100: Hard R - podcast episode cover

100: Hard R

Sep 11, 20243 hr 57 min
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Moe Factz with Adam Curry for September 11th 2024, Episode number 100 - "Hard R"

Moe and Adam finish their series of 100 episodes by really "going there"!

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Last Modified 09/11/2024 16:31:02 by Freedom Controller  

Transcript

Intro

Adam CurryAdam Curry

Mofax with Adam curry for September 11, 2024 this is episode 100

Unknown

jumbo beats hallelujah. That's

Adam CurryAdam Curry

right, this is it. The pinnacle. We have reached the mountaintop. Welcome to 100 the final episode. I'm Adam curry coming to you from the heart of the Texas Hill Country. It is time for the last time to spin The Wheel of topics from here to Northern Virginia. Please say hello to my friend on the other end, the one and only. Mr. Mo, facts,

Moe FactzMoe Factz

how you doing? Adam,

Adam CurryAdam Curry

I'm much better now that I'm hearing you. Mo, although life is pretty good in general, it's good to hear your brother. It's good, good to have us back on the on the on the sticks, again, on the talking sticks, man,

Moe FactzMoe Factz

it's always a good time that when we can get together and, uh, bring it to the table, yeah, under the rug, and get it on top of the table.

Adam CurryAdam Curry

So it's a little bittersweet, because this is the final episode in the series of mofacs with Adam curry. Also, I think, when we were talking just before we started, we had a quick chat. You know, neither of us are really good with dates. And you said, two weeks ago, you said, Yeah, how about how is your calendar for next week or in two weeks. And I said, it's good because I'm going away when vacation, even though I was

working. But, you know, it's still trying to be vacation. And we planned for this day, and only this morning did I realize, oh, it's September 11, which seems to have been forgotten this year by most. Right? It's like, never forget what 23 years later like, oh yeah, oh yeah. It says September 11. How old were you when 911 happened? Actually,

Moe FactzMoe Factz

I was 20. Okay, all right,

Adam CurryAdam Curry

so and so, then you were old enough to actually remember. But so many, I

Moe FactzMoe Factz

remember it vividly, vividly, yeah, so, so

Adam CurryAdam Curry

many don't remember it anymore. Anyway, that

Moe FactzMoe Factz

was pre cell phone. But also, I like to say, Happy belated birthday.

Adam CurryAdam Curry

Oh, thank you very much.

Moe FactzMoe Factz

I'm terrible at that. Don't hold it to my head, not my heart. It's people say

Adam CurryAdam Curry

it's okay. It's more than okay. You know, Tina threw a surprise party for me, and I was there. I know exactly, exactly. She's like, you know, I don't think should have. She said I was thinking about who to invite, but I didn't think that would be the right place for you and Mo to meet face to face for the first time. I'm like, I

Moe FactzMoe Factz

was in the back corner.

Adam CurryAdam Curry

I knew it, I knew you were there. I knew it, I knew it, I knew it, I knew it, it's all good. Brother and I am so excited to get started with the episode 100 now, I have no idea what you've put together, because throughout the past four years, four years. Now it's five, five years. That's right, five years. I know I forgot it's actually four and a half years, because we know it's no, it is five. You're right. It is, yeah,

How it all started

because we started talking to date, that's right. We started talking on the way back from my honeymoon, which was over five years ago, and and just for a Genesis check for everybody, we were talking, and do we do just on DM? I think was Twitter DM, for whatever reason, that was the mode of choice.

Moe FactzMoe Factz

What happened was, I could tell a story. You said dos on the show. Oh, right, right, right, dos, that's right. And I sent you a Twitter DM. It says a DOS because the A is important, because and that from there, it just went into the now, a DM back and forth, and here we are, five years later.

Adam CurryAdam Curry

Well, because you're essentially no agenda producer. And whenever I hear something from by all know that the no agenda producers are smarter than we are. And I was like, Okay, this guy's No, this guy knows what he's talking about. Was very interesting to me. And then we just kind of talk on the phone, I think, for you know, once a week or something, you say, Hey, let me catch you up on this. And then at a certain point, I think I said, Dude, what are we doing here? We

should be recording this. And then I had your arm. Were you doing the live the lives at that point? We doing? Yeah, I was doing the live YouTube lives, yeah. Well, all of that is culminated in this final episode. So for the last time, I'm gonna spin up the wheel of topics round and round it goes where it stops. Nobody knows, except for the man on the other end, my friend mofax, because he put it all together for us. The

What it could mean and how you should react

topic of episode 100 is the N word, ow, the word never spoken in 100 episodes, the N word yes, all right.

Moe FactzMoe Factz

It's the rabbit hole of all rabbit holes. But before we dive in. And I think it's the it's a well deserved trigger warning. Trigger

Unknown

warning.

Adam CurryAdam Curry

All right, everybody set. We are good to go with trigger warnings in place. We are set. We're strapped in. Okay,

Moe FactzMoe Factz

so I got it this show segment in blocks. So the first block is going to be what the word possibly could mean and and how you should react to either saying or hearing the Word. So for as we always do, we got to go to nearly fuller Yes, and he's going to explain if there is a definition for the word, if it's a

Unknown

white supremacist, when they look at a non white person, they always come over what they call nicknames for them that they consider to be offensive, considered to be a put down. The white supremacists, they invent terms that they think that will make you, quote, unquote, angry, or make you feel bad, or make you go into a dejective mood. So but the way the code handles the word, the N word, I just simply say, you give it a definition, because that's where his power comes from. It doesn't have a

definition. Every definition that I've ever seen for that has been it's a derogatory term for a person of African descent, Negro or colored people of color, etc, etc, etc. And so when a white person uses the word. They have found from experience that they get a reaction from the non white person that resents it, and so that's fun to them, that means something to them, and so that they reserve that word because they get that kind of reaction, because they want that kind of reaction. That's

Adam CurryAdam Curry

kind of interesting, because when Neely Fuller, JR started off there, the first thing I thought was, oh, that's what 45 savage does all the time. Little Marco, low energy Jeb, he's a white supremacist.

Moe FactzMoe Factz

But the thing is, like, and here's the thing about this was special about this word is, I went back and looked because I thought it had a definition. Because growing up, you were told it means you're lazy, shiftless, ignorant, from from your parents, you know, saying like, that's so you never want to be, you know. So that's what this word. It was an ugly

word, you know. This is what it means. At the same time, it was used, as we all know, as kind of either a term of endearment or a jab or you're saying someone like in a jovial manner, interracial in the

Adam CurryAdam Curry

70s, although I too was taught never, ever, ever to use that word in normal day parlance. It was totally interracial, you know, as long as it was followed by please. Now that's the 70s. I think that changed a little bit. But then, you know, it became the N word, and the word never spoken by certainly not by white people.

Moe FactzMoe Factz

So that we want to get to that, but let's just get

A one word spell?

to not having a definition. So if it doesn't have a definition, but it's used to elicit a certain reaction out of people, I've come to the understanding that this is a one word spell. Oh,

Adam CurryAdam Curry

yes, very good. Yes. It is clear. And anything that elicits an emotional and often physical reaction, I think, is on that is the definition of a spell. Is it not? Abracadabra

Moe FactzMoe Factz

has no meaning you're saying but it's uttered to elicit a reaction, a magical reaction, right? It's, this is the same, this is the same exact way. And I looked at other racial slurs and even other slurs all over root from they all have a root, you know, like, I mean, because we know what the F word means, you know. I mean, all, all. I mean, like wet back that, you know, that comes from all of them, even you're saying all of them, but this one particular word only they say is

derogatory. It's a derogatory. Why is it derogatory? And nobody ever answered that question, which, when I heard this clip many years ago, I started looking and like, what is this word? I mean, we understand. You don't say it. I'm this is my rule. I don't use the word in mixed company that that's my that's my rule. You know, saying, like, honestly, even doing the show is quasi breaking the rule. But. This is for to bring understanding for

Adam CurryAdam Curry

science. Is for science, right?

Moe FactzMoe Factz

And humanities, science and humanities, but exactly so, yeah, so it does not have a definition, which, I mean, I'm trying to say, I look, I'll try to find old dictionaries that might they might, because, you know, they always change in definitions. But like I said, growing up, the spoken definition was ignorant, shiftless, lazy, that kind of thing. That was the meaning, but And on paper, it never has. And if somebody does have an old dictionary with a definition,

please screenshot it. Send him to [email protected] because so

Adam CurryAdam Curry

if I can just read from the Merriam Webster Dictionary, which is, although they've changed all kinds of meanings over the years, such as vaccine, you're right, it says used as an insulting and contemptuous term for a black person, but it doesn't define what it is used as. When you say

it's insulting, insulting, you're right. There is no actual definition of what it means, but it is, according to Merriam Webster, almost certainly the most offensive and inflammatory racial slur in English without a meaning, yes, whereas the F word that definitely has a definition, you know the yeah, there's

Moe FactzMoe Factz

a lot wicked PD list with all The other racial slurs and their origins, but this one is just a derogatory word for a black person. And here's the other thing, like, when they want to use it for other groups, they'll throw something in front of it, yes, yeah. You know saying and it, but it still doesn't have a definition, yeah? So, I mean, I don't want to get hung up on this first clip. I just want to because, like, I

said this, we're playing with a powder keg here. Seriously. I mean, like, it shouldn't be, but the fact that it is, that, you know, is more to it than just being a term for sure. So, all right, let's go into get to the second part is clear. They want

Unknown

the black person to get upset. And knowing this, years ago, I came up with a definition for it. Says derogatory is a derogatory term, but they don't tell you why. See, that's the key to its power. Yes, sir, the minute you give a definition to a word, it begins to lose its power because it limits its power to that definition. Oh, yeah. But if you don't give it a definition, I can call you by any name. I can make up a name right now and call it, call you by that name, and you don't know

what it is I'm calling you. I have power over you because now you are reacting to something that you can't understand, and because that's what it really is. But I say that a N You know, when they use the N word, I have it in the code book. It's just a term that the white supremacists use to say that I'm a victim of white supremacy. That's basically what they're saying. Because you can't be the N word without being a victim of white supremacy. If you're not a victim of white supremacy, you

can't be that. So by definition, they're just saying you're a prisoner of war. Oh,

Adam CurryAdam Curry

that's that's interesting. So it's really an

Becoming enslaved?

affirmation. When you respond to it, you are affirming that you're this victim of war,

Moe FactzMoe Factz

no where they're saying you or whether you're not you referring to it or not. What they're saying is in more recent terms, and this is something I've thought about. It's the way of saying you're not like us. Sure that that's that like, how this whole Ken Lamar thing foreshadowing,

Adam CurryAdam Curry

they like us, yeah, okay, yeah. Say you're

Moe FactzMoe Factz

on the side of this line, and we're on the other side of this line, and it's meant to one, put you in your place, to to hopefully, well, not all the time, but in some cases, in more recent history, we've seen on video or everything else to elicit a response out of you. And here's, here's the weird, here's the weird part. Yeah, I said that.

Oh, I'm not counting. Yeah, here's the strange part. Is that if you react to the word violently, then you actually put yourself in that predicament of actually becoming a slave by the 13th Amendment. How you like that? Interesting, because you haul off, hit the person. Now a criminal in charge is. You convicted of that crime, you become actual slave.

Adam CurryAdam Curry

Yeah, you do. I'm just gonna withhold because I'm loving the I'm loving your layout here.

Moe FactzMoe Factz

Okay, so now what we have to do is because I know some I can hear. I can hear them triggered already. This is what you do if you're ever called that word per nearly Fuller, we

Unknown

don't know what to do when we isolate it with a whole bunch of white folks, and we need a cold for handling that's

Don't flinch

one thing I learned being on that mountain in Japan, because there's mostly white guys up there. And you know what I got along with them, because I had a code I learned real quick that that's all I needed. Put me around any bunch of white folks I don't have no problem when they use the word niggle, which is what they did. Oh, even flinch. I don't bat an eye. Why codification? That's the only difference between me and other black guy. We're both black. But why is it that I acted different

from the way he acted? He goes berserk. I was calm all the time now, because I'm smarter or stronger or whatever. No codification. I'm going according to a code codification,

Moe FactzMoe Factz

don't flinch, don't move, just look at them. And to go back to a previous episode when we talked about the other N word, Neanderthal, yes, and how we saw that being used interracial between, quote unquote white people and quote unquote orange people, which is another derogatory term that they took a color and made it a term or a slur. They throw this word around, Neanderthal. But even that has some kind of root to it, even if not true, you understand, okay, this is your

logic. How you got to being this being a slur. But once again, the N word doesn't have a slur, which I'm gonna stand on, that it is a spell. It is a one word spell to elicit a reaction, and if you feed into that reaction, then you're playing right into the person's hand and doing exactly what they want to do. So as Millie Fuller said, you had, you have to have codification and not react.

Adam CurryAdam Curry

I saw a video just this week. You might have seen it. I think it was like it looked like an Asian woman, and she was on the subway, and she was just yelling the N word at this black lady and going over and over, and she just, and she was in, you know, she didn't let the spell affect her. It was really interesting. And the whole thing had no power.

Moe FactzMoe Factz

That's the point. That's the thing. It's like, you mashing the button, yeah, and the button is not like a doorbell. You were saying it's like, it's not working. I'm mashing your butt, and it's not working. Here's another example with with Rogan. When they dug up those old tapes, right? They thought black people were going to be all upset with Rogan, you know, which I said I was more upset with his comments about the monkeys, you understand? Because that's right, the Planet

of the Apes. Yeah, that goes. That leans into scientific racism, but it's, it's losing its power, yeah, because I think it's a consciousness of awareness to say, You know what, you want me to react. You want me to, uh, spazz and, you know, and just, just wow out, like you said, like you saw on the video, you know, and hopeful, you know, say, I'm hopeful. That's the case. But let's get back into more of how to be codified with nearly fuller when white

Unknown

people say nigga around me, I don't flinch, I don't bat an eye. All you got to do is just tell yourself that you know you don't have to get permission from nobody and nothing. You just tell yourself, that's what I'm gonna do. I'm not gonna even look up. Whatever I'm doing. I'm not gonna even look around. Keep doing that's what I'm doing. Because they say anyone I'm not around anyway. Already know that. See understanding, I understand racism. I'm not expecting them to act any other

way. They walk around, say, nigga all day, won't bother me out and not at all. None. Nigger, nigger, nigger, nigger. All day long, will not bother me. I mean, they can try it, you know, they can come in and announce, well, fellow. Yesterday, I counted the times I said, nigga, it came to 312 I'm gonna double that today. Help yourself. Triple it. You know,

Adam CurryAdam Curry

how old is this? This particular piece with newly full this

Moe FactzMoe Factz

piece is probably, I'm gonna say, about 15 years old. Yeah, maybe, you know, saying, maybe somewhere around there, 12 to 12 to 15 years old. Um, but that's how you got the attitude. You got triple it. Because, here's the thing, the all because people say, Oh, I felt disrespected going back to code, right? The only respect is self respect, and the only way you can disrespect yourself is lie to yourself. That's it. Yeah, completely what you do is you don't become a slave to your

emotions. That's where they want you at. They want you in your emotional and your emotions. And like you said, That lady was trying to poke that woman's button to set her off. And we all have buttons. And because I said this is not, hopefully this show is bigger than the word. This is, what is your word? Because we all got a word for women. It's the B word. I mean, for every racial group, there's a word you know or whatever, what is your word and can you conquer your emotions? It's kind

of that word. It's kind

Adam CurryAdam Curry

of the definition of trolling, yes, because I get trolled a lot just for my opinions or for stuff I say on no agenda, and the minute you give into it, and the minute you respond, then they know, ah, got him. There's his trigger word, there's his trigger and then to respond, Yes, but the minute you respond negatively, if emotional, etc, yeah, but even, I mean, obviously, even responding is a win for the troll, because the troll just wants to ride on My flow.

Obviously, correct. Hey, how's Rocco doing,

Moe FactzMoe Factz

he's alive and, well, I mean,

Adam CurryAdam Curry

he's good, he's good. It

Moe FactzMoe Factz

must be the male lady, because her as, I don't know what that relationship between male trucks and dogs, but something weird about it, yeah, but just getting back to the point, yeah, everybody, that's this, the ultimate troll. And so, yeah, so you just don't respond emotionally. Just just look and like, okay, triple it. You want to troll. Triple, triple your troll. You know, that kind of thing, right, right? Just for a minute, just because we always get weave in

and out of what's going on in current events. This happened on the debate last night? Yes, as soon, as soon as Kamala Harris says something about Trump's crowd leaving it trolled him. Yeah, you're right. And, and I was like, No, don't take debate, you know, don't just look at her. You know, just look at her. He stay on point. He did

Adam CurryAdam Curry

pretty well with most of it. She now the troll that she was trying continuously was he doesn't respect our military. And he tripled that. He did not respond. I mean, he was really good at that, but yeah, the crowd size thing? No, no, he couldn't help himself there. And

Moe FactzMoe Factz

I don't know what that is I mean, because, like, I mean, we know he's a hospitality guy, and maybe that is a trigger for him, but I'm just showing people example that everybody has something. If you leave that sore spot open and you don't address it, and you know, saying, get to the root of why you feel that way, you're always going to be a slave to your emotions. That's correct. So all right, so let's get into number eight. See,

Unknown

it's a mindset that codification is a mindset, but it's orchestrated. It's precision. You start breaking bad and calling them white and all this old kind of stuff and all like that. Hey, it has just opposite effect. Found that out real early. The other ones tiptoeing. When they use the word nigger. They start tiptoeing from you know, start wanting to do in your favor because you didn't react. Not at all, none seeing that what? What's that's telling them is

that this guy is black. I don't know whether he's a nigga or not. In fact, I don't know what in the hell he is, you know, other than weird and. That's one thing that white supremacists don't like. You don't like to be able not to be able to figure you out.

Adam CurryAdam Curry

Oh, interesting, double interesting that he used the term weird, which was, was an attempt to, you know, like an N word for JD Vance, for Trump, that was, you know, which was not bad as an attempt. But of course, it doesn't really stick, because it doesn't have any historical connotation.

Moe FactzMoe Factz

Once again, it's a spell. Yeah, yeah, the word weird was used as a spell. It's once you're not like us, we're over here, and you're over there, you're weird. By being over there, weird, how? How am I weird? And you can't really give you a definition, it's just like, Oh, you're supposed to be upset because you're not over here with us. Words are fascinating. And I'm a self, I'm weird, if you haven't noticed,

you say, like, No, you can't get a rise out of me. Like, all the stuff we went through with the covid stuff and the job, you can't get a rise out of me, because I live by trying to be on code as much as possible. Of The only thing I will not do is lie to myself.

Adam CurryAdam Curry

Can you remember the last time someone non black use the N word on you

Moe FactzMoe Factz

the let me see the all, okay, the only time I've had it used on me was in eighth grade. And this is a person that was supposed we were friends, I remember, or acquaintances. We were in gym class and some of his white friends, was like, I bet you won't call him this. And yeah. And then I was like, I'll bet you won't, you know that kind of Yeah, of course, yeah, yeah. And you know it was he said it. And then we're saying

we got the tussling, but I mean, that that's the thing. It was he, I don't think he really wanted to do it, yeah,

Adam CurryAdam Curry

it was what he was, but so, but that's interesting. So that's 32 years ago, give or take, yeah. And so in those 32 years, the worst possible word, the spell of all spells, is not being used against you. Yeah, that can't be, this is America. We're the most racist country in the world. How is that possible?

Moe FactzMoe Factz

Well, it's, it's reserved for, first of all, I don't, I don't get into a lot of conflict that. I mean, that's, that's one thing is that just about me, if stuff is about to go left, I'm out of here. Like, I mean, like, I'll remove myself from situations I don't put myself. Eclass always tells me that he's, like, if stuff's going down, you ain't gonna be there, you know, that kind of

Adam CurryAdam Curry

thing. So because you're smart, like, you wanna be part of that nonsense,

Moe FactzMoe Factz

I can read the room. I've always been good at that, like, even in if you're in a party, or whatever the music's going, but I can tell there's a conversation is escalating, and I'm the guy like, I'm out of here. I'm gonna always, yeah, I always would drive the parties. I would never ride the parties, because I'm like, I want to leave when I want to be able to leave, that kind of thing. So, yeah, but yeah, yeah, it's here. I'm gonna tell you how it's racist in America when they

expect you to be the N word, that that's how it's right. And my daughters went through this when they expected her to be the black friend, the stereotypical black friend, that kind of thing. Because I know it's like my oldest daughter, my other kids, not as much, but she started to speak in slang and that kind I'm like, You don't talk like that, but, but her friends wanted her to be the black friend, right? That kind of thing. Like I said, that's where, that's where we're it's a

it's if we refine racism now the N word is, is? It's only used to, like, I believe it's only used to try to get people locked up, like, hit me. So, you know, yeah, you can call and call the cops and get you locked up. I think that's the that's the purpose of it now, because we're so saturated in it as well. I mean, that it doesn't hit like it would in the 70s, 80s, even 90s, that kind of thing, right? So, you. All right, let's get to this last and final piece of advice from nearly fuller see

Unknown

weird niggas. I mean, no, you don't want them on the plantation or nothing, and see nothing more weirder than a black person on his own wavelength, got his own way of thinking. Doesn't fit in nowhere. You might call loosely, kind of in his own world. Man, the things that you think he'll react to, you don't react at all. And he come up with some strange things when he starts talking this out of nowhere. And very seldom talks about anything unless it pertains to something

that's a weird nigga you can say anything around. He just listens and looks at you. Sometimes looks like he's looking through you. So back on the plantation days, they got rid of him, they sold him down the river, and the next shipment, they put him off on some other plantation on well, why did you sell him? You know, I don't know. I just got a bad feeling about it. Well, what does he do? He does what the other niggas do. He does what,

does what he's told. But it's something strange about him, you know, he's not laughing. He playing the tambourine. You know, he didn't get mad and cry. Well, you know, when I talked to him like I did, he just looks at me like he's looking in another world. Last year, I had three of them like that. I got rid all of them.

