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March 6, 2025 66 mins
In this episode of "Everyday Black Men," the conversation continues from the Patreon-exclusive "Oversharing in a WWE World," starting with Sham’s bizarre story about a woman who wanted him to make a personal sacrifice for her ego. The Black Libertarian chimes in with his now-infamous line, “I can make you nut bro,” which the group refuses to let him forget. Riker playfully questions whether he needs to hand Sham a Grammy just to end his Kendrick Lamar monologue, while Sham recalls the final year spent before cutting ties with Black Sapphire. Reed underscores that inflation isn’t a new development, reminding everyone it’s been creeping up since Trump’s first term, and Stylish appears in the second half to weigh in on Social Security matters. The episode concludes with a pointed discussion on the evolving retelling of slavery in mainstream narratives and Sham’s observation that nobody seems to talk about the LA terrorist attack anymore, prompting further reflection before the show wraps up.

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Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:22):
Thank you, ladies and gentlemen. Welcome to the Everyday black
Man Podcast, your location for everyday black Man thoughts. I'm
here with your host Riker, also joined by Red Black
Libertarian the writer. And what was this nigga talking is?
Please follow us on our social platforms and yeah in Georgia. Anyway,
I was trying to tell y'all about this time I

(00:43):
had this girl and I couldn't not so then she
was like, we're gonna do this and you can get
this surgery, and uh, I was like, I don't. I
don't want to get surgery because it said I can
a little bit up to or over an inch, and
she was like, so you don't want to be with
me and too much.

Speaker 2 (01:00):
I I feel like we heard this before and it's
even more funny the second time round.

Speaker 3 (01:07):
Yeah, the nut having.

Speaker 4 (01:09):
Surgery, you lose more than more than a more than
an it.

Speaker 5 (01:14):
She was gonna stay with you after that though, So she.

Speaker 6 (01:18):
Did she really love him or do you just want
to see this nigga nut and be like I made
him nut.

Speaker 1 (01:23):
I'm breaking up with him now and it's like, bitch,
I lost the inch for you. We're married at this
point in time.

Speaker 7 (01:29):
And I don't care. Would what is the circumcision because
you can't lose up.

Speaker 1 (01:37):
I was already circumcized, so the the inch was not
like guaranteed, like it could be less and it could
be more.

Speaker 8 (01:44):
Like nah.

Speaker 1 (01:52):
Comping, Yeah, you don'na lose something.

Speaker 9 (01:54):
Girls, Oh yeah, yeah, it's not.

Speaker 1 (01:58):
Sensitivity is not worth that much because then what if
I get too sensitive? Not my dick smaller and it's
it's like, bro, because it's gonna make you.

Speaker 7 (02:18):
I can help you nut faster.

Speaker 1 (02:20):
No homo, whoa whoa?

Speaker 10 (02:27):
One of them starts me. Look, I know it's a method.
It through pills and two natural vitamins.

Speaker 1 (02:33):
Yeah, I smoke weed. I stopped recently.

Speaker 7 (02:36):
Definitely, it's not weed you need.

Speaker 1 (02:38):
As Ganda the twelve, I think, I think the twelve.

Speaker 11 (02:43):
Hold on, hold on, listen for you responding con confirm
fullic acid and zinc the polic I don't take everything
and zinc together.

Speaker 10 (02:54):
Your net will be thicker, more potent, and larger quantities
and you will know it.

Speaker 3 (03:01):
Well.

Speaker 1 (03:01):
I forget about that.

Speaker 2 (03:02):
Last does the matter if you take girl full of
acid versus boy full of acid?

Speaker 1 (03:11):
I don't want.

Speaker 2 (03:14):
I'm just saying, bro, does it matter if he takes
boy follic ass and the girl follow gass, because if
he can take girl full of gass, and I got
already a large stockpile that.

Speaker 3 (03:23):
I can give him.

Speaker 7 (03:24):
What is girl full of acid?

Speaker 1 (03:27):
Pre natal stuff?

Speaker 7 (03:31):
Oh no, just straight folo acid pills.

Speaker 1 (03:35):
So so male boy foll of acid?

Speaker 7 (03:37):
Got it?

Speaker 1 (03:37):
That's all.

Speaker 7 (03:38):
That's all I wanted to ask, because I got, I
got girl.

Speaker 3 (03:40):
Full of gas out the wazo.

Speaker 7 (03:44):
Acid and sink.

Speaker 2 (03:45):
I love how this nigga says straight fold gas and
see that's how you know he's a hand resexual.

Speaker 1 (03:50):
Or I would start with trying, I.

Speaker 6 (03:54):
Gotta, I gotta does not get any better when you
say it. Just say I can help you orgasm by
prescribing you things all right now.

Speaker 10 (04:03):
Also, you're gonna have to beat you can't beat your meat,
and you can't fuck for a whole month.

Speaker 1 (04:09):
But I'm a half years.

Speaker 7 (04:12):
Cool, cool, cool, Well, hold on, hold on. You need
to nut just one time for the one time.

Speaker 10 (04:17):
So beat your meat one time and then take this
stuff for a month, and you need to liquid ash
for garden.

Speaker 1 (04:25):
That should sounded spensively. I aint gonna low to you, bro.
Oh ain't that ain't that important to me.

Speaker 7 (04:32):
That's better than it's better than the curchon.

Speaker 1 (04:37):
That surgery was never on the table. I would not
bug in that. She's like, but for me, I was like,
you know, I love you, girl, I really do said
those words I love you.

Speaker 10 (04:46):
This may be TM, but once I did it, not
for a long time, when I did nothing, it was
very thin. It didn't have a lot of power behind it.
It looked like sick, like just dead nut. And so
what can happen is that you don't ejaculate for a
long time, you can build up nut in your body
and it can flog your your pass this way from semen. Yeah,

(05:08):
so you need to beat your meat at least once.
And then even if you do the peel ashwaganda, do
that and you'll start noticing. Because what I know, bro
to be honest, When I didn't have sex for a
long period of time and then I nuted, that nut
came out and then I couldn't nut anymore. Like I'd come,
I'd orgasm, but nothing would come out.

Speaker 1 (05:27):
Oh d yeah before well.

Speaker 7 (05:31):
Once I started taking the stuff I just told.

Speaker 10 (05:33):
You, no hormo but really healthy, A lot of seamen
comes out.

Speaker 7 (05:39):
A comical amount sometimes yeah, this.

Speaker 1 (05:43):
Take this center screen exactly exactly.

Speaker 2 (05:49):
You can get sixty servings for roughly about sixteen or
fifteen bucks.

Speaker 1 (05:53):
Sham uh maybe next year.

Speaker 7 (05:59):
This is not that, it's.

Speaker 5 (06:02):
Just like the lip.

Speaker 1 (06:09):
Also, I think you didn't know that. The only thing
he listened I wasn't already taken was the folic acid.

Speaker 3 (06:17):
You need, you need the licktic is what he said.

Speaker 1 (06:19):
Bro.

Speaker 7 (06:20):
No, not full of the liquid coin. But I looked
it up.

Speaker 3 (06:24):
I'm saying the liquid that liquin a god, he needs that.

Speaker 7 (06:29):
Yeah, I mean he doesn't have to have it. It's
just better.

Speaker 1 (06:33):
Better because when he's currently is not working. I think
overlooking the part I ain't didn't bitches easy, So it's
not like it's like a huge, immediate or permanent issue.
Plus it's always good. In the beginning they're like, oh damn,
this do go forever, and then it takes like a
couple of months. What is it?

Speaker 7 (06:53):
Is it?

Speaker 1 (06:53):
Me?

Speaker 7 (06:53):
No, bitch, no he bro, Look, I don't have that
issue no more.

Speaker 10 (06:59):
What I started taking these pills because remember I told
you I you said a long time to not I
don't had an issue no more.

Speaker 7 (07:04):
Bro, I mean nothing nor no, But I mean everywhere.

Speaker 1 (07:11):
I don't think nothing. We know, I think sometimes a game,
but not nothing exactly.

Speaker 5 (07:17):
You got nothing is nothing?

Speaker 1 (07:20):
Nothing is gay. This nigga thought he was funny. That
nigga read thought he was funny.

