This episode is going to cover a lot of ground in the sense of how, in my opinion, a good way to think about how Black Americans moved through the public and deal with issues within our community that affects the greater politics. You're following me. I know it's a mouthful, but you'll understand as we talk. I think it has to do with, or the best way to understand it
is how we raised now as black people. It's safe to assume you was raised by a black mama, and if he was raised by a black mama, I feel with regional variations, um and of course all statistics can be added an asterisk, right, But generally the greatest defense you could do to your mama is embarrassed her. But the degree for which you get in trouble about that embarrassment has to do with where you embarrass her. And
there's one place. Again it may be described a little different here and there, but there is one place that if you cross this line, you're behind this mind. You do not embarrass your mama in public. Slight variation in front of these people, slight variation in front of these white people at this grocery store. At this point, the point is don't embarrass your mama in public because things that need to be dealt with need to be dealt with at home. We already know what these white people
think of us. We already know they already out to get you. I'm just telling you how we think, and we already know what these people think of her. You're not gonna ruin that. But what I think y'all don't understand, as you within our community, is that might sound selfish, don't embarrass your MoMA in public, but it's protection, it's safety. We move differently, all and there's a reason why we do.
Let's talk about it her politics, y'all. All right, So the black community is not in any way, shape or form immune to traditional issues of patriarchy and misogyny. We are just as guilty as every other community issues of homophobia and and all the all the same sort of you know, the toxic masculinity. It's it's in our it's in our communities like everybody else's community. But there is a a venerated person within our community, and its mama.
We venerate moms. Now, it's weird in the sense that like obviously side chicks and baby mamas and and all that drama and all the like, you know, disrespectful hip hop that at least I grew up on, obviously is full of misogyny, obviously is full of like treating mama's terribly, you know what I'm saying. But out of that same mouth comes the song Tupac wrote, Dear Mama, you know what I'm saying, which every thug still sheds a thug
tear whenever that song is played. Mom is venerated. Now, part of that veneration is in theory, because obviously we will necessarily treat our mama's very well. But what you what do you hear when a black man becomes a star, you know what I'm saying, or or an athlete or makes it they body mama house. You know, I'm gonna get my mama this car. I'm gonna give my mom out the hood. You know what I'm saying, Like that
is your first thing. And some of that has to do with a different type of massah, Jenny, you know what I'm saying. Don't get me wrong, I'm not unaware of what's going on here, you know, because we only understand our moms in relation to how they treated us. All my mama worked four jobs, kept me. She's so hard. She worked so hard. That's a strong black woman. I'm gonna take care of it. She ain't gonna ever have to work again. You know what I'm saying, Well, do
you think she wanted to be a strong black woman? Nigger? That's because you're broke as daddy left her, you feel he like, I don't know. I mean, maybe you you're I'm saying, But what I'm trying to say is like we have a hard time seeing her as a full person. But that being said, as dichotomists or oxymoronic as it
might be, we have venerated moms. Even when we make your mama jokes, it's understood that we're not really talking about your mama because we really talking about my mama, Like that would be the end of your life, you know what I'm saying. And a lot of times I remember when I was a kid, like why did you end up in the Spire hospitals talking about my mama? So like there's just something about our mothers that is,
in some ways is the cornerstone of our community. A lot of times, your mother was your the center of your moral compass, even if she gang banged. You know, I'm saying, like and again, like I said in the beginning, all statistics have asterisks. That is not true for everybody, but as a general understanding of our experience, our mom is venerated. So because she shaped our personality, she shaped
who we are. And if you understand the plight of black women in America, also, it's like, well, she's the most targeted of all the then diagrams of suffering and oppression. I mean, like, yo, she she the bulls eyes, the black woman, you know. But she's also the creator of
culture and futures. And like I said, she's the the the center of our moral compass, and she the person that may raised us all and being said, all of us got black Mama stories, and some of them are more fun than others, you know what I'm saying, Like you know little things about like hey, you know why you don't be cutting up in school because okay, this woman working two three jobs, she's gonna have to take a day off work that ain't gonna get paid just
to come and get your ass because you don't know how to act in school, you know what I'm saying. So when she beat the brakes, off you. You know what I'm saying, it's it's it's it's like, oh yeah, that's funny. You know, don't take mama's apple juice. Did my mom have sold us up under her bed that me and my siblings bet not drink. Absolutely was their parts in our our house that we knew. You know what I'm saying, if you go in that closet like family is over. But again, my mama was my moral compass.