Adam CurryAdam Curry

Isn't that, seeing as we've discussed, it certainly the beginning of the show we talked about the trauma based entertainment of Alex Haley's roots. Yes, that was exactly what Toby was like,

Moe FactzMoe Factz

yep. And that was the RE. How can I say it? That was the RE, the update. That was a system where update for that generation of that word, yeah. Software Update, yeah, yeah, the

Fighting words

software that was okay. We need to. It's time for update. We need to, and we have these. We're going to get to other ones along the way. But I'm glad you brought that up, because I didn't cover it in this Roots was that you're not like us, and this is who you were, and this is how we're going to remind you who you were when we use this word, and it worked because, like I said, my dad and his friends, they went to school fighting the whole week when

Adam CurryAdam Curry

that came out, when the series came out, yes,

Moe FactzMoe Factz

see my dad, he's a total different person. For me. He's, he's a total well, like, yeah, he's, he's short on the on the fuse when that kind of stuff comes around. And I guess that's me. He's like, you don't want to be like your parents. You learn from your parents. And I was more like and I've always been like that. Like, even with my older brother, like with mama jokes, we be back in the back of the bus telling jokes, whatever,

like that. And whenever somebody went to the mama joke, or my brother wanted to fight, I'm just gonna get a better mama joke off on you. This is where we're going, you know, that kind of thing. So not, and I'm not copying nearly fuller. What I found was, here's another weird one, you know, like, like me you don't like because you, when you tell people, I don't that, don't upset me like that. Don't set you. You don't want to, you don't want to hurt somebody. Like, no, because I'm the type

if you gonna do something, do it. But like, bust a move. Like, like, Bernie Matt, say, bust a move, you know. GBG, you know. Say it is what it is. But if we just gonna sit here and bump gums, all right, you say what you said, Cool, but you're not gonna touch me. Now, let's get that. Let's get that very different. That's different, yeah, but that's how you have to be with it, like you're not gonna touch me. You can say what you want to say. Now, here's the gray area, and me and grunt.

Talk about this all the time when you're a woman's disrespected,

Adam CurryAdam Curry

but that's You just said it. That's different. It doesn't matter how she's disrespected, right?

Moe FactzMoe Factz

Because, like, you have to go home with her, yeah, and you don't want to lose your standing you're saying, but hopefully you're with a woman that's on code too. But like, I said, when that I'm just saying, like, there's times to crash out and times not to crash out. But yeah, so it's just over words. Now I'm good. You said what you said. Now I'm But me, I'm I can see where it's going left.

Adam CurryAdam Curry

But these days, we have taken the culture to and

Triggering

when I said the culture, I mean the general overall culture, to to a place where there are many n words and many things you can't say because, well, that's interesting to think about that way, because they, by definition, now, are triggering use the wrong pronoun. You can trigger someone out in the grocery store. You.

Moe FactzMoe Factz

We're hypersensitive now, yeah, which that comes from being over stimulated and more trauma based entertainment, yes,

Adam CurryAdam Curry

but it's, but it's still all programming. This is taught programming like, you know, pronouns is a great I mean, I hear kids and parents conversing about pronouns. Of course, it's flipped. Now it's no longer the parents saying, Oh, now, listen, now, Johnny, you got to say they or them, just those. Make it. Don't make a mistake. Now it's the kids telling the parents, oh no, no, no, no. The you can't do that, dad. It's you got to say they or them, or, if you don't know for

sure, you got to ask. I mean, this, this, it's program. It's come from school, but it's programming that is on the same level. And we're in a way, we're all colored Now, one way or the other, there's something that you can say to the other person that will trigger them, yes,

Moe FactzMoe Factz

but here's the thing, who establishes what can be said and what can't be said?

Adam CurryAdam Curry

Satan, Hello, yeah,

Moe FactzMoe Factz

so that's, that's the thing. That's who has the real power is who controls who plugs the words in and says, you can say this. You can't say this, this. This was okay last week, just like I was more skin to go back to debate. Debate. I heard Kamala Harris say, Kamala, how you want to say even her name you were saying is a trigger. I mean, like even that it is, yeah, is that she said a woman can have a baby. Blah, blah, blah, blah, blah. It didn't matter what she was talking

about. But I'm like, Oh, now you can say a woman, yes. Like, don't you supposed to say birthing person? I mean, like, but see this one saying, this is the lick what you

Adam CurryAdam Curry

sound like? Tina sitting on the couch watching that debate. She's except she yells it at the TV is great. The

Moe FactzMoe Factz

reason why is the rules are always fluid, but that's meant by design to cause mass confusion. It's like, I can't tell you what a woman is, and you can't say only women, but then when I'm trying to win a general election, I have to use different terminology so I don't turn certain people off. And it's this constant calculus going back and forth and back and forth, and it makes people exhausted. But I have to ask, and it's a rhetorical question, who's pulling the levers on all

these this is acceptable. This is not acceptable. For example, the lady that got shot in Chicago, not a peep. Not much. No, you follow that, you know, saying, like, four years ago, same, same scenario, somebody, a colored person, gets killed by the cops.

Adam CurryAdam Curry

It was, it was sure.

Moe FactzMoe Factz

So like, who is, you know, who is, who was making these decisions of when is something reporting? And when you use logic, it kind of just, it unravels, you know, what they're trying to do, because it's like, no that that doesn't make sense. That's not logical.

Adam CurryAdam Curry

This is a core question, a very core question, and we don't have to try and answer it right here. But I know for sure there's not some, some group of dudes sitting on, you know, stroking their beards, and they got the white cat. Let's make this. Let's make this the one. It doesn't work like that. You know, it's when it behooves, I think you mentioned this, when it behooves multiple groups at the same time, then they converge, and then it becomes the thing. And the woman in

Chicago, it wasn't the thing. It didn't benefit enough groups, right? Enough, enough of the dark forces to go and turn it into the thing. It could have easily done that. I mean, you and I think you and I were kind of waiting for it like, Oh, this is going to happen. It's going to happen. It didn't happen because it didn't behoove enough groups at the same time.

Moe FactzMoe Factz

And it would have been blowback, because Kamala, or Kamala, however, you want to say it identifies as law enforcement now, yeah, yes. And I disagree with you respectfully to say there is somebody or a group of people saying, Nah, you know, it's political calculus. Like, no, we can't touch that, because then they might draw the link between her being, you know, a part of the law enforcement apparatus, and that

could be negative to us. And this is how they sit back. And we know, like I said, those levers, is now we can't, oh, that's a good one, but we can't. Can't take, you know, because if we take that, when men make encounter with this, it's like chess, you know, like I could take that piece, but what? What's the effects gonna be, 567, moves down the board if I take that piece?

Adam CurryAdam Curry

Yeah, I'll agree with you, in that case, because of the DNC and the messages they wanted to send. In this case, yes, it was. It was not politically the right motivation. I think all the other groups were in play, and could have taken the ball and run with it if the signal was given. But by the same token, if, if one of these other groups had had made it a real issue, and it wasn't in, you know, Illinois, slash Chicago, where people are killed, you know,

1020 a weekend. So I think there was, there's an apathy, like, okay, whatever, you know, it wasn't the thing

Moe FactzMoe Factz

that's part of it too. But even the same thing with the supposed riots that were supposed to happen at the DNC, that didn't happen. No, didn't happen. This is like, you know, whatever I mean. I'm sure there's some concessions made to make people stand down, but let's get back on the clip list. And like I said that, but it's all pertinent to what we're talking about. But this is the official narrative of the history of the N word, and I believe this is from, want to

say PBS, but no, no, no, Washington Post. That's what it was. Washington Post number 10.

Unknown

At its root, the word is n, i, G, E R, the Latin word for Black. But as soon as enslaved Africans were brought to these shores, the word, pronounced with various accents and emphasis, was used to depict them, not just as something derogatory, but as something not quite evolved from ape to human being. By examining this one word, we get an understanding of not only who we are, but who we have been and who we might become. This two syllable word and its evolution reveals much

about American society. There is some risk in attempting to isolate the idea of contemporary culture and comparing and contrasting it to early American culture. For me, it's an artificial distinction. I think it's more useful to look at this word and its usage as part of a seamless strand, really a seamless narrative that runs from the beginning, from before the beginning of the country, to where we are now. In 1619, settlers in Jamestown were already using the word to

describe the enslaved blacks. You will find that British redcoats, and this is well documented, used the N word when they taunted the Revolutionary Army, because the idea was, you're so weak you have to use niggers to bolster your troops.

Adam CurryAdam Curry

Oh, it's the British

Unknown

the Yankees. Once again, that's interesting. And

Moe FactzMoe Factz

just to go back, we were talking about the origin of this show. This is why the A was important, and why I contacted you. Like, no, the a dude and people want us to be ashamed of being identified as American, but we have a unique existence, that's for sure. We have a very and this word, I would say, is very American. Now, I'm sure it's used other places, but it's and I might be wrong you're saying, but I think this word is very American in nature. Yeah, so I'm just saying like that, go

to show you like even when you were saying dos. It's like, no, not. What impressed me about is you, you were on DOS early, like, early, early, before even any of this lineage talk was talked about. And I was like, He's heading down the right path. But let me just add the A to it, and you were spot on. You were like, You were you were on it. Like, I think this group over here is like, you know, kind of, don't, you know, want to be identified as his own thing, right? Yeah. So we've,

we've been here and we're not going anywhere. I hope people understand that we're not going anywhere. We've been here, and

you've seen even before, it here wasn't here. We were here, yeah, so it is like, it is kind of, that's, that's a rub to me, is like we're visitors or something, no, and that's why we feel so and just to speak for a group for a minute, so disrespected that the red carpet is rolled out for all these other groups of people, even though, and this is, this is where I wrestle with myself on they are victims of white supremacy, the system of white supremacy as well, but it's like

when we're talking about addressing needs. You. My people have specific needs to be addressed. If you got it, you were saying, we, it's like, if I, you know, if you, um, if you promise to take your kids somewhere, right? And it's probably a bad analogy, but the first one you promised, that's the one you supposed to take first. You know, I'm saying you don't you honor your your debts in the order you made them, that kind of thing, you know. But like I said, it's just that's a

tangent for me. It's like, bro, we American. American is just as much as us. We are American.

Adam CurryAdam Curry

Here's what I learned this summer. It's just how poorly understood our history is, you know. And of course, the history belongs to the victor, but our schooling system has done such an injustice to all of American history. You know, when we went to Plymouth, and people go to Plymouth, oh, let's go see that rock, you know. Turns out that rock, you know, some 95 years after the Pilgrims landed, some dude said, oh, yeah, I think that was the rock. And, oh,

let's build a thing around the rock. But the monument to the forefathers, you never hear about that, which is an amazing it's like, the, it's like the, it's like the the children of Israel, you know, stack the pebbles, the stones, like, this is the, this is the real Georgia guidestone of America. And similarly, the relationship between African descendants of slavery throughout time has been very poorly reported. Slavery has been poorly reported throughout the world has been poorly reported.

Moe FactzMoe Factz

But here's the difference, just just to point it out, we have no history but America. Everything pre America was robbed, stolen, you know, erased from our hard drive. We were reformatted. So, like only thing we understand, only thing we know is America. So honestly, we're the purest Americans there are, if you really think about it, because there's nothing struggling against that American identity, like when people come here from other countries, their home country, is struggling with

their American identity. We have nothing wrestling with that American identity.

Unknown

Uh, yeah, I'm with you,

Moe FactzMoe Factz

so I'm just saying, like, I mean, like, I just wanted, like, I don't know, like, hey, nobody gonna knock us out our spot, but uh, number 11. But

Unknown

it wasn't just the clan that used the term. The N word permeated almost every aspect.

Adam CurryAdam Curry

Oh, we just jumped to the clan from 1619 All right, where's the clan now? But

Unknown

it wasn't just the clan that used the term the N word permeated almost every aspect of pop culture and daily life, as if it had arisen from the National ground water. And then when you look at the the the best selling songs in the 1920s and 30s, equivalent of the billboards hot 100 we might say today we're looking at songs that not only use nigger

throughout the lyrics, but have nigger in the title. At the same time, I like to say you could stand in your kitchen during this period and you could do a slow 360 turn, and everywhere you turn, your eyes would land on the word nigga, from your stove polish to the trade names for your fruits and vegetables, to the penny bank that your child has, to the board games that your child plays with, to the card games that the adults play in the parlor next to the piano with the nigga songster sitting

on it. Wow, yeah,

Moe FactzMoe Factz

that's less than 100 years ago. Yeah. So I'm just saying but, but at the same time, this is what I'm saying about our identity, you know, is, is baked into American history. But I'll continue once again, like I said, this is the the Washington Post narrative of the history of the word. You were gonna say something? Yeah, I

Adam CurryAdam Curry

was, I was gonna ask you. I And then all of a sudden, you took me back to Washington Post, it'll come back to me. Let me just I'll let me. Let's get into the next clip, and then maybe it'll go back

Unknown

to me. The reigning heavyweight boxing champion of the world, Muhammad Ali, refused to serve in the war in Vietnam. His reasoning set off a national Firestorm. They shoot them for what they never call me nigga. They never leash be put no dogs over me. They're robbing my nationality, raped and killed my mother and father. Well, shoot them for what the hopes and dreams of this movement led to a brash new message. Black was beautiful, baby, and you could say it loud,

I'm black and I'm proud. You could see this new sensibility in the black exploitation films of the early 1970s black antiheroes began to embrace a bold new identity, not by disavowing the N word, but by claiming it. As their own. It's the American dream, but

black exploitation flicks appeal mainly to black audiences. Took Richard Pryor, a skinny comedian from Peoria, Illinois, to shoot to crossover success with a rivaled routine that emphasized the use of profanity, especially the inward spade you nigger, dead, hunky.

Adam CurryAdam Curry

Yeah, we and we discussed blaxploitation. Do you remember what episode that was on?

Unknown

Ah, I

Moe FactzMoe Factz

do not, but that was when we covered the rioting in the theaters.

Adam CurryAdam Curry

Yeah, and people should have just a reminder that if you're just listening to Episode 100 go back to one. Do it over the over your winter break, you won't be disappointed. Now is this, are you on a path to do you think that the one of the main solutions for empowerment of

ados. Do you think that that would be for everyone to just go on code like it just doesn't bother me, because I think that's part of what the blaxploitation was doing, was owning the word, but it's still that me, it's like owning the spell. You know, it's not going to remove the spell. You just temporarily hold it. But do you think that if, if ADOS just said no, just not going to be bothered by that, and everybody could actually do it? I don't think that's possible. It might be, well,

Moe FactzMoe Factz

what the call calls for, and if you read the book, you know, for any people, it's the United, independent, compensatory code. So it's not about groups. None of that is about your individual actions. It's an individual code. This is why it works for me. You know, it calls me to go to no rallies, no groups, no nothing is two things. Everything I do needs to be constructive. That's the first thing. And then the second thing is in the pursuance of justice, which is two things.

One is nobody's mistreated, and two, whoever needs the most help gets the most constructive help. And that is not communism, because we're talking about the individual. If you can help somebody, you know, somebody that needs help, and you can give that help help them. In

Adam CurryAdam Curry

fact, the Good Book says you should give them. If they ask for your shirt, you should give me your coat and your trousers and everything else. And

Moe FactzMoe Factz

that's the independent choice. You know this is, this is why I think people hear certain keywords like, justice, oh, he must be No justice, no peace and that kind, no, no, no. In your individual daily life, are you mistreating someone? Are you creating environment or sustaining environment where a person can be mistreated if you are change

Adam CurryAdam Curry

it. It would be so cool if you could reprogram everybody. If someone calls you the N word you just bust out of James Brown, do the splits. That would be a much better response.

Moe FactzMoe Factz

That wouldn't be constructive.

Adam CurryAdam Curry

It would be entertaining. People be like what just happened

Moe FactzMoe Factz

before we continue on? Am I Borgin? No, you're fine, okay? Because I'm it's not like I'm boring down the road. No, no, no, I

Adam CurryAdam Curry

would let you know you're good. Okay,

Moe FactzMoe Factz

so, but yeah, that's the thing. Is just that don't even with it, even with looking at a person when they say that to you, what is your next action? Is it constructive? Right? I'm gonna look at you and just like, okay, like you said, what you said? What I mean? What? What do you think I'm gonna do something not constructive? No, am I gonna

mistreat you? No, you were saying because, because the natural reaction that's been implanted in us is, oh, you're supposed to get violent, you know, that kind of thing. Somebody say that to you, you supposed to haul off and knock them, knock them down, you know, saying and do something to

Adam CurryAdam Curry

them, yeah? But that's just okay, perpetuate, perpetuating everything. Just it's the wrong direction, not

Moe FactzMoe Factz

even perpetu You're feeding right into. What the trap is, you know, like, it's like, here's a piece of cheese, you know. Like, are you not gonna take it? You know, I know, because I know it's a metal bargain come down across my neck. You're saying, if I take the cheese, I know, I've seen you lay the trap, that kind of thing. And, like, I said, that's, that's the, that's the thing, is these actions the end,

and that's why I said this works for everybody. This is not just because it's for every however you're being mistreated, or you're mistreating someone, or you need something, or you can give somebody help on the individual. And this thing, if the individual does this. In the collective, no communism. Had to say that because people saw with words that hear those words, the whole group changes. And then what happens is that you're you're in the mistreating people. That's weird. I said it

on purpose. You're not into helping people when you can. That's weird. You're not like us. You see how that work, you see how that changes, like changes the whole dynamic. And that's been my whole goal is to take a person's marginalized work who is nearly who I dedicate a whole episode to him, because I understand what they did to him, which I'm accepted, the likelihood is going to happen to me is, is going you're going to, if you're constructive, you're going to get marginalized?

Unknown

Oh yeah, of course,

Moe FactzMoe Factz

you don't get the you're saying, the wet work you were saying, but at best, you're going to be marginalized and they're going to push you off to the side, like we're going to ignore that, because we don't want to hear the masses here that because we're in the business of confusing and mistreating people.

Unknown

Yes, no. I mean yes,

Adam CurryAdam Curry

the N word is a special case all by its own. But ageism, you know, all kinds of different things. Are it? Is it is the biggest, most is the oldest troll in the book with with an intended, known outcome,

Moe FactzMoe Factz

right? And we all have that. That's what I'm saying. This is just a representative. This is just a totem everybody's, you know, everybody has across the bear, and they're ashamed to even white supremacists have across the bear, where you think all that, that insecurity comes from, why you think they got to be such control freaks? It's something there, you know, there's a there. There deep inside? Oh, it's why they had to feel

Adam CurryAdam Curry

sin and guilt. Is what it's all based on. Well,

Moe FactzMoe Factz

I think it's fear more than anything. You know, they they fear whatever it is. I can't, I don't know what we've talked about it, what they might fear, but

Adam CurryAdam Curry

Well, how about this? They fear because they are a relatively seen, very small group,

Moe FactzMoe Factz

yeah, yeah. But nobody wants to do anything to you. That's the thing is, like, from my standpoint of being not mistreating people, you know, it's like, I can't only speak for me. I don't want to harm you. I understand your plight, like I said, I understand your plight because ados, we have the same thing on in America. We want 13% of population. We don't want to get erased by, uh, just being flat black. We want to have our own identity. We get it, we understand. So that's

what I'm saying. Like, like, you gotta let go of that fear, whatever that is. And I'm just saying that's to everybody. That's the area you have to let go of that fear and be constructive, not destructive. But that's, that's all I heard. All I heard last night was two people talking about how much they could blow up stuff. What are we doing here? We live in

the best time in society ever. I mean, like we're on the cusp of being able to solve a lot of problems if we don't have this manufactured competition.

Adam CurryAdam Curry

And that's exactly it. The people want are so trained to have a certain type of show business presentation that this didn't match it, you know, I mean, yeah, it didn't match the expectations of a show business oriented culture. It's like, what is this? This is no good. This is this. We want you to, you know, strike her back. Say this. Say that it's like, it's like, now you jabbing wrong. You doing you doing it all wrong. You doing it

Moe FactzMoe Factz

all wrong, even with this show here, I mean, as a microcosm of that, you know, we supposed to be at each other's throats and all. You know what? You know, that kind? No, we left the offense at the door, you know, saying like you say, what you say, I say what I say, you agree with me. Sometimes I agree with you, sometimes, other time we disagree. But you know what, we've never mistreated each other.

Adam CurryAdam Curry

No, not yet.

