This video provides a chilling look at how historical medical abuse has evolved into modern systemic coercion against Black women. It effectively exposes the dangerous intersection where biased algorithms and legal mandates strip away fundamental reproductive autonomy.
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Nightmare In Labor: Court Orders C-Sections On Black Doula | The Nehemiah SquadAdded:
And he [music] ain't nothing else, tonight and tonight, knowing the price, pay it off with my life. Kill this out with your lights. Do it all for the Christ, and [music] he ain't playing nice. Knew the end from the start. Punch your face like it's art. The sons of [music] a serpent, call them part. Yeah, you did your best, played your part, but now it's time to cut you to the heart.
Flex on occasion. This is the strangest form of salvation. [music] You see it, believe it, amazing. Them tears coming in batches since the creation. War of mind, Lord bless the general, greatest [music] nation. Eat them unequivocal bombs dropping, body count is biblical. Start [ __ ] now it's time to finish you, bull.
Said he won't vote, [music] he looking for smoke.
So, we give him some more. We want the world, we breaking them down. Taking the kingdom, can't wait for the crown. We want [music] the world, we breaking them down. Taking the kingdom, can't wait for the crown. It's the end of the world and [music] the beginning of ours. It's the end of the world and the beginning of ours. It's the end of the [music] world and the beginning of ours. We want the world, we breaking them down. Taking the kingdom, can't wait for the crown. It's the end of the world. I can't wait for our kingdom to start and for them to be finished. Get rid of all of their idols and lying religions. [music] Look for the crown like an empress. Hey, this that crown talk. Wisdom of Solomon 5 [music] talk. This that 2nd Edras 6 and 9. We want eyes talk. It's your time to end [music] and my time begin. It's our time to win, away with the sin. You know where it is.
Rejoice [music] in my kin. See, that is why we repented. Golden streets, I can see myself in it. The city is bright, the kingdom of light, a wonderful sight.
Past the angels to interlight. I need a thousand [music] years of labor. Sit on my throne with my savior. Try to know wine press alone. He bring pain like major. You think the nations is equal to us? TK Kirkland, [music] who raised you?
Flex on occasion. My God a racist.
That's why we moving with patience. It's been a long time coming. [music] I spent my whole life running. Now that I'm 10 toes down and established my faith on a hundred.
Woe to the nations. My king will erase them. You know they got to [music] be punished. Jeremiah 25. Yeah, you know they going to fry.
Said he won't vote, [music] he looking for smoke.
So, we give him some more. We want the world, we breaking them down. Taking the kingdom, can't wait for the crown. We want the world, [music] we breaking them down. Taking the kingdom, can't wait for the crown. It's the end of the world and the beginning [music] of ours. It's the end of the world and the beginning of ours. It's the end of the world and the [music] beginning of ours. We want the world, we breaking them down.
Taking the kingdom, can't wait for the crown. It's the end of the world.
Yeah.
Yeah. Yeah.
Shalom. Shalom. Shalom, family.
Most High Christ bless y'all. Yes. Hey, come on, we got a live audience. What y'all clapping at? Come on. Oh, this is crazy. Don't spare. We don't need no artificial We don't need no artificial claps tonight.
>> finally, we got a live audience, y'all.
They finally came. You know why? Cuz we offered them food. Yeah. We offered food. But all praises and shalom, y'all.
You know, we in the midst of the of the of feast the feast of sweet bread. Sweet bread.
The feast of unleavened bread. Uh we in that Passover week. So, all praises. Uh So, we going to reintroduce ourselves.
We the Nehemiah squad. I am Captain Zakar.
>> Hey, it's Officer Shep. Yes, sir.
Officer Judah. All right. All praises.
So, open that thumbnail, y'all.
Got a good show for y'all tonight. All right. This one is called Nightmare in labor. All right. A court orders a C-section on a black doula.
All right. And our guest tonight is Breonna Bennett, but before we bring her on, all right, cuz she going to talk about her case, what she's going through right now. She was forced to do a C-section. If y'all even Y'all probably thought that something like that wasn't even possible, right? So, what we going to do, we going to show a little bit of a video from a sister that this happened to after Breonna case, right? So, Breonna Bennett this happened to her first, then this next situation happened, right? But more uh video footage was caught of this. So, we want to show y'all exactly what went on with Breonna. We're going to show you a clip of Breonna also before we bring her on and she going to discuss the case. But right now we want to show y'all what actually takes place inside of uh you can't make this up. Inside a delivery room, okay, when they want to force a C-section on you. All right.
Now, play video number three, y'all.
Is a real judge, you know?
My name is Michael Kalil. I'm a circuit court judge here in Jacksonville, Florida. Uh the state of Florida has filed a >> y'all. Hit pause for a second. Now, what you looking at, right? This a real judge. Okay, they they have wheeled in a TV into the room with her, into the delivery room with the judge and and I guess some attorneys and maybe the the district attorney. I don't know who the hell that is in the room. Uh or you see all these uh pictures of all these different zoom uh pictures in there. And the sister, Sharice Doyley, she's sitting there about to give birth, all right, but she wants a natural birth.
The doctors are saying, "No, you need to get a C-section." She said, "Uh no, I don't want that." Right. I want to try natural this time. She had three C-section births previous to this one, right? So, now the hospital went and called the authorities. You understand what I'm saying? I I never knew something like this was possible.
>> Me neither.
>> All right. And they rolled the judge and his people into the room. All right. Hit play. petition for declaratory judgment.
They're asking for an emergency C-section be granted by the court.
>> I have not had a chance to be able to consult with my own legal representation and I'm trying to understand how you are taking my rights away as a patient to be able to decide my own care, to give me an emergency C-section against my will.
Well, let me ask you about that. What about the risk to the child?
>> Any time you go into childbirth, whether you do a vaginal or a C-section, there is inherent risk to the mother and the baby. I have other children out here in the world that need me. If I die from a C-section, nobody on this call is going to take care of my children. Right. You have a new doctor coming Hit pause. What I want y'all to see is how cognitive she is, right? She clearly sounds like she's in her right mind.
>> Right.
>> Right? She's speaking intelligently, right? So, anybody who's watching or listening to this is already knowing, okay, she know what the hell she talking about. You know what I mean? She said uh regardless of C-section or natural birth, this is you know, this inherent dangers with it. She used the word inherent, bro.
I know she's good. Yeah. I know she's clear-minded at this point, right? Go ahead. Hit play.
>> coming on. Yeah, no. They don't have nobody African-American that they can give me. Let me ask you. I don't know that I don't find that race really has has uh Yeah, good. I'm glad he paused. Hit pause. Yeah, cuz he's about to lie.
That's why she said, "Is nobody African-American around here?"
Yeah, cuz she already knows what it is.
Cuz that's exactly what it is, right?
And he knows that's what it is, but he couldn't even get the words out of his mouth. Cuz if he if he really felt that way, he would have been like, "Listen, lady. This has nothing to do with race.
This got something to do with the the the health of your child and whatever."
He ain't say that. He started stuttering. Hit play.
have much to do with this, ma'am. It does have much to do with it because historically black people do better when they have health care providers that look like them. It's nobody black in here. Wow.
I'm I'm over this whole situation, like Y'all like that make me have have level three tracing, how bad y'all stressing me out. Ms. Doyley, that's what's going to be entered. I'm going to circulate this order this proposed order to the other attorneys, enter this in today.
Not requiring anything except for an an emergency basis. Thank you so much, Your Honor. Yes, ma'am. Appreciate you spending two hours Made him eat his words.
>> on a Sunday going through my medical history and fighting for my vagina.
>> [laughter] >> Yo.
All right, y'all. Y'all can drop that, right? She said, "Thank you, Your Honor." Cuz he said, "All right. So, I'mma enter it into the books that you don't need to do anything unless it becomes in an a medical emergency." So, she said, "Yeah, thanks for looking over my paperwork on this fine Sunday." And and and and looking over >> [laughter] >> and saving my vagina. She's crazy. That was funny as hell, right? But so now I want to show y'all this. Bring up number 13, okay? Cuz did Now now you're going to see a video of our guest, all right, Breonna Bennett. You're about to see this. It's not as uh long of a video and we we don't have that same perspective, but now because you seen that one, you know exactly what she was going through, all right? And that one we just saw We just saw a little snippet. That actually lasted a couple of hours, okay? So, so play that number 13.
Go ahead and let's start. What do you want to say? Okay. So, um the Yes, I am 41 weeks pregnant currently.
Um the reason for C-section is not an emergency. Um all of the doctors from family practice have uh shared with me what my risks are for choosing to do a V back after three C-sections, which I requested um a TOLAC, which is a trial of labor after having C-sections. This was filmed by her 13-year-old daughter inside the delivery room. Her name is Breonna Bennett. Over 20 people, doctors, lawyers, a judge crowding her room while she's in labor. And she's explaining clearly why a natural C-section could harm her. She knows her body. She knows the risks. And yet still they keep her there for two hours surrounded, outnumbered. Right.
>> This is obstetric violence. And in that room her no wasn't enough.
Right. Y'all can drop that, right? But that's important to see. And again, uh just like uh the other sister, Sharice, you can hear that sister Breonna was in her right mind, speaking cognitively, intelligently, right? And they had a what? Surrounded. And I think eventually they wound up. But listen, you know what? Let's get Breonna in here, let her tell her story. I just wanted to fill y'all in, get y'all up to speed. Sister Breonna, where you at?
There she goes. Hey, hey.
Hey, how you doing, sis?
Breonna, can you hear us?
>> Hello, everybody. Hello, everybody.
Um, how you doing? Thank y'all for having me. I'm doing well, thank you.
How are you? I'm good. I'm good. I'm good. So, sis, it can you adjust your um you can't Oh, there you go. There you go. Just want to make sure we can see you.
All right, excellent. Excellent.
So, sis, it's uh it's good to meet you.
Um this this what you're going through now is something that uh we didn't even think something like this was possible. I mean, all of us are parents.
You know, we all got like five plus children, you know what I'm saying?
[laughter] Yeah. I got five kids and I'm the baby around here, you know what I'm saying? These guys got like a 11 kids.
They peace, you know what I'm saying?
So, they've been through it a lot. You know, but something like this was so crazy when it was brought to our attention. I said, "There's no way."
Literally the court was brought to you.
Talk to us, tell us about how that day progressed and everything. Just give it to us.
Yeah, so um this happened back in 2023.
Um so, I I was able to heal through my third year anniversary on March 30th is when the court case happened.
>> Okay. Um so, it started with a um just a little flashback cuz I had three prior C-sections. You already told the audience about that, gave them a little history. Um and I knew that what C-sections do to not just women in general, but black women. Mhm. And I knew my history and I knew what I experienced um with the previous C-sections.
I didn't want to do that. And all of the previous ones were based on the white man's calendar. Oh, I'm going on a trip to Europe, so let's go ahead and induce or let's go and and do this scheduled C-section because I have to go to Barbados or whatever the case may be.
>> 100%.
I'm sorry, sis.
>> Somebody is like No, no, I'm sorry. I I don't want you to forget what you're about to say. That's very important what you just said.
What month was that that you uh were in labor?
March. March, okay. Because what you said was perfect and I don't think a lot of people understand that that uh the these doctors, they do schedule the inducing your pregnancy, right?
Inducing the the the birth. They schedule that around the around their schedules. Yeah. So, that's how come you check Mo- They said the highest percentage, right? Percentage of C-sections happens during around the time of Christmas, Thanksgiving, and Christmas.
That's why I asked, you know, but obviously there's more cuz I think most children are born between July and August or something to that effect. But the percentage is very high. So, that I'm glad you brought that out. But go ahead, sis. I'm sorry.
Yeah, no worries. So, um basically I just knew that I wasn't going to experience that out. My children's birthday is not going to be based solely off your calendar and what you and your family are going to do because after this procedure is done, I have to deal [clears throat] with the results of what you want to inflict on me. Right. You know, so um long story short, I presented This was the first baby that I did all of my research. I got myself prepared uh physically, mentally, spiritually, emotionally because just as Sherri said, that's my survivor sister.
Um this I have three other children that are already here. And so, when I consider what I want done to my body, it's not just taken into effect what I want, it's what my family needs. My children need a mother. And I'm their mother. And what I want is to have a shorter recovery period. And I want to be able to take care of my kids. I want to be able to get up and move around, not someone coming in to care for me when I'm a well and able body. Right.
So, this was the first baby that I ever went into labor with. I I mean, I did my research. I looked at the statistics on how black women in America are five times more likely to die from preventable causes in childbirth and in labor and postpartum.
So, these are things that they can prevent and that it has happened to us time and time again. History continues to repeat itself. And I didn't want that for myself. So, um this baby I I went into labor on March 29th, um a little bit after midnight.
This was the first baby I ever went into labor with. My water broke naturally, nothing, no induction, nobody helped me anything.
Um and so, my mom has been programmed with the thoughts that, "Oh, if the doctor says it, then you have to do whatever the doctor says because they're they know it. They've been to school and they know." And I'm like, "Mom, not everything that glitters is gold.
Right. And not everything that the white man tell you is what is 100% facts."
Yeah. I said, "I've studied this stuff for years and I've looked at the statistics and I see what it is. And so, I'm not willing to just go off these scare tactics." They scared tried to scare me with baby number two saying, "Oh, we'll tear his nerves from his neck and he'll have a ruptured um shoulder."
And um just all kind of crazy stuff they tell you. So, I presented um out of the fear of my mom, I went against my better judgment and went presented to the hospital.
Back Let me pause. I'm sorry. I went I was already kicked out of a practice because I did not schedule on the doctor's clock. He wanted me to schedule for a cesarean at 37 weeks. None of my prior babies had been born earlier than 40 weeks.
>> [snorts] >> So, I asked him when you challenge him I said, "Well, why do we have to schedule it this early if we are going to do a C-section? Why do we have to schedule it at 37 weeks when all of my previous babies were born at 40 plus weeks?" Right. And he said, "Oh, well, we just don't want you to go into labor on your own."
