Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Back at it for another episode of the block. But
I see show.
Speaker 2 (00:02):
I am your host.
Speaker 3 (00:03):
See you note the official Blode stepp Up, the voice
of the disabls, and I'm here with.
Speaker 4 (00:08):
Hot Well's the biggest voice of the disabled.
Speaker 5 (00:12):
I guess he's talking about because you gotta change that
ship out now.
Speaker 1 (00:16):
I'm here now to stay okay.
Speaker 3 (00:18):
And this is not a disabled podcast, even though you
got your two disabled heroes on it, and we got
somebody special.
Speaker 2 (00:24):
You see them on this podcast before this.
Speaker 3 (00:28):
Man don't need no introduction, but we're still gonna introduce him.
Speaker 2 (00:32):
My brother's smart, the smart guy.
Speaker 1 (00:34):
What was going on?
Speaker 2 (00:35):
Brother? Oh man?
Speaker 1 (00:37):
Chilling man?
Speaker 3 (00:38):
Just take it easy, taking it one day at a time,
taking over the platforms.
Speaker 1 (00:44):
I want to say that I would say just being
I would say just being uh, you know, diligent and
consistent with getting information out to our people, you know,
and making sure that we're knowledgeable about all the opportunities
(01:05):
that we have. We are prepared for all the adversities
that's to come, and we're grateful that we have the strength,
the resources, and superiority to overcome the adversities that might
be possible in a way, and just being present and
(01:26):
you know, you know, being grateful, right, And I think
it's very very frustrating sometimes to see where we are
as a whole, right, and we've been through so much, right,
We've been through so much, the slavery, racism, the system, media,
(01:46):
bad business, and we still just you know, take it
on the chain and keep going, right. So if we
if I can be you know, part of the solution,
if I can be one of the ones who you know,
delivers the information that we need eat to make a
better future, then I think that's just what I'm being
(02:06):
called to do now, and I'm very very passionate about it.
And one of the things I want to touch on
too with you guys having a podcast is understanding the
two deals that's available to you guys. As you know, podcasters,
you have a you have an audio deal and then
you have a visual deal. So you might get an
audio deal from uh, you know, iHeart Radio, and then
(02:31):
you might get a visual deal from Netflix, Amazon, you know,
TikTok TV, I G t V. And this is how
you structure the business model for your podcast. And then
you get your ad revenue from your audio the audio
version of your podcast, and then you also get at
(02:52):
revenue from the visual advertised at revenue for your.
Speaker 4 (03:00):
J don't tell everybody now came.
Speaker 2 (03:02):
On to drop June to grow the podcast.
Speaker 4 (03:05):
Now that we appreciate that. When when what would you
say motivated you to start trying to well uplook because
you're not trying, you're doing uplifting our people as a
whole and being a motivational speaker and helping everybody out.
What what made you start doing that? And how old
were you?
Speaker 1 (03:22):
Hm? I don't know. I didn't. I don't think I
actually made the decision. I've always been, I think, to
a certain extent, rebellious, fearless and funny. You know, Wolf
was telling me, did I see the New the New
Math half of an episode? When I did the When
(03:46):
I first came on the show, I was speaking from
a place of experience and passion, right like, you know,
I'm not selling my soul. I'm not gonna, you know,
do anything. You know, I'm not going to partake in
any homosexual activity for for a bag, right, And it
just went viral and I realized indirectly the necessity for
(04:12):
my voice.
Speaker 4 (04:13):
Because its people made you seem like you were wrong
for that comment when it's like that's not Yeah, I
get it.
Speaker 1 (04:20):
Yeah, I mean you know, well, well again that that
kind of that kind of like spearheaded you know what
I'm doing now. I mean I've always spoke you know, optimistic, positive,
because I had to do that to myself. I didn't
have any you know, support system. I didn't have a mother,
I didn't have a father. I didn't have people in
my life to give me any any inspiration.
Speaker 4 (04:43):
So you grew up without a mother and a father.
Speaker 1 (04:46):
Yes, so you were in the for Yeah, yeah, I
mean my mom's my mom's my mom's lost me about five,
but before that, my mom's abusing me, beating on me,
getting high. My father was never around, and you know,
I always had to. I mean I've always was a fighter, right,
And the only one thing I think my family, my
(05:10):
aunt to be specific, did for me was my little
brother was getting in a fight in the projects. The
kid was bullying him. He was literally beating him with
a dead bird like a pigeon. Right, can't make this
sh up. It's just funny. Right, So I'm gonna, I'm gonna.
I'm on the other side of the part playing basketball.
These two girls come and get me, say hey, yo,
get your brother's fight, and your brothers fight, so I
would go on the other side. The kids older than
(05:31):
both of us, bigger than both of us, pause and
then my brother is like looking like scared, like he's like,
what happened? I could see the bird is in the
kid's hand, right, So I tried to fight him. He's
you know, he beats me up whatever with the birds,
you know what I mean? You know, he threw the
bird down and you know, and started punching on me.
(05:54):
And so I started crying and went upstairs, and the
two girls brought me upstairs to my aunt, and my
aunt asked me, hey, which I did he punched you in?
And I pointed to that he punched me in and
she punched me another oh, and she was like, yo,
you know, either you're gonna you're gonna fight him or
you're gonna fight me. And it was just like, yo,
(06:15):
what I never even I never even fathom nor even
what fights you what? I just go back and ride
down on the elevator.
Speaker 4 (06:24):
And went back and for them.
Speaker 1 (06:26):
Yeah, and I got beat up again, and my aunt
came downstairs. She smacked him and said not go get
your mother because my aunt was very yeah, and his
mother came back and once she seen it was my aunt,
she was like, now I'm cool. She apologized whatever, And
I think that was something that always stuck with me,
(06:47):
like you you you, no matter what, You're gonna have
to defend yourself. You're gonna have to stand up for yourself.
You're gonna have to fight.
Speaker 4 (06:54):
So do you feel like that helped you or hindered you,
because a lot of black men get it, like they're told,
don't cry, don't be solved, don't do Do you feel
like that helps black men or do you feel like
that hurts them, because a lot of black men complain
about it as they get older and they need therapy
for it.
Speaker 1 (07:10):
Well. Well, self resilience and self self resilience or self
reliance and empathy and nurturing is situational. And there's moments
where you need to be tough as a man, right
and there's moments where you need to be allowed vulnerability,
(07:36):
but not at the expense of your masculinity, not at
the expense of your leadership. And when you have a
great relationship with God, God will always refill you and
replenish you. So the thing about it is is us
understanding our roles, the woman's role, the man's role, and
how the woman, through that role of wis them in
(08:00):
balance and unconditional love. She's able to nurture that man
and point him in the direction of God, and then
through that relationship with God, he's able to feel strong
and invincible. God is the you know, is the great replenisher. Right,
So I think in that scenario for me specifically, I
(08:23):
think what it did was it didn't allow me a
moment to retreat in the face of adversity. So even
today I don't feel that. I don't feel that thing.
Right of yo, this is something that's insurmountable or I
can't overcome it. Right, And then it gave me a
(08:45):
point of reference, which is something I use to make
a mantra for myself. When you feel overwhelmed, think about
what you overcame. When I feel overwhelmed, and think about
what I overcame, and I overcame a lot. So I
don't feel that uh uh uh uh I don't feel.
(09:07):
I don't. I don't. I don't. I don't I don't
while I don't. I don't lay in defeat, I don't follows,
I don't allow myself to something is something's gonna go off,
A mechanism in me is gonna go off.