Unknown

Yeah,

Adam CurryAdam Curry

five years, we got five more to go as friends. You never know,

Moe FactzMoe Factz

right? So I'm just saying, but I don't think that's in our core, uh, programming is, you know, I don't it's to mistreat people so but, and like I said, the last point, uh, let's go ahead and get to the last point, and then we can just

A new generation takes the reigns?

go right into 14. Because this, I'll just foreshadow a little bit this gets into coming from Richard Pryor to hip hop 13.

Unknown

I. The time Ronald Reagan was elected, Pryor had disavowed use of the term, but a new generation was taking the reins of pop culture. Everything was new, raw and angry. The most visceral film of late 1980s was Spike Lee's do the right thing, anchored by its profane, racist rant montage, dig a wop Guinea garlic bread, pizza, sling and spaghetti bin and victim on Perry Como Lucado Pavarotti,

chicken and biscuit eating, monkey eat baboon. Big guy, fast, run, take your fucking Pizza, pizza and go to fuck back to Africa. At the same time, hip hop and rap storytelling gave new voice to young black Americans on the West Coast, a group of young rappers called themselves NWA niggas with attitude, and their first underground album, Straight Outta Compton, featured 46 uses of the N word. Three years later, their album, niggas for life, featured 185 uses of the

word and went to the top of the charts. The word gain new currency in popular culture.

Adam CurryAdam Curry

Yeah, there was an interesting time that very white MTV,

Moe FactzMoe Factz

which we talked about NWA, and we see in hindsight how the members have been this supposed threat to American society. Now, we got one guy speaking known in presidential elections. You know, I'm having a substantial voice. And then the next one is the first billionaire hip hop and has ties to one of the biggest companies, you know, if not the biggest company in the world, being apple and Doc, Dr Dre you know,

so who were they? But we're not going down that rapid. But it's just this is when the N word went mainstream, yes, because before, like you said, they were on black exploitation movies, which was really, uh, very localized. I wasn't alive then,

Movies?

but I'm assuming, like, how to move. How did, okay, you can, you can feel me on this. How did movies work, pre VCR? Because I grew up with VCR, so, I mean, because, like, we that's when you had home libraries and movies, and if you want to see something, you went to the local, uh, VHS store or video store. How'd that work with movie did you have like, B rate movie theaters that showed like, less popular movies? How did that work? Uh,

Adam CurryAdam Curry

it that's a good question. I think that you had movie theaters that just had, you know, certainly the movie usually on a on an off night, you know, not a popular night, they would show something that might be different.

Moe FactzMoe Factz

Okay. I was just wondering, like, I mean, because I grew up from

Adam CurryAdam Curry

the right, but the mall, I mean, basically, you had the mall, right, and the mall had the movieplex, and you had, you know, maybe 510, 15 theaters. And if anything, it was, well, we couldn't get in to see that one. So we went to see that one.

Moe FactzMoe Factz

So, yeah, I was just asking for figuring out how media was, like, disseminated at that time, because we had the VCR. I was, like, born in 80 so, like, by 86 everything we wanted to see we could get a hold of on, like, and watch it in the home. So I was just, I was just curious for next well,

Adam CurryAdam Curry

and then after that, of course, well, around that time, you say, 86 no earlier than that, when, because VCRs had come out pretty early. And I remember that, you know, someone would have, you know, a tape. And it would be like, oh, let's all go to his house and watch Cheech and Chong well, so we it would be like a mini, mini theater. And of course, faces of death was the main one, you know, talking about your B movies, that would be the one we always that he's got a copy of

it. So I think it moved pretty quickly. And there was a lot of bootlegs, a lot of bootlegs. Mo, that was the big thing back in the day. Oh,

Moe FactzMoe Factz

yeah. And that was a big thing in the 90s too. Like movies actually in the theaters, yeah,

Adam CurryAdam Curry

camcorder. And you said, Yeah, this is great, you know, crappy sound. But it was, we could it was all right, we could do it. Was good enough.

Moe FactzMoe Factz

Okay, yeah, the only reason I was asking, because I was going back to like the N word going mainstream, is because in the 90s, you know, that's when hip hop in came about. But in the 70s, you know, even Blaxploitation films, even Richard Pryor, that was, you. I guess you had to buy his records or whatever, like you weren't seeing it on television, right? So that was, that was the only point I was trying to make. But fast forward now. Here comes hip hop, and the Boulet was not

Killing the word

happy with it. So now these are clips from 2007 so it's big chunks going on, from like the 80s all the way to 2007 and it's it's amazing the timing of it that they tried to kill the N word.

Unknown

The hour a funeral for the N word today at the 98th annual convention of the NAACP in Detroit, African American leaders, intellectuals and rap artists will join together for a symbolic burial of the N word. Will it make a difference? Joining us now from Washington is Dr Michael Eric Dyson of Georgetown University. He is the author, know what I mean, reflections on hip hop. Also joining us from Chicago is CNN contributor, Roland Martin. He's the host of the Roland Martin

radio simulcast right now on W, V O N radio. Roland, let me start with you. Why is this taking place now? Well, because, I mean, we've had lots of discussion about the course out of the Don IMS situation in terms of what words you can and cannot say, and so it's a raising of the consciousness of African Americans in terms of the use of the word finding it offensive. You know, when I ran the Chicago defenders executive editor, I put it on our front page saying that it's time for

African Americans to make a decision. Either we say it is an acceptable word, or we say it is not. But you have to make a decision, because some find an offensive, or others say, hey, the term endearment. I disagree. I find it offensive, and I personally stop using it.

Adam CurryAdam Curry

Oh, man, I've forgotten the role in Martin goes back that that's that far. Yeah, I forgot all about that. This is

Moe FactzMoe Factz

Pete Boulet for him, like this is, this is him and Michael, Eric Dyson. These were, this is when they were the cats meow, the Boulet. And

Adam CurryAdam Curry

this was back when I miss was alive and I was seven, yeah, and I, and I think I remember that when I miss it, he might have said the N word he had, you know, he had

Moe FactzMoe Factz

very no nappy headed hoes,

Adam CurryAdam Curry

hoes. You're right, yeah, you're right, you're right, you're right.

Moe FactzMoe Factz

But this is when they were doing the cleanup, pre Obama. This is when, also when Chappelle got leaned on, when he ran away, possibly, literally, he was a lean though. We don't know if it's the

Adam CurryAdam Curry

real Dave who's back, but yeah, okay,

Moe FactzMoe Factz

yeah. Cuz they was like anything that was derogatory to, you know, the black image they were they were doing cleanup, so this was the the timing of what was going on at the time. And they were trying to bury, give a live burial to the N word, and you had, on one side, you had Roland Martin, and on the other side you had Michael, Eric Dyson, who's going to speak in the next clip. Dr

A term of endearment?

Unknown

Dyson, what are your views on the word, and is this symbolic burial a good idea? Well, I think that it may be a good idea for white America. I think white America, or other non black people, certainly should bury the use of that to a particular nefarious term that has been odious and offensive throughout the history. But I think that for African American people, the use of that term has sometimes

been Yes, as a term of endearment. I know Mr. Martin disagrees with that, but having used the word myself, and he having used it as he said himself and stopped using it, obviously one of the uses was a term of endearment, a term of love, a term of circulating brotherhood. It also can be something that's negative. My point is that you can't legislate the use of the word itself to deal with the realities that the word underscores. So that lynching is

much worse than the use of the word. I'm not saying that the word is used by white people is not offensive. It is. I'm saying but African American rappers or other people who deploy that term are not necessarily signifying hatred. They're signifying love. They're saying, I'm not going to let you determine my life by the use of a word over which I have no control.

Adam CurryAdam Curry

Those words and doesn't talk like that anymore. No interesting, right?

Moe FactzMoe Factz

Because it's very it's a lot of words he would even to remember he lost it when the guy was was a guy or lady that we're saying, Kamala. Kamala. He was like, No, it's

Adam CurryAdam Curry

Kamala. And you're disrespecting the sister. Yeah.

Moe FactzMoe Factz

So I mean, just telling you how far he's gone off the rails, and he used to be the voice of reason, you know, saying less than 20 years ago, not even reason, but, like, the voice of, I say, the more, uh, liberal side of,

Adam CurryAdam Curry

but he got made. They brought, they wheeled him in even further high, Listen, man, you got the stature, but yeah, you got to do a little more here.

Moe FactzMoe Factz

Oh yeah, he definitely had to do a little more. So okay, this is the final part of this, the funeral. But

Unknown

growing up, my dad didn't call me that my mom didn't call me that they called me Roland. And so I reached a point where, again, it was so much a part of hearing it, it became accepted. And I reached a point where I said, Wait a minute. This is. Not a word that I should accept, even if somebody said, Hey, you know, you know that. You know that's my man, that's my boy. I really use those phrases. And frankly, saying that's my name, it's just not a term of endeavor, yeah,

but for rolling it for you, that's absolutely fine. I'm not suggesting that that's not a prerogative you exercise, but to suggest that's a universal term that everybody has to subscribe to would be different. I think that if you feel that way, that's fine, but there are many other African American people, which is why it shows you that the bearing of the N word will not be affected. There will be some Martin Luther King, Jr, the night he was killed, said to Andrew, young, little nigga,

where you've been, he used it as a term of endearment. Now there's a difference, because rap music has now made it accessible to the world, because of its circulation throughout the country and indeed, throughout the globe. But the point is to have a, I think, a reductive and narrow and simplistic understanding of that term, misses the use of it by history and suggests to us that white people exercise the

control over our lives that we don't have. Don Imus cannot be the leader of black America. Let's within our own ranks suggest that there are differences and complexities and nuances that we should respect and acknowledge on both sides. Okay, so

Adam CurryAdam Curry

if I understand here, this was the Boulet saying we still need this control over the non Boulet.

Unknown

They stick. Oh no, that's their job. Yes, and

Adam CurryAdam Curry

so, and probably NWA was part of the problem.

Moe FactzMoe Factz

Yes, because NWA have been not even NWA was part of the problem hip hop. For 20 years, gangster rap had festered. And I'm using that word appropriately, yeah, and it had, at this point, it had grown to be the largest portion of hip hop. See, gangster rap used to be just a segment of greater hip hop, but we're talking about 2007 so that's when peak 50

cents. You know, all of that was going, Jeezy, 50 cents, all those guys, yeah, um, so now it's like, hold on, we got too much, and we can't lose the fact that they're trying to push Obama, yeah, into 2007 this is the year before he got elected. So they were trying to clean up any negative black stereotypes,

words, whatever else. Um, out of the way to make, make the you're saying the path clear for Obama. One more thing, Roland Martin said, he said we can call each other boy, which, well, that's saying that's very similar to the N word, yeah, and, and if it said intra racially, it's not offensive. What can be is just

the, you know how it's the tone of, Oh, definitely, right. But if it said it interracially automatic, even if somebody says it in the Oh, that's my boy and but it's interracially is like, you kind of get a side eye, that kind of thing. And I've even played on the show where people would say it and they didn't mean it like that, but then they would go back, either change it, that's how they said it the next time, or or self censor. So one

last point I want to make is my dad. It's funny that this my dad had the hugest issue with homeboy and homie, yeah, because, like, what do y'all mean homeboy or boy, because that's like, when, like, no, and homie, because that was close to homo. He's like, What y'all running around here, calling each other, homie, yo, homie. He was saying, like, what does that

mean? You know, because just, just to give a perspective, like, his issue wasn't the N word, because he would drop it every once in a while, and the one you would hear the most is prefaced by crazy ass you were saying that, and then the N word, you know, saying, so that's how old, older people use it. So

Adam CurryAdam Curry

it's interesting, because amongst white guys, after this day, will still say, That's me. He's my boy. We can say that amongst each other. And of course, you know where it comes from, but it's a total term of endearment. And I think I probably still have friends who will still say, Hey, how you doing, homie? They'll still still say that amongst white men amongst each other.

Moe FactzMoe Factz

Yeah, because, because it came out of homeboy and hip hop into the pop popular culture. But yeah, so that means it's just weird how these words and you know, and you can follow the trail back to where they came from,

Adam CurryAdam Curry

blown away behind by hearing Dyson and Martin. I was like, these are two different guys from who they are today.

Moe FactzMoe Factz

You know the weird,

Adam CurryAdam Curry

I know it's, you know, it's hard not to use the W word.

Moe FactzMoe Factz

And you know why? You know who I got it from divorce.

Unknown

You know, my kids, really, oh, man,

Moe FactzMoe Factz

they use all the time. I mean, like, it's kind of like a, it's a, it's a word that has. So many different meanings,

yeah, but it's like how you used it, you know, um. And especially in their head, and when they're having conversations with each other, they can say it like four and they have four different meanings depending on how how it said and when it said, Yeah, of course, um, but I was saying before that is we saw a similar thing with redneck around this time with Jeff Foxworthy, yep, yep, when you saw the embracing of the term redneck, because

redneck used to be a derogatory, derogatory, yeah, but it had a similar path as the N word, that where it would people either self proclaimed to be a redneck, or self identify to be a redneck. Or to

Adam CurryAdam Curry

this day, I had my boy, Mike, who did our shower, you know, he's said, You don't tell me where you come from. He says, I'm just a redneck hillbilly, all right? I know exactly what you mean, right?

Moe FactzMoe Factz

But if somebody could call him that like I said, Oh, no, probably, yeah, exactly the work words are so amazing of how the power they they wield, when, when they're used. But here is now we because the funeral happened in Detroit 2007 and 2007 was the first hip hop politician, Kwame Kilpatrick. You remember him?

Adam CurryAdam Curry

Kwame sounds familiar.

Moe FactzMoe Factz

Big, big guy, big football

Adam CurryAdam Curry

player, of course, of course, yeah, yeah. He

Moe FactzMoe Factz

got in trouble because he the Boulet. And he was part of it, was trying to kill the word, and then he ends up using it.

Unknown

Last summer in Detroit, a funeral was staged for the N

The funeral, cont.

word. Black leaders symbolically buried the epithet during a national convention of the NAACP, the mayor of Detroit, Kwame Kilpatrick, gave me eulogy. We're taking this out of our spirit. We're taking it out of our being. We're taking it out of our minds. Today we bearing it dead. But during his State of the City address carried live on local television and radio. He said this, in the past 30 days, I've been called more than any time in my

entire life. In the past three days, I've received more death threats than I have in my entire administration. The mayor's use of the word is being criticized by local civil rights leaders, saying he used the wrong Forum and the wrong word for his outburst. Oh

Moe FactzMoe Factz

no. Now here's a black man getting in trouble. N word, yeah,

Adam CurryAdam Curry

can't do that.

Moe FactzMoe Factz

So this is what we're talking about before of these levers, you can't say that now, even though you're black, and he's only saying that he's being called this. And this is when he got into some campaign trouble, and he was in an affair, and then there was a, allegedly, and I say that very strongly, allegedly, a dead stripper that came up.

Adam CurryAdam Curry

It's their favorite, yeah, dead stripper. So hooker, dead hooker better, but dead stripper always wish. I'm

Moe FactzMoe Factz

wondering, like, how, how did that person get there, if they were that was that a leveraging thing? But he went to jail, and I think also he was moved out of the way for Obama, because he was the he was, if you said, Okay, who will be the next black presidential candidate? Well, I would have probably been 10 years from then, but, well, we could easily see him. We all know

Adam CurryAdam Curry

it was supposed to be Blowfly. Who's that? Oh, my God, wait, I throw out a reference and you don't know. Blowfly, no, oh, Blowfly, the first black president. Do you mind if I play you a little bit of Blowfly. Please, please. Blow Fly first black. I don't know what the date is. There has to be early 80s, 1983

Unknown

ladies and gentlemen, introducing the first Nick.

Adam CurryAdam Curry

You remember it now, right? Yeah, yeah, okay, sorry to throw you off track. No,

Moe FactzMoe Factz

no. It fit perfect.

Adam CurryAdam Curry

We played that song over and over and over again. It was hilarious. Yeah,

Moe FactzMoe Factz

that was it fit perfect into what we're doing here. Um, but, yeah, this is Kwame Kilpatrick, I think we stopped it. Yeah, we're at 18. Okay, let's go and get an 18. That

Unknown

outburst was in response to a scandal over sexually explicit text messages sent to a former top aide and

Cancelling him?

possible perjury charges from testimony during a whistleblower's trial, all of it subjected the mayor to withering criticism in the press and public. We've never been in a situation like this before, where you can say anything, do anything, have no facts, no research, no nothing, and you can launch a hate driven, bigoted assault on a family later, Kilpatrick spokeswoman said the mayor used the word as

an example of how hurtful it can be. The N word has been used as a slur against blacks for more than a century, but it is also used by blacks when referring to each other. National Black leaders have called for its use to end

Moe FactzMoe Factz

clear it up. So now we have to get into the history of the N word. And people might say, Mo, ain't that what you've been doing for the last 20 clips?

Adam CurryAdam Curry

No, no. We're going to talk about the constrict, the the contraction, the actual phrase N word. I

Moe FactzMoe Factz

present the actual phrase N word 19

Unknown

and most importantly, non black people would still be casually saying they're without OJ. Technically, we should thank

The N Word

this guy. That's Chris Darden, the black man tasked with prosecuting OJ to the 1994 murder of Nicole Simpson and Ronald Goldman. Chris Darden may be the most unlucky man in the history of American jurisprudence, but he should also be recognized as an unsung hero in meaningfully changing

racial discourse forever. It's no secret that the OJ trial, known as the trial of the century, stopped being about OJ at some point in the legal proceedings, whether intentionally or by chance, OJS trial became a proxy for the never ending, eternal debate on race in America, 63% of whites feel that OJ Simpson can get a fair trial, while 61%

of blacks say he cannot. Has race now taken center stage as we continue dissecting this courtroom drama and through the course of the trial, it became explicitly about the

word there's a specific moment when this happened. It was when OJS legal team discovered that the lead detective in the case, Mark Furman, routinely used the word to describe black people, and you say on your oath that you have not addressed any black person as a nigger or spoken about black people as niggers in the past 10 years, Detective Furman, that's what I'm saying, sir, and that there were recordings of him doing so while bragging about brutalizing black people.

Adam CurryAdam Curry

Yep, yep. I remember it well.

Moe FactzMoe Factz

So you were, you were

Adam CurryAdam Curry

in New York I was in New York City,

Moe FactzMoe Factz

which OJ Simpson, you talking about weird Negro the pit. If you open up the dictionary and you want to have

The Juice?

a picture beside that term, it has to be OJ Simpson, because is he trolling? Oh, well, he's dead now. But was he trolling, or was he that oblivious to not know how certain thing, even, like I said, interracially and interracially, you know the not to trigger people with the OJ stuff, but like the, Oh, the scary movie thing with the banana and just, oh, if I'd have did it this hot, I would have done it kind of thing. It's like, Do you Do you know? OJ, like, how that's coming across.

Are you post racial I can't. I got to this day. I don't know if OJ was trolling the whole time, or was he just like, I'm bigger than all of this, which would actually make him, uh, weird by the definition of nearly fuller gave right? It just, I'm telling you, like, I've watched many of OJ, and just for people, you probably get mad at me. I don't think OJ did it. You understand

it is what it is. Um, you did he have somebody do it? Maybe could have been some associates of other people that were heinously deleted, to use a word like, here we go with the change in language, right? I did that purposely finalized under live, yeah, delete it. You know, that kind of thing. So even the fact that you can't even talk about it this many years later without invoking emotions is amazing. And the N word, actual term,

came out of this. I mean, what? Like? What? You want to give some context to it, or Yeah, I

Adam CurryAdam Curry

can just give you my experience at the time. Yes, he came across as a hubris field celebrity, regardless of race, but I can tell you that everybody I was around was really hoping that he would not get convicted, like, Oh, God, please, because it became about race, that's what it became about. And you know, I think the fear that it would just erupt in race riots everywhere was very real.

Moe FactzMoe Factz

For context. Reason why you I think you're saying and correct me if I'm wrong, is what happened after Rodney King, right? Yes, in LA, just for people that may not know what we it's funny, because we have an understanding, because we know what was the context of that, but maybe they didn't know. And I think 9293 after the Rodney King, verdict, la burned pretty much, yeah. So I can see it from your standpoint of, yeah, let's just not repeat that. And I can see just see, first I understand

to be understood. I can see how people thought, that's why he got off because LA, like, we don't need this. We can double back and get him another way. But we don't. We like, we just kick this can down the road, which I can see that scenario playing out as well.

Adam CurryAdam Curry

There was a lot going on with that trial. You know, Marcia Clark, I mean, it was, it was really, for all intents and purposes, it was one of the biggest celebrity televised trials. Uh, almost not even Michael Jackson didn't overshadow it. You know, you because, you know, remember that, oh yeah, went to cancel Mike. It was just everybody, just

Unknown

because of race, yeah, with

Adam CurryAdam Curry

and. But I think it was really the people just that we were because we had had the the Rodney King riots, everybody just didn't want it. Just, it's like, please. We just don't want it. And then when the glove didn't fit, so you must have quit. It was, it was like, everyone, oh, okay, well, you know, we're not quite sure exactly how, but the glove didn't fit, so you must have quit. Please get it over with.

We just people were afraid and tired of what could happen, and it was completely race based.

