Black Americans are frequently portrayed as villains in media, politics, and society due to a combination of factors including: (1) their exceptional resilience and achievements in overcoming systemic oppression, which creates jealousy and resentment; (2) their role as moral standards and human shields for other groups, which makes them targets when they don't fit expected narratives; (3) media control by European and white perspectives that emphasizes negative stereotypes; (4) their accountability and refusal to accept disrespect, which is misinterpreted as villainous behavior; (5) the psychological impact of the term 'black' having both positive and negative connotations; and (6) the tendency to generalize negative incidents within Black communities to all Black people. This perception is further complicated by the complex relationship between Black Americans and African immigrants, with some Africans viewing Black Americans as competitors for resources and influence, while others see them as allies.
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Why Are Black Americans Always Seen as the Villain?Added:
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>> Hey, good Miss Love. How you doing?
>> I'm doing good.
>> All right. You want to address the prompt?
>> Oh, shoot. I I didn't even see it. Uh, why are black Americans looked at as the villain? Let me think about this one for a second. So, you could you could go to somebody else for now.
>> Landry, ain't nobody else but you right now, but you you can go. You can wave a minute. You can wave.
>> It's It's cool. It's cool. Um, I'll I'll say something. I'll I'll say something.
Why are black Americans uh looked at as the villain? Okay, that's a very good question. Okay. Um it because it's the easiest thing to do. Okay. It's it's easier than looking at a looking at white supremacy. Okay. Um they don't really have the the testicular fortitude to uh look at them as the villain because then you would have to treat them and and uh treat them like the villain and then act on it. Okay. And and number two, uh it's it's easier than looking at themselves, okay? Because a lot of these people who are looking at us as the villain are the ones who are oppressing people of their own group, okay? With their Azoro festivals and whatnot. All right? So when it's when it's time for them to actually hold somebody accountable, they look for a scapegoat, just like all cowards do.
We're used to it, and we've seen it a million different times. Okay? when it's time for them to uh take accountability for the slavery that's happening in Africa of the the children uh who are being given over to the SMMEX tourists who go over there and everything like that when it's time for them to take accountability for their antilack uh racism uh their tetherism when it's time for them to take accountability for the uh them uh coming together with the white supremacist to go against They all start dodging accountability and saying it's not all of us, it's not all of us.
As if that makes it better. Okay? So, it's it's the easiest thing to do. Okay?
Instead of them doing the right thing, they rather choose the path to least resistance and say, "Hey, if I can uh have my cake and eat it too, if I can do something to you and get away with it, uh that's what they're going to do." And it really comes down to a character issue and I'll land there.
Brother, don't you know we know no better. We come here to live and work hard.
>> I do I do want to speak to Trump right quick since >> Laundry is still uh still thinking. Uh while black Americans looked at as the villain, uh unfortunately we we are the opposite of the dominant society's ideal of what society supposed to be. And since we're their biggest villain, uh people pick up those same type of ideologies and look at us the same because we will we continue to fight regardless if it's uh looked as or supported by others because we know that we're on the right side of history like I always we always fight a righteous fight uh no matter what hurdles or what adversities are up against us, we always find a way to thwart those uh hurdles and and overcome them. And then we continue to fight for other people. And since we do that, we we're seen in some people eyes as uh a human shield or protector for some groups. And then when we're not being that, we're seen as a villain because we're not usually being the battering ram that everybody is accustomed of us being. So if if we're not fitting the narrative of certain people or certain individuals, then we're we're their villain. We're we're superheroes and we're villains depending on who's telling the narrative.
>> Hey the black, let me ask you something.
Let me ask the panel something. Do y'all ever feel like we the most loved and the most h a t e it eat it you know globally? Cuz I swear like on um x it be people from Germany calling us the n word. It be people from Pakistan calling us the n word. I be like what the even even Chinese like what what is going on here? But then love us too, you know, love well love the culture and this and that. But they quick people from other countries like globally they quick to read off those crime stats and etc. Ain't that odd to y'all?
>> It is.
>> Are we not the chosen people?
>> Absolutely.
>> We got to be the chosen people. I think it's partly because we we have helped like hold a standard of liberation and and respect and justice for everybody around the world. But also look, we may not want to accept it, but we have been on the side of these these YT folks in America and beating everybody up too cuz none of these WS they would have won globally without us. So that that's why they have a a love and hat relationship with us cuz they know we we are the moral standard of how far uh these people go in America when it comes down to the violence. But they also know we part of the violence cuz we the reason why they win cuz we trying to make sure we we make it back home when we go over there fighting.
>> Shout out to that. I need to quit being so naive about that part. We do play a role. We be faded by fad in the military.
>> A lot of ass.
>> Yeah.
Shout out to VTA. Landre, you ready now?
>> I mean, I don't I don't think uh I don't think people see y'all as the villain. I just I just feel like sometimes people just disagree with uh you know what I'm saying, with some of y'all um y'all stance on certain things. But I don't I don't I don't think people look at black people and uh FBA and think y'all are like, you know what I'm saying? The villains. You know what I'm saying? So, but I think this is more for y'all to answer though cuz for you know >> No, no, no. Because I think you are more than capable of answering Landry for one >> you think Africans.
>> No, no. He says, "You happen to be African, but I'm not going to single you out." But you guys, y'all have a lot of uh white uh supremacist tropes about black Americans, too. Like, you know what I mean? Like, we're violent, we're um you know, baby mamas, like you know, we're lazy, we don't work hard. Like, I can the list continues. So that are those that's the makeup of villains especially you know since we just running around the country putting BT BTA to everybody belt your ass to everybody. So you tell me why do you think like and you came from and y'all learned this on the continent cuz y'all always say you know what I mean that's what you know that's was shown to y you you name like you heard this from Africans saying that like violin baby mas all that oh you heard that from from like >> we called African booty you know we you know we called them booty scratches and that's that's what makes us uh the villain you know.
>> Oh, that only only be that only that one word.
>> That's a good point, Mr. Uh, >> no, don't do that, mister. How you going to say that? So, they got called the booty scratcher bea. Hold on, Landry.
Hold on, Landry. And Aata been out, but they got to call the booty scratcher.
So, now we got to be all 30,000 of them things. You >> hurt our feelings.
>> That's what they would say. me.
>> No, they told me they told me.
>> Well, you guys >> this I'm talking about what they say they learned over there and they ain't over here yet to be called no booty scratcher. So >> yeah, they learn over there.
>> Yeah, I'm talking about the things they learned over there.
>> So Lie just say you don't know.
>> Hold on the black. So just say you don't know then honey, you don't know. You don't know what I'm talking about, right, Landry? Now, it depends cuz sometimes, and I don't know who controls this, sometimes most of the things we uh we we see on TV is more like rap culture, right? Like we look at the music videos and stuff like that's what that's what we we get fed. I mean, we see y >> No, you you even mentioned black-on-black crime the other day to us.
>> Forget about that. Forget about >> No, cuz this is on wildget something that's something else.
>> No, no, no. cuz you said we I got to admit about the black on black crime and you got to admit love's world about the Chicago remember. So ain't them the villains running around unlab people all around the country >> that day. I just wanted to know like okay >> no no >> for the violence. What y what's the plan?
>> I know right then your example related to black people I think yesterday or the day before was getting pulled over by the police >> because like why I mentioned that bro I'm not you know what I'm saying but >> you said that's how we relate to each other.
>> Yeah. Like for example, when I was a kid, yeah, when I came here from Africa, when I had like a a word, like a very African accent when I came here, you know what I'm saying? A lot of black kids used to used to make fun of my, you know what I'm saying? They used to call me all kinds of stuff.
>> What that got to do with Chicago black on black crime, but what do you hold on to black? Hold on to black landry. You said up here on this stage, >> that's your seat I always give you. So you were sitting right there and you said the people you went to high school with >> got convicted and you know for a fact cuz I said how you know that they was black Americans. You said cuz I know for a fact they was black Americans. I went to school with them. I went to high school with them. So wouldn't you consider people all you know under people are doing these crimes to get locked up. Those are here what we call in America villains.
>> You know what I mean? That wouldn't be a hero.
>> Yeah, but you see, I'm not going to use those kids to generalize the whole ethnicity.
>> But you're the one came up here and asked, "What we going to do about black-on-black crime?"
>> Yeah, cuz there's white on white crime.
There's African on African crime.
There's Asian on Asian crime. I'm just saying as part of y'all, you know what I'm saying?
>> No, no, no. Go ahead, man.
>> But how you relate to black people was through getting pulled over, too. So, it doesn't matter.
>> Explain that. I said >> your black experience is dealing with criminality or being dealing with the >> police black bro. You're not going to outpower me tonight, bro. Trust me, dog.
I already explained why I said that. I said that. I said that because for me, I'm thinking that like, okay, the panel is to talk about like black struggle and how, let me say we love, let's allow me to be part of this for a little bit. How we can be better, how we can get at the, you know what I'm saying, at the end of this and stuff like that. So, I'm thinking we're mostly focusing on like black problems and not like, you know what I'm saying, black victories or whatever.
>> But Landry, how is it we when you ain't say nothing? Ain't no Africans in jail.
Cuz you, if if it was we, you would have been like, you know what I mean? You would have been asking that question about what we going to do about this African Wait, you would have been like, "What we going to do about this African and black American crime?" You was like, "No, what you going to do about that black-on-black crime?" And I said, "Prove was black." And you was like, "We know they was black. What about Chicago?
I can't say Africa cuz y'all make a y do a great job of separating >> y'all in jails and prisons.
>> Y'all don't even cuz y'all don't even >> Are y'all in jails and prisons? Can you admit that y'all locked up in our jails and our in our prisons too?
>> Uh yeah, we a couple of us in there in prison.
>> A couple say say >> right.
>> I can I can I can speak to that. It's a lot of Caribbeans, Africans, Jamaicans, a lot of them in prison. I know that for a fact because I was there, >> you know. And the thing about it is if you're black, you are part of the black culture, people, ethnic, ethnicity, period. And the reason why we are looked at as like the villain.
>> You say if he black, he part of the what?
>> He's a part of the ethnicity.
>> You mean people from Africa and Jamaica?
>> I don't want to label under blackness.
They the YT is going to label you like that.
>> Just that just how it is. And in prison when you Caribbean or or or any other than Africaname or black American, you are a black person in prison.
>> Amen.
>> You ain't going over there.
>> You're not going over there with the uh the Mexicans. You're not going over there with the watches. You're going to come right over there where all the black people are.
>> You better hush land.
to jail.
>> Black say amen to what his brother do.
>> They can try, but it won't work.
>> Americans say amen to what he said.
>> Okay, y'all. Let's move on. Let's move on.
>> Hold on. Let's >> They don't think I'm black, brother.
That's the point.
>> I was going to say, >> go ahead.
>> Oh, I was going to say this. Uh over in Africa where um where uh some of us are over in Africa, they're not locked up in those prisons at all. So I think that's mighty funny how you know how they get locked up over here but don't they're not being locked up over in Africa.
>> Hey Landre, I'mma rotate you down. You can come back up though. Okay.
>> All right. That's cool.
>> You can get right back in the queue. I got a little helicopter up here. All right.
>> Yeah. None of our expats are are criminals when when they leave.
>> Yeah. I want to >> So my say something, y'all. Oh, American, can you type that? Can you go and type that? We gonna have to um I text it to you. Can you type that in my chat when I text you?
>> Okay.
>> All right.
Go ahead. Um go ahead.
>> Yeah. Uh yeah, I I just got to say why black why are black Americans looked as as ci villains? The reason why is that uh basically it's a stereotype because if it's one situation that happens in the city or neighborhoods or wherever uh people other uh race people have a tendency to take that as all black people. I mean, you can just go around and you can feel that vibe like uh you go into a um a beauty supply store, Chinese place, they'll walk you all the way around the store.
>> Hey, >> huh?
>> I'm sorry, but it it uh JS turn.
>> Oh, okay.
>> I'm sorry. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. So, he's been here a long time. Okay.
>> He was be he was before me. That's right.
>> I'm sorry, Randy. I ain't mean to cut you off. You know, I love >> No, no, no, no. You know, I've been on here long enough, you know.
>> Okay. All right. Go ahead, J. Um, you want to address the prompt?
>> Yeah, I'll address the prompt. The reason why, you know, we are looked as like the villain, like the late great uh minister Lewis Farrakhan said, they just feel like if we ever got in power that we'll do to them what they have done to us and that ain't even us Farrakhan died.
>> No, he's still alive. But you know, >> oh, >> he's still alive.
>> Okay.
>> But that's that's that's that's that is how they feel. They feel it. So if we ever got in power that we'll do to them what they have done to us and you know that's that is how they feel. That's why we going to always be the villain. We are resilient people. It's nothing that they have done to us that we have not overcome. And now all of a sudden you know what I'm saying? They not they they worship our culture. They worship our music. They can hate us but you I live right here in Florida. Tes I love Tik Tok shop. You got to spell that word.
Yeah, but man, this that I land there.
But yeah, man. They they going to always look at us like that though, man.
>> Okay. Thank you for coming up, JS.
>> Yep. Yep.
>> Um, hey Maroon.
>> What's going on, Queen Mother? What's going on, family? Salute to everybody on the panel. Salute to the family. I just wanted to address the prompt real quick cuz I just got home. Um, so I'm going to be listening. But uh we're the villain.
We're looked at as the villain is be Stop dog. My bad. This dog over here playing toys. Um we're looked at as the villain because we've helped everybody in this whole world. You know what I'm saying? And a lot of people been leaning on us so long they done forgot how to stand. And now that we're taking a stand for ourselves instead of them, now everybody want to paint us to be the, you know, these villains and stuff.
Honestly, the propaganda of us being the villain has been going on for over, I would say, 200 years now. Um, from other countries and different, you know, ethnicities around the world. Um, but in the wise words and the most f and one of the most famous words in one of our iconic movies, even though it's, you know, about a Cuban, say good night to the bad guy. We're never going back.
Delineation is here. It's forever. And the fact that that USA ain't coming back on no time soon. Everybody 38 hot. Um, and you'll never see another bad guy like me again, let me tell you. But I just want to go and say that real quick.
I'mma be back. I just got to uh do some things around the house real quick, but I'm be listening.
>> All right. Thank you, FBA. See you later.
>> All right.
>> Uh, hey Young RJ.
>> Hey, good afternoon y'all.
>> Good afternoon. You want to address the prompt? Why are black Americans looked as the villain? Because we don't kiss ass and we don't make it easy for people to disrespect us.
>> Do tell more.
>> You like you know how you know um like like I said for instance like on the job I see how um people normally talk to other people of different backgrounds and then like they don't stand up for themselves like that. But you know, you you go talk to a brother like that, he gonna check you like, "Bro, I'm doing the job and whatnot, but I'm not gonna let you talk to me like that in that type of way. So, you need to check yourself before it got to go to go somewhere else." If you get what I'm saying?
Yeah. Fat daddy. Fat uh what his name daddy say?
What he say? He said, "Wait a minute. What he say?" He said, "That's a lie. You can't build miracles, I think, without kissing a little as But you know what? That's one thing.
Hey, hush. It's um It's hard for black Americans. Like, you you got to really have You know what I mean? To I mean, straight up like I done seen people get smacked by Chinese people. I done seen people like it it it's it's I don't know. I don't know. We I think we just got a lot of fight in us. We got a lot of like I wish you would >> I've been on jobs where I'm talking to an Asian dude just the same way I'm talking to you and he say I'm just like yo that's not what happened and he say I'm screaming I'm yelling. I'm like bro I'm not yelling. If I was yelling you' be terrified.
So it's like it's like they be talking to because like where I worked before in the airport there's a lot of Caribbean people and like some Africans here and there and they be I see they be talking to them some type of way and I'll be like you know you know like bro I'm not I'm not like I'm not Caribbean fool like like I have a black American dad. He you told me how to operate with you people how to deal with y'all like like you ain't going to talk to me like that.
Shout out to you. All right. Hey, go Rev. >> I'mma go down to the chat. All right, Miss Love.
>> Oh, okay. You can come back though, R.J.
>> All right.
>> All right.
>> All right. How's everybody doing?
>> I'm doing fantastic.
>> Y'all know why y'all know where I be at most of the time. Yeah. But, uh, yeah.
Uh, why are black Americans looked at as the villain?
We never was villains. I thank myself.
The reason why they use that and and uh those terms because they know how great we are. And I'm not saying every race has it little problems.
We do. But the way they put it, I mean, we be number one gangster, you know, enemy number one on everything.
most wanted, you know, black people. But that's not true. I really think the reason why they uh put us in that category is for the simple fact they know who we are.
They know we strong people.
And uh to me, I I think it's stereotype.
Really, I really do. I think it's a stereotype thing. They can hear one incident or maybe two in our community and they'll broadcast that all over the world.
And so when different immigrants, excuse me, come, they will believe that.
out of 69 years I've been living, I have actually seen that going into certain stores, you know, not even doing nothing wrong, just shopping like everybody else, but they will have this certain look, you know, they'll look at you a certain way, like like they watching you like you going to do something wrong. But everybody's not cut like that.
you know, and uh I think it's wrong for them to um put us in that category and make us feel make us feel like uh you know, we bad guys, but we're not.
>> Thank you, Go. Hey, hey, Johnny Black.
>> Hey, how you doing?
>> I'm doing good. You a dancing fool. Hey love.
>> Hey. Hey helicopter. Hey helicopter.
>> My bad. I see you.
>> Helicopter Johnny.
>> Put my time in. Love.
>> Huh? Okay. Let me start.
>> I put my time, man. I put my time and money in that. So, you know, I reap your benefits.
>> I love it for you. I love it for you.
You know, live your life.
You know what I mean? I love that.
Whatever makes you happy.
>> Yeah, I want to add on Yeah, I want to add on what uh Go Ram said because we don't kick it much. Go Red. But I I absolutely disagree with where you the point you coming from. And I think it's weak, man. Why are black Americans looked at as the villain? Because we are the villain.
We the villain because we the champ. You know, has there ever been a champ that wasn't the villain? like you know like we we you know we got Ali and like we the champ of everything like there's a lot of stuff we don't even see on TV like you got you got black brothers and sister in the military tough running for they can run 43 threes in sports they can run four threes in the military so can you imagine running a 43 in the military like Call of Duty like I mean we are magnificent and when you have that talent endowment and skill you the villain. You know what I'm saying? So, you know, you don't don't don't have a weak moment.
When I get seen in public, yeah, people get a little like, yeah, I'm like, "Yeah, it's me." You know what I'm saying? Like, yeah, I'm one of Yeah, it is what I'm one of them. I'm like, you know, and then they be like, "Yeah, you know, it's all right, though." You know, you know, the same thing with the uh, you know, with the trailer park crew.
They get their little hate and all that, you know. You know, but you know, sometimes Britney Spears, have a good day. H E H A T E >> H A T E, you know. Yeah. Sometimes Britney Spears might have a good day, you know. But uh you know, every now and then, you know, thug life can have a good day, too, man. But we the villain, man. Ali was a villain. Jordan was a villain. Kobe was a villain. Uh Malcolm X was a villain. Dr. Martin Luther King was a villain. Everybody was we villains, man. Because we the champs.
