IAGHY pt 1. SCOTUS Said "I Can't Call It!" - podcast episode cover

IAGHY pt 1. SCOTUS Said "I Can't Call It!"

Apr 05, 202344 minSeason 2Ep. 14
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Episode description

When the SCOTUS had to hear a case where youtube was being sued for aiding and abetting terrorists, They realized that any decision they make could potentially break the internet. Their response? "Shiiiid I cant call it!"

See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Transcript

Speaker 1

You know, every once in a while, you being responsible and staying ahead of the game kind of works against you. This is one of those moments in my attempt to stay ahead of the workload for this show. Something like a former president gets indicted, might be facing an arrayment. We're gonna see, look, look, we're gonna see all your pride jumps out the window when you when you're rubbing

your little fingerprint on that thing. We're gonna see, really how gangster this man really is, you know, if he ever has to like face un actual judge, like a like an actual arrangement, I don't know, man, who knows if it's actually gonna go to trial at this point. So I'm speaking as right now future me and regards

to the episode you're about to hear. So that being said, we're gonna get to this his whole indictment, Like we don't even know what the indictment is as at this point today is Monday of the week that you're about to hear this April third, right now, Oh, we don't even know like what's in the indictment. So like, ain't no point in trying to court no show right now? And you know what I'm saying, like, we figure out what's going on anyway, I swear to y'all I'm gonna

get to it. Oh man. Also, this episode had quite an experience because when I had exported the files anybody who works with files to Matt to mix and master it, apparently I had muted the channel so there was nothing. It was forty minutes of silence. And then I had stored this session on some sort of cloud, and then it wasn't downloading this. Look, y'all, this has been a day,

but we found it, pieced it all together. If you should see the screenshots I was sending Matt as I was like pressed trying to figure this thing out, but we got it. Anyway, enjoyed this actual show. Now, Look, I ain't gonna hold you. Usually when you hear that phrase, that means somebody about to tell you something that's truthful, that's like actual factor. They fin't admit something that is like in by no ways cap in any way. I

honestly don't know where the phrase came from either. Just I ain't gonnled you know what I mean, Like, I don't know where that came from. That's just it's just what we say, maybe I need to do a little homework on where that phrase came from. I ain't gold you, though, I don't know where I ain't gold you came from. But look, I ain't gonnolog you. I don't know how this mug gonna turn out, see it. I can't call it politics. Y'all aint gone, I ain't gone an, I

ain't gone, I ain't gone. I welcome everybody. We got to talk about the Internet. I'm thinking about making this like a four part series because you know, there's some things that are just like the world as we know it have has been. We've officially been terraformed in a new matter like this. There's we're in a watershed season

right now. And the truth is no going back, whether it's the fact that uh elon Musk and Tesla is being sued right now because of self driving cars fails, you know, people actually dying, but there's no going back. We're going to have self driving cars. That it is what it is. We got to talk about chat bots and open AI and the nigga's fallen and live because listen, my wife said, you know you refer to her by her prefix doctor. She'd be teaching classes PhD level classes

on the side, you know what I'm talking about. And with that said, she's not so worried about you know, open AI and chats talking about as a professor, you know, her content is not worried about the what, but the how. So for her, she's like, y'all, I'm excited about how like these uh, this open ai chat stuff can help people formulate their ideas. But her classes is more about, Okay, so you've wrote a dope paper, Now how do you

do that? In the workforce? You know, she works. She basically teaches c suite level people on diversity, equity and

inclusion and all the stuff that Lord of hayes. So you might be able to like throw in your you know, you might be able to try to write your dissertation on chat bots and they might be right, but you're gonna have to ask that chatbot to cite every source it's gotten and then to put that in a footnote footnotes shout out to TDC fan, and then you need to cite the footnotes and I need to know, you know, all the dissenting voices. Like, it's gonna be a lot

of work. You gon have to go sentence by sentence and be like where did you get that? Where did you get that? Where did you get that? For that to actually work? You know what I'm saying. And at that point you might as well just go find it yourself, you feel me, because again her class is worried about how I'm rambling. It's in the weeds here. But the point I'm trying to make is like open AI chats, it's here, the world is different, there's no going back

where it's here. But today we need to talk about YouTube being sued. It's like literally in the Supreme Court right now. Now, as y'all know, like I'm not gonna get into the details of like all of the actual tech stuff, like I'm extremely online, but it's a lot of shit I don't understand about this. You know what I'm saying, technical point, but that's not my concern here. I'm talking the big socio cultural like world changing, terrorforming the world as we know it, questions like the actual

