This video presents a comparative analysis of black communities in America and South Africa, exploring themes of black nationalism, self-determination, and cultural identity. The host, a retired American expat with 25 years of real estate experience, discusses how black South Africans under Julius Malema's Economic Freedom Fighters (EFF) are pursuing economic independence and building their own institutions, while black Americans face challenges including declining marriage rates, economic dependency, and internal community issues. The conversation examines whether black people are ready for self-governance, the role of black elites in community building versus victimhood, and the importance of accountability within black communities. The host argues that black people need to practice a level of elitism to focus on building society rather than focusing on individual problems, and that black nations like South Africa have the resources and potential to become independent civilizations.
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Two Americans, One Foreign National Get Honest-Black Americans & Black South African's Current StateAjouté :
to go in more depth about the United States. Um, we are believers and followers of Christ. So, we actually believe the word of God when it says that the United States is Babylon and the United States is under judgment. So, all of those things are very real to us.
And with the message from God saying you need to go, we actually just said okay, we need to be obedient and we need to go. So we were not running away from anything. We actually had a very good life. We had been like I said at that point in time 28 years married. We would had been in the home that we were in for 20 years. That was our forever home. We were fine. We were good. There was nothing terrible going on in our life. We were we are business owners. That was going very well. So it you know it came somewhat of a surprise. But when God delivers you for something, you don't sit back and be like, "Not today, maybe tomorrow.
Heat. Heat.
Heat. Heat.
Heat.
Heat.
Hey, hey, hey.
Yeah, heat.
Hello, hello, hello. Hey y'all. It's me SB for my family in the US and for my family here in SA Cebu.
>> Beloved, >> how are you all doing this evening? It's Friday. Y'all know it's Friday. is Friday and I love Friday night and today has been a terrific day and as say it's a little chilly but hey, who cares?
We're here. I'm here with you all. Y'all told me to engage you a bit more so I'm being real consistent with this thing.
But tonight, oh my goodness. Tonight I have a guest. This is a long time friend actually and often I appear on his channel and when I come back over to my SA family, y'all like, "Who is that guy with that mega hat in the back? You got to get rid of him SB." And I'm like, "What? That's my friend. That's chaotic truth." And y'all going to know why in a minute. But now at this point, he's CT to me, right? So, let's come on up, CT.
How are you? Here we go.
>> Hey, CT.
>> I'm awesome. I'm also sharing also. Uh, what's up?
>> I'm sorry. Say that. I'm also I'm also sharing the screen or the stream so that people will >> come over it. Yeah. So, yeah. Go ahead.
Yeah.
>> Before you get started, go ahead and shout out your channel because you're sharing the screen and I'm I'm bringing you into my South African world because my people have a lot to say about you on occasions. I don't even know if you know that.
>> Did you?
>> Oh, yeah. And uh No, I didn't. What do they say?
>> Well, you throwing them off with that mega hat and you be throwing them off with the mega hat in the background. And often, you know, we just do it's just clips that they see. So, they're not really sure where you're coming from.
And I have to sometimes explain, no, y'all don't get it. Ask my guy.
>> He's been around for years. He's good people. You just stick in there. You'll see. So, you know what most people would say about you.
>> Okay.
>> Most people, >> you know how it goes. But listen, CT, I don't even know if you remember. What's your What's your earliest thoughts or earliest memories of me and you being together? What are they?
>> Um, I swear, well, one of the Okay, it wasn't the first time we talked, but it may have been like the third or the fourth, I don't know, but it was after that incident with Six the Goddess, >> and you didn't know anything and Yeah.
and you didn't know anything about what had occurred with me. And that was the episode where um the the young guy, I forgot his name, but uh he's light-skinned guy. He must have been early 20s. He said, "You didn't have to say that her hands should be wrapped around a mop or something or no, women couldn't build skyscrapers or something or something." And I said, "What what did God No, he said, "You didn't have to say to her that a woman's hand should be wrapped around a mouth."
And then I said, "Well, what did God make their hands for to build skyscrapers?"
>> And that was like one of my first like, "Yeah." Yeah.
>> Oh my god. I remember it. Well, I told you. I said, "CT, if you said something wrong, I'mma call you on it." You was like, "No, no, I was I was wrong. I Her voice her voice. Her voice."
>> Yeah. It was her voice that really bothered me.
>> Her voice. Yeah. But you know what my my fondest memory was? I mean, you spoiled it all. You was a spoiler. Uh and it was on the show when we did I Choose You >> and you was uh you was Bella's father.
You was like, "If I was Bella's daddy and I needed to choose her mate, uh this man just signed a $20 million contract."
>> Oh, yeah. The uh Yeah. When when the uh Colts player called in. Yeah. Yes. And I had looked up his uh I had looked up his uh his salary >> and uh I'm like, man, you know, the only question you need to be asking that dude is when you're meeting him up. I mean, where you talking? You know, all this dating stuff. Don't mean he's worth $30 million. Yeah, I think he had like a $20 million guaranteed contract. And then you said this, he he runs a 44. He said, "Don't you ever say I run a 44 again." I was like, "This is so crazy." But the whole thing was was a secret. We were keeping a secret basically what the individuals did so the young ladies could like be, you know.
>> Oh yeah. Yeah.
>> You was like if I was like your daddy, you know, that was too funny. But listen, I'm just saying all that to let everyone know that you and I go way back. Actually, when you think about it, we've been around each other for some time.
>> But before we get started, I want to say hello to a few people in the chat. And of course, I thank you so much for being here. Um, I'm about six hours off so you can imagine how crazy this is sometime.
Alexander, how are you? Thank you so much for being here. Ivy Dreams, how are you? The big daddy pod. Hello. Front row with some popcorn. Dr. Steel, what's going on? Maj, so Ct, one of one of our um faithful every week. Maj, he's here. Very intelligent.
Comes with good points every week. So, welcome him. He's here. Thank you so much, Taboo. Uh, hey, the party's about to start. How about that, Miss Lucy?
Miss Lucy is a regular Sabona. Miss, how you what? You off from work today cuz we're a little later today. Mr. Wise Guy, greetings, Auntie SBU. Hello. How are you? So, um, Miss Luca says, "This is my favorite my favorite time in on Fridays. It makes my work go by faster."
CT, we don't we don't use Streamyard, so this is like me and Mr. was probably struggling a little bit, but we gonna get it. Oh, I'm just going to say me looking.
>> I'm not.
>> We used to use it a lot, but then we got into uh the other one, which he likes a lot, so that's why we're here. But >> see, the web thing is It slows me up on my end. It just it slows me up for some reason. I don't know why it does that.
>> No, we good. You're here. It's good.
Listen, when you coming into live, make sure you giving us a thumbs up. Make sure you subscribing to CT's channel.
Y'all can go to CT's channel almost every day and get a mouthdropping show. Very entertaining. And I was actually gonna try to make it there today before your show went on. No, >> you're good.
>> And I start I started hearing some crazy stuff >> and I said, "You know what?
>> I really don't need that in my spirit right now.
>> I'll just talk to him later." I don't know how you do it.
>> I really don't.
>> I ask myself that on a daily basis.
I don't know how you do it. But with that said, tonight we're going to talk about a few things. We're going to be talking about how uh South Africa is um lining up a very we have some familiar things going on here as far as the illegal immigration going on. And we're going to talk about from the US this this prom season which is over now. But you got to help me out with this cuz the other day you made a comment about how you understood how people perform at graduations and you made another comment that we would be quite surprised on what you think about um Oh yeah this this prom season thing and I got a video too I want you to hear about that and it was something else. What else we talking about? Was that it? That was basically it. prom season, uh, graduation, um, the immigration in South Africa >> and, uh, and and since we're talking about South Africa, I would like to talk about the EFF.
>> Is it the EFF? Okay. Yeah, we can talk about that, too, if you don't mind.
>> You're talking about Julius, right?
You're starting with Julius.
>> Julius Mima. Yeah. Julius Malma. Yeah.
Is that okay to talk about?
>> Yeah, sure. Yeah. Yeah.
>> Okay.
>> Okay.
>> Listen, South Africa talks about I'm learning over here. We they talk about everything over here. I mean, they get into it. My audience here has given me permission to say a few things. So, we just, you know, we get into it. They, you know, I'm talking to them. They They're helping me. So, let let them help you. So, what's your question?
Where you want to start?
>> Let's start with the prom. The prom uh the prom and graduation.
>> Okay. So, let's take a look at this video.
>> Okay.
Let's take a look at this video because I I'm I'm approaching it from a different angle and I want to hear what your thoughts on this.
>> It's prom season which means one thing and one thing only. Hood prom. And I think what a lot of people fail to realize is hood prom and baby mama culture are like this. You can't have one without the other. You can't have hood prom or the baby shower stuff or the gender reveals or anything like that without baby mama culture. Because the reason why the dresses are so extravagant in the cars, in the show, in the presentation, is because this is the closest these girls will ever get to being a bride in the black community.
I'm sorry to say it, actually. No, I'm not because it's the truth. Especially in lower income households, there's not as as much of an emphasis on family anymore. These kids aren't getting married. They're going to be baby mamas and baby daddies. So, they're never going to have a wedding. These girls are never going to walk down the aisle. Some of them probably will, but the majority of them will never be a wife. They will never be a bride. So, they'll never have a wedding. That's why the dresses remind you of big, beautiful wedding dresses.
These kids are substituting their wedding with prom.
All right. So, CT, let me explain that to my South African family really quick because I don't think they do something.
They may have something. They have a dance. I've seen seen them dress up and have dances, but I don't know if it's called the prom or not. But hey guys, South Africans, this is what we call a high school prom. At the end of the year, um they high schools put on these on the prom and they everyone dresses up, the men or the whoever school you want to go to, they'll ask you, can you take me to the prom or vice versa or whatever and but here in the United States or there in the United States, they have they're really taking it seriously m much more serious than I think it should be. Some are getting helicopters. Some are some parents are decking out the whole exterior of their homes. I mean, their movie scenes, you name it. You saw the dresses. But I want to get CT's take on it because the young lady that had something to say, as you all noticed, she wasn't one of us. So, I want to know, you know, CT has a way of, you know, thinking about things. CT, what you think about her talking about our proms?
How first of all, security boss salute.
Um, and salute to your South African audience.
How do you want me to do this? How do you want me to do this? You want me to be chaotic? You want me to be mild? How do you What flavor do you want me to be today?
I want you to be whoever you want to be because listen. Majin says, "Wow, I'm not sure if I should be upset." Where did it go? Where did it go? Shocked or admire her bonus. Speechless. I'm a bit.
So CT, I want you to respond to this young lady. How you on your own show?
>> What I see is I'm going to be honest about this.
I see a loser white.
I see an individ an individual who by herself probably was raised in the very same households that she is projecting on to these children that she doesn't even know.
I'm pretty sure she comes from an unwed mother.
Until I have any fact or evidence, I could believe the same thing about her.
Most whites in this country are not married.
I've been in situations, I've been in environments where whites are from single parent households, but it's not really talked about. It's not really uh vilified and and what a lot of people do is particularly now that I'm seeing, you ever seen a fat person talk about another fat person like, "Man, you fat, man. Get your fat. It It's sort of like that now. You know, it's like, whoa, whoa, you're you're 300 lb. Why are you talking about this girl? Well, she 400 lb. Well, y'all fat.
And so, the thing is is that what I'm seeing now, you could look at census data. You can I'm here. I got something on Google right now. Thank you so much, Big Daddy Pie with $2 super chat. Where does the S Where does the name Security Boss come? Security boss. Uh, security boss comes be from uh, when we initially started YouTube, my husband and I, we still do own a security firm and we used, it used to be called Making the Cut and it was kind of centrally based around our company. So, I was security boss then. So, now I'm SB and well, I was SB. Now I'm SBU or Sibu. So, it's it's been, you know, been cutting back on it for a while. But, it's because we own a security firm, my husband and I.
So, oh, thank you so much. So, here I see it. I see a white woman and she's some sort of white. I mean, she's not really like a wasp.
I see a lowly white person, probably a mediocre person in life. She fails to look in the mirror at her own self, her own life, her own people, whoever they may be. And it's easy to pick on black people. So >> yeah, >> let me pick on the 18, 17, 18 year old kids minding their business, having fun.
Let me pick on these kids because that's what everybody does in the media now.
Let me find the one shooting that happens, which, you know, we could talk about that too, but let me find the one incident where there was a prom gathering and there was a shooting.
Okay. Okay.
But the majority of those kids are having fun.
The majority of those kids are participating in a very ancient American tradition.
Uh when we were kids in high school, now I would admit we didn't we didn't, you know, wear it like that. At least my group didn't do it that way. But we wore uh cartoon colors to prom.
Um we partied.
We didn't have wads of money.
I mean, you know, we worked at like KFC when we were kids and but we didn't, you know, but my thing is is that here goes a white woman who she can't prove anything she's saying.
She's making a generalized statement based on stereotypes, conjecture, and I'm just going to be honest about it, security boss. I just believe that a lot of those stats are just outright lies. Let me read something to you real quick. Salute to you guys. Get the likes up in the chat.
Come over to SBU Live and hit the uh stream over here. I'm going to end it on my end and just come over to SBU Live.
Now, this is from the white man. It's Google. No. No. Don't the white man love using Google, right? Am I You know, white man. Oh, man. I'm here. I'm I'm on Google and Google this and Google that.
Okay. Well, I'm do the very same thing that the white man does. US marriage rates have declined by 15 to 30% over the past 30 years in America. This this Google the very same thing that particularly the white man he uses now.
Oh man. You know, I grew up in a two parent household. My parents are still alive. They're elderly.
The majority of my friends, SBU, from childhood on up, whether they were black, African.
I knew a few I didn't grow up in New York, so I didn't really grow up around a lot of Caribbeans, but I knew a couple of Caribbeans growing up. They grew up with their mother and fathers.
And you you listen to a lot of these whites and they say, "Oh, like this white woman here talking about this this emulates single parent be." What are you talking about?
How do you know if these kids don't come from nuclear families just because they're wearing uh a Cat in the Hat suit?
And this is my This gets me angry when I listen to a white like that because it's not necessarily I'm angry at the racism behind it. I'm I'm angry at the stupidity of a lot of people. The stupidity, the the failure to investigate, the failure to properly gather information. So, I'm listening to stupid people. I'm listening to your studio mic is off.
>> Oh, there's Oh, but you hear me correctly.
>> I can hear you.
>> Oh, it is off. Oh, yeah. Is off. Yeah.
Yeah. There we go. That should sound much better.
