Freedmen's affairs radio

The Cipher of Life: How We Build What Matters and Destroy What Doesn't ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ โœŠ๐Ÿฟ

โ€ข Aaron von black โ€ข Season 13 โ€ข Episode 135
Speaker 1:

peace, peace and welcome back freeman's affairs radio, the freeman's network. I'm your host, vaughn black, aaron vaughn Black, that is. And today, today, we got him up here. We got him up here, my man, big King. He's in the building On this Peace, peace, peace, lord, on this beautiful sunrise, july 8th 2025. And today we're dealing with Build, destroy and King. How do you see it?

Speaker 2:

Yes, sir, build, destroy, or Build and Destroy. This is something that we do every day. We build it on that which is beneficial for us, while we're destroying that which is not beneficial. And that eight is also like two ciphers, and, you know, a cipher is a circle consistent with 360 degrees, which is everything in life. So, when your cipher, my cipher, we build together, and it's all been born to build and that's what we do indeed, indeed, king, great, great stuff, great stuff.

Speaker 1:

Man, you know, I told him he was going to be up here last week but I misspoke. I think we didn't connect to something like that or whatever, for whatever reason. And you know they really go bananas when you come up here. They really like it. You know the analytics, you know math don't lie, the math don't lie. So you know we got a lot. We got a few things we're going to discuss today and it's going to be a great show. But, real quick, we're going to go to some of the program sponsors and hear from them and then, when we come back, we can go right in. And that's what it's going to be, man. So, family, y'all, hold on a second. We're going to hear from the sponsors and we'll be right back.

Speaker 4:

Because we can't.

Speaker 3:

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Speaker 5:

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Speaker 3:

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Speaker 1:

Hey, because it makes me sing. I know you got the feeling the way you move over there. Yeah, we back in, we back in Once again. The good brother King is up here with me today and yeah, we, you know, man King, it's a lot going on, man. First, we want to, we want to send condolences, whatever prayers you may have, whatever thoughts of kindness to the people of texas, in the state of texas, with the recent floodings and that's been a catastrophe there from natural disaster, and we really, really want to let the people of the state of Texas know that we're thinking about them and we have empathy and sympathy and compassion for the people of that state that are dealing with that, the families and stuff. So many people have died. I'm not sure the number. The last I checked it was like 71 people, like 21 children, and they're still finding people. So the number may have changed and it's just a thing that you know it's a horrible, horrible situation.

Speaker 1:

Let me see if I can get the story in here. If I can get the story in here, we can bring it up in the queue and we can listen to some of the news reports. Hold on, I think King dropped out, but anyway, we'll get him back in here. Hold on, let's try to get King back in here. Hold on, let's try to get King back in here. Hold on, let's try to get him back in here. Hold on, yeah, you dropped out. I don't know what happened. Maybe I touched the button or something, I don't know. But real quick, we're going to try to get the story in here from. I think this is from. Is it from abc? Let me see, can I get that in here. Hold on, yeah, all right, just give me a second and let me try to cue it in. Hold on, yeah, they got the ads running up here, so I'm gonna let the ad run out and then, um, we'll get the audio in here. Give me one second.

Speaker 7:

Family breaking news. We take you now to Central Texas, where Kerrville officials are giving an update following that deadly flash flooding. Let's take a listen.

Speaker 5:

This could hinder us. We are pulling our assets out of there right now to be safe. We'll determine when it's safe again to put them back in there, but this is one time we wouldn't be able to contact all these volunteers and get them out of there. So please understand that. Please pass that message. We have a ton of resources here. I can make a phone call and get a ton more here. We have all the resources, all the equipment, all the manpower, all the food we need. Okay, please help me pass that message on. We do have it under control.

Speaker 5:

So now as we get into my notes, search and rescue operations continue, with a full response from local, state and national first responders. We continue to have hundreds of officers, deputies and to support our staff working every aspect of this emergency, along with air, water, canine and other assets conducting search and rescue. As of 1-30, we have recorded 68 deceased in Kerr County. Among those who are deceased, we have 40 adults and 28 children. 18 adults are pending identification and 10 children are also pending identification. Once again, pending identification are 18 adults and 10 children. At present, there are 10 camp mystic campers unaccounted for. Pen identification are 18 adults and 10 children. At present there are 10 camp mystic campers unaccounted for and one counselor. We continue to offer our condolences to those affected and we will work tirelessly till we reunite them with their families. We know there are many people concerned that are affected by this tragic situation.

Speaker 5:

Please be careful about social media rumors and misinformation. False information can cause pain to families and those already devastated by this event. Please follow the Kerrville Police Department, our Kerr County Sheriff's Office, Facebook for verified information. Please do that All our information put out is verified. Please note that highway 39 West at Ingram is closed to the public. This you're closing that for temporary. That is only for law enforcement resources. Right now we had some issues Republic out there parked on the road. We can't get by going through stuff. Highway Highway 39 is closed to the public. Our mission, our missing phone call center, is open to those reporting missing loved ones. The phone number for that is 830-258-1111. That's the same number we've had, 830-258-1111. At this time I'm going to turn it over to Dalton Rice.

Speaker 4:

Thank you, Sheriff, Again welcome. We appreciate your patience. Obviously, we want to make sure that we have the safety of our responders at the forefront of this, so we can continue to do search and rescue operations. Forefront of this, so we can continue to do search and rescue operations. First and foremost, our hearts go are with the families and loved ones affected by this heartbreaking tragedy. Our entire focus at this time is on the search and reunification efforts for those remained unaccounted for. That is where our energy, our resources and our attention are directed. Nothing is more important than bringing comfort and clarity to those who are waiting and grieving.

Speaker 4:

We know questions are being asked about the emergency notification and, while it is not the time to speculate, local and regional partners are committed to a full review of the events and systems in place. At the appropriate time, we will take clear steps to strengthen our future preparedness. We owe that commitment to the families who are suffering and to every member of our community. We know many in our community are beginning the cleanup process and figuring out what's needed, whether it's clothes, toothbrushes, other essentials or cleaning supplies. The City of Kerrville is coordinating with our regional and state partners State Health and Human Services Commission, the Department of State Health Services, Public Health, Region 8, and Texas Division of Emergency Management are working to set up a family assistance care center where flood survivors can have the ability to access these supplies. We'll share more details as soon as they're available, and with that I'll bring up Mayor Herring for information on how you can donate now.

Speaker 8:

Thank you for being here. I'm Joe Herring Jr, Mayor of the City of Kerrville. Our work continues. Trained experts and professionals from the City of Kerrville, from Kerr County, from state agencies and federal agencies are all working together with one goal, that is, to find, to rescue those in peril and find those who are missing. I repeat what I said this morning Even though different groups and different agencies are involved in the Emergency Operations Center, we are all working as one team. We want to achieve our goal of helping those who've been affected by this flood. Today I learned that another helping hand has joined the fray. Heb is setting up a mobile kitchen in Ingram and when that kitchen is set up it will be able to feed a lot of hungry people in the Hunt and Ingram area.

Speaker 1:

Okay, we're going to pause it right there because, hold on, we'll pause it right there because, hold on, we're going to pause it right there because it was from a live press conference. So any thoughts on that for you, king.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, man, that's a real tragedy there. Man, you know you send your kids to summer camp and that would be the last thing that you would expect something your kids to come summer camp. You know, and you know you would. That'd be the last thing that you would expect something like that to happen. You know, and you know, living in where we're at this is not, uh, really a flood zone. Well, where I'm at anyway, it's not really a flood zone, but I mean, I couldn't really fathom, you know, having so much water inside the house that you can't even go on the first floor. But people face that and, and worse, at times where they where they all up on the roof.