factual Supreme Court. And look, I ain't gonna hold you. I don't know how this is gonna turn out. And listen, that's where I got the shit. I can't call it. I gave you another one that usually mean like listen, I can't call it, like I don't know what's gonna go down. I don't know what it is. Sometimes people use it as a green saw. How you're feeling, man,

how you living? Shit? I can't call it, you know what I'm saying, like I don't know, like I'm chilling right, but in this situation, like fam, we're not chilling this. It might break the internet, and like, I don't know how that's going to turn out because either listen, you know who else says shit, I can't call it. Scotus, NIGGA is Supreme Court. They say the same thing I'm saying.

Thing I don't know either answer is means the Internet as we know it is gone, like the world fitted change and look, look, look there are certain things that just changed everything in music in WA like I ain't gonna nwa change the music. It'll never be like this again. It'll never be pre Gangster rapp. And did we have the sense enough to know that that's what was gonna happen now, I don't know if we did, but it

was never going away. Once that happened, it was like you just gonna have to adjust streaming, you know, streaming music. We do. You know, you had you know, the napster dot com and back back back then when you could like you know, bootleg it download stuff. We was like, well now we was Metallica and them was like, you're stealing our music. They thought they could actually like put that you know, gen back at the bottom. Now it's done. At that point, music gonna be free. It just changed,

it changed everything. We are at a place right now, I believe where and we ain't gonna know about this case until May. They don't already gave the open arguments right now. This is I believe I'm three weeks ahead of y'all of what you're hearing as far as like my recording schedule, which is help. That means I can afford to take the day off one of these weeks because I'm so tired of talking about bad stuff. But

at this point, we ain't gonna know till May. Like they're gonna keep deliberating, but them opening statements and arguments have been brought forward, and today I just want to talk about what their arguments were and fam how the actual Supreme Court was like damn, I can't call it. Both of these people got a point and look, I can't call it. I don't know where we're going. I don't know what's in a half at. I just know the internet as we know it. It's pretty much it looked,

it's gone. Let's talk about it, y'all. Okay. I think the first thing we need to understand, I need to establish this is my point A in going through this thing. You know what I'm saying and trying to help us understand, like why we should care about whatever this stuff is? Point number A is this You like that? Point number A? You feel me? Man, I'm brilliant. Point A is I think, truthfully, at the end of the day, that's another look at the end of the day, as it did. Let with

black people say that they mean they're done talking. I don't want to hear nothing else you got to say, because this is how it look they listen at the end of the day. Um, we still don't know how to use the internet. I know it's been like thirty thirty years, well like will noughties. We still don't know how to use the internet. Like nothing. We really don't

know how this thing works. And then once I went to high school and I feel like anybody you all know somebody like this and all a ton of people like this who got really big, Like I was a ball I played basketball, right, And sometimes you have people that hit they grow spurt where they be their body grow bigger than their mind and coordination is ready to handle. Or like you know that, you know the little boy that like just and probably like a little girl too.

But I'm right now, I'm use both exampts. A little boy that just like sprout facial hair like we in sixth grade. He got a whole ass mustache, you know it all beer. He just like how you got facial hair but still look like a baby. You know what I'm talking about. You got facial you look like baby. It's like you got this grown man stuff, but you're a child. You got like you don't know how to use all this stuff. You you got older before you

got older, you know. Pol little baby girl all of a sudden got to start wearing bras you feel me, po po poe girl. You know you know what I'm saying. We she's still trying to swing on the monkey bars. Little girl got a brawl, you understand I'm saying, Like she just her body starts sprouting before she ready to even have herself be sexualized. You know what I'm saying, Like that that's us in the Internet. The Internet grew technology growing faster than we able to handle it. We

all middle schoolers. Let's just think of it like that. We are all middle schoolers with like a whole period and like and shaving, like shaving our full beards in sixth grade, Like like the Internet went faster than we ready. That Like I feel like and if you step back for a second and really think about the stuff we talk about right now with the Internet and the things we never actually figured out, the stuff we're still trying to understand, is because we got too good, too fast.