>> Thank you. Oh, thank you so much.
So when I hear these >> Hold on for one second. Let me So when I hear a white like that, I bet in her very same neighborhood, there's edophilia taking place that she's aware of.
>> There's there's ethan I don't want to say the words, but there's ethnampetamine use in her very same community. I bet in her very same community there's domestic violence. I bet in the very same community this white chick is from, there's home after home after home of single parent households. I've seen it with whites.
I've seen it with particularly a lot of poor whites and middle class whites.
I've seen it. Mhm.
>> So, this is what a lot of these whites, not a lot, I don't want to say a lot, but this is what I'm I'm noticing or have noticed my life >> in my own life.
>> Yes.
>> Yeah.
>> So, let the kids have fun. What business it what business is it of me to ride past a house and it's some little boy 18. He's with a little girlfriend 17 and they're dressed up in a Pink Panther outfit and they got the money. Okay. Well, isn't this America? I thought this was America. I thought that we we worshiped capitalism here. Is this not a capitalist hedonistic country?
>> Is this country not a Is this country ain't no Christian country? Well, OCT, it was found on Christian.
No, it wasn't. Where in the B where in the Constitution did it say this is founded on the Bible? No, it didn't say that. This is this is a secular country.
So, hey, man, let them do it. Go ahead.
Listen, um, yes, I am still in Africa, but I want to I want to note to her, listen, it makes me very angry for people to, uh, quote, call call out our, um, flaws, per se, and make them something that they're not. I mean, add something to Listen, I don't know why they have gone gotten so extravagant. Who who named it Hood Prom? Where is that coming from? Is that a real thing? Is that a real thing?
I don't know. I'm just I know she said it, but I definitely agree with you. We have flaws. We have flaws. And I actually think that this is a bit too much. This is my opinion, but it goes back to what you're saying. If you have the money for it, if your parents have the money for it, do what you do, but don't be needing your rent paid in like a month or two. Okay? You got to be on top of that. So, in that regard, they look beautiful. I don't all those things she said about marriages declining in the United States period amongst everybody. Uh I'm an advocate for marriage. So you know I've been pushing pushing marriage for a long time and they just not doing it nowadays. They not even having babies. So things are just changing. So it's it's I understand what you she kind of like Ch the Builder but in a different disguise and would say negative things about um you know our culture per se. Is this even a culture though? Is this something cuz this is totally new to me to be I I think I said been seeing it for like the last four or five years though where they have been going over the top but there was one story CT where uh a councilman I think she was a council woman she actually used her her city's credit card to book to book a helicopter to land in the park in her neighborhood for her daughter to go to the prom. Now, what' you think about that?
>> Capitalism.
>> It's all capitalism. And >> capitalism, though.
>> If Well, I mean, I'm pretty sure if you get the permits and if you could do it in a park and it's safe. I'm pretty sure there's ways to do it. You can't just I'm pretty sure a helicopter won't just do it without clearance.
>> Did it. That was the problem. She all every >> That was the problem.
>> Was that ver was that verified that a helicopter landed in the park?
>> Yeah. you. Yeah, there's a whole video about it. It landed in the park and the police actually rolled up cuz it scared people because there were kids playing in the park. She did not get permits and she was the council woman.
>> But I'm just saying to you, what where are we going?
>> The pilot. Okay.
>> You sure? I'm I got to look that up because you know that because that violates a lot of >> Yeah, that violates a lot of uh federal law. So in that case now you're breaking the law, you know. But other than that, had they got the permits and everything required, then sure. But if you break the law, you just break the law.
>> She broke the law.
>> Look up. Yeah.
>> Yeah. It's there for it's it's >> Oh, whatever. Yeah. Well, whatever she's charged with, she should get charged with. I mean, you're now you're dealing with airspace and Yeah. Let me look that up. Let me look that up.
>> She did. But listen, Alan Lewis says, um, don't get angry, bro. I'm from Montgomery, Alabama. We know her whole family mentality. M I'll um that's all she trying to say as I know she can't read literature. What was she talking about? The young the white woman. Oh man. You know listen I I don't listen I don't agree with everything my brothers and sisters do, but I can't nobody talk about them but us. Does that make sense?
>> Does that make sense?
>> I don't like what other people talk about them. But I I am interested in knowing what do you what are your thoughts about what she's saying about I mean she really can't say these things she shouldn't have said those things period but there is a decline a decline in having children and marriage uh do you think in any way this is associated the the celebration is associated to those things in any way do you think that >> I mean it's a it's a possibility I mean with the decline in marriage decline in the strong family structure you know you you you you you eventually will get a uh a new set of traditions um you know from you know more yeah from a household that really isn't >> uh you know if you have a nuclear family right you know there's a lot of responsibility in a nuclear family and if the father or the mother um creates this household It's a foundation and you want the offspring to to be a a strong representative of you.
However, we live in a society now where you know marriage rates are in decline and people partner up. people have these situationships. People people have these co-parenting things and now you create a different standard of ritual now, you know, and and and if you have these situations that are less nuclear and more and and one thing about a lot of and this is why I don't like listening to a lot of whites when they talk about black issues because they don't know what they're talking about. A lot of blacks are in these relationships, these situationships, uh co-parenting things, you know, and they don't get married on paper. So, you know, it it creates this level of um I would say some sort of level of independence and there's a break in culture, cultural norms, you know. Um I would argue that the feminist movement is another reason why these kids are behaving like this because now you know the woman, the mother, she was raised under the feminist movement, the grandmother. And so now the daughter, she want to shake her booty or whatever. And people say, "Well, that's freedom. She can do whatever she wants to do." And a lot of it is the feminist movement, which was ushered in by non-blacks. You know, it was ushered in by, you know, and so, you know, there's so many factors as to why we see these types of flamboyant activities. But to me, at least Oh, go ahead.
>> Well, no. The mas his question is, is there any sort of truth in what she said? the manner she spoke and the way she invokes anger is wrong. But if we become fully honest, are there parts we can see truth in what she said? Now, that's what we're saying.
>> Well, we don't have evidence of that because the marriage rate is going down amongst blacks and whites having children. No one's having babies anymore. It's gone down also. They're not reproducing the way they used to.
So, can we just denote this to black people and make it about extravagant dresses at a prom? I I don't know if we can associate that or not, but it's definitely And then how can we label it hood? It requires a lot of money to do what these people are doing. They have cars. I just told y'all they have helicopters. They be I'm telling they have movie scenes in their homes and a lot of times that I've seen it be mother and fathers. I don't know if it's a nuclear family as in married, but there be it it's it be mama and daddy contributing to this affair. It's not, you know, that's what it looks like to me cuz they have photographers, they have videographers, they have they do everything, y'all. They they make it aable occasion. That's what I see. So, I don't even really know about that. You loved by God. How you doing tonight? So, I I don't know. Majuous. I don't know. I can't necessarily say it's the truth, but that is what they want us to wear.
That is the look that we need to wear.
We need to be hood, substandard, despair. You know, it always has to be if you got brown skin, it needs to be an issue. So, I mean, I've I've saved this a lot. And, you know, the next question is how uh how how brown do you have to be? Uh, you know, that's a problem. It's always an issue with what we do. And coming from a a Caucasian white woman, it's very hard to hear her say these things. So, I'm I'm I'm out to lunch on the truth. Now, I don't necessarily agree with it. But if you got the money, have fun. They look beautiful. So, that again, I'm I'm with CT on that one. CT, I'm agreeing with you on that one. I'm definitely >> Okay. But listen, we gonna move. Do you have anything more you want to say on that with that Trump hat in the background?
>> No, no, no. I'm good. No, no. I'm good now. Yeah.
>> Listen, we're going to go ahead and come to South Africa now. Let's talk about what you mentioned about the EFF and then we can go to um how things are in some way looking like the United States over there here as far as illegal immigration. Go ahead. What were you wanting to say or ask about the EFF?
>> Uh so what exactly or what exactly is the EFF? Is it a just a black nationalist party or like how does it opy operate? I know I know they have uh I want to say 9% of the government like they have Senate seats or like how does the parliamentary work senate and the house or I know they have seats in government >> right my South African family y'all it's time for y'all to join in y'all know I don't know everything but what it is is it is a political group here the democracy it you know how we in in states you have like Democrat Republican independent here they may have up to maybe 20 >> different political groups And um the EFF is one of those groups.
And you know, of course, their leader >> is uh Julius Mal me.
>> Yeah, Julius.
>> He is definitely a freedom fighter. And um I've heard, you know, the only reason I've heard other I have heard South Africans say that one of the reasons why the only reason why they didn't vote for him is because he wants open borders.
And my South African family, I don't believe they want open borders. I know they don't want open borders because now that's why we're going through uh the situation here where they are, look, get out, you know, where they've been called xenophobic because they want their country back. And I know for a fact, I'm dealing with South Africans every day, all day. And here online, they come and they talk with me and they tell me, you know, their feelings, their frustrations. We just talk about it.
They're not xenophobic. They are just wanting their country back. They want it to be a certain way. Um I didn't see that. See CP, do you see that? Uh can you see? Oh, the big daddy pod. Hello.
How are you? He says, "Well, western culture is general despises elderly eldership and exalts the young because it's so feminized. So the woman le culture ends up in worshiping the kids."
Okay. I've heard that a lot. You know, we get jumped on by that. I I can agree with that. Alan Lewis says, "The lady kind of slow on God." Not true at all.
So, okay. He didn't think it's true at all. Okay.
Speak radio. Okay. Just went away. CT, do you see that comment? Because it just went away.
>> Uh, shout out to security boss. Glad I f Yeah. said, "Glad I finally found your channel. You have a new subscriber.
Ladies, follow her example and there might be I'm sorry. There might just be a ring in your future.
>> Thank you so much for that. Thank you so much for being here and subscribing to the channel. Oh wow. So listen, Marsha says the EFF issue Malayma is a demagogue. I a Okay, it just went away.
Wait a minute. Where is it? Okay. I a politician who gains power by appealing to popular desires, emotions, and prejudices rather than using rational argument often use using fear-mongering and false. Okay. So, CT, you've mentioned before the song that he Julius sings. He's no I don't think he's no longer singing that song because we all know too not too long ago. He was found guilty of um shooting a gun in a in a public place and he is not in prison. I don't think he's going to go. I think they you know he did was found guilty but I think they're going to let him set him free.
So what is your question about the EFF though? What are your Tell me what you're thinking.
Uh so in terms of uh uh >> oh >> you you say that Julius Mal Lima supports immigration right? So according to uh >> open borders, excuse me. Um according to uh data or experts, two births per woman is um um it's enough to uh what do they call it? It's enough to um replace the population, right?
So are open border, let's be honest, open borders are really needed only when you need to replace a population. Um, it would appear that South Africa's birthright birth rate doesn't really need open borders, but I don't know too much about South Africa other than, you know, the movies um, news outlets and the movie Saraphina starring uh, Whoopy Goldberg.
But I'm gonna be honest here. I'm gonna be honest.
With that being said, maybe open borders are a good thing regardless if the South African women are capable of replacing the population on their own because you know if you if you bring in let's say Nigerians if you bring in you know other groups of people that are educated right you know a lot of Nigerians are educated a lot of Nigerian Ians are individuals that can come into an environment and thrive.
Now whether it's for their own personal self or personal uh you know their families or some sort of did I drop off or some sort of selfish reason that's one thing but if they are contributing to the development of the country sure why not have open borders um >> I think they would actually >> I think they would agree with you if that was the actual situation I don't think South Africans have a problem with uh foreigners. I think what they have a problem with with is undocumented and illegal foreign nationals. If someone comes here and they are productive and they are um feeding into South Africa's economy, Nigerian, whoever, you know, American, they embrace that. I would think I I mean I'm being embraced. Um we're here legally. I think the problem is is those who come in illegal and those that are undocumented and they >> do not they do not want that anymore.
They they're responsible their thoughts are >> that their government has let them down and the these people that are undocumented and are illegal are responsible for crime. uh basically taking all their jobs >> just somewhat like the things that are going on in the US as far as ICE goes. A lot of that is what is so, you know, it just seems it just mirrors the South Africa right now. South Africans are saying somewhat of what some people are saying in the United States. It's it's so close. It's almost like gosh, I'm um I feel like I'm at home, you know? But definitely >> well what jobs do the does do the South Africans Africans believe that the other African group nationals are taking?
>> Well, it goes on it goes to um even open up business spasa shops. It could be uh factory jobs any job. It could be service industry like mugs and be it could be restaurants. It could be spasa shops being owning private little businesses. It could be factories owning.
>> It could be anything because what's happening is that when they're going to do their research, they're finding that um the owners, the foreign nationals that own these establishments that have just put them up did not go through the proper channels to get their licenses to pay, their taxes, and they're not employing South Africans. A lot of them are bringing individuals with them, family members or what have you. and instead of the money funneling through South Africa, they're making the money and then sending it back to wherever they're from. So then that's causing a large problem cuz South Africans are like, "Hey, look, why can't we be trained to do these jobs? It could be factory. It could be a lot of a lot of people." And then these uh spasa shops would be would be like a tuck shop like a small convenience store neighborhood store you know instead of getting proper licenses to do so where it's obviously written that only South Africans can do that uh Somalians and other people other foreign nationals are definitely taking over that entire um you know business.
What is what is what is uh South Africa's take on remitt uh remittance tax?
>> Um I don't know. I I can tell you this.
Uh everything is taxed here. I can just tell you this as as a foreign national I myself have to pay tax. So I don't know uh majest can answer that question as far as on the remittance of it the remittance tax but we pay taxes on everything and you do that even as a foreigner. So, uh, for someone to maybe have to avoid that or go around that, one of the stipulations for us to even own a business here as a foreign national is we must invest 5 million rand into that business. So, if that 5 million is not invested and you haven't uh gone through the proper procedure with SARS, which is the the uh tax office, then you're illegal. You shouldn't be running a business in South Africa. So they're trying now to um identify all these situations and then you know have it turned around and they they gave an example spasa shops are mom and pop shops. So those things they you can't do that only if you're South African but all the spas shops or most of the spa shops are run by other foreign nationals. So they are definitely protect well I can't say protesting marching against those type of activities here right now.
So >> why are these businesses hiring these um you know these illegals or these individuals that are on paper? I mean do they work for cheap or is is is it the same like how it is in America or >> I'm not sure how it is in America but I would think this is my thoughts here. If I'm working, if I am hiring somebody who is a foreigner but is undocumented or who is here illegally, I don't have to pay them the wage that I would need to pay someone who is South African um and pay taxes for that individual. So, I'm winning as a as an employer. I'm winning because I don't have to pay taxes for this person. And if nobody is bringing attention to it, then it's being done for years.