Speaker 1:

Man, you know it's, it's a sad situation, you know well, if something you said struck and it was um, we, a lot of times we get the when it's bad weather coming, we get these alerts on our phones and stuff like that, and you hear that, that, that boop, you hear that noise and boop, boop, and we say, you know, we know, okay, it's bad weather coming or whatever like that. But now again here in the new york city area, we, you know, now I'm very close to the water, where I'm, where I'm situated at now, there's a lot of water around me. So you know, but again, you know, a lot of us live in high apartment buildings or whatever the case might be, some homes, you know, or whatever like that. But we take those, those alerts for granted.

Speaker 1:

Now these people, from from what I understand, see that they're trying to, they're trying to tie everything into the, the trump administration when elon must, with the doge, cut these fundings for fema and stuff like that. So you know, they done, politicized it already and they're saying he's responsible for cutting funding stuff like that. But they there was, uh, one guy called me and was like, yeah, see no notifications and see, that's because they cut fema. They cut fema, they ended fema. I said they did not end fema. They cut funding. The doge cut some funding, I, I think, for it. I don't have that fact in front of me, but the alerts came. They say there was something like seven or eight alerts that came, but it was like two o'clock in the morning, so most people at that hour are kind of sleeping or whatever have you. And they said that water rose so fast.

Speaker 1:

They said it was over 25 feet of water in a matter of 45 minutes and then the next thing they looked around it was 36 feet of water. Yeah, that's crazy, that's crazy, but again, we take that for granted when we hear these alerts. And maybe now, maybe now we'll start paying more attention and being more because, you know, when something like this happens, it is a catastrophe and, like I, said, we said 36 feet of water.

Speaker 2:

Yes, sir, that's a lot, cause you figure an average room is what? Between 10 and 12 feet, right, so it. And 12 feet Mm-hmm, right, right, so it's 36 feet. That's like three stories, yeah, yeah, actually, more than three stories, you know, and it's a lot of water man, that's a lot of water.

Speaker 1:

And they there were people that that they were showing one lady that that she went with the current. She was floating till she found she was finally able to grab onto a tree and, uh, I think a branch was hanging or something and she grabbed onto it. The water was taking her, the current was taking her. She grabbed onto that tree and was able to climb up and climb, you know, up in the tree to safety and she had to stay there. Some hours before rescue saw her in the tree and was able to get her out.

Speaker 1:

And again, some might question that this program is centered around foundational black Americans and descendants of the free men and we don't know if there's some FBA that might have been involved and killed or, you know, demised in in this thing and it doesn't really matter. This is still the human experience and you know, we, we are, we have a caring heart up here at Freeman's network, you know, at the network up here, and it doesn't matter. It doesn't matter. But this one is something very catastrophic and I thought that we should come up here, bring the story up here and speak on it. And it's just, it's really a devastating thing. It's really a devastating.

Speaker 1:

I've been studying it for the last couple of days. I've been studying it for the last couple of days. I've been studying this thing because, you know, this is right around the fourth holiday and speaking to that, speaking to that, let's segue into this. Now. The last podcast. I didn't wish everybody a happy fourth or whatever happy holidays or whatever like that. I didn't do that Not because I had anything happy holidays or whatever like that. I didn't do that Not because I had anything against the holiday or whatever like that, it was just an oversight I'm saying here today. I hope everyone who participated in this celebration of Independence Day that you had a good time and everybody was safe and everything like that.

Speaker 1:

Now there is a story about this 4X dude blew off. Dude blew off half his hand messing with some fireworks, but we'll talk about that a little bit. But my point being this that there's a lot of people, black people, that they'll say well, in 1776, our people were still in the fields picking cotton and doing, you know, slave work and stuff. Yes, that's true, but again, we don't want to take away anything. We fought in every war, right? The first person killed in that Civil War was a foundational. It was a freedman, chris Bissattix. So, and then with the flag, the history of the flag, with what's her name Betsy Ross and Grace Wisher, another freedman person.

Speaker 2:

Well, didn't Grace Wisher make the first flag?

Speaker 1:

She started. I think she started part of the flag out or whatever, and then Betsy Ross came. You know they're never going to give us the full credit for something, so I would agree with you.

Speaker 2:

If I understand correctly, you remember that first flag, it had 13 stars. Right For the 13 stripes, 13 stars.

Speaker 1:

Right For the 13 colonies. Yes.

Speaker 2:

Right? Is that the one that Grace Wisher made? I believe so. I believe so we got to look into that, we got to look into that.

Speaker 1:

But Grace Wisher. The current flag that we have now the American flag, our fingerprints is all over that from Grace Wisher. Now they will never give us credit for to say that she did the flag on home, that that's probably where Betsy Ross was following her lead in that. So so, but you know, of course, they will never give us the credit. So what? My point being this that that that this country is just as much ours as anybody else, more so than anybody else. So, yes, there is a dark history with independence and what we were doing at the time, but nonetheless, our DNA is soaked in this soil.

Speaker 2:

Well, let's say there was 40,000 000 fba that died in the civil war, fighting for freedom, fighting for freedom, 40 000 I don't know how many thousand was in, uh, world war one and world war two, but it was this. It was definitely a significant amount. You know, know the Korean War, the Vietnam War. We still got brothers walking around now that were in the Vietnam War. That's right, that's right.

Speaker 1:

I had them in my family. I had some in my mom. My mother's baby brother was in that war and I had a cousin that he ended up passing away because he suffered, I believe, from that war. That war he fell into it. Uh, it wasn't the agent arms that that took him out his his thing. His big impediment was was uh, his mind was just oh, yeah, you know he from the sd.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, man, he suffered bad from that and I remember he was my cousin actually, and I remember he would stay in his room at his mother's house and he would smoke all the time. And you know we'd go to the window, the little kids being nosy messing with him, and they would tell us, leave him alone, don't bother him. And he would come out once in a while and talk to us and stuff like that. And um, I remember he told one of my cousins one time he said he said, man, I can kill you with my, with, with my finger.

Speaker 1:

You know, I mean he was a mess with him well he, he would tell you know he, his thing was he didn't talk much, but every once in a while he would break his silence and come out in the yard and talk with us as kids and stuff like that he didn't like, because he couldn't work anymore, because the last time he worked he was working at a door plant somewhere down in the south.

Speaker 1:

Down there he was working at some kind of door plant and uh, some factories, a door factory or something, and something happened one day. And you know, those plants, those factories have loud noises and stuff. Man, he had an episode, man, and he went wild in that place. Man, he man, they said he put about seven, eight people in the hospital.

Speaker 1:

Know, because they were trying to figure out what was. You know, he just started bugging, you know, bomb, bomb, you know, and he went off and he started, you know, from that they gave him disability and stuff like that and he ended up dying on some. You know, I think that was back in the 80s when he died. He finally died off but he had a hard time with that. I guess, from the trauma from that war, them brothers seen a lot, those brothers seen a lot. This is why I don't when people you got some people be talking that stuff, man, I don't celebrate none of these holidays, these crackers, I don't get into that because you don't know, know everybody's situation. You don't know everybody's situation. And again, we have just as much right to this soil, but more so than any other group.

Speaker 2:

We spill blood in every war from the country you know, people that, people that that talk like that. You know a lot. A lot of times they're just becoming awake to consciousness, like they call it, diet woke, and they take everything to the extreme. But there's always a duality, just like it's July 4th and what it represents is America's independence from the British. But when we have knowledge, we know that they are not independent from the British. They're still down with the British. They just had a little skirmish and America became an annex of them. Now they can say what they want about them fighting them off, but you know in what? I think it was 1812 where they burned the White House to the ground, the British. So they were still fighting even after that. You know.

Speaker 1:

Teach that history. Teach that history, teach that history, so.

