Freedmen's affairs radio
This program will focus on political, social and cultural concerns for descendants of American slaves who are the freedmen of 1863 and the foundational black Americans of this nation. The intended targeted demographic are generation x, millennials, and like minded people who are committed to the fight for reparations and justice for FBA and freedmen
Freedmen's affairs radio
Legacy Leverage & lames 🤡
Peace, peace, and welcome back. Welcome back to Freedman's Affairs Radio. I'm your host, Aaron Vaughn Black. And it's certainly a great feeling to be back up here. Excuse me, again this week. And today, January 19th, 2026, we're dealing with knowledge born one and nine. Right? And when we look at that, right, I like to think of it in practical terms as far as one and nine being a like a trimestic cycle. As you know, when the female is carrying child, laboring with child, it's just under normal circumstances, is it's usually for nine months. And this is the under normal circumstances, this would be the situation. Sometimes it's a it's a little longer, sometimes it's uh it's a little less than nine months, or premature, whatever you want, but under normal circumstances it's nine months. And these these cycles are called trimesters, right? And this is how we like to look at the the mer the the numerical the the supreme numerical uh mathematics in terms of those trimestrical cycles one to nine because you know you got knowledge, wisdom, understanding, culture, freedom, power, finance, equality, guard, build, destroy, born, cipher, right? Cypher being the zero. So this is how we we try to look at these uh in terms of those um cycles, trimesters as we call them. Right. But not to spend too much time on that, because we got a pretty decent, decent lineup for you today. So we're gonna we're gonna try to get right into it. And the first order of business is is acknowledging the celebratorial legacy of our late great, great, great grand warrior, Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., as somewhat referred to him as MLK, but we call him Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. And yesterday was the observance of his celebratorial life. And um, we want to take a look at that because there's some issues with that, and we want to just want to touch on those things just a little bit and then we're gonna move on. So take a listen, take a gander.
SPEAKER_15:Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.'s church in Atlanta and in the nation's capital to honor the late civil rights leader. Today's remembrance, though, not getting the same type of recognition it has in the past. Late last year, the Trump administration got rid of admission-free days at national parks for both MLK Day and Juneteenth. In response, Democratic California government given the new system announced that most California state parks will have free entry today. Jim Peter Harris is a distinguished professor of political science and the history of Brooklyn College and the City University of New York has also a king of the North and King Junior's life of struggle outside the South. Thinking for being here, how has the observance of this federal holiday changed since President Reagan signed it into law in 1983?
SPEAKER_16:I think we want to remember why President Reagan. You know, President Reagan reagent in 1980 against having a holiday for Mr. King. And Reagan changes his position in many ways because he sees it as politically useful for his reelection. And I think that gets us to, in some ways, the ways that the holiday is misused. It's used to make ourselves feel good and feel better, and it's not necessarily used to really honor the life and legacy of Martin Luther King, of Clarence Covenant King, and what the masks of us to make.
SPEAKER_15:CBS's government president is reporting multiple prosecutors in the DMJ civil rights criminal section are leaving their jobs. And it comes after President Trump was quoted in the New York Times earlier this month, saying he believes civil protections have hurt white people. How has the narrative around and fight for civil rights changed in recent years?
SPEAKER_16:I mean, I think we're seeing a real reversal of some of the gains. I think many people like to think, oh, I would have marked with Dr. King. And I think the question we have to ask ourselves today is what you are doing today against the ways that voting protections, health care, neighbors getting sort of dragged off the street. What are you doing about that is what you would have been doing in 1963. And so I think we are in a civil rights crisis today. Um, but I think what the holiday asks of us to do is to recommit ourselves, not to charity, but to the kind of nonviolent direct action that Dr. King pursued, in part because I think we want to remember that Dr. King believed in nonviolent direct action because injustice was too comfortable for too many people. So what are you doing to make injustice uncomfortable today?
SPEAKER_15:Professor Jean Theo Harris, thank you for joining us.
SPEAKER_20:Yeah, very interesting closing. Very interesting closing, and I I agreed with some of what she was saying. But the point where I played that little clip is because I spoke on this just as early as last year about our observ our holiday observances for our icons and things that mean a great deal to us, uh such as uh June uh Juneteenth. What the hell is that? Such as Juneteenth. I don't know what that sound was. But anyway, yeah, those are those are things that um I spoke about as early as last year, and like like I said, his birthday was actually on the 15th. Now, to be technically honest with you, we don't care all that about Trump took away the uh free admissions into state parks and government parks and stuff like that, and then Gavin Newsom uh allowed free admission. We don't care about none of that. None of that means anything to us. It's not supposed to. Just the same as these these holidays and these days off. The man's um birth anniversary was on the 15th. But we celebrating it with the the uh we're observing it the federal observance of it is on the 18th, which was yesterday. That doesn't mean anything to us. So, no, it might not hold the same cachet or the same weight as it once did when we were asleep and we weren't aware. Now we're aware of you can't tell us or dictate to us when we should observe or celebrate our icons or our legacies of of of our um ancestors that passed on in this in this uh nation. It's not up to you. We don't care about your free admissions and all of that. That stuff has is uh incircumstantial to us at the period. It's it means nothing. We decide what it means to us. And that's the where that's the the the the the focus and the and the target where where I like to advocate for our uh lineage to go and to start thinking it in those terms. So yeah, so we we don't get caught up into that. There is another there's another person that we want to recognize uh up here. There's another person we want to recognize, and that is um that is uh Sister Gladys, uh Dr. Gladys West. Now, for some of you who don't know who that is, she is um she is uh she was the mother of GPS. She's she was a mathematician of Dr. Gladys West, an African American scientist whose uh crucial work in the 1950s and 60s modeling the Earth's shape of uh geodesity geodesic with a satellite data provided the foundational mathematics for the global uh positioning system, in other words, GPS that we use today. Working at the naval uh proving ground, she developed precise algorithms accounting for gravitational and other forces, enabling accurate location tracking that became essential for modern navig navigation. Right? Her key her key contributions were satellite data processing. Dr. West programmed early computers like the IBM 7 70 30 to process data from satellites to create highly accurate models of of the Earth's size and shape, known as the geoid mathematical modeling. Her equations corrected for distortions caused by gravity, tides, and other forces, creating a detailed, accurate map of the earth for satellites to reference. Her pioneering role as a woman of color in STEM her bat her groundbreaking efforts were overlooked for decades, but were vital for the entire entire GPS system. Right? There's videos on her and and you know, they they of course they didn't want to recognize her. While working diligently, she didn't realize the future impact of her work, which we rarely do. And this is what I was explaining to to DJ Faye on last week's program. The importance of our work. We don't realize it at the time that we're engaged in whatever we're doing or creating the impact that it will that it will have generations later. And look, look, hip hop black culture, one of the biggest exports in in American uh industry. Right? That was created by some some young little small poor kids from from a project up in the in the South Bronx. But anyway, back to Dr. West. In 2018, Dr. West was finally recognized for her world-changing contributions and inducted into the Air Force Space and Missile Pioneers Hall of Fame. And um we just wanted to take the she passed away, she passed away. Uh let's um let's get that. When did she pass? Okay, yeah. Okay, here it is here. She passed, she was uh she was born uh Gladys May Brown October 27th, uh, 1930, in Sutherland, Virginia, United States. She died January 17th, uh, 2026 at age 95. Her alma mater, and this is from uh the Wikipedia search, her Alma Mater was uh uh Virginia State University. And um she earned several uh uh degrees there, her her BS, her MS, her MA, and then from oh well her MA was from um the University of Oklahoma and her her uh PhD came from Virginia Tech. And uh yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. So she had three children. They don't name her children, um, and it went into you know her early life and things like that. But we just wanted to come up here and recognize our late uh great sister for doing her work, Dr. Gladys West. And it's a beautiful thing, family. We have so many inventors and and people who contributed to to society in a positive way. But see, we talk we rarely talk about these things, and we have to start talking about them more because as you see, our culture and our lineage attacked on every front by not just the uh the YT people, not just them or the dominant society. We're being attacked by our own. And I'm gonna get into this do, you know, in the course of the program. You know, the bootlicks and the so-called black conservatives, they you know, their thing is they're talk down on on black culture and how negative it is and how trash it is, but they don't talk about things like that. They don't talk about the everyday hardworking black people of this society that contribute to this nation's uh uh function every day. No one they don't they don't talk about that, but they they'll talk about all of the negative and the foolishness that goes on in the community, the the the degeneracy. You know, I speak to those things sometimes. I do, but the most most of the time you see me, I I'm trying to build us up where we look at our uh lineage in a positive way. Because now is the time for this. Right? And uh let's see here what we got next. Well, what we got next here, because uh I don't want to stay too long up here. Yeah, but just before we get into that, but yeah, this is the these are the things that that that that seem that they would be out in front, that we need to get in front of on a constant basis. Because I'm telling you, family, the way the world is going, the way this country is going, we're gonna come into a time where we need each other. And I wanna I wanna find something, I want to place something real quick up here.