And I was like, "But I've already made it clear that I want a cesarean." So, I was thinking that we were all on the same sheet of music until we got to nine months.
Right. So, he said, "Well, if you're wanting a vaginal birth, then you're going to have to find another doctor."
And I said, "Well, so be it." Right. So, he discharged me. So, I was going to this hospital that ordered the court C-section merely to check on my baby. Merely for them to put the baby on the monitor, make sure the baby's heart rate was fine, make sure my blood pressure was okay, check my weight, the regular stuff that they do at the doctors.
Um so, when I presented to the hospital after my water broke, they put me on the monitors. They um checked to make sure that it truly was my water that broke.
>> [snorts] >> And they admitted me.
Um I began to labor. Even in triage, every person that entered my triage room "Well, we see that you had previous cesareans and do you not just want to schedule a C-section?" So, every person, doctor, nurse, tech, um midwife, whoever presented to the room, everybody's on the same sheet and they want to ask me the same question. And I asked finally and I said, "You know what?
I want to labor in peace. I don't want to be bullied. I don't want to be coerced. I said, "This is my body's time to do what it is designed to do. And I'm not going to keep repeating myself. I'm not crazy and I know that y'all understand English in here. So, I want to labor and I do not want to continue to answer the same question. We're going to have this baby vaginally unless my only my only drawback was if me if I or the baby start showing signs of distress, then we're going to the operating room and we're going to get this baby out as soon as we need to get it out.
>> Right. But until we get to that point, we're going to continue laboring naturally.
So, um the next morning rolls around, the doctor came on.
Um presented to my room. A midwife the night before said, "Well, you may need to think of um a game plan for when the doctor comes on in the morning cuz he's going to want to know how long you plan to labor on your own. And if you're not going to want to schedule the C-section, he's going to be here um doing C-sections um in the morning. He has a couple already scheduled. And would you like to go ahead and get on the schedule?" And my answer again was no.
>> [snorts] >> Um and I said, "And once he comes in in the morning, I'll tell him the same thing. If I haven't made any progress, we'll continue to labor until either me or my baby start showing signs of distress."
So, true true to her word, he came in and he said, "Well, um I taken care of about two C-sections and today is a great day to have a C-section. Well, would you like to go ahead and schedule a C-section?" And I said, "Absolutely not."
And um so, he said um "Well, I'm going to go do a couple more C-sections and then when I come back and if you haven't shown any progress or you haven't if you're not ready to push or something of that nature, then we'll um we'll explore our other options at that point." I said, "Okay." So, a couple hours later, about 12 cuz the first visit was about 8:30-ish. Right. And he came back about 12:30-ish.
And um he came into the room. He said, "Okay, so uh have you thought about it?"
I said, "No, I haven't."
Um my answer still remains. I still want to continue to labor.
Um and I said, "And furthermore, I would like to get out of this bed. I agreed to continuous fetal monitoring, um but it looks as if my labor is starting to stall. And so, if my labor is slowing down, it's because I'm laying on my back and that's not the way my body is designed to labor. I want to get up out of this bed and I want to walk."
>> Right, you got to walk around and and and and and get things flowing. That's that's what everybody does. That's that's the old from back in the days everybody does that. Yeah.
Absolutely. So, there there everyone that I when I was mentioning that every nurse, every doctor that came in were on the same sheet of music, their scare tactic was because I had three prior C-sections that I had a risk of uterine rupture. And for you all who don't know what a uterine rupture is, it's basically where your uterus splits open, whether it's completely ripped open or if you just have a tear in it, it's possible to happen for even women who have never had any abdominal surgery or for women who has never had um who's never been pregnant at all.
So, um but with my prior research and I saw what the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists have already they study this stuff.
They put this in statistical like statements like they they study this. And so, who are you to come try to fear me us to scare me with something the probability of my uterus rupturing at that point with three prior C-sections was less than 2% chance of happening. Right. Right.
>> So, you going to tell me I'm going to be scared of 98% chance of it not ever happening because you want to make $10,000 off my body?
>> That's the point.
>> Yeah.
That's the point.
[snorts and clears throat] Sis, we going to we going to put something we hold your thought, don't forget what you about to say, right? I want to put something up on the screen cuz I want people to see this, right?
There's something that they have that's called a a VBAC, which is the I think it's vaginal birth after cesarean, right? So, they have a calculator, right? Hey, hold on. Let me Let me I'm just talking about it. Bring up number six. Just click on number six, right? And they use this to figure out what's the probability of a successful vaginal birth after you've had a C-section.
But the calculator is biased from the start. They already programmed it racially.
You You can't make this stuff up, y'all.
You cannot make it up. Hey, bring that thing up, y'all. Y'all got it?
Just want to show that real quick before the Okay.
Just read that real quick.
A VBAC success calculator is a statistical tool primarily the maternal fetal medicine units network MFMU algorithm used to estimate the percentage probability of a successful vaginal birth after cesarean.
VBAC for women attempting a trial of labor.
Right. So, scroll down, right? Scroll down a little bit. So, they programmed the AI to lie.
>> [laughter] >> Right. Watch this. So, wow. Hold on.
Scroll down. Right? So, this is how it's measured, but I want you to see updated version. Look what it says.
Updated versions. Earlier versions were criticized for incorporating race / ethnicity, which lowered success scores for black and Hispanic individuals.
>> Why would you think they wanted to do that? So, they can do more on the black and Hispanic population. That's what they want to do.
>> within our areas of where we live, the the C-section rate is like close to almost 50%. Yeah. Whereas in the white neighborhoods, it's like 15.
Right? We going to show that a little later, but sis, I just wanted to show that to show the people that that's why they were stressing so much for the C-section thing because they using this.
And they trying to use this as a a real barometer, but you can drop that. Let's go back to Breonna.
>> Absolutely.
I appreciate you for sharing that cuz actually I have another video posted, y'all, if y'all want to check it out on my page. I've been sharing just a little bit here and there, you know, to bring more awareness that this can happen. Oh, yeah. I didn't think that this was a thing. I was totally taken aback from when this happened to me, but I everything every fact that when you see that I'm laying on that hospital bed, Right. I have the court document in my hand and I'm going line for line every lie that they said on that paper, Yeah.
I'm dispelling every myth. Right. I'm debunking everything that they said.
They They that calculator that you just posted, it also takes into account that obese women, people who are plus size or bigger or larger >> Okay.
>> that they do not also they have lower chances for success in that. And I told them I said, "ACOG doesn't say that."
Right. So, you are telling me as a OBGYN that because I am big or larger than my white counterpart over here that I cannot have a vaginal birth? How many black plus size women have had vaginal births? Right. That's nonsense. Yeah, that that's complete garbage.
Yeah. So, long going for so the when the provider came back from after the second rounds of C-sections that he was just passing out like they were candy that morning, um he decided to ask he said, "Well, how long do you expect to continue to allow this to go on?" And I said, "Well, however long my body takes to bring my baby earthside. So, whatever we need to do to get this baby out of my vaginal canal, that's how long we're going to take and that's how long we're going to allow my body to unless either one of us start showing signs of distress."
So, he stepped out of the room, he came back in. He said, "Well, we're going to do the C-section and we're going to do it now." And I said, "We're not [laughter] doing a doggone thing. You're not doing anything to my body that I do not consent to. And I'm telling you that I do not consent to you doing a cesarean on my body."
So, he you could tell like the color the rest of the color left out of his face, he left out of my room.
He came back in. He said, "Well, I'm going to call in the mental health team and have you evaluated cuz maybe you just must be out of your mind."
>> [laughter] >> I said, "Well."
I said, "Hmm." Right.
>> "It's quite ironic that I was well competent all of these other two visits that you made with me. I was in my right mind. I didn't have any issues, but now all of a sudden that I'm not going with what you want me to do, I'm mentally incompetent. Okay. I said, "Well, call in whoever you want to call in. Call the team in. I consent to that." So, he stepped out, took him about 30 minutes, come back in, no team.
He said, "Well, we're going to call the court and we're going to get this court order C-section."
Again, I told him, "Well, you call whoever you want to." Cuz I'm thinking that this is just a scare tactic cuz one thing after the next I'm just like, oh, he's lied so many times now already so this he can't be telling the truth.
>> Right. Well, to my little surprise, after the nurses the shift changed, I'm laying on my side, they're checking my baby's heart rate, and in comes 20 white people that I have never seen in my life.
And I'm talking about security.
Now, remind you, I am in labor, like real labor.
So, these is So, these is So, these is actual This ain't even no zoom. This is the actual people in your room.
>> So, on that video, you'll see the zoom call is there.
>> Okay, the zoom call I got it. Okay.
The judge, the state attorney, the one of the doctors from the practice that was taking care of me. Um and it was like two other lawyers or um hospital representatives on that call, but most of the people were physically in the room. Damn.
So, um the lady one of the attorneys that represent the hospital is the one who brought the um and you can kind of see a little glimpse of her in that video. She has on the black suit, the white woman that's holding her hand on the little iPad.
And then they proceed they give me a sheet of paper. They were like, "Well, this is we're going to court.
You may want to prop yourself up or prepare for this court proceeding." And I was like, "Court?
Are you serious?" They like, And so, the video won't get you No, I'm sorry. I'm sorry. They said get yourself together like you supposed to jump up, throw some makeup on. We going to Yeah, and I'm just supposed to stop labor, cut my reproductive system off and just turn it off.
>> [laughter] >> Yeah, so um they presented that the paper and the video was recorded by my 13-year-old at the time, my daughter.
And can you imagine the agony All of my children were present. My mom was present. My children were present. Um and they just one lie after the next, one lie after the next. And unlike Sherice, although they agreed to allow her to continue to labor, the judge and the state attorney both said that the um I even asked at one point in the proceeding, I said, and I I talked to my doula, I said, "I don't know who to talk to. I don't know who to call."
Um they said the only way that I would be able to continue to labor is if I had someone to stay the order. And I said, "Well, I don't even have a lawyer present while I'm talking to y'all and I should have a right to an attorney or something before y'all even take me into this. And we've been in this court proceeding for over 2 hours and nobody has given me any representation."
Um well, we cannot give you legal advice over this call. Oh, but you can take me to court while I'm in labor. Right.
So, um my doula at one point she was like, "I'll get you up." She was a black woman. She said, "I'll get you up and I'll put you in the car and I'll take you." And they said, "No, no, no, we think that she's well beyond AMA." So, I couldn't even leave. So, that's false imprisonment that they also would not even allow me to leave against my wishes if I wanted to leave. So, it was just truly you all titled it the best nightmare While labor. It was truly a nightmare.
Man.
So, I mean wow, this is this is crazy. Uh so, from here now, after that happened, you they did the C-section, right?
You stayed there a day or two, I don't know how long they kept cuz I know they kick people out like after a day or so, right? You went home. So, now what happened? Did you now say I'm going to bring some kind of legal action against them or did somebody reach out to you?
How how did that happen?
Absolutely. So, uh it wasn't right away.
I suffered from postpartum depression like really bad. It's You can only imagine going from that type of thing.
Labor and delivery is a a nightmare all in itself, but actually going through a court hearing while you're in labor, that's a whole 'nother coat of a different color. That's right.
But, um it was a maybe a month later that I reached out to some advocates in New York to help me navigate through this.
Um and Sharice and I were connected through this um through the case um of course it was after she had experienced what she experienced. So, we met in like in January.
And we were thinking that we were doing the right thing reaching out to these advocates helping us to maneuver through this. And we were thinking that we were going through litigation to sue the doctor, sue the hospital, sue the nurses. I told them I wanted to sue their ancestors, dig them up and sue them, too.
>> [laughter] >> So, um Right, get everybody.
Yes, the children, too. Take take [laughter] their the money out of their will and everything. I want everything.
I want them to feel what it what it's like to have to experience something like that. That's not something that you just hear about on a day-to-day. And it has happened before. And not as regular to other women of you know, that's not black. It has happened to a white woman at the same hospital that I was. And [clears throat] then it happened to a another black lady um in New York.
So, um >> Yes. Yes. And I heard I think she sued she sued as well.
I think she sued as well.
>> She tried and they couldn't. So, that's what we've been working on. We did get the human rights and civil rights complaint. Um it has been submitted.
Um but, the the route that we've been trying to take is been a nightmare. So, now we have um partnered with a sister in South Florida who is who she said, "Listen, I don't know what the team that you have right now, but let's make a call with them. They've been dragging their feet and at one point they seemed like they were being helpful, but once this sister reviewed our stuff and reviewed our case, she was like, "This could have been done so long ago." So, we're now um exploring other avenues to you know, do litigation um for this case. I'm running out of time. Sharice still has time. We have 3 years Oh, really? But, they can they can do a fourth year if like in the on the grounds of I wasn't aware that this was a crime because the judge made me do it.
So, I wasn't sure that I could you know, do litigation for this. So, on causes like that. Yeah. Well, you know what?
You said something before about history repeating itself, right? So, from from you know, we talking about since slavery this has been going on, right? Um I want to show you something. Go go to uh Bring up number one, y'all.
I don't even think I numbered it, but it's the first book, Medical Apartheid.
Just bring that up.
Bring up the cover and then we're going to read that page.
All right? Um this is for the for the audience and for you as well, sis, right? So, you can see cuz you you made a statement that history repeats itself over and over again and they just change up the ways that they handling things, right? Cuz they're not able to do exactly what they did before. So, now they got to use different means, you know?
Um They change up the names, too. Put different names on it. That's right.
That's right.
Y- Y'all Y'all got that?
All right.
Medical Apartheid, the dark history of medical experimentation on black Americans from colonial times to the present. To the present.
>> Right. So, read read that part that's all highlighted.
For black women, forced experimentation >> Right right above that. Up one, yeah.
Right there. What whatever. Whatever his What Whatever his ethical sins Sims' surgically exploitation of enslaved blacks was consonant with the medical practice of his time.
>> Right. So, when it says that it was consonant meaning it was the standard.
Right? That was what everybody did, right? So, this guy Sims who was a so-called doctor, he had his own slaves enslave or and dealt with other enslaved blacks. Go ahead.
