Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:56):
Jesus set this get up, Paymasu.
Speaker 2 (01:09):
Destination chiming us destinations, timing U such destination, Jesus, this
ain't no mystery.
Speaker 3 (01:33):
Wait you say.
Speaker 4 (01:38):
Where he's out to the west side.
Speaker 3 (01:42):
Who believe jeez, I'm here because I am a roaring line,
crying out rightious. Welcome Heavievin into the trust in the
Lord our endim report combo as it's been over the
past so a couple of weeks, and we thank you
(02:05):
so very much for continue to log on and be
a part of what we do here on a daily basis.
Got a lot of exciting things to talk about. We
are what today is what the the sixth of the
fifth and sixth of October, So we got twenty eight
days left before the election day. And I take the
office of the mayor of the City of New York,
and I look a lot more real each day. I
(02:27):
don't know if you saw the recent ad that we're
gonna be running. By the way, the ad has not
started running yet on any of the television stations. When
it does, it's gonna be it's gonna be ubiquitous. That's
a fancy word for saying it's gonna be like Santa
Claus when the AD does. At least that's what they're
telling us. Now we hope that we don't. You know,
you get the short end of a stick. That's not
But at any rate, uh so, when the ad does run,
(02:51):
you're gonna discover that it's more likely than not. Then
the we're going to I think what's gonna really happen
is gonna put all the other candidates that Osama Bin
Laden Junior Boy and Fredo Cory Loane. Gonna put those
boys into shock when they see that I Am going
to be the next man of the City of New York.
(03:12):
Co Getic. We are delighted to be able to say
to you that over the past eighteen years that we
have been trusting in the law with all our heart,
neither not to our own understanding, and all that ways,
we have acknowledged him and he has directed our path.
And for that Almighty God, we are extremely glorious happy.
Rather and I think the last time you and I
were together, I was saying to you how that if
(03:35):
I had turned to the right or to the left,
I would have been destroyed. I would have been destroyed,
The church would have been destroyed. By the way we
beat the melon bank. We'll be talking about that as well.
That's so much the good news report. But I would
have been destroyed. And many of the children that have graduated.
I think that probably all of the students that have
(03:58):
graduate degrees, law degrees, doctorate degrees that came out of
our school would not have happened. My engineer sitting here,
he would I think he still be living in Staten
Island somewhere, no telling where he'd be. If I had
turned to the right of the left, I had if
I had not trusted in the Lord in the midst
(04:18):
of what was a very, very difficult time. But he
told me at the outside of the Obama to long
wa get Macdaddy Obama's illegal appearance on the stage, world stage,
to trust him with all my heart and lee not
to I'm on understanding in all my ways, acknowledged him
and he shall direct my paths. And I didn't turn
(04:39):
to the right nor to the left, and as a
result of that, I survived. I think what I was
teaching last time you and I were together is that
the survival was really my choice. If I had decided
to listen to them, maybe some of the instructions of
some of the others, or and had decided to maybe
we'll give up a little bit and confess this, or
(05:02):
maybe not be so, you know, if you will staunch
on my opinions, my and standing on the word of God.
That if I had done that, I would have died,
The Church would have died, the ministry would have died,
and no one would have known why. Death just would
have come. But I stayed in the lane. I stayed
(05:24):
trusting in the Lord. I didn't turn to the right
or to the left, no about how difficult things got.
And I say that because I pray that maybe you
might find yourself in a similar situation if you do.
Just stay with the Lord, stay with Jesus. And times
can get threatening, times can get frightening. You can look
like you're not going to wind. In fact, the fat
(05:45):
Lady can sing and you it seems that everything is
over with. But stay with Jesus, stay with what he
told you. If you've heard from him, then don't don't
turn to the right or to the left. And I didn't.
And as a result of that, I live and exists
today to do other things. And I'm more intense now
(06:08):
about staying with Jesus I'm not going to turn to
the right nor to the left. I'm just not going
to do it. And I would think that anybody who
has heard from the Lord would feel the same way.
As I said before. A prophet is not so much
one who speaks something that comes into existence, but a
prophet is one who speaks something and then lives it himself.
(06:29):
That is to say, the prophet speaks whatever God gives
him to speak. And you can check the prophets all
the way from going back to Righteous Abraham, or if
you want to go back as far as nor is concerned,
to Malachi or to Able who they slew between the poors,
or to the modern day, if you will, to the
New Testament. Prophets that all of what they say. So
(06:53):
a prophet says something, but then he doesn't change a
very aid from what he has said. The very eight
I don't know if that's a word. But the prophets
has to do what he has said, even though he
may be prophesying to the nation, he himself has to absolutely.
(07:13):
So his prophecy is two fold. One is that he
says it, and then the other is that he does
what he says. When God said to be out law
of the land, whether the people shall walk barefoot because
the land is holy ground, men shall take off their
shoes and walk barefoot. Well, I've stayed with that. I'm
not turning to the right or to left. That have
been an opportunity to me to do a whole lot
of things. I could be on Fox News. Sometimes I
(07:35):
watch the Fox News broadcast. They got a couple of
Hamdhite brothers on there. They all look like they're queerest
to me. But at any rate, you know, I could.
I had the opportunity to be a Fox News commentator
one time Fox News. Fox News couldn't get enough of me.
They loved me. I would have had to at that
point in time to stay with Fox News, I would
(07:58):
have to give up my own cans, my own belief
my relationship with the Lord Jesus Christ, and follow the
line of whatever the political beliefs were that Fox News
and Rupert Murdoch or whoever else was leading Fox Maga
or whatever else. I would have to then adopt myself
to all of those principles and then tow the line,
which seems to me the most excruciating type of living
(08:22):
suicide that anybody can have to go through to have
to give up what you know is true, to give
up and just to keep an income. You keep spouting
out whatever the byline is or whatever the echo is.
And that's what they all do, and not not just
that they do that everywhere except here at outline and
with me and so. But as a result of that,
(08:47):
I've survived the eighteen years, and I want to maybe
Almighty God has says something to you.
Speaker 2 (08:52):
You know.
Speaker 3 (08:52):
The other thing is that, as I have preached to
you over the year, is God has spoken to you
and he's told you to do things, and you haven't
done it. And so before you were in deep trouble
if you do what God could have told you to
do something. Ten years ago you heard me preaching. I
was preaching when die. I was teaching the word of God,
and the Lord spoke to you by way the Holy
Ghost and told you to do this or that and
(09:13):
the other. And you've not done it, and so therefore
you're dying. You're in trouble because you've not done it.
Let me make myself clear, it's been eighteen years. I've
not turned to the right or to the left. I
have continued to walk the straight and narrow, and as
a result of that, the things that would come in
(09:34):
to destroy me have not been able to get in.
They have the defeat that would normally take place. I mean,
facing the Melan Bank was a major event in the
city of New York. Now I want to be the
male of the City of New York. Facing the Melan
Bank over those years was a major event. But we
defeated them. We defeated them because I didn't turn to
(09:55):
the right or to the left. I hope I'm making
myself clear. I prayed that I am. I prayed it
in my articulate. I'm a little bit fatigued. I've been
doing so many things, and I'll being I'm gonna be
telling you about my campaigning a little bit later on
in a few more moments. But myself, I make it
myself clear, is that the by doing what God told
(10:18):
me to do, staying with what God, even though people
were calling me a false prophet, a liar and a
fake and of this and that, that and the other,
I didn't turn to the right not to and I
didn't doubt. It wasn't so much whether I confessed. I
didn't even doubt. In my heart, I knew what God said.
I heard the Lord clear. I didn't turn to the right,
no to the left, And as a result of that,
(10:41):
I live now. He's got me talking to you today
because there's some things that He told you to do
years ago and you haven't done it. So therefore you're struggling.
If you're not careful, you're gonna end up dead. You're
gonna definitely end up destroying whatever it is that you
heard me preaching. God said, do it, didn't do it.
(11:01):
Get on the good foot and do whatever it is
God said to do. Now. I'm coming back to that
in just a moment, but I wanna tell you I
want to make the announcement of that I'm going to
be going out on the campaign trail today. I'll be
leaving here at about three o'clock and I'll be going
out to Brooklyn. I'll be I'll be sleeping on the
street of Brooklyn for three days. I'll be out on
Park Avenue and Bedford Avenue in Brooklyn and the heavily
(11:23):
Hasidic Jewish population of Brooklyn, New York. I'll be there
for three days total of seventy two hours. That is
where I planned to be there, as I did one
hundred and twenty fifth Street and seventh Avenue. That'll happen today.
And you know, I that's just one of the boroughs
I got. I'll have to do four other borrows as
(11:45):
well between now and November fourth, So I got a
lot of work to do. I'm gonna send my one
of my engineers down to eighty sixth Street and Lexington
Avenue to sit in one of the vans, to sit
there for for ten hours per day for a couple
of days, that's right, and to get the word out.
(12:07):
But I'm going out because I want to pray. I
want to say this to you. I said I would
start each day with prayer right down to the City Hall.
I'm going to ask the engineer to pull up that
prayer and UH. And I want you to know that
I want to pray for you. I want you to
know UH. And not just to people in New York,
but whoever you are, I want you to I want
(12:28):
to pray for you. I want to help you. I
want to help relieve your pain at the suffering that
you're going through. I want to pray, Pastor Man, I
really want to help you. I really really want to
help you. I want to help you and help you,
help your children, help keep you from making mistakes. And
(12:48):
I really want to pray for you. You know I
can hear his. You know this may not ring a
bell with you, but it does what it does with
the powers it being. Let me say this to you.
Let me say this to you. The people that are
sitting in homeless shelters today, or riding the trains, or
(13:13):
living in substances, substandard, rat and roach infested housing and
under the worst condition, there are a lot of people
that are living that way. There are people that are
more than two point three million people in the New
York City area who are living below the poverty level
according to the US Bureau of Census of twenty twenty three,
that's two years ago. Then there are people that are
(13:34):
on Wall Street, another six million people in New York
who will live not only above the poverty level, but
they're living a fairly good and a very comfortable life.
They don't live from paycheck to paycheck. They have resources,
they have more than enough of everything that they want.
And then they're the super super rich who have three
and four houses, not only houses, mansions, that have cars
(13:57):
and planes and boats. And that's category of people that
live and occupy New York City. But when I say,
as candidate and then as the mayor of the City
of New York, that I want to pray for you,
I want to help you. I want to pray that
God would teach you how to be prospered, how to
(14:20):
use the gifts and talents that He's given, that greater
is He that's in you than He just in the
people that are on Wall Street, and that we're not
going to talk about low income housing. We're not going
to ever use that term which indicates low income people.
We're going to talk about building a mighty people now,
(14:40):
people who probably want housing and want more rat and
roach and faster low income if you will, housing where
people are living in all kinds of mental and psychological
deranged conditions. They want to hear you talk about low
income housing. But when I say no, I'm gonna pray
(15:03):
for you that God will lift you up and give
you the ability to be the head of dot to
tell people get angry and want to spit on me
and say no, we need want more houses, and we
won't help. We don't want to hear that church talk.
But the people on Wall Street they tremble when I
talk that church talk. They know they know that church
(15:25):
talk will cut into the wealth that they have. They
know that church talk is the talk. But see the
people who are living the low income below the popular level,
the two point three million that are living below the
popular level. You got two point three million living below
the popular level. You got maybe five million living comfortable
(15:46):
lives in New York. Then you got another million who
are living like kings. And the ones that are getting
the worst end of the matter, those who keep asking
for more low income living, Well, I we're gonna stop
that at any rate. I said, I was gonna pray
(16:07):
every day, so I'm gonna have the engineer run that pray.