SPEAKER_04:Between 1916 and 1970, over six million of our people packed their bags and they left the South. And I'm not talking about a little vacation, I'm talking about leaving everything, homes, land, families to chase a better life. Why? Because in the South, we were being terrorized, lynched, segregated, criminalized. We were free, we were surviving. So we moved, but not all of us went to the same place. So let me break it down for you. Some went Midwest to cities like Chicago, Detroit, Fleet City were chasing factory jobs, Ford Assembly Line was open. Steel mills had openings, and the wars were to come north. You can make real money. And you know what? They showed up, they built communities, they built homes, they created music, movements, and millionaires. Some went east of Harlem Philly and DC. That's where the figures were in, the musicians, the revolutionaries, the ones who support the Harlem Renaissance and laid the foundation for civil rights movement. They're living all the way out west, LA, Oakland, San Francisco, they work the shipping bars, the river, and the aerospace plants. And in the process, they helped build Hollywood, hip-hop, and the black California legacy that we see today. But let me tell you what's even more powerful. Now, in real time, we're seeing the reverse migration. Black folks are leaving those same big cities we once ran to and heading back south. That's Lima, Charlotte, Dallas, Houston, Jacksonville, and Birmingham. And I'm gonna give you four reasons why. Number one, the cost of living.$3,000 a month for one member in Brooklyn? Number two, black opportunity is moving. Black business is thriving in the South. Number three, family and culture. Folks want to raise their kids with values, land, and legacy. Number four, we want our own again. Not to just live, but to own, to grow, to build. So now, what was our escape problem? It's now becoming our wealth problem. We're going back smarter, stronger, and more strategic. We're buying land, we're building businesses, we are reclaiming what our ancestors were forced to leave behind. That's the story of our migration, and it's still being written. We're not just movers, we're builders, we're legacy makers, and if you pay attention, now is your time to move too. But don't just move to cities. Move with purpose, move with a plan, and move to build. Now drop a black fist in the comments and share this with someone who needs to hear this black history channel.
SPEAKER_20:Yeah, family. See, this is this is that's what I'm talking about. But see, none of we don't focus on these things enough. We just want to know some foolishness that's going on online and who's fighting and who's sleeping with who, you know. And I'm not getting down on us, but we need to hear that sometimes. We need to hear that because we gotta start thinking in terms of just that little clip I just played for you. We have to start thinking, rethinking our future legacies that we're gonna leave the generations behind, because I'm Generation X, because most of the the um silent era's gone, most of them are gone. The baby boomers, they're they're just about over halfway gone. You know, they're they're dying out day by day, and uh, you know, Gen X is next up, which is my generation, and we have to. I'm glad that that we're finally waking up in a lot of different areas of our culture, that we're waking up and we're starting to realize that that we are all we have. We have no friends. We have no friends. And this is this is uh we gotta start looking at things different. You know, we've we've been gentrified out of a lot of these big cities that we once came to in in you know in decades past. We're being gentrified out of them, and a lot of us are going back south and different places like that because industries have have dried up and we we are in a technological age now, technology age. And um yeah, so we we um we looking to get back into uh being agrarian the way we used to be, and being getting back into agriculture to to learn how to um work the land and stuff like that. This is the stuff that I was trying to explain to FaZe. Nothing happens overnight. We didn't migrate to these cities overnight. That great migration took place over the course of years. Years even even decades. And and it's in the reverse is going to be the same way. So yeah, we'll get back to it. We're good, but we have to stay positive and stay down for each other. That's the biggest thing. Staying down for each other. Okay, I mean get that off the screen. Bang. Boom. Get out of there. And we're back to it. Okay. Now, the other thing, the other thing. You know, family. Um, I don't know if I should take a break here or not. Go into go into maybe a commercial break. Maybe I will because I I I gotta um we'll take a little commercial break here. Let me see what we got lined up and then we can go from there. Hold on just a second. Yeah, so we'll take a we'll take a little short break, uh, commercial for some of the sponsors, because I haven't did them in a while. So we'll do that and we'll come right back. I'll be right back.
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SPEAKER_20:Yo, yeah, we back. One, two, one, two. Well, yeah, we back, family. We're back in. And um, what we got up here next. We just had to hear from some of the sponsors, cause, you know, these people that that support us up here. And um, yeah. So, okay, the other thing we got, the other thing we okay.
SPEAKER_10:What was that?
SPEAKER_20:What was that? What was that? Okay. That was that. Yeah, then we'll go into that. Alright. So yeah. Family, family, family. Have y'all seen y'all seen the latest with Dion? You know, the other week this this woman got got uh unalive by the the the ice agents up there in Minnesota. That was um the the woman Renee Good. And then the dem now this is what I believe. I believe it was a it's a democratic uh dark money situation. Because you know, that's a real thing. That's a real thing, that democratic dark money. My man, when my man Devine was up here, he spoke on he spoke to that. He spoke to that, and uh, I I am a uh one who actually believes that I don't have any empirical data up here with me to to uh to expound on it. However, this has gotta be a play from the Democratic left because you know, with all these protests and different things going on around the nation for different incidents and different circumstances and different issues, black people, the FBA, the freedmen, us, we haven't been participating in any marching, any protesting, any anything like that. We have not been involved or participating in any of that. And there's some goofies out there. You'll see every once in a blue moon, you'll see a couple of goofies out there and telling telling telling us that that we gotta get involved. And usually they're from from um foreign backgrounds, uh you know, they're from other countries over they just melanated black people. Or sometimes it be people from our own lineage that are just, you know, they they on that democratic thing and they want to protect these illegals and and all this stuff. That's not our fight. We don't get involved in that. We don't care. Not that we don't care, it's just not our thing. We get down for people who get down for us. That's that's where we that's where we at with it. If you get down for us, we we're gonna back you, we're gonna get down for you. That's it. That's sad. Have y'all seen this thing with these fake black panthers? Uh up there in Philadelphia. This cat, let me let me let me play a little bit from this cat. This cat, this cat. Hold on, give me a second, family. Hold on.
SPEAKER_08:Ice agent ever run up on me. I guarantee you they won't. I put a hole in their chest the size of a window. Safe line repair, safe line replace. That's what's gonna happen. They touch me. Unarmed woman was killed by ice. If you think you're about to come and brutalize the people while we're standing here, fuck around and find out. Our interactions with the police and ice and we hold them accountable. We hold them accountable. We patrol the community and we hold them accountable. The the Black Panther Party for self-defense, we're the same Panther Party from back in the day, but we're a little more aggressive now. You dig carry bigger guns and we don't take no shit. Places where there are a lot of immigrants at, I think that the community around them needs to take special care to them and it needs to start escorting them to and from everywhere to make sure that they're sick. Because them ice agents ain't gonna act like that if it's a bunch of people standing outside with a supper rifle's a shotgun. It's a semi-automatic shotgun. That means them shotgun shells are shooting out of a pump, then shoot them rapidly. If you are gonna legally arm yourself, arm yourself with something bigger than what they got. Those who serving the public, they should be fearful of the public. They should be fearful that the public's gonna be dissatisfied with their job that they're doing, not feeling like they're tyrants, not feeling like they're bullies because they got guns and body armoring walkie-talkies, that makes them uh immune to whatever the people would do. I think you want to correct the ideology of the pig and the mentality of the slave catcher, you meet them with equal force. All power to the motherfucking people. No power to the pig.