They not going to love us ever. They never going to love us, you know, and invite us over their house to eat dinner and, you know, play with, you know, deal. I don't want to I I don't even want to deal with >> You don't want to eat their food.
>> I don't want to be around their kids. I don't I don't go around people kids, period. So, anything that has to do with kids being there, I'm not there. That's just one of my rules that I keep hardcore in the uh protocol. No minors.
>> Yeah. But but Johnny, this what I was saying, bro. I was saying about how the negative part is. I already knew about the positive part about us. I know they already been envy and jealous of us. I was looking at the part that they always you know trying to uh you know look down at a person of u you know doing wrong.
You know we did wrong just like they have.
They might have did even more you know but strictly uh far as being a villain in a positive way. Oh, that's definitely a plus. You know, I was looking at it as negative. You know, the way, you know, they speak on us in a negative way or things of that nature.
>> Okay. Shout out to that. Um, hey Greg Knife, how you doing?
>> Hey, peace love. Peace.
>> Hey, love.
>> Hey, helicopter.
>> Go.
Oh, you want to go helicopter? I'm sorry. I'm I'm >> sorry. Go ahead, Greg. I'll wait till Greg is over and everybody else.
>> I was thinking you was uh speaking to me. Hold on. Okay, y'all got to let me know if y'all going to be m y'all going to be panelist cuz I don't always know cuz you know my don't always got to respond to the prompt. But go ahead, helicopter.
>> I figured everybody else respond.
>> Go helicopter. You got to go.
>> Yeah.
>> Yep.
>> All right. I'll be I'll be back on though.
>> Okay. All right. Bye. All right. Go ahead, helicopter. I'm sorry. Go ahead.
>> I'm so sorry. You know, I ain't I was You know, I'm sorry. I be so in work mode. I am so sorry.
>> I was just messing with you.
>> Okay. Don't make me feel bad over here.
>> But anyway, u why black Americans looked at as the villain? Because, man, we we we everything. You know what I'm saying?
Like we was the slave, we the slave and the master, right? You know what I'm saying? We we was the the the gangster and the gentleman, right? We we done been the student and the teacher, right?
And now we the superhero and the villain. You know what I'm saying? So when you in order to become the superhero and the villain, you got to be able to have accomplished everything.
You got to be able to have done everything. You know what I'm saying?
And we done did it all. Ain't too much of nothing ain't nobody else can do that we ain't already done. You know what I'm saying? And one of the things that makes us both the superhero and the villain is how we move, right? You know what I'm saying? like we we we do [ __ ] because we believe in it and we we do it because we know it's right. You know what I'm saying? Because we believe [ __ ] is right. You know what I'm saying? And then then on top of all that, you know, we got power, man. We got influence, right? The superhero and the villain, both of them got power and influence.
You know what I'm saying? And then we got we got some standards, right? We got we got morals, right? We got both good morals that lift people up. You know what I'm saying? We can be the beacon that light that everybody want to look to, right? And we also got morals that burn this damn country down like we did over our young man. That's just one example. You know what I'm saying? And then and then you look at all the other stuff we got going on, right? You know, we just we set the standard for everything with a good and bad. You know what I'm saying? And then we we we we got all of the trauma and we've experienced all of the loss, right? And we looked at by everybody, right, as two different people. You know what I'm saying? Some people see us as the heroes. Some people see us as greatness.
Some people see us as as as prisoners and and baby mamas and all that other stuff. So, at the end of the day, right, what makes us both the superhero and the villain is because we can lift people up and we can make people feel good. And what make us the villain is we can give people some consequences. You know what I'm saying? We can make it make it make it make you pay for the [ __ ] that you do to us, right? And that's what makes us the villain. Nobody else got that power.
And I'm going to land my plane on that.
Hold on, helicopter. We have a a um chat question. We gonna start reading out chat questions too. M sha truth with the I don't know what flag it I think Puerto Rico. I don't know what flag that is.
Helicopter he face shaking my head. The question is why do they look at you as a villain? But these mofos keep heaping praises.
All right. I said we both I mean Michael Jordan was looked at as a villain too, but you got to heap praise on all the things that he did. You know what I'm saying?
>> Yeah. Heavy as a head that >> Oh, a Nigerian flag.
>> I think he meant the other people uh get are heaping praises, but bro, they don't. I got to I used to watch Nancy Gray and I when being the further you are north, the closer you get to some of these areas. I call it watching the Connecticut news. I say that because if you ever watch news come out of Connecticut, >> man, you got some you got some treacherous white folks up there, man.
>> Okay, Johnny, it's Greg time, but them shout out. No, it's okay. You can I just want to get through everybody and then we can probably Okay, truth coming up, but we going to go ahead Greg. Hey, Greg.
>> Peace, love. Peace to the speakers.
>> Peace, God.
>> To those who spoke, but most importantly, peace to the chat.
Why are black Americans looked at as the villain?
I want to focus on that term black on a psychological standpoint as we sit in this western society. That term black was very positive for us. You know, black is beautiful. Everything comes from black. When you're in the black, that means you're in the positive.
So, it's all great. Black is beautiful.
But there's a psychological turn on that term as well, black bald, you know those type of terms. Black out.
When you see a villain, they got a black mask on.
You see? So those ter that term black has a double entandra to it. So psychologically when that's in in inundated with you mentally, subconsciously, you're going to think black in the negative subconsciously.
So when you come into that term, villain automatically comes to your mental.
But the dichotomy of that is us black Americans, the some of the greatest black people on this planet.
We've created everyday things that people take for granted. That's a black hand on that.
We made black something that wants to be emulated globally.
That's black.
We made the term black beautiful, something to look positively upon. No other culture, no other people did that but us.
So when you got that and you got that dichotomy, that duality in that term, only people who don't identify with that can only think of us as the villain. I land my plane.
>> I land with that. I love that, Greg.
Thank you. Hey, Revenue. Hold on. Cuz trust I mean Truth, I think he got a burning desire. Uh Truth, hi. How are you?
>> Uh, peace and blessings. Uh, Love Ward, how you doing?
>> I'm doing good. Um, you want to address the prompt for us?
>> Of course. Um, uh, why are black Americans looked at as the villain? Um, first of all, let me start by identifying what a villain means. Seems like a lot of people speaking on this panel don't know that word. It means a wicked or cruel person. I repeat, a wicked or cruel person. Because most people talking about uh what they talking about is just heaping praises on themselves. Uh how we are good at this, good at this. This is not the topic.
This is not what the question was all about. So let me go back to the topic.
Why are they looked at as the villain?
Black Americans. Uh personally to me I think why as African or as a Nigerian, why I look at them sometimes as the villain is uh what we see sometimes online. You see, there's no any group of black people in the whole world that tend to, like I said before, fight with every other ethnicity or nationality except black Americans. Um, these people fight with Mexicans, with Africans. They talk down on every single person. And it's like they there's no single people or group of people I'm going to say black Americans are allies with because of to me personally how bad their attribute and act I mean their personality is you know so that character alone makes me look at them as villain. um as uh someone that visited black American I mean America before u and went to school sometimes uh with them and even from friends the way they talk down on your accent as an African the way they relate to you the way they tell you nasty stuff especially to the kids that go to school with them makes me look at them as villains you know so there are different things that make me as an African and other people too I've heard some people say oh they're violent people they you know they hope you pure and you know different stuff. So this is the topic of why we see you as villain.
I don't come up here and tell us how you're good and best at this. This that wasn't the topic. If the topic was what makes you good, you then talk all the stuff you're saying but what makes you the villain. Thank you so much.
>> I can't stop laughing right now. Hold up.
>> I know. This is a Nigerian saying all of this [ __ ] Bro, is anybody on this Nigerian want more than a Nigerian pro?
the Nigerian. Please, please let let's don't deflect. The topic is black Americans looked at as the villain.
Don't deflect to Nigeria. Please >> The reason why that's why y'all don't understand American language in English.
Of course, we understand that people look at us as a villain. We're explaining why. Because we are so great.
People are jealous. That's why we're the villain. You know, when you go around liberating people, that that's what makes us admired. And then you go around hitting people upside the head, bringing belt to ass. Then yeah, you you have a love and hat relationship towards the people that you admire. And then heavy is the head that wears the crown. And we wear it very well. That's why people envy us. So we are looked at as the villain because people envy.
>> I'm still I can't stop.
>> Every every single person every single person envy you. The Africans envy you.
White AM you every single person stupid, bro.
>> Yes, they copies us. I mean, white people copy us. Mexicans copy us.
>> Making excuses for your bad behaviors.
>> Hold on. Hold on. Hold on. Cuz making excuses >> compared to other groups. We have the least bad behavior. Nigeria. Your people are being countries. Don't deflect.
Don't Asians are known for many versions of criminality.
>> Hold on. We are here.
>> Is there a country on this planet that don't have a Nigerian in their prison?
Bro, I'm just I'm over here falling on the floor.
>> Black American talking about prison. Are you projecting on something?
>> Hold on. Black American black American in prison in other countries.
>> Oh my god. In America, yes. Many prison.
>> Oh lord.
>> Can you name any black American projection right there?
>> Can you name any amount of black Americans in prison in other countries?
Cuz this this doesn't sound any gay.
>> Oh, America. Yes, you can.
>> You can find you can find a Nigerian in prison in Antarctica, bro. America got Nigerian doctors in the damn goddamn North Pole. Ain't >> true. Them dudes trying to rob Santa Claus, bro. They trying to man. They went to the North Pole, pooped all over every damn thing, and got locked up.
Bro, Nigeria came over here talking trash. You should have left that in comments, bro. I'm done.
>> You deflected. You deflected. Truth. Let me ask you a question. Truth. Does a villain have to be a threat? And isn't a villain great? Don't you have to be great to be a villain? Name me one villain that wasn't great.
>> The devil's pretty awesome, dude. God, >> you is awesome. To me, he's not.
>> The devil is amazing, bro. You stop.
the devil. He was sliming on here now. Nigerian woods, you know, children up in there with the y'all putting children on the altars in the woods in Nigeria, ain't you? You Satan talking about the devil ain't all.
You know, you don't believe in God, I assume.
>> I believe in God.
>> You don't believe in Jesus Christ.
>> Oh, I do. I'm a Christian.
>> No, you do. You're a Christian.
>> You're a Christian.
>> Of course.
>> That mean you understand.
>> You're a Nigerian Catholic.
>> I'm a Nigerian Christian.
>> What? What church you go to?
>> Oh, you want me to say my church now?
>> Yeah. Yeah.
>> Church of Waw Wa.
>> I don't want to say that in public.
Trust me.
>> Okay. Cuz you lying.
>> But my church is Our Lady of Lords.
Bethesda Merlin.
>> Church is our lady of scams.
>> Nobody. Nobody will fe Nobody fears. No Christian or person that believes in God fears saying where they worship or or they perish or they nobody fears that.
>> I don't fear. I told you.
>> Hold up, Johnny. Did you see that video?
Nigerian >> the other day the the Nigerian in church he tried to part the Red Sea the Nigerian sea and he walked out to the ocean and got swallowed up by a wave.
Did you see that from >> that's not in Nigeria. You see why you lying to these people that wasn't in Nigeria and I saw the video that was someone from >> that's not Nigeria and that was probably a >> thought he was going to part the scene.
He went out there with a stick in his hand just >> world dub. What kind of person would do that, man? He come up here live.
>> But hold on, Johnny. Hey, Revenue.
>> How you doing, lover? How you doing?
>> I'm doing good. Just eating some cheddar uh popcorn.
>> You always snacking.
>> I know. I got to get it together. You want to join the punk?
>> Yeah. Why are black Americans looked at the looked at as the villain? Uh, I don't think so. I think the vast majority of the world look at black Americans as victims.
Uh when you hear about stories of runaway slaves running to uh you know Canada uh when you look at like uh black Americans had to be sharecroppers and you know the whole world seeing black Americans during the civil rights movement getting chased by dogs and clobbed over the head by police officers and spit on by white people. I mean the whole world felt sorry. We we see uh black lives matter. Not too much revenue. Not too much.
>> American, let him get Let me get a little goofy statement.
>> Yeah. Look, let me go ahead and get this.
>> Yeah.
>> Goofball again.
>> Yeah. When we when the whole world see uh George Floyd and we see the Black Lives Matter uh marches and stuff like that, I think the whole world felt sorry for black Americans. I don't think anybody looking at black Americans as some as some villains. I think the whole world look at black Americans as as victims. I mean, uh, when you look at black Americans, they're comparable to Palestinians. They don't have their own country. They reside in, you know, a country that, uh, you know, uh, essentially terrorized them when you see, uh, what happened to Philadelphia with with the with the air bomb air bombings and stuff like that. So, I don't think anybody's looking at black Americans as no feeling. Uh, you know, y'all like to say people cosplay. Y'all, I don't see anybody cosplaying the Taliban or, uh, you know, the Triple K and other places. So, I think everybody look at black Americans as as as victims, you know. So, uh, >> B O M. I love Tic Tac. You can't say that word.
>> Oh, sorry about that. Yes. I don't think anybody I think people look at black Americans as victims. That's just the reality.
>> I got one. We look at Malcolm X like he was a victim.
>> Do we look at the Jamaicans who can't visit their beaches as victims?
>> Are the Haitians that's being barbecued?
We are warriors. Revenue. You better get it together.
>> I mean, you don't have no wars. Unless you don't have >> We are warrior.
W that we haven't won.
I mean victimiz name one where you >> see Marcus Garvey that fled to the UK uni with a white woman as a victim.
>> Name name a W to take from victims. What kind of per what kind of people are you >> name? I'll give you one. How about the uh the tank unit that saved the J the JWs from World War2?
How about the red tail? How about hold on you said name of W that we was we was in. How about over in the Philippines?
We save the Philippines. How about we was over in Malaysia, we saved them. How about Vietnam? We saved those guys. How about Ethiopia? We saved them. Who is a Jamaican say? Y'all can't even save y'all own beaches, bro.
>> The the civilian revolution >> and I'mma drive.
>> Can I Can I respond?
>> To all the immigrants, don't forget you were able to flee here because of us being, you know, we this is the land of the free.
>> So, we had to fight FOR Y'ALL TO COME HERE, RIGHT? REVENUE.
>> Fight where? Uh the NAACP >> we had to fight. We not about them.
>> Can I answer your question? The NAA the NAACP was against immigration. A a fellow Randolph was against immigration.
BR Russell was against immigration. So I don't know what exactly what you mean that you I don't see I don't see any civil rights march.
>> So who who let me answer so question. I didn't see any civil rights leader or anybody marching in the civil rights where they had pick a sign saying, "Hey, bring bring more black immigrants." All I seen was we want to we want equality. We want to go to white schools. We want to be able to blinders on. That's why we don't any signs or anybody saying we're fight we're fighting for the rights of black immigrants to come here and flourish.
America.
What I do know historic fact is the NAACP a fellow immigration that the victimizer victimizer sir your parents are victimizers.
>> And then notice the irony right now.
Notice the irony of his statement. He said nobody's over here cosplaying black Americans while he's talking with a whole New York City accent that black Americans created instead of talking with a Jamaican accent. Ain't that something? Go figure revenue. You wear anything else you want on this panel.
>> English drop. I'mma drop revenue. I just want you to know that a lot of your immigrants, including yourself, y'all are very ungrateful and very entitled.
Ungrateful.
>> I'm talking look.
Wait, so you literally just said uh y'all fought for us to get here. Name the civil rights leader.
>> We endured Jesse Jackson.
Go ahead and disrespect him. Ready to disrespect him. Okay, go for it.
>> Martin Luther King many a statement that Douglas they fought for they fought for civil rights. They did not fight for immigrants to come here.
Hold on hold over here was part of civil rights.
>> The legacy the legacy leadership as far as the NAACP they was against immigration. A Philip leader groups outside of the civil rights movement.
>> Do you know that there was other groups other than the NAACP >> to immigration? Do you know there was other groups other than the NAACP revenue?
>> Well, I'm talking about the leadership.
>> Yeah, you're just talking about one group. That's like you talking about you talking about the same four or five people talking about over and over again. It's the same argument every damn night. Revenue. I know. We know what you're talking about, dude. We know what you're talking about. You know Rustin, we know uh uh uh what's that that Jamaican dude you gonna say? What's the Caribbean do? You going to say they invented black? You going to say the NAACP? Blah blah blah blah blah blah.
You name five people and five groups out of thousands that was going on at that time. Dude, this is what the problem is.
You just came over here. I don't care what you came up here for. You came here to disrespect black Americans so you catch this damn smoke. Right. This is the problem with you immigrants that just came over here in the past couple of damn years. And this the reason why you need to be worried about that damn paperwork that you got as a naturalized citizen instead of worried about who the hell goddamn made black people the damn villain cuz you damn sure ain't got the power to make us no superhero or no villain in your damn home. You can't even keep the Chinese off your goddamn [ __ ] >> I ain't rambling nothing. I'm telling the truth right now. Just cuz you don't like it don't mean it's rambling. You came on here talking about ain't nobody cosplaying why you sound like a New York City [ __ ] Why you don't sound like a Jamaican dude? Why you ain't running around talking like a Irishman? You know what I'm saying? Why you ain't sound like talking about like you got jerk chicken stuck in your damn throat? You know what I said? What's your problem, Re?
>> I didn't come up here to to criticize or bad. Hold on.
>> My road boy.
>> Can I Can I respond on a helicopter?
>> Waron.
Don't talk to me. You lucky leprechaun.
I don't want to hear anything from the local leprechaun. Go to >> Can I Can I respond?
>> Go homep his plane so we can move on. Go ahead, Revenue.
>> Yeah. I didn't come up here to lambast black Americans. I didn't I'm not calling black Americans uh villains. I'm just simply saying the vast majority of the world look at black Americans as black Palestinian. They look at y'all like victims. That's just the reality.
Uh when we see >> the reality is that I mean when you have to march in the streets and tell your government that black lives matter.
>> Why did Why did you get here? How did you How did you end up here? I I got here through immigration.
>> Why though? Why did you Why did you get here?
>> Why did you come here?
>> Well Well, white people beg immigrants to come to this country. They're the ones giving uh immigrants work visas, uh H-1B visas to come here to to thrive.
It's not black Americans sitting at the the office. The country is not begging people. You couldn't thrive where you was.
>> I mean, I could, but but your US government is begging immigrants. Trump just signed a deal. Come on. Every time I I speak, everybody just get off their mic.
>> No, but you standing there.
>> Can I land my plane?
>> Yeah, you got seconds.
>> Trump Trump just went to China and he's bringing in 500,000 Chinese immigrants annually. Your government is bringing begging immigrants to come here. I don't know which I don't know what's what's >> Thank you for making us aware. I wasn't aware our government >> Yeah, cuz Chinese are better than black immigrants. They also they also bring Trump is also bringing in 10,000 white farmers. Let me address let me address.
Gotcha. Let me let me Okay, got it.
Revenue. Let me educate people real quick.
>> Let me educate people real quick. Okay.
What those Chinese nationals are bringing over here >> coming up revenue >> is on an education exchange program. The Chinese nationals are coming over here in exchange for education. They're going to get get their little education go and they going to go back to their homeland and stay in their homeland. It's a trade deal in order for China and the United States to keep these tariffs down. So, Revenue like to come on here talk all this nonsense about everybody else.