Speaker 4 (09:18):
I'm like, okay, like that moment, so.
Speaker 1 (09:20):
I get up and fight, and I feel like that
situation was part of my foundation.
Speaker 4 (09:25):
That's what started making your bogs and stuff.
Speaker 1 (09:27):
Getting in not being in the system, I mean, you know,
being in a system, being in group homes. Yeah, being
in you know, Rykers Island, d f y, juvenile right
like you everything you fighting, you fighting for your sneakers,
you fighting for your phone, You're fighting for your cookies.
You're fighting for your telephone time for eavy year.
Speaker 4 (09:45):
But when you were incarcerated, did you ever fail yourself
like preaching to people, like speaking, like speaking life into
other brothers that were there.
Speaker 1 (09:52):
No, ain't that's a movie ship man.
Speaker 4 (09:55):
I'm sorry. I don't mean to call you.
Speaker 1 (09:57):
I mean you you you're just surviving you. I mean,
you're gonna either be aggressive or deeply focused on self
development or there's a balance of both, you know, because
solitude creates envy. So when you in prison and you
separate from everybody else, it's gonna always be that person.
They want to just challenge you. This is just gonna
(10:18):
be some type of you know issue, and you're you're
taught because it's the culture to mind your business in prison, right,
so you mind your business. I'm not I'm not trying
to stand on a soapbox in prison and say, hey,
let's we shall overcome. That wasn't the case. I just
spent a lot of time developing myself, studying so I
(10:39):
could get my ged. I got my ged in prison.
Worked on my stuttering habit, worked on my speech impediments,
worked on, you know, increasing my attention span, right, and
dealing with childhood traumas given to me by my parents.
Speaker 4 (10:57):
How long were you incarcerated for some time? What's some time?
Speaker 3 (11:02):
Yeah, previous episodes that he's definitely been through the system.
Speaker 1 (11:05):
Yeah yeah, I mean I tried to yet alone.
Speaker 4 (11:06):
You know it's multiple times. It was multiple No, I didn't.
Speaker 1 (11:10):
I didn't, but I tried to get into the you know,
we gotta be careful because anything with I never did
nothing fruity and I never told nobody. But in terms
of like I'm learning now to stay too much away
from my criminal pass people. No people you getting you
(11:30):
get pulled into indictments for ship that you be pulled into.
Speaker 4 (11:33):
So I tried to, because once they see you out
and you making it and stuff, they want to bah,
yeah it's changed, he's not the same person. But that's
good that you use that, you utilize that time to
make yourself better, rather than where a lot of people
they let the system break them down and mold them
into a whole other being than when they went in.
But we have a couple of questions for you.
Speaker 2 (11:55):
Before we've get I liked that. When I'm overwhelmed, I
think about what I overcame. I'm about to start you.
Speaker 4 (12:01):
And you have an affirmation that you've been teaching people.
Speaker 1 (12:05):
Yeah, I got to tell you. How you think creates
how you feel. How you feel becomes an emotion. That
emotion becomes a vibration. That vibration becomes a magnet that
attracts things to you. Also, recently I got a new one.
Only think about what you want, forget about what you
don't want. Never speak about what you don't have.
Speaker 4 (12:25):
Only think about what you want, forget about what you
don't want, and forget and never speak about.
Speaker 1 (12:29):
What you speak what you don't have.
Speaker 4 (12:31):
That's powerful, because that's ungrateful if.
Speaker 1 (12:33):
You do no, I mean, it's a distraction, right, So
you being grateful is important. Having gratitude right, But only
think about what you want, because in order to acquire
what you want, you have to be intentional about it.
Only think about what you want. If you want to
if you want to have whatever that is, you have
(12:54):
to actively be moving and working towards it.
Speaker 4 (12:57):
It has to become a lifestyle.
Speaker 1 (12:58):
Forget about what you don't want, because what you don't want,
you don't want it, why even give it any type
of energy? And if you think about what you don't want,
you got enough power in your thought processes to bring
that into your life. So you don't think about you
forget about what you don't want, and then you never
(13:20):
speak about what you don't have because you just don't
have it.
Speaker 4 (13:24):
Start taking lesson.
Speaker 1 (13:28):
So you don't have it. So you know, you never
speak about what you don't have because you don't have itthing,
everything you need you already have, right, and if you
want it. A lot of times that want versus what
you need is just a catalyst or a vehicle for escapism.
You're just using your wants to keep you away from
(13:52):
the accountability or the responsibility to apply what you already
have and through the application of what you already have,
you have the opportunity to get what you want. Still,
but if you focus on primarily what you what you
want versus what you already have, then not only you're
not being grateful, but you're not utilizing the resources and
(14:13):
tools that you have. And then you're worrying about something
that you don't even have. So it doesn't even benefit
you at all. So you know, so I say, only
think about what you want forget about what you don't want,
never speak about what you don't have.
Speaker 3 (14:26):
Yeah, and people that's home watching that, rewind it because
we all should be living like living by that.
Speaker 4 (14:31):
And I feel like I feel like, as too, disabled people,
we do pretty well with that.
Speaker 1 (14:34):
But I wouldn't say disabled.
Speaker 4 (14:35):
I mean I think that word honestly.
Speaker 1 (14:37):
I think I think so not not the part of
your wism, but I feel like I would. I would.
I would find it a revision.
Speaker 4 (14:44):
I call myself handy capable, but I.
Speaker 1 (14:46):
Will revise it, right because because everything is think of
it like dials, right, So if this dow is if
the if the the dowal of the law part of
your body is turned down, there's something else that's turned up. Right,
there's certain things that that are activated right that you're
(15:08):
using more of right, So I would, I would, I
would be mindful of, you know, taking on certain attributes
about yourself, well, speaking certain attributes about yourself, right, and
and and and being grateful for the things that you
(15:28):
actually have. And remember right, only think about what you
want forget about what you don't want. Never speak about
what you don't have. So, if I don't have the
ability to walk, why am I speaking on it? If
I don't have the ability to see, why am I
speaking on it? If I don't have the ability to
to fly like Superman? When am I speaking on it? Right?
If I don't have the you know, the the ability
(15:50):
to to to to fucking sing like you know, Michael
Jackson while I speaking on it? Right, only think about
what you want, Forget about what you don't want. Never
speak about what you don't have. And the more you
are a practitioner of not speaking about what you don't have,
the more your gratitude and appreciation for what you do have,
(16:12):
you will watch it increase. And then that hyper focus
on what you already have it elevates you to a
level that you won't even be aware of So this
is why we say only think about what you want
forget about what you don't want, never speak about what
you don't have.
Speaker 4 (16:28):
I like that. I like the way you put it that.
I appreciate that.
Speaker 1 (16:32):
Get into these questions.
Speaker 4 (16:34):
Okay, well this is a this is a hot topic
right now, but everybody's talking about it. So how do
you feel about black people glorifying the death of Charlie Kirk?
Speaker 1 (16:46):
Well, I think it's a reaction, right, I think I think,
you know, we we're so what condition to care more
about the lives of our oppressors versus the lives of us,
(17:10):
And I think it's it can possibly be a form
of poetic justice for that situation, that unfortunate you know,
that unfortunate death. So even though we're not we're not
happy that we shouldn't be happy that the person died,
(17:32):
but we're not sad that they're going. Yeah, that's true, right,
that's true. Not sad that you're going, I'm not happy
that you died.