So that's my point A And how that point is playing out is right now, one of those ways is like what does free speech mean on the Internet? I think you know that's how That's one of the ways it's playing out, Like, well, I don't know how to laws it and who gets to like enforce it because the internet's the world, Like where is the where is it? Who gets the laws over it? And if the law it's set in, I mean, and and who got to obey the law? Us the internet provider? Is it spectrum

and AT and T. Is it the platform itself? Who is it the channel? Is it the content producer? Is it the platform that allows the content to come out? We don't know how to use the internet, y'all. We ain't figuring it out. And guess what, the people that got to set the laws, nigga ain't ninety years old. Oh, they wasn't forged in the fires of the internet. Y'all. Wasn't outside you wasn't you wasn't learning htmail. You know

what I'm saying. Pivot out your my space, you know, if you feel figure it out, proxy servers, getting over getting over your schools, blockage of YouTube. Yeah, I'm saying. I mean, at least at least I was on my space, you feel me. But in their defense, I don't know the answer either. You got the people, the people deciding to law, they listen. They the ones calling their grandkids on how to open the how to open their emails. Nigga, they still send a chain letters about saying this to

four people or you're gonna lose a million times. These people don't understand the end of that. But in their defense, my point is, neither do we. The MAYI chat box is proving it. We like, we still don't tell you something. We still don't understand Internet. That's that's a. And then now add on social media, we don't know, we don't know really how to use this toy. So that's that's that's the calibrating point. A. Now what all that said,

Let's talk about this Supreme Court case. So right now, the families of the sort of American not sort of the actual American people that, um, you know, that died in a terrorist attack in France are suing YouTube for aiding and abetting terrorists. Now, how they got to that was saying, okay, like how a lot of people get radicalized.

They got radicalized on the Internet, and the algorithm kept suggesting videos that we're getting increasingly more crazy and violent, to the point of where this person got completely radicalized. And that's I mean, that's like what what happened was like this the dude, you know, the people that were responsible for this terrorist attack in France, which is a whole other story, got radicalized via YouTube. You know, of course there was all obviously there's way more to it

than that. But yeah, you know, and I think all of us has done this. You've gone down a rabbit hole. Oh, hopefully you've gone down a rabbit hole over something funny, like you know, who built the pyramids? All of a sudden you looking at aliens and lizard people and you're like, dude, how did I even get here? Right? You know, I'm saying like, there's that, Uh you go down a rabbit hole for plenty different things, you know, But it's because you Tube. It's like, yo, you like this, you might

wells like that. So it's suggesting videos. So that's the case. Now why has this never been on the on the thing before? Because it's like nigga, who in charge? Okay, so listen, let's get get Let's get a hood example, right if somebody you look let me let me step back with this. You remember Kat Williams. Oh, one of my favorite people ever. Right, Cat Williams when one of his one of his it's one of the greatest little clips. I feel like it's just a one little line he's say,

shouldn't have been talking shit? Like it's that simple. There's some situations to where it's like if you get popped in your mouth, if you get slapped upside your head, somebody fire on you and like okay, is like, I can't be held responsible for popping this nigga in the face. He shouldn't have been talking shit. What the hell was you doing over here? Essentially asking me to slap the taste out your mouth. There's some situation this is where it's just like I look and you can't this ain't look,

did you? Two plus two is four? A fan? This man walked all the way over here. You know, I'm saying, put his hands all in the plate, or was talking reckless to my girl or whatever it is, and I slapped the shit out of him. I'm like, you know, here in my face, like Austar Reids last night. Come on, come on, let's go Austar reads now listen again. I'm three weeks ahead of y'all. But during the MAVs game, we saw Austin Reis. I'm obviously I'm a legger fan saw him, you know, flare up and was like in

little hummy face, love hummy. These foods are professional athletes, They're giants. The point is he was like, fuck you gonna do if somebody say that to you and you slap the taste out of their mouth. I mean, I don't know how liable I am? Right? Whose fault is this? Now, let me take this analogy to step further. Is it the arena's faults? No? No, no, Look is the basketball court responsible? Is the game of basketball responsible? Or is it just that got now? Some people see it see

it as this simple. It's like if you go back to a court case in nineteen ninety six and it like, follow me. We still the internet still functions on laws.

Back to when we was making geo cities and you was on AOL like instant Messenger, but when you had to tell somebody to get off the phone so you could get on the internet, right, we would still use a dialupe And and if you don't know what sounds I'm making, then clearly and that's the point I'm making, were based on laws when the internet used to sound like that before you could actually h check your emails.