Y'all go look that up and what the real uh is the real agreement is between the Chinese students in America.
>> All right, we got uh JT. Hey, how you doing?
>> Hey, how you doing, sis?
>> You want to address the prompt?
>> Uh, sure do. In peace to the family. Can y'all hear me good? I got my headphones in. I'm taking a little walk in the park. Y'all can hear me pretty good.
>> Yeah, you you you good enough? A little baby, buddy. You good?
>> All right. Cool. Cool. I appreciate that. Why are uh black Americans looked at as the villains? I think it's very simple, right? It's uh it's when you hold people accountable.
See, because what you got to understand is in a lot of these um foreign countries, these third world, second world countries, there's no accountability there. You look at a place like where revenue was from in Jamaica, there's no accountability. I've been in Jamaica three times. If you've ever gotten away from the resorts, you will see exactly what I'm talking about.
There's no people who are holding anybody accountable. It's basically just a bunch of people walking around. Um the buildings are dilapid dilapidated.
Um that you you you very seldom see construction work going on. And this and this is no shade, but it's just the reality. And this is why people don't like black Americans. You go to certain countries in Africa, you're going to see the same thing. In fact, in certain uh countries in Africa, a part of African culture is scamming. They look at that as a they they hold it up as a as a badge of pride to be able to get over on somebody. Uh that's something that's makes you quote unquote intelligent, right? To be able to scam somebody out of something. So we're we're we think in terms of how we treat each other as black Americans and how we've treated other people. But when we've started to hold people accountable for the issues that they have with us and with and with each other, they don't want that. So rather than dealing with the issues like for example on the continent that's been happening for centuries that's happening right now today in 2026.
Notice how how none of these Africans and none of these tethers and none of these pan-Africans are holding rooms about I ain't gonna say none of them because I know Fendy is one of them that does hold rooms about the situation in uh South Africa. But most of them get on this app every single day and make rooms about FBA. Now they're starting to make rooms about South South Africa. But it's for the same reason is because South Africans are now saying, "Look, we want y'all to stay in y'all's country and build up your economy like we're trying to do. South Africa should be for South Africans in the same way America should be for Americans and Jamaica should be for Jamaicans. But instead of staying in their homeland, pushing out those like we're doing, pushing out those who are problematic to us, they're just fleeing over here by us. And that's the problem.
And because we're speaking out on it, now we're the bad guys. Because South Africa's speaking out on it, now they're the bad guys. Notice that. That's the two that's the similarity between the two of our peoples. And now we've been the bad guy for seven, eight years now because we delineated. South Africa is now the bad guy as well. And it's going to be anybody um that closes this door to immigration and says immigrants go home because immigrants don't want to go home.
And I'll end with that simply. Hey man, you you empathizing with South Africa.
>> I do empathize.
>> Why? Why not? They standing on their own on their own business.
>> Uh they're they're they're giding white people.
>> Ain't nobody ging.
>> No. No, they not.
>> Get off the internet.
>> That's a conspiracy.
>> The president of the United States said they did.
>> That's been debunked.
>> You can't debunk the president of the United States. He said it happened Saturday night. They still watch Pete Heg and the president of United said it happened.
>> Johnny, that's been debunked, bro, years ago, man.
>> Good luck with that. Good luck with that, y'all. God bless you. Good luck with that.
>> That's that mayo on your elbow.
>> I ain't riding with no South Africa.
South Africans can go to hell.
>> Get that mayo off your TikTok.
>> You You fighting for the white men.
>> Okay, hold on.
>> I'm not fighting for no South Africans.
>> Wait, man. Hold on.
You don't have to, but you >> Hold on. A Hey ya. How you doing today?
>> I'm doing well. Are you >> okay? Hold on. You want to address the prom?
>> Why black Americans? What? I can't see.
>> What's your What's your ethnicity?
>> I'm an African.
>> I know, but from what country?
>> Somalia.
>> Oh, shout out to Somalia. Okay, here we go. I'll read it to you. Why are black Americans looked at as the villain? You want to address that? Then you can get into whatever you want for two minutes.
>> You mean black um black American? Okay.
I'm kind of confused. So, are you guys a FBA?
>> World Brains.
>> Yes. Yes. We fall under that that that like >> Okay. So, >> Black American, FDA, we all the same people. not yet.
>> So, I'm trying to figure it out. So, I see um other black Americans, they say they are Africanameans, right? So, are you guys are different from the ones that claim they are Africanamean?
>> Well, we all the same unless they a first generation immigrant or second generation.
>> No, they're not an immigrant. They are >> A lot of these people be second generation immigrants thinking that they're full Americans and they're not.
What? Okay, I'm really confused. But anyways, FBA. Okay. H Well, I don't mind you guys want to um have your own um you know, own thing going for you guys's houseelves. I have no problem with that. The only thing I see, not you guys, but other FBAs always attacking, disrespecting um like Africans. So that to me is like why? Because me as an African, I'm going tell you something. My children's father is from America. He's a black he's a black. I guess that's what he is. Okay.
So anyways, he's from Miami. born here or >> he's from Miami. He's from He's not an immigrant. None of >> you say he from Little Haiti. You say he from >> Yeah. Little Haiti.
>> No. No. No. Not Not Haiti.
>> Little Haiti. Miami.
Haitian. Mo.
He's not a Haitian. He's a black MJ brothers. with us a big ass.
>> Be quiet. Be quiet. He's a black American man just like you and he's one of the black Americans that will whoop your ass and not big head on the screen.
>> He's a [ __ ] >> All I got to do is put a fresh flag on.
He going to bow down my right.
>> Watch your mouth, lady.
>> Right. I was just about to say that.
Don't Don't go there. And then second of all, you talking about what you got a problem with. We don't give a damn what you got to give a damn what you got.
>> Need to give a damn about that rotary song in the background.
Your children are too.
So are your children.
So are your children.
Hold on y'all. Hold on y'all. Let me handle her. If you think if you think >> Hold on. If you think that's what we are, that's what your children are. If you think we and all this stuff, guess what? Your children ain't worth a damn.
How about that?
>> Now, watch your mouth when you come up here. You came up here all wrong and loud. Don't do that. Cuz nobody came here to dis We wanted to listen and hear you out, but don't come up here disrespectful. Watch your [ __ ] mouth.
FBA. That's your right there. FBA.
>> Hold on, Johnny. Hold on, Johnny. Okay, I can we um help you out with everything today.
>> Host, I you know the host, I have no problem with you. Okay, you are a nice lady, but rest of these trash can if you got one to kiss, you filthy piece of American. Watch out, American. Watch out. The Malians are T-words, man.
They're T-words. Like, on paper, they haven't been classified as a T state, but they're definitely T-words.
Like, I mean, y'all be hanging out with Africans like it's okay. Africans ain't okay, man.
They T-words.
>> Who be hanging out with Africans? We be over here.
>> I'm saying y'all glazing. They was glazing South Africa like that's somebody you club from that Johnny and South Africans ain't coming over here trying trying to be black Americans.
>> You going to the club in South Africa minding their own business. They don't come over here to be going to the club.
They in their own country minding their own business. So yeah, I ain't got no problem with them folks. I got a problem with the ones that's coming over here.
They don't want to stay home.
>> Johnny, how how I get a shot thrown at me? What I do, bro?
What is you?
>> You said that your man's No, >> I met my man down here. The other FBA JT I met JT down here. You know, South South Africa, you know, they like it's all good. Yeah. It ain't been debunked.
They call farm attacks. Okay. All of the people that experienced farm attacks were white tea. Yeah. So they're slaughtering YT people in South Africa, man. There's no that's been debunked.
That's what's happening.
>> All right. All right. The people that own the farms was YT and it was getting by.
>> We we don't care. That's their business.
They they handle they >> Okay. All right. Yeah. Don't hang out with them though, dude.
>> Yeah.
>> They ain't over.
>> Don't hang out with that.
>> Now, now if they they need support.
Yeah. I'm going support them cuz they minding their own business. They fighting their own battles. And I support any melanated people fighting their own battles.
>> Okay. Okay.
>> You support HAS2?
You support H-S too.
>> Come on, Johnny. You can't say that.
>> That's right. No, go. Don't say that, Johnny.
>> Yeah, I'm Yeah, he want some smoke.
Go fight. Go ahead.
>> Go blowing this smoke right here.
>> Johnny, why you you want people to protect the white people?
>> You do not.
>> You don't want us to touch whitey.
>> No, I protected Americans. I have zero zero tolerance for t-words.
I have zero tolerance for radical radical extremist. So what they be doing to my people? No. What they be doing to my people cuz y'all weak. Y'all be sympathizing and empathizing with words on some black [ __ ] Y'all get on that black [ __ ] and next thing you know they got your ass on the beach somewhere getting your head chopped off because you stupid on over there. Johnny, go on over there to that store off Marboro Pike by the 7-Eleven, bro. By the stadium. Get you some of them little flowers and go get you a bill, bro. And come down.
>> It's that Scandinavian lady. He racrack with Yeah, for real. I'm not playing.
Like real law racing in that joint.
Yeah, for real. Yeah. Looking like that, wearing it. Yeah, I ain't playing. But what I'm saying is >> So that mayonnaise on your elbow making you feel like that? Don't let that black stuff have you hanging out with t-words is all I'm saying. Dude, >> Johnny, I think you you compromise cuz cuz you sleeping with white ladies, but you say white people.
>> Wait a minute, y'all. Hold on.
>> But you sleeping white people.
>> Let's see something. I want Go ahead.
Y'all can finish talking, but let's see.
See who this story is.
>> Tell you what.
>> I know what he said. No.
>> American D. You need them gummies, bro.
them gummies been giving them older people that make them.
>> He said he from where THEY GOT THE BADDEST YT GIRLS IN THE COUNTRY. But >> she ain't no I don't like YT girls up in Texas. I don't I'm on now.
>> Wait a minute.
>> Yeah.
>> Oh, hey. Yeah, you've been up here before. I just wanted to make sure it was you. Hold on.
>> Hey, Stuart. You want to address the prompt?
Your phone your phone connection is horrible. Thank you. Go. Your phone connection is horrible.
>> My phone you can't hear me.
>> But now now you good. Now you good. Hey Stewart, you want to address the P today?
Where he taking us y'all? We walking somewhere.
>> I don't right.
>> American phone right there.
>> Where?
Who is this?
>> I ste this mofo at the at the refrigerator making sandwich right now.
We being no cuz we listening on an adventure.
>> We walk through the hallways.
>> Yeah. What the hell?
>> Coming down the stairs. I hear y >> he looking for the hoes, y'all.
>> Man, he take he leaving work at the grocery.
>> Oh, okay. Go ahead, Steuart. You want to address the prompt?
>> Yeah. Catch your breath, bro.
>> I I think they're we're giving the most concise and and and and precise answers to them. We're answering America's problems, but they don't want it to get out. I think they're suppressing us like that, too, like they've always been.
That's my take on it. If you want to answer the prompt, if you want me to answer the prompt, I'm sorry.
>> Yeah, you got the thing, >> right? You done took us on this journey.
You better talk longer.
>> Oh, okay. So, but you wanted me to answer the prompt, right? Why are black people being the villain? We're being villain.
>> Yeah. But you can talk about whatever else you want to talk about.
>> Stuart.
>> Okay. Answer the prompt and then you speak on whatever was on your mind after that.
>> So, so here's my take. We're we're agreeing to be disagreeable on the places where where we think we originated from and we're inclusive to everybody's origin that they find as the answer when they do their delineation.
So that is the meaning of letting your differences not take the movement apart.
And so when we do that and we continue to do that, they're going to continue to get answers from our genius. All of us have this genius in us. All of us. If you have that melanin, you you have a genius in you and you have you have to let it out. You can't do it. And every time you get in the spiritual arena where truth is being told, you have to answer to it or you have to be rebuked by it. One or the other. And that's what's been going on all the time.
Through the genius of James Baldwin, uh through the genius of uh MLK, everybody, everybody has done it. Even to the genius of Pewy Newton.
Yeah. I mean, we just answer those questions when people ask us those questions.
Well, where's the African genius without our influence?
>> Well, I don't believe it's African genius, brother. We already went through that stance on it. We are are originals to America, man. I'm telling you that and I can prove it.
We are some of us are aborigy to this soil here. And I know some of the FBAs don't want to believe that, but if you look at the census record and you look at the what America written has written down and why they're trying to cover it up, you can see that we were the first on this soil because they didn't want to talk about the 12.5 million people that they didn't put on the census of 1790.
And then when they finally start counting people before that, I mean, right after that, they put us all as colored. They only had two racial categories. and and the color included all the Chinese, all the uh immigrants, all the Siberians that had come over here, all the um people that were included as uh ethnic ethnicities uh immigrants in the uh in the uh 1870 census and they still couldn't couldn't get enough colored people to account for the colored category.
They did not count. Then they said this one. They said that the census records were burned in Washington DC. They said they caught fire.
>> Okay. I'mma lay your plane for you, Steuart. It's a lot of It's a lot of us that believe um that it was indigenous people here. Go ahead. The black >> Oh, I was going to say the same thing.
Like we we understand and believe that we many of us or majority of us are indigenous. It's just these these tribes have been co-opted. So, us trying to claim their their current status right now, it it doesn't make any sense because you're you're walking into something that has already been taken away and remixed into something else.
Now we the process that we're in now since these people have to acknowledge that they was formerly labeled Negroes and they have to use our former identity to even be classified and they have treaties with different people lineages.
We're making them do just like the the US government has to do. Pay for what they owe cuz we're we have treaties with them. We have treaties with the US. I mean, well, we have stuff that's not finished and un unfinished dealings with the US government. So, we're we're in a position where we're the only final errors to this to this land that can be proven on documentation.
And yes, we're tied in all these different government bureaucracy that >> stopping a lot of money being made within the country like us mining stuff, us having control over certain sectors.
So, we're in the middle of multiple battles. It's just people need to find their lineage and and stay in their own lane and not step on other people toes on how they want to identify.
>> Yes. Now I figure out why would you want to glaze and hang out with Africans and not the indigenous Americans like from the southeast and all that that believe that they people been here for thousands of years which is not hard to believe cuz they don't look like me. Like I said before Lil Wayne and Lil Booy do not look like they related to me. Okay, we look different. So with that being said, y'all loving South Africa and Nigeria and Ghana and all these heathens over there across the border, but you know you ain't ain't no love for the indigenous Americans.
>> Johnny, you ever heard of Super Sunday?
>> Right out.
>> You know what Super Sunday is?
>> No. Go ahead. Go ahead. You got the floor, man.
>> Okay. It's over there in Louisiana. And shout out to the Louisiana family. And shout out to the 13th War. Shout out to Flatboy Giz. We hang out with so many Indian people. There was just a dude up there in New York who uh Shinikok tribe who just acknowledged and backed the uh black the dark-kinned uh queen mother who was finally getting fedally acknowledged for being lumby. We hang out with uh black indigenous people all the goddamn time. I don't know where you get this from. We hanging out with Africans to South Africans ain't even over here. You got beef with people that ain't even here. We we don't even get that many South Africans on this panel.
So I'm just confused why you think we not hanging out with indigenous people.
Louisiana full of them.
>> Yeah. And I was just saying that from the distance I support South Africans and what they doing in their own country and the battles that they fight. Long as they ain't coming over here, they I ain't got no issues. They come over here then I'mma look at them like any other Africans or any other immigrant. Like I'm I I show love to my indigenous people who want to claim that. And any other label you want to claim cuz that's we we all the same. We're black Americans. We're NBA. is what the title NBA encompass black Americans free former slaves indigenous black Americans. So I don't understand the the >> Okay. So So basically for the most part it be them New York bombers that don't be wanting to uh like you know do all that with the indigenous and all that.
Call them pretendians and all that. That be them New York dudes.
>> The Panaffricans.
>> Oh the Pana New York. Yeah. All that New York [ __ ] >> There's a lot of Panaffricans in New York. I mean, but it's pan Africans everywhere.
>> Exactly. Exactly.
>> Pan Africans kind of have a disdain of anybody claiming, >> but they want to hang out with Africans.
>> That was Re That was Revenue before he disappeared then, right?
>> But he ain't us. Revenue Jamaican. He Jamaica.
>> He Jamaican be crazy.
>> Yeah. But if you over in Florida, another I'm going give you another example. If you over in Florida, most of Florida is named after indigenous names.
Oyola County. Um, we also have Sanford.
We have Tallahassee. a lot of Miami. Um, >> hold on.
>> Hold on. Um, let's see. FBA JT, I'mma roll. No, John. Yeah, FBA.
>> Yeah, let me go. Let me go, love.
>> All right, I'mma let you go. All right.
Thank you. Come back. You're welcome.
>> Okay, let's get this new person up here.
>> You believe the next battle is going to be won through our delineation and and and how we prove that these land grant deeds are ours?
>> Okay.
I think that's going to be the next battle. These land grant deeds are found in 15 different areas. And so all we got to do is go answer them.
>> Some of our people, most of our people still have land. We still have land. My grand my daddy still has a deed from what my granddaddy left us in Arkansas in Dallas County, Arkansas. Not not only that, black Americans own the most uh property. So that that's that's why majority of the south is undeveloped because >> y'all want to talk about the topic. I don't want to get too far into the school talking. Oh, right. Right.
Bite your signal.
>> What's going on everybody? Bad. Your signal.
>> Yeah. What is the back?
>> Yeah, your signal is bad.
Yeah, we don't want to do too much on that. We going to get back on the topic.
>> He coming out the TV like the rain, >> man.
I needed my tin foil hat.
>> The boat for real.
>> Oh, that's what it was.
>> That sea. You got lost at sea. That signal was trash. But I wanted to address the topic one more time. Miss Lo, you don't mind?
>> Okay. Go ahead. Thank you so much. Yeah.
Um, something that I I was thinking about when I was listening to y'all speaking to Landry earlier. Um, something I wanted to add a piece of history that I found out over here talking to the Dallas family, especially talking about the uh the imprisonments, the the jail time and stuff. Uh, so as I've been working out here with the Buffalo Soldiers program, we I had a good talk with one of the leaders out here. Um, and they do a law enforcement, right? So, a lot of times they'll get these state troopers to be from Nigeria or somewhere else because they literally know these people have no connection to us and that they look at us as villains.
They look at us as ops. So, they'll hire these people from other countries to be in uh state prison workers and uh counties and different stuff like that.
So, just cuz you see a black quote unquote law enforcement officer does not mean that that person is FBA.
>> Hey, FBA. It's a lot of uh Africans and uh CEOs, ain't it? Yes, ma'am. Yes, ma'am. And uh they work all the prisons and they I I don't know if y'all remember uh even not just over here in Texas, but over in Miami, speaking of the crib, um it was a brother that was in there and he was beat down by some Haitian uh sheriff uh CEOs down there.
