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¶ Intro
more facts with Adam curry from May 25 2021 This is episode number 63 and don't let the ominous music throw you off because we are happy to be back it's been a couple of weeks but the streets demand that is so here we are I'm Adam curry in Austin Texas and in Virginia my friend on the other end ladies and gentlemen Mr. Moe facts Whoa, what kind of disasters music is this? House heavy as hoes in this house.
What I've heard this version, this is just like the this is not even a version is like sometimes. It's the classical version. It's got cuz we're gonna keep it clap today. Oh, okay, so I decided to go with the classical version of it. So wait a minute. Oh, me. We'll keep this short. A lot of people is this because your mama fax is now listening to the show that you can all sudden keep it classy. Is that what's going on? No, it's because of this topic that we're going to talk about. That we're
gonna have to keep it classy. All right, I'm cracking up right now. Please, gentlemen. So we have those topics where it stops nobody knows the only person who really knows his mo course because he put the show together expertly. The topic for mo faxes Adam Curry Episode Number 63 is is called w AP. Oh, yeah, this is right in my wheelhouse. Everyone knows w A P
¶ WAP
stands for weird ass podcaster. So I'm ready for the show. So we have to talk about it. And to let everybody know, this will be a two part show. Ever. Yeah, this is because this is this is not it would have been 100 clip list. So do we have a cliffhanger though? Are we going to leave them hanging at the end of the show? Is that it? Do we have something like that? They'll have to stick around to the end to figure out and then they'll see how it where it goes. But we're gonna
like say we're gonna keep it classy. If I could, can we get a warning? Oh, we already we need that right off the bat. Man. The
¶ Trigger Warning
machine. The machine hadn't even warmed up yet. Of course we can mention trigger warning. Well, when the trigger warning has been activated, I feel good. I'm ready. And I also can we get a parental guidance if you have it in there. If nobody knows what w AP stands for, you might want to go look it up. But it's not what's gonna stand for by the end of the show. I'll say that. for this episode. I think it's it's fairly easy to say that any human being
over the age of 12. No, my this knows what WAP stands for. That
¶ Parental Advisory Explicit Lyrics
song video was hard. Yeah, it is a bit sad. Exactly. So, um, parental guidance, I would suggest you listen to it first. And then let your kids listen to it. Because it's good. As always, we're gonna handle it classy. Um, mobin before you get started, I'm sorry to interrupt. This is a value for value podcast, you better be listening on a value for value enabled podcast app. If not, stop right now go to new podcast. apps.com get something that does value for value and
¶ New Podcast Apps
boost us during the show. So we know what parts you liked and boost a lot and boost often. Okay, it's a splash those that
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splash. So I guess everybody's wondering why we picked this topic. I mean, it's kind of, I don't know, a strange topic to have on one of our podcasts, but it's because of maxine waters and what she said to Megan the stallion. Whale, Megan, the stallion and Maxine Waters had a conversation for Harper's Bazaar online. And one of the things that they talked about was the song whap. They told me to look at that was a well, and I did Don't worry, don't worry, don't worry, don't worry, don't worry.
I said, Now that's Audacity. And that is the ability for women to
¶ Maxine Waters
take charge of what they want to say because I had paid attention to the young, you know, gangsta rap a time. When you know men were in charge. They said whatever they wanted to say. But women, you know, didn't say for a long time. What they could say
I wanted to say a dare to say, okay, okay. Very important to note that was the latest evolution of women expressing their sexual desires on that vaccine isn't Oh gee, she should know that you can't forget about salt and pepper and TLC and little Kim and Fox brown and training gangsta boo Missy Elliott, you know, Kaia Nicki Minaj, like, you know, sexual desires now, Megan the stallion also was talking about
protecting black women. And why is that so hard to do? They feel like it's controversial and all I'm saying is protect black women and now people are taking it like as I'm saying something crazy. So just to be supported by another black woman who you know sends the same message I feel like you know what, I am doing the right thing and I'm gonna keep doing because Maxine Waters saying I can Wow, I didn't even know this happened. When did when did she
say this? out? And how did I miss it go? How did I do? Yeah, it was a while ago, and I found this away because I found it to be one of the most disgusting forms of pandering and commoditizing human beings ever in politics hence, it's gonna have a two part show made about it and but maxine waters that that sort of gig man, she's great at doing that. She's She's really good at productizing people commoditizing them. Correct. And that's, that's
if you understand that culture that's in music right now. And they would call it the thought culture. I don't know if you know what that means. But it's those holes. Hey, I got one. Yeah. Sorry about that. Yeah, I get around. Yeah.
¶ THOT culture
I keep her I know. She knows she knows it's a joke. But we're gonna keep it light. We're gonna keep it classy. But it's a very deep topic. Um, and we have to go and look at all the layers that's going on here. One The reason, bro, somebody a maxine waters. I don't want to say age, but from her generation. This is highly unexpected for her to support this kind of music. You will you assume? Well, I mean, music or the topic and the video and the lyrics and which version did she hear is
¶ Maxine's unexpected support
another thing, you know? Yeah, well, um, but I will say this Maxine water has always been on the side of supporting hip hop music. Now. It may be for ulterior motives. Because of what districts that she's in. And we're gonna get to that later. Um, what I want to do now is show you that you expected this story to be covered on The Breakfast Club. This is a hip hop station. When I heard it on the Rickey smiley Morning Show. That target
audience is where he took over from Tom Joyner. We should know that that's the black Boomer station. wB B s bag ever. Yes. So when I saw it there, I'm like, they're really trying to really push the acceptance of the thought culture and older and older audience. So let's go ahead and get into that clip. So let's get off into
this thing. Last year. I know you're probably remember Magda stallion wrote a letter about the lack of protection for black women and as a result, Representative Maxine Waters sent her a letter commending her for her efforts. Now fast forward a couple of months Megan got the chance to interview rep waters for her heart bizarre Harper's Bazaar spread during the interview, Reverend Maxine Waters saying I listened to young people around me and they may
tell me something that you may ought to pay attention to. But then they told me to look at it was it was she said she said don't worry don't worry. I said now that's Audacity. That is Audacity. Yeah, truth comes out there, huh? Read Maxine Coulter Whoa, aka the Holy cow. Oh, yeah. So that was a major slip that morning to come out there. And that and the reason
¶ Now that's Audacity
why I also use that that was the brat, which was a female rapper from the era from an earlier era. 80s late 80s. Late 80s 90s. He was mid 90s. One of my favorite songs on Spotify. Yeah, early to mid 90s. I will say that she made one of my favorite songs of all time. funkified Um, so here's a good story, too. I mean, she she literally came from from passing shit around, right? We're gonna get her sister store. We got this little foreshadowing there.
Sorry. Good. So we got to go back to Episode 52. And then Well this is when mega stallion first popped up on our show, and it was talking about when she did the the serenade saturday night live
¶ TBC52 - Malcolm X- On Protecting Black Women 1
performance and he was like protect black women. Let's just
go ahead and get into that. That feature this morning hip hop star Megan the stallion speaking out and speaking up for black women in America, being constantly told she's too much or not respected person is the black woman, the singer penning a powerful op ed piece in The New York Times, taking on the issue of violence against women, it opening up about her own experience in what she describes as being a victim of an act of violence by a man explaining the issue is even more intense for
black women who struggle against stereotypes and are seen as angry or threatening when we try to stand up for ourselves and our sisters, for her to speak to these issues and to speak to us specifically, because the conversation is almost always about everybody else. But women. It's very meaningful and it's very significant. This comes just days after the rap superstar performed her mega hit savage on Saturday Night Live.
The words protect black women behind her on stage featuring quotes from Malcolm X and activist Tamika Mallory calling out Kentucky Attorney General Daniel Cameron for his handling of the Brianna Taylor case, we need to protect that black women. Black women, Megan, the stallions op ed pointing to other obstacles black women face like disproportionately high mortality rates for black mothers and citing a 2019 stat that 91% of transgender or gender non conforming people who
are fatally shot or black. Oh, man, I love it to black women. No protection at all. It's not about black women, or they did a quick, little little side side move that little. Yeah, what a quick shift. And my question is protect them from home. Yeah. I'm gonna ask that in all seriousness, because the implied
¶ Protect them from who?
Well, you they need to be protected from his black men. They're saying right. So let me try. Let me try this on you. So of course, we know why they say they want to be protected. But then it's very hard to say that black women are being assaulted. So but look at these black women who used to be men. And that's that is what you're really taking out from biological men. Yeah, I'm not I'm not No, no, of course. But that's that's the method right there. It's like, well, we don't
have any black women to show for it. So well, we got them. Well, and I'll say this. Black women need to be protected. And what they need to do is No, I'm saying specifically, because they're the most propagandize people on this earth. Yes, they need to protected that's and it's could be much more damaging, long run. Correct. And that's what we're really going to get into, because I have to have this show with care. And it's what took so
long. Um, this is why I couldn't do it in one sitting. Because it's a very profound topic. Because I as I always say, there's a gender war, a generational war, a race, we're all going on at the same time. And in that gender war, the mass media or mainstream media is pitting black men against black women. And I want to point out the real enemy in these next two sittings. We really have to do that because this thing is at
a full tilt right now. And let me just interject by just saying, what the heck happened to Saturday Night Live, the musical guest. And I was in New York in the 80s. And I followed the show for a long time. The musical guests was always something weird, something offbeat something that you hadn't heard of, you know, weird outfits, but always some kind of musical. something great in there. I mean, it was it was it was just it was a you rarely ever liked the band, but be
like, Oh, that's kind of interesting. And now it's just turned into this kit making propaganda spot. It's really disappointing. It's the center ring or the woke circus. Correct what it is? Yeah, correct. And what they do is they roll people out. Saturday night, Sunday morning on the new shows, and for the rest of the week. We have something to talk about. Um, I think you're probably referring to the little NAS x performance. Yep. Exactly. And I just want to point that out that
bersih is on the rise. So um, I don't know if you know what that stands for. But that's another thing black women Worry about I'll get into that. Yes. boy, boy, bu SS Why? Yeah, it stands for boy whap is pretty much what it stands for.
¶ BUSSY
Got out. And the reason why I say that is even in that clip, and I brought that up that point up in that clip for a reason. They don't really care about black women. It's the once again black women hold the door. And we're gonna let everybody else in. Yeah. And what us the man brothers, and you're saying that really love our sisters and mothers, cousins,
aunties and whoever else. were waving the flag, like, Don't you see what's going on here, these people, they're putting a battery in your back don't have your best interests at heart. And that's what really irked me about this whole Maxine Reverend waters
¶ Don't you see what's going on here?
doing what she did, because it's like you, you are from content, you understand what goes on with the the commoditization of women, and they're in their in their most prized possession. And they really are truly, it really hurt right now just thinking about it. Because then they say you don't want to protect our women. And the reason why we always have this conversation, it starts with us. It starts with us. But it an end with us. And it didn't start with us. So I'm ringing the alarm.
To everyone else, this is what's coming. And hopefully like as always, we can gain allies and, and put this thing in the chat. One of the disgusting things they did in that clip, and we called it out show 52 is how they took the Malcolm X clip, and use that one little snippet. Yeah, and then play the whole clip in context. So I would like to go back to that clip, play in
¶ This is what's coming
context. And then we can discuss this respected person in America was the black woman. The most unprotected person in America is the black woman. The most neglected person in America is the black woman. We as
¶ Malcolm
Muslims, the Honorable Elijah Muhammad teaches us to respect our women and to protect our women, then the only time I'm Muslim really gets real family is when someone goes to molest his woman.
We will kill you for making a claim, yes, we will kill you for our we believe that if the white man will do whatever is necessary to see that his woman gets respect and protection, then you and I will never be recognized as men until we've applied men and placed the frame penalty over the head of anyone who puts his filthy hands out to put in the direction of our wind. Okay. And the key thing there is when he said respect and protection.
And he pointed out he didn't say black women, he said are Muslim women. So it was the women that participate in our culture. We protect what our lives and we will kill for them if necessary. There's a popular saying in the movie Malcolm X shot by Spike Lee, where he's walking down the street in Harlem, and you have working women, you know, aka prostitutes all around him as he's headed to his destination. He doesn't stop to protect them,
because he feels like they chose to be disrespected. Now we're going to put some nuance and we're not going to dehumanize anybody here. But to use that clip of Malcolm X and say like he would condone what was going on in that stage, while mega stallion performed a song which features Beyonce called Savage. When we've been painted as savages throughout all of history, I don't think he would stand for that. So that's where I'm coming from like, and you got to ask yourself who, who's
behind Harper's Bazaar, who's behind the New York Times? Who's behind Saturday Night Live? Who's given this person Magnus stallion access to people like Reverend waters, and all of these platforms that she's participating in pushing this message, not about women empowerment more than we need to be protected as black women. And I ask again, from who? Who are
¶ Who's behind the message?
you saying that too? So I'll turn it over you I'm just trying to run the brother. I'm hoping the answer is China. But the influence is Very, very deep. And the worst part is that it's black women now, who needs to be protected from black women who have been completely co opted and under, you know, some massive spell.
And that's exactly the point. And this, what this does is when you go on national television, and perform in the way that you perform, you bring down the overall level of respect required for women of all all statuses, but especially black women, because now what we have is you have these extremes. And when the boundaries are pushed, then society like kind of gravitates further to the left
or the right or conservative or liberal. Not in the form of politics, but okay, if like, back in the 50s, showing sex on television was not acceptable, right, but then you will go fast for you know, it's like, okay, loans, they're under the sheets, but we're not showing the body parts. So that made it it made it even more acceptable for you know, other things that happen on television, and they keep shifting This is the sentence, and why didn't you What's the septic, please?
It was only what 10 years ago, and Janet Jackson's boob was exposed on the Super Bowl, and everyone lost their shit. And that's my point, what colors Janet Jackson is always walked right into it. Okay, but now that God has shown me they use us, specifically, but are women more specifically to push this sexual revolution, which I think we're in another sexual revolution. Now we had one in the 60s and 70s. And now we're seeing it. Um, fast
forward, we're seeing another evolution of it. Well, the evolution is has been a complete unraveling first into all these different categories. Right, and what we'd have to do is look at when we talk about this, like you pointed out yourself, you say everybody over 12 year old 12 year old know what whap stand for? That's because it's played on every radio station, of course, and we're gonna get into the lyrics. It was it was, it was completely normalized. They were playing it on morning shows,
they were playing it everywhere. It was number one. It was it was a complete normalization and a super headshake. And you could not say, especially in the presence of 15 year old white girls, you could not say this is unacceptable, but Oh, yeah, I know, you can ring your bell but it's still ringing in my head. And and the main pushback was, first of all, well, don't you know, that's what male rappers have been doing for decades. That was the number one thing and that's why it was hidden
behind a advisory label and kept from people under a certain age or the advisory advisory label is to make you really want to hear it. That's my career. I remember being a teenager when they first came about and you couldn't buy it unless you had somebody over 16 to buy it for you. Yeah, but now you have elders for lack of a better word elder elders like Maxine Waters saying
his chose audacity Yes. Let's talk about the the moisture of your proposition and that that and that in itself that I mean, that's that's a real head shaker but I understand why and we're gonna get into why but when I saw that I was like we are we really jumped the shark Not Not Not that it matters. But do you think rev Maxine actually saw the video? It does Probably not. That's because it came out so easy for this audacity words, like come on. And the other thing is, we
did a deep dive and it's the third person in that room. And the second show of this set, we're going to get into who's the third person in that room between maxine waters and and Magda stallion. So it is how bizarre is not a lightweight magazine. It has it has no decent standing. I think it's from the Hearst family if I'm not mistaken, I believe so. Yeah. So I want to get back going into Part Two from the Rickey smiley morning show so they can wrap up with that.
That's audacity that is Audacity. And that is the ability for women to take charge of what they want to say. I have paid attention to the young gangsta rap at a time when men
¶ Audacity part 2
were in charge. They said whatever they wanted to say about women but women didn't say for a long time what they could or wanted or dare to say and so I thought that is Audacity. Okay, Representative maxine waters that splits up represent right ladies. That's what I'm talking about. I just want to just hit me I'm sensing I'm listening to this. There was one white woman who has done has been on the web tip for her entire career and has been continuously yelled at about it.
And that would that be Madonna?