Moe FactzMoe Factz

And just go all the way there OJ being accused of what he did would be the ultimate N word, yes. And I mean that, I mean that literally, because that's the fear a big black book killing, uh, attractive, blonde, white woman.

Adam CurryAdam Curry

He had all the elements, all of them that, that

Moe FactzMoe Factz

is that. I mean, even Michael Jackson with the key, even though he was kind of black. I mean, like an appearance, not really anymore, yeah, not racially, but in appearance. And then keep that was bad, that was terrible, but this, this fed in to the stereotypical situation of a n word, and the biggest fears of that, of like I said, and her being blonde and attractive, um, if if OJ wife was Mexican or Latina or Asian or black, it wouldn't have been the biggest

story. Agree, the fact that I said she was an attractive white woman. And here's the other part that nobody wants to talk about Ronald Goldman being Jewish. This is why the media went in on OJ, yeah, with all the ink, let me just say, we go, if we gonna tell it, we're gonna tell it all the way this. This is why the media was stacked up against OJ, because he was accused of killing, uh, a Jewish man and an attractive white woman. But

Adam CurryAdam Curry

what was, what was really interesting, Mo, is the feeling was It was not about the people anymore. It wasn't about the people.

Moe FactzMoe Factz

It wasn't about OJ, no, it wasn't about OJ, it wasn't about the victims. It was about who's going to win the race game. Yeah, yeah, that's what it's exactly what it was. And we saw it play out on X Twitter, just less than a year ago, when he died, the same people that were saying, OJ did it? You know it was, it was the strangest thing, because go back to current times and when OJ trout happened, the majority of black people say he did. Do it. That was cost of the Race game

and but a lot of people didn't think he did it. Because, I mean, just, well, I'm me, I'm just like, how that the logistics of it work, but, but here nor there. Then the OJ story came out, the mini series with Cuba, uh, Cuba, good Junior. And then the narrative start to change amongst black people when we covered this, and this is I'm gonna talk about the media mind control. Now, black people started saying, Well, maybe he did do it, or he did do it, you know, that kind of

thing. But since we went through George Floyd and everything like that, now when he died, oh, let's play the Race game again, and we're gonna take OJ back. When I say we on top, not me, but black people. Oh, we're gonna, we're gonna circle the wagons around. OJ, even though we thought he was guilty, and even though we didn't think he was black, he was. OJ, we're gonna circle the wagons on

Adam CurryAdam Curry

there's one difference, and that's the context. Is we didn't have any other media than mainstream media. So you had, you were either listening to, well, if you were, if you weren't listening to music just from New York, if you weren't listening to z1 100 or PLJ or Kiss FM, for music, you were listening to Howard Stern. You were listening

to Imus. I think probably a lot of people listen to Imus. And in the media, well, we had CNN, who had basically non stop coverage, but you would, you would wait for the latest report, or you come home like, Oh, what happened to the OJ trial and and you, there was, there was no, there was no social media. So it, it was, it was very you. I think people have much more. Feel like you just said of control, one, we can post stuff, we can say stuff, we can band together, we can repost, we can

do all these things. There was none of that. It was a frustration. And just hanging on, and even the reporting like, oh, I don't say it like that. You know, it was a very, very different media landscape, and you felt like you did not have control. And I it feels like it feels like we have more control now we don't necessarily, but it feels like we have more control. Yeah,

Moe FactzMoe Factz

because you everybody has a platform, yeah, which can which

Adam CurryAdam Curry

makes you feel good, personally, yes, I said it, I went I did it,

Moe FactzMoe Factz

I got it, I got it off my chest, yeah,

Adam CurryAdam Curry

I see you. Doing that all the time on Twitter. Mo,

Unknown

oh, yeah,

Adam CurryAdam Curry

I see you, yeah, well,

Moe FactzMoe Factz

my thing on X's like, this is that I try to make people think about stuff and not be binary. It's like, think, are you really being objective? One thing is, like, an objective check you're not like, are you really being objective? No, so that's, that's my, that's my, always

Adam CurryAdam Curry

good for me, always good for a like and a retweet for me,

Moe FactzMoe Factz

that's my contribution to the world. Is like, are you really being objective? You know, because, like, you know, that's what we need to be. Is objective, alright? So let's get into this last clip from OJ and how Christopher Darden pulled it off.

Unknown

As you can imagine, doubt was immediately cast on whether or not the crime scene evidence that he discovered could be trusted. Questions swirled about whether or not he planted the now infamous glove to frame a successful black man, people wondered if the LAPD, notoriously cruel toward the black community, could even be trusted to carry out a fair assessment of the accused multi hyphenate entertainer OJS.

Defense made such a big deal out of this blockbuster revelation that the entire case became about these tapes and by extension, the word as you can imagine, the prosecution hated this angle, but offended by those remarks, I would rather not stand at the same podium at which he stood a few moments ago. The issue here is whether this defendant killed Nicole Brown or Ron Goldman or not. The issue here isn't my ethics. The issue here isn't

racism. The issue here isn't detective Furman. This case is a circus, and they've made it a circus. The defense, led by Johnny Cochran, was seizing control of the narrative by centering one of the bloodiest words in American history. The prosecution was going to have to convince a majority black jury to trust the integrity of their star witness, Mark Furman, after hearing him commit the cardinal sin of racism and break the rule of 1968 if you've never heard of

that rule, that's okay. I made it up. Okay, I didn't make it up. I just made up the name, but, but it's real.

Adam CurryAdam Curry

Where was that from? Is that? What is that?

Moe FactzMoe Factz

That's the YouTuber that put that together. Uh, I didn't get his name. I'll try to get after the show. But. Yeah, he did a great breakdown of the OJ trial. That was, what was that? That was 20 Yeah,

Adam CurryAdam Curry

we got one last one here. Okay, so I guess go out.

Moe FactzMoe Factz

Just go and get to 21

Unknown

The rule is simple after the year 1968 the word is to be avoided, only permissible when quoting someone else. This rule is pretty intuitive, but Republican political strategist Lee Atwater gives it some helpful context in what are known as the Southern Strategy tapes. Yes, I know another set of tapes, but bear with me. This political strategy was designed to help Republicans capitalize on the racial hostility of

southern white people after the Civil Rights Movement. Here, I'll let Lee Atwater explain it himself. You start out in 1954 by saying, nigger, nigger, nigger. By 1968 you keep saying nigga. That hurts your backfire. So you say stuff like force plus and states rights and all that stuff. And you get it so abstract. Now you're talking about cutting taxes and all these things you're talking about are totally economic things in a byproduct of the med flats get hurt worse than what Dr

OJS trial. Johnny cochran's plan to introduce these murder tapes into the trial would make the word a constant part of the courtroom discourse. I'd like to imagine that Chris Darden couldn't abide such a possibility. He later stated how much he hated the word and wouldn't allow it to be said in his own home, and so he refused to say it in the courtroom, instead creating the now ubiquitous euphemism for the word N word, there it is.

Moe FactzMoe Factz

So that's how N word came about, and just for a little bit of clarity now you see where dog whistles come from. Yeah, with what was mentioned in the beginning of the clip, with lower taxes, all these different terms. When you hear people say, right, states, rights, that's a big one. That's, that's, that's, that's a big one right there. So you see, it has some basis, even though people might actually, literally

be talking about lower taxes. When you have that kind of clip that you can play, people can spin it any kind of way, but, oh, that was a dog whistle. That's when you said that you didn't really mean lower taxes. You meant hurting black people, you know, that kind of thing. So I just wanted to add that into the word war. So, um, but yeah, that's how the that's how the N word came about.

Adam CurryAdam Curry

My favorite part of that trial was later when Marcia Clark hooked up with Chris Durden. Oh yeah, that was the funniest. Like, oh, okay, there you go. And to

Moe FactzMoe Factz

answer your question, that was Garrison Hayes YouTube channel, where that came from, just to give the content creator credit there. But I guess we need to thank some people now.

Adam CurryAdam Curry

We need to thank a whole bunch of people, because this is, of course, the very last in the series of mol facts with Adam curry. So the

Unknown

white man and the black man have to be able to sit down at the same table. The white man has to feel free to speak his mind without hurting the feelings of that negro. And the

Value for Value

so called Negro has to feel free to speak his mind without hurting the feelings of the white man. Then they can bring the issues that are under the rug out on top the table and take an intelligent approach to get the problem solved. What's the only way that they'll ever do it?

Adam CurryAdam Curry

Then, before we move on. Mo, I want to thank you for the past 99 episodes, and of course, for today's episode that we've been doing, that we've been doing, exactly what that clip has said since the last time we'll play it. Probably

Moe FactzMoe Factz

the funny thing is that we did it before the clip even surfaced. But that was the cool part about it.

Adam CurryAdam Curry

We're breaking all the stereotypes telling you crazy. Hey, we're gonna kick off with our executive and Associate Executive producers who have supported Episode 100 and of course, thank you to everyone who has supported the show throughout its existence in the past five years. We do have a big ball shot.

Unknown

Caller 20 is Blaze only Impala,

Executive & Associate Executive Producers

Adam CurryAdam Curry

and we kick it off with Benjamin nites, who has a nice angel number here, $777.99 of course, that was for episode 99 and he says, and of course, he'll be a top executive producer. It's been almost 20 years since I first heard Adam curry live from the Apple Store on twit. Wow. I don't even remember when I was in the Apple Store, but I believe you episode 99 was super powerful, and the MLK assassination was always a

gap in my historical knowledge. The Hunt angle loops back into the no agenda reading list and Russ Baker's family of secrets. It does indeed, I found this episode served as a wonderful appendix to that book. I cannot wait to watch Dark Legacy and the sequel on bitch shoot. Yes, of course. Thank you very much, Benjamin. And of course, just because this is the last episode doesn't mean that the support for it needs to end. We'd love

to know what you thought of it. So your notes. And your booster grams are always appreciated.

Moe FactzMoe Factz

And share. Share, yeah, I'm just gonna say this because one of the things I did was try to make this show as evergreen as possible, so hopefully when people find it later on, they still find value in it. I mean, that was a that was a conscious ever effort of mine, so please continue. I mean, our producers have done a great job with sharing. I always see on x and other places. Hey, you need to check this out. You need to check this out, you know. So I appreciate much.

Appreciate it, but please continue to share, because hopefully this will be valuable even years from now. Well,

Adam CurryAdam Curry

it's going to stay up. If nothing will ever come down. It's going in perpetuity. And we're going to make sure it's on all kinds of backup systems. I think we're also on archive.org but if not, I'll make sure that happens, just so that I appreciate that for a long time. Hey, and you know what, why don't you download it all onto a CD or something, or onto a thumb drive, or a couple of thumb drives. So one day the anthropologists can go, what is this?

Moe FactzMoe Factz

They make great stocking stuffers.

Adam CurryAdam Curry

Blathercast comes in as executive producer 333 sorry for missing the draft. This is Sir Johnny B I'll take a douchebag for that. Oh, goodness gracious. Wasn't expecting a douchebag. Well, don't we? I don't think

Moe FactzMoe Factz

he deserves it, but I mean, if he's asking for, I guess we got to kind of honor him.

Adam CurryAdam Curry

So hold on a second. Oh boy, it's like I wasn't expecting a douchebag. If you want it, go for it. And I have a request for a posthumous baller. I was the big baller, pre big baller, so I'll take that now. I think we can do that.

Unknown

Baller, shot caller, 20 inch blades only, Impala, and he finishes

Adam CurryAdam Curry

up by saying, sorry for letting the league down.

Moe FactzMoe Factz

If you're wondering what he's talking about, the first facts, family, fantasy football,

Adam CurryAdam Curry

yes, yes, yeah,

Moe FactzMoe Factz

I remember. It's the it's the Yeah, it's the we're gonna get you in it next year. Adam

Adam CurryAdam Curry

Brandon Archer 250 I'm just gonna skip right over that. Brandon Archer $250 go Ted podcast, of course, greatest of all time. Hashtag, GBG. Jason Kretschmann, $200 you taught me about the Boulet introduced me to Neely fuller explain what white supremacy, or as he says, supremacy really is, and now have me listening to the outwitting to Outwitting the Devil by Napoleon Hill. That was, that was great. I can't thank you both enough for what you've brought from under the

rug, up on top the table. I truly loved and looked forward to every episode you will be missed. Thanks for everything. Jason crutchman in Richmond, Indiana, Thanks, brother. Appreciate that. Alexander feckta, fecket, Fecteau, feckt, $200 and he just says, for being a real one, I think that's he means, thinks by that Jamie Palacios, 150 absolutely love mo facts with Adam curry, because I learned years in advance of the clips Jimmy Dore and others were playing in late July, like they

stumbled upon something Mo and Adam school. Me on years before, happy 100th episode, and long live mo facts with Adam curry, it will live long for sure. Ryan Tierney, 12345, congratulations on 100 episodes, four more years. Question mark, well, not of this show.

Moe FactzMoe Factz

Now this show,

Adam CurryAdam Curry

then we had, this was a note and a card that was sent in. Let me bring this up here. Where is my where's my note and my card? Here we go. This was from was it renegade six and sparkles of chaos? Yes, yes. With the beautiful card, beautiful now you have the card. Mo, explain. Explain. This card. It is a

Moe FactzMoe Factz

hand painted card of a Black Butterfly. Let me grab it. Make sure I can read the back of it. It says a Black Butterfly, spiced Bush Swallowtail, which I'm a butterfly guy, if you didn't know. And this was in honor of the Black Butterfly episode with concerning Henrietta lack so. And it's mentioned in the note as well, but it's a beautiful hope we can get it in the show notes. If not, I'll probably be posting it to x and other platforms so people can see it,

because I think it's a great it's just beautiful. So Renegade.

Adam CurryAdam Curry

Six and sparkles of chaos have a note to go with that. Thanks, MO. We appreciate everything you sought to teach us in this series, and wish you the utmost success in your next chapter. My keeper sparkles of chaos painted this for you to. Say thank you to Henrietta Lacks for her unwilling gift that helped in her career, in her cancer treatment. I thank you for helping me better understand where people are coming from. And then he has a quote here from Sheriff Bart. Who's Sheriff Bart?

Unknown

I think that's from, I want to say tombstone. Let me look it up while you read it.

Adam CurryAdam Curry

Sheriff Bard, my work here is done. I'm needed elsewhere now. I'm needed where outlaws rule the West, where innocent women and children are afraid to walk the streets, wherever man cannot live in simple dignity, wherever people cry out for justice

Moe FactzMoe Factz

and then blazing saddle side ass I

Adam CurryAdam Curry

was gonna say, my first guy was gonna say, All right, you caught me to speak. The Plain Truth is getting pretty damned all around here. Have a good ride off in into the MO facts with Adam curry sunset, and we'll see you in the next venture. Thank you so much. That was beautiful. Appreciate you guys. Christopher Benfield, 106 sir combat, rock of the Idaho Highlands here, Mo, thank you for 100 enlightening episodes Godspeed and your future endeavors. I hope to hear more

from you in the future. Can I get a D deadbeat and a biscuit for my birthday? Why? Yes, you can. I had some very busy screen here today. Hold on a second. Got your D dead beating.

Unknown

Congratulations. You're no longer a deadbeat. They always give me a biscuit on my birthday. That's got to

Adam CurryAdam Curry

be one of the most requested, no agenda jingles, biscuit on my birthday. It's unbelievable. I made a show. You did a lot, Gora and Markovich, one, oh 1.01, the binary. Thank you both for providing great insights on all facets of American culture, race relations and general education, about past, present and future of this crazy world we live in. As someone who grew up in another country where almost everyone

was, quote, white, yet similar machinations were present. It is clear that it was never about color of the skin, but about them and us, those who feel supreme and inferior rest of us and the inferior rest of us. These 100 episodes should be stuttered by all who know there's a better way, especially the future generations. Amazing content. And shout out to the higher side chats where I learned about mofax. All right.

Moe FactzMoe Factz

Appreciate that, and there it is, not like us once again, that's right.

Adam CurryAdam Curry

Brain reliford, 133 cents. Love the show. Appreciate your attention to details. Thank you pineapple Brickyard, 101 cent. Thank you for an excellent show and all your hard work throughout the years. Congrats on 100 episodes, and I hope this Palindrome helps with whatever you do next, sir Ty ah, Dame slay me comes in with 100 Hey, Mo and Adam show club donation. Yes, it is. I'm going through withdrawals, and it isn't even over yet. Thank you for 100 episodes of great insights and

conversations. I'm hoping for future bonus episodes, and she caps it off with a GBG,

Unknown

we have a

Adam CurryAdam Curry

and much love. Thank you. Casey Garrett, 100 thank you for all you do. Congratulations on 100 episodes. Chris Novak, sad 100 sad to see the show come to an end. I wish for nothing but the best for you and your family. Thanks for all the amazing insights. Or Chris, in Reno.

Moe FactzMoe Factz

Daniel say one thing, these are all show club donations. They

Adam CurryAdam Curry

all are, yeah, every single one of them, and they'll be noted as such in the credits. Daniel Jacobson, with 100 This is my last chance to get in on the show number club, so I had to take it. Thank you for all the knowledge shared. Happy 100 says Jay codicini, it was a great run. Hopeful, hopeful to see what is next for the show. Kyle Mann and Mingus mahingis Silver, both. 100 with no note, we thank you very much. Love you guys. Says Matt Litke, thank you for your courage. Sabina flag,

100 for the 100th podcast. Steven page, 100 from the beginning to the end, it's been a privilege to be part of mofax. Yes, as a producer, you have been a part of it, and thank you. Tony Romano, Long live. Mofax 100 Thank you very much. Then the Associate Executive producers, who also will be credited as such, Matt, Matt Stegman, 8118, nice palindrome. Just listen to number 18. Kind of relevant again, how that Kamala Harris is running. What was number 18? Mo what

Moe FactzMoe Factz

was it? She wrote a hero. Uh, no, she wrote a zero. Yes, yes. In back to shero,

Adam CurryAdam Curry

thank you for a great run of 100 some of which I'm obviously going back to. Please credit me as sir matters. So we shall, uh, change that to Sir matters. Got it? Uh, Brandon s, $68.88 No. Notes. We appreciate. Kyle towig, 6006 small boobs, donation Episode 100 mofacs with Adam curry. Please don't stop at 100 we need more analysis in these crazy times. Well, this isn't just analysis. This has been education analysis. You never know. David porris with $60 no

need to read. Just karma, please for Dave, Yvette shatera and Inez, karma needed. I might as well read this. I'm trying to help co workers, three black women who feel discriminated against in their employment. And although I'm an attorney, I will be using non traditional legal representation to make our case. Legalhealing.com legal healing.com. Is the website. If done wrong, I'll be breaking my conflict of interest agreement. If done right, I'll be forcing this governmental organization

to admit it doesn't follow its own words. I'd love to share more as we start this journey. Thanks for your show and everything going forward. All the best, and we can hit you with a mo karma for that

Unknown

you've got mo

Adam CurryAdam Curry

karma. Hannah Hernandez, $50 Associate Executive Producer. Thank you for your perspective and for the clear, thoughtful presentations and conversations. God bless you. Adam and Mo and your families. Ken Smith, $50 Thank you Mo and Adam. $50 from Marshall spoon. Thank you very much, Marshall summer Norris with $50 no note. New money for you from Scott Riley, $50 GBG, and that is our executive and Associate Executive producers for Episode 100 the final

episode in the series of mofacs with Adam curry. You are more than welcome to send donations to thank us if you're hearing this at this moment or in the future. The you can do it through a modern podcast app. I recommend using fountain. It's

Thank You!

pretty easy to do that. You can earn little bits of Bitcoin known as Satoshis, and then you can send those over to us. We'll be reading some of the booster grams later on, because people have also been boosting throughout the course of the interim between Episode 99 and episode 100 it's also nice to see people streaming SATs as they go back throughout the archives. Or you can go to mofundme.com that's where we have a PayPal cash app. You can send everything in through that.

And we really appreciate all the support that has come in, particularly from our executive and Associate Executive producers throughout the entire series of mofacs with Adam curry.

Moe FactzMoe Factz

All right, so we have a little short block here, and this is just on who's allowed to say it, which I'm gonna say right now, no one in mixed company. Did you stick to that

Who's allowed to say it?

rule? Who's allowed to say the N word?

Unknown

Honestly, not many people, people of color. I would think you know, only black people are allowed to say the N word point blank. I don't have a problem with any other black people saying it. I just think, like be conscious of how you say it and where you're using it in the context, and don't use the hard er, because that's really bad.

I don't want people to ever forget that that was the last word that some black men or women would have heard before they were killed, before they were raped, before they were assaulted. The word isn't what holds the power. It's the conditions that that word existed under that still perpetuates today,

Adam CurryAdam Curry

just for the context. Mo, you said no one in mixed company, yes, but that you can do it if you're not a mixed company. Regardless,

Moe FactzMoe Factz

I won't know about it. I'm sorry. I won't know about it.