Y'all could look that up. That was just like I think a month or so ago. So they they hire these people because they know they look at us like villains. They know for a fact that they're not us. So I just wanted to add that in there. So Land Andrew is being very disingenuous when he like, "Oh, you know, we see certain things." No, no, no. They hire you because they know you're not going to also in the workplace when hiring, they'll let a lot of Caribbeans or Asians, uh, melanated Asian people be HR reps because they know they'll do the dirty work of the CEO, uh, to not hire FBAs. They will not, um, do good business practices against FBAs. So, there's a lot of things that they know that these people look at us as ops. Um, even when we go travel, yes, we're superstars when we leave this country.
Yes, that is true. But when these people get here, it's like we get the most degenerate, most ignorant people from each homeland over here. And they know they look at us crazy. They hate us to the utmost extent because we are the culturally dominant. We're the life that breathes into this earth. So, I truly believe that we're the chosen ones. I don't know if we're Hebrews. I don't really care. I just know there's something deeply chosen about us and that's why everyone looks at us as the villains. But I with that >> shout out to African reality wherever you are. Uh hey go.
Yeah, I just uh uh I agree with FBA because uh from what I didn't seen in my lifetime, once again, I basically seen some of this the strangest things that's been going on.
Um they don't I mean they don't welcome us since they didn't got their numbers up out of 40 years.
I realized something has changed about them, you know, like they didn't flipped, you know? I mean, they used to be so uh uh um what I'm trying to say, respectful, very respectful to us. In the last 30 or 40 years, I don't know what happened. We haven't done nothing to them. It's just seemed like they got their numbers up and they just uh turned their back >> easy happened.
>> What was that?
>> OBZY happened. Obama came in. They they start getting more numbers up and they start feeling theyel feeling like they can actually say the things that they been holding back in their head cuz they don't respect us. That's why they kept on saying your first black president was a African.
>> Yeah. And another thing uh black I have noticed when you go to the doctor's office, you know, some of them I guess claim to be doctors cuz I don't mess with them.
Every time I see them coming my way, I'll be like, "No, that's all right.
Seriously, I do." And uh because it's just I just feel something about them and and and the way the negativity I can feel that vibe, you know, being around them that they really don't care too much for me.
>> So you you you referencing this your fellow black brother, right? African.
>> Please stay on your mic. He has 20 more seconds.
So I ain't going to stop muting me on this channel, man. I don't like that.
Stop muting me.
>> Excuse me.
>> Excuse me, sir.
>> Hold on. Do you You think you What's up?
You You want What's up? You want You want to talk or not?
>> Yeah, I want to talk. Yeah.
>> Okay. Well, hold on. You can't just interrupt Go Rev like that.
>> All right. All right. No problem.
>> Go ahead.
As I was saying uh from my experience, from what I have seen with my own eyes that I have noticed this about them, Africans, Haitians, all of them as far as I'm concerned. But I know that they don't deal with us and we don't deal with them. Like I'm in Detroit. We don't have no big problem out of them cuz they know they know how we land. They know how we land up in here for real. This is our city.
>> Shout out to >> This is our city.
>> That's right.
>> Straight up.
>> Yeah. So, all I'm just saying, uh, just back down and they cool their heels.
Like I say, uh, you know, we don't, we haven't clashed yet. And I land my spaceship on that right quick. It's 128 folks in here. If y'all don't mind, could y'all please share the room? Let's get up to 45, 50 shares. Tap the screen.
Let's get to that goal of 100,000 likes.
and rules of the room. When you come on stage, wait till you're called on to speak and you will be given two minutes to speak on the prompt first and then whatever you have to speak out say after that and then we're going to move on to Roboto self love world say so or we're going to move on to the next person. So, if you don't mind, keep your composure.
Tap that screen if you feel some type of way. Get that energy off of you. Know what I'm saying? And be patient and wait on mute. Cuz if you come off, you're going to get booted.
But shout out to the chat. The best chat in the world.
>> Shout out to you, the black. Hey, Tres.
>> Trust.
>> How you doing? You want to address the prompt today?
>> Yeah, man. To God be the glory, man.
It's one heck of a world we're living in today, man. Where people are misidentifying themselves, separating themselves, we sensitiz the prompt. Let me read it to you.
>> Yeah, I I'm address.
>> I know, but before I can you just address the prompt, then get into All right. Why are black Americans looked at as the villains? Go ahead because I gotta start your time.
I okay my own respective opinion I think it's because of the crime rate within the black community you understand there's a high there's a higher crime rate in the black community that even right now on Tik Tok or some videos you can see like when we had the vine right we see a lot of black on black violence you know gang fights you know restaurant fights nightclub fights all these things so it get it give that image out there that you know every black person tend to be violent which is not every black person right but the reality still remain cuz these people rely on data and data is what they use to pretty much to come out with these assessments some datas could be manipulated to be honest but it is what it is but me personally I think you know black people are not the villain because the reality is we have some with knowledge and some without knowledge >> so let me ask you some that want to know >> out of that crime of black on black crime you talk about how do you know they all black Americans?
>> How do I Cuz it's data. The data shows >> data. So it separates >> the arrest records.
>> Hold on. It separates a Jamaican, a African, a Haitian, >> it separates them. So you know it's black Americans.
You can unmute. Trust. And also out of a hundred out of what's the percentage?
It's 50 million. All right. So, here's the thing, right?
>> Over 50 million black Americans, what what percentage of black Americans create uh convicted uh crimes, not not arrested, convicted.
>> Okay. To answer your first question, right, they don't classify the data based on nationality.
They classify the data based on race.
You understand? And secondly, >> so why? Well, that can be African. You should go talk to African.
>> Yes, it can be. Yes, that's what I'm saying.
>> Okay. So, don't talk to about the black-on-black crime. That's that could be Africans or >> they I'm with you.
>> Exactly. I'm with you on that one.
Right. But the data, they don't classify the data like that. They classify by race just like work. Are you black, white or two of more race? You know, they don't say are you African or are you West African or East African? They just that's how they do the census, you know. Now, when it comes to the conviction rate, right?
>> 30% of African add that exoneration.
>> Yeah. conviction rate >> and exoneration rate. We going to put all them together.
>> The conviction Okay. The conviction rate is higher than the exoneration rate, right?
>> No, it's not. No, it's not.
>> It is.
How many black How many How many of our brothers have been exonerated from crime from the from being convicted?
>> And it's not even 1% of black Americans that commit crime. So, how we going to be the face of criminality and 99 point something something% of us not even committing crimes? Well, go ahead.
>> Okay. I'm with you, right? But here's the reality. When you go when you go Google check how many percentage of black of black people in prison, it say black people make up about 30% of prison population while the rest makes up different nationalities, right? But they want to be precise with it. We make up 30% of prison population. Now that's a variety of different black people, right? Whether it be Jamaican, African, born African, non-African, African-American, whatever is a whole mixture of black people, you know, right? So now exoneration. How many black people have been exonerated over the past year versus white T men, Hispanic men?
>> White YT people don't really get exonerated that much.
>> Huh?
>> That's a false Hold on the black. That's a false equivalence. You're asking about YT people and we talking about black people. We just talking crime. I'll confirm crime. Okay, >> let me finish. Are you >> Let me finish. Let me finish. I'm going to be quick. You talking about YT people. We talking about black Americans. The prompt says, "Why are black Americans look at the villain?"
Okay. So why are we talking about YT people? The exoneration rates for black Americans are way higher than us getting convicted. And even when they do convict us, years later, people get out. Like the dude in Chicago who just was about to get paid over >> What times are we talking? What crimes are we talking about?
>> Just like the dude in Chicago who was about to get paid over $200 million because they falsely imprison him. Just like the man who just won his seat over there, the uh what is it? Like the clerk of courts over there in Louisiana. And they tried to reverse it. They have to change the rules for us because we are not doing the crimes. They just exonerated a person over here in Dallas a couple months ago who they accused of uh you know essaying a uh YT woman and she lied and then they got uh his son sent up there trying to hug on him and talk about oh we're going to exonerate him after they gave him the chair. So when we talk about crime statistics y'all y'all Africans Caribbeans I have to understand we are exonerated most of the time because we don't actually do it. And I think you said you're Haitian.
You said you grew up in Florida. Most Haitians in Florida are committing most of the crime. I never said I was Haitian, my man.
>> I never said I was Hian, my man.
>> Then he said he grew up in Florida.
>> No, I never said that, my man.
>> You said Pop Warner. Anyways, never mind. But the whole point of what I'm saying is we're exonerated. Doesn't matter what part of the country it is.
Doesn't matter what state, what city, we're exonerated the most. Now, why is it that we're exonerated the most and the crime statistics are not disagregated, which is why we're trying to push legislation for that? And I I learn with that.
>> Okay. Now, let me let me let me tweak with you a little bit. Right. New Jersey, there was a there was a there was a news that came out saying that the officers in booking when they book a when a book of email inmate, whether it be a white inmate or Hispanic inmate, they will pretty much classify him as a black inmate. You understand? To spike their numbers up. So there there are disparities when it comes to arrest records, right? When you say exoneration, we have to look at the crimes that are being exonerated, right?
At the end of the day, right, no matter how you want to put it or portray it, right, we're always in that bucket. You understand? We're always being sex, you know, se um separated by race. We're not I mean, we're always being classified by race, just like the Garangin law. Same thing by race. You understand? And when you look at race, the black race itself, right, it does not just consist of African-American. It consists of born of continental Africans, Caribbean Africs, you know, foreign blacks, you know, consist of just black.
>> That's what I want you to understand.
Right.
Change that though for you. TR how you going to change that? How you going to change that dog? Just sit back and watch.
>> Yeah, right.
>> Sit back and watch.
>> You know how long it take? You know how long it take for sun to go into regulation? When you pass the law, it takes up to 15 years for regulation.
Don't worry about how long to go.
>> This is they said we would never delineate. I was going to say trust you are you are very late because they already started doing it in certain um you college >> college applications. You already got to disagregate it and say what country you originate from. You can't just check black no more.
>> And it soon will be on employment forms, any type of government or non-government forms because we want you to be proud of where you come from. You already come over here and wave your flags. So why not write down who you are? We'll take away that other box so you won't be shamed to check other and and write it in. and we'll just give you a box that say Nigerian, whatever type of African you are. You can be proud and get out get out of our business and fight for your own rights and own little things.
>> What business you talking about, bro?
What business? Like, it's not real, man.
Like, what business is our business?
America is not your business. I got a question. America is everybody's business cuz America is in everybody business. Gotcha. Got real, man. Hey, man. Who are the black people?
>> Trust.
>> Black. Okay. The black people to me just my my distant relatives. You know, they came here. They the children of my ancestors. That's all I know.
>> So, who are they?
>> Hold on. Hold on. Hold on. Who are African-Americans?
>> I don't see African-Americans being indigenous. That's to answer your question.
>> I didn't ask you. I didn't ask you that.
I said, "Who are the African-Americans?"
>> They were They're African-American by birth. We got Americans by birth. The reason I asked you this is cuz somebody in the chat said that you refer to us as African-Americans and you refer to yourself as black. Why is that?
>> Why is that?
>> I refer to yours as African-American. I refer myself as black. I'm naturalized.
So I'm African-American regardless. No matter how you want to classify me, >> but the fact that I was naturalized, I'm African-American myself.
>> So So what what's up with it?
>> Now you're African American.
>> Why use why use the black title instead of just being a proud African?
>> Hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on. He just He just tried to say I'm I'm naturalized. You You're trying to say that as a flex, bro.
>> You really trying to You see what you mean? You get naturalized as a flex, DOG. I >> WHAT MEAN THE FACT THAT I GOT NATURALIZED? I'm Africaname just like you. Africaname.
>> No.
>> Only difference. You were born here.
That's the only difference.
>> My family didn't flee. That's what Wait a minute. This is where you're wrong.
Trust. This is our birth.
>> I got to say it right. America constitutional right. America America is our birthright, honey. This is our birthight.
Our country, okay? We didn't flee another country to come here. Okay? This is our birthight.
>> So that is the difference. That is the difference between You can say something when I get done talking.
>> Now that is the difference between you and us. Okay? You are African. I don't give a damn about you being in America.
You are African. No Africanamean, no none of that. You are just straight up African. We are Americans.
>> All right. Can I come in now? First of all, I got the same constitutional right as you. I got the same legal right as you. I got the same privilege as you.
>> No, you don't.
>> Yes, I do, bro. Yes, I do. Yes, I do.
Let me ask you, okay, you got the same rights as us. Let me ask you real quick.
Let me ask you >> I'm certified to state.
>> Got you. Do you do you exist? Are you are is your name?
>> It's in voting right as you >> bro. I got you, bro. Let me talk. Why you keep talking over people? You're [ __ ] a goddamn savage.
>> Do you have is your name in the DHS system? Yes or no?
>> Yes, cuz I I have >> an actual babbling excuse. I just asked if your name was in the DHS. Yes, sir.
Yes, sir.
>> So, how you got the same rights as me, bro?
>> Because you two you got you got to say you got to say >> I'm not in the DHS system, sir. You going to have the same rights as me.
>> Hold on now. Hold on now.
>> No, ain't no Listen. Listen.
>> You don't have the same rights as me, sir. I'm constanted. You could be denaturalized tomorrow and be in jail. I don't have You don't have talking, right? Give me a chance to talk. Give me a chance to talk, bro. One second. The same right I got to the DHS system. You got the same right to the DHS system.
The next Yes. Go ahead.
>> So trust can can you be denaturalized or not?
>> Huh?
>> Can can you be denaturalized or not?
>> That law hasn't been passed yet and I can kill that law all the depends on the crime that I commit exist.
Yes or no?
on the crime that I commit, but I'm not dumb enough to commit any crime that >> it don't matter if you're dumb enough to commit a crime. You just got naturalized on Sunday and you don't even know it, sir. You don't even know it yet.
>> All right. All right. Let's see then. I bet I stay here.
>> I ain't going to prison so bad. Tre >> cuz I a life here for myself. I build I build a dream, the American dream here for myself.
>> Oh, you don't want to go back home.
>> Hey, listen. I build a dream here for myself. Regardless of what I said, I'm going to be here and I'm going to stay here regardless.
>> You They going to have to You going to have to go kicking this.
>> We going to see about that.
>> We going to see the big rocks and the little rocks. He going to stay here and be a damn prisoner. That's >> I'm here to stay. Yeah.
>> Exactly.
>> I'm here to stay here. Immigration.
We got We got to trust. I got a question.
>> We've been waiting, y'all. Okay, hold on. We got to get to the new person.
>> Appreciate y'all family. A name but love family. You heard?
>> You just hold on. Uh Roz, >> what's good?
>> Hey, how you doing?
>> I'm cool. How you feeling?
>> I'm feeling good. What's your ethnicity?
>> Uh y'all would say black American, man.
I say I'm African. Born in America. Born and raised over here.
>> Okay. Shout out to that. You want to address the prompt?
>> Yeah. I got a quick simple answer for that. Uh, black Americans are looked at.
>> I had two minutes to talk.
>> All right.
We looked at the villains. We looked at as the villains worldwide because Europeans, white people control the media. Period. They control how we are seen by the rest of the world, including our own fellow black people in Africa, everywhere else.
Europeans, everybody sees us the same way cuz they see the same media. They don't see a Spikeley movies, Issa Ray, Will Packa, what's the brother that did Black Panther? Ryan Cougler, they only see Tyler Perry movies, Tyler Perry shows. That's what is pushed to the rest of the world. And then like the other brother y'all was just talking about the negative media of us fighting. We >> do see New Jack City, my boy. We saw New Jack City.
I mean, I don't think that's really the best example either, my brother.
>> You should have heard them call up a in New Jack City then if you saw that. Go ahead, Roz.
>> And let me address FBA Maroon right quick. And I the rest of y'all a lot of y'all who making these comments and generalizations about Africa. I'm curious how often y'all visit Africa. I was literally just there.
>> I would never go to Africa.
>> Well, I've been there over 10 times, brother. I was literally just there a month ago. I've been to six countries.
Yeah, you might you might got something by now.
>> I've been to six countries over there and Tyler Perry.
>> Well, if you been to Africa recently, you need to go I hope you've been to the doctor cuz they talking about you need to go to the doctor if you travel in America. It's sickness everywhere. Y'all don't even know what country I was in. So y'all just repeating what the news is.
>> [ __ ] ain't got to worry about that sickness.
>> It was no Ebola in the country I was in either, fam. So again, do your homework and ask questions before you make you making generalizations.
>> Wait a minute.
>> Go ahead.
>> Okay. Uh, and just to finish what I was saying about the other brother, that's the number one type of movie and media that they see over there. They constantly seeing Tyler Perry movies.
And when I ask them like what, they be big fans of our culture, our music, our movies, our TV shows, but the main stuff that's pushed to them is the [ __ ] Most of them know Tyler Perry or they know 50 Cent. They don't know any of our positive uh media images. They have to search and dig for that. So that's the answer to that question to keep it as simple as I can.
>> Don't we have to search and dig for that same content over here?
>> Hold on. Hold on.
>> To a degree you want to address.
>> Especially I'll say especially recently.
Yes. But I'm I don't know how old y'all are. I'm 38. I remember a time when it was a good balance of music where you would get positive artists as much as you would get the negative [ __ ] You would get decent movies as much as you would get the negative [ __ ] Now in the last 10, 20 years, it seems like they not mixing. You don't get a a decent balance anymore. It ain't no team summit on BET. Like it was a lot of positive [ __ ] I could point to.
>> Go ahead. Hold on to black cuz he addressed FBA Maroon. Go ahead.
>> Yeah, my brother you take no more like how you keep coming off the mic. Why are you >> Okay. Anyways, yeah. Um, brother, you talking about going to Africa. It don't matter what country in Africa you go to, they still live in third world.
>> No, that's a lie. That's not true. You You never been obviously to say that.
>> Hold on, man. We >> I got to address you cuz that's not true.
>> A bunch of lies. Hold on. Hold on. Not true.
>> Thank you, Stuart, for coming up. I'm going rotate you down. Go ahead, Maru.
>> Yeah, cuz I can't mute him. Um, so yeah, my uncle just got back like a month or a little over a month ago and I saw videos and pictures of things. I mean, the church is literally pimping out people's dollars over there. They don't even practice Christianity the same as us.
>> Like they don't do that over here.
>> Hold on. They don't even practice Islam the same of us. A lot of them still use different uh sa c, you know, sack or whatever. I love Tik Tok shop uh to their religions and different things of the such. They just are now getting uh uh god darn skater rings and bowling alleys and they don't know how to use any of it. They don't even they buy tickets and they sit on the side. You're not going to tell me I ain't seen what I already seen. They literally have signs saying $25 for healing miracles for this, $60 for healing miracles for this.
They're literally selling miracles over there in the church in Ghana and any of the other countries. A lot of my family used to be Panaffricans. We used to help these people sending over our hand-me-downs, food and all things of the such.
>> They do not watch Tyler Perry like that and they still over there wearing je tank tops. They wearing our >> Stop acting like an African, bro. Stand your mic.
>> I am an African. But when am I going to get the response? He made three points.
We just right now calm down. Everybody calm down. Go ahead.
>> I'm about to land. I'm about to land cuz I know he got he about to land. Then you can leave.
>> All right. Go ahead.
>> Yeah. Y'all and like I said, they so behind with the times. So you sitting up here talking about they didn't see this, they didn't see that. Y always talking about some movie they saw and that's how they look crazy at us. No, these people had the word before the movies came out.
