The episode offers a sharp diagnosis of corporate exploitation but ultimately trades rigorous economic analysis for performative radicalism. It prioritizes moral outrage over practical solutions for systemic change.
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Don't Ask for Better... TAKE IT BY FORCE | The JAAM Ep. 61Added:
The conversation should be what people rights we get in defending XYZ. The conversation is who's the better side between Boeing and Rathon.
That's why you have a 1% approval rating in Congress and no one gives a no more in XYZ cuz you haven't proved to us that you can the kids.
>> Yo, what's going on everybody? Welcome back to episode 61 of the jam. It's JJ Allen AB Matt the way it always is except for somebody has aged up on the couch.
>> Level up.
>> Happy birthday Alan.
>> Bro 22.
>> How you feeling, bro?
>> I was feeling old.
>> No, your bones start to creek.
>> It's starting to like a little limp.
>> No, that's talking you gang starting to get a little >> starting to get the lint.
>> They going to be crawling by 50.
>> It's crazy. I feel like it feels so weird to like even look at your birth date and just be like, "Damn, it's my birthday. It's weird, but it's dope."
>> Shout out, >> man. It's crazy. Um, please leave your love and everything in the comments. I'm already knowing y'all going to do that.
Uh, the way y'all be showing him love, it's crazy, man. Everyone now on the couch.
>> Big tour in the building. speak.
>> I don't do the stars, but I mean toxic.
>> He said heard him say that.
>> That was like you.
>> I start reminiscing. I start I remember I went I remember I went to um I did I tried to work at Amazon and I was like this girl had asked what my sign was. I was like a tourist. She was like tourist man is toxic. I think I quit that same day.
It was the second day I was in there.
God damn.
>> Yeah, something's all right. I'm not going to subject myself to that torture if I'm on the floor. U back out. Back out. Um but yes indeed, we have a jam-packed birthday episode of Doom uh coming. We're going to talk a little bit about um we're going to banter. We're going to respond to the village, of course, talk to some of y'all with the jam talks. Leave your comments with #jamt talks on every platform. We will for a chance to be in the episode respond to you. We're going to talk a little bit about NBA playoffs, some uh other stuff, the NAACP boycotting. Um, we going to go into all that, but the main meat and potatoes, we're going to talk about uh the terrorist attack that just happened uh and the the rampant Islamophobia that this country continues to engage in. Y >> um we're going to talk a little bit about that. We're going to talk about some good news following that up with AOC and Zora Donnie. Um, like we kind of hinted at last episode, the only two politicians, like two of like maybe six.
>> One of them might be elected today.
There's an election happening in Pennsylvania for uh my dude Chris Rob who is been endorsed by like the Democratic Socialist AOC was campaigning for him. And it's that versus like some establishment person that Cory Booker was supporting. So, we'll see what those results turn out today.
>> Oh my god. Did you see that video of him and his wife?
>> What? Well, when Cory Booker >> Yeah.
>> Was it when he was at that rally? No, it was this funny video. He was sitting with his wife. They was at a table and he was like, I think it was in their crib and he was like, "Good morning, honey." And it was so cringy. He was like, "What do I do when I first wake up? Get the donut." It was so I have to actually show yall since trying to be relatable.
>> That sound like some Cory Booker stuff, man. Show the show the world what your daily routine is. Maybe that'll hide the genocide. Um, let's talk about So, we're going to get into all that and then we're going to end off the second half of the episode with what's pretty much the fun half, celebration have, celebrate my man birthday, talk about uh what it done took to to to grind like this to shine like this time. Well, okay. So, we're going to uh song.
>> Someone's white mother is like, "What the hell are they talking about?" No one knows me too much. My god, someone's white mom has no idea what. But yeah, we're going to end off the the rest of the episode just uh talking to y'all talking to you about how you feeling on this special day. Uh thank you for joining us for episode 61. If you do go on to enjoy, please like, comment, share, subscribe, all that good stuff.
Hit the hype button, >> send it to five people that you know, uh because the jam is worth it. And Allan, seeing as it's your birthday, you have to tell them what they need to do. It's my [ __ ] birthday, bro. It's my birthday. What more do you want? You're not entertained.
>> It's my birthday, bro. You already know it's tourist season. You don't know what they say about tourist people, bro, is they're good people, bro.
>> So, in honor for that, you need to share this video. You need to like this video.
Comment on this YouTube #jam talks. If you type in a a paragraph and there's no Jam Talks, we're not [ __ ] reading.
>> Right out the >> right out the other. And if you really [ __ ] with a and you really want to wish a happy birthday cuz I know y'all going to be in the live chat saying happy birthday. No. If you really about the [ __ ] you going to share this video on YouTube, on Tik Tok, on Instagram, on Blue Sky, AA Prime, >> and Patreon.
>> Oh my god.
>> patreon.com/thejamodcast.
If you go there right now, not right now, after you finish the video, you will see the Drake reaction.
>> Iceman gang is free. You can just join the community. You can just chill with everybody.
>> Yeah, it's free to join the community.
But if you want the exclusive content, >> it's not that much.
>> It's $6.99.
>> It's $6.99. YouTube charging about to charge $28 and you paying for it because you stuck in a capitalistic way.
>> But when it come to supporting blackowned business and you turn, >> you say happy birthday to >> No, we ain't clear. do back it up with something.
>> A good $6 will either get you one gallon of gas, which really isn't that useful, right?
>> Now, if you use that $6 for the JM podcast Patreon, >> then you could learn about why the gas gang.
>> Yeah.
>> Yeah. That's like the best $6 I ever spent. For real.
>> For real. Even though like our shit's coming to the minimum wage, it's like it's cool, bro. The price is almost there, but it's >> 725. I must say, pay us federal minimum wage so you can be angry at your government back. Um, but yes, it is going to be a very, very good episode. I'm looking forward to it. First and foremost, um, Allan, I think you could be getting the fit check.
>> Hell, you already know, [ __ ] Blue shades.
>> Blue shades. Oh my god. you.
>> I gota definitely get >> I definitely gota get some other ones cuz my foot is like all the way at the top.
>> You want to do a swap? Let us know.
>> I'm about to say one of y'all got the rare colors of shades. Hook us up.
>> Pick ones, gang. If y'all really wish me happy birthday, but Jay London on the thing, on the pants, got the half evil.
We got the custom Soho. I made this [ __ ] >> We got the the what's real on the reflection. Oh my god.
>> We already know. Got >> Y'all can't even get this.
>> Y'all can't even get it. It's coming soon. I swear to God it is. Give me some time, bro. Get my life right. Got the dragon.
>> Oh my god.
>> Got the Got the royalty on us.
>> Birthday of doom. Okay. Can we do we do reset to the Jays? Okay.
>> Well, we have the gratitudes.
>> Gratitude.
>> It's been a long time since I don't know if I ever actually worn these on a pop.
Maybe like once.
>> Maybe like literally like one. Then we got the Quo. Shout out to Queno saying shout out. You know, you know, our business is not bigname brand. Shout out. Uh, then we got, well, the one that is big name brand, Armani Exchange. But, you know, >> Armani, >> it's a little T. Little T. I don't wear it. You know, >> uh, too much nowadays, usually inside, you know, chain stack, >> chain stack, Nike. It is not my I will accept, and I told them this even though they disagree. I'll accept this is probably the one episode I'm missing.
But but however, I got However, if you watch the other 60 plus, you won't have to worry about these problems.
You go, man, your boy got the J B on the [ __ ] >> Little white sock action.
>> Little white sock.
>> We're going to talk about the white socks.
>> Great shorts.
>> Gray shorts.
>> Gray shorts.
>> Oh, we're going to talk about the white.
>> A pleasure. Like quilted tea.
>> Quilted tea. Hey, I'm about to start buying the quilted clothes for real.
What is this? Omega. What is that?
>> Swatch on the radio.
>> Rolly.
>> What time is it? It is 11.
>> No, it's perfect time.
>> A perfect time.
>> Oh my god.
>> You ain't never experienced racism till you walk into a watch store. No, I'm playing.
>> She seems gang. Okay.
>> Yeah. Yeah. Tell that story real quick.
Real quick, gang. So the other day, right, I went up to a swatch store because everybody's trying to get the swatch collection, right?
>> Saturday I went. Complete [ __ ] show.
Nobody got anything because they shut the store down.
>> I'm like, "Okay, so they didn't open Sunday. They opened Monday, but it was they they said they didn't have any like APs in there." I'm like, "Y'all still got the graphic on the wall right there?
Y'all ain't got no APs?" He like, "No, they said that, you know, for us to send the stuff back and we'll figure out something." I'm like, "Okay, whatever.
>> Send it back.
>> Send it back." Yo, these watches.
>> Yeah, it's it's ridiculous.
>> One thing to mention, after the first after the initial day, the watches went up from like $400 to $4,000.
>> [ __ ] was reselling that [ __ ] for like $4,500. That [ __ ] went all the way back down to 1,200.
>> Crazy.
>> Bang out. You pay to resell, you're cooked.
>> Cooked. Bro, so I'm about to say, so now you've run into the same problem that they were saying earlier about like, oh, you can't make the the whole watch $400 cuz then you going to keep in I spent $200,000. Well, congratulations. You spent four bands just >> $3,000 loss. Stupid on.
>> So almost like none of this [ __ ] matters anyway.
>> It's almost like they literally doesn't [ __ ] matter. So yesterday I went in, I'm like, "Fuck it. I'm gonna get me two watches because I need some more watches." I got me the Omega Moon swatch in the uh black. I think this called like Mission to the Moon.
>> Oh my god.
>> And then I got I got the black and white one.
>> Fire.
>> And I'm like, you know what? I like the watch, >> but this band is [ __ ] >> Yeah. You know that they had to keep on it.
>> This what the [ __ ] It defeats the whole purpose of the watch and everything. So, I'm like, you know what?
>> I need to change this strap.
>> Yeah. You got to buy. Me and the homies Joshua and uh Matt went outside to go shopping for a strap.
Go inside the Omega store.
>> Beautiful watches.
>> Yeah. Beautiful.
>> She was telling us like most of the watches that were in the display was like >> 57,000 10,000 for like Yeah. So you could only imagine when this dropped in like 2023, [ __ ] was losing their mind. So >> I go in there, I'm like, "Hey, can I get a new strap?" She's like, "Okay, um, we got, you know, black leather, we got black, uh, rubber, but I don't think the rubber is going to fit because you need a 20 mm, whatever, blah, blah, blah."
I'm like, "Okay, let me see the black leather." She's like, "Yeah, that's going to uh, that's like $400, but we do have the cheaper. I I didn't ask you for the cheaper version.
Give me the leather watch, gang.
>> So, so I ain't going to lie, bro. I ain't asking for the cheap.
>> I be trying not to be like that, bro.
But shorty was like, she was like, "Oh, what are you guys looking for?" He's like, "Oh, watch out." She's like, "Okay." She's like, "Okay, we got this option. This uh" She's like, >> "It is $400."
>> Yes, I know. That's why we just walked in an Omega store, gang. Like, we know her skin complexion is darker than you.
>> Yeah. Like, I'm a human, >> you know? Shout out Shout out her, though. You know what I'm saying? She's like, "Fuck you."
>> Yeah. She's like, "It is." She's like, >> "It is.
>> It is 400." Hold on, [ __ ] ass [ __ ] It is 400. Ay's like, "Oh, okay. I I'll see it." She's like, "Okay." She dips back.
She comes back real quick. She don't got [ __ ] in her hand. She say, "I have a a $200 option as well."
>> Maybe. All right.
Do you not want the sale?
>> Let us know if we reach him. But like, >> I just don't service, bro. I just don't think if I'm named Cheryl White.
Yeah. Like I don't think they walking in Tom and Cheryl. You're like, >> "Can I get a white?"
>> You probably going to take them [ __ ] to the seat and try to sell them something that's even more expensive.
>> Yeah. I feel like if I ask you like you're just doing that those like sales techniques, >> microaggressions. It's really microaggressions >> because like I feel like you should only you should only be doing that out of convenience if I ask something out of like something I don't know. So if I'm like I have no idea how these things go and you give me a cheap option cuz it's like well the other band's not worth it so don't pay that much.
>> See at the end once she realized we like it's like once she realized that we were serious and then she saw the [ __ ] watch then she like start being helpful. And I feel like that's always how that exchange goes, especially when you have >> whether it's an Asian woman, she was an Asian woman, whether it's an Asian woman, whether it's a white woman, you know what I mean?
>> I think you always have those dynamics.
But it do be like, bro, like it's the same line.
>> That's not my first thought when I'm selling something. My first thought is not, let me see this person be like, >> "Let me give it the >> They probably can't afford this. Let me give them the cheap option." You know, or you wouldn't be in a watch store.
>> I'm in a I'm in an Omega. It's one thing to go into a [ __ ] >> Toys R Us and be like, >> "Let me give you the cheap route." You know what I mean? I'm in a Omega store.
There's $7,000 watches in front of me.
>> Do the fit check and then we'll get >> Oh, yeah. I didn't even do my fit check.
I completely forgot.
>> Um, White Shades of Hell. White Shades of Hell. You know what I mean? Got the uh I don't know where these from. I think these got the half evil belt on. You feel me? Got the half evil shirt, you know?
Uh, got the change. I >> And then you're full evil now.
>> Full evil now. Got >> I'm evil. GOT >> I'm evil.
>> What you want?
>> Uh, what you on? Oh yeah. Chain. What you on chain stack? Then I got the what you own hat. You feel me? I don't wear it much of. Oh yeah. Brace on. You feel me? Fit of hell.
>> My logic on the story is it's the same thing with it's the same racial profiling that police and ICE use. And this is why capitalism doesn't work.
It's my most woke take of the year is because you're trying to read like if you're a saleserson, you're gauging like body language and you're trying to read all that to try to make the best sale possible. So the racism comes in in the inherent assumptions you make based off the body language you're trying to gauge. You're probably selling watches to like a very specific demographic of people. You see [ __ ] come in, your first mind is either they not gonna buy nothing or they don't have the bread or they might steal XYZ. And it might not be I hate you black person. But that's what when you're in sales trying to get you to sell trying to maximize the outcome of blah blah blah. So you might off-handedly treat somebody a little bit less cuz you might think another [ __ ] give you more money or something. That's where you perpetuate that [ __ ] >> Literally I had took a Uber. It was Mother's Day. I took a Uber back home >> from here all the way to suburbs. That's a long ass drive. and it's a pretty expensive Uber, but I was like, "I'm not getting on that train." I get home, the dude finally speaks a word to me. He like, >> "You work at that building?" I was like, "What?" I was like, "This I'm going to my mama house." He was like, "No, the building I picked you up." He was like, "You work there?" I was like, >> "No, I live there." He's like, >> "I thought your black ass like >> I thought you were the door man." We're talk we'll probably talk a little bit more about that on the second half of the episode because the amount of like inherent assumptions that are made about >> people make assumptions about us all the time and I get it. We like you not you don't see [ __ ] like us like >> around I guess but also like kill my [ __ ] >> It kills my [ __ ] every time cuz I'm like bro like it's like what the [ __ ] is wrong with you >> now? If I'm an unruly and I slap the illiteral [ __ ] out of you, now I'm wrong.
>> I start beat the brakes off of now, >> bro. It's like you don't do that7.
>> You wouldn't do that to to [ __ ] bro.
I don't know. [ __ ] just >> when you never seen >> actually, you know, it kind of leads into like hell of the Jam Talks conversations that [ __ ] want to have cuz I feel like people always ask us [ __ ] about that or like perceptions and [ __ ] >> We're at Jam Talks now. So, >> RIT as Ren. Um, we got a few jam talks.
We're going to go um download. I'm going to try to get through these pretty pretty quick. We appreciate all of the jam talks y'all be leaving us though.
>> This time we shout out all the Spotify users. Shout out to Spotify.
>> Spotify.
>> Hell yeah. Hey, Spotify kind of weird though cuz like I be reading y'all and I be want to like y'all, but like also it's my Spotify account, so like you can see my songs. I don't be liking to do that. But >> that's really fed.
>> It's a little fed. It is a little fed, but we'll go down the line. Shout out first one. God damn, this small. Shout out. Oh my god, I'm dying. Anyway, shout out Cassidy Moore. Shout out Cassidy Moore. Uh, hashtagjamt talks. I've watched y'all since the beginning and I appreciate how you guys mix up the topics every week. Balancing the act of serious politics and fun entertainment.
With y'all living in Chicago, I was wondering if you guys follow the WNBA since the Chicago Sky is there. If so, what are y'all thoughts on what the Sky has done during the offseason? What do you guys Mhm.
>> Uh, and what do you guys think this upcoming season may bring?
>> Oh, I see.
>> Look at this. Not Ber. Uh, uh, fun fact, I don't even think y'all know this.
>> The first basketball camp I ever went to was a Chicago Sky basketball camp.
Really?
>> It was when I was like >> I want to say it was when I was like I don't know. It must have been when I was like five or six.
>> I was young as [ __ ] though. It was like right up here on the north side. I think it was like in Lake View or some [ __ ] like that. So crazy.
>> Some [ __ ] Yeah, it was the first [ __ ] I ever met. I met all the players and [ __ ] like it was crazy.
>> Fire. I was I've been following along with what uh the Chicago Sky been doing this offseason ever since they let uh Angel Reese go. It my heart ripped out my chest. But then we got Skyler Diggs.
We got they replaced pretty much the entire roster. Skyler Digs I that was one of the bad the WNBA players I've been known about since I was a kid. So I'm like we got her old [ __ ] in.