I want to pray for you. I want to help you.
I want I want to teach you because you need
to know, and I want to help relieve the pain
that you're going through because I know it's painful. It's
painful being poor. It's very painful living paycheck to paycheck.
(16:29):
That's painful. It's painful when you want to, you know,
a piece of meat to eat, and you you know,
you want something that you want to and you can't afford.
It's painful. When you can't buy a cart of orange juice.
That's painful. Just just got to get by with just
drinking water, But that's painful. That's painful living and not
(16:52):
knowing if you're gonna be able to afford the rent.
That that's painful. And there a lot of other things
going on in your life. So I want to pray
for you. I want to pray for you. When the
people in the city hall hear that kind of talk,
they tremble. They want to keep you in a continual
(17:13):
rat race cycle of talking about pole, talking about poppy,
talking about low income this low income, that low. They
want to keep you. They want to keep your mindset
in the in the rat race if you will, of
thinking poor. They want to keep you thinking poor, voting poor.
(17:34):
They tremble when they hear persons such as myself. They
don't want you to listen to me. There's a whole
lot of liberation stuff I say that little wealthy people
don't want you to hear. They pray to God that
you don't listen to me. Then they'll hire these pension
those negroes to tell you that somehow another I Ai'm
I'm not for you, and you fall down to believe it.
(17:55):
At any rate, I'm going to ask the engineer that
I'm going to talk to you about my going out
on the street today and I'm gonna let you see
the new campaign ad that we got running. They start
running yet. I talked with the people that the ad
agency today and they said, well, let's start running to
day or tomorrow. We'll see. At any rate, mister jail,
let's listen to the prap that I'm gonna pray for
(18:16):
the people of New York City once I go to
City Hall. I'm here because I am a roaring line
crying out anciousness. I really want to help the people.
I do. I want to people in a lot of pain.
There's a lot of there's a lot of misery going on,
(18:37):
and I can help it as the mayor of the
City of New York. That's right. I And so I'm
gonna start each day on prayer. I gotta. I had
the engineer bring up my photo. I'm every day. I'm
gonna start every day at City Hall on my knees
in prayer. That's what I'm gonna do every day. And
I'm gonna pray for the people. That's city Hall. I
(18:58):
still on no steps some time ago. But I'm gonna
buy my head and ask our most High God if
you will help me guide this city. I'm going to
ask him. Lord, help me guide this city. Lord, help
me to root out corruption. Lord, help me to bring
justice to the people. Lord, help me to bring truth
(19:19):
to the poor, not just financial handouts and trick its
trinkets to hand out to poor people. Let me bring
them the truth. Let me exalt them rather than dig
a deeper hole for them. Lord. Let me bring peace
and unity among the homes. Let me bring health and
(19:42):
long living. Lord, help me lead this great city. Lord.
Let me prepare this place for you to return. Lord,
let this become a place where people all over the
world will come to see what you have done, using
my experience and the length of my years and the
(20:03):
taste of my days, the millions of meals that I
have served to the poor, the housing that I have
provided to those who are homeless, and those that are
prison bound. That we can shut down the prisons and
shut down many of the police stations, and let the
(20:26):
streets be safe because of your peace. And let me
speak comfortably to the people. Let me speak love in
the hearts of the fathers, for their children and for
their wives. Given their wives a peaceful financial, spiritual security. Lord,
let me lead New York City. Now, I'm gonna pray
this every day, not just that particular prayer, depending on
(20:49):
those circumstances, but that's the general idea of what I'm
gonna pray every day when I become the mayor of
the city of New York. And my God, God is
a prayers in God. I don't know about your God,
but my God, his name is Jesus, is a prayer
answering God. And here's what I want to do. Live
(21:10):
by the Holy Ghost, and I pray to y'all will
be able to received this. I know many of you will.
Some of you perhaps will not, but I know that
many of you will. Lord, Thank you for not turning
this building over to that Muslim Zorahan Mandandi Mandani. Lord,
(21:31):
thank you for not giving him this building. Lord Jesus,
thank you for not giving him this city. Lord, thank
you for not giving him the power to make us.
Say peace and blessings be upon the prophet Mohammed. Lord,
(21:54):
thank you, Thank you for keeping that Muslim, locking that
Muslim out of these sacred quarters. Thank you Jesus. Thank
you Jesus for keeping that Muslim from having full power
over our schools, over our institutions. Thank you Jesus that
(22:16):
this city Hall remains sacred. And in your name, Almighty God,
the Muslim shall not enter in and shall not take
charge of the lives of the people. And I'm willing
Almighty God to be your vessel. I'm willing Lord Jesus
to be your servant. I'm willing Lord Jesus to be
(22:37):
your righteous that I might stand in the gap between
the living and the dead, and to protect this great
building from Islam, from anti fadders, from ices, from al Kaeda,
from Hamas, from the hoodies, and from others, to protect
(22:58):
this building and to protect this city, to protect, defend
an uplift. In your name and by your power, I
thank you for giving me this opportunity to serve at
such a critical time as this. Thank you Jesus, as
(23:19):
we prepare a place for you to return. And in
your name Jesus, I pray and give things. Amen and Amen.
Now I'm gonna pray that as well. I'm gonna pray
that as well. Hey mon DOMI, what's my name? What's
my name? What's my name, Jans Manning? When you go
(23:41):
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? Who you going to print?
Speaker 4 (24:00):
Whose name? James Manning?
Speaker 3 (24:04):
Hey, Mandani, do you understand the words that are coming
out of my mouth? Do you understand the words gotter
coming out of my mouth? Whose name you're gonna print
on the writing section on the ballot on November fourth
here in the New York City mayoral election, James Manning?
(24:25):
All right, now, let's get it home, all right. In
this next segment, the Manning Reports segment, I'm gonna show
you a video of a Jewish company came up to
me a couple of weeks ago out right out there
on the street where the sidewalk there, and pleaded with
me to please win the officer's mayor so that I
can protect the Jews from Bondami and from Sharia law
(24:46):
and from jihad and from Entafada and from far Qua
and all that stuff that the Muslim does that it
does they do it, you know everywhere around the world,
and Jews would be their lives would be greatly intimidated.
Should Mondambe become the mayor of the City of New
York and ask me to please win the office. And
I'm gonna win it. I got a peace coming out
(25:10):
with queensy flipp It just a moment when the next
segment rather not just a moment where you will see
them making that plea to me. And I was caught
between two people. He was calling me, they were asking me.
But I want you to know that I do plan
to I do plan to do everything I can to
protect New York and the world from Zoran the Osama
(25:33):
bin Laden Junior. I do plan to do that. What
I want to do today is I'm going to be
leaving today the office here and I'm going to be
spending three days non stop, seventy two hours out in
Brooklyn on Park Avenue and Bedford Avenue in Brooklyn, New York,
in the heavily Hasidic jew area. And I'm going to
(25:55):
the Jewish area to say to them, I'm gonna protect y'all.
And I'll be out there from four o'clock today until
four o'clock on Thursday, praying and campaigning. It's what I'm
going to be doing. So I there, I'll reports from
(26:18):
coming from coming from out there where I'm going to
be on the street for three days. I will not
return to my home. I will not return to my bed,
or to my kitchen, or to my even to my
own toilet for three days, for seventy two hours, longer
than that, probably, and I will be praying for all
(26:39):
people worldwide, Americans in general and New Yorkers in particular,
as God would give me the strength. And that's not
the only time I'm going to spend. As you know,
I spent three days. I'm one hundred hundred and twenty
Fifth Street and Seventh Avenue, going back a couple of
months ago now and I'll be I'll be doing that.
(27:03):
What I'd like to be able to do now is
that we have contracted with this ad agency UH to
start our television ad and now they they said they
were gonna start on Saturday or Sunday, they didn't get
started as yet, and even we talked to the office
today and they're still trying to get them slotted in.
But we believe these ads are going to be a
(27:25):
real help to moving our campaign to from where it's
at now to presently to winter. And uh maybe I'll
saw some of the ads on Saturday when we were
random Uh in the uh trust in the the pupet
of power from the marble pulpe it. Uh. But I
want to run it one more time to let y'all
take a look at it and uh, and we'll see
(27:47):
what takes place. From that, Miss Engineer, to bring up
that that ad that's been they they put this together.
We didn't do that. The Ad Agency put this all
together in the voice over. They did all this. Of
course we had to pay them for it, but go ahead,
miss Engineer.
Speaker 5 (28:03):
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 right in candidate. Mike Duggan was a
writing candidate in Detroit in twenty fourteen, and he turned
(28:25):
that city around. James Manning will do the same for
New York City.
Speaker 3 (28:29):
I am James Manning, and I approved this message, all right,
so they have it. I like that ad. But they
SAPLE was online with them earlier today and they said
they're putting together several other ads. They said they're going
to you know, to reach various people and deal with
several issues. But you know, it's it's just good that
(28:52):
we're able to reach this point. And Ministry, we've got
what do I say, we have thirty twenty eight days left,
and we have enough time to win the election. We
have enough time to become the mayor of the City
of New York. The other two candidates are really as
that I had said. One is, you know, as indicted
on sexual predator, is a sexual predator. The other is
(29:13):
indicted on bribery and wild fraud. And so people chose this.
Osama have been laden Junior as the best of the worst,
but he could easily be defeated. I think one of
the things that we need to be clear about is
that he's talking about free bus rides. I mean, you know,
if you if you're unlearned, if you don't know, you
(29:33):
don't know But imagine this, right, Osama been Laden Junior.
It's talking about giving free bus rides to everybody in
New York City, all the people that ride the buses
every day. All you got to do is get on
and get off. So a free bus ride right now
cost you two dollars and ninety cent next month that
I cost you three dollars to ride the bus. So
you don't have to pay that three dollars now, right,
(29:54):
All you gotta do is just get on the bus.
So here talking about congestion on the b talking about
busses being crowded, busses being uncomfortable because people will normally
walk three or four blocks. Right, Can I just get
on the bus and said, well, I'll just get on
the bus. Don't cost me anything. I want walk three
or four blocks. I'll just get on the bus and ride. Now,
(30:14):
you got congested bussing. You got people jammed into the bus,
You got people arguing one another, bumping into one another
because it's free. But not just that. Check this out. Okay,
it's July, it is ninety nine degrees in New York City.
The concrete is baking, and the bus is air conditioning
(30:35):
air condition So here come the bus. You're gonna walk
three or four blocks or you know, you're just outside.
He said, Well, let's get on the bus and ride
around on the bus because the bus is air conditioned.
So you just get on the bus just for air conditioning.
You're not that you're going anywhere. You have no destination.
You just want to get away from the hot heat
and the concrete jungle of New York City. So you
(30:57):
get on the bus. Now the buses are congested, crowded,
their pack from one end to the other because the
buses at free. Well, let's say it's cold, it's stowing outside,
it's icy outside, right, and the buses on one So
you get on the bus rather than walk into four
blocks in the coal, you get on the bus and
just ride, not every from one end of the bus
(31:18):
line to the other. It's jam packed with people, uncomfortable umbrellas,
people bumping into one another, people are sexing up one
another on the bus because it's free. What an idiot?
