Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:01):
Broy Hoods. The Boy Ken White hosted the South Side
Unicorn Show. Uh, well it's Saturday. That means it's been
four days, five days since Charlie Kirk was taken from us,
since he was assassinated, and tomorrow is his funeral. Mm
and you got people out there going, hey, he's dead. Uh.
(00:23):
You got one of you guys gonna stop talking about him? Wow? Wow. Uh.
I don't wanna be doing this tip for tat and
this for that stuff. I'm not gonna do that. But
you guys are disgusting. And the fact that George Floyd
was rubbed under our noses for almost four years, four
(00:45):
years with statues and more murals and all camp one
of which one of those murals was actually actually struck
by lightning and utterly destroyed. Meteorologists said it was one
of the strongest lightning strikes they'd ever seen or recorded.
People who witnessed it said that it was one of
the brightest lightning strikes they had ever seen. Yeah, so
(01:11):
here we are about to put the body of Charlie
Kirk to rest. But that doesn't mean that Charlie Kirk
is going to rest. That doesn't mean his memory is
going anywhere, how nasty. You know. I look at you
all on the left or whoever, who have varying opinions
about Charlie Kirk, and I look at you and I say,
(01:36):
wait a minute. They have a head, they got a body,
they got arms, they have legs, eyes, nose, mouth, hair,
sometimes and they look human. They look human. And I
(01:57):
try my best never never to call a human being
an animal. A lot of people are quick to do it.
I mean, they're quick to divorce a person from the
human race, and to me, I think that's very hearty
and very mean spirited. It may be an attempt to
try to show their disgust at that person, but I
(02:18):
think we need to be careful calling human beings animals.
So it's something I try never to do. So I'm
going to continue to look at you, those on the
left and those who are dispouraging the memory of Charlie Kirk.
I'm going to continue to look at you as though
you're human, like humans, you know. But I do have
(02:45):
to say using you all as a litmus test for humanity,
everything has its highs and its lows. When I watch
how you are operating about the memory of Charlie Kirk,
when I watch how you all are operating about a
(03:06):
man who was taken from his family, A man who
was sitting on a chair preaching, preaching was taken away,
was murdered, and that one moment that he may have
felt a tender pain, and that all that he was
(03:28):
about to offer, all that he had to look forward to,
was all taken away from him because somebody thought they
had more rights than Charlie Kirk. And so when I
see how you all are behaving regarding Charlie Kirk, I
(03:50):
never imagined that the human species could be so low
that we could really be that bet of humanity. You
all are embarrassing in us. You are embarrassing us within
time and space. Because the sad part is, and I mean,
(04:14):
I wish, I wish there was some kind of rug
that we could sweep your words and your behavior, your
attitudes and your lies. I wish there was a rug
we could sweep it under and hide it in case
aliens come to visit us, in case someone like an
(04:35):
archaeologist hums around. These times are something I hope nobody
finds and nobody sees the way we've been forced to
have to see it. But the sad part is we
have technology, your words, your lies, your ugly acts of
(05:00):
facing his memorials, people were trying to grieve for him.
Then you've been tricked by a demonic spirit. You've been
tricked by wicked people into believing that you hate this
man so much that you would do that. How many
(05:23):
times have you driven down the road unfortunately, how many
times have you driven down the road and seen flowers
and candles and balloons alongside the road, perhaps in a
field the last place a person was, And you have
for whatever reason, because of the way we're conditioned as
(05:45):
a society. That's why you need to check yourselves and say, really,
I did that when I defaced this man's memorials. You
drive by others with no problem. You put up yours,
the ones that you think should be important. Nobody bothers them.