SPEAKER_20:Now, family, you hear that performative garbage. You hear that performative garbage. This is the so-called new Black Panther Party. They come to find out, uh, brother uh brother Fred Hampton Jr. down here in Chicago, he said, Man, them people ain't got nothing to do with us. And the actual Black Panther Party, the new Black Panther Party are acts of petitioning them to stop using their name because they're not a part of it. And then people did a little, you know, our people, we're gonna do a background check. We're gonna find out, yo, who man is this? Whose man is this? And that's the type of time we we've been on now for the last couple of years. When we get uh strange, weird people come out of nowhere and just start popping up and talking that tough talk like he was just talking there, like the Grandmaster J dude. We start uh immediately find yo, who man is this? Who know this dude? Who know this woman? Who who people is this? Where are they from? Who are they? This is the type of time we've been on, family. So and and and it's very good because it it it it keeps our ranks tight. We know we not going back to that. You know, even in the days of the Black Panthers, and by the way, I met Bobby Seals, who was one of the founders. It was him and him and Huey Newton. I never met Huey. I never met Huey. I wish I had, but I never met Huey. But I did meet um Bobby Seals in person and talked with him. I shook his hand, embraced him, and talked with with uh chairman Bobby Seals. And that was one of the highlights of my life talking to that meeting that brother. Because he was one of my heroes. Him, Huey, um, um, bunchy carter, you know, Fred Hampton. Later, you know, later on, I I got you know, started learning about Fred Hampton. But Bunchie Carter and Huey and Malcolm and Dr. King, those, those, those were some of my top guys, top heroes. But I did get a chance to meet Bobby Seal and talk with him, and that was one of the highlights of my of my life, meeting that brother. You know, you ever you meet one of your heroes in real life, man, that's that's a that's a thing, the a grand thing, very grand. But anyway, yeah. Let's let's take a little clip of this sister. She did a little a little deep dive into these dudes also.
SPEAKER_06:Drag black American people specifically into the fight to um help illegal immigrants stay in the country. There is like it's pretty obvious at this point that this is an actual thing. Like, they actually want us to fight on behalf of illegal immigrants, not just of immigrants, illegal immigrants. Like this almost kind of feels like a PR move that nobody asked for, nobody wanted on behalf of Black America to say, no, guys, look, look, no, no, we we we're in support of illegal immigration, guys. With the Black Panther movie uh movement, we're we're uh we fight for all oppressed peoples all around the world. Uh so yeah, uh yeah, just ignore this whole delineation thing. See, see, we fight for everybody. Like, well, what the hell is that what is this about? We didn't ask for no PR. We didn't ask for nobody to come in to step in and play Captain Saber Ho and put our and put our name on it. Nobody asked for that. So where the hell did y'all come from? What where did you just dropped out of Never Neverland? Like, what the hell is going on? I'm really truly confused. I would I would like to have more information on what the hell is really going on with this. I'm about to show you something.
SPEAKER_05:So America is so desperate for us to get involved in this ice fight that they presented a black panther group. Yeah, I'm about to show you the black panther group, okay, that they presented. They're supposed to.
SPEAKER_09:Yeah, no, because the black panther patrol, this cop is a good cop, and this cop is a good cop. Once they said the slave catcher patrol. And I take it, they call the police officers now, but their name is slave catcher patrol. That's what they is, that's what they always have been. Every black officer out there, shame on you. So how the black police officer came into fruition?
SPEAKER_05:Ma'am, who are these people? Now, before I get into it, I appreciate anybody who is trying to stand up for justice, okay? Whether they are pink, red, green, whatever, right? However, what the f is this? Now, this is the most multicultural, um, this looks like the United Nations. And not only that, like, sis with the like straight dress, like, who's she running after? Like, who is she trying to fight? Like, how's she gonna fight in the dress and then she has a little bow tie, her little tie on her little ribbon? Um, it's just, I don't know what I'm confused. I'm confused. This is not the Black Panther Party. This is more like the multicultural party. I don't know what's going on here. Um, they are so desperate to try to get us involved that they're trying to put a makeshift group together and then put them out there because first of all, how does it even get impressed? Like, what have they even done to stop I? It's like, I don't even know what's going on with this.
SPEAKER_14:This is what I'm talking about, bro. Y'all be pissing me off. What y'all gonna try to revive the Black Panthers to protest against immigration enforcement? Why don't y'all go stop the organizations that unalive more black people than anybody in the world? Bloods, Cribs, GD, Vice Wars. They've unalived more black people than the KKK have ever unalive, bro. We do more damage to each other than anyone else. And you guys are trying to deflect from that every day. You're in Philadelphia marching against ice. Meanwhile, they got school bus with no seats, a whole row of seats missing, little kids, little black kids sitting on the ground, driving them to school. These kids' lives were in danger every time they took this trip. This should have never been a why y'all not out there talking about this, protesting this, bro. Let them people ice do their fucking job, bro. I'm sorry, bro. They're not looking for y'all, bro. Why y'all want to be involved so bad, bro?
SPEAKER_03:After doing my research, that black man, whoever he is, who appears to be black American, is not black American, who's out there in Minnesota pretending to be a part of the Black Panther, he's not of the Black Panther movement. Let's get that out of the way. What he's trying to do is make it seem like black Americans are involved in going against ice and we're not we're sitting back eating our popcorn and minding our black American business. What he's trying to do is create martial law, okay, that is a point for him to make it seem like black Americans are involved in going against ice so that there could be a civil war or something. But no, we're not involved in that. But we're eating our popcorn, we're minding our business. This needs to go viral because black Americans are not involved in disrespecting law, the ICE law enforcement. We're not because we're minding our business. But far too long, these people came to our country, talk bad about us, and if it wasn't for us, they wouldn't be here. They came here on our amendment, disrespecting us. This needed to happen. Trump.
SPEAKER_13:There was this video, and shout out to Sister Demetria for sharing this video with me of this so-called Black Panther out there. I think he's in uh the Philadelphia area. And when I heard this video and heard exactly the wording this man was saying, something went off in my spirit about this. And I want y'all to hear exactly what this is. This brother Phil's got to be. And we got a lot of questions about this gentleman here, this so-called Black Panther. So let's go ahead on and check this out. The first time I watched this video, I was like, first of all, who is this guy? Number one. Number two, in my spirit, I didn't feel like, yeah, man, that brother, that brother, you know, he really speaking, he was speaking about this or he was standing on business. I didn't get none of that from him. You know what I was getting from him? William O'Neill vibes. If you remember, William O'Neill is the guy that was sent in to the Black Panther Party to help set up the assassination of Fred Hampton. That's what I get from this guy.
SPEAKER_02:So now we got Tethers faking being Black Panthers. We have Tethers pretending to be Black Panthers, right? Right. Um, so we know Black Panthers is gone for black folks, right? FBA, we are not no longer a part of whatever they gonna, because if we say we Black Panthers, they finna, they're already saying FBA a hate group. So if we say, okay, we the new Black Panthers, we're gonna be a terrorist group. You know, male-nated militias get to run around. So we should probably call ourselves a militia now instead of um Black Panthers, because Tethers are taking over Black Panthers and anything black for real. Now everybody black. All them I know blacks are black now. So we're gonna have to come up with a new name for our so-called militia, because it can't be Black Panthers because Tethers have infiltrated that.
SPEAKER_11:Good morning, everyone. So I see that the new Black Panther Party is saying they're gonna be involved in the situation going on with ICE, and they're gonna defend the illegal aliens and they're gonna defend people. I got a question. I was in Chicago, which once a stronghold for the Panther Party. Why aren't you on the red, blue, and green lines helping out? Well, because people are being assaulted on there, murdered, set on fire, robbed, beaten often in Chicago. Like you can be, you can go help out with that. You know, like what about all these working class people that can't have a key or a Hyundai or any type of fast Mopar? Because you got the little Yans and Ski masks with spilling their cars around switches. Where are you? Where are you? But now this is your final straw, huh? This is this is just the heel you, this is the heel now for the new Black Panther Party.
