Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (01:10):
Jesus, set this get up crust to the seminos. Pay
The point is triminosostation, crept to the seminos of The
point is Triminosos destination. Crept to the Simino. The point
(01:31):
is Teminos destination. Jesus, this ain't no mystery. Ad wat
you say when he said to the west side, real.
Speaker 2 (02:03):
I'm here because I am a roaring line crying outcious.
Speaker 1 (02:11):
Welcome everybody too.
Speaker 2 (02:12):
The trust in the Lord and the Manning Report combined,
you know inevitably that it's always been that way. I mean,
I do the trust the Lord for an hour, and
then after that I go right into the Manning Report.
Allegedly or supposedly, these two hours are supposed to be
markedly different. One is, you know, biblical and spiritual and
religious teaching and all that theology stuff, right, and the
(02:35):
other is supposed to be local, national, international news, demanding report.
Speaker 3 (02:42):
And so.
Speaker 2 (02:43):
But what I've been doing because of my intent schedule,
and by the way, thank all of you for all
your prayers for me. But because of my intent schedule
now with the campaign for the mayor of the City
of New York, and I promise you when I become
the mayor. I will be doing daily reports. I will
start the prayer. I'm going to ask the engineer to
bring up the prayer I prayed a couple of days
(03:05):
ago that I will pray at City Hall every day
before I start the work of City Hall. Of course,
you know, the work of City Hall runs twenty four seven.
It does never really start date or start time. But
I want you to hear the prayer I prayed some
time ago, and I will start each day with prayer.
Whether or not I'll be able to do the manning
report or you know, I can assign other people to
(03:28):
take over this position for me. People that are now
ready to do that will have that take place as well,
and we'll see how that all works out once I've.
Speaker 1 (03:35):
Become the mayor.
Speaker 2 (03:36):
But I have been extraordinarily, extraordinarily busy, and I've been
trying to get, you know, myself ready for the office
of mayor. I've been trying to adequately campaign, you understand, right,
And thank all of y'all for still hanging in there.
But here is how I want to start each day
at City Hall as the mayor of the City of
New York. Then I have more things I need to
talk to about more the news about Mother Dunlop passing
(03:58):
this morning, but we'll get to that a little bit later.
On this engineer, let's hear that prayer.
Speaker 1 (04:02):
Please.
Speaker 2 (04:03):
I'm here because I am a roaring line, crying out
right anciousness.
Speaker 1 (04:10):
I really want to help the people. I do.
Speaker 2 (04:12):
I want to people have a lot of pain. There's
a lot of there's a lot of misery going on,
and I can help as the may of the City
of New York. That's right, I And so I'm gonna
start each day on prayer.
Speaker 1 (04:28):
I gotta. I had the engineer bring up my photo.
I'm every day.
Speaker 2 (04:32):
I'm gonna start every day at City Hall on my
knees in prayer. That's what I'm gonna do every day.
And I'm gonna pray for the people. That's city Hall.
I still on no steps some time ago. But I'm
gonna buy my head and ask I Most High God
if he will help me guide this city. I'm gonna
ask him, Lord, help me guide this city. Lord help
(04:55):
me to root out corruption. Lord help me to bring
justice to the people. Lord help me to bring truth
to the poor, not just financial handouts and trickts trinkets
to hand out to poor people. Let me bring them
the truth. Let me exalt them rather than dig a
(05:16):
deeper hole for them. Lord, let me bring peace and
unity among the homes. Let me bring health and long living. Lord,
help me lead this great city.
Speaker 1 (05:29):
Lord. Let me prepare this place for you to return. Lord.
Speaker 2 (05:34):
Let this become a place where people all over the
world will come to see what you have done. Lord,
using my experience and the length of my years and
the taste of my days, the millions of meals that
I have served to the poor, the housing that I
(05:54):
have provided.
Speaker 1 (05:56):
To those who are homeless, and those.
Speaker 2 (05:59):
That are prey and bound, that we can shut down
the prisons and shut down many of the police stations,
and let the streets be safe because of your peace.
And let me speak comfortably to the people. Let me
speak love in the hearts of the fathers, for their
children and for their wives. Given their wives a peaceful, financial,
(06:23):
spiritual security. Lord, let me lead New York City. Now,
I'm gonna pray this every day, not just that particular prayer,
depending on those circumstances, but that's the general idea of
what I'm gonna pray every day. When I become the
mayor of the city of New York. And my God
is a prayers and god. I don't know about your God,
(06:45):
but my God, his name is Jesus, is a prayer
answering god. And here's what I want to do. Live
by the Holy Ghost. And I pray that y'allill be
able to receive this. I know many of you will.
Some of you perhaps will not, but I know that
many of you will. Lord, thank you for not turning
(07:06):
this building over to that Muslim Zorahan Mandandhi Mandani. Lord,
thank you for not giving him this building. Lord Jesus,
thank you for not giving him this city. Lord, thank
(07:27):
you for not giving him the power to make us
say peace and blessings be upon the prophet Mohammed. Lord,
thank you, Thank you for keeping that Muslim, locking that
Muslim out of these sacred quarters. Thank you, Jesus. Thank
you Jesus for keeping that Muslim from having full power
(07:52):
over our schools, over our institutions. Thank you, Jesus that
this city Hall remains sacred. And in your name, Almighty God,
the Muslim shall not enter in and shall not take
charge of the lives of the people. And I'm willing
Almighty God, to be your vessel. I'm willing Lord Jesus
(08:16):
to be your servant. I'm willing Lord Jesus to be
your righteous that I might stand in the gap between
the living and the dead, and to protect this great
building from Islam, from anti fadders, from ices, from al Qaeda,
(08:36):
from Hamas, from the hoodies, and from others. To protect
this building and to protect this city, to protect, defend,
and uplift. In your name and by your power, I
thank you for giving me this opportunity to serve at
(08:57):
such a critical time as this. Thank you Jesus, as
we prepare a place for you to return. And then
your name Jesus, I pray and give things. Amen and amen.
Now I'm gonna pray that as well. I'm gonna pray
that as well.
Speaker 1 (09:15):
Hey, Mandami, what's my name? What's my name? What's my name?
James Mannon?
Speaker 2 (09:24):
When you go into that voting booth on the fourth
of November here in the New York City mayoral election,
And when you go in there, whose name you're gonna
print in the right in section, Whose name you're gonna
print in the right in section on the ballot?
Speaker 1 (09:42):
Domie, who you gonna pray? Whose name James Mannon.
Speaker 2 (09:46):
Hey, Mandanie, do you understand the words that are coming
out of my mouth?
Speaker 1 (09:52):
Do you understand the words that are coming out of
my mouth?
Speaker 2 (09:55):
Whose name you're gonna print on the right in section
on the ballot on November fourth here in the New
York City mayoral election.
Speaker 1 (10:06):
James Manning? All right, now, let's get it on alright,
It is all right.
Speaker 2 (10:15):
We are sadly we have to announce the passing of
mother Bertha Dunlop, who passed this morning at about three
twenty and her daughter, of her daughters, and her family
and friends was by her bedside.
Speaker 1 (10:36):
You'll forgive me.
Speaker 2 (10:37):
I think Mother Dunlop is either ninety five or ninety
six years of age. And I had a meeting with
her on day before yesterday and said some things to her.
I suspect that she was waiting for me to come
and speak with her before she decided to go help
(11:00):
on and past. She's had an extraordinary life. She is
and remains and will continue to be, even in her passing,
an extraordinary woman. And she has raised two extraordinary daughters
that I've been members of this congregation and have contributed
(11:22):
greatly to this congregation. Both Bathsheba and Bennett, both their blood,
sweat and their well their tears of joy. I should
say to this Ministry Contributions that I don't think most
people will be able to understand how those two daughters
have made such a significant contribution and done so without
(11:43):
asking for anything in return. The selfishness, and they got
that from their mother, who really probably you know, should
have been a comedian. I think maybe if times had
been different, she could have gone and done stand up.
Mother Dunlap could have and her earlier day because she
(12:05):
was quite funny, and her daughters are quite funny as well.
Quite frankly, if you take the time listeners, they don't
think that they are, but just watching them you start
laughing at their actions. But we all are grateful for
having Mother Dunlop with us the years that she was
with us. And there'll be more details about the memorial service,
(12:32):
when that will take place and how that will take place.
I would want you to contact Bennett's family and see
if there's anything that you can do. You might want
to make some donations to her, inasmuch as that funeral
cost has gone through the roof.
Speaker 1 (12:52):
Here in New York City, the average funeral costs sixteen
to seven seventeen.
Speaker 2 (12:59):
Thousand dollars, and that's on the low end. With a
thin casket. Things are just very expensive here in New York,
as Raphae Al Suleiman made mention of the other day,
So you might want to make even donations to her.
I don't know whether or not they will go with
the route. I did rather have financial donations other than flowers,
(13:23):
which can also be extraordinary expensive. But yes, mother Dunlop
has passed, and we shall. I asked her as she
would stay around to see me become the mayor of
the City of New York. She chose not to do that,
mainly because I think it's whatever she was experiencing. But
(13:46):
bless your mother Dunlop, and bless your daughters, and bless
the members of the Outlaw Church and all the children
that love you so dearly.
Speaker 3 (13:56):
We'll have more to say about you in the days
to come.
Speaker 2 (14:01):
Mother Bertha Dunlop passed away this morning quietly at her
in her home, at her and at her bedside.
Speaker 1 (14:10):
What's her family? Amen and amen? All right, I'm going
to turn a corner.
Speaker 2 (14:15):
I don't know if you can see that the announcement
board out that the have you all been watching Queen
zip Flip queensy Flip's programming of me. It's been getting
a lot of attention, quite frankly and surprisingly a large
number of younger people what you call them gen zas
(14:36):
from I don't know whatever up to up.
Speaker 1 (14:38):
To the early thirties. I actually appreciate what I'm doing.
Speaker 2 (14:42):
You know, the event with me that woman that accosted
me in Jens Queen zy Flip on the street the
other day. Most people thought she was out of order,
and she was out of order, and she was very arrogant,
and I think she thought she had it going on
that she could just walk up to me and just
get in my face any kind of way you want.
(15:03):
And uh and and I was watching this broadcasters where
there's four brothers for men, and they would saying, you
know some of these sisters, and how my sisters are
like that. They thinking they get up in your face
and just say what the hell they want. And these
men were cheering me on for putting her in her place.
Now you know I didn't want, you know, the mayor
(15:24):
the City of New York. You just can't be belligerent
to people and that was the daughter.
Speaker 1 (15:27):
But she just got in. She was just out of order.
You know, she had no respect.
Speaker 2 (15:31):
She thought she could just run over me because she's
a she I think she's an ankle woman on NBC
News right, so she probably thinks she's got it going on.
And but I stopped the dead cold. A lot of
a lot of people like that, even the young women,
like they said no, she was out of order. And
Quinsy flipped his broadcasts, getting me a lot of attention
(15:53):
among young people, and I, you know, I'm thankful to that.
For I'm grateful that that that I'm getting that attention
and that I expect to get a large number of
young people's votes. We've parked one of our vans over
at City College right at the interests. The main interest is,
I said, I say the college Columbia University, pardon me.
(16:16):
And I believe it's going to get us a lot
of attention. I think it's going to cost a lot
of talk between now and election date that the students
over that Columbia would be able to see that I'm running.
I'm manning for mere because there's a lot of tension
now between the foreign foreign students at Columbia University and
the Jewish students, the men of the foreign students are
and many of the Islamic students have been threatening to
(16:39):
the Jewish students and the Jewish students being a smaller community.
And so I think it's going to engender a lot
of conversation over there at at Columbia University. So we
think Queens flipped for his presentation. I think all the
young people for taking a look at me, just taking
a second look at me, a clean look at me,
without all the other the you know, he ain't this,
(17:01):
and he ain't that, and he ain't for the black man,
and he ain'ts for the homosextion and all that kind
of stuff. But just just just fresh of all, listen
to what the hell I'm saying. That's first day, so
we'll thank for how let me say this to you
that Eric Adams, the president mayor of the City of
New York, has dropped, dropped out of the male race.
