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October 13, 2025 • 120 mins
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Speaker 1 (00:36):
Hi, Jesus, set this get up.

Speaker 2 (01:15):
Crust who terminosustition?

Speaker 3 (01:20):
Crust?

Speaker 2 (01:20):
Tom who just teminos to destination?

Speaker 4 (01:24):
Crap Tom, who just terminos to destination?

Speaker 3 (01:29):
Jesus, this ain't no mystery. Tadla Wait say.

Speaker 2 (01:49):
He'sa to the west side. Believe that.

Speaker 4 (01:59):
I'm here because I am a roarring line crying outious.
Welcome everybody to the Trust in the Lord and the
Manning Report combined. We have been running the two of
those together for the last month or so because we

(02:19):
are also running a major campaign to become the mayor
of the City of New York, and so there are
several things that we're doing. And we thank you for
your patients and many of you who are very faithful
to come to listen to the broadcast. Inst Angela Kane
want to take our hat off to her for being
coming to every broadcast. And we just want to give

(02:42):
thanks to brother Eric Miller as well, who have been
with us now for years and years and years and
years and years and years. The race car driving them
in Dinnapolis, Indiana, Brother Eric Miller, and so for other
brother Nunya him out in San Bernardino, California, UH and
and a bunch of others as well. Obviously some of

(03:05):
I'm just called these names. These people have been around
for a thousand years.

Speaker 5 (03:09):
Uh.

Speaker 4 (03:10):
And we pray that brother Canaan from over and over
in the UK is still around. I told him he's
still a member of the family. I just don't have
time to talk to him every day. Uh. I'm you know,
my life is, I'm just busy. Uh. But at any rate,
we are going to be intimittently having these sessions until

(03:30):
the election is over with and we then become the
mayor and we can restructure our the way we do
our programming. I also stated that we would start every
broadcast or not even broadcast, but every day is the
Mayor of the City of New York with prayer. Now
the prayer that we have prayed, We've We've used it
several times. I don't know if I'm going to use
it today because I got so much on a pack

(03:51):
and to potentially what is just this one hour today
because I have to I have to go do some
scouting of the Bronx and also of Queen's not today,
but certainly scouting of the Bronx. Uh, to discover where
I'm going to spend my three days sleeping on the
street in Bronx, New York. As you know, I was

(04:13):
out in Brooklyn last week during the suka Uh celebration.
By the way, if you haven't read Leviticus chapter twenty three,
you ought to read it. Uh. And at some point
in time, Pastor Many will keep his promise, and he
said he's gonna teach it, and I'll teach more about
the six celebrations of festivals, the six convocations. In one
of them, of course, is the Atonement, the other is

(04:34):
the first Fruit, the others the feast of trumpets. The
other's a feast of booze, which is known as suka Uh.
And let me say this as well. I to elder
the floor, I stated that I wanted to bring the
school out to Bedford Avenue to see where I slept

(04:55):
for three days and to observe the u uh, the
traffic of the young people and the uh and their
mothers and their fathers. I I, but I want to
stay this as I was praying, if you don't like children,
and you know, if you don't have a deep love
and compassion of the of the beauty and the wonder

(05:17):
of children, then you probably would not see what I
saw because beyond the what I saw it was so
amazing was the beauty of the children.

Speaker 6 (05:28):
Uh.

Speaker 4 (05:29):
I'm gonna ask the engineer who did some extraordinary work.
I want to take I'll hand engineer Captain E LAIJ. Lewis,
who did an extraordinary job of capturing the moments. Those
moments were very precious and he was able to capture them.
This is one of the moments of my standing uh
with the with the children, and some of the senior
men were standing off to my left. Uh and and

(05:53):
and so you don't see them in that particular shot,
but looking and they looked like they looked like they
decided to start with the younger at the right and
moved the taller further as they go. And there is
also the segment where I sat on Bedford Avenue, mister engineer,
and I filmed the families going by with the strollers

(06:13):
and went on. I did it kind of incognito, if
you must, because during the first three days of Suka,
which is the Feast of Booths, which is a legal
holiday to pass over like the you know, the feast
of the Atonement on Kapoa. It's a legal holiday to
feast of booths is and so I you're not allowed

(06:36):
to use a camera, use a cell phone, driver car,
read the newspaper, or watch television. So I kind of
sat there with my and I repent for having done
anything wrong that violated the Holy Suka to day. But
here you'll see in a few moments you're gonna see
a parade of children going by, and Minister Williams, if

(06:58):
you you know, if you don't love children, probably what
I saw would not be amazing. It'd said, well, what's
the big deal, pastor you're talking about how great it was?
It was great because of the children. That's what made
it so great being out there and having that experience

(07:19):
over the days that I was there. Now you see
a lot of adults as well. These are men going
back and forth. By the way, the synagogue remain open
twenty four hours a day, seven days a week, and
all twenty four hours there was something going on. So
you see them when they're walking towards the front of
the van. They're going towards either Hooper Street Synagogue or
the Rodney Street Synagogue or the Urine Synagogue on Lee

(07:42):
Avenue and Wallabat Street. But it's the children that I
realized that it's so beautiful. Look at that. That was
so and so. If you don't realize, if you don't
love children, look at that. If you don't love look
at look look at that, you probably would miss the
hostil past man. What's the big deal about being on

(08:03):
Bedford Avenue. I don't see anything that's so big and so,
but look at the look at those children, and look
at those mothers and their fathers. Also, mister Gene, you
took a shot where I was seated. Uh, and the
two men stopped buying, told me I was gonna win
the election. If you could bring that up as well,
I would appreciate that you took a a that's a

(08:25):
really good shot. These two men told me I was
gonna win. Now, let me say this to you.

Speaker 7 (08:30):
Uh.

Speaker 4 (08:31):
The what's his name? Osama bin Laden Junior was at
the hoop of Synagogue on Wednesday and he spoke to
some of the liberal Jewish, but nobody gave him a
cent that he came out then because he's a candidate
for mayor. They were courteous enough to receive him, but

(08:52):
they didn't say anything positive about his being there. He left,
but these two men I believe were in the meeting
when m uh Osama had been Laton. Now y'all call
him z Round Mandani, but I call him Osama bin
Latton Junior. These two men stopped on Wednesday night after
I had done all that work out there. It was

(09:13):
not work, but after done all that ministry, I should say,
out there, uh, at the urines of the synagogue and
also there on Bedford Avenue, and told me I was
gonna win the election. They said, you will win and
so and there you see me sitting there with I
got all my my black Jewish hat, my black Jewish

(09:33):
my rabbi outfit, because the young children asked me to
put it on. I was out there on Tuesday night
with my red shirt sweater on it says manning for
mayor and so they and but I had a picture
of my being a righteous gentile that on a poster.
They said, well, will you put that on and come
back and talk to us something of that nature.

Speaker 7 (09:52):
It was.

Speaker 4 (09:52):
It was most one of the most beautiful experiences of
of the young people and of the of this as
you see the older people talk with me as well.
So I wanted to be able to say all that,
and thank you for allow me to have three nights
away from and I want to again give them a
big shout out to our extraordinary engineer who was able
to capture that moment, who was able to Actually I

(10:14):
heard that the engineer was out there taking some bureau
pictures of the properties and somebody asking what was he doing,
and I think he said that he told him he
was with me, and they said, all right, okay, because
they got surveillances out there. You can't do nothing out
there without their camera picking you up one way. And
not that the crime or anything. It's just today the

(10:37):
children able to walk the street at night by themselves
because there's this surveillance and security like you ain't never
seen before, like the security of Israel itself. But that's
what happened to the engineer. You told them that you
were with me, and they said, okay, all right, you're
good to go as long as you with the man
that's in the van. So it was an exciting time.

(11:00):
Let me talk to you about my desire to comfort
to people, Missinjin. If you bring up Isaiah chapter forty,
I drive much to be appreciative of it. If you
bring that up my desire to be able to comfort
the people of New York City and the people of
the planet, in fact, people of the world. I'd love

(11:22):
to be able to do that, and that's why I'm
running for mayor. I'm not running for mayor because I
want to be mayor of New York City. I'm not
running for may because I want to be a politician.
That's the last thing I want to do. I'm seeking
the office of mayor because I want to comfort to people.
I genuinely want to help people. I do. Now, you
probably may have some arguments with that in terms of

(11:45):
your belief of it. Let me just share my heart
with you today. I want to be the mayor of
New York City because I want to help people, and
I know that I can. Can I say a thing
with you and those of you who are astoote listen
to this. Politicians, by nature of them, politicians are insensitive

(12:16):
to other humans. And generally they're insensitivity is fuelled by
their personal desires and their personal if you will, aggrandizement
of themselves. That two things can't be true at the

(12:38):
same time. On this regard, a politician, whether either a
black politician or a white politician, or red politician, or
a featherwere in politician, or a Cherokee politician or Polish politician.
Politicians listen to this or Catholic by nature that they

(12:59):
are Titians are enable of caring about anybody other than themselves.
That's what makes them politicians. Now you can go and
do a psychological study, and you can call in all
the medical experts, a psychiatrists, you can call the pall

(13:20):
An historians, and to discover politicians and especially leaders of
nations can send tens of thousands of people to their
deaths and not miss breakfast in the morning. For instance,

(13:41):
right now, what's happening in Ukraine and Russia. I don't
know how many people are dying per day. Let's say
there are three thousand men dying per day. Putin is
not bothered by day. That doesn't bother him at all.
He has his regular breakfast whatever, He has his eggs
over easy. He's not bothered by three thousand men are

(14:02):
going to die today because he wants to take Ukraine,
he wants it as a land for him, doesn't That
doesn't bother him. He's a politician. He's a politician. I could,
I could, I could talk about Trump also as a politician.
That I mean, they'll lie to you. And one of

(14:22):
the things that, whether you agree with me or not,
that politicians are totally and hotly insensitive of caring about
anybody other themselves. You may disagree with that, but let
me put it to you this way, put it down
where you can get it. Why they don't care about people.
Politicians they don't care where they are. A politician will

(14:42):
come to your church, or come to your organization, come
to your meeting place, come to your rally, and promise
you the world, and promise you the world. What if
you want to hear?

Speaker 7 (14:57):
They'll tell you.

