to try to prevent that
and to get those funding those dollars resort.

Speaker 8 (59:41):
To the organizations.

Speaker 3 (59:43):
Look, people's on the tone these are both run up
new allogancy.

Speaker 6 (59:47):
They've got staff, they.

Speaker 3 (59:49):
Got I mean, this is like real, this is a
real impact.

Speaker 23 (59:54):
It's it's very real role.

Speaker 29 (59:55):
And these are folks, folks that you talk talked with before,
folks as you work with all across the country. Their
job very simply is we forced the law that was
passed in April on April eleventh, nineteen sixty eight.

Speaker 23 (01:00:11):
Fair fair housing rate legislation, and so that that's the
law of the country. What those have done is eliminate
their funding.

Speaker 29 (01:00:20):
They cannot operate, they cannot do the investigations, they cannot
send folks into investigate, they can't educate community, they can't
hold people accountable.

Speaker 8 (01:00:30):
And you know, we've been dealing with this for.

Speaker 29 (01:00:32):
Years now, most recently, as you recall, there has been
several major settlements.

Speaker 23 (01:00:37):
Over the last ten years with major banks.

Speaker 29 (01:00:39):
Around fair housing because they're discriminated with modern day red
lining to deal with this for a number of years,
and now with that addict, because these organizations will no
longer have the funding in place to deal with educated
communities and investigating community.

Speaker 8 (01:00:56):
Where that's been discriminated.

Speaker 23 (01:01:00):
So how are others joining you in this fatuity?

Speaker 29 (01:01:04):
Yes, yes, we had a president earlier this week, had
several commerce pieces, several UH state senators.

Speaker 23 (01:01:11):
UH joining in this effort putting put in public base
and and bugual making out for the water community. You
know what's going on rolling It's so much happening.

Speaker 29 (01:01:21):
At at such get such a rapid date that some
of these issues getting lost in the public conversation. That's
why I appreciate you so much for opening up your
airway so we can get this word out. So the
lawsuits being filed Urban lea other organizations to file the lawsuit.

Speaker 23 (01:01:37):
Nationally to get those dollars before.

Speaker 29 (01:01:39):
But this is just a to sip the ifer of
what we're complaing all across the cuntry and folks have
got to step up and step out and do whatever
it is that they can.

Speaker 8 (01:01:49):
What I say, Roland is very.

Speaker 23 (01:01:50):
Sup for take your own hell.

Speaker 8 (01:01:52):
You've heard me say this before. Wherever you may be.

Speaker 23 (01:01:55):
Don't worry for this party or this organization.

Speaker 29 (01:01:57):
Whatever, to step up, take your own health, get engaged wherever.

Speaker 8 (01:02:02):
You can get in.

Speaker 23 (01:02:03):
Engage to fight this fight. So let's mind to that.

Speaker 29 (01:02:06):
We cannot we cannot go back to the day where
where all the discrimination in.

Speaker 23 (01:02:12):
Our opportunity of custance.

Speaker 8 (01:02:14):
A home is allowed, it's allowed to be.

Speaker 23 (01:02:16):
The laws of the lad We cannot go through the
baculose days.

Speaker 6 (01:02:19):
No, this is all by design. They want to starve organizations,
cities and states.

Speaker 28 (01:02:29):
If they don't agree where they want to starve them financial.

Speaker 30 (01:02:35):
Well, we need to organize on every issue, on every front.
And as my dear brother said, on every hill.

Speaker 8 (01:02:46):
I mean, let's face it, we all know that one
of the.

Speaker 30 (01:02:48):
Most significant benefits of Hood's fair housing grants is economic envirolwerments. Right,
it always gave black access to a water bow and
quality housing.

Speaker 23 (01:03:02):
I mean, that's one of the most pivotal cornerstone in
our lives.

Speaker 8 (01:03:06):
Right, it's going to be one.

Speaker 30 (01:03:06):
Of the most major purchases that we will make in
our lifetime. But when you start to strategically go after
black families, right, not DI families, Black family that's.

Speaker 8 (01:03:20):
Where they're going after.

Speaker 30 (01:03:22):
So they don't want us to have social security, they
don't want us to have a full one K plan,
they don't want us to have housing, they don't want
us to.

Speaker 8 (01:03:30):
Have Medicaid, medicare.

Speaker 30 (01:03:32):
All these things are strategic and so as you continue
to advocate Roland, that we got mobilized and organized on
every front and meet them where they are.

Speaker 8 (01:03:43):
So if they want to go.

Speaker 30 (01:03:44):
Low and start taking away hug fairhousing grants, then we
need to meet them where they are. If we got
to march in Atlanta, we got to march in Detroit,
we got to march in Orlando, Florida, wherever we are
because this is going to impact us all.

Speaker 6 (01:04:01):
It's very evident, Robert, and people need to pay attention.

Speaker 8 (01:04:05):
They're going to get tinued.

Speaker 6 (01:04:06):
And luckily you have these federal of judges who are
stamping up for there's no guarantees of the talent court.

Speaker 23 (01:04:13):
Is the tween Court are going to affirm?

Speaker 6 (01:04:15):
Is your court really? Look?