(17:22):
He has he's no longer a candidate. What the heck,
he's no longer a candidate for the officers the man
and he came down the steps. What was on Saturday morning,
Sunday morning, I think it was. Came down the steps
on Sunday morning at Derrick Gracie Manchon I think it was,
and maybe a city hall, I'm not sure, sat down
on the steps with the sleeves rolled up in a
(17:43):
picture of his mother at his left side, and he
declared that he was no longer seeking the office of
a suspending officers bear. He was suspending his case and
that was to be understood that he would do that,
that he was. You know, he was suffered terribly in
the polls. The media is against him, and there are
(18:03):
a lot of mistakes that Eric made, and his biggest mistake,
the fatal mistake that Eric made was to go to
maur Laga and ask Trump to help him in his
criminal trial. In the indictment by the Southern District of
New York on federal campaign charges, charges that he did
crimes if you will, allegedly that he did. That was
(18:26):
the nail in the coffin for Eric Adams. I think
he would be formidable and almost impossible to beat had
he not gone down to talk with and asked Donald Trump,
and then Donald Trump a course stepped in in a
very public way and had his indictment dismissed in a
very ugly way, very public in a very ugly way,
in a sense that people that are rich and are
(18:47):
powerful don't have to face the Bob justice the way
the rest of us do. I think that's the thing
that hurt Eric Adams the most. But that's not what
I'm here to talk to you about today. What I'm
here to talk to you about today is I'm going
to ask Eric Adams. Already asked Eric Adams if he
would endorse me. Now, I know that the polls are
not reporting this publicly, and they dare put a camera
(19:10):
on me or a microphone in front of me, or
to write about me as a candidate. But I'm out
there in the ether everywhere you shake a stick and
asking a poll. Where the Quinnipiac poll or the Fox
News poll or CNN CBS polled, the marriage poll. All
of those posters get people saying I'm going to vote
for Manning. They're not reporting that. But I can tell
(19:34):
you now, according to what I have heard and have observed,
is that I'm polling in about forty percent in the
polls were I on the ballot. Now here's what the
posters are saying. So the poster will call up a
person ask him who you're going to vote for? Where
are you a Republican? Are you independent? And the persons
(19:54):
on the other end will say, I'm going to vote
for Manning, and the poster will say, well, he's not
on the ballot, and so he's not officially running, and
so you have to give me another name other than
Manning because he's not on the ballot, and that's by
not My not being on the ballot is absolutely true.
Speaker 1 (20:12):
However, I am running.
Speaker 2 (20:14):
But because I'm not on the ballot, they think that
their poll has to reflect only people's names that appear
on the ballot. So then they ask, if you can't
vote for Manning, what's the next person? And they may
say Mondami, or they may say Cuomo, or they may
say Adams. But really I am polling higher than all
(20:34):
three of those at this very moment.
Speaker 1 (20:37):
Now they're not reporting that. They are not reporting that.
Speaker 2 (20:41):
And technically, and according to the poster situation, and according
to the way the election laws work, they probably cannot
report it because.
Speaker 1 (20:51):
I'm not on the ballot.
Speaker 2 (20:53):
I'm a writing candidate, as you have seen, and people
have to write my name when they walk into the
voting booth on the fourth November. But what I having
said that I'm a formidable I am out there, I've
been out there. The people love me, the people want me.
It's incredible what I've been able to build and momentum
(21:14):
over the last year running as a candidate of mayor
for the City of New York.
Speaker 1 (21:18):
And I'm gonna win.
Speaker 2 (21:21):
But what I want to ask Eric Adams to do
is to endorse me. And I don't know whether or
not this is illegal. If it is, then I don't
mean to meet it as an illegal offerm. But Eric Adams,
let me say this to you that I could use
(21:42):
your help in city Hall. If you will endorse me,
you don't have to leave city Hall. I can use
I need I want.
Speaker 1 (21:54):
Let me repeat that, eric or Mayor Adams, I can
use I need. I want you a help in city Hall.
Speaker 2 (22:03):
And mister Mayor, not only if you endorse me do
I need you, But I would ask you to bring
with you to City Hall to help me some of
your most trusted, dedicated and honorable people that we can
continue most of the work that you started here in
(22:26):
city Hall, the work that you've started, the work that
you've completed the things that you've accomplished over the past
four years. That work can continue on the Demanning administration now.
As best I have checked legally an election law, what
I am proposing is not illegal.
Speaker 1 (22:47):
That is not the intent.
Speaker 2 (22:49):
I'm simply saying there would be a place in city
Hall for former Mayor Erka Adams.
Speaker 1 (22:55):
He would not have to leave. There would be a
place in.
Speaker 2 (22:58):
City Hall for all the people that Mayor Eric Adams
deems as trustworthy, as as people that are visionaries, people
that are great administrators. There would be a place for
all of them. Were that the case. And not just that,
but many of the great projects that you engendered, mister
(23:22):
Adams will Mayor Adams will continue under the Manning administration.
Speaker 1 (23:29):
Moreover, Mayor Adams, you don't.
Speaker 2 (23:31):
Want Cuomo sitting in your seat, Mary Adams, you don't
want Andrew Fato from the Godfather Cuomo sitting in You'll
see you don't want Andrew Fato from the Godfather Cuomo
seating and sitting in your seat. You don't want that,
(23:52):
and I'm the only one that can unseat him.
Speaker 1 (23:56):
You also don't want Mandani.
Speaker 2 (24:00):
You referred to him, and you were absolutely right that
he is a snake oil salesman. That Mandami is a
snake oid. Not only is he that, but he is
Osama been Laden Junior. Mayor Adams, here, here my heart,
Mayor Adams, here my heart. You don't want to turn
(24:22):
New York City, the city that I'm sure that you love,
the city that you have worked so hard to build.
You don't want to turn it over to a snake
oil salesman. Who is Osama been Loaden Junior in Mandami.
Speaker 1 (24:37):
You don't want to do that.
Speaker 2 (24:40):
And there's nobody but me on this planet right now,
Mayor Adams, that can stop uh Osama Bin Lodden Junior
from taking your position. And of course we all all
know about pussing boots.
Speaker 1 (24:56):
Uh. This sleevewall boy who is really is name should
be pussing boots.
Speaker 2 (25:02):
Uh.
Speaker 1 (25:03):
He's a joke that ain't funny. He's he's up.
Speaker 2 (25:06):
The big said, I started a joke that started the
whole world crying. Pussing boots sleevewa is a joke. If
he became the mayor of the City of New York
would have the whole world crying. So you don't want
pussing boots. You don't want Fado from the Godfather Cuomo,
and you definitely don't want Osama bin Laden.
Speaker 1 (25:28):
Junior sitting in your seat.
Speaker 2 (25:31):
Endorse me, Mayor Adams, and we shall walk together the
streets of New York. We shall work together the streets
of New York. I'm James David Manning, Mayor Eric Adams,
I am the Lord Servant, and I've served this community,
in this city and this nation for forty four years.
I seek your endorsement.
Speaker 4 (25:54):
To all New Yorkers, lend me your ear November fourth
is approaching quickly, and you need to know that you
still have a choice in voting for the best candidate
as Mayor of New York City, and that person is
none other than James Manning. Pastor Manning may be able
(26:16):
to save the black race in America if it gets
into politics.
Speaker 5 (26:21):
He knows what the problems are. He is the quintessential
black man.
Speaker 4 (26:27):
He has been everywhere where a black man can possibly
go in America, from an elite university to prison, from
a rural southern background to a big city existence to
a corporate job to a brief life as a criminal,
from poverty to a middle class existence, to a belief
(26:50):
in God and a reaffirmation of faith to a religious
leader and a family man. He understands the black man
and women down to their very bones. Elect him, people
of New York City to the Mayor's office. With the
advent of the new AI technology, white racist and power
(27:14):
will have god like technologies at dead disposal while possessing
primitive impulses to suppress all progeny that are week, just
as the Nazis did in.
Speaker 5 (27:26):
Germany during the period of World War II.
Speaker 4 (27:31):
Eugenics as a concept is about to make a huge
comeback because we didn't deal with these philosophical concepts.
Speaker 5 (27:40):
Over several generations.
Speaker 4 (27:43):
Since we didn't heal these psychic impulses in our collective unconscious,
they will re emerge among us.
Speaker 5 (27:53):
Now is the time.
Speaker 1 (27:55):
Now is the moment.
Speaker 5 (27:57):
Now is your opportunity to change your life. New Yorkers.
Speaker 4 (28:04):
Let's make history together. Print his name James Manning on
the ballot on November fourth, twenty twenty five, and watch
your lines be mightily blessed.
Speaker 2 (28:25):
All right, So we're on our way, and I want
to inform you that we should start seeing campaign's ads
here in the New York City, New Jersey, Connecticut, Pennsylvania area.
Speaker 1 (28:39):
By the end of the week.
Speaker 2 (28:40):
Today as I date this message is Wednesday, October the first.
By the third of October, we should flood the airways
on the major television networks. And I want to ask
the d if he'd bring up the list of television
stations that we're going to be on. Fortunately, Gods allowed
us to put together three hundred thousand dollars to retain
(29:04):
this agency to prepare these ads and also secure the
time slots for these various ads.
Speaker 1 (29:12):
But just to run down some of the television stations
we're going to be on.
Speaker 2 (29:18):
We're going to be on w ABC, mainly in the
Good Morning America slot or category. Also on w ABC
on the program called a View, and w n YW
in the Good Morning Wake Up at six a m.
Speaker 1 (29:38):
And w n y.
Speaker 2 (29:41):
W the Good Day Street Talk, several programs slotting on
w n y W. We're going to be on ww
our Good Day on the that's also television station number nine,
several days broadcast on that and on wln Y. We're
(30:03):
going to be morning Monday through Friday at seven am
at seven am News and on some of the other
broadcasts on WLNY. We're going to be on WCBS on
several broadcasts WCBS and also w NYC, WNBC RATHER and
(30:26):
WPIX WPIX. So we're going to be on all of
the major networks television broadcast stations here in the New
York City area, and over a period of thirty days,
we will run three hundred and sixty thirty second commercials
at that would give us approximately one hundred and eighty
(30:51):
minutes over a period of a month. And we'll be
able to work that deal out with the broadcast media
outlet that's been able to put this program together for us.
Why is this important, Number one is because we're finally
getting on television. The media they completely they did everything
within their power to ignore me. Politics is of their
(31:14):
dirty business. They've known about me for years. They hear
my name when they coordinate when they ask who you're
gonna vote for. But they have been successful to get
me off the ballot twice. Didn't get a judged to
throw me off a ballot a third time. So they
have done everything within their power to try to prevent me.
But I have not gone away. So look forward to
(31:37):
and you can scan this if you like, and you'll
be able to know what time I'm going to be
on some of these major networks such as Good Morning Americans,
such as The View. You'll know the days I'm going
to be there, and if you want to see the
commercials that we're going to produce, and we're working with
a production company to get a lot of those things
taken care of. That's number one. But number two is
(31:59):
that I need funding. I need donations. Like a deer
panther for the water, I really need donations.
Speaker 5 (32:08):
Now.
Speaker 2 (32:08):
We were able to put together three hundred thousand dollars,
but we're gonna need more than.
Speaker 1 (32:14):
That before that.
Speaker 2 (32:16):
We are now thirty three days away from the election
date on November fourth, and though we have been able
to put together three hundred thousand dollars and get these
we're gonna need other things that we're gonna have to
do and we need donations. So I'm gonna ask you
to go to Manning formayor dot com and donate. Manning
(32:37):
formayor dot com and donate. You're gonna make one of
the best investments you will make in your political future,
all things being considered political here in the City of
New York and across the world. Go to Manning formayor
dot com and donate. Go to Manning formayor dot com
and donate. Now, I have to tell you obviously there
(32:59):
are people that are opposed me, as you know that
they would and I you know, all candidates suppose each other.
They are people that I'm opposing. I mean, I call
Curtis Sleeve, we're pussing boots, you know. I call Andrew
Cuomo Fato from the Godfather, that weakling from the Godfather,
and the more Osama bin Laden Junior is my nami.
(33:19):
Uh So it's not to be interpreted and somehow that
I'm worse than somebody else because they just want that
office for mayl for themselves and they were I'm the
most formal old candidate to stop them, and I'm gonna win.
Speaker 1 (33:34):
But but I need you to. I need you to
to go ahead and nowt and go to manifamail dot
com and doing it. Will you do that?
Speaker 2 (33:42):
You know we've ran a great campaign. I think you
know this is our first time out of the box.
I think we've done a great job. We've hung in
there in spite of all the disappointments and that we
ran into. We're still here and we'll get it ready
to go up and stronger now that we've ever been
with this new campaign that we have going. So we
(34:04):
need donations, we need need a need donation. All right,
I'm going to take a break, everybody, and I'm gonna
be going to be right back after the break. So
watch this and you see how the people love me
here uh in the New York City area.
