Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:19):
But once again, ladies, Jim, if you come to other
spoil every Day black Man podcast podcast, w Sandy Black
met thoughts, Hey boy Riker read Stam stylists the libertarian
point on his black uh, the writer, and of course
white collar should fall us. On Twitter, ev y D
black Men, It's from Everyday black Men, every Day black
Men facebook page. We also have Patreon, ev and p
We have Sham's drawings. All new episodes, they be there first,
(00:42):
and of course they are exclusive episodes like the thing
that we talked about beforehand, because I have no idea
how to categorize that. But last, but not least, our
website is www dot Everyday black Men dot com.
Speaker 2 (00:52):
As you're saying, we found an stained list, Sham, you
got a lot of shit that explain mat uh you
made that reference.
Speaker 1 (01:01):
Sham is the last person that you would see on
any such list, if anything, you would enough for you,
if anything, you would see Sham on the UH people
who may have killed Epstein list. I don't know how
he got I don't know how I don't know how
he got in there. I don't know how he hung
this man. But Sham was there and then.
Speaker 3 (01:20):
He he's saying he did anything wrong.
Speaker 2 (01:23):
All I'm saying is the Daddy parties and the Epstein
List sham.
Speaker 3 (01:27):
I feel like you live in multiple lives and I
want to know the truth. I need.
Speaker 4 (01:32):
Who have referenced me as a Epstein List person? I
have been Drake fans. I find that remarkable. It's not
all Drake fans, but this between all of you, Bitch.
Speaker 3 (01:46):
To my face, I can't believe you.
Speaker 1 (01:49):
He did he did? But does or sorry, let me
phrase that does the high he'll fit you.
Speaker 3 (01:56):
Look. Look if I had a glove what you got
right now? Okay, I'm challenging to a duel eminem mouse.
That's my secret. It's out, the secrets out.
Speaker 1 (02:09):
Okay. Well, what I wanted to talk about first is
is your house trashed? Because it is, I'll pay cash.
This is a campaign by YouTube by the name of
John Williams. People are mad because he made references like this,
as well as if you got a crack house, I'll
I've got a check for you, something something along those lines.
(02:31):
I didn't I didn't fully remember the second one, but yeah,
I remember. If your house is trash, I'll pay cash,
and so people got really mad at him because he's
in Detroit, just talking about people like, hey, if you're
if your house is trash, I'll basically buy it from
you and you can get out of here and go somewhere,
not sure where, but somewhere else. And people mad. They
(02:52):
wrote to their their local mayor and they got one
of his billboards taken down. But this is good. Yeah,
in Detroit, they were that mad that their shitty houses
were being called out for being shitty houses.
Speaker 5 (03:06):
I think that might be a little bit of a
fultn you go ahead, I'm.
Speaker 1 (03:08):
Finish no, no, no, no, no, finish landing.
Speaker 4 (03:12):
It sounds like it might be a little bit of
I won't say false propaganda.
Speaker 6 (03:15):
I'm sure people do feel that.
Speaker 4 (03:17):
Way, But wouldn't It wouldn't suck if somebody was doing
that for people that's already got, you know, everything in control,
all nice and tidy, the way they like it up there.
Speaker 5 (03:26):
It's all like he's just fru from the status quo.
Speaker 6 (03:29):
Whatever.
Speaker 1 (03:30):
Now, if you saw what color John Williams is, you
know exactly which one it is. Yeah, I'm not saying
he's a Drake fan, but he's lighter than Drake.
Speaker 6 (03:40):
So is he angel?
Speaker 1 (03:42):
No, he's white.
Speaker 5 (03:43):
Okay, this question twice. You can just leave me in suspense.
Speaker 6 (03:46):
I'm like, is this question mark for no?
Speaker 1 (03:50):
No, no, no, there's no question mark. He's a white man.
People are offended because it's a black city.
Speaker 2 (03:54):
I personally think Detroit is trying to do a full
blown gentrification project. I don't know, y'all be into the
Detroit airport, but when you think of Detroit and then
you get to the airport, you would not think those
two match.
Speaker 1 (04:08):
I didn't even know about exactly.
Speaker 2 (04:13):
I had a layover one time, and I told my wife,
I'm expected to be the worst, and it is a beautiful,
well cleaned, effishent fucking airport. And outside of like some
of the things like that where they're pushing people out
of like the bad the neighborhoods they got off the
bad buildings.
Speaker 3 (04:27):
I think it's now officially coming into fruition because I.
Speaker 2 (04:30):
Remember reading a passage on uh those oh you know,
y'all go to hoods and y'all see like the band
in storefront of old brick and mortar buildings and everything,
and nobody's doing nothing with those. And then some of
those are owned by the same person and they're purposefully
waiting for the community to bob believe so they could
then return it all down.
Speaker 5 (04:49):
Yeah, that legal liquidation.
Speaker 6 (04:51):
You know what I'm saying.
Speaker 7 (04:55):
In Detroit. Yeah, this is the worst place ever.
Speaker 6 (04:57):
No, no, no, it's parts doing it. It's the same
way they did the West Side of Atlanta. It just takes.
Speaker 1 (05:05):
Correct correct Detroit.
Speaker 6 (05:08):
I just like rating everyone.
Speaker 1 (05:11):
It's just everyone does. Detroit is a shithole, but it's
slowly becoming a decent city.
Speaker 6 (05:16):
It was a black met that one.
Speaker 1 (05:22):
Jobs from dumpster.
Speaker 7 (05:24):
Don't you pull up to a dumpster a five story
trailer park? I love, I hate Detroit so much. It's
a piece of ship, especially dear Born.
Speaker 8 (05:32):
I'm saying this for anybody I know in Detroit, just
so when they listen to this, they can re remind
it that I hate them and I hate Detroit.
Speaker 1 (05:38):
Ain't not nothing to Detroit. Cleveland one of our Cleveland
and Detroit are two of our biggest listening cities. Man,
you can't just be disdetroyed like that. Fuck Detroit.
Speaker 6 (05:48):
First of you, how do you hear take? How do
you find what? How do you fight against gentrifications?
Speaker 1 (06:01):
Well, the easiest way to fight against gituations have two
pairent households. But y'all niggas don't like that, so I
don't know way way for there's a way for y'all
to fight against gentrification, but y'all don't want to have
two pair of house.
Speaker 4 (06:16):
Stand the top of the hill side being the only
one amongst my comrades with no blood.
Speaker 6 (06:22):
On my legend. H I have no children, no cube.
Speaker 2 (06:25):
Then all the things I did for the black community,
you see this mixed child in my back seat, go
to hell?
Speaker 1 (06:30):
I mean, yes, we do. See the mixed shout in
your back seat.
Speaker 6 (06:35):
You all wanted to when you put three?
Speaker 5 (06:41):
He got he got right, he got three?
Speaker 3 (06:45):
You know, you know how these my breads are.
Speaker 2 (06:49):
My wife gets told so much stuff that they don't
know that black side is offended by no.
Speaker 6 (06:55):
But you got a full nigga. I don't know why
you say that a lot, but we overhear thing for nigga.
I'm justeking. Unless you got a blonde.
Speaker 1 (07:03):
Your wife, your.
Speaker 6 (07:06):
Wife just got it, you know, if they unless it's
the big, big.
Speaker 3 (07:08):
Time understand actually they actually.
Speaker 6 (07:14):
Like I knew you said something different wise, Like I
just thought she was like skinned, so you said something
like she's a negro.
Speaker 3 (07:23):
But look the black people can see the black side
of it. White people don't, for whatever is.
Speaker 1 (07:28):
Because they don't want to see.
Speaker 5 (07:29):
They don't color my brother. They don't see color my brother.
Speaker 3 (07:33):
She got this like Clark U Superman.
Speaker 6 (07:36):
Some white people can I just tell you all this.
Speaker 8 (07:39):
It's sixty eight degrees in Atlanta, and I mean, Evan
feels so good outside.
Speaker 5 (07:46):
You know, I don't even know about that this.
Speaker 1 (07:48):
Episode comes out, Bro, it's really gonna be sixty eight degrees.
Speaker 6 (07:53):
It's different.
Speaker 3 (07:54):
That's what's an enclosing up your your topic.
Speaker 2 (07:58):
I think they're they're trying to work out through the
gentrification process because Detroit has been trying to like forty years.
Speaker 3 (08:04):
Now from when they even moved to Detroit. Pistons out
of Detroit.
Speaker 6 (08:09):
Yeah, one lady, isn't she from Born the Squad.