>> We got Tyler Digs. I'm like okay we have some hope.
>> Yes we have some hope. Uh, and she's like I'm pretty sure she's like a legend in WNBA already. So, like that. And then we got I don't remember the name of the other players, but they pretty much revamped the entire roster with a bunch of like really good to like experience like people to >> I'mma follow along. I haven't been following along as much and I need to cuz I think they only got like 16 games or something, right?
>> Yeah. When I hear about Chicago, what are you saying?
>> Course out of doom.
>> Course out of hell.
>> Course of hell.
>> I think when I just hear about Chicago basketball, my brain turns off. I have not watched a Chicago basketball game in general >> for like years.
>> Shout out to you.
>> Yeah, I definitely got a >> And it's not the Sky fault. It's cuz the [ __ ] Bulls killed that >> [ __ ] It's not fault. It's the Bulls.
>> At least it just switches off of me.
>> At least they uh they are um um Did we already have Camila Cordoso?
>> Yeah.
>> Okay. Yeah. Yeah.
>> She's uh that was the girl from Southern something, right?
>> Yeah.
>> The one on the team with uh that Yeah.
Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. We already had her. We had her yet last year or a year before then.
>> Yeah. But yeah, they got like a few other players which it was confidence inspiring cuz I was like, "Oh shit."
After they let her go, I was like, "I wonder what we going to do now." So, we're going to we're going to see how they how they perform. No, I definitely want to go to a game.
>> Yeah, that would be fire if we can go to >> Oh, they actually already playing.
What's >> Yeah, only they I think they like three four games in the season, right?
>> Yeah. It says they uh Oh, [ __ ] They just lost. They they second to last game against the Mercury, but they beat Portland 98 to 83.
>> The Mercury though.
>> Yeah. Yeah. Who's on the There's someone >> big on Margarita, right?
>> Uh >> I see. I got to lock in with I got to lock.
>> I don't know. I know probably I know barely anything about the uh the NBA roster.
>> Yeah, that I don't even watch regular NBA game.
>> I only watch NBA playoffs, >> but it says that the Chicago Sky are currently second in the WNBA game.
>> We got to lock in, >> bro. Shout out >> W.
>> Shout out to the Chicago Sky, man. And shout out to Cassidy for that comment.
Wcast shout.
>> Um, we got another one. Uh, Ebony Mada Make Meta Meta Meta.
>> Okay.
>> Um, sorry if I butchered your [ __ ] >> Um, #jam talks. I'm truly impressed by all by you all and your ability to articulate feelings that I struggle to express and I routinely share your content as a result.
>> Appreciate you. As a Canadian, I refuse shout out. I refuse to stay uninformed, especially on world news and US issues as they often affect us. It could be overwhelming and sometimes I wonder if I should step back for my mental health, but I value being informed. My question is, >> how do you prioritize self-care as young black men in America while navigating these challenges?
>> We don't.
>> Bang out.
>> That's a great question. Um, >> what I would say to like cuz she said she wants to stay informed, but it's taking a toll on her mental health. Take a break.
>> Yeah, real. That's how we met. That's how we do it. Take a break.
>> Take a break. And then whenever whenever you feel as if you're okay to come back and learn some more [ __ ] then you can do that. But if it's really taking a toll on you, cuz it takes a toll on us every day, just take a break, bro.
>> Oh, bro.
>> Take that break.
>> Real spell. I think that's the Yeah. Say what you going to say.
>> Oh, no. I was just going to say, yeah, I think um Yeah, it's that trying to find time. I legit have accepted. I don't know if I can be a [ __ ] on TikTok like who posts every single day again. But like because I'm already trying to deal with, you know, processing news every day. But because I'm already going to do that, I legit try to take any time I can to just like decompress, tune out from stuff cuz I'm going to be on the internet all the time already. So it's like them times you don't have to be on the phone or you go outside, listen to music, other stuff. All that stuff genuinely helps. Like I remember um when we first moved in together like it was much harder to get like to to deal with your mental and decompressing cuz it just wasn't a weirder circumstance. And we had one window so it's like you don't get sunlight that's already going to make you feel worse on top of like not eating the best. It's like you try to battle all those things to keep your mind right. And when it gets too much I legit just will like just not do it cuz I accept that I'm constantly working already. The politics is [ __ ] us over every day. So, it's like um trying to keep that separation, get some space to breathe just so we can relay y'all the information. It's like, of course, it's it's it can be a lot. Everyone has their different thresholds of tolerance, but you never have to um you kill yourself on it.
>> But yeah, cuz we we have no choice but to kind of be informed. It's so weird being like our demographic in this country cuz it's like we're the ones that the stuff hits first. So like if you get your news from anybody regarding America and what effect it could have on Canada, it would be um us. So that that's fire that that we got viewers all over the place too. Um but yes, please take your time. Information always going to be there as long as you live. There's more stuff to learn. So >> for sure. You got anything to add to it?
>> No.
>> Love you.
>> Shout out your [ __ ] Shout out. Shout out you. Um >> another one we got is Zechariah F. Oh [ __ ] >> #Jamt talks. What are your thoughts on white people like me enjoying things from black culture? I've always liked hip-hop, but I as I have progressed to be more liberal, I sometimes feel conflicted about enjoying black media and black art. I do my best to be informed about the ra informed of racial happenings and the racist history of America, but sometimes it feels like I'm taking from something that's not mine and not for me. So, what do you guys think and feel about all of this? M >> I feel like you can enjoy it cuz it's like I mean there's no like everyone enjoys it whether or not you want to admit it or not. Everyone enjoys this [ __ ] and it's too good to not enjoy it.
But I will say >> I will say this because whether you're white or other ethnicities have enjoyed a lot of things from black culture and have been close to it >> and they think that they can speak on what it's like being a black person and like Yeah, just cuz you're close to it doesn't mean like you can even speak about golf.
>> Even being close to it, but also even like knowing about it. Like >> you can know more [ __ ] about hip-hop than me. I done met white [ __ ] that know more about hip-hop than me.
>> That don't mean you can speak on it. So I think it's just you got to balance that line of like >> enjoying people culture but also not overstepping the boundaries. As a white person, your number one task, I guess, in America to me is to truthfully understand and embrace what multiculturalism means. That means that you have to have respect and difference for cultures that are not yours. That's applicable to every race in this country. And the quicker we get to that, the quicker we'll stop sitting with our thumb up our ass.
>> Yeah.
>> I have no problem with white people being in hip-hop or like enjoying it.
>> You still shouldn't be saying [ __ ] cuz it's in the song.
>> Yeah. And I will and I will die on that hill 10 times out of 10. And you know why? Because I don't say every curse word under the damn sun when I'm standing next to my mom. So I'm not about to go stand in a culture with a bunch of like Native American people and then just act as though I'm entitled to all they [ __ ] all they slang, all they words, all they cuss words because I listen to a couple songs. And a lot of people [ __ ] up right there. You can enjoy it with understanding like the historical weight of it. you can listen to it even though it might not be for you.
>> Adding it to your vernacular in a sense is like >> you can't you I I don't think there like Yeah. Like me >> I'm never going to like I'm not going to like be the [ __ ] WHO'S LIKE >> start whooping Yeah. start whooping every white person ass cuz they have slight dialect. No, that's not what I'm asking. I'm asking you to be >> But if your name is Jimmy and you saying [ __ ] >> they don't even got Yeah. Like or phone them or like you hear a [ __ ] like clock it. you, you know what I mean? It'd be [ __ ] like that where it's just like >> it's not you gang. You know what I mean?
Like you can enjoy your own [ __ ] >> Yeah. It doesn't mean that you can never enjoy someone else's stuff, but you have to understand, especially when those people those people might you can't control how those people feel about your use of it, too. Some [ __ ] get the push back, BUT I THOUGHT THAT WE WERE JUST >> in public. Especially in public, though.
>> Yeah.
>> You saw that um you saw that video that white girl and she was like, "Say word, folk. Say word folk, bro. She was like, she was like, "Say word to folk." I'm like, >> "Alabama resident."
>> You didn't even say it, right?
>> I don't even say that.
>> No one says that.
>> Really? Don't say that. Yeah. Say word to f. I mean, unless you unless you big GD like if you big GD, then I guess maybe she with maybe she GD. That's the only reason why I allowed this [ __ ] I'm like, [ __ ] >> from Neighborville, Georgia, [ __ ] They were the folk.
>> Quincy, Illinois.
>> There is there is I I do appreciate your sensitivities towards it cuz there is definitely like a white but also other culture like commodifying black culture problem in the world but also broadly in America. So, it's always good to have your mind towards that. But that does not mean you can't listen to rap or can't be around the space. Just know your own space within that space and keep it respectful in the same way because [ __ ] don't feel comfortable around you probably >> and they are forced to keep it a little bit respectful at least to like you know don't want everybody got they bubble bro stay in your bubble you got to pop nobody else bubble to have fun stay in your bubble >> real [ __ ] people act like it's the end of the world like just show common decency to people decency >> shout out to the jazz talks man appreciate >> shout out y'all thank you for leaving your comments we going to talk to y'all each week the more you leave the comments shout out to Spotify. Shout out to Spotify, man. If you listen on Spotify, I want y'all to know we really do appreciate y'all.
>> I could give you a bear hug right now. I could, man.
>> You see, I I got ADHD, so like if I don't see the people I'm talking to, it's it don't register as >> there's probably someone there's someone on like iHeart Radio typing out a heartfilled message and I won't sorry. I will try to check, but like my brain and >> I don't even know where to check.
>> I couldn't tell. Maybe you got to go on the website. I like We got an app.
>> I think we have an app. iRadio.
>> DM us. Yo, IHR Radio Jam Radio. Can you Can you not I didn't know you could watch video on Spotify until we started the podcast.
>> Oh, yeah. You can watch video on Spotify. I forget that they got video now.
>> Oh, shout out y'all. But yeah, don't it doesn't mean I don't care about you. I just don't pay attention to all the platforms.
>> Crazy.
>> Crazy.
>> Damn.
>> I think it's the most convenient cuz like you could watch it and then say you're about to do something. You could just turn >> swipe it away, I guess. Yeah. You don't need and without paying $30 from YouTube just to have a video play in the background >> cut off anyways cuz like they haven't optimized you at all to be like a Spotify thing on your >> the only good thing is I don't got no [ __ ] ads like literally >> that's the best part about it. I be it be catching me off guard. They be playing eight ads and you can't even skip them now. Um uh but outside of the banter, outside of uh uh the jam talks, let's talk a little bit more about um the the the Hall of Fame basketball player in his second year, >> Victor Wyama, >> cuz we watched the game last night.
They're bringing the birthday, >> bro. Turn that playoff game on cuz I was like, "Oh [ __ ] first game."
>> Spurs and OKC. was like a that was like one of the best games probably since like like one of the Pacers runs.
>> Oh yeah. With Hallebertton watch when he hit that button when he hit that game winner that was unironically like top five basketball games I've ever watched in my life. I was like what the [ __ ] Yeah, cuz it's um if y'all don't know, it's the Spurs versus OKC.
>> Mhm.
>> And everyone was already like this is about to be like a crazy ass series cuz already when they play it's all already crazy games and I think the last time they had a run where they were playing like straight in a row. I think um the Spurs beat them like three. Yeah, this is like the only one that came and won and already they just got that heated rivalry and then already how the media is pushing it with when Byama being about to be the face of the league and we got Shay now winning double double MVP. It's like yo like this is about to be >> if this was the finals [ __ ] I would have took it like watching this [ __ ] Shay he wasn't playing that good. He he was he was pretty bad. I don't know if he was injured but he just looked out of it. The [ __ ] was missing hella. I was seeing he even missed a free throw. I was like, "Oh my god, that [ __ ] Alex Caruso put up 30 points."
Alex Caruso, >> former Chicago Bull, Alex Caruso, whom we traded for a bag of peanuts and a wish from Cosmo.
>> AND THIS [ __ ] DROPS 30 RIGHT before the fight.
>> This [ __ ] was like nine threes.
>> Oh my god.
>> What a god.
>> He is literally like >> It was never a blowout. It was always close and I remember it was about halftime. I had took a break like uh stopped watching and then I had um talked to Matt and JJ and then I came back in the room.
>> Fourth quarter, there's five minutes left and it was pretty close. Spurs still had the lead. It was going back and forth of who's winning, who's not.
And then um I forgot what ended up I think >> was it when Victor pulled from >> No, not that. Yeah, I think it was the uh first OT. They ended up going into overtime close as hell. I think Shay ended up tying it with a layup >> and then the um then it went to first overtime >> then that [ __ ] winama. Bro, they're down by three. I forgot who banged the three on uh OKC.
>> They're down by three. I'm like they're [ __ ] >> 28 seconds left. And I'm like you have to bang a three or like these [ __ ] might get a stop. And and and by the way, I want to stop this like if any of these [ __ ] is dick Ryan cuz they was talking about winama fouling.
They both got equal fouls.
>> It was a very even game.
>> It was a very even game when it came to fouls. And even if it wasn't, the ref was still bullshitting on both sides. It was not OKC just leaning into that. I swear to God it wasn't cuz there was times where Shay was going up. It looked like he got fouled and on Jesus he didn't. That [ __ ] Wyama slapped the [ __ ] out of Chad and he didn't get fouled. Same thing happened on the spur.
So, let's stop that [ __ ] right then and now.
>> Oh jeez.
>> 28 seconds left. This [ __ ] when I forgot who's taking the ball up when come from the back. This [ __ ] pass it to him. This [ __ ] damn near half [ __ ] court.
>> Jesus position when a center footman. This his second year in the league >> pulling from Curry territory.
>> First game in their hometown. You're down three. First overtime this [ __ ] pulls it and cashes it in.
>> The last time a [ __ ] took that shot >> was Stephen Curry in OKC.
>> Really?
>> Yes.
>> On the same side of the court, the same that's where that when they came back from that's where it comes like >> for three bang. That's where that comes from.
>> And this [ __ ] Wi walked down the court.
28 seconds left.
>> Nut. Didn't even jump.
>> Didn't even like jump.
>> But this the thing like, "Oh, get a stop." You can't get a stop.
>> If this [ __ ] shoots from the [ __ ] logo, >> how do you get what? And then like no one's guarding that cuz it's like this [ __ ] shooting from the logo and then on top of it, he >> 30 seconds left.
>> That was his.
>> They were only down three.
>> Only down. That was his second three of the night.
>> He could have drove. He could have drove.
anything next to the rim. Get me three layups right now so we win this game, gang. That's you. What you this [ __ ] >> Yo, half court.
>> No hesitation.
>> No hesitation. Half court. Then when asked like what was going through his head when he took it, what did he say in the press conference? He was like, >> no, like he did say that, but there was there was something he said in the what did I'm trying to think what he said.
Like >> I think he was just like like I wouldn't have took that or I forgot what he said.
He was like, "Oh, you know, I just Oh, the [ __ ] was like, >> he was like, you know, I just wanted to make the right decision." And I'm like, >> "That was the right decision.
>> You pulled a [ __ ] half court. That was the right decision." And this nigga's mind. He was like, he was like, "Yeah, you know, I just tried to make the best play."
>> He's like, "Cuz I'm going to hit this right now."
>> Yeah. He's like, "Yeah, I'm going hit."
>> No, you know what happened? He was that way too smart. That inbounded the ball.
He went through every calculation like he's [ __ ] What's that one dude's name?
>> What? The uh the Marvel character >> calculator diggy.
>> The Marvel character.
>> Oh, which one >> was it? It's not Doctor.
>> Oh, it's Doctor Strange.
>> Doctor Strange.
>> Get [ __ ] >> One way.
>> He wasn't even thinking. This just really went up.
>> Oh my god. Okay, so yeah, it goes into double over >> the double OT, bro. team, bro. Even though Shay wasn't playing as good and of course he was still heating up because he ended up getting like over 25, I think.
>> Yeah, >> the both of the team OKC was still pulling through. Jaylen Williams still pulling through. That [ __ ] Jared McCay, I think he came off the bench with seven points. Alex Feruso 30. So, the team was moving. They had good ass defense. The Spurs, oh my god, crazy defense, bro.
Amazing off. It was just an amazing game to watch. Like, it was just back and forth. Whoever had like there was no counting anyone out no matter how long the lead was because even the Spurs was leading five. Didn't matter. A minute left. These [ __ ] come back.
>> So, who y'all got to win the series?
>> All right. Well, I think I have to stick with my prediction. When we were on the couch last time, I said I think I got Wii this time, but I wouldn't be mad at OKC cuz you know they could if they win they repeat, right?
>> Yep. Yeah.
>> And that would be >> Well, no. Well, they repeat in terms of Yeah. Western Conference Finals, but they I mean, if they win the finals again, then they >> Yeah, they still got to I mean, New York and Cavs, that's not going to be no easier next round.
>> God, I do think >> and you're going to be if the Knicks win, you're going to be an MSG. Like, you're fried. Like, whole different ball game.
>> Either way, whoever win this series is going to be a great finals. But yeah, I think I don't know. That [ __ ] Victor looks scary right now, bro.
>> Their whole team looks terrified. It does.
>> Their whole team just looks ready for the moment, man. Like when I was looking at OKC and I remember I saw Chad just looking down with his hands on I'm like tired. Yeah.
>> Championship hangover [ __ ] >> Yeah. Whoop your ass in that first game.
>> I literally was saying I'm like dog. I'm like the only reason I'm like I I >> would like OKC to win.