Speaker 1 (34:20):
All right, bless you.
Speaker 6 (34:32):
You're the pastor of the church.
Speaker 1 (34:33):
Yes, I am. I love that you.
Speaker 6 (34:36):
I've even watching that church and my hustle for you.
You're so bold, you are not out of order, and
I love.
Speaker 5 (34:42):
The authority that you want so inspirational.
Speaker 1 (34:45):
That's my man's sitting back in the cort. Thank you
for all your God bless you, thank you, fow you,
thank you, thank you, thank you so very very much.
Gods up the hand. You're going a little Yeah, you're
a little bole up here. Yeah.
Speaker 6 (35:06):
What's your name, Lynette Nicholaste Well, thank you, jeanneless.
Speaker 1 (35:10):
Yes, I'll take a flight. You're you're a journalist. You're
right for.
Speaker 6 (35:14):
Essence Magazine, Books and culture.
Speaker 1 (35:16):
We'll give me some press. Thank this on my I
sing me for knows that I'm gonna be incially I'm
all right.
Speaker 7 (35:22):
It's the flesh year in the car.
Speaker 1 (35:24):
And I'll give you all of that. I'm so happy
to my fast.
Speaker 7 (35:29):
Sometimes we walk with from our condo just to see
what you cooked up.
Speaker 6 (35:33):
I'm so wholes.
Speaker 1 (35:35):
It's just true.
Speaker 7 (35:37):
People are so kind up in modern day creatures, and
they're trying to be celebrities and please everybody. Your leaders
are supposed to tear that. They're supposed to break down protocol,
you know, and not follow.
Speaker 1 (35:47):
The status close. So thank you for your compliments.
Speaker 7 (35:50):
Not everybody's confused.
Speaker 5 (35:52):
We understand the bolt.
Speaker 1 (36:08):
I'm I'm here. That's we got lovely. We don't care.
I love you all.
Speaker 6 (36:16):
I cannot wait to tell my husband.
Speaker 5 (36:18):
We always come and see what you're pudding. How's your
Nixte Nicholas?
Speaker 3 (36:21):
Okay you all?
Speaker 1 (36:22):
God blessing that. Yes, ma'am.
Speaker 7 (36:24):
I'm so thank you for y'all.
Speaker 1 (36:26):
God bless you.
Speaker 2 (36:28):
Thank you for stopping and saying hello to me. Absolutely,
thank you, God bless you.
Speaker 6 (36:34):
Take a picture of me. Pass to James Manton, so
welcome and be like I met him personally.
Speaker 1 (36:41):
Where're you gonna help me move better place? I will
read that card will help improve your life?
Speaker 2 (36:46):
If you get a better income or take these burdens
off your shoulders that you're carrying around.
Speaker 1 (36:50):
Yes, we need to understand that. Thank you, God, bless you.
I understand all.
Speaker 2 (37:00):
The time that many that's you. How are you? That's you?
Speaker 1 (37:06):
Meet your great Hey, bring that.
Speaker 3 (37:13):
Right, mayor?
Speaker 1 (37:14):
All right? What's your name is? Jerald Davis? Gerald Davis,
Jerald j E. R A L d r ld Joel. Okay,
I'll be looking away him. I'm talking about the mayor,
next mayor. That's what you mean, that's what you mean. Yes, definitely,
(37:37):
definitely said bless you, Thank you.
Speaker 2 (37:47):
I have the plans and the ability to infuse forty
one billion dollars into working class neighborhoods in New York City,
and that was start with a beginning of raising all salaries.
Anybody working in New York will not earn less than
(38:11):
twenty seven dollars per hour, whereich works out to about
fifty to fifty.
Speaker 1 (38:16):
One thousand dollars per year. Now listen to me very carefully.
Speaker 2 (38:20):
I'm going to infuse forty one billion new dollars into
the working class neighborhoods of New York City, starting out
by raising the minimum wage to twenty seven dollars per hour.
That's just the beginning. The other thing that we're going
(38:42):
to be able to do by doing that raising the
minimum wage is that we're going to set forward to
a program that will then recognize that a lot of
the money that New York City is spending on items
that really are sort of trinkets and things that took
(39:04):
the fancy of those who are well to do, such
as plug in for phones all over the streets and
bus schedules that are not necessary that costs a ton
of money. We're gonna ask the City of New York.
As the mayor of the City of New York, I'm
going to ask the City of New York to tighten
its built now. Right now, it's budget is one hundred
(39:24):
and fourteen billion dollars per year. I'm going to ask
the City of New York to tighten this budget and
to reduce that amount, which will then and the money
that will be reduced can then be put in a
pool for home ownership, and that will give the opportunity
(39:45):
for people who are working. Let's say we've got a
husband earning seventy thousand dollars a year and a wife
earning fifty thousand dollars a year. At the twenty seven
dollars per hour, we're looking at one hundred and twenty
thousand dollars per year. Well, they then perhaps can qualify
for a home in Brooklyn or in Queens that is
not terribly expensive. New York City itself might be a
(40:08):
little bit much, but they can rent buy two family
home in South Ozon Park or in Laurelton, Queens, rent
out a part of that to a family member a
friend that they and then start what is known as
a small business. Because they're now renting, they're responsible for
the fuel, to maintenance, to take care, taking care, and
(40:28):
now they're beginning to build equity as well, which will
bring money into the so called working class neighborhoods.
Speaker 1 (40:37):
The other thing that we're going to do is that
we're going to make sure that the city of New York.
Speaker 2 (40:45):
Is swept broom clean of all vagrants, all homeless people,
all people sleeping on the street, all people that are
distracted to the community. We're going to make sure that
the community is swept broom clean. Now, we can do
that simply by giving every man an opportunity to have
(41:06):
a bed, to have his own house, and that's a
massive program that I don't have the time to give
the details to now, but I've done so in some
of my other presentations that I grew up in a generation,
even during Jim Crow, where there was never anybody sleeping
on the streets, not even in New York or in
(41:26):
Red Springs or Shannon, North Carolina. People didn't sleep on
the streets. Every family's provided housing. All families provided housing.
We're gonna give incentives. Let's say, for instance, two families
get together and the families are making one hundred twenty
two hundred and twenty five thousand dollars each, that's a
(41:49):
total of two hundred and fifty thousand dollars per year.
Then we will set up a long mortgage project whereby
those two families may be two brothers and his wives
or two sisters.
Speaker 1 (42:02):
And their husbands.
Speaker 2 (42:04):
We'll get together and they will buy let's say a
one million a two million dollar house. As corporate buyers.
They will have enough many a quarter of a million
dollars a year to be able to afford that housing,
and so then they would that would eliminate the need
(42:25):
for them anybody to talk about rent. And if the
house is big enough they could rent a segment of
that house to a person who's not a family member
or a person who does not qualify to be on
the mortgage. We will set those mortgages up through one
of the banking systems. And then I want to reach
out to the university universities. Is like Foredom to have
(42:49):
for them to set up classes to teach people in
neighborhoods and are working class neighborhoods, business skills, business ideas,
understanding taxes. We will set the homeowner that purchased a
home in the New York City area to be tax
free for the first ten years. All services to that
(43:12):
particular home will be free, such as water and sewer charges,
property taxes, all of that will be free for the
first ten years. We will go to organizations like con
Edison and Religious Service and Electric electrical Services and tell
them to prepare special discounted rates because in doing so,
(43:35):
we are now providing housing, making housing possible, and with
the Fordham University or other universities doing training on business management,
equity understanding, maintaining property, maintaining businesses.
Speaker 1 (43:49):
That it will take.
Speaker 2 (43:51):
People off of the street. See people are on the
street because ain't. Nobody got no money. Even people who
are working ain't got no money and can't help them,
and the City of New York doesn't have a heart
to help them. This program will clean up the streets,
will make the streets of New York broom clean in
less in the first year of my administration. And then finally,
(44:12):
the thing I think it's important I want everybody to
know is that I'm going to allow for street vendors
that are presently vending, especially on one hundred and twenty
fifth Street, to continue this street vending. However, they will
have to have in uniforms a code of ethics that
they will submit to that will make doing business one
(44:33):
hundred twenty fifth Street pleasant. They will be given recognition,
they will be given if a small if a vendor
has been on the street for at least three years,
I would recommend, very strongly, as the Mayor of the
City of New York, would a guaranteed program from the
Business Administration that if you have been on the street
(44:53):
as a vendor selling whatever you've been selling for seven
that you are now qualified to go to the Small
Business Association, even though you don't have a brick and
mortar business. The Federal Small Business Association will be obligated
and duty bound to give you a loan so that
(45:16):
you can get off the streets and get a brick
and mortar business. Let's be very cathley. This will be
very cathley. If you have been successful as a vendor
on the streets of New York for three years, and
you can demonstrate that you've been successful, then I would
recommend that the City of New York would set up
a fund where the Federal Small Business Association would give
(45:42):
you money to get a brick and mortar business. There
are a lot of businesses. If you don't live in
this neighborhood, so you wouldn't know that, but there are
a lot of businesses on one hundred and twenty fifth
Street that are closed storefronts that are just closed or
one of the most popular streets in the world. Yet
(46:02):
businesses that could come don't come, such as high end
stores don't come to one hundred twenty fifth Street because
they don't want to deal with the riff raft. They
don't want to deal with the homelessness, they don't want
to deal with the drug addiction, they don't want to
deal with the naked men walking around with you know,
with their butt showing. But we're gonna clean all that
up and we're gonna make one hundred and twenty fifth
(46:24):
Street the Park Avenue or the fifth Avenue of uptown.
Speaker 3 (46:29):
No.
Speaker 1 (46:29):
I can do that. I've done it before. I can
do it.
Speaker 2 (46:31):
I can do it that with my eyes closed. I
don't even have to get out to bed to get
that happen. But anybody who's been running a small business
for three or a vendor business will then qualify for
a loan to get a brick and mortar business. And
you know, there's something going on right now with Bashiva
Sherman where she has purchased into a business one hundred
(46:52):
and twenty fifth Street that has several other business like
a department store, but each person owns a segment of
the department in that particular store. Right now, she's running
a long Ajer race segment. There's a Jamaican man there
that runs hats, and there's another person that runs another quality.
So there are four or five people within that structure.
That's already happening to some degree, But I'm going to
(47:15):
make it a reality. We're gonna recognize the benders. I'm
for small businesses. I am for small businesses, and I
believe that small businesses should have an opportunity to survive.
And I believe that vendors can start out as small
businesses and can rise to become major global corporations. Should
(47:35):
Jesus Tirey does not come back anytime soon. So forty
one billion dollars, imagine this, forty one new forty one
billion new dollars in working class neighborhoods in New York City.
We're not talking about Wall Street. We're not talking about
the East Side where you know, you got a lot
of rich people living on the East Side, like Bloomberg
(47:56):
and a bunch of other folks billionaires up the wazoo.
But we're talking about working class neighborhoods like Dead Sty
or at least the brown and black color of Bedsty
and Harlem and East New York and South Bronx. We
also need to talk to some of these developers about
the land grabs that they have taken. We want to
(48:19):
take a second look at that. But forty one billion
dollars coming into the working class neighborhoods, it's what I
will be able to do the first year I've got
an extraordinary plan, and it will start with the twenty
seven dollars per hour at minimum wage. And the other
thing is that we'll bring in incremental dollars is the
fact that there'll be no tax on any food sales
(48:43):
in New York City, no matter where, whether you eat
at a fancy restaurant or whether you eat at Sambos.
If you will Sambos, comp all right past thematic, but
there'll be no food, no fish. To go to McDonald's
and you order a quarter pound and shake, they'll charge
you whatever it ten dollars. What if we cost then
they charge you eighty five percent tax. That tax will
(49:06):
be gone. You will never pay tax again for food
in New York City, or if you go to a
small grocery store, small bodegas. Now, I did reach out
to the bodega president. They didn't return my call. I
reached out to a lot of people had not returned
my call. Okay, I understand that they got their choice of.
Speaker 1 (49:22):
Who they want.
Speaker 2 (49:22):
They don't want to rock the boat. Didn't return my call,
but they will return my call once I become the
mayor or, they'll want me to return their call. Let
me put it to you that way, but no forty
one billion dollars, no sales tax. Incrementally, you could be
surprised at how much sales taxes came collected at McDonald's,
at Taco Bell, at Kentucky Fried Chicken, at Chick fil A,
(49:44):
the Burger King.
Speaker 1 (49:45):
I mean, the.
Speaker 2 (49:46):
Taxes that are collected that man's food restaurant is incredible.