Speaker 1 (08:13):
Something like that, Yeah, something like that.
Speaker 6 (08:15):
But I think it's darable because I remember they have
made it them from that voting for Kamala and they.
Speaker 3 (08:22):
Moved into a good, nice white Bridge area.
Speaker 6 (08:25):
Nah, but they got they got they on cold because
a lot of people I'm noticing, as far as time
goes by, they're just like, well, you said it would
be bad, and they say she's going to run for
president again. I'm just like, in my mind, you lost
to somebody we knew was gonna be bad. You're not
gonna win. I don't run again.
Speaker 7 (08:43):
That guy worked for the CIA, came out and said
he didn't win.
Speaker 1 (08:47):
According to the c I A bro.
Speaker 7 (08:50):
They did an audit, and apparently she will.
Speaker 2 (08:53):
I don't want to talk about I don't talk about it.
Were in it already, it's here. It's too late. Was
what we want you to do. Only I'm just waiting
for the news line.
Speaker 1 (09:05):
Man.
Speaker 3 (09:06):
Donald Trump is passing everything except the way.
Speaker 1 (09:10):
Hey hey, talking about Donald Trump passing away? All right?
This man is he's literally life on this in the
real streets man. And that's not even really the big
story that you need to be talking about. It's time
that we were supposed to transition to. If you look
at the Ledger, the things that I wrote out for
this episode is the t app slaga, my brother, the
(09:32):
t Apps no no, no, no, yeah, man, the t
Appi bro. It was it was one of the best
of times. It was the worst of times. It was
women nah, man, we gotta talk about it. We gotta
talk about it. So uh, of course we know the
writer has been underneath the rock, so he doesn't know
(09:54):
what the t APP is. But essentially, the writer the
t APP is an app where women are allowed to
anonymous sleeve rape men and talk shit about them anonymously. Uh,
but they won't put.
Speaker 7 (10:07):
Out They're supposed to be for women's safety.
Speaker 6 (10:10):
Ricord.
Speaker 1 (10:10):
He's not. I'm glad that you brought that up, because
the app was designed by a white man who wanted
pictures of women and their IDs. And within two weeks
of the of the app being out.
Speaker 4 (10:26):
No, no, no, no.
Speaker 7 (10:29):
No, So I knew you're going to tell this ronan
that's been out for two years.
Speaker 1 (10:33):
So they have been out for two years and they
only got traction in the last month.
Speaker 8 (10:38):
Yes, yes, yes, it's been out that two years, and
they built They said.
Speaker 3 (10:43):
I don't know what Rebrandon is.
Speaker 1 (10:46):
No, no, let him tell it, he says, since he
didn't want to, he didn't want to talk about it.
But now he wants to tell the story.
Speaker 8 (10:50):
Tell the story that's been off over two years, all right,
in the past two months three months has got a
lot of traction. And within that attraction, it was hacked
because they didn't turn on security settings inside of Amazon. Now,
the first hack was easy user data, supposedly old user data,
but the most recent hack stole text mess messages in
(11:10):
between other girls about dudes that they were having privately
up to this year.
Speaker 7 (11:14):
So the women are losing their mind. And on Reddit,
no not Reddit, four Chan.
Speaker 8 (11:20):
Four Chan users hacked it, and the four Chan users
also once they hacked it, they made a app.
Speaker 7 (11:27):
To rate the users who are rating other people.
Speaker 1 (11:31):
God's playing, that's God's playing.
Speaker 7 (11:33):
They were pretty ugly.
Speaker 5 (11:35):
I mean, yeah, well they're pretty Oh, I'm not going
to be a part of this. You almost got me.
Speaker 1 (11:43):
Now they hit. We had the perfect set up there,
Black Libertary. Your your check has been the mail. One brother,
your check has been the mail. All of this to
get Sham to get involved, and we almost succeeded. That's
good enough. That's a win. A win is a win.
But yeah, the women, the women who were who were
on there were pretty pretty googly.
Speaker 5 (12:03):
Yeah, but I mean does that sound just about right?
Speaker 1 (12:07):
I mean not just doesn't sound just about right. But
when you see, like there was a guy who made
a TikTok about this because a woman put him up
there because he didn't want to date her, and she said,
is it a red flag, like this guy's gotta be gay?
And then he showed because one of his homegirls was like, yeah,
how they did it was absolutely dirty. She showed like
(12:28):
women like raiding him and saying he's gay and all
the other things. So then he comes out of the
TikTok like, one, I'm not gay, but I don't mix
my money with my honey. And then women still called
him gay for that. So I don't know how you're
gonna win that one, my brother, because you kind of
lost the moment you decided that you were gonna make
a reaction video after your homegirl already showed you they
call him you gay. Don't worry about that. It's people
(12:49):
on the internet. People on the internet think all kinds
of ignorant things. We got a whole nother, whole other
segment that's gonna be just like this about the Hodge
Twins on the back ass uh. But for thee oh no,
they're not gay, but they got their negro wake up
call and it was it was. It was beautiful, my brother,
It was beautiful. But yeah, the tea app all I
(13:12):
see the tea app is bitter. People got the bitter desserts.
Speaker 4 (13:16):
They're just assert I guess there's another example of how
we kind of a portray the vulnerability of women. I
guess the purity of them. Yes they are vom but no,
they are not above you know, any type.
Speaker 3 (13:28):
Of on this earth.
Speaker 8 (13:31):
Especially more Black women have killed people than anybody else.
They black women have killed more Black people than any
other black person or any other white person.
Speaker 2 (13:41):
This was the opportunity to go after black women, and
you went straight after the black women.
Speaker 1 (13:47):
You know, you know he doesn't like them, just.
Speaker 3 (13:50):
Straight black He went straight for when do we love.
Speaker 6 (13:55):
In THELA community.
Speaker 8 (13:57):
I love black women, but they're murderers and they're the
all time and our committed.
Speaker 1 (14:01):
Look, man, you're gonna leave black women alone, all right?
She needed that abortion for the fourteenth time. Abortion is murdered.
Don't care how.
Speaker 2 (14:13):
Don't put that down falls while acknowledging the past, and
then you did the centuries of brainwashing that led to it.
Speaker 1 (14:18):
Nobody bringwatched them and having abortions. Don't you lie up here,
I've got he dropped his bomb and dip he dropped
the fifth BOMBA dipped out. No Wikipedia right now, see
he's on Wikipedia right at this exact moment. But at
(14:39):
the same time, sham, what were you gonna say because
you had something for my remark about abortions and women
being accountable.
Speaker 5 (14:47):
Oh no, I just I mean, sadly everybody got that one.
Speaker 6 (14:50):
We blame him for that, but that.
Speaker 5 (14:52):
Was a just blame there to be taking yes on
both sides. But what did I do. It's not just
the you.
Speaker 1 (15:00):
Know, I blame all of that on the writer.
Speaker 6 (15:04):
It was a breakdown of the black household.
Speaker 5 (15:06):
They were taking us like.
Speaker 1 (15:07):
It was definitely the writer. The writer is the reason
why we have a breakdown the black house because the
writer won't date women based on no objectively weight.
Speaker 6 (15:19):
Black people. Really, these people are crack babies, bro, Like,
that's why we don't have the way this general. But
these are crack babies. So you get love kids like
like Kodak Black and stuff like, yeah, you're.
Speaker 1 (15:34):
Gonna leave, you gonna leave Kodak Black Womple When you
see him, he's white man alone is a problem.
Speaker 9 (15:43):
Go ahead, Oh he's just as he's He is a
black man who has forgotten himself and gotten so far
away from that fact that he I think sometimes a.
Speaker 2 (15:54):
Different He's also he plays a caricature on TV.
Speaker 4 (16:00):
And I think he thinks that everyone else is aware
around him, that he puts that mask on and then
takes it off. He don't realize that they see him
with them. He's the man's don't matter to them. He's
just especially Rifer.
Speaker 10 (16:14):
Rifer sucks just because I have all their problems and
I couldn't speak back.
Speaker 1 (16:18):
Didn't think I was gonna spep back.
Speaker 6 (16:20):
You suck.
Speaker 10 (16:20):
You know, it's not my fault that these people having trouble,
these females haveing trouble.
Speaker 1 (16:25):
You're out there and it's it's being bullshit. You don't
blame black women for your own in undesire of them bullshit.
And yes, I am yeah blaming black women. Jesus Christ,
I am am right the wrong villain here. We thought
(16:47):
it was double down writer always all right, all right,
So it's uh, it's just the smart people here. Now
that's American eagle. I know Sidney Sweeney has great gens.