Speaker 4 (17:39):
But I'm not sad.
Speaker 1 (17:42):
Because because because because your your your your purpose, your
life worked, the energy that you put in was was
negative towards our people, was insensitive. So a lot of
times you know when we when we talk and and
someone who likes to be master manipulator, right, and you're
(18:06):
having debates on a large platform with people who are
ill prepared for the conversation, and so you're able to.
Speaker 4 (18:19):
So you look like you're smart and you're able.
Speaker 1 (18:21):
You're sounding smart to someone unaware, uninformed, or not properly prepared.
So when when when when the late Charlie says, well,
why don't you slavery has been over for this amount
of time, Why aren't you guys doing for self? We've
(18:42):
built over one hundred cities that were burned to the
ground by white lynch mobs and white supremacist groups in
the clan. Right. You know, Central Park was a village
owned by us and I think it's called Seneca. You
can you can checked this right, So Central Park, right?
Speaker 5 (19:06):
Uh?
Speaker 1 (19:06):
And and I want to say Louisiana, right, there was
there was a two towns they built one hundred years apart.
And they use they they they polluted the water, right,
and then use that as an excuse to condemn the town.
(19:26):
Make it a buffer zone, push out all the residents,
displace them, and then clear up the polluted water and
then take over and reclaim the land. Right, and there
never was an uninterrupted period long enough for us to
(19:48):
benefit from our self reliance and doing for self. So
when someone says, why don't you do for self, Well,
we've we've we've built things that we didn't have the
institutions to protect, and we relied on the government for protection.
And when we didn't receive that protection, and those murderers
(20:09):
weren't even prosecuted or brought to justice. Right, we not
gave up, But there's a there's a fear that's being
instilled when you do for self. That's what that's what
being a martyr is about. Right, And we still deal
with the slave consciousness. Okay, So if you're a mother, right,
(20:32):
so if I if you smoke crack right every single day,
and you're pregnant, you smoking crack, smoking cigarettes, and you
give birth to a baby, what can we expect the
baby to look like? The baby's going to have some issues?
Speaker 6 (20:43):
Right?
Speaker 1 (20:43):
And then now that baby grows up born with these
issues that you hereditary passed down to that child, and
then that child grows up and nobody else Mommy smoked cracked,
but that child you only cracked baby in the schools right,
and now you're being judged based upon and then you
(21:06):
grow up confused, and then when you finally have enough
awareness to be like, wow, it wasn't my fault. My
mom did this to me. Now you're mad at your mom.
But what mommy couldn't properly articulate was she was chained up,
held down and forced a smoke crack. Se. So the
limitations that they accuse us of being unable to deal with,
(21:32):
or the opportunities we have that they accuse us of
not being capable of taking advantage of, or not even opportunities,
and you're talking about people who have a four hundred
five hundred year head start looking at us like, and
you're only in position because we worked and built this country.
Speaker 4 (21:52):
Right, good credit for everything, right.
Speaker 1 (21:54):
So that's important. And so this is what I'm saying about.
I can't respect someone who's just flat out an idiot.
He's an idiot. Oh sorry, he was an idiot, right.
So and then the next point is what he said
was he said, you know, blacks committing a bunch of crimes. Yeah,
there's no other race in America that has committed more
(22:18):
acts of violence than European men. And if you google
this in fact check how many black men were convicted
of murdering white people, right, and compare that to how
many white men murdered black men black people.
Speaker 2 (22:38):
There's no number.
Speaker 1 (22:40):
We could just start with one town. They killed two
thousand people in one town. We have not killed two
thousand white people in America to date, to this date,
we have not killed two thousand white people.
Speaker 2 (22:53):
I believe.
Speaker 1 (22:53):
No, no, no, it's not you. This is a fact. We
have not killed two thousand white people. And the whole
existence of us being in America. We have not killed
two thousand white people. And they've killed million, they've killed
millions of us, only to have this this, this, this, this, this,
I don't know what to call them, right, say that
(23:18):
we're criminals, but and we're violent, But the the the
the most violent people in America has been white men,
has been white people as well. Right, So that's that's
important to understand. And then also understanding we're talking about redlining,
you know, and then then everybody likes to say, well,
(23:41):
the black father is you know, not not not present.
When the government strategically removed trades out of schools, got
rid of factory jobs, laid off so many black men
and at the same time pumped drugs into the community.
Put like really broke up the financial power structure of
(24:05):
black mens and single black mothers and said, listen, if
you want to receive money, it can't be a man
in the house. While at the same time, when white
women fell on hard times, and when the white farmer
white fell on hard times, she wasn't required to make
the husband leave the farm. She was still able to
(24:25):
receive subsidy from the government. So you're talking about you're
talking about architected, an architected, architected destruction of our family,
of the black family, right, So how I feel about
(24:45):
this guy leaving it?
Speaker 6 (24:49):
You know, hey, man, a.
Speaker 4 (25:00):
Lot of people would counteract and say, well, why do
you think what is the justification of us being that
you said a lot of black You said something real,
you said, black people to this day have been killed
over more than two it's less than two thousand white
people that we've ever killed. Right, So then why is
it that we do it so much to each.
Speaker 1 (25:16):
Other because we condition to do so, right, So you
gotta think goes back to Willie Lynch letter, Jim crow
Low's right. So there's there's always there's always something next. Right,
So you start with the plantation. You on a plantation.
We're going to give you a religion that's not yours
(25:38):
and tell you all the people that run the religion
is white. We're gonna not allow you to read you
going to school, and and and he talked about he
talked about, Uh, I think it's called D I D
E I D I D. Right, that was only created
because we were being attacked and not given opportunity. We
(26:00):
couldn't even go to school.
Speaker 4 (26:01):
We could be overqualified and under made.
Speaker 1 (26:04):
Yeah, we couldn't even get the job because of how
we looked. So these things were created to counter act racism.
And what white people love to do with us is
when we abandon what they created to counteract something that
they created to hurt us. And we abandon that and say,
(26:24):
fuck you, I'm gonna fight your ass now. We're racist. No,
we're not racist. We're playing defense.
Speaker 4 (26:31):
So you don't think black people could be racist?
Speaker 1 (26:33):
No, absolutely not. And we never were racist. It's not
even in our nature. And we never imposed our will
or tried to hurt somebody because of their skin color. Right, So,
and I'm not I I may be the wrong person
to ask these questions because I don't give fuck about
white people. I'm not you know, I'm not an integrationalist, right,
(26:54):
I don't.
Speaker 4 (26:54):
I don't.
Speaker 1 (26:55):
I don't feel like I have to make white people
feel comfortable with my uncomfortability that I go through due
to being a black man living in America dealing with racism.
Fuck them all, and I hope there's a day that
(27:15):
we all wake up and realize that white people will
never get out the way. White people will never take
their foots off of our next unless we take a
machete and relieve them of their foot right or defeet right.
And that's just what it is. And they don't have
(27:39):
the power. Who the fuck do we think, like what
we're superior. It's more of us than them on the planet,
It's more of us in the United States of America everywhere.
So we just have to only just understand that value
of us. So the reason why we kill each other
is because, look, they put race specific chemicals in the
(28:00):
drugs in the weed. They put prescription They put synthetic
versions of prescription pills in the marijuana that creates bipolarism, schizophrenia.