If all that money that's now going to the federal
government or to the to the if you will, pockets
of the politicians in New York City, stays in the neighborhood,
all that money will stay in these batter I think
as much eighty cents here, two dollars there, But it
(50:08):
all adds up when you're talking about two point three
million dollars million people living in the poverty level. We
have in New York City two point three million people
that are living below the poverty level, and each one
of them are spending at least eighty cents to two
dollars per day in taxes on fast food. That's what
(50:30):
four million dollars a day. How much is that over
a period of a month, over period of a year
going down the city Hall, and what they're doing with
it down the City Hall, what they want, what they're
doing with it, so that money will not leave the
working class neighborhoods, that money will not leave the pockets
of the working class people. And New York is the
most tax placed on the planet. As you very well know,
(50:51):
you got to pay city taxes. You gotta pay the
city taxes.
Speaker 1 (50:56):
Then you got to pay.
Speaker 2 (50:57):
The state wants to cut up your money. The state
wants to access out of your paycheck and out of
things that you buy, out of you if you buy
a house or buy land.
Speaker 1 (51:06):
They won't.
Speaker 2 (51:06):
They won't state taxed in the federal government. They want
to cut and you tax the leaf already. I used
to belong to the Tea party. Your tax the enough already. Well,
we're gonna do something about that. That's why I was
very important. Don't let the ref raft, don't let the showmanship,
don't let the snake of ourselves from mondami, don't let
Fredo Carlyon Fredo Fredo Cuomo, and don't let puss in
(51:29):
boots sleeve. Don't let them hoodwink you. And they have
no idea how to go in, how to come out.
You want to listen to me and you want to
get off your high horse. Are you gonna be crazy.
Speaker 1 (51:45):
All your life?
Speaker 2 (51:47):
You've known for years that politicians have never done a
damn thing for you. Moreover, black people in particular, I'll
take it. It's a whole segment for them all by
themselves about black leaders who are perhaps the worst pen
shul tho nigga. See, black people got a problem with
being black. They don't like being black. Well they shouldn't.
They're not black, s edition. They weren't black until back
(52:08):
in the nineteen sixties. I think rap Brown and Stokely Carmachel.
Y'all don't remember them, but I do, and started calling
course what we call color well called black. Of course,
we're many colors, high yellow, tea teasing ten. We still
like to call ourselves there. Back in the fifteen and sixties,
we used to love our.
Speaker 1 (52:28):
Collar well chocolate.
Speaker 2 (52:31):
We used to call our chocolate color berry. We used
to call ourselves berry color, chocolate.
Speaker 1 (52:36):
Teasing ten, high yellow.
Speaker 2 (52:37):
We used a lot that this is somebody calls her
know we're all blacks, what hellse No, But we're all
a stokely Carmachel, Rapped Brown and the Black Panthers. Right
back in the nineteen late sixties, so everybody started calling
themselves black. They left colored. We ain't black, color no more.
Then here comes Jesse Jackson back in the nineteen seventies.
After that round, for about ten years, even James Brown,
my favorite, came out with a song I'm Black and
(52:59):
I'm proud, said loud, I'm black, I'm brown. And then
after that, here comes to Jesse Jackson. Jesse Jackson comes
along and said, we ain't black. He was right about
that one thing he's never been right about. He said,
we're African Americans. Oh okay, all right, so they stopped.
We started picking ourselves African America. I'm not sure where
that came from, because we weren't African, but we were American. Well,
(53:21):
your ancestors in Africa, well I'm.
Speaker 1 (53:22):
Not so sure. Listen, I see some high yellow people.
I think they're ancest came.
Speaker 2 (53:29):
From pork porky Jesus from England. So anyway, so nice
African America. So we can't make up our mind. Now
you listen to people talk today, it's either they call
you black or African America.
Speaker 1 (53:42):
They don't know what ye We don't know what the
hell we are. I don't know what color we are.
Don't know what. It's confusion.
Speaker 2 (53:47):
I tell you one thing that's remained, though, is that
years ago, back in nineteen sixty five, you call me black,
that's fighting.
Speaker 1 (53:57):
Well, damn it, that's it. You what you call me black,
that's it. Damn it. We're gonna fight. Come on, now,
come on, you'll be calling them.
Speaker 2 (54:04):
You call somebody black back in the nineteen sixties, they
will fight those an ins.
Speaker 1 (54:09):
Now, I thought Malcolm X is tall all. Ye didn't y'all.
Speaker 2 (54:11):
Didn't y'all see the movie Denzil Washington and Dad their
prison up there in Boston, and he said black collared
black day, black sheep black, this black, that everything bad
is black? Then white this everything good is white. He said,
why y'all call yourself? Why y'all want to be called black?
With everything in the dictionary black is bad? Then I
thought y'all learned something from Malcolm Xts.
Speaker 1 (54:33):
The crazy at black people that said, I swept before God.
Speaker 2 (54:36):
The black leaders we have, specially these homosexual ones like
that Ity Glored and that Jelani boy over the Columbia University,
and a bunch of others, and that Van Jones and
a bunch of others everywhere everywhere you shake a stick.
They got them on television as newscasters, as commentators, and
all that's all that comes out of their mouths all
that comes out of their mouth, you know.
Speaker 1 (54:56):
And so and they listen. They're running a car this
industry too, by the way.
Speaker 2 (55:01):
They're making millions of dollars by pimping ignorant people who
ought to be calling themselves hemites, running referring to themselves
as black as the sons of Ham. You ain't black,
I ain't black, leaders, what I'm black about? Even my
hair ain't black no more so. But here going back
to the original thesis here is that I'm going to
infuse forty one billion.
Speaker 1 (55:22):
Dollars and it can't be done. And listen, John Lindsley,
because Ed.
Speaker 2 (55:26):
Kotch could have done it, Abraham Dean could have done it,
Bill Old LaGuardia could have done it.
Speaker 1 (55:31):
Listen, all these males could have done it. But I
don't care.
Speaker 2 (55:35):
It takes you to hear it. Could I share this
with y'all, y'all promise not to be upset with me.
To do this, I'm gonna have to fight, not not
white people or Jafer people. I'mbout to fight black people
because black people, these politicians, you city council members, our
shoppings of the world, they make money on y'all being ignorant.
Speaker 1 (55:56):
They make money.
Speaker 2 (55:57):
Or the white man ain't treating you all right? Oh
we got the box just the white man. Woy, yes, sir,
we got the march. You gets the white man. Come
on now, we're gonna meet at eight o'clock in the morning.
We got the white man.
Speaker 1 (56:08):
Ain't treating you all right? White police, two brutals, got
defund the post. Listen. That's how they make their money.
Speaker 2 (56:15):
They're just like anybody that's like leave by selling jeans
the way our shopp that sells racism, or to ignorant people,
he sells the fact that the white man. So listen,
that's that's why you don't see. And I'm coming to
stand beside me, and it never will. I don't want
them standing beside me. But I can infuse forty one
billion dollars and can make the lives of people in
(56:37):
New York City. They stell a city. So when Jesus
does come back, he's gonna come back to a great city.
He's gonna come back to a great So you're looking
at the man that has has the ability to make
all these things happen. Let me turn around again and
say to you that we just spent three hundred thousand
dollars on television ads. All right, So I ain't seeing
(57:01):
you on televion. I see all these other people. I
see Osama bin Lawdon Junr, and I see Freid O,
Corey Cuomo, and I see Pussing Boots U sliwa on.
But I ain't never seen you. I ain't not one time.
I ain't never I thought you why of the race?
I fact, I didn't think you're gonna make it anyway? Uh,
(57:23):
Pastor Man nine first heard about I laughed, I didn't
think you gonna make it?
Speaker 3 (57:27):
Uh?
Speaker 1 (57:28):
But nah, I see you on television y'all put together.
Speaker 2 (57:32):
But I need more money, all right, So I need
to tell you all that I need y'all to uh
to step up and help us be able to do this.
Speaker 1 (57:41):
All right, And let me say this to you that
I want to help you. And you you you I
I you know I.
Speaker 2 (57:52):
The Bible says that Jesus stood on the hill over
watching and overlooking the kid von Valley mount out of
it in Jerusalem, and he wept like a baby. He
just wept because what he offered the people to help
they didn't. They wouldn't accept. As good as Jesus was
as a teacher them, Jews didn't understand what he was
trying to say to them. They kept looking at people
(58:16):
like Barabbas and other militant leaders to lead them from
the What Jesus was trying to show them was through
the power they anoint him by keeping the word of God,
there should be the head and not to tell. But
they couldn't hear it, and so Jesus wept. So I
have to tell you this one thing, And it doesn't
(58:37):
matter whether a black person has a PhD or MD,
or law degree or politician or whatever. They still don't
know a damn thing, you know, they still don't know
a damn thing about the world.
Speaker 1 (58:49):
Now see that's to see Pobs man.
Speaker 2 (58:51):
That kind of thing gets you in trouble, you know,
talking about how black people with medical degrees, and then
the other thing he's had to run around talking about
black people built American And I said, not a lie
that one of the biggest lives ever told.
Speaker 1 (59:01):
But they don't know anyth they don't understand the world.
I put it to you this way.
Speaker 2 (59:05):
Show me where the black people are built any damn thing.
Show me where the black people have built anything. Show
me how they understand the world. Show me a ship
that they have showed me a sea worth the vessels
that black people are built, even though they got doctors, lawyers.
Show me a ship that they've ever built. But I
can show you millions a ship of white people who
don't have no kind of degree, but they built and
(59:26):
they've selled the oceans.
Speaker 1 (59:29):
That's as simple as that. It's as simple as that.
Speaker 2 (59:33):
But you can't talk to the black folks, especially, you know,
since they get when they especially the pension isn't one
listen about.
Speaker 1 (59:41):
I got to go. Are y'all gonna donate to the
campaign tause we need you to donate.
Speaker 2 (59:46):
Now listen. Obviously I'm gonna rebroadcast this. It's gonna be
rebroadcasting another ten times.
Speaker 1 (59:53):
You can learn something by listening to it more than once,
at least seven times. Give me some slack.
Speaker 2 (59:59):
We got to prepare for other Dunlop's funeral, and there
are a lot of other things that we're working on
the campaign that we're working on, and I'm trying to
get a little bit of rest as much as as possible.
I don't think that's feasible right now. There's a lot
of strategy. I mean, we're even putting together a program
on where we're gonna place the vans. We got a
(01:00:19):
van over at Columbia University that's gonna drive them. Students
over the Columbia University insane to see me knocking out
my Donny already, Man, I got to go peace out.
I'm the only one that can cure your spiritual problems
to New York City.
Speaker 1 (01:00:40):
I can bring healing, and I can bring heal in York.
Got away.
Speaker 8 (01:01:06):
Ready to read.
Speaker 1 (01:01:12):
The city gear, ready for.
Speaker 8 (01:01:17):
The fight for you in all yours. The tide of
the last that you've been told is a chance for
you to Vood told.
Speaker 5 (01:01:29):
You he's a man.
Speaker 2 (01:01:34):
I do the trust Lord for an hour, and then
after that I go right into the Manning Report. Allegedly
or supposedly, these two hours are supposed to be markedly different.
One is, you know, the biblical and spiritual and the
religious teaching and all that theology stuff, right, and the
other is supposed to be local, national, international news uh,
(01:01:55):
demanding report.
Speaker 6 (01:01:57):
Uh.
Speaker 2 (01:01:57):
And so, but what I've been doing because of my
intent schedule, and by the way, thank all of you
for all your prayers for me. But because of my
intent schedule now with the campaign for the mayor of
the City of New York, and I promise you when
I've become the mayor, I will be doing daily reports.
Speaker 1 (01:02:14):
I will start the prayer.
Speaker 2 (01:02:17):
I'm going to ask the engineer to bring up the
prayers I prayed a couple of days ago that I
will pray at City Hall every day before I start
the work of City Hall. Of course, you know, the
work of City Hall runs twenty four seven. It does
never really start date or start time. But I want
you to hear the prayer I prayed some time ago,
and I will start each day with prayer. Whether or
(01:02:39):
not I'll be able to do the manor report or
you know, I can assign other people to take over.
Speaker 1 (01:02:44):
This position for me. People that are not ready to
do that will have that.