You know. She had her prayer closet. It was you know, every day or every other day whatever, for like an hour maybe our fifteen minutes, she shut the doing locket. She going that room. She praying, like my mom and they're praying, you know, she praying over us, you know, laying hands on it. Like whatever the case, maybe your mama become she's just the center of your thing. And there is one thing that I feel like we all
know you're intro with school, you're into whatever. You know what I'm saying, you you disrespect or you back talker, like, of course you'll handle that, but most of us know not to talk to your mom's that way, right, which is why generally we look at the way white people
raise their kids. We just think it's strange, you know. Said. Granted, we have a lot to learn from each other, because obviously this podcast is not unpacking why our moms um perpetuated some of the practices that we're birth out of our disenfranchisement and oppression. Um, we're only scratching the surface of that. But the point is there's a narrative being pitched here. So when I say the biggest thing you can do is wrong is embarrass your mama in public. Uh,
some of us may have some PTSD from shivers. Some of y'all has been on how bad that your mom was? If you and barrassed me out, if you embarrass me, I'm gonna embarrass you. You know you mess around? Is again pinning how boud it y'all are? How hood y'all were your mama mess around, beat your ass in front of all these people, in front of your friends. She would even say that, don't make me embarrass you in front of your little friends. You know what I'm saying.
That's another thing, you know, we always say another one of the thing, I'm not booboot the fool. Don't talk to me like I'm one of your little friends. You know what I'm saying, like I deserve this respect, you know, and she had the backhand to back it up. You understand saying, but whatever it is, whatever cutting up you got, if you do it in front of other people, and specifically because when we she with her homies and you act stupid, she gonna light you up in front of
them because they know all my too. Girl, I don't know what these young they mess around, they mess around, jump in yo, say uh, you mess around in front of family, any one of your aunties might get in you, you know, but not in front of these white fee not in public. And again, pen On, how bad that your mom was was what she was, She owned, how she feels, how she developed in her own sort of psychology.
She may be like, excuse me for a second, to whoever she was talking to, even whether she was on the phone, uh or you was actually in public, give you this look like go a wait in the car. Ah, buddy, buddy, you finna get it. I know. I remember a few times I mouthed off at church. She gave me this look like, you know, white people be like wait till your father gets home. You know, I taught me that's scary you know, I get it because it's your daddy
the enforcer. That's just I mean my daddy. My daddy was around for my my early childhood, you know what I'm saying. So, yeah, he was an enforcer, but he ain't need to be. That's like he didn't need to be. A mother would say stuff like go away in the car. Fam, you had already crossed the line on me. It's it's bad news bears for you. Now. Why I bring this up in in terms of hood politics is I think
there's some ground I want to cover here. I know, I did a two part episode about Kanye and I really want to be I want to dead the topic with this um, which has not much to do with him, but how the black community responded and how we generally respond to somebody who has probably crossed the line many times, but we ain't done nothing like and as far as into the world of canceled little bull offenses, you know, speaking of which, when you say, like, who do you
think invented cancel culture, it was black women. They invented the term like, oh, he's canceled like, and they just did it as like and not as something that was supposed to become a culture. You know what I'm saying. That's what happens when you're talking from the white people. But black women used to say that, Oh no, he canceled, like that came from them. I just let me set
the record straight. The phrase came from black women. But anyway, there's a long history of incredibly problematic Black figures, you know, who've continually dumb. Now granted now now follow me. Ain't no more problematic than anybody else's figures, you know, But even problematic Black figures that have made us, I don't know, feel embarrassed in public, you know what I'm saying. Uh, one would ask what took us so long? With R Kelly? I think I brought this up before. Um what took
us so long? Whini Bishop Atty? Long? Now it beens on how black y'all. You may not know his name, you know, but the brother was a listen, I mean, brother was brother was outside in all the wrong ways.
You feel me? There were some problems going on. But the line that you have to cross before we disavalue is something that needs to be understood as a way to understand why we are not white liberals while we are not just what the Democratic Party thinks we are, or even what the Republican Party thinks we are, or what's your Twitter feed thinks we are, depending on how hood your Twitter feed is, There's a lot going on here.