>> I don't care if the Spurs win though.
Like if the Spurs win, I'll still be happy cuz like I just want new [ __ ] inad playoffs. Yeah. You can't be mad at all. The thing I said though, I'm like, it is very true that both these teams are good. You got the defending champions, but [ __ ] these [ __ ] are hungry, man. Spurs and WBY are hungry, bro. That hunger will carry them all the way to the finals way faster than the OKC's. Like, I guess defending their like, no, bro, these [ __ ] is hungry because they're young and they've never gotten it. And like >> it's the Spurs, bro. This is a dynasty, bro. You going to have Mono Genobi at your finals game.
Tim Duncan at Tim [ __ ] Dun.
>> Fox wasn't even playing.
>> Playing out. Okay. So, you had a full team, bro.
>> De'Arra Fox wasn't even playing.
>> Wait, who's he on? What team is he on?
>> He's on his first.
>> Oh, he was out.
>> He wasn't even playing. So, that's where it's like, >> yeah, >> but I also do think like Shay missing free throws is also not normal. Jarro McCain getting seven points is I wouldn't say it's not normal, but like they definitely are gonna need him to do something this game. It's like >> I'm I'm curious to see what they do in the game plan cuz they was locking they was locking Shay up literally like he couldn't even move. That's why he had so many assist.
>> He literally said that like he was like he just found it harder to find the gaps this game. He was like usually he just it comes to him he find Yeah. He was like Yeah. He was like it was harder to find the gaps. He was like but I got to be better. He was like that's it's on me. I got to be better. Oh, >> we'll see if it's really on you or if it's >> get back in cuz you win the perimeter, a come up, a [ __ ] come up, then you get double team.
Then you have no space to move. You pass and you try to get in the paint. Then you have this 7 foot [ __ ] like you have no space like terrifying.
>> He's not a slow seven foot [ __ ] >> No, he can't make up someone else. got someone else because then you got four more hungry ass role players that in like >> any normal NBA setting, bro. Like these [ __ ] is pro like if they have if they have veterans on the Spurs, these [ __ ] are on the bench. You feel what I'm saying? Like >> uh uh uh uh Dylan Dylan Harper like like they're probably on the bench if you have like legends or I wouldn't even say just veterans. Bro, these [ __ ] have like vets and they have such a good mix of like Harrison Barnes who was on the Warriors like >> Dynasty Warriors team as a vet. You got De'arren Fox a vet >> and you got these hungry ass like >> 6'6 is Victor like WBY hates Chad.
>> Yeah. Like they don't like they don't like each other.
>> [ __ ] with Chad because they >> they've been playing since Chad is Chad Homegr. They've been playing. He's uh the center on the um OKC.
>> Is that the tall white [ __ ] we seen?
>> Tall white. They're both like I'm pretty sure they're both like 74 or some [ __ ] like that. They've been playing each other though since they were like kids.
Like literally. Yeah. Like 16 years old.
>> It's been like back and forth rivalries and Wamby's always been like, "Nigga, >> it's not a rivalry." Yeah. But like >> we going to have to see who won it back.
>> I think it's going to go.
>> I love this [ __ ] >> I think it's got to go in the paint where like >> it's going to go seven for sure. You you take two steps and WBY only got to take one to reach.
>> It's either gonna go seven or it's gonna go five.
>> It has brahma be so real. This is a game where like you cannot lose momentum or you're [ __ ] >> If they lose this game, they're [ __ ] They're [ __ ] >> If OKC loses, they'll probably be out in five. I'm not this next game. They might be out in five. They have 200 comp. They could >> you can't a you can't discredit them.
But then again, like it's a long series, injuries, tired, like you don't know the the the effects on [ __ ] bodies after a game like double overtime in the first game. Like >> it's going to be different and they have the experience over Spurs. They've been here before. They you know what I mean?
So it's like >> the only thing I will say is about like Yeah. with with Wii is like Yeah. He if he that's my main thing I seen from me got in the league cuz I know like usually with like super tall [ __ ] you run into a bunch of issues. If that [ __ ] can stay healthy.
>> Yeah. Yeah.
>> Literally. and he looked and then after that like >> today we got Cavs Nicks and already like if the Cavs are consistent that is a very good series cuz if you're not consistent I'm not about to lie you're getting [ __ ] on >> [ __ ] on the last time the Knicks got this far.
>> Yeah, cuz the Knicks haven't even last season.
>> Have the Knicks ever won a ring?
>> I don't think they got to the conference finals last season. I think they second round.
>> They what? Second round. Well, >> this third round >> they may cuz they beat Let me see.
>> They beat the Cavs.
>> Yeah, >> I think who else?
>> No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no.
>> Who beat the Cavs last season?
>> OKC.
>> OKC. This is conference finals, right?
>> Yeah, this is conference finals.
>> Damn. Have the Knicks won a ring? I feel like their fans are so crazy about it because it's been a long time.
>> Yeah, it's been a long time though. I don't remember the last time cuz Melo didn't win a ring.
>> Yeah. Yeah, >> it's been a long time since they won.
Probably like 90s or early 2000.
>> Conference finals uh that season again.
When's the last time they reached the conference finals >> or two?
>> 1999.
>> When was the last time they reached the conference finals prior to that?
>> Eastern conference finals.
>> Uh, no, no, no, no. 25. May 2025 was the last time it was.
>> Yes, it was conference. Before that, I thought I knew they got before that. It hadn't been since 2000.
>> Five years, gang.
>> Because I remember they lost to the Pacers.
>> Pacers. Then it went Pacers with that game winner. I'm tired.
>> Oh, the choke. Oh my god.
>> Like three game winners in the same series.
>> That [ __ ] was on [ __ ] fire.
>> Yo, pray for that [ __ ] That [ __ ] got shingles.
>> Oh yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. I seen people was making fun of him and he was like, "Yeah, I have not been feeling good."
Like his body weight was going up too cuz he was dealing with like a lot of sicknesses. So yeah. Hopefully Hallebertton gets straight come back better health next year.
>> That's the way to end your season though.
>> Yeah.
>> W >> good playoffs happening. Um >> Oh god.
>> In uh um baseball news, it's not really playoffs. um at all. It's middle of the season, May. Um Cubs just got [ __ ] on by the Chicago White.
>> BACK UP, [ __ ] BACK UP, [ __ ] >> I let I let Eve have.
>> Yeah, >> I let Eve have.
>> You know, man, you're happy.
>> That's like the only like when you >> What team you got doing good?
>> What?
>> What teams you got doing >> for Chicago?
>> Any [ __ ] >> Yeah, I THOUGHT SO.
>> BLACK, [ __ ] >> HEY, this the thing, right? doing the best they have in a minute. In a minute.
>> This is the thing, right? Exactly, bro.
A They doing the best they have in a minute.
>> One [ __ ] One [ __ ] >> It's like two [ __ ] I don't know what the other I think like, >> bro. I don't hate the Cubs, though.
Like, I love the Cubs. I love the Cubs >> for many reasons.
>> I love the Cubs. I hate I love the Cubs.
I love the White Socks. I love Chicago.
>> But like, y'all was talking a little too loose. You know, y'all was he talking a little too loose about the the the White Socks. He ain't never been to a game.
You know, so I just >> The National League said they was Nako.
>> They was, but like >> I'm not going to lie. Yeah, we'll just I I let the >> These is your 2016 World Series winners that just lost to these shitbags.
>> I'm about to say we'll see.
>> See how quiet it is in the room. Y'all see how y'all see how it got real quiet?
>> It'll be louder.
>> It'll be louder in November or not not November, in September. Um >> Yeah. When I mean the Socks aren't going to make the play.
>> Yeah. Yeah. Hold. I was just about to ask you, well, what's their record, man?
>> They were they were positive. They were like coming into the series.
>> You know, this is why I love a rivalry cuz like Cubs FANS JUST CAN'T STAND IT.
24. I can't stand it because you want to know why I can't stand it. You know why I can't stand it? It's cuz these [ __ ] ass white socks fans my entire childhood before before 2016, these [ __ ] was acting like God's gift to earth cuz they went 88 years and won it in '05. This [ __ ] don't even remember that [ __ ] But uh they've been doing good. They've been doing the exact same thing.
>> I remember won.
>> I remember that rank >> because it happened in 2016.
>> I remember.
>> How many years though?
>> I remember.
>> 28 years.
>> It was eight to 88.
>> OOH. SUCH A BAD DIFFERENCE.
>> 20 YEARS IS A BIG THAT'S YOUR LIFE. Do you remember?
>> That's this nigga's whole life. 20 years is JJ's whole life.
>> But from 0 to 20 years is a bigger difference from 88 to 100 or 80 to 100.
That's the That's >> I I >> order of numbers, order of magnitude.
You tell the difference between 88-year-old and 108y old.
>> We are saying the debate is >> you're at the end of your life, gang.
>> Either way, YOU AT THE END OF your life, gang. 80 to 108.
>> That makes it worse cuz they won in 2016 and they just lost to the [ __ ] that haven't won since 2005.
>> They haven't won since 2005 because their management has been the same management since then and they ran the franchise into hell. They've been doing good though. I mean, the White Socks have been doing good. They've been championship hangovers since 05.
>> This is this is what we call history.
This is what we call field.
>> They did make history last year. This is what we call coping.
>> They did make history last year.
>> They made history for having the worst record and then they just lost to the Cubs this year.
>> Yeah.
>> We thought about last year and they like this. This is peak coping. This is what this is.
>> They spent like money.
>> These are southside [ __ ] that grew up on the south side. Yeah. Grew up in the south side.
>> THEY SPENT THE NEVER been to Never lived on the north side. This is what we call >> our family lived on the north side. But um you can call it that. They spent like 20 mil on Murakami who was like the Japanese Bay and Yeah. SO THEY'VE BEEN SO NO. SO THEY'VE IMPROVED.
>> Then they lost.
>> They've improved.
>> Then they lost.
>> Wait, how what's what's the White Socks record?
>> I don't know.
>> The way this [ __ ] talking, YOU THINK IT'S LIKE THE END of the day. This is the first time.
>> I'm not even I'm not even baseball. I'm just getting like this because what's that record?
>> Cubs is 29 and 18. Socks is 24 and 22.
>> They're two games above 500. Yes. This is This is 23. This is 2023.
>> Yes, this is the White Socks best start in like multiple years. And they >> Why can't we just be happy for both teams? That's why I'm sitting here.
>> I HAD THESE ARE TWO CHICAGO TEAMS.
>> I HADN'T finished >> and they're five games.
>> I HADN'T FINISHED. I HADN'T FINISHED TALKING ABOUT IT. Jesus finished.
>> Oh my god. No, the White Socks are the White Socks. Um, and it was a It was a series.
>> Yes.
>> The White Socks are the White Socks. the the series though, the reason to >> the reason why I said I hate the Cubs is because um No. Yeah, the the Cubs have been very hot and cold this season. Hot and cold. Hot and cold.
>> The last over the last like nine games or something, they're like rocking a two and seven record. They their pitching has begun to fall apart even more because their injuries and everything.
Um but yes, uh the cross town series happened. I think overall in the cross town series, they're still very even.
It's like either like one or two game separation. They've always been pretty even. Um, but it was a wild weekend. PCA got um PCA got a little bit of controversy cuz he cussed out this white side. What did he say? Um, I think he called her a [ __ ] and then that's why they fried his ass because he was like and then he went on the press conf. He was like, "I'm I'm ashamed of the word choices that I had cuz you know kids could see it." And these hate this baseball [ __ ] So >> they they were but he was but he was maintaining that. He's like >> I think this is the thing about it, right? To in all seriousness I could give a [ __ ] about baseball. I've never played baseball. I've only went to one game in my life. I couldn't give a [ __ ] I I just have always thought it so intriguing that Chicago fans take it so incredibly serious when it's like >> the White Socks are literally 10 minutes away from or are literally 20 minutes away from the the Cubs.
>> Wrigley Wriggley Field. No, I wouldn't say 20, maybe like 25. Wrigleyfield is north, White Sox is south. I'm a southsider because I grew up in a black household of southsiders.
>> That's the only reason. It's so funny.
>> Like this [ __ ] PCA called a woman a [ __ ] These are the same city teams.
>> Like that's what like it's always so intriguing that it's like >> it's once you get into the base fans are just like >> I'm like I'm hear like I'm hearing JJ's Yeah. Man, I hear such a distinct >> cuz it's cope, but it's not cope. It's that base I' I've been involved in baseball my entire So it's like it's like you're in LA with two basketball teams and you like they in the same state so why is there beef?
>> Yeah, it's that's the basketball of it all. It's [ __ ] the rivalry when it's 100 years in the same city is going to be more intense than like if it was in a different state or something.
>> I just think having a rivalry in the same city already doesn't make [ __ ] sense.
>> I don't know where there's a city where there's not though.
>> No, I wouldn't say it's a Chicago only thing. I just think it's around sports in general.
>> Yeah, I know.
>> I've never been the type of [ __ ] to be like, I hate the like when the Cubs won, I was celebrating. When the Socks won, I was celebrating.
>> It's a Chicago team. When the Socks are doing good and they beat the [ __ ] out the Cubs, I'm celebrating. When the Cubs every year beat the [ __ ] out the Socks, I'mma celebrate. I'm like, "Oh, like >> Yeah. I just wasn't really all that into baseball. I I don't even I'm so out of it that I couldn't even tell if I went to a socks game or a Cubs game.
>> They looked at the jersey. They got jerseys on.
>> Literally, I was so bored. And I remember my granddad was in a hospital and we had to leave early and that was like the most exciting thing of the [ __ ] >> Good. He's not dead, but like just shut up. Shut up. Shut up.
>> Yeah. I just like poking fun cuz I know they take that [ __ ] dumb serious.
>> Baseball is baseball. Um it's still early in the season. worse in the National League. Like call that out.
That is some funny [ __ ] >> N Yeah, it is what it is. But yeah, it's just sports. Um the NAACP >> Oh my god, >> sucks, man.
>> Um uh yeah. Okay, so what about this NAACP?
>> NAACP is crazy though, right? In other sporting news, the last sporting news, the NAACP just called on >> basically like black athletes who are taking NIL deals to >> just disinvest from their programs, right? Stop going to PWIS, start going to H.B.CU.
>> What y'all think about that?
>> I think it's a good move.
>> I think it's a good move. I remember being like younger and not really seeing the like not really being woke to the world and not seeing the significance of H.B.CU to use >> and like now like >> having the knowledge I have now and like actually seeing it like it's completely worth it.
>> Yeah, you have to.
>> Yeah, it's it's cool. It's a um it's a cool thing to encourage. Uh the logistics of it, I'm not sure cuz it's a lot of [ __ ] [ __ ] stuck in uh PWIS and those the incentives for all this [ __ ] It's like yeah, there needs to be a broader thing in general to expand [ __ ] ability to go to H.B.CU to use and tuition free or like whatever you got to do. But yeah, I would prefer if um you take your talents to places that would try to respect you more.
>> I think that's my thing is like the logistics too. I'm like >> it's not that I don't like it, but I think and but I I understand that like >> you also don't want to be the person that's always like, "Oh, well this can't happen." You know what I mean? cuz like I mean I'm sure we could figure out something but like I did see someone say like why are we not telling white athletes to disinvest like especially the ones that like >> are a part of the culture and you know you got your Cooper flags dating well Cooper Flags in different league different you know but I'm just using him as an example of like >> they was just talking about how Cooper Flags like a dirt cuz he has like a black woman like that's his girl or whatever. It's like you got a lot of especially football white men in football that are like in proximity to blackness. They are, you know, playing the songs in the halftime and they, you know what I mean? Why are we not telling white athletes to disinvest from it if they care? If they, you know, um >> I don't know. I think I think it's one of those things that it's like it still should be personal preference, but I do think it makes sense >> at the same time. Well, I I think it makes sense because it's kind of tapping into a different sector of what white people care about, which is sports. Like they give a [ __ ] more of more of a [ __ ] about sports than like human rights. So, >> so like it's like sensitive cuz it's like when you make a precedent like that and you make this whole thing of like, yo, y'all need to stop going to PWIs.
Then it's like then to a [ __ ] who does go to a PWI, it's like then that [ __ ] will get [ __ ] on for going there because it's like, well, why aren't you going to HBCU? you don't give a [ __ ] about black people. And I feel like that's a very hard line to cross.
>> I think it's also investment though.
Like I think and correct me if I'm wrong, >> a lot of people just be going where the money at.
>> That one the the NIL deals and obviously these bigger schools have more money to give them. Two obviously like the the the the um facilities and you know like LSU or some [ __ ] like that is like >> those facilities are some of the best in the world. But I also think it's like >> some the narratives around some of the H.B.CU are sometime like the dorm issues that happen at certain H.B.CU and [ __ ] like that. Like >> those are Yeah, those are things that kind of take time to invest. So I think >> I think and this is hot take. I think before we talked about the 17 to 18 year old athletes that want to go to college, we need to talk about the celebrities.
To call out the >> athletes >> athletes first without directly calling out the [ __ ] that y'all invite to the award shows every single year that have done [ __ ] all.
>> I don't know if I [ __ ] with that. You miss the nuance because it's like >> you can't hold that standard to a [ __ ] that's from a [ __ ] hole that has an opportunity to go to one of the best colleges in the [ __ ] country >> off the hard work like that they >> Yeah. until they build up an H.B.CU and everything and get those adequately like funded and everything. I think you should do both that and get more black kids there. But yeah, it's not >> or even just like educating it, you know, like and before we just say cut off their access to these PWIS, how do we educate athletes about these things much more so than we're doing >> and more investment into HB.CU too.