What an idiot? If New York is, If y'all are
stupid enough to free bus rides, you want be able
(31:41):
to get on the bus, they'll be buses by busloads
passing by because nobody get the buslow pack. You can't
get on the dog gone thing, free bus ride. Oshima
bin Laden Junior, y'all call him Zo run Mondani. And
then I made mention on Saturday about people who don't
know free government food. I talked about that government cheese
(32:03):
and that yellow rice. The government's saying, now what a
I mean, it's when I look at this younger generation
of people, they don't know a damn thing about nothing,
and you know, it's just incredible that people will go
for something Mandammi's talking about. Then he's talking about legalizing prostitution,
freezing the rent. I mean, all of those things he's
(32:24):
talking about are ridict you less, free bus ride, you
won't be able to getting. There will be freeloaders on
the bus every everywhere you look, busts will be looking,
they'll be dragging the street. The bust will be so
loaded down with people that are freeloaders. I mean, I've
never heard anything as ridictions. People talking about, oh he
got good ideas, he got some good policy, or the
(32:47):
slap the taste out your mouth, Oh man, Dommie got
good policy of policy, his policy affordability, affordability ride for
free eas the rent government, food, afforda bising, that's good policy. Everybody,
What the hell is wrong with you? Ain't you got
(33:08):
no sense? Your mama raised a fool? Are you? Are
you kidding? The free bus rides, everybody in their brother
will be on there, staking up to high heaven section up.
Women on the bus cause there you're being there, packed
in there like sadays. The men to get on there
just a rubber woman's but it's so packed and they'll
(33:28):
be bustling past it by stopping. You try to get on,
you can't get on. Nobody getting off. Obama's I mean
Obama Osima been Ladon Jr. He's got good policies. Affordability.
The only people that only persons that appeal to is
somebody who trying to get something for nothing, afforda billing
(33:50):
tees a for New York affordability. Now you don't want
no cheap town, and don't New every New York everybody
can afford. Why don't you, Why don't you rather than
to wait for something for free, why don't you find
a way to try to increase your skills and your
abilities so you can pay the price. Even the lord
(34:14):
won't want you in the church unless you bring an offering.
I mean, you can't even come to church. But listen,
Jesus said, bring the offering, the times and offering to
the church. And the woman came in off she had
with two mics. She gave that. But even the Lord
wants you to bring something to the church. I mean,
come on, Jesus was and all they talk about love Jesus.
(34:37):
When you come to church, Jesus said, bring you all
the tithe and the offering. And you don't bring an
offering to the church, he gonna curse you. You talking
about a free bus ride. Affordability boy, that man now
o Sima Been Lawton Jr. He got some good policies. Affordadentity,
free bus rides, government food stoves, freeze the rent, a
(35:00):
billion dollars around the ghetto to keep them black people
in them ghetto cages. Here. Affordability boy, that boy smile
he affordability.
Speaker 4 (35:10):
What an idiot?
Speaker 3 (35:11):
How long you're gonna stand in it? Look at that
anybody who want to vote, and cause now you start
talking about handling our free stuff, you're gonna get everybody.
And that snake all salesman Osama bin Laden Junior. He
knew that. Listen that snake all salesman knew. The moment
he started talking about handing out stuff for free and
(35:33):
living in rent free apartments, then everybody gonna vote for that,
cause there a whole lot of people out there looking
for something for nothing. You need to get that spirit
at you. No, y'all needed to get that spirit out
of you. Looking for something for a free bus ride,
you won't be able to get on the bus. Everybody
everybody free loading. You bust so crowded you can't even
(35:54):
get on there. A free bus ride, a government grocery store.
You're looking for something for nothing. You got the wrong attitude.
The world does not. That is adverse to the entire universe.
If you go from here the far end of the
Kaiper Belt all the way after Pluto, the world rejects
(36:18):
something for nothing. The Royal rejects free bus rides. The
world rejects Osama bin Lawdon Junior's affordability. What a bunch
of freeloaders, y'all are. Oh, he got some good policies,
a good policy, or he afforded bill that can even
(36:39):
if people don't a view, don't like that boy, and
they're like they're like anything. They're like Mikey. They're like that,
but they don't like her because they got better sense.
Looking for something for nothing. Afforda billit tick anyway? Missing
you that roll my clip one more time? See what
the Manning gets talking about? And then I got another clip.
(36:59):
I'm worting just a second. Affordability, something for nothing, free
bus ride, free grocery, free rent, affordability. He's so smart, boy.
Those are good policies. If thought that bility New York,
I found what a bunch of freeloaders go ahead? Miss
(37:20):
engineered and the NYC mayoral primary.
Speaker 5 (37:24):
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 writing candidate. Mike
Duggan was a writing candidate in Detroit in twenty fourteen,
and he turned that city around.
Speaker 3 (37:46):
James Manning will do the same for New York City.
I am James Manning. And I approved this message. Yeah right,
ah this engineer. Let me show. Let me show the
people what I'm going to do. I'm gonna infuse forty
one billion dollars into the working class neighborhoods, is what
(38:07):
I'm gonna do. And that's gonna it's gonna bless everybody.
It's gonna cause everybody's wealth, uh limits, well not limits,
but wealth the lines to increase affordability. But I I
got a plan to to bring forty one billion dollars,
(38:27):
gonna raise the minimum wage, I'm gonna cut off taxes.
The New York City is gonna have to take a hit,
and the and the and the budget of New York
City and a lot of other things that are budgetized
around New York City. They're gonna have to take a
hit as well. But miss Jay Robot is clip As
opposed to Osama bin Laden Junior's free bus rides, I
(38:49):
can't believe you went for that free. I can't believe
you went for that looking for something for nothing, free
bus rides, free food. Now, the next thing I do
want to say, in terms of my candidacy and my
becoming the next mayor of the City of New York.
(39:09):
I plan to raise the minimum wage to twenty seven
dollars per hour, and I plan to do that quickly
and as effectively as I possibly can. One of the
reasons why there is homelessness and this crime and their
ghettos is because the people in those particular neighborhoods don't
(39:31):
get the kind of pay that they get. And we
only think that people who have college degrees should be
well paid. But there's a truth out there now that
seeing to a large number of people. You know, you
go to college and you run up one hundred and
fifty thousand dollars college tuition bill, and you get out
(39:52):
and you barely can't find a job. And so a
number of people are thinking that, well, if I can
just get some good training and develop some skills, perhaps
I don't need the college education. I'm not telling anybody
not to go to college, God forbid. What I am
saying is that there has been a structure that has
(40:13):
been supported by working class people to only honor people
with large degrees. You don't have to have a degree
to run a big shop, and I'm thinking about truthful
of flaw who wants to run a big shop? You
don't have to have a college degree, you know, to
run a small business, to open up a paint store,
open up a haberdasher store and make three four hundred
(40:36):
thousand dollars a year. You don't need a college degree
to do that. What you need is a structured skills.
So what I'm going to do is to by raising
the minimum wage, that'll give everybody at least a running start.
Then we're going to create a if you will and
tie if you must, gentrification housing loan pool where people
(41:01):
who are physically anchored, spiritually anchored can go and borrow
and buy a house, borrow up the two three million
dollars to buy a house, and a part of the
commitment of the loan that they would get at a
very low interest rate, of no interest at all, is
that they would take in a homeless family. That they
would taking a family. We have a family, not church
(41:22):
like brother Broner. I'm not sure where he's living right now.
He's got three children, his wife. They all come to
church on Saturday, and the baby just cries and interrupts
my sermon, like you won't believe, baby, don't do anything
until I start preaching. But a family like that needs
an opportunity. If let's say, for instance, the elder Smith
(41:43):
buys a home, buys one of the brownstones you'll see
across the street. That's a three family house. He rents
out a whole floor to the Bronner family. They have
to pay him rent. He now has to manage the house.
We want to replicate that kind of an event into
the neighborhoods. And we can get people who are working
(42:05):
at a minimum wage of twenty seven dollars per hour,
making at least fifty thousand dollars per hour fifty thousand,
fifty thousand, seven thousand, seventy thousand dollars per year, then
they can afford the rent. Now they'll still be skimping.
I plan. Listen to this, and I'll say this to
the gentrifiers. While I've been definitely against you moving into
(42:25):
this community, but I but I've told you over the years,
you have not realized your dream of an ideal community
where you paid five six million dollars per house, and
you're now living in an astored neighborhood. It isn't happening.
But here's what I'm going to do. Here's what I'm
going to do. Gentrifiers and everybody else. First of all,
(42:47):
you need there needs to be some reconciliation and gentrifries
need to come to talk to me. But I'm going
to clean up. If you walk down one hundred and
twenty fifth Street here in Harlem in New York City
is now outlaw. You see people sleeping on the street.
You see all kinds of dissparaging, if you will, kinds
(43:07):
of activities going on one hundred and twenty fifth Street.
People that are on drugs, people that have no mattress,
have no spoon, have no curtain, have no table. Every
curtain or table or napkin that they use, a toilet
that they use, a toilet paper that they use, belongs
to somebody else. I'm going to sweep one hundred and
twenty fifth Street broom clean where it looked like. Well,
(43:30):
we were in Paris several years ago, and I think
that we were on what was known as the Franklin
Delano Roosevelt Terrace or street. It's right near the Shampson
Lese and not too far away from the Eiffel Tower.
Beautiful community, beautiful neighborhood, absolutely beautiful. A little better yet,
I'm going to have the streets of Harlem look like
(43:53):
sixty second Street on the east side between the third
and second Avenue and First Avenue, those beautiful streets. But
there's never any thing awride, never a garbage can out
of place, never litter on the street, just very beautiful
tree line community. I'm gonna I'm gonna sweep Harlem broom clean.
And by the way, can I say this to you.
(44:16):
Years ago, when I first took the helm of this ministry,
I used to have the men of this community church
that we had, like I don't know, one hundred, two
hundred three hundred men sleeping in the building at night. Well,
one of the things that would have them during the
morning is get up early in the mornings and take
brooms and see that sidewalk, see that man walking down
the street. Sweep that sidewalk all the way down to
one hundred tenth Street from here, that's thirteen blocks, and
(44:39):
then sweep all the way up to one hundred and
thirty fifth Street, and then sweep both sides of the street.
Every morning they would get out with a bunch of
these heavy, deedy brooms. I said, thirty forty men out
to sweep the streets. I did this for years. I'll
say this to the gentrifieres into all New Yorkers and
all visitors to New Yorker. The first year of my
(44:59):
becoming to me the city of New York, and at
the conclusion or the beginning of the second year, Harlem
will be broom clean. It will be swept, broom clean.
There will be nobody sleeping on the streets, there will
be no litter on the streets. The streets themselves will
be cleaned. It will be a delightful, delective place. You
can actually eat off the streets. That's how broom clean
(45:21):
I'm going to streets. But not only that, I'm going
to buy the process of raising the minimum wage. Then
encouraging people to own businesses again in Harlem, encouraging people
to buy homes, get equity, rent out the space, learn
how to manage it, and the minimum wage yourself. And
(45:44):
by no food sales tax, wherever you go to buy food,
you will not pay tax. And to relieving all the
bodegas of sales tax, the city of the City of
New York is gonna have to take a hit in
the pocket. I'm gonna tell you this right now, right now,
the budgets one point, it's one hundred and fourteen billion
dollars per year. Well, you'all gonna have to take a
(46:05):
hit in the bucket, in the pocket the City of
New York. You got to tighten your belt. When I
become the mayor of the City of New York, you
got to tighten your belt. A lot of waste money.
I see a lot of money that's wasted for things
such as you know, plugins on the street for your phone,
and all kinds of other stuff about bus schedules and
whatnot that really isn't necessary that we're gonna cut back
(46:28):
on some of those things. The City of New York
needs a cutback. Are you gonna You're gonna have to
take a hit in in your budget the City of
New York, and we're gonna direct that money that's going
to the City of New York to then go to
all the city the people that are profiting, the manufacturers
and business people got contracts with the city. You'll gonna
have to take cut a cut, and we're gonna infuse
(46:50):
that money back into the community. You have to read
a forty one billion dollars a year now, if you
can imagine think about this for just a second, and
I can. I'll outline this. I'll have our accountant outline
this for you. Think about this for just a second.