Speaker 2:

But we also take advantage of the time off, you know, to reflect, relax. You know, to spend time with family and friends, you know, and it has nothing to do with their independence. Right, right, right, that's their agenda. You know. We don't wait for them to tell us what our holidays are. You know we were celebrating Martin Luther King Day before they made it a holiday. You know, june 2nd, we were celebrating that before most people even know what it is. Some people still don't even know what it means. Talk to them, talk to them. And we have Black Solidarity Day. Some people still don't know what it means. Talk to them, talk to them. We have black solidarity day. Some people still don't know what it means. But I remember that from when I was in elementary school I think it was november 6th or something like that you know wouldn't have to go to school. You know black solidarity, solidarity day.

Speaker 1:

I remember that, I remember yep.

Speaker 2:

So and there's so many. When you look around, especially living in a city like this where there's so many different, diverse communities, there are functions that go on all the time that are not national holidays. You know the Indians, they have this, this thing. What do they call it? Pagwa, pagwa.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, yeah.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, what do they call it? Pagwa, pagwa, yeah, yeah. Yeah, they throw powder and stuff that blew. The powder's supposed to ward off evil spirits or something. You know, and there's a lot of things you know. If you just follow behind what the government says, okay, and you want to ask away the fact that we have a footprint in it, we have a fingerprint in it, we have a fingerprint in it then you're just going to learn one day you know, memorial Day that came from us.

Speaker 1:

Memorial Day came from us.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, started by us.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, that's right Now the thing that gets me two groups that really we, as foundational and descendants of the emancipated, should take serious note. And our cue from and there's nothing wrong with it is the Jewish community when they have Yom Kippur and different Jewish holidays, yom Kippur and them different Jewish holidays and also also a big holiday here in the city. It's not even a recognized holiday from the federal government, but you would never know. And that is St Patrick's Day. Business is still going, but people are celebrating man that parade, and then you're going to Manhattan and them pubs and man people are everywhere, everywhere. Them people ain't waiting for nobody to tell them that what they can sell.

Speaker 1:

And that's the way we are doing it. That's the way we're going to start doing it. We ain't waiting for no government. Oh, I ain't got the day off. Listen, man, if I go to work, it might be for half a day. If I want to, junete might be for half a day. June teeth might fall on a Monday, I don't care, or Malcolm X day, or whatever the case might be. Whatever we feel like is important to us, we ain't waiting to see that right there. It exhibits power, right.

Speaker 1:

When you're not waiting for nobody to tell you what your agenda is. That exhibits power and that's where we're headed and that's where we're going to take this thing. We ain't waiting for no. Oh, I got to work. It's not a federal holiday, so I got to go.

Speaker 2:

Like you said before, look at all the Jewish holidays. There's so many of them and the thing about it, they wouldn't go to work, so they had to close the schools. But they couldn't make it a national holiday, but they had to close the school because there's so many teachers that are Jewish, so many school administrators that are Jewish, and when they have these religious holidays, they're not coming. You know, and they already know, they're not coming because they put in for their vacation. That's power. So what do they do? They shut the school down. That's power, exactly, and that's being on code. You know what I'm saying. I mean, it's so much.

Speaker 2:

Just look at this thing that happened, regardless of what the real implications are. But look at this thing that happened with Target. This boycott thing, right, and that wasn't even really like a major thing that everybody got into, but look what it did. You know, their stock prices went down. They lost so much money that they had to restructure their administration.

Speaker 2:

People had lost their jobs at the top behind that and this was something that just came out because of what D? Was it D-E-I? What do they call it? D-e-i, d-e-i, the D-E-I thing. They said, okay, well, we know, we're not going to do that and they said, wait a minute. But y'all brought us into this based on D-E-I and we got our products on your shelves. And now you're saying that because of the new administration, that y'all going back on that, okay, now we're gonna let you know what we're gonna do now. The best, the best thing that could come out of that is not that target is losing money, because target is rich anyway. They could shut down and still be straight for generations the people who own it, you know. But that should be a wake-up call for us to start to understand the power of the dollar and the power of being on code.

Speaker 1:

You know being a bully with the bucks. Being a bully with the bucks Throw your weight around with the bucks.

Speaker 2:

But you know that started?

Speaker 1:

that started real quick. That started a civil war in the black church because, come to find out, some of them, hog-mawed, fat, back-eating preachers took some dough under the table, you know. So, sharpton and that other nut from Georgia, what's that? What's that name? Um, jamal Bryant, that, that negro, there, them, they got mad, they got upset because some, some of them, other, uh, preachers from from um, from from in those um, little sects or whatever. They took some money and um found out they was telling their people to go back in there and start shopping or whatever. So they took some money, they took some money from target and they got wind of it. See them, negroes wanted that paper for themselves. They wanted that Right, sharpton and and and, uh, that, that, jamal Bryant, and, uh, I, I, I think, um.

Speaker 2:

Well, you know what's sad about that whole thing, man? It's the same playbook that Sharpton has been using for years. You know, like they remember back in the 90s, when what was his name? Jesse Jackson? Jesse, they said what they would do. They would go down to these companies on Wall Street. That's why Operation Push had a little pull. You know, they go down to these big companies on Wall Street and tell people listen.

Speaker 2:

You know, we have Operation Push, rainbow Coalition and what we're going to do your company is not hiring. You don't have enough black folks that work on any level in your country not entry level position, not in your company. I mean not entry level position, not mid-level management and certainly not upper management. So we all going to diversify this or what and what happens? Every time you don't hear nothing else. Because they took some money under the table and they quieted it down and left.

Speaker 2:

And they said the same thing when this dude, slim Shady, shopped him back when Vicente Fox was president of Mexico, you know, and he said something on the news about yeah, I don't know why you want to put the Mexicans away and put them in immigration and send them back, because they're doing the job that even the black people don't want to do. And Charlton popped up, jumped on a plane and flew down to Mexico. He said he got audios with Mississippi Fox right, and he told me. He said listen, you know we represent the National Action Network. You know we represent the National Action Network and we represent 43 million black folks in America and you just insulted the 43 million blacks. Now what we're going to do? You know we're going to keep people from going on, but you're going to have to donate at least $100,000 to the National Action Network so that we can get our programs rolling and keep everything moving. You don't?

Speaker 1:

want to start marching.

Speaker 2:

You don't want to start marching now, got to pay the bill as Vicente Fox looked at him and said no peek at the English. Yeah, no peek at the English. And they put him on a plane and got him out of there. And it's the game they've been running, man. You know they use our suffering, our real suffering. You know they come in there like spokesmen and then they sell us out for the dollar. And that's the problem that a lot of folks have with Benjamin Crump, because what they it's the same play a lot of folks have with Benjamin Crump it's the same playbook every time Police kill one of us. You know this, dude, benjamin Crump, they run to the family, right? We?

Speaker 3:

want justice.

Speaker 2:

And they have a meeting with the city and they say listen, this is what's going to happen. You know what this cop did was wrong. They got it on video. He was ready to tear this place down, you know. Now I'm going to talk to the family. The family is going to make a statement, you know, and try to keep things under wrap, but we're going to need a quick settlement out of this. You know, at least $15, $20 million. Maybe we can keep it, because if the people go off, it'll be billions of dollars worth of damage. Right, right, right. And this is why the family always come out and say oh, we forgive them. Can you imagine that Somebody kill your family member and you're going to get up on TV and talk about you, forgive them.

Speaker 1:

Why? Look here, I told the family, right, I can't remember which program was it, but I told the family right, I can't remember which program was it, but I told the family if something ever happened to somebody in my family me or anybody, any one of my family members and it's a big national story like that, and what you're going to see at the press conference is me chasing them Negroes with a bat from Ben Crump to Alshon. You will see me running them Negroes off with a bat in Ben Crump to Alshon. You will see me running them Negroes off with a bat in my hand swinging. Don't come around my family with that, don't come around.