For black women, forced experimentation was the standard of care.
A. Donaldson, Louisiana surgeon named uh Dr. Francois Marie Prevost used enslaved black women to perfect Cesarean Cesarean a section. Right. So, you see that? Right here during slave times, right? This is where they perfected They made sure to say that.
Perfected Cesarean sections, right? Go ahead. Performing four such deliveries on them between 1822 and 1831. Right.
So, between 1822 and 1830, right? They were experimenting on our people only.
Right? To to so-called perfected. So, that means that before 1822, nobody was being born, I guess. I get the They needed C-sections for people to be Come on. Th- Th- This is the reality of this of this nut job that that we got over the medical care system. This is a demon. Go ahead, read.
In 1830, he performed his first successful Cesarean on a woman. Uh-oh.
Prevost described as a fat colored primipara primipara primipara primipara, a woman a woman giving birth for the first time with a contracep- contracted pelvis. Right. So, he tried to he tried to give it a title as if something was wrong with the woman, right? He He said something about her pelvis was contracted and all that. She was fat colored and all He's trying to write it in a way to make it look like I had to go get the baby. Right.
>> Right? But, the point is this is how they did us.
Total experimentation now is to the point of okay, like you said it like you brought out, sis, now it's about the money, right? 10 to 15 Gs on top of whatever the cost is to give birth. Now they got extra money. Now they can do every Okay, I got to go on vacation.
Man, if that woman has the baby while I'm on vacation, I ain't going to get that baby money. So, let me schedule it while I'm around. Then when Christmas come, I got to go on my Christmas vacation. I got to make sure they have it on the 19th. All of this is going on.
Yeah. To the point the way they tell you that you have very few people born on December 25th and uh like January the 1st, right?
Which people call Christmas and and New Year's. They literally have very few births around that time because of these practices here.
You know?
This is crazy. Look, hey check this in that in that uh it says uh delivered a deliveries on them between 1822 and 1831.
Right. In 1830, he performed his first successful Hey, I'm glad you brought that up.
That's beautiful right there. That's right.
>> mean everybody else died?
>> Of course.
They was killing them.
Yeah.
>> might I add to that? Please. It wasn't even um they're talking about and he's named um the father of um gynecology and obstetrics. And those surgeries, I don't know if it outlines that in that article, but those women did not have anesthesia. Oh, no, not at all. They were cutting them without no pain meds, no nothing. No, none at all. Even to this day, they would say that the so-called African-American woman doesn't have has a higher threshold of pain. That's right. Right?
Than than than the white woman. Right? I was going to bring that up earlier. You are so informed, my brother. I am so proud of y'all. Yeah, hey.
Yes, sis. And and and and this is the guy. This is the This is the evil sinister demon right here.
Look at him. Yeah.
Yeah, they they got him sitting up and he's probably in all kind of medical uh uh schools and everything. They probably got him in all the obstetrics uh clinics and everything. Like he's the he's the he's the guy. This is the This is a damn demon.
>> What What I like, you know, that my sister she you know, she she pinpointing who these people is, man. I love it. Yeah. I love that you using the white man so wonderfully. Yeah. Give me >> [laughter] >> Give me uh Ecclesiasticus 12 and 10.
Right. I love that you say that you can't I want to go back to what you said earlier. You can't believe everything that come out of this white man whole wide man's mouth. You can't. Watch this.
Ecclesiasticus chapter 12 and verse 10.
Hold on hold on one second. Make sure y'all put that up on the screen. Make sure y'all got it up so she can read it.
All right, y'all got it? Come on. All right, go ahead. Ecclesiasticus chapter 12 and verse 10. Watch this, sis. Never trust thine enemy.
>> Wait wait wait, what the Lord say? Never trust thine enemy.
>> God said do not trust these people.
These are the same people like we just read they they experimented on on our on our women to perfect this. Right. So, everybody died for 9 years or for 8 years and the first successful one was in 1830. Right. Go ahead.
So, for like as iron rusted >> Cuz just like if you put iron in some rain and let it and and the rain hit it a couple days, that iron going to rust.
Go ahead. So, is his wickedness. So, shall this people. No matter how much they say that they care, no matter how much they say that they they they trying to help you. Only thing they they put presenting that to you for is to line their pockets. So, just like that iron go rust, so will they. Go ahead. Though he humbleth himself >> Though he act like he's for you and go crouching >> and go crouching down make humbling himself. Come on. yet take good heed >> It said take good heed to this person.
Look at Look at all everything that his ancestors did. Look at everything that they doing in today in today's time.
Look at all of the genocide they committing and just putting another name on it. Look at all the plant parenthoods they putting on our neighborhoods. Look at all of the the liquor stores they putting on our neighborhoods. Look at all of the all of the drugs and guns that they drop off in our neighborhoods. You got to take all this stuff into consideration because why? The Bible said that that's your enemy. Go ahead.
>> and beware of him >> Beware of that person. Come on. And thou shalt be unto him as if thou hadest wipe a looking glass.
>> Go ahead.
>> And thou shalt know that his rust have not altogether been wiped away.
>> If you look at what's going on and you look at the history, you'll be able to tell they Hey, this person is the same person. It's the same man. He These are the children of the man that did it.
Right. They all Like you said earlier, I want everything. I want it out the counter. The kids I want That was beautiful.
>> Yeah, cuz God said that, too. He said the same thing. That's why I was laughing.
>> Yeah. Read that. Keep going. Set him not by thee >> don't set him by you.
lest when he have overthrown thee >> Wait, what is the solution? when he have overthrown thee >> Set him not by you. Read that again.
What's the solution? Set him not by thee >> don't get in don't get too involved with this man. lest >> Don't get in too involved with this race. Come on. lest when he have overthrown thee >> Uh-huh. he stand up in thy place >> up and take your place. He stand up and take all of the credit of everything that you did.
Ain't all right. The Bible talks about these type of people. It talk about It's talking about that exact man that we that you talking about right now.
>> Yeah, that's literally the white >> white guy. Yeah. Red man. Red man. Yeah.
You know, and and since I know we can't keep you that long. Um my sister's out on the East Coast, so we can't keep her that long. But um I want to hear the end of like where where you at a little bit right now where you going to go with it, but I want to show you one more thing. Uh go to that next book. Um this one is called medical bondage, right? And I want to make sure you see this in a quick cuz you got a lot of good knowledge cuz I see you already knew. You you knew about that that that animal. Um Yeah. Yeah.
But bring this up right here, y'all.
He's a filthy animal.
>> Right. All right. Go ahead. Read that thing.
>> Medical bondage, race, gender, and the origins of American gynecology. Go ahead.
Just read the highlighted section. Just Most pioneering surgeries, such as ovariotomies the removal of diseased ovaries and cesarean section surgeries that occurred in American gynecology history help happened during interactions between white southern doctors and their black slave patients.
>> Right. So, basically all they were doing was Frankenstein type operations.
>> That's it. That's all they was doing.
Right? They calling themself doctors. We don't even know if they was doctors. No, they wasn't doctors. You know, they probably was just some barbers. No, they wasn't doctors at all, cap. They were serial killers. Yeah, for real. That's what they was. Yeah. Bring the next page.
Go ahead.
The antebellum The antebellum era saw significant advances in gynecology gynecological gynecological gynecological research as gynecological surgeons first performed ab- abdominal surgeries that removed diseased ovaries, delivered babies via cesarean section.
>> And the reason they they they this is highlighted cuz it says the antebellum era. Right? This is the time of slavery.
Just so y'all know. This is when it says they research they they had advances.
Why? Because they had these all of these guinea pigs they could work on. Right.
That's what it was. So, we can drop that. Let's go back to our sis.
All right. So, sis so so I know you have the uh the new attorney that came in and got on board.
>> Yep. And so so what are y'all What are y'all planning now? Y'all just moving forward her and hoping that something sticks or or y'all have some other plans?
We So, we we're taking several avenues at this uh moment. We're um both of us are absolutely weird for our black people. We're advocating for black women. She was already doing her own thing as a doula. She's actually the one that's the doula. Right. I was the nurse student. Okay. Okay.
>> she um was making sure she reached out to you know, especially like low-income black women, um people who are on Medicaid cuz they get classed out so often. And so, we're basically just advocating We've been um circulating our petition to stop these kind of laws from being you know, relevant in today's society.
And we've often what we've taught what we've realized is the consensus right now is that um the people that we originally had, they've been fighting with cotton balls.
But that's what you can expect from the white man. And so, we've I'm sorry, sis.
We can't see you no more. Something happened with your camera.
Yes, so I got I was connecting my charger. Okay. Okay.
All right. No problem. Go ahead, sis.
Let me see if I can turn it back on.
Oh, there you go.
>> Can't see me? Yep. Yep. Yep. Go ahead.
I'm sorry. It's not a good view, but Yeah.
Um So, I was basically, you know, we're advocating. We're signing the petitions to try to get these laws changed. We are working with this new attorney, um a sister down in South Florida. Um also with a lady from the West side. She um she heard about the story and she was like, "Listen, I'm not barred in Florida, but I'm willing to help y'all fight. I want to help this lady in South Florida. Whatever y'all need me to do, I'm willing to do it." So, we're just getting these teams in We're um taking donations as they come to help cuz, you know, getting legal representation is not cheap. Um but all in all, we're just trying to get the word out, making sure that people are informed. And it's so sad the way we the life that we have to live. And what we realized in this is not enough to have just people who are informed because we were both informed, well informed.
>> Right. It's not enough to just um have doulas present anymore because the doula black too. So, what what two black people going to do in in the off in when a when a room full of white people? Hey, so it look like the doula got to get a law law degree.
The doula got to be a lawyer.
Yeah, absolutely.
>> Yeah. Absolutely. And I said we even went as far as saying, "Since we want to play the white game, maybe we need to get some white people signed up to be white men to be doulas." Now, I don't know. No. No. No. No. Remember, set them not by thee.
>> [laughter] >> Yeah. No. It was a joke. It was a joke.
>> [laughter] >> Because they they won't listen to us.
How else do we And so, what we also realized we can't keep fighting this like um Sharice made a mention. She was like, "They were getting um permits to do strikes and um march and all of that." I was like, "Do you think our ancestors were doing that? Do you think the people that came before us were getting permits? We're wrecking up stuff. We we don't want no peace because we don't have peace. So, you don't get none either." Right. Right. All praises.
That's a beautiful thing. Good stuff there. Yeah. Good stuff. Yeah, that that that's wonderful stuff. You know what I mean? I'm a I'm a read cuz I'm a read something to you, sis, because uh you know, we just had Passover this week, right? And this was based on the time when when Moses was was carrying the the children of Israel out of uh Egypt, right? And before that, right before all that happened, the the the nation of Egypt said something about our people, right? And I want to read this to you and see if this is not exactly what's happening today. When we look in the scriptures, our spiritual Egypt is here in America. Right? This The Bible talks about America as spiritual Egypt and Babylon, spiritual Babylon, right? So, I want to read something to you in in the book of Exodus chapter 1 and let's start in verse 17.
>> [clears throat] >> Exodus chapter 1 and verse 17.
>> 15.
Uh yeah, 15. Verse 15.
And the king of Egypt spake to the Hebrew midwives of which the name of the one was Shiphrah and the name of the other Puah. Right. So, the king of Egypt went to go speak with these midwives, right? To go talk with them. Go ahead.
And he said When ye do the office of a midwife to the Hebrew women and see them upon the stools, if it be a son, then ye shall kill him.
But if it be a daughter, then she shall live.
>> Right. So, they wanted to kill all the male children off because that's where the seed comes with, right? And then that would be the nation of Israel would still be surviving. So, he said, "Get rid of those boys. Just keep the girls, right?" Go ahead. But the midwives feared God >> Mhm. and did not as the king of Egypt commanded them.
>> Go ahead. But saved the men children alive.
>> That's why we got to have our own people as as the midwives and the doulas. We can't use other people because they they going to keep We got to. But our people they It said, "Hey, they feared the Lord." That was their people, right? Go ahead. Read on. And the king of Egypt called for the midwives and said unto them, "Why have you done this thing and have saved the men children alive?"
>> So, they didn't kill them kids, right?
So so the the Egyptian king said, "Why you ain't kill them kids?" Go ahead. And the midwives said unto Pharaoh, "Because the Hebrew women are not as the Egyptian women."
>> Right. The Hebrew women, Breonna, she not like the Egyptian women. Go ahead.
For they are lively. What they They lively. Yeah. You know what I mean? They lively. So, they can't come in here talking about, "Oh, no, because you're big, you can't do No, they lively.
That's the key. Different. Go ahead. And are delivered ere the midwives come in unto them. Right. Meaning that them children is coming out regardless. I don't We We ain't even putting our hands We ain't even there. Them babies just coming out. They just told the story.
But the bottom [laughter] But the bottom line is that's our people. We have to protect ourselves and each other. Right? So, you Make sure you keep your circle with our people. You know what I mean? Don't Don't invite nobody else in because somebody going to catch them at a dinner party and start talking crazy to them. Then all of a sudden they going to come in here talking about, "You know what, Breonna, you should get the C-section." You know, it's best. Yep. You know? Yep. And then And not And not only this >> glad you Go ahead, Breonna. Go ahead.
I was just going to say that was the exact scripture that I was referencing in my head as I was thinking Right. as retelling the story, I was thinking like, "We're not built like them. We're unique. We're not Our genetic makeup is different. Our blood Everything is different. Yep. And for you to compare me and the VBACK calculator screams that this this biblical reference right here Yep. is exactly They know this. They Oh, that Yeah, sis, you put that together. They know this. All praises. Yep. 100%.
>> Talking that good stuff.
>> Yeah. That calculator is 100% what we just read, taking a different tone. Now, instead of them talking it, they just set up a computer, program it.
>> Yeah. And now the Oh, no, that's what the computer says. And everybody rolls.