The entire budget of the City of New York, for
the police Department, for the fire department, for all other departments,
for the education department, nine hundred thousand students, is one
(47:13):
hundred and fourteen billion dollars a year per year. Is
that right? That's how much it is. Imagine by redirecting,
reinvigorating the people that are unproductive, that are not working,
that are not paying taxes, getting back in the workforce,
getting back on the tax rolls, getting back on the
(47:35):
ownership rods, getting back in the rental roads, getting back
into having money in the local neighborhood would reproduce forty
one billion dollars. That's nearly a third of the budget.
And I can that would be money that'll be coming
into so called marginalized neighborhoods, if you want to call
them that. I'm not sure that's why I want to
call them. It's a brilliant it's just God's plan. It's
(47:59):
just a plan that God has put the put forward,
and it would make New York City. The streets of
New York City, broom clean, There'll be no litter, there'll
be no people on the street sleeping, there'll be no
riff raff. And you know I was. When I was
growing up in North Carolina, there was a man who
(48:21):
had some psychological problems and he lived with his family,
and there were several women that lived in the house.
I had a decent house. And one of the things
I liked about him that had a outside in the
yard they had because they had a big yard in
the house on that street next to the I think
the Ami Church was. They had a place where they
(48:45):
grew grapes. Anyway, So this man was a little bit off,
and so most of us when we were young would
be fraid to go by the house because we know
he's sitting on the porch for did come out and
chase us and run after us. And sometimes he do that.
Sometimes he come out, he chased he ran after we'd
all run in scout. But they let him stay in
the house. He was a little bit crazy, but they
(49:06):
let him stay in the house. See. The problem the
blessing with me is that I grew up at a
time when no matter what happened, every man and every
woman and every boy and every girl had a bed
to go to at night, no matter how impoverished the time.
Even during the time of the Great Depression, every man,
(49:27):
every woman, and every boy and every girl had a
bed at night because the families took them in, even
though some of them were a little bit crazy, some
of them had problems, etc. But we all dealt with it.
We all dealt with it. Nobody slept on the streets.
We can bring that back. We've lost our way. And
I'll tell you why we've lost our way, because our
(49:47):
leaders are hypocrites. They are worse than hypocrites. They're satanic.
And the rules of life, the rules of civic if
you will, family structure, they're all, if you will, hypocrites,
the very the best of them a satanic at the
(50:08):
very There is no all this business about blaming white
folk for everything that ever goes wrong with black folk.
The white man's ice. If you go buy a block
of ice, and the white man buys a block, and
the white man sells the white man a block, and
the white man sells the black man, the white man
will sell the black man a block of ice is
(50:29):
not as cold as the white man's ice. I mean,
that's all you hear out of the mouth of these
so called black college professors at Princeton, and these Cornell
West and these Eddie Gloyd's and these joy Van Jones
and all of these news commentators and everything is that
the white man's ice is colder. The white man gets
(50:50):
what he buys. You buy the same place, but the
white man gives you a lesser product. I mean, it
is ridiculous how insane this has become over the last
sixty year. And if you're not, if you're too young
to realize when even during the time of Jim Crow,
every man had a bid the sleep in, every child
had abid the sleep in, every child had a father
(51:12):
in their home. None of this nonsense, this perversion that
you hear on a daily basis coming out of the
mouth of these hypocrites. And now they've gone even worse
by wanting the men to become homo sexual men, women
to become lesbian women. Is madness. I will so to
the gentrifiers. You probably thought you'd never hear this from me,
(51:36):
but I'm going to increase the property of your property value, gentrifiers,
I'm going to increase your property values. Of course, I'm
gonna take all the riff raff out of the community,
and not by using the police and cracking heads. I'm
gonna take it out by simply employing the biblical principles
and showing the spirit of love and stopping the lying
and stopping the profiting. Stopping if you will, the cottage industry,
(51:59):
the law of these pension those negroes. They make all
the money by blaming white folk and stirring up anger
with black folk to be angry with white folk, and
they've being intermediaries. That's how they make them millions of
dollars to do it in the movies, even if they
got making money on as athletes. I'm going to to
the gentrifiers, I am going to improve your property value
(52:24):
by cleaning the streets and making the neighborhood safer, cleaner,
and without using police or the fire department. That's right,
That's what I'm gonna do. I've done it for years.
I used to sweep the streets of these this community
for years, and I used to clean up, would let
people go out of the building that the world unkempt,
and I gave a man a bed to sleep in.
(52:45):
So we need to remindful of what's coming with me
as the mayor of the City of New York. But
I do plan to and I'll close with this. The
budget right now the City of New York is one
is one hundred fourteen billion dollars. I plan to make
New York City a classic upgraded city where poverty has
(53:09):
been abolished, homelessness has been a bobblished has been abolished.
I do plan to say this. I do want to
remind everyone that I'm gonna keep the street vendors, but
they're gonna have to, you know, clean up their act,
polish up their act, get their act together. I will
require street vendors to wear uniforms based on the logos
(53:29):
of their business, whatever their property, whatever they are selling.
But there's enough room one hundred and twenty fifth Street
for the for the street vendors and the store owners.
And my listen, this is America capitalist. I'm a capitalist
in that regard the and so let the best man win.
I think the street vendors need to be able. I
(53:52):
consider them small businesses. Now they're gonna have to wear uniforms. Uh,
They're gonna have to be fully responsible for the white
Washington of their sidewalk for the cleaning and for the
presentation of their wares. And they can do that. That's
not the problem. Most of them would be willing to
do it. But I'm gonna make Harlem, in particular, the
streets so clean. When I say to you, I'm gonna
(54:15):
Harlem is gonna be the streets is going to be
brooms swept clean, broom so you won't see anybody sleeping
on the street. You won't see anybody vega zagabondy. And
I'm gonna make Harlem brooms, the entire community community of
Harlem brooms swept clean. One five, one hundred, forty fifth,
one hundred and sixteen hundred, tenth, seventh Avenue, eighth Avenue,
(54:35):
Lenox Avenue, Lexington Avenue, Broom swept clean. I said this
thirty four years ago, that the streets will be so
clean you could take off your shoes and walk barefoot.
I'm gonna show you a picture of myself and Elizabeth
actually on the street out in front of the church,
walking barefoot, thirty four years ago. I was a much
(54:56):
younger man. Elizabeth was a little bit younger too, But
I said I was going to make the streets brooms, sweep,
swept clean, and I'm going to do that. I'm going
to do that as the mayor of the City of
New York. And again I'm going to bring forty one
billion dollars. Now, if you look at the commerce, the
economic commerce of Wall Street down in that region, I
(55:23):
suppose that annually they go over the trillion dollar mark
in terms of sales, of stocks, of trading, of businesses,
of mergers, of banking, all of that they do probably
on a billion dollars. And New York just gets a
small chunk of that of one hundred and fourteen billion
(55:43):
dollars to run the City of New York. What I'm
going to do is that I'm going to turn Harlem
into a black wall Street. Well, no, not more. That's
a phrase they came from back in the nineteen twenties
in Tulsa, Oklahoma. No, I'm going to turn Harlem into
an outlaw Wall Street to a righteous Wall Street. Where
(56:06):
and bedsty Too and Fort Green and South Jamaica and
East New York and all of those regions I'm going
to turn into a profitable area where there will be
forty one billion forty one imagine this in South Jamaica.
Imagine this and bedsty forty one billion dollars now being
(56:29):
poured into these neighborhoods. How it would change the clothing
at the people where, the cars that they drive, the
houses that they live in, and it would upscale the
city of New York in ways probably nobody ever dreamed
of in terms of New York being in upscale city
will be the new Dubai of the Western world. All right,
(56:49):
So I ain't got to get out of here real quick.
I'll be back for the Man Report in just a
come a couple couple of moments. But I will be
going out on the street today out to Brooklyn on
Park Avenue and brod in Brooklyn. I'll be spending seventy
two hours on the street non stop without returning to
my home. So I'll give more information about that in
the next segment coming up.
Speaker 6 (57:08):
Uh.
Speaker 3 (57:09):
And then of course I'm gonna do all the other
boroughs as well, and I'll tell you how I'm gonna
get them done. But I'm gonna check out it close
out this segment of the Don't go anywhere, all right,
I'll be right back. Hey, Mandami, what's my name? What's
(57:30):
my name?
Speaker 4 (57:31):
What's my name, James Manning?
Speaker 3 (57:35):
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 ind section? Who name you're gonna
print in the right in section on the ballot? Mondmie?
Who are you gonna print? Whose name? James Manning? Hey, Mandami?
(58:00):
Do you understand the words that are coming out of
my mouth? Do you understand the words that are coming
out of my mouth? Whose name you're going to print
on the writing section on the ballot on November fourth
here in the New York City mayoral election.
Speaker 4 (58:17):
James Manning.
Speaker 3 (58:19):
All right, now, let's get it on. I'm the only
one that can cure the spiritual problems from New York City.
I can bring healing, and I can bring unitw York shity.
Speaker 4 (58:37):
Get ready, ready, re ready go get a ready.
Speaker 7 (58:51):
Ready reay ready ready ready ready ready goody again.
Speaker 4 (59:02):
New City.
Speaker 6 (59:04):
Get red from man who will fight for you in
all your need. He's tired of the lastity you've been told.
He is a chance for you to vote for to
He's a man with the plans that will get you
(59:24):
through your struggles. All enjoy the dawn of a new
your eyes have never seen. Get ready if a change,
and be truly said, we love righteousness. We don't need
no politician. Love righteousness is all ween need. Loving righteousness,
(59:53):
New York City Indeeds, loving righteousness, that's all we need.
Speaker 8 (01:00:00):
Yes, a can. It's the can't can. It's the cannon,
the canon, and he will because he's a man. It's
a can.
Speaker 4 (01:00:05):
It's the can't can. It's the canon.
Speaker 8 (01:00:07):
He can and he will because he's a man. It's
a can. It's a can't can. It's the canon. He
can and he will because he's the man. Yes, the can, Yes,
the can't can. Yes, the canon.
Speaker 4 (01:00:17):
He can and he will because he's the man.
Speaker 8 (01:00:19):
I'm a manchestin.
Speaker 3 (01:00:20):
You can't can.
Speaker 8 (01:00:21):
It's the can.
Speaker 6 (01:00:21):
You don't need no colitian as Harvey Madison.
Speaker 8 (01:00:25):
Yes he can't can.
Speaker 4 (01:00:25):
It's all we need.
Speaker 2 (01:00:28):
Love.
Speaker 8 (01:00:29):
Yes, he can't can.
Speaker 6 (01:00:30):
Yes, the cannon, and then we will need its loving Madston.
Speaker 4 (01:00:34):
If you can't can, that's all we need here.
Speaker 3 (01:01:06):
All right, everybody, We're back with the Manning Report, and
we got a lot to report. I want to get
started in this segment of the broadcast. Let you know
that I will be starting my five borough tour of
sleeping on the streets until November fourth, when I win
the election to be the mayor of the City of
(01:01:26):
New York. And I'm probably going to modify some of
those days and nights depending on what area of New
York City I'm going to be in. I've already done
it here one hundred and twenty fifth Street and Seventh Avenue.
I plan to end our campaign there on November fourth.