And I say this in the shadow of unfortunately today November one of the shooting death of Amigo's artists, take Off um as an accidental I mean right now, like the the Again, depending on how deep in the black Twitter you are, you may not really know all the details about this, and maybe this isn't I went by the time it comes out like, maybe the story might have get straightened out. But essentially, if you know, take Off, he was always known as being really quiet in the cut,
even killed stay out of stuff. He wasn't He wasn't the type to pop off. He was real chill. And in the situation, there was a dice game going on, and apparently Quavo was more pressed about something else and some shots rang off, and essentially take Off was shot by accident. You know. So it wasn't like no dice game, or it wasn't like he was shooting dice And you know what I'm saying, Like word is he was literally standing in the back and he just caught a bullet
and probably uh most likely again can't confirm. None of this might have been friendly fired. Just somebody shot, they shot back, and he out of bullet and rather than the rest in peace, you know, take off things that should have taken off, hashtags that should have taken off, Black on black crime took off. That's that's the that's that's the hashtag that's trending as of today. This is why this topic of politics is so important to me.
And if you can hear in the tone of my voice that this isn't the normal jovial like, oh my ads is so absurd kind of tone. This is like like this is something I feel like some deep sociology here. All right, I'll ready, let's go, ready. So the first thing you have to understand about how black people deal with uh people that they have quote unquote not for your terms, not by what you mean canceled, but why what we mean by that? Um, we're very we across
the board. Again, all statistics have asterisk, but generally we deal with things via humor, like you know, we crack jokes, we make fun of each other, you know, and it's understood that like yo, if you're getting if you're getting cooked, you're supposed to cook back, you know, because there's an understanding that we're in this together and it's all love,
you know. And then there are some things that were just like yo, if you just don't mess with somebody, you don't mess with somebody, you know what I'm saying. As far as like within our community, it's like, uh, that man, you're a weird though, like like ah, but that but that weird will have homies like like like I'm just gonna go out and say it's like Kyrie Irving,
like you're a weirdo. You know. Also today, uh, the news dropped that Steve Nash has been fired from the NETS and apparently it was over some argument with Kyrie and cannot be confirmed again the the news is still breaking, but essentially Steve Nash that had everybody at the crib and and Nash was pressing him about being a flat earther and what sucks is like, man, this video of Takeoff being murdered, but don't nobody want to see that. I want to see the video of this conversation where
a situation. According to the story, he was pressing him about being a flat earther, and he told Steve Nash, what do you know about rotations? Which is if you know basketball, that is funny, okay, And part of what makes it so funny is that, Okay, if you're a flat earth are, you're already starting from a deficit, so
you should easily you should be cooked easily. Right, But you out But Steve Nash, you outgunned, you out mad the fact because black people have been cooking each other for a long time, so we always have a comeback, right, So he like that, like it cooked that boy, you got cooked by a flat earther. Like that's hilarious to me.
But anyway, point being, we we cracked jokes among each other, right, but when we're done with you, when you've crossed the line, we don't Generally, you're not gonna see a bunch of like hay tweets or disavowing. It's not like, it's not like, it's not like how everybody else handles stuff. You cease to exist to us, You just mattering. Stacy Dash is a good example that nobody's checking for it. The last time we heard heard about her was when she realized
two years later that DMX was dead. Nobody checking for it. You know, we talk on this podcast because of like you know, cool zone media and the fact the stuff that I'm in about Candice Owns you run through the hood. They have no idea who she is. She just don't matter. You when you when we're done, you fall off the planet. So it's like, if you're not gonna get made fun of, you just not gonna be checked in on We're done, Like you're just you don't How else can I say?
You don't matter? You know why black people know who Herschel Walker is now just because he's running, because he's running for office. He was like, wait, thank that the nigger I thought he moved to Texas. The nigga stopped mattering to us. You know he's he You crossed into a world to where we stopped checking for him. You know what I'm saying that we only talk about him now because we got to talk about him now. The only reason Black people talk about Candice owns Now is
because of Kanye what checking for it? She stopped mattering. Y'all, y'all following me, You have to be really into the stuff. But when you go through like listen your Twitter feed, I'm part of the talented tenth. Like and I and I say that in academic terms, right again, you gotta google your W E B D. Boys, you gotta google. You gotta google that to understand what I mean by the talented tenth. Right, Um, I'm gonna make you do your Google's Google Talented tenth shout out tom Me Sho
Barrock who did an album on it. So I'm hybrid, I'm I'm different. You know what I'm saying. But if you go through the block, oh no, Candice always and niggas don't care. You know, I'm saying like she don't matter, you feel me. It's not that they're uninformed or just not there on intelligence. Are very intelligent people. That's the whole premise of her politics, is that the streets are actually very intelligent. But as a community, you know what
we're not checking for. So really that's that's how it looks what y'all want us to do with Kanye, how it would actually look in practice is like that he would just stop mattering. The problem is he still matters to us. And I'm gonna explain to you why after this, Yeah, all right, we're back now, why Kanye still matters. Is something that really goes back to your mama saying don't embarrass us in public part of it, and and it's
in two parts. The first part is is the cultural power to cancel, and two is is the white gaze. I'm gonna start with the white gaze because I feel like that's a good intersection with like the male gaze. It's this and now it used this as as a comparison. Women will tell you about the male gaze. It's this this feeling at all times that you're being watched, being ogl being It just feels icky. It's always a man, whether it's sexual or power or whatever the case may be.