¶ Madonna
Oh, yeah, and that's the thing like, it was taboo wish she would talk about it. Madonna was rolling around on stage in 1986 with like, five with like a virgin in a wedding dress. It was assumed gandel a scandal I tell you then she had the the
¶ Like a virgin
pointy bra and oh, a scandal and what's with all these dancers
¶ Pointy Bra
and it's always always always got shit on initially by the the culture police. Right? And now fat, you know, coming into 2021 all different kinds of behavior. Is it okay is is okay to show to 12 year olds. And that's I find that to be a real problem. But first, we got to look at the word Audacity. And I have two definitions here, just from a quick web search. And it says a willingness to take bold risk. That's the first definition. And then the second
¶ Audacity
one is rude or disrespectful behavior. impudence. So what does she mean when she says audacity? Good one? It's a it's a it's one of those words like is depends on who's hearing it? Yeah, what it means Yeah, and how you say it. But that's I'm looking at the dictionary calm because you know, they always update their they update their definitions. And whenever it's politically handy. So they say, boldness or daring, especially with confident or arrogant disregard for personal safety,
conventional thought are the restrictions. That would be this show, by the way. And then two was effrontery or insolence. Shameless boldness. So it has softened it a little bit, but and when you can, when you combine those two definitely, definition is shamelessness without thought, dude, that's a good one. Yeah. Yeah. And that's the key point of it is without thought is, go do what you want to do. Do it that will, if you want to go Alison Crowley on him, and
you won't be judged by your for your actions. But we all know, that's not how reality works. We're all judge for all our actions. But that's why I said this is very, it's a very harmful message that Maxine Waters is sending to younger women can expose. I don't want to interrupt. What did you say as well make sure I heard it. They were judged on all of our character, like all of it. Is that what you said? He said, I said, we're judged. I mean, for everything that we do
everything that we mean, that's how our society works. If I go outside with a red nose, I'll actually be able to do it. But then people don't call me a clown. Right? Okay, very competent, I could be a very competent person, but I'm gonna be judged by my actions, I guess, I guess I jumped in. Because what I see is a very disturbing trend of people doing just that judging on the one thing you do, and not being interested at all in the whole of the person, because that
person really only represents that one tweet they made. And there's nothing else or that one stat. But that's what they're doing. They're balling down women to a part. That's the problem. I have three daughters and a wife and a mother, he's like, you're not going to do that on my watch without me saying something, that when when you go out here that you're just bogged down, you know, to, to, you know, to, and we're actually we're gonna get into the web.
So, I went and found this clip from laurette on muret Lin, from the TED Talks from Tulsa University, and she's discusses redefining female death. audacity is defined as having the courage to make bold choices, or excessive confidence. It is both of those, or either of those.
¶ Redefining Female Audacity Laurette Lynn TEDxUniversityofTulsa
I define female audacity as having the excessive confidence a woman needs to make bold choices between two seemingly conflicting, but significant elements of her life. And that's pretty deep. Excessive confidence. Yeah. And if we were saying this about men, possessive confidence, that would be called toxic masculinity, right? Yeah. Or a or a trait of toxic masculinity. So why It's not toxic femininity. Yeah, we're calling a spade a spade. But what they're trying to do is
Chinese the best word here. what they're trying to do is radicalize these young girls sexually. Oh, mission mission accomplished so far as far as I'm concerned. And let me feel it from my perspective how this works. These are the greatest High Priestess of the cult. You know how many Converse you can catch with pushing this message with sex you see on tik tok? Yeah,
¶ Sexual radicalization
these girls dancing doing whatever and then a pushing a political or social message with it. And well, I think that's why I found it disgusting. Maxine Waters and people her ilk said, Well, you know what, we need more of these young girls like this. We need more of them to hypnotize everybody. Well, we saw it with the tick tock nets and doctors right. Yeah, the same thing. Yeah. This is how you get the message across. So it's like, well, let's commoditize some web and and
congratulate them. And they'll more than do then go and evangelize. For our calls. Being the call to woke. Does that make sense? Yes, it certainly with 62 episodes under my belt? Yeah. No, it's all witchcraft to me at this point. Yeah, cuz witchcraft is what control and when you use sexual sexual sexuality, you can not saying you do or you will, but you can have control over people. As we saw another thing that made me do this case me do
this story is what happened in Atlanta. Wait, stop, stop at the sexuality. There's something else going on? That I've noticed. The sexual acts of a black woman depicted in music videos are different from those of white women. And they are influencing? Does this make any sense what I'm saying? It makes plenty of sense. Because now to work towards the dance of the cult, it I mean, it has the whole big booty has changed the way women talk about their asses,
¶ Twerk: the dance of the cult
white women ever again. I just want you to know that it's so noticed, but it's also for me as a white man. And I've seen you know, I've seen a lot of music videos. But black sexuality on screen is different than white sexuality, but it's influencing in major ways. How women dress, how they walk, how they, their makeup, everything is all geared towards
this. Yes. And you also got to look at AV AV as well which African African American vernacular English, which we're going to do a whole show on that where it's like, they get into a trance, and they channel what they think black women are like, and you see this in all cultures. You know, um, the way they speak like said the way they move everything so they're channeling could be could be the mother goddess, but we're not gonna go fast for yet. Um,
let's just get into the lyrics of the song. And to get to get to that we have to go to the hip hop afficionado ben shapiro 56 million views within 48 hours of like, Central Casting Hey, can you find me a white guy like a really white guy? Yeah, he's been a perfect 56 million views. Within 48 hours of release. This is a deeply important piece of American art that we should all pay attention to. It is deeply
¶ Hip hop expert: Ben
empowering. As as a sympathetic human being I just want to make sure these ladies get the care they need. My wife's medical advice is that they go to a gynecologist ASAP, and that they and that they do whatever checks are necessary for bacterial vaginosis, yeast infection or trichomonas. horrors in this house, there are some whores in this house. There's some horses in this house. There's some horses in this house. Hold up. I said certified freak seven days a
week. Wet ass p word. Make that pullout game week. P word p word is female genitalia. It continues along these lines. Yeah, you effen with some wet spy. Bring a bucket and a mop for this wet aspie word. Give me everything you got for this wet aspie word I mean, a bucket and a mop. This sounds like there's some there's something that is going
on here that is not biologically normal. And by the way, the song is so unsexy, that it frankly sounds like somebody describing what amounts to a serious condition that requires the care of a doctor. Fortunately, I know a doctor, who is my wife. And so I asked her for her medical diagnosis. And she looked at the lyrics herself. And after being kind of appalled by them, obviously, there are a few sort of Giveaways here. So first of
all, a bucket and a mop for this wet ass PR. So first of all, she had to clarify whether what s p word was a description of the P word or whether one of the clinical symptoms here was also diarrhea. So he embarrassed himself with that, Roy? I'll tell you, yeah, bad. But I will say this rule No, we're not gonna put it off
all off on black women either. And the reason one thing I have with me Shapiro is Ben Shapiro, I'm sure you have a quite a few phone numbers of record executives, that are from your tribe. If you if you put in picking picking up what I'm putting down, Oh, snap that, that you could put pressure on if you really want it to put pressure on him. But no, it's always it's the women. It's not this that this is not the people who sign off on this play. You play it on radio stations and, and and
social media apps. And why does this loud on Twitter? without some kind of label on it? Do you hear those lyrics. And the thing is, this comes on at seven o'clock in the morning on black radio stations, while moms and dads are taking their kids to school. And I've seen it with my own eyes. Mom's in the front seat jammin out, he's in the backseat jamming out to these lyrics. And he didn't get to the these are, these are the tame lyrics of the song.
He couldn't even he couldn't even get into it. But my question to ban is, if you really want to, are you using this for a talking point? Are you actually want to make some change? And if you do, make that phone call to your brethren. Well, okay. So first, I have to say the music business has changed somewhat. And although Yes, radio stations and syndicated shows and networks on radio, have it. There's a it's old school. That's really the old guard. I know. I know Charlemagne and you know, is is
very popular and a lot of people listen. But This to me is more controlled by the advertising and technology. And you could not just as easily because Spotify really controls a lot more of the music business. YouTube, YouTube, still Apple Music, Apple Music. Those are the big ones and then outlet wise. The one to keep your eye on is Tick Tock. I mean they are they're making hits, they are forcing hits. They reinforce hits.
It's brilliant from a marketing perspective. But it also gives everyone the opportunity to practice to practice being whap or whatever whatever whatever the pushing that what I'm about being is and then like said if you really want to talk about it and make change but he doesn't let's just be honest now he's just doing an outrage talking point. He's I can't believe this is happening. That's the way I feel which which is no better than what Maxine Waters did. Correct? me if I'm going to be
if I'm going to be fair and balanced and objective. I have to call out usury on both sides. Yeah. Which this whap was allowed him to put a battery in your state whoever he's connected with back one being Candace Owens to put them on attack of in the culture war. Oh, and the everything points to that being completely intentional. Let's throw this bomb out there. Blitz Blitz, Spike it on on SNL. And let's let's get the division going. Let's get the
party started pay up. Let's get everyone pissed off. Yeah, so I just want to point that out. I mean, if you want you feel that outrage, pick up the phone and change the things you can change. And just going out and ranting about it really is not going to change it if you have the power to call people in high places and say hey 50 so he said 56 million views in 48 hours.
Yeah, I mean those were kids but I think ben shapiro too much credit I mean, he's he's a major player where YouTube Yeah, because he's one of the reasonably in there one point I'm pointing this out is he's one of the only few quote unquote with pips conservatives allowed to stay on that platform. So you had you you have you got less true now? Yes. I'm not gonna poopoo here
saying what kind of now can you get it pulled off? No, but I'm just saying that they You want to take action that would be the way to go be be more effective. Let's get back to Ben and him wrapping well. Please bring a bucket and a mop so this suggests that there's an awful lot of not to be too graphic but some sort of medical discharge that's happening here and a lot too much because
that's a symptom of something that is not going great. Beat it up Edward catch you charge extra large and extra hard put this keyword right in your face. swipe your nose like a credit card. Pop on top. I want to ride I do a Cagle. Well, it's inside. spit in my mouth. Look in my eyes. This p word is wet. Come take a dive. Apparently they're their signs of prolapse. And I say that because top on top I want to ride I do okay, go well, it's insides. There's some signs some actual clinical prolapse
which is which is a problem. There's some talk about where this person is putting their nose and there's some talk about smelling talk your S word bite your lip, ask for a call while you ride that D word. You really ain't never gonna f him for a thing he already made his mind up for he came in Now get your boots and your coat for this wet ass p word. pay my tuition just to kiss me on this wet ass p word. This is what feminists fought for. This is what the feminist movement
was all about. It's not really about you know, women being treated as independent, full, rounded human beings. It's about what aspi word. And if you say anything differently, it's because you're a misogynist, you see? Yeah, it's it's very unfortunate. But that's that is definitely young women today and I'm talking 20s only fan the younger, younger. I'm just telling you what my experiences. Yeah. Or knowledge is the only fans doing Yeah,
well, you know, the in what? You don't need only fans it happens on I was just listening to an interview today it happens on on the dating apps. You know, it's like, why don't you know, it's called a Tinder pizza. Send me a pizza and then I'll then I'll connect with you. And then I got one. Straight from the streets, ladies and gentlemen. It's the latest. Yeah, it's the Tinder pizza, where, you know, I'll hook up with you. But send me a pizza first or it will go like
I'm hungry. I got to get me a Tinder pizza. And just swipe swipe right on somebody and say, Hey, man, send me pizza. And, and this transactional nature of relationships is is very deep right now. It's happening all over the place. And you hit it right there. You walk me right into my talking points what we do. Oh, I don't know. How we roll. Yeah, well, I missed that. Oh, because I don't know what to do.
It set for you got it, you you can protect your children from listening to the music directly, but the culture around them are changing. And it's changing at such a fast pace. That what you just say it's the commoditization and the
transaction base of you give me this, I give you that. And it's not like it used to be I give you my ear saying my reproductive capabilities and proposition and you give me a house and a safe livelihood and you know me safe distance, and you protect me with your life and apparently partnership and the male female model. Yeah, what it is now is gig work.
Well, it's worse because on the other side of the equation, I'm sure you got something about it in this episode of The next one is porn is a huge problem for young men so bad that I recently learned that a major pharmaceutical advertiser on podcast although they're sporadic amongst gaming podcast
¶ Pfizer marketing
is Pfizer and their marketing Viagra and their marketing it to 20 year old men. Yes, and that's the that's the aboveboard stuff means y'all forgot this bag or substitute or vibrolux like appeals being sold around everywhere. And what it does, it just warps it works the expectation that young men and women and then they say well protect women. And this if you take a young boy, and I'm not making any excuses, and thank God, I didn't grow up in this era.
Before if you want to see anything, you kind of had to get your uncle's tapes or magazines that he was gonna ask, you know, because we're was 1666 a year, right? So my first porn was in the Netherlands, but it was magazine we had two magazines, one was called chick, and the other one was called candy. And we had them literally buried in the woods, Mo. We had them in a
¶ Porn access for minors
plastic bag buried and hidden under a log. I got it. It's my turn. It's my turn for the magazine. We go get get the magazine, I take it home and bring it back the next day and the other guy would take it. That was it. That was it. That I'll say this. This is where that I was on that lead the first wave of this sexual leap when you had little kids Foxy Brown, right? Internet if you didn't find your first porn on the internet, did
you? Oh, no, no, you had to go in either it was magazine was taped right now, for complete transparency course it was the it was the it was the African and Middle Eastern vendors that will sell DVDs. Because she went out I mean, you go in these bootleg stores that right we sell bootleg movies or whatnot. And that's, and then they have like a back section, you know that and that was probably my 20 so I was saying before then you had a magazine called Black tails. Um, and that was kind of
like the black man's playboy. Cool, but what happened was, that jumped off of there and then to King magazine, and I think what's called vixen. And this is the rise of the video vixen where hip hop videos blurred that line between pornography and, and hip and just hip hop videos. I mean, you had a thing called uncut used to
¶ BET Uncut
come on bt. And you were still at three o'clock in the morning, you know, to see what was the latest uncut video from the okay. Interesting because this did not start the sexualization of women in music videos, of course did not start with with black women. It started with white women, because that was you know, it took a while for money to be put into hip hop videos and but I was there I witnessed all of this. And he literally went in one year from Tani kitane rest her soul she
just passed away. I was at her wedding. lovely girl. No, alcohol is a shitty ass addiction. Who was rolling over in the Whitesnake role. She was married
¶ Tawny Kitaen
to the guy from rat first and she was in their videos, and she was on the Jaguar with her legs kind of spread and rolling around. And it went from that to you know, boom, yo, MTV Raps and it was, you know, it was but really it was a lot of bucks. That's what it started with. And it just, it almost ended it made the made the white hair band rock videos with hot chicks. A joke
¶ Yo! MTV raps - Butts
almost overnight. Does that make sense? like yeah, everyone be like, Ah, that's sad. The Look at this. It changed right before your very eyes one year's time? Yeah, no zz tops. No more he will say it was exactly. Exactly. Tired. Yeah. There you go. Sir. Mix a lot probably was one of the biggest changes in how women were expressing sexuality on MTV. I'm not talking about anything else. But on MTV. And
¶ Sir mix a lot
that was probably around that time, right? That was very early 90s. Like, the same time you had to balance that was the thing. It was like, this is a subculture of hip hop. You know, this is a sub conversation in hip hop. You know, you had the rest of the thing going on. And I keep forgetting I'm sorry about this forgetting his name. The guy that you said you did the advertising with, um, in this next clip, big time
advertiser. Thank you that you did business with him. Anyway, john Ren from Omnicom not know, you hear his voice, and then you probably could pick up on what he pointed out and I use this clip in a shoot is to talk about the stud stereotype they use in hip hop. And we just kind of slip past the other s that he discusses in this clip. Another area you talk about is relationships between black men and women and family dynamics, right? Certainly, relationships between black men
and women are known to have been troubled. African Americans
¶ Stereotypes & Family dynamics
certainly have a lower marriage rate than any other group. We have a lack of stable families which has a big impact on both black children and adults. You say that this is partly the result of popular culture which promotes black men as brutes and black women as slits the studs and sleds campaign. So you fast forward 400 years and this thing seems the stats and such sluts theme seems to be carried out certainly in the music videos,
which are produced and acted in by black people. Yes. Yes. And it's you know, it's really I want to believe that it's, it's not a malignant kind of intention. I believe that it's insensitive, we have been conditioned to victimize ourselves with the use of the N word denigrating massagin. A denigrating our women killing each other. This is part of the conditioning that nobody wants to talk about Tom Burrell. Yes, yes. famous, famous for his advertising company, and I'll call him out.