Speaker 4 (14:59):
And then and once you elect him to office, you
never see them again. Now you can't refute that. We
don't need any world medical American Medical Association Psychiatric reports
to back that up. Everybody and their brother knows that
a politician, because he is a politician, he is an
ept of caring about and he is a most adept

(15:19):
at lying. He'll come and he'll promise you the world
whatever you want to. Come to your church, he'll come
to your business, he'll come to your wherever, and he'll
promise you the world. But once he gets elected, you'll
never see him again until the next election because he's
inapable and incapable of delivering on the thing. And that

(15:43):
is why politicians are rated as such low life, low
integrity people. I'm not saying anything. You don't know what
I am saying. I'm bringing it down a little bit
further where you can get it. Politicians are incapable of
caring about anybody but themselves. I don't care who, whether
it's John Kennedy or Abraham Lincoln, They're incapable of caring

(16:07):
about anybody but themselves. They cannot. They have no if
you will instinct. They have no if you will, brotherly
love or instinct for anybody other than themselves. That's why
be are politicians. Otherwise they wouldn't be a politician. You
couldn't qualify to be a politician if you have a
brotherly an instinct love, if you have a humanitarian spirit,

(16:31):
you can't be a politician. Politicians are not humanitarians. They
don't help people. I'm not a politician because you raise
the questions of a pastor man a while you're running.
I'm not running as a politician. I'm running to be
Mayle because i want to help people. I want to
help people, and I've made that absolutely clear. Some of

(16:51):
the people working on our campaign have tried to get
me to act like politics, act like a politician. I'm
not going to do that. They don't understand. They don't understand.
I'm not a politician. I'm not gonna act like politicians.
I'm not gonna act do what they do. What the
others are doing, sure will probably get me attention, probably
get me elected. There's a potential, there's all the possibility
of a possibility that I don't get elected because I

(17:13):
don't do what politician do. I'm good with that, but
I will not be a politician. I want to help people.
I want to do what I've been doing for the
last forty four years of my life. And anybody looking
at me very carefully, looking at this from this perspective,
especially for those of you who know me for across America,
though you don't live in New York City, you can
help me get elected. Those of you who know me

(17:36):
over the years know for the past forty four years,
there ain't no way in a snowball's chance in hell
that after serving people, helping people, housing the homeless, feeding
the hungry, educating children, preaching the gospel, preaching the truth
that I'm all of a sudden going to change and
be a politician. That just there's no way that could.
There's no way you could take forty four years and

(17:59):
just throw them in into the garbage. There's no way
I'm gonna do that. Now, can I use the office
of mayor? Well, Jesus said this, that what I do
is feed the hungry at Matthew's Gospel, chapter twenty five,
starting at verse thirty nine or so, what I do
is feed the hungry, clothes and naked, house the homeless,

(18:19):
visit the prisoners and the sick. Well, if I can
do a bigger job and a better job of that
from the office of mayor, then so be it. Listen,
I'm gonna go to a city hall to do what
to feed the hungry. I'm gonna cure homelessness. By the way,
I can cure homelessness within the first ninety days, first
one hundred days. I'm gonna cure homelessness in the first

(18:43):
one hundred days. That and I'm gonna do something about
infusing forty one billion dollars of money into the poor
neighborhoods now. I mean that you don't have to build houses.
People will buy their own houses because they got their
own money. Because the money that I'm gonna bring as
a result of tax structures. I'm something to tell Donald Trump. Listen,

(19:06):
we won't send any federal money. We won't send any
tax teller. I'll tell Kathy Hokle up there in New
York an Albany, listen to New York will withhold his taxes.
If y'all don't get you act together, and we'll tell Trump,
new York will hold his taxes. New York is the
biggest tax payer on the planet. We'll withhold our taxes.
Y'all don't get tacked together. Don't be coming that talking
that talk to me as mayor of the City of

(19:26):
New York. But here, let's get back to the issue.
I'm gonna ask me to bring up a scripture so
I can read the tax Here's what I want to do.
I want to I want to I want to inform
you I don't care who it is, whether it's Obama,
whether it's Hillary Clinton, or whether it's Donald Trump. And
especially maga people, especially maga I think the best example

(19:47):
of the fact that a politician doesn't care anything about
the people. That's what makes them politicians. That's what makes
them politicians. They're abusers, they're not humanitarians. I have no
athletic skills. There no athletic skills in my bone. Bones
in my body. Don't ask me to dribble a basketball,
throw a football, hit the baseball, hit the tennis ball,

(20:13):
kick a soccer ball. Don't ask me that. There's not
one athletic bone in my body. There's not one humanitarian
bone and a true politician. Donald Trump is probably the
best politician anybody's seen in a very long time because
he's not a humanitarian. There's not one humanitary that he
can lie to your face. He's an abuser. He is

(20:37):
an abusing. He's the abused of women. He's abusa of
the truth, he's the abuse of God. He's an abuse
of people. Probably one of the best politicians we've seen
in a very long time.

Speaker 8 (20:47):
Now.

Speaker 4 (20:48):
Lyndon Johnson was one as well. But he's an abuser.
But he's not there. Even the smallest one, the smallest
assembly person, the smallest state senator, city in some office
someplace in Oklahoma somewhere, also does not have a humanitarian.
They're not humanity. Politicians are not humanitarians the way I'm

(21:09):
not an athlete. They're just not humanitarians. That is not
what a humanitarian. So I am clear. But here's what
I want to do. I want to comfort the people.
I see people are suffering. People are suffering in New

(21:29):
York City. People are hungry, not because there's not food
enough to feed the masses. America grows more food than
we could ever eat every year. Our farmlands are beautiful
or bountiful. The potatoes, the peanuts, the wheat, the barley,
the tomatoes, the cucumbers, the strawberries, the collars, the cabbage,

(21:51):
all of that, the cows. We grow more fruit than
all Americans can eat, so we give it to other nations.
There's no reason why there should be soup kitchens. There's
no reason why they should be why anybody should be hungry.
And I'm going to be a humanitarian. And that is

(22:12):
where I land, and that's who I am, and that's
who I pray to you will perceive me to be.
I want to comfort to people. God said to Isaiah,
comfort comfort, ye, my people say, if our God speaking comfortable,
to comfortably to Harlem to outlaw to New York City

(22:33):
and cry unto her that her warfare has accomplished. That
the days of your being hungry, or days of your
being over taxed, the days of your being evicted, the
days of you being gone through the problems that you've
gone through, those days are overwhelmed now that I am
now And this is what you know. If people will

(22:56):
listen to this, how you're not gonna get this on
Steve Corbert, You're not gonna get this on CNN, would say.
But Anderson Cooper, you're not gonna get this on Foxwood.
You know, the the Walter's Boy. They're not gonna let
this kind of teaching go forward. But today that I
become the mayor of the City of New York, all

(23:17):
the troubles will be over the warfare, the fear of
being evicted, the fear of being foreclosed, the fear of
losing your job, the fear of being mugged and mugged
in the street, the fear of being robbed, the fear
of death, the fear of sickness and disease. All of
that warfare will be over with when I become And

(23:43):
were you a good disciple, you would make sure at
least a thousand people hear this message I'm putting forward
because it's a truth. That would be your assignment to
get a thousand people to hear this message. Whether it's
in New York, or whether it's in why Washington State,
or whether it's in California, whether it's in Alabama, Mississippi,

(24:05):
West Virginia, a thousand people would hear what I'm saying
to you. Now. I want to comfort to people, and
that once I become the mayor of the City of
New York, means that the sins of the people has
been pardoned, the things that you've done. And I'm going
to get to it. I don't know how much time
I'll have today to get to it today of regarding

(24:28):
the Black crisis and understanding homosexuality, but your iniquity has
been pardoned, Your sins have been pardoned. I want to
say that, especially with respect to the so called Black crisis. Now,
black people are Hamites, but in terms of their iniquity,
their sins, my becoming the mayor would pardon means that

(24:53):
God has pardoned them of their sins. And so are
you listening to what I am teaching? For she have
received for the Lord's hand, double for all her sins.
And in other words, the people are in New York
are going to rejoice. They're gonna receive double even the

(25:15):
things that they thought they just wanted, rather than one home,
two homes, rather one car, two cars, rather than one
business two businesses. This is a beautiful word. This is
a beautiful word, one of the more beautiful words of
the entire Bible. And Isaiah spoke it, and actually it

(25:37):
was a prophecy of the Lord Jesus Christ. It is
a beautiful word. It is a beautiful word. So when
you hear something like this, people will be comforted. Finally,
help has arrived. Help has arrived. And to black people
who thought help was gonna arrive through Barak Hussein, the

(25:58):
Long Lady, mcdady Obama, help did not arrive. Trouble came
on steroids. And to the Maga people who think that
help has arrived through Trump. Trump is perhaps one of
the best politicians wanted ever seen, mainly because he is
totally insensitive. He just he can't feel anybody's pain. He

(26:18):
can't he can't feel anybody, and he can't feel any
sense of morality. I mean, anybody who would talk about
having sex with the door. Well, a lot of men
do have sex with their daughters. I'll have to say that,
but do it publicly. He has no shame. There is
no way Trump can feel the pain of what's happening,

(26:41):
what's going on in Africa. Now you can say, well,
the African should provide for themselves. They shouldn't be working
on America to send them, to send them USAID all
that food being sent to Africa by ships and feeding
them Medican medicine for all kinds of diseases such as HIV,
AIDS and a bunch of other Let black people do
that African for themselves. Oh, can you be absolutely right,

(27:01):
no doubt about that. I agree, But I mean, if
America is sending it while I stop sending it, and
why not have some concern that tens of thousands of
people are dying. I listened to the tribulation Trump the
Orange rangutank talk about how he's trying to shave Russia
by saying five to seven thousand soldiers are dying on

(27:22):
the battlefield. Pardon me, pardon me. I listened to Trump
spout off how he's going to end the war in Ukraine.
He's not gonna end anything. And by the way, he
has an end of the war between Harmas. And if
you think that war was over, which you're doing lost
show cotton picking mine. They trained at the hostages, Harmas

(27:46):
was glad to get rid of those hostages. And in
the boot they got some of their Palestinian warriors, some
of their chief generals out of the jails there in
the West Bank. So come on, Trump, talk about the
wars overWe But the thing of it is this is
that that we need to understand is Trump is running
around here talking about that five to seven thousand soldiers

(28:07):
are dying on the battlefield of Russia and Ukraine, and
how horrible that is. But can I ask you the
question that anybody is sophisticated enough out there, because many
people are very sophisticated. But how many people are dying
in Africa? How many people are dying in Ethiopia, how
many people are dying in Nigeria, How many people are
dying in Mali, how many people are dying serirely on,

(28:28):
how many people are dying in Iberia, how many people
are dying in Angola, how many people are dying in Zimbabwe,
how many people are dying in the Congo. How many
people are dying in Africa every day because you Trump
stopped USAID going to Africa and giving medicine for diseases
and food for the hungry. How many people are dying
in Africa? Would it be twenty thousand people per day dying?

(28:52):
So you have great concern about the soldiers that are
dying in Russia, but you don't give a damn about
those dying. See, it's just for him, It's just a strategy.
But we're not gonna spend any time. So he's not
worth my time and your time either. Trump isn't. I
want to help people. I want to comfort the people,

(29:14):
and for the past forty four years I have been
feeding the hungry and I will just continue to do
that until Jesus comes. That's what I want to do.
Can I do that from the office of the Mayor
of the City of New York? Of course, of course
I can, and of course I will. And so understand this.

(29:39):
I'm going to take a break. But before I do that,
let me recount something to you. Understand this if you
never understand anything else again, And the primifracial case of
this right now is Trump politicians are abuses. They are
not humanitarians. What New York needs is love and righteousness,

(30:04):
not affordability. Not affordability, affordability. No, politicians are not humanitarians.
The same way I'm not an athlete and probably could play.