And then, of course there are segments of Brooklyn where
(01:01:48):
I could spend as much as three different segments in Brooklyn,
and I'll have to divide that up because I want
to do Flatbush, I want to do Church Avenue and
No Strain or flat Bush rather, and I want to
do No String at Fulton. And I'm going today at
four o'clock. I will be out at Bedford Avenue and
(01:02:10):
Park Avenue in Brooklyn, New York for three NonStop days,
night and day, so I may have to jigging some
things around. I plan to do eighty sixth Street and
lectionson Avenue. I plan to do on hundred forty ninth
Street and Third Avenue. I plan to do Fordham Road
and Grand Concourse. So there's a lot that I want
(01:02:33):
to try to do in the next thirty days. I'm
not going to be going home very much. I'm going
to be out on the street indus streets of New York.
And I think that's a good thing for me to
be able to, you know, spend that kind of time
out on the street campaigning and praying. I'm going out
to Brooklyn today, pardon me, particularly because I want to
(01:02:54):
pray that Osama bin Laden Junior does not continue to
bring fear to the Jewish population that fear his Interfaa,
his shari allaw, his Jahad ideas. So I'll be out there.
I would not return home to my bed, nor to
my kitchen table or my dining room table for three
(01:03:17):
solid days and we'll see how the other I'll give
you the scheduling of how the other days will turn
out as well. So we're we're thankful to Almighty God
to be able to have that happen. I also want
to be able to show you our video that's been
put together by the Ad Agency. We have what twenty
(01:03:38):
eight days left now, and the ad Agency, we did
talk to them this morning and they said they should
be the ad should be start tracking on w ABC, CBS, NBC,
Fox News, w I N S, W O, R, ABC, as,
et cetera. Were praying that they get it, get that
(01:04:01):
done as soon as possible. But we're praying that the
ads will be everywhere un there, you be like Santa
Claus ubiquitous over the next twenty eight days.
Speaker 5 (01:04:15):
Uh.
Speaker 3 (01:04:15):
And I believe that once those ads start hitting, we're
going to be able to dominate what's going on in
the in the mayor race contest. Right now, they're talking
about Osama bin Laden Jr. They're talking about Fredo Corey Leone,
Afredo core Leone is Andrew Cuomo and Osama bin Laden Jr.
Is Uh, what's that boy's name is? Ron Mondamin right
(01:04:38):
down there talking about him. And they also also talking
about Pussing Boots. Yeah, put pussing boots is what's his face? Uh,
Curtis Sleever.
Speaker 5 (01:04:47):
Uh.
Speaker 3 (01:04:48):
But they're gonna have to consider me once I get
those ads go up. I do want to say I'm
gonna run the ad and I'm gonna tell you we
need more money. Uh, we need more money to run
more ads, all of you know, without having to say
so that political campaigns are extraordinarily expensive. You can't get
away with a campaign here in New York City with
less than a million dollars. Everybody knows that. Most people say,
(01:05:10):
to run a campaign here in New York you need
at least eight million dollars. Well, I don't think that
we need that much, and we don't need that much,
but we do need a whole lot more than what
we have right now. And so we're gonna ask you.
I'm gonna let you see how good the ad is.
But this is just one ad. They're gonna put together
several different types of ads, reaching several different people types, ideologies,
(01:05:35):
and also expressing different kinds of things. For instance, I'm
gonna have jet Pilot deal with the whole business of
the affordability, which I think is one of the dumbest
things I've ever heard. And maybe maybe my intellectual strengths
are just out there above everybody else. I don't mean
to be both for to think, but when I heard,
(01:05:56):
when I heard that affordability free bus rides for me,
that's how I'm so stupid. I'm thinking. I used to
ride the trains. I don't do it very much anymore.
I should get on the trains, should get on the
GG train out there in Brooklyn morning, going to work
at Lord Taylor's, and the dog on train will be
pack You'd have to squeeze push your way into the
into the train, and then you know your trainers monk
(01:06:18):
moving back and forth. And I'm thinking to myself that
if you give free bus rides, the buses are going
to be packed, jam packed like Saday's all day long,
every day. Because people say, well, i'd rather walk in
for blocks. Why don't I just take a bus ride?
It's free, it's cold outside, Why don't I get on
the bus and just ride? The bus is warm, it's
(01:06:40):
hot outside, one hundred one degrees of bacon here in
the concrete jungle of New York. Why don't I just
get on the bus and buses air conditioning. I've never
heard anything as dumb as that. I mean, I guess
a lot of people affordability man, that old zorad Mindami
Osima bin Lone Jr. That mon got a good program.
He's talking about affordability. That's why New York affordability. Are
(01:07:04):
you stupid? And I don't mean insult anybody, that's all
what I'm doing, but I'm trying to figure out what
you know. You're probably trying to get something for nothing.
Have you thought about what the busses would look like
if they were free in any and everybody could just
get on anytime and get off anytime. Do you know
how crowded the busses would be? Do you know how
(01:07:26):
many fights you would have on the busses? How many
people be fighting over this, fighting over seats? Finally, are
you have you lost your mind? I mean affordability? Is
that what affordability means? You don't pay nothing? I thought
affordability means you pay something. Affordability means free everything, free food,
(01:07:48):
free bus rides, freeze the rent. Is that the two
for in the program and the slogan affordability don't even
match one another. Is my intellect so much higher than
everybody else? Case? You gotta be stupid to how New
(01:08:08):
York City buses jam packed from from one end of
the line to the other, with people just freeloading, getting
on and getting off, pushing one another, men rubbing up
against a woman's butt, pushing up against her. I mean
you are you crazy? Free blessed rides, freeloaders, of that.
(01:08:30):
Ain't that's not affordability. That's insane. What that is. I
can't believe you all went for that, Oki do I
can't believe. And at the college students too, PhD students,
graduate students. You mean to tell me your intellect, your
your you had no better sense to recognize that tack camp.
(01:08:52):
There is no way you can have free bus rides
in New York City. Everybody crazy, people getting on, Nasty
people get on, dirty people getting on. People ain't got
no money getting on. It's bad enough, got that. People
are sleeping on the subways a night. You're talking about
buses off, getting off and on the back of the bus,
(01:09:12):
front of the bus driving, the bus driver crazy, the
busses be slowed down, dragged down, weighed down, stinked down,
and you went for that. That's not affordability.
Speaker 4 (01:09:25):
Have you lost show?
Speaker 3 (01:09:26):
Do you understand semantics? Affordability means a price that you compare.
That mean you pay something. Afford means you pay something,
maybe not an extravagant or somea bin laden boy. That
boy got some good policy affordability. And I even see
so many people on television, these dudes an't going right.
Affordability I see it all in the newspapers. Affordability. What
(01:09:50):
the hell is wrong with y'all. That's a whole world
gone dumb, ignorant, affordability, afforded Lord, and then government grocery stores.
Let me tell you something. I mean, I've been around.
I've been around barn a couple of times. I don't
want the government dealing out my food. I don't want
(01:10:13):
them telling me because then you're gonna get all kind
of other practices going on that they ain't got no
business being involved, government thieves, government liars. Then they're gonna
try to figure out you know, you want some government food.
Come over here, little girl, let me talk to you
in the corner. Lord, have mercy y'all talking about or
(01:10:35):
or somema beIN Laden Jr. Affordability. Man, he got some
good policy, he got some good policy. You donet lost
your mind. I see what you're wrong. You'll see what
your problem is is that you want something for nothing.
That's your problem. You have a grown outside of the
phase of trying to get something for nothing. That's not
the way the world up works. There is no free lunch,
there is no free bus ride. Dammit. At some point
(01:10:58):
in time, you will mature to the where you realize
that there is no free lunch. You will lose the
philosophy and the idea of trying to get something for nothing.
You will realize that everything has a cost, and everything
has an opposite and an equal reaction. You're not there yet.
You haven't reached that. You haven't learned how to learn.
(01:11:18):
You don't know that yet. You're still in the dog.
You think you can get something for nothing. There is
no free bus ride, there is no free lunch. For
every action. There's an equal and opposite reaction. And when
you learn, and it may take you another thirty forty
years before you mature to the point where you recognize,
wait a minute, going through life, there is no free lunch.
(01:11:39):
Everything has a prize, Everything has a price. Even going
to church, you got to bring an offering. You haven't
learned that yet. That's your problem. That's why Osama bin
Laden's policy sound good to you. You haven't learned life yet.
You don't understand life yet. There is no free lunch
(01:12:03):
for everything. There's a time and a season for everything.
For everything, there's the costs and a reason for everything.
There is no how you selling a free bus ride.
There ain't no free bus rides unless you're going to
the execution chamber. They give you a free ride then,
(01:12:24):
you know. So I'm not his scholing you. If you're
a passivate, you're scolding me and everything. I got my
master's degree from Columbia University. Okay, alright, alright, okay, so
you gotta offend it. Okay, right, you gotta offend it
because it's true. Anyway, I'm gonna let you see how
this is just one of many. This is in your
rollo clip show you what I'm gonna do. And the
(01:12:48):
NYC mayoral primary.
Speaker 5 (01:12:49):
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 justice revolution. It's time to
meet James Manning, a true advocate for the people of
New York City and is a writing candidate. Mike Duggan
was a writing candidate in Detroit in twenty fourteen. Can
(01:13:09):
he turned that city around? James Manning will do the
same for New York City.
Speaker 3 (01:13:14):
I am James Manning and I approved this message. I
answer him to the back end of the broadcast. I'm
gonna let you see how I'm gonna infuse four to
one billion dollars into the economy. No free bus rides, now,
I ain't gonna be The world doesn't work that way.
So everything there's the time and the season. The world
doesn't work that way. There is no free anything, all right,
(01:13:35):
So let's get that straight. So I'm gonna bring that
in towards the back end of this broadcast. But what
I want to do now is that I've asked Eric
Adams to endorse me. You think you will. He called
Fredo Corleone. Y'all call him Andrew Cuomo, but he's really
Fredo Correleone from the Godfather. I don't know if you
remember The Godfather. He called him a snake and a liar. So,
(01:14:03):
I you know, I think once our videos get going,
I think a lot of people are gonna get on
our bandwagon. I think, cause we got some uh some
really good videos. But any rate, I'm gonna make an
appeal again to Eric Adams to endorse me, and I'm
mis engineered. You get that video, and I'm gonna tell
(01:14:25):
Y'allso I told y'all early on when I first drove
up about the fact I'm going out to Brooklyn today.
I'm laughing because I'm gonna spend three days out there
among my Hasidic brothers Jews, and I'm gonna see what's
gonna happen. I'm, you know, probably gonna do a lot
of sleeping in the van. Yes, they're sleeping on the street,
but I actually when I actually go to s I'm
(01:14:47):
gonna be on the street for three days. But when
I actually go to sleep, I'm gonna be in the van.
That's why I'm gonna I would van with the my
knocking out moor Osama bin Laden Junr. But yeah, yeah,
I said, can y'all write to Eric Adams and ask
him to endorse me? You all do that. I think
(01:15:09):
that'd be a good thing if he did he endorse me.
I think it'll be a real good thing. Gowhamns send
me to roll that clip. I'm here because I am
a roaring line crying out rightiou Eric Adams, the president
mayor of the City of New York, has dropped out
of the male race. He's no longer a candidate for
(01:15:31):
the office of the man. He came down the steps.