That's how long ago them laws are. Now we crack jokes, but we're still following the laws from seventeen seventy six. So maybe maybe jokes on us um, But that's also a whole other argument. But as the contratart torts a sovereign document, yeah, okay, things we couldn't imagine we were we set laws based on an internet we understood. We don't get this, y'are different? This different? Oh man, it's different,

you know what I'm saying. So back then the law was you can't sue the internet provider for what the internet user does. You follow me in the same way that like, okay, listen, you got electrical outlets in your house, right fam if you plug seventeen things into it, which a little extension course, because that's the only plug you could get. Or you know, you got a you got this busted up toaster with a court with you know, with the with the shards missing. You know what I'm saying.

You on your on your early twenty struggle bus, you feel me? And you just got horrible appliances and you plugged that thing in and it burned and your whole kitchen down. Can you sue the electric company? No, it's not the electric that's not the utility's fault. It's what you plugged into the utility. Does that? Are you following me? It's not the electricity's fault. Like you have you you took your little grubby hands and that dusty ass toaster and you put it into the outlet. Nigga didn't. That's

I like that. How can that be that? How can that be the electricity's fault? The electricity just does what electricity does, right, The electricity doesn't produce any content. It just gives you the You it's whatever you plug into it. So social media. I remember I saw an interview with Jack you know, when he started Twitter. That was his argument for Twitter. He was like, it's where utility company. You plug in whatever you now get it again, I'm

just giving your analogies. This ain't the way I feel. I'm just helping you understand, right, this is the way that we've seen it. It's like, it's a how how you blame Twitter for what a person who? What a person tweets? I'm just the platform. No more than a paper is responsible for what you write on it. Right, It's just paper. It's not the paper's fault, the author's fault, unless, of course, the paper is telling you which page to

turn to. Now let's go back to the electricity company. Now, what if the what if you bought the toaster from your power company, and what if the power company said, if you like this toaster, you should use that microwave Okay, Now the utility company you participating in the product. That's different. So as is if you can use the same analogy with what's going on with like Amazon and stuff like that, where it's like or streaming music with Spotify, like like

follow me here. Like I said, we don't know how to use the internet. Again, it's point eight. So if you are Spotify, you are essentially a platform and all music should supposed to go to that platform. Now, if Spotify has a record label, now you're a platform and a content producer, which means obviously, if you Spotify, you are going to give preferential treatment to the artists that

you make. Y'all remember the whole Joe Rogan situation. That's what they were saying, Like Joe Rogan is paid by Spotify. So it's like, man, I mean, come on, like, what are we supposed to do here? Is that too complicated? What about a grocery store? Your grocery store, then your brand? Then you shouldn't produce also food too, because if that's the case, ain't you gonna give your own product special treatment? If you Walmart? Of course you make Kirkland brand, Like

why would not I'm the store and the provider. Right, if you Amazon, why not have other companies that produce some of the products? You say, why should everybody else get rich? In here? I can make some content. Or how about this, if you want to put your stuff in my store, and since everybody here, why don't you pay me a little extra and I'll put you to the front of the stuff. But that wasn't a concept

in nineteen ninety eight. Nobody thought about that because it was nobody thought you could buy stuff on the internet in nineteen ninety six. You can think about that for a second. You didn't. There was no online stores in ninety six. There was no social media in ninety six. There's no such thing as an algorithm as far as we know it. Now, what didn't happen in so you don't sue the provider, and we've been based on that.

You don't suit the provider because they're not a content creator, right, Like, they don't create the content. They're just the plate that you set the content on. So how could it possibly be my fault? Well, how do platforms make money? Now, let's now let's walk into how it gets complicated. How do platforms make money? Well, forever they made money by getting subscribe, right, I just need more people in here. So the way to get subscribers was to have dope content.

So it was like, since I'm not a content provider, right, I need everybody to come in here and bring so I need to have the dopest content. And how do I do that? Where I need to get content creators? And then how do I do that? Why? I incentifize you to create dope content by saying, look, everybody's eyes are here. My store got the hottest. It's just like starting the club, my club the hottest. How do you get a club dope? Well, you start paying for beautiful

women to come. That's listen. That's that's how you do it. You know, rappers can get artists can get what's called walkthroughs. I don't know if you've heard of this. A club in Vegas. When you when they say they put your whole last name on the flyer, it'd be like, where's Khalifa at Club so and so? Is he performing? No, He's just going to be there in VIP away from the rest of you niggas, behind that little railroad and a whole lot of good I'm using I pull whis