Speaker 2:

It shouldn't be like that, the way it should be, with all the struggles that our night. When we talk about ancestors, we ain't talking about King Tut or nobody, from thousands of years ago. We talking about our ancestors from the last 10, 15, 20, 30, 40, 50, 60 years. That's right. We talking about Thurgood Marshall and Dr King and people that went in there and gave their life, you know, so that we have the opportunity to go in here and practice law and to make some noise and agitate and keep things moving, you know, and then to have these.

Speaker 2:

The ones that benefited from that are these attorneys that are in there now, these black attorneys, and why is it that we don't hear about a cadre of them that they can come together on these cases? You know, have, like a, a, a think tank or a bank or something like I heard Johnny Copkin was doing something like that or putting something together. You know, like a, a, a coalition of black attorneys, you know, that could sit down and and and and go through all these things, man, and get things done constitutionally. You know, use their laws and make things happen. You know, and that's probably the reason why you know, use their laws and make things happen, you know, and that's probably the reason why you know they took him down like that.

Speaker 1:

That's the next way I was going, because all of a sudden he what he had a brain tumor and died or something.

Speaker 2:

Something like that.

Speaker 1:

It's always something. Just mysteriously, just get ill all of a sudden, because you know he was putting like you said, he was putting that thing together to charge the federal government with the reparations thing and he was putting them lawyers together and he had to. At the time he had the influence to galvanize some of these lawyers.

Speaker 2:

That's right, these attorneys.

Speaker 1:

He had the influence, he had the motivation Right that they weren't boo up. You know, because most of these Negroes is bulleted up, they get into these positions and you know they sucking and licking all in between white folks, toes and shit, you know.

Speaker 1:

So he had a team of them that he had influence over that would follow him like that. We don't have that now. This is why that thing down in Texas, withxas, with that kid, camilla anthony because even though I spoke to tarika the other day about it, I wanted to speak to jason black, I couldn't get through to him but I did speak to tarika about it and he he said man, he said they're not gonna charge because that twin brother should be charged in the in the murder one along with Camillo, because there's there's plenty of case study that showed that that is the law.

Speaker 2:

But you know, no murder, one case.

Speaker 1:

No, it's not, it's not, but what that prosecutor did. What that prosecutor did was he set the trap like that. So if this thing goes to trial, because from all indication is that the family, they wanted, they wanted to go to court because they believed that that boy was defending himself, so they, you know, they wanted, they want to go to court with it, now the prosecutor set the trap because there's only one or two outcomes in the case of it goes to a jury and that is, either you let him go on the self-defense or you come back with a murder one guilty which holds, I think, 99 years, 100 years of life or something like that. So that's the trap they set. So it is no. Well, you know, we didn't find murder one, but we can give a manslaughter two or manslaughter one, and they didn't do it like that.

Speaker 2:

And they did that for a reason, and the only chance this brother has in that they have to motion for a change of venue, which I don't think they're going to grant, they could be throwing a life sentence out there through murder one, and then, when they get you know, before they get close to the trial, they could offer him manslaughter and he'll, instead of going to trial, he'll just take it afraid of getting that life sentence, you know.

Speaker 1:

But see.

Speaker 2:

I don't think. I think he should you know.

Speaker 1:

But see, I don't think I think he should. You know, looking at it, unless they give him a man, two or something like that, and they offer him say five, 10 years or something like that, and he can be out in you know, four, five, six years or something like that, and he can get out of there because he's still a very young kid and he can really still do something with his life. But if you talk about keeping him for 20, 25 years and 30 years, he'll get out like that. Come on, man, you understand what I'm saying.

Speaker 2:

This is the kind of case where the brilliant and great legal minds in black society you know that were pushed to their greatness on the shoulders of our ancestors. This is when they're supposed to come together and at least have some type of committee that can look into this thing. You know, from a legal perspective, and know exactly what's going on, so that this family doesn't have to depend on a court appointed attorney. You know, and you know, there's so many rumors going on around this case that we really don't know. You know, but if they, if they request a court appointed attorney, that's not really a thing to have in a case this serious. You know, even though you got some court-appointed attorneys that are very good, why take a chance on something like that?

Speaker 1:

You know, knowing the history of things, like that, right, and then it doesn't look good that the community donated a half a million dollars and now you're saying that you don't have no money. That could be rumor, it could be rumor, but you know you got people that ain't never did a day that. Oh, he's going to jail man yeah, he's going to jail. He's going to jail. I don't see it, man. This is open and shut man. This is murder. This is murder. This is murder, he murdered, he didn't have to do.

Speaker 2:

You know, like man, yo, you never that's the same thing they said about Diddy right, oh, we going there next we going there next.

Speaker 1:

We are going there next. But yeah, you talking about people that ain't never did a day or never been fought a trial in the courtroom or nothing. They'll tell you, yeah, he's going. How did you know? See, um, let me tell you, we said we had this conversation before and you you were saying how this could be a strategy that that people are overlooking, because you get the McCord appointed um guys and let them do all the discovery and do all of that preliminary stuff. Now, when you're getting ready to start picking juries and stuff, now you bring out the big guns. You understand what I'm saying, because you don't have all that money up front. So you don't know, and people need to chill out because what it is, you got the Sambo Society and the Bootleg Brigade and the Coon Commission.

Speaker 2:

You know when you really, when you really pull the layers off and look at this case, right, it has gotten to the point now where it doesn't even matter what happened, it's the politics behind it. Now, because anybody with common sense you know that is not totally biased. And look at the elements of it, of what happened. It started raining a bad rainstorm. He went under the tent to get away from the rain. Right Now, it doesn't matter if you're from this school, you're from that school, you ain't from no school. It don't matter how you gonna go up to somebody and tell them you don't belong here, go out in the rain. You know what I mean? That's some real bully type of stuff, man, and they was picking on him when they did that, and anybody can see that, and for him to tell them Not the bootlick brigade, not the boot lick brigade.

Speaker 2:

He was supposed to just get up and go out in the rain, because these two big bullies who don't even run track, they ain't even there for that. You know, even if they're supporting their school, they're representing their school and you don't go in there and tell somebody go out in the rain. You don't belong under this tent. You know, when weather get bad, people seek shelter wherever they at, and it don't matter who it is. They can be up under there and must be, and you just got to deal with it.

Speaker 1:

That's what it is. Look now the bootlicks, the bootlicks and the coons. They'll tell you he wasn't supposed to be under there. He had no business up under there. Okay, then, if that's the case, go get somebody from faculty or from from uh, who's running the event? Listen, man, we got a guy in here, whatever, and let them deal with that. Who are you? Who are you right? But you, like you said, and every all the boot licks in the coons, the coon commission, they, they are overlooking that. Oh, you know how kids are. You know they're very protective of their teammates and you know people be stealing stuff. Man, listen, man, we're taught early. I know my grandmother them taught us early mind your business and don't touch nothing. Don't belong to you. And you mind your business because there's always somebody badder than you. And see, that's what happened that day them, the twins. They effed around and found out everybody ain't having that.

Speaker 2:

And the boy told you they messed up after it because they the playbook that they'll try to use. Oh, he's a, he's from a single-parent household or he's a gangbanger, or he's special ed or something. But no, this kid happened to be the captain of the team. He's doing very well academically. He comes from a two-parent home, you know, and he hasn't been in any trouble at all, you know. So now they ain't got no narrative, that whole narrative they can about. You know, and he hasn't been in any trouble at all, you know. So now they ain't got no narrative, that whole narrative they can about. You know what they used to call it wildin' back in the days. He wildin' because he's a young and that term they use YNs. I don't like that man. Don't call him no YN, call him a YG. Young guys. They ain't no young niggas.

Speaker 1:

You gotta come up with something better than that but see, that's the people don't understand the reality of things, they don't understand the power of narratives and propaganda. They don't understand that and they think they're doing. You got people running around here with MAGA hats on and you know anything white people say is right. Yeah, you know anything white people say is right, it gotta be right.