Speaker 5 (17:05):
Question who is that?
Speaker 4 (17:07):
I've heard that I was talked to him one time
on a couple of times. I don't know that name,
and I'll be honest, I'm not gonna look it up.
Speaker 1 (17:12):
Sidney Sweeney is a kind of okay looking white girl
that white guys.
Speaker 5 (17:19):
Okay, irrelevant, my bag.
Speaker 1 (17:21):
We need more pictures. This is not enough. She looks
just body. We need the body tape. She's a regular
white girl. That's right, of course.
Speaker 3 (17:32):
Hey, what's what what's the take? What's what's the She's
basically looking like this, there's nothing special about it. But
what racist?
Speaker 5 (17:39):
She's cute?
Speaker 1 (17:40):
I get she cute. You think you exist?
Speaker 3 (17:44):
What what racism does she do?
Speaker 1 (17:45):
Though? No, she has great geans thing uh, And she
was saying that about eugenics. She was basically saying that
her jeans are the only jeans that are great. And
also she wears gens.
Speaker 11 (18:00):
What she is on time, her jeans jeans that are great.
Speaker 5 (18:04):
But she don't want the faith though, so it don't matter.
It's just like, you know, when somebody told.
Speaker 1 (18:09):
The whole issue she is twenty seven her what does
her mother look like? And what does the grammar look like?
I'm not I'm not doing that. I'm not doing that.
You don't have to do that. But I'm making a point.
Speaker 10 (18:20):
She's saying that her jeans are great, her genes are great,
means that it's been proven through generation that she looked
good in her older age, not she looked good when
she's twenty something like if her mother looks good and
her mother's her forty the fifties, I'm like, okay, if
her grandmother and her grandmother.
Speaker 1 (18:36):
Jeans, I need to I need to call me down slightly,
because remember, she's not the one making this. It's American eagle.
You know that kind of okay ish kind of gene
brand that people used to kind of mess within, like
the early two thousands slash nineties, there were black people.
Speaker 4 (18:54):
Have no idea about that until we got the movies
like fucking bring.
Speaker 6 (18:58):
On, she like that.
Speaker 2 (18:59):
So are you saying they sneaked this and eugenics out
here when not sneak this and eugenics, but sneak this
and by putting eugenics out here with double tondras, Yeah.
Speaker 1 (19:05):
They're putting the gens out here with double tondras and
acting like we didn't know what they were doing. And
then they they even said, you know what, we're not
gonna apologize, and it's like, you know what, On one hand,
I appreciate your racism because at least now I know
not to mess with you guys. On the other hand, yeah, No.
Speaker 2 (19:24):
I've gotten to the point where I mean, it's not
a surprise, is there.
Speaker 3 (19:27):
I don't expect them to apologize. I just I think
it doesn't bother me anymore because what the fuck are
we gonna do? We don't even spend money with them
like that.
Speaker 2 (19:34):
So that's one of them brands that ain't even supported
by black people a beleeve, I.
Speaker 1 (19:37):
Mean, you're a twenty percent right, but they had the
audacity to be like, what do you mean people aren't
going to buy our stuff?
Speaker 6 (19:46):
Now?
Speaker 1 (19:46):
It's like, well, buddy, like you kind of just came
out and said what you said, did what you did,
so well, we were just making it. Bro we saw
the eugenics play before you could even really like do it, Like,
you can't pretend like we don't know what you're doing here?
Speaker 4 (20:03):
Is this really the term for that to be as
big of an issue as it would have been like
in previous years.
Speaker 5 (20:08):
I feel like, if anything, this might have more of.
Speaker 6 (20:09):
A rubber band effect for him.
Speaker 4 (20:12):
They could have like being an entire party unified behind them.
And you gotta remember, again, it's not like we were
really in there to begin with, So it's just deliberate.
Speaker 2 (20:22):
Did you not say that that Jubilee Recentral episode.
Speaker 6 (20:27):
Uh, that was one I had to do with the Indian.
Speaker 2 (20:33):
Uh I forgot his name, but yeah, the the Cambridge
Grad Indian dude. That when against all of the current
new gen maga and and that's all right right, yeah, yeah,
that's why I say at this point, man, like, I
ain't even gonna call it an upstream battle uphill battle.
It's kind of a dim versus us kind of thing.
We gotta wait till twenty twenty eight for the civil
(20:53):
war whatever hell that's gonna look like, I just I
what what what do I care about this? This famous
white bitch and or not so expecive clothing like the
they it's out there, man, it's here, it's here. We
literally had to wait to twenty twenty gate to see
if we're gonna win and lose. And I ain't talking
about the election motherfuckers.
Speaker 1 (21:13):
He said, he's playing the long con cool anything else
about that before I move on to the next thing.
I want to move on.
Speaker 10 (21:21):
I don't even don't even give him that more attention
to this.
Speaker 1 (21:23):
This this blots me. Man said, this is black more.
You pretty much gonna hate the next topic.
Speaker 6 (21:29):
Writer.
Speaker 1 (21:30):
Uh fine, black women are finding out that Hispanic men
only date them to use them for stuff I need.
Speaker 12 (21:37):
What's what's the what's the anadotal stories on this one?
Speaker 1 (21:40):
So basically a bunch of black women on of course
you know are black women, Uh, they decided to put
out there or sorry, are black ladies because you know,
I was one of the black people on Reddit originally,
so I'm part of all the o G communities. But
they had a really big thread about a week ago
(22:00):
where people are like, beware of y'all, some people are evil.
And basically this is the span of guy and the
black girl found out that he's like I thought, dating
a black woman welcome with more benefits. This bitch ain't
got money. And they're like.
Speaker 3 (22:14):
How can you say that, girl?
Speaker 1 (22:15):
Blah blah blah. It's like, because he is telling you
what he wanted to get out of the relationship, Like
I don't know why people just like they will hear
people say what the person thought of them, and they're
how could he think that? Like he was never in
it for anything else? Why did you think this is
gonna be something else. Here's a just adding to the
(22:37):
list of photos that are going down today of just
like the black woman here because she she was she
was high keyp hissed about this. Now girl is pretty cute.
I'll give her.
Speaker 6 (22:46):
That is random white girl.
Speaker 1 (22:49):
No, no, this is a black girl definitely. Uh no,
I just I just hit it twice. It didn't it
didn't go. It didn't hit the first time. Yeah, yeah,
you see the black girl now.
Speaker 11 (23:02):
And yeah she's a cute black girl.
Speaker 1 (23:05):
She's throwing Kenny out there. But I mean, you're sacrificial
land for this one.
Speaker 6 (23:10):
She is cute. It's cute.
Speaker 5 (23:13):
I think I might just to some some people might
not consider is.
Speaker 4 (23:17):
That the image uh kind of caught on outside of
the culture, Like what if?
Speaker 6 (23:24):
Yeah, what is it? Uh?
Speaker 4 (23:26):
Red is always talking about how black man is like
the picture of masculinity. So then with this black women
and it's not I mean, because there's positive and negative
connotations and you know views for every culture, right, we
want to say, what if the ones for black women
is that they are the boss pitch they always got money.
Speaker 11 (23:41):
Mm hmm.
Speaker 6 (23:43):
They quote unquote Nicki Minaj, Beyonce, Art Sight, who else.
I'm trying to think of someone that's not like that
kind of celebrity. But like here in Atlanta. It was
that one who was in that group had an old
Lady gang restaurant. They kind of no, she was in
that thinking group. I don't know, right, man, I'm sorry. Yeah, man, Candy, Yeah, Candy.
(24:12):
They love her, I don't get you.
Speaker 1 (24:14):
They love her because she's the perfect amount of black.
Well also the perfect amount of you know that too.
Speaker 3 (24:22):
She got that sex show that she tours with Nasty.
That's what it is. They want to be dominated. She
has a Dominatrix tour.
Speaker 1 (24:29):
She does have a tour. Again, that's a big, big
fetish by white and Hispanic man.
Speaker 11 (24:34):
Hispanic men can run over Land, but they can't run
over a black woman.
Speaker 3 (24:38):
That's why they like it.
Speaker 5 (24:40):
I've heard these exact same things on both sides.
Speaker 6 (24:43):
I'm gonna pull out of this one.
Speaker 1 (24:44):
You think it's somewhere in the middle.
Speaker 5 (24:48):
No, I'm just saying, Look, I'm.