Keleifa's name out of nowhere. I'm not saying. This is what I'm saying. And the club paid him like fifty racks and then gave him y'all follow best an hustle, and then gave that man another fifty thousand bar tabs so you can keep ordering stuff you like. You mean to tell me they just spent one hundred thousand dollars. What that should tell you is how much they're gonna make tonight. That's That's what that should tell you, is that that's worth it. I'm gonna give you another little

hack about this. Here's some free game. The money is at the bar because the margins are absurd in the sense that sometimes, you know, you get a promotional case of a vodka, you know what I'm saying, and then the well drinks them drinks in the well like fam them well whiskies them well drinks, like when I tell you they don't they don't cost anything to that bar,

like it's just pennies. So as you're doing full five rounds of shots, you know what I'm saying, you didn't paid for almost all the lick of that night already. That's why they'd be like, yo, free drinks, you know what I'm saying until ten o'clock. Or that's why they'd be like, you know, girls enter free by eleven. Before eleven, it's like, I just need bodies in here because if the girls come, then the dudes come, and if the

dudes come, they drink it. Yeah, the covers only forty Yeah, the cover is ten dollars cover, you know, or sometimes it's free in a two drink minimum. Because the point is, I'm gonna make my money at the bar, because the bar doesn't cost them anything. The first the first shot you bought, if you get you're trying to go there and get that high end castle me goes you didn't paid six Listen, you didn't paid sixty dollars for a shot. You know the bottle costs sixty dollars retail. You understand

I'm trying to say. The point is, y'all are making the money you need. Subscribers, right, That's that's how the Internet worked for a long time. But then the Internet changed again and it went from subscribers to ads, ad revenue commercials, which is the world that we've lived in for a while. That's the Internet that as we know it where your platform is free, but that's because you

the product. Right. Then they started selling your information to make sure that these ads get to where they're supposed to get, right, and they get more and more specific. So these platforms were hitting this lick off of again us, right, But you can't sue us because I mean, look, we're providing a service. You scroll down all the way to the bottom to the terms and conditions, right and listen, We're just the utility company. That's all we are. You

understand what I'm saying. So they used all of our data, you know, apps talking to each other, right, so that they could sell that and say, hey, listen if you advertise for us, because clearly we're not making money off as users. We got all the subscribers now to pivot our model. Everybody here. You know, in twenty fifteen, there were more people on Facebook than there were Catholics, Like like, let that sink in more practicing registered Catholics, like the

whole religion. There's more people on Facebook than that. Right, So you like earth on these platforms, and if you like a kind hearted, pure hearted sociologist, you're like, dude, we can run the dopest sociological experiments. Ever, we've we've never had a chance to have a sample pool this large. If you're a hustler, you like, hey, come to my club, what is it worth it? Who? Who be at your club? Again? If you're a club promoter, I'm that's like again, I'm

using this analogy. You're a club promoter and you like nigga. We average two million a day people at the club. Nigga, two million? You got something you want me to put some in front of these two million people. I could tell you not only what to I can not only allow you to put stuff in front of them. I could tell you specifically what they want to see. Well, how do you know, well, how do you know, as the advertiser, what the promoter says? What they told us?

They really they walked up and told you what. No, they ain't walk up to the show. They logged on to their platform and they started clicking stuff. They came to the They came to the club and just ordered the same drink seventeen times. Now I know what they like. That food orders costs of egos, This food orders mescal, that food orders whiskey. These like beer. So look you

see that section right there. They like beer, I'll make a flyer, put your beer logo right on the front and send it only today's section, right, I mean that side of that side. That's that side. Platforms had us on their pages. It was they went through the analytics, figured out what we like to started selling it to us. Now, how does that work? Well, that means if that's the case, if that's how I'm gonna meek money. If that's how if I'm a platform, that's what I'm gonna make money.

I need you to stay on the platform. Now how do I get you to stay on the platform? Well, you know, you remember all this stuff with Facebook. They trying to move your eyes around, you know what I'm saying, making you know, added different color patterns, make sure that that the home page is so excited, so many things to click. And then after a while we was like, yo, this is annoying. Right, So now it was like, all right,

well how about stuff? How about I suggest for you things that you told me you liked, you know, on your Netflix app, you can turn off the like next episode starting in you know ten, Now you can turn that off, right, because they trying to keep you on the platform. You feel me? All that you know, when you open your you open your browser or Yo Yo Yo Yo streaming service, and the and the and the

trailer just starts. You can turn that off. But how you make sure that the thing that's rolling and how you make sure you that's specific for every user, Well, you build a program. I'm only suggesting these things because you liked them. That's what you said, you liked listen. That's how. That's how your streaming platform. That's how Netflix works, That's how that's how YouTube works. That's how that's how Yo, that's how Yo Google. That's how. That's how the internet works.