Speaker 1:

And I have this conversation a lot with my brother Wise. You know, good brother, you know, but he's one of them people. You know, hey, man, there's no racism. You know black people just don't have accountability. And you know, good brother, you know, but he's one of them people. You know, hey, man, there's no racism. Uh, you know, black people just don't have accountability. And you know we don't take accountability for our failures. And you know we always playing victim and we always on the wrong side of the story. And this, this and that, this, this and that, but you totally glossing over the fact that those they had no business saying anything to him, no business at all saying nothing to him, because the first thing you'd approach me like that I'm going to tell you, man, what are you talking about?

Speaker 1:

get out of here, man, move around.

Speaker 2:

Man, move your ass around, man, get out of my face the people that are in charge could not do it on their own. Without this racism thing they could not survive. Because if you look at I don't care what field you look at we have the greatest mind and we receive the the lowest amount of reimbursement. For you know, when you look at the medical field, when you look at the computer field, when you look at automotive, whatever you look at, the greatest minds are the ones that are getting the least reimbursement for it. And there are other people that steal inventions and they make millions and millions off of it and it's only by some sort of a lapse that they make a mistake and we're able to recoup that, like the brother that the brother created a water gun the super soaker, you know and they stole his idea and mass produced it. It made millions off it, but they slept because he had already patented it and they didn't know produced it. It made millions off it, but they slept because he had already patented it and they didn't know about it and it took a while. But when he finally got his recognition for it, they had to pay him something like 70 or 80 million dollars. This is for a water gun, you know.

Speaker 2:

Imagine all the other things that was invented by us, that we didn't get the benefit from it. But there's somebody else who's getting residual benefits for it, whose family and their great-grands and their great-great-grands is going to live off of that. The greatest musicians, the greatest singers. Who is us? And who's the one that's receiving the least amount of reimbursement? It's the ones with the most amount of talent. You know that's a pure sign right there of exploitation and it's racism. It's over.

Speaker 2:

There's Blacks doing it too. No, these are not Black. These are what they call Oreos. They may be Black in skin, but they're not Black in consciousness. Every time one of them gets some consciousness, where they start to turn things around, what do they do? They take them out. They did it with Prince, they did it with Michael Jackson, because they went in there and they took the record companies and they flipped it upside down and they said no, I want my masters, I want them in control, and that's what they're afraid of. They don't want us to just segregate and live amongst ourselves, because they know that we're going to thrive and that the parasites and they cannot live without us, because they got to suck the parasite, got to suck the blood in order to live. They can't live without us, all that crap they talking about.

Speaker 2:

Go back to Africa. There ain't no way for no Africa. They know that we have a connection to this land through blood, sweat and tears. And not only that. Also, when you look um at the teachers of of uh, what's that brother name? He wrote the book called when rocks cry out. His name is horace something, and he broke it down. He showed how all these monuments broke it down. He showed how all these monuments pre-USA monuments of black folks in North and South America is. This is in the rocks. The rocks is crying out, showing you. This is who these people are. The Clovis people, folsom people go back 20 and 30,000 years old in this land, land, not just in Africa, in this land. If Africa the motherland and this must be the fatherland. You know we was here too.

Speaker 1:

That's right that's right, real quick, what I want to say? This right to the bootleg brigade, the coon commission and the Sambo society. I want to say this to them I know that you're bootlicking for your butter biscuits and your bacon bits, but I would challenge, I'm going to start challenging, these YouTubers that get up there and every episode that they put up, every stream or whatever they constantly showing the dregs of black society, black, uh, so-called black, culture and everything. And you know, you, you, you, you, you, you got your, your Vince Ellison's uh, uh, your, your, your, um, what's that big fat Negro, jason Whitlock, your Jesse Lee Peterson, your Larry Elders, your Thomas Sawyer and that other little chick that be following, that be hanging around, jasmine or something. No, the little chick, the April chick that be following Vince Ellison around. Every time you turn around and see a lot of them hide behind that Christian thing.

Speaker 1:

You know, we're all brothers and sisters in Christ. We don't see color. You know we're in Christ. But see, here's the thing I noticed from me going on that brother's channel. Sometimes, you know, he'll invite me up for a panel or whatever like that. But here's one thing I noticed when I pay attention to the chat and I'm looking at, you know, because they come after me, they be coming hard body for me and sometimes I used to, you know, curse them out, you know, on the replies and stuff. But I stopped doing that because what I did one day I looked at some of the profiles and I was like, oh my God, of some of these people and a lot of them a lot of them are white people that be comment and when you go to their profile, brother, you talking about some white nationalists and some some some racists.

Speaker 1:

But see, they hide behind that. We are brothers and sisters in christ. Yeah, y'all they brothers and sisters in christ with you to a degree, see, they'll let you run your mouth about your people and show all the videos. You to a degree, see, they'll let you run your mouth about your people and show all the videos. You know, the other day they was talking about the carnival cruise and all this here and these big cruise ship companies that are cutting rap music and stuff out like that, which I don't have a problem with, because when you're showing out, you know you have to try to, but you started it. See, you're a victim of your own hands. You got all that alcohol on them ships and you're playing that trap music and all, and we're going to get into that too. You're playing all this trap and all this craziness and you know it's a bunch of women out there, a bunch of people from different places around the country going on these cruises and you got big fights breaking out and all this kind of stuff like that. You create an atmosphere for that. You create Jerry Springer type Jerry Springer stuff.

Speaker 1:

But now there's white folks that show out on these cruises and stuff too. They don't. They don't that. Don't get that. That ain't an algorithm. That's purpose, purposely kept out of the algorithm because they don't want you doing, they don't want you searching for that. But there's plenty of videos of that stuff going on in on the white cruises too. But more so. Now they're cutting out. They're telling the people you can do the boots on the line, uh, boots on the ground dance, but you can't have no fans because you might make a mistake. It's all you know. It's all cap, it's all cap. But the thing is, those Negroes will play them videos and show everything that's wrong in the black society and they constantly do it.

Speaker 2:

They can't have no fans yeah, they don't want them.

Speaker 1:

Having fans doing the boots on, that's to kill a lot of. I noticed that the bootlicks don't have no fans. Yeah, they don't want them. Having fans on. You know, doing the boots on, you know that's to kill, you know, a lot of them. I noticed that the bootlegs don't like it. They don't like that and it's nothing. It's a nice thing, you know. And you'll hear them say you know I don't really care for it. You know I don't really like the boots on the ground thing, man, I don't like it.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, that's because you you don't have to. That's because it's too black for you. It's black people having to enjoy themselves and having too much of a good time and you don't like that.

Speaker 2:

So we all know what that is. They can't cosplay on it.

Speaker 1:

They can't cosplay, but it's black folks saying it, the bootlegs, the bootlegs saying it. Yeah, the coons. Now you'll show them videos all day and white people will send cash apps, they'll send super chats and all that. But I challenge any of them, all of them, vince Ellison, all of them. When you're doing these live streams for one month, don't report on black society, report on the degeneracy in white culture, report on the incest, report on the mass shootings, report on the rapes, report on all of the stuff, the violence that they do, just for one month. Every time you broadcast, just stick to them, stick to the dregs of their society. I guarantee you they won't do it. They might do it, I know they ain't going to do it.

Speaker 2:

They might do it. You know why they ain't going to do it. You know why they ain't going to do it? Because of that white picture of Jesus that they got hanging in their church and hanging in their house. You see, because they've been convinced that that white picture of Jesus is the son of God. Right. And if they can convince you right that that's the son of God, right, then in your subconscious mind it's going to tell you that well, if the son is white, well then the daddy must be white. The father is white.

Speaker 2:

I can't go against my father now then their super conscious mind is going to have them have a certain amount of humility and submission towards white men, because in their subconscious mind they believe that they are God. That's why they ain't gonna do it, because that'll be like them going against their religion to go against them, but see they hide behind that.