Speaker 4 (24:49):
From a place where it was pretty much half black
and Latino and like one random white person that was it.
Speaker 5 (24:57):
Well, white people want more some of my song on
TV than anything else.
Speaker 4 (24:59):
I I was very used to being around the Spanish people,
and so all the differences between him and like a
lot of the ship was saying kind of sounds like
the same ship they were saying, and it's like, is
this a is there a child in danger?
Speaker 1 (25:12):
Sorry about that, we just got an amber alert here
in Georgia.
Speaker 5 (25:15):
Yeah, I forgot what I was talking about.
Speaker 6 (25:17):
Now. Whatever Reed was saying, it was probably right.
Speaker 1 (25:22):
Don't get read nothing, bro, don't get reading out a
dang thing. Plus he he's muted right now because he's
doing some stuff. But what I'm saying now, he was
talking about he grew up around Hispanic women, and you
that one white white poking person that wasn't read that
was that was white collar shug.
Speaker 6 (25:41):
Uh.
Speaker 10 (25:41):
But I thought Sham was talking in his story and
he was like he grew up with black and.
Speaker 1 (25:47):
One token white person that was white should.
Speaker 6 (25:53):
That was Shamp. That was Sham.
Speaker 1 (25:57):
Let shamfool you like that, bro? Sham was Sam. Knew
you wasn't paying attention close enough. It was like, I
got you.
Speaker 3 (26:05):
It was a story.
Speaker 1 (26:07):
No, Bro, you're good, You're good. You're good. You're good,
You're good.
Speaker 4 (26:11):
All I'm saying was that they I've heard this exact
argument reverse like ten years ago and then reverse to
getting fired before that, and it's just funny.
Speaker 5 (26:20):
It just depends on who you're seeing, because.
Speaker 4 (26:22):
You got to say, all right, what thing to consider
is you said black women?
Speaker 5 (26:27):
How many black women was it?
Speaker 4 (26:28):
Is it just that it was a couple of pretty
girls who realized that they were stupid and they having
to be Latino, Like, what are the numbers here?
Speaker 5 (26:36):
Because if they can hop on the form and start
talking about it, they will.
Speaker 4 (26:40):
You really got to add some solid numbers behind that.
Speaker 5 (26:42):
Otherwise you just got some loud visits who want to
be seen, and those are a down a dozen.
Speaker 1 (26:48):
I mean, it's roughly two hundred women here, But do
they all have a story.
Speaker 12 (26:56):
Saying that I dated a Spanic dude in the Spanit
Dude was like, you know what.
Speaker 10 (27:00):
I had to pay for this and pay for that
and pay for that, And I'm the one that pay
them and pay for the days and pay for this
and pay for that and use mess my money like.
Speaker 1 (27:07):
If you know, for their money. It's just that they're
just now discovering that people use people for things, kind
of like how women will get dumb bitches.
Speaker 4 (27:20):
Bro, That's all That's what I'm saying. It's not Hispanic.
It was only two hundred, two hundred dumb bitches. Realized
they was dumb bitches today. But they're gonna blame the Hispanic man.
You gotta if it's who comes along and does it
next year and she's still the same dumb bitch.
Speaker 1 (27:37):
Start making better choices, is am. This is gonna be
a this is gonna be subjected under Start making.
Speaker 10 (27:44):
What I'm hearing is that these black ladies, these black
lovely chocolate.
Speaker 11 (27:50):
Ladies, do not like being used and abused.
Speaker 1 (27:53):
This is what I'm here.
Speaker 6 (27:54):
That's my point.
Speaker 5 (27:55):
Though it's only two hundred of them, these are pretty
dumb bitches.
Speaker 6 (27:58):
This is not all women.
Speaker 4 (27:59):
It's two hundred them across the country who happened to
get on his one website to share their.
Speaker 1 (28:04):
Across the country. They could be across the world. One
of these women she's in the UK and the other
ones in Canada. These are not even the same calibers
of the spanis bro.
Speaker 5 (28:12):
That's what I'm saying.
Speaker 1 (28:13):
These are just random stupid bitches.
Speaker 11 (28:16):
See here's my issue, right, Like, do you think men
feel they don't?
Speaker 1 (28:23):
Man?
Speaker 5 (28:23):
Why would you master?
Speaker 12 (28:25):
You know, when men have the money and they keep
paying fish and paperish and the woman's like you know what,
oh thank you? And then you know what you're done.
I'm done using you. Moving on to the next dude, Like,
what is that man suppsed to feel? You supposed to
fel nothing, a piece of anti disc They just to
serve women and make sure that they're dulled up in
their don't you realize.
Speaker 1 (28:41):
That yet, women, you're supposed to be serving women. I'm
totally not being sarcastic, totally not being sarcastic. This guy
is green. Just for comparison, That's how you know I'm
not being sarcastic. Guy's green.
Speaker 4 (28:59):
I think you gotta supported you whatever, your girl, your woman,
your lady. Uh, and ship he might have to help
out a little bit more, and that's that's a real relationship.
But we keep talking about this like once I was
supposed to be a whole lot better. We ain't doing
pushing the rock in the wrong direction.
Speaker 1 (29:16):
I mean we are pushing the rock in the wrong
direction as a culture, because, Uh, telling women to go
through their man's phone ain't gonna do nothing, because most
of these guys are slick enough to have two phones,
and even if they don't have two phones, they smart
enough to put stuff inside of lock and key. Like
what's wrong with y'all. It's like, y'all, this is our
first time on this planet, and you're making it the
(29:36):
worst time on the planet.
Speaker 6 (29:38):
I think Nigga's his stories.
Speaker 5 (29:39):
We probably don't want to put in that much effort.
Speaker 4 (29:41):
It's a couple of dudes that's doing that, not saying
that some dudes don't regularly.
Speaker 5 (29:46):
That's actually that's exactly what I'm saying. I think you
got some.
Speaker 4 (29:49):
Who have done it, and then a smaller percentage wants
to do it all the time.
Speaker 6 (29:53):
I've heard gets worth it? Is it worth it? Anybody?
Is it worth it? The question is it worth it?
Speaker 1 (30:02):
Yeah? Is it worth it? Is it worth it?
Speaker 4 (30:07):
It feels I never like I had to deal with
more ship than I would have to otherwise.
Speaker 6 (30:12):
Most people I know do it out a sense of duty,
but they'll never say it's worth it. It's just like
who I am or what I think I'm supposed to do.
But the question is is it worth it? And that
one right there, I guess you'll answer that when you're
about to die.
Speaker 1 (30:26):
I forgot man, me too. I was looking at this
guy who was simping in Nigeria and it's like, bro,
just cut the girl off.
Speaker 4 (30:33):
Oh yeah, speaking with my mom does not like Nigeria's
just found this out.
Speaker 1 (30:38):
Oh, man, tell her, tell her. She's definitely invited to
tell her.
Speaker 6 (30:46):
Who didn't either at one time. I'm not gonna say
his name.
Speaker 1 (30:52):
Hey, all I got to say is invite her to
that wedding. We would love to have her as a guests.
Speaker 5 (30:57):
Oh, she's nice enough that she's she's man.
Speaker 4 (31:01):
She has finally found her with the like black Internet,
and it's just been like a fucking roller coaster. I
haven't even stolen her day anyway. So recently she's been
on Toka she kick and sending me his videos random
doctor Umar things.
Speaker 5 (31:16):
She's like, oh my god, all this all that. She's
like super uh democratic.
Speaker 1 (31:27):
On for doctor Umar. Even after the late the same
where he said f black women because that one girl
supposedly staw his money.
Speaker 4 (31:34):
She don't keep that close. She's not like on it,
you know, to her. So she's got toes and everything.
You know, I just let her talk sometimes like threaka
Machida Doctor Umar. She likes.
Speaker 6 (31:50):
You know, he's not like okay, yeah he's not. He's
not with the democrats.
Speaker 4 (31:56):
Like a democrat, like you know, you still have a
conversation is about stuff just be actually.
Speaker 1 (32:08):
Yeah, because in recent years I've been coming more going
back to uh, Professor black truth because pretty much she.
Speaker 6 (32:16):
There's just too much around him, a bit performative.
Speaker 1 (32:20):
Well we know, we know, we know it was all
performance to begin with.
Speaker 6 (32:24):
What I'm saying is griff. To be honest with you.
Speaker 1 (32:30):
He is a grifter, but he's pretending. Well no, sorry,
he accuses the other side Adolphs of being grifters. Both
tone talks and uh the gay black woman who was
part of it, and they pointed out things with him.