So that employer is making lots of money. Now at this point in time, I think like I like they've said, they're going knocking on doors to see who is, you know, not following the proper channels for their business. And and this is what's happening. This is why they've been called xenophobic. This is why there are there have been some fights, you know, but that's not the intent, but that's how it looks. You know, when I'm when I call you out on something that you did wrong, this is how it looks. and they're shutting down businesses left and right. So, it's not a pretty picture, but I think you know that they're doing something to get things back in order. So, let me read the super track Chris Reed says, "Is Amazon Elon Musk paying taxes?" I don't know. I hope so.
What do you think about that?
>> Elon Musk is and Jeff Bezos are paying a lot of taxes, especially on their especially onment centers. Yeah, they're paying a lot of taxes. Yeah.
Yeah.
Well, let me ask you this. Are Go ahead.
>> That's to you. It says, "Mr. CT, do you um do black Americans really have a say?" Because we know foreigners and Spanish people um is running America.
What do you think about that? Woo.
>> Uh well, I mean, I I don't I don't think anything of it. And shout out to Chris, uh I don't think that Spanish people are running America at all. I mean, what industry are they running?
>> I mean, are they Are they running uh the lumber industry?
Are they running steel or oil? What are they? I'm trying to figure out where do these people run the industries.
Now, some mom and pop may hire them for some service work or some landscaping stuff, but these these people from the south of the border aren't running anything in America. I just I don't see it. I don't see it. Are they running the automotive industry?
I mean, if I were to go to Ford, will I see Hector on on on the on the website as in the leadership board or board of directors? I don't think so.
>> No way.
But I wanted to ask >> um Saraphina was a great movie. Yes, it was. Yeah. But I wanted to ask you, what do you how are Nigerians viewed in South Africa?
>> I'm going to let my South African family answer that. Um, listen, I have, as far as I go, I have neighbors.
>> Still here, give me one second.
>> Okay. I have individuals that live actually in my neighborhood that uh that are Nigerian and we have no issues. Um, but I want my South African family to chime in on that. What are your thoughts or what are you all thinking or your thoughts about Nigerians here in South Africa? Majid, um, let me hear what you have to say. And who else was uh in here from South Africa that I recall? Anyone who has a thought about it, let me hear what you all have to say about that.
He's asked a good question. Thank you so much, Avy Dreams, for being here. Um, what was that?
Taboo says, Tabo says, "Negative Nigerian." Oh. Oh, wow. You're not painting that that big old brush over all Nigerians, are you? Are you really?
Oh, gosh. He gonna want to hear more about that. Definitely. So, uh, >> I look at it like this, right? Um, Alan, thank you so much for the 99 cent super sticker salute. I look at it like this, right?
>> Why not have open borders within uh a a an emerging market which is South Africa? You know, why not have it? You know why? One of the biggest problems in Africa, particularly in Nigeria, has been brain drained. You familiar with the term brain drain, right? It's been brain drained.
Why are the best going to Europe? Why are the best going to Asia? Why are the best coming to America? Why not just stay in the continental? Why not just stay in the continent of Africa and participate in the building in the development of South Africa or Nigeria or um what's another emerging country? You know, um maybe Uganda, Tanzania, maybe Tanzania, uh uh uh Angola. Why why not just stay in Africa and and build up Africa?
So to me maybe there is something to this uh open borders.
>> I think some of them do stay but not enough. You're you're correct with that.
There's not enough and actually the president is calling for more especially in that field you just mentioned in the medical field. They're calling for more uh doctors and or anybody in the medical field because they want to open more hospitals and more uh clinics. So, um I would think it was due to the economy and their corruption, but I think it's time now. I think they're saying now that it's time for South Africa to move forward. They're trying to get all of that in order and correct. I think the people here are saying no, we're going to we're shining a bright light on everything. We're starting with this and we're moving up the ladder, I suppose.
So, I think they're going to do some different things.
I definitely do. But I wanted I want you to see a video that we have. I think Mr. Balls has a video about um the march on march when they approached one young man and his uh what he had to say. So can you play that video?
>> I have 24 years in this country. I don't have even ID if I've been in Europe for 4 years. I'm supposed to be a citizen. I have three children here. My two children in Portstone. My last child is in Joc there. I've been stay here for 24 years here. I've been arrested more than seven years, seven time in this country 24 years. I don't have even ide business they come and make a problem with us here and now he become and let me make like this. What is that? We have children here. Are you going to say I must move in here and where my children going to go? Even like that that now I'm telling you I'm divorced with my wife according to my situation not about these things according to my situation my life is [ __ ] up I was come from prison before 2 years ago I don't have anything right now as I'm telling you I'm I'm sleeping in the shelter I have to pay 60 rand a day every day where I'm going to get the money to pay there if I'm not grafting I'm not do anything there please that's my message you are leader wherever you are there we telling us you must Go and you must go to the time of Aprate. We are the one we fighting for freedom here. We bring all soldiers here. When Mandela was in prison, when Mand was in prison, all country is African country. We bring soldiers here to help this country.
Please, that's my message. I have 24 years here. No, I did not think I got it here.
>> Who the hell was uh singing in the background?
What what wait why was that music first of all in the background? Uh secondly, where's that guy from? Because he actually looks South Africa. Where is he from? Like >> that was my question. I don't know where he's from, but he says he's been here for 24 years and he's now divorcing his wife. I think he said he has been in prison for the last four or seven years or something of that nature.
>> Yeah, I thought he said he got out 14 years ago, but yeah.
>> Okay.
>> Yeah.
>> I don't know where he's from. Um, but it's interesting. What do you think about individuals being able to not necessarily here in South Africa, but he's been undocumented for 24 years and been working and making money >> be kicked out because he's not he's he's not the desirable that I'm speaking of, right? You know, >> right?
>> He's not the desirable. And I don't know anything about South Africa.
I don't know anything about you know the politics over there but you know these countries are developing countries and to me you know him you know you know he's been in the penitentiary I don't know how educated if he's educated or not but what can he do to really build that country >> what can he do for South Africa and to me you know being an outsider and I am an outsider I'm an American if he's undocumented. If he's been undocumented, what is what is the purpose of stressing the government into making him a documented citizen? Now, I'm assuming if he becomes documented, he he can, you know, um have all the rights of any citizen in South Africa. He can um I don't know how I don't know how it works in the healthc care field if you are a citizen. I don't know how it works in terms of taxation, but to me it's like he he would he's more of a burden doing what he's doing now, you know? And it's almost like, well, what are you really doing in this country other than, you know, more than likely he's what going to be a taxi driver or something? Like we we got enough of those already. Like what would he do?
>> If that makes any sense.
>> That's the point. That's those are the people that they're saying, you know, they're calling they look, he said we need ICE here, but those are the people that they're now trying to say enough is enough because this is an overwhelming amount of people who resemble this this man. Um, and someone said he looks Ethiopian. So I really >> Yeah, >> I don't know. But that is one of the issues. Maju said they brought soldiers to South Africa. No, no, guys. Uh, they did not help South Africa. South Africa gained its freedom through sanctions and global power. He came illegally. So one of their um justifications for being here is that they have helped South Africa become free or the country that it is. So that's why they kind of feel as though the border should be open and they should be able to be here with undocumented however they want to come.
That is the big disrespect I should say.
They don't want to um do things have a standard for doing things and following the laws of South Africa. They want to do exactly what they want to do and that's like where we are now basically it is.
So here you know you have it there you have it. What what are your thoughts about let me ask would you ever leave America and uh would you ever leave America and visit South Africa? I really need to know that.
>> Yeah, of course. Yeah.
>> Okay. Okay. I'm I'm inviting you. Thank you so much.
>> You and your wife, come on on the plane.
Come on over.
>> Was it 18 hours?
>> Well, probably. So, well, it's uh No, no. Um from Atlanta. Well, you know where I don't know exactly where you are, but I think it's >> I know because you have to fly out of either Atlanta or North Carolina. One of the two.
>> We went one of our trips. I think it was from North Carolina to Atlanta. I think it was 14 hours, >> but 14 hours straight I think it was.
But um you know they of course have the trips where you can stop in Europe and then eight hours this way, eight hours that way you know which may take hours when you're off. Definitely would love to come to South Africa and stay for couple of weeks or maybe even a month.
Yeah, >> you got to stay longer than a couple of weeks because it doesn't do you any good. I mean it takes you probably a week to get your head back in order from the long flight.
>> Yeah, >> definitely. But yeah, it's definitely I've been meaning to do that. I've been meaning to offer that to you. So, I'm glad we actually talked about that. So, >> yeah.
>> Yeah. Now, Julius, you mentioned him.
What were your other thoughts about him that you wanted to mention?
>> I believe in black nationalism.
>> Okay.
>> But when it's done the correct way and obviously the correct way, meaning the CT way.
There's nothing wrong with participating in global trade. There's nothing wrong with participating in uh the development or monitoring and controlling of industry and you put blacks at the helm. Whites do it all the time. Asians do it. I mean, who do you think is at the helm in in these Asian countries? So that's everybody's already practicing racial nationalism except for the black man at a large scale. Don't get me wrong, most of these countries are they're black ran, but they're not really practicing it the way that in my opinion, right, the way that other groups of people are appearing to be practicing it. So, I don't know again too much about South Africa, but South Africa has resources, right? I don't know who owns the mines and South Africans any of this, but what's stopping South Africans from making their own airplane, you know, like their own airplane like I mean everything from the mining of the material to to the um you know testing the you know like I mean obviously you you you would make it airworthy. you would obviously probably more than less copy off of a a current plane now the design, the specs, but why not just make your own?
And to me, there's a level of pride in that. And so, I don't I don't see anything wrong with a black nationalist government that's even declaring to be a black nationalist government. The Chinese declare to be a Chinese government, right? What? What?
What? What? You know what the CCP stands for, right?
>> No. Tell me.
>> The CCP Jesus Christ. The Chinese Communist Party or who's the current?
>> Yeah. So, I mean, >> I'm hearing something. Do you see that in Julius? Is that what it is? You see that?
>> I don't know what I I think that's what I see in Julius. I mean, um, it could be, but I don't I don't think I don't think the African mind works that way.
You know, I'm I'm more or less speaking from a from a from from the perspective of being an American, you know, and seeing the world from, in my opinion, the bully side, you know, Americans, we're we're bullies to a degree. And and I'm like, oh, why can't that kid? It's like you're rooting for the underdog, you know, and and let's be honest, most of the planet are the underdog compared to America, at least the way I see it.
And so I'm I'm like I'm rooting for the underdog. It's like why you know Oh, go ahead.
>> I can say at one time, well, even now in this current state, the United States may look like the bully, the top dog, but I think we're at a time now where things are turning and it's not it's no longer going to be that way. In my opinion, the United States has fallen apart and the eyes have been on South Africa very hard since definitely since I've been over here. So I I think you are absolutely right and I think that the change is coming here.
This is why things are so disrupted and and uh South Africa does have everything it needs. But even myself and a lot of a lot of others and maybe even including you if this makes sense to you, they may need that bully aspect or that innovation or that that mindset coming from the US here to go to that next level. They may need those type of people.
>> If America falls as B and I'm going to be honest with you, >> okay, we're going to use South Africa because you're in South Africa. This is a South African topic. If America falls, I think South Africa go right back to living in the damn jungles. And I know it's no jungles in South Africa, but but because America, in my opinion, the the the the interconnections, right? The automotive industry, the airline industry, every industry you can fathom, America is at the forefront of it. And so the question I have for your South African audience, if America falls, where are you going to get your cars from?
>> Where are you going to get your where are you going to get your airplanes from? Where are you going to where are you going to get And just hear me out for a minute. Just hear me out.
>> Even when you told me when you moved from America, you had to bring your items on a shipping container, right?
>> No, I didn't bring anything. I bought 25 pieces of luggage.
>> Oh, thought you bought something on the shipping container. Okay. Well, nevertheless, >> even even even the microphone in front of you, the couch, >> these things are are are primarily made either by American companies that have, you know, outsourced their companies over to Malaysia or somewhere so that they can make them for free or they're made in America. But here goes the thing. If America is not really at the forefront, who's going to protect these straits? Is South Africa going to protect these straits? Is Nigeria going to protect these straits from let's say international uh like the Houthis, right? Like think about the Houthis.
>> The Houthies are a real problem. And there was a time when you the Houthis were, you know, uh there were so many choke points in the uh what's is it the straight horse moose or where you know they're attacking cargo ships, you know, shooting, you know, kind of can you imagine how crazy these and so and so the thing is that I I I I'm not hating and I actually support you, but when you say America is falling and then you say, you know, South Africa might be where it's at, The question I have is will South Africa build industry and ma and be able to maintain industry enough to maintain a civilization.
>> I would say yes because South Africa and you probably know this is part of bricks and I happen to think China and Russia are going to make sure that the United States falls and as long as they're on this side, China is creates everything.
There's nothing that China doesn't have.
>> True. True.
>> So I think that that's the way we're going and I'm I'm agreeing with you. Not well, let me say it right. I think South Africa I think Africa continent has everything that it needs now. Whether they'll be in perfect timing with where we're going. I may not be may not may not every country be there, but I think South Africa is in a position to be a what we going to call it a super country. and and to be independent and not need the United States and if they haven't done they have not done it yet but they're working towards doing so. So that's the route that we're going in and I think a lot of that is because of bricks. So that's what I'm seeing and we're going to see. We're definitely going to see how it happens or see what happens because South Africa doesn't need the United States. Of course they've they have definitely relied on the United States and most nations have you know and that's the whole big picture. That's the mystery of Babylon of it all. These these all these countries are going and nations are going to be watching the United States and how it does fall and what's going to happen next. So we're We going to see.
We're going to see what definitely happens. Now, now am I I don't want anything any of this to happen. But this is all written. It has nothing to do with me. It's just that I want to be on the right side of it. And it goes back to what was going on. And I hope you don't mind me pivoting this. Do you have something else you want to say on this really quick before I do this?
>> Following your lead. I'm following your lead >> because I want to go back to your show that you were having today. Um the way >> Okay. Your show was about the Carmelo and Austin Metaf the >> unalivvening of a young man at the you know what your show was about but it turned into what it's going to turn into and that was almost like a civil war and a a war amongst the races. This is where we going and and for some reason our people >> seem to think that they're ready for that type of war. What are your thoughts about that? Do you think that we are ready? And this would be um whatever you want to call yourself, African-American or blacks in the US. Do you think that they are ready for a civil war?