Yeah. You know what I mean? You know, later later I want to look at the eugenics tree, which means good birth, right? And it's got all of the methods of how to destroy our people. And one of them is statistics. So, like like the the statistics of what's a healthy person is based on a a white woman or a white person. You know what I'm saying? Not taking into account that we are different in those ways, you know? Another branch of the eugenics tree was surgery, medicine. You know what I'm saying? So, that go into all these little crafty councils. So, this is on point.
>> Yeah.
>> Yeah, straight up.
>> Yep. Straight up. And then um like you were saying, um we we built different, right?
>> Mhm.
So, what they trying to do? They try to get you to do that C-section so they can so they can so they can steal your placenta. Yeah. It's Oh, yeah. Take your genes. That's it. Come on, bro. Take your genes, man. Yeah. This is This is Now your baby don't get all of its nutrition. Right. Because they want them.
Right. Listen, man. That's what the whole Epstein thing was about.
>> Yeah, the whole little thing.
Yeah. The whole little thing. We only you heathens, man.
>> The stem cells, everything. That's right.
>> And they knew that I That was all a part of my birth plan when I went in there. I do not want you to clamp my baby's cord.
I do not want you to do anything. I want all of this going to my baby because that's who it's for. It was designed for my baby, not for y'all to get rich off of it.
>> Right. They make millions multi-millions off of this. Exactly.
Exactly. That's what they looking for.
And And they need it from the black women. We have to specify that. Yeah.
All right? Because even them demons are are Epstein and all his whole crew We did the show on it before. They had We got videos of these people saying, "Yes." Talking to black women saying, "Hey, we want your period blood, too."
Yeah.
>> Exactly. Yeah. They taking the babies.
They They They killing the babies, drinking the blood, uh eating the bone marrow. I'm talking about madness.
>> Really? You know? So, in the hospitals, what they doing? That placenta Oh, that's all That's good money.
Yes. I'm not sure if y'all have connected with my sister my survivor sister, Sherice, but >> No. y'all really need to talk to her.
Okay. If If y'all can coordinate that If you can coordinate with Sherice because they were trying to medically kidnap her baby after this court this court session. They had the baby hooked up to all kind of machines. Like y'all really need to get that story.
And this this should have been a part of Y'all need to do a part two cuz it is crazy of what we You know, you you you can read about it. You can hear about it. But when it's knocking at home Right.
>> it's it's different. It's different.
>> Yes.
>> All the way different. Yeah, that's real real crazy, sis. That's real crazy.
We just want to thank you for for coming on. I know it's late on the East, you know what I mean? It's already 12:30 over there. All right? So, all praise to the Father. I'm glad you had a chance to come on. And And you know, we going to stay in contact with you.
Thank you. You know, hopefully we want to see positivity at the end of this.
They need to be throwing you a couple of millions of dollars, you know what I mean? The next time we see you, you should be in the in the foyer of your new uh >> [laughter] >> on the new crib. Absolutely. Thank you.
All right.
>> And keep them people away from you before they try to intercept your dollars. Exactly. All right. Thank you, Breonna. All right.
All right, y'all. My pleasure. All right. Shalom. Shalom.
>> Yeah, man. All praise to This is crazy, sir. Yes, sir.
Yeah, I'm telling >> To the hand to the sister, man. Yeah.
She did her thing, man. Yeah, bro. You wouldn't You And we got the eugenics tree up there. This is what Officer Judah just brought out about all the different branches they got, right?
In the roots Yeah. of what they got, man.
Uh Read a few of those off, Officer Ezra.
You Zoom in on the uh the branches.
Yeah, cuz it's a little tough to see.
Yeah. Check. Check. Oh, there you go.
Anatomy. Right. Anatomy. Right. Go ahead. Biology.
>> Uh-huh. Physiology.
>> Physiology. Psychology.
>> Psychology. Don't make everybody think that they crazy. Right.
Mental testing. Right. So, when they doing the mental testing, even those is not really good to Everything is is is skewed towards their people. Right? So, So, when they do anatomy, "Oh, no, these guys are inferior inferior physically."
"So, now we have to do testing on them to figure out how to help them." Like all of this was BS. Physio- Physiology, that's the the makeup of your body, how things move around and all of that.
Psychology, "Oh, yeah, they're crazy.
They're not well. They're dumb." You know what I mean?
Go ahead. Anthro- anthropometry. Yeah, I wish I knew what that meant.
>> [laughter] >> Uh geology.
Archaeology. Anthropology.
Uh-huh. Geography. Law. Politics. Right.
What What What Why you going to skip that, bro? Yeah. Law. That's a big one.
That's a big one. Yeah. Look under uh the one that we didn't know what it meant. It say history. Oh, Oh, yeah, yeah.
>> history, bro. Yeah.
Bro, they been doing that, bro. Bible.
Okay, you got it. I was going to go for Go ahead. Anthropometry is a scientific study and systematic measurement of the human's body size, shape, proportions, and composition.
>> Oh, so you shaped different.
>> Yeah. Yeah. That's what they were doing.
That's what they were doing. Remember they would always take a brother's skull? "Oh, this is the skull of a negro. It's a dumb skull.
>> [laughter] >> I can tell by looking at this skull this man was dumb. It was a numbskull.
>> [laughter] >> A numbskull.
You can tell this was a dummy right here. And he had to have been black.
Look at that skull.
>> [laughter] >> These people is some demons. Bro, they step They stole They stole They take the history, erase your history.
That's one of the biggest ones right there. Right.
>> Because what are What are they calling us? They calling us African-American.
Meanwhile, we the Jews that the Bible speak of. Exactly.
>> Meanwhile, we the people. Right.
>> Meanwhile, we the chosen. Right.
>> Come on, man.
>> And remember this tree is all about um Put the tree back up, y'all. It's It's all about uh uplifting the white race and increasing their numbers and decreasing ours. Right.
>> can law decrease There you go.
>> our birth rate? Very good.
>> You see what I'm saying? Court-ordered C-sections, taking of the ovaries by law, framing of mischief bylaws. So, all this stuff we seeing is is biblical. You see what I'm saying? And then you get to where we saying um medicine.
>> Yep. Surgery. All these things are done to keep our birth rate low. Yep.
>> that? And then increase theirs because whether you know it or not, their birth rate is decreasing rapidly.
And they fear that.
>> Yeah. And that's why they That's why they be trying to uh push all of this interracial garbage.
Every time you look on social media, YouTube, Instagram, or Facebook, it's some white dude with a black woman.
Right. You see statistics right there?
That's that calculator.
You know? That's that That's that calculator that that determines if you going to have a successful vaginal birth, or you know what I'm saying? Or Or if you if you're healthy, or this that and the third. And it's all based upon either their intelligence, their weight, their height, all that stuff to to make us not want to continue to be fruitful and multiply. And Judah, and through those statistics because you don't have the education they able to they able to cuz education is on there, too. Because you don't have the education on what they talking about, you fall for anything. But But And check this out. But let's let's stay with that law for a second cuz that's going to be that's going to weigh heavily into the conversation. Get Get Wisdom of Solomon 2 real quick, right?
Because the law That's That's where the power is at for these people, man.
It's always been that. That's why they brought the law in there to go deal with her. Like this is this is insane.
Right? You got that? Just Just hit it straight. Uh your verse 11, yep. Wisdom of Solomon >> 10.
Wisdom of Solomon, chapter 2 and verse 10.
Let us oppress the poor righteous man.
>> Go ahead. Let us not spare the widow nor reverence the ancient gray hairs of the age.
>> Go ahead. Let our strength be the law of justice.
>> Right. So, Esau is saying, "Let our strength be the law of justice." You may say, "How we know that's talking about him?" Read verse one. Verse one.
For the ungodly said, "Reason with themselves, but not all right. Our life is short and tedious, and the in the death of a man, there is no remedy.
Neither was there any man known to have returned from the grave."
>> Right. So, it says the ungodly, the wicked. That's what it's talking about, right? So, read 11 again. Verse 11. Let our strength be the law of justice.
>> Right. The law of justice, meaning we going to create any law we want. Right.
There was no vote on whether we should bring in some attorneys and a judge and everything into a delivery room. Nobody never heard of this. They just put that in the books and started running it down on people. That's what this is talking about. Let our strength be the law of justice. Go ahead.
For that which is feeble >> which is feeble, which is our people.
Sister was in there, she was feeble. Her whole family, everybody, feeble. Go ahead. With that which is feeble is found to be nothing worth.
>> It's It's not worth nothing. These people ain't worth nothing. That's how come we can have this eugenics tree and and and talk all this garbage and lie and create things.
>> Right. Right? So, go ahead. Uh uh after law, what we got?
Statistics, right? Education, genealogy biography >> Damn. economics, politics religion, psychology >> whoa whoa religion.
>> Yeah. See that? Religion.
See, even the white man put religion in there cuz they know they created all these false religions.
>> Yep. To do what? Keep the people in pocket. Yep. Right? That they don't know the law, they depend on them for everything.
Right? Go ahead.
biography surgery, medicine >> Okay.
Surgery, medicine, right?
>> surgery and archaeology Archaeology.
Wait, where's that at? On the uh in the middle, more towards the middle to the left. Damn. Archaeology. Okay, yeah, yeah, we must have missed that before.
Archaeology, that's excellent, right?
Cuz that That's what they using to say uh archaeology goes with uh anthro- anthropometry. Yeah.
Right? They They got them things. They digging up bones and all of that.
You know, talking about the first woman was in you know, here, there, and I'm telling you, y'all, this is it right here, eugenics. This was the beginning of what they put together for abortions and and Planned Parenthood and all of that. Margaret Sanger. We going to get into all of it, right?
So, all right. We can drop that, y'all.
Yeah. You can say economics on the tree, too. Yeah, that's money. That's money.
It says good economics.
>> Good economics. That's right. to get them to abort I mean, not abort, but to get Assyrians. That's right. Yep. Cuz it line their pockets, man. Absolutely.
Hey, and and and and family, we just want to We forgot to mention the super chat is live and in effect. Oh, yeah.
>> All right.
>> some people to shout out to. Oh, you got some people to shout out? All right.
Take your time. Go ahead. I got Anto- Ant- Antoine Silva, okay, $20. All right. All praises. Thank you, Antoine.
Uh W619 Hunt, $50.
>> Oh, man. All praises. Alvin Israel, Okay. 144, Mhm. $20. All praises, Alvin.
Miss Gad Israel, $10.
>> All praises, Miss Gad. I don't want to mess this up, but it's kind of messed up already. It's uh SS Porky, 650, $50. All praise SS Porky. Yeah, SS Porky, man. Okay. And let's test Sporky.
I don't know. All right. All right.
Well, hold on. [laughter] Hold on. SS Porky, if we saying your name wrong, forgive us, but all praise to the Lord.
We appreciate [laughter] you. Uh uh uh Official uh Keto, I know I said that wrong, $10. All praise to Official Keto and and and W W Hunt, right? WB Hunt, I think I said that before. I can't remember the Whatever that was I I forgot the name. I didn't actually say the name.
>> W619 Hunt. W619 Hunt. All right. All praises. Yes. Yes. Yes.
>> Shout out to the super chat. Yep. Shout out to the super chat. Forgot to mention that before. Hey, Cap, I want to point out one scripture real quick.
>> Please. All right. Give me Exodus 1 cuz I loved it. Exodus 1, this >> [laughter] >> is talking about basically how the Egyptians felt about us, right? As we was increasing, right?
So, give me verse 9.
And then that that um question I popped up. Exodus, chapter 1 and verse 9. Cuz there's no new thing under the sun. This is the This is the [clears throat] spiritual Egypt, right?
Watch this. And he said unto his people, "Behold, the people of the children of Israel are more and mightier than we."
>> We are more than them. We are mightier than them, and it is a necessity to to control that. You know what I'm saying?
Read on. Come on. Let us deal wisely with them. Eugenics, education, birth uh statistics, so on and so forth. At this time, it was appointing taskmasters.
Right. You know what I'm saying? But as you look at when you get to this new Egypt, they got a whole a slew of methods, right? Give me Psalms 105 and 24.
Right? So, this is a This is a mindset.
They know that we are more and mightier than them. So, you look at You look at the map. They'll make America very big on the map when it's actually very small. Right. You know what I'm saying?
Africa looks small on the map, but it's really vast. You see what I'm saying?
And that's the to do what? To make you visually think that we are the minority when we're the majority, right? So, read that. Psalms, chapter 105, verse 20 You want 25? Uh 24. Verse 24.
And he increased his people greatly.
>> God increased us greatly. He's He's always done that. Even in poverty, guess what we do? We don't have money?
Uh we we give birth.
>> [laughter] >> That's the nice way to say it, right?
That's the nice way >> [laughter] >> We don't have money? We give birth.
Right. And made them stronger than their enemies.
>> He made us stronger than our enemies. We run faster than them. We do everything better than them, right? Read.
And he he turned their heart to hate his people >> Uh-huh. to to deal subtility with his servants.
>> So, when they see that we more and mightier than them, it hardens their heart, and they deal subtly with us, especially when they in the throne in the seat of authority Yep. to create laws, to to handle medicine, to govern so on and so forth. So, that's what we seeing. Yep. They got Planned Parenthood in every neighborhood. Right.
Right. Right. Right. Right. Still subtly. Right. Where we at in Oakland?
On on 14th and Broadway, there's one right across the street. We see people hopping out running up in there every Sabbath. Yeah. Right? At least a couple people, you know, sometimes it just catch your eye. You might be teaching.
You might be on a and you happen to look and you see some some feet prancing up inside there.
>> [laughter] >> You know what I mean? And they not going for an interview, man. No, not at all.
>> No. Not at all. Hey, hey, y'all, bring up number five.
Bring up number five.
All right.
So, this is a quick little video about C-sections and percentages and things like that I want y'all to see.
Y'all got that? All right. There you go.
You want to have a C-section because you want it or because you need it, not because the hospital you're at happens to do them a lot.
Hospitals have wildly different C-section [music] rates, really, for no good reason. If you take a look at low-risk women, women who [music] you wouldn't expect to have a C-section, if you go to one hospital, it might be really high. If you go to another hospital, it might be really low.