Speaker 31 (01:04:18):
At some point in time we have to take responsibility
as a community and realize that there is more people
on social media talking about just hilarious at the breakfast
club having a trash out than they are talking about
the thousands of people who are going to be affected
by the couch to us, by the cuts to Medicare
and social Security, by the cuts to entitlement programs across
the board.

Speaker 6 (01:04:38):
If we as a community have to understand that we can,
we can.

Speaker 31 (01:04:41):
We have to stop waiting for Superman, and Gil scott
Heron once said that ain't no sustaining Superman. For some reason,
we're expecting the next messianic figure to descend down to
lead black people. They believe that doctor King or Malcolm
is going to common rise up from the polity and
leaders from victory.

Speaker 8 (01:04:57):
That has never been the way that things were, and so.

Speaker 31 (01:05:01):
Local organized people stand it up in their own communities
and took their family lou Hammers and the James Oranges
of the world, and took the show works of the
world to come together and bring together blocked by block,
street by street, and say we're no longer going to
be subjected to a system that treats us as being
second class or sub humans in America. There's a reason
that these groups are going after the least of these,

(01:05:23):
or at least among us first, because they know that America,
rip bars does not care about the least among us,
or we would have done something about it first. If
you are going after the multimillion dollars a Nick Mansions
instead of going after people who are on federal assistance,
you'll be hearing a lot more about it if you
were to hear if we were going after these programs
that are promoting would be going to the upper classes

(01:05:44):
into the million out of contracts. Then that we would
hear more about that. Then when you're dealing with poor families,
they're just trying to get by side to side. So
it's going to take us not just coming together, not
just marching and going down the street three poll times.
I think we're going to take a constant trades if
we see the big cons that's what these tertal programs
you're making a very cup they are. We have to

(01:06:05):
create a community based solution to do that.

Speaker 9 (01:06:09):
And that's my story. I'm particular with it. As I
tell you, I get this is big seed sports. You
learn on my program when you don't learn on other
sports shows because it's factual.

Speaker 2 (01:06:17):
Other sports program they want to pay us big.

Speaker 9 (01:06:19):
Money for saying touchdown, hold run, three point play, Oh man, Willie,
he's going all the way now. You watch March Madness
coming up over the weekend, the one shiny moment.

Speaker 2 (01:06:32):
Seventy percent of those athletes on the four of.

Speaker 9 (01:06:34):
Black men, every single one of them are affected by
what this just happened with the Department of Education is
cutting funding that help our children and students. You won't
hear that on other programs. But that's why I say
a mind is a trouble within the wist. It's not
just about me and what I think. On Big Seed Sports,
I play some of the brightest minds in this country.

(01:06:57):
If we, as African Americans and good people of all
faith in colors, if we don't stand up for the
least of these, they were all doomed. We see what's
happening with the dogs. The biggest recipient of federal dollars
is Elon Musk in the cutting school programs so kids

(01:07:18):
can eat lunch and breakfast. But they got us hood week,
untouchdown homeer, three point play.

Speaker 2 (01:07:26):
Oh man, Willie, he's going all the.

Speaker 9 (01:07:28):
Way with Big Sea Sports is different. I offer you
employment to start your own career. I tell you about
asset protection to get a roll in the trust, and
I let you hear bright minds that let you know
that's stripping away rights that the Civil Rights Act fought for.
As a Black American, I'll not tolerate being dumbed down

(01:07:49):
and just giving your scores.

Speaker 2 (01:07:50):
I won't do that.

Speaker 9 (01:07:51):
That hurt me in to my stomach. We need some
people to stand up and we talk about marching. Marching's fine,
but those Republicans are not marching up been down the street.

Speaker 2 (01:08:00):
Don't just not marching.

Speaker 9 (01:08:01):
They're going right to the courts and using executive order
which is being fought by the courts.

Speaker 2 (01:08:06):
They're not marching. Totus has not had one march outside of.

Speaker 9 (01:08:12):
The January sixth Insurrection march when they destroyed the state,
the nation's capital. They're not marching. They're using the power
of the pen. Let's start using lawyers with the power
of the pen for liberty and justice for all.

Speaker 2 (01:08:26):
That's my story. Never ticket with it. Enjoy your march madness.

Speaker 9 (01:08:30):
The mad thing is most of those black men can't
even get into a university without a scholarship.

Speaker 2 (01:08:37):
Are some grants. You won't hear about it on any
other program than Bix's Sports Now. Who deserves some praise?
Give it, praise, praise, praise. That's my story, and that
ticket with it.

Speaker 11 (01:09:03):
I thank you, I appreciate you, and I hope that
you have a super fantastic dame.

Speaker 8 (01:09:16):
I'm looking for a unique point of view on pro
sports game.

Speaker 7 (01:09:19):
Analysis this twoache of Big Z Sports.

Speaker 8 (01:09:21):
Podcast, because iHeart radio. We're a sports talk worldwide. This
a live episode.

Speaker 3 (01:09:27):
You play it on command of the iHeart Radio app.

Speaker 7 (01:09:30):
Joining Big Seed former NFL Play, a long time award
winning radio broadcaster covering all sports including NFL, NBA.

Speaker 3 (01:09:38):
Nlb uf C, e C, type, Play, USL and Woe
to

Speaker 8 (01:09:42):
Their live or on demand on iHeart Radio podcast today
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