Call them out then I'll call him out now that it wasn't intentional. You had to know any of you were there at the time. It was a sister named Steve, Delores Tucker and we're definitely gonna talk about her on the second show.
She called us out from the very beginning and a lot of things name was Curtis but if I'm not mistaken and passing and Curtis but um, they called it out they say if you continue with this degradation in society, this is where you're gonna end up and lo and behold, here we are now and one or two pots favorite famous lines is he's like the Lord has taught me you occur. He was saying like yeah, cuz he was like how you're trying to hate on him. Sam brothers, you're saying trying to make money. But
it was at what cost? And everybody told people like them to shut up, the money's gonna be good. And even Maxine Waters was on the side of gangsta rap. At the time when see Delores Tucker
¶ At what cost?
was pointing this out as a problem. And she had an ulterior motive and a vested interest in hip hop. When I say she I'm speaking of Maxine Waters, because her district is Compton, which is ground zero for gangsta rap. So of course, you don't want to see it be taken off, right. It's a lot of revenue coming into your district. And I think fast for it. Now we're seeing this again, where it's like, you know what, this can be very beneficial for us politically, they get behind
these young girls even though we know it's not right. You know, but they vote to and and they're powerful priestesses if we mobilize them and and know and make a radicalized young men and women with their platform. They're given power of music. You fat that's the you factor anything like sex and music together. That's like, that's a deadly cocktail. Speaking of which, let's just go right into number 13. Get your 40 foot instead of instead of put instead of instead of Paul,
do we get her attention? Good. So you're really not gonna vote.
¶ TBC52 - Get Your Booty to the Poll Official PSA
You know, it's more than just the President on the ballot right? Check it, a district attorney decides to prosecute, including whether or not to go out the dirty cops. Do you know who elects the DA we do, but you don't want to vote. Can't make it rain if you've locked up on some bullshit. One Trey's encoding taught in our schools then vote for the school wars
that will prepare us for the job market. Want to end cash bail will then vote for the sheriff's and county officials that feel the same way you do, but use our mouth. Ferguson just elected the first black mayor. You know how that happened. It's clear black lives don't matter to some of our current elected officials. If they matter to you the Don't let
other people decide who's going to run your community. Get your booty to the pole get your booty to the pole get your boat into the pole stress free information on how and where to vote as well as resources to find out who's running where you live. Go to get your booty to the polls calm to put instead of Paul put instead of Paul, since everything is done on the fly here. I didn't have a lot of time to look this up. But of course
you're in my in my old wheelhouse in advertising. So I I looked this up I want to know how effective that ad was. Because it was new. Obviously we know what its intent was. According to Wikipedia, the first video was released in
¶ Get Your Booty to the Polls (GYBTTP)
September 2020 before the presidential election, and it was repurposed for the Georgia runoff election for January. The success of the first video led to the new Georgia project funding a second ad explaining how to fill out a voting ballot so evidently evergreen, evidently it was successful and it worked. And you know what? There you go that's what all the political ads should be. If I was a consultant we'd like hey, that's the way to go.
And if you have that those numbers I'm sure they have those numbers someone next slide let's get behind the person like max they are mega mega stallion. Yep. Woman check black check, booty check, go. Right. And I wanted to just point out on one example and this is really fascinating that you have black women participate in a ve are African American vernacular English. What she said they're gonna pick
who they won't pick. It will say it's like yours speaking how you think black men are going to speak
¶ African-American Vernacular English (AAVE)
And Moe is you got to stop because there's, it's so. Okay. I don't know what it is. But I catch myself doing that too. When I'm talking to you. Yeah, no, it's it's a couple different things and they're conflating them together. There's code switching, there's a V. And then there's, if you're talking to somebody, and they're from another culture, you're gonna pick up on things that they do. And I'm guilty of this myself, I work with a lot of eastern
India. And they do this headshake left to right. Really cool. Like, bollywood, bollywood movies, like so. So or so you do it? Because I've seen them do it. And it's not like I'm conscious that you know, what I'm gonna pander to them by doing it back to them is, I think in human nature, we pick up on these things. Um, but there's like, I'm trying to get
to something here. Because it's one thing, when, you know, when you pick up on stuff, you do stuff where I'll say, Hey, brother, you know what, I say that to other friends of mine, too. It depends. He was not the same for every every person I speak to. But in general, if if Tina hears me say something that is clearly like, like a mo facts ism, she was like, excuse me. You're singing it in a song, then it's acceptable. You see?
If you're singing and if you shot me off in Britain long enough, I'm gonna come back with a bloody or too bright. I mean, it's just gonna. It's just gonna happen. What is it? My thing is if this Okay, let me pander to this person, right? What do they say? How did they say it? Yeah, it's like, write the script and build it all in there. Right? Or if this uncomfortable, so and I must say this, this is a public service announcement to all my all my
white friends out there. By the give me a pound dog. Don't do that. Don't do that. No, cuz I understand you're trying to, but that's what I'm saying. It but it's not. It's not even trying to be endearing. it's it's a it's like a thing. It's, I think it's a human thing. You
¶ PSA: don't Dawg me Bro
want to mirror someone you and by the way, people love mirroring successful people. So I understand exactly what you're saying. It takes conscious effort sometimes. For me as a white guy, and not automatically Yo, yo, blood. Because I've been trained that way. It's when I grew up as Huggy bear. You know, it also shows you like your you know, what error you came up in, because being guilty of it, too, because when I get ready to use slang, I go back to the
programming of my teenage and young 20 years. I know for something sometimes you pick up on but no, but I'm just saying, you know, you just said you made very clear like, Hey, man, don't do that. And but but you know what, I do it to my daughter. I'm like, No, no cat. She just gives me that look like, people don't know about cat like, no, put in the work. But don't
¶ No cap - (African-American Vernacular, Internet) Truthful, not exaggerating
don't. Don't sugarcoat it. No, no, no, don't exaggerate. You're saying the cat is like when you exaggerate or Oh, okay, I learned something. So it's not even it's generational, as well as racial, um, and women, but you hear do say it to women and women say it to men. I often have this this weird thought. And I don't want to make this a 30 our show but I got to know I often have this weird thought that one day I'll meet you. I've never even seen
you. One day, I'll meet you. And I have this really this awkward feeling like, here's how I envision I come to your house. I'm like, hey, Mo and I think and I'm and I know that your wife and your kids are gonna be looking at me. I'm gonna be so fucking conscious of myself. white dude who works with daddy. It's the weirdest thing like, how would I say hi to Moe? Does that make any sense? It's, it's just a thing that pops into my head sometimes. So my question is, is that your natural
conditioning? Or is that like you're just the cultural temperature that we add now that you don't want to be offensive, but you don't want to be neglectful either. I think that's the weird place that puts people in line with you. If it's just me and you. I know. I'm not worried at all. It's like it's how will I be perceived? And the reason why this conversation is so fascinating. This is what happens with women. The same thing is like, how do I communicate with them? But I'm
being really honest here. I mean, and it's, it's, it's weird for it to come out of my mouth because you're my friend and I and your culture background, nothing matters to me. But it's there. It's there. Yeah, well, we talk about all the time. So it's not I mean, it's not like it's, like all put in your a thing, but that what I'm saying is the same way. I'm just wish this were being you want to get that door? I was thinking. Yeah, hold on a sec. I'm gonna close it.
¶ Closing the Door
Alright, so justice. Now, the same way you're saying about coming to my house? And what will you say? It's the same thing with me. I'm sure what a lot of black people to interact with white people on a constant basis. It's like, what's the fine pitch? Because what's the right tone? Right? The reason why I say that is and this is the double consciousness of the black person. It's by how without being perceived, and how do I stay true to myself. And when I come here, I don't look
at it. I'm talking to you as a white person. I come here and I'm talking to somebody with decades of broadcasting experience. So I need to step my game up. To be able to hang with you on your on your level of broadcasting. But there's a subconscious thought of, well, I don't want to sound too white either. So it's the same thing. Yeah. But it's so weird, because growing up, but I'm not even
growing up in the in the 90s. In New Jersey, I go down to South Jersey a lot when this was kind of the rock scene to be in the studios. And it maybe was just a New Jersey thing. But everybody was spoken to based upon their how they look, they weren't they weren't treated any differently. Everyone was treated exactly the same. But we have read the cripple, hey, Ray cripple, you know, like, go go, go get us some lunch, and you have a suneel Yo, Godhead. He was Indian, you know? And we like,
Hey, you know, cracker. And for some reason, when it wasn't restricted, you could just say these things to each other. It normalized everything. Let me just I'm gonna start every sentence by pointing out that I see you're different than me. And then and then nothing is different after that. Right? And then we've lost that we can't do that anymore. And I'll be honest with you, when we're talking about AV, AV, how black people have the white person voice, right? He's like,
we go out there for you. I Oh, yeah. That's great. Ah, yeah, that'd be great. We should do a whole show reversing it. So it's not like I say it's human. But the thing is, when you do it, when you go into it, calculate it. And just to bring it back to where we talked about Now, of course, of course, with Maxine Waters, this was very calculated because I'm going to point out what era Maxine comes from, and some of the tales that made it
be presented that it was it was pandering. And that could have been a great examples of pandering. Here's the hot sauce in the purse with Hillary Clinton. Yes. This is it right? This is the equivalent of that, but between two black women, I think we left off. I can't I can't start anything. Please. Yes. can't start the clips without the tour.
So we got our booster po. Alright, so now we're going to when we talk about where I'm not speaking about the biological part, per se, and it was this book that came out in the mid 1990s. I remember my parents having it's by Don Spears, and it was called in search a good pussy brother to produce a profile and Phil Winston and Jim Hill came here we have a guest author today and he has written two books, his first book, it has a very provocative title. So get
ready for it. Okay. Okay. The name of the name of the book is
¶ Book: In search of Good...
in search of good without love, and his more recent book is called Playing for Keeps. And his name is Don Spears Welcome to produce a profile. Glad to be here. Great to have you here. Okay, give me get you ready. Now. I read some through some of the book and I must say that I brought the book down with me to my friend's house in Virginia and she put it on a coffee table and she had a party in need. was to say, like everyone that came to the party picked up your
book because of the provocative title. But one of the things that we found out it's really a metaphor. What is it a metaphor for? It's a metaphor for you for surging euphoria in search of happiness. Nobody think about it twice. But the minute AC, good policy, everybody's curious. And I was trying to get everybody to focus on exactly what a feeling of euphoria was like, that most people can identify with six. So needless to say, I kill two birds with one stone. Oh, this
is a new entrant into my, my library, this john spears. And saying this, this book was laying around my house as a young teenage boy, I was quite disappointing, and the content does come with like a treasure map or illustrations or something. Man is boring. But I'll say this. Like when when I saw my parents, what color's your parachute, I was very disappointed, it was not about jumping out of airplanes. So
what what Don was, he was a visionary. Because he, and we're, I keep saying this, but we're gonna address some of the topics that he addressed in that book. But some of the talking points that you have coming out of relationships in the conditions between men and women, he was spot on in the mid 90s. And works and we'll talk more about that. But what I want to do is when we refer to whack, I want you to think about it as a stock in a company that sells euphoria, and the value being
manipulated by shareholders or brokers. And Maxine Waters is one of those brokers. Does that make sense? Cuz I don't want to make it book. I want to keep the class like I said, I don't want to make it vulgar. Now, guys, right. So whap is is like, a pot company stock, which gets manipulated a lot. But the the product brings to you for you. And your shareholder. Is that is that where we are? Right? But then you also could spend it. So it's like currency too. So I mean, just
is Bitcoin okay. I gotcha. It could it could be but it will not necessarily it will be the it will be the the paper currency. Yeah. Because you can actually well, could be karate or Fiat, but we'll get there. Um, so let's get so what we always do, we have to go back to the source material of the conversation between Magda stallion and Maxine Waters, we don't want to just do sound clips. So we can hear it, the conversation in context now be number 15, I was
moved by your article. And I was so pleased that you wrote the article for a lot of reasons, oftentimes, particularly happens with entertainers, they put you in a box. And somehow they don't see you as a person who has a life that includes family, that includes interactions, decisions that you have to make that has nothing to do with your performance. And so they don't see you as thinking about the pike, for example of black women, or civil rights or any of these issues. So that's why I
¶ Megan Thee Stallion & Rep. Maxine Waters on Standing Up for Black Women and The Genius of 'WAP'
was very pleased that you wrote it. And so when we saw it, we thought, Wow, this is great. And I'm so pleased, let's, let's writer, let's let's that we think that she's doing a great thing and has done a great thing. And I want you to know that when use you know, speak of yourself, and you say maybe, you know, people think you're being too controversial, etc, etc. Pay that no attention. For some people who don't have courage, and don't have confidence. They
don't understand it when they see it in other people. So you should be proud of that. You should be proud of who you are. And I know you are not only your talent, but your person who do you care about. And what is it that you're doing that is not only good for you, but it's good for others. So thank you very much. And I'm pleased to be with you. My question not she was featured in Harper's Bazaar. What did she write? I don't
think did she write her own article? No, actually, they wrote a letter to Maxine Waters wrote a letter to manga stallion by this third party and was like, You know what, this would make a great segment if we get them down. together I see and in a conversation and we'll reveal the third party. So stay tuned to the next show, because that is a very fascinating person that's in that room with him now.
This person Mm hmm. They asked, Is there a person and that's like the broker is like, you have the seller. You had the buyer and then you have the broker is brokering these deals between these two parties. And what Maxine Waters is basically telling me is that you don't feel any shame. Don't worry about people at low confidence, you know, have your female audacity or your high confidence.
Now, she probably mentioned although it may come up later that Megan the stallion, of course, it's really cardi B song but Megan, the stallion, she, this was her moment to be pushed to the forefront since cardi B couldn't communicate any messages she was failing.
That's exactly right. And what what? Excellent point and you took me home, all right, this is the phasing out of cardi B, cardi B, what you have to have is a balance of being able to, as you say, communicate the message and be seen as intelligent, but at the same time be able to harness your
¶ The phasing out of CardiB
sexual powers to cast the spell. And make the stallion is being groomed in that way to be a perfect example of this. Because they want it to be cardi B but she's too cartoonish. And, and it just doesn't work. So but like I said, I found this knowing Maxine's age, excuse me as Reverend waters age, and what school she comes from is a thing called modesty. Um, my grandmother will probably be about the same she's still living be about the same age as
maxine waters. And while you were here, it was like hussy fast ass. Um, bless you, she say a stroppy tramp. He was saying,
¶ Modesty
and it was like I would say, it would be the one you'd hear the most proud to have. Are you? Are you are you? Are you bad? Bad bad news. And when I see a woman sitting up here, congratulating another woman on perpetuating stereotypes that black women have worked so hard to shake, even herself. And I'm not saying it's right or wrong. But this leads to men in certain areas. I'm in office place whatever else saying lewd jokes
or maybe use an approach you in a certain way. It's like, Oh, well, you're black and Meghna stallions black, and she likes to twerk Do you like that kind of thing? He's like, why would you think that? And it's like, well, every other person I see on television likes to work. It looks like you so why wouldn't you? And that's why I think this is very dangerous for her to peddle in this kind of, I'm calling what is smart? Is it smart parenting, and this is not the shame women if you're a sex
worker, and that's what you do, and that's your choice. And you made that choice in this dog more power to you. My issue is the effects that it has on developing minds the same way I would say about drugs. And as you said, with porn, it's the same thing. I have no problem if you're an adult male or female and you like the about watch pornography. Hell, if you make
¶ Smut peddling
it a national choice, I'd even add cable news to that list at this point to emo as bad things for you to do that development of a young mind. Whereas porn, porn is porn. Yeah. We have we have a sexual porn and news porn and all kinds. Well, we covered a snuff film on the last show now. That's what that that's what that nine minute video was and how the news played. That's not the news. I'm portrayed it as you know, as a snuff film to elicit certain
feelings. And two, they use the same way that Maxine Waters is trying to leverage. In fact, in the styling, in fact, the faces of death was a thing today, it would be in faces of death. Exactly. Exactly. So I just want to point that out because it troubles me and the reason why I have a vested interest is I have
¶ Leveraging the Stallion
three daughters, one being 17 years old, um, I don't want her to be looked at as some kind of sexual object and I don't want her to be thinking okay. When you hear a sitting a congressperson in Congress, Congresswoman say it's okay to portray yourself in that way. I can't see her telling her
¶ Protecting them from who?
granddaughters this I can't see I mean, I may be wrong, but I don't see it. Um, but let's go ahead and get into number 16. planned in full. Thank you so much. That sort of brings me to my next question, which is What do you What's the biggest lesson you hope that young black women cancer have learned from this current moment that we're in? Well, you know, I think that because black women have not
¶ Megan Thee Stallion & Rep. Maxine Waters on Standing Up for Black Women and The Genius of 'WAP'
been respected in ways that will help them to feel good about themselves, and they looked to others and particularly men, in order to get approval, then, you know, we need to say to black women, first of all, concentrate on who you are, and let you think and what you care about. And approval does not always have to come from others, other people's opinions do not make you and the opinion of men
do not determine who you are. And so we want women to have the kind of confidence that we're talking about today that you have Megan. And so I think it is anything that we can say, to other black women is that get grounded, get grounded, you have an opinion. And you're thinking, and you have you taking charge of your life, rather than have everybody else telling you what you can do what you should do what you shouldn't do. And so building competence is the most important lesson that we can
share. Wonderful. So happy to be here. Yeah, you know, the more I hear this, the more I'm thinking like Maxine Waters is 82 years old. She didn't see this video she was given. She was she's being directed. At this point. I have a hard time believing she really knows how destructive it is what she's doing. I just naturally been far even more dangerous, because now she's a commodity. Yes. Yes, totally. This woman has not seen it. She has not
seen it. She really doesn't know it's been kept from her somehow, you can tell. And then I call bs on her then saying you take control of your life, you make your own decisions, where if that's if the scenario paints it, like you're paying, it plays out, like you're painting it, then she doesn't have in control or herself. And then she's telling the third party, which he doesn't have control over herself. Let's be clear here
that Dahlia is a commodity. Yeah, Magnus Dahlia is a commodity to an asset to the record industry, and maybe even a larger entity. She doesn't get to choose what she wants to do, and what she wants to say and what she has to wear and, and the songs that she sing. And that's bullcrap. There, there's study groups, and advertising agencies and, and business executive record executives that picks her every move.