That's what the that's the piece of history and documentation that y'all skipping right over. And I land with that.
>> Okay. Can I respond to what he said?
>> Hey, teacher some matter. He mad.
>> Shut up. Trust. It's Ra's turn.
>> Remember when you got dropped last [ __ ] and you was in the damn chat begging us to come back up. I think you I think you remember that last night, bro. Stay on your mic, man.
>> First of all, the brother talked about uh all of these scams and stuff in the religion over there. as if that's not super common over here. That's pretty much every religion and it definitely is big over here. First of all, second of all, you keep making generalizations.
Again, I was trying to interrupt you to ask you which country did your family member go to because it makes a very big difference. I've been to some countries that I can agree with you, it's a lot of third world elements even in their capital city. But then I've been to some countries in Africa that it look you really wouldn't know you wasn't in America, bro. Until you talk to somebody, hear a accent. You in their big cities. Some of their areas look even better than ours. Some of the infrastructure is just as good as ours, if not better sometimes. So again, that's why I started off by asking who has all been there? Cuz if you haven't been there, it's I mean, no offense. I'm not trying to be offensive, but you are literally speaking from a place of ignorance.
>> You are speaking on you are speaking secondhand.
>> Man, stop coming off your mic, bro. Stay mute, man.
>> Name I'm a mod, dude. Name a first world country in Africa. Uh, Ros, >> you could say South Africa. You could say Namibia.
>> Oh, heck no.
And just as many problems as you could point out that they have in South Africa, I can point to the same issues that we have over here. Bro, >> no. Out of the 50 countries, none of them are first world. You know that, right?
>> How is you? You act like America.
>> The people that make this argument kill me because y'all act like we don't have Flint, >> the water issues. You act like we don't have the water. You act like we don't have you act like you we don't have >> uh infrastructure.
>> People [ __ ] all over the damn streets. You're right about that.
>> It's not people [ __ ] all over the streets in South Africa, Namibia either.
This is what I'm saying. You making you sound like a racist white person to me because you don't know the DNC. There we go. There we go. All right. Just say that. Just say you want people voting for Kamala.
Stop with all the >> You name one. We know there ain't no good Hold on, brother. Hold on. Hold on.
Let me respond to you. We know good and well it ain't even no African version of Flint cuz Flint is a paradise compared to any city over there in Africa.
>> That's not true.
>> That's the is that is the truth. We not true at all.
>> If you want to go over to Africa and you want to get some South African girl knocked up, that's fine. Be do your best. Whatever. Do your big one on that.
But stop coming over here trying to tell us that there's some first world African city when we know there's not. They still upside beating each other upside the head over there and running Nigerians out. We not even doing that.
We just trying to delineate in peace.
And we got people like y'all coming up here trying to Africanize us. So that's how we know we different, bro. It's it's just a difference. If you want to go live in Africa, by all means. You want to eat bush meat, by all means be my guest. You want to see them pooping in the streets, by all means.
>> You sound like a a racist white person.
>> No, that's just the truth. Racist is racist. And what I said at the beginning of this family, you'll never see another bad guy like me again. Say good night to the bad guy cuz they they when we start giving them accountability, now all of a sudden we racist. Now all of a sudden we xenophobic.
>> We just got to speak truth to power.
>> And and a lot of ignorance is being stated on here. Yes.
>> I was going to say I was going to ask you, Raz, so uh are you an American a black American black person or are you truly an African? Like do you have African ancestry family that you can connect to over there in that continent?
>> No, I was born and raised in Chicago.
Most of my roots are in Mississippi or Arkansas.
>> So why would you So why do you think that you're African?
>> Because our culture is so much more similar to African. That's the same thing I put in the in the comments that I've been asking people for years. Can any FBAs give me examples of how our culture is similar to Native American culture? Because I can name a lot of examples.
>> You do know that we're not Native American. We are American Indian. There is a difference between the two. Those Native Americans are Siberians. They have completely different traditions and cultures, whatever the hell that is. But um most of us that come from down south are the mound builders. Our culture is not an African culture at all. You should just try to do some studying before you run over there to Africa.
>> Most of us are Creek Indians from the Southeast, right?
>> Okay. So, give me some examples, please.
I'm asking. I will change if y'all can show me the stage, y'all. We got new new people on the stage. We got to We can come back, but let's at least get people.
>> I'm going to be quiet, but the last thing I'm going to say, nobody has given me any examples, and that's my problem.
>> Thank you. Thank you. Um, thank you.
R, I'm with you. R, >> you can drop me.
>> Okay, Rev. Thank you.
>> Hey, Bo. Okay, Rev. I got you, Bo.
>> Hey, how you doing? Can everybody hear me?
>> Yes, sir. How you doing?
>> I'm doing >> I'm chilling. Finally got out that rain.
>> Yeah. Shout out to the rain. You want to address the prank?
Well, I I I like the rain at night.
Like, if it's raining and I'm trying to go to sleep, but other than that, I got to go out in it. No, thank you.
>> Oh, yeah. It was raining couch, isn't it?
>> Yeah, >> it's raining cats and dogs right now in Virginia. But, uh, yeah, I can address the prop right quick.
>> Okay.
>> Um, yeah. Why are black Americans looked at as the villain is? Cuz it was it's just indoctrination. A lot of people up here, they don't they don't do a lot of research. They don't talk to their great great or great. They uh they kind of like just pull from what the high school teacher told them or whatever Google's telling them. And most of that is who created that? Who's giving you that information to spew out to us? You know what I'm saying? So that's that's kind of what it is. I mean, the first movie ever made in America is about a it's about a black dude trying to, you know, RA the rest of that to a girl to a white girl and it's all about saving her.
>> I think it's called what? Birth of a nation phenomenal.
>> Birth of I mean technically the first film was uh the the black kiss. Two two black couples kissing.
>> See, I didn't even know that. I'm about to look that up. That's pretty cool. But yeah, see so it's all indoctrination. I mean, everybody's been indoctrinated to even I mean, we've been tried they try to indo indoctrinate us to hate ourselves. You see what I'm saying? So, it's just it's one of it's a 200 year spell. T H A T E. I love Tik Tok.
>> Oh, I'm sorry. Yep. Sorry about that, y'all. I love Tik Tok shop. But yeah, it's just a spell that we got to we got to endure and and I think we're actually breaking through. I mean, just me coming on Tik Tok right now listening to this.
I have no idea what I'm doing, by the way. I just got on TikTok cuz my wife want me to like her video. So, that's here I am. And then I found y'all and I'm listening to this and this is all brand new to me. It's not brand new to me. It's brand new to me hearing other people talk about it, which is a beautiful thing. So I think I think it's a I think it's a spell that's about to be broken. And I literally call it a spell cuz that's what it is. You got to you got to break the spell and actually you got to search for history. And a lot of people want to be taught history when it's something you got to search for.
It's a treasure. See what I'm saying?
It's that value. So I land there.
Also, technically before the little black kiss, it was the little black jockey on on a little horse. They recorded the little horse, him riding on the horse. So, we we always been the first of everything, negative or positive.
>> Be it will since you off mic, you want to go answer the prompt and and >> well, you know, I'm But I was going to say the same thing that both right was just talking about. I think the programming started before Google. Um um you know I you know one of the things I had a lady say this morning that kind of makes me real quick. American got to go walk the dog real quick.
>> Okay. I got you. So imagine we are all sitting in a room, right, or in a in a house kidnapped by somebody, right? And the kidnappers decide to just throw meat or water to the rest of us at a certain time frame, right? And we over there fighting over the meat or the water, right? But we are not fighting to get our freedom from the kidnappers. And sometimes this is how this sounds like, right? Um, we are all under Is that your refugee story, man?
>> Let me finish.
>> Let me finish. You all You always cutting off, man. The other day I was here, you were talking about U visas and you you're like, well, they stop giving you vis.
>> Let's finish your point, Bill. Land your plane. Land your plane. Thank Now, um, so I'm thinking, right, some of the things y'all be saying here, like helicopter, some of the things you'll be saying, I'm like, is this guy getting paid by the YT to say this stuff?
Because the YT cannot openly say some of the stuff y'all be saying.
>> So now, >> okay, B, do you have a point? Stop talking about helicopter and get get to your point.
>> That's my point to all of y'all.
>> Okay, are you done? Are you So, we're going to land your plane.
>> Let me ask you a question, B. Well, yeah, I've made a whopping $847.
over the past three months of doing this [ __ ] bro. So, if you want to call that being paid, hey, I would have got there take it from you. But hey, man, tell us more about your refugee story. How you ended up over here, man.
>> Yeah, cuz they they try to, you know, project. But yeah, you can go finish bed. You got you got to >> Yeah. Just don't keep talking about helicopter. We don't want to hear that.
We listening to your story.
>> Jealous. Don't be a jealous American.
>> Whatever.
Can Can somebody give him a minute on the clock?
Are you still there?
>> I'm still here. And he missed the analogy. That tells me that he doesn't have reasoning power because what I was getting at is we are all been under the oppression of somebody. Someone is oppressing all of us, right? This fighting amongst ourself. The analogy was we fighting for the bottle of water that was told to us by the kidnappers.
Who is saying anything about the kidnappers, right? And he's talking about refugees. Dude, some of us are living a very good life. Probably living better life than you do. Just because we spending time having this interaction with you on on on TikTok and you think that you are entitled to looking down on people that means you're ignorant.
That's all that means. Because in terms of being here in America, I'm pretty sure Uncle Sam knows that we living better than you do and we contributing more than you do. So, I mean, this high horse that you're sitting on because of whatever you think you got going on, it makes no sense.
>> It's just ignorance.
>> Wait, let me let me ask you this.
>> Go ahead.
>> If if we're doing if y'all are doing so well than us, then why are they currently making laws to get rid of y'all? and and they're not making laws to get rid of us.
I want to know how they doing so much better than us. But he just gave us a story about how they fighting over boxes of water. Man, y'all ever seen how Africans drink water? They drink water out of literally out of >> You just plain ignorant. You just >> all that bag water.
>> So know how they doing the question. I want to know how they're doing. I want to know how they're doing better than us when they have to take Wait a minute. I am a mod. You can't do that.
>> So, I want to know how they're um doing better than us when they take our money and send it home just so they can live well because their do their money is worthless. So, how are you doing better than us? We're over here. We're over here succeeding in a country where it's way higher to live than in your country.
So, how are you doing better than us?
>> I'll answer the question. Those are two questions. Let me answer two questions.
First one, hold. So, so, so you won't so you'll remember there's two question.
The first one is why are y'all getting deported and making they making laws to get rid of y'all if y'all doing better than us? And why are y'all sending money back to y'all countries if y'all doing better than us? Cuz y'all money not worth nothing. Okay, first of all, the laws are not make being made to deport all immigrants, right? Because we both of you know and I know the immigrant that was in Washington firing Americans that are veterans born in whatever in America, he's an immigrant, too, right?
He probably has more right on your own land than you do and he's an immigrant.
So, the government is not making laws to to get rid of all immigrants. That's ignorant statement. Second of all, and I and I I'm going to be very specific about this. These people that build your society, that build your system has been taken from Africa for century. Guess what we doing? We are back here to take back what was taken from us. Well, at least a >> You need to talk to your >> And he just And he just lied because first of all, yes, they are they're trying they're working on denaturalizing you and taking you guys up out of here.
I don't know what you think the 14th amendment re being revised. I don't I don't think you guys understand what that is actually saying about you. They want you out of here. They're working on take they don't care about you coming over here getting naturalized and all that bull crap. They want you out of here. Donald Trump is actively working towards snatching those rights, whatever rights you think you have away from you.
And I don't think y'all understanding this.
>> Now, people who want to immigrate here, they got to stay in their country till they get approved. Now, >> can I speak?
>> I saw that, too. If you want to reapply, you got to go back home to reapply.
>> On the 14th amendment, can you put that up so that we can all read it? And you show me a premise that speaks of naturalized citizen. It talks about birthright citizen.
>> He is a dummy. I can't. I'm sorry. I'm going back. It's not about the 14th amendment. We're in an authorative state. So it doesn't matter what the 14th amendment say at the end of the year. At the end Oh, my bad. Go ahead.
>> No, go ahead. I'm sorry. My bad.
>> At the end of the day, he going to do what he want to do. And maybe 10 or 20 years later through courts, you might be able to fight it. But you know, he owns the judges, so it doesn't >> Well, since American is smarter than all put it up so that we can all read it.
Please put >> Why do I need to put it up when I know what it says? You're the one that don't know what it says. How about you pull it up and [ __ ] read it, >> right? And here's another thing, right?
It's gotten Trump done that waged such a W on y'all to where now they've identified 384 cases in the past 2 weeks of people to be dnaturalized, right? And guess what loophole they about to close out now? They about to close that marriage loophole. There's people in the DHS saying now that if any of you immigrants get divorced, Hold on, let me finish.
>> Let me finish. Let me finish. They saying now that if any of you immigrants get divorced, they going to hit y'all with that. Going to say that y'all got married out of fraud and they going to denaturalize y'all. Bro, y'all don't have a leg to stand on in this fight moving forward. You keep running around here going to talk about all the I'm going I'm going to be here for a while.
We going No, no, no, no. Keep playing these games, bro. We've been with these YT folks for 400 damn years. We know exactly how they move. Y'all been over here about 14 months and y'all telling us what's going on. Keep being stupid.
Keep on. We going love. I'm going to make sure I got a whole goddamn case of popcorn ready to go when they start digging up in y'all ass to the next person. He's >> 400 years.
>> Okay, B, we're done. Okay. Yep. Land has >> We'll get back to you in a second. We'll get back to you.
>> Uh, is it Patric Patrico?
>> What's going on?
>> Hey.
>> Hey. Um, >> you want to address the prompt first and then you get it?
>> Yeah. Um, why are black Americans looked at as the villain?
You know, when you when you uh popping your [ __ ] people going to hate on you.
That's just what it is.
>> I love you got to spell it out, brother.
Go ahead.
>> I'm sorry. People are going to uh throw shade on you. Um, we are the, you know, we the glue, we the nucleus, we the engine. We literally are the engine. That's where they came up with the name engine after us. Don't nothing move without us. Don't no fashion move without us. Don't no real estate move without us. Don't no music move without us. Politics don't move without us. But we got to uh recognize our own power.
Um and we do need to use it a little more because I don't think they really know who we are. I got a photo in the background. This is before the reconstruction. And literally reconstruction was reconstruction. And I heard the brother Rise who from my city, you know, say that we ain't got nothing in common with indigenous people in America and we got more in common with Africans, which I'm confused cuz I'm from Chicago, right? My granny from Chicago. My great granny from Chicago.
Our founder >> family, too.
>> And our founder was a brother, right?
And he right here in the background.
They knocked that down and put up them them them other Indians. Now you'll see they statues, but this got knocked down.
Rise. You probably never seen this before cuz you've been indoctrinated.
But this is the city that we come from.
We come from a kingdom. It's still castles in Chicago. And we built them castles. We built all of them ancient structures in Chicago. That's who we are. So when you talk about what we what we got in common, tell me where you going to see them kind of structures anywhere else in the world. You tell me that in abundance. You go to Austin, Texas building background there. St. >> Youard the Chicago fire, right? It's in all them buildings, right? I mean, all them cities, right? It's in It's in the small towns, too.
So, the fact that you don't know the history, I'm sorry, but I think we just she was a whole Indian. She was the mayor of Chicago. Did you forget that?
You think came from Africa?
They went jeans brother in church.
came from. Them brothers went over to Liber and the flag is the US flag.
Call your people. Check your back.
to him.
>> Yeah, I'll respond.
You can go ahead.
>> Hold on. Can you hear us in the chat?
They said we break. We can't hear. Only the panel can hear. Oh, they can't. They can't hear us. Hold on.
can't hear us and the live is glitching.
We might have >> Can y'all hear now?
>> Can y'all hear?
>> Some people saying yes, some people saying no.
>> Put one on.
>> Y'all can hear us.
>> No, we talking about the people down there. We can hear each other.
>> Somebody said they reporting the live.
Um, so I don't know what's going on, but >> Okay. They said it's better now. I logged this out and logged us back in.
>> Okay.
>> So, y'all ready?
>> Yeah.
>> Yep. You can get you can get one minute back.
>> Yeah. Can you get next minute again?
>> No time.
>> Probably got to drop me as a M and add me again. You You can go. You can go.
You got your time back.
>> So, first of all, our hairstyles are similar from the braids, afro locks. I would like to see you all show me some similarities to the native hair. The food is similar. We definitely eat different things.
>> Hold on, guys. Hold on. Sorry for the technical difficulties.
Everybody, Patrio, they want to hear you again. They couldn't hear you.
Okay. So, uh I had a photo in the background. I almost want to put it on the big screen.
Um >> because >> we can do that.
>> Okay. So, >> I started his time. Should I or no?
>> Yeah.
>> Okay. So, Rod say he from Chicago and he said we don't have nothing in common. with the indigenous Let me let me let me That's a brother with jeans in Africa with know Can y'all hear me better in the chat?
>> Yeah.
>> It really wasn't nothing to report. I ain't say nothing but facts. Um They said that it's glitching.
>> It's still glitching.
>> Can y'all hear it now?
>> That's crazy.
>> Yeah, they said y'all can y'all hear is good now.
No, we can't put you back.
So, like I said, we had American.
That's cool. That's cool. I'm I'm I'mma leave it. Y'all can go on my page. I got a lot of information on the page. I'm not going to I know I'm I'm I'm very influential in a certain aspect and when I it hold a lot of weight. So, I'm going just go ahead and and let y'all do y'all research, but just look up uh the founder of Chicago. Look up the history of Chicago. Look up Chilaga.
Um look up look up the the the ancient uh Omeg statue. Look at their hairstyles.
Um look up the the uh the jeans, the automobile, all the things that we use.
Right. Okay. And you tell me you tell me where your influence comes from. The drums that they use came from the Americas. Okay. The sweet potato came from Peru. I went to church at St. Martin Deores. St. Martin de Porter was a melanated man from Peru. That's the Catholic church I went to. And you can go look up that Catholic church. It's still standing. And it has the same aesthetic as these buildings in the background. Chicago is a kingdom. Okay?
We didn't get taken to Chicago. Chicago was our land. It still is our land. And that's why the parks are protected.
That's why if you go to Chicago, you can go below the surface. You can go 75 ft below the surface and there's still roads, right? This ain't this ain't no no no no no uh folklore. This is facts that you can look up. Chicago is an ancient city that still stands and it's not built by anybody other than us. So, I don't know who gave you your information. I don't know if you didn't talk to your granny. I don't know if you ain't talked to to your to your uh grandma, your your aunties, your uncles, but the school going to tell you you one thing. You got to get >> want to go to school tomorrow >> and you got to look up >> naked >> your genealogology.
You got to look up who your Mississippi roots. You got Tennessee roots. You got Louisiana. You got Chicago roots. Huh?
Well, brother, go ahead.