[music] At Los Angeles Community Hospital, more than half of low-risk women ended up with a C-section. Now, you just drive a couple of miles away to California Hospital Medical Center in Los Angeles, [music] the rate of C-sections for those women is 15%. So, in just a matter of miles, you go from more than half to 15%, [music] and this is all for low-risk women. Now, many experts say >> a second. Y'all see that? Yeah. So, in in that other hospital where it's more than half of the women getting uh C-sections, you know who's over there, right? Yeah, that's probably it's in a it's in a so-called minority neighborhood.
>> Exactly. Right? So, the Southern and Northern Kingdom getting smashed over there. Blacks and Hispanics, they're the ones that getting chopped up over there.
Now, when you go them couple of miles, that's where Esau is at. Yeah. it's 50% or lower. Yeah. It's one side of the railroad tracks that look good, and the other side of the railroad tracks is terrible. Yeah. Not only that, right? I don't think it's in this one, but I I think I read it that the World Health Organization actually put out there that the only that C-sections are really only supposed to be done between 10 and 13% of the time. Mhm.
So, they put that out there. So, that means all these hospitals have that information, and they're like, "No. No, we need this bread." Yeah, money.
And don't even need it. That's why y'all need to stop doing drugs. If you stop doing drugs, you'll have some money to spend.
>> [laughter] >> What the hell?
Y'all hit play.
Yeah.
They are expensive. Hit play.
There is no medical [music] reason for this. It's just that some hospitals happen to do a lot of C-sections. That's just their culture. Now, why would hospitals so close together have such a wildly different C-section rates? Well, some people say that hospitals like to do C-sections because they make a lot more money. They make [music] about 50% more on a C-section than they do on a vaginal birth. Other people say, "Look, doctors are rushed. I mean, when someone's giving [music] birth vaginally, it can take a long time.
They're in labor. It can take days.
C-section, very quick. You're in and you're out." [music] C-sections are major surgery, and they carry all the risks of surgery, such as infection.
Also, babies who are born vaginally are less likely to have breathing [music] problems than babies who are born from a C-section. Now, ho- ho- hit pause. Hit pause. You heard that?
You might think that the opposite, right? Cuz the baby You to come through there, all the fluids going in the nose.
Y'all see Y'all been in there. Y'all see how it go. Yeah. But they saying that's a that's better for a baby than it just get taken out.
But they make it look like, "Oh, no, it's just easier, you know, we just cut get you up out of there sew you up and No, no, no, no." She said it carries all the risk of a regular surgery.
Every single last one of them.
Infection. Right, infection, all that.
You can bust that scar right back open again.
>> Exactly. It's a lot of stuff that could go on. Right. And all they worried about is that money in your center. Yeah, getting you up out of there. A lot of them sisters bleed to death cuz they cut a artery or something.
>> Yep. Yep. Yep. They don't talk about that either. That's a real thing. Yep.
Hit play, y'all. You want to avoid a C-section, [music] you should avoid being induced. Because being induced is much more likely to lead later on to a C-section. The key here is that either way women should have the birth that they want >> [music] >> and that they medically need. They shouldn't have the birth that their hospital wants or that their doctor wants.
Right. Okay.
Yeah, we just wanted to see it to show you what is the difference cuz now you got doctors saying, "Well, uh we doing it because uh it's healthier for the baby.
It's quicker.
Oh, I got to go. If Yeah, if if [laughter] if she's having a vaginal birth, I don't know how long that's going to take. I can't hang around here all damn day.
I got things to do.
This is crazy.
And oh, bring up number seven. That's what I wanted to show the people. We talked about this a little bit with Breonna, but I wanted y'all to actually see this cuz you can't make it up.
I'm telling you.
This is insane.
Cuz unless somebody bring this to your attention, you would never think this is how that business operates. But one thing we got to understand that it is a business.
You know what I mean? Only time it's not really business when people got home birth, you got your doulas and stuff like that. That's like a real, you know, birth and pregnancy that you know, with the birth and all that.
Anything after that is business.
You know, you at the you at the uh What's the word? You at the uh Not the behest, but you're you're at the mercy of these physicians and what have you, right? Y'all got that?
Go ahead.
The hell is going on? This guy is crazy.
Y'all got it? They said yeah, too. Okay, there you go.
Your observation is largely correct.
>> Just jump down to holiday effect. Yes, sir. The holiday effect in percentages.
Statistics show that a distinct pattern where elective procedures, scheduled C-sections, and inductions are intentionally moved away from major holidays like Thanksgiving, Christmas, and New Year's. You see that? They intentionally move around your birth so it's not on Thanksgiving cuz they got to go home with the family eat turkey.
Yeah. Right? It can't be Christmas cuz they got the family. We we we got something planned. And not New Year's cuz generally when they go away, they go away from Christmas all the way through New Year's. Yeah. And then pop back sometime in January fresh to give some more C-sections. Yep. All right. This is what I wanted to show cuz this is insane. But look look at mid-month spikes and all that.
Mid-month spikes.
To ensure Can y'all get the ask anything off of there?
Oh, there we go.
>> Yeah, there you go. Go ahead. To ensure babies are born before or after a holiday, there is often a concentrated cons concentrated concentrated increase in scheduled births during the first two or three weeks of December and November.
Mhm. Yo, this is crazy, man.
>> Damn. You see that? A concentrated increase in scheduled births.
All right. Just to let y'all know, all of y'all who never had children before and whatever and y'all getting ready to go through it, this is what's happening.
When y'all going into y'all uh what do you call it? Prenatal appointments and so on and so forth and they checking all right, the baby's due around this time. They already got in their mind, okay, oh yeah, we going to do something to make sure they come out this time. They doing all that. All right. Scroll there. There's one more piece. Oh, yeah, Monday through Friday compression. Read that real quick. The Monday through Friday compressions.
Because hospitals typically operate reduced staff on holidays, doctors often schedule catch-up procedures on the weekdays immediately preceding a break, which can temporarily inflate the C-section rate for those specific weeks.
That's crazy. They even got to watch the Even the weekends is off. Listen, you can only have your baby during the week.
Your baby got to come out during the work week, brother. Right. Yeah. The baby is not going to be paid for weekend work.
>> [laughter] >> Time and a half. Yeah, no time and a half for that baby. That baby getting strictly $25 an hour. And that's it.
All right. Yo, uh go to All right, so I want to show y'all this as well. Check this out. Uh Go to Go to number 17. Should be a It's a video there. We going to play that video real quick. See a quick history of what they was doing with the northern kingdom primarily Ephraim, right? Watch this, y'all.
We going to read some.
In the fall of 2020, headlines of forced sterilizations at the for-profit Irwin County ICE detention center in Georgia dominated Stop. So now, this is 2020, right? in Georgia.
ICE, your good friends.
Rounding people up, so-called immigrants, rounding them up and giving them forced sterilizations.
Right? There's forced hysterectomies, all that. ICE had their own gynecologists up in there abusing women.
All right, go ahead. hit the news cycle.
>> [music] >> What many of the reports lacked was context of the long history of forced sterilizations of Latinas in the United [music] States.
The eugenics movement, which sought to quote better the human race by preventing supposedly inferior people from reproducing, influenced [music] many programs targeting Latinas.
>> Right, stop. You heard that?
She said uh supposedly inferior, right?
Yeah. That's what that eugenics thing was all about, remember? Biology, uh physiology, uh anthropometry, and all of that. That's what all that does. And then and it says, "Okay, these people are inferior. Now we able to do what we want." Mhm. All right. We're going to sterilize them so this way they don't bring out more of those [ __ ] children. Yeah. And and all they got to do is make you think that. Right.
>> Scripture say, "As a man thinketh, so is he." Period.
>> All they got to do is make you think that. All they got to do is make take your self-esteem away just a little bit.
Yeah. And then you you do whatever they tell you. That's 100%. Hit play, y'all.
Starting in the 1930s, the federal government advocated for and used sterilization as a way to control population growth. In many cases, women were falsely pushed into sterilization as the only means of contraception and in the context of economic development plans to reduce [music] poverty.
For example, it is estimated that the 19 So that's supposed to be used to reduce poverty.
Because if you have too many kids and you can't take care of them, you poor.
So just just just sterilize yourself.
Don't have any children. And in this way you going to have money in this life.
That's what they going to tell you. You lying. And even when they do that, they still be poor. Of course. Cuz they ain't going to get no job. You can't get no job. You can't do nothing.
>> They inferior. Exactly. You know what I mean? Exactly. They didn't They didn't use the bow 19 of the 20 branches on the eugenics tree on you already. [laughter] Whoop you. Right.
>> your own switch.
Right, pick your own switch.
>> [laughter] >> Right. Hit play, y'all.
In 1947 and 1948, 7% of Puerto Rican women were sterilized. And by 1956, one out of three Puerto Ricans suffered the same fate. In many cases, these women were told their tubes were being [music] tied, but never told it was an irreversible procedure. Right. Later, in 1970, [music] a whistleblower exposed evidence of widespread abuses at the Los Angeles County USC Medical Center, where mostly Spanish-speaking women of Mexican origin were approached during childbirth and pushed to sign consent forms written in English. Hey, stop. Stop. Stop.
That's the same thing they did when they took over in in from Ephraim.
And took over the northern kingdom.
Remember what they did? They used to have them go pick the gold. They would talk to them in in in in Spanish. They didn't speak Spanish. They spoke Hebrew.
They didn't understand.
They would cut the limbs off.
Remember that? This is This the same thing.
Oh, speaking to them in English, they speaking Spanish. Okay, yeah, sign here.
Boom. Sterilization. No, she said we good to go.
This This is This is foolishness. Huh?
That's That They didn't even know what they signed. That's what they That's what you call crafty counsel. That's what Officer Judah brought out earlier.
He brought out how they move how they move against us, man.
You know, it ain't Though they go crouching humbly, brother, they trying to get you. Yep. That's it. Wicked. You know, how you like you were saying, Officer Sham, they get you to trust them. Yeah. They They put a smiley face in front of you, you know, they shake your hand and slide that consent form.
You don't know what you signing. Right.
>> Damn. Hit play.
to end the practice of sterilization without informed consent. In the case that became known as the Madrigal 10, which [music] was led by co-counsel Antonia Hernandez, who went on to head MALDEF. Not only were these women sterilized against their will, but the judge in that lawsuit blamed it all on a communication >> [music] >> breakdown. He went on to argue that he believed Mexican women draw their worth from quote rearing a large family.
[music] So their pain came not from being sterilized against their will, but because they could not fulfill their Mexican duties. Right. Right. You see that? That's Esau. Yeah. No, no, no, no.
Trust me, they're not upset because they are sterilized. No. No, they're not worried about that because their main pain is because they just want to be Mexican. Yeah.
>> And have a lot of children and and and and reared a lot of children, but what they don't understand is that rearing a lot of children is not good for them.
And this is why we sterilize them. So, don't worry, they're going to be fine.
That's basically what's being said.
Yeah. These people sick. Yeah, and then they basing everything off of them because they can't do it. Yeah.
>> They can't have large families like that.
>> Right.
>> They can't do certain things that that that we can do. Right.
>> So, if if we can't do it, y'all can't do it.
>> Right. And that's the point because they they birth rates been going down for a long time.
>> Yeah. It got nothing to do with uh uh uh uh uh what you call them abortions and all that. They just can't have them. Yeah, they get sterilized. Not sterilized, what is it called? Uh fertilization clinics. Yes.
>> Yeah, they go into fertilization clinics to help their births. Right. Right.
>> Yeah. And then sometimes they'll mess around and have 10 kids at the same time. And then put that all on TV and glorify it. Yeah. You know, but then let a let a Hispanic sister have eight kids and it's it's like a great shame. Right.
>> Yeah. You know? Right.
This is pure stupidity. But it play. in favor of the USC Los Angeles County Medical Center.
The most recent allegations [music] of forced sterilizations are the latest in a pattern of the state trying to control brown and black bodies. [music] This is why we must continue to protect the right of all [music] people regardless of race, education, and income level, or immigration status to have autonomy [music] over their own bodies.
Yeah. You know, she's saying something there, right?
But we can't have autonomy over our own bodies. Mhm. Because we under we under the auspices of the of the dragon right now, you know what I'm saying? That's what you got to understand. Uh and and and we bring the scripture out a lot, but we going to go back to it again.
Nehemiah 9. Yes, sir. Right?
Watch this because again, we we don't have that autonomy over our bodies.
Yeah, right here, we go to the gym.
Yeah, with certain things you could do.
Yeah, the government. But when it comes to situations like that, when they really want you, that's it. They're going to flip that switch. All right? Uh starting uh 36.
The book of Nehemiah, chapter 9, and verse 36.
Behold, we are servants this day. And for the land that thou gave us unto our fathers to eat the fruit thereof, and the good thereof, behold, we are servants in it.
>> sister right there, right? She talking about uh uh the so-called tribe uh not so-called, the so-called Mexicans, but the tribe of Issachar, right? This is their land.
It was given to them, right? But now they're servants in it, right? This is what the scriptures are saying it, right? Go ahead. And it yieldeth much increase unto the kings whom thou has set over us. Right. Go ahead. Because of our sins. Right. Because of our sins, Esau's gaining all the wealth of the land. Go ahead. Also, they have dominion over our bodies.
>> You heard that? They have dominion over our bodies. They got power over our bodies. So, when you saying, "Oh yeah, we have to have autonomy over our bodies." Yeah, it sound nice, but it's not accurate. And it it's not going to be accurate cuz at the end of the day, they have power over our bodies.
Continue that.
And over our cattle at their pleasure.
And we are in great distress.
>> And we in great distress because we got brothers com- uh uh sorry, sisters coming in. Hey, uh you listen, we just going to tie you tubes. When you hear about tying tubes, sound like it could be untied. Yes. Right.
>> But in reality, what they do, they burn them, don't they?
>> Yeah, they burn them. Right.
Right, they burn the ends. So, that's for you to never become pregnant again.