So Maxine is in but in the same note, if like I said, if it plays out like you're panning it, which I would probably lean toward what you're saying more than anything else, then
¶ The Coach, Coaching the Coach
somebody. Somebody is in Maxine Waters here, telling her and coaching her. So you have the coach coaching the coach. And it's like, Who is that people behind? These two? Yes. Yes. Who is the people behind these two? No, you had to wait and see. Is that in part two next week after the cliffhanger? Yes. Yes, it is. So going back to you brought up the point fiat money. And we have I want to be very careful to say that whap can either be
¶ Commodity money vs. Fiat money Financial sector AP Macroeconomics Khan Academy
commodity money or fiat money. And we're going to get into definition of those two things. And where else better to learn if whap is commodity money, or fiat money then Khan Academy? Let's take a look at a United States $1 bill? What is it that gives this thing value? You can give it to people and get back, you know, food that you can eat or things that you can use and things of hard value. But what is it about this little piece of paper that makes it valuable? I guess it's not paper? Is it?
It's it's cotton, something like that, right? But the question stands, right, like what makes this flimsy little thing that doesn't seem to have any use in its own right valuable? Well, one kind of interesting exercise is to step back in time a little bit and take a look at what the very, very first United States dollars looked like. So I have here one of the very first that was printed, and let's zoom in on it and kind of read some of
the words associated with it. So if we zoom in, let's just say towards the very top here, notice that it says silver certificate, silver certificate up here at the top. So what does that mean? Well, if we zoom out a little bit, it says it says that this certifies that there has been deposited in the treasury of the United States of America. And then the sentence kind of continues in an awkward way below, one silver dollar
payable to the bearer on demand. So what that means what this dollar originally represented, for the fact that you were going to be able to turn in this bill for a silver dollar. This piece of paper, in theory can be turned in to the United States Treasury, which guaranteed that it had in its deposits. Get a silver dollar an actual piece of silver. And I'll show what one of those look like in just a moment that it would return to you for this bill. So in essence, what gave it value?
Was this guarantee that you could turn it into silver? If you wanted? Yeah, good times. So that's commodity money. And what I will say is just my my opinion whap in its proper state is a commodity. Now, I just want to make sure we get some terms straight, and I'm fine with you calling it that. But Fiat Fiat, when you talk about Fiat, specifically, it's it's not commodity money. But when you feel juxtaposing there's two different things. Okay. I'm not I'm not conflating
the two it. Yeah. So that's, we're just talking about commodity money here. Okay, gotcha. Sometimes back in the back of your web is children. scarcity, because silver being scarce is what holds value, right? You can't find it anywhere. So the last is on the market at Moore's consumed, the value goes up in it, right? So that's what I'm saying the traditional expectation of whap, or the proper state of web is a commodity because they can deliver dividends to you call
children. Okay, I'm with you. That's why a man will invest in it's like, you know what? Yes, okay, I will share half my food with you in my share who wish you because you're going to pay off dividends down the line. Um, now we get to fiat money. And its word Fiat kind of means a decree or a declaration. So it's like the United States government has declared that this is money. And just by declaring that it's money, presumably, that gives its
value. So it kind of feels much more hollow in comparison to you know, commodity money or commodity backed money. But there's a couple a couple of hard things backing this up. One of them, if you if we kind of zoom in on some of the words here. And we go, you see that it says this note is legal tender. So here, I'll write that down. This note is legal tender for all
debts, public and private. And I talked about the idea of legal tender in the last video, and how that actually, you know, gives a little bit of clout to this being valuable as long as you trust that the government will enforce its laws, as it claims that it will. But for the most part, what makes this stuff valuable is the fact that other people trusted, right. The reason that you value having $1 bill is because you know, you can give it to most people and they are willing to trade you
valuable things for it. And at the end of the day, that's what was making, you know, silver dollars, or these $10,000. You know, Gold's gold notes valuable, because almost no one would actually trade it in for the silver, because why would you it's just as good. And it's a little bit more convenient to
just trade around the bill itself. So once that's actually in the psychology of a society, and once everyone kind of is used to the idea of trading around this paper representative money, in order to be able to get things of value, it's not actually a huge leap to just have the paper that you're trading around as long as everyone else trusts it. And it still serves those those functions of money that I talked about in previous videos. It's a medium of exchange, and you can
store this for value, right? Oh, okay. I like this a lot. I like this direction, though. This is this is very good. And I know, a lot of history of money. But the thing I'll just notice, I'll just add one thing. It's total mind control. Yes. I know. I know. That's I'm just saying I gotcha. It's mind control. And that's the point. Oh, wow, where they're headed with whap is to make fiat currency. They say it's worth something because I said it's worth something. Yeah. It's not
backed by anything. Because if I invest in it, it's not gonna deliver anything to me. You're saying it's the only the only value as the market said it is? It's not like it's backed by anything. So they that's why they need to have this audacity or this high confidence. That's what these are words that we say in stocks and and now in cryptocurrency all the time, it's like the what's the confidence in here? What makes
it hold value? Here's an analogy for you, the US, the US dollar, well backed by no sound, money, no sound commodity is backed by one thing that the entire world believes in. And that is the humungous military apparatus that says if you don't believe in our dollar, we're going to eff you up. And it seems like this type of Fiat that is being created has a similar backing. Like oh, you don't you don't believe in it. We're going to cancel you. We're going to eff you up. It can I
get a council call man castle cannon for that? Excellent. Right You nailed it right on the head and master thing is that if you gotta have confidence in it, if you don't have confidence in it, then we'll do what like they did. Gadhafi will drag you out. If you're gonna do you're gonna sell your oil in What you're gonna do a goal right are what? That's right. This is what's happening now that it's that it's this currency war going on. And it's really between women.
They take it out on men, because kind of like men are setting the
¶ Currency war
value of, we're cool. Either way. It's like, I mean, whatever I mean, if you want to, you know, treat it like fiat currency, or I just gotta say, since our last show, since our last show, I've been, I've been watching the wire, you know, it's like, I think my homework seriously, and you know, you're doing stuff for the show. I'm doing stuff for the show.
And, wow, it and of course, I never seen the wire before started with season one, I'm now into season two, I watch this with very different eyes than I would have when the series first came out in 2000, to 2003. But the the creation of Fiat women is all over this thing is all over this thing is all over it. And that's 15 1617 years ago, and now enter stock. So we got
to talk about stocks for a minute. I've got my split in half what is playing despite kind of what it is, but this is how young females are treating their, their their stock, they're treating it as it is gonna go up because it's gonna go up. It's like the high confidence in the, in the Fiat version of it. And it's, I can sexualize myself and in the market. I can go to a brokerage brokerage and put my stock on the market and it'll gain value. And it's the same kind of mentality behind stocks,
¶ What are Stonks?
stocks, stocks, stocks, so you want to invest your money, then you might want to think about investing in stocks. Stocks are one of the hottest investments in the world right now. You've probably heard everyone talking about stocks. So how do you get in on the fun? Well, you just take your money, spend it at a stock exchange through a stock broker? Easy. You'll be a millionaire in no time. Stocks, stocks, stocks, buy them now. You're laughing and this is that was a joke mean kind of like a
joke of description of stocks. But that's kind of the message to these young girls. monetize it and you will be a millionaire Overman overnight, only fans are and it's kind of like tik tok is the grooming platform. They jump off and the only fans and the reason why I say that is answer bad But baby fans should be changed to 21 and older only. I mean your 18 year old only. What? What do you think? I think any bitchy says that in magazine didn't make as much money as me. That's someone younger?
I've seen a banker make a million dollars and say Oh no. You can't bank unless you're just because they're young. 21 you're gonna say that it should be 25 or 30 you're saying it's like child? What do you listen? By nobody I make all my own decisions. And I had because I was very young. You were a little hesitant to post you know everything. How do you give the people what they want on your only fans without you know giving them the whole thing? You gotta go check
it out. Let me ask you one last thing people are saying that it's cheating if you're married a man a married man or married woman and you're subscribing to someone on only fancy cheating. I mean, I wouldn't. My boyfriend won't do that. So I don't know what your boyfriend's doing. Y'all need to take that up with them. Would you? Would you be pissed if your boyfriend was describing to another girl? He would never do it. But what was I considered Gee, would you consider that cheating?
I wouldn't date nobody that would do that. So I wouldn't know what to say right? Yeah, that's fucking loaded loaded. It's so so much there. So we have that bad baby. She made a million dollars her first week only fans because people are waiting for her to turn 18 and do it. And that's why they say as grooming which I agree is grooming. She's another one. So I made my own decision I have where you
know, you know you haven't? Um, she has been steered by record companies for a very long time since she showed up on Dr. Phil. Now No, you may not know her name here but this is the catch me outside girl from Dr. Phil. I don't know if you're familiar with that or not. Hello, I'm not the catch me Outside girl I know. So she's a allegedly a white girl and she uses a V. And she kind of carries herself, like a stereotypical
ratchet woman. And what she does here is like I said, she built up this anticipation for her to turn 18 to do this. And it's like I said, this is the grooming, this is the job. That's a professional marketer who did their business there. That's, that's Yes, that's very professional. And the other thing is, so now she's saying the same thing. The stocks been Let's rock brought the stocks in his teeth, people were saying, well, you need to be 21 to be your only fans not 18. That's
the same thing. Stocks investors saying that the order guys don't want us to make any money. You know, we want to make money. And we're saying on these on these short squeezes, and things like that. And it's the same thing over here. And I think this is points to a more of a culture of Quick, get quick and get rich, quick. It's not just like I said, it's not only women, it's the same mentality with women and men of the generation that is getting money
and get paid for nothing. But this is this is, you know, we talk a lot about they and them. But this is a the mechanism, technology. I mean, I've been in the meetings, I know that there's meetings about Look, this is fantastic. We got all these chicks, and they paid 1000s of dollars people to see them all the fans, you know, we need to find more need to recruit more, let's go
out there. So I'm sure there's nefarious elements that intersect with that, of course, but it is it is just an automatic mechanism by the douchebags that run these websites that it's they don't care whether it's female porn, or political porn, or war porn, or as long as it's porn. And so they're a big part of this without necessarily having an agenda other than profit, I would say and an agenda, nothing other than engagement. And Okay, fair enough. Fair enough. Fair enough. Fair
enough. It doesn't, it doesn't matter which side your own. And this is where my in the last time since we talk. My not my not has been wrought. My head has just been like a mind blown by this discovery, a warfare, worldview warfare, and it's something I'm gonna be bringing to the show in the near future. But it's by a talented young man, I had the privilege of having a conversation when he's wrote a seven year took him seven years to write this book.
There's basically it doesn't matter which side you're on, as long as you're engaged. As long as they have you either on the ben shapiro and Kenny's on one side or the other maxine waters in the in the negative stallion side, as long as you're engaged, they're winning. Correct engagement equals either more data to sell or more advertising to sell, or more anger and division to sell to others on the same platform. And it's bigger than that if you're engaged and you're a binary thinker.
What really frustrates people about us because we're not binary thinkers, we use nuance, and being objective to look at situations it's not like I'm on Team missing your own team that that kind of thing is, okay, let's look at the details. And that's that doesn't work well, because what they need to program society is ones and zeros.
See that? It's a program. We're in a major program, yes. of one's a each person is a one or a zero and in the programming of society, and we talked about this early on in the first 10 episodes, nudging how technology no credit credit score, we have a little disagreement on that, but credit score apps that nudge you into certain behaviors right down to what videos you watch on Netflix, all a part of it. Yes. And that's that's the whole point right there and all complicit too, I would say, and
like I said, we're bad baby. Just one thing I want to point out to her she was linked with NBA young boy and that's the perfect match of the split and splits and studs that Tom Burrell alluded to before and she's coming with Butterfly tattoos so I mean you do with ultra baby perfect you do with that which you will and and she came on the scene with Dr. fields so this is just a bunch of smoke there Dr. Cipolla fine Oprah outlet let's just let's just tie the knot there.
Thank you so we're gonna go back to maybe stallion and Maxine Waters conversation in part three. How do you build community with other black women you know what I'm seeing right now. Between The two of you is like, it's like, it's like an example of how you build community, which is showing words of affirmation for another person saying, I see you when I see you. So I'm just
¶ Megan Thee Stallion & Rep. Maxine Waters on Standing Up for Black Women and The Genius of 'WAP'
wondering how you build those sorts of communes what sort of actions you do to build community with other black woman. First of all, we have to take people where they are. And we have to be honest with people about who we are. And we have to be honest in ways that will help people to open up and be honest
with you. And so if we put ourselves high on a pedestal somewhere, and we're talking about your role model, and you got to do this, you got to act this way, and you got to dress this way, you should be doing this etc. First of all, we're not being honest. And secondly, we have people who address issues in different ways. We have people, certainly who have, you know, different thoughts, things that we don't even think
about or know about. And we have people who, you know, don't accept, you know, what is considered the tradition. And we have to respect that. And we have to take people where they are, and when we approach people, it is not trying to have them believe that somehow you are more pure, you are more knowledgeable, you are more anything except people where they are, and they'll accept you, or where you are.
Hmm. So building community, what they're trying to do is bury the hatchet between the and I use these words, just not in a demeaning way, but they're ratchett, sexually free, sexualized women with the thinkers and the effluent, women. And that's what they're trying to do. And it's specifically black women, because there is contention between the educated and the uneducated Is this where the Gucci and the Chanel fits in? Well, that the ties that bind
both sides appreciate those things. But what I'm saying is, at one time it was I went to school, so I'm not of that crowd, right. Or if I'm in that crowd, these women look down on me. And it's what's happening when black men poured away more and more, when you have it go from 10% to 20%, being more politically politically free minded, either where they're not voting, or they're voting for the opposite party, then they're normally expected to vote for these political groups need to
galvanize their ranks. So it's like sisters, we got to band together, you know, we're losing black men over here, you know, you got to, we got to figure out how to bring the women in, get them off the pole. And you know, and get him in the poll, you know. And that's what you saw the strollers drawn into the poll.
And that's really who's pulling the strings here are the strollers and that's what Maxine Waters represent, they will typically look down at their nose at these women, but they realize the power that they have now in the platform that they have, and also the need to bring them into the fold because of their shrinking numbers of overall black. And what this really points to is, I've been saying a lot of times that black women are their own different demographic. Really, they have
their own culture. They've developed their own culture separate of black men. Hmm. So and and they're talking about build community. And nowadays, it's like, how does? How do we build community with black women? Now, I what I'm going to do is we're going to go back to show 53. And listen, and Maxine was saying, you know, we need to meet people where they are and celebrate differences in thinking, well, this is Maxine water on blackmail, by Trump voters.