(06:11):
Nobody says your memory or your feelings about that person
means nothing. My watch what's happening. And I think about
the words of the Lord Jesus Christ, and he said,
if you will do these things while the wood is green, well,
(06:36):
the wood is pretty dry. Now, it's so dry we
may as well be in a tinder box and look
at the things we're doing. How long do you all
think this is going to last? How much more of
this do you think the entire community can take. You're
(06:58):
defacing the more woreoles. You're lying on the memory of
a dead man. You won't even allow the decency of
grieving for those who cared about them in a mutual compassion,
as if though you have that right. It's if though
the rights you have supersede everybody. Now, what if everybody
(07:24):
felt the same way you do? What if everybody felt
they had the right to hit rooftops, we start snatching
people off the planet because that's their right. They're doing
something good because they don't agree with you. Well, no,
(07:49):
I don't. I don't. I don't feel like I want
to plead for reasoning, because what I'm talking about, the
blueprint of it should be in every human soul. The
blueprint of it should be in everybody. We've had enemies
back in the olden days with swords and shields and
(08:12):
all that stuff, and even they had the sense and
the decency to honor the dead. Now we live in
the time, Well, all you gotta do is break out
the switch, and you send him more lead down range
than a whole army of soldiers with swords. Our ability
(08:36):
to kill each other has reached staggering levels and abilities. Hell,
a ten year old could take take out a whole team.
And when we had swords and we realized that the
tongue was a sword, and that in the tongue rest
(08:59):
the power of life and death, we have more regard
for it. Now our ability to kill is greater than
it's ever been on this planet. And we will not
regard our tongues. We will not protect our tongues wounds.
(09:26):
When nine millimeters come together, where do you think that's
going to go? Where do you think that's going to lead?
So I say, in this brief little host that I'm
going to put up, we gotta do better. Guys. I
(09:48):
know we have a group of young people who just
don't get it. They the poor, fortunate, unfortunate children. They
were born into a really bad deal. I don't know
what we're gonna do for them. I think because I
did a show the other day with a very hard
(10:10):
working woman that advocates for parents with the school systems,
and she said, because of COVID, and because of the malaise,
and a whole lot of factors, there's a sect of
young people who are pretty much just oomed. Well. I
(10:31):
think the best we can do for them is to
give them examples. Let's just be an example for them,
and maybe they can redeem some of themselves or redeem
some of their humanity through watching how we behave. But
(10:54):
if we continue to behave like this, we're all gonna
learn very, very very bad lesson. And the sad part
is once it starts, the end would be probably beyond
our lifetimes. So let us stop, let us collect ourselves.
(11:21):
Try to look at the picture of Charlie Kirk or
someone I will say, Charlie Kirk. Look at his picture
until you feel something. And if you keep looking at
his picture and you say you don't feel something, then
keep looking. Look in his eyes, look at his smile,
(11:42):
look at some of the pictures of him with his
wife and his children, or his mom and his dad,
or his sister, look at him playing basketball as a boy,
until you feel something, because that's the only place that
we connect. We connect with each other in this world,
(12:04):
and we make the world a better place when we
feel something good. Not anger, not apathy, no hostility, but
when we feel something good. Look at Charlie Kirk's picture.
Until you feel something good doesn't have to be a lot.
(12:29):
It could be just you know what, that's wrong, defacing
his memorials with paint with your ideology over his memorial
His time to speak is over now. He said his words,
and he shared his thoughts. Some of the things he said,
(12:55):
they ruffled my feathers. They ruffled my feathers. I won't lie.
If you look on my page or you go to
my podcast, you'll see I did a show called a
Chat about the Dreamer. It's a part one, part two.
And in that podcast I discussed with some Steam panel members.
(13:15):
The idea is that Charlie Kirk was saying about doctor
Martin Luther King, Jr. And I have to own it.
It upset me when I heard him say all the
things he said about doctor King. I grew up on
the South side of Chicago. Doctor King was an icon
in my life. I mean, especially here we go every February.
(13:37):
Every February, what did we do. We put out a
silhouette of doctor King and we pasted on a piece
of construction paper. And I have a dream. I have
a dream. And so when I heard Charlie Kirk saying
what he was saying. You know, I grew up on
the boy Billykin parade. I stood at the Operation facilities
(14:02):
and listen to Jesse Jackson's speak myself. So imagine how
I felt when something that is part of my belief system.
I mean, I used to ride the bus to school
down doctor Martin Luther King Junior Drive, you know Boulevard.
I was visibly and seriously upset about what Charlie Kirk said. However,
(14:28):
because I believe in fairness, because I believe in the
search for truth, I looked for proof and evidence of
what he was saying, and wouldn't you know it, Charlie
Kirk was right. So now posthumously, I simply say to you,
(14:48):
Charlie Kirk, thank you very much for delivering the truth
to me.