>> To answer your direct question, no.
But to answer the question in reality, right? So, of course not. I mean, uh whites outnumber blacks what 10 to1 in America something. It's the numbers are just in security bars. You know, I I actually have traveled across America.
I've literally driven.
Driven. Jesus Christ. I've literally driven. I don't think drove is a word. I literally have driven.
>> You've been hanging out with them.
You've been hanging out with >> I've literally have been hanging out with them.
>> I literally have driven across them. I'm pretty sure you have where you can go hours without seeing any black person, any other race but white people. Town after town. Am's here to pick up, you know, get some, you know, you driving and you go to some little town and you get some gas, you off the exit.
>> Yeah.
>> America's mostly white. So, an actual war, h let's be honest about it. Whites, whites might do some damage if that was possible. But security boss, one thing I know, one thing I've seen, the white elite, the real whites, the >> bgeoisi, the Vanderbelts, the the >> Rothschild, >> the the royal families all across.
They've tricked the proletariat whites into believing that they are like them.
Oh man, you guys are white like us. Hey man, you're white. They've tricked these whites.
And they've tricked them because think about it, security boss. Hey man, if you're if you're if you were the queen of South, let's pretend like South Africa overnight became a monarchy and you and your and and and you and Mr. Security Boss I mean you and Mr. be became the king and queen.
>> Mhm.
>> Now y'all all black in this country, but you don't want all these words on in your goddamn in in the in in the in the in the presidential palace the and in the courts and all that stuff because truth of the matter is that look at what people do on a small scale. They try to take over, you know. They they you know you have situations where people will take over your home. You know how many times you see these Airbnb situations, rental situations where they got to go to court to get these people up out of here.
>> How many times have we seen that [ __ ] So just think about this for a minute.
Think about it at a small scale. You've had kids parent get old, get a little seat now, they take over the home, trick the parent they they get the trick the parent out the home.
>> What the hell do you think would happen if you and your husband overnight became the ruling class and you got all you got now you got thousands, tens of thousands of people around thinking. They thinking the best thing to do is to have them thinking about each other and other groups of people. Hey, hey, you know this other group of people over here, they're, you know, they're a different religion. Hey, there's other group people over here. They're they they they're like this and you should they it's so so these bgeois going back not to get lost in the question but these bgeoisi whites have tricked these whites into believing that there's a depopulation thing amongst them that blacks are a problem that that that Muslims are a problem that to keep them distracted from them you know to teach You ever notice, you don't really hear about whites. They don't have no smoke for the white elites. You ever noticed that? And even if they have smoke for the elites, it's always the Jay's the they created another. See, they know better.
And so this is what these whites do.
See, these wealth, I don't know how they do it.
I can only guess. I mean, propaganda, brainwashing, you know, telling you that you're better, you know, every the the wealthy elite control the media outlet. So, hey, keep showing all these pictures of these blacks doing stuff and let's get all these whites angry at these let's let's let's make it seem like these these blacks are a problem.
All the while, these wealthy elites, did they not offshore businesses in the 80s and the 90s? Did they not take away businesses? Did they not Did Did these wealthy whites, correct me if I'm wrong here, did these wealthy whites not take businesses and corporations out of these towns and offshore them? Did they not?
They did not do that.
>> No, they did.
>> Detroit, Cleveland, I could go on. uh Springfield, Ohio. All these towns, they they they they all short.
So to land the plane, you think some wealthy whites want Billy Joe Bob and Tyrone to be fighting each other and destroying airlines and to be destroying bridges and their infrastructure? Hell no. Do you think some wealthy white or some wealthy JDub wants blacks and whites to really have a national civil war and destroy the NBA or the NFL and and all their profit revenue? Are you do you think hell no.
These whites have so much vested interest in this country and their wealth. They me they kword some of these these these white nationalists. I wouldn't be surprised if they're not doing it already. K word to some of these crazy ass whites because here goes the thing. Look at these wealth. Let's break it down to just something small like sports, something easy, something that your audience, my audience, and everybody can can pick up on.
Those wealthy NBA owners make 20 billion,$30 billion a year off these off these animals. And I'm saying animals respectfully, but off these six foot n dudes running up and down some stupid court playing a kids game. I don't want people fighting outside that stadium in some racial war. I can't word every last one of these people before y'all let that happen. So you better believe ain't no racial war coming to America because even though I'm not the boogeois, I'm just some poor negro. I think like the boogeoisi.
If I was wealthy in a black nation, let's say for and I'm sorry for being longwind with it. If I was wealthy, if I was the king of a black nation, I'm talking about if I was the overlord, if I was the the billionaire and some crazy pro blacks say we got to get rid of these whites and them whites are making me money, man. It'll be so many accidents. I'm saying that with quote, "It'll be accidents with a lot of these pro blacks." We got to get these whites up out of here. Oh, we got to get these whites up out of wear.
And I'm not going to say, but I'm telling you, I these wealthy whites are really good at what they're gang. That's why when I hear like all this racial talk, I don't think anything of it. I'm like, man, you stupid. You think that this white man, he's going to have you fighting in and messing up some goddamn city and he got oil refineries, he got steel uh factories, he got all this stuff here, he got rubber factories. You You think he's gonna let you mess up his supply chain? He >> gohead.
>> This is the part that you're missing.
>> Go ahead.
>> That's the part.
>> Go ahead.
>> Sisters out with just simple disrespect.
That's how we know because we're we're emotional. They You're right. They're not going to let them destroy everything. But we our numbers will diminish. We will be deleted, put in jail. a non-factor due to our behaviors and we're not ready to fight. The fight is your emotional.
Are you em emotionally ready for what's coming? And we're not. So guess what?
Carmelo is a prime example. If someone would go right now and just sit down and have a talk with him and say, you know, brother, >> you were totally disrespected and you would hear what that young man said. I hope it would change their mind. So I hope one day he becomes a poster child for what not to do because even though he felt disrespected and he fought he did this. I bet you right now he would tell you he hate that he made the decision that he did because he's out of here. I mean I get what you're saying.
We're going to go through the trial and see what happens. But those were not his intentions. His emotional his his emotions got the best of him. And I said to you other yesterday on your show, pride and ego comes before destruction and he's just been destroyed. And that is what will take our people out. It they don't have to have a serious war where they meet up against the white men and we fight and we have weapons and stuff like we we know we've lost if that happened because we're not trained. We don't even fight for the country.
>> Not many of us are going to the military. So we don't know combat. We don't have bunkers. So if some things really got hot, we would be very vulnerable, but emotionally they could take us out. They can I mean right there on your show. I mean I don't want anybody, you know, even though I don't agree with a lot of things the brown skin does. I don't want anybody talking about it but us. I'm the only one can talk about it. Or CT, you're the only one can talk about it. So when I hear other people calling us out, I'm like, "Oh my goodness, please stop." But, you know, I can't do that. That's not That's not fair.
>> I I uh I I said this the other day, too, on the show, >> and I've been saying this for years.
Well, I just think that the black man is divine. I've always said that, you know, and and it's weird when people say I'm a a co or something. I've always said the black man is divine. So, to a degree, man. Hey, man. you want to keep obsessing over me, you're just obsessing over a I don't want to say God, but it's something about the black man that everybody just obsesses over. So, even with this woman talking, it's like it's something about blacks that she's obsessing. But black, you know, we don't obsess over whites to be honest with you. Not not in that fashion, you know, >> not as a whole, but man living in some of our heads that he is.
>> Yeah. But only when it comes to like some victim stuff. But in terms of >> Okay, I got you.
>> What you're doing, you know, or you know, it's like we don't look at them like that, you know. What's going on over here? Whitey, what are you doing over here? You know, we don't operate like that, you know?
>> Right.
>> And so, you know, when I see this white girl making her commentary, I'm say, you know, just she just, you know, she's doing what she should do when she sees her master.
In my opinion. In my opinion, >> right?
>> In my opinion.
>> You listen, I I understand what you're saying and I too, and I say it often on your show, think that we are very elite and I think that there is a such thing as black excellence. Um, but I just don't see it enough. I don't see it enough. But what I do see is a lot of victimhood and a lot of emotions. And I'm telling you, >> sorry I cut you off. Go ahead.
>> No, no, no. Go ahead. No, you're fine.
Well, the thing about being elite is you only repres the elite only represent a small percentage within any population.
There are not supposed to be that many elite blacks in the first place. The problem with black elitism is that we view our and I'm not saying that I'm an elite, but black elites view themselves as other blacks. See, white elites don't view themselves as white. Oh, it's it's it's no way. It's it's absolutely no.
It's no way. But you know, you meet some blacks, they always want to help out other blacks. You know, I got to be with the other blacks now. You know, I got to help out the other blacks now. I I came from the same place that they did. But maybe that's always been the fault of a lot of blacks. You know, there this thing about we don't have a class structure and which we should have a class. No, we have a class structure. We definitely do.
>> We Yeah, >> we definitely do.
>> So, you said we do have a class structure.
>> We do have a class structure. I see it.
I don't know why. Yeah, >> black. But, >> right. But when I say um and I know exactly what you mean when you mean when you say elite. I'm thinking I'm talking about the mentality of it all. Um success is not always tied to money.
I'm talking about the thought process, the way you think about yourself, the way you handle situations, the all of that that that to me plays a a huge part in your success. It's not always how much money or the job that you work.
This is all purposeful to me.
>> To me, your job is not necessarily your purpose. It would be great to be purposeful purposeful in your job, but it's not the other way around for me.
You know, you CT, you know how I think.
It's it's it's always spiritual and bib biblical for me. So, I think you should show up holy in whatever you're doing, not the other way around. You know how some people just oh um I'm in my purpose at work and it has nothing to do with Christ. So, that's my thought process.
So, it's not going to necessarily um align or maybe even make sense to people who are somewhat worldly, but this is just my thoughts, my dreams of how I see that the black community should be here and there, >> you know.
says, "What's the end goal for us black people? What are we working towards? Is it making money and flashing cars and blowing money for social post or is it to build a society?
>> To me, it's to build a society." And it goes back to Yes. is to me it's a building. Listen, what happened to George Floyd though tragic and I'm going to be honest about this and I'm going to be brutally honest SB.
This is where eliteism amongst blacks should have occurred.
They should have threw him away. Why would they Why would they care about some crackhead? When When have black people ever cared about crack Listen, I'm 41.
I didn't grow up in the bad communities, but I remember a crackhead here or two.
You treat a crackhead bad. You know, you he don't crack. He a crackhead. He's He's the lowest of the low. He He comes around. Hey, watch my car, crackhead. He watching for a dollar. Throw him a beer.
Hey, crackhead. Come here. You You treat them bad. They're a crackhead.
I saw it growing up. But because the white man >> took the life of a black man, now you got doctors, black professors, black wealthy people, not practicing elitism, but practicing this stupid collectivism.
That could have been me. That could have been you. You you you could have been a crackhead fiending on in in in what? Milwaukee. What was it? Milwaukee. some little crappy neighborhood.
And and to a degree, that's why I say it, we have to practice a level of elitism because if we did, we wouldn't have focused on this guy. I'm sorry, it's brutal.
>> It's brutal, but it's just something that needs to be said.
And this is why certain black elites need to be in control. This is why I'm thinking maybe Julius Malima is like that. You know, maybe he's like that.
Maybe he think again. I don't know that.
And that's and going back. Maybe he thinks like that.
Maybe he thinks the same way that I do.
Maybe there needs to be a class structure or an elite structure. You know, hey, we're not focusing on this dope thing. We're focusing on building this country. Man, mother f a protest, man. I want to build this next skyscraper. I want to build this next bridge. I don't care about no goddamn dope thing. That's how it should have been in America. So this is what I'm thinking about in Africa like Ibraham Trayor and uh Bkina Faso.
Maybe he's maybe he's thinking about that because they are building their own car for God's sakes and maybe maybe they will maybe you are correct. Maybe America will fall in America in in many of these African countries particularly South Africa will be dominant. But they they're going to have to practice a level of elitism that that >> I agree with that.
>> No, it makes all sense, but I would just say it more just plainly, accountability. You're you're right. But we don't want to for some of us don't want to hold others accountable. We don't um that's when that pan-Africanism and all of that comes in and that's my brother and all of that comes in and then there's no accountability. And also this is where the victimhood lies. So I I definitely agree with you. But listen, let's take a quick break because I want because you are here and um we have a good people in No, I'm not going to bring anybody up. I don't know if we can actually do that because >> or Okay, it's up to you.
>> We might we might try that. But listen, no, you're fine. But before we do that, I want to do the trailer of House Hunter. See, I got this comment where I'm going to be uh out here just showing off South Africa because I think it's a great place. I think we were just so deceived about Africa, the continent.
So, I definitely want to continue to show House Hunter South Africa. And this is the trailer. So, y'all stay tuned. Go ahead.
>> This season on House Hunter South Africa, >> I am the House Hunter. Yes, it's just a play on words. No, I'm not out finding homes, but what I am is a retired expat that has recently moved to SA. Yes. And my camera crew and I have gotten with other expats and they've allowed us to go along with them as they find their real estate, as they find their perfect home. Listen, I bring to the table 25 years of real estate experience. I mean, can you tell I just love real estate? I do. I love houses. I love the decorating. I love I even I found a way to even like the remodeling of the damp.
But this is what we're bringing to you this season on House Hunter. Stay tuned.
>> Was the real estate priced well for you?
>> Absolutely.
>> So is that what sold you? of Definitely.
Um, yes. Yes.
>> Coming from America from America, >> that's sold me. That sold us.
>> Yeah. Absolutely. Yes, ma'am. Yes, ma'am.
>> What? What? You had something else in mind. What?
>> No, no, no. I think it I think she hit it on the head. I mean, it really the pricing.
>> Okay.
>> That sold me cuz I was like, there's no way. You know, some of these houses I've seen would be millions of dollars. And I'm like, and so I'm >> getting more for my money.
>> Yes, ma'am.
Now, this is a good one.
>> I want to know what y'all think. Let me hear it. Let me hear it.
>> True.
>> What do y'all think about this house?
It'll make make you consider some things. Would it not? It will. The price is good start. I mean, you don't pay that for it, of course.
>> But that is I mean, he they didn't go outrageous.
>> I thought they were going to go outrageous. I tell you the truth about >> I said watch they say something crazy, >> but he didn't.
>> He didn't. I was just pleasantly surprised.