Speaker 10 (07:27):
No, Bro, we need to talk about men's seemen semen
on health. There's nothing wrong with that.

Speaker 12 (07:33):
Nah, nigga, you can't be the same nigga's talking about that.
They was talking about attention.

Speaker 5 (07:36):
Bro, you look like a huge retention.

Speaker 7 (07:39):
Did do good for me? I think they helped with
me coming faster? All right?

Speaker 3 (07:42):
A right, this this is too much talk about this.

Speaker 10 (07:47):
What I want to change, man, it's men's health. Don't
be on comfort, be mature.

Speaker 1 (07:52):
No no, no, no, no no.

Speaker 9 (07:54):
Well, I want to know, is it better to have
a bad job with the good.

Speaker 4 (07:58):
Boss or a good job with a bad boss.

Speaker 1 (08:02):
How much you uh? The good job with the bad boss?
Is the good job with the bad boss or a
bad job with the good boss?

Speaker 7 (08:11):
Uh?

Speaker 1 (08:12):
Enough to pay bills? Look comfortable?

Speaker 3 (08:15):
Bad job?

Speaker 7 (08:15):
The bad job with.

Speaker 6 (08:16):
The good boss is enough to pay bills. But in fact,
the roughly let's say the good job of the bad boss.

Speaker 4 (08:25):
Then you get paid about one hundred and sixty thousand
dollars a year.

Speaker 6 (08:28):
The bad job with the good boss, you're getting paid
one hundred and thirty five thousand dollars a year.

Speaker 1 (08:34):
My sanity's worked more up at that close plus one
hundred and thirty five. I'm living like krying.

Speaker 3 (08:39):
This figure here is so reasonable to be young again.

Speaker 1 (08:45):
I just didn't take on a village.

Speaker 7 (08:48):
But I mean, all right, right, fine, let me let.

Speaker 3 (08:50):
Me, let me increase the spread.

Speaker 6 (08:52):
What if the bad job with the good boss is
let's say one hundred and uh do it?

Speaker 5 (09:00):
Yah, nigga, you don't know what a bad job it is, Nigga.

Speaker 12 (09:03):
Every time you said about one hundred, both niggas, it
will be like whatever, drop that job down about fifty dollars.

Speaker 1 (09:09):
That doesn't make it easy.

Speaker 12 (09:12):
I'm just letting you know, nigga, that that what you
think is a good job is like niggas was like
one hundred and thirty.

Speaker 5 (09:17):
I'm good.

Speaker 1 (09:21):
Woman a medio pussy just because it's a regular girl.
You think they wouldn't do it for money?

Speaker 13 (09:26):
Okay, all right, fine Jesus, and you need to hear
it from every mom here. Fine, the good job with
a bad boss is seventy five thousand.

Speaker 7 (09:40):
The bad job with a good boss.

Speaker 1 (09:42):
Is fifty thousand per year.

Speaker 2 (09:46):
That's how much fifty thousand per year with the bad
with the with the good boss seventy five thousand.

Speaker 1 (09:53):
For with the bad boss. That's where it skills. Now enough, Now,
what exactly as a job like some manual labor type
ship or no, No, you're got to send off of
these niggas.

Speaker 4 (10:06):
And you gotta talk to them.

Speaker 7 (10:09):
I do that.

Speaker 1 (10:09):
I don't know. I've had bad jobs before, so they
were for fractions of the smaller numbers you've getten. So
I mean, I'm just gonna stay out of this one.

Speaker 6 (10:19):
Noah, bro, your input is there, because the thing about
it here is and what I was gonna get to
is the fact that.

Speaker 8 (10:26):
With a good job with you, what do you mean
by bad boss? But let me let me give mine.

Speaker 3 (10:34):
He's micro managing you.

Speaker 4 (10:37):
He doesn't understand boundaries, He overshares ship that niggas shouldn't share,
and to be honest, he kind of gay, like not
enough for you to be able to pull an HR,
but enough for you to be like this niggas hitting
on me.

Speaker 8 (10:53):
So it is his micro management, micro managing and all those.

Speaker 7 (10:59):
Things like that.

Speaker 1 (11:00):
Causing me to like if he cutting my eyes and
make you me lose less money type of deal.

Speaker 14 (11:07):
Oh no, no, no, he can't cut your hours, but he
makes your hours miserable, where like you don't want to
be at the job, like you're tempting quitting and doing
something else because he's just so extra.

Speaker 3 (11:20):
He's extremely flamboyant to the point where it's.

Speaker 6 (11:24):
Just like, Nigga, this is a job we're trying to work,
and he tells you can't have headphones on, so like
you got to listen to him smack his gums and
his lips together all the time, and you're like, nigga.

Speaker 3 (11:36):
Why aren't like if this wasn't working, the guy just
slapping in the face.

Speaker 1 (11:41):
This sounds like it was whoever came up with this question.
I ain't really had to work a hard, shitty, shitty
job before, because this is just regular shit, a good job.

Speaker 6 (11:52):
With the bad boss or something, the bad job with
a good boss. The job is trash, is absolutely trash.
You got to be in his hunting's office. But your
boss is cool. He buys food all the time. He
also make sure that when you got a peachy your request,
he automatically approved that shit. You't got to fight this
nigga for it. He's understanding with shit. Well, like when

(12:15):
you got to like lead to go out of town
sham to like go visit family members.

Speaker 3 (12:20):
Like he's one hundred percent supportive. He's willing to jump
in and help you with stuff where it's a bad
boss at the good job. He he don't want to
help you with shit.

Speaker 1 (12:31):
That's just what I'm used to. I don't know, man, Again,
I think I should. I'll just excuse myself from this.

Speaker 15 (12:38):
You gotta be included, man, we want your vote because
I mean, for me, I wanted to do the good
jongle with the bad boss or something bad job with
the good boss. Because if you got a good enough boss,
then it doesn't matter how bad the job is, because
you know he covered for you, and you know everything
is scope citic.

Speaker 6 (12:57):
But I've seen plenty of niggas quit a job that
they were making a lot of money and be.

Speaker 15 (13:00):
Like, I just can't do what the I just can't
do with the people because one boss can fuck up
the whole thing.

Speaker 3 (13:07):
No, no one boss can suck up your entire enjoyment.

Speaker 5 (13:10):
Jobs.

Speaker 1 (13:12):
Thiggas put too much enjoyment on the job I get
spit on that you understand this ship like, just.

Speaker 3 (13:25):
Go, I hear you, I hear your kid. Do I
neither throw your mmy at you or you go Okay.

Speaker 1 (13:31):
I'm just saying the different people have different levels of tolerance.
We'll put it that way.

Speaker 15 (13:38):
Correct, very very different levels of tolerance. Because I don't
I don't think. I don't think that most jobs are
like the job with the bad boss.

Speaker 1 (13:49):
I think it depends on the industry and location.

Speaker 15 (13:52):
Yeah, I mean, I mean, yeah, your industry is trash
and your location does not help.

Speaker 1 (13:57):
Oh no, I'm talking generally. Uh yes, also man, but uh.

Speaker 6 (14:03):
Damn, bro, you weren't supposed to agree with that so quickly, nigga,
like at least like give yourself two seconds to.

Speaker 1 (14:09):
Like, this is what I'm saying. This is why you
spent a year with somebody you didn't like and I
was like two weeks in nahu this h recognize the
bad stuff, get away from it. I know your limits.
Even if your limits are high and normal, there's got
to be some you know, what's the world for, uh morals, standards,

(14:33):
some hard.

Speaker 5 (14:36):
Some alone over there.

Speaker 10 (14:41):
I'd rather take the ID rather take a job with
the good job with the bad boss, because you know, fucker.

Speaker 3 (14:49):
We know, nigga, you love strength and he talked about earlier.

Speaker 7 (14:53):
No, I just need the money.

Speaker 1 (14:56):
Yeah, I mean I could work the bad job for
a bit and then once I feel comfortable, go found
a decent job or you know, the one.

Speaker 7 (15:01):
With a bike. Let me tell you something.

Speaker 10 (15:04):
Not having enough money that's a different type of stress
that I.

Speaker 7 (15:07):
Don't want, don't like it.

Speaker 10 (15:10):
I'd rather have a nigga nor the fuck out of
me every day than I have to not be able
to eat.