(30:25):
I'm not an athlete. Politicians are not humanitarian. They don't
give a damn. And you can argue all you want
and try to lift up politician before me, But everybody
and their brother, even little baby in the stroller, would
tell you that politicians will come and promise you the
world when they're running for office. They will come and
promise you the world when they're running for office, but

(30:48):
once they win that office, you ain't gonna see them
no more. And moreover, whatever they told you they're gonna
do for you, they never do. They just make themselves
richer and the people around them that paid for their election.
They don't help you. They never have and they never will.
But yet they keep coming back every three years, every
two years, every one year, every four years, every six years,

(31:10):
with the same old game. And you go for the
same oakie dope every six years, every four years, every
two years. But they're not humanitarians by nature. By nature,
they can't be. They're not they're not equipped to be.
So I am. I'm a humanitarian. So pastor man, I

(31:32):
didn't know why you running for I'm running for office
because I want to feed the hungry. You want to
you want to know what I will I'll do when
I get in an office. You want to know what
I do? Look at what I've done. We used to
have a a uh over at the minister's conference. You

(31:53):
felt about the name of it. I forget his name.
Not anyways to ask people, Just ask how you like
the food? Well, I had like look at how people
eat it. If you want to know. If you want
to know what I will do as the mayor of
the City of New York, look at what I've done
as a pastor. That's all you know. You don't have

(32:15):
to go and talk about affordability and a policy. The
hell with affordability. What about the policy? What about the
years I've educated children? What about the years I've educated
my own daughter, well, the spiritual daughter to be accepted
at Yale University? What about that? Can I do that?
If I can, If I can get in this building

(32:35):
early in the morning, get a student up and out,
and go ready for yell or Julliard, what will happen
if you turn the whole school system over to me?

Speaker 7 (32:44):
What have I done?

Speaker 4 (32:45):
Is what I'm going to do. If you want to
know what kind, don't ask me? Ask me not about
no damn affordability. How many people have I fed? How
many people have if you ask them on the streets
of Harlem today, have eaten that the kitchen? They've gotten
their lives. Yeah, because of what I've done. If you
want to know what I'm gonna do is mayth don't

(33:05):
be talking about though, I'm gonna I'm talking about helping humanity.
Affordability means why what does that mean? What does that mean?
Mean that you're gonna get everything free? You can now
afford something that you couldn't afford before. Oh you want
to know, Pastor Manning, look at what I've done. That's

(33:27):
exactly what I'm gonna. Let me say, he judge looking
at a man right, the judge getting ready of sentence,
a man right, judge getting ready of sentence, Puff daddy, Right,
judge getting ready of sence, puff daddy. All the stuff
he did, they weren't able to convict him on actual
sex trafficking and international prostitution and a bunch of other

(33:48):
charges they had.

Speaker 5 (33:50):
Uh.

Speaker 4 (33:50):
They the jury just didn't come back and find him
guilty on that because many of the women that were
involved in it said they enjoyed it, that they were
in love with him. So all right, okay, but they
did get him on prostitution, and I think the maximum
that was me twenty years or so. I don't know
what the story was. So puff daddy is lawyer said,

(34:13):
let him go free. Heze already served fourteen months. Let
him go free. And the judge said, you know, looking
at his record of what he has done gives me
some indication of what he will do when he gets
back out on the streets again. Looking at what he
has done will tell me what he will do. So
looking at what he has done and finding out what

(34:35):
he will do guides my and informs my giving him
a five year center. Don't let this boy out on
the street for quite some time, and when you do,
hit him for five hundred thousand dollars and probation for
ten years, because looking at what he has done tells
me what he's going to do. So check this out.
His wisdom, he said, passed man, you're always arguing and

(34:57):
fussing with us and everything his wisdom. You want to
know what I'm gonna do, is Mayor to look at
what I've done. And I just say, just look at
two or three years like Osama bin Laden Junior, who's
only thirty three years old, and I have done something
for two years. Well, we don't know what the hell.
All he's done is that he is promoted into Farder.
He's promoted uh prostitution, that the prostitution become legal, He's

(35:20):
promoted Islamic ideas. He is promoted freezing rents on people.
He's promoted. But is that what he's done, or is
he gonna promote more prostitution. He's gonna promote more into farder.
Is that what he's gonna do, Well, then that's what
he's done. That's what he gonna do. So look at
what Pastor Manning has done. I mean, here is and

(35:42):
it takes, it takes maturity and the members out there,
and we believe that we've got some ads coming up
now starting on the twenty five. Heard Sabbath say We're
gonna be hammering the place everywhere you look on ABC, CBS, NBC.
Use those big ads when I start to the twentieth

(36:02):
and give people an opportunity to then vote for me.
But look at what I've done. Look at what I've done,
because that's not exactly what I'm gonna do. I look
at my eye. And so the politician, the career politicians,
they are, and you can't blame them because they were

(36:25):
not born with a gene of humanitarianism. Not everybody can
be a pastor. You know, I said something a few
moments ago. I said something a few moments ago. I said,
you know, because I was telling all the floor, I
want to bring the school out to the out to
Bedford Avenue, to Williamsburg to see the Hasidic Jews and

(36:45):
their families. But then, after praying about it, I realized,
unless you see the beauty and children, unless you see
how beautiful they are, what a under children are, unless
you see that in every child, and then you see

(37:07):
thousands of beauty, thousands of implements of wonder walking or
running or jumping or skipping or riding on the stroller
three and four at the time. Unless you see that
as beauty, you wouldn't know. You said, what's going on
with bus pastor man? You brought us that. What you
brought us out of to see, we don't see anything
because you wouldn't see You wouldn't see the beauty of
the children. You won't be able to see that. You

(37:31):
don't have that ability to see that. So I thought
to myself, Well, I bring some people out think cause
maybe they don't see it. Maybe I don't understand them,
but maybe you don't see the beauty of pastor matting.
Maybe you don't see the beauty you don't see. A
man who has, for forty four years educated, well, yeah
I have. Even when I wasn't didn't have an official school,

(37:52):
I was educating people. You don't see that. You don't
see that for forty four years, been housing homeless people.
You don't see that. You want him to look like
somebody else. But I'm a humanitarian. What New York needs

(38:16):
is love and righteousness. That's what New York needs. New
York doesn't need affordability, you know, because you can always
change the price. New York needs love and righteousness. Now
you may not know that. You may not be able
to see that. Now, you may have no political bones
whatsoever to be able to see that. I got a

(38:39):
song that Sama put together called love and righteousness. And
by the way, the Lord gave me this, imagine missing
let me read the rest of the verses. Then I'm
gonna bring up love and righteousness. Imagine, imagine New York
City becoming known as the city of love and righteousness,

(39:02):
the city of love. They call Philadelphia. Brother, Raphael Suleiman,
Brother Suleiman, Are you're on line today? Brother, Brother Sulei mine?
They call Philadelphia city brother. They loved well, that they
have done something at one point in time. But imagine
my turning New York City into a city of love

(39:23):
where we love our neighbors as ourselves. That we won't
need an affordability. So journ of Truth said, I read
it the other night that rich people rob from the
poor and poor people rob from one another. So even
affordability don't work because rich people will rob everything they
can from poor people, and poor people will rob each
other as fathers. They can't, So we don't need a
full of ability. Of what we need is love thy

(39:46):
neighbor as ourself. And you have thoughts, and I want
to I want to make this clear. Imagine this, Imagine this,
and that's what I saw also out in Weisburg on
Bedford Avenue, that the men and women out there love
their neighbors as themselves. I'll let you look at some

(40:08):
more footage of what took place out there, but that's
what was going on. They love their neighbors and their children,
and that's why there's no crime. That's why everybody's treated
fairly because they love. They have love and righteousness out
there and on Bedford Avenue out in in Waysburg, they
have love and righteousness. They love their neighbors as theirselves.

(40:34):
People didn't holler, don't love each other. They talk all
that black talk all you want, but a black boy
hits you in the head so quick it'll make your
head swim. We don't love each other. We don't profess
righteousness towards but that's what we need. We need love
and righteousness. Love and righteousness is what we need now.

(40:55):
It's the highest standard. You know, it's a deeper grade.
It's from a higher pigrid. You to understand that, well,
that means that you've got to have some sensitivity. But
that's what they have out there in Williamsburg. Love and
the children, Lord have mercy. I was so loved out there.

(41:20):
They loved me. They knew what I was doing. They
were watching me the whole time I was there. Anyway,
first three, Miss Indiana, because I got that way. My
time is. I promised it that was only going to
be an hour to day. The voice of Him that
crieth in the wilderness, prepare you the way of the Lord.
Make straight in the desert a highway for our God.
Imagine this that Jesus is going to return to New

(41:42):
York City outline particular. And the voice of Him that
crieth in the wilderness of New York, prepare you the
way of Love. Love, Lord, Love, and righteous me. Righteous,
make straight in the desert a path, a highway for
our God. Every valley shall be exalted in every mountain,

(42:04):
and hills shall be brought low, and the crooked shall
be made straight, and the rough places plain. I'm gonna
make the crooked places straight, and I'm gonna make the
crooks pay. And the glory of the Lord shall be revealed,
and all flesh shall see it together, For the mouth

(42:24):
of the Lord hath spoken them.

Speaker 8 (42:29):
So.

Speaker 4 (42:29):
If you're in Arkansas, if you're in West Virginia, if
you're in Ohio, Indiana, if you're in Wisconsin, or if
you are in Wyoming or Montana, South Dakota, North Dakota,
if you're in Texas, if you're in New Mexico, if
you're in Arizona, if you're in Mississippi, if you're in
South Carolina, Virginia, if you're in Pennsylvania, New Hampshire, Vermont, Maine.

(42:54):
Please hear me. Let's do this. Let's put past manning
the humanitarian, not the politician. Let's put past the manning
the humanitarian, the man who wants to comfort the people,
the man who simply wants to use the office of

(43:15):
mayor to feed the hungry, to clothe the naked, house
the homeless, visit the prisons, or empty the prisons and
visit the sick, and empty the hospitals. Let's do that.
I mean, for years and years and years, you've had
one line politician after the other. You've had one abuse

(43:37):
after the other, insensitive, and you can't be angry with
the politicians because they don't have the equipment. They don't
have the spiritual equipment to love you. They don't have
the spiritual equipment to be humane. They don't have that.
They're devoid of it. They just don't have that bone

(43:57):
in their body, their abuser. They're not humanitarians. And so
they come and they lie and they tell you and
they promise you the world that everything's going to be wonderful,
and then they get in office and you don't see
them again because they never intended to do it in
the first place, and you never expected them to do
it in the first place. But you have no choice

(44:20):
because good people like myself have not ran for office.
And so now you have an opportunity. America, from Cedars
Shining Sea, from Maine, from Benga, Maine, to San Diego, California,
and every place in between their abouts, you have an
opportunity to put in office a mayor who is a humanitarian.

(44:41):
What are you going to do about it? What are
you going to do about it? You've not had this
opportunity since the days of Israel. You've not had this opportunity.
Now on you stand on the precipice of an opportunity.
Even though you don't live in New York. You can donate,
you can vote, you can suppor you can come, you
can volunteer, or at the very least, if you don't

(45:04):
even give any money, if you don't donate. If you
don't volunteer, if you can't vote, at the very least
you can open up. You have your eyes and ears
open up to what it is to a humanitarian and
the fact that politicians are in app and though they
run their games, their affordability games and lies, it's just
a hustle. But here's someone who can feed the hungry.