Somehow, if they are going to support to realize some big sums of money that's going to come to them to some damn proposal that they're going to present. And they've got to be taken care of, and they're going to be able to
¶ TBC53 - Maxine Waters Black Male Trump Voters Are Despicable To Their Families & I Will Never Forgive Them
manage all of this money. They are crazy, then that don't get a dime from these people. They don't even know how to put together the right kinds of proposals to even be considered in this way that government worked in how you have to get through that house in the Senate, and all of these committees, even in order for the President to sign something and he's not going to sign a dog. He's a racist. He does not have any appreciation for black people or black women in
particular, he's talked about is so bad. We talked about john lewis. He talked about coming, so That he has no respect for us. He's not doing anything for us. And for those black young men who think somehow they can align themselves with Trump, Trump, not only that termly mistake mistake of any of them showing their face, I will never ever forgive them for undermining that possibility. They have their own people and their own communities. It is absolutely unconscionable. It is shameful.
Wow. I think the first part of that was the most offensive to me, where she's saying they don't even know how to put together a proposal. I don't know how it works in government, stupid black man. Exactly where this meeting meeting where they are in the same standard for these maybe politically inexperienced women. I'm sure they don't know how to put bills together and things of that nature. But and then the weird part is this was
in response, partly to what icecube did, yes. What he was trying to do americaine thing is she was supportive of IQ where he was putting degradation and, and, and gangsta rap for it. And in the 90s, he was for that. Oh, yeah. But it's like, you can't have independent thinking, Oh, no, no, no. All that understanding and meeting people where that goes right out the window. What to vote. So for somebody equally as bad, if not worse, than the option.
Of course, what we're missing is a lone black man standing up and saying Maxine, aunty Maxine, you're full of crap. You don't hear that anywhere? Now you hear is just there's not a hopper loss on mainstream media. It's not No, he can't allow that to happen. So now we got to look at culture. And we had to really look at the purpose of culture. And we're going to get into the difference between a cult and culture, because I'm sure people ask as well, what's the difference? And why do you look
at when one group is one way and with the other? So we're gonna
¶ TBC30 - Dr. Amos Wilson Culture & Problem Solving
go to Dr. Amos Wilson, and he's going to talk about culture and problem solving. Looking at the question, what is culture hoarding? And he said, from light from their life experiences, a group develops a set of rules and procedures for meeting their needs. The set of rules and procedures together with a supporting set of ideas and values is called a culture to a great extent your co culture involves a set of rules. And a procedure for meeting needs. And this is thing we have to keep in mind, you
don't have a coach, you just have a culture. And you don't claim a culture, just because it's a culture just because it's African. The ultimate thing that culture must do is problems. That's why people evolve. That's where culture comes into existence as a way of solving problems and meeting needs. That's why at a certain point, when a culture no longer meets the need of a people, or solves the problem confronting a people, that culture must be transformed.
Am I am I just now realizing that the word cult comes from culture? Are you but as a difference? There is a difference? Yes, I'm just kind of that just kind of hit me with that clip. Yeah, but there is a key difference because culture solves problems. That's the whole purpose. We work together in a culture to solve common problems, right. And the thing about reason why I say this is, we call them a coven before or even now I call them the cult of woke. It doesn't solve any
problems. It's just just to say that I'm part of a group to say that I'm part of a group, you ask, Well, what is twerking and being sexually promiscuous? And I'm participating and degrading behavior. How does that for the culture? And that's not me, that's black man as a whole and as a man as a whole is saying, how, how's this productive? It's not, especially when you're talking about the main goal of humans is to for the human race. To multiply
is counterproductive. Because you have that same time you're taking viable candidates out of the mother pool, and you're flipping them from a commodity money or commodity to Fiat. Yes, It's a classic pump and dump in more ways than one. That's right. We're gonna go there. The market is saturated. So it's like when you have, because let's just talk about in the money terms, what's the whole appeal to to crypto now? Where if you keep popping, print and fiat money, Fiat Fiat Fiat
Fiat, or shaman does that? Yes, it makes the value go down. So you have to spend, you know, $10 were used to have to spend $5. And this also simultaneously explains for people for musicians who don't understand it, well, how come there's only only a couple of only a couple of hits? There's only a couple, there's only a couple of big hits. Why can't that be more when you have to be more hits selling? Well, because you mean that's that dilutes the pool.
So yes, anybody that works in the favor of the people that control the exactly the spigot, exactly. They want to keep that tight, they want to totally control that flow. Oh, I do like this analogy. Mo, this is very nice. Yeah, so what we had like said, what we have now is that the value of, of this commodity or currency where you want to call it a whap is so low, that they have to do so much. You got it, you got a flood. That's why you see, that's why you see pornography going into a more
violent, more. It's not even sexual anymore. I mean, it's pretty much degrading. And you saw that with 50 Shades of Grey, that comment ushered in. And I'm not condemning anybody where you're into, but we got to realize, adults only are not watching this adults only. We're not
listening to rap music. And like I said, our generation went through this as well, when rap music itself, um, little boys walk past the magazine out me being one of them in the grocery store, and it's like that shapes your Oh, that's what a female body looks like, Oh, that's what is expected. And it's like now it's like you have the fear is being printed at such a high rate. And then your brain your, the way you're flooding is, you're introducing more and more stocks into the
market. Because it's like, oh, you're 1516 years old, go for it. Do your thing, you know, and it's like, well, or 18 like they do bad Barbie now, you know, it's so abundant. That really guys don't even worry about sex, and the more they can get it, and the ones that can't get it or so tortured by it, that you have people like the shooter in Georgia, the internet truly must be a dream for people who like to use this type of control. And you can turn the spigots on or
listen. Hey, you know what, we got a little bit too much porn out there. Alright, let's do let's D monetize Pornhub let's take away their credit card processing. Okay, good. Alright, guys, we got the supply down a little bit. It's more powerful now. Just think about what you can do. If you view it that way. And what they did was this, I can always go back to the Uber example. What they did was that and then they also they also turn Oh, being a porn star into gig work. It's like we don't need
stars to stall this anymore. It's like you can yo you got some free hours. Instead hop on your computer do a couple cams. Yeah. And you know and make some quick quick cash. And it's like now you don't even have you know starlix anymore or those kinds of things. And so yeah, completely. I want to say this the market is at an all time low. And it's because there's no scarcity. No skit, yeah, no scarcity. And just in a band just an abundance of the of inflows they
¶ Market at an all time low
can. Oh, man. Well, that's the same thing to do with diamonds, right? Dogs are abundant. We all know but diamonds are abundant. It's just that they have a strong strong handle on how many comes to the market. It's even crazier than now they've they've mined controlled the diamond market and the next version of diamond purchasers into believing that it's better to have laboratory creates diamonds, because they're much more ethical. So now they're
they're literally selling cubes or konia. As diamonds and diamond prices, they can just shut the mines they don't need it anymore. People. It's like here's this paper diamond just like the dollar will save you so if you take that analogy and go for it with it when you have a Andrew Six androids it'll be the same thing. Design. Uber is going to do with the driverless cars. We only need the drivers for a short period of time and our business model.
Yeah, yeah. Yeah. Although I see the sex robots coming before the driverless car, to be quite honest. And what I mean by sex robot is I'm not gonna say I mean, I don't ever think it will get like iRobot, or at least in our lifetime, and maybe even our children's lifetimes VR thing managements baby VR? devices? Yeah, of course, experience. Yeah, so I didn't want to go too far off in a tangent away from culture and
cult. But let's go back into Dr. Amos, part two, there's nothing sacred, about holding the culture in the face of, you know, new new events and new changes. Unless, of course, you're free to do that, if you're willing also to accept
¶ TBC30 - Dr. Amos Wilson Culture & Problem Solving
suicide or death. And you have that right to their drugs. We have the right to say, look, we're gonna hold on to this culture, even if it kills us, but we should be very conscious of our decision, we should not be holding on to it out of a misunderstanding of what culture is supposed to do. Ultimately, culture is supposed to solve problems, and to meet the needs of the people. And a culture then has to be measured against those standards. And that's what black men are saying to black women
specifically. And then overall, it's what men are saying to women, specifically, is that this culture that you want, if they want to have it both ways, and young men are saying, you know what, well if you want to take that route, and marriage is off the table to get married, why I'm back can order intimacy like order a pizza, that takes that need off the table?
So why why would I continue in this participate in this culture that we have of marriage and children and those things, when you're bringing a when you're not bringing a you're not bringing any commodity to the table that the product right your product is frozen been degraded? Whether the quality has been degraded, so it really puts the the separation of black men and women and and it's not going to stop there in a hyper warp drive.
Because what you're saying is men are saying, I'm not gonna pretend and I'm not saying like, this is not only black men, but you're, you're hearing it more on the black side, because
our politics is tied to you know, our culture. And that's not I think that's almost exclusive in our in our group, compared to any other group, because you pretty much have a, an even split, but it's a split, there were there's no 6040 7030 in some groups, you know, it was 5050, liberal conservative kind of splits and other racial groups. Ours is, you know, you see it play out because no, you know, you're 50 years of feminism hasn't worked. Yeah, look at our
communities. Look at it, no, we're gonna take control of our identity. Black men are saying this, we're gonna take control our identity, we're gonna take control of the identity of the women we accept in our culture. And if you don't want to take part in that, that's why I brought up the Malcolm X thing.
I'm sure he walked out on the streets every day and it was depicted in the movie like I said, Malcolm X pass streetwalkers now pass working girls he wasn't trying to say there he saved his energy and resources and his time for people who saw his culture being raped being Muslim women and it's the same thing now that we're saying hey, go go do that you know go do the Alice get out of the Crowley thing and do without will and you want to do you know, participate in all this?
sexual liberation. But with that comes and this is where it really the problem I have with it. With that comes increased STDs, unplanned pregnancies, I mean, you listen to the lyrics of web makers pull out game week, meaning that I can trap him sexually and then meet in the heat of the moment. And then you wonder why your your single parent rates at 75% and climbing? Yeah. This is this is witchcraft. instruction manual, basically. Yeah. Just put all this out. So now the question is what is the
difference between culture and culture? And it's answered by Weinstein when he has a discussion with with Joe Rogan when you say Catholicism is a cult. I don't
¶ Joe Rogan - What's the Difference Between a Cult and a Religion
Don't agree because Catholicism historically must have been delivering messages that caused people to correct their thinking in ways that made them collaborate more effectively, that made them better able to find the opportunities in their environment. I'm not advocating that we should sign up for belief systems that are
at odds with our modern environment. But one thing we can say, I believe, for sure, is that religions that have stood the test of time did so because their value to the people who believed in them it was so great that those that disbelieved were out competed. Can you play it last two seconds, one more thing, I want people to hear what he actually said there. Um,
there comes odds with our modern environment. But one thing we can say, I believe, for sure, is that religions that have stood the test of time did so because their value to the people who believed in them was so great that those that disbelieved, were out competed. So a culture is only value bias results. And that's what Dr. Amos Wilson was saying, if your culture is not producing fruits, right, you can you can hang on to it due to vanity reasons. But it's not producing any fruits in that way.
Yeah, but whilst he was saying a cult, or religion, you can at least say and I'm not saying I'm not pushing religion in the sense of that and what and what I'm doing is I'm not speaking in
Catholicism, specifically in that clip. What I'm saying is these religions if you want to say it, just say in the black community, when you look at the noi, you can say well, that some people may say that's a call, but when you look at it's like, well, they do reform men from from prison to be upstanding citizens. They're women or children, they don't have a lot of children out of hardly any out of wedlock. There's ordering structure as their, their their belief system bear fruits.
When you look at the call of feminism or the culture of baby wants to has a culture with fruits, has it bared? Well, this is no coincidence that the very same people who promote the the Fiat, the Fiat Fiat the stallion, are the same people who condemned Christianity and support as a communism or socialism, which the same thing socialism you would look at as a political religion. Why why why is the two knuckleheads have to explain this to the rest of the
world on a podcast? It's it's in the history books. This has this is not like a new thing. It has gone wrong before. Why us? Oh, God, kiss it go is teams, we go back to the binary thinking, it's like, I'm a capitalist. I'm a socialist, like, well, let's, let's look at some nuance there. And I've been saying this recently, elsewhere that I am not 1%.
Against socialism, I think we should have a strong safe, strong social safety net, where people fall off, you know, lose their job or, or whatever and is strong enough, bounces them back up. It's not what it is. It's not a it's not a safety net. Now it's a hammock, well, so loose, that you fall in it, you fall asleep, bounce you back up on the bar, right? But But if we're if we're honest about it, the safety net was always family, the safety net was the church. That's where you also went from
medical care. That's where the, you know, the nuns said the sisters. Right, that safety net became a philanthropy the United States incredibly philanthropic people. Now, of course, sadly, a lot of that philanthropy was also used for control. So although we have great medical care, it's gone completely overboard, because choices have been made by early, early old, old money. And you know, that's why we're in this pharmaceutical nightmare. But now that has been handed over to
¶ Social Safety Net
the government. And that was a reasonably slow process. which just makes it if people were still so you still have your safety net just makes it much more inefficient. Lots of corruption, less personal. In the long run. I like the old the old way better, but there's obviously no way back. But But see, I don't I don't believe that because I think if people actually say what they believe, instead of what's expected of
them. There is a way back but it takes courage to stand up against being canceled and the point I'm not saying I support No people don't say, Oh, he's a socialist now know what I'm saying is that, I'll put it like this, if you're going to give a family. Let's just say let's do some quick math $50,000 over 20 years and welfare, food stamps, those kinds of things. Why don't you shorten up to five years, the same amount of money and get them back on their feet? Right?
where they actually can read to a small business, those kinds of things. It's like, No, you want them stuck in perpetual poverty. Because there is a there is a link. And I'm going to point that out. And then next, oh, guaranteed, between the feminism mindset and the communist mindset is that I expect something for nothing. I expect not to be a prime candidate for marriage. But and I want to go out here and do it, I will do what I want to do with my body.
But at the end of the day, there will be a husband readily available available to me when I'm ready for it. That's the same as communism, it's like, yeah, I want to go spend my money like I want to spend it, but you're gonna send me a stimulus check to bail me out at the end of the day. Saying mindset, and they are they are bedfellows. strange, strange bedfellows. But bedfellows nonetheless, um, so let's get into this last clip before we go into. So donations
break, I want to lay out this one thing. And Maxine shows her true colors in a sense of There are levels in the women Harkey 26, when I think about you, and you continuing your education, I said to myself, you know what, she doesn't have to go to nobody school and she's got it, she's got it, she's got it made. So that is so
¶ Megan Thee Stallion & Rep. Maxine Waters on Standing Up for Black Women and The Genius of 'WAP'
absolutely commendable that you continue to focus on education, when you know, you don't have to have a you know, people go to school to try to get to where you are, here you are in this place. And you're still, you know, paying attention. So that's very, very commendable. My mother, and my great grandmother passed away recently, but my grandmother is still alive, and she will work my butt. Even me at 25, she will work my butt and I dropped out of
college. So I'm like, you know what, I'm not only getting a degree for myself, I'm getting it for the women in my family who originally pushed me to go to school. Anyway. That's why I remember if you had, you know, Grandma, my great grandma, my mom and all of that. I know what they say, girl get educated, because they can't take it out of your head. They can't take it away from you. If you get they always said right. get get get some paper.
But that's great. And again, I commend you for continuing to do that. And now I understand even more, why it's important to you. You're not just doing it for yourself. You're doing it for them. Oh my goodness. You don't you don't need to don't get smart. You could you just take the fast track shortcut. You hear that? And then she had to backpedal on it because Megan mega stallion kind of said, No. My grandma always told me to get you state standard books and get those papers we gotta get. We
got to get that Texas girl out of her. She's failing on the mission. We can't have that thinking. Don't say Maxine, You know what though? Maxine realized like, oh, you're you're one of us and not one of them. That's why she really realized like, Oh, now I can talk to you. It's not that you're you're flashing
¶ Sex as a weapon to level up
us know, a sex worker parading around as a intelligent, intelligent woman, your intelligent woman moves like moonlighting, or just using the sex to, to level up is the difference. It's like, you're saying that the room was around Kamala Harris and I don't want to dabble in rumors. It's the same thing. You're an intellectual person, but you use sex as a weapon or as a tool to get where you want to go. So okay, I get it now. You're not one of them. Damn, you're Yeah, and but that's interesting.