Speaker 7 (15:15):
So, yeah, you're.

Speaker 15 (15:19):
Able to eat. You're able to eat at both jobs.
That's something where your bills are not going to be
able to be met. That's originally why I had it
at one hundred and thirty five and one hundred and fifty.
But you niggas like noll, there's too much money. It's like, yeah,
but the whole point is for it to be like
you don't have to have external factors such as if

(15:39):
I take the job with the good boss, I won't
be able to afford a car. It's like no, it's
like it's supposed to be parody as far as your expenses.

Speaker 1 (15:48):
Sometimes it's a bad question.

Speaker 7 (15:51):
Yeah, I don't.

Speaker 10 (15:52):
I don't think parity with my expenses, everybody would choose. Well, no,
what's the job.

Speaker 3 (16:00):
I said you got to sit in the office. Let's
say it's a call center.

Speaker 7 (16:05):
Oh no, that's a bad job. Oh no, yeah, yeah,
that's a bad job.

Speaker 3 (16:11):
This nigga's getting on you. Where's the other job you
get to be? It's a good job.

Speaker 6 (16:16):
It's it's a it's a it's a bad sorry, it's
a bad job, but a good boss. So while this
one is not a call center, this one it's a
shipping job. Like you guys get packages together for people.
But your boss is understanding and he doesn't set shitty metrics.

Speaker 10 (16:33):
Oh yeah, Why would the call center be a good job?

Speaker 16 (16:38):
Oh because remember you're making you're making really good money.
You get free internet and they pay for your four
oh one k they match up to ten percent.

Speaker 10 (16:49):
No no, no, no, no, no, no, no no no.

Speaker 7 (16:52):
A call center is not a good job. Have you
ever worked in a call center?

Speaker 3 (16:56):
Yeah, nigga goes my first job about a college.

Speaker 7 (16:59):
Nonigga, that's a bad job.

Speaker 3 (17:02):
That really good, good nigga. I used to play ahn
the Ammo r.

Speaker 6 (17:13):
PG well on the phone with niggas and stylist can
verify here for you.

Speaker 3 (17:20):
I used to play MMO RPGs while working at call center.

Speaker 6 (17:24):
Job, nigga, I understand that you went to one of
them slave minds, Like, uh, what is that place called
x x v I.

Speaker 3 (17:32):
I know you went to.

Speaker 10 (17:34):
No, No, I'm not center. I've done the I T
support for call centers and I can tell.

Speaker 3 (17:39):
You, oh yeah, yeah, that's that's that's that's different. But no,
I went to the good call center.

Speaker 1 (17:43):
Man.

Speaker 6 (17:44):
I didn't work in no x x v I because
x c I is a shithole. In fact, if you
have x v I on your resume, some places will
completely throw that ship out because it's such a.

Speaker 3 (17:56):
Horrible run company.

Speaker 6 (17:57):
But you know, it's very Asian, so they allow a
lot of bullshit because they got good union rights.

Speaker 7 (18:04):
Yeah, I'm not working at a call center. Don't give
a or bad.

Speaker 3 (18:09):
Okay, I mean that's that's cool.

Speaker 7 (18:11):
All right.

Speaker 6 (18:11):
Well, I think everybody kind of said what they were
gonna say about about this. So I go on to
one final one before I turn it back to the group,
and that is am I the jerk for refusing to
pay for my brother's wedding after he exposed my secret relationship.

Speaker 7 (18:25):
Why are you getting this question, nigga?

Speaker 6 (18:29):
I just I just look for stuff that I find
on the internet and that's what I go with. No, no,
this is from this is from am I the asshole.
So free context. This story happened two months ago, and
it's told from the context of a woman.

Speaker 3 (18:47):
So about two months ago, my.

Speaker 6 (18:51):
Family and I, you know, had a come to Jesus
meeting over it, and I'm still not over it.

Speaker 3 (18:57):
I have a younger brother whose name is Jake.

Speaker 6 (19:00):
He is thirty years old, and she is going to
be Jill, just to keep it easy, and she's thirty
two years old. Jake recent got engaged to his long
term girlfriend, we're gonna call her Lisa.

Speaker 3 (19:16):
They were planning a big wedding for the spring. And
since Jill got a really, really nice job, she.

Speaker 6 (19:23):
Got that good job, the one they're all talking about
a second ago, she said that she would help with
the venue deposit and some of the.

Speaker 3 (19:31):
Other costs, which is about twenty thousand dollars. Now.

Speaker 6 (19:38):
The secret relationship is for the past year, Jill has
been dating one of Jake's best friends by the.

Speaker 3 (19:46):
Name of Tim. They kept it in secret because.

Speaker 6 (19:50):
They didn't want the family to know, and they didn't
want to cause any drama in the friend group.

Speaker 3 (19:55):
Last month, during a barbecue which was.

Speaker 6 (19:58):
Kind of like one of those meet and greets before
the wedding between Jake.

Speaker 17 (20:04):
And Lisa, Jill and Tom were being a little too
friendly and Jake picked up on that. So Jake pulled
Jill aside and started interrogating her about it. She admitted
that they were dating, but begged him to keep it

(20:24):
quiet because they planned to tell everybody once they were
ready and after all the wedding stuff.

Speaker 6 (20:30):
Because they didn't want to feel like they were upstaging
Lisa's you know, big period of time.

Speaker 3 (20:37):
So fast forward two days, when Jake decided to tell
the entire world. He made a post about it on
the Internet with a snarky caption that.

Speaker 6 (20:48):
Read, looks like my best man has been busy, congrasted
him and my sister Jill for keeping.

Speaker 3 (20:56):
Us all in the dark. This caused utter chaos. The
parents on both sides were.

Speaker 6 (21:02):
Furious because Jill hadn't told them, and Tim and Jill
were both really plugged into the event. It also made
Lisa upset because she was like, bitch, I'm getting married.

Speaker 3 (21:16):
Why the fuck would you reveal this information? Now, even
some of Jake's friends started giving Tim grief, and Tim
was mortifying because he really didn't want all the smoke
and he's getting nothing but straight Kendrick lamar Top five
packs right now. When Jill confronted Jake, he laughed it

(21:39):
off and said he was just trying to help them
rip the banding off. Jill told me he had no
right to share their personal business, and then he made
things ten times harder for them in the beginning of
their relationship. He shrugged and said, well, maybe you should
have kept secrets. That's when Jill said, fuck it, she
was done. She was pulling her financial support, and Jake

(22:01):
thought you was kidding until she called the venue in
front of him and cancel the payment. Now, Jake and
Lisa are scrambling to come up with the five thousand
dolls deductible to get the venue back, and.

Speaker 6 (22:13):
The parents are super mad with Jill because they feel
like she ruined the wedding twice?

Speaker 3 (22:18):
Is Jill the asshole?

Speaker 1 (22:21):
I'm not gonna lie, just sound like white people proms
nigga give an answer. At some point, I got confused
as to why they were why the second person got
mad enough to tell everybody ahead of time? Oh?

Speaker 3 (22:34):
Why Jake did it?

Speaker 6 (22:36):
Because Jake is a child. He's he's immature. Oh, I
mean he shouldn't be immature since he's thirty years old.
But he found out then he found out.

Speaker 1 (22:46):
Didn't treat children like children.

Speaker 3 (22:50):
True. True. So you think that she's not the asshole?
Jill is cool.

Speaker 1 (22:55):
Fucking when I find out, I don't want to say.
I mean, I agree with you.

Speaker 7 (23:02):
No, she's not. She sucked around and found out three.

Speaker 5 (23:08):
Sea.

Speaker 1 (23:09):
Well she's the asshole.

Speaker 12 (23:11):
It's not that serious. If you were going to reveal
it anyway, just got early. He's just being picked.

Speaker 1 (23:16):
Okay, they catching ship forward though, that's the other part.
If it was just revealing, then I be on your side.
But that they got to do it.

Speaker 5 (23:23):
On the catch it either way, That's what I'm saying.

Speaker 1 (23:26):
Just you makes somebody else deside how you're gonna have
a yesterday?

Speaker 12 (23:29):
Uh yeah yeah, But that wasn't tied to her promise.
She decided to put her money off somebody. I say,
you gotta gotta fall through with it.