Speaker 2 (01:02:48):
Take place as well, and we'll see how that all
works out once I've become the mayor. But I have
been extraordinarily, extraordinarily busy, and I've been trying to get
you know, myself ready for the office of mayor. I've
been trying to adequately campaign. You understand, right, and thank
all of y'all for still hanging in there. But here
is I want to start each day at City Hall
as the mayor of the City of New York. Then
(01:03:09):
I have more things I need to talk to about
more the news about Mother Dunlop passing this morning, but
we'll get to that a little bit later. On mis engineer,
let's hear that prep please, I'm here because I am
a roaring line, crying outrightnciousness.
Speaker 1 (01:03:26):
I really want to help the people.
Speaker 8 (01:03:27):
I do.
Speaker 1 (01:03:28):
I want to people in a lot of pain.
Speaker 2 (01:03:32):
There's a lot of there's a lot of misery going on,
and I can help as the mayor of the City
of New York. That's right, I And so I'm gonna
start each day on prayer. I gotta I had the
engineer bring up my photo. I'm every day. I'm gonna
start every day at City Hall on my knees in prayer.
That's what I'm gonna do every day. And I'm gonna
(01:03:55):
pray for the people. That's city Hall. I still on
those steps some time ago. But I'm gonna buy my
head and ask our Most High God, if you will
help me guide this city. I'm going to ask him. Lord,
help me guide this city. Lord, help me to root
out corruption. Lord, help me to bring justice to the people. Lord,
(01:04:16):
help me to bring truth to the poor, not just
financial handouts and trick its trinkets to hand out to
poor people. Let me bring them the truth. Let me
exalt them rather than dig a deeper hole for them. Lord,
let me bring peace and unity among the homes. Let
(01:04:39):
me bring a health and long living.
Speaker 1 (01:04:41):
Lord. Help me lead this great city. Lord. Let me
prepare this place for you to return. Lord.
Speaker 2 (01:04:49):
Let this become a place where people all over the
world will come to see what you have done. Lord,
using my experience in the length of my years and
the taste of my days, the millions of meals that
I have served to the poor, the housing that I
(01:05:09):
have provided.
Speaker 1 (01:05:12):
To those who are homeless, and those in a prison.
Speaker 2 (01:05:15):
Bound that we can shut down the prisons and shut
down many of the police stations, and let the streets
be safe because of your peace. And let me speak
comfortably to the people. Let me speak love in the
hearts of the fathers for their children and for their wives.
(01:05:35):
Given their wives a peaceful, financial, spiritual security.
Speaker 1 (01:05:41):
Lord, let me lead New York City.
Speaker 2 (01:05:43):
Now, I'm gonna pray this every day, not just that
particular prayer, depending on those circumstances, but that's the general
idea of what I'm gonna pray every day when I
become the mayor of the city of New York.
Speaker 1 (01:05:57):
And my God is a prayers and God.
Speaker 2 (01:05:59):
I don't know about your God, but my God, his
name is Jesus, is a prayer answering God. And here's
what I want to do. Live by the Holy Ghost,
and I pray to y'all will be able to receive this.
I know many of you will. Some of you perhaps
will not, but I know that many.
Speaker 1 (01:06:16):
Of you will.
Speaker 2 (01:06:18):
Lord, thank you for not turning this building over to
that Muslim Zorahan Mandandi Mandani. Lord, thank you for not
giving him this building. Lord, Jesus, thank you for not
giving him this city. Lord, Thank you for not giving
(01:06:45):
him the power to make us. Say peace and blessings
be upon the prophet Muhammed. Lord, thank you, Thank you
for keeping that Muslim, locking that Muslim out of these
sacred quarters. Thank you, Jesus, Thank you Jesus for keeping
that Muslim from having full power over our schools. Over
(01:07:10):
our institutions. Thank you Jesus, that this city Hall remains sacred.
And in your name, Almighty God, the Muslim shall not
enter in and shall not take charge of the lives
of the people. And I'm willing Almighty God to be
your vessel. I'm willing Lord Jesus to be your servant.
(01:07:34):
I'm willing Lord Jesus to be your righteous that I
might stand in the gap between the living and the dead,
and to protect this great building from Islam, from anti fadders,
from ices, from al Kaeda, from Hamas, from the hoodies,
(01:07:55):
and from others, to protect this building and to protect this.
Speaker 1 (01:07:58):
City, to protect, defend, and uplift.
Speaker 2 (01:08:04):
In your name and by your power, I thank you
for giving me this opportunity to serve at such a
critical time as this. Thank you Jesus. As we prepare
a place for you to return. And in your name Jesus,
I pray and give things. Amen and Amen. Now I'm
(01:08:25):
gonna pray that as well. I'm gonna pray that as well.
Speaker 1 (01:08:30):
Hey mon, DOMI, what's my name? What's my name? What's
my name?
Speaker 2 (01:08:37):
Jans Manning, When you go into that voting booth on
the fourth of November, here in the New York City
mayoral election. And when you go in there, whose name
you're gonna print in the right in section? Whose name
you're gonna print in the right in section on the ballot? DOMI,
(01:08:57):
who are you gonna pray?
Speaker 1 (01:08:58):
Whose name? James Manning?
Speaker 2 (01:09:02):
Hey man, Donnie, do you understand the words that are
coming out of my mouth? Do you understand the words
that are coming out of my mouth? Whose name you're
going to print on the writing section on the ballot
on November fourth here in the New York City mayoral election.
Speaker 1 (01:09:21):
James Manning? All right, now, let's get it home, alright,
It is all right.
Speaker 2 (01:09:29):
Uh. We are sadly we have to announce the passing
of mother Bertha Dunlop, who passed this morning at about
three twenty and her daughter, of her daughters, and her
family and friends was by her bedside. You'll forgive me.
(01:09:52):
I think mother Dunlope is either ninety five or ninety
six years of age, and we had I had a
meeting with her on the day before yesterday and said
some things to her. I suspect that she was waiting
for me to come and speak with her before she
(01:10:14):
decided to go on and pass She's had an extraordinary life.
She is and remains and will continue to be even
in her passing, an extraordinary woman. And she has raised
two extraordinary daughters that I've been members of this congregation
(01:10:36):
and have contributed greatly to this congregation, both Bathsheba and Dennett,
both their blood, sweat and their well their tears of joy.
I should say to this ministry contributions that I don't
think most people will be able to understand how those
two daughters have made such a significant contribution and done
(01:10:58):
so without asking for anything return the selfishness, and they
got that from their mother. Really, I probably, you know,
should have been a comedian. I think maybe if times
had been different, she could have gone and done stand up.
Mother Dunlap could have and her earlier day because she
(01:11:21):
was quite funny, and her daughters are quite funny as well.
Quite frankly, if you take the time listeners, they don't
think that they are, but just watching them you start
laughing at their actions. But we all are grateful for
having Mother Dunlop with us, or the years that she
was with us. And there'll be more details about the
(01:11:46):
memorial service when that will take place, and how that
will take place. I would want you to contact Bennett's
family and see if there's anything that you can do.
You might want to make some donations to her, inasmuch
as that funeral cost has gone.
Speaker 1 (01:12:07):
Through the roof. Here in New York City, the average
funeral costs sixteen to seven seventeen.
Speaker 2 (01:12:14):
Thousand dollars, and that's on the low end. With a
thin casket. Things are just very expensive here in New York,
as Raphae Al Suleiman made mention of the other day,
So you might want to make even donations to her.
I don't know whether or not they will go with
the route. I did rather have financial donations other than flowers,
(01:12:38):
which can also be extraordinary expensive. But yes, the Dunlop
has passed and we shall I ask her as she
would stay around to see me become the mayor of
the City of New York. She chose not to do that,
mainly because I think it's whatever she was experience. But
(01:13:02):
bless your mother, Dunlop, and bless your daughters, and bless
the members of the Outlaw Church and all the children
that love you so dearly.
Speaker 3 (01:13:11):
We'll have more to say about you in the days
to come.
Speaker 2 (01:13:17):
Mother, Bertha Dunlop, passed away this morning quietly at her
in her home, at her and at her bedside. What's
her family? Amen? And amen? All right, I'm going to
turn a corner. I don't know if you can see
that the announcement board out. That's the Have you all
been watching Queenship Flip Queensay Flip's programming of me.
Speaker 1 (01:13:40):
It's been getting a lot of attention. Quite frankly.
Speaker 2 (01:13:44):
And surprisingly, a large number of younger people you call
them gen zias from I don't know whatever up to
up to the early thirties, actually appreciate what I'm doing.
You know, the event with me, that one one that
accosted me and Jens Queensy Flip on the street the
(01:14:05):
other day.
Speaker 1 (01:14:06):
Most people thought she was out of order, and she
was out of order, and she was very arrogant.
Speaker 2 (01:14:11):
Uh And I think she thought she had it going
on that she could just walk up to me and
just get in my face any kind of way you want.
And uh and and I was watching this broadcast where
there's four brothers, four men, and they would saying, you
know some of these sisters, and how my sisters are
like that. They think you they'd get up in your
face and just say what the hell they want? And
(01:14:33):
these men were cheering me on for putting her in
her place. Now, you know, I didn't want you know,
the mail the City of New York. You just can't
be beligerent to people, and that.
Speaker 1 (01:14:42):
Was the order. But she just got in. She was
just out of order. You know, she had no respect.
Speaker 2 (01:14:47):
She thought she could just run over me because she's
a she I think she's an ankle woman on NBC
News right, so she probably thinks she's got it going on.
Speaker 1 (01:14:57):
And but I stopped a dead cold.
Speaker 2 (01:15:00):
A lot of a lot of people like that, even
the young women, like they said, no, she was out
of order. And Quinsy flip his broadcasts getting me a
lot of attention among young people, and I, you know,
I'm thankful to that. For I'm grateful that that I'm
getting that attention and that I expect to get a
large number of young people's votes. We've parked our one
(01:15:22):
of our vans over at City College right at the
interests the main interest is, I said, I say the college,
Columbia University, pardon me, uh, And I believe it's going
to get us a lot of attention. I think it's
going to cost a lot of talk between now and
election date that the students over that Columbia will be
able to see that I'm running. I'm manning for mere
(01:15:43):
because there's a lot of tension now between the foreign
foreign students at Columbia University and the Jewish students. The
men of the foreign students are and uh and many
of the Islamic students have been threatening to the Jewish
students and the Jewish students being a smaller community, and
so I think it's going to engender a lot of
conversation over there at at Columbia University. So we think
(01:16:07):
queens flipped for his presentation. I think all the young
people for taking a look at me, just taking a
second look at me, a clean look at me, without
all the other you know, he ain't this, and he
ain't that, and he ain't for the black man, and
he ain't for the HOMOSEXU and all.
Speaker 1 (01:16:20):
That kind of stuff.
Speaker 2 (01:16:21):
But just just fresh of all, listen to what the
hell I'm saying as first day, So we'll thank you
for that.
Speaker 1 (01:16:27):
Now, let me say this to you that.
Speaker 2 (01:16:32):
Eric Adams, the President Mayor of the City of New
York has dropped, dropped out.
Speaker 1 (01:16:36):
Of the male race.
Speaker 2 (01:16:37):
He has he's no longer a candidate. What the heck,
he's no longer a candidate for the officer the man.
And he came down the steps. It was on Saturday morning,
Sunday morning, I think it was. Came down the steps
on Sunday morning at Derrick Gracie Manchon, I think it was,
and maybe a city hall, I'm not sure. Sat down
on the steps where the sleeves rolled up in a
(01:16:59):
picture of his mother at his left side, and he
declared that he was no longer seeking the office of
a suspending office of bear. He was suspending his case
and that was to be understood that he would do that.
That he was you know, he was suffering terribly in
the polls. The media is against him. And there are
(01:17:19):
a lot of mistakes that Eric made, and his biggest mistake,
the fatal mistake that Eric made, was to go to
maur Laga and ask Trump to help him in his
criminal trial. In the indictment by the Southern District of
New York on federal campaign charges charges that he did
or crimes if you will, allegedly that he did. That
(01:17:41):
was the nail in the coffin for Eric Adams, I
think he would be formidable and almost impossible to beat
had he not gone down to talk with and asked
Donald Trump, and then Donald Trump a course, stepped in
in a very public way and had his indictment dismissed
in a very ugly way, very public in a very
ugly way, in a sense that people that are rich
(01:18:02):
and are powerful don't have to face the Bob Justice
the way the rest of us do. I think that's
the thing that hurt Eric Adams the most. But that's
not what I'm here to talk to you about today.
What I'm here to talk to you about today is
I'm going to ask Eric Adams. I've already asked Eric
Adams if he would endorse me. Now, I know that
the polls are not reporting this publicly, and they dare
(01:18:24):
put a camera on me or a microphone in front
of me, or to write about me as a candidate.