>> Yeah. Just in general. I feel like it's Yeah, it's it's it's one of those things where it's a very like >> it's a simplified like answer.
>> Yeah. Because like it would make sense if Yeah. the H.B.CU GCU's had the resources to reach out and just collect all the black athletes before they get a bigger offer. But the reason why PWI's can do bigger offers cuz they're PWI.
>> Yeah.
>> So, it's like until there is some course correction for leveling out the the funding levels or whatever you got to do. Yeah. That's probably not like a a thing that you should enforce on the level of like okay any athlete who does who goes to one is like cuz I remember even when I was trying to go to school.
I was never an athlete that was going to play in college but like when I was trying to find my school like so many [ __ ] happened and I wasn't like fully sure I was going to college that year but by the time I signed up to go to school there were no not only is there like no H.B.CU use in Illinois, but there was like none that I was going to be able to apply to within that time period cuz all the deadlines already happened and then you got to go out of state. So, it's logistically a lot harder for especially disproportionately won't have money already like getting the ability to choose which like place they go as opposed to like oh they going to give me all these benefits. Yeah, you going to be in the system and you going to be around all the um white people who like are running it like it's like a damn near slave auction depending on the sport like B like football. Um, but they give you a lot of bread, they give you scholarship, they give you XYZ, and it's stuff that HB.CU don't have the capacity to do as much right now. So, yeah, it's a multifaceted problem. It probably won't just solve itself by like if um athletes stop doing it, but they probably should. I would prefer black athletes.
>> Yeah, I think you should care enough to like take it into consideration.
>> Yeah, >> for sure.
>> Okay. Um, that is the last bit of stuff and Yeah.
before we get to something real serious and then we'll get back to happiness again. But uh let's talk about um this uh this attack on a synagogue that just happened.
>> Yeah.
>> Yeah. Um >> in a world where you know Islamophobia is perpetuated by the administration.
>> This is not something that shocked me.
>> Yeah. It's per culturally like just accepted the Islamophobia in many different ways. We'll talk about it.
>> Yep. So, this attack happened in San Diego. It was a Islamic center.
Um, I forgot what day it happened, but it was two teen suspects.
>> 17 and 18.
>> Damn. Can anybody guess what race it was?
>> Ethnic.
>> The usual suspect.
>> Was it usual suspects? Usual suspect.
Damn. And what about what's all that about pattern recognition?
>> Pattern recognition.
>> Pattern recognition. One person by the name of Kane Clark, 17, and the other dude, Caleb Vasquez.
>> Oh, these are the shooters. 17 and >> Yes.
>> 17 and 17 years old.
>> Shooting up a dude stole his mother's gun. The mom ends up calling the police and like, "Yo, my son has taken my gun." And he's left a suicide note. Can anybody guess what the note had in there?
>> What?
>> Racial pride ideology.
>> And here we are. Joe, how is this not terrorism though?
>> No, no, no. They're they're they're investigating this as like a hate crime/2.
But like Yeah.
>> wordage that I didn't hear. I ain't see like no like terrorist >> domestic terrorism is what this should be called. White supremacist terrorist.
>> Yes. Yeah. You don't run with >> You know who the president is put that on a white like bro you ain't never calling no school shooter a terrorist.
>> They roof to get mentally ill.
>> Yeah they did. They took that [ __ ] to get Burger King.
>> They took Dylan Roof to get Burger King.
This this president this administration will not let the word actual terrorist fly out their mouth from someone who from anyone who is a terrorist because most of the time when they are terrorists they are the white [ __ ] who support Donald Trump. So yeah. Go ahead.
>> Yep. So, he ends up uh I guess when they retrieved the gun, it had some like wording inscribed on it. I think it said like hate speech or something in there.
>> But one thing that I want to harper down on is the Islamophobia, right? So, there's We just got done talking about baseball. There was a game.
>> Yeah.
There was a game where >> y'all know that [ __ ] Jake Lango [ __ ] a [ __ ] who was >> he goes around like literally just trying to [ __ ] on the Quran and all this extra [ __ ] There was a um there was an in there was an instance where it was people doing a protest whatever and he had like a Quran in his hand. He was trying to burn it and everybody was like throwing water on him and [ __ ] >> Why are these people so obsessed, bro?
And it and it irritates me because like you didn't learn when you got your ass.
You didn't learn.
>> No. No. Cuz it's the personality he There's [ __ ] like Jake Lang have nothing. They have nothing going for them. No one gives a [ __ ] about them.
They have no worth to the world. So they'll sit there and they'll try to be the main character by being as outrageous as possible. You're trying to burn a Quran. Like in my world, you go to jail for that.
>> Yes.
>> I'm not Muslim. I'm not religious at all. But in a society, you can't have burning religious texts. If burning crosses and putting them on yards, that's what the clan did. That was an overtly religious reference and they use it to terrorize [ __ ] You're trying to >> burn [ __ ] [ __ ] for attention because you were just racist. Like the is just a raging white supremacist and a bunch of them have felt emboldened through the two [ __ ] times we elected their white supremacist and chief. So yeah, you get [ __ ] like that and this black save >> saved him.
Leave that [ __ ] on the cross, bro.
>> Should have let them put that [ __ ] on the cross, bro.
>> What the [ __ ] are we doing? Saving that [ __ ] >> Leave that [ __ ] on the ground.
>> What are you doing? Come this way.
>> [ __ ] Should have fired down on both of y'all. [ __ ] it.
>> You over here burning.
>> Burning. What? Mind you, none of these dumb ass [ __ ] know nothing about the Grammy because if they did, they find a lot of commonalities.
>> Yeah, like I was about to say that. I didn't know if I like what they Jesus is in both books. They just play different roles because they don't they don't consider him like the savior. They consider him a very valuable piece of it, but they have a different savior.
AND YOU [ __ ] ON THAT DISTINCTION THAT YOU DON'T EVEN KNOW ABOUT.
>> I'M burn up their mind. That's what happens when like you put like every funding into the military and like you dick write it so much because you think now every brown person is a [ __ ] terrorist and you're like we need to burn this because you get the [ __ ] out my >> I see how [ __ ] not your >> I see how [ __ ] talk about like Chicago public schools and they'll be like well we're giving all this money.
Why come these kids got literally what's going up with It's not enough money.
It's not enough money. We need to systemically like almost tear down and completely rebuild our education system.
You know why? Cuz we spent too much time giving money to the [ __ ] military and no one has >> We have a WWE personality heading that [ __ ] right now.
>> Yeah.
>> What [ __ ] >> Yes. The the head of >> UFC in the [ __ ] White House.
>> Yes. All these [ __ ] from UFC, WWE, all these people, they're currently the people who are responsible for this [ __ ] We don't even have like we don't even have like theology classes universally in high schools. If you go to a rich high school, like say in Illinois, like if you go to [ __ ] like Hinsdale or some [ __ ] you probably learn all about theology, gang. Yeah.
>> They was not teaching us that [ __ ] >> I don't know what the [ __ ] theology.
>> The study of like religion.
>> You feel me? It's like there's like that's where it goes to, dang. That's where this like literacy [ __ ] goes to, bro.
>> [ __ ] [ __ ] that like their entire job is to give another [ __ ] CTE. You're You're in charge of the education system. Got it. I got it. I got it.
>> Put that [ __ ] ass [ __ ] in football at the age of six. He can't write his name yet.
>> [ __ ] write like this.
>> Hold the pencil like this.
>> [ __ ] throwing chairs.
>> That's who we have heading the education department.
>> Stupid [ __ ] So in that um it was a baseball game. Jake Lane decides to throw up this um banner.
>> Can we see the banner right quickly?
>> Yep.
>> White replacement.org or save America, deport a h 100red million. Um, he was very quickly banned out the stadium for life after that.
>> This was in Washington DC.
>> Has the >> This was at a Washington.
>> Has the MLB said anything?
>> I didn't see official.
>> I don't think they've said nothing, but he's been banned from that.
>> I saw I saw media accounts that I follow recording it and being like, "Yeah, he [ __ ] did this at the game." But the MLB is not saying nothing. You know they're not saying about that. B >> the major league guys.
>> You got a bunch of Dominican running your league.
>> You got a bunch of Dominican and black [ __ ] who are Japanese [ __ ] >> who are the best [ __ ] in your leagues.
But guess who owns the teams regardless of the city local or the history of all the teams? The same demographic of all white people own all these teams and they're all Trump supporters and they're all conservatives. There's almost like the leftwing representation and political viewpoints from polling in the MLB is very [ __ ] low. All these [ __ ] are [ __ ] with their heads up their ass.
>> So they they love >> they kept [ __ ] Matt Shaw on the Cubs after he did that [ __ ] with Charlie Kirk.
>> This [ __ ] showed up at the rally in Arizona and had his name on the [ __ ] promotional poster and this [ __ ] still has a job today. STILL ON THE CUBS NOTHING. HE SHAKED >> HE'S only there cuz he was a [ __ ] draft pick IN LIKE 2025. CUT this [ __ ] What are we doing?
>> He did a AI picture. He said, "Free Chud, stop bias justice against white Americans." And then on the thing it says, "They chimping out with Chud with a judge thing." And then it's a whole bunch of monkeys with chains in the back.
>> Does he lang him?
>> That does not help his Instagram.
>> That does not help him.
>> And he's collapsing here. 1.2. No, 1.5 million next time.
>> Wow.
my like >> that's that's victimization to them.
Their their person was provoking black people to like hit him got arrested and that's like white oppression.
>> Free him.
>> Free.
>> I'm talking about other people, bro.
>> Free him.
>> Oh my god.
>> A lot of a lot of these uh racist people like Jake Lane, they try to push this narrative. Oh, we're all getting replaced. The white people were going extinct. We got to deport everybody while we, you know, sleep with people that aren't our race. Yeah, mind you I was going TO ADD THAT. MIND YOU, WE'RE [ __ ] THE [ __ ] OUT THE LATINAS, DOG.
>> THE WHITE [ __ ] [ __ ] THE [ __ ] out the Latinas. [ __ ] the [ __ ] out the black women. [ __ ] THE [ __ ] OUT THE Middle Easterners.
>> But we're getting replaced, MAN. THEY'RE REPLACING.
>> Y'ALL ARE REPLACING YOURSELVES.
>> YES, BECAUSE YOU'RE HUMAN. [ __ ] HORNY >> cuz none of this [ __ ] matters.
>> Becky, my [ __ ] BECKY AIN'T GOT AN ASS ON HER. BECKY BUILT LIKE A USB CABLE.
Like >> baby got TO GET 10 BBLS JUST TO MATCH.
>> YEAH, >> sh them.
>> YEAH.
>> NOW YOU MAD.
>> YEAH.
>> It was the same thing. They had [ __ ] in they had [ __ ] in slavery because they're inferior and they are so dumb and can't be in society and then had sex with them and produce children to go [ __ ] to the juke joint. Like it's it never makes sense. And they start this whole white identity, we're oppressed thing by the whole great replacement theory, which is what he's hidden at, by saying like there are these British [ __ ] who will be in like the UK and being like, you see, only 44% of our population is born in Britain. That means that they're And what they really mean is that like, no, they're white people born in Britain, not like the brown people who actually are no longer immigrants. They're like first or second generation and were born in Britain, too. And they're British people, too.
They have a white definition of that.
Therefore, any Middle Eastern or or or Southwest Asian or or like uh any African or anyone who comes to the country, they all have their immigration fears. We got to shut it down cuz they're going to replace white people.
Like, y'all don't go to their countries already and do the thing. Humans procreate and you mix. Sorry. This is why you can't defend white identity from going extinct.
>> It's not our fault. Our melanin sticks in your situation.
>> Yeah, bro. That's how human genetics works. And these [ __ ] be in your country contributing to it. And you probably stole them from their country and you probably stole products from their country to help your country. So yes, they deserve a right to walk around in your country, too. No, you're not being replaced because you know who still runs Congress?
>> All the oldest white people that you think.
>> Bang out.
>> So what is the threat here? It's delusion. It's And that's why all black people even if Congress and the government in general was all black people, you still wouldn't be getting replaced. You still wouldn't be 13% of the population. What the [ __ ] are you talking about?
>> Anywhere you go IN THIS COUNTRY EXCEPT like the four cities, >> you going to see majority white people.
Literally anywhere.
>> Yeah, >> you got states in this country that are 95% white, 98% white. Like >> Vermont, >> what are you talking about?
>> Is 99% white.
>> Iowa is like 89% white. So I'm like this whole this whole essential this the thing cuz people try to act like they what the right will try to do is like when you try to celebrate your heritage or your culture or you try to embrace diversity they'll say you're making everything about race because you're embracing the simple fact in reality that multiple races exist and we all like comingle and we all have histories xyz. That's the rational position. These [ __ ] will tell you I'm not focusing on race. I just want to defend America. So you know what I'm going to do? I'm going to essentialize that any brown person or non-white person coming in is directly like replacing my population even though we're still the majority. And because of that, we have to lock up and deport 100 million people. That >> and then kill them.
>> Mind you, you can put on a banner like, "Yes, we can deport 100 million people."
What [ __ ] hold up a banner like deport 100 million? What [ __ ] has the power to say we could deport 100 million? to say that you're being oppressed, but you also have the ability to like tell the president to deport 100 million people is like the fact that you don't see the power dynamic that you're delusional. Go >> back to the shooting for >> now that we have the type of like >> mind frame that this Kane and Caleb person were probably in when they created this uh massacre. Not massacre, but it was it almost got to a massacre.
So, the Islamic Center of San Diego, it is the largest mosque in San Diego County.
>> And it also has an uh elementary school attached to it.
What's up with these American patriots and not regarding schools? I thought it's protect the kids.
>> We bombed a school in Iran.
>> Save the kids.
>> School shot up here. Mos shot up here with the school.
people and then the people in power is those kids.
>> Yeah. Yeah. Save the kids. Save the kids. Save the kids. So put in the kids.
Yeah.
>> Yeah. So basically what happened is five people died. Two of the people >> were the shooters. So we'll get into that. Um, the reason why it wasn't more >> was because there's there's a security guard by the name of um I don't want to butcher it, but Amin Abdullah >> he is he's been a security guard at that place for like ages. Everybody has been coming out with stories like he's like the nicest person ever. Like he he basically like held that [ __ ] down and he end up he ended up dying >> saving >> saving everybody. He didn't. He didn't.
Okay. So, basically what happened I guess like through his efforts I guess they got scared and ran off.
>> These [ __ ] ass [ __ ] >> ended up going in a car and killing themselves.
>> After killing two After killing three people, they ran away, got in the car, and killed themselves. So, one of the three people that they kill was the security guard.
>> Yes.
>> Rest in peace.
>> And then you go in the car and you kill yourself.
>> Rest in peace. [ __ ] ass.
>> Rest in peace. Most they killed themselves. Charge their parents.
>> Yeah.
>> Charged whoever cuz I know they got the guns from their mother. Charge her.
>> Yeah. She needs to be investigated and investigated. But like my thing is >> this is why the whole good guy with a gun model is just cope that you tell yourself. You could be the most military SWAT [ __ ] used to and them [ __ ] run too. The fact that he didn't run and he lost his life because of it is the exact reason why all these police run. Most shootings end when the shooters decide to end it and they went in a car and killed themselves.
>> Wow.
>> [ __ ] ass.
>> That's the case in almost all of these [ __ ] shootings. You look it up. The shooter killed I think it was like even in Coline shooters were dead for like two hours for the SWAT team. The multiple [ __ ] SWAT teams that were paying multiple millions of dollars for even decide to enter the building.
>> Yep.
>> Cuz they were scared. Cuz you're terrified.
>> You're terrified. You picked the job and you're terrified to do your job.
>> Scared the [ __ ] off. Got into one interaction with the [ __ ] ran back to the car and killed themselves and you realized no way out.
>> You got >> Wow, bro. Ran back to the car.
>> Hard to kill y'allselves.
>> But um y'all ran back [ __ ] >> This [ __ ] [ __ ] choed.
>> Don't chip out you with a gun. Other has a gun. Don't chip out. Other spit on me.
I'mma call the police. You Youard like the phone calls are coming out now. Jail calls. Jail calls.
>> This [ __ ] was like, "Aidan Ross, can you please help me? Save me. I'll go fight for free cuz Yeah. Yeah.
>> Because waste time on that [ __ ] >> consequence your actions, right?
>> Who are the who are the victims other than the two or other than the security guard and who else?
>> I need you said there's five, right?
Including the two people that Well, [ __ ] them [ __ ] ass [ __ ] Right. Piss. [ __ ] them other two [ __ ] ass [ __ ] But it's security guard and it's two other people. I got to find their names.
>> Were they adults?
>> They ain't the kids.
>> No, no kids were hurt. No kids were hurt. So they're >> they're all traumatized.
>> Yeah, I know. Those kids are traumatized though. Jesus Christ.
>> So they launched they um basically like a GoFundMe for the uh for the security guard. They've raised 1.7 million.
>> Wow.
>> Let's go. Let's go. in like >> did it happen today?
>> I think it happened yesterday.
Yesterday? Yeah, yesterday. Yeah.
>> Let's [ __ ] that. That's That's the amount of impact this man had on that community, >> man. That's fire, man.
>> Hey, man.
>> Hopefully that could cover like >> Abdullah, you said his name was, bro.