So, let me say this, KG. No, it doesn't smell like a zoo here in South Africa. No, it's not definitely not where I'm at. No, it does not smell like a zoo. But listen, uh, Chaotic, I think what we're going to do is Mr. Buff is going to drop the link and we're going to see. Can we pull We're gonna do one at a time to see because I I some people have some things they want to talk about. Um, >> can we go to your You are loved by God at 5:23 p.m. And thank you so much.
>> I want to show you something here.
security boss. Show you >> okay.
>> Was Malcolm a crackhead?
>> Was Medgar Evans a crackhead?
>> I'd argue that Malcolm and Medar were worse than the crackhead.
What institutions did Malcolm build for you? You are loved by God.
What institutions when you got to get a bank loan, who do you get a bank loan from? Who do you get a car loan from?
How did you purchase your home?
If you need a job, where do you go? H I'm going to go get a job here and I'm going to Who who puts foods on your table? Malcolm X and Megar Avers, particularly Megar, who preached integration. To me, they were complicit in actually destroying black people.
You don't have any of your own hospitals.
When you want to get something to eat other than some soul food, where do you go to eat at? Where do you go eat at?
These people were in bed with white people. They love white people more than themselves. Hell, Malcolm X was half white.
What I am saying, you are loved by God.
is that maybe these people in South Africa, Julius Maliban who sold people, maybe they're on to something here. Maybe Iraham Trayorway, he ain't saying it, but that's clearly a black nation. Maybe they're on to something here.
I don't dislike white people. I don't care. I I live around white folks.
But what is the black man going to do and build for himself? You thought that you got me on Malcolm X. Malcolm X was a traitor to the Nation of Islam according to the honorable minister Lewis Farrakott. They make this up. That's what he said.
He single-handedly destroyed one of the greatest black institutions in America because he is and listen, let's be honest about it. Hey man. Hey, if the honorable Elijah Muhammad was sleeping with some 17, 18 year old girls. Hey, what business is that of mine?
But there are institutions where they do lot of quality control. Hey man, you know our dear leader, you know, it could be the whatever they they they did this.
Oh man, what we got? We got to what do they call that? Uh they call them adjusters or fixers in a in a company because if this gets out, hey, this could destroy the whole damn thing. And what did it do? You are loved by God.
All that stuff got out. Membership plummeted in the Nation of Islam.
When he died, it had to be reorganized.
And just like a lot of black institutions, they failed. They failed.
So this whole thing about Megar Megar Evers, come on, man. He wanted some black dude to, if I'm not mistaken, he wanted some, he fought to have some negro go to some white college. Why don't you go to your own college or take your black ass into the field and get to work and and and and grow something for your own people. Create your own supply chain network instead of going to some college majoring in 14th century pottery in some white man college. Don't get me started. You are loved by God and I rock with you because this is SB's channel.
But don't get me started about some some old negroes from the 60s. I man I I don't Go ahead.
>> Well, there's another comment for you.
>> They put their life on the chopping block for the advancement of black people. Really? Oh, we're so advanced.
Oh. Oh, okay. Well, can you name the black airplane that we built? Can you name Can you name the black oil refinery that we built in America? We're so advanced. Can you What What is advanced about us as black? Can you name the black phone that we built with our own technology?
No. You are loved by God.
No.
This is the importance.
Maybe SB and she ain't probably agreeing with some of the stuff I'm saying. But maybe there is something that they're doing in Africa that might they might be on to something here.
You know, they're not going to come out and say this is all black, but maybe black people need to think like that.
>> Advancement. Go ahead.
>> No, I happen to think, but let me say this first. Mr. Boss, were you able to drop the link? You're loved by God. If you're able to or in a position where you can definitely hit the link, he's going to put it out there. Um, I would rather this be a conversation because uh, CT I am >> came up too much.
>> No, no, no. You're good. No, you're good. But some things I agree with because I believe in black excellence. I do believe in black people having their own and accomplishing their own and having enough uh, wherethal to know that you can do so. So, I'm in agreement. And to go on to the what you mentioned about the segregation or desegregation but whatever way you want to put it in the 20s and the 30s we did have our own. So something happened there. Something happened there and I want to know what your loved by God wants to say about that that intram time where things did somewhat I can't lie fell apart because that's what we do need to do.
>> Yeah sure.
>> Can I tell you what happened SP?
>> Yeah. Now, I wasn't I don't have a I was born in ' 84. I can only tell you what happened between 88 and on up. I think that's like one of my first thoughts.
I don't know what happened in the 30s, the 40s, the 50s, but I can only guess a lot of dumb blacks.
Tell me if I'm being too much for your channel. You know, I I'll I'll soften it up.
I wouldn't have used the word dumb blacks, but I think I understand what you're saying.
>> I think they started they they started reading.
started reading >> and >> and how come and then you know a lot of people who weren't really brilliant.
You add main character syndrome to the equation.
Then they start listening to other groups of people. Hey man, how come you guys never thought about going into Mr. Charlie's uh delicatess, you know?
And they said, "How come we can't go to the Mr. Charlie delicatess?"
And maybe there was a smart black like me. Hey man, why do y'all care about going to Mr. Charlie delicatess? Man, you got our own delicate testing.
I'm just guessing. I'm just guessing.
But this is what I think happened. There were a lot of brilliant blacks like myself. Hey man, we Why don't we have we had our own hospital? Well, they hospital a little bit better. Well, we can make ours better. We could just copy and paste and such.
I won't be with I that ain't fair. White man. Okay. So, I think a lot of blacks actually undermined black societies. Like when they talk about Black Wall Street, I I I have a theory that Black Wall Street is everything that I'm saying right now. I just think it was blacks who didn't want anything to do with black people. Wanted to be around white folks. And and and what I mean is they wanted whites to treat them fairly. You know, they they wanted to go to the restaurants. They they wanted to they date white women and and they wanted to do all this stuff because they wanted to be accepted.
>> You feel as though they wanted the respect of the white man.
>> They wanted proximity with white people.
They wanted to know security boss.
Remember that episode I did with Aries Spears?
Uh no. Um um >> that what's that big um Corey Hul.
>> Yeah, I do know Cory Hok.
>> Remember I showed that video with Cory Hul?
>> Yeah.
>> Now he ain't the greatest.
>> He asked this white man in a Klux Clan off. How come you don't like me, man?
You mean to tell me that there weren't about 50 Cy Huls back in some little small little backwater town in Alabama 100 something years ago? Stop. Of course it was. Cuz you got them now in the 2000s. You got him now >> because we What are we fighting for then?
>> But what are we fighting for? What today?
>> Huh?
>> Today on your show there was such a There was such a fight. It was such a black and white and you know for us to like you say for us to want to be integrated I suppose. What what are we fighting for? Why do what's the fight?
Why are they on your channel going crazy?
>> It's an insecurity. It's an insecurity on both parts.
>> It's insecurity.
>> I love JP to death, man. That's my dude.
Even I even had to tell JP, JP, why are you arguing with a man whose parents got here in the 19 goddamn 20s and your bloodline's been here at least 500 years? Why? Why are you arguing with him? I'll sit back and let him talk.
Hey, you can talk all you want because the truth of the matter is you ain't really no American. It's I'm more of an American than you are. It's it's this thing that, you know, it's a it's a it's a symptom.
And I believe some people have the gift of, and I'm not knocking anybody, >> but me growing up, security boss, I could tell you, sweetheart, >> this ain't no act with me. And a lot of people don't, you know, when I get to talking about black empowerment. Oh man, CT, I didn't know he was like that. Man, you'd be surprised what I think about the black race.
It was always in me. you growing up, security boss, I had to be about seven.
I'm with my little friends one day. I was probably a little bit older actually, maybe like nine. I said, "Why are we giving our money to these A-Bs in the Arab store?" Like, "Why are we giving our money to these Arabs?"
I don't know what it was about my brain.
Nobody put I'm looking at these people like, "Why are we giving our money to these people? These people don't live in this community. They don't do they and I I guess I couldn't put it together about the economics behind it because you're you know nine but I knew that they weren't putting back into the community.
Said why we g and I I rarely will go into an Arab store.
Every now and then if I get drunk enough I'll go get some Chinese food. I'll get some Chinese food when I'm drunk enough but not in the hood. not in the hood.
But I would argue that we don't want to win enough. So when you say South Africa might be on the comeup, even I have to say I don't know because do we really want it that much? Do blacks really want it that much? I don't know the South African blacks, but do they really want it enough to maintain the bridges, maintain the roads, maintain the I mean, I know they they they they they took away the nuclear program from from the blacks over there.
I'm not going to lie to you. I probably would have taken away from them them blacks, too.
But do we want to win enough? Go ahead.
I think that what they're demonstrating now is somewhat what you said you experienced when you were um a seven-year-old boy. Um but do they know everything? I don't think they do. Yeah.
>> So, would they require help and maybe some guidance? I think so. But, you know, I think they want it though.
That's the thing. I think they're wanted. And I actually think the part the part about me and Mr. about being here. We're here for some reason, you know. Um, and we're comfortable, if that makes sense. Uh, so the stage has been set for South Africa to become that. In my opinion, it's been set. It's 80% um, you know, it's 80% black. And, you know, to >> see that >> to be here and have it be set in motion is to me is is a great thing. I'm I'm sitting back. I don't know exactly where fit in but um you know we are praying for this nation I am definitely and I think it can only go forward but there are a lot of things due to victimhood due you know just the fact that it's new to us or whatever there's a lot of things that we don't know here that we do have to learn because this is a a nation a country that needs that can just go so far so you know I I think that it could be I just think that like you said they have to want it enough and and they're they're demonstrating that they do and they are frustrated what they have now.
This younger generation they are kicking down doors. They're not playing.
>> You know, older folks like myself and Rama who is older than myself, you know, sure we all laidback. You know, we can we can add a little wisdom or give some direction, but the reality of it is these young folks, they kicking down the doors. They they you know, they might burn something down. You know what I mean? They may go in, you know, you going to hear me, whereas we kind of, you know, relax and like I said, may add a little wisdom to the to the group. But yeah, I think they definitely want it to happen.
>> Some of us need to be in the fields.
Security boss >> and I would argue it's a lot of people with degrees. It's a lot of bail, man.
Even I might need to be in the fields.
Some of us need to be in the fields. Get your ass in the field. Shut up.
you're not capable of leadership. And that's what it really boils down to. I would argue that bringing up Malcolm X, he may have just needed to be in the fields, >> you know? Uh, and I think that's the biggest problem, trying to educate every damn body. and not educate in the sense of I mean but when you when you get somebody who's out of order to thinking they can undermine an entire group of people. They can undermine people. I'm pretty sure these things have even happened in South Africa. I'm pretty sure there's been I'm pretty sure there's been a lot of people who are very ingenuative, very future oriented thinking that have been undermined by what would really be a peasant who who who just went to college and started reading. you know, if that makes any sense. I know if you follow me, if you follow me, because I I've been in situations like that, you know, uh where >> Well, it even goes back to what you were saying. Even though um South Africa is 80% black, ran by, you know, this is this is a black country, there is still definitely spiritually undermining that's going on with those who are in financial leadership and and it's all designed. There's all there's still a distraction. I don't necessarily uh understand it because I me in my mind you know I'm not a u a part of any politics but in me in my mind I'm like we running this you know because I'm like we in control you know so let's do what we got to do you know I'm thinking to myself in my mind there are no uh shackles there is nothing holding us back but there are still people who are in a much more financial or leadership you know so even though we are in power. We don't have all the power. And I think that that's probably the next step.
>> Yeah.
>> So, I don't think anybody's going to call in because one thing about me, >> well, show it.
>> The same person, you were God or loved by God, you know, they wrote uh self-hating black.
No.
>> Who was it that most selfhating black?
Hold on. Let me see. Maybe it wasn't.
>> I don't know. I'm not I'm looking for what you said.
>> Let me see.
>> Yeah. Self-hatred is your confusion. You are loved by God.
>> They're writing in white.
>> I don't understand.
>> Okay. Okay.
>> They're writing in the white >> They're writing in the white man's language using a device made by non-blacks. Hey man, the black man didn't make Streamyard. The black man didn't make the phone that this person's using.
Black man didn't make I bet if this person were to call in, hey, why don't you get on camera? You are loved by God.
You know what? I'm willing to bet.
>> What?
>> You were loved by God lives in the same type of community that I do around white people.
>> I bet they got on camera. Hey. Hey, you are loved by God. Walk to your nearest store.
I bet they walk past Amy, Brenda, Becky.
Like, well, you you living the same life that I'm living. I can walk right outside right now. There's white girls out there walking and running and can.
So, how so what is so self-hatred about me that you're doing the very same thing that I'm doing? you're participating in Western civilization like I'm doing.
And so, you know, you know, these are the things that I know that this person won't call in. I already know they won't call. You know, you not to call in with me cuz I turn your camera on. They won't do it.
>> I don't know about you, you ain't turning that camera on.
You know better.
I don't know, but I don't I don't know you loved by God, but there she's always I'm saying she is always in my comment section and is always a spiritual person. So, she would be someone that would be somewhat like myself. Although accountability is very very important in our black race, she also shares and has grace and mercy for other people who have not yet come to the point where she's at. Now, as far look, I I can agree with you with some things, but I would say I live like you live, too, as far as who are my neighbors, where I'm at, and you know, things of that nature >> because we're not.
>> I'm just I'm still going to be the person that's promoting who I am and those that are around me. I pro, you know, but that doesn't mean I'm not going to call them out, you know. I'm I'm I'm going to hold them accountable.
I'm going to hold our people accountable for what they're not doing. Um, and I can imagine she is too. She would. She definitely would. We have to. So, I'm not sure where exactly the disconnect is, CT. I can only imagine it's just your uh your delivery. You know, the dumb blacks, you know, that's kind of harsh things of that nature.
>> Sure. I mean, well, I mean, see, this is what I'm saying. Security, we we we we have to get over what we don't have to do anything. You know, you could do whatever you want to do, but I got to get over this being nice thing.
Some people are destined to lead and some people belong in the field. You're not that intelligent.
And there's a guy named Comey. He's a young guy. He he's a uh he he has a a little group called I don't want to say little, but he has a group called the Zamit Group. And he you think, you know, I thought at one point I was a black nationalist, man. His views are extreme.
And he he doesn't sugarcoat anything.
And so you are loved by God, who I'm assuming is a woman.
You are so used to women having voices particularly particularly in spaces that they really shouldn't have voices in like the political realm. You can only do that now because we live in peace time. Other than that, I mean, let's be honest about other than that if if everything were to really hit the fan, oh, women would give up their what?