Men's is always watching. You can't do nothing without them watching, you, feel me. If you're in a um professional situation, what
comes out of that male gaze? A lot of times just man explaining you know what I'm saying, Like, you know, you over here diligently doing your work, dropping gems, you know what I'm saying, And then the dude that's watching the whole time essentially just says what you just said to the rest of the group, and everybody's like, oh, you know that's you know what I'm saying, it's this idea like or or the brother come pick your from
your office and pick your brain. And this happening to my wife, you know what I'm saying, sitting on a panel, Like she was doing a panel discussion and the guy, one of the one of the dudes, came in and talked him, was like, hey, so tell me what you're what you're about, what you're talking about, so we could be on the same page on the stage. So she
started dropping some of her ideas. They get on the stage and he essentially just says her ideas, Man, you can't you just can't talk in front of these people. I can't show you none of my brilliance. You know what I'm saying, Because it always ends up being a power lever. It's the male gaze. Can't dress cute because that means I'm inviting you to like you know what I'm saying, plat X ray goggles on my boobies, you know what I'm saying. Like, So it's this gaze black
people feel that we white people. It's this idea that like, whether you're watching us to steal our words, our dance, redefine them as your own. Like I've talked about so many times. The fact that there is such thing as cancel culture, woke culture CRT as a problem is y'all watching black people move and then giving definition. So it's like, yeah, we always say, like, man, you can't talking from the white people. That's gonna ruin our slang. They're gonna ruin
our dances, They're gonna run. They always watching. But also this feeling that you're always watching to prove your prejudices correct, you're following. This is why I bring up take Off being murdered and then Black on Black crime trending. It's the white daze. You're looking into our community to prove the prejudices that you have. There's this um clip going around of Jamal Bryant. He's a pastor back East Black pastor.
He lightened up herschel Walker, and he lightened him up because of the stuff that I'm talking about is like herschel Walker shucking give for you. This man can't talk is why I brought up before they make a talk. He sounds ignorant. You know what I'm saying. Here'd do whatever the white man tell him. So of course they want him in power now grant it Jamal bran ain't no saint. I mean this goes back to like what I'm talking about before as to like nigga, we probably
should have dealt with this nigga a while back. But the point we're saying is this man has crossed the line into a place to where you like, it's like house niggas and field niggas like you you think you know because they didn't. They didn't put you all in the front, you feel me, Uh, they propped you up all in the front. You getting all these checks. You know what I'm saying, Why do you think you're getting all these checks from these white people's because you'll do
what they say. Nigga, you're not with us. You you understand what I'm saying. That's that white gaze. They went and found a man, according to Jamal Bryant, that look exactly the way they think of us as and then they gona do whatever they do. You turn around, put them in front of black people because you know, hey, you know black people want to be equal representation, right.
But he's like, they don't speak for me. Yo. This is an interesting, uh sort of cross section with the new Prime Minister in the UK Who's this a South Asian brother? And are you asking does he represent that South Asian community? I mean, I guess, but he's extremely wealthy. He's one of the most wealthy. I like, have y'all pulled his have y'all pulled his pulled his LinkedIn. He even married into an extreme, extremely wealthy family. That man
represent money. So so you're talking about the average you know, the average brown uh brother and sister, South Asian brother and sister out there in u K. He's like, does that man represent me? I mean, I don't know, just because he just you know, all scaring folk and can folks, you know what I'm saying. So there's that nuance right that this man don't represent us, but the white people's
is watching. So when your mama say, don't you embarrass me in public, there's a there's a bigger sociological phenomenon happening here that you could possibly trace. I mean, this may sound grandiose, you know, some Niggers might be like, whatever you put an extras on it, but I believe this this stuff stayed in our bones from the overseers, all the way back into the slavery times, all the way back into gym Crow. You need to stay in line. You can't. Don't cut up in front of these people.