You know, they put hormones in the food right. Things
that alter how we look, how we think, how we function,
makes us aggressive, makes us paranoid. And now we're in
(28:23):
a neighborhood where there's no resources and that's just what
it is. So what's the solution. So what's the solution? Well, again,
what could we do to change that?
Speaker 2 (28:33):
Because like you gave us some stats about no.
Speaker 1 (28:35):
I was just so so the reason I was just
debunking everything. The late Charlie got shot in the neck,
not hear no more he was talking about so so
so you know, I was just I was just referencing everything,
like saying, okay, we yo, Slavery's over. Why you guys
(28:57):
don't pick yourself up and do it? Well, we did.
We built over one hundred cities, and you came in
and killed everybody. No, no, no, no, you killed everybody. You killed,
you killed everybody first, massacred, you know what I mean.
And then you say, yo, well why do we you know,
why are fathers leaving leaving a home? Well, you incentivize
(29:17):
the black woman to have financial opportunities if the black
man is not there, and then through your power through government,
you remove all the financial opportunities from the black man.
Make it harder for him to get housing, make it
harder for him. So now I can't get a house
unless I have good credit. I don't, sorry, what did
I have ever have credit? I never have credit. You
make all these things, you make all these obstacles unattainable.
(29:43):
I mean, you make all these obstacles insurmountable, Like it's
so hard for me to get over, but you make
it easier for the for the for the woman. And
then that as a child on the way, it's one am.
I said, Now you're pushing me out right, So it's
just it's just diabolical. And then you say, well that
that happened, and then well, we can't even get venda's licenses.
(30:03):
There used to be a white vendor, yellow venda, and
a blue vender. You would go to the Department Consumer
Fires forty two Broad with the sixth floor. You see
all the Franks stands all over New York City. You
see all the food trucks and stuff like that. Right,
A lot of all them Africans don't have no food
venice licenses. They don't have no no permits to sell
vendor on the street. They gotta work for a jew
(30:23):
or work for a Chinese or work for arab And
when Bloomberg was the mayor at the time, he put
a freeze on all the licenses you could get. So
even when a brother said, you know what, I'm not
gonna sell drugs, I'm not gonna commit crime. I'm gonna
take I'm gonna make some T shirts that says I
love New York and go to bowling, go to bowling.
Speaker 4 (30:41):
Green and and you're going to jail and.
Speaker 1 (30:44):
You can't even But but you can't even get I
know because I try to get the license. That's why
I know so much about the ship being frozen. Yes,
so when I got out of prison, yo, let me
you know. So even when you try to do for self,
you still can't do for self. So when I'm listening
to this, to this, this, this guy you know say
all this bullshit is frustrating. And then to see people
(31:08):
be expected to give a fuck about a motherfucker getting shot,
it's just it. You're trying to create this slave consciousness.
I don't give a fuck who who's white and who dies.
I got too many brothers that look like me and
too many just dying every day.
Speaker 4 (31:26):
Everything be like just another need.
Speaker 1 (31:31):
Were just in the recess of.
Speaker 3 (31:32):
Going definitely, So like gentrification is big right now all
over but in New York City, how can we.
Speaker 2 (31:38):
Take back our neighborhoods, our streets?
Speaker 3 (31:40):
How can we take how can we like snatch the
gentrification out of our hoods and take.
Speaker 4 (31:45):
Over what it's Brooklyn and got it bad? You not bad?
Speaker 2 (31:47):
When you got white people walking through the projects.
Speaker 4 (31:49):
And they're getting mad. It's been going on going on, Because.
Speaker 3 (31:53):
Where do we start from, Like, where do we start
at taking back over our neighborhoods?
Speaker 1 (31:57):
Well, well, the first thing is so with mindset, right, espy,
I say all the time, right, like, we have to
develop an impenetrable force field around your skull, around your mind. Right,
you know, if it's no enemy on the inside, no
enemy on the outside can ever do you any harm.
So we have to stop looking out the window and
(32:18):
start looking in the mirror and start creating affirmations and mantras.
And we have to do things as a collective community.
So cookouts, barbecues, spade tournaments, we have to spend time
together without conflict. So we have to create a new mindset.
(32:39):
We have to have, you know, goals to increase or
improve the quality of life in our neighborhoods, and then
we have to do things together as community, as a neighborhood,
as a society without conflict, and learn to coexists in
the same space, in the same room together.
Speaker 4 (32:57):
Do you think if there were more black politicians or
black people in the police.
Speaker 1 (33:01):
Field, No, no, no, you can't. They can't. No, no, no, because
because those those people are part of a system that
wasn't designed for our personal development or elevation. So we
would literally have to create our own nation. You can't
build your house in another man's backyard unless you plan
on having a treehouse or a dog house, right, So
(33:23):
it's important for us to understand that we have to
build our own nation, and the destination of that is Africa. Right,
we have we have the place to go, we're just
conditioned not to go to the place that we have
to go.
Speaker 4 (33:36):
But even in Africa, there's a lot of white people ruling,
like South Africa's.
Speaker 1 (33:41):
Basically that's one plot. Listen, that's one listen, that's one spot.
You got a better chance you're gonna see less white
people in Africa than in Brooklyn.
Speaker 4 (33:51):
Yeah, now that that those are good points, especially being
that like you said it is already a system that
wasn't mean for us it.
Speaker 1 (33:59):
Was so, and then and then so so the first
so the first step is, you know, our our new
overground railroad is not going to be built overnight. Right,
So we had the underground railroad which was clandestine and secretive.
(34:22):
Right now we're going to create an overground railroad. But
it takes time. Right, So don't don't worry about the endgame.
Worry about being present. How can I feel better about myself?
How can I have mantras? How can I look in
the mirror and love what I see? Right? How can
I become more knowledgeable on all the contributions that my
(34:45):
people contributed to this world?
Speaker 6 (34:47):
Right?
Speaker 1 (34:48):
And then take pride in that and use that as
your reference to say, well, if black women invented math,
I can't invent a financial plan to make my my
podcast at revenue over twenty million dollars. Yeah, I think
I can, and I can and I will and I'm
doing it right. And then start to elevate yourself with
(35:10):
this new mindset, and then connect with other people who
share the same mindset that look like you, and then
start small and keep growing, growing, growing, growing, growing, expanding
and then over time will be where we need to
be and we'll have what we will born to have,
which is our power. Yeah, for sure.
Speaker 4 (35:30):
And how do you what do you think? What kind
of men do you think black women should be looking
for in order to just you know, empower our race
as a whole and do better.
Speaker 1 (35:40):
Well, I think I think, I think I think our
women should be looking to themselves first. And you should
be focusing on personal self development. And because your role
is wisdom and balance, right, your role, So let's let's
let's lay out some things what black women are supposed
to be doing. Right. You're supposed to have wisdom, So
instead of you trying to figure out what lash is
(36:02):
to put on, you should be trying to figure out
what books to read. Right. You're supposed to have empathy
and patience. You're supposed to be a nurturer. Right, So
if you're not at peace with yourself, how can you
create a peaceful situational environment for the man that you
deal with? So you have to focus on meditation, you
(36:23):
have to focus on breathing techniques, you have to focus
on cognitive behavioral therapy, identifying what your negative dought patterns
are and creating positive dought patterns. You have to understand
the three phases of love. The first phase of love
is informative. You're informing that man that he has to
go to God and have a relationship with God. And
(36:44):
prayer is not with his mouth, but is with his actions,
and the actions that he takes becomes the prayer, and
the answer to the prayer is the results he receives
based upon the actions he takes. Right, you're informing them.