Oh, women to give up political power instantaneously to have men rule. Let's be honest about it. Let's be honest about it. If society were to collapse, man, you wouldn't have no lesbian women running around here and what? Oh, they be the prim and proper overnight. So, you know, one of the biggest problems is that, you know, I say about black people, you know, the dismantling of the patriarchy.
And I think that's a big problem, too.
>> And so, and so with this lady, you are loved by God. I mean, how should I talk?
Should I tickle you when I'm talking?
Should I tickle you? Or should this should you allow a man who I've haven't cursed and I love security boss so I don't have any quum with her.
Well, let me just say what's on my mind because I'm a man. This is what I think.
This is what I believe. I mean, >> well, we gave the example. Listen to this. We gave the example last week about how uh information is translated.
And I gave I shared with you all how a young man was on a train and he was uh had his head out the window admiring things you know all around and someone at the back of the train was yelling at him that a bridge is coming you know but he wasn't nice >> he was saying MF get your head in the window you know he was just trying to get his attention let him know it's serious I need you to do this but he was not nice and the young man kept his head out the window and then came the bridge so he um obviously lost lost his head.
And um that's the that you know that's the that's where we are now because she just made a comment and I'm still saying she we have never met. I love what she offers to our channel. She made a comment is I don't answer to man. I answer to the most high. Now you're loved by God. I'm not this is not I wouldn't we're going to we can talk another time but if we're going scripture to word by of God you know that um the order of this thing is uh anyway this this is not your husband I get it but we're not going to discuss that but I I just let's just relax let's relax and hear what he's saying and not um put any biases or our emotions into it. Let's just be accountable for what he's saying and what the Most High has demonstrated and showed us through blueprint through Adam and him walking alone before the woman was ever even created. Let's just do that. Let's just let's just keep it real and just relax.
Let's relax and and find the message of God within the conversation because that's what we look for as spiritual beings, as followers of Christ. So, I'm speaking to you that way because I know that. Now, listen, Mr. The boss has already dropped the link. Not only just for you, you are loved by God, but for whomever wants to come and add something to the conversation because CT is making some sense. We I'm calling it accountability. He's calling it What would you call it? What What was your label? It ain't just a woman's problem, but it is a woman's problem. We have dismantled We have dismantled the nuclear family. We have taken the man out of leadership. We have Get out. We did it. It Dearly beloved, >> you weren't doing what you were supposed to do. Get out. It happened. Now what?
Now what?
>> Security.
>> Yes, sir.
>> That little boy that was kworded by that child guy.
>> Oh, okay.
>> Yeah.
Where was the black man in his life that said, "Hey, you see that store? You see that man in the store?
That's your enemy. You don't give him any money. You don't take anything from that guy.
Where the black man like that?
Because let your, you know, let let somebody black open up. You think you could be black and open up a store in the community and they let their kids come to you?" Absolutely.
I challenge somebody to prove it right now. Where where does this happen at?
Where do Asians if Asians wanted something? You think they're going to go to some black store?
>> Never.
You think they're going to buy hair from you? Never.
>> You think they're going to buy food from you?
You can forget that.
>> Never. Never.
>> Never. You love by God.
You gotta listen, sweetheart.
You see, you think that I forgot what you say? Self-hating something or whatever, man. If you listen to me, if if blacks listened to me, you were loved by God. That boy wouldn't have been shot in the first place.
>> He didn't have took his He would have took his ass in that Arab store. I mean, that Asian man store.
>> Yeah.
>> Why are you going in these people's store? I didn't have a son. my if I had a sign. Oh, you can forget about it.
Hey, may you see these people right here? Unless you are in their country, it's no reason why you need to give them a penny because they wouldn't give you one. They wouldn't give you nothing.
And and they're practicing their own level of racism.
There's nothing wrong with it. They love their race. They love their race.
>> Yes, they do.
>> So, going back to South Africa with Julius Mal Lima, even if he was saying kword the bors, I don't know what that really means.
>> Kill the boys.
>> Well, I mean, I'm going to say it.
>> I think you know what that means.
>> What the hell were you in the country in the first place? Why were it your country? It wasn't your continent.
Should have never been there.
I rock with whites. I don't want civilian whites to be kworded, you know.
But what were But you got to look at it from their perspective. Hey man, what the f what were you doing there in the first place? Well, you know, my family goes back to the 1700s because of the Dutch.
Yeah, that might be true. That might be true. But what in the world possessed you people to come into this land, occupy the land, subjugate the people, create a system of apartheid, then then you you hand the government over to the blacks, which >> it's that same thing you just talked about, that same following of the US.
It's that same elite that you're talking about where they distract and so in order to take power. It's that same demonstration of um Jim Crow apartheid.
It's that same thing that they've been following that they're no longer willing to follow.
And I'm hoping that what's going on now is not a big distraction. Um but I've heard some things. I've heard some chatter where some elites to say some that are in control would say um um their time is up meaning the black government their time is up. We we've given them an opportunity to get it right and they haven't gotten it right yet. Now I'm just hoping that that's just some chatter you know.
>> I'm hoping >> Can we Can we go to 553 to Tony Gi, please?
>> Tony Gi. Yeah. Tony Gigi 553.
>> Okay. Okay. Floyd Mayweather.
>> Tony Gigi says Floyd Mayweather. I think she means George Floyd. Could have been you, sweetheart.
>> Wait a minute. CT. How we going to confuse George Floyd with Floyd Mayweather?
>> Now, security boss. You know that this is a sassy black woman right here. You know she don't she you know she didn't mean that I could be a billionaire. Come on now. This is a sassy black woman. She meant to say George Floyd. It was a typo in her in her comment.
>> George Floyd from Floyd Mayweather.
Okay.
>> Typo >> Tony. Tony Tony fix.
>> Ain't no black woman. Ain't no sassy black woman that look like this about to give me no compliment. So she met George Floyd and I know she meant George Floyd and I'mma go in.
>> She meant George Floyd. Okay.
>> She met George Floyd.
I mean think about security boss. How many be black women to say you could be like Floyd Mayweather? I mean, really sit back and think about it. Ain't no black woman saying that to no black man that especially talking like this. Oh [ __ ] Hey, how she say George >> Tony? You got to clear that up. Guess what? What if she said what if she is actually paying you a compliment? I don't know. You done got a compliment for the day. This is unusual. I agree.
But we gonna find out what Tony, >> I have not said this in a long time, but you know I am the negro whisperer.
You know that I know blacks. This chick meant to say George Floyd.
>> We gonna find out.
>> Ain't no chick in no comments section about to give me a compliment of that esteem.
>> Wow. So listen uh let me give some more I got a request here. Let me give some more information on House Hunter. See, House Hunter is myself and other expats that are here and they're allowing me to go with them while they are looking for their homes and I'm actually journaling it or going along with them on their journey and bringing it to you all South Africans. You all know you know you live here, but I'm also showing my American family what it's like to live and and have that dream home in South Africa.
I'm actually giving in my opinion South Africa more life because I'm promise you guys I feel as though I was definitely deceived about South Africa and I want everyone to know that this is an option.
South Africa is an option because the things that we hear are basically negative about Africa the continent but I want everyone to know that South Africa has life for us and um that's why I'm doing that. So I hope I given you enough information but guess what? If you know someone, an expert that is coming, you can also reach out to me at [email protected] and I would love to communicate with you all and whomever you all know that is coming and would love for us to journ journal their journey here um finding a new home. Yes, sir. And y'all already know I'm a realtor of a very long time, but I'm not working here here. I'm a retired person, but I love real estate, so I just don't want to let it go yet.
episode, but definitely um CT um I'm going to announce this one more time that Mr. Boss has dropped the link cuz I would love some people or individuals to come up and just speak to you. Now, you and I are appear to be totally different, but I understand you so much. And I don't know if if it's just because I'm at a time in my life where I just get it and my concentrations are what they are or what, but you and I have hit it out from the very beginning. I don't You say some of the craziest things. Yeah.
>> And I just look at you and be like, "Oh my god." No, you didn't. Yeah.
>> So, now >> I'm okay. This young lady, thank you so much. This young lady meant to say George Floyd because really she wants a a Floyd Mayweather to take care of her ass.
Let's be honest. It's one of those Frey Oh, security boss. Come on now. Stop.
Now she she meant to say you could have been like George Floyd.
Sweetheart, just because I share the same skin tone with George Floyd. George Floyd was a dope feed. He's a dope feed. He up in there smoking crack.
See, >> I think that's a Why would you even wish that that would have been me? I'm not a crackhead.
>> But you Let me say this. You sound like J Prince when you just said that. Don't do that.
>> Yeah.
>> You sound like J. You J Prince is always saying somebody did something and it's like, what are you talking about? Where you getting this from? This be like the weirdest thing.
>> Do you honestly believe that this woman said, "I could have been like Floyd Mayweather."
>> I want Tony to let us know.
>> I don't know. I don't know where this came from, but let me read this comment because I want to say something else. U Mas says, "Women don't get that a man's role in a relationship is exactly his role in society, provide and protect.
Now, what's a woman's role in society at large?" I hope this doesn't get read the wrong way. Listen, because I am the person reading it. I totally understand what you're saying. I'm going to go one step further. If you are a person who has a relationship with Christ and you follow God, it goes further because the relationship that a man has with Christ is a direct relationship that he would have with his wife. So if you want to do well at that, it's a direct relationship. So if you felling at one, you sure ain't doing nothing with the other. And I would say that this would be the cause of the breakdown from the patriarch to the matriarch. The women had to do it. But that doesn't mean we are that's the way it's supposed to be. We are and have been out of line for a very long time.
We'll take it all the way back to Eve. I I get mad at Eve, y'all. On the daily.
On the daily. When I get to get hot, I get mad at Eve. I'm I'm mad at her because I'm like, why why couldn't you just go along with Adam, you know? But anyway, that's just me, my rant. But CT, >> did Tony come back and say anything about this? But wait a minute, you're loved by God. Let me just say this.
>> She says, >> and this is just funny because she's such a good woman. She says if you if she was a betting woman, I would say he was abused as a child and got a channel to bully others.
Okay, so let me you can chime in in a minute, but let me just answer that.
You're loved by God. From what I know from CT, he is not that guy. Um, he came from a two parent household, mother and father. They may have been hard on him, but I don't think there was any abuse.
But let me tell you something about CT's channel. It is very unusual. Um, he's one probably the one and only channel that I know of that will allow people, individuals from every race, every culture, from wherever, every class to come and give their opinion on a subject and he allows them to verbally say whatever it is they want to say and he doesn't cut them off. Now, he gets on his rants on occasionally, but it's still he allows it. I wouldn't do that.
I don't care how you feel. If you ain't down with what I'm down with, you ain't coming over here acting crazy. I'm not I'm not going to let you. Even though my people are wrong, I'm not going to let you come over here and dog them, per se.
I'm going let you hold them accountable.
But you ain't going to be no name calling ain't going to be no outrageous behavior. Hey, it just but CT from all different sides, he will sit there and he will quiet quietly listen to what's going on and then he will tell and give his opinion of what just happened. And I think that's amazing that he can do that. I I just couldn't do it. But one thing that we did not do, CT, what is your history? What did you you African-American studies, correct?
>> Unfortunately, yes. I majored in many underwater basket weaving degrees. Yes.
Listen. Tony says, "H okay. She really got me going now. What that be?" CT.
>> I told you she meant George Floyd. She It's like a fraudulent slip, right? It's like you're thinking about something like you've always thought about it and then you know like George Floyd Floyd Mayweather she's it's like a twisting of the of of synapses or whatever.
>> Okay. and and and the computer the the typing just kind of >> she meant to write George Floyd, but she was thinking about Floyd Mayweather because she wants to be with a guy like Floyd, a guy like of immense wealth.
>> So where come in at? What's H?
>> She knows I'm right. I know.
>> Why not say you right? I made a mistake.
>> Cuz she's a woman. SBU. She's a She's going too far.
>> I'm a woman. What do you mean? Yeah, but you're you're not like that kind of you're you're you're honest with your a lot of these women, they're not they can't apologize. They can't she knows she meant to say Floyd George Floyd, but and her she but she's been thinking about Floyd Mayweather for years. He's a billionaire. I you know, I understand if a woman wants to be with a guy like that and that's what it is. So that's she doesn't she can't find it to say I I I I was really thinking about Floyd Mayweather. I caught her. I'm I'm really that good when it comes I'm an expert on black people.
>> Oh my god. Okay.
>> She went to the left cuz she just said um you know she got somebody else. She's talking to Allan Lewis and she says, "Are you looking for me?"
>> You know, so she went to >> I'm an expert.
>> Okay, whisper.
>> But I majored in I majored in underwater basketball and I majored in uh African studies, criminal justice, pursued education. It was bunch of BS.
if I could do it again. I was just left high school at 16, emancipated myself, moved to New York, got into radio, and uh yeah, done that.
>> Okay. So, you always wanted to be in radio. Well, let me answer this question. Uh Mrs. Espie, you have you lived in the United States? Oh my.
Alexander, I have lived in the United States for 54 years. I just recently moved to South Africa. It will be uh two years. Two years in Oh my god. Oh, July 1 in a month. It would be two years, but we've been here definitely. You're loved by God says, "Miss SB, if you consider my comments as rude." Oh, no. I respectfully It went away. Remove myself from your channel. No way. Why did No, you haven't been rude at all.
No, you're loved by God. No, you're not rude in any way. Express yourself. I don't mind. Listen, what what world is there there where everybody agrees? See, that's one reason why I like CT and it's probably one reason why he's accepting of me because I know he thinks a lot of things that I say are just crazy. And sometimes you didn't you tell me I was crazy a couple times.
>> You sure you did? You told me I was delusional. Didn't he tell me I c when I be talking to you about the Lord and Holy Spirit and >> No, not at all. Because that's your I don't think so. That's your faith. I can't disprove your faith. I I can't I can't disprove it. Well, I wouldn't see it as you trying to disprove it because I wouldn't pay you no attention in that aspect. But you be saying >> you'd be saying as you really believe that.
>> I mean, if I I'm more or less joking, but you know, because I don't believe like for example, I believe the story of Adam and Eve is it could be a multi it could be many different theories, right?
It could be hell Adam and Eve could have just been in a petri dish in a scientific lab somewhere and God was probably the scientist that c I mean who I have no idea. So So I don't I mean I don't really knock people's belief on um on on >> No, I never I never took it that way.
America man says um they demand all blacks be performative over whites. Hey look, I don't I would say something like this American man and good to see you. I would say um why have another race be your measuring stick?