Speaker 18 (23:38):
I think sometimes you gotta learn that some things you
got to keep to yourself. Because not like Jake even
told Lisa, Otherwise Lisa could have had this whole conniption earlier.

Speaker 6 (23:49):
Why did you tell us? Right, yeah, that's what I'm saying.
He didn't even tell his wife. This nigga did it
just to be an immature kid about it. But I
do think, uh, this closer to everybody here sucks because
she really did just straight up force this nigga to
have to find five grands from under the count's kitchens.

Speaker 3 (24:11):
Hilarious.

Speaker 7 (24:12):
Why parents help him?

Speaker 9 (24:15):
Maybe got money, They got that really bad job where
they make twenty thousand dollars and you know they've been
able to make it so far because they're old and
they got Kleenexes. You leave me alone.

Speaker 1 (24:33):
I thought Stars was slapping ghosts, ghost his ghosts slapping boats.

Speaker 3 (24:41):
Oh yeah, yeah, right now he's whooping feet in them books.

Speaker 1 (24:46):
No, I'm at that literally.

Speaker 9 (24:49):
Yeah, yeah, I mean too, he's wooping feet with them booked.
This man is slapping dictionaries and other kinds of books
that I'm not gonna say because I'm not trying to
give out his information.

Speaker 7 (25:05):
Why not.

Speaker 1 (25:06):
I'm afraid he's gonna revoke some pepper or something.

Speaker 6 (25:10):
Yeah, man, he might he might cancel my pre uh
five year in versus with my wife's he's gonna revoke that.

Speaker 3 (25:21):
Don't make the stylish mad. Don't make the stylish mad,
all right. That's that's the two ones I had. Who
else got something they want to ask a group?

Speaker 5 (25:30):
Oh, let's look for its.

Speaker 1 (25:35):
Recently, because I won't shave you. Nobody had that work, No,
I mean that makes sense. When they asked about it,
I said, uh, I've seen you not wash your hands before.
That was at one time.

Speaker 7 (25:50):
Right nowadays?

Speaker 1 (25:51):
Uh not half of them are pissed, and well, actually
all all of them pissed. That's the only reason I
brought it up. Everybody vision, I don't see the issue
with it, because now you got pissy hands, why you
need to put your hands on mine. We can't just fish,
bump elbows whatever. We're supposed to be boys. Yeah, nigga,
we ain't touching this. Am I the asshole?

Speaker 7 (26:13):
Yes very much?

Speaker 1 (26:18):
I don't know. Man, you go to the bathroom, whether
you're shot in the prison, you you know you did,
and wipe your ass and then you go to slap
aother man hands, y'all cool? That that don't make sense
to me. I got in trouble for this one time
right before COVID, and then they had to have a
big meeting like at the height of COVID, and it
was like, well, maybe he was right. I guess We've
gotten far enough outside of COVID When I'm wrong again.

Speaker 7 (26:40):
Is it possible You're always wrong?

Speaker 1 (26:46):
Always?

Speaker 9 (26:46):
No, probably it's always impossibly, always wrong, but wrong many times.

Speaker 1 (26:52):
Yeah, I get that.

Speaker 7 (26:56):
I'm sad. Guys, I'm in some good thing.

Speaker 1 (27:00):
I was about to say that you actually get the medicine.

Speaker 7 (27:02):
Yeah, but I'm a thing. You see.

Speaker 1 (27:08):
You know Chris who Pierce Morton, he's like some Yeah,
he's been like Goblin Elon Musk lately, and he had
most of that black scientists that really don't like. Yeah,

(27:33):
he was like the bigger scientists, if you know what
I mean, like actually physically larger the most.

Speaker 7 (27:42):
You're talking about. Yeah, yeah, yeah.

Speaker 1 (27:47):
So he was on there like you know, uh, Neil
had an interview I guess with Bill Mark or something,
and then he was like Bill Maher was sucking off
Elan too, and he was like he's trying to take
us to space. You know, he's one of the greatest
thinkers that you know, this century and you know we're
gonna we need to be on Mars. And Neil's opinion

(28:09):
was like, if we have enough money to go to
Mars or actually his opinion started with typically whenever we
had a large expedition or something of that nature, but
we had to go beyond what we normally go. The
example he gave was going to the moon. There was
a pertinent issue that led to it. It was war,

(28:30):
you know, the USSR COD War and all that shit.
And when I think it was JFK somebody gave the
speech about it. It was phrasing a way where it's like, yo,
we need to win. This is a matter of life
and death for us. And that speech is what got
Check signed, investors and all that. That's what made the change.
What Elon's trying to do is essentially like not pertinent

(28:53):
immediately because it's not like we're facing the space thriap
and he's saying we need to go to Mars terra form,
and it's like, we have the money to go to
Mars terror form, then why can't we just spend that
money on making the Earth better? And then Pierce was
just kind of like, well, you're just doing I feel
like you're being like down trodden. Then you know you're
one of those naysayers of the current age. And then

(29:16):
it was like, well, the nay sayers of the previous
say didn't know shit about space. I'm a fucking scientist.
I have the actual information and whatnot. I'm also in
the same field. I'm not saying this to be mean
or anything. I'm saying because it just seems illogical. Anyway,
He's been catching a lot of flag for that reason,
and I was wondering what Re's gonna say because he

(29:37):
don't like him because of the whole plutle thing.

Speaker 12 (29:40):
No, No, it's not that it's like he's one of
those people just too smart for us.

Speaker 5 (29:44):
I'm good. The reason I don't like him.

Speaker 12 (29:45):
Is because if it's like those weird sexual social studo
helped joining that shit. But when you talk about anything
that science related helps change his mind just to make
people feelings feel better, either you are or you aren't.
Kind of like the thing that he's talking about, which
is true. Uh like logically signs if we have enough

(30:05):
technology to go quote unquote terror form a planet, which
we don't have yet. But that's neither he an Noo,
there then why can't we just fix the planet we're
on that? Like, are we gonna do is just set
up another planet to kill and with their logic? Right,
but why do they want to leave?

Speaker 1 (30:25):
Oh? Because they plan on this planet before its time
actually comes.

Speaker 7 (30:29):
Yeah, that's what I was gonna say.

Speaker 10 (30:30):
They plan on fucking us, and it'd be nice if
they at least took us to dinner first.

Speaker 1 (30:39):
You've seen these prices.

Speaker 12 (30:41):
Yeah, you can't get in here with unclothed, so you
can before we go to dinner. Look, I ain't got
no but I need you know it off this side
of the million, I don't know good. That's no the
grass tic niggas gonna call homo socialist or some bullshit
like that, right, it saying a.

Speaker 1 (31:00):
Lot of different things. It's not that I particularly care,
but at least in this argument, I'm like, you don't
the people who I've seen say things against at least
that argument have just kind of shifted to the whole
typical thing where was like a tax character, he's a bully,
blah blah blah. You don't like this, but all right,
well what about this particular argument. The ain't saying you
gotta like him?

Speaker 5 (31:19):
I'm just saying, you know, well, you don't have an argument.
You argue, you attack the person not arguing.

Speaker 7 (31:24):
I argue that why not go to Mars?

Speaker 1 (31:29):
Right?

Speaker 7 (31:30):
Like, like, here's the thing. At any given moment, the
Earth could be destroyed.

Speaker 5 (31:40):
That's not true, no.

Speaker 7 (31:41):
I mean it can't be calamity war.

Speaker 5 (31:47):
Can you meet one of those any given moment things.

Speaker 7 (31:49):
Have a nuclear war?

Speaker 5 (31:53):
But that's ours.

Speaker 7 (31:54):
I just say it could be destroyed by outside factors.

Speaker 5 (31:58):
You know.

Speaker 12 (31:59):
What I'm saying is like it it goes back to
his point, like when we just fit to ship here, But.

Speaker 7 (32:03):
Like, why not just have a backup? Playing at the
chill on them?

Speaker 12 (32:10):
You ever heard that the way they was gonna terraform
it was gone. I think they said Mars has polar
ice caps and they just gonna melt it with nuclear
bombs and some bullshit that they're.

Speaker 1 (32:19):
Just gonna put nukes on Mars. Gonna be in the
same bucking situation.