The second phase of love is unconditional. Right, but you
can't love him unless you love you. And if you
don't know who you are, then how can you love
(37:05):
what you don't even understand? Right? What it is? Right?
So you have to be living in the season of
self development, not living in the season of single but
living in the season of self development. And then the
last phase of love is tough love, which is accountability.
But you can't have an expectation without a preparation. So
how are you preparing this man to meet the expectations
(37:29):
that you're setting for yourself and for the relationship, right
when you haven't even prepared yourself to be the best
version of yourself to be prevalent in this man's life.
And you don't choose the man. The man chooses you.
But when you're chosen, what version of you is being chose?
What version of you is this man receiving?
Speaker 2 (37:48):
Right?
Speaker 1 (37:49):
Is it an asset or is it a liability? And
you also need to increase your financial literacy because what
you bring to the table is the multiplication of that
man's finances. What you bring to the table is the
detection of that man's finances. What you bring to the
table is your wisdom. You have psychic abilities and capabilities.
So through those psychic capabilities, you're bringing foresight and intuition
(38:14):
right in ten, five, twenty years up the road, warnings
before it even happens. That's what you're bringing to the table.
Speaker 3 (38:20):
Yeah, so he drops some knowledge, be flipped it around
as a black man, what should we be looking for?
Speaker 2 (38:28):
How should we be going into a relationship?
Speaker 4 (38:30):
He basically he basically said that you're looking for?
Speaker 1 (38:32):
Yeah, you know what I'm saying. Now, that's a fact.
I'm saying. As a man, what work do we have
to do? You gotta get to God because God gives
us revelation. The woman doesn't get the revelation like we
do because it's not her responsibility. It's not She's not
responsible for leadership. We are. So when we talk to God,
(38:54):
God gonna answer our call. But he's gonna send her
text message. She was a text message. Little later, God
gonna he's gonna pick up on the first ring for us.
He not answered for her, Gonna send a text message?
Or what's your old yo?
Speaker 6 (39:07):
Yeah?
Speaker 1 (39:07):
God, what's that?
Speaker 4 (39:08):
Man?
Speaker 1 (39:08):
Hit you right back? Talking to the man. I'm on
the phone with the man. Hit you right back? B
all b so so. So you gotta have your You
gotta have your You gotta have your relationship with God intact.
And you have to utilize whatever religion you follow. You
have to identify the tools for your advancement, the tools
(39:30):
for your liberation, the tools for your your your personal
development in that religion, right, and then you have to
find something that is pleasing to God that God can
give you provision. He can grant you provision. Right. So,
if you don't have a stream of income, a job,
something that you're working on. It doesn't have to be
(39:52):
cookie cutter. It just has to be something that can produce.
And if it can produce, God but will grant you provision.
And through that provision what you're doing will produce in
such a way that you're able to take care of yourself,
your household, and your family. So we have to get
right with God and stop going to women what we're
(40:15):
supposed to go to God for right. Because when you
try to call the woman and the way you call God,
she doesn't even have a phone, so she can't even
answer the call. And she doesn't even have that that phone.
That phone doesn't exist. So you calling a number that's
not real, looking for a network that don't exist.
Speaker 4 (40:38):
Huh.
Speaker 1 (40:41):
And the more you call her instead of calling God,
you get so behind in the bill that man, you
can't even you can't even catch up. Now you too much.
Now you got a file for bankruptcy.
Speaker 2 (40:49):
Man.
Speaker 4 (40:49):
So you feel like a lot of a lot of
problems and relationships are black households. Is that a lot
of Sometimes a lot of men look to women for
guidance as opposed to us looking for guidance.
Speaker 1 (41:00):
Yeah, because we a lot of times for sure, because
the woman, See, the greatest soldier in the white man's
army is the black woman. So she's drunk off of
the incentives that white men give you through corporate America
through government. She's drunk off that because she's able to
utilize that in a way to being a stronger position
(41:21):
than the man. And because we're not taught. I felt
that one we're not taught. And because we're not taught
as men how to go to God right in every
avenue that will lead us to God, the white man
fucked it over. So now we're not in the position
(41:42):
that was supposed to be in, but it's by nature
we want to be in that position. So now he's
talking like he's the man, but he's not producing like
he's the man. So now you don't want to listen
because he's not producing, even though he's saying the right shit.
But you can't respect them because you're producing or contributing
more than he is and you don't have enough empathy
(42:03):
wisdom to look at it and say this is not right.
And because you're not in your proper place, just because
you're productive don't mean you're living in your purpose. It's
a difference between being productive and living in your purpose. Yes,
you're productive, you're taking care of yourself, but you're not
living in your purpose. You're living outside of your purpose.
So you're never going to be happy, and you're never
(42:25):
gonna have peace. And if you're never genuinely happy and
you never have peace, I don't care about them stupid
ass vacations you're going on. I don't care about the
eyelashes you put on, the weaves you put on, I
don't care about the coaches you like to dick, you suck,
whatever it is you got going on. You are not
fucking happy because you're not living a life that a
woman is supposed to live, and because you don't understand
(42:48):
that no matter what shiny shit you have in your life,
you are never going to be happy unless you're living
the life that God designed you to live with the
person God created you to live it with. Mm hmm, right, yeah,
I know this off.
Speaker 2 (43:05):
It's off, But do you think, as like black people,
we can stand with.
Speaker 1 (43:09):
So hold on and let me know. But listen, let me,
let me get back to the let me get back
to the let me get back to the thing. So
now we have to create something that can produce or
get involved, indulge in something that can produce, and go
to God for provision. Right, you say one prayer, God,
(43:34):
please grant me provision. God, please grant me provision, so
I put it out there and then now that's the
first phase of prayer. The second phase of prayer is
I have to take action. I have to get into
applying myself in troubleshooting and failing. But I have to
fail faster. And then the time it takes for this
(43:57):
thing to produce was the prepper ration that God made
me go through. So I can be prepared, I can
be durable, I can I can have strength in a
way due to all these failures. And then now I
get provision. And then when I get provision, now it's lit.
I'm doing what the fuck I gotta do.
Speaker 4 (44:16):
See, so do you believe he already asks you the
LGB quickly?
Speaker 1 (44:22):
Yeah, Because we can't build the nation with our men
dealing with men and our women dealing with women. We
have to pro create. We have to have family structures, right,
so you know, and homosexuality is one of is a
tool in the toolbox of white supremacy because they utilize
it to protect against white genetic annihilation. Right. So I
(44:45):
don't have to make a commercial and say, hey, you're
a woman, bleed, bleed bleed. I don't have to force
that down your neck. You're gonna have your minstrew every month, right,
(45:06):
nature right, not constructed nature to take you out of
your true nature. Right.
Speaker 4 (45:18):
So yeah, do you feel like why do you feel
like so many black men are so feminine these days?
Speaker 1 (45:26):
Well again, black men are tired. We what the fu
are we supposed to do? We shit, nobody gives a
fuck about us. Everybody's insensitive. Our women are so unaware,
they can't take accountability. Our women are toxic and narcissistic.
They beat us down to right. Then you got the
white man over here, he like, man, fuck you. Then
(45:47):
you got the white woman who will take a version
of you sexually, but won't take the higher vibration version
of you because genetically she cannot connect with you because
you're so you're superior. They're the recessive, what the dominant?