>> Why not just >> No. No. CT, >> that is not that's been the problem the whole time. Why is the people that supposedly right above you your measuring stick when there's so many others that if if you wanted if if I want to learn Baroque, you know, I'm not gonna go to some Bush man in South Africa.
Yeah, I'm gonna go to the people who created Baroque, you know, maybe somebody of that lineage, you know, somebody who's continued that art form.
If I wanted to learn, you know, how to build an engine, >> you know, Germans, for some reason, are very good at building. I don't know what it is about these people. They they're very good. So, I I can't knock, >> but they learn from somewhere. Meaning, I'm going with your love by God. Now the most high has instilled some things that are very purposeful in a lot of us just like the another race would learn a skill or engineering or whatever. We have that same material. We have that DNA. We were made in his image. We can do it. We just not we're not um what do you call we're not touching in or clocking in to what we need because we're distracted by other things. And I believe it's probably some sort of a curse put upon us too. But we need to get over it.
I just believe I'm just I'm not willing to accept that a race of person is better than who I am because my skin is brown and I don't have the ability to learn the same things they learned. Come on.
>> Let's let's take it let's take it something simple.
>> Okay.
>> You would agree that black American women are the best singers? Yes. Like, you know, let's be honest about it. No, no white woman could ever top Artha Franklin. I mean, you know, that's beyond I mean, in in in in B in in in any church on any given Sunday in the '9s particularly, you literally had Artha Franklin's in all Baptist churches just singing just on a random Sunday, you know, so you didn't really, you know, maybe some racist people are better at certain things, you know, maybe maybe Indian people are better at algorithms, maybe Chinese people or Asian people, not all of them, are better at being meticul. ridiculous about, you know, certain like mathematics or something. I have no idea. I mean, it could be. I'm not saying that it's true, but >> No, that would that would make a lot of sense, but I still wouldn't have them as my measuring stick, but that would make a lot of sense because I do believe that God created us all and we all have uh we should live together. So, I do agree with that. Um, but to go back to that question, I think that there's something to I cannot say Artha Franklin is one of the black women have the best voices. I can't say that. Now, I can tell you that I have an ear for a black voice and therefore that would be more pleasing to me, but just to say, you know, what is the measuring stick to holding a tune or going up an octave or being an alto or a soprano? How do what are we me how do you measure that? It would be all in what I like. If if if I was a person that liked um opera, they can't hold a stick at an opera singer. So, I can't say that a black woman would be the best singer, but that may be what I like to hear. But the reality of that is I like men singers better. Just me. I'm one of those ones that like men sing better, which is weird, I think, because my husband be like, >> I'll just go for women men singers. I I just I wouldn't >> I guess that's Yeah. I I can't Yeah.
Yeah.
>> Not a good example.
>> Yeah. Well, no. No. No. Your example is good. It's just Yeah. I I never thought of Okay. Okay. Okay.
>> It's just the ear. My ear is tuned into that for whatever reason. Of course, you know, cuz I'm black, but you know, it's a It goes into rhythm. Can we go with what?
>> I'm sorry. Can we highlight Allan's comment? Poor guy. Jesus Christ.
>> This one.
>> Poor guy. He says, "CT, do you have any sympathy for your people, especially when you know we are greater?" Poor guy.
Why you got to change the voice, though?
What's wrong with >> Because a man should never say something this this soft and weak. And Allan, you're a good guy. And salute the security boss. And Allan, my people are my mother and my father. They are the only people who unconditionally have ever loved me. Even my siblings and first cousins and aunts and uncles, I don't really look at them as my people. I look at my mother and father as my only people first and foremost. Those are the only people where I can unconditionally say I can get anything if they can offer it. Of course, without them you begging you this, you that you I can go and get I can go and get food without feeling uncomfortable. Open up the fridge. These are the only people who took care of me as a child and they're supposed to. You're a kid.
They're the only people who were my chauffeers and and they they tutors and they taught me everything I needed to know. I don't have a people.
That's your problem. Allan, let me just finish. Security boss, let me finish. I don't have a people per se.
per se. I don't have a people because at the end of the day, my people will backstab me, rob me, they will bring physical harm and mental harm on me and keep it pushing.
>> No, there cases there been cases of family side or of course it has. But generally speaking, your mother and your father and I would even argue your grandparents to a degree have that same type of connection with you as well.
But other than that, Allan, you have romanticized blacks.
They're not your people. They're not my people.
Aboriges in Australia. My people are Well, you got Well, let me just finish.
Let me just finish. Let me finish. Are are the blacks in Papa New Guinea? These these these savages with bows and arrows my people in Papa New Guinea. Are are are are the white in the in in the south side of Chicago and with Oblak? Are they my people too? Are the Crips in the Bloods my people? Are the Omega Sci-Fi people too? Like who is my people? My people are my mother and father. Now do we share a common skin tone? Oh, sure.
But is Jeffrey Dmer people with the Bush family? Hey, I can imagine George Bush saying, "Hey, Jeffrey Dmer's my people."
Oh, man. Oh, man. That's my people, man.
Is is is Charles Manson the same people as Jeff uh Jeff Bezos? I can imagine Jeff Bezos saying, "Yeah, Charles Manson is my people."
Come on, man. is [ __ ] because I can't rely I can't rely on my people security bus I can't rely on my people for >> a bank loan a job I can't rely on my people uh to um um if if I need to go to the hospital I got to go to the white man's hospital I got to get on the white man's plane my people my people what what is my people what is this my people my mom and dad never suffered as far as I don't ain't never he ain't never lived through no goddamn slavery. My dad is what uh 80 years old or 80 something years old. He ain't never talked about no white. In fact, he used to go in on if some reason he's changed in life, but he used to really go in on whites and now he's like, "Oh, you're you're a racist." I'm like, "I'm a racist." You used to I remember. So, I don't have the same connection with my people. Now, I will say this.
Would it appear that we are on a certain team? Maybe I can see that when it fits my needs. If security boss opened the bank and I would be one of her first uh customers. Hey, can I get a can I you know, I'll be I'll be up in there begging. Hey, you know, can I get a bank loan or you know, we're the same. But that's about as far as it goes.
>> Go ahead, security boss. Go ahead, my people.
>> I'm gonna say thank you to Allan. I'm still here by >> Thank you, Alan, for your super chats.
And listen, CT, um I'm going to welcome you into the family of those that follow Christ cuz there you have family. And I think what Allan is saying, um is that people are still we have one father, one creator, and that's Christ. That's God.
So in a in essence, we are these people are your people. Now we have two energies that we're working with and that's good and evil. Occasionally we come across folks that are just evil or that mean you know good. So those people you put outside the family and I can say that God did the same thing. He says go away I didn't know you. But we have to pray for those who are in our immediate family. And we still have to me me this is what I do. I still love people and I'm not I don't have an agenda. So I'm not looking for them to do anything for me. So, hey CT Allan, thank you so much for your super chats. And Chris says, "Mr. CT, why a lot of be women is not following in the footsteps of Oprah?" Oprah, a billionaire, a billion now.
>> Well, every black woman, well, first of all, Oprah is a very talented person, Chris, and everybody can be a billionaire. And you know, everybody doesn't want to go into news report. You know, Oprah started off in news reporting and >> um anchor lady and she was very talented. So, everybody can't be Oprah or Whoopi Goldberg. I mean, these are very talented people in their own right.
So, it's, you know, it's like one in a five billion.
How many negroes have been born?
>> Wait a minute.
>> I got to say something to you before you get on Oprah.
>> Yeah. Just because some family members have bad behavior, they're still family members. And >> of course, >> I'm I'm with I'm with I'm with Allan on this. And and I'm hard I'm hard on my brothers. And when I say I'm embracing them as a follower of Christ, this is me and my I wish everybody, you know, I wish everybody um comes into the knowledge of Christ and has a relationship with the Lord. So that's my that's my duty. I feel as though to say I'm going to embrace this person. Now, do I can I discern the fact that they're not they're not hitting on, you know, they're not doing what they're supposed to do? Absolutely. But you don't throw people away. CT, >> I never said I threw anybody away. I just said even with >> even with siblings unless we are building something together we don't need to what's the point of communicating and and jostling around if we're not really building something like have a like you know we don't have like a like a company and what I mean is that what's the point we're not 10 11 12 years old anymore like a lot of this is just wasted time now you know I'm a man security boss Not to say that it's, you know, I'm just saying that I don't look >> Yeah. I don't look at, oh man, I want to just go hang out with my first cousin and and and and just fraternize. No, it's like that's a waste of time, man.
We I'll be I mean, I'm damn near 60, so I don't I don't have time for it. I want to I want I I want to I want to um be in a position of influence and jostling around with family members at a backyard barbecue and just hanging around and it never really interests me to be it never really interests me as an adult.
I mean, I get what you're saying, but I think like you said earlier, we all have a role. Um, and your your role may be in leadership. Uh, your your purpose may be to be a leader. People definitely flock to you for whatever reason. They they listen to what you say no matter how cra no matter how crazy and off. And you know what? You get away with stuff that I'm thinking nobody else would get away with that. So, there is something there.
So, you you do have it's purposeful. You do have purpose. But, let me read this comment. Sin7 sin says um SBU I'm under the assumption that you're running a security service in SA but aside from your personal situation what sort of security measures would an expert require to live in a community shown listen um sin um I'm retired I don't do any of that here no I'm relaxing but my suggestion to any and all expats would be to live in an estate in in the states most of them if not all of them are gated in some way. Uh some of them have two uh two ply of security measures with uh armed security. Some have unarmed security. They have cameras. They have biometrics. Uh it all depends. But I would suggest always an estate when you move into SA. This is my suggestion. I could be over the top, but um I find that you would think that it's it's more uh relaxing to live in an estate and have the security measures. It's cuz you know they call you and no one gets in the gate unless you allow them to get in the gate. So that's what I would do for a security measure. And I don't think me and Mr. Boss are going to own a security firm here. Um it's just too much.
>> Well, isn't it oversaturated with security firms in uh South Carol I mean South Carolina? Uh South Africa >> say >> Yeah.
um oversaturated. There are a lot of companies I don't know I I don't think I could go as far as saying oversaturated because security plays a major major major role. they have so many more um rights than what we have in the US like I mean as far I mean because there's not enough policing you know regular police so they're there when the police are not there and they carry weapons >> and they have the the right to use those weapons whereas in United States we too carry weapons but the the regulations that come with carrying that weapon is really almost you prefer not to carry a weapon so >> you know I'm not going to say oversaturated But there are a lot, you know, even in the malls, they um there are police officers or security with weapons. They I mean, they just don't play, you know, they don't play. Do you think a lot of this has to do with, and this is going to be a tough question because I don't know how this is going to be perceived amongst your audience, but do you think a lot of that Zulu nature or a lot of that nature hasn't really been bred out of of many of these a these South African people? Like, you know, these I mean, let's be honest about it. It wasn't no more than 150 years ago. These people were, you know, >> fighting. Let me look.
>> Well, not just fighting. I'm trying to be careful here because I know you live there. So, I don't want to get you in because, you know, I could be very I'm very open. I could be very kind of brutal. I don't want Yeah, I want to be careful here.
>> Well, I want to hear from you. What is the Zulu culture or nature that you're speaking of? What are you?
>> Well, for the most part, for the most part, most of man, you know, up until recently, most men were savages, right, on the planet, right? Zulus included, they were savages. I mean, to be I mean, they didn't have rocket technology, right?
>> So, they were, you know, they were living pretty much >> for the most part hunter gatherer, farming type, fisherman type lives.
And and and you know, you could argue the same thing in America. You could argue the same thing most in most places that you know, like even these even even the the the Chinese people, these people were goddamn rice farmers up until the 70s. The all these big Shanzing, Chong Queen, all these big cities, this stuff didn't exist until the last 40, 30 years. So, so could it be that a lot of this stuff isn't really truly bred out of out of us and particularly even in South Africa? Maybe that's one of the reasons why these people are walking around and I don't know anything about South Africa, right?
I can only go by the media and I guess you argue it's you can argue it's propaganda, but you know the the the necklacing and the jungle justice and could this just really just be remnants of the past that still live amongst the peoples in their DNA? And maybe that's why you need all these you can't control these people because it's never really been bred out. It's never been bred out of these people. And the same thing in the states. If if somebody want to argue about the states, I I argue the same thing with the states.
>> I mean, unless you're like a Go ahead.
>> I think that um >> is that a good question or is that too much?
>> Well, no, it can make some sense. Let me just explain it this way. Um I think the Zulu culture or those who are Zulus, I think it's a very proud group of individuals. I don't think that they are savages in any way. now strong appearance and presence um yes uh very very tribal and very you know sticking up for who they are but on the other hand I think that um as far as the security and things of that nature that comes because there's so much disparity you may have people >> on the left here that are millionaires in all aspects of the word ran and or US dollar, whatever you're spending, millionaires, huge houses, great estates or whatever. And the only thing that could be separating them for people who live in informals or which some may call is a four-lane road.
And the reality of it is scarcy breeds crime. And you know, if I can't eat or if I, you know, don't have anywhere to live, if my if my my informal township or whatever is being flooded, I got to find somewhere to go for my family. So, I may do this, I may do that. So, I think it's more that than Zulu culture.
I don't think they're responsible. I think the security measures are more so for that reason because um everybody is not being serviced here. there there in my opinion are groups of people that don't have this is my opinion don't have what they need and you know I don't know if they're here illegally undocumented South Africans I don't know that part but I think that not everyone has what they need here which could in turn cause uh a problem where people may rob hijack uh you know you know do things of that nature so that's why the security measures are in place. Cuz even like in the malls, if you need if you're hungry and you're a man and your family hadn't eaten in days or what have you and you haven't worked because remember unemployment here is like 35 40%. And your child hasn't eaten and you you your child looking at you like daddy I want something to eat or whatever whatever you may go to the mall and rob it.
>> But why have kids in the first place in a place like why why have kids in the first place? Um, that's a good question because they think differently than we do. Um, you may have kids, you know, we've been trained to have kids when we can take care of them. I think, um, here people have kids because they see them as money. You know, if I if I have these children children, eventually they're going to be in a position to bring money and wealth to this family. Um, and that goes back to the labola, you know, like when a man marries a woman, he goes and he takes certain amount of cows or sheeps or whatever to the family and he actually pays the family for this child because guess what? I'm taking I'm taking a uh I'm taking money from you or I'm taking a resource from you. Let's say it like that. I think they see their children as resource as, you know, a way to bring wealth to the family. So, it's it's looked upon totally different. Now, is that being are they going away from that? Yeah, they're getting away from it a bit. And I think that's because of west the west uh the social media and what they're doing in the United States cuz even now here they're doing what I'm just going to call it like it is. They shack it up which was something you probably would never hear of what 20 years ago.