Speaker 1 (01:18:30):
But I'm out there in the ether.
Speaker 2 (01:18:32):
Everywhere you shake a stick and asking a poll where
the Quinnipiac poll or the Fox News pole or CNN CBS.
Speaker 1 (01:18:39):
Polled the marriage poll.
Speaker 2 (01:18:42):
All of those posters get people saying I'm going to
vote for Manning. They're not reporting that, but I can
tell you now, according to what I have heard and
have observed, is that I'm polling at about forty percent
in the polls were I on the ballot.
Speaker 1 (01:19:00):
Now here's what the posters are saying.
Speaker 2 (01:19:03):
So the poster will call up a person, ask him
who you're gonna vote for?
Speaker 1 (01:19:06):
Where are you a Republican? Are you independent?
Speaker 2 (01:19:09):
And the persons on the other end will say, I'm
gonna vote for Manning, and the poster will say, well,
he's not on the ballot, and so he's not officially running,
and so you have to give me another name other
than Manning because he's not on the ballot.
Speaker 1 (01:19:23):
And that's by not My not being on the ballot
is absolutely true.
Speaker 2 (01:19:27):
However, I am running, But because I'm not on the ballot,
they think that their poll has to reflect only people's
names that appear on the ballot. So then they ask,
if you can't vote for Manning, what's the next person?
That they may say Mondami, or they may say Cuomo,
or they may say Adams, But really I am polling
(01:19:48):
higher than all three of those at this very moment.
Now they're not reporting that they are not reporting that,
and technically, and according to the poster situation, and according
to the way the election laws work, they probably cannot
report it because.
Speaker 1 (01:20:07):
I'm not on the ballot.
Speaker 2 (01:20:08):
I'm a writing candidate, as you have seen, and that
people have to write my name when they walk into
the voting booth on the fourth of November. But having
said that, I'm a formidable I am out there. I've
been out there. The people love me, the people want me.
It's incredible what I've been able to build and momentum
(01:20:29):
over the last year running as a candidate of man
for the City of New York.
Speaker 1 (01:20:33):
And I'm gonna win.
Speaker 2 (01:20:36):
But what I want to ask Eric Adams to do
is to endorse me. And I don't know whether or
not this is illegal. If it is, then I don't
mean to meet it as an illegal offerm. But Eric Adams,
let me say this to you that I could use
(01:20:58):
your help in city Hall if you will endorse me.
You don't have to leave city Hall. I can use
I need I want. Let me repeat that, Eric or
Mayor Adams, I can use I need. I want you
a help in city Hall. And mister Mayor, not only
(01:21:22):
if you endorse me. Do I need you, but I
would ask you to bring with you to City Hall
to help me some of your most trusted, dedicated and
honorable people, that we can continue most of the work
that you started here in City Hall, the work that
(01:21:43):
you've started, the work that you've completed, the things that
you've accomplished over the past four years. That work can
continue on the de Manning administration.
Speaker 1 (01:21:55):
Now.
Speaker 2 (01:21:56):
As best I have checked legally at election law, what
I am proposing is not illegal.
Speaker 1 (01:22:03):
That is not the intent.
Speaker 2 (01:22:04):
I'm simply saying, there would be a place in city
Hall for former Mayor Eric Adams.
Speaker 1 (01:22:10):
He would not have to leave.
Speaker 2 (01:22:12):
There would be a place in city Hall for all
the people that Mayor Eric Adams deems as trustworthy, as
people that are visionaries, people that are great administrators. There
would be a place for all of them. Were that
the case. And not just that, but many of the
(01:22:33):
great projects that you engendered, mister Adams, will Mayor Adams
will continue under the Manning administration. Moreover, Mayor Adams, you
don't want Cuomo sitting in your seat. Mayor Adams, you
don't want Andrew Fato from the Godfather Cuomo sitting in
(01:22:58):
you'll see. You don't want an Drew Fato from the
Godfather Cuomo seating and sitting in your seat. You don't
want that, and I'm the I'm the only one that
can unseat him.
Speaker 1 (01:23:11):
You also don't want Mandani. You referred to him, and
you were absolutely right.
Speaker 2 (01:23:18):
That he is a snake oil salesman. That Mandanmi is
a snake o. Not only is he that, but he
is Osama bin Laden junior. Mayor Adams, Here, here, my heart, Mary, Adams, here,
my heart. You don't want to turn New York City,
(01:23:39):
the city that I'm sure that you love, the city
that you have worked so hard to build. You don't
want to turn it over to a snake oil salesman
who is Osama bin Laden Junior in Mandanmi.
Speaker 1 (01:23:53):
You don't want to do that.
Speaker 2 (01:23:55):
And there's nobody but me on this planet right now, Adams,
that can stop uh Osama bin Laden Junior from taking
your position.
Speaker 1 (01:24:08):
And of course we all all know about pussing boots.
Speaker 4 (01:24:12):
Uh.
Speaker 1 (01:24:13):
This sleevewalk boy, who is really his name should be
pussing boots.
Speaker 4 (01:24:17):
Uh.
Speaker 1 (01:24:18):
He's a joke. That ain't funny.
Speaker 2 (01:24:20):
He's a He's a the BG said, I started a
joke that started the whole world crying. Pussing boots sleevewa
is a joke. If he became the mayor of the
City of New York would have the whole world crying.
So you don't want pussing boots, you don't want fado
from the Godfather Cuomo, and you definitely don't want Osama
(01:24:43):
bin Laden.
Speaker 1 (01:24:43):
Junior sitting in your seat. Endorse me, Mayor Adams.
Speaker 2 (01:24:49):
And we shall walk together the streets of New York.
We shall work together the streets.
Speaker 1 (01:24:54):
Of New York.
Speaker 2 (01:24:55):
I'm James David Manning, Mayor Eric Adams, I am the
lorde Servant, and I've said of this community, in this
city and this nation for forty four years.
Speaker 1 (01:25:05):
I seek your endorsement.
Speaker 5 (01:25:09):
To all New Yorkers, lend me your ear.
Speaker 4 (01:25:14):
November fourth is approaching quickly, and you need to know
that you still have a choice in voting for the
best candidate as Mayor of New York City, and that
person is none other than James Manning. Pastor Manning may
be able to save the black race in America if
(01:25:34):
he gets into politics.
Speaker 5 (01:25:36):
He knows what the problems are. He is the quintessential
black man.
Speaker 4 (01:25:42):
He has been everywhere where a black man can possibly
go in America, from an elite university to prison, from
a rural southern background to a big city existence to
a corporate job, to a brief life as a criminal,
from poverty to a middle class existence, to a belief
(01:26:05):
in God and a reaffirmation of faith, to a religious
leader and a family man. He understands the black man
and woman down to their very bones. Elect him, people
of New York City to the Mayor's office. With the
advent of the new AI technology, white racist and power
(01:26:29):
will have god like technologies at dead disposal while possessing
primitive impulses to suppress all progeny that a week, just
as the Nazis did.
Speaker 5 (01:26:42):
In Germany during the period of World War II.
Speaker 4 (01:26:46):
Eugenics as a concept is about to make a huge
comeback because we didn't deal with these philosophical concepts over
several generations, Since we didn't heal these psychic impulses in
our collective unconscious, they will.
Speaker 1 (01:27:05):
Re emerge among us.
Speaker 5 (01:27:08):
Now is the time.
Speaker 1 (01:27:10):
Now is the moment.
Speaker 4 (01:27:13):
Now is your opportunity to change your life. New Yorkers,
Let's make history together. Print his name, James Manning on
the ballot on November fourth, twenty twenty five, and watch
your lines be mightily blessed.
Speaker 2 (01:27:40):
All right, so we're on our way, and I want
to inform you that we should start seeing campaign's ads
here in the New York City, New Jersey, Connecticut, Pennsylvania
area by the end of the week today as I
date this message is Wednesday, Actober the first. By the
(01:28:01):
third of October, we should flood the airways on the
major television networks. And I want to ask the d
if he'd bring up the list of television stations that
we're going to be on. Fortunately, God has allowed us
to put together three hundred thousand dollars to retain this
agency to prepare these ads and also secure the time
(01:28:25):
slots for these various ads. But just to run down
some of the television stations we're going to be on.
We're going to be on WABC, mainly in the Good
Morning America slot or category. Also on WABC on the
program called a View, and w NYW in the good
(01:28:50):
Morning wake Up at six AM, and wny W the
Good Day Street Talk. It's several programs sliding on WNYW.
We're gonna be on ww our Good day on the
that's also television station number nine, several days of broadcast
(01:29:14):
on that and on.
Speaker 1 (01:29:16):
W ln Y.
Speaker 2 (01:29:18):
We're going to be morning Monday through Friday at seven
am at seven am News and on some of the
other broadcasts.
Speaker 1 (01:29:27):
On wln Y.
Speaker 2 (01:29:28):
We're gonna be on WCBS on several broadcasts WCBS and
also w NYC, WNBC RATHER and wpi X WPIX. So
we're going to be on all of the major networks
television broadcast stations.
Speaker 1 (01:29:50):
Here in the New York City area.
Speaker 2 (01:29:52):
And over a period of thirty days, we will run
three hundred and sixty thirty second commercials at that would
give us approximately one hundred and eighty minutes over a
period of a month. And we'll be able to work
that deal out with the broadcast media outlet that's been
(01:30:17):
able to put this program together for us. Why is
this important, Number One is because we're finally getting on television.
The media they completely they did everything within their power
to ignore me. They did the politics is of their
dirty business. They they've known about me for years. They
hear my name when they coordinate when they ask who
you're going to vote for, But they have been successful
(01:30:40):
to get me off the ballot twice, didn't get adjudged
to throw me off a ballot a third time. So
they have done everything within their power to try to
prevent me. But I have not gone away.
Speaker 1 (01:30:51):
So look forward to and you can scan this if
you like, and you'll be.
Speaker 2 (01:30:57):
Able to know what time I'm going to be on
some of these major net we're such as Good Morning Americans,
such as The View, you'll know the days I'm gonna
be there, and if you want to see the commercials
that we're going to produce, and we're working with a
production company to get a lot of those things taken
care of. That's number one. But number two is that
I need funding. I need donations. Like a deer panther
(01:31:20):
for the water, I really need donations.
Speaker 1 (01:31:23):
Now.
Speaker 2 (01:31:24):
We were able to put together three hundred thousand dollars,
but we're gonna need more than.
Speaker 1 (01:31:30):
That before that.
Speaker 2 (01:31:32):
We are now thirty three days away from the election
date on November fourth, and though we have been able
to put together three hundred thousand dollars and get these,
we're gonna need other things that we're gonna have to do,
and we need donations. So I'm gonna ask you to
Go to manningfamayor dot com and donate. Manningfromayor dot com
(01:31:54):
and donate. You're gonna make one of the best investments
you will make in your political future, all things being
considered political here in the City of New York.
Speaker 3 (01:32:04):
And across the world.
Speaker 2 (01:32:06):
Go to Manning for Mayor dot com and donate. Go
to Manning foramyor dot com and donate. Now, I have
to tell you, obviously, there are people that are opposing me,
as you know that they would, and I you know,
all candidates oppose each other. There are people that I'm opposing.
I mean, I call Curtis Sleeve. We're pussing boots, you know.
I call Andrew Cuomo Fato from The Godfather, that weakling
(01:32:29):
from the Godfather, and the more Osama bin Laden Junior
is my name. Uh So it's not to be interpreted
somehow that I'm worse than somebody else because they just
want that office for mayor for themselves and they were
I'm the most formal old candidate to stop them, and
I'm gonna win.
Speaker 1 (01:32:49):
But but I need you to. I need you to
to go ahead now and go to manifamior dot com
and donate.
Speaker 3 (01:32:56):
Will you do that.
Speaker 2 (01:32:58):
You know, we've ran a great campaign. I think you know,
this is our first time out of the box. I
think we've done a great job. We've hung in there
in spite of all the disappointments and that we've ran into.
Speaker 1 (01:33:10):
We're still here and we'll get it ready to go up.
Speaker 2 (01:33:13):
And stronger now than we've ever been with this new
ad campaign that we have going.
Speaker 1 (01:33:18):
So we need donations. We needed a need donation.
Speaker 2 (01:33:24):
All right, I'm going to take a break, everybody, and
I'm gonna be going to be right back after the break.
So watch this and you see how the people love
me here uh in the New York City area.
Speaker 1 (01:33:35):
All right, bless you.