Speaker 1:

We're brothers and sisters in Christ, yeah, y'all are. But they, y'all are y'all brothers and sisters in Christ. That's how y'all see it. They only see that up until a certain point, and then, because once you start talking about the dregs of their society, they go whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa.

Speaker 2:

You know what they say is the most segregated hour in America Sunday morning, between 11 and 12. Sunday morning it is the 12.

Speaker 1:

Sunday morning.

Speaker 2:

It is the most segregated hour in America Black folks in their church and white folks in their church.

Speaker 1:

But see, these Negroes will tell you, these so-called conservative Negroes will tell you oh, you know, man, y'all race hustlers, man, y'all push this racism. No man, we pushing the reality of what it is. You don't see the reality because maybe you've been a little successful at businesses. You know you've been able to buy a nice home, big home. You got a couple of cars. You know you riding around in a BMW, your wife got the little Benz truck and your kids are going to nice schools. So you have made it in your mind that, hey, I made it.

Speaker 2:

So what are you?

Speaker 1:

Negro. What are y'all complaining about? If I can do it, y'all can do it. That's not the point.

Speaker 2:

And the thing about a hustle is somebody's winning and somebody got to lose. That's the thing about a hustle. Somebody got to win and somebody got to lose. That's the thing about a hustle. Somebody got to win and somebody got to lose. If speaking on our issues is a hustle, who's winning and who's losing? Who's the hustler? If we're losing, who's the hustler? How you going to tell the hustler? How you gonna tell us that we losing because we talking about race. But in a hustle, somebody's winning, somebody losing. So who's winning? You know, and it ain't got nothing to do with no hustle. You know, this is the truth, this is supreme wisdom, you know, and if you don't get it on your own, you gonna get it one day sooner or later, because you gonna get your wake up call, candace Owens.

Speaker 1:

Jason Whitlock that Nick Fuentes told Jason Whitlock, man, we don't even like you, man, we don't even like you, we don't need you to speak for us. And the first thing that Negro did when he did respond because he had to respond because the dude called him out First thing he went to that you know, I don't really care what the Corinthians says, because I believe in Jesus and I'm a.

Speaker 1:

Christian. You went to that Christian thing. You went. Right now I'm not knocking nobody. That's Christian. I'm not. I love our Christian brothers and sisters. I love them. But y'all got to realize, man, you see yourselves as brothers and sisters in Christ. Them folks that's supporting all you do and you putting up all these videos and and you study, punching down on your people. They, they, they, they. They support you financially, they support you morally with that stuff. They support you because you're saying what they don't have to say. You're saying it. So, yeah, they, they, they cheering you on. Yeah, yeah, I guarantee I'm a whole lot, guarantee I'm going to hold that challenge to all of the bootleg brigade, the Coon Commission and the Sambo Society.

Speaker 1:

I'm going to challenge all of y'all One month, just one month. Don't report nothing about black folks, report about the dregs of white society. After the first day you might get by the first day, but after that you'll see in the super chat, see how they turned to Candace Owens right, because she started going against the Trump administration about the Israel thing and all that stuff like that in the Palestine thing, and you see how the boot licks is flipping on her. What she's saying is truthful. The child is saying now, I don't really care for Candace Owens, but she's a somebody. She is somebody and she holds weight. She's getting calls from the president. She holds weight, she's getting direct calls from that dude. She's a super cool. She's a super cool, but now she done went against the green because she speaks out about Israel and they like whoa, hold on, wait a minute.

Speaker 2:

We got a large following. We didn't get as large following for you to talk about.

Speaker 1:

Right, and this is my challenge to the rest of them bootlicking so-called quote-unquote conservative Negroes. Because they run around, man. They run around shining the spit off of Trump's boot heels, you understand, with their MAGA hats and all this craziness, man, they're like man. Well, are you kidding me? But that's the challenge I hold to you.

Speaker 2:

One month.

Speaker 1:

I'm just asking you one month straight report every time you broadcast a live stream report on on that. I'm I'm challenging all of them to do that and I know they're not going to do it because they scared. They really really are scared of them white folks. They really are of course.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, that's good you understand that now we gotta move on to on to Diddy real quick and then we're going to do the last story on the Chicago thing. But we're going to talk about Diddy real quick, Not going to spend too much time on him, because you know, in my opinion, of my thinking, they overreached and I'm glad he beat that top charge, the Rico charge, because they didn't have no Rico stats on, they had nothing there. Now the sex trafficking, them, two things he was found guilty on, I think even if they run him bow-legged it wouldn't amount to no real major time for a first offense anyway. So you know, I don't see him going to jail and they still got the. And see, this is what I'm talking about.

Speaker 2:

This is what I'm talking about you can beat that on a pill man yeah you're going to beat that on a pill, man, the boy should be out, because the man you know that came from the man Act. That whole charge is what they use against Jack Johnson. You know, look man, you're a black man. You know Rick said look man, you're a black man. You're in the ring beating all these white men up.

Speaker 1:

And grinning. They used to tell him stop.

Speaker 2:

When you knock them out, don't grin. And you're grinning, and then you got all these white women that's running behind you, you know. So they wanted to teach him a lesson.

Speaker 1:

It was created for him. It was created for him.

Speaker 2:

For the man Act and what it basically is is taking. It was supposed to be for taking taking prostitutes across straight lines, across state lines, right, for the purpose of immoral conduct what they call immoral conduct, right conduct what they call immoral conduct, right. So with Diddy, they charged him with promoting transporting for the purpose of prostitution. Yeah, I mean, that is such a reach. You know, here it is. Now who's supposed to be the prostitute? That's the male escort, right? That's the one that he's supposed to be paying. You're paying, but you're charging the John. He did it with the John. That's his name, sean John, right, right. So he did it with the John. So now you charging the John for prostitution because he paid the prostitute.

Speaker 1:

But he never had no direct. The dude said the dudes in a testimony. They never had direct contact with him. They did everything through the girl. Now they knew he would be peeking in and looking at them doing their acts or whatever, but he never. They never had no direct contact with the guy Mm-hmm.

Speaker 2:

So and then you contrast it with what the government is doing with the illegals. Because here it is, you arresting people for working on a job and being here illegally, but you're not going to arrest the business owner for hiring them. I knew that's where you was going.

Speaker 1:

I knew that's where you was going legally, but you're not going to arrest the business owner for hiring him. I knew that's where you was going.

Speaker 2:

I knew that's where you was going. If they really wanted to stop him, they'd start arresting the business owners. They're not going to do that. Okay, they're not going to do it because that'd be going against the white supremacy code.

Speaker 1:

You can't tell these conservative MAGA hat wearing Negroes that. You can't tell them that, hey man, the country's built on capitalism. Man, you got what you expect. No See, you can't talk out both sides of your mouth and this is what they're mad at. Candace Owens is about this is what they're mad about Because she's kicking that fire on them. Now Candace Owens is about. That's what they mad about, because she's kicking that fire on them.

Speaker 2:

Now Candace.

Speaker 1:

Owens was right she's a boot licker. She's a supreme boot licker. You know, she was man, listen. But then when she started going against the grain, now she's getting it from everybody. But go ahead, Dora, I don't want you to lose your thought. Go ahead.

Speaker 2:

No, I said what I had to say, you know, because it's crazy, man. You know, you hear this you got these contracting companies Talk about how good, they work hard and they don't take lunch and they don't take breaks and they just work all day. Yeah, and you don't pay them nothing either, you know. And then, in order to justify it, you say these are the jobs that Americans don't want. No, it's not. These are not jobs Americans don't want. That's pay that Americans don't want. You know, they know what they're supposed to get.