Adam CurryAdam Curry

Oh yes,

Moe FactzMoe Factz

I got you see how that work. I mean, like, I'm not gonna be coming if I'm there. It is mixed company. Yeah, you follow me. Like, I follow you. I'm an N word absolutist in this standpoint that I'm not one of these people, that people of color, slash colored people, can use it like, say, for instance, Fat Joe or Asian people or that kind of thing. If you live close to the culture and how they like to say it, that don't fly with

me. I think that's a word that needs to be reserved for black people to use, but I think it's tacky when black people use it in mixed company of other people. I make them clear what my stance is, but if you use if you want to use it, make sure it's not in mixed company that way, just for your sake and safety and just everything else that's going on with being canceled or wherever else. I mean, if you feel you have to use that word, knock yourself out. But just don't do it in

mixed company. But I'm not one of these people that give out n word passes to you see, and see, listen, this is a southern thing versus a northern thing too. In the north New York, those kind of places, I think they live so close together that you had certain other ethnic groups. And even in California, you see it as well that they let these other groups use the N word. Then it gets confusing, when it gets disrespectful, because it's like. Are you saying it to disrespect me, or are you

saying, I wish we can't go back. There's only one way to disrespect yourself, against a lot of yourself. But I'm just saying like, are you using it how I will use it against another black person, that I'm being disrespectful, but not with his word? Are using it as a slur, because that's where it gets confusing. So I'm an N word absolutist. I don't use the word in mixed company. I think it's tacky at best. It could be trashy and terroristic. Oh, and I don't I suggest no other

people should use it in mixed company. If you feel the need to use the word

Adam CurryAdam Curry

is that that's exactly what I wanted to hear from it, and

Moe FactzMoe Factz

that's the best advice I can give you to stay out of trouble. You were saying like to be honest. But if this teacher would have listened to me, he wouldn't have had the issue. And this is probably, if you want to say, the funniest use of the word, if it's possible, but this teacher, he gets in some hot water over

Unknown

Valley, traditional high school is in the middle of a racial controversy right now, a teacher used the N word towards the students. The word is only six letters long, but the impact is far reaching, and we do want to warn you that some of the language in this story is strong and it may offend you, it

may offend some other people. But since the story is not just about the N word, it's also about the teacher's intent and definition of the word, we have decided to leave it in the story for you to decide. And what did he say specifically to you? Sit down. Keyshawn chambers is a freshman at Valley High School, a Boy Scout, a football player, a member of the ROTC, an honor roll student. He was hanging

around his teacher's classroom door in December. The teacher told him to sit down, and the teacher says that N word first, and I just kind of was stunned a second, well, well, then get away from the door. And I was just I repeated the same insult, because that's sort of what I've been trained to do.

Moe FactzMoe Factz

Once again, this is confusing. This word is conf, is confu, and this variation is not the hard R, no, that was obvious. I'm letting people know like it's not, it's, don't use any of them. But there those are two different, completely different words, completely, but people can hear them the same. Now, are

Adam CurryAdam Curry

you going to get into the difference between these two words?

Moe FactzMoe Factz

I mean, not really. I mean because, I mean because we covered it kind of in the back and forth, in the funeral aspect of it, you know, you have the hard R variety, right, which is the spell, and then you have the n at the GA, which is like the term endearment amongst black people. So, I mean, that's pretty cut and dry. But like I said, it's, it just gets confusing which spells are meant to be confusing. But let's go ahead and

Adam CurryAdam Curry

get whatever you whenever you say with a hard R, all I can hear is Eddie Murphy mocking a white person using it. He does that so well, all right, here's the next second part of this clip. He

Unknown

says n, i, G, G, E, R is a racial slur, but says that students use ni GGA as often as they say dude or hey man, and Dawson says as much as he does not like the word still use the slang version to feel more comfortable with black students. Why? Why is this word used so frequently? So I just, I just don't understand it, and I'm trying to understand it. I need help. Yes, I use

Adam CurryAdam Curry

this guy needed to mofax with Adam Curry's, but we were there to help see, finish the clip.

Unknown

I just, I just don't understand it, and I'm trying to understand it. I need help. Yes, I use nigga. I've used it. I admit it. I put the H on it to emphasize it's please. Can you lend a nigga a pencil? What kind of example are you setting for your students if you use a word that you don't have to use upon reflection, that's not good. Dawson was suspended for 10 days without pay from January 9 to

January 23 and he has to go to diversity. Training. He says that he's learned from this experience and hopes that others think twice before using the N word, I will never say any form of nigga. You know, I'm cured of that you

Adam CurryAdam Curry

had to go to diversity training. He's cured. He's cured. And

Moe FactzMoe Factz

this would never happen if you take my advice of never using it in mixed company, but

Adam CurryAdam Curry

also not also the context of a spell, he was, he was cured from the spell, yes,

Moe FactzMoe Factz

yes, but he also triggered unintentionally, yeah, he rubbed up against, you know, it's like, did you say Beetlejuice or not, it's kind of like, sorry You said Beetlejuice. So here's another and, and in this case, I have to

Giving them a pass?

blame black people for this. Of using this word so flippantly amongst mixed company, I find it. Tack is one of my pet peeves and one of the most awkward things if you're as a black person or with another black person, but they gave their non black person, no matter the race, what it is, the N word pass and they drop it, and then it's like this weird, because, like, you look at the person that said it, and then you look at their black friend, and then they both look at you, and it's

like, the you know, like, it's the most awkward situation. And people know exactly what I'm saying, because either you've been in this situation as one of these parties, it's just like, oh, that's how y'all getting down over here, huh? But I guess it's just don't do it, just don't I mean, just be like, be saying he needs help. You know, we're trying to give you help. But Kendrick Lamar ran into this situation with a concert. Goer Kendrick

Unknown

Lamar, a young man who I consider the leader of the new school for this generation, was performing at the Hangout festival in Alabama, and he decided to bring this young Caucasian Delaney on stage to do a little trap karaoke. Now, well, when you younger, you don't see things that way simply because you only know the N word because your favorite black artist uses it all the time, and your favorite black personalities use it all the time, and your favorite black

athletes use it all the time. It's in the music that you purchase. So I understand how, for a youngin, you know, the use of the N word can be confusing. Now, Kendrick bought this white woman on stage and had her sing Magic City. Let's be clear, this song, match city has the N word in it 21 times. Let's listen to the audio and see How Delaney handled this fear factor challenge over

Adam CurryAdam Curry

Oh, I'm sorry, I didn't know that happened.

Moe FactzMoe Factz

Yeah, this is, this is, this is a few years ago. But even amongst Kendall Mars crew, this is Schoolboy Q was one of his. It's a loosely, loose group called Black hippies. They are. They disagree on this topic. You

Unknown

talking about these hipsters piled into your shows? Oh yeah, talking about you can go ahead and say the N word in here. So hold on, hold on. You feed my family, you pay my rent, you you know what I'm saying. Like, you're not racist. You in here listening to my music. Yeah, the line comes up. I'm not expecting you to blah, blah, blah. Like, say it. It's a rap concert. Like, I'm not telling you to go out on the street, yeah, on the street and say it like, you know, I'm saying don't

do that. Like, but when you in the concert, man, be comfortable. Like, our whole thing got high powers, like, Kendrick made a song, but this is still for all of us. It was called ethnicity. You know what I mean? Like, we don't believe in that. Yes, we're black, Asian or whatever, but at the end of the day, we all people. We bleed the same, breathe the same. We may have babies the same. We all like the same music, obviously, you know, so like, if you in my concert and the N word comes up,

don't be scared to say it. Like, don't go somebody gonna hurt you in my show. Like, you know, we all having fun. We relieve your stress.

Adam CurryAdam Curry

This reminds me of a story in Austin, I want to say, maybe two, three years ago, where a bunch of schoolgirls were singing along. I don't know what's I don't remember the song, and they were doing an Instagram then it had the N word, and they. Were, you know, they were just wrapping along with the N word, and they got expelled from school. And

Moe FactzMoe Factz

once again, mints come. And here's where I'm confused, because I get confused like everybody else. If you make art and the art is meant for the world's consumption. Is it okay to use the N word? Because technically, that's mixed

company. You catch what I'm saying, like I don't. I go back and forth wrestling with myself on is it should it be used or not, and where I end up landing is if it has artistic purpose and not just a filler word, I think you have justification to use the word, But if you're just using it to punctuate sentences, I don't

Adam CurryAdam Curry

that's just Yeah, right, but that comes down to you're saying the artists, the artists themselves,

Moe FactzMoe Factz

yeah? But, I mean, there are certain artistic standards, you know, like it just like we could. I know people that punctuate sentences with MF, which also has a racist connotation, but that's another story for another day. Um, is it? It, even with, even with swearing like I don't swear on, uh, on this show much, unless it's necessary to illustrate a point, and that's what I'm saying. Like, is it necessary to use these words to make a point, or are you just using it? Just

to use it? And I believe the reason why I was using rap is to fill in. It's a good filler word. When you're trying to have a syllabus, you're balancing your syllables, syllables in the line. You can throw that one in there. And I'm saying it's like a filler word. So I think that's one of the main purposes of it. So I mean, that's, I don't know where I stand. I don't know where I stand on it, because you don't want to censor art. But also, art is a very, you know, I'm saying, like, are usually

really art at a point? Yeah.

Adam CurryAdam Curry

I mean, is Banksy art is who's afraid of red, yellow and blue art. I mean, right, can go on forever for me, none of it bothers me, like whatever, yeah, none of it.

Moe FactzMoe Factz

I see where you're coming from. But here, the reason why I made this, this segment, is this next set of clips, and I didn't want to really talk about her. I avoided her online as much as possible. But it was the it was the interest that she drew in that interest me, not her herself, the lady that the TRad wife that dropped the N word. I don't know

Trad wife gunna trad?

if you've heard her or not. No, no, no, I don't know. Oh yeah. This was a big thing about a few months ago, 28 so it's

Unknown

been requested. Let's talk about Trad wife. Tick tocker, Lily Gaddis, a Trad wife, short for traditional wife, basically the idea that a woman's proper place is in the home, cooking, cleaning, while the man brings in the money. And Lily's been in the news recently because there was a video that she posted where she was chatting with her viewers about a with her viewers about a quote, dumb whores, immigrants Fresh Off the Boat looking for a green card, as well as gold

diggers with it all. Then, leading to this clip, everybody I know who's married right now, they're married to broke and they don't care. We don't give a money. That video blowing up. A lot of the responses going, what did she say? They're getting millions and millions of views until her Tiktok got suspended online. You saw tons of people super pissed off and disgusted, clearly, then responding with his video.

So a recent video of mine seems to have upset members of a certain community, and it this, although backlash just really made me, you know, just really do a deep dive, like do a soul search, and after all that, I still couldn't find a care.

Adam CurryAdam Curry

Wow, controversy. Oh no. And

Moe FactzMoe Factz

this is where you have to be weird when she said that collectively, everyone should have just looked at her, almost like looking through her, because the whole point of this was to draw engagement. I'm gonna say what shouldn't be said or couldn't be said exactly, you know, and like flies the shit. Once again, I use that in an artistic way. Yes. Here they come. Here, everybody, the haters came the Oh, you, Oh,

you, you. You're based Lily. You're based only. And then at the mean, just to spoil the punch line here, I mean, because they're going to get into it, but when they started looking to her past, she didn't meet the litmus test of the people. She thought she was based for but 29 with

Unknown

all of that leading to people online, finding her job, sending the clip to her employer, which also, I will say I found confusing. Why does a Trad wife have a job? You should be in the kitchen, making sandwiches and babies, making Harrison Butker types feel like manly men, despite playing the

one position they sometimes let women play. But yeah, she was apparently a marketing and sales manager at a home health care company for the elderly and disabled in North Carolina, we got to go past tense, because yesterday, without naming her, the company announced that it had fired an employee over quote, inflammatory remarks on social media that do not align with the values and beliefs of our company. Right into that news, we saw a lot of people rejoicing, but also a lot of

other people pissed off. So personally, my reaction was much closer to Hank Green's. But I'm saying there's never been a more clear example of a person trying to rage bait their way into becoming a conservative pundit than this woman. And in fact, Lily herself ended up tweeting, thanks black community for helping to launch my new career in conservative media. You all played your role well, like the puppets you are, and it appears like she's gonna be speed run in the circuit. I mean, she was

just on Infowars. She just made a video about everything being gay. And ultimately, this ends up being an example of the culture war economy that we see online.

Adam CurryAdam Curry

Ooh, I like that. Culture war economy. Ah, exactly. Yeah, that's right, yeah. And

Moe FactzMoe Factz

the thing is, she doesn't have any talent at all other than saying the N word, you bring her on your show. Everybody brought on Candace Owens, Alex Jones,

Adam CurryAdam Curry

really, I missed all of this outrage. Oh no, every

Moe FactzMoe Factz

conservative platform had her. What's the two guys? The brothers

Adam CurryAdam Curry

the hedge

Moe FactzMoe Factz

Yeah, those guys,

Adam CurryAdam Curry

hedgewood. What are they called? I forget what? Hodgepodge, Hodge, Hodge twins. Hodge twins,

Moe FactzMoe Factz

yeah, all it was just like, oh, let's get her own. Let's get her own. Oh, you said the N word, you know, that kind of thing, like past that. What do you and this is what I'm talking about, art. Even podcasting is art. We got to make this clear right now, podcasting is just like hip hop, in the sense of everybody can rap, but not everybody can rap. If you get what I'm saying, everybody can podcast, but everybody can't Podcast. I'm sorry, yes, gotta kind of have

something to say, and it doesn't matter what you say. That's going

Adam CurryAdam Curry

to be my new bumper sticker. Podcasting is just like hip hop. Yes, yes. Finally, recognition,

Moe FactzMoe Factz

because it's a microphone and a person and you have to express yourself. Now we have beats, clips, you know, saying our other you know, backdrops to, you know, the to keep the motion going, but you have to have something to say other than just making word drama. It's this. It's the same thing. So you got, we got to be careful of who we give,

Adam CurryAdam Curry

who we platform.

Moe FactzMoe Factz

I wouldn't say that because, like, that gets kind of communist. You're saying. What I'm saying is you got to have a standard of what you consume, like, everybody should have a platform where you should where your taste should be, like, do you just eat anything, you know, like that kind of I'm not saying you can't make chitlins. I understand. Why would you eat shit?

Adam CurryAdam Curry

Yes, I follow. I follow.

Unknown

There's better options out here, folks, there are better options.

Adam CurryAdam Curry

That was perfect. You put me right in the mood for the next donation segment I needed that was little, little palette cleanser. Yes, let's just make this light for a moment. Oh, I gotta go find the TRad wife. Now, I can't believe that she was on everybody's podcast too. That that, that just shows you what was the term. Again, culture the culture war economy. Culture war economy. Let me just hear it again.

Unknown

It appears like she's gonna be speed run in the circuit. I mean, she was just on Infowars. She just made a video about everything being gay. And ultimately, this ends up being an example of the culture war economy that we see online.

Adam CurryAdam Curry

It's that is a great descriptor the culture war economy. Yeah, it works. Which people make a blank off it before

Moe FactzMoe Factz

we thank people for they appreciate what we do. We avoided that. Yes, we don't talk about hot stories when they're hot, we wait. We wait till they fully develop the one, the biggest one was George Floyd. We waited until that thing played all the way. It out? Yeah, the Vert was final, then we talked about it. So it's like, I said it's better options out here. Yeah, so the

Adam CurryAdam Curry

and not participating in the culture war economy is definitely a vow of poverty, but that's podcasting this hip hop. We're the true hippopers with no record, no record deal

Moe FactzMoe Factz

that was not broke. I like brand new money. I

Unknown

just I don't want any money around me is not I'd almost rather have a new one than a brand than an old 20.

New Money

That's kind of dumb and but there's something about new money that excites you. You like $100 bills? Oh, yeah, I like money too. Oh, most beautiful thing on earth is $100 bill? I haven't seen a woman as good looking as $100 bill. There's something $100 bill that excites you. Well,

Adam CurryAdam Curry

we already did our $100 bills. Now it's under 50, and we are so appreciative that we want to thank everybody who supported us here for episode 99 and 100 and Jill Woods says she sent $47 with a reason. She says, Thank you for your service. Let's go 47 savage mo karma. Please.

Unknown

You've got mo karma.

Adam CurryAdam Curry

We got Dustin Zimmer with 40 Thank you. Curtis, $25 payment from Curtis, $25 indeed. Priscilla Rubio, 25 thank you for taking us through the rabbit hole. Godspeed, then we have a number of 20s here with no note. Want to thank Aaron Sneed, Bo Baldwin, Benjamin. Benjamin Barlow, Bonnie blank Shane, David I McCann Lee and David Jones. Also. John Siebert, $20 Thank you. SV 20 Corey Katz says, $20 since Yahoo wouldn't take it, hey, it's the reason. Mark Asher, 1837 no note, but

interesting. 1837 interesting number. Benjamin Bateman, 1234 Great job, guys. And he says, Hi. Susie Jordan Brown says, D deadbeat. Me,

Unknown

congratulations, you're no longer a deadbeat. $11.24

Adam CurryAdam Curry

on a recent episode, another producer whose child was born on 1122, 2420 24 talked about navigating the ridiculous childhood vaccine schedule. I'm in the exact boat. Adam put a link in the in the Midwestern Doctor sub stack in the no agenda. Show Notes. That was very helpful. Okay, crossover there. Christy Carlton, $10 Kyle tack 10, Ronaldo Perez, 10, Thomas state, Tom, Tom. Stark weather. 10. Vanessa Steinbach,

$10 out in scales, $5 thanks for the great content. Joshua Goodson with $5 and Terry Keller, who has always been there as the human subscription machine,

Moe FactzMoe Factz

there we go. $4.11

Adam CurryAdam Curry

couple of booster grams I'd like to share, because people have been sending those to us as well. Kilo Romeo from pod verse, 99,333 SATs, thank you. We We've kept it all, all of these Satoshi so one day we'll be able to retire on it says, after listening to 99 episodes, oh, I am no longer a deadbeat. Well, it's about time, brother, congratulations.

Unknown

You're no longer a deadbeat. 35,000

Adam CurryAdam Curry

from noodle gun. 99 who says thanks, 30,000 from Nigel h6 all the SATs I've earned listening to your show via fountain paid back to you as a thank you for everything. Well, that's exactly what we asked for. Thank you. 14,900 from Merlin, 12345, 12,345 Satoshis from tag Mr. B been a hell of a ride. Looking forward to whatever comes next. 10,000 from fountain forever. The end is near. Thanks for 100 great episodes. I will share them with friends and family for years to

come. Yes, exactly what we'd like you to do 510 1000 from count of SF. He says, Damn, that resonated. Okay, probably episode 99 Yes, it was. Gene ever at 10,000 Elon hasn't given up on electric cars at all. It's the biggest part of his net worth. I don't think Trump fits into the same box as bush. Elon a cowboy man, if he is, Trump definitely fits too especially what he went through in the 80s dealing with the mob in New York City. Find myself disagreeing a lot here, but still love it.

Boost, boost, boost. Thank you. Gene, thank you for being there throughout all the episodes. 10,000 from fab six. Thank you. Brothers. Says SLC with 10,000 SATs. Dave Ackerman, Ace Ackerman, I'm sorry, who has boosted every single episode with a boob donation. 8008. 808. Says V for V. Episode 99 we appreciate it. We're going to take it to the 5000s here we got 6000 from from Hawaii. Big Love from Hawaii. Mama llama. 5020,

sad to see the series. Go start listening in. 2020, because of no agenda save my SAT so I could donate $3.33 which it was at the time of donation. Want to make sure I. Donated before the end of the show. Thank you guys for all you do. I'm excited for more projects to come in the morning from Kaylee Jackson and finally, Hopper with 5000 I can't let this series come to an end as a deadbeat. Please. D dead date me.

Unknown

Congratulations. You're no longer a deadbeat.

Adam CurryAdam Curry

I've listened to every episode. Can't wait to see what your future holds. Love the clips from the audiobook I'll be buying Outwitting the Devil myself shortly. Keep up the great work. Thank you very much from Nick and we appreciate all

Thank You!

the people who, throughout the past 100 episodes, have participated in this as a modern podcast on a modern podcast app still available for you to boost in and, of course, to send your paypal or your cash app donations, uh, mofax.com you can click on the donation page the archives will be up, of course, in perpetuity. Archives.mofacs.com or if you want to go directly to the donation page, it is Mo fund me.com I just renewed all of the domain names again for another

five years, so they will be sticking around. Thank you all from the really, from my heart, from Moe's heart, you have been a great source of excitement for us. It has really kept us going just and it's not the money, it's the fact that you're sending value back as a value for value project has meant so much to us, particularly through the harder times that mo went through with the job, it has been immense. Thank you again for support, your support of mofacs with Adam curry. And

Moe FactzMoe Factz

I want to say something before we continue on that it's those little dings on your phone that say, okay, somebody still cares out there. It's not the money, you're saying. It's not the amount. And if people know me in Eclass, you're saying, Can I attest to this? I never did anything for the money in my life. And I don't mean like we got to work to live, but I never made a decision in my life based off of what, what was, you know, finance up front. You know, all

this is the best, the best thing. No, no, I have to really want to do something to do it. And this, you'd be surprised. Like that one little, oh, that $5 message here to keep you going, you're saying when you're up late at night listening to clips and listen to source material, you know, just to say somebody still cares out there and finds value. That's the real magic of value. For value is knowing somebody cares out there

what you're doing. So I just want to say that you know, is, you know, saying it keeps you going, it

Adam CurryAdam Curry

does, that's it certainly does. And of course, we never did this for the money. We did it. We liked each other. We wanted to explore something that is has not really been well explored in in media, certainly not in American media. You know, there were, there were fakers who came along Obama and they tried to do it, Bruce, take that bomber. They didn't even come

close to scratching the surface of what we done here. For me, it is most important that people find this in the future, for your kids, for your grandkids, that something is around and that at some point in the future, people can say, hey, this is how these guys saw it at this point in time.