SPEAKER_10:Choke. Now I've been seeing a lot of people's takes on the guy that's a Black Panther, they're talking about we need to do something to ice and all that other stuff because we'll have it to that white woman. But we ain't following for. And you know who this guy reminds me of? That dude by the name of Grandmaster Jay.
SPEAKER_17:Now, if y'all don't remember Grandmaster Jay, the whole nine y'all in Vince become the backbone for become the backbone for the military for a new black nation. What is the solution to all of this in this last one? The solution is very simple. We follow a declaration of liberation, declaring every African American descendant of slavery, a political prisoner here in the United States, and that was affected by the Portuguese slave trade. And then after that, the United States has a choice. Either A carbon us a piece of land out here, we're gonna take Texas and let us do our own thing, or don't stop us when we exit this somebody here and go somewhere where they will give us our own land to build our own nation. What is your name and what is the official grandmaster? I created the interface here. And how long have the organization been in existence? We don't give that information out. Just how we don't tell you this we're all ex-military, we're all very disciplined, we're all expert shooters. We don't want to talk no more, we don't want to negotiate, we don't want to sing songs, we don't bring signs to a gunfight. We're an eye for an eye organization. So when they decide to act right, we don't decide to act right.
SPEAKER_10:And we was the guy that had this quote unquote militia called NFE. NFAC stands for not frown coalition. Now y'all probably remember around the time Breonna Taylor got unalied, God rest her soul. Shout out to her man, shout out to her family. But they came out with a militia time, they were gonna do some things for white folks, and some police and stuff like that. When I first saw her, I was like, it don't sound right to me. It just really don't. And during that time, I was around some black organizations that was believing this shit. I'm like, hold on now. Y'all understand Quarantale Pro. Y'all read all the books for how the Black Panthers got dismantled. Y'all read all the books about how Michael Max got infiltrated. And y'all believe this dude, this dude got on national TV and talking about he was gonna do with the police, and nothing ain't happened to him during that time. Then it was so crazy. I remember they were joining the movement to Kentucky, they were having like a big protest out there in Kentucky. So they invited all the n around the world that can carry guns legally to come out there and protest with them. Peep gang. Some majority of the people that was out there had to fill out an application for them. And they had to put the type of gun they have and the serial number on the uh on the sheet on the application. That didn't ring a bell. I'm telling my partner, I'm like, why you gonna put your serial number down for? Why he need all that for? And it's just a protest. Turns out, dude was a fed. I believe he was a fed. People say, well, he's in jail. Well, why we haven't heard from? He ain't saying no word.
SPEAKER_20:Anyway, family, we're gonna move on. We're gonna move to get the idea, right? You get the idea. That's that to me is straight from the Democrat Party. Um, they desperate, they don't have a plan for 2026. They don't have a plan. It's the same old thing. Uh Trump bad, the Republicans are bad. Uh, we're gonna work on health care, uh, we're gonna work on uh corruption in in Washington and so on. So they ain't talking about no type of uh uh tangible beneficial uh uh policies for uh black Americans come to midterms 2026. Now the the these the the season, the midterm season actually starts I think in March. Right, and it goes into November all the way up until election night. And they're desperate. They don't they but they didn't they didn't come day to day didn't learn anything from the last general election where Trump uh came back in office. So their their playbook is the same. Now they're doing these type of things now and and acting like we don't see through it. This this is supposed to get us out there and say, Yeah, the black matter's out there. We bet we better get out there and help them brothers and sisters. Yeah, but you got a whole bunch of this dude look like he he might his name might be um Saldez Rodrigo's or something like that. This this this this um Paul Bird song dude, that's the dude who's talking about uh F around and find out if Ice come out here and get in my face, I'm gonna shoot, I'm gonna blow a hole in their chest. That's that's what this he talking all that. Grandmaster J tough talk. And um, you know, they they they they went out there. They went actually the the ice right where he's at, they came out there in force, and you ain't here peep out them dudes. See, this is when you start raising your eyebrow and everything starts becoming suspect. But yeah, family, we ain't falling for none of that. We not getting out there. Democrats, leave us alone, please. Leave us alone. You didn't want to be bothered, you don't want to do nothing policy-wise for us, just leave us alone. Go ahead and run your program and run your plays, and you and the Republicans duke it out. We ain't messing with the Republicans, we're not messing with you. Leave us alone. We vote for the couch, as far as I can see. You know, maybe maybe some of us will vote Republican or re vote con uh vote conservative because this is the only thing that's happened. Uh at least we're getting a little something out of out of conservatism. Getting some of these people out of here and and you know, changing up some of these policies and stuff in these in these uh liberal cities. So yeah, so but that's the that that was that family. But the other thing is, the other thing is I want to talk about before we because we gotta get ready to get out of here. Um oh boy Mr. Tendernism. Mr. Tendernism. Now that is everybody that that seen that be on TikTok or whatever like that, you know you got that dude from I think it's California, Southern California. He promotes those TikTok videos where he promotes um this uh destination place called destination state smokehouse. Destination smoke house where they smoke brisket and oxtails and all different kinds of stuff, and he you know, barbecue and different things like that. So there's a food critic, a food reviewer, and a critic, um, Keith Lee. Very famous for doing um these these um these pop-up um food um critiques, right? He pops up to these eateries and these restaurants, and uh he gives his his uh his analogy of the the service, the food, the taste, um, the pricing, and so on and so forth. So he rolled up to this this place, uh Destination Smokehouse in Southern California and gave a review. He did it, the meat the the the meat was falling off the bone, like advertised. I forget this man's name. Uh Mr. T we call him Mr. Tendernism, right? Because he's very animated in his um when he's doing these TikTok videos and these shorts, these YouTube shorts and whatnot. And uh Keith Lee gave his uh his um review and at the end of the review, he was looking for the man to actually give him a tip, a four thousand dollar tip he wanted to give to this man out of his money. And also he was gonna give an uh an extra thousand dollars to the customers in line at the place that were inside the the establishment at the time. He was gonna give the pay pay a thousand dollars worth of food for the customers who were in the establishment at the time. Anyway, the security there told uh Keith Lee that he couldn't do it because the the guy was they was doing up some kind of podcast in the back or shooting a video or something like that, and he couldn't be disturbed. So he didn't get the the$4,000. That started raise that's what raised this whole thing and started raising up people's antennas and and black people got right on it. And this is this is what I mean, family. We're getting back to that. Just just one incident could just trigger, just just triggered a whole the whole nation of us. Because black people were going there on the stretch for those video shorts though and those those YouTube shorts and those um TikTok uh promotions. Black people were you know, they they'd be a line down the block. People trying to get in there to get to that get to the um to the menu. Anyway, yeah, this brought up a lot of suspicion. This guy, they didn't allow this guy to get the get the money, the$4,000. Then come to find out, they started digging into it, digging into it. He would, because we was always on, everybody was on the impression that this was this guy's establishment, this destination smokehouse was his establishment. But come to find out he's a worker there. I mean, he might be a cook or something like that. That might be him, he's he's a pit master, barbecue pitmaster, or whatever the case might be. But it's not his establishment. That the establishment is actually owned by a white guy, he's some kind of foreign white guy or something. Hungarian, I don't know what he is Hungarian or Bulgarian or whatever, wherever he's from, but he's a white man. He's the actual owner of Destination Smokehouse. And this this um goes and started giving you them them aunt and mama vibes and them Uncle Ben's rice uh vibes and stuff like that. The other lady for for um for Colonel Sanders chick uh KFC chicken and all of that stuff. He started giving you those type of vibes. And people started digging. Now that the place is canceled. So the guy came out and did a did a video. Mr. Tenderiz and the the owner, they did a video and put it out, and it looked like he was hold to me, it looked like he was holding the guy hostage. Because he the white guy was doing all the talking, he's just sitting there looking like a mope. And I guess he was felt some kind of way. He didn't get the$4,000 from Keith Lee, and he was a little down about that. You know, did they use the guy as a mascot to promote the business. Now, here's the interesting thing about it. You know, they're using him. Now, I've heard he's been fired since then. I don't know, but here is here's the thing that's been very interesting. Hold on, let me just bring this up and then we can get into it. Hold on. This is an attorney, this is an attorney young sister, uh, attorney Candace is her name, and she did a deep, deep dive into this. Hold on. Let's get to it.