He pointed out things with them. Oh say, dude, Jackson
actually had a pretty good breakdown of it and the
whole thing, and it was just one of those things
(32:50):
that was like he got a pretty pretty good point
because no, no, we know, we know adolph grifters. Difference
here is I feel like Adolphs are grifters with a
purpose for their drifting, whereas I don't know what she's like.
We know, doctor Umar is he just wants to never
(33:11):
have to work a day in his life. That's what
the grift is about. No, we're talking about the Face school.
We know that. Oh well, you know, you know he's
really just brother Umar. He's not really a doctor. I
don't care what he has to say about some degree
in the place, and he's never practiced. The thing about
(33:37):
the thing about Sheet is it's crazy that you have
all these opinions that you married a white woman. Like
I'm sorry, Brock can't get seriously, you married a white woman.
Speaker 5 (33:47):
Though I don't know.
Speaker 1 (33:49):
That's the other part that people point out all the
time when they have like things with with treating. They're like,
bro you married a white woman, Like how are you
so pro black? And like how do how do you
get up in the morning.
Speaker 6 (34:01):
You said that they can be a part of it,
you No.
Speaker 1 (34:05):
I I know. I think he can be part of
the movement. I just don't think that he should be
part of the forefront. And that's something that you know.
Not the leader of this ship, No, he says, he's
not the leader the ship, but he is the only
leader for his ship.
Speaker 6 (34:18):
He's doing the same b one that kind of a
kind I know.
Speaker 1 (34:23):
But I'm saying fb A. He is the proponent, the craftsman.
He's trademarked f b A. You can't say I'm not
the leader. But nobody could bring up f BA without
legally you condoning it.
Speaker 6 (34:35):
I don't know if he's trademark I don't know.
Speaker 1 (34:38):
No, he's trademarked. He's trademarked f b A. He made
sure he because he learned after getting pushed out the
ATO thing, he learned that, Yeah, you got to get
your trademarks right, because that was part of why he
was so why he wanted to basically uh ether them
was because they basically pushed him out and said we
own this. You can't touch him.
Speaker 6 (34:55):
He was like one of those people who described l
he issues and he does. I let that distract him, but.
Speaker 1 (35:04):
Only gets distracted with FB LGBT issues. Because what's that
girl's name? I think it was only my time, but yeah,
the one of the main leaders. She is also a
legbian so that's part of my which is pretty funny
because she was also married to a white man. So
I guess it goes around for our leaders. Now they
all just married to white people, but they're so pro black.
Speaker 6 (35:26):
Alice Marker purple the color purple at the time she
was married to a white man. Yes, but uh, it
be a pro black woman movie.
Speaker 1 (35:38):
Yeah, it's that's the part. That's that's the part that's
so crazy. So many of these people are so.
Speaker 6 (35:44):
Pro this, pro that, but like black lives matter, and
we always pointed when they kick that dude out there,
these niggas can be sold out because I think I
think we've had legends there before. And now ask him
the same question, are you pro black or for LGBBT,
They always say both. Carnell.
Speaker 1 (36:02):
That's her name, Ev Carnell. Yeah, event's lesbian, which she
was previously married to a white man. No, no, it's
it's event, but it's spelled with a hy evet Carnell.
Speaker 6 (36:18):
I think I followed home and uh and and.
Speaker 1 (36:21):
Antonio Moore, they're the they're the creators of ados and
told actually he had a he's had a series of
videos that are starting to sound more in line, not
a serious I think he's been talking about like this
for a while. He does. He's not great with like
live calls and stuff. I think he needs to work
on that, but he is. He's had a great series
of kind of conversations about stuff because most recents he
(36:42):
was talking about how black people think that they're gonna
get all this great stuff from all these immigrants getting
pushed out and He's like, really you're not. Uh, things
are going to continue mostly status quo, and things will
kind of get a little bit shittier for you in
your community. It's like, that's the.
Speaker 6 (36:58):
More reason with them on that.
Speaker 1 (37:00):
What do you think is gonna happen with all these
get kicked out?
Speaker 6 (37:04):
Now? What he's saying, yeah, because generally speaking, the second
class citizens before they came over here were black people.
So I mean, it's just a fact of osmosis. So
I don't understand how you can even listen to that
and be like.
Speaker 5 (37:22):
Oh, where are those black people now? That's my point.
Speaker 6 (37:25):
Oh, they were replaced by Hispanics. Like you remember you
had that carpenter that was cheap and stuff back in
the day. The question is saying, but where are they now?
Speaker 5 (37:34):
That essentially kind of wiped off, so like.
Speaker 6 (37:38):
Because typically coming like places, they're still here. Like typically
you learn from your father those trades and they pass
them down, so we would say they're still here. But
remember he too expensive, man, he'd be tripping like stuff
like that. The question is when they get more business,
do you build more people like that? It just happens
through osmosis to take a couple of years, maybe five,
(37:59):
ten years, and then you have more people getting into
those fields, but immediately probably not, but like long term, yeah,
but I don't think.
Speaker 5 (38:08):
Be kind of shitty short term and I don't think
it will.
Speaker 6 (38:10):
Be a lot of people. Bro, that's just the truth,
that's what. Yeah, Because if if you like he at
like he was gonna get ten million, and let's be
realistic with that number, it'd probably be less than a million.
Speaker 1 (38:22):
Yeah, exactly if it's that getting kicked out of the country,
because there's enough different ways for people end up saying here,
plus on top of that, enough people are just gonna
leave and go back because.
Speaker 6 (38:34):
It really isn't.
Speaker 1 (38:36):
Exactly like there's enough different ways for people to manipulate
and be able to run.
Speaker 6 (38:40):
That's still just a million people, Like, that's not gonna
affect it.
Speaker 1 (38:45):
Then I think, yeah, that's saying I think you can
agree with that thing that that Tom was saying. But
the other thing they talked about is like the top
ten percent of America is white and they have all
the wealth. It's not just about the billionaire class. And
he's right about that, but black people always be like,
oh no, if we just do this and we get
to like bro, You're still not going to be in
(39:05):
this club. It is a white club. It's not about
the billionaire class or any of that other stuff.
Speaker 5 (39:11):
It's American dream though.
Speaker 1 (39:13):
I mean, well, no, not the American dream. That's an
American nightmare because we're not we're not inside the dream.
Speaker 6 (39:18):
We're not.
Speaker 5 (39:20):
A good riding and all that ship. You know what
the funk I meant.
Speaker 6 (39:23):
I mean my brother, I.
Speaker 11 (39:26):
Don't feel about I know.
Speaker 6 (39:28):
I'm more probably close to Tyrek because I think what
he says is tangibles, and Tom talks act like he's
about tangibles. But if I don't if I remember correctly,
this nigga was trying to convince me to vote for
the Indian woman. I'm just like nigga.
Speaker 1 (39:38):
No, I don't remember it was during that because I
pretty much ignored everybody when it came time for that
kind of thing, because it's like, you're not about to
tell me who to vote for because none of y'all
are actually gonna be here no matter what happen.
Speaker 5 (39:50):
I know that the nigga I voted for would have
had this ship upright.
Speaker 1 (39:54):
No, I don't think he was telling you to vote
for that any woman because he said repackaging Kamala Harris
to run for president in twenty twenty four, it is
a disaster. And then you talked about the true behind
Kamala Harris and her truancy laws and her running for
presidency or running without politicy policy is not gonna win,
which he was right about that. And then of course, uh,
he talked about the terrible Harrison Trump.
Speaker 6 (40:17):
The baby according to people, they they thought it was cool.
Speaker 1 (40:23):
I mean, no, no, eighty one percent of black people
are going to vote Democratic no matter what. But that
number is steadily decreasing. If you go back to like
the nineties and you go back to the mid two thousands,
it was closer to Liken.
Speaker 6 (40:34):
It's gone down ever since.
Speaker 1 (40:36):
I once, once people realize that hope and change bullshit
was just bullshit. People are like, yeah, this is this
is not this is not doing things for me.
Speaker 5 (40:45):
Yeah, that's what That's what your niggas get to have
it both.
Speaker 1 (40:50):
I mean, people don't want to have that conversation, but
not to derail this further. That's supposed to agree with me,
got that. No, you you're right about that, Like, have hope,
you need to have you need to have an idea
of like a goal that just set to achieve because.
Speaker 6 (41:04):
They're probably think that Judah said kind of reference to hope.
If the government is trying to solve it, it's too late.