So this and their nature to be attracted to the dominance,
but something in them malfunctions if you're truly being dominant
(46:12):
and being truly who you are outside of the bedroom,
So you don't even you gotta water yourself down if
you're gonna deal with women women of other racism. Right,
but black men are tied, you know, and the tie
it and it's a lot that you gotta deal with directly, indirectly, spiritually, mentally, physically,
right yeah, so.
Speaker 4 (46:34):
Yeah, but if that's the case, then we could say
black women are tired as well. We deal with a
lot as well.
Speaker 1 (46:42):
It's not but it's not a comparison. See it's wisdom. Yeah, right,
check this out. It's about of water there, right, Yeah.
If that door is locked shut and those windows are walls, right,
and the only person is strong enough to open that door.
On the other side of that door is the exit,
(47:02):
and it's ten thousand bottles of water, and were about
to die of dehydration? Right, what do you do with
that bottle of water?
Speaker 4 (47:11):
Share it?
Speaker 1 (47:15):
Wait?
Speaker 5 (47:16):
Is that the wrong question? I mean answer? I said
share it? What was the answer? You said that these.
Speaker 7 (47:22):
Windows, the walls, the windows bottle, it's only one bottle
of water, and the only person strong enough to open
it is what give it to the man so that
he can open it?
Speaker 1 (47:34):
Total question? Whatever? You just just ponder on that ship
pond that let's stup it on YouTube.
Speaker 4 (47:40):
What's the answer.
Speaker 1 (47:42):
But that's what we deal with, right and right because
we can. Our women are conditioned to be that way.
So now it's like you like share it or most
of our women are going to drink the whole bottle. No, no, listen, no,
this is real. They're gonna drink the whole bottle and
(48:03):
try to open the door and die next to that
man of dehydration because you didn't have the appreciation, you
didn't have the gratitude, you didn't have this humility, you
didn't have the submission, if you didn't have the level
of submission to allow that man to be a man.
Speaker 4 (48:22):
M hm.
Speaker 1 (48:24):
Right, so we both died trapped in his funky ass room,
on his funky ass couch. The question is to give
the man a water and let the man open the door. Right,
That was the part two of my answer.
Speaker 2 (48:39):
Let her pretty much the thing. Let a man be
a man.
Speaker 4 (48:42):
So do you believe in interracial do you absolutely nothing?
You feel like it's killing our race, watering it down.
Do you acknowledge biracial kids as black?
Speaker 1 (48:51):
Yeah, because we because we the dominant. So if a
black man have a baby with with with with one
of them, one of them, whatever you call those things,
nobody you know that baby, that baby's gonna come out
looking like he got some chocolate in them. So, so
again we have to stop see, we have to let
(49:13):
go of our slave consciousness. They called us monkeys, talk
about they called us monkeys. You ever see the lips
on a monkey look like yours?
Speaker 2 (49:23):
Mm hmm?
Speaker 1 (49:25):
You ever see the nose on a monkey look like yours?
Who do the nose on the monkeys look like? Answer
this question? Think about it? Who do the noses on
the monkeys look like? Think about this.
Speaker 4 (49:37):
I don't want to get camp.
Speaker 1 (49:38):
Now, You're not getting canceled. This is just the reality.
This is this is this is what I'm saying. This
is propaganda. Do monkeys have thin lips or thick lips?
Who get here on they chest? You see black men
walk around with he all over their fucking chest. So
who are you talking about? Who? Where? Where did you
(49:59):
get the nose sh or the gall to? Caught me
a monkey? When you the real monkey.
Speaker 4 (50:04):
A lot of people, and a lot of black people
choose to date lighter or go like even if it
is a black person, they will say like light is
better and stuff like that because they're trying to make
a lightnse.
Speaker 1 (50:12):
When and when, in reality, you want to be technical,
The darker you are, the better because you got more
melon and black and sweet of the juice. Right, No,
not the sweeter the juice. Right, we're talking about melon,
and were talking about our brains produced neual melinin our
protoritory glands. This thing is genetically. But because we not
taught physiology neuroscience, right, we're not taught who we are,
(50:34):
we don't know, We can't. How can you love what
you don't understand or what you don't know? If you
was taught that that water was poisoned and the poison
was water, and every time you get thirsty, instead of
you drinking the water because you think it's poison, you
drinking a poison and you're getting sick, that's true. And
everybody else drinking the shit they supposed to be drinking
(50:57):
getting good.
Speaker 4 (50:58):
Oh, so that I guess it was just saying that's
that's like how they put like the whole foods and
the traded Joe's and the white neighbors and comes to
us and they.
Speaker 1 (51:06):
Give us all these food bizarre Keith, the.
Speaker 4 (51:08):
Simple chains and stuff like that, and the pop Eyes
and all that shipping there.
Speaker 1 (51:13):
You don't see no liquor stores. You don't see no
liquord stores. And the white people you see wine. You
see you see liquor stores in the ghetto, wine cellars
and the birds you want.
Speaker 4 (51:22):
That's right about that, and it's putting on every other.
Then they then when they have the smoke shops, that's
the smoke shops on every other every block.
Speaker 1 (51:29):
Yeah, because because because they put race specific bio chemical
weapons in the marijuana, in the weed and then the alcohol.
Speaker 4 (51:38):
Who cloned tyrone?
Speaker 3 (51:39):
You've seen about that, we should believe because people are
smoking and they just getting dumb on.
Speaker 4 (51:46):
Yeah, they and people are addicted to it. That's why
I just stopped smoking. We because it's like I don't
I don't like anything to control me or have any
type of control over me. So I was just like, yeah,
and I don't like to be out of my body.
I like to have my own common sense and to
use my full brain. And I feel like I.
Speaker 3 (51:59):
Wasn't And it's brainwashed because it's like now you can
go in the store, you could buy it, and I
just see them, I see them smoke, and.
Speaker 4 (52:05):
Then people don't realize if it's getting cheaper, they're putting
stuff in, it's stretching their spraying stuff.
Speaker 1 (52:10):
Twenty seven grams. It was never like that back in
the day.
Speaker 2 (52:13):
And I see them smoking back after back.
Speaker 1 (52:16):
I'm like, dam we're just finna smoking.
Speaker 2 (52:17):
They's smoking again. They're smoking again.
Speaker 4 (52:19):
It's like people will wake up smoke before they do anything.
It's like a smoking some people can't go to sleep with.
And I realized I was like, I was only smoking
because I'm around a bunch of people. Then when I
stopped smoking, I'm not around anybody anymore.
Speaker 1 (52:29):
It's just me, cir mind. They down to My son.
Speaker 4 (52:32):
Literally told me. He was said, Mommy, I'm so happy
you stop smoking wheed. And when he told me and that,
and when he was able to identify that, I was like, yeah,
thank god, because that means I was slow as hell.
He's the smartest person in the room at that moment.
Speaker 3 (52:42):
But it's like they definitely put these smoke shops in
the hood that tails down everything. I go to jail
for selling weed and I could go in the store
and just buy it.
Speaker 4 (52:49):
And now everybody's glorifying. They're glorifying. Yeah, that's this is
just the new age crackheads, if you think about it,
And everybody wants to call a crack at the cracket,
but they are, y'all are fiends. Everything to put ourselves
to sleep and not use your full brain and your
full potential, and that's killing us off as.
Speaker 1 (53:06):
Well than yourself.
Speaker 4 (53:07):
And then looking at people crazy calling it design er drugs.