So not only did she not only had she not seen the music video when she got involved in this, she also really just thought that it was just, you know, they an MK Ultra model that they put out there and she was just doing her bit. And then now, cardi B Yeah. And then right there, she realized, Oh, okay. And then she even has the audacity to say you did it for them. Ah, that's also not a very positive message. Well, I'll say The motivation for some black people is to make their elders
¶ Freedom papers
and family members proud of them. Because when they say get those papers, a degree once was seen as like freedom papers, freedom from having to do to do a house labor, you know, Washington cleaning, those kind of things, or being a sexual object or being a drug dealer. Not even that being tied to a I'm just making for women specifically being tied to a
man. And you have no freedom. Yeah, no, no, it was like, This is why education was pushed so hard, and to women in our community, because it's like, if you have your money, you can at least me if you have your papers, you can at least go and make money on your own, and you're not obligated to be taught to a man, or to have to participate into domestic work. Right. And so that's where her grandmother, you know, and those people and Maxine age was, go to college,
get something in your head. And that way, like I said, you won't be a not not the word of victim but more of you won't have to, you're not obligated, you're not obligated to anybody, right? Unfortunately, culture in general, internet culture, I'll just call it has degraded everyone. You can go into any any grade school today and say, What do you want to be? And probably a majority of the children will say famous or influencer, any anything anything, but
it doesn't matter. And even if, honestly, if they had to study
¶ Internet culture has degraded ambition
for five years, they still want to do that. But that's the goal. The goal is famous. Yeah. And that's understandable. Because that's what we put value in into the society now is the famous person, we don't celebrate the smart people, we celebrate the famous people. So it's fascinating. And I'll wrap up with this. And then you know, we can move on. But the greys are the same way. Now. The greys
¶ Fiat degrees
used to be backed up by something that you had a skill you saw, right went from commodity to VR, as well. It's like, Yeah, you got a degree, but it's just cloud. It's like, I have a degree and it's like, in what what can you do? Well, I have a degree and it said it had value, you know, it's like, so what skill does? What's your commodity yours and what working? When I get, you know, saying when you exercise that degree, what commodity? Or am I
gonna get for a whiskey? I'm gonna get four. Oh, no, no, no, no. Well, I have a degree in gender studies. Okay. Next customer, please. And now you have a bunch of people this in depth, and had him Stan has have a bunch of these degrees as well. So, um, yeah, as you know, we can't discuss this anywhere else, anywhere else. But here. You know. That's why we appreciate it. We give you value. And hopefully you you see the value provided back to us. Yeah. And and so a
couple things about that. One is we love fiat money is there's no.
¶ Value for Value
Well, it's still last, we love the fiat money. But that's not why we show up to this to this party. It is these words that have always motivated us, right man in 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 are both negros and the so called Negro has to feel free to speak his mind without hurting the feeling of the right man, then they can bring the issues that are under the rug on top of the table and
take an intelligent approach to get the problem solved. That's the only way to do it. And that is exactly what we do. Here are mo facts with Adam Curry. And it is indeed value for value talked about that in the beginning of the show. So the way you can support us is just by considering what value the show brings to you and then put a number onto it. That's that's really all that it is. I mean, you're listening for a couple hours an episode. It may it may be equal to a college course for
some, for others. It's just another hip hop album. I mean, whatever that value is, put it into, into into PayPal or you can use any of the value for value apps. Which stream in real time and you can boost us with any amount is it's all in the show notes at mo facts calm we can look at the previous shows
¶ New Podcast Apps
archived, archived at mo facts calm but what we'd like to do at least somewhere in the program is thanks to people who came in with with solid support for the show. This does come in through our donation page at mo fax calm and go directly to that at mo fund me.com mo efundme.com and
¶ Value for Value
We're gonna start right off today with the big baller of the show. Shot Caller 20 is Blaze. Oh man, Paula Clayton Bowers
¶ Baller
comes in with $333.33 as a donation just really, really kind. You are the big baller and executive producer for Episode Number 63 and Clayton says hey, moe and Adam really enjoying the show. I'm a giant fan of no agenda as well but figured I would. I would like this show to get the support it needs for you guys to do episodes more often. Hopefully this helps everything
helps everything. No, you are inspiring to the straight white male right raising white children in this world that wants me to tell them that they are evil for their skin color. Please keep doing the work. He wants to be dead the dead beated and if possible, he wants to be hooked up with a moat karma. Which is a goat plus mo karma. I think we can do that. Let's see if we can take care of you here. Congratulations. You're no longer dead. Philip brown $115 half a yard value for value.
Half a yard Am I am I What am I have for yard value for value?
¶ Executive and Associate executive Producers
Half a yard because dogs are people to me on the spot and five on it. Okay. Wow, this is good code. I love it. He is kilo. I think it's keto India five November Tango Yankee ham radio operator. 70 threes, keto five alpha, Charlie, Charlie. And that's what we need more black ham radio operators mo we got to recruit you into the into the ranks of the ham. It's I think I might again because I'm realizing there's too many why there's no diversity in ham radio.
Tags all the time. It's like fishing. Get that go and fill up. Thank you very much, man. Nice. Very nice. 73 Martin Olsen $100. Also executive producer said heard the episode 62 when you pointed out how they changed shahrvand name to cast a spell, which of course was now it's it was a Chavez then it became COVID COVID. COVID, right. joven. stove Shogun for chauvinist. I says I when when you told me that they changed his name to cast a
spell. And by the way, that is an excellent. That was the spell moment when I think about it. Hmm. That was all it took that and some you know, a frog's leg. They changed their children's name, children's name to cast a spell. I knew I had to send some value. Thank you for all you do. We appreciate it. Martin value received and appreciated. Same from Todd Webster. $100. I'm having a hard time putting into words how I felt after pink elephant.
Was that 62? Yes. Yeah. In some ways, my heart is broke because of my own shortcomings. You know, that was an emotional episode. Actually. That was emotional for us too. And I know a lot of people got to the end of that and felt it man, we felt you in particular mode. It was. We used to say that's a legendary radio moment. But I think that's a podcast moment that will go down in history. And I'm glad we have it codified. Continuing with Todd,
my heart is broke because my own shortcomings in another way. I see a bright light shining over us as we begin to understand salutely Thank you mo for what you've brought to me through your experiences and research thus for this far, keep it coming. We'll be here cheers, brother from farmer Todd. Thank you, ty. That's the notes man. The notes Really? It is. It really is. You know, whenever someone sends notes, it's like, Ah, that is that is very the notes are very valuable by
themselves. Anthony nice $100 for show 63 he says thank you. You're right there, man. mesquida Mesquita 6333 show show number donation. And miskito says first of all D dead beat me. Congratulation, you're no longer dead be Hello from the Kami state of Massachusetts. Thank you so much for the job you both do listen to your conversation is a breath of fresh air and each episode is a breath of fresh air. And each episode is a learning experience. Please send me some mo karma and a whoosah.
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You know, we have so much planned for this year. I didn't know how much to donate so I figured the next show number was as good as any Yeah, this is the year we professionalize. It's going to take this global global mo Firstly, it was Brandon first it was Brandon second years it's been said you go. Kylie, Stefan, Stefan Oh, $63 Thank you. Dame girl Kylie. Yes. She's been a supporter of the no agenda show and other podcasts and I think we misgendered her many times. From Kylie because
Yeah, yes. Now she just she's just coming right damn girl, girl, girl, Kylie. And good to see you here. Kylie. Thank you. Chris Bailey. $63 Timothy Kiernan $63. To the final Show episode. donation there demone. Adam, thank you for your episodes. They're always worth the wait. May I have some more karma? Thank you. All the best sir Timothy have no fixed title. You've got we have some associate executive producers to thank as well. We
have Michael roar with $54 Eric hoko from Deutschland $52. James Frederick's with 5150. Check out the Trayvon hoax, unmasking the witness fraud that divided America documentary. Did you take a look at that moment in chance if you're not having I follow that case pretty closely. So I know about most of the details in the case, but I will check it out too. And that that was the original one. Like we talked about George Florida in last episode. The Trayvon Martin case was their original.
I don't use this word lightly. And I didn't use it previous in the show, the original snuff film that they all it was a form of pornography that they use to to my control people. Very very troubling, very troubling. The Bs, and he says thanks Chaka Gump and by the way, I want to go back to Eric hoko. His note got put in the wrong field, but I didn't want to mess it up. He said God bless you, sir. Never want to know it's okay. So we'll make sure we got it out.
Ryan summer $50 first donation to my other favorite podcast. I'm a JRE to N a demo facts listener. That's a What do we call that? JOHN? All right, Joe, Joe. Joe, Joe. Joe Nemo. Yeah, Jonah, Mo. Mo facts has quickly become my only must listen podcast other than no agenda. I'm really impressed with the level of detail and research that goes into your shows and I always come away with more knowledge than I had before. PS I was also checking out your music on SoundCloud.
That's for you mo bi you should promote that more during the podcast great stuff. As I said, lots of come in this year. Thank you, Ron. Xenophon, wolf moon $50. And Sina Fon says hard to put a
¶ Moe on SoundCloud
value on something that is priceless. So here's a 50 Semper Fi. Okay, thank you very much. And thank you for your gotta go back to that last note, just make a making a point of when things when markets become saturated. When I first got into music, being a music producer was a very lucrative, you know, endeavor, even if you were saying were semi professional, but once they gave everybody access to start making music, people started selling beats, like buy beats for 99 cent. You know, it just
sounds like you know what? I love I love music. I always will make music, but I'm just showing that that when you saturate a market, it destabilizes in a very bad way. Yes. And also we're waiting for for my Theremin playing to get a little better. So that we can do a joint Alright, on to off the beaten path towards $50 I discovered your show thanks to the no agenda podcast I've devoured for 14 episodes in the past seven days. It's a binge. I finally thanks and no agenda podcast. I
¶ Executive & Associate Executive Producers
love what you're doing. I appreciate all the hard work what you're doing is important. God bless you and your family. You and Adam Curry are a perfect pair is actually from Paula and thank you. Well in the legendary words of Stacey lattice are on Johnny Gill We are the perfect company $50 dating myself I know $50 from Chris wants to D dead beating WUSA and mo karma You bet. Congratulations. You're no longer dead. You've got a final associate executive producer he always is here to
support the show. Elvis the chef Rosenberg and he wants his cancel cannon that winds up our executive and associated executive producers for Episode 63 of mo facts with Adam Curry value for value where man we not only value you supporting us with the actual treasure, but the notes man it's really it's such a motivating factor. Keep doing that if you'd like to support the show, be a part of something that I find is very unique and you see other
people trying to come up with versions of it. I see you Bruce Springsteen and obama i don't think so. I think so. Then please support us by going to move facts comm go directly to the donation page at mo fund me.com m OEFUND. me calm thank you again for supporting mo facts with Adam Curry. So now we get into as we always do, we have to look backwards to
get context for you know what's going on today. And you said Maxine water was what was how old 82 I just want to get 82 so that's me in 1972 she was quick math 7230. about 20 is that right? Yeah, I wasn't I wasn't playing along. No, she has to be older than that. So Me too. So we this is okay, this is probably the worst. The worst thing we've ever done. So we take 2021 minus 1972 49. Kills 4972 Yeah. Wow. Wow. 8082 is up there, man. No, cuz I didn't know she was
that. Oh, she was good for age. I gotta give it to her. I thought she was in her 60s or something. That's all the compliments you're gonna get. she she she definitely been using lotion. Yes. So Maxine will be the age of the mother in this movie. And the movie I'm referring to is a black girl, which was made in 1972. That's why the years important. And what it's going
¶ Momma Maxine
to do is shine a light on what the expectation of education was of somebody Maxine Waters age. In that time. He better come on back and you're washing dishes. Oh, y'all stop all that foolishness. I'm doing myself. You don't need to be washing dishes behind nobody. And Billie Jean ain't doing nothing. Besides, Rosie wants to attend to books on a weekend flip books. And oh love music they've been playing in a room the past
two months they've been coming out no books. Maybe she can study the music on Billy Gene or you know you didn't quit school and quit school. Gene you mean you've been leaving here every morning with your books? Like he was going to school and you ain't been going to can say nothing cuz she knows it's true. You should throw in things around my commanded me. What are you gonna do when Rosie finds out about it?
mercy y'all get mad with Rosie takes on about nethersole maybe reason why she does it because now one of y'all don't seem to want to get nothing in your head. Wow, I never heard of this movie. So the set it up and I set it up boy sorry about that with the with the math. I didn't want to be racist. So our math calculation was definitely racist. are definitely the answer to it. Nowadays, you don't have to have
a right answer. So anyway, um you have Billy Gene which is maybe a 16 year old girl 1617. You have her two sisters. You have her mother her grandmother Madea. Yes, yes, yes. Yeah, got it. And then you have a Rosie who was her mother and the dynamic in the house is Billy Gene has a different father than her other two sisters. So she's treated like the the, you know, the black
sheep of the family are the two sisters ganging up on her. And that's what you heard one of her sisters ratted her out to my dear that she had been, um, she dropped out of school, and she had been doing other things where her time instead, instead of going to school every day, so you heard what my dear said she like it's one more character is a trend girl without a home that Rosie took home that she was raising as her own daughter and Rosie and we're gonna get more
into this movie. But Rosie had opened her house up for girls that were you know, kind of like didn't have a place to go and she would take care of them in the hopes that she could get a girl that would get an education and kind of save her pain and give her status in the community. So that's that's the setup I sorry for the salt poor setup but that's what's going on here. Billie Jean's dropped out of school. A sister's know about
it Madea and Rosie don't. And um we say the same on phone now with a I believe this is when Rosie finds out that Billie Jean has dropped out of school. Got no damn well you ain't accusing me of breaking the record. You better not be accusing me. Y'all got my year format and everything. She could have had it ready by now. Mama what is going on in here? She's starting some old mess about a damn
record Mama. Mama. Somebody broke the record. I've been practicing my dancing with a girl I don't want to hit nothing about no Don Denson told you that mess you're doing a devil you keep on caring about it for normally. Why don't you and Ruth and Billie Jean get on with her schoolwork? Then she will be popping up Dale? schoolwork to get cars Billie Jean Dan quit the gene You mean to tell me you don't quit school? The teacher was picking on me Mama teachability. And don't
stand and lie to me. I'm not letting mom come You can come and tell me about it. Oh, there's something else to this. And I'm going up to that school and found out what it is. She thinks she's grown Mama. You can't tell her nothing. If I wasn't already halfway late to work. Wow. Okay, so so well, it seemed like the push for education was pretty strong back then. Cuz that was your only freedom. Yeah. For doing domestic work. Or, as she said popping your
tail? I know it's working right there. There it is. 1972 is torque word. Yes. And that was highly frowned upon that you know, you use your body or sexuality to make money that that Lord just lower your standard in society, even under a domestic worker. Um, you know, so was educated domestic worker, and then you know, sexual work in these times. So, yeah, so I mean, I thought this was a great piece to go back in time and look at, you know, how a woman Maxine water age would value.
Education. And you hear how Rosie is invested in, it's like, you can get something even my dear gets up between your ears get something in your head. So you won't be a victim and have to pop your tail to make make money? Yeah, yeah, exactly. Like they can't take it out of your head, I think was the they can't take it out of your head. And you know what, that wasn't exclusive to women that was sure that was exclusive to all black children. Like they can't take it away from you. If you get it
in your hand. That's something they can't take away from you. And it brought pride to the family my grandmother's had,
¶ Grandmama's Pride in education
that they love to say, and you there's no look on a grandmother's face, especially a black grandmother to say, baby, my baby went God through schools got to school, especially in computers, or you do something to computers on a smart. Thank you saying that. That's the pinnacle of joy and pride. I know I believe what I just see my grandmother's Look at her face when she would tell her friends that her grandchild was going to school going to college for computers. No idea what I
was doing. No, I nothing. But the fact that no, that was a sense of, you know, living through you vicariously. And I think that's what Rosie wanted from netta to experience that to say, I get to live through this adopted girl and it wasn't
legally adopted. And just I'm giving this child a place to live in hopes that I guess I took part in her education and you have they have a lot of this in our community where people live vicariously through the achievement of others which is natural when you want to see your you know, your people do well.