>> Mississippi indigenous people from Mississippi >> and the people from the southeast don't look like them people from the northeast. So when you look at the the the statue that I'm showing you in the background with that brother with that horse, you don't see that in Chicago no more. You go downtown and you see a different looking Indian. And that's to show you what reconstruction did. They reconstructed the land in which we occupy that we built to make it fit another narrative. But brother, the proof is there. If you open your mind to go and see, but if you going to continue on with with that wool over your face, you ain't going to be able to see. You going to be running to Africa to try to find your great great grandma. Whole time whole time she in the soil right here. So all I'm saying is honor your ancestors and do your research, bro. I'm done. tribe up.
>> All right, go ahead, Ry.
>> All right, I respect the brother's opinion. To start off, I'm not sure what us inventing jeans and like we've accomplished and invented a lot, damn near everything of any value in America.
But I don't see what that has to do with our connection to Africa and the point I was making. So, it's like a lot of stuff he said I don't even disagree with. But to finish my point, uh y'all said y'all want some examples. cuz I'm going to give you some and then I please give me some to respond and I'm a open-minded brother. I will.
>> We got people in the queue. We can't center. We got to move this forward.
>> All right. I'm not going to take long.
This will be 60 seconds or less.
>> Okay. Go ahead. And then that's it cuz we got >> and we got to run.
>> Black Americans pour out liations. When people die, we pour liquor out. That's a African tradition that comes from Nigeria.
Uh, we all we smack our lips and suck our teeth. That's an African tradition that's still done over there by several tribes. We eat collard greens. That's part of soul food. They eat Goldman in Ethiopia, which is collard greens. They eat sukuma wiki in Kenya, which is collard greens. We eat grits. They eat fufu. They eat pop. It ain't exactly the same, but it's very similar. Uh the fact that we barbecue, that's a big part of our culture. South Africans, Namibians, bride, it's just barbecue. Or they got kapana, that's just barbecue. Okra, the fact that we eat it and it's in soul food and it's a word that comes from a word in uh one of the Nigerian languages. The fact that we say the word yam, which is also a African term. It's like I could go on with this. Our hairstyles, our dances, our music. So, I'mma end with that cuz I'm not going to rant about it. I know this.
>> What about inventions? Since we got um over 50,000, it seemed like we was so much alike. What can they got that many inventions over there too?
>> Africans. Yes. They some of the most innovative people. They inventing stuff constantly.
>> So, Roz, where where did the Where did the sweet potato come from?
>> Okay, hold on, sir. We got people. We got >> That's not what I said.
>> Hey, look. Hold on. Patrio Patrico and Rise. We gonna rotate both y'all down.
We got new people in.
>> Hey, can I can I ask a question before I go real quick? What's the number? What do that blue number mean? Or the number next to that little blue thing?
>> That means you got gifts. Somebody uh gave you some gifts.
>> Ah, okay.
>> Little bit of Jolaf.
>> And what a grit made of corn.
>> I'mma buy all the jolaf I can.
>> Can we please get back to the prompt?
>> Appreciate the time. Y'all be smooth.
>> You too. Come back anytime. Rise.
>> All right.
>> All right.
Um, Tero.
>> Yes.
>> Hey, you want to um address the prompt?
Thanks for your patience.
>> No problem. Y'all um address the problem. Why do black Americans look at Why are black Americans looked at as the villain? Um, we looked at it as the villain because we are the people that come from this soil and that disrupts a lot of people's um, spirit because they can't just walk all over us and do whatever they want.
That's just like coming into somebody else house and throwing furniture and stuff around, shifting stuff around.
They can't do that. And because we have strong ethnic pride uh that also disrupts people energy and make people feel uncomfortable and to them it may come across is for us it's strong. We have strong confidence in ourselves but for them it may come across or they may perceive it as arrogance which it might be a little bit of that mix in there too. I mean that's a thin line confidence and arrogance. It it kind of teeters and it goes back and forth. Um, so I think that's what what the issue is. Um, why we are always looked at as the villain and we always come out on top. So the person that come out on top always get looked at like, dang, I need to I need to knock them off they off they off they number one spot.
But we never keep they can never do that. We keep coming back. So I think that's why we are always looked at as a villain.
>> Al.
>> All right. Thank you, Tero. Uh, Jua, how you doing?
>> Hello. Good. I'm doing good. How are you?
>> I'm doing good. What ethnicity are you?
>> Um, I'm from Africa, East Africa, Tanzania.
>> Tanzania. Okay. You want to address the problem for me?
>> Yeah. So, I'll take that. Why black Americans are looked as as a villain?
One thing I'll say, they are not a walkover to white supremacy like Africans. black American will stand will stand against it. So they paint them to be villains because without African-Americans or black Americans, I think Africa right now will be in a worse shape. But you know because the way people stand there, black Americans stand against white supremacy. Some Africans are coping that. So black Americans are going to be look >> Hold on one second. By I'mma rotate you down. Go ahead, Ju. Yeah, I'm saying so black Americans are looked at as villains because you know Africans like coping black Americans because you know black Americans uh are a big force.
Don't get me wrong. So black Americans are going to be looked as villains because let me tell you many Africans copy your talk against white supremacy.
You understand? So they going to copy as villains so that Africans don't copy that against you because they know if Africans copy that talk. No other black no other black people in this world speaks against white supremacy like black Americans. Black Colombians don't you know black Brazilians don't. So they're going to paint as civilian because they know if the rest of black people speak against white supremacy the way you guys speak about it, there's going to be a revolution against white supremacy. So to do that, they have to paint you like a bad person, like a villain. So that when these Africans don't come here in America, they don't do they don't look at you like that. me I used to not to know but I met a black American in Tanzania and he taught me a lot against white suprem which I did and I'm like now I see why these guys are are looked as are looked at as villians because they don't want us to copy them to talk about white suprem and speak against it because if we do that we're going to bring a revolution in the world I promise you.
>> Thank you J. Hey Dr. V.
>> Hello everybody. Hello. Hello.
>> Hello.
Hello.
He just stole everything that I was going through. Say um because of the strength as many times you been on your panel, right?
I say all tight in firm to this. He's absolutely correct. You looked at as a billion simply because the whole world is watching you. You understand? And he's right back home. Okay. On the continent, this is why I get my draws in a bunch when people say Africans because we have different countries. So everybody ain't the same. However, we all agree on that point that you guys are there the trans. You understand?
You've paved the trail for the rest of us. You understand? And so of course, you know, What do you mean by that statement?
>> What do you mean? Are you serious?
>> Tell you something.
>> Can you still do you want to be a part of this? That's what I mean. You you don't you like you I ain't no way. Ain't no way we the same cuz can you have some decorum?
>> I don't know where you from.
>> Wait a minute. You after Dr. Z. Now I got to give Dr. Z more time before we hear your your insults. Go ahead and drop this off.
>> No, no, ma. Let me tell you something because um I'm with the shits today.
Mhm. Had a hard day yesterday, but I'm with the [ __ ] today. I don't want truss to come in and say what do you have to say because he think I'm poor. I'm a [ __ ] kingo. So come after Mike and say what you have for say sir.
>> All this sucking up you doing man. I don't like it. You know how can you come and say um our brothers are transcendentals when the people of the K method you know we had a narrative you know where origin starts from of civilization started from Africa when when they were migrating they migrated with their culture when they were tokenized slaves they took away their culture you have to you guys just hear just you know ving we're all one there's no difference there's no threat setting they inherited the power and the genetics of the ancestors that's how come they're able to navigate themselves through everything went they went through >> they have they are the direct they are the direct descendant of the ancestors because you know why Africa has been mixed with Arabs Lebanese fan and tooken over the identity so at least the African-Americans have the direct line ancestors because right now Africa is all mixed up bucks up with every race >> so let me ask you a question there Truth >> yeah listening >> what part of black American culture is black American Every there's no there's nothing part of a black American culture is black American because here's why.
>> So everything we do is African.
>> Everything you do is African. Direct African.
>> No.
>> The only thing is you just don't speak the language.
>> You just don't speak the language.
>> I want I want to hear this out.
>> Right.
>> You just don't speak the language.
That's all. But I'm going let her learn.
Let's let her learn. I'll come back to me.
>> No, no, no. Elaborate. You said we don't own anything. Everything we do is African. So elaborate, bro. Tell us. The only thing the only thing the only thing is that you don't speak the language but you have the same creativity >> Beyonce >> you have the same creativity you have the same strength you have the same enthusiasm you have the same will and you have the same >> y superstars >> bro >> compared to ours we don't want >> it's not about it's not about superstar some things are hereditary you know the word hereditary >> where are that people reverence Where's your inventions? Where's your toilets? Where's your garden?
>> Where's your toilet?
>> You inherited. You inherited. You inherited the genetics of the ancestors and so on so forth.
>> If I have the same genetics, then where is your greatness? Why did y'all inherit those those genetics?
>> Because we're now mixed. We're now mixed in Africa. We're all mixed now.
Mix.
>> Yeah. Yes, we are mixed.
You have a flock of fan flocking all over the continent. We make lemon flocking all over the continent.
>> Are notes are not in Kenya. Chill out, dude. Let me tell you.
>> They everywhere. They in Kenya. What are you talking about? They >> know they in Kenya. Why are they everywhere?
>> Arabs. You have a flock OF ARABS ALL OVER AFRICA. WHAT ARE YOU WHAT ARE YOU GUYS TALKING ABOUT? ARE YOU GUYS REAL?
>> But if you just said it's hereditary, but you ain't >> And now YOU HAVE A FLOCK OF AFRICANS IN SOUTH AFRICA. WHAT ARE YOU GUYS TALKING ABOUT? WHY YOU SO Hold on. Hold on.
>> Hold on a second. Hold on. True. Truth.
Stop crashing out.
>> True. True. Calm down. Truth. Calm down, dude. Relax, man. I got a second question for you. Right. So, if all of our culture is African, as in what you said, right? We don't own any of our culture, right?
Never said except for the language. You said the language is this different. That what you said, right?
Okay. I'm assuming you know you hear what I'm saying. So, I want you to tell me cuz I'm I'm a part of a particular culture, right? Tell me where in Africa do they take 74 Cadillacs and put 26s on them. Bro, what part of the African culture is that? I'm I'm I'm going to go back on mute.
>> Ryan Swangers, >> please.
>> He doesn't understand black culture.
Black culture has evolved.
>> No, no, no, no, no, no, no. I want him.
I want him cuz he said all of our culture is African. So, I want him to point to me. No, no, hold up, bro. Don't don't don't don't try to save this.
Don't be Captain Savo, okay? Let let the whole goddamn speak for they self. All right, >> brother.
Show me where Let me say around with 74 Chevys on 26 in goddamn right. Let me say let me say this. Let me say it last, right? Let me tell you one thing. Africa, we're all divided by tribes and ethnicity. You understand?
But you guys are not divided. You guys are the only breed of the African continent. If that's not divided by tribe, there should be at least one tribe. This is what I'm saying. This is what I'm saying. No, no, no. This will be one.
>> Listen to what I'm saying. You guys are the only one that's invited by >> I want you to battle. I want you to tell me one tribe that's riding around on 70 on on a 76 Chevy with with 28s on it.
Bro, tell me one tribe.
>> I could I could I could put one out that's riding on seven.
A mouth full of go >> all time. Listen, you can't. You can't.
>> You are the only ones that's not divided. You're the solution to African unity. If you get your mind together, you can liberate Africa. You are the only ones that can do it. We cannot do it on the continent. That's the reality.
The >> wrong messenger.
>> That's the reality.
>> To liberate Africa, y'all.
>> Y the only ones that can do it.
>> You're the only ones that can do it. Why are we the only ones?
>> Because why are we the only ones? Here is why y'all the only ones that can do Here's why. Cuz y'all the only ones that's not divided by tribes of interest.
>> Cuz we the only ones that's not upholding to the to like narrative.
>> Y are not divided by tribes.
>> West coast or east coast. Do y'all >> No. No. Y'all are not divided by tribes.
Y'all could come down to Africa and unite and unify Africa and build Africa from here.
>> You can unite Africa from America. Hold on. Asian doctor. You have to destroy the system here.
>> I want to say something. Go ahead, Dr. Zah.
>> You see, uh, if you sit back and listen to a person long enough to tell exactly who they are. Now, you gave two messages here. Okay. Two. And I I I got to be honest with you. I was I'm I'm totally confused, sir. Ain't nobody soaking up to nobody. You understand? So if you're in America, right, you are you what is his name? True trust. Are you >> he nationalized and he ain't never going back.
>> Oh, so he is here. Okay, no problem. So true. Right. Do tell me. Do tell me.
Okay.
Tell me who is Jako Graves.
>> No, no. You You tell us.
>> No, no, no. If you been here, you don't know history. Who is Jako Graves?
>> What's his name? Jacob Graves. What is his name? I don't understand. I don't >> Graves. Jako Graves.
>> All I know is >> No, no, no. Okay, let me let me give you Okay, let me give you the answer. Let me give you the answer.
>> All I know is African-Americans can unite Africa from here. What they have to do is destroy the system. Yeah.
>> Let them have to destroy the system here in order to unite Africa >> from the continent.
>> You're from East Africa. I'm from West Africa.
>> Africa is by uniting here and destroying the system here and Africa or you that's it. The rest Africa there's a lot of countries there. What country are you from? Just say a country. I don't need a whole >> I'm from Syrian. I'm from Syrian. And you? What country you from?
>> Pause. Stop. Stop. Stop. So for the most part, >> wouldn't you sit there and you said, "Okay, they didn't have no culture or everything came from Africa and it was inherited." The brother asks you a question. rather you know and the whole continent because I don't know right people are driving around in Cadillacs and those rims >> that's a lifestyle NOT A CULTURE LIFESTYLE answer the question YOU >> CHOSE TO DRIVE SEVEN CADILLAC THAT'S NOT THAT'S NOT a >> I'm convinced let me tell you something what I am starting to hear right I'm reading in between the lines a couple of things you may be dehydrated and you may also for me be constipated and you're so angry that you're not them. Sorry.
And and and this is what I'm hearing.
You're angry because you aren't them. H why in the world where they want to go right on and fight our fight. There are 50 goddamn four countries.
>> Nice. Let me let me give you an answer now. Not answer. I don't need an answer.
I don't need an answer. I don't need an answer. There are 54. There are 54 countries and a whole bloody continent of Africa and you mean to tell me the United well in the America's bottom line you want everyone from the Americas to come over to the continent to start to go and solve the problem of being hold I don't want to know why I don't want to know why you know why for me I under freaking stand. Why in the hell you want them to fight?
>> Yo, I'm paid you down. Thank you for coming.
>> Here's why. Here's why. Here's why. Can I ask you the question, please?
>> It was an actual question. It was a >> Hold up. Well, let it be a T, but I'm going to give you an answer today.
Right. For how long have we gained our independence in Africa? For how long we have managed to liberate oursel from all the struggles, but yet today we're puppets. We're still suckling from the same milk that feeds us. We're divided by tribes. We're divided by nationalities. We're divided by ethnicity. Isn't that what you have?
Listen, they said again, >> they are the only ONES THAT CAN UNITE AFRICA. THEY'RE THE ONLY ONES THAT CAN LIBERATE AFRICA.
They have no country. They have no pride.
>> They have no tribe.
>> Here's where you Here's where you [ __ ] up. Trust. I'm going tell you where you [ __ ] up at.
>> They have no tribe. They're the only one that can unite Africa.
>> Yeah. Oh, here's what you Okay, got you.
When I asked you where what part of our culture is ours and you said none of it, all of our culture is African. Guess what? AFRICAN IS TRIBAL. SO, HOW CAN WE how can we fix the same as you? If y'all are tribal and we're our culture is yours, that means we're trial. So, we can't fix you because we're just like you. Ain't no why. You said we're you, which means we're tribal just like you, which means ain't no solution, [ __ ] You inherited the strength of our ancestors, fool.
>> You inherited the ancestors.
>> We inherited the creativity of our ancestors.
>> Oh, no. No. Then why don't godamn super Why don't y'all have the creativity? Get your acts together. You are the chosen.
>> Why don't you have the creating ones?
>> You are the chosen ones.
>> Wait a minute. Wait a minute.
>> You guys are the chosen ones. I'm telling this now. Hear me?
today.
She was kissing MY ASS.
>> YOU GUYS ARE THE chosen ones.
>> You guys are the chosen ones. I'm sorry to say this, my my fellow Africans, but you guys are the chosen ones.
>> I need everybody I need everybody to absorb this for a minute. Do Do you guys hear what he's saying?
>> I don't want that ass kissing.
>> Yes, ma'am. America.
>> He was just getting on.
I'm not kissing. I'm wait minute.
>> Wait a minute. It's not him ass kissing.
That is his spirit. He's convicted and he don't have a choice but to tell the truth. He's speaking the truth right now.
>> Yep.
>> Failure.
>> Dang.
>> He can't liberate himself.
>> I'm not a failure.
>> You a failure. You can't liberate your own self and it's more than you. How YT sir. Y'all don't even have YT people directly in pain on y'all. Y'all dealing with YT people from a distance and do what you got to do and you need to wake up. Hold on. You need to wake up. You just told me I was kissing ass. Let me tell you something. I don't kiss nobody ass. The problem is the fact that let me tell you something actually.
You guys are the problem with Africa.
Bro, >> let me tell you something. Ya Allah, ya, you know what the problem is? You don't want them to come over to Africa to fight a fight.
Is that when you say, "Oh, they are from." Can you please mute? Okay, they already chosen.
>> Please, we know they are the chosen one.
We notice. I notice. What the hell are you talking about? I already notice. So you want them. You want them speak against me. If you >> No, because you said I was kissing ass.
Okay, that what you said. I was ass dude like we did last night.
>> Yeah, he can't even have self-control.
>> Stop. Cuz we want to hear what you got to say. Just let let the doctor let doctor um let her finish her statement first. Please let cuz we like to hear doctor's a too. Please just be quiet.
Wait a minute.
>> You finished doctor.
>> All right. Thank you sir. No what needs to happen is the fact that us over in the continent. Okay. Although I'm here in America and they can't get rid of me at all. I'm sorry. Okay. But us in the continent first and foremost have to go right on and we have to get together to go and fight stand up and fight for ourselves. Case in point in South Africa I ain't never in my life seen nothing like this or well no I have I have so Africans want to go and they want to kick out other Africans from their country Batman and this is rhetoric you kick every African out of your country yet you repeat the Europeans that's there that is oppressing you makes no sense okay It makes absolutely no sense whatsoever. No. And I also agree with you. N I would agree and I've said this time and time again. Yes, they are the chosen ones. Yes, they are. Yes, they already are. As in when you say or they don't have the or they don't have culture, they don't have this. It came from the ancestors question. We were born on the goddamn continent.
Okay. So Ash, okay, that's what I thought. And you also thought >> Okay, let me ask you a question. You also ask question, >> you also thought you cooked, right, and served a goddamn meal in which the fact that you ain't cooked nothing. I ain't cooked a goddamn meal. You only prepared the vegetables for me to cook your ass.
The problem, you ain't true. You went through that. Oh, she's Arab. She's not even African. So, and so forth. Let me tell you something. Look at this melanin. You're damn right. You think I'm going to go right on and be ashamed of what I am? I am Arab, Moroccan, and Spaniard. I ain't apologizing to nobody as for what I am. But guess what? I have respect. And that's the problem that a lot of you guys come over here, you have no respect.
whatsoever yet or they need to they need to liberate.