But by the time they know about it, it's too late.
So if you're hoping changed, if it's an acknowledged problem,
we all know, if the government finally finds out about it,
it's too late. It's already fucking so yeah, because they've
(41:25):
not shown a propensity to do much, especially in the
last thirty years forty years.
Speaker 5 (41:31):
Did you know did you know the slaves.
Speaker 1 (41:36):
That people Comedian made that thing that was pretty good?
That was pretty good.
Speaker 6 (41:41):
You want the ones that lived in that basement? Yes?
Were they slaves or I didn't know what the fun
was going on with?
Speaker 1 (41:48):
No, No, there was slaves. There was slaves, and were
they were actually like can you believe? Like the most
recent example that was that white family in Florida who
had twelve black kids, sorry, no, eight black kids, four
white kids. The white kids were allowed to be inside
the house for black kids had to be outside. And
it's like, so, y'all just redoing slavery, just you just
(42:09):
can't let that part of your history go then they
got arrested and they're like, well, where all the black
kids gonna get it? Oh, back into the uh falsis system.
It's like, so y'all brought them out to bring them
into slavery, to put them back.
Speaker 4 (42:20):
Hey man, y'all always thought to be about me having
a shitty life, and then you just keep coming up
with these American versions of people with a shittier life?
Speaker 6 (42:27):
What do you want for me? That is?
Speaker 1 (42:32):
That is not that is not the thing, my brother,
that is not the thing. Your life is told it's
not that bad. But yeah, it's not that bad. But
at the same time, don't you five people had a
worse life to compare to.
Speaker 4 (42:47):
We need some I wish we would do something for
the kids in some much shy fashion. But yeah, it's
planning on going up.
Speaker 1 (42:55):
Yeah, true, indeed, true, indeed, that's what ship since you
brought that up. Remember Roy Williams Junior, the black comedian guy.
He was asked on that black girl who thinks that
she's all that show, like, oh, what do you do
you have a mess for the kids? Leave? She's like,
what do you mean, like leave America? Like you're gonna
(43:15):
have to let this next like twenty years play out
this next generation, then you can come back, but leave America,
like as soon as you get your degree, just leave.
And she's like, that's that's your mess. He's like, yeah,
there ain't nothing. They ain't ship here for black, black folks.
And she got offended and it was like, yeah, like
you asked this man for a real thing. What are
you saying is an alternative accidentally getting pulled over or sorry,
(43:35):
getting pulled over by a police officer and when he
doesn't provide you with, you know, any form of courtesy
or treating like a human being getting your window punched
in and getting dragged out of your car, and then
they get mad that the video footage of that came out.
Speaker 3 (43:49):
It's like, sir, you did it.
Speaker 1 (43:51):
You're like, how dare you point out this thing that
I did?
Speaker 3 (43:55):
There?
Speaker 1 (43:55):
You so I'm your people always video paping everything, so
just let us do our dirt and silence. And it's like,
why are you even mad at Roy Williams like saying, like,
giving everything going on in America, maybe it's better for
kids who have the skills to leave, to leave, Like
why are you mad.
Speaker 6 (44:13):
A lot?
Speaker 1 (44:14):
I mean, it would be nice if police did uphold
the law. Unfortunately, we're finding out exactly who we're finding
out time to time they don't. And on top of that,
let's not even get into the uh remember that movie
The Town and then people found out that stuff like
that goes on in bot and it's like, come on, bro,
you thought The Town was just a movie. Nah, Bro,
that was them telling on themselves.
Speaker 6 (44:32):
Yeah, the policies, that's different.
Speaker 1 (44:36):
Correct, But thank you for teaming up really well here
read So the Hodge Twins got their Negro wake up
call from an unlikely source. So you may not have
heard about it, but there's a white guy in Arkansas
who's been raising all this money to have this all
white community because he's like, we need to we need
to get back to our roots, painting banjo and eating
(44:57):
ship outside and you know other stuff. Basically all that
was just me being hyperbole, but essentially, he wants to
create a white's only community. He wants to build it
up from the ground up. And he's gotten you know,
a lot of different people, like some people are like
they shouldn't be allowed to do this, and then others
of us, myself includer, like let the white folks have
that let the white folks have their white only community
(45:19):
because I want to know where the crazy white folks
are so I can know, Oh you're from that, you're
from what time? Yeah, I can't trust you, Yeah, I
can't trust you at all. In fact, get off my property, like, no,
you can't hang out with my kids and nothing. Y'all
likely to steal people, making them in the slave I mean.
Speaker 5 (45:38):
I want to say I don't care, but I do
care to a certain extent.
Speaker 4 (45:42):
I want them to be monitored because when white people
come together and make their communities, like when black people
do it, you know, it's just black people and white
people do it, we get shit like Mormons, and we
don't need no more of them, even other Mormons.
Speaker 1 (45:54):
Now they've been trying to commute very heavily, or sorry,
not commute. They've been trying to evangelize a lot in
Africa because they're trying to you know, once.
Speaker 4 (46:02):
Your company gets so big, you kind of get away
from your base values in the saga profit but that's just.
Speaker 1 (46:07):
Yeah, yeah, it is. It is like the Mormons there,
they changed their tune entirely and no longer. Because I
used to have a guy back when I worked in
a paint department many many years ago, and he was like, yeah, man,
you know I was. I was a Mormon, and they
told me people look like you were the devil. And
(46:28):
it was so crazy to me because I got a
black friend like who was like in school and he
didn't seem like the devil. You wasn't trying to convince
me of this and that. And the third thing I
was like, so what you're saying is your mind was
open and wisdom was chasing you, but you were faster.
You couldn't fully make the connection that if they're telling
(46:48):
me this, but I know this other thing to be true,
then they're telling me lies.
Speaker 6 (46:53):
I mean, it was to be fair. That is probably true.
Speaker 1 (46:57):
That is probably true. But the reason I brought this
up because the Hodge Twins have been in the news
lately because uh, unfortunately conservatism isn't paying as much anymore
it used to be. And if you if you're ignorant
of this, because I know the writer is the Dodge
Twins used to be really big in like gym culture,
and then they stopped getting as popular. Their skits weren't
(47:19):
getting laughed at as much, and so they pivoted into conservatism.
And they really like through their whole weight behind it.
They got white wives and had multiracial kids, and they
they had all these things, and they've been like, look, man,
look i'm a good nigga. I'm a good nigga. I'm
a good nigger. And I said it with the heart
end for the point so that you can understand what
I'm saying. But outside of the reference to the Bob
(47:41):
song uh and that one thing to grab your attention,
they really thought that, you know, hey, they've changed. So
the same guy who's making the whites on the community,
they reached out to him. They say, look, man, we're
forty percent white. Like we here's our DNA test. You
can see we're forty percent white. So could we come
to join your community? And he gave them a respectful
(48:01):
hell no. We said all white. We don't want to know.
But but our kids would be no, don't care, don't
we don't care, we don't care. It's all white community.
And then they were they had to actually take a
pause because they didn't know how to respond to that
properly because they're like, well, we respectfully understand, and it's like, no, sir,
(48:25):
you didn't get respectfully understood that guy told you straight
to your jaw, you're not one of us, You're not
like us. You can't come inside, you stay outside exactly
said you know the rule, man, get my gun. But
it was just so funny because the hots Wins they've
(48:48):
been they've been basically thinking that they're, oh, well, were
we got all these big fan bases and people love us,
and they found out, No, they don't love you. They
just like laughing at you. You're thinking they're with you,
but they're laughing at you because they keep thinking to themselves,
how dumb are these two guys to realize we don't
like them at all?
Speaker 6 (49:09):
Like black conservatives and black liberals for the same reason.
You just want to hear your bullshit come out somebody
that who don't look like you now so you can
believe it even.
Speaker 1 (49:16):
More confirmation by you at the chambery Ay, he said
the words. He said the words. But it was just
it was hilarious this week to see them so left
with their their flabbergacid jaws all the way open, just
like I can't believe it. After all the white men
(49:37):
that we've said yes to, there b yes, you still
like a less in the club.
Speaker 11 (49:40):
He was like, didn't they have they've been duke on
the show.
Speaker 7 (49:44):
Yeah, they did.
Speaker 6 (49:45):
They on them.
Speaker 1 (49:46):
They had every possible white person thinking that if they
just if they just give up this a little more
of their blackness and just let other guys have sex
with their wives, don't make it into the club. It's like, no, sir,
that's not that's not that's not a club for you.