Speaker 6 (01:33:47):
You're the pastor of the church.
Speaker 1 (01:33:49):
Yes I am.
Speaker 2 (01:33:50):
I love that.
Speaker 6 (01:33:51):
I've even watching that church and my hustle for you.
You're so bold, you are not out of orders, and
I love.
Speaker 7 (01:33:57):
The authority that you want.
Speaker 5 (01:34:00):
Inspirational.
Speaker 1 (01:34:01):
That's my man. She's sitting back in the Cutaine. Thank
you for all. Yeah, God, bless you, thank you, Hi,
following you, thank you, Yeah, thank you, thank You're so
very very much. You go up to hen You're going
a little ball up here. Yeah, what's your name?
Speaker 7 (01:34:22):
Lynette?
Speaker 1 (01:34:23):
Nicholas Lynette. Well, thank you, Jeanneless. Yes, I'll take a flight.
You're you're a journalist. You're right for.
Speaker 6 (01:34:29):
Essence magazine, the books and culture.
Speaker 1 (01:34:31):
Will give me some press. Thank you so much. I
sing me forward. I'm gonna be next. I'm all right.
It's a fushing here in the time, and I'll get
you all of that.
Speaker 5 (01:34:42):
I'm so happy to meet my husband.
Speaker 7 (01:34:45):
Sometimes we walk well with from our condo just to
see what you cooked up.
Speaker 1 (01:34:48):
I'm so full. It's just true.
Speaker 7 (01:34:53):
People are so caught up in modern day creatures and
they're trying to be celebrities and please everybody. Your leaders
are supposed to tell that they're supposed to be break
down protocol, you know, and not follow the status close.
Speaker 1 (01:35:04):
Thank you for your compliments.
Speaker 7 (01:35:06):
You're not everybody is confused. We understand the vote.
Speaker 2 (01:35:13):
You and.
Speaker 3 (01:35:23):
I.
Speaker 1 (01:35:26):
We gotta love me. We don't care. I love you all.
Speaker 6 (01:35:31):
I cannot wait to tell my husband.
Speaker 7 (01:35:33):
We always come and see what we're pudding.
Speaker 5 (01:35:35):
Now, what's your name?
Speaker 6 (01:35:36):
Nicholas?
Speaker 1 (01:35:37):
Okay, yeah, I'm God blessing that, yes, ma'am.
Speaker 5 (01:35:40):
Just I'm so thankful for y'all.
Speaker 1 (01:35:42):
God bless you.
Speaker 2 (01:35:43):
Thank you for stopping and saying hello to me. Absolutely,
thank you, God bless you.
Speaker 6 (01:35:49):
Take a picture of me and pass to James Manton
so welcome and be like I met him personally.
Speaker 1 (01:35:56):
Where you're gonna help me move by the place.
Speaker 2 (01:35:58):
I will help improve your life if you get a
better income or take these burdens off your.
Speaker 1 (01:36:04):
Shoulders that you're carrying her out. Yes, we need to
understand that. Thank you, God bless you understand. Many that's you?
Speaker 8 (01:36:20):
How are you?
Speaker 1 (01:36:21):
That's you? Meet your great I'm hey, bring that a
right over the mayor. All right, what's your name is?
Speaker 8 (01:36:31):
Joel Davis?
Speaker 1 (01:36:32):
Girl Davis? Joe j E R A L d R
L G Joe. Okay, I'll be looking away. I'm talking
about the mayor. Next mayor that's gonna be me. That's
what you mean?
Speaker 2 (01:36:51):
Yes, definite, definitely, you said, God bless you, Thank you.
I have the plans and the ability to infuse forty
one billion dollars into working class neighborhoods in New York City,
(01:37:14):
and that will start with a beginning of raising all salaries.
Speaker 1 (01:37:21):
Anybody working in New York.
Speaker 2 (01:37:24):
Will not earn less than twenty seven dollars per hour,
which works out to about fifty to fifty one thousand
dollars per year. Now listening to be very carefully, I'm
going to infuse forty one billion new dollars into the
working class neighborhoods of New York City, starting out by
(01:37:48):
raising the minimum wage to.
Speaker 1 (01:37:52):
Twenty seven dollars per hour. That's just the beginning.
Speaker 2 (01:37:56):
The other thing that we're going to be able to
do by doing that at raising the minimum wage is
that we're going to send forward to a program that
will then recognize that a lot of the money that
New York City is spending on items that really are
(01:38:16):
sort of trinkets and things that took on the fancy
of those who were well to do, such as plug
in for phones all over the streets and bus schedules
that are not necessary that costs a ton of money.
We're gonna ask the City of New York. As the
mayor of the City of New York, I'm going to
ask the City of New York to.
Speaker 1 (01:38:36):
Tighten its built now.
Speaker 2 (01:38:37):
Right now, it's budget is one hundred and fourteen billion
dollars per year.
Speaker 1 (01:38:43):
I'm going to ask the City of New York to.
Speaker 2 (01:38:44):
Tighten his budget and to reduce that amount, which will
then and the money that will be reduced can then
be put in a pool for home ownership, and that
will give the opportunit tunity for people who are working.
Let's say we've got a husband earning seventy thousand dollars
(01:39:05):
a year and a wife earning fifty thousand dollars a year.
At the twenty seven dollars per hour, we're looking at
one hundred and twenty thousand dollars per year. Well, they
then perhaps can qualify for.
Speaker 1 (01:39:16):
A home in Brooklyn or in Queens that is not
terribly expensive.
Speaker 2 (01:39:21):
New York City itself might be a little bit much,
but they can buy two family home in South Ozon
Park or in Laurelton, Queens, rent out a part of
that to a family member a friend that they and
then start what is known as a small business. Because
they're now renting, they're responsible for the fuel, to maintenance,
(01:39:42):
to take care, taking care, and now they're beginning to
build equity as well, which will bring money into the
so called working class neighborhoods.
Speaker 1 (01:39:53):
The other thing that we're going to do is that.
Speaker 2 (01:39:56):
We're going to make sure that the city of New
York is swept broom clean of all vagrants, all homeless people,
all people sleeping on the street, all people that are
distracted to the community.
Speaker 1 (01:40:11):
We're gonna make sure that the community is swept broom clean.
Speaker 3 (01:40:15):
Now.
Speaker 2 (01:40:16):
We can do that simply by giving every man an
opportunity to have a bid to have his own house.
And that's a massive program that I don't have the
time to give the details to now, but I've done
so in some of my other presentations that I grew
up in a generation even during Jim Crow, where there
(01:40:37):
was never anybody sleeping on the streets, not even in
New York or in Red Springs or Shannon, North Carolina.
People didn't sleep on the streets. Every family's provided housing.
All families provided housing. We're gonna give incentives. Let's say,
for instance, two families get together and the families are
(01:40:59):
making one hundred twenty two hundred and twenty five thousand
dollars each, that's a total of two hundred and fifty
thousand dollars per year. Then we will set up a
long mortgage project whereby those two families, maybe two brothers
and his wives or two sisters and their husbands, we'll
(01:41:20):
get together and they will buy let's say a one
million or two million dollar house. As corporate buyers, they
will have enough many a quarter of a million dollars
a year to be able to afford that housing.
Speaker 1 (01:41:35):
And so then they would that.
Speaker 2 (01:41:38):
Would eliminate the need for them anybody to talk about rent.
And if the house is big enough, they could rent
a segment of that house to a person who's not
a family member or a person who does not qualify
to be on the mortgage. We will set those mortgages
up through one of the banking systems. And then I
(01:41:59):
want to reach out to the university's universities. Is like
foredom to have Foredom to set up classes to teach
people in neighborhoods and are working class neighborhoods, business skills,
business ideas, understanding taxes. We will set the home owner
that purchase a home in the New York City area
(01:42:21):
to be tax free for the first ten years. All
services to that particular home will be free, such as
water and sewer charges, property taxes, all of that will
be free for the first ten years. We will go
to organizations like con Edison and Religious Service and Electric
(01:42:43):
electrical Services and tell them to prepare special discounted rates
because in doing so, we are now providing housing, making
housing possible, and with the Fordham University or other universities
doing training on business management, equity understanding, maintaining property, maintaining businesses.
(01:43:05):
That it will take people off of the street. See,
people are on the street because ain't nobody got no money.
Even people who are working, ain't got no money and
can't help them, and the City of New York doesn't
have a heart to help them. This program will clean
up the streets, will make the streets of New York
broom clean in.
Speaker 1 (01:43:24):
Less in the first year of my administration.
Speaker 2 (01:43:27):
And then finally, the thing I think it's important I
want everybody to know is that I'm going to allow
for street vendors that are presently vending, especially on one
hundred and twenty fifth Street, to continue this street vending. However,
they will have to have uniforms, a code of ethics
that they will submit to that will make doing business
(01:43:48):
one hundred and twenty fifth Street pleasant. They will be
given recognition, they will be given if a small if
a vendor has been on the street for at least
three years, I would recommend very strongly, as the Mayor
of the City of New York with a guaranteed program
from the Business Administration that if you have been on
the street as a vendor selling what have you've been
(01:44:10):
selling for seven that you are now qualified to go
to the Small Business Association. Even though you don't have
a brick and mortar business, the Federal Small Business Association
will be obligated and duty bound to give you a
loan so that you can get off the streets and
(01:44:34):
get a brick and mortar business. Let's be very cathley.
This will be very Cathley. If you have been successful
as a vendor on the streets of New York for
three years, and you can demonstrate that you've been successful,
then I would recommend that the City of New York
would set up a fund where the Federal Small Business
(01:44:55):
Association would give you money to get a brick mortar business.
There are a lot of businesses. If you don't live
in this neighborhood, so you wouldn't know that, but there
are a lot of businesses on one hundred and twenty
fifth Street that are closed storefronts that are just closed
on one of the most popular streets in the world.
(01:45:17):
Yet businesses that could come don't come. Such as high
end stores don't come to one hundred and twenty fifth
Street because they don't want to deal with the riff raft.
They don't want to deal with the homelessness, they don't
want to deal with the drug addiction, they don't want
to deal with the naked men walking around with you know,
with their butt showing. But we're gonna clean all that up,
(01:45:37):
and we're gonna make one hundred and twenty fifth Street
the Park Avenue or the fifth Avenue of uptown.
Speaker 3 (01:45:44):
No.
Speaker 1 (01:45:44):
I can do that. I've done it before.
Speaker 3 (01:45:46):
I can do it.
Speaker 2 (01:45:46):
I can do it that with my eyes closed. I
don't even have to get out to bed to get
that happen. But anybody who's been running a small business
for three or a vendor business will then qualify for
a loan to get a brick and mortar business. And
you know, there's something going on right now with Bashiva
Sherman where she has purchased into a business one hundred
(01:46:08):
and twenty fifth Street that has several other business like
a department store, but each person owns a segment of
the department in that particular store. Right now, she's running
a line of gerae segment. There's a Jamaican man there
that runs hats, and there's another person that runs another quality.
So there are four or five people within that structure.
That's already happening to some degree, but I'm going to
(01:46:30):
make it a reality. We're going to recognize the bends.
I'm for small businesses. I am for small businesses, and
I believe that small businesses should have an opportunity to survive.
And I believe that vendors can start out as small
businesses and can rise to become major global corporations should
(01:46:51):
Jesus Tarry does not come back anytime soon. So forty
one billion dollars, imagine this, forty one forty one billion
new dollars in working class neighborhoods in New York.
Speaker 1 (01:47:06):
We're not talking about Wall Street.
Speaker 2 (01:47:07):
We're not talking about the East Side, where you know,
you got a lot of rich people living on the
East Side.
Speaker 1 (01:47:11):
Like Bloomberg and a bunch of other folks billionaires up
the wazoo. But we're talking about.
Speaker 2 (01:47:16):
Working class neighborhoods like Dead Sty, or at least the
brown and black color of Bedsty and Harlem and East
New York and South Bronx. We also need to talk
to some of these developers about the land grabs that
they have taken. We want to take a second look
at that. But forty one billion dollars coming into the
(01:47:42):
working class neighborhoods. It's what I will be able to
do the first year. I've got an extraordinary plan, and
we'll start with the twenty seven dollars per hour minimum wage.
Speaker 1 (01:47:51):
And the other thing is that we'll bring.
Speaker 2 (01:47:53):
In incremental dollars is the fact that there will be
no tax on any food sales in New York cit weed,
whether you eat at a Fascy restaurant or whether you
eat at Sambos. If you will Sambos, all right, past thematic,
but there'll.