Moe FactzMoe Factz

And hopefully it helps you to seek first to understand, that's right, that's, that's, that's the real goal, and that's the real magic of us coming together, because we both came into this seeking, first, to understand, right and and we had some levity, some comedy there. But I want to let people know that the conditions of the N word never stopped. There's this misconception that after slavery, after Jim Crow, after civil rights, the condition stopped. Well, sad to

say it didn't. And I'm gonna these next 10, Eclipse is kind of like black pillage, but no pun intended. But I just want to, like, I want to express why this word holds the weight that it does, because the condition still exists. This is Noam Chomsky, and he explains the hidden history of America.

Unknown

You told me you taught in school that claim slavery ended in the Civil War. It did for about 10 years. By 1877

Hidden History

there was a compact made by north and south that the South could do what it felt like, essentially. So they reinstated slavery, but they reinstituted in a much more brutal form. What they did is criminalize black life. So if a black man is standing on a street corner, he can be arrested for vagrancy and. If he looks at a white woman, he could be arrested for attempted rape, you know, or something. And it didn't matter

if you're, you know, you were in for a $10 fee. You'd never get out because he couldn't pay the corrupt judge, and you couldn't pay the lawyer. He didn't have any money anyway. So it was essentially permanent servitude.

Moe FactzMoe Factz

And a good example of this is, if you ever seen seen the show held on wheels, you ever seen that show, I don't think so about when they're building a train across America? No, no, no, yes. You know, great show. Great show, the context they have the race relationships of the Irish and and and the freedmen, and they even have a Swede on there. And some of the you know this, everybody, it's very in the Native Americans.

It's amazing how they capture it. And one of the components of it is these, basically prisoners that were traded, you know, their their labor was traded

Adam CurryAdam Curry

to help build a railroad. Still the same today,

Moe FactzMoe Factz

yeah. Well, that's one of the things that Kamala slash Kamala is accused of, is holding people

Adam CurryAdam Curry

longer for longer,

Moe FactzMoe Factz

for cheap. Yeah. So, yeah. So let's get into the second part of Chomsky.

Unknown

These criminalized blacks were then handed over to industry, and that's a large part of American industrial development, this big southern industrialization based on Mines, you know, steel, us, steel and so on. A lot of just based agriculture, of course, that went back right back to the cotton fields, and this is a large part of American industrial economic history that's based and it was worse than slavery for exactly the reasons that the slave owners

had always argued. When we own these guys, we take care of them. When we just pick them up from the jails, we don't give a damn about them if they die at starvation. Final, got more from the jails. So you had a period worse than slavery. It went up to the Second World War. Was not small. Big impact on American industrial history. Big Impact

Moe FactzMoe Factz

Second World War. So that was night in 1940s but sad to say, in the 2020s this thing still exists in Alabama. Well,

Unknown

a lot of people are calling it modern slavery. Does that feel just about to say, That's slavery, that's slavery. You took away the Wilkes, but you put the paperwork, took away the Masters, and you gave put them in uniform. Same difference, Same difference. It kind of appears that there is a coordinated system in order to protect the labor that's created by the prison system. Walk into a McDonald's in Alabama and the worker flipping your McDouble could be an incarcerated person.

Here's a sad situation a way, they getting rich off of the Alabama Department of Corrections farms out incarcerated people to work at hundreds of private companies and government agencies across the state. McDonald's, Burger King, Golden Corral, Wendy's, they got a Wendy's contract right now, state troopers office. They'll send everybody everywhere. They'll send you

everywhere. Yes, the parole office, and even though Adoc trusts these incarcerated people to leave prison every day and work alongside the general public, many of them are still denied the chance at real freedom.

Adam CurryAdam Curry

Yeah, wasn't that the Corrections Corporation of America, the CCA? I think I'm not the short track. I think so. But

Moe FactzMoe Factz

that's, that's you're safe enough to go work in Wendy's, but you, you're not safe enough to get paroled or let go. And I know some people like, Well, they did the crime. You did do the time. These are non violent offenders. Most of them like, uh, well, I'll let go. Let go into 30 you want to say anything before we don't know anything. But what I'm saying, this is McDonald's, Wendy's. I mean, like the same

thing is going on. These conditions still exist. So we, when you say this word, this, this is what gives it the weight of the magic. You know the spell, because all all these feelings are conjured back up. If it was in the past, it would be in the past, you know, that kind of thing. But it's not, but it's, but it's not, you know, at all. It's kind of, I'm gonna give you an example. It might be a poor example, but it's the

closest one. I think of is it's a difference if you cheated on your wife in high school, or if you cheated on your wife in high school. You had a baby out of it, you see the difference? Like, if it wasn't no baby out of it, it's like she might kind of got past it, but no, you know, saying it's still evidence that exists that hasn't been addressed. You know, there isn't water under the dam. You know, it's still here. It's not went anywhere. So this is what gives the magic word the power.

Hopefully, that was a good analogy.

Unknown

I got it all right, 34 but Adoc offers people in prison with non violent misdemeanor convictions a potentially life saving deal. If they join the work release program, they get to live in special facilities that are generally much less dangerous than regular prisons. They spend their days working in the free world without prison supervision, and they can earn 72 hour passes to visit their families at home. If you go out here and you do the right thing, you get to elevate. You

get to grow, you get out of this facility. But you know what you didn't tell me is that you even get all my money. That's what they didn't tell you. The State takes a 40% cut of every incarcerated workers, wages off the top, before taxes, plus an additional $5 a day for Van rides to and from work, $15 a month for laundry and then any restitution and court fees.

If your check is 636, you might see two, something two, something out of that, and that's a two, that's every two weeks, and you didn't work eight hours and only seen $200

Adam CurryAdam Curry

Yeah. I'm glad that we had this clip, because it triggered me the work release program. I remember when this was put in place. Do you

Unknown

Yes? Obama,

Moe FactzMoe Factz

yeah. I mean, it don't matter. It matters, but it doesn't matter what color the person is putting it in. It's who do they serve, right? It was saying, like, Obama is the biggest you're saying one of the biggest supporters of the system of white supremacy. That's what scares me about Kamala. You were saying, like, if she gets in there, oh boy, you were saying like they really got some cover going a woman, a colored woman, you know, what kind of damage she could do. They have coverage,

Adam CurryAdam Curry

and we haven't actually discussed this. I i watched the debate last night. You watched the debate. I never underestimate Trump's ability to communicate to the American people. When I say the American people, that's not you and I yet we're I would call us the media class, the the true American people are really hurting, and they see it. They see what's going on. I think he communicated, first of all, debates never matter. They never have. It's, you know, trust the

science on that one. They really don't matter. The only matter for in certain cases of people who didn't matter in the first place, like the Dean scream and other things like that. It gives a it gives the media a thing to hold on to. In this case, there was nothing new. Everybody's already heard these accusations. I think Trump's consistent hammering on the border on crime

and even eating the dogs. I think that resonated. And I don't know if he'll, I don't know if he'll win the election based upon the Electoral College, but I think he definitely will win the popular vote. I think it was, it was very uncomfortable to watch, and all the things that we all felt like, oh man, how come you didn't How come you got triggered by this, this? Yeah, but the message, which was

Taking the power?

consistent throughout the entire, you know, more than an hour and a half, I think it resonates with the people who will come out to vote. I do not think, I do not think we'll see Kamala Harris as president.

Moe FactzMoe Factz

Here's my two takeaways. First, I find it amazing that Ms 13, all these gangs taking over apartment, these are all narratives, true or not true? Who knows we talking about media narratives here, but it's Haitians eating the dogs and cats is one. Get everybody worked up? You know, it might honestly we've had children be human trafficked, taken, you know, I'm saying, uh, kidnap. Deleted. Need all this stuff, but it's the Haitians eating ducks. That's

Adam CurryAdam Curry

correct. No, that. That is America. That's America, but that's

Moe FactzMoe Factz

what I'm saying. What are the Haitians? Hello. They'll say just like at the border, I ain't seen nobody else get chased down on horseback, except people that kind of look like me. I'm just, I'm being, I'm being completely honest here. Why is it always the darker the immigrant, the worse the immigrant, not the crime they're doing. No, you thought you follow them. Yes, I

Adam CurryAdam Curry

hadn't considered it from that angle. But yes, of course. But, but

Moe FactzMoe Factz

on the other hand, what I'm most afraid of is I'm right about the orange people about to be people of color. I think it doesn't matter what happens in this election. I told my wife. I said they're gonna take it and they're gonna say, if you want it, come take it. You came up here last time on January 6. Do it again, but we're in power now. See orange.

People have not seen the system really turn up. And this is what scared like, seriously, I mean, like, this is, this is what I find concerning, because if they did what they did out of power, and they control the media. Do you really think they just gonna give it up? Did you see how they lied last night on all those flat checks? And I'm telling you like, this is what I'm saying. Like orange people. I told when I we started this show, I said

it starts with it. I said that from the very beginning, it starts with us. I'm afraid y'all about to be declassified to full colored people. It doesn't I hope, I pray I'm you don't know how wrong I want to be, but I truly hope I'm wrong. But these people got an agenda, and Trump is bad for their business. Of the system they want you're saying they they trade it in their white coat sheets for white coats. Well,

Adam CurryAdam Curry

if that's what we deserve, then that's what we'll have to go through. No, I'm

Moe FactzMoe Factz

just telling you, that's the gaslighting, you know, the get the level of gas likeness going on the level of every she hit, every meme, as far as the fine people on both sides. I mean, like they haven't been like, they haven't been this

Adam CurryAdam Curry

debunked, yes, but yes. But meanwhile, a ground game has taken place to do the utmost to protect the the integrity of the elections, and I, I have faith in this, because if not now, then maybe never. And again, I think the trap is to think that something was lost with a debate. It just, it doesn't matter.

Moe FactzMoe Factz

No, no, no, no, no. This, this was, this was my thought, pre debate. This is my thought, all the way from the beginning of everything. What you say, we say that enough. What do you say? It in Dutch, what they, what they what you are, what I say, I or I am, what you say,

Adam CurryAdam Curry

what you say, being yourself. Meet your corporate health, yeah. What

Moe FactzMoe Factz

do they always say? Trump gets into power. He's not going to relinquish it, if that holds true. But you say, I'm not saying I'll pray to the God above I'm wrong, but you just said one word that white supremacy don't have is integrity,

Adam CurryAdam Curry

exactly.

Moe FactzMoe Factz

So I'm just telling you. So I'm just, I'm just, when I'm saying this, from the standpoint of for people's mental health, are and I say this to all the producers, all my friends, everybody out there, are you prepared if it doesn't go the way you expect it to go because this is how black people have to live. If I can't, if I don't do any, if I throw this microphone away after this tonight or today, hear me out. This is how we have to live like I know what's right, but I know

how it can go. And are you mentally prepared? Are you and I can say, I hope everything goes well and he wins, or even if he don't win, everything's on the up and up, whatever it is. But like I said, Are you mentally prepared for what may happen? Because these people. Are ridiculous, agreed,

Adam CurryAdam Curry

and I'm more concerned about Trump winning. What, what we're going to get on the streets. We have to be prepared for winning too, right?

Moe FactzMoe Factz

Which I would say four years. If he wins, they say, We kick the can down the road. You know, he can justify

Adam CurryAdam Curry

he'll be four very, very turbulent years.

Moe FactzMoe Factz

Yeah, I'm just saying, but like the Democrat, I mean, this is the calculus they're weighing right now. You're saying not to belabor the point, but they're saying, Do we and what's this is what? Let me give you the background from my my explanation of why I'm so concerned. They're looking at the Supreme Court. This is what it's all about, is the Supreme Court, because if they win, Clarence is probably he can't keep holding on. You might can get two justices out there bring

some kind of balance back to the courts. This, this is, this is their logic. This. I mean, this is me doing the war gaming for them. But if Trump wins, Clarence is gone, the other conservative justice is gone, and they get some young, fresh faces in there that will hold the court for a mighty long time. Yeah, you're right. That's what I'm saying. Like they're desperate. That's the word their their desperation scares me. Well,

Adam CurryAdam Curry

here comes another Dutch saying, and cotton is now mark that are out of sproma, which means, translation, please. When you drive a cat into the corner, it can make very strange jumps. Okay,

Moe FactzMoe Factz

and that's, who's the cat? Is it? That's, that's my question. Like, who is the cat in this situation?

Adam CurryAdam Curry

The Democrats, yeah, the crazy, crazy Democrat party, right?

Moe FactzMoe Factz

So I'm just telling you, I'm just, like I said, I don't want to scare people. I don't want to black peel people. I'm saying this for a mental health standpoint. Well, if it doesn't go, you're and then I'm telling you, this is this is this is my existence, honestly. And like I said, it sounds don't know you've

Adam CurryAdam Curry

said this from the beginning. You have said this from the beginning. The big takeaways of 100 episodes is it starts with us. We're just we're just first, and orange is a color. So these things have always stuck in my mind and but I also look at America as a federation of states. I look at individual communities. You live in a community, I live in a community that's where we can make a difference and and or not. And this is America, not the first time. This is not our

first rodeo with nonsense like this. Yeah.

Moe FactzMoe Factz

And like I said, I'm not talking about totalitarian, kicking indoors. But like you said, communities like, there was the quote, unquote black community, you know, saying that was, like the safe space for black people, that kind of thing. They're gonna be orange communities, you know, where you can you'll have the school board, you'll have the mayor, you'll have city council and that kind of thing. Um, so no, I'm like, I'm not.

Adam CurryAdam Curry

I live in an orange community,

Moe FactzMoe Factz

right? I live in an orange community. Yes, I said I had to go where the guns are. What you mean?

Adam CurryAdam Curry

That's right, we give each other guns for birthday presents around here, I had

Moe FactzMoe Factz

to come where the guns is in you like, for real, for real. You're saying, GBG all day, but I'm just saying, like we and I just found a song to say, because I mean it, mentally prepare yourself for the worst and pray for the best. Because that's what if it happens, you're already ready, yeah, and you don't have to get ready. And I think that's what happened in the aftermath of 2020 a lot of people weren't ready. Weren't ready, you know, and like to think they won't do it again.

That's the we're doing it right now. You were saying like, hello, 2031 3233 34 we're at where we're at right now. Oh, you think they won't lock black people up and use them as labor? Hello, we got Wendy's. We got McDonald's. That's right, we're still doing it. You know, that's so, yeah, yeah, you were saying they, they don't stop. They're relentless, and it's because they they truly have something wrong in their brain and in their hearts and in their souls.

Adam CurryAdam Curry

Seriously, it's, it's spiritual warfare. Mo, it's actually very old. It's a very old story, and once you realize that, then. You can see it and like, Okay, I see what's going

The master mindset

on here. Well,

Moe FactzMoe Factz

since we did that, let's just go ahead and jump to 37 and in honest, see, I always try to go deeper into figuring out, why do people how can you see first? How do they think like this? And it took me back to Nietzsche. Nietzsche, how you want to say I've heard three different more pronunciations than Kamala. People say it Yes, but it's like the genealogy of morality, the master and the slave. 37 explains these people's mindset.

Unknown

So what about the Master's internal psychology? Well, the Masters, they're Yes, Sayers, right? Their first act of evaluation is to say, I'm awesome, I'm beautiful, I'm strong, I'm rich. This is awesome. And what this surplus of confidence provides for the master is that the master becomes somewhat indifferent, a cool nonchalance to the external

world. He embraces danger. He's not easily offended at all. And even when he commits atrocities, he walks away cheerful, I quote you Nietzsche masters step back into the innocence of the beast of prey conscience as jubilant monsters who perhaps walk away from a hideous succession of murder, arson, rape, torture with such high spirits and equanimity that it seems as if they have only played a student prank, convinced that for years to come, the poets will again have something to sing And

praise the picture that Nietzsche paints of the master is of this joyful brute, and he is a brute, okay? So he's very stupid, partially because he's never had to use his intellect. But what's positive here is his naivete, okay, the fact that he doesn't overthink things. Yeah,

Adam CurryAdam Curry

exactly, exactly, don't, they don't overthink things.

Moe FactzMoe Factz

Beautiful brew, yeah, just go around the world is kicking stuff over, just taking stuff, kicking stuff over, and just causing mayhem on our on our dime and our name. See, that's what we had to really get. You know you're doing this under our name. Yeah. I mean, like, and this is at the when the rubber meets the road. This is their mentality that they don't have. They don't have, like, this Dave Chappelle Show that says, The guy says I, he told the cop, said I didn't, I

didn't know I couldn't do that. And then the cop walks away saying I did know I couldn't do that, that could like, yeah, you know, you know it's wrong, but they don't care. They don't care, but I don't give a hope to even their salvation for them, I don't,

Unknown

we can't, yeah,

Moe FactzMoe Factz

let's continue with the master.

Unknown

So the best way to think about Nietzsche's Master is your high school jock. Okay? He's a physical specimen. He's on top of the social pecking order. He loves danger, extreme sports, drunk driving, body checking people in hockey. He bullies people, not because he's mad, but for him, it's fun to shove someone into a locker and you can call all manner of obscenities to his face, partially because he's so smug and confident, partially because he's too stupid to realize what

you're actually saying. That might sound a very negative ideal for us, partially because we have been influenced by Christian morality, but it's the naive self assurance, okay, it's the willingness to indulge in one's simple desires. It's the natural independence. That's the first reason that makes this masterly mode of evaluation preferable to the slave. The second reason that slave morality is despicable for Nietzsche is that they promote bad values. And Nietzsche wants

to ask, How can you not promote bad values? You've simply taken what the Master's like and you've flipped it. Yeah,

Adam CurryAdam Curry

I've never read Nietzsche, to be honest about it,

Moe FactzMoe Factz

I've gotten into it for two reasons. There's this whole stoic thing going on in the manosphere. Yeah. Definitely a trend.

Adam CurryAdam Curry

Yeah.

Moe FactzMoe Factz

So in it, you get a lot of the, you know, the talking points and and when I did the show on the Overman or the Uber mention, and I think it's how you pronounce it. Um, that's how I got into them. And so when you go down this hall with your algorithm, it starts feeding you more and more psychology and stuff like that. And what I don't want to do this, I know I've got. You jumping around. But I want to what that slave is, and really what the N word is. It goes to

Carl Jung and young. I heard, once again, these names, Young. I'm just saying, but young Carl Jung, yeah, no, people are gonna hit. No. It's this, you know, I'm saying like, they're gonna, like, three people gonna give me three different pronunciations afterwards, but I think we need to go to 43 and then come back to the slave mentality. All right, because what the slave is, and this is me and and, okay, so this this master, and the slave is answer person, personal relation between two

people, yeah, or between two groups. Carl Young is answer person, like the intrapersonal or inside yourself. He talks about the shadow once again, this is, this is the algorithm feeding me stoic talking points, um, but what he says is that your shadow is everything you repress. So if you look at the master, everything he represses is the weakness and morality and all these things, right? He pushes those things down, then

he projects it onto the slave, onto the slave. That's why Black people are in words, because we're everything that white supremacy don't want to be. They project it on us. Are you following me? No, I'm

Adam CurryAdam Curry

following you. Mo and

Moe FactzMoe Factz

then what they do is use mass media to put to project this on the world stage and say, look at them. What is a gangster rapper? A gangster rapper is nothing but a warlord. You know, there's no difference between Dick Cheney and a rapper. No, when you really get down to it, you're saying, we're gonna go, we're gonna go slide, we're gonna go slide on the rack, you know, kicking they door, you know. Like, seriously, yeah, and this is, this is, you know, so this is where I got to I was

Projecting?

like, Okay, so the shadow is being projected onto the slave. The slave has to do it. The slave don't have no option. So let's get into the projection. And that's 43 just

Unknown

because there are people who are unconscious of their own dark sides, and they project that darkness outward into, say, Jews or communists or whatever the enemy may be, and

say, there is the darkness, it is not in me. And therefore, because the darkness is not in me, I am justified in annihilating this enemy, whether it be with atom bombs or gas chambers or what, but to the degree that a person becomes conscious that the evil is as much in himself as in the other, to this same degree he is not like to project it on to some scapegoat and commit them as criminal acts of violence on

other people. Now this is, to me, the primary thing that Jung saw, that in order to admit and really accept and understand the evil in oneself. One had to be able to do it without being an enemy to it. As he put it, you had to accept your own dark side.

Adam CurryAdam Curry

Yeah. Well, that's the human experience. Yes. And America is a media country, and so we do this all day long to each other all the time.