They don't like you. And I know y'all have a
very black mom because we know what your mom looks like,
(50:09):
because people look you up so unlike or very much
like your white dad. He doesn't exist, and either do you.
Speaker 11 (50:17):
This makes me think about the Tweekend Amazon on my
homies out here, and we have the oldest in the
house of the Third Fortunes, and we would asking questions
about why certain stuff. It's like, why they treated like
this like he was literally inquisitive about it, but also
kind of wild boy that histors, you know something, even
as far as exlaming him the paper backus. And this
(50:39):
makes me think about the highest point he's like, he
asked about why did they let some black people in
the house. So I said, they have to pass the
paper back touch and I explained by how they became
you know, some a licensed ganetically some mark. But it's
like the high point is never. I think that's the
importance to the slaying of your kids early on, what
the history is and what the at fere is, and
(51:00):
even just certain certain nuances that we know the second nature,
like don't shield them from everything. Some stuff they need
to know. His parsis to do. We explained to him
about buck breaking, We explained about how the castration process
went when they did to how you know this astrue
of soul Scenard that he's the freshman he about to
start a trunk a year and none of this stuff
is like you know, he's sitting like how do y'all
(51:21):
know about this? And it was like it was funny
because it was always watching it might to be Jordan
movie for fairhear fire, for the war, what fifty one.
Speaker 1 (51:29):
And for fifty one? You got it for fifty one.
Speaker 11 (51:31):
Yeah. He was asking because he's like why they burn
the books and it was just explaining him that's where
knowledge comes from, or you know, it helps you, it
makes you think. It's inquisitive all this stuff and it's just,
you know, his dad's off for his dash for black
of faith. But it's just the fact of matter of
we sometimes forget to like really explain some litt stuff
to him at a certain nags because you can around
to have a harsh twin because they find out about
(51:52):
it later on and they think it's bullshit or they
already been already affected by the other side.
Speaker 6 (51:56):
Where because that's true love it. Yeah, well I think.
Speaker 11 (52:03):
It's important, right and not in a traditional senses with
like metioned so many ship and let's the ceograph. The
questions don't force feed them so they ain't gonna listen,
but they got questions. They're actually interested and didn't answered
it before and give them a little school fools. He
ended up talking us for like an hour about shit
because he had questions like why did this?
Speaker 6 (52:20):
Why that?
Speaker 1 (52:20):
Why do they do that?
Speaker 6 (52:21):
Back? Is not even a real thing, like is not
do you really think about it? I don't ever see
anybody else like corporate designation in their culture.
Speaker 11 (52:31):
We explained the black on black crime, it was like
you ever heard of white on white crime or brown?
Speaker 1 (52:35):
O'Brien prime was.
Speaker 11 (52:36):
Like, nah, it's like exactly because it's not a real thing, No, not.
Speaker 1 (52:39):
At all, especially when all the what are the white
guys doing now, oh they did that? Uh fifty was it? Fifty?
Speaker 13 (52:48):
Thirteen thirteen fifty? And being like black people are thirteen
percent of the crime, thirty percent of population, but they
can be in fifty percent of crime. No, black people
thirty percent of the population, we get fifty percent of
the arrests.
Speaker 1 (53:00):
We also make up like seventy eight or eighty something
percentage of the exonerations. And also that's arrest That doesn't
mean that these people are found guilty. It just means
that they've been arrested by a cop. And all of
us have been in a moment with a cop where
we potentially we're going to get arrested because we're black,
not for any other real reason. In fact, some of
us have been arrested. Yeah, some of us have been
(53:21):
arrested and released and then nothing.
Speaker 11 (53:23):
You ever went to the catch on these program?
Speaker 1 (53:32):
Yeah, yeah, and sorry about that, Sam.
Speaker 6 (53:35):
But the part that we want to bring up, like,
say what you said you've been arrested, Yeah, yeah.
Speaker 11 (53:44):
I've been caught and release.
Speaker 1 (53:46):
So it seems like three ys y'all have been caught
and released talk talk twice, yep.
Speaker 6 (53:52):
Just once and I was arrested for not reason and.
Speaker 11 (53:55):
Both I was a minor without my parents being contacted.
Speaker 6 (53:58):
Yeah, I was well team. So you know how Georgia works.
Speaker 1 (54:02):
You're reminder. You're a reminder without it, without being your
parents being contacted. But they thought that you were not
a minor because of course you're black, So you don't
get the same thing.
Speaker 6 (54:12):
Black boy.
Speaker 5 (54:16):
Was supposed to be accountable, and it must be beaten
into our body.
Speaker 6 (54:19):
Yeah, because one thing that still bothers me today is
takement rights. And the officer should be killed.
Speaker 1 (54:26):
Yeah, should have been like you rolled up, Zimmerman. You
rolled up on a black boy because he was in
your neighborhood, and you started beating on that black boy,
and when he started getting the upper hand, you reach
for your gun and kill him.
Speaker 6 (54:40):
It was black people serious, because that man should be dead.
Well kill him. That's why I don't really like in
my core, like like I don't really care about these
issues because no Democrat, no Republican ever fixed it. And
y'all out like they did. We have a video again,
go watch taatement Rice and just be like, oh you
recording while you want? It doesn't if it's I'm white
(55:01):
and I'm saying something soil that goes away. Yeah, I'm
going to just support the same system. And remember this
shit happened under Obama. I'm just ain't gotta know. You're
quote unquote golden president and he did nothing. Well.
Speaker 1 (55:11):
Yeah, but black people hate hearing that Obama wasn't the
guys saying and let's not get started about how Obama
both fixed and hurt the health care system that nobody
else have.
Speaker 11 (55:20):
That that brings a circular conversation of the problem issues
and how accountability is.
Speaker 5 (55:27):
On both sides.
Speaker 11 (55:28):
It's just a different from accountability.
Speaker 6 (55:30):
Black Lives Matter started under Obama. I don't think it
wasn't this trendy.
Speaker 11 (55:34):
It was until we don't know who it.
Speaker 6 (55:37):
Was under Obama it was I.
Speaker 1 (55:39):
Know when it came out.
Speaker 6 (55:40):
No, it was.
Speaker 11 (55:41):
It wasn't twenty sixteen trendy. It was trendy, but it
wasn't because what.
Speaker 6 (55:46):
Happened under him, Like.
Speaker 11 (55:49):
I remember, he had a lot, it was a lot
of black deaths where Black Lives Matters was spending, but
I mean spinning. But didn't it like perpetuate even further
after Trump and COVID, I just.
Speaker 6 (56:00):
Going Trump, it got bigger under Obama. Most of that stuff,
like all those riots, people in the street. Lot of
that was under Obama.
Speaker 1 (56:06):
Bro, you remember that's happening in the year of twenty sixteen.
Now twenty eighteen was also a pretty big year for.
Speaker 11 (56:11):
Right, Okay, that's why I gotta make it up because
I'm thinking.
Speaker 6 (56:14):
Of but that wasn't I think we give Black Lives
Letters credit for that, But by that time black lives I.
Speaker 4 (56:20):
Ain't gonnaw, I ain't really haven't a Black Lives Matter
cract for anything. I hadn't been giving white people can
phrase they could say to be like, I ain't see.
Speaker 6 (56:29):
Not really he was black lives for you to vote
for Democrats.
Speaker 1 (56:33):
Frank about it.
Speaker 11 (56:34):
I'm gonna be real like between the the youtwoe and
Black Lives matter of specific I use those two because
they kind of like rose at the same time. But
if it takes a fucking hashtag to create something that
happened and then this massat mirage of bullshit.
Speaker 6 (56:49):
I mean, wait, wait, what was that guy that died
in New York over the cigarette?
Speaker 1 (56:54):
Eric Holders? An air holder? No Brown, Eric Gardner? Eric?
Speaker 6 (57:04):
That happened on the Trump But all the stuff before that.
Speaker 1 (57:07):
Happened to Obama that was twenty fourteen. Black Lives Matters thirteen. Literally,
that was twenty fourteen. Yeah, that's the time, like the
time Mike Brown and.
Speaker 6 (57:22):
Obama stuck is weekends up there to my hea, look
like he'll be my son. And that's how you fought
half fast fight because he didn't.
Speaker 5 (57:31):
To be fair, he ain't never had a son.
Speaker 6 (57:33):
Exactly what he'll be a daughter right now?
Speaker 1 (57:37):
Exactly.
Speaker 6 (57:38):
He didn't have a husband.
Speaker 1 (57:42):
He didn't have a husband.