SPEAKER_07:I'm intending for the word tendernism, and unfortunately, Mr. Tendenism is not an applicant on any of those applications. Now, I'm attorney candis. Let's talk about what we can do to help save Mr. Tindenism's brain. So he doesn't end up like ancient mama. Now, just as a recap for people who may not know Mr. Tendonism, he got his name he wants to have been doing videos, showing his barbecue from the bum, and he was saying the word feminism. Check it out. Now, social media has recently been in the up because uh the public has discovered Chemical Hemis has been a trend for the word feminism. Someone's from the still Mr. Tembinism's bum. Um Mr. Hemis did make a statement on TikTok, basically. Um he's a black man, he wasn't trying to steal feminism, but he knew when he that other people were trying to steal it. So he tried to mark the farms, he's an attorney. Mr. uh Kenneth Harris is an attorney, he tried to mark the funds, he's been trying to get in contact with Mr. Tendonism to transform over some but he's been unsuccessful. Now, the other thing is Kenneth is not the only one who has Mr. Hemis uh somebody who's trying to mark for the word tendonism in two different classes as early as November 16th, 2020. Subsequently, we have personal twenty marketing. Now we've all um the the West the Nation smoke house. We don't research around smoke. Now we such one secondary side. When you start diamond smokehouse, the single level is Nicholas Yappy Mum. Okay. Nicholas level search for designation smokehouse. Is it the same? So when you pull the formal paperwork for designation smokehouse, you can see the member. Um section that says offer you see the Nicholas Yap. So we can smoke house feminism is um by Nicholas Mokhouse. Mr. Timinism actually is a business one with Michalism and he owns a portion of the designation smokehouse. As you can see from the official paperwork, that is not true. Um Mr. Timonism is not the same as the public paperwork. The only way you would have an ownership interest in the company is shares, ownership shares of the corporations, it would have to be memorialized in writing, some type of contract. You have to receive the shares, things like that. I'm willing to bet that hasn't happened. Now, the other thing that comes into play before we get to a resolution is this the employee employer relationship is always important when it comes to who owns the intellectual property. Typically, when you work for an employer as an employee, what you produce in your day-to-day uh duties as a part of your employment to the corporation, the employer. However, if you are an independent contractor, the same is not so. Now, from what I'm saying in these videos, my intuition is saying there is no employee-employee relationship. It looks like Mr. Tendenism is an independent contractor. The destination of smoke house is a billion companies, they have no emotion in Mr. Tendonism's intellectual property. He's an independent contract. Obviously, we wouldn't be more fact and information fully clarified. Now let's see what's the resolution. Now let's talk about the resolution. But before we go into the resolution, I would have to talk about ancient mama. Um, ancient mama is saying this is a black woman back in the table. Um something very similar to what's happening with Mr. Timonism happening with her. She was known to make a very good thing. She had this recipe and everything, and um white people that she's not in this beginning of time. And this is black people didn't know it's a recently that this was this black woman's um black woman, let's the black woman's that's not the case. So the way that Mr. Timinism is too happy by in twenty markets blackness. Just talking about the entire mum because the black woman was a pretty wholesome looking black woman in the black belly kids. Mr. Teminism, Mr. Teminisms. So we know. This way, this was a little his particular mind of the word tendonism. And we were buying it because now we know that this is his problem. This is him. He gets his logo for his own restaurant, just like KFC, just like McDonald's. When we see KFC, when we see the old white man with the red beard and all that, we know it's KFC. And he could do the same thing with his own restaurant, and that is how he would save his brand. Now, there's gonna have to be a part two to discuss, you know, the legalities, who would win and all that with the current pending trademarks pretendingism.
SPEAKER_20:Okay. Yeah, great stuff, great stuff there. Thank you for that, sister, attorney Candace. She's doing a thing, and I guarantee you, I can guarantee you that there's gonna be some help for him to get his his uh image and everything trademarked. Because you know that them them folks is beating him out of they they not uh putting no shares up for him where he can share in the pot of gold on a on a on an equitable term. You know that's not happening. He's he's being used as a mascot, just the same as the the sister was talking about Aunt Jemima there, which her name, that woman name was Nancy Green. They just she was actually largely discovered at the I think I think 1963 or 1964 World's Fair, something like that. And then she was there making pancakes and and telling old Southern stories, and she just blew it. The company blew up. But they used her image to promote that syrup, that maple syrup. Her name was Nancy Green. Now, when it came to Uncle Ben's rice, there was never anyone named Uncle Ben. I think the company, the rice company, there was a rice company named Ben or something like that, but there was never no one named Uncle Ben. The image that they used for Uncle Ben's rice was a man by the name of Frank Brown. Frank Brown was that was the image used on Uncle Ben's rice. Never made a dime off of it. Mascot. Never made a dime. Same thing with with with she it was ironic that she brought up Colonel Sanders chicken. There's a woman, they say that the actual recipe came from a black woman. I forget her name. I forget her name. It slips my memory at the moment. But you know, I I think I reported on it before. I think I did some did some um talking about it before. But anyway, yeah, they said she was the one that actually whose recipe it was that they used for the Colonel Sanders chicken, the KFC, Kentucky Fried Chicken. But anyway, you know, this I brought that in just to to give us our intellectual properties and stuff like that are very important. Our culture must be safeguarded and gate kept. Now he's this guy's Mr. Tendernism is an old guy. He's from the um he's from the baby boomer era, you know, very old guy. In his 70s, maybe. And um don't want to make no fuss. And he's hugging his videos and hugging on the owner, and he's trying to cover for him. Like, like we know you getting beat, but he's trying to make it seem like he's not getting beat. But yeah, family, that's what it is. That's what it is. So, but we got one more thing, and we're gonna blow out of here, and I gotta touch on it. I really didn't want to. But I know everybody, let me get a little bet in here. Let me get a little bet. Uh, let me get can I get that bed in here? Yeah, okay. All right, there it is. All right, family. So everybody's heard, everybody's heard about the 5150 show with uh brother Corey Holcomb and his uh uh debacle. I'm gonna call it a debacle with with that uh with this Anton Daniels uh dude. Now, Anton Daniels is a is a YouTube influencer, he's a YouTuber, and um he has he has a large following. He's very successful with the YouTube thing. He's probably a hard-working dude because he's made he's making a lot of money. He's making a boatload of money, and he's blown up with the on these YouTube streets. He started uh I was I you know I used when I first got wind of him, I I was kind of proud of him, and you know, black brother doing his thing. Then then he started getting into areas talking about political things and black culture and stuff, and then then that's when the boot licking started. And and I was like, I had to come up here and apologize to you guys for talking and bigging, you know, giving him props like like I did, because I didn't know he was on that type of time like that. But anyway, make a long story short, last week he was on Corey Holcomb's 5150 show, and he went up there, man. That thing turned into a debacle. It turned into a debacle. Now, the dude is very shrewd. Corey, in my opinion, I'm gonna say this to y'all. Corey shouldn't have never, never had that conversation with him. First of all, Corey's a comedian, right? And that guy, that dude is is a YouTuber, and he has no shame. He he loves, he loves, he hates black people, and I'm I'm I'm gonna explain what I mean by that. Well, he said on the show he's not black. And let me see, can I find it? Um this dude, this dude is a lame. He's a lame. I mean, when I say lame family, he's a lame. And he's living out his dream now. He's become important. He's he's he's uh almost celebrity status, almost. On the in the in in the internet society, he's a celebrity. He would be considered a celebrity. In real life, a lot of people don't know him unless you scroll in YouTube and Instagram and Facebook and stuff all day. You know, there are some people that do that all day long. That's all they do. The reason why I know about him because of the work I'm doing, his algorithm runs across my uh different platforms and stuff that I'm uh apps and stuff that I have. So this is why I end up knowing about him. Other than that, I wouldn't know. You know, if I was still on the streets, I would be like, who? Who's that? You know, but make no mistake about it, he's very successful in the YouTube streets. And he went on that show to have a car. What he did was he played it very he played this thing like a like a pianist, like, like a pro. He sent, he was must have been he sent in a cash uh super chat into Corey's