Moe FactzMoe Factz

And I noticed this in movies as I got older. Rocky Ford, the Russians was the bad guy, yep, right. And then it went from the Russians, and then it went to the you started seeing the Arabs as the bad guy, yeah,

Adam CurryAdam Curry

the sheik, the chic, yeah,

Moe FactzMoe Factz

you know. And then it went from them, and then, you know, then you had the cartel members, and, you know, that kind of they were the bad guy for a little while. Now we're back to the Russians. They're constantly project their shadow on and I'm not saying these are good people, but I'm just saying that the projection, they're really projecting their shadow

off onto whoever they consider their enemy. And this is why, when it shocks people that black people think a certain way, because, like, Well, we thought You thought this way, it's like, no. This is what the media wants you to think it's like, you know, and that's why airtime, something trending, it's like, that's normal, but not for what, how they project and use their main, their mass media, or if you want to say how they cast spells, you know, um, to to. Manipulate people to think a

certain way. The trauma based entertainment they've always painted. That's why I said about OJ, they painted. OJ, well, they didn't paint OJ. OJ appeared in that image of what they painted all the years of this black brute that finally did it. Yeah. That's why it was triggering people, whether he did it or not. I'm telling you, that's how it appeared. That's why I'm saying I completely agree. That's what I'm saying about that's why Haitians eating your duck is more scary than Latin

people kidnapping your kids or your cat. You know, like they paint, we're at the bottom. And when we say we're at the bottom, we're at the bottom of every stereotype, because it's a color based system. Now they might mess around and put orange down there. Who knows? You know, saying, but more orange? I'm gonna tell you why Orange is the problem, because Orange has resources. Yeah, that's the problem. They have a whole lot

more resources than any other color person there is. So that's why, you know, that's why they see you, you, you, and I hope I mean not to say you, but I'm talking about the orange people out there. That's why they you're seen as the biggest threat, because you actually have resources. Yeah, you're colored with resources, right? Which, that's a, that's a, that's a recipe for disaster. Can't have that, yeah, can't have that at all. So now we gotta go back back to 39

hopefully I explained that. Well, the master, his shadow was

You will obey

projected onto the slave, and the slave becomes everything that the master represses. Don't take my word for I did this all in chat. GPT, yeah, no, serious.

Unknown

Don't laugh.

Adam CurryAdam Curry

I know you did. I know as

Moe FactzMoe Factz

far as, like, what is the common thread? Like, this is what this tool is great for. Like, what is the common thread you're saying? Like, what that kind of thing when

Adam CurryAdam Curry

it comes to language chat, GPT is useful? Yes, all right. 39 Nietzsche

Unknown

argued that there are two explanations for how morality develops. Part of the story is biopsychological, in terms of what morality resonates with what psychological type of person. One is the other part of the story is cultural, because different moral codes develop under different survival

circumstances. And so Nietzsche searches history for the survival circumstances that necessitated the development of slave morality in the West, Nietzsche finds the slave morality's roots in the Judeo Christian tradition in a decisive set of events that occurred early in Jewish history, the enslavement of the Jews in Egypt. The significant result of the Jews being enslaved for a long time was the development and internalization of a moral code suitable for surviving slavery.

Adam CurryAdam Curry

Oh, I never thought of Nietzsche in that context. In what context? Yeah, of the the slavery of the Jews. Yeah.

Moe FactzMoe Factz

So basically, he thinks that religion is created to explain why you're inferior. Makes a coping mechanism. They say it like that, like I'm gonna I'm moral. That's why I'm this way. Not I'm moral because I have to be moral because I because I can't take on the Master.

Adam CurryAdam Curry

Yeah, this is where Nietzsche loses me. But I understand where he's coming from. What

Moe FactzMoe Factz

I'm not saying, like, I said, I'm not taking him at anything other than the mind state of the people that's in power. We have to get inside their head, you know, like your God and my god, don't exist in them. I mean, like, seriously, no, like, we're ruled by, you know what? We're gonna have to answer later on. We're gonna have to answer to a higher power. You know, that's why we're more, not only the real, not the only reason, but you're saying it's more, it's win, win,

to be moral if you don't have that ruling you. And it's like everything on Earth, is it? It was saying like this, this is the game. That's a very that's a very scary mindset to deal with, honestly to say, this is it so I can do whatever I want to here, because there's no nothing to answer to afterwards. Are you still there? Yeah,

Adam CurryAdam Curry

I was thinking, I don't have anything. I have no comment on it. It's I'm trying, I'm desperately trying, to look at it from your perspective and

Moe FactzMoe Factz

and. What? It's not. It's not my perspective. Yeah, it is. It

Adam CurryAdam Curry

is it is. You have a lot more experience with thinking this way.

Moe FactzMoe Factz

All I'm saying is this is seek, first to understand. I'll put myself in their shoes and say, You know what? If I could go do all this bad stuff, and there's no really one can stop me, and there's no higher power to answer to. Why wouldn't I do it? Right?

Adam CurryAdam Curry

But I guess where I'm coming from is there is a higher power to answer to, yeah, and, and that's what I pray for. That's what I pray for, the higher power steps in. No,

Moe FactzMoe Factz

no, I agree. Me, like I said, Me and you are more aligned in thinking. But that's we can't allow that to be a blind spot for us to think that they don't think like that. Oh yeah, they don't. They have nobody in the attitude in their mind, like, Hey, you were saying it, let it, let it roll, you know. And it's, that's what I say, is, I don't know. I don't know. That's a scary that's a scary thought. But let's go and get into part two. Suppose

Unknown

that you are a slave. How do you survive? And if you have children who are born into slavery, what survival strategies will you teach them? In order to survive, a slave must obey the master. This does not come naturally. So the first lesson is, you must stifle your nature. Suppose the master strikes you the desire for revenge comes naturally, but you have to stifle it. Suppose the master tells you to wait. Being inactive does not come naturally, but you must suppress

your desire for activity. Suppose the master tells you to do something you do not want to do, you must override your desire to do what you want and obey generalizing. You must train yourself to restrain your natural impulses and to internalize a humble, patient, obedient self. You know you must do this because slaves who do not end up dead.

Adam CurryAdam Curry

Yeah, it's it's interesting in the context of the Haitians, because Haiti is pretty much the only enslaved population in history who successfully revolted against their masters,

Moe FactzMoe Factz

which was in French. And could that be the reason why they're demonized? I because you think about all over, everybody's coming across the border, are people of color?

Adam CurryAdam Curry

No, I know. I know. I mean, you know, well, yeah, is

Moe FactzMoe Factz

that mentality? Is it that mentality that we, I'm not to take color out of it? Well, take, like, okay, but pigmentation.

Adam CurryAdam Curry

Five minutes ago, it was Chinese men of fighting age. You know, I think this, this was just a purposely launched trend. By the way, there's sufficient evidence that it's actually happening, but okay, you know, doesn't it doesn't really matter. It was an effective trigger. And notice that Trump didn't say Haitians, yeah, he just says they, they're eating

the your the dogs. So it, and the whole story behind it is much deeper, of course, but I don't think it's that that has that there's a particular reason for it that being Haitians,

Moe FactzMoe Factz

but to me, the El Salvadorians taking over. No part. We just talk about narratives. You were saying, like, because all these are just, they're all narratives. They're pieces, they're they're fact toys rolled up into, you know, saying, into narratives, there's some, there's some there, there to you the turret, you're saying, There's something

basis to it. But they're, they're, they're rolling it up into something bigger, and El Salvadorians taking over whole apartment complexes is way more concerning to me than Haitians eating ducks and cats. I'm just saying, like on the on the scale of what concerns me. But, but why did? Why is it that is that we love cats and ducks like, what it what is it? Not? I'm not expecting to answer. I'm just saying, but why did that take hold? Oh, there's like I said, I don't want you to put you in a

spot to answer. I'm just that

Adam CurryAdam Curry

question. Well, I can, I think I can explain it, because pets are the new children. Children. That is undeniable, that, you know, we have over a quarter billion pets in America. It's probably even more. And you know, your doctor, your fur baby, this, this has been a narrative that's been building for a long time. People are not having children. They are taking pets, and pets are seen as their children. So it, I think it's very effective.

Moe FactzMoe Factz

I can see that, you

Adam CurryAdam Curry

know, so it's to you and I maybe not the same. But I think in the American psyche, in in the last 1520, years, it really has become incredibly important, you know, above children,

Moe FactzMoe Factz

obviously, because I'll give you, yeah, I'll give you that. It's plus, plus eating your pet is foreign. That's foreign in nature. You say, hi, yeah, yeah, horse or heating a cat if I mean,

Adam CurryAdam Curry

look at look at it this way. Castrating your kids doesn't have the same effect for some reason. So this is what I say, is I never underestimate Trump's ability to speak right into the psyche of the American public, the true American public, right?

Moe FactzMoe Factz

So, all right, let's go and get into 41

Unknown

Nietzsche argues, I'm sorry,

Adam CurryAdam Curry

41 here we go. This naturally

Unknown

leads them to resent the master strongly, but they also start to hate themselves for doing what the master says, and for their own role in suppressing themselves psychologically, hating oneself causes unbearable pressure inside because the outward discharge of the instinct gets inhibited and turned backward against man himself, hostility, cruelty, joy and destruction. All this turned against the

possessors of such instincts. That is the origin of the bad conscience, hatred of the strong, self hatred and revenge fantasies to ease the pain become the lived psychological reality of such slaves. Make this psychological reality a matter of months and years, and the results will be ugly and poisonous. More provocatively, Nietzsche argues that such slave individuals who feel the internal war most strongly become the social leaders of the slaves. That is to say, they

become their priests. It is because of their impotence that in them, Hatred Grows to monstrous proportions.

Adam CurryAdam Curry

Yeah, yeah. Well,

Moe FactzMoe Factz

we see that's the Boulet right there. That's right, that's the Boulet, you know, saying, like they they hate their condition, so they become the priest amongst the slaves. But they're not really gonna change anything, you know. They just send you on a bunch of dummy missions. But I can, we can skip 42 because that's just nearly full of confirming what, what was said in the previous clip of why Black people are full of poison. Now, do you not when I keep saying you now, does

everyone understand why there's black on black crime? You can't take on the master. So what do you do? You brutalize and victimize each other. Export that across the world. You take that to Africa, you take that to Asia, you take that everywhere in the world. You have colored people harming other color people, that's right because they have no other recourse. And I want to say I'm gonna make what's

Adam CurryAdam Curry

where I want an inflammatory statement, no,

Moe FactzMoe Factz

I think I understand why this thought process is foreign to you. And a lot of the listeners, you have a concept of the Calvary, right? The Calvary is going to come, you know, there's, always a Calvary, you know, even if they get us, you

The Calvary is not coming

know that the Calvary will come, we'll take the day, that kind

Adam CurryAdam Curry

of thing. I think American

Moe FactzMoe Factz

concept, you're saying hard, backed in by cowboy movies and no, that kind of thing. Man. Okay, we just gotta hold on, fair enough. No, because I'm saying, I mean, I, as an American, is, I adopt some of the same thoughts, you know, like, if something happened to me, you know, hopefully American goat mayor, come get me. You know, we have that kind of thing

Adam CurryAdam Curry

that I don't think. I think that I'm, personally, I'm more like, I'm the Calvary, I know. My neighbors. I know what we can do together. That's what I'm

Moe FactzMoe Factz

saying. But some Calvary has come. You know, they

Adam CurryAdam Curry

get, not the government, not looking for the sheriff, not looking for the cops.

Moe FactzMoe Factz

We don't, we don't have a concept of Calvary.

Adam CurryAdam Curry

No, I see, of course, I understand you

Moe FactzMoe Factz

don't say, like, it hits the fan, there's no no. And this is that's that slave master relationship of his, like, you kind of got to go along to get along, because there's, there's no and the weird thing about it, I said it again, I gotta stop it. But the fascinating thing, that's the word I was looking for, is that 13% of the population of the world, versus 87% of the world is colored versus white. But the colored people have don't have the mentality of a cavalry.

Yep, that's high power mind control, my friend, which I'm saying, what I'm saying, it shouldn't be a need for that. I'm just saying, like, that's a spell that's cast throughout the world that, like, no matter what, and you and, let me say this, they have the muscle to back it up. Oh, let's, let's be clear that they have the muscle to back it up. And that's why they play this brinksmanship game with the world. Like, Are you effing around to find out? You know, you know, that kind of

thing. So I'm just saying I'm trying to seek, first, to understand, and that's why I just thought about it Calvary, like, you know, like right at that moment in cowboy movies when all hope is lost. Well, you hear the horn blowing. Well, that's

Adam CurryAdam Curry

exactly it. This is, that's your mind control, right there. Yeah,

Moe FactzMoe Factz

the movies, of course. But I'm just saying we don't have I don't, and now I would love to hear people chime in on this, but as a black person, I never thought about the Calvary of a black Calvary coming to save you, right? So I'm just, I'm just I'm just trying to get, like I said, practices seek first, to understand in real time. Because, yeah, so we're gonna wrap this up with next set of clips, because this sounds very black pillish, but no, what I

was doing was diagnosing the problem. Right? Whenever you, whenever you have a problem, you have to get diagnosed

Adam CurryAdam Curry

on the problem. You've done that very well to a depressing point, I might add, no, well,

Moe FactzMoe Factz

it's not because, like, if you, if they figure out what's wrong, you know, like, it's kind of like when you go to doll I don't feel well, and they run a battery or test and nothing's coming back. All hope is lost. That's worse, right? I don't even know what I'm fighting here. My thing here is like, Okay, we ran the battery of test. Okay, we're dealing with Masters. Okay. Now, how do you deal with Masters? You know?

Auditing ourselves and our problems

Like, how do you deal with this mentality? Okay, so first we had to figure out and this is gonna be left field. I don't know if you ever heard this or not. Let me just set it up. Minister Farrakhan and Scientology. Have you heard about that before?

Adam CurryAdam Curry

Well, I know about the Church of Scientology. I know about I've read Dianetics, actually,

Moe FactzMoe Factz

yeah. Well, so it's Farrakhan, and he found a lot of value in it, to the point that he was supporting it and and suggesting it to the noi, but Something

Unknown

in the teaching of Dianetics of Mr. L Ron Hubbard, that I saw could bring up from the depth of our subconscious mind, things that we would prefer to lie dormant but the auditing process brings it up, and it's like bringing up demons out of us, and just as this book Bible says, that was the work of Jesus. How can you say you love Jesus the Christ when he was an exerciser of demons out of the people

Adam CurryAdam Curry

I never heard that clip before.

Moe FactzMoe Factz

I. Not supporting Scientology. I'm not even supporting what Farrakhan was saying there. My point is this, we have to do a self audit on ourselves. That's my suggestion to people, because 90% of your problems is internal.

Adam CurryAdam Curry

I would say 100%

Moe FactzMoe Factz

like you have some out, outside influences, but 90% of your problems are internal, whether how you spend your money, how you spend your time, how you spend your resources, where you were you allowed to enter your psyche? I mean, it was a bunch of questions like, Why don't you watch a movie if you're going to talk about it. When we talk about trauma based entertainment, I don't need that poison in my mind. I don't I don't need you. Just said it yourself. It's like the movies

is the problem, you know? It's we're constantly being bombarded with, uh, all kind of propaganda and mind control. So we have to do an audit of our lives and say, How am I spending my time? How am I spending my resources? You're on this and rightfully so, of this kick of, what are we putting in our bodies? Yep, what are we eating? You know, like a lot of times like we we give it up to, uh, to the masters. They gotta take it

Adam CurryAdam Curry

completely in that regard, the world, but certainly America is completely enslaved to the food masters totally

Moe FactzMoe Factz

and they got slaves working, really. That's true. That's a 360 USA 360 racket here. Just to illustrate my point further. Do you actually look inward I'm talking to like I said, this is, this is the final white pill that Mo's gonna give you. You're saying in this iteration to whatever I'm doing. I never left people on a negative because I understand you're saying, how that can you know? And that's why I stress

this is not a black pill. What we were going through is a battery of tests to figure out, what is the concern, what is the problem? And the problem is, we're dealing with a master slave system, and it's, are you being a willing slave? And when I'm asking these questions, I'm asking them to myself, how are you supporting the system? Mo, how are you being compliant to the system? Go

Adam CurryAdam Curry

ahead. Have you come up with an answer to that, yeah,

Focusing on the important

Moe FactzMoe Factz

you have to change how you spend your money, how you spend your time, how you spend your vote, how you spend your energy. You know, are you focused on the things that matter? Prioritization, putting first things for all these seven habits, all we want, Seven Habits heavy, but that's why I believe in that set of habits, when you start putting first things first, and think win, win, and seek first to understand and be understood,

Adam CurryAdam Curry

things change for you, right?

Moe FactzMoe Factz

But all that is in your power. It's not, it's not external powers. You don't need any external stimulus or any external compliance to make this happen. And then what nearly say is, everything I'm doing, is it constructive or non constructive? It's only two boxes. Is this behavior or this

thought, constructive or non constructive? And you put it in the right box that thought it doesn't help me, that worry it doesn't help me, not constructive and not spending time on that you asked me when I and this is constant auditing. You understand, it's not like I sit down with a notepad and like, let me audit for today. You know, it's like, it's real time. Well, for a

Adam CurryAdam Curry

lot of people, reading their Bible every single day is literally an audit of yourself,

Moe FactzMoe Factz

right? Correct? Because what it does, it re centers you. I totally agree with that. And I don't know if I said this on the show or not, but I read Proverbs every day, 31 books. I mean, 31 chapters in Proverbs, right? So if you start on the first of the month and just cycle through every month, oh, yeah, that's a good one. Came to find out my grandfather

Daily Proverbs

had been doing that for years when I told him. But I'm just telling it like, because that's, that's a recentering, uh, and it's based, it's wisdom based knowledge. Um, here is, yeah, so I'm just saying that kind of thing, um, those kind of forming, those kind of habits. So that's, that's what I believe. And then we're going to get to Dr Bruce Lipton here on how to reprogram your mind. And I know people like, man, you

come in with all. It's what they call a new age, a new age, no, no, no, because if you're a believer, all of this is in the Bible, as far as what it say, renew your renew your mind. Yeah. What is that scripture? But anyway, like I said, it's, it's this constant reflection, you know, reflecting on your every word. You know what? It's about, idle words and idle

thoughts and these kind of things. This ain't New Age. Now it is you're saying, but it's not exclusive to New Age, and it's not exclusive to the Bible. That's why I'm always careful on what I bring up and out, because I don't want to feel anybody feel like a captive audience to a Christian exclusive conversation. Hopefully whatever I talk about is is value.

Adam CurryAdam Curry

Romans 12 do not conform to the pattern of this world, but be transformed by the renewing of your mind.

Moe FactzMoe Factz

That's it, right there. I

Adam CurryAdam Curry

thought that's what you meant. I had to look at it though,

Moe FactzMoe Factz

yeah, be transformed by the renewing of your mind. It don't get no more new age than that. For all the people that I knew it, I knew most of you were saying like, no, no, no, you go.

Reprogramming our minds

Put that on me, but this is Dr Bruce Lipton, and he gets into the subconscious. And then how you reprogram your mind every

Unknown

human, and it's a fact, every human first seven years, is download, a hypnosis. The brain of a child under seven is in a lower vibrational frequency. When you put wires on a person's head, you read electroencephalograph, reading brain activity. A child below seven has a lower vibration than consciousness. It's called theta. Theta is imagination. Theta is also hypnosis. And the idea is this, before you can become conscious, if you don't have any programs, what are you

going to be conscious of? So nature makes the first seven years. What kind of programs are required to live on this planet? I say, how do you get them? Theta is hypnosis. You just watch your watch your parents, your watch your siblings and your community, because you have to learn how many 100,000 rules. Think about it. Just to be a functional member of a family and a functional member of a community, there are rules.

Teach an infant these rules. You don't have to first seven years, I just observe it and just download it, and then I say, why is it relevant? Because this is the unfortunate fact 95% of our life comes from those programs in the subconscious.

Adam CurryAdam Curry

I don't know who Dr Bruce Lipton is, but he's describing Dianetics right there.

Moe FactzMoe Factz

Okay,

Adam CurryAdam Curry

theta, all of that stuff that's all from the their machine. You know, I have one of those machines. Actually,

Moe FactzMoe Factz

I didn't know this was all related. You see, like I'm going following the threads here. I did not know what Farrakhan was talking about. It was related to this. I'm following the threads. And the reason why I'm bringing this up is nobody teach you. Teaches you how to be an N word. That's right, nobody sits you down. It's like, Hey, this is how you're going to be black or N word, right? No, it's you

witness interactions at a young child. And maybe this is why I'm weird in the definition how nearly uses it, because I grew up in a pretty much constructive household. So that's why I seen stranger in my own world. Because my mom, you know, she she's very she was very open to different ways of thinking. Even though she's Christian based, she was always looking for other, just other improvements. You're saying, like, she was on colonics in the 80s and that kind of stuff. Like, yeah, she

was especially for a black woman. You said, like, that was out there, yeah, the aloe vera and all that. And then, like, said, my dad, he was strong in his masculinity. So that's an awkward combination in the first place, yeah, so I'm just saying so. But if you grow up in the traditional, media driven, trauma based environment, you're naturally going to learn to be a victim. This is how this my virus is, which I call a mile with malware is human. Malware is what it is. It's not how.