Speaker 7 (32:24):
But at least we got a backup. I like, I
don't have a problem.

Speaker 12 (32:31):
I just don't know why we're going, Like is this
some kind of mineral there or resource there that's worth it?
We're just going for shifting giggles. That's what I don't get.

Speaker 7 (32:39):
Resources.

Speaker 5 (32:45):
I mean, I think we all agree why we think
they really want to go, But.

Speaker 7 (32:49):
We're gonna run out of resources here, so.

Speaker 5 (32:54):
I don't think so.

Speaker 1 (32:56):
I think as soon as the toss up word, as
far as what that means. But is it in all lifetime?
Two lifetimes, you know, I'm sorry, two three generations from
now that deal.

Speaker 5 (33:08):
I say, none of our children will be None of
our children will be alive.

Speaker 7 (33:14):
That's fair, that's pretty soon, You're right, but we'll be dead.

Speaker 5 (33:20):
We won't care, but then we'll be like.

Speaker 7 (33:21):
The boomers of the previous previous generations.

Speaker 12 (33:24):
I don't even think our children children will be alive.
That's how far move I think it is. And I
think the way we use resources will change too, So
I just don't.

Speaker 7 (33:33):
Know, bro, that's pretty soon, I think.

Speaker 1 (33:37):
I think the only never change the way we use resources,
uh would be honestly too little, too late situation.

Speaker 12 (33:46):
Well, the one thing I noticed that's kind of interesting.
If you talk about the one that more people care
about it, like oil, that one is like we're getting
more people and we're using less oil. Because even if
you look at China, they're going super hard on electric cars. Uh,
Mexico had all those Third world countries. They're trying to
put them on electric cars before gasgards, which is weird.

(34:11):
It's not weird, but it makes sense. The developing nations
just skip them a level. So if you're talking about oil,
and then if you think about the oil we don't
get because of quote unquote environmental concerns.

Speaker 5 (34:27):
How long whole out there?

Speaker 7 (34:28):
How long does it check to charif the planet?

Speaker 5 (34:33):
I think ten twenty years what they said.

Speaker 7 (34:39):
I think it takes longer though.

Speaker 5 (34:41):
I don't think time over there.

Speaker 12 (34:43):
I don't think the time moves the same on Mars
as it's similar it's twenty four hours. Is that there's
almost no atmosphere jigger than ours. That is the higher
rotation speak.

Speaker 1 (35:00):
I only notice, I don't know that's a twenty it's
it's similar, I should say, not exactly.

Speaker 12 (35:09):
And when we talk about moving there, I mean, how
many people you think they maybe move at the time,
because I think right now it's like a three year trip,
right shit?

Speaker 1 (35:17):
Uh? Has that man?

Speaker 3 (35:19):
Though?

Speaker 1 (35:19):
That's unmanan hell.

Speaker 5 (35:21):
Let's see how long it takes.

Speaker 7 (35:22):
And the bigger question, who wants to go to Marrow?
Who wants to stay here.

Speaker 1 (35:30):
I don't know. Man, if they got like orange titties
up there, I ain't like when I have all types
of difficult.

Speaker 7 (35:38):
I don't know. Generograph sounds awesome.

Speaker 1 (35:42):
Yeah, I was right.

Speaker 12 (35:43):
Three years, one hundred and forty miles, one hundred and
forty million miles.

Speaker 5 (35:47):
Damn. I don't know how I know that. I was
talking about head Nerd.

Speaker 7 (35:50):
I don't know her. Nah general graphty touch it sounds good.

Speaker 12 (35:55):
Who the fuck would give up three years of their
life in the middle of space. Ain't no saving you, nigga,
you are dead. You gotta be dedicated to the cost.

Speaker 7 (36:07):
I do it.

Speaker 1 (36:08):
I'd be mad if I made a bunch of money
out there and then die before I got back and
spend it. I'd be mad as fun.

Speaker 5 (36:13):
People who do that ain't doing it for money.

Speaker 1 (36:16):
Uh, there's gonna be a lot of niggs doing it money.

Speaker 12 (36:18):
If you do it, you ain't doing it for I'm
saying they probably make good money being asked.

Speaker 5 (36:22):
But people who do stuff.

Speaker 7 (36:24):
Like that, I think they're gonna turn into a person.

Speaker 5 (36:26):
We would hope.

Speaker 1 (36:29):
Going to.

Speaker 5 (36:32):
Yeah, it's like America.

Speaker 7 (36:34):
No, like the whole earth would be prison. You have
a prison world.

Speaker 8 (36:42):
Like Australia.

Speaker 5 (36:45):
Yeah, planet, you know, I was thinking the same thing.
But it's weird thought.

Speaker 1 (36:51):
But that's that's the historical fact.

Speaker 12 (36:52):
It was a prison originally, I mean it was you know,
it was a debtors prison, that kind of I guys,
the ar they.

Speaker 1 (37:07):
Maybe trying to talk Americans are racis nigga y'all, y'all
damn racious.

Speaker 5 (37:16):
Hey.

Speaker 12 (37:17):
That was when I was listening to some story this
lady from South Dakota called idiots like very No.

Speaker 1 (37:28):
It's because they live on the prairide. But that's not
the word. That's the issue.

Speaker 12 (37:33):
H Yeah, you shouldn't say that.

Speaker 5 (37:40):
Mm hmmm, No.

Speaker 12 (37:42):
Whit Idea was like like okay, I was like, hello, man,
let me ask you all the serious question since we
asked the questions, So this is is kind of deep.
Do you think this country still is as racist as
it was in.

Speaker 1 (37:55):
The sixties, openly or inherently?

Speaker 5 (37:59):
You inherently? I think so too. Yeah, I think so too.

Speaker 12 (38:06):
There was this thing I was watching with well, yeah,
it's a little popular video to go with the guy
who created Boondogs talking about the moral currency of black
It's over like they don't give a fuck it's an
old video. But me, that's because white people over use
the word racist that it doesn't matter anymore. And they
did it on purpose. And he was like, what do

(38:29):
you mean? They called everybody racist to the point where
it doesn't even matter if it's just like whatever.

Speaker 1 (38:35):
Yeah, fucking Bank of America.

Speaker 12 (38:37):
And then when things are actually racist, everybody looking like
you're just saying that because you just saying that.

Speaker 1 (38:41):
That's why I get mad when black people just I
hate when like nigga niggas not black niggas, Like, man, racist,
no nigga, you showed up to work late three times
in a row and then you simply took a week
off and then say nothing. It was like, oh, man,
you know how it is because of me?

Speaker 12 (39:00):
It looks because they don't know what racism is, because racism,
like I don't inherently believe that you can change your
situation drastically with education in this country because you don't
have It's not about education if you don't have opportunity.
But they believe education presents opportunity. But there's a whole
lot of educated black folks, but they ain't got no

(39:20):
goddamn opportunities.

Speaker 5 (39:22):
But yeah, I don't know.

Speaker 12 (39:24):
I was like, there's like these white people are talking
like it's not like it used to be.

Speaker 5 (39:28):
I'm just like, I just hote this shit better.

Speaker 1 (39:30):
I think there's a lot of people who are not racist,
but systematically in how things actually go.

Speaker 5 (39:38):
They don't want they won't change anything. Correct, I won't
change it.

Speaker 1 (39:42):
I think we have less.

Speaker 5 (39:43):
And it was like, what do you mean you won't
change shit. I don't have the power.

Speaker 12 (39:46):
Like, you won't have the power because you don't want
the power because that's the responsibility. You won't even call
out racist grandma. You just well, that's just he just
grew up in a different time. Your grandma is not
that old that like it's twenty twenty five. Grandma is
somebody who's like fifty now. She was around after the

(40:08):
civil rights.

Speaker 1 (40:09):
No, but I guess that's another issue, is that it's
not that old. But that's because things ain't changed that
much easier. Correct, So they're not right, But inherently that's
the issue.

Speaker 12 (40:21):
There's a massive investment in the opportunity and then they're like, well,
you can't do that because it'd be racist.

Speaker 5 (40:25):
But just it's just for black people.

Speaker 12 (40:27):
But y'all made laws against black people specifically. But y'all
can't take loss specifically to help black people.