What was on Saturday morning Sunday morning? I think it
was came down the steps on Sunday morning at Derrick
Gracie Manchon. I think it was so maybe a city hall,
I'm not sure, sat down on the steps with the
sleeves rolled up in a picture of his mother at
his left side, and he declared that he was no
longer seeking the office of a suspending officers bear. He
(01:15:53):
was suspending his case and that was to be understood
that he would do that. That he was you know,
he he was suffering terribly in the polls. The media
is against him, and there are a lot of mistakes
that Eric made, and his biggest mistake, the fatal mistake
that Eric made, was to go to maur Laga and
ask Trump to help him in his criminal trial in
(01:16:15):
the indictment by the Southern District of New York on
federal campaign charges charges that he did crimes if you will,
allegedly that he did. That was the nail in the
coffin for Eric Adams. I think he would be formidable
and almost impossible to beat had he not gone down
(01:16:35):
to talk with and asked Donald Trump, and then Donald
Trump a course, stepped in in a very public way
and had his indictment dismissed in a very ugly way,
very public, in a very ugly way, in a sense
that people that are rich and are powerful don't have
to face the Bob Justice the way the rest of
us do. I think that's the thing that hurt Eric
Adams the most. But that's not what I'm here to
(01:16:57):
talk to you about today. What I'm here to talk
to you about today is I'm going to ask Eric Adams.
I've already asked Eric Adams if he would endorse me. Now,
I know that the polls are not reporting this publicly,
and they dare put a camera on me or a
microphone in front of me, or to write about me
as a candidate. But I'm out there in the ether
(01:17:18):
everywhere you shake a stick and asking a poll. Where
the Quinnipiac poll or the Fox News poll, or CNN,
CBS poll or the marriage poll. All of those posters
get people saying I'm going to vote for Manning. They're
not reporting that. But I can tell you now, according
to what I have heard and have observed, is that
(01:17:40):
I'm polling at about forty percent in the polls were
I on the ballot? Now here's what the posters are saying.
So the poster will call up a person, ask him
who you're going to vote for? Where are you a Republican?
Are you independent? And the persons on the other end
will say, I'm going to vote for Manning, and the
poster will say, well, he's not on the ballot, and
(01:18:01):
so he's not officially running, and so you have to
give me another name other than Manning because he's not
on the ballot, And that's by not My not being
on the ballot is absolutely true. However, I am running,
But because I'm not on the ballot, they think that
their poll has to reflect only people's names that appear
(01:18:21):
on the ballot. So then they ask, if you can't
vote for Manning, what's the next person? And they may
say Mondomi, or they may say Cuomo, or they may
say Adams. But really, I am polling higher than all
three of those at this very moment. Now they're not
reporting that. They are not reporting that, and technically, and
(01:18:45):
according to the poster situation, and according to the way
the election laws work, they probably cannot report it because
I'm not on the ballot. I'm a writing candidate, as
you have seen, and that people have to write my
name when they walk into the voting booth on the
fourth of November. But what I having said that I'm
(01:19:05):
a formidable I am out there. I've been out there.
The people love me, the people want me. It's incredible
what I've been able to build and momentum over the
last year running as a candidate of mayor for the
City of New York. And I'm gonna win. But what
I want to ask Eric Adams to do is to
(01:19:26):
endorse me. And I don't know whether or not this
is illegal. If it is, then I don't mean to
meet it as an illegal offerm. But Eric Adams, let
me say this to you that I could use your
help in city Hall. If you will endorse me, you
(01:19:49):
don't have to leave city Hall. I can use I
need I want. Let me repeat that, Eric or Mayor Adams,
I can use I need. I want you a help
in city Hall. And mister Mayor, not only if you
endorse me do I need you, But I would ask
(01:20:13):
you to bring with you to city Hall to help
me some of your most trusted, dedicated and honorable people
that we can continue most of the work that you
started here in City Hall, the work that you've started,
the work that you've completed, the things that you've accomplished
(01:20:33):
over the past four years. That work can continue on
the Manning administration now, as best I have checked legally
an election law, what I am proposing is not illegal.
That is not the intent. I'm simply saying, there would
be a place in city Hall for former Mayor Eric Adams.
(01:20:56):
He would not have to leave. There would be a
place in city Hall for all the people that Mayor
Eric Adams deems as trustworthy, as people that are visionaries,
people that are great administrators. There would be a place
for all of them. Where that the case. And not
(01:21:18):
just that, but many of the great projects that you engendered,
mister Adams will Mayor Adams will continue under the Manning administration. Moreover,
Mayor Adams, you don't want Cuomo sitting in your seat.
Mayor Adams, you don't want Andrew Fato from the Godfather
(01:21:42):
Cuomo sitting in You'll see you don't want Andrew Fato
from the Godfather Cuomo seating and sitting in your seat.
You don't want that. And I'm the only one that
can unseat him. You also don't want Mandanni. You referred
to him, and you were absolutely right that he is
(01:22:05):
a snake oil salesman. That Mandami is a snake own.
Not only is he that, but he is Osama bin
Laden Junior. Mayor Adams, Here, here my heart, Mayor Adams,
here my heart. You don't want to turn New York City,
the city that I'm sure that you love, the city
(01:22:27):
that you have worked so hard to build. You don't
want to turn it over to a snake oil salesman
who is Osama been Lodden Junior in Mandanmi. You don't
want to do that. And there's nobody but me on
this planet right now, Mayor Adams, that can stop uh
(01:22:48):
Osama been Lodden Junior from taking your position. And of
course we all all know about pussing boots. Uh this Sleevewalborn,
who is really his name, should be pussing boots. He's
a joke that ain't funny. He's up. The big said,
(01:23:09):
I started a joke that started the whole world crying.
Pussing boots Sleiewa is a joke. If he became the
mayor of the City of New York, would have the
whole world crying. So you don't want Puss in boots.
You don't want fado from the Godfather Cuomo, and you
definitely don't want Osama bin Laden Junior sitting in your seat.
(01:23:32):
Endorse me, Mayor Adams, and we shall walk together the
streets of New York. We shall work together the streets
of New York. I'm James David Manning, Mayor Eric Adams,
I am the Lord Servant, and I've served this community,
in this city and this nation for forty four years.
I saw an article the other day verified to make
(01:23:54):
sure it's all on the helping up that Osama bin
Laddon Junr. Y'all call him around mandani. Uh. It's planning
to allocate sixty five billion dollars for people to have
transgender operations. You can have your junk cut off, uh,
and New York City will be in the place of
that and more. Which is probably worse than that, is
(01:24:16):
that people can come from all over America. They don't
have to be citizens of New York and get that
kind of medical attention that they can have their junk
cut off and become a training You know, I've survived
in this city that perhaps one of the more liberal
(01:24:36):
cities on the planet. Actually, I found out that Portland
has perhaps more homosexual people and homosexual ideologies and businesses
and strategies than does New York. I'm not sure that's true,
but I've heard that that's maybe why. One of the
ways of the reason Donald John Tribulation Trump has trained
his iire towards Portland, Oregon because of its uh bread
(01:25:01):
liberal if you will ideas. I was asked to be
on four radio stations out in San Francisco. Uh, but
you know, San Francisco is a very liberal place as well.
And once the general manager got news the fact there
was me, he cut me off. And now New York
San Francisco couldn't handle Pastor Manning. But you know what
(01:25:21):
I want to say is that I've survived this city.
It has it has emptied out our church. There was
a young girl who grew up in this church, and
you know her mother, and that she went to college.
Then she came back and she discovered you said, what,
pastor matter, Why don't you go for homosexuals? Why don't
(01:25:44):
you think that you men can men marry men and women?
And as far as she was concerned, she had learned
in college. That's what's doing, that's what's happening, and she
was amazed that I didn't go along with that, and
so I survived that every every day. I don't know
if you know what that's like. People who don't that
(01:26:04):
people don't have a problem homosexuality. Now, they they're not
gonna stand up and shout it from the rooftops or
probably admit that they're one themselves, but they don't have
a problem with even though the Bible condemns it. It
is the weirdest thing and one of the reason why
Obama's long leg back that Obama's far worse than Trump,
even though Trump is a nightmare. Homosexuality defies the Bible
(01:26:30):
all three stages, the Old Testament, Jesus, in the New Testament, Paul,
and the Epistles. Homosexuality is clearly, unmistakably an assault upon
the Word of God, and churches, including Pope Leo over
there in Rome and Bigoldglio before him, they've all accepted it.
(01:26:55):
I think what I'm doing is probably a little bit
of bellyaching, because I'm trying to say to y'all, you know,
those you don't live in New York city. That I'm
able to survive in New York City, even to get
people to come to this church's incredible because this is
a very liberal city. He said, Pastor, Man, if it's
that liberal, if it's that liberal, then how do you
expect you to become the mayor of the City of
New York? Because I believe there are number of people
(01:27:18):
who believe that even though the city is a liberal city,
that I could be better than that socialist, communist Osama
bin Laden Junior or afraid old Coreleone. There was a
woman that said to me, going back about five six
months ago. She said to me, she said, Pastor, she said,
(01:27:40):
you know, if you don't repent and apologize to homosexual
you'll never get elected mayor of the City of New York.
And you know, I listened to her. I thought she
was out of her mind, but I said, you know, well, okay,
all right. But you know she wrote to me a
month ago and she said, you know, I'm I'm gonna
(01:28:00):
come help you win the election. I'm gonna come help
you do what you're doing because you're doing the right thing.
It's just like I want her. I believe I can
win others as well. And I believe that people know
that what I'm speaking is true. I think people are
tired of the sicking of madness. It's one thing. I
(01:28:20):
tell you, what, if you're gonna make homosexuality approved by
higher than the standard of the world of God, why
don't we make adultery, line, killing and stealing as well?
There are all things that God said you can't do.
Why just pick? Why just pick one such as the
sex that you which is the other thing? It's about sex,
(01:28:41):
It isn't about nobility about well, I said, the world
get together. We are the world. Let's say, if if
we find a way to raise up the economic powers
of all the fifty four nations of Africa and make
Africa a beautiful place in terms of health, human services, engineering,
if you will, modern ideology, and technology, archaeology, why don't
(01:29:04):
we do that make that a global principle in practice. No,
they want to make sex. Let me come on, and
the way that they do it and how they do it.
I said to me God, So one woman said, it's
just a homosexuality requires you got to do too many
things to get it done to be homosexual.
Speaker 6 (01:29:24):
You know.
Speaker 3 (01:29:25):
The other thing is that you know, haven't given any
local news about local national news about what's going on
with Trump, what's going on with Gaza, what's going on
with the government shut down? If pass many you have
given us any news about it? Because of what there's
no news really to tell you about. Quite frankly, there's
nothing to go. There's nothing to say except that I
do think this that the the proposal of twenty point
(01:29:50):
proposal that Trump laid out for Hamas ain't gonna work.
I bet they may give up the hostages. I think
they may give that because they're tired of feeding. I mean,
they're the ones that are dead. But then Hamas is
not going to give up any hostage. Is unless they
can get for every one hostage they give up in Gaza,
(01:30:11):
they get a thousand Palestinians that are locked away in
the West Bank or in Israel. So I mean that
might work, But beyond that, I don't see. Trump threatened
and said if they don't agree to the peace deals,
such as Hamas leaving Gaza altogether, you got to be
at your mouth you think that's going to happen. But
(01:30:33):
Trump said that, he said, if they don't they don't
do that, then all hell is going to break loose.
You know, I said something the other day. I think
it needs to be clear that what Hamas did on
the seventh of October coming up tomorrow, was perhaps one
of the most horrific things that has happened to humanity.
(01:30:55):
I think that Hamas planned when they knew there was
going to be a young people are going to be
having a concert there on the border of Gaza, and
that there be a lot of young girls there. I
think that Hamas planned to rape those young girls. And
(01:31:20):
all those girls that were raped, and there were a
lot of them raped during that twenty four hour period
one day before the IDF could get there. The first
time those young Jewish girls had sex was they were raped.