(45:29):
Did you hear him say that, house the homeless. Did
you him say that, clothe the naked? Did you him
say that, visit the prison, the gym, say that, visit
the hospitals in the say did GM say that? No,
here's a rare opportunity that the world has not seen

(45:55):
to put a humanitarian in the office of the mayor
of the City of New York. A rare opportunity and
at the same time an extraordinary education. That politicians are incapable.
There's some people. I mean, if you try to teach
me quantum physics, First of all, I have a problem

(46:18):
with long division. I can tell you that right now.
I'm not gonna try to hoodwink you. You try to
teach me quantum physics, well, physics itself, forget my quantum physics.
I don't know if I could pass the intra level test,

(46:39):
and that's just not my DNA. It's not my intellectual strength.
My intellectual strength is that of a humanitarian who helps people.
That's what I do, That's where I excel. That's why
I got my PhD. I help people. I'm a helper.
I'm a humanitarian. Now you may not like my methods
of doing it because you're too ignorant to appreciate eight

(47:00):
what I'm doing. But I'm a helper. Politicians are in
em They can't help people. They don't have it in
their DNA, no more so than I have quantum physics
in my DNA. They don't have it in their DNA.
And that's why they're successful as a politician. So I'm

(47:23):
here to make the crooked places straight and make the
crooks pay. Imagine if everybody decided it's listen to me
right now, they're gonna make sure at least one thousand
people to hear this message today. Imagine that that the
humanitarian mayor of New York City. Imagine that if one

(47:44):
thousand people say, well, you can't get a thousand to
get five, that's closer to one thousand than zero. I
have more to say about the crisis that's going on
in our nation right now. And I have more teachings
as well about the understanding of homosexuality that there has arisen.

(48:13):
You may not like MAGA, you may think they're the
world's worse people. You may not like the fact that
Trump is decomposing the Constitution, but you have to remember something.
You have to remember something that there's a group of
people across America who wish to make what the Bible

(48:35):
says in each one of its segments. But the Bible
says in its Old Testament and its New Testament and
its epistles, it's letters that homosexuality is a sin. But
there's a group a foot today who wants you to
say that you approve of it, and that it is

(48:59):
the Bible has. There's no power to order sexual homosexuality
as a sin. There has never been in the history
of the world where humanity, humanity has ever tried to
make murder legal, even adultery, They've never tried. They stop

(49:19):
punishing people for adultery. There's no place on the planet where,
well except for Muslims, where they make lie legal. And
anybody who doesn't agree with you committing adultery or committing
murder or committing lies as a hater. That's never happened
in the history of the universe. But that's what that's

(49:43):
what homosexuality says. Homosexuality says, the Bible says it's wrong.
We're saying it's right, and if you don't agree with us,
then we will persecute you. We'll prosecute you, we will
treat you, We'll dold out a punishment to you. If
you don't agree with the fact that the Bible is
wrong or that we have a greater and higher power.

(50:05):
I'm gonna deal with that. What I want to do
is this. I need to announce that about my campaign
coming up in the next couple of days. First, I
want to let you hear love and righteousness. I want
you to hear it. I want you to hear it,
not affordability. Not affordability. If you think about it, how

(50:29):
many times have you heard politician talk about affordability or
something on that order, and your life has just gotten worse. Taxes,
a higher prices, a higher food price, is a higher
eggs you can't even afford. And they keep talking the
same old talk, and they been doing it for the
last one hundred years and things have gotten worse. But
when have you heard a preacher or parlor someone seeking
office talk about love and righteousness? When have you heard that?

(50:53):
Don't you think it's time? The eggs, the price of eggs,
the price of cars, the price of egg everything has
gone through the roof with affordability, and they keep running
the same old game. Don't you think it's time for
love and righteousness? Come on, Oklahoma, come on, Texas, come on, Indiana,

(51:13):
come on now, Ohio, come on, come on, Wyoming, come on,
come on, Washington State, come on now, Virginia, come on,
West Virginia, come on. Don't you think it's time for
love and righteousness. Don't you think it's time for a
real change. Love and righteousness over affordability is a real change.
That's a real change. Whether you believe it works or not,

(51:35):
it's a change. God knows that's a change. It's engineer. Please,
what's my name?

Speaker 2 (51:52):
What's my name?

Speaker 4 (51:54):
What's my name?

Speaker 2 (51:56):
Jeans Manning?

Speaker 4 (51:57):
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. Who name you're gonna
print in the right in section on the ballot? Mon DOMI,
who are.

Speaker 2 (52:16):
You gonna print? Whose name?

Speaker 4 (52:18):
Jeans Manning? 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 gonna print on the right in section on
the ballot on November fourth here in the New York
City mayoral election, Jeans Manning? All right, now, let's get

(52:44):
it on. I'm the only one that can pure the
spiritual problems from New York City. I can bring healing,
and I can bring healing in New York sh.

Speaker 9 (53:00):
Get ready, ready, ready, ready, any any ready, get a ready,
get ready? Ready Aye ready you read ready, get ready,
get ready?

Speaker 3 (53:17):
Got ready?

Speaker 8 (53:18):
Got ready?

Speaker 7 (53:20):
You're ready?

Speaker 3 (53:20):
Get any gay ready ready.

Speaker 8 (53:23):
Ready.

Speaker 7 (53:25):
The city?

Speaker 2 (53:26):
Get red?

Speaker 8 (53:29):
Who fight for you in all your He's the time
of the last you've been told.

Speaker 7 (53:39):
He is a chance for you to vote for.

Speaker 8 (53:44):
He's a man with the plans that will get you
through your struggles.

Speaker 4 (53:50):
All enjoy.

Speaker 8 (53:53):
The dawn of a nude your eyes have never seen.
Get ready if it change, and be truly said, love
and righteousness. We don't need no politicians, love practressness.

Speaker 2 (54:10):
It's all we need.

Speaker 3 (54:12):
Loving righteousness.

Speaker 8 (54:15):
New York Kitty Indes, loving righteousness, that's all weed need. Yes,
a can, Yes he can't can, Yes, the canon, the can,
and he will because he's a man.

Speaker 2 (54:27):
Yes, a can. Yes he can't can.

Speaker 8 (54:29):
Yes he can, and he can and he will because
he's a man. It's a can, it's a can't can.
It's the canony can, and he will because he's the man.
Yes he can, Yes he can't can, Yes, the Canon,
he can and he will because he's the man.

Speaker 3 (54:41):
I'm a magistans.

Speaker 7 (54:42):
If you can't can, Yes, the can.

Speaker 8 (54:44):
You don't need no politicians, Harvey Magistine.

Speaker 7 (54:47):
Yes he can't can.

Speaker 2 (54:48):
It's all.

Speaker 3 (54:51):
Love the magic.

Speaker 8 (54:52):
Yes he can't can, Yes he can, and needing me
loving magistine.

Speaker 3 (54:57):
If you can't can, that's all we me.

Speaker 4 (55:01):
All right, So I thank you for allowing me to

(55:31):
just broadcast one hour today. You can stay on for
the name. I'm gonna just flip this for the Manning Report,
so you can maybe here the second time and learn
ten times more than you did when the first time
you heard it just a few minutes ago. I am
also going to be going out today to scout out
the Bronx. I'm going to be sleeping in the Bronx
on the streets of Bronx for three days as well,

(55:54):
and I'm going to be scouting out that area today.
The area we've looked at it, I'm not approving of that,
so I'm looking for a different area. So I'll be
out there during that. And of course our major ad campaigns,
the major ones now they're running now on several stations
as it is, but the major blitz is going to

(56:14):
happen starting on the twentieth, which is a week from today,
with ABC, CBS, NBC, and Fox. But I will be
on the street and sleeping on the street, so I
will do some I think what our engineer did was
just one of the Everybody was just so impressed with

(56:34):
the engineer's work on last Wednesday night. They told the story,
he allowed me to communicate. The visuals were all good,
even though, you know, and people are just thankful that
and we got a lot of views as well as
a result of what happened on Wednesday. So we may

(56:54):
do some live streaming from the Bronx. I'm not sure,
it depends on what There was a special holiday going
out on and out there in Brooklyn. But I may
be as starting as far as early as tonight or
tomorrow night on the Bronx, in the streets on the Bronx.
We'll have to see it. Then we'll let you know
what I'll program. I want to let you see the

(57:15):
two videos that have been put together by an ad agency,
and then I'll come back from closing redbox.

Speaker 6 (57:25):
Is this the guy you want as your next mayor
of New York City? A socialist? Google it and see
how bad this is. Also read up on a few
other famous socialists New York. It is time for a
wake up call. It's time to meet James Manning, a
true advocate for all the people of New York City
and is a right in candidate. Mike Duggan was a
right in candidate in Detroit in twenty fourteen, and he

(57:45):
turned that city around. James Manning will do the same
for New York City. Join the Manning for mayor Right
in Revolution. I am James Manning, and I approve this message.

Speaker 5 (57:55):
In the NYC mayoral primary, this guy resigned as governor
for multiple allegations of such harassment. The incumbent was indebted
in wire fraud and bribery. So the best of the
worst is a socialist New York. It's time for prosperity
and a justice revolution. It's time to meet James Manning,
a true advocate for the people of New York City.
And it's a write in candidate. Mike Duggan was a
writing candidate in Detroit in twenty fourteen, and he turned

(58:17):
that city around. James Manning will do the same for
New York City.

Speaker 4 (58:22):
I am James Manning, and I approved this message, all
right about it. We got three weeks to get it done.
Three weeks to get it done, and we can go
to love and righteousness and we can have a humanitarian
and we can now it began to there's so many things. Again.
I can cure homelessness. I can take care of all that.
But I'm gonna I gonna check out with the West
End in the carnival that we had. I loved this
song as well, thought y'all might want to check this

(58:43):
one out on my way out, and now hang tight,
don't go anywhere I stay for the next hour as well.
My sister Kane, I'm gonna be watching. I'm gonna send
somebody down in South Carolina and brother Miller. I'm gonna
send somebody out there there now to see if y'all
still watching, whether they are just watching one hour, and
they will report to me what y'all have done, whether
they all are staying off a boat Broods. All right,
mister in go ahead. I'm the only one that can

(59:06):
cure your spirit, your problems, New York. I can bring healing,
and I can bring union.

Speaker 8 (59:13):
Now York City, get ready, ready, ready ready?

Speaker 3 (59:22):
Do you ready?

Speaker 4 (59:23):
Go ready? Go ready?

Speaker 3 (59:25):
Go ready, get a patty you ready, go readygnygy again
ready ready, get ready, get ready? Got ready?

Speaker 4 (59:35):
Got ready? You're ready?

Speaker 3 (59:37):
Get ready? Gay ready Ready Ready.

Speaker 2 (59:42):
A city gear retro.

Speaker 7 (59:47):
The fight for you in all your hes to time up.

Speaker 2 (59:53):
The last you've been told?

Speaker 7 (59:56):
Can You's a chance for you to vote for.

Speaker 8 (01:00:01):
He's a man with the plans that will get you
through your struggles.

Speaker 2 (01:00:06):
All enjoy.

Speaker 8 (01:00:10):
The join of a new your eyes have never seen.
He read if a change, and be truly said, love
and righteousness. We don't need no politicians.

Speaker 3 (01:00:24):
Loving righteousness.

Speaker 7 (01:00:27):
It's all we need.

Speaker 8 (01:00:29):
Loving righteousness. New York City needs loving righteousness. That's all
weed need. Yes it can, Yes, he can't can.

Speaker 2 (01:00:41):
Yes, the can and the can and he will because
he's a man.

Speaker 3 (01:00:44):
Yes, a Cany's he can't can.

Speaker 2 (01:00:46):
Yes he can, and he can and he will because
he's a man.

Speaker 8 (01:00:49):
It's a can, it's a can't can, it's the canaedy
can and he will because he's the man. Yes he can,
Yes he can't can, Yes the can Andy can.