Corey. Does the 5150 show once a week, he does it, and this guy sent in a$500 super chat got Corey's attention. And one thing led to another, they had a phone conversation and said, uh, well, let's set up and you know, come on the show, man, and bada bada bada blah. So the guy ended up going on a show and he went in there. Now this guy's a when I tell you he's a square type of dude, lame, like his his whole thing is a facade. But I don't want to get into I'm not here to beat the brother. Well, I'm not calling him a brother because he's not my brother, but to beat the dude down or to to attack his character, nothing like that. His character speaks for itself. Anyway, he goes in there and um right away he came in with this energy like um Corey when they do the introductions or whatever like that. Corey introduces him in. And right away he was a yeah, I was here on time. I was here on time. Corey must have been a little late to get into the set, to do the show, or whatever, and he reminded Corey he was here on time. So right away, there was a little spicy mustard type of thing going on, a little spiciness going on, right? So they get into a conversation and they go right into topics of, you know, political topics and societal issues or whatever like that. One thing led to another. And um Corey asked him, I think Corey asked him a question, man, like, why do you, because he said, uh, that's like me sitting up here saying all black people are stupid. That's that's what struck that. And so Corey said, well, why do you use that analogy? Why, why don't you say, why didn't you use white people in that? And he went back, they went back and forth on that. And and Corey um says, yo, man, you never, you never say nothing bad about white people. He says, I do it all the time. I do it every day. I talk about white liberal women every day. They're the worst thing that they're the worst terror terror to happen in America. They're the worst thing, the worst enemy to America is white liberal women. So Corey says, Yeah, well, what about white men? You don't say nothing about them. See, let me tell you something with them games them conservatives, the black conservatives play. They'll talk about liberal, liberal, white liberal women, and even liberals in general, whether they men or women, but mostly they they'll they'll pounce on white liberal women. That's their trick. They will never, as much dysfunction there is in white society, they'll never talk on that. Remember, and King King, if you listen in, brother, you can attest to this. You can wit be my witness to this. When I used to go on that brother, um, there was this that brother, uh, what's his name? Wise. I used to go on his uh program, The Righteous Perspective, as a as a uh panelist. I would go on, you know, a couple times I went on here. And that's all they do over there is punch, you know, everything is about black culture, it's so trash and so degenerate, and black people this, black people that, black, black, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah. And I'm, you know, as a panelist, I'm like, wait a minute. I'm not coming up here for that. I'm not coming up here for that. And I'm not gonna allow y'all just to, I never, I check, I ever I check, I checked it as much as I could. I was up there three, two or three times, maybe, maybe once. I but I was up there about three times on on as a panelist. And each issue, it was always black this, black that, blah, you know, we gotta, see, they love to hide behind, oh, it's just tough love. These are the conversations nobody wants to have, and the truth is uncomfortable, and black people don't like to hear the truth. And we're saying this because we want black people to do better. They hide behind that. Every black conservative does that. This is this is the excuse they use for punching down and targeting black uh degeneracy. Right? We know we have problems in the community. There's problems, and we talk about them. There's problems in the community. I talk about them up here on this program, Freeman's Affairs Radio. But it's I'll be doggone if I'm every single program. Black this and black that. We need to do better. We stupid. Nah, we ignorant, you know, we ghetto, we cult, our culture is trash. I'm not gonna do that every because I know better. I know better. We just talked to you about this woman, Dr. Gladys West, Dr. Martin Luther King, some of our great innovators and and and and pioneers. Let's talk about some of those things sometimes. But they didn't, they're not gonna do that. So, what happened was I put a challenge out. Let me tell you how I ended up getting booted off that off that channel, and they blocked me from super chats and everything because he had a thing, he would always read all the super chats. So I would send in super chats challenging them to if the I gave them a 30-day challenge. I said, for 30 days, if y'all could not talk about black degeneracy and talk about degeneracy in the uh white society, I said 30 days. Give me 30 days of doing that. They can't, they're not gonna do it. Not only they're not gonna do it, they can't do it. And this is the challenge Corey put out to to Anton Daniels to look, man, you you always talking trash about black folks, especially black women, single mothers, you know, this the ghetto queens and you know, the trash culture and yada yada this, yada yada that. Meanwhile, you don't say nothing about white folks. The only thing you do is talk about white liberal women. You ain't gonna say nothing about that white man, nothing. And Corey said, because you afraid that it's gonna be video that people can uh can go back and and reference of you saying something against them. And you know if you go against them, they they're they're essentially your masters, and if you go against them, that's gonna have a financial effect on what you're doing. Same thing with with the dude wise on the righteous perspective. All those super chats he gets, they're from Christian people, some of them black, but a lot of them white, a lot of them are white supremacists because the reason why I know I used to go into their profiles, and that's when you see they come on as Christians and stuff like that. Oh, we're Christians, and we don't see color and all this crap, you know, the same old playbook they always talk. But then when you go into the pro and you dig, do a little digging, you'll see you'll see, you'll see the white supremacy. So when I did the challenge, right away I got booted off, got blocked from the super chats and everything. You know, and I would even eat I even email him and all that stuff like that. The dude, he's another one, a lane, another lane. Baz, yeah, you're a lane too. Um scared, you know, scared of them white folks, because that's see the e and Corey said this in in his um in his rant. He said this, he said that you fear these people. You fear them. This is why it's e the easy thing to do is to uh punch down on on black folks. That's the easy thing because there's money in it. First of all, ain't no money in talking against them, ain't no money in it. I've been doing this this this podcast here for three years, and I I haven't collected a dollar, not even three dollars, and I don't ask any any of you for any money. If you feel like supporting the show financially, you'll do it. If you feel there's just some value in what I'm seeing, you would do it. But I don't press anyone, I don't ask anyone for anything. There's no money in this. Now it would now. If I was a dude that would get up here and talk about how ignorant we are, and how how our culture is so garbage and trash, and we need to do better, and white people are great, and you know, we should take notes from them. Man, I I would I would probably be man, I would be rolling. I'd be rolling. I I would be rolling. I would have the YouTube channel be up and rolling. I would be busy every day. I wouldn't come on once a week. I would probably have to do maybe three shows a week, plus two YouTube channels, two YouTube shows a week. So that did this is the thing. There's no money in in speaking the truth. People are not interested in that. White society is interested in in the useful tools. They're they're monkeys, they're little monkeys that they can send out. See, we don't have to the black, this is what black people are saying. You guys need to do better. But see, now they're sick of them. Listen to Nick for Wentez and then when we got on Jason Black. We don't need these bootlickers and coons anymore. They have no use. We can say what we want to now. We don't really need them anymore. But but guys like Anton have built a he first of all, you gotta give credit to him. He is uh some kind of engineer, tech, uh, techno tech uh technology engineer, something like that. So he knows these algorithms and these this compute, this online stuff. He's mastered it. He has mastered this stuff, and he's able, he's been able to monetize and make some real money. Uh, but there's a downside. Now he went on Corey and they got into it. And uh let me see, can I find any of the any of the um the stuff here so y'all can hear it? Y'all can actually hear it.
SPEAKER_01:Comedian Corey Holcomb and Anton Daniels almost come to blows after some choice words from Anton Daniels during the heated debate.
SPEAKER_19:It's the reason you go after black males or black people quicker than you will go after white males. What are white males responsible for in this country? I'm talking about everybody. Here's the fact have you said something about Capacitian males and how this is making someone? Listen, because you you talking about what you must say a lot. You talking about you still, I'm not giving them one number. I'm losing for you. You you know what easy. What you let me tell you what you do. I'm doing lessons. What you talking about?
SPEAKER_01:Didian Corey Hope.