Their lives have been forever ruined. It's one thing that
they killed a lot of Hamas did, but it's another.
(01:31:43):
It is another that they raped and maimed the way
they did so Hamas. You know, if someone asked me
the other days, well, how do you feel? I think
Queen Z's flip asked me, you know, how do you
feel about it? I said, well, I you know, I
see the hunger and the suffering going on in Gaza.
Now my heart goes out form but you know, if
they hadn't started, it wouldn't be nothing. They started it,
(01:32:06):
so a lot of people, you know, I mean, I'm
Israel all the way. That's just all this should I'm
just Israel all the way. I believe that God gave
that land to the Jews, gave it to Abraham, gave
him the deed, and I'm just Israel all the way.
I'm pardon me, but that's who I am. And that's
why Osama bin laden Junr got to be stopped. He's
(01:32:29):
got to be stopped. People don't realize what Obama longly
get back Daddy did with this sex thing. Let me
come on, now, you're gonna have sex. Get in your bedroom,
closed the door, go in a closet, go somewhere, have sex,
Do what you gotta do, then leave everybody else alone.
I want you to approve of my sex. I want
(01:32:51):
you to approve of the way I have sex. I
want you to approve of who I have sex with.
I want who I have sex with and who I
chuse use to have sex with to be nationally recognized
and publicly put before the entire world and all of
the ethics in Themorrows and the social things that humanity
has done. I want who I choose to have sex
(01:33:14):
with to be recognized right along with the Sermon on
the Mount, or above the Sermon on the Mount taught
by Jesus. I want my sex recognized. I want to
have sang sex. I want to have sang sex with
the with the man, and I wanted to be recognized.
(01:33:36):
And so I just you know, everybody, if y'all live
in someplace, y'all ought to help me out up here
in New York. You really ought to help me out,
knowing what I'm going through up here at any rate,
I you know, I wanted to also state that I
am amazed at the number of people that even homosexual
people that love me. And I believe a large portion
(01:33:59):
of people that's going to make me a mayor who's
gonna be people that are homosexuals because they know don't
deal what's up anyway. I found love one hundred and
twenty fifth Street. I want you to see some of
the people that have prayed for me, and then I'm
gonna come back and I want y'all listen to my
program A forty one billion dollars. This is a great
(01:34:20):
program and it's getting a lot of views on Facebook too,
but forty one billion dollars into the working class community.
And by the way, you know, I've been talking about
this thing for the last what thirty three thirty four
years of how to build this community economically. And some
of these other you know, city council persons, mayors and
(01:34:40):
ding Dinkins and du Blasio and a bunch of others
need to go to jail. Eric Adams as well, along
with that fellow us and then with all that money,
they all need to go to jail. Anyway, Miss and
Gin wrote that piece, which will please Okay, God, bless
(01:35:02):
your daughter.
Speaker 4 (01:35:07):
The crowd.
Speaker 8 (01:35:13):
You're the pastor of the church.
Speaker 3 (01:35:15):
Yes I am. I love that you.
Speaker 8 (01:35:17):
I've even watching that church and my hustle for youth.
Speaker 6 (01:35:19):
You're so bold, you are not out of order, and
I love the authority that you want, so inspirational.
Speaker 3 (01:35:27):
That's my man. He's sitting back.
Speaker 4 (01:35:28):
In the contain.
Speaker 3 (01:35:29):
Thank you for Oh yeah, God, bless you, thank.
Speaker 6 (01:35:32):
You, I.
Speaker 3 (01:35:34):
Follow you, thank you, thank you, thank You're so very
very much. God bless the hand ball up here. What's
your name, Lynette Nicholaste, Well, thank you, jeannialist.
Speaker 8 (01:35:51):
Yes, I'll take a fly.
Speaker 3 (01:35:52):
You're you're a journalist. You're right for.
Speaker 8 (01:35:55):
Essence magazine, Books and culture.
Speaker 3 (01:35:57):
Will give me some press. Thank this on my I'm
for that. I'm gonna be all right. It's the fresh
year in the car and I'll give you all of that.
Speaker 8 (01:36:08):
I'm so happy to meet my husband. Sometimes we walk
over from our condo just to see what you cooked up.
I'm the whole.
Speaker 3 (01:36:16):
It's just truth. People are so caught up in modern.
Speaker 8 (01:36:20):
Day creatures and they're trying to be celebrities and please everybody.
Your leaders are supposed to tell that. They're supposed to
break down protocol, you know, and not follow the status
close though.
Speaker 3 (01:36:30):
Thank you for your compliments.
Speaker 4 (01:36:32):
Not everybody's confused.
Speaker 8 (01:36:33):
We understand the vote.
Speaker 3 (01:36:47):
And I'm going to get here.
Speaker 6 (01:36:52):
We we love me.
Speaker 3 (01:36:53):
You're okay. I love you all.
Speaker 8 (01:36:57):
I cannot wait to tell my husband we always see.
How about your name's okay?
Speaker 5 (01:37:03):
You all?
Speaker 3 (01:37:04):
God blessing that, Yes, ma'am.
Speaker 6 (01:37:05):
I'm so thank you for y'all.
Speaker 3 (01:37:08):
God bless you. Thank you for stopping and saying hello
to me. Absolutely, thank you, God bless you.
Speaker 8 (01:37:15):
Take a picture of me.
Speaker 3 (01:37:16):
Pass to James Manton so we become and be like
I met him personally. Where're you gonna help me move
better place? I will read that card and help improve
your life if you get a better income or take
these burdens off your shoulders that you're carrying her out. Yes,
we need to understand that. Thank you, God, bless you.
(01:37:36):
I understand all. That's you. How are you?
Speaker 4 (01:37:47):
That's meet your great God?
Speaker 3 (01:37:51):
Bring that man all right? What's your name? Jerald David
gerd David er e r E L D e r LD.
I'll be looking away. I'm talking about the mayor, next mayor.
(01:38:14):
That's me. That's what you mean, God, bless you, Thank you,
and I really have got to become a mayor. There's
so many people and this is just a small clip
that there's a whole lot of stuff. We haven't really
put up any news videos in a month now. Uh,
(01:38:37):
everybody's been just so busy doing so many very various things.
But we got a ton of footage, I mean every
which a kind of way. We were down on hundred
sixteenth Street on Saturday. We got footage from hundred forty
ninth Street. Uh, and a lot of really good footage
as well, and very positive. Also, nobody says to me
that oh, well, it's either gonna be oh, some of
(01:38:58):
in Laton Junior or fred O coral Own that's going
to be the mayor. By that, I mean Andrew Cuomo
or Zorn Mandani. They never said they, Oh what I'm
praying for you. I'm gonna vote for you, you know,
even though all you see on television now is those creeps.
But we're going to be on television shortly. All praise God.
(01:39:21):
He gives an opportunity to be able to do that.
And I think it's gonna be a beautiful time once.
Once we do listen, I'm gonna let you. I'm gona
go to ask the engineer to take us to the
top of the hour we wanted. I think I want
of the most beautiful programs that any country or nation
or people I've ever heard by infusing forty one billion
dollars into the working class communities, So mister engineer, take
(01:39:46):
us to the top of the hour with there. Don't
go anywhere. Everybody to watch this now. The next thing
I do want to say, in terms of my candidacy
and my becoming the next mayor of the City of
New York, I plan to raise the minimum wage of
twenty seven dollars per ho, and I plan to do
that quickly and as effectively as I possibly can. One
(01:40:06):
of the reasons why there is homelessness and this crime
and their ghettos is because the people in those particular
neighborhoods don't get the kind of pay that they get.
And we only think that people who have college degrees
should be well paid. But there's a truth out there
(01:40:28):
now that's saying to a large number of people. You know,
you go to college, you run up one hundred and
fifty thousand dollars college tuition bill, and you get out
and you barely can't find a job. And so a
number of people are thinking that, well, if I can
just get some good training and develop some skills, perhaps
(01:40:51):
I don't need the college education. I'm not telling you
about not to go to college, God forbid. What I
am saying is that there has been a structure that
has been supported by working class people to only honor
people with large degrees. You don't have to have a
degree to run a big shop. And thinking about trufl
(01:41:12):
of flow, who wants to run a big shop? You
don't have to have a college degree, you know, to
run a small business to open up a paint store,
open up a haberdasher store, and make three four hundred
thousand dollars a year. You don't need a college degree
to do that. What you need is a structured skill.
So what I'm going to do is to by raising
(01:41:34):
the minimum wage, that'll give everybody at least a running start.
Then we're going to create a if you will and
tie if you must gentrification housing loan pool where people
who are physically anchor spiritually anchor can go and borrow
and buy a house. Borrow up the two three million
(01:41:56):
dollars to buy a house, and a part of the
commitment of the loan that they would get at a
very low interest rate, of no interest at all, is
that they would take in a homeless family, that they
would taking a family. We have a family our church,
like brother Bronner'm not sure where he's living right now.
He's got three children, his wife. They all come to
(01:42:17):
church on Saturday, and the baby just cries and interrupts
my sermon, like you won't believe baby, don't do anything
until I start preaching. But a family like that needs
an opportunity. If let's say, for instance, the elder Smith
buys a home, buys one of the brownstones you'll see
across the street. That's a three family house. He rents
(01:42:37):
out a whole floor to the Bronner family. They have
to pay him rent. He now has to manage the house.
We want to replicate that kind of an event into
the neighborhoods. And if we can get people who are
working at a minimum wage of twenty seven dollars per
hour making at least fifty thousand dollars per hour, fifty
(01:42:59):
thousand seven others seventy thousand dollars per year, then they
can afford the rent. Now they'll still be skimping. I
plan listen to this, and I'll say this to the gentrifiers.
While I've been definitely against you moving into this community,
but I but I've told you over the years, you
have not realized your dream of an ideal community where
(01:43:22):
you paid five six million dollars for a house and
you're now living in an austured neighborhood. It isn't happening.
But here's what I'm going to do. Here's what I'm
going to do, gentrifiers and everybody else. First of all,
you need there needs to be some reconciliation and gentrifries
need to come to talk to me. But I'm going
to clean up. If you walk down one hundred and
(01:43:44):
twenty fifth Street here in Harlem in New York City
is now out law. You see people sleeping on the street,
You see all kinds of dissparaging it if you will,
kinds of activities going on one hundred twenty fifth Street.
People that are on drugs, people that have no mattress,
have no spoon, have no curtain, have no table, Every
(01:44:05):
curtain of the table or napkin that they use, a
toilet that they use, a toilet paper that they use,
belongs to somebody else. I'm gonna sweep one hundred and
twenty fifth Street broom clean where it looked like. Well,
we were in Paris several years ago, and I think
that we were on what was known as the Franklin
Delano Roosevelt Terrace or street. It's right near the Champson
(01:44:27):
Lease and not too far away from the Eiffel Tower.
Beautiful community, beautiful neighborhood, absolutely beautiful. Well better yet, I'm
gonna have the streets of Harlem look like sixty second
Street on the east side between the third and second
Avenue and First Avenue, all those beautiful streets. But there's
(01:44:49):
never any thing awride, never a garbage can out of place,
never litter on the street. Just a very beautiful tree
line community. I'm gonna I'm gonna sweep Harlem broom cl
and by the way, can I say this to you.
Years ago, when I first took the helm of this ministry,
I used to have the men of this community church
(01:45:09):
that we had, like I don't know, one hundred, two
hundred three hundred men sleeping in the building at night. Well,
one of the things that would have them during the
morning is get up early in the mornings and take
brooms and see that sidewalk, see that man walking down
the street. Sweep that sidewalk all the way down to
one hundred and tenth Street from here, that's thirteen blocks,
and then sweep all the way up to one hundred
and thirty fifth Street, and then sweep both sides of
(01:45:31):
the street. Every morning they would get out with a
bunch of these heavy, deedy brooms. I said, thirty forty
men out to sweep the streets. I did this for years.