You want, you understand, because we don't know what they're gonna do. I love you, we love you. They looking they're looking for a reason, these white people looking for a reason. Now with me. Obviously, when I say this, I'm talking about um, white as an institution. You know you're your buddy Carl from accounting, who's like a super good dude. Obviously it's not what i'm talking about talking about. White is an institution, which at this point in this
podcast you should know that by now. But and obviously black, I'm not talking about every black person. You know, I'm talking about Black as a community as an institution. But there's this understanding all the way back to the overseers that I don't know what they'll do to you, or a matter of fact, I have an idea what they'll do to you if you step out of line, or if I show that I can't keep you in line. We're all in trouble. So when you're cutting up in school,
cutting up is such an old phrase. That's I'm telling you our parents when you know you're messing up in school, why you get drag so bad when you get home, it's because again your mom and them know they're looking for a reason to count you out. They're looking for a reason to not give you opportunities. You understand. So in some ways, again it's not about her, it's about us, which brings me to the next point as to why we don't cancel the way you want us to. And
I believe it goes back to the same principle. Are collective is what has kept us safe. It's what has kept us alive. Our community, our community protection. We have a always worked in tandem with each other for our freedom. I am because we are that that that you have when you're when you come from a suffering people. And again I can only speak as black people. I am because we are. You make your ancestors proud. It took a lot of people to get you to where you are.
So when we have that understanding, we tend to desire to police each other among ourselves. So when you get out of line, our inclination is to be like, get in the car for a second and we'll say, hey, hey, hey, baby, I don't know what's going on with you, but Nikka, you tripping, right, and we'll crack jokes, but the door shut, the door shut and locked, because we can't let these white people see this. This is among us, Nigga, get your ship together. What is you doing? Because our discipline
among each other. Why our moms were so hard on us is because what I'm gonna do to you is far less damaging than what they're gonna do to you is far So we keep it in the house. When you start tripping, we keep it in the house. And we also understand internalized racism. When you start internalizing yourself hate, right, and you start spewing out some of this to Sodian. So then this is what happened. This is original Kanye problem.
You know what I'm saying, You being like, okay, you know, how do you go from these lyrics all college drop out, like, oh, they put you know um when you you know, when you get on they leave your ask for a white girl. You know what I'm saying, Oh, they love Kanye. Put him in the front of this though, you know, and the white man get paid for all of that. You know what I'm saying, Like, how you ended the Black panthers? Ronald Reagan had an answer like we could spout so
many Kanye lyrics about this black liberation right. Uh, so we're saying, oh, oh, Son, you didn't been given the oaky dog. Come come come back home. Let me talk to you some Oh oh oh, we get it. He's sick. Okay, baby, Okay, listen, Slavery is a choice thing. I'm gonna chalk that up. Listen, you have been. I'm gonna chalk that up to your uh,
to your mad. Now as this is happening, he's chipping away at his support within the black community and some people at that point at the slavery the choice and it was like, all right, no, this niked done. I'm cool. Then you go into the kyrie world to where you're like, oh I didn't get weird though, Look y'all can haven't you know what I'm saying? But are we gonna turn him over to these white people? No? Now, what happened with Kanye is again, according to the communion, it started
seemed like he just he wanted their approval. That's kind of what it started seeming like. You know, now when you walk into the again, now when you walk into the city, listen, they still ride with it. They're like, nah, man, they're just trying to keep this billionaire down. You know, you talk. I talked to some of these young dudes. They're like, Yo, he made graduation and that's it. You know what I'm saying, because as a community, deep down inside us, we don't ever want to turn somebody over
two the type of dehumanization that comes from whiteness. Now as he's losing. You know, all these um partnerships with these bigger companies. Now, why you don't see that with us is the fact that like, well, we don't have the collective cultural capital or power to cancel somebody like that. Well, we don't all those companies, we can't do that. We own cool, we own we own streets, We own culture in the sense that we we decide what's doping what's not.