Speaker 1 (40:33):
Like that doesn't make it any Say we're gonna get
the money for reparations, Nigga stops sitting at the Israel.
Oh well, you know that's that's the mother land to.

Speaker 5 (40:42):
Be a start. That's not nobody's mother's land.

Speaker 1 (40:46):
Those aren't the people who are originally there. That's like
saying the Egyptians for the original Africans. Motherfucker said, they're
not even Africa. That make it make sense? How come
the pyramids ain't got no noses, Nigga, the whole pyramids.

Speaker 5 (40:58):
I noticed this country.

Speaker 12 (40:59):
When they need to find money, they'll find it because
just like during the pandemic, I was watching people they
were talking about we should keep Democrats in. Republicans put
all that stuff in far as, all them social things,
and like all that child tax credit, them check niggas
is getting all that help the small businesses. That was
all done by Republicans. But when Democrats got elected, they
got rid of every single program. They did add some

(41:20):
stuff for healthcare and did some checks and maybe a
little extra stuff, but inherently the people who were elected
to do that kind of stuff. It's supposed to be
Democrats for the social good. When they got in there,
they put a time step on everything and.

Speaker 5 (41:34):
Got rid of it.

Speaker 12 (41:35):
Well, they both do that, right, because they don't really
want it. And I don't think people are lazy, because
I know people who go to work every day and
they still not making it. Well, then you need to
get a different job or work multiple jobs. I know
people who work multiple jobs and still ain't making it.
This systems fucked, and I think the rich people have
gotten too greedy. I went to the store and I
remember buying a receas cub.

Speaker 5 (41:55):
I'm not that old.

Speaker 12 (41:55):
Ladies and gentlemen, not even forty yet, and they used
to be fifty cents. It was two and sixty nine
cents for two recents cuff and that was just a
regular one. Of course it was a gas station, so
even back then, the gas station receas would have been
like seventy nine cents. But fifty cent to their regular
price is like a dollar nineteen.

Speaker 1 (42:13):
They talk about how the price everything went up like
widden wages. How come everyone is still like.

Speaker 12 (42:19):
Going through record profits. They say, if you raised the wages,
everything goes up.

Speaker 1 (42:24):
You got record profits.

Speaker 12 (42:27):
That's why the death of the CEO means more than
people give it credit for. Logically speaking, and everybody in
this little small group of people, I see them all
trying to educate themselves and see out of help. And
I'm sitting right there, like, really really helped? Or will
you just be a little better off?

Speaker 1 (42:44):
I think everybody it's hard to argue with incremental uh
incremental increase and standard living. You go from shit to
not quite as shit. You still be happy it wasn't
ash it as it was before, Like, you know, it's
not good, but.

Speaker 12 (43:04):
I guess we'll see this year and next year everybody,
hopefully everybody upgrades and go from there. Because even people
who think they're doing good, I'm just like, well, you're
a paycheck away.

Speaker 1 (43:17):
I think we also had this issue with not grandeur,
but uh excess. I feel like most people I know
who even are.

Speaker 8 (43:26):
Doing good living but they mean it's supers.

Speaker 1 (43:31):
Yeah, oh ship.

Speaker 5 (43:37):
Dollas. What is the floor?

Speaker 8 (43:39):
What is the floor? What do you mean?

Speaker 5 (43:41):
Yeah?

Speaker 12 (43:41):
What would be the floor for an average person? The
floor used to be able, you can afford a house
and a car. You can't even do that now.

Speaker 8 (43:52):
I mean, I wouldn't even include the car in there,
because you can get around without a car depending on
where you live at.

Speaker 12 (43:58):
No, well, I'll I agree with you.

Speaker 8 (44:08):
I mean it's shelter and shelter and food. I want
to foot the vehicles, like, man, can't you find it?
Like I remember, I can find it a little beater
for like man, like a few thousand dollars or some ship.

Speaker 1 (44:25):
Look at how much it cost.

Speaker 8 (44:28):
That's the probably used you to use car market. I'm like, bro,
but it's hard to find shutting under five thousand be
that and most of these car cars like looking looking
in ten ten plus and it's stuff to like I
feel started for these kids and stuff too that like
you you you come out like straight out of high
school and you gotta have a damn good job to

(44:50):
go through out there and then live on your own.
And I still see some people sitting there talking about
like man, it's weird that if the kids they don't
don't they don't move about eighteen like that, see like
the good you don't see what's going on?

Speaker 1 (45:03):
Not ignoring this ship.

Speaker 5 (45:07):
Everybody are a.

Speaker 1 (45:09):
Lot more informed than they are. And then when you
call them out and start asking questions like well, you
just we've gotten to the point where it's just so
unpopular to even have a conversation. Is there's no work
that needs to be done to split us up. We
do it to ourselves.

Speaker 8 (45:23):
Oh yeah, exactly, like y'all. Like people are just like
I don't know, like I was, I was, I can.
I heard y'all talking about like the racing a little
bit though, I'm kind of like, I like, yeah, the class,
the class is. It feels like that's a lot more
it's a lot more important right now to talk about.

Speaker 3 (45:45):
Problem.

Speaker 12 (45:46):
The problem with that argument is that there's a whole
there's a proportionally too many black people that are important.

Speaker 8 (45:53):
I mean, yeah, you're right, man, it is. It is
going to be a part of this is a part
of the conversation.

Speaker 1 (45:59):
You can't take the cant.

Speaker 5 (46:01):
That's why I like Bertie Sender when he talked about class,
but he would never talk about race the first like
he acknowledged it. Whatever.

Speaker 12 (46:09):
But the best way to trick white people is to
have the class argument versus the race argument.

Speaker 5 (46:14):
But the problem is you would think that.

Speaker 12 (46:19):
They wouldn't be able to do it from a federal standpoint,
where they would screw people over race. But my problem
with white people is once they fix the class issue,
I think, or if they even try to that, they
would find a way to screw black people, kind of
like with the New Deal.

Speaker 5 (46:35):
So you have to keep it in the conversation.

Speaker 8 (46:38):
I mean, it's true, but I think I'm thinking from
it from this prospect of like this the regular individual.
There's a lot of people who are there. They're very
focused on like the social the social cultural war part
of Paulic life. I mean, there was a big factor
for my my good to sue. You see how they act,

(47:01):
they're they're how they acting towarding h one B stuff though,
But it's for a lot of people, it's a culture thing,
like yo, just because you know, just because you know,
some image is gonna get not gonna get them knocked
out of the country. No, it's not gonna make you
like no, no more, not much better. You're still gonna
be GT, still gonna be Yeah, You're still gonna have

(47:21):
a ship life and you know you and then you
don't have nobody to blame them where it ain't black
people's fall, the immigrants fault, and then then who do
you blame? The only thing kind of thinking about no more.

Speaker 1 (47:32):
But you know, the whole platform was bringing stuff to
America and keeping in America and not the first thing
is like, I mean, Trump himself was like, I don't
like these visas, and now he's like, I ain't never
seen the problem with these visas, like nigga, we have
the internets written now.

Speaker 8 (47:47):
Yeah, I mean you can. Yeah, this is written in
stone there though, But it don't matter if the people
who supporting don't pay attentions or not. They don't pay
attitions and they don't really acknowledge it, which they've They've
been very good at doing that. Even if you can
be a hypocritic as much as you want to, they
still like them and they're still unless you pass. Well,
we'll see, we'll see this side.

Speaker 5 (48:08):
Well.

Speaker 1 (48:09):
You know people have been causing the like split that
they won't acknowledge it.

Speaker 8 (48:13):
Yeah, but you know, it feels like they're blaming Elon
more than Trump on this stuff, because you know, Elon
don't got to douce like like truth.

Speaker 1 (48:22):
So he might, but he's the money behind the decisions.
People are finally wise enough to the fact that Trump can.

Speaker 8 (48:30):
Be bought and always ass mm hmm, yeah, always been
in the case.

Speaker 12 (48:38):
White people picked the wrong savior. But at the same time,
I felt like on the other side, the things they
try to fix, the things that don't people don't give
a fuck about. We need to have all these like
LGBT safety, Like no, bro, like they all picking the
wrong villains when it's all like, glad you go back

(49:00):
to class issues. It costs too much. And then they
were like, well, if we can't call the immigrants out,
it's gonna cost too much money. But y'all also letting
allegedly up to twenty million people and everything still got expensive.