That's why I don't believe in scientific racism. We're naturally born, biologically inferior. All this is learned behavior, and it's learned so early on in this first seven years I believe, or sooner or later, who knows you're saying, but it's learn. Like I said, I don't get into specifics, the analogy

Adam CurryAdam Curry

of a computer operating system. We've talked about it several times throughout this episode that. Holds true. And of course, you know, everything is a is a fractal of of everything else. So computer systems are, in fact, a fractal of the human, human mind. And so, yes, malware is a very is a very appropriate analogy.

Moe FactzMoe Factz

And it specifically had, I gave it a specific term. Me and grunt have been working on this I came up with on one of his lives. Late night, it was like me and he was just riffing. And for lack of better word, it's the nigger mindset. There it is, all it is, all it is, you know, and I'll use that in the artistic in a specific term, because it's the actual scientific terminology, and what it is, is, it's the complete

opposite of the seven habits. Is being reactive. It's putting first things last, you know, say, like, and when you go down the list, and me, him went down, it was like, this is this? Is it? This is what is expected of us, you know, we in the first thing last. We're expecting the practice the touchdown dance before we learn how to run the touchdown. You probably like we were expected. You know, no synergy. We want to be understood first, then to be understood. I mean, we're about

to be understood first, then understand other people. And it goes down the list. I'm seeing, like, I'm

Adam CurryAdam Curry

writing, those who want to be could be first, will be last. Those who want to who will be last will become first,

Moe FactzMoe Factz

exactly. So this is the malware, you know, and I'm noticing that it's spreading. It's spreading like like wildfire, and that's what put me on. On the Orange is the new color person, because I'm seeing behaviors that's typically targeted towards my group being deployed, widespread. Yeah, deployed. So, but there's once again, there's hope, because in 46 here's the hope and

Unknown

the Jesuits. For 400 years, they were boasts, and people didn't understand. They say, give me a child until it's seven, and I will show you the man. They've been saying that for 400 years because they knew seven years was the program period. The conscious mind is creative and can learn in any number of ways. Read a self help book, go to a lecture, listen to this, and conscious mind is going to get some awareness. And I go, Yeah, but subconscious mind doesn't learn that way.

Subconscious mind learns in two fundamental ways, naturally, hypnosis, which is the first seven years. And after age seven, how do you put new programs in repetition practice? I like the last one because there's a new phrase that's bandied about called Fake it till you make it, meaning, if you're not a happy person. I say, you want to be a happy person. Then repeat all the time. I'm happy. I'm happy. I say, Well, you don't look happy or anything. No, who am I

talking to by repetition? I'm talking to subconscious. If subconscious gets I am happy, and 95% of your life comes from that subconscious, there will be a point once the subconscious got I am happy, you don't have to say it again. It'll be automatic.

Adam CurryAdam Curry

Yeah, it's, that's computer programming, 101,

Moe FactzMoe Factz

but also that's faith based, because you pray and then you believe as it already has happened. That's the fake it till you make it, you say like it's already

Adam CurryAdam Curry

happened. That's the same thing that Anthony Robbins does in his in his power talks the exact that's what the secret is. It's all parts of the same thing.

Moe FactzMoe Factz

And what it really is is having control over your thoughts. And what brought it home for me is really, when it started, I got named Dion at my former job. He had a small booklet on his arm. And I was like, What you reading? Dion? He was like, The Strangest Secret by Earl Nightingale. And he was like, he said, I'll send you a link. And he sent me the link. And I felt this before the seven habits, and he sent me the link, and I challenged myself. It's the repetition to listen to it

for 30 days straight. I challenged myself, and it like I said, it worked. It worked. It's not because of what they're saying. It's because it's shifting your mind. And it starts with 47 I'd

Unknown

like to tell you about the strangest secret in the

Think, don't just react

world. Not long ago, Albert Schweitzer, the great doctor and Nobel Prize winner, was being interviewed in London, and a reporter asked him, Doctor, what's wrong with men today? The great doctor was silent a moment, and then he said, Men simply don't think and it's about this that I want to talk with you. We live today in a golden age. This is an era that man has looked forward, dreamed of and worked toward for 1000s of years. But since it's here, we pretty well take it for

granted. We in America are particularly fortunate to live in the richest land that ever existed on. The face of the earth, a land of abundant opportunity for everyone. But do you know what happens? Let's take 100 men who start even at the age of 25 Do you have any idea what will happen to those men by the time they're 65 but by the time they're 65 one will be rich, four will be financially independent, five

will still be working. 54 will be broke. Now think a moment out of the 100 only five make the grade.

Moe FactzMoe Factz

Okay? That's because they don't think no, and that sounds silly, right? You would even for myself, but you realize I was surprised. And everything I'm saying today is I've tried it, it's been successful. I'm less confused, you know, say because I'm not sitting there touting myself. Is outside of the mindset, because it's constant. It's like a fire hose, you know? It's constant bombardment. But what happened is, I realized how little I was actually thinking. Most of the

time, you're being reactive. Things happen in the day, and you just react to and you go to work, you're at, the emails you're at, it is, you know, you come home, you're at you're just constantly putting out fires all the time, and you never have a chance to prevent fires. This is what uh Kobe talks about, sharpening the saw. You have to learn how to start preventing fires. Am I? Am I making like

Adam CurryAdam Curry

hopefully, I think you're making a lot of sense, because

Moe FactzMoe Factz

what I'm telling people all in a nutshell, you have the power. How much brain are you using every day? How much are you really thinking well,

Adam CurryAdam Curry

clearly what's going on is five to eight hours a day, people are scrolling. You're scrolling. You're not doing what. You're not thinking right?

Moe FactzMoe Factz

And you're not even focused on your problem saying like you're in escapism.

Adam CurryAdam Curry

That's exactly right. There it is in a nutshell. That's it, right there. Stop doing that and spend that time thinking.

Moe FactzMoe Factz

And what is that escapism? That escapism is my control. So you're, you're making the problem worse. You know that you pour gas on the fire just by let me give let me get some more programming. Let me get some more programming. And that's that's what I'm saying. We live in the best of times and the worst of times. It's so much free information out here. Everything I play today, it cost me anything to go listen to it and find it. Are you training your algorithm the

right way? Think about it. Adam, when we buy a phone, right? It doesn't feed us a bunch of negative stuff. When you take it out the

Adam CurryAdam Curry

box, does it? No, it makes me feel good. It smells nice. You have to train it.

Moe FactzMoe Factz

It's like, Oh, you want them negative people, huh? Let me, let me give you some of this trauma. Let me give you some of this mind control. Yeah, you seen this video? Let me give you five more like it. Yeah. Where, if you look at, like I said, all this stuff, the stoicism and all this other stuff, was fed algorithm. When I start looking for a start feeding so the algorithm is not the problem, no,

Adam CurryAdam Curry

it's it, it's, it's even better than that, because the the out, you know, people talk about like Tiktok. All the Chinese are doing this or that. No, do it to yourself. The algorithm is pretty dumb. Actually. All it does is give you more of what you just saw. And if you do another one, then it doubles. And you do another one, then it's exponential. And that's how people go down. That's how they go into the to

the death trap. And it's everyone falls into it. From time to time, I usually fall into it with the, uh, airplane crash videos, which, which all to me, is educational, but you know, then, before you know it, I'm looking at influencers getting arrested by police.

Moe FactzMoe Factz

And that's the slippery slope of, but you

Adam CurryAdam Curry

just, but I'm aware of it, and I also, I have a really stupid phone that doesn't work very well. Helps. It helps.

Moe FactzMoe Factz

That's all I'm saying, is think, start there.

Your reap what you sow

Just start there and think, realize what you're consuming. All right, let's go into 40. I want to wrap this up because I don't want to build don't want to belabor people too long.

Unknown

Now, it stands to reason that a person who's thinking about a concrete and worthwhile goal is going to reach it, because that's what he's thinking about, and we become what we think about. Conversely, the man who has no goal, who doesn't know where he's going, and whose thoughts must therefore be thoughts of can. Confusion and anxiety and fear and worry becomes what he thinks about. His life becomes one of frustration, fear, anxiety and worry, and if he

thinks about nothing, he becomes nothing. Now, how does it work? Why do we become what we think about? Well, I'll tell you how it works, as far as we know. Now to do this, I want to tell you about a situation that parallels the human mind. Suppose a farmer has some land, and it's good, fertile land. Now the land gives the farmer a choice. He may plant in that land whatever he chooses. The land doesn't care. It's up to the farmer to make

the decision. Now, remember, we're comparing the human mind with the land, because the mind, like the land, doesn't care what you plant in it, it will return what you plant, but it doesn't care what you plant, you reap, what you sow. Mm, hmm,

Adam CurryAdam Curry

that's it. It's it's as good as the Bible. The Strangest Secret,

Moe FactzMoe Factz

and here's the scary part for parents out there, if, whatever, if you're planning anxiety in your field, your your children in that theta stage, whatever age it goes to, I'm not, I'm not hard setting these numbers at age seven or whatever, your children are around you, and You're consuming and you're letting off that energy is going right into their little brains and in their little hearts and their little

souls. And do you wonder why these children need all of these medications and all this anxiety?

Adam CurryAdam Curry

Anxiety the number one thing the Bible helps you get rid of. I don't want to sound preachy here, but it's all over that book. It's all over it. And if you don't want to

Moe FactzMoe Factz

put the Bible into your life, at least take the devil out your life, you don't say, start there. Amen, yeah, exactly, start there. You know, like, don't, don't let that negative energy breathe like us a word back in during covid slough you're sloughing. You're sloughing negativity all over your children, yeah, and anxiety. And I say this because I love you. I love everybody, and I love everything you're saying, even the people that you know saying that want to see me

do harm. I love I love everybody, because it's easier that way. To be honest, it's less taxing to love everybody. Hey, it's hard, lot of work, a lot of energy. Y'all got time for that? Let's go ahead and get into 49

Replacing negativity in your mind

Unknown

stop thinking about what it is you fear each time a fearful or negative thought comes into your consciousness, replace it with a mental picture of your positive and worthwhile goal. There will come times when you feel like giving up. It's easier for a human being to think negatively than positively. That's why only 5% is successful, you must begin now to place yourself in that group for 30 days. You must take

control of your mind. It will think only about what you permit it to think each day for this 30 day test, do more than you have to do. In addition to maintaining a cheerful, positive outlook, give of yourself more than you've ever done before. Do this knowing that your returns in life must be in direct proportion to what you give the moment you decide on a goal to work toward, you're immediately a successful person. You're then in that rare and successful category of people who know

where they're going. Out of every 100 people, you belong to the top five they

Adam CurryAdam Curry

you know, this is there you go. This is our next series. Will be a self help series with Adam and Mo, how to be successful in 30 days.

Unknown

Hey, look,

Moe FactzMoe Factz

don't threaten me with a good time. Seriously, like that. It's so much, it's so much negativity out here in everything is just like, negative, negative, negative, negative, negative, yeah,

Adam CurryAdam Curry

this is, if I can just say this is the secret behind no agenda. We went through covid, and we were just laughing the whole time. We would like, I mean, it was dire, it was bad, right? But we were just laughing about it, like, just make just if you, if you, that's the best way, that's the best way to change your own behavior, to change your insight, your thinking makes you feel good, particularly if you can laugh. It's always better just

Moe FactzMoe Factz

health wise laughing, it's just an act of laughing. You know,

Unknown

proven, proven, proven to help.

Moe FactzMoe Factz

And that's what we've done here with such a heavy topic of race. Who. Who would think this episode would end like how it began? Oh, I

Adam CurryAdam Curry

knew it would, because I know you. I know your format. I know I know what you do. You always take us down to the darkest depths, and then you pull us right back up. You

Moe FactzMoe Factz

have to, because, like, look, it's the darkest before dawn. You're saying, like, that's that's a real phenomenon. It's gonna get dark. But my thing is, if you can learn how to love those people that want to harm you, they have no power over you. That's what. That's what turning the other cheek was about. Like I said, not to be cast this audience. Mo,

Adam CurryAdam Curry

you're being a black Jesus right now. No,

Moe FactzMoe Factz

don't put that on me. I You say Remove this cup for me. No, but I'm being like, this is how you have to interact, because don't be a negative Nancy. And I'm telling you, this stuff works. Try to listen to the strangest secret for 30 days. Just make a habit of it, hearing something positive, if nothing else, to hear something positive. It worked for me. And the reason why it worked for me is it changed how I saw things. Because when you're in corporate America and your kids are

getting older and you're looking like is this it? Is it coming to this cubicle? Uh, is this it? And then you start thinking, like, no, I got this other talent and honestly, to be and I never told you this. Adam, Oh, before I met you, and before I even got into commentating, I was headed back into music, you know, because I'm like, God gave me this gift, I need to really

take it seriously. You know, that kind of thing, not make, like not performing music, but like more producing that kind of thing, but then doing that, and not habit, and doing those habits and doing that. And then, like, I saw you, heard a guy said, Are you a talker? Are you a doer? And that rang a bell, and then I called into a show and another show, and then that gave me the confidence to reach out to you. And then here I am. So your path is not gonna be set. It's the willingness to get

You walk your own path

up and walk every day or run every day is, is, is what you control. Now, where's the one takes you?

Adam CurryAdam Curry

In fact, being open to seeing another path and going down that path is what's always been successful for me speak on it. I mean, this my whole life. I mean, it took me until I was 50 to realize what I'd been doing, but I going through all these different paths, and I'm like, Oh, I'm a broadcaster. Oh, that's what I am. And I didn't really you know, already been

doing no agenda for seven years, right? And all these other things are paths I needed to take to come to the realization of what my true calling is, and and it can be, it's can be all kinds of different things, but I so. I am, I am a doer in talking. Let's put it that way.

Moe FactzMoe Factz

Yeah, I mean, because that's your your thought about it. You think about it. Because when we do what we do, a lot of thought goes into it.

Adam CurryAdam Curry

But I mean, I, I started several companies. I took a company public on NASDAQ, what would what I find myself doing, talking all day, talking like I'm talking to investors, I'm talking to clients now, at a certain point I'm like, I'm talking crap. I gotta stop that. So I left my own companies like, I can't, I can't. I love talking, but I can't speak lies or half truths to sell something, which I think is why I can identify it so well. So yeah, and I, I hope you get back into music.

Moe FactzMoe Factz

Well, I can say they became a hobby more than anything now, because this became my first priority. Because, like you said, this is I didn't know what this show was gonna be. We ain't know the show is, like, let's just,

Adam CurryAdam Curry

I still don't know what it is. Yeah, I don't

Moe FactzMoe Factz

either. Y'all tell us. You said right here to tell us what it is, you know, because it's just I go something far. I find interesting something. I start to think about it. I start to investigate it. I start to put stuff together, collect things, find common threads. And this how you have 100 episodes of this, which I'm about to wrap up now with. You wouldn't believe Reverend Ike. Are you familiar with Reverend Ike, sir, I

Adam CurryAdam Curry

am not familiar with the good reverend.

Moe FactzMoe Factz

Well, Reverend Ike, he was a pastor. He got cues of

Listen

like taking money from his from his congregation. But here's the thing, as my good friend, brother Theo say, eat the meat and leave the bones. And if some if somebody has one thing valid or valuable to add to conversation, hear em out, because that might be their one purpose in life. And what. He talks about, he confirms what Dr Bruce talk about, the subconscious mind, and in the next clip, he's going to talk about the power of positive thinking.

Unknown

The subconscious mind can also be likened unto a computer, and the computer people have a wonderful slogan that they use in their business. They say, garbage in, garbage out. And many times people wonder. They ask me, Reverend Ike, how is it that these things are happening to me? Why? What have you put into your mental computer? What have you put into your subconscious mind? So I want to instruct you on telling

your mind what to think. Now, please listen to this. Your individual presence of mind should be operated by you and given strict orders by you, but these orders, as I indicated before, should be given lovingly and joyfully. If you do not tell your mind what to think the world will keep your mind confused. Yeah. Amen, Reverend Ike

Moe FactzMoe Factz

directed thinking like, control your mind. That's all I'm gonna add to that. Just control your mind, and you'll be surprised how little you actually do it, yeah,

Adam CurryAdam Curry

and if you control it, and if you, if you exercise it, it's amazing things will happen.

Moe FactzMoe Factz

Just being, just being focused on how being in control of it is a game changer in itself, believe me, because the past, the thoughts we have, the implanted thoughts we have, the big one is the plant implant. Is it thought? Your thought wasn't implanted in your mind from a from a second source? What was that phrase?

Adam CurryAdam Curry

Again, from the earlier clip, the culture, something economy. What was that?

Moe FactzMoe Factz

Culture? War Economy,

Adam CurryAdam Curry

because that's what a lot of people are trapped in, the culture war economy. They're trapped on

Moe FactzMoe Factz

both sides, yeah,

Adam CurryAdam Curry

all sides, well,

Moe FactzMoe Factz

you beat me too. All sides find their flavor or their flavor. Your flavor finds you,

Adam CurryAdam Curry

yeah, culture war economy, that's exactly what we're in. That's, that's what, that's it. Culture, war, economy. I love that phrase,

Moe FactzMoe Factz

all right. So here it is. Here comes just the the last and final clip of the 100 episode 51 I'm

Unknown

talking about how to use your mind power to get what you want now, and I want to talk about the idea now for a moment. Let me hear everybody say now. Let's be even more emphatic by saying right now. Now, most of you know that I am not a pie in the sky preacher. All of you who want pie in the sky, by and by, when you die, you're in the wrong church. This afternoon, I'm a now preacher. This is a now message, which I bring to

you. And why am I a now preacher? Because now is the only time there is yesterday is gone and tomorrow never comes.

Moe FactzMoe Factz

Who was that? That's Reverend Ike.

Adam CurryAdam Curry

Reverend Ike again, wow. You know, he reminds me a bit of Tony Evans. You know, Reverend Tony Evans, yes, who also, by the way, recently just resigned under some issues which have not been defined. He does. He does a lot of sermons just like that, just like that.

Moe FactzMoe Factz

But Reverend, he had a huge church, and like I said, some of the things, eat the meat, leave the bones. But the point and last, final point I want to make is, and this is prevalent amongst black people, that heaven has our answers. We're going to struggle on Earth, and then, you know, we'll get our fair share of No, that's

Adam CurryAdam Curry

not the message of Jesus.

Moe FactzMoe Factz

No, no, I want mine today. You were saying because he said I asked not and he shouldn't answer, right? So I'm knocking today. I want mine today. And that's the mindset we gotta have, that we want a better life, a better world. We want a place where nobody's mistreated, everybody can get what they need today.

Love everyone & Be Nice!

Adam CurryAdam Curry

It can be done once we start loving each other.

Moe FactzMoe Factz

Well, I love you, Adam, I really do

Adam CurryAdam Curry

smoke mo I love you, brother, I really do and I am grateful, grateful that we have been. Allowed to do this that we have been put together to do this, and I, for one very much look forward to the next thing that he has in store for us.

Moe FactzMoe Factz

Well, my antennas are up and I'm listening, uh, to what, what is the next move? Um, but antenna then, as I always

Pay attention to Everything and the Truth will reveal itself

say, pay attention to everything, and the truth will reveal itself.

Adam CurryAdam Curry

And going out with style with Mr. James Brown, Mo, thank you very much, my brother. Thank you Adam, and thank you for listening to mo facts with Adam curry for 100 episodes.

Unknown

You know, we're dealing with a very critical and crucial time, most crucial and critical time that I've ever witnessed, being as young as I am. You know, we all don't want to say nothing else, so we say as young as we are. Now, I want to talk about the pronunciation and the realization. Now the educators, they call it ESP positive thinking, right? Some of the people on the cut, on the cross side of the pond call it vibes, vibrations, astrology and all those

different things understand. But I call what is, what is, but it is, what is lookin now you see a brother, you taking the ghetto, you find a whole lot of crime. I can understand. Hey, I know what it means. Me nine years old before I got my bus there on the way out of the store, you know, putting on a half a half breasts from the pawn shop with tennis shoes,

trying to be hip. So I know where it coming from. Like your fellow say, having catfish head stew, and then, like the catfish went in there with his head and come out very quick, and then leave nothing else. That's one thing that educators and the politicians and the savage man gotta remember. My brothers need jobs. You don't you can't eat. You don't wait, you can't eat. Get help cook yourself. Good dog. Mom did it from the street. You can't eat, Sis,

you don't wait. No, you can't eat, so you got to have mind power to deal with starvation, and that's what we're dealing with. You see, we can't go back to the biblical stories, two loaves of bread or two little fishes. Five loaves of bread, two little fishes. Yeah, five loaves of bread. Now, look here. Too many brothers to go by that. I want your brother's big where we coming from? Set your mind right here. Dig the JBE experience. I dug this from a young man out of New York.

You said the GbE. The GbE, now we want to take To the JB, the JB Experience. Head on mine, mine, mind, what is what it is, what is what it is. It is, what is it is, what is it is what it is, that's what it is. That's ah, give me some flute. You. You know, dealing with Harlem, South Side of Chicago, the Bay Area. What? Five point bottom, mid bottom in Atlanta, giant Street in Augusta, West broad in Savannah, U Street in Washington, going over to Baltimore,

South Street in the village, Boston. I know somebody need to help us. Give us just give us a chance. Somebody gotta get yourself together, unified. We need information. Pass on that. Rhino information. Yay. Musa. Musa.

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