What was was interesting in this particular scenario is that it was pretty much about the same two things that fee at the stallion and and Reverend Maxine were talking about study or or pop into tail dance into the record I mean it's the same damn thing. Oh it gets deeper dirty and you can go out tomorrow and find yourself a job. She already
¶ Black Girl (1972) Leslie Uggams Brock Peters
got a job mama already got one at the groovy Bar and Grill down at second wall doing doing that ballot there ain't no ballot dance v a l l e t 's palette Amen. Well, b a l l e t gots to be ballot It ain't even a candidate dancer. But a gene had Have you started dismiss? Yeah. I just worked through nice. Just not hearing about it. So I thought she hadn't told you about it Mom. It's a job. I didn't see no reason for her to be had no job
and this is some mail she doing? I was gonna tell you mom for you was gonna tell after that my first weeks pass on. Go see no week at that place Billie Jean. But you know, I don't know how. And she can your tail at the groovy grill all breezes. And you know, I didn't raise it all like that. And Amanda want to be looking at no belly dance and know how they want to see some strip t babies. How much is you getting for this mess? $3 a night mom?
3000. I don't get how many ticks you get you over that sometime today. And guess what that makes you ever hear of you, God? take you in what? Yeah. So that just provides perspective of using your body to make money versus education. And this just lends more to what I'm saying about Maxine Waters being disingenuous just within one lifetime. She gets to the point where she is it because if you do the math, I mean, she's the same age as Rosie and this are around
that same generation. And it was looked down upon that. You're gonna go on to groovy bar and Shake your tail even. And the thing was, Billie Jean was doing ballet dance moves. But it was it wasn't how it was, what you were doing, it was how it was perceived. And these girls and these and women excuse me, in these in the rap industry and things of that nature, you think he's artistic? It's like well, art, it's not rockiness where it was now, which is pure launch. um
they look at the same way. Well, it's not. It's not harmful. I'm just stripping. I'm just stripping so that just shows you in 1972 how this thing was perceived. Now we fast for almost 25 years later answers players club now players club is a very iconic film in the black community because it was the merging of the two things education and dancing. And this is kind of where I know it's not this the genesis of it, where it became popular lies of dancing your way through school.
And it was a very fine piece of propaganda they put together there and ironically involved Ice Cube Oh man. Yeah, so let's just go ahead and hear the movie review all players club. You could be making a lot more money than what you're making up immunity. We'll just use what you got to give us a bonus don't mess with this chump check. In Was that supposed to me, Jeff?
¶ What I learned from THE PLAYERS CLUB movie review + The Stripper's Myth
In 1995 it was showgirl say 96 we got striptease, and in 1997 he was formatting all our movies about strippers. The incomes 1998 and IQ released the players club. This is a story about the strippers. Diamond is only struggling to pay our tuition based on the strip club thing in Atlanta in the early 90s. You know the freaknik era was it about our college journalism major looks back when she was fresh out of high school and became a stripper to support her son and to get through college.
Meanwhile, money moves in and wants to be just like diamond he is on the pole, but isn't mature enough yet. together. They turned verse to elaborate on the players club in hopes of meeting their goals. Characters Diane diamond Armstrong is an ambitious college student studying journalism. She's sweet and a little naive in nature, but she's always stripping too rarely to get through college. I
plan to study by day and strip by night. Then she's done. She's kind of like a stripper superhero Pam Anderson play. Ebony is done with fazla little ghazan little does she know her mother has diamond to look out for. She has diamonds ambition, but not her morals.
She's paid to play all the way. Ronnie that chick was Ronnie was a bisexual predator stripper taking advantage of young girls like them and repeatedly wow another one I got to see diamond became the the was the icon or even the caricature caricature of it. Yeah, I'm stripping my way through school and I'm using what I got to get what I want and that kind of mindset. And it kind of made it okay to be a stripper then it was the in the
90s it was still looked down upon. But it was way of you doing what you got to do to get to a better life then it's understandable. And this thing was this talking point was used by a lot of women about stripping. Well the ramp up was interesting in that review, but Well yeah, all these movies that you had about stripping and it
rammed right up to players club. I mean, that's interesting because I remember I remember when striptease came out and full monty and it was a desensitization Of course and intentional or not, and you get to players club it's like boom everything's wide open I guess. In a in one of the movies I think they pointed out was showgirl showgirl Shana said wish featured if you remember say about a veil it was Jesse who was the smart borderline feminist and saved by the bill
the end up being used as the stripper show gross. So if you had little girls idolizing or identifying through JC because in that show say by the bed head clear archetypes right, it was the the jokester or the the funny guys that right you have AC Slater as the as the jock. You had screech as the nerd. You had Lisa turtle as a self absorbed black valley girl. And you had Lisa um, you had Kelly is the prototypical cheerleader who
gets the cool guy. And you had Jesse, which I forget the actor's name, but he was the I'm gonna do the books and I'm gonna be smart, and you know, pushing all kind of political causes and that kind of thing at the school. And they it's funny that they use her for the showgirls. Yeah, Elizabeth Berkeley, is it? Is it funny, or is it planned?
It's just got a look at this stuff and think, wow, you know, in you know what, that's something I have to look at all the time, because I see these characters character archetypes played out through generational roles. And it's, you know, they'll take a character and develop them in different movies. And it's like, they're progressing through life. The screen, and it's where and what happens is we as humans, we identify and live through people. Sure. So it's like, if
you identify say with just take Queen Latifah for instance. If you look at Queen Latifah, she brushed it on the stage. And this is sort of a 10 I'm digressing a little bit but I just want to lay this out we're clinging on to it because you pointed it out and I'm glad you did. Because gave me a great opening point and point this this trend I see. So Queen Latifah. She came on the scene as the positive rapper. She didn't show our body all that
kind of thing. Then player I mean, excuse me a house party too. She played a hardcore feminist that you know, she was trying to woo one of the main characters
¶ Queen Latifah
in a house party out of you don't need no man you need to focus on your books you know saying man we're gonna get you in trouble that kind of thing. So it's pertinent to the story. Then she goes from there and then she's rolled into this show called Living single living single is about women other modern day 90s women it's the 90 kind of where I'm glad I got my girls. They're all living together and you know they have these archetypes next
show. And then like I said, you fast for and then I'm going to possibly get into girls trip where now quit. back up and, and living single. Queen Latifah plays a owner of a magazine company called flavor. Now you fast forward to girls trip. It's like these women have gotten older. And now she's a struggling blogger that has lost her, her magazine. So I just was saying it's like they play these characters out right in front of
our face. And all of these different movies, but it's the same theme or the same character or character, character archetype across all the, you know, all the brands of franchises. I have not seen it yet. But now she is the equalizer. Yeah, she's the only woman that has to go beat up, man. That's that's the role, right? And it's like, anything make any sense? I mean, but oh, no, no, no, no, it's just, you know, assets, commodities, commodities, you can use these
commodities in all kinds of ways. And that's, that's the realization. Well, hollywood, hollywood, starless, they'll always be a commodity, right? That's just it doesn't look that way anymore. Because it's all broken up into studios. And, and then as William Morris entertainment, and although that's getting now now that the studios were broken up, back in the day, a lot of it was for
¶ Hollywood studios
for women, you know, it's like you had to break up the studios and make them smaller, because, you know, it was it was totally abusive. And what's happening today is they're rolling it all right, back up, again, is really going to be two companies, three companies, tops that own everything, and they will be the studio system. And they'll just use these commodities like they did back in the early days of Hollywood. They're right back where they want it to be under the guise of equity, equality,
empowerment, and all of that. It's a great, great spell. And there'll be one feeder system which is Disney, which has all the all the budding starlet pretty much. It's right back right back to where they started. Yeah. So going back to player's club, let's get into the second part of the review. Ronnie. That chick was Ronnie was a badass sexual predator stripper,
¶ What I learned from THE PLAYERS CLUB movie review
taking advantage of young girls like damn and repeatedly. She kept asking Damn, and if you have fortune. But that's exactly what they're about to call you upstairs. So you might as well give us two drinks with the oldest stripper at the players club. She's been written hard and put away wet. She's the better sidekick of Ronnie. Blue is a disgruntled DJ. The only one in the club. That's not a creek. Because of the bad deal between dollar bill and him. damn near word of free.
I just don't think it's fair to charge a 25% interest on the money that you loaned me. You already take 30% out my check was a stupid game putting $1 bill is the owner of the players club. He borrowed 60 G's from this gangster named St. Louis. It hasn't made a payment. Bernie Mac hands down at the stand out of this failed as dollar bill with the shutdown colloquialisms. His story about how stripping started is funny
enough to be true. Should have been started a long time ago, long, long, long time ago white man went to Africa only beautiful black women walk around. That's how it started. Well, there is a list let's listen to the whole history as laid out a lot the late great Bernie Mac in this in this movie and it's the history lesson and the strip gang should have been started in Africa A long time ago. Long, long, long time ago
white man went to Africa. He saw the beautiful black women walking around saying in Dallas and working living
¶ A History Lesson In Tha Strip Game!!!!!!!!! Dolla Bill
in the new fucking Nick kids. You can see the public edge this white man went from village to village to seek out the beautiful black women watching them for fall in the New Age. The free idea to go back to the same type of business take with my black lemons. chunky white BHS today it's the same identical way but to no avail. Window same love black women with no shame and walk around. I start saying thing, but it didn't happen. Though. White
mages told him the most beautiful words. You don't want to hand up a fish. Unless you say baby. The white beard just looked at that white man did and I told him that paid me That's why I get 30% for when can I start? Do you meet so And all just there is some truth into that story. You want to yeah anything you want to say you want to get right into it now Go Go for it. I'm all ears. Okay, I am Sarah. I am Sarah baartman koi koi we
¶ I Am Sarah Baartman , by Tomeka Allen
we want to known for our lobby lobby Are you safe on the lips of our vagina? They were unusually large, much information. I think so too. That was not meant for you to know. But thanks to the infamous Alexander lop. You almost know everything there is to know about me. My name Bob Kahn loved my body chatter cherished it. promised I would return to South Africa, a very rich woman, then I believe him. I did not think for one second that the day I say yes to Him.
I wouldn't be forced to give up my very soul. Okay, this does go back to the Dutch actually. I am Sarah Bart me, Sarah baartman was paraded around Europe because of her large Botox and other female parts by a man named Dunlop. The only difference was she voluntarily did it. The VA said there's some truth and test of the exploitation of women. But it was voluntary. Well,
that's very interesting. Because I you know, while the clips were playing, I was also I looked up the history of striptease, which takes you back to burlesque Of course and, and some other earlier time periods. But Sarah baartman actually, her name was Satya was from South Africa, which is why there's a Dutch connection. She lives in the late 1700s. And when she was taken around, I'm just reading from the Wikipedia here. The objectification of their of their buttocks were exhibited as freak show
attractions in 19th century Europe. So that definitely predates the burlesque period. And then here's the interesting part friend of art, and now we have some Dutch producers out there. She traveled around Europe under the name Holton thought which is a phrase still use today in a derogatory term towards women. In the Netherlands, I this is this is a history I was not aware of this is really
thanks, Mo. And some people will even say that I often thought hey, we say isn't kind of the origin of thought. Some have made that connection. Really? Yes. When it goes deeper, it goes deeper. They stuffed me in tight stocking, decorates me and beat put feathers on me and paint my face as I dance like animal
¶ I Am Sarah Baartman , by Tomeka Allen
before them. I sing. I sing in humiliation in my very own native tongue, and was repulsed as I was made to sing the European folk songs as well. Dear puppet I was no longer theater. She did not exist anymore. I will talk to Venus. Never forget is rolling up and down my thighs. Six miles. Look upon the buttocks God gave me for me in my Austin that I will never have the pleasure to know my body was exhibit. The Brits was obsessed with Botox. To white women even try to prop up
their bottoms to look like mine. Oh my god. This is just history repeating itself. This is fake. antastic my god, her name was hot and taut Venus yes coves Venus, the mother goddess. And then you say Why? She said it herself. Her body was meant for her and her husband. If you go out here, and she was no longer herself Megan the stallion is no longer herself little kin was no longer hers till Foxy Brown was no longer herself. Oh go so you don't go by your real name you go by your stage name. The
interesting thing is Maxine Waters the Reverend. She is she is motivating Megan the stallion. And she was also alive to motivates Sarah Houghton Todd. That's all Maxine Waters is. She's she is the missing link. No, but she she knows about the objectification of black women. This is not this is an untold this isn't. This is an untold story to me. So this is a huge revelation. I really appreciate this one. And what and what I want to point out is the slavery
narrative or story, however you want to look at it. Sexuality is a huge part of it. It's the it's the elephant in the room that nobody wants to talk about. Nobody, because it was that was part of slavery that you're an
object. You're to be used, well, any way possible. Or any way as seen, yeah, we only need to look at BDSM culture to understand that that's very logical that that was taking place back in the old days of slavery and has never stopped and and the sad kind of thing is that what some people do in 50 Shades of Grey, or that idea between consenting responsible adults, is mirrored exactly that way with non consenting people today, all over the world. But going back as far back as what
we're talking about here and beyond, I'm sure. And I'm going to foreshadow a little bit into the next episode, the core set it was meant to be shattered in the 1920s by the flappers. Now in the course it is synonymous with sex work. Yeah. So you see how we come 360 is the very thing that women want to be freed from is the is the one of the most iconic pieces of, of
wardrobe apparel that represents sex work. And but it's almost no different from the years and years of campaigning and work that women put into getting women sports, just for women, and only to enter the 2000s. And, hey, there's dudes popping up and I want to be respectful. I have no problem with trans. I grew up in Amsterdam, so I've been exposed to this for a very long time. But clearly, there's some physical issues that just
don't make sense. And, and those women are being shouted down, they can't even Forget it. Forget, even if it's true or not, they can't even have the conversation say Hold on a second. So they kind of work themselves right into that which they fought so hard against. And you will see that he is a it's a it's a computer, it's a computer, it's got its competition, you introduce competition, because men are looking at trans women as real women. And you've made you know, more competition for yourself
pushing I mean, just to be synonymous with the sports. It makes it makes them it doesn't make any logical sense. And I'm just gonna say from this, the sports aspect of it. Sport is about competition and fair competition. You don't put a 250 pound box in a ring with a 180 pound boxer now, it doesn't say Oh, one guy's lesser a more a better boxer, right? It's just that if we want to have fair competition, let's put people with the same physical ability and see who you know. So that's
it that doesn't even have to talk about gender there. It's just the point of this bet people will to compete with their own you know, class of competition. So, um, I have a pro tip, by the way, a pro tip if you're googling boosey, do not click on the images. tab. Yeah. Pro tip. All right. So we got to go into this obsession with large buttocks. We've seen Kim Kardashian and it's amazing how they use Kim
Kardashian to you bring in the the large buttocks. But if you have a representative least have a black woman representative, if you're saying is positive that is kind of interesting. Yeah. And and the thing is Kim Kardashian actually mimic Sarah baartman on on one or on a magazine cast that is
¶ Big butts
the I will By the way, the first woman to do that in pop music, I believe was Grace Jones. Yes. But I'm only realizing now that that is Sarah baartman. Yes. And I've. And he's been become mainstream and acceptable in a short amount of time. But it's a slavery thing. That has been, I mean, that has been replicated throughout popular culture. And I've been a part of it. And no one has ever told me this. And notice, though, we're shouted down, like, hold on.
I'll show everybody you're good. You say like, Hey, you know, my liberal teachers Deliver us. My feminist teacher said, I have the right to show my body off, and not to be judged. And we're saying it don't work like this. They don't they don't work like that. And that's not how it works. And that's where the frustration comes in, in this war between black men and black women, and it's gonna spread if it's not
spreading already. That is, the frustration is meaning like, you know what I'm checking out. I don't marry I don't want to marry him say I'm good. That's very good. Is that is that saturation point. Now there is that's what's happening? Oh, yes. This is just a new, this is just the beginning of a whole new Stay tuned for part two of this fabulous, fabulous journey.