SPEAKER_20:Now, y'all heard that. Y'all heard that. That that's what it led up to. That it started out a little subtle, and that's what it led up to. Corey asked D, that, that woman that's up there, that's his co-host, to move, switch seats with him so he could be next to Antoine. Not only did he get next to him, let me tell you something, family. Let me tell you something. Corey got right up on him in his face. He was first he was standing up over him. Antoine did not get up out of his seat once. He just looked up at Corey. Then Corey sat down and was waving his hands in his face. And you heard the exchange, they went through it. I don't give a F what you talking about, nigga. He because he he he has to say face now. He can't look soft. So he gotta say some explicites and and and I don't give a F, nigga. I don't give a F what you talking about. Man, F what you talking about. And the minute he said, because you ain't gonna do nothing, Corey said, say I suck such and such again. Say it again. And then he put the mic down. He said, say it again. I'ma show you I ain't doing it for the for the internet. Antoine jumped up and said to give himself space because Corey's on him right up on top of him. He jumped up. We can go outside. See, and and a lot of the cornballs online were saying how because Corey didn't go outside with him, that he punked Corey. Let me tell you lame something. Let me tell y'all lame something. Then then check this out. Right? I got this little clip here. Um this dude, uh um, he was talking about how he because he went, you know, he was going in after that. But anyway, once a dude, he done told you already, listen, man, straighten that out with that, with that, with that um SD stuff, straighten that out. Don't talk like that because you're violating. And he switched seats with the girl D. Got right up on him. You know, when he walked over there, Anton ain't standing. That's when, cause actually, to me, when you coming towards me like that, I'm standing up and I'm probably gonna take the first poke at you. I'm gonna throw the first bomb because I don't know what your intentions are coming coming to me like that. So I'm not letting you get up on me that close. And when I say he was close, family, he you could he, whatever he was as he's talking, spit coming out of his mouth, is getting on him. I know it is. If not spit, his breath is on you. That's how close he was. As a man, you don't let no other man in a hostile uh confrontation get that close on you. Either you, either I'm gonna back up to give you, oh listen, homie, you're getting too close to me. You know, stop that's far enough. Or if if you first he let him get way up too close on him. Then they going through the exchange. And he says, Because Corey, you ain't gonna do nothing. That's when Corey says, say it again. Say it again. I'm gonna show you I ain't doing it for the internet. He would he wouldn't repeat it. That's when he came with I'ma respect it because it's your show. I'm no, dude. No, my dude. If it's if you standing on business like everybody say on your side that say you standing on business, you gonna say it again. You're gonna say it again. And and me with my attitude, I probably would have said it again and then put your mother on top of it. That's where we come from. But that dude ain't built like that. He knew right away he had to get away from Corey. That's when he started that corny, yo, let's go outside. Like, what are we in high school? Nigga, it popped off wherever where it's it's going down. Wherever it popped off at, that's where it's going down. We ain't changed, yo, I gotta change my, I got my dress shoes on, let me put my sneakers on. And then I'm gonna see what you're talking about. It ain't none of that. It's up wherever it jumped off at, it popped off at, it's up right there on the spot. If it's that serious. I'm me at my age, I ain't trying to fight nobody. I ain't got it in me. I know how to throw my hands. I've been fighting all my life since I was 12, 13 years old. I've been fighting. Right? All through the 70s, 80s, growing up. Man, I'm fighting, I mean battling. Battling. So it ain't nothing for me to prove in my year, you know. I'm starting to reach that latter stage in my life, my twilight years, and I ain't got nothing to prove to nobody. I don't want to fight. In fact, I be trying to avoid any kind of confrontation. That's why when I go out, I try to go out early in the morning. If I gotta go to these stores or whatever like that, I try to go before, you know, certain elements in these places and streets get crowded. I don't like bumping into people, I don't like stepping on people's feet, I don't like people stepping on my foot. You know, I'm just, I don't want to be bothered. And I'm I'm just trying to, I must do my best to stay out your way. I'm gonna do my best. And if I bump into you or something like that, pardon me, pardon me, bro. I'm sorry. To anybody, whether they white, black, brown, purple, red, green, I don't care who you are, I don't want no problems. Because once it go there, I know how far I'm gonna go with it. So I really don't, I can't be sitting up in no penitentiaries at my age talking about I got a charge for some loser. And dudes, I've been disrespected, like, you know, I didn't take it like, okay, I'm looking at this bozo like he ain't got nothing to lose. He ain't got nothing going on. Looking at the way a dude dressed or whatever, like that, the way he's behaving. I'm saying, I'm gonna get into it with this clown. Let me avoid this fool and get on with my life. Because I ain't gonna never see him again. So I don't I don't get into those things. But this dude, Anton, let me tell you what this dude, he's a lame, he's been a lame his whole existence. He says he's from Detroit and people been doing homework on him. He's not a certified Detroit cat. He's not. He's a dude that was born and grew up in Michigan, in the Detroit area, probably in the suburbs. From what I'm understanding, from what I'm hearing, he went to a Catholic school. So he he didn't go, he didn't go to regular public school and was, you know, had to fight every day and all that stuff. He didn't come from that. And he's a short, stubby, chunky dude. I'm not gonna call a dude ugly, but you could tell, you could look at him and tell he wasn't in the in crowd. He was never in the in-crowd growing up. And from what I could see, he he always got something to say about black women. Especially if they single and they sing, they got kids. Oh, you're a single mother, it's always he jumping down on them. That's because growing up, he's in school, he was looked over. He was looked over, and you was probably treated like a lame. And some people that scars them, they hold that, they hold that trauma. That's traumatizing for them, and they hold that for their life. They hold on to that because it hurt them. They were hurt. And we all have been disappointed in the young, you know, because good girls, you know, the pretty girls and the popular girls and the good-looking girls, the big butts and the the beautiful light skinned chicks and all that. Like they they straight washed over him, like, eh, this nigga's a bozo. He's a clown. He never got no attention, never was in the in crowd. This is why they hate black culture so much, because they were left out. They were outsiders. And that, that, that even and it goes for the girls too. When you see girls that hate black people like that, and they they're of the they of the lineage, they have some trauma. Guys that messed over them. Um the popular guys that that all the girls was after, you know, they probably gave them a little something, and the guy never paid him no mind. He was, you know, other chicks teased you because you couldn't dress or whatever the case. And that's the kind of wounds that this brother has. Well, this guy, I keep calling him brother, but that's the kind of wounds that this guy got. Because Corb even asked him, Do you identify as a black man? The first thing he went to, I'm a Christian. I ain't none of that shit. I'm a Christian. That tells you right then and there what you need to know about him. Because Christians, white Christians, they haven't, they put their race first. See, them conservative, them conservatives, the black conservatives, the black manga, they'll tell you they're Christian. They don't see color. But them white folks will tell you I'm white. I'm a white man. I'm a white woman. I'm Christian. I have Christian values, but I'm white. It's only the black ones that play that. Oh, I'm not black, I'm a Christian. Black is a construct. No. Black is a category. It's not a construct, it's a category. And we'll get into that another time. That word play. We'll get into that another time. But that's where this dude is coming from with that. He's been hurt. He's been looked over. He's probably been treated like a lane. He probably might have been beat up a couple times or robbed or whatever like that. And he hates when he sees certain dudes because, you know, he'll tell you in a minute. Well, I don't mess around with niggas that have been to jail and all that. We all got friends that done been locked up or been in some kind of trouble. All of us. I'm going to be the first to tell you. I'm I would the first time I touched state penitentiary, I was 19 years old. 19 was in state penitentiary. My first time. I was 19. So I've been going through it. I come from the mud, and I'm not saying that as a rite of passage or as a bragging rite or nothing like that. It's just that certain cult, you know, we've been through some things. And it gave me my street smarts, it gave me my common sense, it gave me a sense of awareness. Because look at this dude. Now you tell another man that he's tell a black man about S and D sucking, you know, private parts. Those are fighting words. And you can't comfortably be talking to another black man like that. You know that. Because that's part of the culture. The whole, you know, the whole room gets silent, man, and you know, because people know what's coming next when you start talking like that. But he has no sense of awareness like that because he didn't come from that. He was a cornball dude. He didn't go to school with the other ruffians and stuff like that. He was told to stay away from the kids. And the the whatever encounters that he did have wasn't good for him. And like I said, the chicks overlooked him. Now he said he's been married since he's 22 years old. Look at his wife