But just the way they they they name it, you see what I'm saying? It it is it's just wicked as hell.
You see the uh the process how they always do it and it's it's always repetitive, right? They'll present it as an option first. Right. Right? And then when you don't go with the option, that's when the force comes out. You know, and if you look at recently, there was this one sickness that came about that now if you didn't take a certain thing, you can't get on an airplane. You can't go to the store. You can't get a job here. You get fired from your work.
You can't go to school. You know what I'm saying? And if it would have got any worse, that's when the force comes. But it they they're doing the same thing over and over, right? Yeah.
Same different experiment. I mean, same experiment, just a different playing field, man. Exactly. That's all it that's all that it is, man.
But we on to you. We on to you.
>> We on to you, man. Yeah, we got the same move. Yeah.
>> Same move.
>> times you think you going to hit us with the with the people's elbow >> [laughter] >> and the rock bottom? We know the rock do that.
We know Esau do the the swooping swap, you know? Yeah. But we on to it, you know?
>> Yeah. That's what Iran said. Iran said, "Yeah, we we know this story already. We not giving in at all."
>> There you go. You know what I mean? Hey, uh bring up 19. Let me show y'all something. Let me Let me show y'all how much the C-section and the um the history of what was going on with the sisters, the Ephraimite sisters, right? Specifically the tribe of Ephraim in the land of uh Puerto Rico or or the land of Borikén, which is the original name, right? The land of the brave lords, right?
But watch this.
So, they were doing so much sterilization and abortions and everything else. I want y'all to see this uh what's going on here. Number 19, y'all.
Y'all got it? All right. Just read that real quick.
From forced sterilizations to fertility technology, addressing medical mistrust in Puerto Rico.
>> Right. So, this was written last year.
This 2025 this article was written, right? Just scroll down.
Uh go to a legacy, right there. No, no, no, no, no, no, no.
A legacy of coercion.
No, no, no, no, no. I'm sorry. Right above that where it says Puerto Rico, right there. Yes, sir. Yep.
Puerto Rico has the lowest birth rate of any US state or territory, 6.1 per 1,000 people.
>> Now, that's real crazy cuz you go to New York and Ephraim is having babies every 5 seconds.
>> Right. Right. [laughter] Right? Like they supposed to. That that's like a joke in New York.
Everybody know that. The tribe of Ephraim got mad kids. They used to be having like 10 kids in one 10 people in one car, all that. That's like a that's a known joke. Right? They have mad kids.
Same thing in in in Philly. If y'all in Philly, y'all know what it is. Ephraim out there having kids. That's a known thing, right? But now in their own land where the United States was over there pulling off all type of wicked experimentation, they only having 6.1 out of 1,000 people is getting pregnant.
This is demonic, but read on. Watch this, y'all. Yet, one of the highest cesarean sections rates at 50.5%.
>> So, how you got the lowest birth rate and then half of the births is cesarean section? Found the culprit right there.
I think uh 98% of them births is cesarean section.
>> Man, I'm telling you. And look, far above the US average of 32.2.
So, now what they want to they want to act like that's something like a natural thing that that just happened all of a sudden? No. That that's something that Esau did, concocted, and and and and uh conducted, you know what I'm saying? And made it to happen. All right? Scroll down a bit. There's something in there about uh in 1956. That's what I want.
That next second paragraph. Yeah, there you go, right there. In 1956 In 1956, Margaret Sanger and Gregory Pincus launched clinical trials for experiment for an experimental contraceptive pill in Puerto Rico, circumventing stricter US regulations.
>> Right. So, Margaret Sanger was from America. She's a demon, right? She is the mother of the eugenics movement, right? And basically all the Planned Parenthood uh uh spots is was generally a eugenics center. It was renamed Planned Parenthood to give it a more softer appeal. But Margaret Sanger is the one who started that and she said she started it for who? Blacks and Hispanics. They were reckless breeders, Yeah. right? So, So, when y'all see Planned Parenthood in the abortion clinics, it was strictly set up for our people, 100%. That's why they went down to to Puerto Rico and talk about she was circumventing strict the US reg- No, she wasn't. That's what they were used to doing down there. Yeah.
All right, look. Right? That looks like Oh, she's a nice person. You can't trust a face that look like that.
>> Yeah. Look at her Hey, guys.
We We got burgers over here. You coming over? That's her face.
Meanwhile, she's the devil. She going to stab you right in your eye. Yeah.
>> She ain't even going to wait for you to turn around and hit you in the back. She going to hit you right in the eye. Yeah.
Go ahead. Go back.
Read that thing. Over 200 women in Rio Piedras were enrolled.
>> Piedras.
were enrolled. Right. Most of the women were poor >> No. Most of whom? Most of whom were poor and lack access to formal education.
Right. Meaning they could run any type of game they want on them, right?
Because they were doing an experimental contraceptive pill. Meaning that you going to take this pill and knock you pregnant.
So, what they doing? More experiments.
>> Yeah. Meanwhile, these Meanwhile, the sisters probably getting sick and everything else. But go ahead.
It's about to come up. Go ahead. These participants received little to no information about the drug safety, >> Right. reflecting the medical standards of the time, which did not prioritize informed consent. Right. They always say that, "Of the time." Just say we didn't care.
We were just dealing with them because they was Puerto Rican. Yep.
>> They're the tribe of Ephraim. They they're nothing to us. We want to destroy them. Go ahead. Women who later reported serious side effects such as nausea, dizziness, and blood clots >> And blood clots. Go ahead. were dismissed as unreliable historians.
>> Yo. Wow.
>> Unreliable historians, meaning y'all some lying a nigs.
>> [laughter] >> That's really what it was.
Go ahead.
These trials echoed Hold on. Your mic went out.
Check. Okay.
Wow, somebody getting my mic.
>> to be dead.
Yeah. Somebody getting my mic. All right, I'll read it. I'll read it. These trials echoed broader eugenics ideol- ideologies and disproportionately targeted marginalized communities. Mhm.
Sims a central figure in these trials later founded Planned Parenthood, right?
That's what we just telling y'all about.
>> Right.
>> An organization now advocating for reproductive autonomy. What that means is they have already set the stage for you to walk in and kill your children yourself. After they first been killing your kids, now they saying, "No, no, no, just go ahead and you do it now." Yeah.
So, that's what that reproductive autonomy means, right? Yet built upon a legacy of exploiting black and brown women. Look at that.
>> legacy of it. Look at that. Right?
Without these ethically compromised experiments on Puerto Rican women, much of the groundwork for ART would not exist. What is ART?
Ain't no ART about that.
>> Yeah, yeah, go up to the top.
Maybe we missed what ART actually stands for.
Just go up to the top, y'all. Go up up up up up up up up.
Hold on.
Okay, assisted reproductive technology.
Okay. Okay.
Okay, so so that's what it is. And that's why the people said, "Hey, we don't trust these people." Exactly. They not supposed to trust. You not.
A lot of a lot of blacks and Hispanics don't like going to the hospital and don't trust doctors and stuff cuz of the history of We should go to the doctors.
No, 100%.
>> we should be you know, checking up on ourselves, but just the history and relationship that we've had uh throughout our uh our being here is not been a good one. It's always been something underlying that's to destroy us, you know? So, we don't really trust too much. Yeah, you can't.
You can't trust somebody that that that that killed all your kids. Right.
>> trust that. You can't trust somebody that wanted you to kill all your kids.
You can't trust that.
>> Exactly.
>> You only You take what you what you can, and everything else you throw in the trash. Exactly.
>> Right. So, throw in the trash, right?
All right. Hey, y'all, bring up number nine.
All right, it's from the same book we were reading before uh which is medical bondage, right? It's from that book.
All right, bring up number nine.
It's a few pages there. We're going to read the highlighted sections, all right?
Go ahead.
Physicians were often slaveholders themselves.
>> Right. Oh. You see that? The physicians were often slaveholders. Cuz the slaveholders were calling themselves physicians. Yeah. 100% We we don't know what kind of medical school they was going to. They wasn't. Right. Medical school was that uh was was was the guinea pigs that they had on the on the table.
>> Exactly. That's all they was doing. Go ahead. However, doctors also brought and hired slaves on whom to conduct experiments too painful, too risky, or otherwise too objectionable to inflict >> objectionable. Go ahead.
>> me. Too objectionable to inflict upon whites. Right. They said, "Yo, we need some of them slaves so we could cut them without anesthesia." This is what the sister was talking about.
>> Yeah. Right, there was no anesthesia.
They They probably said, "Man, you want some rum? Psych."
Man. [laughter] They ain't even give him get him drunk or nothing. Yeah. You know what I mean? Because during that time when they did dentistry, right? Just to show y'all, that's why I made a little joke about the barbers. The first dentist amongst Esau was barbers. Wow.
Cuz they Yeah, they already had the barber chair. They were like, "Hey, this chair is perfect."
Won't we You let me fix your teeth while we at it. That's what happened. It's the same chair. That's how it started. I'm telling you it's the same chair.
>> Wow.
>> When y'all really think about it, it's the same chair. It started like that.
So, the first dentist were barbers, right? Probably first started with just some you know, we call it um when they remove your teeth, right?
>> Yeah. Boom, knock that out.
And then things got warm The point is when they saying they were physicians, we don't know if they were really physicians. That's my point. All right?
Right. Go ahead. Get back to that book, y'all.
Huh? You was going to say Your mic is out?
Hey, check check over to Sham's mic. Go ahead. Bring that thing back up. Go ahead.
Highlighted, bro.
Blaming enslaved mothers for the high death rates of their infant children.
>> Right. So, this So, that same clown uh Sims right? It's hard to call him a doctor, but that same guy Sims that we saw the picture of and and who perfected the C-sections and all that, he would blame the enslaved mothers if their children died. Go ahead. He ascribed neonatal tetanus, newborn tetanus, or trismus, or nascientium to the mother's moral and intellectual failures.
>> [laughter] >> So, because the children died, he said, "You know what? Y'all are morally and and and intel- intellectually uh inferior. Yeah.
>> That's why your children died."
Th- This was a This was a complete demon. This is what you call Dr. Frankenstein. That's the only doctor I'm really I'm ready to put on this guy.
Right. A pure Dr. Frankenstein. Go ahead. Go to the next one.
Or Dr. Jekyll, Cap. Right, Dr. [laughter] Jekyll. Yeah.
For real, that's what we going to call him, Dr. Jekyll.
Right? So, this one it says James So, that's his whole name, James Marion Sims, savior and sadist. That's what they say, right? So, read right under that, bro. James Marion Sims is an important figure in the history of experimentation with African Americans because so well embo- he so well embodied the dual face of American medicine to which racial health disparities owed so much.
>> Uh-huh. Damn. Sims is revered as a woman's benefactor. Right, it says Sims is revered as a woman's benefactor, meaning what? That if it wasn't for him and all his gynecological advances, women would be in trouble. But he's really a demon. That's fake. But go ahead.
Although he conducted years of nightmarishly painful and degrading experiments Right, hold on. Hold on.
Man, how can you use that in the same Bro, you can't make it up. Nightmarishly painful and degrading experiments.
>> Damn.
This is not a doctor. No.
Go ahead. This Dr. Jekyll. With- Without anesthesia >> Uh-huh. or consent >> Right.
>> on a group of slave women. Right. Go ahead. He was born into a struggling family of 10 in Hanging Rock near Lancaster Ville, South Carolina in 1813.
In his autobiography, The Story of My Life, Sims described We got to raise it up. Sims described how despite Raise it up, y'all. Pay attention. You got to raise it up.
It'd be good if y'all wasn't asleep back there.
See, this is why we need y'all in the super chat.
>> Yeah, super chat. Come on, help us.
>> This is why we need y'all. We need we We We just Fire the whole team and build us a new team.
>> Yeah, we about to get As soon as we get We looking for a certain amount that'll be enough for us to pay the new team.
>> [laughter] >> Go ahead. The story of My Life, Sims described how despite a career as an indifferent mediocre student >> man was a mediocre student. Man.
A mediocre student. Go ahead. He gained entrance first to South Carolina Medical College and then to Jefferson Medical College in Philadelphia.
In the manner of the day, his medical education consisted Raise it up. Of a year and a half.
Don't Don't Don't Don't that sound like uh Epstein, bro? I'm telling you.
>> Yeah, it's pretty much Bro, he He didn't have nothing He had nothing to do with the things that he was doing. Right. He was not a profession. He had no profession in nothing that he claimed that he had profession in. Right. But he was able to uh Right. move around like he had something going.
>> Become a doctor. The man said he was a mediocre student. There's no such thing as a mediocre student that translates into a doctor.
>> Nah, it it ain't. No, that that that's madness. But again, like you said, they said he started off poor, right?
>> Epstein started off poor.
Right? Then all of a sudden he This man is the head of gyneco- No, he went in there, worshipped Satan, and they said, "Yo, you ready to do this? You ready to drink this blood?" I am.
>> [laughter] >> He was like, "Come on in, Dr. Jekyll."
>> [laughter] >> Go ahead. Read that thing in highlights, bro. But these were mere prelude. On a June day in 1845, 17-year-old Ar- Anarcha, or whatever, a slave on the Westcott Plantation just outside Montgomery, Alabama, felt the contractions that heralded the birth of her first child.
Three days later, the exhausted, terrified girl still writhed Right.
writhed writhed writhed in excruciating labor. Sims was called in and used obstetrically forceps >> obstetrical forceps >> obstetrical forceps with which he admitted he had little experience. The child died. And although Ar- Anarcha Damn.
Anarcha That's cool, man. Anarcha seemed out immedi- immediate danger immediate danger, she soon faced another horrible trial.
Her torn vagina began eroding, and she was left with openings between the remains of her vagina and her bladder and rectum.
>> Wow. So, it just fell out?
Oh, no.
>> wicked, bro. This is wickedness, man.
>> fell out. He forgot to tighten some screws on the woman's vagina.
>> nuts and bolts. This man didn't give a damn, bro.
>> [laughter] >> Read. Go ahead.
She was now incontinent and the incessantly incessantly flowing urine inflamed her ravaged tissues.