Speaker 5 (49:11):
So they picked the back up what they.

Speaker 1 (49:15):
Like, he wasn't letting in a bunch of interests when
he was in Like because I had this argument what
to do at the bar. He was like, yeah, you know,
little Trump Trump lesson amigrant in But it's different when
you you know, yeah, you guys can't come in and
you look the other way as opposed to we'll just
let everybody and get the sanctuary cities and shit like that.

(49:37):
That's that's my issue with it. That's what he said.

Speaker 8 (49:40):
Yeah, yeah, everybody's gonna everybody's going to like play defense
for this side. Like something goes wrong, and that's all
that's always been a problem to I have a lot
of people on both sides too. It's like yo side, yeah,
they don't. They don't hold their own side accountable. That's
always my big issue. Like you see some dune shit

(50:00):
going on that. I do see some people on LEFTO
who do called dumb shit and on left just like
again they kind of getting some hope. They're like, hey,
maybe you know, maybe maybe fucking about decades from now
something this shit would catch on a little bit better.
But some of the album will be saying the dumb
shell soun like like frans women are woman ship full shit.

Speaker 1 (50:20):
But we'll see.

Speaker 8 (50:29):
You see some dump ship like noice account of you know,
I don't care. I don't care if you're side black,
Like whatever.

Speaker 12 (50:37):
Problem I had, I mean even myself with these immigrants
when like the amount of help they were giving them,
it was just like ridiculous, bro, if you know, you know,
but if you don't know, they were giving these niggas
food stamps for like two thousand dollars a month. Nigga,
if all of us apply for food steps, none of
us is gonna get two thousand dollars or month.

Speaker 1 (51:00):
I'm only giving the dollars a.

Speaker 5 (51:02):
Month, correct, Like what the fund has she been here?

Speaker 8 (51:08):
Don't make no more? She ain't worked about working a lot?

Speaker 5 (51:12):
You know, Yeah, it don't matter her has been worked.

Speaker 7 (51:16):
I mean you can you could.

Speaker 8 (51:18):
She got, she got, she got, you got his? Uh
so security checking all the stuff ain't ain't nothing to
cover all the ship they gotta do.

Speaker 1 (51:27):
That's why I'm scared of saying the same. But these
prices keep doing it. Yeah, not not in the way
to make it significant, No, definitely not, Like I don't know,
they just trying to pick the bad guys when it's
a combination of the federal government and classicism.

Speaker 8 (51:50):
I mean again, it like like you were saying earlier,
this is some corporation they were getting they're getting really
good at at trying to trying to lower their own costs,
and they just get to greed. I know, they like
they can't wait for so they can relation more people off,
so they ain't got a family, keep more money and ship.
That's that's that's really the that's really the biggest issue.

(52:12):
If you've been saying it for for a long time.
But you know, people keep getting distracted by by by
immigrants and trans people and all the other bullshit that
that in the grand scheme of team don't matter all
that much.

Speaker 12 (52:27):
The question is is the list top of the list,
but then these.

Speaker 8 (52:31):
Are the top person because yeah, personal look a lot
of a lot of ship. I honestly don't get too
shipped about.

Speaker 12 (52:39):
Like logically speaking, like the question is like as somebody
who like whenever you have children, if you have children,
like let's say your pocket straight, you ain't gonna be
worried about that. You find that other stuff that's about
these white people, the poor white people. Pockets ain't straight,
and they know they can't control that because that requires
everybody to fight against classes. But the things you can

(53:00):
fight against, you better fight against because like the immigrants
and the trans issue, it is something that may not
affect them on you know, that level, but like it
was little things as a parent, when they had like
France reading time in like an elementary school in the
Camp County, I'm just like, oh, hell no, I think.

Speaker 8 (53:23):
I think it's I think for me it's two things
that was like one that I don't have to and
probably won't and two if I did, they're not going
to public school. I won't be dealing with that.

Speaker 1 (53:36):
You need the money, my goal, then you right to
the classes. You are over again. Well yeah, I can again.

Speaker 8 (53:42):
This This is a personal thing though, I mean, and
I'm not saying that's that's cool for everybody else.

Speaker 1 (53:47):
And I'm just saying that's.

Speaker 8 (53:47):
Why I kind of don't care about that that particular issue.

Speaker 5 (53:53):
That's the wayest.

Speaker 1 (53:53):
I mean, it's stylish by the least, my kids not
going here public schools.

Speaker 12 (54:03):
But the problem was the federal government, like the way
they distribute money to schools is that whatever. That ship
was called Title nine, but you had to go buy
these certain rules when it came to education and all
that kind of stuff, and they had a lot of
that stuff in there, and people were like, nah, they
don't need to be in there. But the problem is
they always expand that ship to like, oh, well, we

(54:23):
need to take some of this stuff about you know,
slavery and ship out too.

Speaker 1 (54:28):
I notice whenever they had videos, they find a black
person who's like against it, Like, I don't want my
daughter to think that she can't be anything except for
a way slavery. Uh, I get what you're saying, but
also statistically, shut the fuck up.

Speaker 8 (54:43):
I purpose I mean, I get the way modern life
is and stuff too, but like and a lot of
people they really need to rely on public schools to
kind of you know, take care of kids wiley at
work and educated, but stuff like that, Like I don't
want them to keep on waste slate. I mean, I

(55:03):
think part of that should be gonna use the parents
that kind of to make sure they don't turn out
like that, that's what you want to reach out.

Speaker 1 (55:13):
But they're saying that, like, oh, the way it was
put was almost like oh, they're teaching statistics and how
things go, and like they shouldn't do that, Like they
shouldn't say the truth. So like because then that extends
to issues where it's all right, well they want to
say truth about that, then what do that to say?
The truth about slaves were actually you know, taught a
bunch of decent skills and they had a good time.

(55:34):
Like let's let's put it this way. They were very
pertinent about making sure that Germany after or you know,
post whatever that ship is called. You know, I'm talking
about you thing juice, the juicing. They made sure that
history was told the way it was the whole world.
But for some reason, America used to be like, eh, well,

(55:56):
you know, actually it was mostly just a bunch of
lazy niggas and the ones that were there were happy
to have a decent living. Like that's that's not how
that went. That's not how slavery goes at all. You
have to drive a line somewhere.

Speaker 5 (56:07):
They care Toby.

Speaker 12 (56:09):
They told Toby he stole five appls and Toby's I
ain't still on five hovels. They hit Toby, he said,
you hit me since times.

Speaker 5 (56:20):
See, I know you can.

Speaker 7 (56:21):
Count this nigga learning Oh hit him again?

Speaker 5 (56:27):
M that seven balls? You said fivese?

Speaker 18 (56:31):
You counting?

Speaker 1 (56:33):
Damn, this is Uncle rock story all over again.

Speaker 5 (56:36):
I don't know, it's thrange. It all goes together.

Speaker 12 (56:40):
And like I keep telling people, you cannot trust your media.
See any MSNBC. I can see why they're all dying
because they're all in the tank. They're all sold out.
They like it was the Obama years that made me
realize it. Not saying they weren't dying before, but as
an adult, I'm just like they were like, he's the
greatest president ever.

Speaker 5 (56:58):
The economy is awesome. I'm just saying, like this ain't
this ain't good. It was good.

Speaker 1 (57:06):
I was algous with my mom and she's just like
what my mom was like heavy Democrat, like she sends
money Democrats, like, can you stop doing that? Just send
that money to me.

Speaker 12 (57:13):
Whenever you feel like, yeah, y'all generation gone, bro, that
civil rights generation.

Speaker 5 (57:18):
You can't tell.

Speaker 12 (57:18):
They're just democrats down to the court and they see
that people changing, and they scare us every now and then,
but they can't scare us twice with Trump. They scared
us once during the pandemic and whatever kind of funky
math they did. But the second time, niggas like Nigga
come on that ship. And I kept telling people like

(57:39):
she like niggas weren't feeling her. She needed the Obama numbers,
and they was just like, well, she ain't have enough time.
It was like, you were never going to convince anybody
in this planet that.