>> Yeah, I mean Abdul [ __ ] hero. That's crazy. And I you >> Who are the other two people? Let me >> But I was going to say while you looked that up, it's like, >> okay, are we about to have a conversation about this sweeping crisis of anti-Muslim violence?
>> I'm waiting on it. Can we do it now? Cuz I'm going to have the conversation right now. Go ahead.
>> Yeah, that's what Matt say. It's like that's why verbiage is so important because that's what leads into having this conversation. But you [ __ ] won't >> classify it as terrorism because >> Yeah, they brown. You want to know who Cho and those two people who did it who did the thing and those people who was threatened in H.B.CU after Charlie Kirk got popped. And what they all have in common is the exact same thing that Donald Trump's Department of Justice was saying before January of 2025, which is that the biggest domestic terrorist threat in this country is coming from white nationalists, white extremists, the 1500 [ __ ] that the president pardoned trying to raid the capital. I believe they haven't um disclosed yet.
>> Okay, it says Amin Abdullah Mansour Casia. I'm sorry if I'm butchering these names. And Nadar uh Aad they were outside of the center when they rolled up and shot him.
>> Wow. Just wanted to make And apparently they shot at landscapers, right?
>> Yeah, I'm pretty sure they hit. Yeah, >> I swear they they Yeah, I saw somewhere that they hit like there was landscapers that was just I guess somewhere and yeah, they like hit one and then shot at the other >> just a bunch of like bro you >> terrorism and you're seeing their and this is why it's like >> we still deny mental health being a thing and we want to defund it and not even put money. you CNN methods and you [ __ ] is 17, 18 year olds picking up a gun going to a moss killing people. Then you [ __ ] up and run back in your car and shoot y'all.
>> And then they tell everyone and then like these same individuals tell everyone that like >> you got a brown politician that exists.
Well, actually your presence is being anti-semitic and also this is this is really scary. you know, these brown folk we since like 9/11. And this is why never [ __ ] like actually talk about it in this goddamn country. Since 9/11, like the the struggles of different racial demographics in this country are all different, all historical XYZ. You can layer up whose struggle was worse than whose. I don't feel like doing that, but everyone knows the stories of black Americans in this country. Mhm.
>> What people have not talked about is since 2000, since this era that all of us have come to age in, Muslim people have like we just like forgot that like yo, you can't just get certain [ __ ] off.
Yeah.
>> Like you can't just say like I was watching when like even when Zoron was running how these people would like, yo, Muslim jihadist, yo, let me send you the mailer with the [ __ ] skin slightly darker and his beard slightly longer.
Yo, let me >> saying his name wrong.
>> Wait, if y'all did like ears and red lipstick on a [ __ ] that's easy. You can visualize that. Yo, that's [ __ ] crazy. That's racist. But nothing with like Muslim people/br people like triggers that in people in America.
Like, whoa, that's way too far. Y'all being racist to them right now. Y'all could get off with anything. They going to blow the plane up. They going to XYZ.
They going and black people perpetuate that as well.
>> Yes. Because [ __ ] don't know no better than a lot of these [ __ ] racist ass white people. All America do is play victim. We think because that one thing happened 911 we are owed and they owe us something.
>> And that's the thing because and then we never talk about the full picture of why that even that event even happened. The reason why a lot of [ __ ] get off with those same jokes is because and this is the thing that black people in America don't talk about is that >> when you deprogram from a lot of these ideologies and you start exploring things. One thing that you realize is what position of privilege you're in being in America being an American and how that warps your worldview. You might think that as a black person in America, because of the unique struggle that we had, that no other thing matters. The reason why I can't agree with you is because the reason why the thing happened to us is because they get off with it with everybody else.
>> Yeah.
>> So, when you're sitting there perpetuating the same jokes, stereotypes, the same mocking XYZ, the same not sticking up for these people when this [ __ ] happens, the same tactics they use against us. What happens? That makes it normalized. And you understand that that leads to [ __ ] getting killed, [ __ ] getting bombed, [ __ ] having terrorist attacks. But then no one calls it a terrorist attack afterwards. No one comes out in the government's like, "We got to defend our brown people. We got to defend our Muslim what Trump has said about this."
>> Well, not a goddamn thing.
>> Oh, the president of the United States didn't speak on a shooting at a mosque.
>> I mean, a [ __ ] how many churches shooting things happen? I wouldn't expect you to talk about that.
>> I want to say I want to say this to like to like to the white listeners as well.
If you can't figure out why this matters, take out people of color, right?
Let's talk about the white people, right? I want to touch back on the mental health aspect of it.
These things are happening. The reason why we said usual suspects, the reason the reason why we like make fun of that aspect of like, yeah, just white people shooting people, bro, there's obviously [ __ ] always pointing fingers. [ __ ] always pointing fingers at black people.
>> What about I seen the other day? You're >> not counting gang violence. I seen 6ix9ine talk the other day. Sorry, I'm going to get you can go right back to it. But anyway, >> I know what you're about to say.
>> Yeah. And it was like, well, you trying to call me cuz they was like, well, all I seen was cuz they was trying to like, oh, people might not respect you cuz you speaking on brothers like killing each other and he like, well, yeah, cuz who killed Nipy? Another brother who killed XYZ another. They like, "Yeah, he ain't said nothing wrong."
>> You know who killed, you know who, you know who killed majority of anyone who's going to die in this country for any reason?
>> It's another white person.
>> Most of the times the victim's another white person.
>> But you be with Aiden Ros, right?
>> Because the the theory of danger and everything. I hate you [ __ ] ass cuz now I'm about to get upset. I hate you [ __ ] ass. The reason why I brought up the whole pointing finger thing is cuz this.
Let's point a finger. Dog, y'all need help. Your people need help. [ __ ] giving a [ __ ] about me, the black people in your community, the the the the anybody give a [ __ ] about yourself.
>> You got 17 year olds running around this [ __ ] killing themsel or killing themselves after shooting up churches.
>> If that is not a like, >> damn, as a white man who maybe my KIDS ARE GROWN UP WHITE PRIDE, RIGHT?
EXACTLY.
>> Off of messages y'all are >> as a white person, bro, in this country.
If you don't agree with those things, why are you not doing everything in your power to help your people?
>> Yeah, but they expect that from brown people. But they expect that from every every elected official is going to come out and condemn this Muslim terrorism whenever some happens.
>> Didn't come out and say, >> "Oh, these these white men are going through such mental turmoil that they would kill." I damn near in a way think it would perpetuate y'all [ __ ] racism and because that that pride would would come out and wow he really care. He don't even give a [ __ ] about y'all enough.
>> Yeah.
>> We care more about y'all than y'all care about y'all.
>> Yeah. Because it's e bro it's it's the it's the same model over and over. Let's simplify our issues.
>> Blame it on black.
>> You and let me tell you why you blame it. You blame it and you get upset and you say all of these things and you create all of these narratives and you say these things because you're scared.
You know why you're scared, bro? Because if white people got their [ __ ] together, got their [ __ ] together enough to provide reparations for Native Americans, to provide reparations for uh uh Pacific and like like Pacific Islanders, to provide uh uh reparations to black people, reparations to to Muslims in the Muslim community, >> Hispanics who country, let's not forget like >> if white people do that, >> California and everything, right?
Mexico. If white people do that, you're scared that then on equal footing, [ __ ] will turn around and say, >> "You know what? [ __ ] them big ass [ __ ] Let's >> did a lot of really bad [ __ ] >> We might do the same thing to you, but no. That's not how that works. It's never been like these are fears, like we said with Jake Lang and all. These are fears that come to your head that are [ __ ] irrational. You don't give power in reparations to black people, then they turn around and say, "Let's enslave white people."
>> You know why I hate them [ __ ] like Jake Lang is because it's the exact same ideology that your confederate ancestors had.
>> That's the whole reason why slavery was justified to them to prevent in to survile insurrection. If we give black people the ability to read, then they find out that we're [ __ ] them over keeping them on plantations, they might come back and rebel against us and kill us. But the problem is again, racism isn't right. N >> so black people are not barbaric. N >> once your society begins improving and you know you have highspeed rail and internet and low crime rates and everything, maybe you don't get those demographics of people trying to commit the most heinous act that's ever been committed in in human time.
>> People just trying to live like I'm about to say [ __ ] shocker. Fast forward to 302.
I don't think black people are bringing reverse slavery back if our communities are more wealthy than they are now because we had reparations if we do nothing.
>> 32 if we do nothing.
>> Maybe you get what the [ __ ] you you're you're FEARING FOR.
>> YES.
>> YEAH. Cuz we waited a century to help [ __ ] >> because you have to move. You have to move out the [ __ ] If you can't occupy the space at the table and use the space at the table to write the wrongs that have already happened, you will get moved from the table either v via BEING SCALPED OR YOU WILL HAVE TO COME TO THE TABLE AND AGREE WITH [ __ ] >> COME ON.
>> I'M NOT going to lie. You cannot continue to live in this society that's trying to pull off this experiment of multiculturalism, multi-racialism, which is a fine experiment cuz there is nothing that's stopping two people from different skin colors living in a similar proximity. You just continuously maintain these social barriers, social barriers that are determined by society that can change. And you set your arbitrary line that it's too many brown people here, it's going to replace us.
You're creating the war that you're acting like you don't want right now before it even has to happen cuz your [ __ ] ass your arrogant ass doesn't want to move. You think a lot of people, a lot of like liberals too, a lot of people in this American like like uh a lot of people in this like American like Overton window view equity as literal like inferiority. They think that if we did a socialism or if we let like a socialist project work in our hemisphere, our standard of living would go down because Apple would be forced to develop their product without exploiting like slavery.
>> How that's going with the grocery store.
>> Exactly.
>> Yeah.
>> [ __ ] in New York like, "Oh my god, no.
>> I'm getting groceries."
>> Propaganda >> groceries.
>> What we GOING TO DO WITH GROCERIES?
QUESTION YOURSELF WHY THESE [ __ ] ARE asking these questions like this and sounding incredulous. They're acting as though we could do nothing else. You want to know why? Cuz in their mind, if we tried anything else, we'd be lesser than now.
>> YEAH.
>> WHY? WE'RE AMERICA. WHY?
>> WHY COULD WE NOT just do what we we are doing what we are right now? WE WE BOMBING. WE'RE BOMBING CHILDREN, BOMBING BOATS, BOMB.
>> We can do whatever the [ __ ] we want across the waters as long as a cruise missile's involved.
>> Yep. But it'll stop. Everyone, even people with the best intentions, will stop right short of, "All right, let's do reparations or let's let's pull back from all these wars in the Middle East."
They'll stop right short of that. Why?
Because it's your American comfortability.
>> You think it's just something's just got to happen.
>> Yep. Something >> so cruel because like >> it's not like [ __ ] are asking for everything. I think the cruelty in it cuz you said it perfectly is like having to share equity is like literally they feel so inferior to doing it. It's like asking, you have a Steven A. Smith saying the [ __ ] he does cuz he's so caught up in the American way of dominance. It's like asking a company to maybe, you know, pay more on taxes or asking a company, put a little more money in X, Y, and Z in your employees pockets or do X Y and Z. It's like we're forcing their hand and they have to bow down to the people. It's like >> the people who >> like the people who made you your ass.
caught up in that and the people are so brainwashed by it that our country doesn't stand to survive in God knows how many years cuz everyone's going to be [ __ ] like like if you give a [ __ ] genuinely like we talk about the insecurity that comes with that right if it makes you insecure >> giving people a group of people giving people in your personal lives equity into whether it's a business whether it's socially whether anything if it makes you feel insecure. Why is the question on all like why is the the the problemolving like tactics in white culture? Why is it not get the [ __ ] up and help y'all own [ __ ] then?
>> Yeah, >> obviously there's something wrong here.
But all of you white people sit here and act like there's nothing wrong until a brown person say anything, a black person say, "Oh, you know, maybe we need >> and then it all comes out. It leaks out that guilt, that insecurity. It comes out because, bro, you've been holding it in.
>> You sit at every Thanksgiving knowing damn well you sitting across the table from your pedophile uncle >> and you and if anyone dares brings up what Thanksgiving was, they too woke.
You're just running from it. Running from it all of the time. You don't know how black people have gotten to the point that we could still have fun. We could still have these things. You can't run from it.
>> You can't run from it, bro.
hate.
>> You're so you're These white people are so racist that they don't even believe in government aiding because it's like because it'll help a brown vote to get rid of this [ __ ] that I'm actually realize >> a lot of most of this [ __ ] is going to the people that predominantly run this [ __ ] so you're so caught up in it. It's so, like you said, irrational that you can't even help your own people. It's dividing. You think that the We don't need universal health.
>> That's why there is a blind woman.
There's a blind white woman who can't get her groceries and can't get any form of aid or her [ __ ] children can't get any. Why? Because the racist white man that you put in power doesn't like [ __ ] So he thinks everyone in this help, God forbid you see a AOC run, you see a Jasmine Crockett run for, you know, >> I don't know, man.
>> I don't know if I like her. You know, there's something about her like you go.
She's even though the majority of y'all [ __ ] culture would benefit. Yep. You know why? Cuz you're the majority of the [ __ ] country.
>> Yeah. Yeah. Like when you when you break down >> well before before you even transition, condolences to the people that lost their lives. Jesus Christ.
>> Them two them two kids that that did that [ __ ] [ __ ] you.
>> Yeah, I know. We hope that your your parents suffer the consequences of your action.
>> Yeah, they will. And they should. They should. Anybody that doesn't believe their parents should be prosecuted, you're part of the problem.
>> It's so funny because like oh my god, >> they took your gun. Even like when trans people had shot up the churches like then you see the narrative they run with Charlie.
>> Look at THE NARATIVE RIGHT NOW THEY ARE ACTIVE STILL RUNNING. THEY just made it up.
>> [ __ ] right now they are actively being like yeah we going to kill trans people.
They just said the administration just said we're going to we're going to hunt and kill these [ __ ] >> White trans people. Any sort of people that don't follow your white supremist white nationalist [ __ ] ways. You are in the way. That's why everyone That's why like white people think they're free from it. No, no, no. Everybody in this country will deal with these [ __ ] in power.
>> And people like to act like they learned that lesson after like the Holocaust because that was the reason why it really hit for people was because the victims kind of looked like the perpetrators.
>> Yeah. Yeah.
>> But do you think that your blonde hair Okay, let's fast forward to America where we don't have a strong Aryan population. We don't got blonde hair, blue eyes all sticking together. We got brown hair, black eyes, we got Asian mix, we got black mix, we got Native American mix. Which one of you [ __ ] thinks that we're going to actually fit into this st? Candace Owens, you think your place is resolved? You think Hispanics are more conservative? You think your place resolved with the Jake Langs of the world? Or do you think you'd be facing that barrel too? Because it's not rational.
>> It's going to get smaller. The barrel, the friend enmy, >> the barrel is going to get smaller.
>> THE FRIEND ENEMY DECISION, >> THEY NEVER kill me.
>> The barrel is going to get smaller and smaller and smaller. You know why?
Because at some point in 32, there's not going to be no black people here, right?
There's not going to be no going to be more mixed.
>> It's going to be mixed.
>> You going to be contending with 45% >> and then you really deal with they already did last drop rule and [ __ ] like that. Like they're going to say, "Okay, all right. Your eyes is three inches apart. We going to start discriminating against [ __ ] who >> Let's reduce what whiteness is.
>> Let's deport 100 million. And you think that's going to help do it help? They will tear down their country.
>> They going to come right acknowledge.
>> Hey, are you a little overweight?
>> White people, are you a little overweight? Are there are there people that's overweight white people? You think they going to get >> the the welcome wagon?
>> No.
>> No. Cuz you're not physically fitting over, bro. We all know what it's going to be. It's just going to be wealth.
>> Like wealth. It's going to be the rich and the poor. It does not matter because that's literally where you're headed.
Like you're making things so unaffordable to the point you want it to be divine cuz you don't give a [ __ ] about white people.
>> Yes. So that's my thing is that like if there is anything that's going to help everyone including white people, it will be a universal politic that addresses everybody's issues and is not shy about where those issues stem from. Even the the concept of wealth and whiteness being so close in this country, when those days come, it will be rich and poor. And then anyone else who's just not white because they don't care if you're rich, if you're still a [ __ ] unless you could buy your own bunker in your own [ __ ] silo off, which how many of us can [ __ ] do that? That's why you have to de you have to separate this [ __ ] and handle it like a rational person. No, wealthy doesn't mean white.
No, white culture is not better than black culture, brown culture, than XYZ.
No, Americans are not just inherently better than everyone else in the world.
You have to live and you have to make negotiation. You have to make peace with people. And you can still be the most powerful country in the history of the world doing that. There is no justification for deport 100 million. We have our space isn't even close to being filled in this [ __ ] ass country. We have unsettled land still.
>> Yeah.
>> Like we don't got ROOM FOR [ __ ] SHUT up with this [ __ ] >> It's it's complete [ __ ] and propaganda. How does American dominance reflect on their own people? I thought it was just the overseas thing. You do anything. But now we have to dominate our own people.
>> That's what fascism is because you eat everything and then you eventually come around and eat yourself.
>> Literally. That's why there's no rationale to it.
>> Let's talk about >> the only force that will save [ __ ] and put some rationality in the room, which is exactly the opposite of these [ __ ] at the end of the >> women.
BROWN PEOPLE >> LITERALLY.