That's what I'm trying to say. This might break the internet, because it's just that's the internet we know. Now check this out. Guess what started happening with the ads. I don't know if y'all been seeing y'all been getting some like weird ads recently, where like the language don't make no dog on sense right, or what they what they're trying to sell. You don't really like, what the hell is this? It's because you know, Apple started saying when you lop download the things and say ask app not

to track. A lot of us started asking the app not to track. And what's the app start not tracking? Then it doesn't know anything about you no more. It's got less data. So now it doesn't know what adds to give you. Y'all, we didn't broke the thing, so like it. One ways, us giving up our privacy has made our made us used to it and experience on the internet. Right, you walked into the club, the club is custom made for you because you unknowingly told the

club what you liked. Sister, you walk in and it's brunettes everywhere, or it's it's dreadlocks everywhere. You like, damn everybody finding this club. I like this one. I'm gonna keep coming to this. Yeah, well, because you told him that's what you liked, Joe said, without telling them, that's what you like. And we ain't like that. We thought that was creeping. Now I'll stop asking me what I like. Now you walk in and you're like, I don't know, man,

the club weird, you know what I'm saying. So they like, well, damn, what you want us to do? You want us to know or not know how the hell we posted to make money? Well, obviously there's an upside and a downside to that. The downside is well, what if you're into things that are awful? Again, we still haven't solved the free speech thing on the internet. I'm not even talking about that. That's gonna be the next that's that's part two. Well we don't even know what free speech means here,

and what are the suggested solutions to this. That's gonna be part two of this. I'm just trying to lay out the problem. That's what I'm trying to say. Like, dog, I can't hold you shit, I can't call it this one thing gonna be two episodes, actually foe episodes, because you gotta understand the problem first and why this matters, nig, Like you need to know what you're looking at. I ain't gonna, I ain't gone. I ain't gonna. I ain't gonna. I ain't gonne, I ain't gonne. I ain't gonna, I

ain't I ain't gonna. I ain't gonna. I ain't gonna. I ain't gonna, I ain't gone. So here's not what happens this man, this person listen. It's whether it's the christ Church shooting, whether it's the Dalan roofs of the world, whatever, whatever the hell happened, and what with right wing rights or right wings extremism out here, Nigga, the Internet, like obviously, I don't know if y'all remember like the Arab Spring, you know in Egypt, when these activists like took down

their government. That was the Internet. So there's a plus to it where it's like you find each other, shit gets suggested, y'all learn how to like collaborate, connect, you build a community, and a lot of that stuff is because this algorithm is understanding the shit you want to talk about, the things you're trying to see, and it

puts you all together. There's things where it's beautiful. But on the other hand, Miramar nigga disinformation leading a dog on genocides and then bringing it to this point right now where an extremist got radicalized via an algorithm. Whose fault is it? What should the law be? What's the difference between a suggestion a retweet? What about a cooking show? What if? What if you're just in it? Is there? Can the algorithm can make any distinction between what's a

cooking show? You know, something nice and innocent where you wanted to make you wanted to bake oatmeal cookies. And then it says yo, are you in the peanut butter cookies? What's and it just suggested, not telling you to click it, It just suggested that you was into that. Does it can it tell the difference? Does it flag extremism? And then how do you decide what's extremism? Because, as you know, one man's terrorist is another man's revolutionary. Hell, one man's

Andrew Jackson is another man's Nelson Mandela. I wrote a song about it called Andrew Mandela where I'm comparing the two. You know what I'm saying. You asked me, Andrew Jackson is a textbook terrorist, that's a genocidal Do you understand I'm trying to say, right, well, one of the greatest wrongs, Old Hickory, You're the greatestrong. Just like the trailer tears my nigga like he's a terrorist. You know, I'm saying, how do you decide that? That's Listen, nobody happy with

the Internet. The conservatives swearing they voices being censored, Nigga deliberals is saying they voices is being censored, and right wing stuff is getting pushed to the everybody got dare, everybody got receipts about it? Ship I can't call it. I ain't gonna hold you. Nobody happy but the Internet? Why because we still don't know how to use it? What the hell is free speech on the Internet? I don't know. So if the algorithm flags this thing crushes

that video, do they get sued for censorship? Because who gets to say? What is terrorism? What is out of bounds American law? This is the Internet. The Internet's not America your European law, Internet and Europe either where? Who gets there? Who's the what's what's internet jail? You get kicked off the Internet? Like you know what I'm saying, Like they're they're private companies. How do you like? And and the private companies are not even the Internet themselves?