>> Right. So, what was going on when it says that that she was incontinent, right? Meaning that she kept her urine kept coming out.
She had no way of stopping it because she had no control over her her genitals anymore, right? And it says the incessantly flowing urine inflamed her ravaged tissue. So, now the urine was hitting her tissues and what?
Infecting it. Yep. Right? Go ahead.
Triggering pain, recurrent infections, and odor.
>> Right. All because this animal went in there and did whatever he felt like.
This is this is this is insane.
Because they let a mediocre student that love inflicting pain on black women in there.
>> Yep.
That's what it really is.
>> Yep.
Go to that next one and start in the the second paragraph.
Next one.
Hey, the next page, y'all. All right.
Well, well, why why we doing that?
>> sir.
>> We got Tolbert Israel, $10. $2. Tolbert.
>> All praises.
>> Trey Chamone, $20.
>> Okay, Trey. 20 All right. All praises.
Thank you. Super chat.
All right.
Super chat. All praises.
>> in the super chat.
>> Yes. Yes.
>> So, we can get us a new team. They heard our pain, man. They heard our pain.
Yeah. Hey, did y'all y'all got the next one?
Okay, bring that up, man. Before more super chats coming about y'all.
Yep, another one just came in.
>> Oh, yeah?
Hey, Rifka Israel, $10. All right. All praises. Thank you, Rifka.
As a plantation doctor, Sims attended many children. Hold on 1 second, right?
Just just just scroll back up to the top again, right? I'm a I'm going to read some real quick, right? So, I guess from the other page they were saying how he came in and removed the contagion and relocated and the same so on and so forth, but it says today we know the deaths of those slaves were probably the caregivers for meaning Sims, right? Same thing we said before. When he was doing all of those experiments and then in 1830 he finally got the C-section right.
Right. That's cuz he was killing everybody.
>> killing everything that walked through there. For 8 years straight he was killing everything that walked through there. And then in the ninth year he finally completed a successful one.
Right.
And all of them people was black women because they said that that pain couldn't be inflicted on the white person. Right. It actually said that.
>> It did say that.
Go ahead. Now now read as a plantation.
I'm sorry, bro. As a plantation doctor, Sims attended many children. But he used only the black infants as subjects for dangerous experiments in tetany, a long misunderstood children's neuromuscular disease characterized by convulsions and muscular excuse me muscle spasms. The tetany that was an epidemic among enslaved children was actually the result of severe calcium, magnesium, and vitamin D deficiency caused by chronic malnutrition.
>> Right. Because our people enslaved, they feeding them slop. They're not giving them good food. So, therefore they were malnourished. Right? Even though you might let's say they give you a bowl of something to eat. That don't mean you going to have good nutrition. There was no no nutrition in it, right? Look at all Look at everything that's missing.
The calcium, the magnesium, vitamin D.
You need all that. Yeah. Go ahead.
But Sims Raise it up. But Sims was was erroneously convinced that it was caused by the displates displacement of of skull bones during birth.
>> Wow. Going back to that anthropometry.
Yeah.
>> Right? The skull. I'm telling you. Wow.
>> But but remember, this is a this is an idiot demon that's working. This is not no smart man. Nah. This this not an intelligent man who's becoming a doctor.
This is some guy a regular dude who you know that they made a doctor, right? Because he was a demon. They needed him to do these experiments. He had the the stomach, you know what I'm saying? To do this. A natural born killer. Go ahead. He took a sick black baby from its mother, made incisions in its scope, then wielded a cobbler's tool >> Hold on. Hold on. Hold on. Yikes. He made incisions in the scalp, then wielded a cobbler's tool to pry the skull bones into new positions, man.
What? You Bro, this is this is Dr. Frankenstein, for real. For real. Bro. For real. They made a movie about him. Yeah. For real.
He's really Dr. Frankenstein. Look.
And everybody's there watching and he's doing whatever the hell he wants, man.
I'll tell you, man. Yo, when the Lord come back, these demons is going to pay.
That's why the Lord said they going to do It's going to be double. You see You see what's all the stuff we reading?
Worse things is going to happen to them.
In the new Bible in the next Bible it's going to be like, man, Israelites was playing with these people. Right. Oh, man. It's going to be very vicious.
The Lord said I got to put my fury in y'all mind, but see cuz we don't really understand everything.
But when the Lord said when he come back, he's going to put his fury in our spirit. Meaning what? We're going to see all of the evil that they did. Yeah. We going to say, okay. Now it's going Now we going to take care of business.
>> Yeah. Go ahead.
Where we at? During this time I would occasionally puncture the scalp over the lambdoidal suture with a point of a crooked awl and prize prize out the edges of the parietal bones always.
>> Right. The parietal bones. That's them bones on the skull. Go ahead.
With the effect of a greatly modifying the rigid floor of the extremities, Sims attempted to open the skull was base What? was based upon a scientific myth that the bones of black infants' skulls, unlike white infants, grew together quickly leaving the brain no space to grow and develop.
>> [laughter] >> Hey, listen. What they did right there was create that after the fact. They wrote that in after the fact. Yep.
>> They didn't think, oh yeah, oh no, their their skull grows together real quick and it doesn't give time. So, we're going to go in and pop open the brain and let them No, they did that after so it would make it look like they didn't know.
This is 18 something. Y'all See, it sound like this is ancient history. You got to understand all kind of all kind of surgeries was being done by our people way before this.
Way before this. So, it's not that they didn't have certain understanding. They didn't give a damn.
They was going in there and torturing our people, destroying our people, trying to work on themselves. They just trying to figure out what to do with themselves. That's all this was about.
It wasn't that they didn't know about the All this this information had been in the past.
>> Yeah.
You think people they had brain problems, they wasn't getting no surgeries back then? Y'all must be crazy. Our people was doing all that back then.
All right? Like what's my man's name?
Ben Carson? Mhm. Right? Ben Carson was the first one to do the to separate the Siamese twins, right?
You mean to tell me in all this time in history not one Edomite did that?
After all their their schooling?
This brother who's probably maybe only two generations removed from slavery is the first one to do that?
So so guess what? Cuz our people been doing things like that a long time.
A long time, y'all.
All right? That's Ben Carson right there.
Okay?
He Ben Carson, you know, he's a great brother in in regards to his skill set and the Lord blessed him with intel you know, certain levels of intelligence and and acumen and all that, but guess what?
He's a [ __ ] [ __ ] status. Yeah. You know who was why?
Yeah. Yeah. Totally cooned out. But go ahead.
That was it on that, Joe?
That was it on that, officer?
Nah nah nah. I think that's it. I think that I Wait, hold on. There might be one more. Hold on.
Ain't you know, Esau make up the stupidest reasons to do stuff, bro? Right.
They make up the dumbest reasons because the baby brain wasn't going to grow.
>> What the hell is you talking about?
>> that that's just a lie. Yeah, that's the smoke. Yeah. No, for real.
>> Like you care. Like you don't care, bro.
>> Yeah. He just threw the dust in the eye.
Real talk.
That was that damn what you call it again? That's the Green Goblin. Yeah.
That that that smoke bomb he dropped.
I'm like, what? He ride off into the nothingness.
>> [laughter] >> Yo. Hold on. It was another one I wanted to play. Hey, I think I it should be way in the bottom. 22. Let me see. I don't Oh, yeah. Hey, play 22. Now, this is going back over the sister Sherice, right? But this is a doctor.
His name is Dr. Jewel. He's going to go into some things, right? But just check this out real quick.
Imagine you're in labor, in pain, and contracting, and then suddenly a nurse wheels in a screen. On it is a Zoom meeting with a judge and lawyers. You're suddenly in court while in the hospital.
That's exactly what happened to Sherice Dooley, a professional doula in Florida.
As she was actively in labor, the hospital took her to court to try to force her to have a C-section. Here's a clip. It's a real judge.
My name is Michael Kalil. I'm a circuit court judge here in Jacksonville, Florida. Now, the state of Florida has filed a petition for declaratory judgment. They're asking for an emergency C-section be granted by the court.
>> I have not had a chance to be able to consult with my own legal representation and I'm trying to understand how you are taking my rights away as a patient to be able to decide my own care to give me an emergency C-section against my will.
There's so much to talk about here. My name is Dr. Jewell, the Medical Myth Buster, and today let's talk about what this case says about medical autonomy and reproductive justice. Sherrice had three prior C-sections, but she wanted to try for a vaginal birth. She understood the risks and had full decision-making capacity, but the decision wasn't hers anymore because under Florida law, a court can intervene when a fetus is seen to be at risk.
>> Oh, pause pause pause pause pause. It says What did he say? Take it back a couple more seconds. Let me let me hear that again.
Dr. Jewell, the Medical Myth Buster, and today let's talk about what this case says about medical autonomy and reproductive justice. Sherrice had three prior C-sections, but she wanted to try for a vaginal birth. She understood the risks and had full decision-making capacity, but the decision wasn't hers anymore because under Florida law, a court can intervene when a fetus is seen to be at risk.
>> You you know what that means? That means that you are not free at all. That means you're still a slave. That means the slave master can still come in and make decisions in your life just because they want to. Right. Like the scripture Cap read earlier, he said um What was the scripture that he read earlier?
Read it again.
Read that again.
Nehemiah chapter 9 and verse 36.
>> There you go.
Behold, we are servants this day and for the land that thou gave us unto our fathers to eat the fruit thereof and the good thereof. Behold, we are servants in it. We are servants in our own land. Come on. And it yieldeth much increase unto the kings whom thou has set over us because of our sins.
>> Uh-huh. Also, they have dominion over our bodies.
>> They have dominion over our bodies. How could a court uh take the rights away from a completely sane woman and do whatever the hell he want to do?
Right. Because we don't have dominions over our own bodies. We still slaves to these people. Right.
>> You're not free.
You remember they said >> Go to the liquor store. Go ahead. Go ahead.
>> No, just to your point, you remember they strength is the law. Right. So they brought that out. The the loophole was what? If the baby's at risk. Yep. That baby wasn't at risk.
>> Not at all. Not at all, but they can say, "Oh, we see a little something here, so it's time to bring the courts in." You know, say she's mentally ill or whatever. Some kind of some kind of loophole, you know, and it's it's the law that that stop them from having to obviously be the devil. That's their main weapon.
Yeah, the law this this current law that we under is the devil. Exactly.
>> It's it's it's 100% the devil because guess what? Under this law, two men can get married. Right. What the hell is this?
Mischief.
Straight mischief. Give me Psalm 94 and 20. Bring it out.
>> [laughter] >> That's perfect, man.
Cuz yeah, this and the law was on the eugenics tree.
Yeah, it was. It was right there on the in the middle.
What was that you called? Uh Psalm 94 and 20. The book of Psalms chapter 94 and verse 20.
Shall the throne of iniquity have fellowship with thee which frameth mischief by law?
>> All right. They they frame mischief by a law. So for instance, they took away slavery but they reinstituted it if you go to jail or you know what I'm saying? That's how they do it. So by law, if you if you've ever become a prisoner or whatever, they can make you work so on and so forth. What's I forgot what was that that called? Title I forgot the name of it. It's a a good documentary on it and on on Netflix.
Uh what's it called? Slavery by another name? The 13th Amendment. That's what it is. And that's a law to where even though slavery is technically abolished, if you go to prison, you you right back a slave again. You see what I'm saying?
You have reproductive rights unless they see fit that they say, "Well, your baby's in danger or whatever." It's really for them to make money, you know, and and sterilize us.
Yeah.
Hey, read that again, verse 20.
Verse 20.
Shall the throne of iniquity have fellowship with thee which frameth mischief by law?
>> They frame frameth mischief by law. Now, the next scripture is going to tell you why they do it. Go ahead and read the next one.
Verse 21. Uh-huh. They gather themselves together against the soul of the righteous.
>> themselves together against the souls of God's people.
>> Exactly. That's why they do it. That's why they frame that mischief by law. Go ahead. And condemn the innocent blood.
>> And condemn anybody that speaks against that.
You can't say nothing about the LGBTQ these days. They condemn they condemn you for it. Yep. You can't you can't say uh nothing about uh uh them on social about anything that they do on social media. What they do, they a so-called cancel you.
Go ahead.
Oh.
Yeah, yeah. You play that. Play. Play. 2 to 3 hours >> Take me off the screen. the judge ruled that Doyle could keep trying for vaginal birth unless there is an emergency. But in that moment, her autonomy, her right to decide what happens to her own body, was overridden by the law. Overnight, doctors said that her baby's heart rate dropped for 7 minutes.
>> Lie. Doyle woke up to her hospital bed being wheeled to surgery.
Her baby was delivered via C-section.
What's so interesting to me here in this case is the ethics because in medicine, one of the most fundamental things we're taught is autonomy. If you're an adult with decision-making capacity, you have the right to refuse treatment, surgery, blood transfusions, CPR, intubation, but pregnancy exists in a different legal and ethical space. But that doesn't happen in a vacuum. Black women in the United States are more likely to have C-sections than white women, more likely to have their pain dismissed, more likely to suffer from pregnancy-related complications, more likely to have their pain dismissed, more likely to die from child birth. And up until 20 Right. That's the same thing that dude that that was just in the book. That's right. The book said that they they couldn't do it on white women because because it was too excruciating for them.
>> Right. And for the babies as well.
Remember they said the infants, they treated them the same way as well. Yeah.
>> Right. They wanted to use the the the the black babies because the white babies couldn't take the pain.
So you imagine from 1830 or whenever that was 1830.
This is 2026. And it's the same thing.
Same thing.
>> That's why y'all I'm telling you that the people who not in the truth, y'all need to believe this Bible. Y'all don't y'all don't we don't have to keep going through but we got to keep going through it.
>> [laughter] >> But y'all have to come around and start look at this. You think this is going to change? You still got some brothers out there talking about, "Oh, now you we making a change in this world."
Skip the bibbity bibbity babble. Come on, man.
>> [laughter] >> It's just it's slave, man. It's a slave mentality.
Y'all got to stop. Y'all got to stop this.