is not an ugly woman. I'm not gonna say she's ugly. She's not something that that uh most of us would talk to. She's about a five. She may be a strong five out of ten. She's a strong five. Not an ugly one. I'm not saying she's ugly. She's not fat. She's not um obese or morbidly obese or nothing like that. She looked like she's in fairly good shape, but she's not a dying piece. Like this dude portrayed his what he portrays is like he knows everything he touches gold. Your wife is not a dying. That's number one. Beauty is in the eye to beholder, she looks good to you. Fine. There was a girl that told him one time, you married the first piece of piece of nookie you got, because you know it wasn't working for you. So he married early, had some kids. Kudos to him. He he don't have no outside kids. He's been married two decades, and that's a great thing. You take care of your family, that's a great thing. That that is exemplifies you're doing the right thing. But the way you get up and brag about, because what happened was he was a cornball all his life, and what happened was his father got killed in an incident on a job. The family got a settlement. That's how he first got his first lick of money. The dude is a tech uh technology guy, so he this internet thing fit him like a glove, and he blew up from it. Now he's seeing he's reaping the success and the rewards from his work. Great thing. You're able to take care of your family, you're able to buy some material things and do some things like that, and you know, he, you know, now he's able to buy some clothes and you'll see him with the Gucci and the Louis Vuitton stuff on and stuff like that. So you're living out your dream because you've been ignored all your life. So now that you have some success, you know, you you but see, here's the mistake you made. You're reaching, you're you're starting to go into, you've been talking slick these last couple of years. You've been talking all this, you don't give a F about this, you know, what people think about you, and you say whatever you want, blah blah blah, you got security, ain't nobody gonna do nothing to you. This, then, and this, this, and that. There was a scene in the in the movie Carlito's Way. There was a scene that um Sean Penn was playing Al Pacino's attorney, and he went to go to um Rackers Island to visit a mob guy, Tony T. So they set this thing up where he was supposed to break him out of jail because he owned a boat, and you know the story. Anyone go watch the movie Carlitos Way. So he took Al Pacino on this thing, on this, on this uh lick to get this guy out of the jail. So they got the boat. They were supposed to pick him up out the water. He ends up killing the guy, killing the mobster and his son. And Al Pacino helped him throw the body over the water and everything. When they got back to shore and they got back to, you know, to laying the boat and everything, Al Pacino said, Look, we even now. I don't owe you anything, Dave. That was the attorney's name, Dave. I don't owe you anything. He said, Congratulations. You made it, you made it over to the other side. You're not an attorney no more. You're a gangster now. You understand? You're a gangster now. The ball game is different now. And see, that's the that's the route that Antoine's going in. He's he's landed his himself in. You you in the gangster realm now. Because I seen uh, it was uh earlier today, no, yesterday, late yesterday, I saw a a um, he was on this panel with some other guys. And some of these guys, you could tell, you could tell they they were street dudes. And they was telling Antoine, yo, like, homie, we don't believe you. You ain't you ain't got notes, you soft, like you, you ain't about nothing, man. You ain't about nothing, man. You're a YouTube dude. Stop playing, stop playing these gangster games, man, because because it's not gonna work for you. And it's not, see, that kind of life, you can't learn it. Listen to me well, family. You can't learn it, right? And you can't have a late start. This dude is 43 years old. Now you're talking about shooting fair ones, going outside, and shooting the fades. Nigga. Nigga, that ain't what this is about, bro. You went out there, you went on Corey's show, you did that, pull that little stunt, and then you started mentioning certain names. You mentioned the dude Craig Fax. Craig Fax pulled up to the show, but Antoine had already left, right? These dudes, you don't know. LA places Corey is from Chicago. Them Los Angeles, California dudes, that city, and that city of Chicago, dumbcats is totally different from other cats around the country. And I'm not I'm not no jock riding kind of dude. I'm a New York guy, born and bred. I'm a New York guy. Old school New York. Grew up in the 70s and 80s. Dumbcats is different. You know that Antoine was supposed to stay out there a few days. He left the next morning. He called the airport, changed his flight, everything, and got out of there. They knew what hotel he was staying in. California is one of Los Angeles is one of them kind of cities. Them dudes talk to each other, and and even some of them that's beefing with each other or talk to each other. When it's a mark from out of town, and they knew, they knew he changed his flight. They knew what hotel he was staying in, whatever airbnb. Ask pop smoke. Ask pop smoke. Right? And you talk about your security, and you got your security is different. My dude, hear me well, man. I don't know if you're gonna ever gonna hear this because I'm a little dude. I don't know if you ever gonna hear this. They they don't ask Trump. They almost got the Trump. He got it. They didn't kill him, but he got it. Dumb dudes don't care nothing about that because you got a couple of big old security guards. Thumb dudes can get it too. And if you and if you go to the wrong cities, like LA, like Chicago, right? You can get it. Ask Tommy Sodomai. He came here to New York on some on you at a at a right there in Harlem at the Alahama Ballroom and got punched in his face. Just from running his mouth. Dudes walked up on him and decked him in his mouth, man. But see, in them cities like LA and Chicago, them casts is coming different. Once, once the once they got your ticket, once the ticket is pulled on you, it's th it's pretty much a rap. And what you're doing by running your mouth, because you did, you went and did a live, all these lives and different podcasts and stuff, talking about how you punk Corey and he was shaking and he was holding the mic, shaking, and all this here. No, that's adrenaline. You you you mistaking uh fear. You were mistaking adrenaline for fear, my dude. That wasn't that wasn't because Corey was hands were shaking, that was adrenaline. Mike Tyson to tell you, he he said it many a times. Just before each fight, he's scared to death. And Mike Tyson would get in there and knock a dude out in in a matter of seconds. So you you you that's why you know you are lame and you don't know nothing about the street game. You know nothing about this game, man. And like I said, you can't learn about it and you can't have a late start. This starts when you're young and coming, you come up. That's your come up. You learn about these things. How to move, what to say, what to avoid, where to go, how to move when you go somewhere. You don't know none of this. This is why you run around, you run around running your mouth. And what you're doing, you're inviting that kind of energy into your space, and sooner or later it's gonna, it's gonna it's gonna work bad for you. Because now you're starting to rub elbows with them with them real tough guys. You you love to say, I'm not a tough guy, I'm a screw, but you talk that talk, bro. You talk that talk and you keep running your mouth, and them guys is coming. It might not be 2026, it might not be 27, but you're gonna be around for a while because you have a success. Believe me when I tell you, bro, you're inviting the kind of energy you really don't want. And it's gonna go bad for you. It's gonna because you're not a likable person. You see? You're not a likable person. If you was likable, it probably wouldn't be so severe. You don't know it's it's people licking, licking, look, they they chomping at the bit to get at you. It's dudes right now, I'm telling you. And I don't, um, them dudes, let me tell you, that dude, Craig Fax, you called his name out. Then you said you you you mentioned um Glass and Malone. Boy, you better stop playing, boy. You better stop playing because dudes don't already check your background in Detroit. Them Detroit cats, them them cats, they don't mess with you. You're not a certified dude out there. But we are, we most of us already knew this, but you confront to these internet people, like you, you know you the you the guy. But we know them cats in Detroit, them them real cats, they don't fool with you. You in you actually you're an embarrassment to them. You you know, you're a cuck dude, man. You you you you a lame. That got you a lame that got some money. That's having some success. But nonetheless, you're still a lame. But anyway, family, we're gonna get ready to blow out of here. And uh I I wish I could have played that little clip. I wish I could have played that little clip from um Kalito's way. And this that would have been that would have been from a man Matthew when when uh when the when Dave went to go see Tony T in the lock up there, and he he told him he said, he said, Well, my office is dedicated to your appeal. I ain't talking about no fucking appeal. I'm talking about you busting me out of here. That was the funny part. He said, the line pit's already dug. The guys, the goons, the guns. All I gotta do is push a button from in here. And then you'll be down there sweating down in the bottom of the water there with the meals and crabs crawling out of your eyeballs. So don't play with me, you thinking bummy. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Go check the movie Colorado's way out. But anyway, family, we're gonna we're gonna blow out of here. We're gonna blow because it's time to go. And um, as my man Malik says, we're gonna leave you with respect life, love, justice, cherish freedom, and treasure the peace. Y'all be good until next week. We'll come back and we'll do it again. Be safe out there, family. Be safe. We love you up here at Freeman's Affairs Radio. Email us Freeman's Affairs Radio at gmail.com. We need to hear from y'all. Get them emails into us, y'all. Come on now. All right, peace.