That is the most ignorant should I heard? What the
fuck is a designer drug? That's like when Whitney Easton
said crack is cheap crack, Yeah, she said no, she
said crack is cheap. I will never do crack the
whole time she was doing cocaine as if it's anything better.
But yep, that's true. Anything to put it in the
hood and make us look like how they portray us
(53:29):
even though we're not. And it's so many like now
we have the most black millionaires that ever existed, But
that's not getting glorified. They'll just glorify everything that we're
doing wrong rather than the positive. And then there are
a lot of black marriages that are going on, the
successful ones that that that's not getting glorified.
Speaker 3 (53:45):
Or do you feel like it's being glorified just we
don't just celebrat it be celebrated.
Speaker 4 (53:49):
No, that's not they they know it's not being glorified.
They'll put everything we do bad in the news before
they put anything that we do good in the news.
If it's something good about a black person in the news,
that has to be like a charity event or something
like that. It's nothing like that with successful, rich black
people like in the news. Think about it. Everything that
we get is because oh, they wanted this person, want
a contest or this sick orphan. It's like, you know
(54:11):
what I mean, they put it out there, and it
make us look like we're so helpless. If you think
about it. The propaganda is real fun, it's crazy. But yeah, Wolf,
did you have any other did you have a question
you want to ask?
Speaker 1 (54:25):
You know, actually you got up relationship.
Speaker 2 (54:31):
You're saying that.
Speaker 1 (54:33):
A child of relationship you can still con child. Oh
I forgot you got like a white uncle, right, So
so so it's important. So it's a couple just just
some just some important things to be mindful, right, I
got you with hold on, let me just lan, let
(54:54):
me land. It's playing real quick, right, Okay, So we're
the only what the only group, We're the only group
but the only ethnic group that were slaves here in America? Right,
So there's a deep rooted inferiority complex, is it? So
these are things that we still deal with because we're
the only people that dealt with that holocaust here, right,
(55:20):
And so there's a lot of fear, subconscious trauma, lack
of belief, resentment, and constant, constant, constant negative reinforcement. Right,
we shouldn't see no more movies like Jijango and all
this stuff, stupid shit. Right, you keep reminding us, right
of what you did to us, and you ain't deal
to nobody else but us here. So so that's the
(55:42):
thing that affects us, right, And not only not giving
an economic base, but America made a relentless effort to
dismantle the independent economic base that we tried to build
for ourselves through all those towns and cities and Black
Wall Street and stuff like that.
Speaker 2 (56:00):
Right.
Speaker 1 (56:01):
Also, then when you fast forward in terms of not
even passing executive orders or laws to protect us. So
even if you want to argue, yo, that happened years ago,
we're still affected by it. But even in the current day,
we didn't get reparations. We didn't get our own land.
Everybody else got reparations in every other race. They worked
together behind the scenes for power control structure, right, So
(56:28):
that's important. And then when when the Amansion praising the right. Right,
we didn't get We got freedom, but we didn't freewear
right because so we got freedom and starvation at the
same time. Because we didn't get the forty aggres and
the mule. We were displaced, We had nowhere to go,
and the Klan was still active and more active than ever.
(56:51):
And whatever white group or white village or white town
murdered us while being free, there was no repercussions for it. Okay.
And then when Lincoln was assassinated, the very next president
reversed everything that he put in play, right, So that's
important to be mindful. I just heard that too. And
then the next thing is understanding that when white people
(57:13):
fought the British, because there was a British revolution, they
didn't go to them white people and say white lives matter.
They fought and killed the motherfuckers and battled and got
into power, and they fought for their freedom. So how
can we expect the people that enslaved us to let
us out? How can we beat them in a way
that they didn't beat the people that enslaved them. Right,
(57:36):
this is not about peace, This is about fuck you.
Let's get it popping, Okay, So they taught us subconsciously
to hate ourselves, always looking outside ourselves, always seeking validation,
and then they used religion in a way to control
us and to make us feel like outsiders and our
own shit. Jesus didn't die for nobody's sins. Jesus died
(57:57):
because he was challenging the white power Structurejesus was African, Okay,
So when you think the reason why Martin Luther King
died and the reason why Malcolm X died, that was
the same reason Jesus died. Because he was a practitioner
of a system given to him from God that they
called the religion, but it was a system inspired by
African beliefs that he was using to wake up black
(58:19):
people at that time to fight the white power structure.
And because he was successful, they packed him to fuck up. Okay,
So that's important to understand. And then there's a void
that we feel, but that void was created by white people.
So we're expecting the motherfuckers that put a hole in
us to fill us up, but they put the hole
in there to begin with, right, don't make no sense.
(58:40):
And then we're now expecting the people that put us
in our holocaust to take us out of our holocaust.
That's like a Jew, a so called Jew, telling Hitler, hey,
could just stop gassing us. Hitler, please stop, he's going
to turn the gas higher. Okay. So that's important understanding.
And then another thing I said with the pregnancy concept
of if you inject drugs into the mother while she's pregnant,
(59:04):
the baby is gonna have some complications because of that.
So we have to understand. We have to study the
past and the reactions that we react due to our past,
so we can understand why we do the things we
do today because of what was done to our forefathers
and our ancestors yesterday that still affects us today. Okay.
(59:28):
And if white people want us to stop talking about
race and what happened to us, then they need to
relinquish all the power that they acquired because of what
their forefathers did to us. You're only in power because
of what was done to us, and you use that
as a catalyst to get into power. So if you
want us to stop fucking complaining and being angry and
(59:50):
playing a victim card, then give up all the money,
give up all the buildings, give up all the land
that you have that you got due to slavery, right,
or give up reparations and get the fuck out the way.
So you're not gonna do that. And even if you did,
it's still fuck you. It's still up. I'm still not
gonna talk about I'm still not gonna stop talking about
(01:00:10):
what the fuck you cowards and you pigs did to us. Right,
I'm almost done. That's wanted to get to run through
this and also understand it. Also understanding that policies, policies
were created to counter act racism, and all the policies
that they created to counter act the shit that they
created didn't work. So now when we like, yo, you
(01:00:31):
said you was gonna give us forty acres and the mule,
you ain't give us nothing. This is what you said,
you said affirmative action. This is why I don't respect
Charles but well he well he's gone now. But you know,
this is why I'm listening to this idiot say this
shit you're talking about d whatever the fuck that shit is.
That was created because they didn't want to hire us,
(01:00:54):
because we were not only overqualified, but through these positions
we will be able to get in positions of power.
So that was the issue. And they wanted to hold
us back and still keep us oppressed, so they created
laws and things to get us in, and we still
even in, had to deal with racism and be and
(01:01:16):
still be ten times smarter than everybody else and get
paid ten times less. Okay, So that's important to understand it.
And no matter what you say, you ain't gonna make
the victim the victimizer, because he's talking about being victimized. Okay,
then and then and then and then boom right and
so and then understanding like, Okay, this is some research Tulsa, Oklahoma,
(01:01:41):
right research on that three hundred three hundred people killed,
businesses burnt down, Rose with Florida, thousand black people killed,
town burned down, no one arrested, Oco, Florida nineteen twenty,
two hundred black people killed over voting rights. Businesses burnt
down eighteen ninety eight. Wilminson, North Carolina, two thousand and
people murdered because of biracial government officials. So you talk
(01:02:03):
about that biracial sucker shit. When they had people that
will biracial getting in government positions and making it more diverse,
they killed the motherfuckers murdered them because of a biracial
political power structure in that town time Morrisville, Louisiana, eighteen seventy,
they used chemical weapons used to damage the water supply
(01:02:25):
and then made that town that zone a buffer zone
and took it over right. One hundred years later, they
did the same thing in Reveltel Town, Louisiana, chemical weapons
used to damage water supply, turn it into a buffer zone.