>> Oh god. Only saving grace. Um let's talk about it, right? And the reason why I want to bring this up is because also Zoran Mani is a Muslim person. Um AOC is a brown woman. And we can see that both of their politics at least so far have embodied pretty much like people people do this thing in like these political circles and it pisses me off where we have to keep trying to act as though like well >> maybe that works in New York.
>> I don't know if it would work but but in Idaho in Ohio Idaho is a different buggy. You just have no choice but to bring a [ __ ] [ __ ] who's paid off by Exon Mobile cuz that's all you can [ __ ] get.
>> No.
>> And I like And I like having dirt roads, >> [ __ ] ass.
>> I like exas one hospital every 35 miles.
>> One hospital every 160 miles.
>> That's why you don't put money into mental health anything because like you're everyone is so [ __ ] up. You're defending your [ __ ] >> You're defending your status quo. You hate yourself.
>> You're defending your status quo. Which I'm going to give you a little lesson in history. You almost should never be defending the status quo. There's never a point in time where some [ __ ] looked in the history book and said, "Yeah, we're done. Let's keep IT HERE."
>> WAIT, IMAGINE THEY CALLED THAT [ __ ] IN 1870. YEAH, >> [ __ ] We have been done now.
>> We would have been dying at 22.
>> [ __ ] [ __ ] wouldn't be making it that far. So, yeah, the hand of history kind of forces progression. That's often times why you hear progressives sounding like the most common sense [ __ ] and everyone sounding like a [ __ ] caveman.
>> Bro, I HATE THESE PROGRESSIVES.
>> WHAT?
>> Like what?
>> They want like they just >> they don't know what progress progression is, bro. This shit's crazy >> cuz you have never seen it. So, let let's talk a little bit about it, right?
So, um um let's start with uh AOC >> because um >> she has been building up her uh profile recently. It's been rumored that she may run for president. She may run for Senate. She may run for something. They tried to ask her about that um and whether or not her positions was to do that. And she was talking about my ambitions is not that small. I want to change the whole country. I'm like, I don't know what that means, man. And then she went on and said, "You can't earn a billion dollars." And I was like, "Oh, you're talking. Let's talk about that."
I want to ask y'all first.
>> You're locked in.
>> What What Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. What be comes to mind when you hear the words like, "You can't earn a billion dollars.
>> You can't earn it without >> taking advantage of people."
>> I Allan. Yeah, you can go.
>> Yeah. inform my thought by >> I'll tell you what comes to mind when I think of >> no one can earn >> no one can earn a billion this is what comes to mind >> um so I bought a chair on Amazon [ __ ] >> JEFF WE GOT SOME [ __ ] words [ __ ] >> I bought a chair on Amazon dog you know why I bought a chair bro I got back problems bro I've had back problems I'm since hoping I got bad I got bad posture already. I'll be looking down at my phone all the time. My neck be hurting.
My back be hurting. Like >> when you have locks, the Mitches are heavy.
>> Oh yeah, my locks is heavy, bro. Got back problems, dog.
>> I order a chair for lumbar support. The chair was $200.
>> Steep, but I'm like, >> it's a good chair. Apparently, it got the little pieces apparently will help my lumbar support.
I got the chair. I'm trying to invest.
Exactly. Invest in your health. I sit down >> for my job. So, God forbid a [ __ ] want >> God forbid a [ __ ] want to sit down.
>> Be comfortable.
>> Be comfortable. You know what I'm saying? I got to You know what I'm saying? I buy a chair.
These send me the chair in a day and these [ __ ] ass send me the chair and there's no [ __ ] pump for the chair. There's no hydraulic middle piece for the chair. In other >> sit [ __ ] floating.
>> You can't put it on.
>> How can I put the chair together?
>> You can't connect the butt of the chair.
>> You have the legs >> and the [ __ ] wheels of the chair.
>> It's going to be sitting like this.
>> You have the wheels. You have the wheels and then you have the circle joint that the metal joint supposed to be in so that the chair can sit on top of it and then you can go up and down in the chair. $200.
>> I'mma just sit on the ground.
>> $200.
>> $200.
>> Paid for a chair just to be missing parts.
>> So [ __ ] happens.
>> So what [ __ ] happens? The box was halfway open when I got it. So [ __ ] happens. I say, "You know what, dog?
Whatever it is, I'm mad as [ __ ] I'm going just try to get my money back. I'm going just try to, you know what I'm saying, talk to somebody, etc." I must have been trying to figure out how to get a refund on this [ __ ] ass chair for an hour and a half. I'm calling numbers. No one's answering cuz it's 8:00 p.m.
>> Mind you, >> I want you to understand >> global shipping.
>> You [ __ ] ass [ __ ] will sit here and put Andy Jassem I can't say their names.
I remember last time. You [ __ ] ass [ __ ] will put these [ __ ] dicks down your throat and say, "No, Jeff started Amazon in the garage.
>> Such a good idea.
>> He will work."
>> Elon, good idea.
>> He deserves it. That's what y'all are saying. He deserves it. Do I think Jeff should make his money for being able to get me my chair in a day? Sure, gang.
Make your bread. I appreciate it.
>> So should they. Do I also think if the [ __ ] chair comes without the most essential PART OF THE GODAMN CHAIR, should I be able to get a refund and talk to a person 247?
>> Yes.
>> Yes. Whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa. But Matt, 24/7, that's like, you know, labor laws and XY. Oh. Oh, now you want to >> If we live If we lived in a functioning [ __ ] society, a trillion dollar company could pay for [ __ ] to have a 247 customer service line, no questions asked, immediately on the phone with a person.
>> Yep. Cuz guess who >> would that provide Oh, you can't kill you can't text the billionaire. They going to move. Would that provide jobs, JJ?
>> It would. A lot of [ __ ] sit on that phone.
>> Yeah. Right.
If it was 40 hour, 60k a year.
>> Yep.
>> Oh, they can't do that. Let me tell you how I know they can do that. You know why? Cuz they can pay for HR to be in every [ __ ] building.
>> I used to work HR shifts till 4 in the [ __ ] morning in this building. And as soon as I clock out, I got two more people coming in to start the shift.
>> You know why? Cuz it's essential. You need HR. You know why though? Yeah.
>> HR wasn't in the building to help the people. HR is in THE BUILDING TO STOP a lawsuit just in case.
>> Yep. Literally.
>> So they don't lose money. These are the things that as a society we are trained to think. And that's why it's so important for AOC and for our candidates that we're trying to vote in to be saying [ __ ] like billionaires don't earn it.
>> You cannot earn it because guess who got you that chair in a day? It wasn't Jeff.
>> It wasn't the workers who's employed under Jeff.
>> IT WAS MARIPOSA. YEAH. [ __ ] >> WITH NO [ __ ] HEALTHARE [ __ ] benefits.
>> What you say?
>> The propag we're so deluded into thinking that like you'll defend it because you think you're I feel sorry for you cuz you think we live in a free market.
>> You think we live in a market to where these companies should be able to practice what they want and give fair >> cuz we got our rights and they got their rights.
>> You have companies that you defend and dick ride monopolize everything.
>> Amazon.
>> A free market means nothing. I try to I Oh my god. I'mma give you I'm I'm So continue with the door dash [ __ ] >> So we Oh, the door dash [ __ ] is a whole different thing. I'll get into that, too.
>> The the the the We can put it in post, dog. I'm trying to contact Amazon. I type in Amazon contact phone number. It pops up a bunch of links even though it used to just pop up the number. You know, Google AI is so [ __ ] smart.
Just pop the [ __ ] number up.
>> Yeah. Innovation >> dog. I pop up. It says contact us. I press contact us. Ask me what it does.
It takes me back to Amazon. I kid you not. It's showing me a [ __ ] track phone I could buy to contact them.
>> I swear to God, we will put it in post.
I screen recorded it. I swear to God.
There's no way. There's no way. There's no way. Say you swear to God. Say you swear TO GOD. PUT THAT ON. SAY SAY PUT THAT ON ALLAH. SAY WAHI, BRO. SAY WAHI.
>> IT TAKES YOU BACK TO THE WEBSITE TO BUY a phone from Amazon.
>> No way. Contact us for customers or buy a phone from Amazon. Have it shipped a track phone.
>> A track phone. A house phone.
>> You can't you can't even free market by the way and monopolizing everything. You can't even get a phone without like dealing with the [ __ ] of billion dollar corporations that are Jesus Christ.
>> T-Mobile.
>> Gota T-Mobile. This happened literally just recently. I ended up getting a new phone cuz my other one was [ __ ] Went through T-Mobile. They end up telling me they're like, "If you add someone to your line, it makes the bill cheaper."
>> So, I was like, "J need a new phone."
And his phone was [ __ ] up. And I'm like, "Bro, we're already outside. Let's go to T-Mobile." So, we get to T-Mobile to try to open up this line. He gets the phone, everything. It's already ordered.
We're there probably like 30 minutes. We get the phone ordered. JJ already got to come out $600 out of pocket while trading up his phone with $1,100 credit and getting locked in for two years already. That's the business MODEL OF FREE MARKET.
>> YEAH. And he's coming sick. He's coming what? It was 600 out of pocket for a phone that is [ __ ] quality compared to the other ones. But you know what? We have to let Apple keep doing what they do. So then he gets the phone, the uh the address is [ __ ] up because T-Mobile doesn't know how to run their systems after JJ multiple times put the correct address in. But you know what? I have to pay $144 a month for them to not put the correct address. Mind you, it's my line. and the address is already on there. They [ __ ] it up. It's to our old address. JJ's like, "You know what? We could just end up going to our old apartment to go get it." The dude's like, "You know what? We could just go fix it." He He goes to the back. You know what he does? He cancels the [ __ ] order. So, what ends up happening, me and JJ, he doesn't tell me and JJ he cancels the order. So, we're like, "You know what? It should be fine.
There's no problem with it." He comes back. He's like, "Oh, yeah. So, we have to check you for fraud because they're run. They're like giving you a fraud alert because you haven't had your account for X, Y, and Z." I mean, it's so new. And since we canceled the order cuz he couldn't order a new iPhone. So now me and JJ are in there for an hour.
>> He cancelled. Yeah, he canceled the order. Came back from the back room and he had us try to put in the phone order again with the updated address and it kept saying, "You can't do it. You got to visit the store."
>> Mind you, another finesse of how this system work. JJ didn't even want the brand new phone. JJ wanted the phone. I have the iPhone 16 Plus. But in order to do that, you know what you have to do?
You have to order it because they don't keep it in there because what do they want you to do? They want you to spend the $700 out of pocket for the brand new phone. You have to order it.
>> In fact, and this is and we're going to get in, this is going to all come back, but with this whole sales model and this unfettered, let's let the businesses run the whole thing. When we walk in, what do they want to do? They want to get you a sale. They want to sell you the most expensive thing they can sell you.
They're not here to serve you for the service that you want. They want you to pay them as much money as possible. When we walk in, the [ __ ] says out his mouth that they don't have the 16s.
>> They don't have the 16. And then we go on the phone on the app and the 16 is right here.
>> No, he's literally cuz I was like I was like literally the camera mode. I'm like you're lying. I just got my phone. We go on there. The exact model is in the app.
>> But oh well. He said they don't really have them for real because he wanted me to get the 17 off bet cuz it makes you the most money.
>> Cuz it makes you the most money you [ __ ] ass [ __ ] >> Not consideration for why I want a 16.
>> You dumb ass [ __ ] You can't even look a [ __ ] in the eye. You stupid [ __ ] So then we already going there. Mind you, the second phone, the phone that he wants, hasn't even been ordered yet. And he is, "Oh, well, Allan, you can add an Apple Watch onto your plane. It makes it cheaper, too. You can get a iPad. It makes it cheaper, too. Third line. You can get a third line with a SIM card if anyone wants it. And you can keep it and, you know, be an extra, you know, it's free. But if you wait, it's going to be $1,000.
>> Keep going and going." And while >> he was like, "Yeah, he's like, "If we do it right now, it'll be free. It be if you come back in a couple weeks, it might not be available."
>> This [ __ ] dope head. this honky [ __ ] talking, doing all this [ __ ] ends up [ __ ] up the order. So now we're like, "Okay, well, he can't get it." They're like, "Well, Allan, you need your social security number and your ID." And I was like, "Well, I have the number." He was like, "No, we need a physical card." So I'm like, "I don't carry my social security number on >> in my back pocket to go to T-Mobile."
>> He was like, "Oh, oh, >> okay."
>> So mind you, me and JJ are there for an hour 30. We're like, "You know what?
We're going to do this a different day.
We're going to wait till JJ's phones breaks so we can get another one. We end up going all the way back home on the other side of the city. Then I go and I realize and I'm trying to text you and it wasn't going through and I'm like that's weird. Probably no cell your data to where I'm at. Go in the house.
Immediately when we walk in the door I tell Matt about the experience and then I look on my message they're like we have now suspended your T-Mobile account. We have suspended you from calling, texting or looking up anything.
So I'm like what the [ __ ] >> Now I have to travel back. Well, then it clicks in my head. I'm like, "Holy [ __ ] it's cuz of the fraud alert." I get on the phone with T-Mobile. They're like, "Oh, yeah. We can't do anything for you cuz of fraud alert. You're going to have to go right back to that T-Mobile." Me and JJ go back in there. This was an experience from we I can imag.
>> Oh, >> and we went through all that trouble.
>> I'd have to say as soon as you clock out, meet me outside.
>> The billion dollar The billion dollar company. The only reason why we even I even got my [ __ ] back was because we dealt with a black man. And even then during that experience, the [ __ ] on the phone for T-Mobile, billion-dollar industry, don't even believe that it happened. The worker that was in there was lying saying he knew about the procedure and we knew. Bullshitting. And then come to find end of the story, we get it fixed. Then the lady gives me a 25. She's like, "This is the best I can do for you. I'll give you a 25% off my T-Mobile thing on your bills for life if you stay with T-Mobile. Mind you, I just checked my Gmail. They said you have 144 payment, the same payment I've been paying since I got on the thing >> cuz it's not supposed to hit for 3 months, right?
>> Hit for three months. It's And it's probably going to be credits.
>> And it's going to be credit on tax and fees.
>> Yeah. And when we're in the store, we're dealing with this black employee who who was trying to advocate for us and is like, "Yeah, y'all trying to accuse. He was already a paying customer. Why would y'all cut off his service trying to say he's frauding when he was trying to give us more money and add another line to the service? What the [ __ ] So, he's that's the only reason why. And he's on the phone with three different [ __ ] from their support team and they're like, "Well, yeah, he can't do it cuz the the count was was open early and there's nothing we could do." And then it had him get on 611 before they gave him the 25% discount for life. And the reason why this comes up is because the service is same thing with dealerships with cars. I want a phone. I want a phone. I want this specific phone. In fact, I know y'all have it. I want this 16. And to get my phone, I have to sit through 6 hours of you trying to give me everything besides my phone. And then it goes wrong. You wipe the [ __ ] sheet clear three times. You don't know what you're doing. And then you fraud check this [ __ ] So, what just happened? one interaction to get this service, this essential item that's so ubiquitous in everybody [ __ ] pocket now. Yeah. To get this one item take you 6 hours, you might not even get that [ __ ] because some policy that T-Mobile has >> and you have the money to get >> and you have the money to get it. So much so that the order already went through and it only [ __ ] up after you canceled it. And you just deal with that and then you go home, you're good. They cut you off your service, you're good cuz something in their system flagged.
And mind you, >> probably free market, >> free market, >> free market, >> the company that makes your old phone slower when they make new ones.
>> You have now made a social standard that you need this phone to fit in society.
And then on top of it, you need this phone to really function in society. If you want to make convenient purchases, you going to need that Apple Pay. If you want good quality videos on the social media that we monopolize, you're going to need that new iPhone. And well [ __ ] you might need that brand new one if you really want to get >> Yeah, you might need to wait because the 18 is really about to come out.
>> Oh, wait. In that plan that we're going to lock out last month for an extra 2 years on credit that is [ __ ] meaningless.
>> Oh yeah, >> let's keep [ __ ] you over >> and are we going to drop the price >> year over year? No, we're going to keep rising them [ __ ] >> We are going to stop making them in titanium though because that costs a little too much on the pennies. We're going to start making them back in aluminum though. So it could bend in your pocket just like it happened with the iPhone 6. That changed, but no one cares because we've monopolized the market. So if anything, we could sell a chocolate bar for 5,000. [ __ ] it. Let's make THAT THE SOCIETY STANDARD. YOU need to live to eat dark chocolate.
>> YOU want to talk to people? You want to TALK TO PEOPLE? [ __ ] SUPREME.
>> Supreme sold a brick for like I think >> like No, like actually I mean dark chocolate is literally better for you and they price it higher because >> price it higher.
>> So you want to live in your society and be on your phone. That's what the price is. You can't go into a a shop and be like, "Yo, I want this to maximum take 10 minutes. I just want this phone."
Maybe you do if you come in there with your social security just in case and your line is longer than 3 months old and you didn't have a recent address change and Yeah, maybe maybe then you can get out there in an hour. But instead of this, they have just cart blanch to just sell you [ __ ] sell you [ __ ] sell you [ __ ] sell you [ __ ] because they want to make the most money off of you as possible.
Now, if you're talking interpersonally, that's what we call a hustle. And everyone tries to respect the hustle is I'm just getting the money, just getting my come up off [ __ ] But when you have an essential thing like health care or like food or food quality or like access to internet >> in 2026, >> is that a hustle?