They're the website? Is it the hosting? Like? Who do you sue? Who do you set the law for? I ain't gonna hold you. I don't know. All I'm saying is we can't call it y'all. Now, why should you care? Obviously you understand why you should care, because like this is gonna change the Internet as you own. No matter what they decide, the Internet as we know it is changed.

Now next week I want to talk about some of the suggestions they made or it has been floated around as answers to this because these nineteen ninety six laws they just don't work, because it's built on a world that just really don't exist no more. What like what is we gonna do? It'd be like, you know, homie, come back home. Look, bring it back to the homie come back home after doing a good twenty five year bid.

He looking at the streets like you little young niggas are weird, Like the world is not what you remember. It's not like there are some card and fast rules that change. Some of the ogs understand that the change, but then some of the stuff is like you little you you you do you knew, niggas is weird. This ain't the world I'll remember. I mean, that's that's where

we're at. And what's crazy is how high these stakes are because as the entire world's economy, every dollar niggat all money, like all of the money, all of the business, all of it like international DP like uh international product like like all of it. It's on the internet, like it's on the internet, like like this will shut down

the not just like all world world economics. No, I mean literally like the if you like if you get this wrong, or if you do nothing like if if and it's like if you like part of why none of these things have gotten to the Supreme Court have gotten to this level because it's like most companies just cash out. It's like, I'll just settle out of court. I'll just pay y'all because if you're gonna bring suit, it's not worth the danger of tearing down the whole Internet.

And there's too much money to be made. So I tell you out, you know, cut you off family a couple of million. You know what I'm saying, Like I'm sorry, I'm not admitting guilt. I'm just saying, let's just make this go away, because like the questions too big, and like, no matter what we decide, who gets to enforce it? Because they private companies. You can't make a law over the internet because the Internet is not a place. That's

that's why I'm like, it's just big. So why we should care is because I mean, it's gonna change the change how you move as we know it. No matter what they decide, it's better by gold. I'm just kidding, or at least this and it's so stupid to come to something this trivial, but like, yeah, like judges are left. Did you know, we're not They're not voted on, they're selected and elected. So like we need to really think

about who be on these courts. And once it gets to the Supreme Court obviously, like that's that's a presidential choice. I don't know. And when I say elected, I don't mean like you vote on him. I mean like they're elected in the sense that the people we vote to put in office choose the judges. You know what I'm saying, Like I don't have that makes sense to you, but anyway, so you need to think about who you putt in

the office. The point I'm trying to make is like whenever big things like this happens, a lot of times, us in these sort of melaninated circles sometimes be like the last to know or don't really understand how it affects us until it's too late. So I'm just saying right now, like I ain't gonna hold you this, this one's big. I'll talk about some of these suggestions next week.

Ain't all right, I ain't gone, I ain't gonna, I ain't gonna, I ain't gonna, I ain't gonne I ain't gonna you know, I don't know why I ain't thought of this before, but you know you could use promo code hood for fifteen percent off on terraform coldbrew dot com. Like I forgot I owned that company and this is my pod. Y'all, go ahead and punch it. Promo cod hood if you're in the cold brew and get you

some cold brew, gonna get you some coffee. Yeah, Like I can't believe, I ain't think it is still right now, y'all, y'all, This thing right here was recorded by Me Propaganda and East Low Spoiled Heights, Los Angeles, California. This thing was mixed, edited, mastered, and scored by the one and the only Matt Olsowski. Y'all check out this fool's music. I mean it's incredible. Executive produced by Sophie Lichterman for Cool Zone Media. Man, and thank you for everybody who continue to tap in

with us. Make sure you leaving reviews and five star ratings and sharing it with the homies so we could get this thing pushed up in the algorithm. And listen. I just want to remind you these people is not smarter than you. If you understand City living you understand politics. We'll see you next week.

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