Speaker 2:

Let me tell you, on my job right, they did a renovation about 10 years ago, right, and they were pointing the buildings outside. They had an African guy and an Indian guy, a Sikh, and they were doing the work pointing the building, and the dude, they was paying him $15 an hour and the prevailing wage for that, if you go through the like you're supposed to go through, is $55 an hour, plus benefits, you know. But they was paying these people $15 an hour and they wasn't in no union or nothing. They was working off the books and they was pointing the building up on scaffolds. You know, dangerous work, man, you know, and that's why they want a large class of unemployed immigrants so that they can keep the salaries low. Because when somebody comes in there and they demand a job and they demand the pay that they're supposed to get, they can say look man, we can't pay that. Sorry, that position doesn't pay that much. They'll pay this, you know. If you don't want it, seek opportunities elsewhere.

Speaker 2:

And then they'll bring Mexicans in there and they'll say yeah, yeah, we'll knock it out, because they don't have the same history of fighting in order to make the money that they're supposed to make. So they'll come in at an entry level and figure well, I'll get there one day, not knowing that your entry level is supposed to be way more than what they're giving you and you ain't going to never get there, because they're going to make sure they keep people that don't have papers. You know this company. You know what else they used to do. They were on payday. You know what else they used to do. They would on payday. They had somebody coming in there with a ice vest on and a contractor hat and all the Mexicans would run away. They done worked all week and then, when they supposed to get paid, they got somebody coming in there with an ice hat on and run them off. Now you ain't even got to pay them Now you ain't even got to pay them.

Speaker 2:

They ain't even got to pay them.

Speaker 1:

You know what I'm saying, but two things real quick. Jason Black, I was listening to him the other night and he said he was somewhere in some town one time and he went on one of them construction sites because it was across from the hotel he was staying at and he was just observing things. You know, because, know, when we in this work man, we very observant of things around us, at one point in time we weren't really paying attention to that kind of stuff. He said man, he said Pedro and them was around there sleeping everywhere. There was a corner to hide and them dudes were sleeping and hiding and lollyganging around but they worked so hard. You know, it's all cap, man, it's all cap.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, it's all cap. They just want a low-paid workforce. That's what it's all about.

Speaker 1:

That's all it's about.

Speaker 2:

They would rather call us late than to give us the job, because once we get the job, we know what we're supposed to get. We're supposed to get benefits, we're supposed to get the amount of pay we're supposed to get you know, and these companies are making a killing man.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, and see they can afford to get paid them low wages because, like we were saying before, you got 10, 15 dudes living people living in a three-bedroom apartment on top of each other, and I remember that story you told me about, the sister was renting out. They were subletting that apartment and when they went in there to take the apartment back, them brothers had sectionals in the living room.

Speaker 2:

They had about 10 sectionals in the living room Cubicles Like a dome, yeah, like a dome in the living room you understand.

Speaker 1:

See, we don't live like that so when they talk about the heads of households and all that. Yeah, if you got 15, 20 people, 35, 40 thousand a year, and then it's just me and my wife, maybe we might combine for maybe a 120 thousand, 130 thousand or something like that. Yeah, you're going to be your head of household, going to be my wife. Maybe we might combine for maybe $120,000, $130,000 or something like that. Yeah, you're going to be, your head of household is going to be more than mine because you've got 15 people living with you.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, and the thing about it a lot of them they're on a different mission. You know they'll come over here and they want to bring the rest of their family members over. You know so they'll work for whatever they can. They'll stay in, you know, a building where they don't have to pay a lot of money. You know so that they can send money back to try to get their family members there, and their real goal is to send the money back so they could build a business in their homeland. You know, a lot of time they come over here and it'd be so hard that they ain't even got enough money to send back home. So then, what they do, they'll get together and live in a commune. It could be one house and in that one house ain't no telling how many people are in there. And if they can do it, they can do it. But dang, that's rough man. It's rough man, what it's rough living in a house with two people in one bathroom.

Speaker 1:

Because you imagine, Well, see, they use the bathrooms and stuff like that in shifts. In shifts they do what. I realized that and I've seen it. They have things in shifts. You know bathroom time and all that stuff. You know what I mean. So you know bathroom time and all that stuff. You know what I mean. So you know we don't live like that man. Listen, man when you get 18.

Speaker 2:

But if you got to go to the bathroom, how you going to put that in the shift? Yeah, if you got to go to the bathroom, nature said time to go to the bathroom and your bathroom time is 3.20, and it's 1 o'clock. What you gonna do?

Speaker 1:

But see you talking about the people that's used to that come from places that ain't got no running water and electricity so they'll take a dump anywhere or find a corner or something. I mean, let's be real man. Yeah, that's where they come from, so that ain't nothing to them to go find a corner or closet or something to go take a dump in.

Speaker 2:

Damn, I mean, you go find a corner or closet or something to go take a dump in. Damn yeah.

Speaker 1:

I mean, you know you're wiping your behind with banana leaves and stuff or cocoa leaves or whatever. You know what I mean. They don't care nothing about that. We don't live like that.

Speaker 1:

But the last thing we're going to touch on and we're going to go because we've been up here a little bit the last thing is this story out of um chicago, the mass shooting. And this is why and I want to speak to this real quick about the the wide delineation, not just delineation, but separation, even from some people in our, in our own lineage. We got to get away from them. Check this out. Um, it's the story coming out of chicago. I'm trying to get it. You know, every time I play it, they, uh, they bring up these ads and stuff like that. But yeah, man, you know the uh, it was something like 18 people shot, I think four of them passed away. And uh, this um, this drill rap out of chicago, this female mellow, mellow bucks they call herucks. Now, she had an album release party. I believe that was on the 2nd of July and, man, you know she's heavily affiliated with some gang, the Trench Gang or something like that. Here it is Breaking news.

Speaker 6:

Chicago police say four people are dead and 14 others wounded after a mass shooting overnight. It happened outside a restaurant where a rapper named Mellow Bucks was holding a mixtape release party. That's brain. Abc News'. Olivia Rubin for more Olivia. What's the latest here?

Speaker 7:

Yeah, police are saying that this all unfolded just after 11 o'clock last night. Individuals gathered outside of this location. When officials say that some sort of dark-colored sedan pulled up outside and at least one gunman started firing into this crowd and individuals on scene, describing a chaos, terrifying blood on the streets. Individuals down outside it went from laughing, one individual said, to shots, ringing out multiple gunshots and, critically here, diane. Police are saying that no one is in custody here, so they are still looking for this individual. It's also not clear exactly what the motive was. Like you said, it was outside of this mixtape release party. Unclear if it was related to that. Was it targeted? Was it random? Very little information on the motive and why this happened and, specifically, who did it. Police, as I said, still looking for someone, right?

Speaker 6:

now A lot of questions there. All right, Olivia, thank you.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, yeah, hold on, let me pause this thing, let me pause it. Yeah, king, you heard that right, yeah, man, yeah, now this girl, she's a drill rapper and. I don't know if you ever heard her lyrics. I mean her lyrics is what turned around and got her, Because her boyfriend was killed in it. Another guy that was close to her was killed and two of her female friends were killed.

Speaker 2:

Was she killed too.

Speaker 1:

No, she wasn't killed, she's alive. She's alive, she wasn't even hit. She wasn't even hit. You understand.

Speaker 1:

Now this is, and I was on the phone with my man the other day he's in the feds doing life and I explained, you know, some time ago, I explained to him when they took all of the guys that were big influences on the streets in the street game, this didn't go on. When them guys was out here, this didn't go on because you had people that could real. You know, you know times there was times when turf wars broke out or whatever like that, and it went on for a little bit. But then, but then the heads or the ogs would would a phone, start making phone calls on this because you're messing up the money now, right, you understand. So they was able to reel it in and say, all right, look, let's figure this out, because we got to get back to the money.