I'll say this to the gentrifieres and to all New
Yorkers and all visitors to New Yorker. The first year
of my becoming the mayor of the City of New York,
and at the conclusion or the beginning of the second year,
(01:45:53):
Harlem will be broom clean. It will be swept, broom clean.
There will be nobody sleeping on the streets. There'll be
no litter on the streets. The streets themselves will be cleaned.
It will be a delightful, delective place. You can actually
eat off the streets. That's how broom clean. I'm going
to streets. But not only that, I'm going to buy
the process of raising the minimum wage. Then encouraging people
(01:46:17):
to own businesses again in Harlem, encouraging people to buy homes,
get equity, rent out the space, learn how to manage it,
and the minimum wage yourself, and buy no food sales tax.
Wherever you go to buy food, you will not pay tax.
And to relieving all the bodegas of sales tax, the
(01:46:42):
city of the City of New York is gonna have
to take a hit in the pocket. I'm gonna tell
you this right now, right now, the city budgets one
points one and fourteen billion dollars per year. Well, you're
all gonna have to take a hit in the bucket,
in the pocket the City of New York. You got
to tighten your belt. When I become the mayor of
the City of New York, you got to tighten your belt.
A lot of waste money. I see a lot of
(01:47:03):
money that's wasted for things such as you know, plugins
on the street for your phone, and all kinds of
other stuff about bus schedules and whatnot that really isn't
necessary that we're gonna cut back on some of those things.
The City of New York needs to cut back. Are
you gonna You're gonna have to take a hit in
your budget the City of New York, and we're gonna
(01:47:24):
direct that money that's going to the City of New
York to then go to all the city the people
that are profiting, the manufacturers and business people got contracts
with the city. You're gonna have to take cut a cut,
and we're gonna infuse that money back into the community.
You have to read a forty one billion dollars a year. Now,
if you can imagine think about this for just a second,
(01:47:45):
and I can, I'll outline this. I'll have our accountant
outline this for you. Think about this for just a second.
The entire budget of the City of New York, for
the police Department, for the fire Department, for all other departments,
for the education department, nine hundred thousand students, is one
hundred and fourteen billion dollars a year per year. Is
that right? That's how much it is. Imagine by redirecting,
(01:48:11):
reinvigorating the people that are unproductive, that are not working,
that are not paying taxes, getting back in the workforce,
getting back on the tax rolls, getting back on the
ownership rods, getting back in the rental roads, getting back
into having money in the local neighborhood would reproduce forty
one billion dollars. That's nearly a third of the budget.
(01:48:35):
And I can that would be money that'll be coming
into so called marginalized neighborhoods, if you want to call
them that. I'm not sure that's why I want to
call them. It's a brilliant it's just God's plan. It's
just the plan that God has put to put forward,
and it would make New York City, the streets of
New York City broom clean. There will be no litter,
(01:48:57):
there'll be no people on the street sleeping, there'll be
no riff raff. And you know I was. When I
was growing up in North Carolina, there was a man
who had some psychological problems and he lived with his family,
and there were several women that lived in the house.
(01:49:19):
I had a decent house. And one of the things
I liked about him that had a outside in their yard.
They had because they had a big yard in the
house on that street next to the I think the
Amy church.
Speaker 5 (01:49:31):
Was.
Speaker 3 (01:49:32):
They had a place where they grew grapes. Anyway, so
this man was a little bit off, and so most
of us when we were young would be afraid to
go by the house because we know he's sitting on
the porch for did come out and chase us and
run after us. And sometimes he do that. Sometimes he
come out, he chased he ran after we'd all run
and scatter. But they let him stay in the house.
He was a little bit crazy, but they let him
(01:49:54):
stay in the house. See the problem the blessing with
me is I grew up at a time well, no
matter what happened, every man and every woman and every
boy and every girl had a bed to go to
at night, no matter how impoverished the die. Even during
the time of the Great Depression, every man, every woman,
(01:50:16):
and every boy and every girl had a bed at
night because the families took them in, even though some
of them were little bit crazy, some of them had problems,
et cetera. But we all dealt with it. We all
dealt with it. Nobody slept on the streets. We can
bring that back. We've lost our way. And I'll tell
you why we've lost our way, because our leaders are hypocrites.
(01:50:37):
They are worse than hypocrites. They're satanic. And the rules
of life, the rules of civic if you will, family structure,
they're all, if you will, hypocrites, the very best of
them a satanic at the very There is all this
(01:50:58):
business about blaming white folk for everything that ever goes
wrong with black folk. The white man's ice. If you
go buy a block of ice, and the white man
buys a block, and the white man sells the white
man a block, and the white man sells the black man,
the white man will sell the black man a block
of ice is not as cold as the white man's ice.
(01:51:18):
I mean, that's all you hear out of the mouth
of these so called black college professors at Princeton, and
these Cornell West and these Eddie Gloyd's and these joy
Van Jones and all of these news commentators, and everything
is the white man's ice is colder. The white man
gets what he buys. You buy the same place, but
(01:51:39):
the white man gives you a lesser product. I mean,
it is ridiculous, how insane this has become over the
last sixty years. And if you're not, if you're too
young to realize when even during the time of Jim Crow,
every man had a bed to sleep in, every child
had a bed to sleep in, every child had a
(01:52:00):
father in their home. None of this nonsense, this perversion
that you hear on a daily basis coming out of
the mouth of these hypocrites. And now they've gone even
worse by wanting the men to become homo sexual men,
women to become lesbian women. Is madness. I will so
to the gentrifiers. You probably thought you'd never hear this
(01:52:22):
from me, but I'm going to increase the property of
your property value. Gentrifiers, I'm going to increase your property values.
Of course, I'm gonna take all the riff raff out
of the community, and not by using the police and
cracking heads. I'm gonna take it out by simply employing
the biblical principles and showing the spirit of love and
stopping the lying and stopping the profiting. Stopping if you will,
(01:52:45):
the cottage industry that a lot of these pension those negroes,
they make all that money by blaming white folk and
stirring up anger with black folk, to be angry with
white folk, and they being intermediary. That's how they make
them millions of dollars. Do it in the movies, even
if they got making money on as athletes. I'm going
to to the gentrifiers, I am going to improve your
(01:53:10):
property value by cleaning the streets and making the neighborhood safer, cleaner,
and without using police or the fire department. That's right,
That's what I'm gonna do. I've done it for years.
I used to sweep the streets of these this community
for years, and I used to clean up, would let
people go out of the building that the were unkempt,
(01:53:30):
and I gave a man a bed to sleep in.
So we need to remindful of what's coming with me
as the mayor of the City of New York. But
I do plan to and I'll close with this budget
right now. The City of New York is one is
one hundred and forty million dollars. I plan to make
(01:53:50):
New York City a classic upgraded city where poverty has
been abolished, homelessness has been a bobblished, has and abolished.
I do plan to say this. I do want to
remind everyone that I'm gonna keep the street vendors, but
they're gonna have to, you know, clean up their act,
polish up their act, get their act together. I will
(01:54:13):
require street vendors to wear uniforms based on the logos
of their business, whatever their property, whatever they're selling. But
there's enough room one hundred and twenty fifth Street for
the for the street vendors and the store owners. And
my listen, this is America capitalist. I'm a capitalist in
that regard the and so let the best man win.
(01:54:37):
I think the street vendors need to be able. I
consider them small businesses. Now they're gonna have to wear uniforms. Uh,
They're gonna have to be fully responsible for the whitewashing
of their sidewalk, for the cleaning, and for the presentation
of their wares, and they can do that. That's not
a problem. Most of them would be willing to do it.
But I'm gonna make Harlem, in particular, the streets so clear.
(01:55:01):
When I say to you, I'm gonna Harlem is gonna
be the streets are going to be brooms swept clean, brooms.
You won't see anybody sleeping on the street. You won't
see anybody vega zagabond. And I'm gonna make Harlem brooms,
the entire community community of Harlem Broom swept clean. Five
one hundred forty fifth, one hundred and sixteen hundred, tenth,
(01:55:21):
seventh Avenue, eighth Avenue, Lenox Avenue, Lexington Avenue, Broom swept clean.
I said this thirty four years ago, that the streets
will be so clean you could take off your shoes
and walk barefoot. I'm gonna show you a picture of
myself and Elizabeth actually on the street out in front
of the church walking barefoot, thirty four years ago. I
(01:55:43):
was a much younger man. Elizabeth was a little bit
younger too, But I said I was gonna make the
streets brooms sweep, swept clean. And I'm gonna do that
I'm gonna do that as the mayor of the City
of New York. And again I'm gonna bring forty one
one billion dollars. Now, if you look at the commerce,
(01:56:03):
the economic commerce of Wall Street down in that region,
I suppose that annually they go over the treeion dollar
mark in terms of sales, of stocks, of trading of businesses,
of mergers of banking, all of that they do probably
(01:56:24):
on a billion dollars. And New York just gets a
small chunk of that of one hundred and fourteen billion
dollars to run the City of New York. What I'm
going to do is that I'm going to turn Harlem
into a black wall Street. Well, no, not, that's a
phrase they came from back in the nineteen twenties in Tulsa, Oklahoma. No,
(01:56:46):
I'm going to turn Harlem into an outlaw Wall Street
to a righteous wall Street. Where and bed Stye too,
and Fort Green and South Jamaica and East New York
and all of those regions I'm going to turn into
a profitable area where there will be forty one billion
(01:57:08):
forty one imagine this in South Jamaica, imagine this, and
Bedsty forty one billion dollars now being poured into these neighborhoods.
How it would change the clothing at the people, where,
the cars that they drive, the houses that they live in,
and it would upscale the city of New York in
ways probably nobody ever dreamed of in terms of New
(01:57:30):
York being in an upscale city will be the new
Dubai of the Western world. To be absolutely sure, Hey, Mandammi,
what's my name? What's my name? What's my name?
Speaker 4 (01:57:45):
James Manning?
Speaker 3 (01:57:47):
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 going
to print in the right insection? Whose name you're gonna
print in the right in section on the ballot? Who
are you gonna print? Whose name?
Speaker 4 (01:58:07):
James Manning?
Speaker 3 (01:58:09):
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 writing section on the ballot on
November fourth here in the New York City mayoral election.
Speaker 4 (01:58:29):
James Manning?
Speaker 3 (01:58:31):
All right, now, let's get it home. 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.
Speaker 4 (01:58:46):
York shy.
Speaker 7 (01:59:00):
Ready again and again, ready any ready, Ready, Ready again.
Speaker 4 (01:59:14):
Of city, Get ready from.
Speaker 8 (01:59:19):
The fight for you in all your.
Speaker 4 (01:59:23):
He's the time of the last you've been told. He's
a chance for you to vote for.
Speaker 6 (01:59:33):
He's a man with the plans that will get you
through your struggles.
Speaker 4 (01:59:39):
All enjoy.
Speaker 8 (01:59:43):
The dawn of a new your eyes have never seen.
Speaker 6 (01:59:47):
Get ready for change, and be truly said, Love righteousness.
Speaker 4 (01:59:54):
We don't need no politician.
Speaker 6 (01:59:57):
Love righteressess is all weendy, Loving righteousness.
Speaker 4 (02:00:04):
New York CID.
Speaker 6 (02:00:05):
Indeed, loving righteousness, that's all weendy