Speaker 2 (01:00:56):
And he will because he's the man.

Speaker 8 (01:00:58):
Loving righteousness, no conversation, lovey can't change.

Speaker 2 (01:01:05):
It's all.

Speaker 4 (01:01:08):
Love can.

Speaker 3 (01:01:11):
Read me. That's all.

Speaker 4 (01:01:15):
We several things that we're doing, and we thank you

(01:01:49):
for your patience and many of you who are very
faithful to come to the listen to the broadcast. Inst
Angela King want to take our hat off to her
for being uh coming to every broad cast. And we
just want to give thanks to brother Eric Miller as well,
who have been with us now for years and years
and years and years and years and years. The race

(01:02:10):
car driving from Indianapolis, Indiana, Brother Eric Miller uh and
and so for other brother Nunyas from out in San Bernardino, California,
uh and and a bunch of others as well. Obviously
some of you I'm just called these names. These people
have been around for a thousand years. Uh, and we

(01:02:31):
pray that brother Canaan from over and over in the
UK is still around. I told him he's still a
member of the family. I just don't have time to
talk to him every day.

Speaker 9 (01:02:38):
Uh.

Speaker 4 (01:02:39):
I'm you know, my life is. I'm just busy.

Speaker 5 (01:02:43):
Uh.

Speaker 4 (01:02:44):
But at any rate, we are going to be intermittently
having these sessions until the election is over with and
we then become the mayor. We can restructure our the
way we do our programming. I also stated that we
would start every broadcast do not broadcast, but every day
is the mayor of the City of New York with prayer.

(01:03:04):
Now the praid that we have prayed, We've used it
several times. I don't know if I'm going to use
it today because I got so much on a pack
and to potentially what is just this one hour today
because I have to I have to go do some
scouting of the Bronx and also of Queen's not today,

(01:03:25):
but certainly scouting of the Bronx to discover where I'm
going to spend my three days sleeping on the street
in Bronx, New York. As you know, I was out
in Brooklyn last week during the Sukkah celebration. By the way,
if you haven't read Leviticus chapter twenty three, you ought
to read it. And at some point in time, Pastor
Many will keep his promise, and he said he's going

(01:03:46):
to teach it, and I'll teach more about the six
celebrations of festivals, the six convocations. In one of them,
of course, is the atonement, the other is the first Fruit,
the others the feast of trumpets. The other is a
feast of booze, which is known at Sukkah.

Speaker 8 (01:04:00):
UH.

Speaker 4 (01:04:01):
And and let me say this as well. I to
elder the floor, I stated that I wanted to bring
the school out to Bedford Avenue to see where I
slept for three days and to observe the UH, the

(01:04:21):
traffic of the young people.

Speaker 2 (01:04:23):
And the.

Speaker 4 (01:04:24):
UH and their mothers and their fathers. I I but
I want to state this, as I was praying, if
you don't like children, and that you know, if you
don't have a deep love and compassion of the of
the beauty and the wonder of children, then you probably
would not see what I saw because beyond the what

(01:04:45):
I saw it was so amazing, was the beauty of
the children.

Speaker 5 (01:04:49):
UH.

Speaker 4 (01:04:50):
I'm gonna ask the engineer who did some extraordinary work
I want to take I'll hand off to engineer Captain
E leij Lewis, who did an extraordinary job of aftering
the moments. Those moments were very precious and he was
able to capture them. This is one of the moments
of my standing with the with the children, and some
of the senior men were standing off to my left

(01:05:13):
and and so you don't see them in that particular shot,
but looking and they looked like they looked like they
decided to start with the younger at the right and
moved taller further as they go. And there is also
the segment where I sat on Bedford Avenue, mister engineer,
and I filmed the families going by with the strollers

(01:05:34):
and went on. I did it kind of incognito if
you must, because during the first three days of Suka,
which is the Feast of Booths, which is a legal
holiday to pass over, like the you know, the feast
of the Atonement on Kapoa, it's a legal holiday. The
Feast of Booths is and so I you're not allowed

(01:05:56):
to use a camera, use a cell phone, drive a car,
read the newspaper or watch television. So I kind of
sat there with my and I repent for having done
anything wrong that violated the Holy Suker Day. But here
you'll see in a few moments you're gonna see a
parade of children going by, and Minister Williams. If you

(01:06:20):
you know, if you don't love children, probably what I
saw would not be amazing. What's the big deal, Pastor
you're talking about how great it was. It was great
because of the children. That's what made it so great
being out there and having that experience over the days

(01:06:40):
that I was there. Now you see a lot of
adults as well. These are men going back and forth.
By the way, the synagogue remain open twenty four hours
a day, seven days a week, and all twenty four
hours there was something going on. So you see them
when they're walking towards the front of the van. They're
going towards either Hooper Street Synagogue or the Rodney Street
Synagogue or the Urine Synagogue on on on Lee Avenue

(01:07:03):
and Wallabat Street. But it's it's the children that that
I realized that it's so beautiful. Look at that. That
was so and so if you don't really, if you
don't love look at that. If you don't love look
at look look at that, you probably would miss the
host pass. What's the big deal about being on Bedford Avenue.

(01:07:25):
I don't see anything that's so big and so so.
But look at the look at those children, and look
at those mothers and their fathers. Also. I mean said,
you know, you took a shot where I was sitting seated. Uh,
and the two men stopped buying. Told me I was
gonna win the election. If you could bring that up
as well, I would appreciate that you took. That's a

(01:07:46):
really good shot. These two men told me I was
gonna win. Now, let me say this to you.

Speaker 7 (01:07:51):
Uh.

Speaker 4 (01:07:51):
The what's his name? Osama bin Laden Junior was at
the who A Synagogue on Wednesday and he spoke to
some of the liberal Jewish, but nobody gave him a
cent that he came out there because he's a candidate
for mayor. They were courteous enough to receive him, but

(01:08:13):
they didn't say anything positive about his being there. He left.
But these two men I believe were in the meeting
when Osama ha been Laton. Now y'all call him round Mandani,
but I called him Osama bin Latton Junior. These two
men stopped on Wednesday night after I had done all
that work out there. It was not work, but after

(01:08:35):
done all that ministry, I should say, out there at
the urines of the synagogue and also there on Bedford Avenue,
and told me I was gonna win the election. They said,
you will win and so and there you see me
sitting there with I got all my black Jewish hat,
my black Jewish my rabbi outfit because the young children

(01:08:57):
asked me to put it on. I was out there
on Tuesday night with my red shirt sweater on that
says manning for mayor and so they and but I
had a picture of my being a righteous gentile that
on a poster. They said, well, will you put that
on and come back and talk to us something of
that nature.

Speaker 2 (01:09:13):
It was.

Speaker 4 (01:09:13):
It was one of the most beautiful experiences of the
young people and of the of this as you see
the older people talk with me as well. So I
wanted to be able to say all that and thank
you for allow me to have three nights away from
and I want to again give them a big shout
out to our extraordinary engineer who was able to capture
that moment who was able to. Actually, I heard that

(01:09:36):
the engineer was out there taking some bureau pictures of
the properties and somebody asking what was he doing, and
I think he said that he told him he was
with me, and they said, all right, okay, because they
got they got surveillances out there. You can't do nothing
out there without their camera picking you up one way.
And then not that this crime or anything. It's just

(01:09:57):
today the children able to walk the street at night
by because there's there's surveillance and security like you ain't
never seen before, like the security of Israel itself. But
that's what happened to the engineer. You told them that
you were with me, and they said, okay, all right,
you're good to go as long as you with the
man that's in the band. So it was an exciting time.

(01:10:21):
Let me talk to you about my desire to comfort
to people, mister Injiny. If you bring up Isaiah chapter forty,
I'd very much to be appreciative of it. If you
bring that that up. My desire to be able to
comfort the people of New York City and the people
of the planet, in fact, people of the world. I'd

(01:10:43):
love to be able to do that, and that's why
I'm running for mayor. I'm not running for mayor because
I want to be mayor of New York City. I'm
not running for man because I want to be a politician.
That's the last thing I want to do. I'm seeking
the office of mayor because I want to comfort to people.
I genuinely want to help people.

Speaker 5 (01:11:02):
I do.

Speaker 4 (01:11:02):
Now you probably may have some arguments with that in
terms of your belief of it, but let me just
share my heart with you today. I want to be
the mayor of New York City because I want to
help people, and I know that I can. Can I
share something with you and those of you who are
astoote listen to this. Politicians, by nature of them, politicians

(01:11:34):
are insensitive to other humans, and generally they're insensitivity is
fueled by their personal desires and their personal if you will,
aggrandizement of themselves. That two things can't be true at

(01:11:59):
the same time. I'm on this regard a politician, whether
either a black politician or a white politician or red politician,
or a featherwere and politician, or a Cherokee politician or
Polish politician. Politicians listen to this rare Catholic by nature

(01:12:20):
that they are politicians are enable of caring about anybody
other than themselves. That's what makes them politicians. Now you
can go and do a psychological study and you can
call in all the medical experts, a psychiatrist, you can

(01:12:40):
call the called an historian, and to discover politicians and
especially leaders of nations can send tens of thousands of
people to their deaths and not the miss breakfast in

(01:13:01):
the morning. For instance, right now, what's happening in Ukraine
and Russia. I don't know how many people are dying
per day. Let's say that if three thousand men dying
per day. Putin is not bothered by that. That doesn't
bother him at all. He has his regular breakfast whatever,
he has his eggs over easy. He's not bothered by

(01:13:21):
three thousand men are going to die today because he
wants to take Ukraine, he wants it as a land
for him. It doesn't That doesn't bother him. He's a politician.
He's a politician. I could, I could, I could talk
about Trump also as a politician. That I mean, they'll

(01:13:42):
lie to you. And one of the things that whether
you agree with me or not, that politicians are totally
and totally insensitive of caring about anybody other themselves. You
may disagree with that, but let me put it to
you this way, put it down where you can get it.
Why they don't care about people. Politicians here where they are.
A politician will come to your church or come to

(01:14:06):
your organization, come to your meeting place, come to your rally,
and promise you the world, and promise you the world.
Whatever you want to hear, they'll tell you. And then
once you elect him to office, you never see them again.
Now you can't refute that. We don't need any world

(01:14:27):
medical American Medical Association psychiatric reports to back that up.
Everybody and their brother knows that a politician, because he
is a politician, he is an ept of caring about
and he is a most adept at lying. He'll come in,
he'll promise you the world whatever you want to. Come
to your church, he'll come to your business, he'll come

(01:14:49):
to your wherever, and he'll promise you the world. But
once he gets elected, you'll never see him again until
the next election because he's and incapable of delivering on
the thing. And that is why politicians are rated as
such low life, low integrity people. I'm not saying anything.