Speaker 1:

It's some bad blood. We done got it out of our system. You know, a couple of people done lost their lives or whatever, because we always had underground economies and uh, street stuff goes on in every society. Every society has an underground uh economy. So we don't trip off of that, you know, you know I'm saying but the thing is, with this stuff here now we out here trying to fight, fight to get reparations and different things like that, and here y'all is, y'all cutting up with this craziness and you're making it hard because now the bootlicks, I guarantee you you're going to see you go on any of them, bootlicks channels this week.

Speaker 1:

this is all they're going to be talking about, because they're going to say see this is the culture, see, these Negroes, see, this is why black people need to be locked up. Like charleston white said, we need to be all put back in slavery. You, you, you're going to have that. But see, my thing is, I'm calling for delineation and separation, not just from from white folks, because this is where the point, this is a in in effect, we didn't do, we don't do mass shootings. This is not our thing. We learned that from then, that poison has seeped into our society.

Speaker 1:

Now, that poison and see when you got a poison, you got cancer or something like that, or you got gangrene, they got to start to cutting limbs off and cutting that cancer out or cutting that disease out of you. You got to get it out, you got to clean, you got the minister and clean that infection out. And this is what's happening with us. This is why I said right now we need total separation, not just from white folks, not just from the from, from from um the tether community, from the car and from Africa. We also need to separate from the Negroes, the twerking, ratchet, dusty, mindless folks in our own community. And I'm saying that Because the first thing some of the bootlicks will say oh, y'all don't talk about that, y'all don't hold nobody accountable. I'm telling you we need to separate from them Negroes that want to do that. Y'all don't hold nobody accountable.

Speaker 2:

I'm telling you we need to separate from them Negroes that want to do that. Well, you know, the thing is, every culture got dusty people that be doing grimy stuff. You know what I mean that was. I mean it's unfortunate but, like you said, this is behavior. But the problem is that I mean this type of stuff is being supported, that drill rap, if I understand correctly, the drill rap is like when you shoot somebody and then they tell them about how they shot the person and everything. It's like serious stuff that really happened, that they really was involved in. You know, that's what I heard about drill rap. You know they said these people go around killing each other and talking about it and and making songs about it and that's how they get caught all the time, because they done made a song about it. You know, and I could be wrong, but that's what I heard you know now, I love, I love the hip-hop, the origins of it.

Speaker 1:

I love some of the stuff. I love some of the artists that's out, you know now, the newest stuff, that drill, rap. I ain't really with all that that kill, kill, murder, murder, kill, because that's the making, these, that's making these kids into turning them into demons, and ain't nobody pushing this stuff, but these, these, these executives and these, uh, music industries, these executives and executives that control the radio and stuff and what's out there in the algorithm. They're putting that because they know the effect of what that stuff is going to do.

Speaker 2:

Right.

Speaker 1:

We don't have to consume it we don't have to consume it. And I'm in agreeance with that. I don't like it. I do not like that stuff, every other word. As much as I used to love Jadakiss and the Lox and them, at some point I would even say yo y'all got to turn all that coke selling and money and street stuff you're talking about. Turn it down a little bit because it's affecting these kids, and I loved it.

Speaker 2:

And they wasn't even no street cats.

Speaker 1:

That's what's crazy. They might have sold a little here and there a little weed Did Jada Kidd's pops blow him up one time. I think so, I think he did. Yeah, I think he did.

Speaker 2:

You was raised mother, father, home and everything Went to good school. What are you talking about?

Speaker 1:

Well, you know them, dudes. They rapped about the realities in their community. Maybe they were living it and a lot of them weren't, but they saw what was around them.

Speaker 2:

And see from what I heard that's it's supposed to be the thing about this drill, rap, this supposed to be real stuff they talking about, that they did or they gonna do, and to me that's just crazy, man yeah but again if Negroes want to do that and that's what y'all want to do, then cause I don't want to be around nobody like that.

Speaker 1:

I want to be around productive, positive people. You know them, brothers, they had the boots on the line, dancers and stuff down there at those events. 7,000, 8,000 people out there Ain't nobody fighting them, people out there loving on each other and having a good time. That's what I want to be around. I don't want to be around those. You know, the ops and all this stuff with the ops, the ops, the ops, the ops. When we become, when did we become, so much ops to each other? Come on, man, y'all can't, y'all gotta, but see again that delineation is total. Separation is very necessary because we're going to have to get out from around the dregs of the society and I'm saying that with a realness up here. But we're going to have to get out from around the dregs of the society, and I'm saying that with a realness up here, but we're going to get ready to get out of here. I'm going to give you the last word, king.

Speaker 2:

All right, my brother, it's always a blessing man talking. The last thing that I wanted to talk about was that brother that you had told me about earlier. I looked into it where he was talking to some blogger or something and a bunch of kids ran up on him you know, like what set you from and all this here, right? And one of them, and he told him straight up, he said I ain't in no set nothing what you talking about, man? He said I'm a gamer, I go to school, I'm a gamer, you know. And the kids, oh, no, no, no, no, you down with Snoop and the rat or something. Then the kids slapped him and ran and they laughed and ran off, you know, and it was a young white girl that was talking to him and I guess she was like interviewing him or whatever, and she caught all this stuff on video, right, right, and she said oh, wow, you know that wasn't right that wasn't right.

Speaker 2:

And he told he said look, he said it happens. You know, this is the hood, you know. He said I ain't worried about that. He said I'm going to be a millionaire, that's right. And he bounced, he would skateboard all down and bounce right off, you know. And she was the one that kept it going, kept it going, kept it going.

Speaker 1:

Crying and all that shit.

Speaker 2:

Crying and all that shit. This wasn't right, yeah, but that kid was focused and, you know, I believe the only reason they did it is because they saw him with her like that, you know.

Speaker 1:

Could be. It could be. I didn't think about that, but it could be, but I know, and I was telling my man, I know, See, we used to protect dudes like that Right man. Yo, we would tell, because they did it to me at a point in time when I was still going to school and stuff like that, the dudes would tell me yo, but get your ass out of here. Don't you let me catch you on this block, get out of here Beat it.

Speaker 2:

That's right. That's what they did Because they knew. They knew they was out there and they knew that it wasn't no real future in that. So they try to help the young brothers, you know, to try to move forward until they get to the point where they see you ain't listening.

Speaker 1:

All right, man. Yeah, you can get down now you hard-headed. All right, you want this, this, what you really want. All right, come on. You know what I mean. But we mostly protected them. Kids like that man, we seen them play ball real good, or they had a promising future. They were smart. Yo man, you ain't hanging around here, don't? Let me catch you around here, and we don't have that no more, so you know. But we're going to get ready to blow, bro, and it's always a pleasure.

Speaker 1:

I'll give you the wrap up. I'll give you the wrap it up.

Speaker 2:

All right, respect life, love, justice, treasure freedom and cherish the peace.

Speaker 1:

And with that said, y'all, go in freedom and cherish the peace. And with that said y'all go in peace and keep the peace and come on back, see us next week. We'll try to bring our brother back up soon. I can't promise you when. But my brother, you know they love you up here. They love when you come up here.

Speaker 2:

I love coming there and talking to people. Man, Just give me a call that I love coming in and talking to people.

Speaker 1:

Man, just give me a call, that's all All right. Catch y'all later. All right, my brother, freedman's Network, freedman's Affairs Radio, signing off. We love y'all. We love y'all. We love y'all. Oh, bobby, don't take no mess. Bobby, don't take no mess. Bobby's a man who can understand how a man has to do. Whatever he can get me, whatever you can hit me, baba don't, baba don't, baba don't. I won't take no mess. No, I won't take no mess. Now pop the microphone. Drink a little taste of gin. That is the last gin On a little game of gin. Bet it's the last gin On a little game of gin. Hit me, woo Ha-ha. Papa don't take no money. Papa don't take no money.

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