>> [laughter] >> They got to stop dancing, man.
Go ahead. Hit play, man. 21. Medicine reinforced many of these biases through tools like the VBAC calculator, which used race in order to predict someone's likelihood of having a successful vaginal birth after previously having a C-section. If you were black or Latina, the calculator gave you a lower chance of success and pushed providers towards offering you surgery. So that meant black women were more likely to be told that they weren't good candidates for vaginal birth and more likely to be told to have a C-section. I look at a case like this, I have to ask, is this about safety or is this about control? Because when a court can enter a delivery room or an algorithm can decide who gets the chance at a vaginal birth, that's no longer medicine. That's institutional power. If your autonomy can be taken away at one of the most vulnerable moments of your life, then the question that I have to ask is whose body is it really? See? Imagine you're in la- Right.
>> We have no dominions over our bodies.
Period. Period.
That's just what it is. Yeah. So how you don't believe the Bible when it's telling you all this stuff Right.
thousands of years before it happened and we still living it, you know? Right.
Come on around, man. So come on around.
Yeah.
>> [laughter] >> For real. Hold on. I thought I don't want to bring out one more thing.
Um I think that's it.
Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. No.
Thought I had one more. But yo yeah.
Yeah. So while you looking for that, let me see.
Booster Club. Bing. Oh yeah. Hit that up. Booster Club. Make sure y'all scan the QR code. Give to the Booster Club because they they they treating us bad all over the world.
>> Yeah. And we trying to heal that heal our people all over the world to wake up to this truth. Mhm.
Send it on over there. Send it on over there.
>> [laughter] >> Yo.
Hey, and um remember the sisters, y'all got to come back to the laws of God. One of the laws is marriage is honorable. Yeah. A husband in those rooms is very powerful.
I've been in that nursing room and they were pressuring them what those women to get pressured. Yes. Can I tell y'all something? Yeah. Can I tell you and I and I forgot to ask Breonna.
>> [snorts] >> Um but the other sister, what's her name? Sherrice? Yeah.
Did you see her husband in the room?
Nope.
>> He was there.
With all that pressure to Yeah.
Yeah.
Some sometimes the men is there. They they don't care. They come in rough shot. They just putting the Wow.
>> pushing >> fake Get up out of here. And that that's why you men need to wake up into this truth, man. Because we make we make men out of you weak brothers, man. Yeah. You can't come into the room and talk to and and talk nothing about me while I'm sitting there sitting right there. Yeah, it's crazy, bro.
>> This is all me right here. Yep. Right.
All this ain't thing inside up in here.
Everything up in through here. Yeah.
>> [laughter] >> Right? Cuz she said her mom was there.
She said the kids was there. Maybe maybe pops is on his way. You know sometimes you be at work that happen. You got to hurry up and get out of get get over there. Anything is possible. But the other sister, it just look like she was by herself.
>> It did. No, she wasn't by herself. Her husband was there.
You know what I mean? And they still did whatever the hell they wanted to. Yeah, it's crazy.
>> So imagine in a situation like that.
They not even going to the husband saying, all right, so what you want to do, you know? At least at least some respect. Like, hey, so what you want to do for your family? I know your wife saying that, but what you want to do, you know? Well, none of that. Yeah.
>> No, you no no, sir. You you you Not only do you have not autonomy over your own body, but but that's what what the Lord said, right? That a that a husband and wife is one flesh. Right.
>> Yeah, so they disrespecting both of y'all at one time. You Yeah. One flesh.
Hey, y'all.
All praise to the Lord. We we It's good that we see these things, right? Hosea 5 and 15. Hey, Cap. [clears throat] You know what's crazy about that what you just said? Because um they they they oppress press your body your choice Right. only when it benefit Right.
>> uh them. Exactly. Abortion. For the abortion, yep. That's it. Right. Your body your choice only when it benefit you, but when it benefit me and you want to take money out of my pocket, you getting a C-section. Right. Your body my choice.
>> [laughter] >> I choose your body.
>> Yeah. Right.
Go ahead. What we said we was doing? Uh Hosea 5:15. Hosea >> Yes, sir. Yeah, read that. The book of Hosea, chapter 5 and verse 15.
I will go and return to my place >> Right. The Lord said I'mma go return to my place. Go ahead. till they acknowledge their offense.
>> We have to acknowledge our offense that we have not been keeping the laws of God. We have not been worshipping the Lord with the right way, right? So the Lord said, acknowledge your offense, right? Go ahead. and seek my face.
Right. Seek my face in the scriptures.
That's what it's talking about. Go ahead. In their affliction >> In their affliction in our affliction they will >> Things like hold on. Things like this force C-section and all that. Go ahead.
They will seek me early.
>> to go looking for the Lord. Yeah. Mhm.
We going to say, oh, something ain't Like this is This is absolutely insane.
No one has ever heard of nothing like this. I'm telling you. This alone And yes, it has happened to uh like she said, it has happened to a couple of white women. But if we if we start to really get them numbers together is it really happening to white women as much?
>> Right. They got to throw a couple of them in there. You You know what the crazy thing about it? Them white women probably had black baby daddies.
>> [laughter] >> Damn. Ain't no telling. Yo. Nah, real talk. They was probably getting done like that because they was so-called [ __ ] lovers.
>> Right. You know what happened when they did the ultrasound? They said, look at this skull. That's a black baby in there.
>> [laughter] >> Yeah, that's a black baby in there. I can tell by the by the circumference of that skull. It's a numbskull in there.
>> [laughter] >> Damn. They ain't no fitted for that big head of his.
>> [laughter] >> Woman, did you have a sex with a black man? Th- Th- This is what's going on, y'all. You probably right.
You probably right. If we go check them numbers out, maybe maybe 40 to 50% of the white women had a black baby daddy.
Yeah. Damn. Or the white woman was really in danger you know?
>> Right.
>> In that kind of case, you know?
>> Right. Maybe it was really in danger.
>> Yep. I I I don't be I don't think it was really They didn't go through what the sisters is going through. It's no way.
>> No. There's no way. Nothing wrong with our sisters that we just watched. Yeah, nothing wrong with nothing wrong with it. And >> [clears throat] >> and I bet you it wasn't like really like really forced on them. They just putting it in there as it was. They probably consented to what they was talking about. And just, oh, see? We We We do it to white people, too. Yeah, no. It's like that one white person that got one black friend. Right.
>> And and probably that's what the hospital was just all white people. So they got to get some C-sections up out of there. They said, listen, our numbers are low. Come on. Where's the C-sections? Come on, guys. Give me a couple of C-sections. Get one this quarter. Yeah, you can't you can't find one problem there. Come on. You're not looking hard enough. Give me about five C-sections this week.
And And they when they did it. But other than that, our people is getting destroyed through this. Y'all seen it.
Close to 50% in LA in the LA hood.
Right.
>> a couple of miles away where Esau is at, 15% and lower. 15 and lower.
>> As of last year, 2025 in Puerto Rico, the tribe of Ephraim with a small birth rate 50% C-sections, man.
Yo, listen, y'all.
And that's just the number that they counting, bro. Right. Right. Look at this. Unnecessary C-sections. Read that quick, officer.
Unnecessary C-sections. A study found that roughly 10% of all women feel pressured by doctors to undergo C-sections.
>> Mhm. Research on unnecessary procedures, those that medically just justified >> Those not medically >> Excuse me. Those not medically justified >> Uh-huh. indicates that black women are approximately 25% more likely than what white women to receive one. Right. And I'mma tell you something. A lot of them white women, they probably want it. Mhm.
You know what I mean? They probably like, oh, yeah, just take it out. Cuz scientifically, it's like, all right, if you just going to take it out, I'm good.
I don't really feel like going through the pain. I heard some people say that.
I don't want to go through the pain.
You know what I mean? But you going to have some kind of pain. You ain't going to just have a baby with no pain. Come Yeah.
Not [clears throat] yet. Go ahead.
General C-section rates 2022 through 2024 in the US, the average C-section for a what for the white race, excuse me.
C-section rate for white women is 31.1%.
>> Mhm. For comparison, the rates for other groups are black women, 37.1%.
Right. Asian Pacific Islanders, 34%.
Mhm. Hispanic women, 31.9%.
American Indian {slash} Alaskan Natives, 29.9%.
Right. But if you really look at the percentages >> Yes, I was just about to say that.
right? It's still skewed because these are the minority groups. Right. Right.
So 30-something percent of that is higher >> Yes.
>> way higher than their number at 30-something. You know what I mean?
We have to really check them numbers, man. For real.
>> 30-something for real with us that 30 60 68 Hey, look at this. Check this out.
>> 80-something percent. Look. Oh, it said right there. Look. Look.
Check that out. Go ahead. Court-ordered procedures.
>> Uh-huh. Historically, court-ordered C-sections have disproportionately affected minority women.
>> You see that?
They have affected them disproportionately letting you know that a lot of these C-sections we wanted to have nothing to do with it. Mhm. We It's what they call the low um low risk. There was no need for it. But they forced it. That's what they saying.
Go ahead. A foundational 1987 report in the New England Journal of Medicine found that 81% of women subjected to such orders were from minority groups suggesting only 19% were white at that time.
>> that? So that's 80% of the white Yeah. This is crazy.
Letting you know that the that the the Edomite women, they were probably asking for it. Right? And that 19% they said, oh, the judge got involved. The court got involved. That Listen, bro. We don't believe nothing Esau talking about.
>> Nah, we don't trust them.
>> like hell, bro. Lying like hell. The lion kings. Right? [laughter] The new version.
AI version.
All right. So yeah, yeah, y'all. We We going to We going to shut it down here.
All praises to the Lord. Um it was a great show tonight, you know?
Yeah, all praises.
All praises.
You know?
A lot of times when you when you see these kind of things, you know, we've been blessed to have these kind of guests come on the show, you know what I'm saying? And share what they got going on. Because it's not it's not really it seems in these days and times everybody jumping on a podcast.
Everybody's talking and whatever. So it might seem like it's just easy to talk about. But it's not really easy to talk about because this is a real life. Yeah.
She got to go into a real courtroom. She got to deal with real opposition.
Right?
And And yo, they need to throw her some some some bread, man. Real talk. They need to throw her some bread. Yeah, open up the safe, man. Yeah. Open up the safe. Yeah, they better settle out. They better do something. Yeah. Talking about, oh, yeah, y'all don't have much time. You know, we we checking the What they call it again? Uh When it when it got the time span on your on your >> Statute of limitation.
>> Statute of limitations. They got the nerve to have a statute of limitations with this? It's crazy.
>> know this was a law. Right. So we ain't know the law. We don't know the statutes, right? Like some of y'all y'all don't know the laws and statutes of the Lord. Right. Right? But y'all got to learn them things. All right?
So yeah. So again, y'all, boost the club, right? We just hit it a couple of minutes ago, but hit that, you know what I'm saying? We got the brothers all over the earth right now as we speak. All right. And all all all over the four corners of the earth and they pushing this truth crazy. All right? The Isaiah 11 11 project. We need to do this. All right? We need to activate the angels.
All right? That coupled with the war and everything else. We trying to get up out of here, y'all. You know what I'm saying? We ain't saying don't live all right while you here. Yeah, go to work.
Do what you got to do. But keep in mind that we all trying to get to the kingdom. All right? And start a new adventure. Go on send that. For real.
All right?
All right. Save a couple dollars for us.
If you if you couldn't hit us up on the super chat, then hit us up on the PayPal. All right? I [email protected].
Right.
Right. Y'all see how painful it was today. Right. Hey, so the next show we going to have for you a pastor, right?
Pastor Vincent and Lady Artist Leslie. All right? This is a a couple we talking about steps to building a godly marriage, right? So now they they they they coming from the um Christian church, but it's going to be a excellent show. We going to discuss you know what I'm saying? We we going to touch this Bible up very nicely. You know what I'm saying? We going to talk about a a a man and woman becoming one flesh, honorable marriage, so on and so forth, you know what I'm saying? To let them know, you know, they going to tell us what they doing and we going to speak on um on what we doing, right? And Lord's will, the Bible going to be in place so we should have a excellent excellent show. We can't wait for that one.
>> This is going to be very very good.
>> Oh yeah. Oh yeah, 100%.
>> Ladies and gentlemen, come on down.
>> Yeah.
>> [laughter] >> He said come on down. Now this is those shows usually be like great shows for us when we have uh you know, Christians that come on the show and stuff like that because, you know, we we already know there's a difference in doctrine or whatever, but the bottom line is marriage is honorable in all. Yeah.
Right? So so what we talking about?
>> The bottom bottom line is let God be true and every man a liar.
>> right? And we going to take marriage a little bit deeper when we when we having these conversations, you know what I mean? So Lord's will everybody leaves as friends.
Yeah.
So put those Seat belts on. Strap down.
It's going to be a hell of a ride.
>> Yeah.
All right. See you Officer Shiloh, take us out, bro. Hey, you know what to do?
Or do you know what to do? Hey.
You don't know what to do, bro.
Nehemiah chapter 13 verse 21.
Then I testified against them and said unto them, "Why lodge ye about the wall?
If you do so again, I will lay hands on you." If you do this thing again, we got to lay hands on you. If you don't donate to the booster club, we got to lay hands on you. And guess what? Supporting cast, if you ever do us like this again, we got to lay hands on you. Hey. Y'all tuned in to the show. This is Nehemiah squad. You got the mighty captains of God.
I'm Officer Shiloh.
That's Officer Judah.
We out. Yes, sir. Most High Christ bless y'all.
Let's go.
I'm leaving the heathens and holy days away from the heathen. I need a break. I don't need a reason. I need a script. I don't need your grievance. Keep it to yourself. It's better for my health.
Leave it on the show. I ain't hearing nothing else. Tonight and tonight, knowing the price, pay it off with my life till [music] it's out with your lights. Do it all for the Christ and he ain't playing nice. Knew it in the end from the start. Punch your face like it's art. The sons of a simp, call them Bart. Yeah, you did your best, played your part, but now it's time to cut you to the heart.
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