Speaker 6 (57:45):
Let me ask you a question, brouh, we got to
use it. If your wife was named Michelle, what you
ever call him? Michael. I'm just saying.
Speaker 1 (57:53):
Again, you're not.
Speaker 6 (57:58):
I'm just saying I know, I know the family that is.
Speaker 1 (58:04):
She's always been one.
Speaker 6 (58:07):
I'm just saying, bro, that always made me go, I'm
with you. I don't believe it. But there's no way
in hell and slip up a tongue, Michael to Michelle,
that's just not gonna happen.
Speaker 1 (58:16):
You leave his closeted homosexual placing alone, right, Michael said
he want to stay out of this.
Speaker 11 (58:24):
I don't even know how to respond no more.
Speaker 1 (58:28):
Remember, Remember, like Michelle, Michelle, Obama is a man, then
Obama's gay.
Speaker 6 (58:34):
He has as a boyfriend.
Speaker 1 (58:36):
That boyfriend that's name is Michael. To Michelle, I.
Speaker 11 (58:44):
Feel like Reid is the most dangerous black man and
social media.
Speaker 1 (58:48):
And it is because I've never met anybody that.
Speaker 11 (58:54):
Will make such good, intelligent points and also take three
steps back on purpose it.
Speaker 1 (59:01):
Even fully on purpose fully on purpose.
Speaker 11 (59:06):
He's different with something stupid and they don't they do it,
they don't know. But he'd be like, he'll tell us
some lealhip. You literally get us five steps up. He's like,
I'm gonna take three of them steps back.
Speaker 6 (59:15):
Somebody heard that we're gonna get fired. I'm just I'm
just saying, bro, I'm glad you said it. I was
on way to get all out first. Did you ever
say that it's just somewhere.
Speaker 1 (59:24):
No, I'm not going to confuse my spouse's name ever.
Speaker 4 (59:28):
One time I did call my girlfriend about her last name.
It was in the military. She got real mad at
I bet she did.
Speaker 1 (59:34):
I mean one time I mistakenly uttered another girl's name.
Speaker 5 (59:37):
But I can't how does that happen?
Speaker 1 (59:42):
Because I was mad, I thought about black Sapphire, and
that's the thing that came out. Like we were in
the middle of a heated debate, and it was just
like why black Sapphire and it's.
Speaker 11 (59:54):
Like that's rough man anyway, I don't understand.
Speaker 1 (01:00:00):
That this was like, this is like three years ago,
so I would have. I would unless I'm like a
Resident Evil eight where you find out that actually you're
you've been dead this whole time, very much alive. Although
he also did have a kid. Maybe I am dead,
(01:00:21):
because that's always.
Speaker 11 (01:00:22):
The part about.
Speaker 1 (01:00:25):
Followed apart is how you dead but you had a kid? Nigga,
how you did but you had.
Speaker 4 (01:00:31):
For several minutes after death, his body, his body apparently had.
Speaker 1 (01:00:37):
The ability to still power them firms. It was like,
you know what it does?
Speaker 6 (01:00:41):
It does, hey, bro, you did not just.
Speaker 11 (01:00:43):
Keep us your mess of reflexes are still after man
a woman and takes advantage of you.
Speaker 1 (01:00:49):
Well not remembers Resident seven. Once you get through all
the stuff, you have a kid roughly I think eight
months after the game. So still the timeline doesn't fit
because spur, your spur lasts roughly every ninety days.
Speaker 11 (01:01:08):
Who the hell trying to have kids right outside or
near a rat coon city of Jason Location. You are terrible.
Speaker 1 (01:01:15):
Jason Location Resnel seventh story is the most normal. I think,
I'm that dude, I gotta find my wife.
Speaker 3 (01:01:23):
Story.
Speaker 1 (01:01:24):
Ever, it's like a man his wife goes missing, he
puts out stuff searching for her all over. He sees
somebody who's like, hey, man, doesn't this look like your wife?
In this little backwards ass town in Louisiana, And he
just goes there. And then he breaks into people's house,
you know, just you know, obviously a little b and
e being EA's in these people's houses. And then he
finds his wife blocked up, and then he releases her,
(01:01:46):
and then he's going upstairs with her, and then she
just goes whole beetlejuice on his ass and he's like damn.
And then like when he shoots her and he puts
you down, he's like, oh no, I murdered my wife.
And then she gets back up and then some weird
white guy with this weird must sash comes up and
beats the crap out of him. That's when you die,
by the way, and then takes you to the main house,
and then the rest of the story happens.
Speaker 6 (01:02:07):
Ah cool, I got to pay that game.
Speaker 1 (01:02:10):
Uh well, the thing about it is actually resting actually
kind of a sad story because the only reason that
that guy becomes the monster that he neverably becomes is
because he was out there fishing with his homeboys and
he sees this girl off the girl floating in the water,
and he goes and saves her, and then she infects
him with this mold thing and turns it into a monster.
(01:02:33):
Just goes to show you that, uh, because the because
he was he's actually shown to be a caring father,
a loving husband, all these things, and everything changes because
he because he decided to help one girl, he just
(01:02:54):
became a monster.
Speaker 5 (01:02:55):
It's really a story about oh celibacy exactly.
Speaker 11 (01:03:02):
I'm not one to play these games, but I will
watch the YouTube rap ups.
Speaker 1 (01:03:06):
That's that's how I watch the YouTube for Revenue seven
is a great game, especially if you need somebody who
sucks and playing the game.
Speaker 11 (01:03:13):
Because god am I am I the only one that
got a kink for Madam the wad up in her
name Demetri with something like.
Speaker 1 (01:03:24):
You're talking about the nine foot tall vampire from Resby.
Speaker 4 (01:03:27):
Yeah, she can't have a white woman, but you can
go for an under digital white make it makes sense, Brome.
Speaker 11 (01:03:42):
Wrong, because we know she is who she she is
what we expected her to be.
Speaker 1 (01:03:50):
Keep in mind, shamp he turned down twins for this
because the other girls who are there are twins, twin
white girls, blond hair, blue eyes also did what.
Speaker 5 (01:04:02):
No, I ain't with this, bro, I still remember that part.
Speaker 11 (01:04:05):
No, no, look look as somebody that is not keen
on it and may or may not know that she
was a vampire. They are suggests, they say they are.
Speaker 6 (01:04:15):
I wasn't.
Speaker 1 (01:04:16):
So the go go gadget extendo Claus is really seductive
to you, Damn bro, you damn bad.
Speaker 11 (01:04:21):
No, No, I want her to lose, to do me
like a praying mantis. Go ahead, let me cly next
before you do.
Speaker 5 (01:04:26):
Like.
Speaker 11 (01:04:26):
I don't even to know about that part.
Speaker 1 (01:04:28):
What's crazy is the uh, the the voice actress. When
you look at her, you're just like because of that voice,
I still take it down.
Speaker 11 (01:04:35):
Yeah, the voice does a lot. Voice doesn't lie.
Speaker 1 (01:04:39):
Yeah she's not.
Speaker 11 (01:04:39):
She's not a bad looking white audio with somebody making
her chase them between the doors. And they won't for
making that, ask you. That's all I'm saying. They knew
what they was doing.
Speaker 1 (01:04:48):
I'm just saying, bro. Booty Physics has gotten a lot
better video games for coming to another episode of every
Day Black Man Podcast podcast I Think Black Male Thoughts.
My name is Riker. I was joined by sham Ree
white Collar should, the writer, stylist, and the libertarian formerly
known as black Sows on Twitter, ev y D black Men, Instagram,
every Day black Men, Everyday black Man Places with page.
(01:05:08):
We also have a Patriots E, B and P. We
have all kind of cool things up there. Sham has
some pictures. All episodes debut there first, and of course
we asked some suits episodes as well. At last and
not least. Our website is w w W every Day
black Man dot Com. I wish you all all now
and uh, don't let this white woman get you.
Speaker 11 (01:05:26):
I want to confess, did you stop the course you
stopped the court?
Speaker 1 (01:05:29):
No, we still got one sid all right.
Speaker 11 (01:05:32):
I want to confess that that Sham was not on
the Epstein list. That was actually the mist of people
who potentially try to kill Jennie Fox. Did not mean
the next step up my hat. You are he's on
the diddy list and he potentially is tried to kill
Jennie Fox.
Speaker 1 (01:05:46):
That's all right, We're gonna have to stop. We're gonna
he's not on the Diddy List, peace into the Middle East,
and of course Black America, White America, r.