>> I don't think that the business model we should be going for is let me hustle hustle hustle get the most money off you because you're not trying to finesse a [ __ ] on a similar setting to you. I have to go to work probably if I'm sitting here in this [ __ ] thing with my phone. I have to go to work in a few [ __ ] hours. I MAYBE DON'T EVEN HAVE SIX hours to sit in here [ __ ] with you.
>> Yeah. Yeah. So >> I wanted to stream last night. I consider my [ __ ] chair.
>> So, this is where it all connects.
What does the word deserve mean?
>> Is this the best possible thing we could get? Services are good. America, we're in the most modern, most advanced country, blah blah blah. Even though China's killing our [ __ ] but services is good.
Is that mean that is that's it? We should just allow carton blanch this the best we can do. What if I what if I notice that there's some [ __ ] with the system? What if I notice that it's easier for me to give you money than for you to give it back to me when you [ __ ] me over?
>> And what if I just can't survive?
>> What happens? What if the quality is [ __ ] We were talking about the Door Dash and the Uber Eats. You got like two options for food delivery. You got like Postmates and stuff, but you got like two mainstream options for food delivery. They don't take care of their workers. It's a gig economy job, so they don't give them benefits. And then also, they can [ __ ] your [ __ ] up, give your your [ __ ] in whatever quality, not bring your [ __ ] at all. And then you got to talk three AIS and then yell at a [ __ ] on the phone before they give you partially a refund or some credits which is just delaying the when you give me my money anyway.
>> Yeah, they >> when these things give you your credits, >> they gave me credits and I literally thought about it. I'm like, I deleted the app. So the credits are just sitting there. Thanks for taking my money again.
>> Yes, credits are sitting there. You don't get that money back. It's just delay for the next time you want to pay me money. When I'm trying to order food, sometimes, say you go on Uber Eats, they will legit multiple times, almost every single time you try to order, they will flash up this buy Uber 1 $4.99.
>> Yep. I'm trying to buy the food that I want to make a ONE-TIME PURCHASE. YOU POP UP the ad. And in the same position where I would hit buy my food, you hit you put subscribe to [ __ ] a subscription. $5 a month that I don't want.
>> Yeah. And it's not going to bring the food faster.
>> And you want to [ __ ] your [ __ ] up. And when you want to cancel it, you have to go through the process of Oh, are you >> Why are you canceling it? Are you sure you want to cancel $5 on your next order to cancel?
>> That's where it really gets [ __ ] You order, you give them the compensation to get [ __ ] over.
>> So, are these companies making more and more money now because they're constantly breaking boundaries and pushing and innovating, or are they just coming up with more ways to trap your money without having to increase their services? that would cost them more money to produce.
>> That's why wealth inequality is happening. It is partially these tax cut stuff that Trump and them be doing for the billionaires. But it's because these companies get to find ways to soak the money that you're not making from you.
They get to call that innovation while providing you no additional services.
Google AI is the new bubble that's going to take us into the future and beat China. It couldn't even find Amazon's phone number.
But they call it innovation and we shouldn't even have no law regulating it. I hear all these businessmen they talk about you need in order to thrive in a market. Yeah. [ __ ] >> You got to build scarcity. When you really think of it, right, YouTube had the ability to charge $28 because they have now introduced a standard that they just now brought a few years ago. And YouTube has been a thing since we were children.
>> Yeah. Yep. A standard that is so groundbreaking that you set the innovation is just to not have advertisements for $28. That's the main way.
>> You can make any profit off a market that you create desperation from.
>> Yes.
>> That's how you make your money. There's no innovation >> and and anyone telling you that you are on equal footing with them and should be defending them cuz look how much they're doing for your life is lying to you.
They're playing you like a sucker cuz they own the Congress people that create the regulations in general. Um, let's let's just go let's go right into the the AOC Marjorie Taylor Green thing because what this has to do with everything is AOC's has been running around the country. She's been building up her profile. She's been talking she's been pardoning the billionaires. She's been uh saying all these things trying to advance the narratives cuz this is what this game is is advancing the narratives. There is not a clear-cut opposition to people in the country right now because they're either just clocked out from politics or whatever or they just see as Democrat, Republican, blah blah. But like these are the ideologies that were not popular a few years ago that need to be popularized.
And I seen people trying to fry AOC for remaining consistent on like other issues like Gaza, like the genocide and everything because everyone is now in this era where they want to sound like [ __ ] now.
>> They want to sound like us now. We've been screaming from the rooftop that yo, there needs to be a different system.
There needs to be a different way. We can do XYZ so much better. One second ago, audience was acting as though this stuff was impossible. This didn't make no sense. Everyone's just woke. XYZ. And now you have people like Marjorie Taylor Green or your most right-wing Republican trying to sound like [ __ ] Hassan [ __ ] because we're right about the [ __ ] Um, this was a little beef. I don't feel like diving into everything because I've seen Medie Hassan did a really good video about it already. But this is a statement that she made I believe at an event in Chicago. Yeah, University of Chicago uh Institute of Politics and it blew up the internet.
you know and um I don't I I care about results.
I care about results. Now there are certain places where certain areas where I don't think that that we should ignore some folks record on some of these issues. Right? It's about where we we trust intent, where we trust where those outcomes are going. I personally do not trust someone like Marjorie Taylor Green, a proven bigot and anti-semite on the issues of what is good for Gazins and Israelis.
>> There you go.
>> I don't think that it benefits in that instance to align the left with white nationalists.
I don't think it serves us. And so I think it's about looking at the context, the place, the results, the outcomes, intentions, and where we think that train would go. But as far as what someone says about me, I could care less. And um you know, I think it's really about what our outcomes are. And to be honest, there are some areas where things will not get done if they're partisan because they are anti-establishment.
um the there is bipartisan consensus on keeping and protecting stock trading in Congress and so it's going to require a massive bipartisan consensus of people willing to come together across those differences to get it done.
>> Cool. So basically, yeah, what she's um what she's getting at there was and this statement blew up for no [ __ ] reason.
>> No, like why?
>> Because they're so >> everyone forgot. Everyone is trying to play this. Let me actually secretly be.
I was so wrong. I'm so remorseful. Let me define myself.
>> I touched the coach.
>> Yeah. On some Tucker Carlson. On some Tucker Carlson [ __ ] or whatever. And the reason why it annoys me is because it distracts you from the conversations that we were just having about these companies, about why the class thing of it all, how it interacts with your life.
Because people like Marjorie Taylor Green don't give a [ __ ] about that.
Marjorie Taylor Green, she made her money already.
>> She made her money already. She was trying to gear up for running for Senate in Georgia and everything. Trump and them was like, "You're not about to [ __ ] do that." And then at that very moment, she heel turned, removed herself from the one position of power she had to challenge Trump and them. Stepped down from Congress and has now tried to be like, "We this is a brutal murder happening in Gaza. Genocide in Gaza. We all need." And then the reason why those two got into it is because Marjorie Taylor Green like last year put some bill out to try to get funding away from Israel's like missile defense system and AOC voted against it cuz she doesn't [ __ ] with Marjorie Taylor Green. And then the next day AOC voted against the entirety of that weapons package anyway.
She just knew that Marjorie Taylor Green is not seriously trying to start some effort to get funding away from Israel after she also has been publicly on record saying that we should punish anti-Israel protesters students in America. Yeah.
>> For protesting that.
>> Like did y'all forget already?
>> I have like articles I could get into about legitimately like her quote bar forbar talking about her position on uh Gaza not being this literally 2 seconds ago. You want to know why? Because she's a careerist like 99% of American politicians.
>> She's not serious.
>> She's not serious. She didn't People are trying to give her extra credibility because she sacrificed her career. What sacrifice? She a white woman who's about to have a podcast now.
>> Like what? Sacrifice how?
>> Sacrificed how she >> she got bread.
>> She removed herself from United States Congress person. That would help a lot for you to hold that position and say there's a genocide in Gaza. Especially when the [ __ ] who you removed yourself or the people you distance yourself are Nazis.
>> Yeah.
>> Like what are we talking about?
>> But we're supposed to >> It's not like this is some grand guy she moved. There's a there is a motive for why she would.
>> There's a motive because >> she can't eat and I'm supposed to feel pity for this white woman.
>> Yes. There's a motive because we're getting to this point where like we're saying, we're trying to paint for y'all or at least I'm trying to paint for y'all each week like the building blocks to why certain steps forward make sense.
Certain steps otherwise don't make sense. Um there is nothing that a Tucker Carlson, that a Candace Owens, that a Marjorie Taylor Green, that uh insert Republican who just found out that all the [ __ ] he was dabbing up was Nazis yesterday. There's not a Democrat.
>> Republican I mean Democrats. Yes.
There's not a thing that's going to happen or there's not like an ambition to want to reign in these forces that are actively making [ __ ] lives hell. I don't give a [ __ ] what your rhetoric looks like after it was politically expedient for you to say so.
>> When will you ever fight for workingclass people? You made me mill off insider trading and are about to sit on a pod now. Same [ __ ] with Tucker Cross. You lost a network 700 million for lying. You [ __ ] are not working class champions, nor are you even consistent on these issues. Because someone like AOC has been having the same talking point, same issue, same voting record for years.
>> And she's obviously getting pushed more to the left, which is what we [ __ ] need. God damn it.
>> Yes, she officially swore off all support for any weapons going to Israel, offensive or defensive, which is already more democracy, more yo, my politicians listening to me, than any other government. damn near than James Gallerico.
>> Like, bro, y'all [ __ ] be picking favorites.
>> Y'all pick favorites because, oh, he look like me. He look like my uncle. He And then you get a person. You get a [ __ ] shining hope of light.
>> You start nitpicking.
>> I think her and Margie Taylor Green should be friends.
>> Bro, shut the [ __ ] up.
>> So, like, bro, have we not? These [ __ ] are so [ __ ] stupid. Have we not learned from Trump? Why are we investing in personalities? Are you that dumb?
generally that much entertainment in your life. I seen that >> that's the privilege of >> go watch baddies.
>> That's like that's genuinely like the privilege that these people get to live on is like you have the privilege to be invested in a politician's personality when like >> a [ __ ] doesn't even have the resources to even understand who to vote for.
>> We didn't get the education. We didn't even [ __ ] didn't get the education to start building profiles on politicians until LA like last year.
>> Like last year.
>> The [ __ ] out of here, my [ __ ] Because there's the information, >> bro. They can afford to not even >> Yeah. They they they think this [ __ ] is [ __ ] my player, [ __ ] >> They think this is they think this shit's a game. Like the only reason why like at least for me, why I could even get like up like somewhat on the curve is cuz this [ __ ] been ahead of the curve since he was. But if I didn't have you, [ __ ] I'd be another [ __ ] idiot.
>> That's why people like ALC are needed though.
>> It's a bunch of [ __ ] idiots.
>> We're talking about it. Like cuz and that's cuz it's like you do the best to >> um minimize get get away from [ __ ] records on things. Um and that protects their own power. [ __ ] Marjorie Taylor Green tweeted right after October 7th, like October 23rd or some [ __ ] She said, um, "I hope every pro Hamas student that walks out of their classes today protesting against Israel gets a failing grade. We need to defund all colleges and universities that promote these anti-semitic protests. Stop rewarding bad behavior.
>> If we make this, you know what we going to do? We going to watch that and then I want you to say that in the clip >> because what the [ __ ] defund any college that's do you understand?" said they need to be saying he said they need to get a failing grade and we need to fund their [ __ ] college not arrested failing grade.
>> Yes. For walking out and protesting against a genocide against >> do you and all of a sudden it's not like >> all of a sudden there's genocide and AOC ain't really about it. All of a sudden there's a genocide and if AOC was really about it, she would have voted with me in my resolution.
>> The same resolution that you would have denied if you were >> It's like a [ __ ] play peekaboo with you and you think a [ __ ] ACTUALLY DISAPPEARED.
>> YEAH. LIKE [ __ ] NO OBJECT PERMANENCE.
>> LITERALLY, >> I'M SEEING WHAT JORDY was saying 2 years ago. This is the and the broader point and it was also about um Zoron too. Like I'm looking at this how Zoron is uh he just added uh more free preschool slots for three-year-olds in New York. They're opening. They just discussed how the the second um city-owned grocery store, which is actually going to be opening before the first one that we discussed, it'll it opens next year.
>> Juvenile Center, right?
>> Yeah. They they took it used to be a juvenile center. They took that and they're like, "We're going to turn this into >> using a space that's occupied for [ __ ] usefully."
>> What do we need groceries for?
>> Fighting the prison complex and giving [ __ ] groceries at the same time with the stroke of a [ __ ] pen just cuz the nigga's about doing it. This unironically, and this is including the [ __ ] with you, Brandon. This is including our mayor. He's the best mayor in the entire country. He's probably the best politician in the entire country.
And that's bar none. Yes. But what when was the last time you [ __ ] heard?
>> I thought that it was about to be the end of New York. These [ __ ] was freaking the [ __ ] out. The Door Dashes of the world, the Amazon of the world.
Did they leave yet?
>> Ken, what was the [ __ ] [ __ ] name?
Ken Langon or whatever the [ __ ] And he was pressed that Zoron mom Donnie was money out of >> this. You remember when he announced the pia deter tax, which was the tax on second homes above $5 million. That billionaire Ken Langon or Ken or whatever the [ __ ] these [ __ ] name is.
Same [ __ ] was mad about him filming outside of the house and he was like, "Oh, y'all saying tax the rich is like the same thing as these racial slurs."
>> Oh yeah.
>> Why?
>> Because there was a proposal on taxing a second home that you own and don't even live in. This is what we're >> over $5 million. these companies. You act like we're just all America holding hands. Some of us are companies. Some of us don't have companies. These [ __ ] will take everything from you. And if you ask for anything, they will make it seem like you're taking everything from them. That's intentional. You sh It's impossible fight to win trying to pass a head tax in Chicago when three of your aldermen in the city council are saying it's going to eliminate jobs. They're just going to not come to Chicago. What?
You think we're supposed to believe that?
>> What are you even saying?
>> A combined among all your thousands of companies will pay a hundred million extra dollars in tax revenue over the course of one year for some community programs. And they made it seem like everyone was going to leave Chicago and Chicagoans were just going to be destitute.
>> When you market of desperate people when you have a market of desperate people, how can they even think of themselves?
They will they will make them they will make the billionaires victim because that's what you're doing. not pitching to defend people. You're pitching to defend the billionaires who are buying your campaign.
>> Going back to what you said earlier, the reason why that [ __ ] had to be like, "Oh, this is a racial slur >> because it makes you feel so inferior that this brown man is going to >> they achieve because what did we begin with saying?
>> What do you do?
>> Did you earn it? Do you deserve it?
>> You deserve it. You earn it." They say that you they say that you should not tax the billionaires because the disconnect is they came up with a good idea, they made a lot of their money and then what? We're just going to come take it from them. You're going to come take someone else's money even though they had it with their idea. It's the most kindergarten. It's the most It's still in taxation theft. Then you get a libertarian who has don't tread on me as Trump is treading on your [ __ ] face every day and you're dick sucking him still cuz you're just racist. But that was like 99% of you billionaires are overweight and you talking about hard work that don't make no difference.
>> So my thing is right >> you [ __ ] ain't never had to do nothing because y'all been had the money.
>> You're resting on your laurels. So this is what I'm saying is if your argument against taxing the wealthy and massively redistributing all the [ __ ] wealth that we have generated over the last however many 30 40 50 [ __ ] hundred years um because it's their idea in XYZ.
I just want to ask like when are we ever going to get a politician that phrases their attacks and their advocacy through the people who actually created the wealth for these people. The jam is a good idea. The jam is only as good as the [ __ ] who are willing to film it, edit it, cut it out, put it on platforms xyz. That all requires labor, right? So for me to say that the jam was my idea and therefore you shouldn't tax me, how does that make you feel?
I'll whoop your ass.
>> So, do we stop WHOOPING THESE [ __ ] ASS BACK?
>> BECAUSE WHAT? THAT'S WHY YOU GET PEOPLE BURNING DOWN [ __ ] WAREHOUSES BECAUSE YOU CONTINUALLY YOU GIVE ALL THE CREDIT TO THE [ __ ] [ __ ] WITH THE IDEA WITH THE SMILE LOGO. NOT THE MINIMUM wage grandma who still got to work in an Amazon truck at 67 who's the only reason why you had to get health just to get healthare.
>> Do you know how dystopian that is?
>> Yeah. Amazon has a smile as their logo.
Meanwhile, the [ __ ] that work in there, if something [ __ ] up with their teeth, they can't get they can't afford it.
>> They don't get proper, they might not QUALIFY FOR THE >> THEY tried to sink Bernie campaign for saying we should have universal healthcare that includes dental and eyes.
>> Oh, so you don't have to pay.
>> THESE [ __ ] ASS [ __ ] DON'T NEED TO SEE.
>> YOU HAVE BEEN LIKE, >> you have been brain and then we'll tell you. Then you get a private equity, start a veneers company and say the smile is the most proper thing you can do in sales. The smile is how you sell >> 10,000.
>> I can't get I can't even get healthcare to get a smile, dog.
>> I can't even do that.
>> Yep.
>> And and we're driving a delivery truck and you can't get no [ __ ] eyesight, visual care. How? I can't GET GLASSES.
HOW? We're asking you to give just a little bit of wealth that you have been hoarding since my greatg grandmother was born.
>> 70% of your wealth of your of your of your >> of what you make. Oh man, that sounds like a lot. These [ __ ] don't. No, >> you don't understand. Tyrone, these [ __ ] don't make 50k. 70% of 50k.