>> That's our man. That's our man.
You're going to have to drop him off. He is not going to be able to control himself.
>> Right. Let's uh hold on Dr. Z. Go ahead.
Say your little piece uh uh trust so we can get to the next people.
>> Yeah. And explain why we got to destroy.
>> The Arabs invaded us. They still invaded us. They established themselves in our continent. Africa belongs to black people. That's point blank. The reason why I'm saying that African-Americans are the chosen one is this. You guys, although you don't have the the cultural substance as far as tradition, what I mean by substance tradition, you're not divided by tribes. That's the thing. All you guys need to do is unite. Come together. That's all. That's why the white team is continuously to keep y'all divided in all ways, shape, or form because at the end of the day, your strength itself speaks loudly. You understand? destroy the system here and come and rebuild Africa. The system here is what's controlling Africa. You guys know the system. You know the whites.
You know their dirty games.
>> Ain't no playing. Ain't no way.
>> We know how to play. So you guys could only come down there.
>> No. Ain't no way in hell we going to ever destroy our country. Go ahead.
>> Hey F.
>> Hey.
>> You have to avenge the blood of the ancestors, >> bro. Tell y'all what I tell y'all.
You're going to have to drop this telling y what's going to have to happen.
>> Helicopter powers. Go ahead. Um, black queen. My powers not working. You You got to remove them and add it back.
>> Really?
>> Yeah.
>> Cuz mine is test.
>> Y'all been out here powerless.
>> We've been trying to use my fingers to go off fast and everything. Hold it down. Go. Go ahead.
>> Yeah. It's cuz of the new update.
>> Okay. Go ahead.
>> Okay. Um, so I've been sitting here all all day watching this and and I've heard that we're victims. Um, we're lazy, we're criminals. Um, I've heard a lot and and I know it takes a lot for me to come up here. Um, so let me get to it. Okay, this guy, the only truth that came out of his mouth is the fact that we are the chosen people. And and I just want to tell you guys something. They know that.
Even the YT people know that. Um they all have the same talking points. The YT people and a lot of these um immigrants, not all of them, shout out to Dr. Zah.
Um but they all have the same talking points. The YT talking points. Oh, you're lazy. Oh, the criminals. Oh, the this. you have no culture. Okay, we do have culture and our culture despite of what you want to think did not come from Africa. Um, we ate greens and yams and we ate pigs feet and because that's all we had to eat. That's all our people had to eat. They had to struggle to survive.
Okay? So they had to eat the grass and the green leaves and they had to be uh resilient and come up with different dishes to eat. And that's the beauty of it because that's who we are as a people. We are strong. We are survivors.
Okay. And the problem here is they along with white tea people are highly jealous of us and not all of them. I believe that this guy right next to us, right next to me, I believe he truly wants us to come to their country and rebuild it.
And a lot of them think like that. And so I'm just going to say to you this. It will not happen. We will not. Y'all are too damn disrespectful.
You come here and I'm I'mma hurry up, love. You come here, you align with white tea supremacist, and then you think that we are supposed to help you.
You you It's like y'all, it's like we're fighting this battle, this war, and they come up from behind and start stabbing us in the back and think we're supposed to help them. I don't know what's wrong with these immigrants, the the black ones, uh the Latino ones that think that we're literally supposed to help them.
And jealousy is a hell of a spirit. And let me just give this and I'mma land. If you look at revenue, he will get he has dedicated his life to trying to destroy our people, our legacy, our history, and our name. And anytime that somebody has that much passion to destroy you, that spirit is powerful. Okay? And this is why I pray for my people on a regular. I pray for my people because we are up against spirits and principalities like that and we are the chosen ones and that is who has protected us is the hand of God and I >> miss can I >> man keep keep them prayers coming >> look can I come oh go ahead >> I was going to say really quick that um it was just it all these you know we encounter these Africans daily but he was the only one that I've ever heard say that. So, you know, that kind of like drew my attention in. But yes, we already know we're not doing it. We're not going to help you guys at all because of the constant.
>> You don't have the spirit is going to make you >> whatever. I bet you I won't anyway.
>> I help a cursed people. And this is what I want to tell you. You all are cursed because you mess with you because you you be quiet. Be quiet. You people are cursed in that land. And that is why it cannot survive and progress and and grow because you are cursed. You know why?
Because you >> you messed with God's people. And it is written that when you mess with his people, you will be cursed. and you mess with God's people when some of our people came through Africa and y'all was jealous of them like you're jealous of us right today and y'all threw them on those slave chips and that was a very small minute amount okay of the our people from the tribe of Judah that ran and fled to Africa from Rome fleeing from Rome and y'all became jealous of them and y'all through them got together with the Arabs and the Ashkanagi small hats and y'all threw them on slave chips and sent them over here. You know exactly who we are. You people know exactly who we are. But you get up here and try to put us down every day.
>> Hey hoes, can I say something? Host, please.
>> Just give me one minute. Right. And I'm going to say this here. Here's a song for y'all. Right. Going home.
Going home.
going back to the land I am from when that spirit kicks in you will have no control because why that is the spirit of your ancestors that is going to transcend into you and he's going to have that will you're going to see your black brother suffer on the continent you're going to say to yourself I got to go ahead and do something each one of us going to have a role to play you understand [ __ ] >> and we're going to play that role >> when you see your back brother suffer on TV >> you're going to be You know, I got to do something over me to go save y'all. I get >> When the revolution start, when the revolution start, you're going to I got to go back and get peace of mind.
>> Ain't no revolution and ain't no revolution. We ain't going back. It's coming.
You need to work on your people.
Hold your breath for >> you going to take action, too. You're going to say, "No, that's my black people suffering. I can't if we call over there.
>> Y going to come over, man. Can we come over there? We coming to call >> up Dr. Z.
>> Thank you, >> Miss Miss L. Can I comment on the >> We coming to put y'all and Bonnie.
>> Yes, please come. Please, please, Maria.
Okay. Yes. Hey, just wait a minute real quick.
>> Uh, the black, can you do a mod break?
And when we say you never know what turns this uh show going to take in a day. You just never know. The the Black Can he do that real quick? FBA or >> Yeah, go ahead. I'll go after him. I'll go after him. That would be perfect.
>> Real quick, >> shout out to Shout out to theund 44 people know what I'm saying in in the chat and watching live. Welcome to Love's World where we have diverse conversations and you never know where it's going to go. But if y'all don't mind, let's tap that screen. Let's get to 100,000 likes. That's the goal of the night. And let's get to 50 likes. Let's just five five shares. You know what I'm saying? We would like more than that.
But hey, if we can get to 50, that'd be a great thing right now. And then let's tap that screen. Rules of the stage.
When you come up, please stay on mute.
Know what I'm saying? And when you called on, your first thing you have to do, read the prompt. Answer the prompt.
And then you can go on your spirit with the rest of your two minutes. And after that, if somebody has a rebuttal and and receive fit, then the host will let that rebuttal go. And then you have a minute to respond. Both sides. the person who has the stage for the two minutes, they always have the final say. But hey, make sure you give No saying your favorite panelist for show your host. Make sure you follow her on YouTube and follow any other panelist that you see fit. You know what I'm saying? And let's continue to make this a great show. Like always, shout out to y'all, especially the the best chat in the YouTube chat.
Thank you, Deac. I appreciate you. Shout out to the mods. Um FBA, you want to go?
>> Yes.
>> Thank you. Thank you for the gifts.
>> You know, that's perfect to cleanse the energy of the room. Shout out to Black Receipt for that. Um I just wanted the family to just pay attention real quick.
We have a whole prompt talking about why are black Americans looked at as the villain. This is a beautiful prompt.
This is a beautiful time for people to actually tell us what gripes they have with us, what issues they have with us, why they want to be us, why they want us to be helping them. Perfect opportunity.
Somehow some kind of way, Africans started trying to denigrate our lineage.
They wanted to >> not all of them, but you know, they wanted to center themselves. They want to make us African. They keep trying to have this debate of our culture, our history that we have documented very well. We're one of the only people on the planet who can track our ancestral lineage, but somehow some kind of way they show us all the times that we're the villains in their story. This dude came up here and said we're not doing enough for Africa, which we're the only ones who did anything for Africa. We have Caribbeans come up here every night try to denigrate our lineage, aka Revenue and a bunch of the other ones.
These people have dedicated everything to trying to make us look bad. We don't need YT supremacy when we have melanated people doing the work for them. So, I just wanted to make that very clear.
This is why we're looked at as the villains because we do not put on the cape for these people no more. We already did that, but I just wanted to land I I land with that. You know, we have a beautiful prompt here for people to really show us and talk to us and have a real life conversation about whatever it is that they want to talk about.
>> Thank you, H. And thank you, Gore. Um, all right. Shout out to that. So, we got Chaa. Hey, Chaa.
>> Loves world. Peace to the room. Peace to the panel. What's up, chat? Shout out to everybody.
>> Hey, you want to address? Yeah. You want to address the prompt, Cha?
>> Yeah, I do. Why black Americans look at as the villain? I think it's projection energy because we such exceptional [ __ ] You know what I'm saying? And you know, we are put on pedestals due to their insecurity, you know, and they need help. They do.
But they looking for us to save the day.
And I'm sorry, our ancestors are not your ancestors. If you if you a continental African, your ancestors are the sellers.
Our ancestors are the ones that were sold. There's a big difference in that.
You know, there's nothing about our culture or lifestyle that you could find on the continent of Africa still to this day. We are not Africans. We And those that came here on those ships haven't been Africans since the bill of sale.
So, you know, it's a projection mechanism, you know, and honestly, they want us to come and save the day, but I don't think energy works like that. You know, God would not bless us and share a and and create continue to create miracles in in our lives with the very people, places, and things that put us in a negative predicament in the first place. It's like y'all want to get paid multiple times for a product you didn't even find worthy to keep.
We We were the gemstones that y'all tossed away. Y'all gave them to the pigs, but we created a whole farm and a whole paradise and we still building upon that. And now you want to reap the benefits and rewards that comes with that. Oh no, sir. If we continue to uh go down that narrative and be this generic African, we forfeit every right.
>> Okay. Can I come in now, Miss Love?
>> Hold on.
>> Uhuh. Let her land her plane and hold on. We going after that and then we going to let we going to have open panel.
>> Go ahead. Land your plane. Cha cha.
>> All right. we forfeit every right that we fought to gain while we were on the Western um hemisphere. And I think that will be um very um idiotic and foolish.
Fool me once, shame on you. Fool me twice, shame on me. And I'm and I'm and I know for a fact black Americans are sick and tired of being sick and tired and foolish to the same oppressor cuz our point of view you is just as much as our oppressor as is any white tea in this in this in this in this world and I land with that.
>> Thank you.
>> Only three times. I just got to put BTA.
>> Huh?
>> Okay.
>> Can I come in now?
>> No. We gonna get to Salad for his two minutes, then we gonna go to open panel.
Go ahead, Sid. How you doing?
>> Uh, hi everybody. Um, uh, respects to the panel. Respects to the FBA family.
Uh, respects to W world love. Um, I I I don't want to say any I mean, Lo's world, I apologize. My apologies.
>> Um, I don't want to repeat anything that we've been saying, right, for the last year to these tethers, right?
But I do need to say this. I think we should really analyze what that dude said as far as in um us going over there.
>> Hold on. Hold on. Can you address the prompt, please?
>> Oh, yeah. Yeah. Um, thank you.
>> Yeah. By the way, my name is Trust. You heard?
>> Oh, yes, sir. Yes, sir. Yes, sir. Uh, uh, nice to meet you, Trust. Um, >> I believe we looked at as the villain because simply uh we're just not going with, you know, the old rhetoric no more. First of all, um, that African-American label was just thrown on us. This is not something that we came up with. You see what I'm saying?
And I think it's timely. I think it's very, very important that we pay attention to the timing that everything that all of this stuff is going on right now. It's very, very timely. And if you if you really pay attention to what's going on, hey, uh, better better better get ready for for what's going for what's going to come.
That's all I wanted to say about the prompt. But, you know, as far as in as far as in the prompt, yeah, I just think we looked at as the villain because we just not going with the old rhetoric no more.
We're not African-Americans. We're just Americans. Simple as that. That's all I really wanted to say about the prompt. I don't need two minutes for it.
You can say whatever else you want to say. It's your >> Okay. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Well, um, no, what what I really wanted to say was, man, I think we should analyze what the, uh, what the guy got up here and said as far as in us going back to Africa and building up Africa because ultimately that's what their mission is.
Ultimately, immigrants coming over here to replace us, that's what their mission is, to replace us, for us to go over there and build up their country. I think we should really sit down and analyze why he said that. And I'm talking about have a big ass panel about it. Just like this panel right here. I mean, just like, you know, this this this this panel right here talking about that one specific fact. Like, you have to be in a specific mindset to even think that we was going to burn this country down to go over there and fix that whole continent up. That's That's it. That's all I wanted to say. That was funny to me. That was very funny to me.
But y'all have a good day. Hey, I'm going just get back in the comments and uh and listen.
>> All right. Shout out to you, uh, Solid.
>> All right, Mr. Love.
>> Yeah. Thank you.
>> Give me my own two minutes. Let me address some things that >> you ain't getting two minutes. We got It's open panel.
>> All right. All right. Let me just address some things that was said. You know, realistically, it by ain't a matter of choice. It's a matter of time. When it kicks, it kicks in. You gonna feel in your spirit. You know, it's not it's not something that someone going to tell you to go do. It's something you yourself going to going to go ahead and Hey, man. I'm talking, man.
Be quiet, bro. I'm talking, bro.
>> But but I'm saying respect my time, bro.
Respect my time.
>> But respect my time, >> bro. Don't disrespect us like that.
Don't disrespect us telling us what our spirit want. You not our ass, bro. Now, if I start putting my spirit on your ass, you might, you know what I'm saying? I start we start putting our spirit on you. You might not take putting our spirit on you. You might get told by them mosquitoes and [ __ ] >> Your damn spirit. We don't want your spirit, bro.
>> We don't want your spirit. We don't want nothing from you. Go home.
>> Hey, you heard? Listen.
>> And I got very clear. We are not.
>> We are worried about East Indians, Chinese.
>> We got We all got you an immigrant coming here. I just want to make that real.
>> I'm telling you, I I really wanted man.
We all got man.
>> I really Wait a minute. Trust. I really wanted him to say what he said because that just goes that just goes along with what I've been saying. They want us to go over there and build up their country. Exactly what I've been saying >> for weeks.
>> It's not about It's not about building the country. There's no country.
to your gods.
Pray to your god.
Hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, listen up.
Listen up.
It's about going back. It's about going back to what is yours. Guess what?
We all can't speak all at once, man.
You're not going there.
>> You're not going to have to calm down, man. I'm going shut it down for y'all, man.
>> You ain't going to shut down Africans packing. Y'all back back home.
Y'all met floods and fire.
>> He said they thought it was the other WAY AROUND.
>> WHAT'S THE STRATEGY BEHIND THAT?
What's the strategy about packing everybody? What's the strategy behind these people, man? We are definitely over there. Y'all can stop slowing down.
>> I'm trying to knock some [ __ ] into your head. Y just talk about mouth for no reason.
>> No, no, man.
>> Y get some wisdom and slow down our progress. We are listening at the same time, bro.
>> Hold on. You just submitted. We got good jeans. Y'all ain't getting nothing. So yeah, we don't have toilets, no nothing >> stagnating our progress.
>> And I just want to make it very clear, denim is my denim is my ancestral garb.
>> Jeans are my ancestral garb.
Jean jackets are my ancestral garb.
Cowboy hats is my ancestral garb.
Different outfits over here is my ancestral garb. A kinte cloth and cover my behind with zebra skin is not >> my This is strategy behind what I'm saying right here.
If if y listen if y the man refuse to do it, we're going to marry the black females and have kids with them and have those kids do it.
>> That's what I'm going to do.
>> Y'all don't know how to win.
>> They don't want to be eating soup every damn day either. They don't want to get knocked inside your head for having a disagreement with you. Okay? They don't want to get forced to do things they don't want to do because you in a damn mood. Our women have no no our women are gods. We don't we don't No, no, no. We don't put your woman. We going to get your woman for us. You know what I'm saying?
They tail, bro. You know what I'm saying? We don't want no no monkey kids, bro. No, no, no, no. Y'all Africans.
Y'all got this. Y'all listen. Listen up.
Listen up. Want nothing to do with y'all. Okay.
marry the sisters.
>> That's not going to have kids. You going to marry your sister? That's what y'all already kids back home.
>> You want to marry your sister? Y work your kids back home.
>> Kids back home.
>> No, no, no. You're not going to have to happen in slavery, bro. We're not going to let you talk to It's already happening.
>> No. FJ like musty.
>> They don't like musty peppercorns. They don't like It's already Thank you. You can come back up later.
We got to get some new people in the queue. Thank you. Okay.
He say he going to get the black ladies, >> gentlemen.
>> I don't know. I got my black American, but y'all better chill >> on that uh passport bro and the the lonely big bera. Y'all better chill.
>> Right for a green card.
>> Exactly. They plotting and scheming.
>> I know. Doing something strange for a piece of change.
for a dollar. Ain't that ain't that state culture? Arranged forced marriages and all that. Nah, I'm good.
Now I'm good. And and and to let me say this, no, there's nobody jumping the broom in Africa. They always saying everything we do is Africa. Show me where they jump the broom at in Africa.
>> Okay, hold on. Cha cha. Hey, human. How you doing?
Human, you want to unmute.
>> Human rights spokesman.
Are you here?
>> Human. Oh, all right. Go ahead. I don't know what happened with that, y'all.
>> They doing something strange for them green cards. I've been telling y'all for weeks now. They've been doing something strange for them green cards. So, sisters, y'all better watch out. It's a musty African on the loose over here in America. And he say he trying to get one of y'all caught up. I'm just letting y'all know this a PSA to the family.
Watch out. And if he start singing Acon and he start talking about Acon City, you better you better run.
Don't get that desperate. It is a black American male out here for somebody.
>> You better meet the whole family before you make permanent decisions cuz you know they they good at cosplaying. Thank y'all for >> you be thinking you with a whole black American and the whole time he from Nigeria. You better meet the whole family. get ideas or >> Let's be real though, Chaa. They got a certain look and they >> I was about to say we we ain't getting >> eyes be yellow. They can't dress >> stomach. They wear certain Right. They wear certain cologne that black American men don't wear. So they got that funny smell.
>> Skinny jeans.
>> They got that weird head shape, right?
Them crusty feet out.
>> They be wearing them crusty toes out. No socks on.
>> And we having the world's strongest flip flops out there. [ __ ] >> man. Shout out to that. Hey, Bill. How you doing?
>> Hey, love. How are you?
>> I'm doing well. You want to dress the prompt today? You you Somalian or Ethiopian? Bill?
>> No, I'm I'm Ethiopian.
>> Ethiopian. Okay. All right. You want to address the prompt for us tonight, Bill?
>> I live in Ethiopia.
>> Okay. Sure. Uh, why are black Americans looked at as a the villain?
Um, by whom though? By what? Africa.