Speaker 1 (01:48:11):
Be no food, no firsh.
Speaker 2 (01:48:12):
You go to McDonald's and you order a quarter pounder
and a milkshake, they'll charge you whatever been ten dollars.
What if we cost then they charge you eighty five
percent tax. That tax will be gone. You will never
pay tax again for food in New York City. Or
if you go to a small grocery store, small bodegas. Now,
I did reach out to the bodega president. They didn't
return my call. I reached out to a lot of
(01:48:33):
people had not returned my call. Okay, I understand that
they got their choice.
Speaker 1 (01:48:37):
Of who they want.
Speaker 2 (01:48:38):
They don't want to rock the boat. Didn't return my call,
but they will return my call once I become the map,
or they'll want me to return their call. Let me
put it to you that way. But no, forty one
billion dollars, no sales tax. Incrementally, you could be surprised
at how much sales taxes can collected at McDonald's, at
Taco Bell, at Kentucky Fried Chicken, at Chick fil A,
(01:49:00):
Burger King. I mean, the taxes that are collected at
Manners Food restaurant is incredible. If all that money that's
now going to the federal government or to the to
the if you will, pockets of the politicians in New
York City, stays in the neighborhood, all that money will
stay in the news matter. I think as much eighty
(01:49:21):
cents here, two dollars there, But it all adds up
when you're talking about two point three million dollars million
people living in the poverty level. We have in New
York City two point three million people that are living
below the poverty level, and each one of them are
spending at least eighty cents to two dollars per day
(01:49:41):
in taxes on fast food.
Speaker 1 (01:49:44):
That's what four million dollars a day.
Speaker 2 (01:49:48):
How much is that over a period of a month,
over period of a year, going down the city hall,
and what they're doing with it down that city hall,
what they want, what they're doing with it, so that
money will not leave the working class neighborhood. Money will
not leave the pockets of the working class people. And
New York is the most tax place on the planet
that you very well know. You gotta pay city taxes.
(01:50:09):
You gotta pay the city taxes. Then you got to
pay The state wants to cut up your money. The
state wants the taxes out of your paycheck and out
of things that you buy, out of you if you
buy a house or buy land. They won't they want
state tax in the federal government, they want to cut
you tax the enough already.
Speaker 1 (01:50:27):
I used to belong to the Tea party.
Speaker 2 (01:50:28):
Your tax the enough already. Well, we're gonna do something
about that. That's why it's very important. Don't let the
rear raft, don't let the showmanship, don't let the snake
of our salves with mondami. Don't let Fredo carly On,
Fredo Fredo Cuomo, and don't let puss in boots sleeve,
don't let them hoodwink you. And they have no idea
(01:50:51):
how to go in, how to come out.
Speaker 1 (01:50:54):
You want to listen to me and you want to
get off your high horse? Are you You're gonna be
crazy all your life.
Speaker 2 (01:51:03):
You've known for years that politicians have never done a
damn thing for you. Moreover, black people in particular, I
are taking it's a whole segment for them all by
themselves about black leaders who are probaps, the words pinch
those negros. See, black people got a problem with being black.
They don't like being black. Well they shouldn't it not.
They're not black, so edition they weren't black until back
(01:51:23):
in the nineteen sixties. I think Rap Brown and Stokely
cormack on. Y'all don't remember them, but I do. And
started calling, of course, what we call color well called black.
Of course, we're many colors, high yellow, tea teasing ten.
We still like to call ourselves there. Back in the
fifteen to sixties, we used to love our collar well.
Speaker 1 (01:51:46):
Chocolate.
Speaker 2 (01:51:46):
We used to call our chocolate color berry. We used
to call out some berry color, chocolate teasing, ten high yellow.
Speaker 1 (01:51:53):
We's a lot that did. Somebody calls say, no, we're
all blacks.
Speaker 2 (01:51:56):
What hellse No, but we're all a stokely Comaco right
brown in the Black Panthers right back in the nineteen
late sixties. So everybody started calling themselves black. They left colored.
We ain't black, color no more. Then here comes Jesse
Jackson back in the nineteen seventies. After that ran for
about ten years. Even James Brown, my favorite, came out
with a song I'm Black and I'm proud, said loud,
I'm black, I'm brown. And then after that, here comes
(01:52:19):
to Jesse Jackson. Jesse Jackson comes along, said we ain't black.
He was right about that one thing he's never been
right about. He said, we're African Americans. Oh okay, all right,
so they stopped. We started picking ourselves African America. I'm
not sure where that came from, because we weren't African,
but we were American. Well, your ancestress in Africa, well,
I'm not so sure. I've seen some high yellow people.
(01:52:43):
I think they're Ancestra. Came from pork porky Jesus from
England or.
Speaker 1 (01:52:48):
So anyway, so nice African America. So we can't make
up our mind.
Speaker 2 (01:52:53):
Now you listen to people talk today, it's either they
call you black or African America.
Speaker 1 (01:52:57):
They don't know what We don't know what the hell
we are know what color? We all don't know what red.
It's confusion. I tell you.
Speaker 2 (01:53:04):
One thing has remained though, is that years ago, back
in nineteen sixty five, you call me black, that's fighting.
Speaker 1 (01:53:13):
Well, god, damn it, that's it. You what you call
me black? That's it.
Speaker 2 (01:53:16):
Damn it, We're gonna fight. Come on now, come on,
you'll be calling over. You'll call somebody black. Back in
the nineteen sixties, they will fight. That was an insul Now,
I thought, Malcolm X tall all you didn't, didn't y'all
see in the movie Denzil Washington and Dad the prison
up there in Boston. He said, black collar, black, day,
black sheep black, this black, that everything bad is black?
Speaker 1 (01:53:37):
Then white this everything good is white. He said, why
y'all call yourself? Why y'all want to be called black?
Speaker 2 (01:53:43):
With everything in the dictionary black is bad? Then I
thought y'all learned something from Malcolm xts the crazy as
black people that said I've swept before God. The black
leaders we have, especially these homosexual ones like that It
It Glored, and that Jelani boy over the Columbia University,
and a bunch of others, and that Van Jones and
a bunch of others, every which everywhere you shake a stick.
(01:54:03):
They got them on television as newscasters, as commentators, and
all that's all that comes out of their mouths, all
that comes out of their.
Speaker 1 (01:54:11):
Mouth, you know. And so and they listen.
Speaker 2 (01:54:14):
They're running a cottage industry too, by the way. They're
making millions of dollars by pimping ignorant people who ought
to be calling themselves hemites, running referring to themselves as
black as the sons of Ham.
Speaker 1 (01:54:25):
You ain't black, I ain't black leaving I'm black about me.
Even my hair ain't black. No more so.
Speaker 2 (01:54:31):
But here, going back to the original thesis, here is
that I'm going to infuse forty one billion dollars and
it can't be done.
Speaker 1 (01:54:39):
And listen, John Lindsley could, Ed Kotch could have done it.
Speaker 2 (01:54:43):
Abraham Dean could have done it, Bill Old LaGuardia could
have done it. Listen, all these males could have done it,
but I don't care it takes you to hear it.
Can I share this with y'all, y'all promise not to
be upset with me. To do this, I'm gonna have
to fight, not not white people, of jaful people. I'm
aout to fight black people because black people. These politicians
(01:55:06):
use city council members, our shoppings of the world.
Speaker 1 (01:55:09):
They make money on y'all being ignorant. They make money.
Speaker 2 (01:55:12):
Or the white man ain't treating you all right? Or
we got the watch against the white man. Oh yes, sir,
we got the march against the white man. Come on now,
we're gonna meet at eight o'clock in the morning. We
got the white man ain't treating you all right? White police,
two brutals, got to defund the post.
Speaker 1 (01:55:27):
Listen, that's how they make their money.
Speaker 2 (01:55:30):
They're just like anybody that's like leave by selling jeans
the way our shop sells racism, or to ignorant people,
he sells the fact that the white man. So listen,
that's why you don't see him. And I'm coming to
stand beside me, and it never will. I don't want
them to standing beside me, but I can infuse forty
one billion dollars and can make the lives of people
(01:55:52):
in New York City.
Speaker 1 (01:55:53):
They still a city. So when Jesus does come back,
he's gonna come back to a great city. He's gonna
come back to.
Speaker 2 (01:55:59):
A great So you're looking at the man that has
has the ability to make all these things happen. Let
me turn around again and say to you that we
just spent three hundred thousand dollars.
Speaker 1 (01:56:12):
On television ads. All right, So I ain't seeing you
on television. I see all these other people.
Speaker 2 (01:56:19):
I see Osama Bin Lawdon Junior, and I see Freido
Correy on Cuomo, and I see Pussing Boots sliwa on.
But I ain't never seen you. I ain't not one time.
I ain't never I thought you why to the race.
I fact, I didn't think you gonna make it anyway,
Pastor Man nine first heard about I laughed, I didn't
(01:56:41):
think you gonna make it.
Speaker 1 (01:56:44):
But nah, I see you on television. Y'all put together.
Speaker 2 (01:56:47):
But I need more money, all right, So I need
to tell y'all that I need y'all to to step
up and help us be able to do this.
Speaker 1 (01:56:56):
All right, And let me say this to you that
I want to help you, and you you.
Speaker 2 (01:57:06):
I, you know I. The Bible says that Jesus stood
on the hill over watching and overlooking the kid von
valed mount out of it in Jerusalem, and he wept
like a baby.
Speaker 1 (01:57:17):
He just wept because what he offered the people, this help,
they didn't they wouldn't accept. As good as Jesus was
as a teacher.
Speaker 2 (01:57:26):
Them, Jews didn't understand what he was trying to say
to them. They kept looking at people like Barabbas and
other militant leaders to lead them from the What Jesus
was trying to show them was through the power. They're
annoying him by keeping the word of God. There should
be the head and not to tell. But they couldn't
hear it, and so Jesus wept. So I have to
(01:57:48):
tell you this one thing. And it doesn't matter whether
a black person has a PhD or MD.
Speaker 1 (01:57:56):
Or law degree or politician or whatever.
Speaker 2 (01:57:59):
They're still don't damn thing. You know, they still don't
know a damn thing about the world. Now, see, that's
to see a pass man. That kind of thing gets
you in trouble, you know, talking about how black people
with medical degrees and then they are things. Had to
run around talking about black people built America, and I said,
not a lie that one of the biggest lives ever told.
But they don't know anyth they don't understand the world.
Speaker 1 (01:58:20):
I put it to you this way.
Speaker 2 (01:58:21):
Show me where the black people are built, any damn thing.
Show me where the black people are built anything. Show
me how they understand the world. Show me a ship
that they have. Show me a sea worth the vessels
that black people are built, even though they got doctor's lawyers.
Show me a ship that they've ever built. But I
can show you millions a ship of white people who
don't have no kind of degree, but they built and
(01:58:42):
they sell the oceans.
Speaker 1 (01:58:44):
That's as simple as that. It's as simple as that.
Speaker 2 (01:58:49):
But you can't talk to these black folk, especially you know,
since they get when they especially the pensions, the one
all listen about.
Speaker 1 (01:58:56):
I got to go.
Speaker 2 (01:58:58):
Are y'all gonna donate to the campaign, cause we need
you to donate. Now listen, obviously I'm gonna rebroadcast this.
It's gonna be rebroadcasting another ten times. You can learn
something by listening to it more than once, at least
seven times. Give me some slack. We got to prepare
for Mother Dunlop's funeral. And there are a lot of
(01:59:19):
other things that we're working on, the campaign that we're
working on, and I'm trying to get a little bit
of rest as much as as possible. I don't think
that's feasible right now. There's a lot of strategy. I mean,
we're even putting together a program on where we're gonna
place the vans. We got a van over at Columbia
University that's gonna drive them students over the Columbia University
(01:59:40):
insane to see me knocking out my dummy already, man,
I got to go peace out. I mean, only one
that can pure up the spiritual problems to New York City.
Speaker 1 (01:59:54):
I can bring healing, and I can bring healing in.
Speaker 2 (01:59:59):
City.
Speaker 1 (02:00:01):
Get a ready Ready Ready.
Speaker 8 (02:00:07):
You had to go Ready, can readigin Redico Ready, get
a patty giver ready.
Speaker 2 (02:00:12):
To go ready gin red again, read again Ready.
Speaker 1 (02:00:15):
Gain penny. You're always being ready.
Speaker 2 (02:00:17):
To get ready Gin ready, can ready go patty, keep
your
Speaker 1 (02:00:21):
Medico ready, Go ready Gin Ready