>> These [ __ ] have 200, 300, 400, 500, 800 billion. And it's 70% 70% left.
>> It'd be a 70% and it's not even that's not even how taxes work. It'd be 70% of every dollar past a certain amount.
>> Yeah. It would be the whole your company >> past 100 million.
>> If your company is good enough, >> if if we had high top tax rates for these rich people, your company could be good enough to generate a billion dollars in revenue. It would just be after every dollar passed 250 million, you'd pay 65 cents on that dollar towards the taxes in the society. You'd still make cuz your money is still going. You probably still got stocks XYZ. That money is still making money.
It's just that a portion of it will be taken out for your thing and you will still be a billionaire. And on top of that, you will now have highspeed rail that Amazon gets to then partner with and send your packages through the highspeed rail network >> for years. YOU ACT LIKE AT THE END OF THE ROAD.
>> YOU GET A [ __ ] WORKER. YOU GET A BUNCH of workers who say, "Damn, I can't let >> AND I LIVE IN [ __ ] IDAHO. I'M GOING TO GO TO CHICAGO THIS WEEKEND AND WORK EVERY WEEKEND.
>> CUZ I CAN FREEDOM." For decades >> because the government provided you the freedom to.
>> For decades, you've been getting [ __ ] with a blindfold on. And now And now they have taken the blindfold off and now they're [ __ ] you while you see it because we wait. Look at your example.
Ticket master. Ticket master. The CEO of Ticket Master quite literally went and said, "I feel bad because this is highway robbery cuz we're literally [ __ ] AFTER PAY TO GO see someone's thing for an hour."
>> The CEO of Campbell Soup that these these said they were laughing at you [ __ ] cuz you EATING 3D PRINTED CHICKEN OF MCDONALD'S. HE CAN'T even eat a burger.
>> You know when that CEO of McDonald's he was trying to eat it? That [ __ ] reminded me of uh Squidward when >> Yeah.
>> Yeah. The little one the Krabby Patty episode. Yes. The [ __ ] in Walmart, this [ __ ] that happened when they had got like leaked cuz of the [ __ ] s not surge pricing, but they had like raised like hell.
>> It was surge pricing. All these all these Door Dash, all these other companies have gotten caught recently.
And this is one an effort that was spearheaded by Lena Khan under Biden and them to stop the price gouging because these [ __ ] will do dynamic pricing, which means depending on who you are, what you will pay for it, which is gathered by what? The data that they're allowed to gather for you that automatically goes to [ __ ] like you have >> data brokers, Palunteer, all this [ __ ] When you go on Google, when they search your [ __ ] search history, they're able to use the algorithms that only they know how to build and control, not the layman, and collect data about you unconsciously that you don't even know they're collecting just to do math on how much money you would pay for an item based on how much you would need it.
That's like microcasming the whole supply demand thing of capitalism from individual to individual through an algorithm that you don't know how it's controlled. Yep. And they're saying that we shouldn't even regulate these [ __ ] They shouldn't pay taxes. In fact, if you ask me to do that, you're basically calling ME A [ __ ] >> WHAT? LIKE, that's crazy. And I'm supposed to have sympathy for them. You You're getting [ __ ] with the blindfold off. And then you look behind and you have Zoron Manny and AOC with the bat and spikes and you say, "Fuck you, you brown communist." And then KEEP GETTING [ __ ] BY KEN LANGON AND JEFF BEZOS.
>> All right, bro. And then call it Oh my god. Like when I tell you no blindfold on just [ __ ] the [ __ ] out of you. Stephen A. Smith. Oh yeah. [ __ ] with a $100 million contract. A [ __ ] from New York.
>> Yeah.
>> [ __ ] them gross.
>> I want to see police on the subway that I don't take.
>> I don't know what happened with >> 100 millionaire.
>> Bro, everybody when we made that clip, bro, there's a whole bunch of people like, "Nigga, I've been in New York all my life. There's not there hasn't been a part of me that wanted police everywhere.
>> No one likes no [ __ ] no getting paid from Bill O'Reilly and them actually likes the New York police.
>> The NYPD run their [ __ ] like gang. These [ __ ] These [ __ ] be throwing up gang signs. They randomly go in [ __ ] cars planting [ __ ] >> Let's add 15 more to incarcerate the same people who are the most incarcerated in this country that don't even make up most of the population of this country. every single election.
It's that's why that's why we get the same thing every election. We just need to be more cops. We just need to do XYZ because it's not centrism. It's paid.
It's astroturfed. The conversation should be what people rights we get in defending XYZ. The conversation is who's the better side between Boeing and Rathon.
That's why you have a 1% approval rating in [ __ ] Congress and no one gives a [ __ ] no more in XYZ cuz you haven't proved to us that you can the kids.
>> The kids don't care.
>> The kids all right until that's why people like that it requires courage. It requires courage to do this. It requires courage to >> fight for the people politically. It requires courage because the facts are all there. You just got to be you just got to have it laid out because I'm they they win in disinformation. They win with the lies. They win with shielding things from you that you they don't want you to know.
>> ALC for 2028, man.
>> 2028.
>> ALC for 2020.
>> ALC was talking about the North Got to pull up on the South.
>> Yeah. No, we >> probably first American politician to like speak like everybody wanted to ask.
Well, if it isn't Gavin Newsome, >> the one you swear TO GOD COULD NEVER WIN. ON GOD, SHE LET HER DECLARE. Let her declare >> on Jesus, we should be candidly speaking and white people that say they're allies should be candidly speaking about AOC becoming president 2028 because that not only will that light a fire under her and her campaign because she hears the talk. She wouldn't be saying >> she didn't say no. She said my ambition bigger than that.
>> My herition's bigger. She hears the talk. Not only is that gonna let a light a fire under her and her campaign to do the [ __ ] but also us. We need a woman in We need a woman in power. It's time.
And here here and here's why. And here's why it won't be Kamla.
>> Oh, [ __ ] >> Because we can you can build the agenda.
>> You've lost it.
>> You know where she's coming from already.
>> You have you get and it's not it's again she's still an American politician. So it our overton window is she's not as far as probably you could be if she was in Europe or something. Criticism still applies to AOC >> for sure.
>> But AOC is also a candidate I know will listen to those.
>> Yes.
>> Yep.
>> Kla Harris going to tell me I told you this.
>> Are you shaking?
>> I did tell you that >> or some staffer on saw another do for black people.
>> I saw another thing from her being like >> oh it was about the voting rights. She was like, "So they did what we told you they were going to do, which is it's like, oh my god, you're going to scold them. You're going to scold them."
>> It's like you're talking to Nikki.
You're talking to a woman.
>> Nobody's listening. No one's ear is to the death.
>> WHY WOULD I give a [ __ ] It's like Okay.
It's like the first time YOU SAY IT.
>> OKAY.
>> YOU RIGHT. SURE.
>> RIGHT. NOW, what are we supposed to do now?
>> You said it at a dead [ __ ] funeral.
Okay.
>> Maybe.
>> [ __ ] you. Now you're saying it again like dog. Stop, bro. Because, bro, at the end of the day, you were not resourceful, especially to your own [ __ ] people and you didn't convince no one. And the [ __ ] that don't have no resources WITH NO KNOWLEDGE, YOU AIN'T EVEN CONVINCE THEM. AND YOU GOING TO sit and tell the [ __ ] that have no idea what's going on, [ __ ] I told you so. You might as well [ __ ] punch me while I'm not looking. What the [ __ ] They don't make no damn.
>> You could have campaigned with ALC as your vice president. Campaign with Tim Wall. Let them [ __ ] change you.
>> The election strategy, >> let's talk about it. [ __ ] stupid. The election strategy of the status quo failed in favor of fascism is not going to be ended by >> Oh, you know what? I told you we should do the status quo.
>> Good. Thank goodness. Thank you for having [ __ ] eat. Thank you, bro.
>> What? I know.
>> Yeah, it's it's one to judge in the south, though. Yeah, it's it's it's um it's it's unforced errors and it's needless badgering and gigantic [ __ ] about what we know. my head >> it's more it's nothing more than just than just being up your own ass about these things and these white people in the white people's in these rooms that are staffers that are consultants that are convinced that they got the one recipe and you know AOC might work in New York but will she work in the farming lands maybe if she gets a person on her campaign that comes up with a model for the farmers that a socialistic damn near type model for the farmers that uplifts them and make sure their jobs aren't secure. What are y'all laughing about?
>> Yeah. What they laughing about?
>> Brain in the ass.
>> Hey bro, real quick shout out, bro. Hey, let's do this last. It's It's 15.
>> I know we got like no time, but talk about it real quick, >> [ __ ] >> Oh [ __ ] bro. Happy birthday, bro. We got a present for y'all, bro. We do. We do have a present for you. I got a present. Luke, we got time to go outside and grab it.
outside.
>> All right. Is it hard? H hard out.
>> Is it hard?
>> No. He had it.
What you talking?
>> 10 more minutes.
>> Okay. You run. Grab it. I GOT A GIFT.
>> You got a gift.
>> Oh my god.
>> We got A GIFT.
>> WHAT THE [ __ ] >> You do have a gift. We will be taking a short commercial break.
>> Oh my god. I got a gift.
>> Yeah.
Do I close my eyes? I close my eyes like a close your eyes.
It's the birthday boy.
>> Happy birthday to you.
>> Happy 22nd birthday.
>> Um >> birthday boy.
>> We have arrived.
>> You've been working hard, baby.
>> You've been working hard, bro.
>> We don't [ __ ] with [ __ ] ass named Chud that say, "Hey, you chimping out."
Uh-huh.
>> Something better.
>> Only real [ __ ] bro. You've been working hard, bro. You deserve this [ __ ] bro.
We appreciate you, my [ __ ] Everybody appreciate you on this couch, bro.
>> I appreciate you.
>> It's been a long ass year, bro. You deserve something nice.
>> I'm about to say Only Chimp we [ __ ] with on this side.
>> Only chimp we [ __ ] with, man. Yeah.
>> Bang out.
>> Bang out the Yeah.
[ __ ] >> [ __ ] >> Come take THIS HOE OUT, [ __ ] >> COME TAKE THIS HO OUT.
>> Come take this ho out, [ __ ] [ __ ] I'll show you a real quick show.
You got to show >> I'll show you a real quick.
>> I'll show you a real quick show you a real quick.
>> Hold on.
>> Amazing one, [ __ ] >> Amazing.
>> OH MY GOD.
OH my god.
>> Yes.
>> Happy birthday, [ __ ] >> Let's [ __ ] go, [ __ ] >> Hard, [ __ ] >> Yeah. Yeah. Hard, [ __ ] >> One of them more.
>> Oh, yeah. That's a tote. It come to bag.
>> Toe bag. Get it.
>> Today is going to be a day, gang.
>> Yeah, it's going to be a day.
>> Big 22, bro.
>> Big 22.
You have to blink.
>> What are we talking about?
>> Have to blink it.
>> Have to blink.
>> I'M SO GLAD WE GOT THE BLACK ONE.
>> BLACKWOOD, [ __ ] >> YEAH.
>> Hold on. You got to sit down so YOU CAN SHOW EVERYBODY.
>> BRO, [ __ ] >> that [ __ ] is crazy.
>> That [ __ ] is crazy, [ __ ] paper on this [ __ ] Boy, >> what the [ __ ] >> That [ __ ] is crazy, dog.
>> Bro, what the I told my story earlier that I went that we went went out to find some straps.
No, we did not. We went out to find no mega store, but we did go to the baby store.
>> Y'all don't understand, bro. I've been wanting a bape jacket since I was in sixth, seventh grade, bro.
>> I'm seeing [ __ ] in the school pull up with the bait jackets. I don't have the bread for that, bro. They [ __ ] was fake.
>> That [ __ ] was fake. We was fake. Oh, this real straight from the store.
>> Yo, y'all don't understand, bro. We've went to the babe store multiple times and like >> I have not been in no position to buy myself nothing. Not even financially, but just mentally. Cuz like >> bro, it's been a year dog.
>> Surviving, [ __ ] It's been a year.
>> I think the hardest someone asked about the mental battle earlier. The hardest mental battle is trying to like battle that that scarcity mindset and that survival mindset, bro. You deserve to [ __ ] have the flowers gang.
>> Like what? Been surviving and doing a great job of it, bro.
>> Like dude, like when I tell y'all [ __ ] like there'll be an episode when we really like get into it. But like, bro, the year, bro. It has genuinely been such a rough >> from going to like having mental issues already to like getting in a horrible relationship to like [ __ ] losing my mind like and it's just while dealing with all this and like >> fame and like and like not even like bro I wasn't even the closest to y'all because of everything that was happening cuz it's like when go through [ __ ] you just naturally isolated. And especially like y'all knew the relationship I was in. Like that [ __ ] was like that [ __ ] was worse than al-Qaeda. Like that [ __ ] was horrible, bro. I'm going to be so real. Like it was one of those ones that you just like, you know what I mean?
>> Grenade.
This [ __ ] grenade grenade, >> bro. Dude, >> real talk, bro. Like, life is like life is serious. And I, bro, I'm going to be so real. Like, y'all know me as the fashion [ __ ] but when I tell you I barely have clothes. I literally What's so funny was I was I wanted to wear my black jacket, but I was like, "It's not washed." And I was like, "I want to wear my pink jacket. It's not washed." And I was like, I have no other jacket. I was like, that's literally it. And like now I have the jacket that I've been wanting since a child. And like, [ __ ] it is [ __ ] crazy.
>> Oh, and this one glows in the dark.
>> That's that joint.
>> It glow in the dark.
>> Glow in the dark. So like the white glows. It'll be like green. Yeah.
>> Yeah.
>> Yeah.
>> Oh my god. I'm about to smoke.
>> I think this is one of the craziest.
>> I'm about to I GOT TO SMOKE IN THIS, BRO. I got to smoke this.
>> That is unironically.
>> Wow.
>> That is so hard. I got to go put mine on as soon as I get home.
>> YOU GOT THE DOUBLE DECKER, [ __ ] >> We vaped out, [ __ ] I had to grab >> You got one.
>> I got one. Yes.
>> It's a blue one, >> [ __ ] YOU GOT IT. YOU GOT IT. SO, LOOK. Right when we was buying it, we buy this one.
We're like, "Yeah."
>> In any circumstances, it's my [ __ ] Allen birthday. This [ __ ] he probably not going to spend the money on. It's not tripping. There was a like one of one bait hoodie in there only stripes and instead of camo [ __ ] it's like it's like white. Yeah, it's like clouds. It's like >> that hoodie has to be the coldest [ __ ] I've ever seen.
>> It's so cold. JJ was like I ain't going to buy. I said, "Nigga, you better buy that."
>> This hoodie and that blue hoodie. I would like take like >> I'mma steal this one. I ain't going to lie. The black one better than my one.
I'm like, "Oh, Jesus is >> this shit."
>> That [ __ ] was po that popped when we first walked in and that blue one popped when we first walked in.
>> As soon as we walked in, the first one we saw was this one. It was like, "Oh my god, this is [ __ ] crazy."
>> When I tell you, bro, y'all don't even understand like y'all like even like there was a time, bro, like even like this shameless promo. This was made off of the fact that I couldn't even look at myself in the mirror, bro. There was like I ain't been excited from my birthday in years. I never gave no [ __ ] about my birthday cuz I didn't give a [ __ ] about myself. This was like the first time where I'm like >> I'm happy about I'm happy with myself for the first time in God knows how long, bro. So like I love y'all, bro. Oh my. And that is partially in part it comes with a lot of stresses, but it's in part because of y'all. Thank you guys for supporting us during this.
>> We wouldn't be able to do [ __ ] like this, [ __ ] You see, I wouldn't BE ABLE TO DO THIS [ __ ] WITHOUT Y'ALL [ __ ] EITHER. LIKE, [ __ ] look at her feet, >> bro. This is the I'm I'm about to [ __ ] flick up.
>> In all serious hell.
>> Fit of hell. Literally fit this, bro.
Like, this is all I ever wanted, bro.
Like, to be able to make an impact in the world, bro. To be able to change our community, [ __ ] like that. But also to like make an impact in the people I love life, bro. Like, genuinely, bro, like, thank y'all, bro. Thanks.
>> Bucket list [ __ ] bro. It's bucket list [ __ ] the [ __ ] that we get to like experience and live and we will get to do and continue to do is literally bucket list [ __ ] bro. And and it's it's it's literally just meant the world that we're able to be in this position, [ __ ] And you're able to feel [ __ ] the way about yourself that you need to be feeling all the time because [ __ ] and they'll probably tell you, [ __ ] they feel that way about you, bro. Like, what a [ __ ] bro. See how easy IT IS TO GIVE UP.
>> Thank you for joining us on the next episode of the channel. Please like, comment, share, subscribe. Um, hit the hit the like button, hit the like button, follow us on all our individual platforms.
Uh, what you on to give >> to get back to give back.
>> A be the artist.
>> AB the artist. Yes, sir. Thank you guys.
We hope you enjoy episode 61 of the jam, a special one. Wish the [ __ ] happy birthday, of course, and we will be back with y'all next week as always. Um, please have an awesome day and night, wherever you may be. And peace.
>> Peace out, y'all.
>> Peace out. Peace.
>> [ __ ] fire.
>> You got it. Look at that [ __ ] dog.
>> Thank you for watching this long. If you haven't already, subscribe. What is you doing?
>> What is you doing?
>> What are you doing? You think we just sitting here doing it for nothing?
>> You think you're going to sit here and not?
I know you're not subscribed. Click it.
Hey,
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