>> So you know and also the feminist movement and I know y'all going to disagree with me. The feminist movement is here too. It's coming here. It's becoming very prevalent which some would say it's always been there. I would say no it hasn't you know marriage is still a big thing in Africa the continent but the feminist movement is coming I mean it's here they talking ladies are talking like what I need him from like oh you know it's quite surprising so there are a lot of things that people on the continent here and especially in South Africa are identifying with and they're embracing whether it's good or bad and I wish it would stop because some things a lot of things that are done here in my opinion are very successful and it it we really need to keep it right there because it's definitely what works but again you know we're just looking at big sisters brothers so um Maj says uh CT oh CT that's up to you go ahead >> CT here in South Africa we are not ashamed of who we are and in celebrating our culture and identity we acknowledge our thousands of years of roots, the same people you think are savage are well off.
>> Yes.
>> I mean I I I was just going to say I mean I it's it's nothing about South Africa. I could argue that I'm just gonna Allan I'm just or not Allan I'm just going to say it.
You could be proud of your culture, but 99% of these cultures globally did not usher in the industrial age. They didn't usher in the computer age. They didn't they didn't usher in the ages that we currently live in. And this is what I'm saying, man. You could have thousands of years of pride. I'm pretty sure the Eskimos have thousands of years of pride. I'm pretty sure the the Gaelic people in Ireland have thousands of years of pride, but it doesn't take away from the fact that your that these people didn't really do anything. And it's that way of thinking that in my opinion keeps a people stagnant. You know, it it does it it it does it it if you want to win, you may have to adopt or adapt or adopt certain levels of western thinking moving forward.
>> And they have >> and they have. Right. Right. Right.
Right.
>> Yeah.
>> Yeah. There we go.
>> They definitely have. But listen, um what is maybe I'm not understanding this.
>> Huh?
>> Lexo got a good one. I don't want to answer that one. Jesus Christ. at 6:30.
>> I may not understand >> Lexo. Yes. Yeah.
>> Hold on for a minute. 630. But wait a minute. Let me get this one first because I'm not understanding. Allan, let me understand this. Got the folk living in Hut in 2026.
4,000 million rand is just three USD.
Boy, get back with that. That's the first injustice in itself. Now you want black people to stop their generations.
Get back. Okay. I don't understand nothing about what you're saying. 4,000 million rand is three US what is what anyway go down. He says um whose comment was it CT?
>> Oh um >> Lex >> Lexo at 631 >> Lex >> Lexo Lex No TV. Yeah. 631.
>> Oh the bottom here. Right there. CT just admit you you hate black art, culture, and beauty. What?
>> But to a degree, we all do.
>> We we all hate it. Um >> you got to explain that to me. I don't understand.
>> Well, the culture as of today, black culture as of today, I don't like. So, yeah.
>> But you you you hate black art. You hate black culture. And most people hate black beauty. I mean, I bet if Lex Snow were to call in, Lex Snow has weave.
What What in terms of your culture do you love that's black that you that you like? Is it the language? I mean, let know are you speaking a black language?
Are you using black technology? What black what you know, here goes my thing, right? Black people say that they love black stuff, right? They love black people. They love black. If we keep that on there real quick, if we keep that comment on there, you know, black people say they love black stuff.
>> Oh man, I love black. Oh, black, black, black, black, black, black, black, black.
Open up the refrigerator. Uh, if you love black, what what's in your refrigerator right now, Alexa? What What What did you last order from Door Dash?
What did you last make? Let's Let's just use cuisine. Let's Let's just use cuisine.
Blacks don't eat a black diet on the 21st. Black people normally eat food that was made in other cultures to be honest with you. Oh, we're going to go have le Lebanese tonight. We're going to go We're going to go have Chinese.
Honey, you want to go get some pizza tonight? What are you talking about? You want to talk about art? Let's talk about art.
I know you ain't talking about in Christianity up until the 90s that I can remember. You going to every goddamn black church and you know I'm about to get security boss is a picture of white Jesus. He over here just praying. White Jesus white man praying in the church.
White man, a whole bunch of negroes all in the church. Whole bunch of whole bunch of blacks in the church. How much art do you love? You got this white man.
You got a image of a white man in front of you.
culture. Oh, you could forget about culture.
>> Um, you can forget about culture.
>> And so, even in beauty, even in beauty, >> well, I know you ain't talking about women because, well, let's be honest, most black women, they do everything possible to look like other races of women. If you ask me, no, Scooty Boss, I know you probably don't, but most black women ain't walking around with no big ass African hoop earrings like you got on right now. And and and and that most black women walking around, they they you know, they they wearing Chanel.
They're wearing uh I don't know the uh St. Laurent. They're they're they got weave in their hair. I already said it earlier. They're trying to look like a white woman.
>> I ain't agreeing with that. I think women just want to do what they want to do in their appearance. I don't think that women are >> Why not get you Why not get you a weave afro? A weave fro.
>> I think they do that, too. I just don't think Let me just say this. I don't think that women are sitting around thinking about a European woman and saying, "You know what? I think I would love to look like her." I don't believe that. I do not believe that. I mean, and if they do, okay, I'm wrong. But you know, I've wanted what have I done? What would I do? I get extensions in I get extensions in my hair. I ain't never thought about no European >> security boss.
>> Never. No, I'm not agreeing with that.
>> Look at this comment real quick and let's just read it again. Just admit you hate black art, culture, and beauty. Lex Snow.
If I had Lex Snow call in and I'll ask that same famous question I do all negroes. Well, turn your camera on. Let's see what type of house you live in. Lexno probably lives in a Victorian home, a colonial.
Lexno probably lives in a bungalow.
That's that's you know all white architectural styles. How much black culture do black people really love in America? Black people build homes all the time. You could ask that. You could literally ask the architect, "Hey, I want my home to look like a home in Africa or or or whatever architectural style was created by a black man." Well, why not? Why do black people get colonial homes or these new homes now?
But why do black How come black people don't get homes that look like uh like huts?
>> Why would they? That's >> why why not? But why not? Why not?
>> Because that's not what that's not what Africa offers. That's just a part that you've seen.
>> But is that not an architectural style?
I don't I don't see anything wrong with the way a hut looks, but why not in America?
>> No. No. That's what that's what that's what that is what you know. Well, guess what? in the villages in rural areas. I think some of them do maybe live in in huts or what they I don't know that but that would be their choice.
>> But what I'm saying is if if if I'm looking at this question right Lexno says CT just admit you hate black art culture and beauty. But what I'm saying is that when do black Americans or black people love black architecture?
I'm trying to figure this out. Or black clothing items. Like right now black man didn't make this suit. This come from a white man. this whole suit, the the suit jacket, that's the that's that comes from a white man's brain. So when I hear these things about culture and art and beauty, I hear from Negroes wearing Nike wearing jeans and and who made this stuff? That's white man stuff. That's white man came up with all that stuff.
So, you know, I I'm really, you know, I'm I'm sort of good at this. Go ahead.
>> Go ahead. where you have to promote the creation or black more black suitors for whatever you gota people who are creating suits and things and Nikes and things like that and yeah too there's a thing that they probably wouldn't buy those things if they knew that a black man create we understand but let me let me read this comment cuz I'm not understanding come on now at SB crime has been issued there since decades they killed lucky dubes who is that almost 20 years ago what what is your point there's crime I'm here definitely and I think I agreed with the fact that there is crime but I think that um what we were talking about is the security measures that are taken. Um there's crime, let me tell you something. I think and I'm going to be honest with you. I think I would feel more comfortable definitely being out and about in the city here than I would in Chicago.
And I'mma tell you why. here. I realized that although there are some weapons, um, not many people here, they're still fearful of guns and weapons and things of that nature, different weapons, um, in the United States, everybody has one.
Kids, young folks, and and they are afraid, they're not afraid to use them. In other words, I think my life would be a more danger in in a at a particular time and place in Chicago than it would be here in I mean crime is everywhere. What is you name one person but understand this y'all there are whatever you get in other any other country you get it here too.
There's syndicates there are gangs there are uh people stealing cash from cash trucks banks they they do all I mean why would it be any different? I I would love for it to be different, but why would it be any different? Again, that goes to the disparity. That goes to people not having what they need to survive. A lot of it is survival, I believe. I believe in they steal cell phones. Why would I mean, I'm not saying that as in, you know, a cell phone is not important, but really, why would you steal a cell phone? I'm, you know, but that's something that they do. Alan Lewis, thank you so much again for your 99 cent super chat. Alexander. So now all artifacts is is to look like another race.
Listen, I don't know what CT, you tripping. I think women have a prerogative to look the way they want to. It's a young man that's on TikTok all the time, and I think he's on YouTube, too. He's always talking to women about their hair and how they look. I don't think I really don't think that women, and you could help me out, cuz you deal with a lot more people than I do, are walking around thinking about this European style or a white woman or whatever. and like I want to emulate that. This is what I want my head to look like. This is what I want to look like. Now, although here lately, um, black women do have this look that they kind of all favor each other, I still wouldn't think it. I'm not still saying that it's um, European.
>> Black women, just like most of the peasants on Earth, want to look like the kings and queens of society.
The suit jacket comes from the royal class hundreds of years ago. Like that's where it really comes from, right? And it's just been passed on down, right?
You know, um it it's like, well, I look like the royal family. I look like the prince such, you know. So they just started selling these items to the peasants and the peasants started walking around and oh man I I look like Prince such and such and you know and Duke such and such. It's been passed down throughout Western civilization to look like the kings and the queens. So, so they're doing it subconsciously probably, you know. Um, and again, if whites, if blacks had won the global race of superiority, maybe other groups of people wouldn't look like black people.
I'm pretty sure I'm pretty sure if the Asians had won, like, let's say the Japanese had won hundreds of years ago, you you'll see masses of women walking around with kimonos on probably.
Well, the reason why I'm saying that because I'm here in a country that is majority black and they wear they wear straight wigs here. They wear lashes and I know they're not sitting thinking about what is the white woman been doing. I know that that's not their thought process. They just think that they like it. They've seen it on social media and they like the way they look.
They like to play around with their looks. This is what my think my thoughts are. But, you know, that's that's always a big deal. And I just want to know why white why women can't just do what they want to do with their look. Now if they got a man in their life, the men can, you know, add on to what's going on. But just to say, you know, you trying to do this. Come on. I got to stop. There's more crime in some cities than others though. SVU. And you it went away. Let me read that first. I was just reading that one. It went away.
And you really don't know who Lucky. No, I don't. I'm sorry. Should I? I don't.
Um, but thank you so much for the $5 super chat, James. He says SB. So, you're telling me that Chicago is worse than Hillbrow? No, that's probably equivalent. What's those the block eight block or eight block or wherever the block is on HBrow? I mean, over in Chicago, it's probably the equivalent of Hibbra, but Hrow is just one place. So, what you're saying? And guess what?
People who live in Hibbr probably love the fact that they live there. You talking about I mean, so what's the difference? I don't get it. You you acting like there's no crime in the United States or how can you even measure it? I mean, you know, both places have crime and what's the difference? What's the difference? I'm not I don't go I wouldn't go to Hibbral.
I wouldn't go to those places in Chicago. You know, I lived in North Carolina. Certain places there I wouldn't go either. So, I don't you know, why do you why do we call out this place like what's the ultimate? What could happen?
you lose your life, then what?
I'm trying to figure out what y'all talking about because that's always something that people just want to note about South Africa. They doing this, they doing that. I I can imagine that it's pretty much the same. And guess what? Younger folks are doing it in the US than here in South Africa. This is just my opinion, but thank you so much, James, for your $5 super chat. Um, black people going to never be independent civilizations without military power.
All right, so listen, CT. Um, it's been a pleasure. You've been here. What would you >> Oblock is one block. Hey, look. Oblak is one block in the middle of a project. I agree with you. I don't Here, browse. A lot of people that live in here, brow.
I'm I think some of them will probably say there's nothing wrong with some part of it. I don't know. I don't go out measuring crime. I don't go looking for that type of thing. I mean, if that's your thing, then you do it. But I don't, you know, I I I wish there was no crime.
But like I said long time ago, there are two forces that live here on Earth. You have good and you got bad. So whoever decides to go for bad, then that's what they do. That that would probably equal a place full of crime, you know.
>> Great.
>> It's sad. Where in North Carolina wouldn't you go in North Carolina? Where would I not go? Let's see. Uh you probably not going to be forget. I was from uh I'm from the suburbs of North Carolina. I used to live outside of Charlotte, North Carolina. Back in the day, it's Dalton Village. We wouldn't go there. It's a lot of hood, Earl Village, Dalton Village, Pete M Courts. It was a lot of places we wouldn't go. You just wouldn't go. It was the hood. You just you just wouldn't go, you know. But there were people that lived there that you associated with in school. You would meet at school. There was nice people.
You hung out with them at school or you might meet them somewhere, but you wouldn't go in where they live. You know, we talking crack acade epidemic.
We talking about all types of stuff.
Prostitution.
it used to be. I ain't gonna go all into that. But anyway, CT >> yo, >> I appreciate you.
>> I appreciate you. Thank you so much.
>> And it's been a pleasure. I don't I'mma have to hear from um unique and interesting episode, SBU. I'mma have to hear from my people if they haven't embraced you into the South African family. So when you come over here, you can be sitting beside me and we can be doing this, right?
>> Having a great time. So then I can take you to um >> I'll take you out there in the world. We ain't going to here, bro. We'll go somewhere. We ain't going there, though.
We'll take you out.
>> Oh, yeah. I've been watching Yeah, I've been watching a lot of uh clubs uh like the nightlife scene in Joelberg. And how far is uh Cape Town from you?
>> Cape Town is a plane ride of an hour and 30 minutes.
>> So, you've been there?
>> Yeah, it's not it's it's not expensive at all. You go, we went there last May and you have a good time. You stay a few days and you come back. It's cool. It's not far at all >> in my opinion because but but you ain't driving. That just takes away from you know.
>> Could you drive there? It's like 500 miles, right? Could you drive there?
>> Yeah, you could definitely drive there, but I just wouldn't do that because it would take probably about 10 hours or so.
>> Okay, sounds good.
>> Thank you so much. But listen, thank you so much CT. Um, listen guys, thank you so much for a lovely night. And listen, until I see you all again, be good. I'll talk to you later. Bye-bye.
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