(01:15:13):
You don't know what I am saying. I'm bringing it
down a little bit further where you can get it.
Politicians are incapable of caring about anybody but themselves. I
don't care who, whether it's John Kennedy or Abraham Lincoln,
They're incapable of caring about anybody but themselves. They cannot.
They have no if you will instinct. They have no

(01:15:35):
if you will brotherly love or instinct for anybody other
than themselves. That's why be are politicians. Otherwise they wouldn't
be a politician. You couldn't qualify to be a politician
if you have a brotherly an instinct love, if you
have a humanitarian spirit, you can't be a politician. Politicians
are not humanitarians. They don't help people. I'm not a

(01:15:58):
politician because you raised the questions of the pass man
a while you're running. I'm not running as a politician.
I'm running to be mayor because i want to help people.
I want to help people, and I've made that absolutely clear.
Some of the people working on our campaign have tried
to get me to act like act like a politician.
I'm not gonna do that. They don't understand. They don't

(01:16:20):
understand I'm not a politician. I'm not gonna act like politician.
I'm not gonna act do what they do. What the
others are doing, sure will probably get me attention, probably
get me elected. There's a potential, there's all the possibility
of a possibility that I don't get elected because I
don't do what politician do. I'm good with that, but
I will not be a politician. I want to help people.

(01:16:41):
I want to do what I've been doing for the
last forty four years of my life. And anybody looking
at me very careful and look at this from this perspective,
especially those of you who know me for across America,
though you don't live in New York City, you can
help me get elected. Those of you who know me
over the years know for the past forty four years,
there ain't no way in a snowball's chance in hell

(01:17:03):
that after serving people, helping people, housing the homeless, feeding
the hungry, educating children, preaching the gospel, preaching the truth,
that I'm all of a sudden gonna change and be
a politician, that just is no way that could. There's
no way you could take forty four years and just
throw them into the garbage. There's no way I'm gonna

(01:17:24):
do that. Now, can I use the office of mayor? Well,
Jesus said this that what I do is feed the
hungry at Matthew's Gospel, chapter twenty five, starting at verse
thirty nine or so, what I do is feed the hungry, clothing, neaked,
house the homeless, visit the prisons and the sick. Well,
if I can do a bigger job, at a better

(01:17:44):
job of that from the office of mayor, then so
be it. Listen, I'm gonna go to the city hall
to do what to feed the hungry. I'm gonna cure homelessness.
By the way, I can cure homelessness within the first
ninety days, first one hundred days, I'm gonna cure homelessness.
And in the first one hundred day is that. And

(01:18:06):
I'm gonna do something about infusing forty one billion dollars
of money into the poor neighborhoods Now, I mean that
the you don't have to build houses. People will buy
their own houses because they got their own money because
of the money that I'm gonna bring and as a
result of tax structures. I'm something can tell Donald Trump listening,

(01:18:27):
we won't send any federal money. We won't send any
tax teller. I'll tell Kathy Kle up there and in
New York and an Albany listen to. New York will
withholdless taxes if y'all don't get your act together, and
we'll tell Trump new York want the hold this tax
New York is the biggest tax payer on the planet.
We'll withhold our taxes. Y'all, don't get you ACKed together.
Don't be coming that talking that talk to me as
mayor of the City of New York. But here, let's

(01:18:48):
get back to the issue. I'm gonna ask some message
and to bring up a scripture so I can read
the tax It's what I wanna do. I wanna, I wanna,
I wanna inform you. I don't care who it is,
this Obama, whether it's Hillary Clinton or whether it's Donald Trump,
and especially Maga people, especially Maga, I think the best
example of the fact that a politician doesn't care anything

(01:19:11):
about the people. That's what makes them politicians. That's what
makes them politicians. They're abusings, they're not humanitarians. I have
no athletic skills. There no athletic skills in my bone.
Bones in my body. Don't ask me to dribble a basketball,
throw a football, hit the baseball, hit the tennis ball,

(01:19:34):
kick a soccer ball. Don't ask me that there's not
one athletic bone in my body. There's not one humanitarian
bone and a true politician. Donald Trump is probably the
best politician anybody's seen in a very long time because
he's not a humanitarian. There's not one humanitary that he
can lie to your faith. He's an abuser. He is

(01:19:58):
an abusing, he's women, he's abusa of the truth. He's
an abuse of God, he's an abuse of people. Probably
one of the best politicians we've seen in a very
long time. Now. Lynda Johnson was one as well. But
he's an abuser. But he's not there. Even the smallest one,
the smallest assembly person, the smallest state senator sitting in

(01:20:21):
some office someplace in Oklahoma somewhere, also does not have
a humanitarian. They're not humanity. Politicians are not humanitarians. A wait,
I'm not an athlete. They're just taught humanitarians. That is
not what a humanitarian. So I am clear, but here's

(01:20:41):
what I want to do. I want to comfort the people.
I see people are suffering. People are suffering in New
York City. People are hungry, not because there's not food
enough to feed. The massive America grows more food than
we could ever eat. Every our farm lands are beautiful

(01:21:02):
or bountiful. The potatoes, the peanuts, the wheat, the barley,
the tomatoes, the cucumbers, the strawberries, the collars, the cabbage,
all of that, the cows. We grow more fruit than
that all Americans can eat, so we give it to
other nations. There's no reason why there should be soup kitchens.

(01:21:24):
There's no reason why they should be, why anybody should
be hungry. And I'm going to be a humanitarian. And
that is where I land, and that's who I am,
and that's who I pray to you will perceive me
to be. I want to comfort to people. God said
to Isaiah, comfort comfort, Ye, my people say, if our

(01:21:46):
God speaking comfortable, to comfortably to Harlem, to outlaw to
New York City, and cry unto her that her warfare
has accomplished. That the days of your being hungry, or
days of your being over taxed, the days of your
being evicted, the days of your being gone through, the

(01:22:09):
problems that you've gone through, those days are overwhel now
that I am now, and this is what you know.
If people will listen to this, how you're not gonna
get this on Steve Corbet, You're not gonna get this
on CNN, would say. But Anderson Cooper, you're not gonna
get this on Fox with you know, the Walter's Boy.

(01:22:29):
They're not gonna let this kind of teaching go forward.
But the day that I become the mayor of the
City of New York, all the troubles will be over
the warfare, the fear of being evicted, the fear of
being foreclosed, the fear of losing your job, the fear
of being mugged and mugged in the street, the fear

(01:22:51):
of being robbed, the fear of death, the fear of
sickness and disease. All of that warfare will be over
with when I become And were you a good disciple,
you would make sure at least a thousand people hear
this message I'm putting forward because it's a truth. That

(01:23:15):
would be your assignment to get a thousand people to
hear his message, whether it's in New York, or whether
it's in Washington State, or whether it's in California, whether
it's in Alabama, Mississippi, West Virginia. A thousand people would
hear what I'm saying to you now. I want to
comfort to people, and that once I become the mayor

(01:23:36):
of the City of New York means that the sins
of the people has been pardoned, the things that you've done,
And I'm going to get to it. I don't know
how much time I'll have today to get to it
today of regarding the Black crisis and understanding homosexuality, but
your iniquity has been pardoned, your sins have been pardoned.

(01:23:58):
I want to say that, especially with for sir, with
respect to the so called black crisis. Now, black people
are Hamites, but in terms of their iniquity, their sins,
my becoming the mayor would pardon means that God has
pardoned them of their sins. And so are you listening

(01:24:20):
to what I am teaching? For she have received for
the Lord's hand double for all her sins. And in
other words, the people are in New York are going
to rejoice. They're going to receive double even the things
that they thought they just wanted rather than one home,
two homes, rather one car two cars, rather than one

(01:24:43):
business two businesses. This is a beautiful word. This is
a beautiful one of the more beautiful words of the
entire Bible. And Isaiah spoke it, and actually it was
it was a prophecy of the Lord Jesus Christ. It
is a beautiful word. It is a beautiful word. So

(01:25:07):
when you hear something like this, people will be comforted.
Finally help has arrived. Help has arrived. And to black
people who thought help was going to arrive through Barak
who saying the long Lady Macdaddy Obama, help did not arrive.
Trouble came on steroids. And to the Maga people who
think that help has arrived through Trump. Trump is perhaps

(01:25:30):
one of the best politicians one that's ever seen. Think
that because he is totally insensitive. He just he can't
feel anybody's pain. He can't he can't feel anybody, and
he can't feel any sense of morality. I mean, anybody
who would talk about having sex with the door, well,
a lot of men do have sex with their daughters,
I'll have to say that, but do it publicly. He

(01:25:53):
has no shame there is no way Trump and feel
the pain of what's happening, what's going on in Africa.
Now you can say, well, the African should provide for themselves.
They shouldn't be working on America to send them sending
them USAID all that food being sent to Africa by
ships and feeding them Medican and medicine for all kinds

(01:26:16):
of diseases such as HIV, AIDS and a bunch of
other Let black people do that in Africa for themselves.
How can you be absolutely right, no doubt about that.
I agree, But I mean, if America is sending it,
while stop sending it, and why not have some concern
that tens of thousands of people are dying. I listened
to the tribulation Trump or Orange Ngutank talk about how

(01:26:37):
he's trying to shave Russia by saying five to five
to seven thousand soldiers are dying on the battlefield. Pardon me, pardon.
I listened to Trump spout off how he's going to
end the war in Ukraine. He's not going to end anything.
And by the way, he has an end of the

(01:26:57):
war between Hamad and if you think that war was over,
which you're donna lost your cotton picking mine. They trained
at the hostages. Hamas was glad to get rid of
those hostages. And in the boot they got some of
their Palestinian warriors, some of their chief generals, out of
the jails there in the West Bank. So come on,
Trump talking about the wars overwhere. But the thing is

(01:27:19):
this is that we need to understand is Trump is
running around here talking about that five to seven thousand
soldiers are dying on the battlefield of Russia and Ukraine,
and how horrible that is. But can I ask you
the question that anybody is sophisticated enough out there, because
many people are very sophisticated. But how many people are

(01:27:42):
dying in Africa? How many people are dying in Ethiopia,
How many people are dying in Nigeria, How many people
are dying in Mali, How many people are dying serily on,
how many people are dying in Iberia, How many people
are dying in Angola, How many people are dying in Zimbabwe,
how many people are dying in the Congo. How many
people are dying in Africa? Every day? Because you Trump,
stop USAID going to Africa and giving medicine for diseases

(01:28:06):
and food for the hungry. How many people are dying
in Africa? Would it be twenty thousand people per day dying?
So you have great concern about the soldiers that are
dying in in Russia, but you don't give a damn
about those dying. See, it's just for him, it's just
a strategy. But we're not gonna spend any time. So

(01:28:27):
he's not worth my time and your time either. Trump isn't.
I want to help people. I want to comfort the people.
And for the past forty four years I have been
feeding the hungry and I will just continue to do
that until Jesus comes. That's what I want to do.
Can I do that from the office of the Mayor

(01:28:50):
of the City of New York? Of course, of course
I can, and of course I will. And so understand this.
I'm going to take a break. But before I do that,
let me recount something to you. Understand this if you
never understand anything else again. And the primi fracial case

(01:29:12):
of this right now is Trump politicians are abusers. They
are not humanitarians. What New York needs is love and righteousness,
not affordability. Not affordability, affordability. No, politicians are not humanitarians

(01:29:40):
the same way. I'm not an athlete and probably could play.
I'm not an athlete. Politicians are not humanitarian. They don't
give a damn. And you can argue all you want
and try to lift up politicians before me, but everybody
and their brother, even little baby in the stroller, would
tell you that wants will come and promise you the

(01:30:01):
world when they're running for office. They will come and
promise you the world when they're running for office. But
once they went win that office, you ain't gonna see
them no more. And more over, whatever they told you
they're gonna do for you, they never do. They just
make themselves richer and the people around them that paid
for their election richer. They don't help you, they never

(01:30:23):
have and they never will. But yet they keep coming
back every three years, every two years, every one year,
every four years, every six years, with the same old game.
And you go for the same oakie dope every six years,
every four years, every two years. But they're not humanitarians
by nature. By nature, they can't be. They're not, they're

(01:30:48):
not equipped to be. So I am I'm a humanitarian.
Sai pastor man, I didn't know why you running for
I'm running for office because I want to feed the hungry.
You want to you want to know what I will
I'll do when I get an office. You want to
know what I do? Look at what I've done. We

(01:31:08):
used to have a a over at the minister's conference.
He felt about the name of it. I forget his
name now anyways, ask people just to ask how you
like the food? Well? I like look at how people
eat it. If you want to know. If you want
to know what I will do as the mayor of

(01:31:30):
the City of New York, look at what I've done
as a pastor. That's all you know. You don't have
to go and talk about affordability and a policy. The
hell with affordability. What about the policy? What about the
years I've educated children? What about the years I've educated
my own daughter, well, the spiritual daughter to be accepted
at Yale University? What about that? Can I do that?