Speaker 8 (57:48):
She was when she when she got the when Byan
dropped out and he announced that she was going to
be the one I was.

Speaker 5 (57:55):
I was.

Speaker 8 (57:55):
My first thought was like, it's a good thing that
this campaign gonna last at longcause I think the longest
she would have went, the worst it would have got
for her.

Speaker 1 (58:04):
She wasn't.

Speaker 8 (58:05):
Yeah, she wasn't that.

Speaker 1 (58:07):
She wasn't that chick.

Speaker 5 (58:11):
She won the people. She's like Hillary Clayton.

Speaker 12 (58:13):
She's protested if it's if tomorrow one hundred percent, if
you can say you kill babies with what steak soft
and eat them, she wouldn't agree with that ship because
she doesn't have any real pull the lital pink.

Speaker 5 (58:23):
She just wanted the power.

Speaker 12 (58:24):
And that's why the left was so happy because they
got somebody who was for the weird social issues with
that one guy because he is like that, he's he's
like a CLK white guy. Uh, Tim, but Tim Walls
because they thought he was gonna run everything while she
just set up there and ipportunity to be president. That's
why them white lefties were so happy because that's what
they really thought was gonna happen.

Speaker 5 (58:45):
Because they know she don't got nothing. They know she has.

Speaker 1 (58:48):
I know some of color hair people are who are
happy about Kamala.

Speaker 12 (58:54):
They were yah, but they like Tim Wallas. They loved him.
I'm just like that go beta.

Speaker 1 (59:03):
What y'all think about the explosions in the New Orleans.

Speaker 12 (59:08):
Thing, we didn't even talk about that. I didn't have
an opinion of it.

Speaker 1 (59:12):
Well, that terrorists whatever the part the representative whatever that said,
it wasn't a terrible attack. They talked about possibly fire
and hurt. I'm like, ball got right there, reprimand so
I can't say fire.

Speaker 5 (59:31):
No, I don't know what happened with.

Speaker 1 (59:35):
Okay, So you know, you got the Tesla thing. I
think that was New York with them, and then you
got the New Orleans attack.

Speaker 5 (59:44):
Or which was weird at all, Yeah, weird.

Speaker 1 (59:49):
But these things both happened from two people who were
prime military. Both were on the same base. One of
them was I can't remember for sure, but no one
was spec ops and one of them is apparently has
ties to Augusta And I feel like they're just saying
that because he got stationed in here one time, like
maybe it's here, uh, people that don't fucking know. Uh.

(01:00:12):
But then, at least with the Tesla, dude, that was
just handled so poorly from someone who's supposed to be
spec Ops.

Speaker 12 (01:00:21):
I don't get what his point was. No, but what
was the point of blowing up a Tesla in front
of a test works in it.

Speaker 1 (01:00:34):
Fireworks? I'm just I just if y'all had to do
something you wouldn't google, like how to make a bomb,
your spec ops. You don't have access and know how
to you know, rig some ship, no where to go
as far as like old military supplies that she ain't
got nobody on the inside. You ain't made no connections, nothing, nothing.
And then you drive your Tesla across.

Speaker 5 (01:00:56):
A couple No he got one legend.

Speaker 1 (01:01:00):
Yeah, try you drive a Tesla from a couple of
states over which is fair. You don't want to be
close if you're try not to get caught. But then
you shoot yourself before you blow it up. You have
an Iceis flag in your bag somehow that makes it
out of the explosion very well. And then you loaded

(01:01:21):
your car with fireworks to make a statement. But you
kill yourself before you you like, you shot yourself in
the head before everything goes off. Like nothing about this
makes sense.

Speaker 5 (01:01:30):
Yeah he did.

Speaker 1 (01:01:33):
He was as they put it, he was dead in
the car and they couldn't identify the body. But for
some reason his cack or his essentially uh, the common
access car or whatever I've got. You say, shit, your
military ID that survived. The flag survived, Yeah, definitely, there's

(01:01:57):
more to that, and it probably won't be released until well,
we'll see it.

Speaker 12 (01:02:00):
Against released it's one though, it sounds like one of
those stories is getting a little weird.

Speaker 5 (01:02:04):
So they started talking about less and less.

Speaker 1 (01:02:09):
I don't want to look at American news.

Speaker 5 (01:02:14):
Uh.

Speaker 12 (01:02:15):
They talking about it on TikTok, and I just I've
been out of the internet. And then some guy who's
saying he had his manifesto then he disappeared, and they
were like, what the hell going on?

Speaker 1 (01:02:26):
Well see, and the other issue is cloud is just
so such a strong drug right now, you can't really
believe in it. Just one person, Yeah I got it,
release it. Didn't say you got it? Like, don't don't.
You're not selling that ship at the hospital. You're just
putting the target on your back, buddy.

Speaker 5 (01:02:42):
Hell yeah. Especially I don't know if I noticed. But
they kill a lot of Americans.

Speaker 1 (01:02:48):
What's that you say you found a way to make
really a lot of one? You work at the grocery store,
you know what. Let's uh, just to have a dude
randomly go on a rampage at this particular place and
shoot you. No, no white people, make sure he doesn't
shoot any white people.

Speaker 5 (01:03:07):
Get those blacks the moral compass of them.

Speaker 1 (01:03:09):
Then we're gonna we're gonna have him able to stream
that somehow in spite of us of being able to
do a deep I mean, a fucking twelfth grader can
do a d DOS attack and shut down a website,
but the government can't figure out how to get twists
to shut it down. Like I seeing a little strange.
The lane stopped talking because I ain't trying to get nothing.
I don't make enough money. If you had to kill
me leave me alone.

Speaker 5 (01:03:30):
If I did, I would the fuck out h m hmm.

Speaker 1 (01:03:39):
But yeah, it's that whole situation is just a funny.
Any related general, thank you for visiting us for another
episode of every Day black Man podcast. The blodcast every
Day Black Man Thoughts. I've been your board riker. We
had sham two arms, Uh, stylist was here. Black Libertarian
was an extreme amount of pain. I think I said
he was a liar. Maybe he wasn't. Maybe you won't
find out in the Patreon only episodes. We have three

(01:04:01):
and five dollar tiers.

Speaker 7 (01:04:02):
Uh.

Speaker 12 (01:04:03):
He died, you know, just because he's so hyper like whatever.
I just can't believe that he's really hurting that much.

(01:04:24):
And even if he is, it's just like, push.

Speaker 4 (01:04:28):
That ship deep down, bro, Push that ship deep down, bro.

Speaker 5 (01:04:33):
Like because somebody gonna help him. He lives seven minutes away.

Speaker 3 (01:04:36):
From he lives seven minutes away.

Speaker 1 (01:04:38):
You still would help him? Bro? You still don't want
to help him?

Speaker 5 (01:04:43):
Bro or not like a man? The whole the podcast.

Speaker 1 (01:04:51):
Bad boy baby?

Speaker 5 (01:04:56):
You know what I mean?

Speaker 12 (01:04:56):
If I needed help that culture guys which I help you?

Speaker 5 (01:05:07):
Mm hm No. What if I really needed your help,
I would come and laugh at your funeral.

Speaker 4 (01:05:12):
I would throw jokes at your funeral, straight jokes, keats
at your.

Speaker 12 (01:05:17):
Funeral and tell them I wasn't there to support your emotionals.

Speaker 5 (01:05:22):
That's what kind of friend I am.

Speaker 8 (01:05:24):
Damn, that's tie.

Speaker 5 (01:05:27):
Fuck your third ball.

Speaker 1 (01:05:29):
Yes, check us out on patient and whatnot?

Speaker 7 (01:05:33):
Uh, episode is being great?

Speaker 4 (01:05:34):
Really appreciate you sham for clarifying that might have been one.

Speaker 3 (01:05:39):
Of your best podcast autros of all time.

Speaker 8 (01:05:43):
And uh you did the name.

Speaker 3 (01:05:46):
Well that's the that's the whole part.

Speaker 1 (01:05:47):
Man, that's the part that makes it funny.

Speaker 19 (01:05:50):
You know you're being weird. You're being weird, bro. No,
that's not why weddever. If you can't get ahead because
people be mad, he'll be mad.

Speaker 1 (01:06:04):
Gen'ally did perform as well, and this is mag a
mad he
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