>> Hold on, Cha Cha. We going to rotate you down. Thank you for coming up. No, by the world. Global. It's global.
>> Not just African. It's global.
>> True though.
>> I think um black Americans have been called the nword. I've seen from so many different countries. It's not just here in America, but go ahead. You can address it whatever you think it is. Go ahead, Bill.
>> Yeah, I think it's all about um divisions at the end of the day. Um what we what you guys are going through um Africa that we've been through it, the tribalism, the classism, um language and everything. I mean, if you look at African uh WS, everything is on the in the name of like mainly tribalism. So, um we're so used to it. So, this kind of saddens me because now this disease is kind of find its way into the US, the most civilized country in the world.
Black Americans being the most civilized um black people on on earth. Um, how you think tribalism got over here?
>> Because I see it like uh the the lineage division.
>> I know. But how you think tribalism got over here?
>> Because of what what what's going on right now? It's very simple.
>> You don't think immigrants You don't think Africans brought tribalism over here?
>> No. Tribalism was brought to Africa. Go ahead.
tribalism is brought to Africa by the the col the colonialists or whatever however we say it my accent sorry tribalism was never in existence I mean there was a division of um I mean respecting one another our lifestyle our language >> tribal wasn't it tribes that's wasn't it different tribes that sold people >> no the tribe tribal tribalism was celebrated in Africa especially in my country there would there was absolutely absolely absolutely no w and all that.
Everybody kind even even Christian Christians and uh Muslims in in Ethiopia to this day they they live together.
>> Miss Lo, didn't you ask how tribalism got here to America?
>> Can I finish? Yeah.
>> Yeah. I'm going to let you finish, but I just want to make sure the question was clear. Miss Love, didn't you ask her how did tribalism get to America? Not Africa.
>> Yes, sir. Yes, I did.
>> And then she started going on how tribalism got to Africa.
>> No, I mean ask her.
>> No. Because I asked her, hold on.
Because I asked her, "Well, then, you know, didn't tribes slaves cuz she was saying it was no tribalism in Africa until the colonizers."
>> Yeah, there are tribes obviously, but they coexisted.
It was never a a problem until they got here and they wanted to use it to their own benefits and started um the the the animosity between the tribes and then it turned into tribalism. Before it was just tribes existing together exist um I mean exchanging.
>> What country you say it was from?
>> Ethiopia. At least in my country that's how that's how it started. Tribes were fine. There were absolutely no tribalism. Meaning like there was no sentiment of tribal tribalism. Tribes always existed. In my country there are like 86 tribes with different languages, not just dialects. Totally different language.
>> Didn't y'all didn't y'all go to didn't y'all have like a ethnic W uh with with the uh what is that little or something?
>> Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Of course. No, that's exactly what I'm talking about. Tribes were >> Hold on. Hold on. You said y'all was all living in in harmony and all together, but then you just said y'all had a W against another tribe. What's that all about?
>> Yeah. Tribes celebrated each other before the the the the in my in my country. I mean, we always coexisted with no problems whatsoever until uh these uh colony wars and stuff started. Uh and then they they use some tribes to gang up against the other tribes. To this day, some tribes are looked as the word band, which means like traders because the the the occupiers tried to use some tribes against the other tribes.
>> Hold up though. The reason y'all was at W because of colorism. It wasn't because it's a tribal beef. Am I right or wrong?
>> No, no, no. There was no no such thing colorism in Ethiopia whatsoever.
>> Hold on, hold on, hold on. So, Aritrians aren't the lighter versions of y'all?
>> Not at all.
was a W. Why was all a W with each other?
>> It's always based >> based on tribes. Always the one tribe wanted to rule another tribe. That started after the Italians tried to occupy Ethiopia, >> right? And who which the Italians pick sides with the light-skinned ones and that was the whole You know what? Let me go ahead and land my >> Not at all. Not at all.
>> Hey, what's crazy about that? you know, black Americans, uh, it was a black American man named uh, John Robertson.
He was a Tus Tuskegee airman. He helped fight um, Mussolini. Um, he and taught um, the Ethiopians how to fly planes and stuff and they gave him a um, he was the head of the Ethiopian um, air force at one point. It's a black American dude.
This is a fact. Um but yeah, he's super um he he's honored out there and he tried to save y'all because y'all was the only independent black um I mean not black, the independent African nation at the time outside of Liberia.
So um y'all >> and hold on we going to let her lay in her plane. Go ahead, Bill.
>> Yeah. Yeah, definitely. That's a fact.
Ethiopians have a very um productive relationship with black Americans throughout history. And Ethiopians were the first black um Africans African students to arrive in the US. And every single one of them came back during um the Hilis Salassi region. they went there to go uh they they studied and then they came back sponsored by governments because Ethiopia was the only uh free um free continent uh I mean free nation on the continent. So if you look at the history Ethiopians were the first migrants I mean not migrants like students to arrive in the US. So it's always been and then they they really existed with the black Americans when they arrived in the US. So, Ethiopians and black Americans have always this very respectful um relationship until recently. I don't know. I I honestly don't know what happened. I think it's been probably the African immigrants number started to grow and probably Ethiopia got lost in that in that situation.
But, uh I I mean I feel bad about this division. I'm not for it whatsoever, but I I truly believe that somebody I mean there is a power behind it who wants this division.
>> Okay, let me complain >> and we just need to be careful. Whatever was done in Africa, now it's finding its way in the US. So, I don't know that that's my point. Okay. Yeah, I land here. I appreciate it uh being given that.
>> All right. Thank you, Bill. Um, Jerry, go ahead. You want to address the prompt?
>> Oh, yeah. Um, so yeah, why black Americans look at us looked at as the villain? Um, I think, um, I don't know, man. I think these people uh, not all, but u, I think black Americans have been gas lit about what's going on. Uh, the fact that she couldn't explain the tribalism in America. Uh, black Americans have always been in opposition to like what happened to us historically in terms of Jim Crow and opposition to white supremacy and whitewashing the history and to our demise which we shouldn't never did. We tried to show as they show love to like Europeans and [ __ ] and pan Europeanism and white supremacy and they used to try to say like the uh the ancient Egyptians was white. We went d we was in direct in opposition to that and we tried to show you know some type of love to the continent. But what happens is uh we kind of we pivoted and we made the right pivot because you guys have brought that tribalism to the United States, right?
Like you got a people that's been in opposition to white people and white supremacy for a while and we've been pro all black people which is which to our demise. And you got another group of people that just migrated over here in the 2000s and they've been they're tribe first for 20,000 years. So once we started to see that you guys are your group first. Okay. Well, in response to that because everything that we're doing is reaction to how y'all are are acting and then we said, "Okay, we're our ethnic group first as well." So now all of a sudden people are painting false narratives, siding with uh um the mainstream narrative about black people uh saying we're lazy, just typical um white white indoctrination and [ __ ] And um we getting gas lit be to be labeled xenophobic, right? And they what's crazy, they're actually doing the same thing, and I'll end with this. They're doing the same thing with the black South Africans over there. Um they're migrating to their country, calling them lazy.
um and then trying to undermine and use pan-Africanism as um which which is really pan leechism and a pan freaky right they don't they're not really pan-Africans because if they're really pan-Africans they would have migrated to African country that will want them to come over there they usually migrate to European countries uh western countries uh so yeah I I I think I think us I think we've been gas lit for the last uh six years and um that [ __ ] not working.
So, I I I'll end with that.
>> All right. Shout out to that. Y'all want to um have a little open panel, then we wrap it up for tonight?
>> Yeah, sure.
>> Okay.
>> Yeah. I wanted to say one more thing about the prompt as well before we go.
Uh and this just goes for every foreigner. Um which is why I was like, you know, these Africans, they love to center themselves. Y'all are not the main characters. Just want to put that out there one more time. But to address the prompt as well, our moral compass is different than everybody else on this planet. Uh people look to us to see what is right from wrong. And then when we tell them, you know, the things that they do are wrong through our own actions. We don't even have to literally vocally tell them. We have a saying in the FBA community. I was always told growing up, tell the truth and shame the devil. A lot of people don't look at >> Oh, you can hear me now.
I can hear you good.
>> Okay. Yeah. But we have a saying, you know, tell the truth and shame the devil. A lot of people don't look at stuff like that. You know, a lot of people are just trying to get out their homelands. We see over there when East Indians um are trying to get uh get from over there. They have one of the people who worked in their immigration office saying they were doing different scams to uh try to get a U visa or all these different student visas, whatever visa they could get. They not even trying to get a green card. They just trying to get a visa to come over here. Um, they're not even looking for a pathway to citizenship. They're just trying to fake it till they make it pretty much.
You know, we don't really think like that. We think more along the lines of hard work. Get it out the mud. You know what I'm saying? This is all black American sayings. Even though a lot of people like to copy us once they get here. So, that's one of the biggest reasons why people look us at look at us as the villain is we have that moral compass. And I think that is a divine thing that God gave us specifically for the world to look us look at us as a beacon in dark times. Uh when we whenever people need light, whenever people need hope, they know who to come around, which is why they keep going down to Selma and all these different places in Alabama and want to come to the south. But you know, the ancestors are coming to see about everybody right now. So y'all might want to stop doing that line with that.
to add on that, right? Is this is it open? I'm sorry. Is it open panel? My bad. I apologize.
>> Yeah, it's open.
>> Okay. Yeah. So, there was a thing back in the day, right? I forgot the exact name. Um but it was basically where uh slave owners used to give other enslaved people um their manu mission or freedom to tell on other uh enslaved people to get um like if they was planning like a a rebellion or whatever. I I forgot the term. I don't know if anybody on here know it's it's a specific term back in the day, right? Hold on. Somebody got static.
Uh, so you got to come off your mic. I mean, mute your mic respectfully. Yeah.
So, I was looking up this thing, right?
Cuz they have a modern version of that today, right, with immigrants, right?
So, there's this thing called a snitch visa. Y'all can look it up. It's it's a it's an informal term for the S non-immigrant visa which allows foreign foreign nationals to remain in the United States and get their green card in exchange for providing critical information to the federal or state law enforcement regarding criminal and terrorist acts. Right? So let's say a immigrant come over here to Chicago, right? Because you know Teneibu the president of Nigeria uh him and his peoples they used to uh sell schmugs in uh Chicago in the 80s. This is this is a documented fact, right? And I actually got the case right now right in front of me, right? So let's say somebody migrate to the United States, sell schmugs um from Nigeria, right? If they work with the law enforcement, right, that same person and they tell on like black people that's doing something, right, they can get a citizenship. This is called a S visa program. This is a fact.
Look it up.
>> Revenue. No, I'm just playing. Go ahead, brother. So look, so I'mma I'mma I'm I'mma show y'all the case real quick so I can real quick. All right, so here's the case. It says the United States of America plaintiff, right, versus Bola Tinu.
This is this is the president of Nigeria. This is facts. Okay, so let me just read it real quick, right? And let me tell you what type of people we dealing with cuz they trying to gaslight like we >> hurry up cuz it's not >> I'm done after this.
>> Yeah.
>> No, no, but this is correlates but because he was talking about visas and stuff. So it says um u as is stated more fully in the attachment affidavit beginning as early of 1989.
Aande with others operated an organization a organization which distributed white I don't want to say that word but white this word right um a controlled substance under title 21 of the United States code as is stated more fully in the attachment affidavit this distribution operation was conducted on a large scale and the proceeds of this operation was uh substantial the defendant I'm done after this the defendant funds represent proceeds of this operation and property involved in the money laundering, right? So, so you got people that's been selling schmugs.
>> Wait a minute. You saying that was an African?
>> This was the president of Nigeria.
>> Oh, what?
>> This the current president of Nigeria?
>> This is the current president of Nigeria. He he caught a case and then they took $400,000 uh from his bank account and he didn't do he didn't do no jail time. So, anybody that's street smarts in here, right? If somebody catching a case, right, a forfeite case that's tied to that type of schmugs, right, you're going to jail, right? Somehow this dude is all all of a sudden the president of Nigeria didn't get and didn't get no jail time for it. Now, I'll let y'all now now now now this goes back this goes back to the S visa, the the snitch visa.
Okay? No, I'll just leave it at that.
>> Wow. I wonder how did he Oh, I guess they can commit the crime.
>> He was snitching like a damn stool pigeon. He was in like Hold on.
>> That's what he was doing. Just like a stool pigeon.
>> Y'all hear me?
>> Yes, ma'am. We can hear you.
>> Okay, I guess they can commit a crime over here and go be president over there.
>> Was that So, have you have you heard of the Vienna Convention? They're protected. Have you ever heard of they have you ever heard of Vienna Convention?
>> Know what's going on, right? Because because it's important, right? Now, this is how America get down, right? America, you come over here, you you do a criminal act, right? Just like a random person, if a black person was to do something and then they snitch on the organization like that's how a lot of our um our black nationalist movement got infiltrated through snitches, right?
So, so, so now he's controlled opposition. Now, if you don't um now you're a president of of of Nigeria and you don't do what's in the best interest of the United States government, then we're going to bring this case up and prosecute you, right? We did it with the Panama uh president back in the day, right? So, Tenebu is controlled opposition to the West, right? He he is the United States [ __ ] because if you don't do what we say, we're going to put this case back on you. Because literally the fact that everybody in Nigeria is like, "Yo, where did this dude come from? How the hell did he get the president of Nigeria?" Right? I seen Kamla behind him. I seen all of these presidents behind him. I'm like, "What's going on? He's controlled opposition.
This is what's going on. This is why he over there. And this is why he the president." But I I'll leave it at that.
He's the one that let all >> he let all them soldiers American soldiers build a base over there too.
That's the reason why they put him in that president's spot.
>> Y'all remember when he um the dude from Bkina Fosil, right? They had a um a group called Echowas, right? Which is headed by Nigeria. They Echawas was trying to intervene when they staged the coup and um in Bkina Faso to kick the French out, right? They had Nigerians trying to be controlled opposition to the west and opposition to the dude that was the leader of Bina Fosle. So this is the type of tactics that they do. They they're pit bulls for the west once they get in bed with us but not with us with the government. But yeah, >> in so many words family um do not trust an African. When you see an African living in your apartment building like myself, run. Stay away from those aatas or whatever we reverse thing tethers.
Yeah. Stay away from the tethering. Do not let them around you. Do not let them set you up into no situations. Mind your FBA business and keep it pimping.
>> They are not to be trusted. And I know firsthand, believe me. And I'm in Texas, Houston to be exact.
>> None of them. Not even not even the women. The women can't be trusted. The men are the kids.
>> Yep. They can't be trusted at all >> cuz they eat them too. They next up. So they snitching on the Africans to get out of being a meal. So >> yep.
>> We don't got no smoke for all Africans.
But I'mma keep it real. The most problematic Africans that I seen, bro, I'm going just be honest, right? Cuz like like we trying to delineate in America. I try to delineate between. I don't do the whole Africa cuz I like to delineate between who's problematic and the people that I see the most problematic bro I'm just being honest bro is EOS bro in um in them Eurobas like it's like everywhere they go bro I hear what people say in the UK about them I hear what people say in South Africa about them they getting kicked out of Saudi Arabia India it's like now when I like I didn't talk to >> lot of Somalians Somalian >> yeah so I I was going to name the top three, right? Cuz the people that I get along with the most is South Sudanese people. Uh cuz they just got their independence in 2015 and some crazy.
They they they some good cool people, right? I ain't never had no gangs people. He don't come from he >> No, no, no, no. He from He from North Sudan. He he >> Yeah, he though.
>> No, he not. No, no. He North. He he he only ones I like is the ones that stay at home where they at.
>> Yep.
A lot of South Africans, too. And I rock with a lot of South Africans, too.
>> And I was going to say, and them Igboo ones, those ones are the those are the ones that be keeping the Torah, and they be keeping up the most fraud and the most bull crap. And they got the nerve to be keeping the Torah, uh, reading out the Torah and stuff with them little small hats on, with them tight robes.
>> That's just corrupt.
>> I'mma just say that's not that's not our fight. Y'all call the police. Call the police. They going to be there. They may not come as fast as you want them, but they coming. Call the police on them.
Don't get your hands dirty. Don't touch them. They may give you Ebola.
>> Yeah. I'm telling you, it's really predominant Nigerians, though.
>> Hold on, Jerry. Uh, the black, you got your final thoughts of the night? Let's wrap it up, y'all.
>> Yeah, I just say mind your FBA business.
These folks gonna continue to come and want what we have and we gonna continue to be great like always. Hey, heavy is the head that the crown and we wearing it very well. So, look at the chat in the YouTube chat. Y'all the best.
>> Nice talking to y'all too, man.
Appreciate y'all allowing me to speak.
>> All right, helicopter.
>> Thank y'all.
>> Yep. Thanks, love, for having me on the panel. Shout outs to the FBA family.
Shout out to the chat. Shout out to everybody once again. Great great live, great evening. Wish the best of everything to my FBA family. Hope everybody has a great night and a great day tomorrow.
>> Thank you. Helicopter FBA, you got something to say?
>> Yes, ma'am. There's a famous song by James Brown called Living in America.
And I feel like, you know, that's been a that's been the FBA anthem for us for so long. And, you know, we've been looked at as the villains all this time. Now, we're just moving like the heroes in our own story now. So, no more looking out for the rest of these people. You know, it's time for us to build and and focus on us. This the first time we're not even being targeted in our own homelands by the oppressor. So, shout out to that.
Shout out to the family. Love y'all. I'm going see y'all on the next one.
>> Thank you. Lady to Marone. Terry, you got final thoughts of the night?
>> Yeah. Uh, shout out to black Americans.
Um, keep improving yourselves individually. Keep growing, bettering yourself better than you were yesterday.
Better than than you were last year. And yeah, that's it.
>> Shout out to you, Tero. Bail, you got final thoughts for the night?
>> I just want to say thank you for having me. Um, and I'll be back. Thanks.
>> Thank you. Byebye. Neville, you got final thoughts of the night?
>> I just be sneaking in here, don't I?
>> Yep.
>> I just came up to say great show. All of you did so well. All my children.
>> Thank you, Mama Neta boo. Thank you.
>> I love you all.
>> Love you, too.
>> All right. So, you got final thoughts for tonight?
>> Yes, ma'am. I just want to say may God and the universe protect and bless us while we still here before the big invasion cuz y'all see what's going on.
Man, American tribe, you got final thoughts of the night?
>> Yep, I got final thoughts. Um, I just wanted to close out by um reading something. This is uh John 4:24 and it says, "God is a spirit and they that worship him must worship in spirit and in truth." And I think that we need to continue to push this truth out because this is what's stirring these people spirits up because they ain't right and we know they're not right and there's, you know, their evilness is being uncovered. But we just got to know and we got to believe that our ancestors been having us since day one and still has us to this day no matter what. So I just want everybody to have a good night. Rest well, you know, stay protected and stay safe. Let's stay away from these people who mean us no good.
>> Amen to that.
>> Amen to that. Shout out to everybody who joined the live.
Thanks again as always. I think it was a good show. Thanks to my amazing mods. I appreciate y'all so much. Thanks to the chat then both chat, this chat and our YouTube um family over there. Thanks to all the giftters. We really appreciate y'all. And thanks to all the panelists. Good night. See y'all tomorrow.
Good night. Good night.
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