(01:31:52):
If I can? If I can get in this building
early in the morning, get a student up and out
and go for Yell or Julliard, what will happen ifact
you turn the whole school system over to me?

Speaker 7 (01:32:05):
What have I done?

Speaker 4 (01:32:06):
Is what I'm gonna do? If you want to know
what kind of Don't ask me not about no damn affordability.
How many people have I fed? How many people have
if you ask them on the streets of Harlem today,
have eaten that the kitchen. They've gotten their lives together.
That because of what I've done. If you want to
know what I'm gonna do is math, don't be talking

(01:32:26):
about I'm gonna I'm talking about helping humanity. Tell affordability
that means what? What does that mean? What does that mean?
Mean that you're gonna get everything free? You can now
afford something that you couldn't afford before. No, you want
to know pastor mining, look at what I've done. That's

(01:32:47):
exactly what I'm gonna. Let me say it. Judge looking
at a man right, the judge getting ready of sentence
a man right, judge getting ready to sentence puff daddy, right,
Judge getting ready sense puff daddy. All the stuff he did,
they weren't able to convict him on actual sex trafficking
and international prostitution and a bunch of other charges they had.

(01:33:11):
The jury just didn't come back and find him guilty
on that because many of the women that were involved
in the said they enjoyed it that they were in
love with him, So all right, okay, but they did
get him on prostitution, and I think the maximum that
with me twenty years or so. I don't know what
the story was. So puff daddy is lawyer said, let

(01:33:34):
him go free. Heze already served fourteen months. Let him
go free. The judge said, you know, looking at his
record of what he has done gives me some indication
of what he will do when he gets back out
on the streets again. Looking at what he has done
will tell me what he will do. So looking at
what he has done and finding out what he will

(01:33:56):
do guides my and informs my giving him a five
year centence. Don't let this boy out on the street
for quite some time, and when you do, hit him
for five hundred thousand dollars in probation for ten years,
because looking at what he has done tells me what
he's gonna do. So check this out. His wisdom. He's
a pass man. You're always arguing and fussing with us

(01:34:18):
and everything. His wisdom. You want to know what I'm
gonna do, is mayor to look at what I've done,
And I just say, just look at two or three
years like Osama bin Laden Junior who's only thirty three
years old, and I have done something for two years. Well,
we don't know what the hell. All he's done is
that he is promoted into farder, he's promoted prostitution, that

(01:34:39):
the prostitution become legal. He's promoted Islamic ideas. He is
promoted freezing rents on people. He's promoted. But is that
what he's done? Orr, he gonna promote more prostitution, He's
gonna promote more into father. Is that what he gonna do? Well,
then that's what he's done, that's what he gonna do.

(01:35:00):
So look at what Pastor Manning has done. I mean,
here is and it takes. It takes maturity and the
members out there, and we believe that we've got some
ads coming up now starting on the twenty If I've
heard Savad say, we're going to be hammering the place
everywhere you look on ABC, CBS, NBC. Uh, those those
big ads will not start to the twentieth and give

(01:35:24):
people an opportunity to then vote for me. But look
at what I've done, Look at what I've done, because
that's not exactly what I'm gonna do look at my eye,
and so the politician, the career politicians, they are, and
you can't blame them because they were not born with

(01:35:47):
a gene of humanitarianism. Not everybody can be a pastor.
You know, I said something a few moments ago. I
said something a few moments ago. I said, you know,
because I was telling all the floor, I want to
bring the school out to the out to Bedford Avenue,
to Willisburg to see the Hesidic Jews and their families.

(01:36:08):
But then, after praying about it, I realized, unless you
unless you see the beauty and children, unless you see
how beautiful they are, what a wonder children are, Unless
you see that in every child, and then you see
thousands of beauty, thousands of implements of wonder walking or

(01:36:32):
running or jumping or skipping or riding on the stroller
three and four at the time. Unless you see that
as beauty, you would know. You said, what's going on
with bus, past man? You brought us that? What you
brought us out of the see? We don't see anything
because you wouldn't see, you wouldn't see the beauty of
the children. You you won't be able to see that
you don't have that ability to see that. So I

(01:36:54):
thought to myself, well, I bring some people out. Think
maybe they don't see it. Maybe I don't understand them.
But maybe you don't see the beauty pastormatic. Maybe you
don't see the beauty. You don't see A man who has,
for forty four years educated, well, yeah I have. Even
when I wasn't didn't have an official school. I was
educating people. You don't see that. You don't see that

(01:37:20):
for forty four years, been housing homeless people. You don't
see that. You want him to look like somebody else.
But I'm a humanitarian. What New York needs is loving righteousness.
That's what New York needs. New York doesn't need affordability,

(01:37:43):
you know, because you can always change the price. New
York needs love and righteousness. Now you may not know that.
You may not be able to see that. Now, you
may have no political bones whatsoever to be able to
see that. I got a song that Saba put together,
called love and Righteousness. And by the way, the Lord

(01:38:04):
gave me this imagine missing let me read the rest
of the verses. Then I'm gonna bring up love and righteousness. Imagine,
Imagine New York city becoming known as the city of
Love and righteousness, the city of love they called Philadelphia.

(01:38:26):
Brother Raphael Suliman, Brother Sudaman, Are you on line today, brother,
brother Suleiman, they called Philadelphia city. Brother. They loved well
that they have done something at one point in time.
But imagine my turning New York City into a city
of love where we love our neighbors as ourselves. That

(01:38:46):
we won't need in affordability. So durn the truth said,
I read it the other night that rich people ride
from the poor, and poor people rode from one another.
So even affordability don't work because rich people will everything
they came from poor people, and poor people will rob
each other as far as they can. So we don't
need a full little bit of What we need is
love thy neighbor as ourself. And you have thoughts, and

(01:39:13):
I want to I want to make this clear. Imagine this,
Imagine this. And that's what I saw also out in
Weisburg on Bedford Avenue, that the men and women out
there love their neighbors as themselves. I'll let you look
at some more footage of what took place out there,
but that's what was going on. They loved their neighbors

(01:39:33):
and their children. And that's why there's no crime. That's
why everybody's treated fairly because they love. They have love
and righteousness out there and on Bedford Avenue out in
in uh in Waysburg, they have love and righteousness. They
love their neighbors as theirselves. People didn't holler, don't love

(01:39:56):
each other. They talk all that black talk. All you
want the black boy hit you in the head so
quick it'll make your head swim. We don't love each other.
We don't profess righteousness to ward, but that's what we need.
We need love and righteousness. Love and righteousness is what
we need now. It's the highest standard. You know, it's

(01:40:18):
a deeper grade. It's from a higher pigrid. You to
understand that, well, that means that you've got to have
some sensitivity. But that's what they have out there in Williamsburg.
Love and the children, Lord have mercy. I was so

(01:40:39):
loved out there. They loved me. They knew what I
was doing. They were watching me the whole time I
was there. Anyway, first three missing you because I got
that weird by my time is I promised it that
was only gonna be an hour to day. The voice
of him that cries in the wilderness, prepare you the
way of the Lord. Mix straight in the desert a
highway for our God. Imagine this, that Jesus is going

(01:41:02):
to return to New York City outline in particular, and
the force of Him that cries in the wilderness of
New York. Prepare you the way of Love. Love, Lord, Love,
and righteous me. Righteous, make straight in the desert a path,
a highway for our God. Every valley shall be exalted

(01:41:23):
in every mountain, and hills shall be brought low, and
the crooked shall be made straight, and the rough places plain.
I'm gonna make the crooked places straight, and I'm gonna
make the crooks pay. And the glory of the Lord
shall be revealed, and all flesh shall see it together,

(01:41:44):
For the mouth of the Lord hath spoken him.

Speaker 8 (01:41:50):
So.

Speaker 4 (01:41:50):
If you're in Arkansas, if you're in West Virginia, if
you're in Ohio, Indiana, if you're in Wisconsin, or if
you are in why own On, Montana, or South Dakota,
North Dakota. If you're in Texas, if you're in New Mexico,
if you're in Arizona, if you're in Mississippi, if you're
in South Carolina, Virginia, if you're in Pennsylvania, New Hampshire, Vermont, Maine,

(01:42:15):
please hear me. Let's do this. Let's put pastor Manning
the humanitarian, not the politician. Let's put past the manning
the humanitarian, the man who wants to comfort the people,
the man who simply wants to use the office of

(01:42:36):
mayor to feed the hungry, to clothe the naked, house
the homeless, visit the prisons, or empty the prisons and
visit the sick, and empty the hospitals. Let's do that.
I mean, for years and years and years, you've had
one line politician after the other, You've had one abuse

(01:42:58):
after the other, insince and you can't be angry with
the politicians because they don't have the equipment. They don't
have the spiritual equipment to love you. They don't have
the spiritual equipment to be humane. They don't have that.
They're devoid of it. They just don't have that bone

(01:43:18):
in their body, their abuser. They're not humanitarians. And so
they come and they lie and they tell you, and
they promise you the world that everything's going to be wonderful,
and then they get in office and you don't see
them again because they never intended to do it in
the first place, and you never expected them to do
it in the first place. But you have no choice

(01:43:41):
because good people like myself have not ran for office.
And so now you have an opportunity America, from Cedar
Shining Sea, from Maine, from Benga, Maine, to San Diego, California,
every place in between their abouts, you have an opportunity
to put in office a mayor who is a humanitarian.

(01:44:02):
What are you going to do about it? What are
you going to do about it? You've not had this
opportunity since the days of Israel. You've not had this opportunity.
Now on you stand on the precipice of an opportunity.
Even though you don't live in New York. You can donate,
you can vote, you can support, you can come, you
can volunteer, or at the very least, if you don't

(01:44:25):
even give any money, if you don't donate, if you
don't volunteer, if you can't vote, at the very least,
you can open up. You have your eyes and ears
open up to what it is to a humanitarian and
the fact that politicians are in app and though they
run their games, their affordability games and lies. It's just
a hustle. But here's someone who can feed the hungry.

(01:44:50):
Did you hear him say that house the homeless. Did
you hear him say that clothe the naked. Did you
hear him say that the prison the gym, say that
visit the hospitals in the city. Did GM say that. No,
here's a rare opportunity that the world has not seen

(01:45:16):
to put a humanitarian in the office of the mayor
of the City of New York. A rare opportunity and
at the same time an extraordinary education that politicians are incapable.
There are some people. I mean, if you try to
teach me quantum physics, first of all, I have a

(01:45:38):
problem with long division. I can tell you that right now.
I'm not going to try to hoodwink you. You try
to teach me quantum physics or physics it self, forget
my quantum physics. I don't know if I could pass
the Entra level test. And that's just not my DNA.