Pierce City, Missouri. White mark killed three hundred residents, destroying
the black town. So these are things that we have
(01:02:46):
to realize. No other person in the history of America,
from the founding fathers to Donald punk ass Trump has
killed more people than white men. Okay, so there's no
there's no escaping that.
Speaker 2 (01:03:01):
Then.
Speaker 1 (01:03:01):
The last point I want to say is America is
a business. Religion is a business, and a product is God.
They use religion they create systems, you know, to to
empower them and disempower us. So we have to create
systems to help us improve the most important areas of
our life money, love, family, purpose, institution, development, ownership, business, community, industries, diamond, gold, printing, books, media,
(01:03:26):
right and technology. Satellites. We should be doing space travel.
What the fuck the Russians in America and the Asians.
We need to be black. I want to see a
fucking timuland boot on the spaceship and the motherfuck got
a Yankee hat for a NASA helmet and we got
we got Tupac. You know, ten nine eight seven, five
(01:03:50):
four three ten crack commandments on me out of here.
You know what I'm saying, You feel mean we need
to be fit building our own motherfucker spaceships. Man, fuck
out here. I mean, if you talking about this, you
talking about this, this this white love that you have man.
Speaker 4 (01:04:04):
White love?
Speaker 5 (01:04:05):
Wait, but Wolf, do you have a white uncle? Did
you pull that from under your fitted? Like?
Speaker 1 (01:04:11):
Yeah, Wolf, Sometimes people they look ambiguous like you're there, there,
can't you can almost they can almost be like three
different than No, they can't know. They can't know. They
can't know. They can't they can't. No, he can't. That's
a water down of water down, water down. So that's
just what that is.
Speaker 4 (01:04:30):
So do you think do you look at if somebody,
if a black person.
Speaker 1 (01:04:34):
Hold on, hold on, let me just relax. I got
I got kind of excited.
Speaker 4 (01:04:37):
Different if a black person, say, an Asian person, anybody
that other than a white person, is that still like,
what do you think about that? What is it?
Speaker 1 (01:04:52):
How many water downs take they officially it doesn't even matter.
You could the point that the point, the point is
that's a rabbit hole, right, White people want to chase it.
I tail, it doesn't matter. Man, we ain't supposed to
be dealing with white people that you know what I'm saying.
And you made a mistake that ship man, ship man,
no disrespect. You get you if you get if you're
(01:05:15):
a guy and you somebody go on your booty hole. Man,
it's going forever. Man for something ants. You can judge
them for something the ancestors did because they benefit today,
or for what the ancestors did through the system, through laws,
through the society acceptance of white privilege. The only way
(01:05:37):
to help, The only only way to help is to
give up the money, shut the fuck up, and have empathy.
That ship, you can't tell me how I'm supposed to feel.
I still deal with racism. We still deal with the
ship because of this is what is not going anywhere.
It has evolved, it's clandestine, it is refined, it has expanded. Okay,
(01:05:59):
when is a marriat? When has America ever been great
for black people? So to say make America great again?
What does that feel like? That whole monica, that whole
slogan is is diabolical, is insensitive. Right now, if you're
saying make America great, that's different. Okay, you're saying make
(01:06:20):
America great again. When the founding fathers were founding liars,
the founding fathers, we found out that they was motherfucking liars. Okay,
we were here before white people. We were here before
white people. You know, it's parramids in America. They don't
talk about. We was here before every part of this planet.
Black people was here first before anybody. So what you
(01:06:40):
mean make America great again? You mean make it black again?
That's what you mean. Yeah, I'm saying, so it is
what it is. What I'm saying, I mean tripping shout
out with white family man, no disrespect. I'm saying. I know,
I know the type. I know the type socks with
the sandws in locks.
Speaker 4 (01:06:59):
Man.
Speaker 1 (01:07:00):
He fucking white bitches, man, He fucking white bitches.
Speaker 2 (01:07:02):
Man.
Speaker 1 (01:07:04):
He got urban outfit, he got urban outfit of socks
on slippers, slippers from the thrift shot and dress. He
fucking white bitches man, He fucking white bitches beautiful.
Speaker 4 (01:07:15):
He had a queen. He posted that beautiful black He
got a black queen, got a black queen. Yo, Oh
my god, Well we this episode the fact. What do
you want to leave the people with?
Speaker 1 (01:07:30):
Only think about what you want Forget about what you
don't want. Never speak about what you don't have. How
you think creates how you feel. How you feel becomes
an emotion. That emotion becomes a vibration. That vibration becomes
a magnet that attracts things to You. Know who you
are and who are you? You are a god, you
are a goddess. We are the fathers and mothers of civilization.
We are the scientists of life. And can this notion
(01:07:52):
that black men or get the fuck out of here.
You can't call yourself a queen without acknowledging a black
man because we invented the term queen. You can't call
yourself a godess and not acknowledge black men because we
invented the term gods. Okay, so before you start throwing
(01:08:13):
us under the bus, just do some research through your
due diligence, and you'll realize how much the fuck we
love y'all. Where they can find you out, they know
where to find me man, and.
Speaker 4 (01:08:25):
We're doing a five k on Saturday on the tournament.
Speaker 2 (01:08:28):
She got me running.
Speaker 4 (01:08:29):
He's not gonna come.
Speaker 1 (01:08:30):
No, I'm locked in.
Speaker 4 (01:08:32):
I'm locked He's not gonna come. But you can't focus
on what you can do. You're just gonna do.
Speaker 1 (01:08:38):
Yeah. And then and then the last thing I need
to focus and remember the audio, the audio deal and
the visual deal s need you need to start. Y'all
need to start shopping and trying to figure it out.
It's some call. I'm pretty sure Wolf knows about it.
It's called b I think it's b E. I think
it's called bee. Yeah, Yeah, Yeah, that's the I think
that's the answer. Every company under iHeartRadio because Universal Music
(01:09:01):
Group used to have a company to give the audio deals,
and I think that company got bought by our Heart Radio.
So you start looking to reach out to our Heart
Radio's corporate to get the audio deal audio. And then
you need to get an i PA, which is an
insulst your property attorney, and have them starting to negotiate
(01:09:22):
and try to find a point of contact with TikTok,
with Instagram, with the YouTube so you can start to
have conversations about getting these these these audio deals right
because ad revenue is what it is, and you you
need to understand how this business model works so you
(01:09:48):
can build your own setup. Because most people are not
going to most podcasts places they fall and it's just
fuck you pay me, and it's not like, damn, we
might have something here, like I told, well, you know,
the first time we did it, we did episode, I
was telling them like, yo, you got something special. So
you can't stay stagnated. You gotta keep evolving, keep learning
(01:10:10):
the business.
Speaker 2 (01:10:11):
Over your Instagram, FOBC.
Speaker 3 (01:10:14):
Note all the blah and I see NYC each every Wednesdays.
Speaker 1 (01:10:19):
Right back here.
Speaker 4 (01:10:20):
Nigga is stupid, and make sure you buy tickets to
his party, yo.
Speaker 3 (01:10:25):
Some b carrious September twenty six, the hosting by Diamond
the Body