But we don't own the bank, we don't own the company. We own the trend. So when we decide you're not trendy, that's how we flex our power. When we're done with you. You're following me. I mean, when the last Stacy Dashed movie you've seen, we decided we were done. Does that do you understand that I'm asking you, Like you're sitting here but ultimately, our desire collectively has been let's deal
with it inside. Don't you embarrass us in public. So when we're dealing with crime inside of our communities, yeah, you you just we're not We're not delusional. We know we're killing each other. I just don't need you to talk about it because you don't love us. We're just a talking point. We're talking about LOWA unemployment rates, We're talking about jail jail time sentences, We're talking about that, like we know, we know how we got here, but
we know. But also how it gets really complicated is the fact that, like, if you think of all of the institutional obstacles that have been placed on the black community, whether it's policing, unfair housing, all of the things that have pressed against us from so many different angles, why would it not be so hard to believe in a conspiracy theory? Because it feels like a conspiracy just pressed
on every angle by every possible institution. It's hard to not be, like, you know what, I think y'all sitting around and planning all this. Y'all niggas just don't want no black people to win. So when Kanye stand up and start speaking up he's like, nah, man, I'm going against this system. You like, right on, Kan, Yeah, of course there's a conspiracy. Who you said the conspiracy is what you say? Oh, it's the Jill Okay work. Yeah, it's them. That's like you hear the term Mark Zuckerberg, right,
and you're thinking that's the Jewish dude. So therefore Kanye's right, because there's no way Kanye would really sell us out because he wanted us. You see how the logic happens. I am because we are, and you have to think about the amount of long suffering we have. And of course obviously it's not a light switch on and off, because eventually you become Bill Cosby, and even becoming Bill Cosby, it's still folks that's like, nah, they after a black man.
They're just trying to keep a black man down. You know what I'm saying. We've survived because of our collective protection against a system that has always felt like it was against us. So excuse us for not moving the way a liberal person, progressive person would think we would. It's not an issue of an intel of intelligence. It's an issue of survival. So obviously this is no defense of Kanye's words and actions. Again, I'm a little different.
You know, I've been to a Holocaust museum. I understand the complexities and intersectionality of the black and the Jewish plight, and I also understand how industry works. And I also understand and I understand where they're coming from and why they would think the way they think. Now, it is my opinion that Kanye himself will always have his remnant
that will always run with him. You know, give or take some some new Fox News ads, but there's going to be a percentage of our community that's just done again. I say R Kelly, I even say Chris Brown, you know, he's a star again. Of course he's moved on. You know, he made his made his thing. I think Travis Scott is actually a great example of somebody who showed his penance. It was like yo, like he was when you know, the astral World thing happened, Like yo, it was a mistake,
you know what I'm saying. And he owned it and did everything he could and we like it. You know, I got you, no big deal. But I think there's a remnant in the streets that will always be like it ain't that serious. What Kanye saying, and y'all just after him because he's wealthy. Y'all just trying to take a black man down? Why? Because a lot of times it is they're just trying to take a black man down, and it's not. Again, I can't stress this enough. It's
not that these people are unintelligent. They have a perception based on hundreds of years of evidence, the one did they think the way I think? So now when you're thinking about the black vote or the voter block listen, it's complicated. What does the black community think of Kanye is complicated? Will we ever fully disavow him? It's complicated? I because our our survival has been interdependent up until this day. So I don't know. Do we oftentimes vote
against our own selves interests? A lot of times? Has the in I can't believe on saying this in defense? Has the Democratic Party always counted on us riding for them because the publicans sound ridiculously racist, Yeah, they have, but that's because they don't know us. That's because they're not really out here. Ye. So that's for you who are not of our community to at least understand what's going on now us that's inside of our community we gotta have a family meeting, y'all. Is the man coming
to the barbecue or not? I mean, he did kind of embarrass us in public. What how are we gonna deal with this? I I will defer to the majority. I will state my opinion that these people on this recording ain't going here because this is mixed company. I will state my opinion and I'll follow the delegation. But we got bigger fister Fried bro rappers keep dying, we keep What is we doing, y'all? When Biggie and Tupac was murdered, it was like at shock waves. This stuff
happening way too frequently. What is going on, y'all? Can we have a family meeting to discuss? And in the meantime, who we're voting for the for the for the mid term politics? Y'all? Yeah? This is the thing was recorded by me Propaganda and he's slow Spoil Heights, Los Angeles, California. This mug was mixed, edited, mastered, and scored by Matt Osowski. I can totally say his name, guys, it was it
was a stick. He's going by Matt now again because he got to some legal situations with the name Headlights y'all know common used to be called common sense. Y'all know Tip t I was Tip Sometimes It Happens. Executive produced by the one and only Sophie Lichtman for a Cool Zone Media and the theme music by the one and only Gold Tips Gold Tips d J Shawn P. So, y'all just remember listen every time you check in. If you understand city living, you understand politics, We'll see you'll next week.