(01:46:03):
It's not my intellectual strength. My intellectual strength is that
of a humanitarian who helps people. That's what I do,
That's where I excel. That's why I got my PhD.
I help people. I'm a helper. I'm a humanitarian. Now
you may not like my methods of doing it because
you're too ignorant to appreciate what I'm doing, But I'm
a helper. Politicians are in em They can't help people.

(01:46:30):
They don't have it in their DNA, no more so
than I have quantum physics in my DNA. They don't
have it in their DNA, and that's why they're successful
as a politician. So I'm here to make the crooked
places straight and make the crooks pay. Imagine if everybody
decided it's listen to me right now, they're gonna make

(01:46:51):
sure at least one thousand people to hear this message today.
Imagine that the humanitarian and mayor of New York City.
Imagine if one thousand people say, well, you can't get
a thousand, to get five, that's closer to one thousand
than zero. I have more to say about the crisis

(01:47:18):
that's going on in our nation right now, and I
have more teachings as well about the understanding of homosexuality
that there has arisen. You may not like MAGA, you
may think they're the world's worst people. You may not

(01:47:38):
like the fact that Trump is decomposing the Constitution, but
you have to remember something. You have to remember something
that there's a group of people across America who wish
to make what the Bible says in each one of
its segments. But the Bible says is in this Old

(01:48:01):
Testament and this New Testament and its epistles. It's letters
that homosexuality is a sin. But there's a group a
foot today who wants you to say that you approve
of it and that it is. The Bible has no

(01:48:21):
power to order sexual homosexuality as a sin. There has
never been in the history of the world where humanity,
human humanity has ever tried to make murder legal, even adultry.
They've never tried. They stopped punishing people for adultery. There's

(01:48:44):
no place on the planet where, well except for Muslims,
where they make lie legal. And anybody who doesn't agree
with you committing adultery or committing murder or committing lies
as a hater. That's never happened in the history of
the universe. But that's what homosexuality says. Homosexuality says when

(01:49:07):
the Bible says is wrong, we're saying it's right, and
if you don't agree with us, then we will persecute you.
We'll prosecute you, we will treat you, We'll dole out
a punishment to you if you don't agree with the
fact that the Bible is wrong or that we have
agreed and higher power. I'm going to deal with that.

(01:49:29):
What I want to do is this, sir. I need
to announce that about our campaign coming up in the
next couple of days. First, I'm want to let you
hear love and righteousness. I want you to hear it.
I want you to hear it, not affordability, not affordability.
If you think about it, how many times have you

(01:49:51):
heard politician talk about affordability or something on that order,
and your life has just gotten worse. Taxes, a higher prices,
a higher food price, is a higher eggs you can't
even afford. And they keep talking the same old talk,
and they been doing it for the last one hundred years,
and things that have gotten worse. But when have you
heard a preacher of parlor, someone seeking office talking about
love and righteousness? When have you heard that? Don't you

(01:50:14):
think it's time? The eggs, the price of eggs, the
price of cars, the price of everything has gone through
the roof with affordability, and they keep running the same
old game. Don't you think it's time for love and righteousness?
Come on, Oklahoma, come on, Texas, come on, Indiana, come

(01:50:34):
on now, Ohio, come on, come on, Wyoming, come on,
come on, Washington State, come on now, Virginia, come on,
West Virginia, come on. Don't you think it's time for
love and righteousness? Don't you think it's time for a
real change. Love and righteousness over affordability is a real change.
That's a real change. Whether you believe it worse or not,

(01:50:56):
it's a change.

Speaker 2 (01:50:57):
God knows.

Speaker 4 (01:50:58):
That's a change. Its engineer. Please pee, what's my name?

Speaker 2 (01:51:13):
What's my name?

Speaker 4 (01:51:15):
What's my name? Jeans Mannon? 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

(01:51:35):
on the ballot? Mon DOMI, who are you gonna print?
Whose name? Jeans Mannon? 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 gonna print on the right in section
on the ballot on November fourth, here in the New

(01:51:58):
York City mayoral election, James Manning. All right, now, let's
get it on. I'm the only one that can cure
the spiritual problems in New York City. I can bring heal,
and I can bring unit Now York.

Speaker 8 (01:52:18):
City, get ready, ready, read.

Speaker 9 (01:52:23):
Read you ready, go ready, go ready, go ready, go ready,
get a ready you ready, go ready, ready ready, reay
ready you read ready.

Speaker 3 (01:52:37):
Get ready, get ready, got ready.

Speaker 4 (01:52:39):
Got ready?

Speaker 3 (01:52:41):
You're ready, get ready ready, ready ready Ready.

Speaker 8 (01:52:46):
The city, get ready the fight for you in all
your He's to tie up the last that you've been told.

Speaker 7 (01:53:00):
Can youse a chance for you to vote for.

Speaker 8 (01:53:05):
He's a man with the plans that will get you
to your struggles.

Speaker 4 (01:53:10):
Red all enjoy.

Speaker 8 (01:53:14):
The dn of a new your eyes have never seen.

Speaker 3 (01:53:19):
Get read.

Speaker 8 (01:53:20):
It's a change, and be truly said. We love and righteousness.
We don't need no politicians.

Speaker 3 (01:53:28):
Love righteousness.

Speaker 7 (01:53:30):
It's all we need.

Speaker 8 (01:53:33):
Loving righteousness, New York City mes, loving righteousness, that's all
weed need. Yes it can, yes, it can't can. Yes
the canon he can and he will because he's a man. Yes,
a can, Yes he can't can, Yes he can, and
he can and he will because he's a man.

Speaker 7 (01:53:53):
It's a can, it's a can't can. It's the canon.

Speaker 8 (01:53:55):
He can and he will because he's the man. Yes
he can, Yes, the can't can. Yes it can, Henny Cannon.

Speaker 2 (01:54:00):
He will because he's the man.

Speaker 3 (01:54:02):
I'm a Magistan.

Speaker 7 (01:54:03):
If you can't can, you can.

Speaker 3 (01:54:04):
You don't need no colititions. I've Maistan, you can't change.

Speaker 2 (01:54:09):
It's all. If you can't cans the.

Speaker 8 (01:54:14):
Candy can mean you can't.

Speaker 2 (01:54:18):
That's all we need.

Speaker 4 (01:54:28):
Save me, all right, So I I thank you for

(01:54:51):
allowing me to just broadcast one hour today. Uh, you
can stay on for the name. I'm gonna just flip
this for the Manning report, so you can maybe here
the second time and learn ten times more than you
did when the first time you heard it just a
few minutes ago. I'm also going to be going out
today to scout out the Bronx. I'm going to be
sleeping in the Bronx on the streets of Bronx for

(01:55:13):
three days as well, and I'm going to be scouting
out that area today. The area we looked at. I'm
not approving of that, so I'm looking for a different area.
So I'll be out there during that. And of course
our major ad campaigns, the major ones now they're running
now on several stations as it is, but the major

(01:55:34):
blitz is going to happen starting on the twentieth, which
is a week from today, with ABC, CBS, NBC, and Fox.
But I will be on the street and sleeping on
the street, so I will do some I think what
our engineer did was just one of the Everybody was
just so impressed with the engineer's work on last Wednesday night.

(01:55:58):
They told the story. He allowed me to communicate. The
visuals were all good, even though you know, and people
are just a thankful that and we got a lot
of views as well as a result of what happened
on Wednesday. So we may do some live streaming from
the Bronx. I'm not sure. It depends on what there

(01:56:20):
was a special holiday going out on and out there
in Brooklyn, but I may be starting as far as
early as tonight or tomorrow night on the Bronx in
the streets on the Bronx. We'll have to see and
then we'll let you know what our program. I want
to let you see the two pro the two videos
that have been put together by our ad agency, and uh,

(01:56:41):
and then I'll come back some closing redlocks.

Speaker 6 (01:56:46):
Is this the guy you want as your next mayor
of New York City? A socialist? Google it and see
how bad this is. Also read up on a few
other famous socialists New York. It is time for a
wake up call. It's time to meet James Manning, a
true advocate for all the people of New York City
and is a right in candidate. Mike Duggan was a
right in candidate in Detroit in twenty fourteen, and he

(01:57:06):
turned that city around. James Manning will do the same
for New York City. Join the Manning for mayor, right
in Revolution. I am James Manning, and I approve this message.

Speaker 5 (01:57:16):
In the NYC mayoral primary, this guy resigned as governor
for multiple allegations of sexual harassment. The incumbent was indebted
in wire fraud and bribery. So the best of the
worst is a socialist New York It's time for prosperity
and a justice revolution. It's time to meet James Manning,
a true advocate for the people of New York City
and is a write in candidate. Mike Duggan was a
right in candidate in Detroit in twenty fourteen, and he

(01:57:38):
turned that city around. James Manning will do the same
for New York City.

Speaker 4 (01:57:43):
I am James Manning, and I approve this message all
right about it. We got three weeks to get it done.
Three weeks to get it done, and we can go
to love and righteousness that we can have a humanitarian
and we can now it began to do so many
things again. I can cure homelessness, I can take care
of all day. But I'm going I go and check
out what west end in day Carnival that we had.
I loved this song as well, thought y'all might want

(01:58:04):
to check this. I'm the only one that can cure
the spiritual problems York City. I can bring healing, and
I can bring uni No York City.

Speaker 3 (01:58:19):
Get ready, Ready, re ready, go ready, ready ready get
a ready ready, got.

Speaker 1 (01:58:30):
Ready ay ready.

Speaker 3 (01:58:34):
Ready, get ready, get ready, get ready, got ready.

Speaker 8 (01:58:37):
Got ready.

Speaker 3 (01:58:39):
You're ready, g reny g ready ready.

Speaker 2 (01:58:44):
The city, get red from.

Speaker 8 (01:58:49):
The fight for you in all your He's the time
of the last You've been told.

Speaker 7 (01:58:58):
He's a chance for you to vote for.

Speaker 8 (01:59:03):
He's the man with the plans that will get you
through your struggles.

Speaker 4 (01:59:09):
Red all enjoyn of.

Speaker 8 (01:59:14):
A new do your eyes have never seen? He read,
if a change and be true. He said, love and righteousness.

Speaker 2 (01:59:24):
We don't need no politician.

Speaker 8 (01:59:27):
Loving righteousness. It's all we need, loving righteousness.

Speaker 2 (01:59:34):
New York hit.

Speaker 8 (01:59:35):
Indeed, loving righteousness, that's all weed need. Yes a can,
Yes he can't can, Yes he can, and he can
and he will because he's the man.

Speaker 7 (01:59:46):
Yes, a can, Yes he can't can.

Speaker 8 (01:59:48):
Yes he can and he can and he will because
he's a man. It's a can, it's a can't can.
It's the Canedy can and he will because he's the man.
Yes he can, Yes he can't can. Yes he can,
and he can and he will because he's a I'm
a manchestans you can't can. You don't need no conversation
as Harvey magistans, yes you can't. Candy's allween movie love Manchistan.

(02:00:11):
Yester can't can, Yes the can and wed in me
in Machistan.

Speaker 3 (02:00:16):
If you can't can, that's all we here
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