So with that said, let's get into my toxic obsession. This is a story about a woman who defined herself by her external, how she looked on the outside to such a degree that her quest for perfection, became her poise. In the world of plus size models, and nivia was at the top of her game. That was so good. I walked into willamina on an open call. I did the test shoot. And I guess that was booking really good jobs. But the very thing that helped her get to the
tongue soon became her downfall. In my quest to gain weight to become a plus size model. I started to butt injections. At the time, there weren't many options either to go overseas, or you get it done here. And I'm like, hey, everybody's alive and growth living. I'm gonna look like that. So I went the cheap route. In her pursuit of a modeling career, and nivia says she took part in the underground world of buck enhancement injections to
get a plump, curvaceous behind. It looked amazing and had just kept going. It's just imagine not having outside and someone tells you that they can fix your eyesight for such cheap price. You start paying and you start to see see you just keep going back again and again and again. I see the way other people look at her many times I've heard people say real goto Chico touch it. Or I want to tap that. There it is.
These women were injecting any and everything into their backsides to meet a standard a very unhealthy standard now. This is nothing new. We had this in the 80s it was more of a white women with the large breast implants. Yeah. And there was a movie called thing called breast man on HBO, where the
¶ Unhealthy body modifications
these guys were giving women you know, triple G's and Triple H's and yeah, it was just I mean, you saw it was like it was body disfigurement. You were looking at these women be like, what did you do to yourself? I mean, Dolly Parton was one of them. Right? I mean, that was like the running joke of like, you know, saying Look how big you know, saying her boobs or whatever. And going back full circle to what you're talking about. And
rock videos. It was the same thing. It was. It was cartoonish, but it also really became a I have some expertise in this area. married three times my first and second wife, definitely. I had a front row seat to a lot of different cosmetic things. And it's fashion driven. Part of it is his age. But a lot of things were fashion driven. And the breasts in the breast out too big needs to be smaller. Nice. Oh, now we have to go
almost flat chested. It's almost identical to Twiggy being the the icon and the perfect woman in the 60s to Well, obviously what we now see in the 2000s, which could not be more polar opposite. So and when I say fashion, that means it's driven by culture and by media, and and all the factors that we constantly explore. And oh, yeah. Now, along with that comes. So here's what I've learned about plastic surgery. There's always a couple of weeks of bruising.
That's what the doctor will say, for no matter what procedure couple of days, couple of weeks of bruising, don't worry about it, that's a lie. And you need to you need to maintain it. It's not a one and done. There's, there's no Johnson and Johnson for this stuff. It's like, You got it, you got to maintain it, you got to stay on it. And with that, you know, since you're doing it anyway, that's when culture moves you and changes you and you sometimes reduce instead of enhance I mean, it's, it's a
it's a really crazy dynamic. And let me be clear, there's nuance to this conversation about plastic surgery. I understand a mother that had a couple of kids, if she wants to get something tightened up or, or you're saying or get hurt, try to bring her pre baby body back. Fine. Because I understand how beauty and for lack of a better word, vanity is important to women confidence. Confidence is
incredibly important. Yeah, yeah. So I get it. What I'm saying is when it becomes cartoonish, when you have these in the 80s, you had these women who had like two basketballs. I mean, there were tears. I mean, like, terrible, terrible boob job Pam Anderson was was really big. And that was considered a standard, I would say with Baywatch. I'm talking about the ones don't skinemax What did you do to your body? Like, that's not even hot. That
was just that was just sick of sick people. And it became, it became funny at a certain point. The point I'm making is that we're here right now in that moment now but it's not breast is but and that's what's driving these women. When you look at them, it's like that's not attractive. You're Assad show. Hello. often taught it's not about it's not about all that's attractive.
It's just that I gotta look because this obscene you know, in a way, and these women and I say this out of care out of love, because a bunch of women have died from this. Have. These are not real doctors. These are women setting up and guys setting up shops and hotel rooms. And they're putting, actually like silicone from Lowe's. Like to patch holes here. Now I'm serious. I'm serious. I know it's true. I know. It's true. I'm laughing. But yes, it's
absolutely true. It's so true that this the lady's gonna explain her experience with these makes your butt shots in the next clip. But in 2010, i nivia made headline news, because the model is accused of helping other women build a better body by giving them buttocks enhancing injections. She was indicted on charges of the unauthorized practice of medicine without a license. Now, the accusations that the media put out there, we're definitely not true. And this is my first
time speaking out on it. I do not have a record. No, I did not go to jail. No, I was never arrested. And that's that Olivia pled not guilty. The case was eventually dropped due to a technicality. Today on the biggest problems stretch far beyond her legal issues. Now, my life is possibly in danger, all due to the fact that I wanted a larger buttocks. I remember exactly when my butt started hurting. I can't
remember specifically one of my first sharp pains. And all of a sudden this nail was something just went straight through the middle of my right budget. And it brought me down to my knees almost. So it was so confusing and it sounds crazy. But the reaction that I get from people Oh, you have such a great shape. Oh, I love I've never had that before. And I don't want to lose that. But I don't want this but to be so big. I have become
someone that I never thought I would be. I'm 32 years old and I'm better angry, hurt? loan? No children. Wow. You know, I picked up on the line in there. Girl You look so amazing. Your body looks so good. This is Instagram talk all day long has nothing to do with me. Now all day long. Girl You look so good. You look so fine. I love your curves. And mass what feeds it's the dopamine. It's the it's the it's the you put it online, but women are lying. They're lying to each
other to a certain point. They're just lying. I know they're lying. Because it's one thing to say no, I mean, this is this is two dudes talking now. It's one, and I'm just gonna be just as honest. Women around me are like, Oh, man, you know, Liz, oh, she's great. She's putting it out there. And like she's obese. She's obese. I'm sorry. She's Bs, I understand and body types and body shaming and, you know, whatever. But I don't think it's helpful to tell people who are obese, that you're just
beautiful. And it's fantastic. You know? Because it doesn't make your butt big, you know, it's like no, and they're lying. It's like your butts. Really. You could say this, your butt's really great, but you know, you need to lose some pounds. But you can't say that, or you can't say exactly and which
¶ Why math is racist
answer answer is Mr. Kevin Samuels, but we're going to talk about him later. But he's got himself in the world of trouble by writing women by beauty standards. And by doing that he's made himself public enemy number one now you can say what you want to about him, but just the bell curve distribution. Everybody can't be eights, nines and 10s. You know, there has to be ones and twos and there has to be you know, the majority of fall in the middle of the bell curve probably between fours and
sevens. You know, certainly you have the other than the bell curve. But what you're saying is and this is why math is racist, it's like you know, you can't This is why I'm not seriously Yes. logical thinking is that we're all teams equity equity and and what feeds to that and now I've
said something, but let me clarify it. Men do play a role in it by being simps and liking these women photos on Instagram it's because you can tribute to this with these sent messages under their you know, to their own demise by thumbs up being in and supporting this behavior but then you and when you see him in public you went and you know take them seriously you're sending a miss mixed messages to when man's real man stand up and
say you know what? Yeah, and to be honest with you real men like women of all shapes and there's a flavor for each guy you know some guy like charging women some God like petite women, yo some might you know, it's a it's kind of a crowd audience out there for each type. But what you need to be is healthy and not only physically healthy but mentally healthy where you love yourself. Because that that resonates net you can see that. Like, you know, Shawn, right through it with a person that
actually love love themself. That's very attractive. Yes. Oh, you love it when you love yourself for who you are. And what you do is one thing, and that can be in that soup. I mean, hey, you know, Billy Joel is talented. He got Christie
¶ Love yourself
Brinkley, I mean, you know, Bill Gates getting all kinds of tail. These are not the most attractive guys, but they're intelligent. They're interesting. They love themselves with women exactly the same. But when you love yourself for some fake aesthetic, that that can end well with a trainee. One man's love for the world's love. And that's the that's the bargain. That's the that's the fasty and deal they made to say, you know what, I'm not satisfied with one man's love. And you know what?
Sarah baartman was portrayed to say about Tamika Allen, to say, you know, my husband loves what I have. Now with what his Instagram say about me and Kay said this and it was like a punch line or whatever like that. Excuse my language. We say Instagram got you a bitch. And what he was saying is, yeah, she checks with Instagram before she checks with you. That's right. She's satisfied with Instagram before she satisfied with you and This is all this culture is built in by
¶ Living the Instagram life
portraying women natural beauty or natural state with falsified, you know, images of I woke up like this, that kind of thing, you know that pictures airbrushed and you have makeup on. And it's been, you know, you have a filter and those kinds of things, your daughter of Instagram, your daughter of Instagram,
she's a spec to me and her had this conversation. And she's, she's a spectator of social media, I think younger people are leaning more towards this and they're a solid there, the silent majority is, well, what we see on Instagram is the minority. I don't want to throw the you know, this, but I guess the point I was gonna make was if you because I, I
don't use Instagram. But it doesn't matter which picture goes up, we tap on the filter, let's just make just just a little rub of the the lines under the eyes on me, by the way. Just whiten the teeth a little bit. And that's just normal. It's just normal now. So if that's the standard, well, we think humans look like you're gonna go out into the real world and it's gonna suck. And then
what happens is you need Viagra. That's what you need. Well, not only that, but what happens is I want to stretch this out too long. But what happens is when women get that support, you know, adoration and and No. Attention, but you know, they think that's real. Yeah. And then when a guy sees them actually on the date, and it's not a the same kind of energy, yeah, it crashes the market.
It's like, you hype this stock up. You hype it up. And then the IPO comes, it's like, oh, no, it's not performing like, and he's doing it and he just tanks. And that's a real person we're talking about and that and that's why I do this. That's why I did this show.
¶ Freeing women from unrealistic expectations
These unrealistic expectations. Women need to be set free from the only people who can do is real man stand up, say, you know what, we like real women. Not these cartoon characters. And it's sad I can say and the thing is, it's beautiful women that do it to themselves. Yeah, that's that's the real that's, that's, that's the kicker, right? Yeah, that's right. I mean, like, you were fine. Like you were, um, but yeah, but there is some science behind our
obsession with big books. So you might say to yourself, I like big butts. And I cannot lie. But you might be wondering why Why? Why do people feel like they need to lie about that? I don't know. Why, as a society, we're so obsessed with big butts, especially the big butts of some people like Kim Kardashian or a Jen Stelter, if you will, apparently evolution might have
¶ Science behind liking big butts
the answer. So the curve, you know, of your back in your in your bum, the curve would have enabled ancestral women to shift their center of mass back over their hips during pregnancy, a time during which there is a dramatic forward shift of their center of mass basically would have been like a seesaw. Yeah,
exactly. Consequently, ancestral women who possess this degree of lumbar curvature would have been able to forge longer into pregnancy and would have been able to carry out multiple pregnancies with a reduced rate of injury, just thinking about that is giving me lumbar. Now evolutionary psychologists might have a different answer. So they say attractiveness is socially constructed, varying among human populations across the globe and across
generations. And further, men in the study were less attracted to larger reps that resulted from fat qMk or excess muscle to do with spine curvature, but not backsies, which was seems to conflict with the notion that Kardashians body is setting off some sort of primeval sex Bell's or that that's the particular reason why it's setting off a sextile Hmm. So that that means it's primal and built into our DNA. Yes. And I was a teenage
boy wants to talk. What's the point of time ago, you just bought a great but I don't care like you could be driving 60 miles an hour, down the road. And out your periphery you it is we're just being honest here. For you, you see that curve? And this is like I said, this is hardwired into our biology. Well, yes. Right. So the white boys version, baby makes her blue jeans talk Dr. Hook in the Medicine Show. Brooke Shields, nothing comes between me and my door dashes My Calvin's, what was it?
Yes, I would say the all American white girl always had the bikini out or the hot pants. But not with the super not with the supercharged but with Definitely, yeah, of course, we see that we've gone to an extreme here we've gone to a whole nother level is science though. It's just like with the golden ratio or beauty, right? It's not and it comes down to a science of symmetry and, and which angle which is why you cannot have just a butt enhancement without breast enhancement, because then you
you ruin the ruin the Fibonacci sequence. I think that that's exactly right. So I just want to point that out and make this final point, before we move on. There's a talking point. And men circles, men, right circles, you know, the manosphere, the black manosphere, wherever, that women that were close to work, to accentuate This is a form of sexual harassment. I didn't come to work to be asked to be tempted. I didn't you know, this is, you know, it's, it's very distracting.
I'm sure I mean, no, you don't you don't work. But I've been in a work environments where people like, Why does she wear that? You know, when you go to the grocery store, yoga pants and these kinds of things, it's like, it's nothing looks like you're showing everything. And what we're doing is we're abusing little boys and young men.
You can you can take it how you want to, but it's by a biological, and I don't I don't feel this is his ways to be sexy without being are ways to be attractive without being no going and getting into that, you know, gray area. That's it. Again, you know, the how far this is. This has progressed from my own history when Christina was about eight, and her mom would pick her up and her mom you know, beautiful had was always wearing. What Not today would be Lulu lemons.
Yeah, and but she kind of wore those all she's she was a singer performer. So that was kind of her attire anyway. And now this was around the the first or second boob job. And she would pick up our daughter at school. And at a certain point, one of the moms came to our door and said, we really think you should dress less provocatively when you come pick up Christina, because you know, the boys are seeing way
too much. That is 2020 years ago. And and you know, and of course, I know, I had a company with 700 employees, I ran the New York office with over 100. So I'm very familiar with, with what and this was in the in the 90s, mid 90s. So I'm very familiar with, you know, what you how people dress and what kind of impact that has on just to go back to the Lulu lemons. I mean, today, I went to the grocery store, and you're right. I mean, that's 20 years ago, that was not done anywhere, let
alone out in public and like the supermarket. And that's all that it is mo your apps, I would say eight bought Whole Foods, Whole Foods. eight out of 10 women in whole foods are wearing lemons. And then the way they're designed is x, you know accentuate it with the right thing. And oh, yeah, totally. Yeah. And it fries your brain. I mean, like, especially for a little boy, I mean that. What am I seeing? I mean, I can say I was a young man once and this, you're already wired that way.
And to push it, you know, to that extreme. You got to take in the fact that like the mother said, protect our little boys by having a nurse and doing something different. Not but now they want to say moonboys overcome your toxic masculinity. Right. Deron is what a trap. And then they say why are men so effeminate? It's like what do you expect? Yeah, I'm battling millions of years evolution here, lady. Oh my goodness. But it's okay to sexualize our D sexualized
little boys. I mean, that's that's the message that we're being sent. We're moving on. Can we get a little Leon Lani little, please understand that
¶ New Money
there's some people out there who need my services. Any people out there who are weak people out there who are weird Y'all got k? Well, we need we need a little bit from y'all. And that means that it's time to thank some more producers the second half here, who supported the today's episode, Episode 63. Mo facts with Adam curry complete value for value proposition. There's no advertisers, no, no pharmaceutical ads, no creepy
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for what you're doing. I've been so fascinated with the topics you discuss on the show, but I've never been able to find a source of information even so close, even close to as good as the one you guys provide. I'm going back and listening to old episodes. I probably missed it. But did you know that Brianna Taylor's case is intertwined with an opportunity zone situation? I did not want to look into it. Don't say hello, the wire season one Hello. has named evades me nipsey Oh, yeah.
Yeah, yeah. Forgive me this was already covered in the show. No, it hasn't. But you heard it, we're on it. It's been both riveting and slightly traumatic to relive the 2020 timeline through old episodes of the show. Yeah, I can understand
that. But it also is a record. Another interesting part of the story is the letters, which he attached that were given to business owners of the hip, cool, gentrified part of town last summer, they were accompanied by a racial justice scorecard, much like the ones you see issued by the health department for restaurants. Again, forgive me if you've covered this, you will not be surprised. We learned who was behind these.
I'm sure. I'd love to ride boots on the ground information if I can, because I think Louisville plays a big role in what is going on out in the greater world is related to the topics to discuss not sure what I can offer, but I'm willing to help in any way possible. Thanks again. Sam. Sam, you're doing it man. This is exactly what it is. Tell us what's going on boots on the ground and support us and we appreciate it. Jonathan Ashcroft magic 3333 33 says Wow, once again you blew my mind pink
elephants on parade mo karma please. And we got some mokameh you've got mocha. And there's our buddy john Fletcher. Also 3333 years show has opened my eyes to so many perspectives and ideas that I would otherwise be blind to thank you so much for your courage and passion love and light from Fletcher anonymous j 3333. Amazing podcast mo I'm also in Northern Virginia. God bless. We got to do a meet up. Dodge Gaskill. 3333 value for value
gentlemen, great job. Doug dodge. Listen from the show from show 133 33 need to be D deadbeat and sir Doug of the Channel Islands. Congratulations. You're no longer a deadbeat. Thank Lewis brag first $30 and Valerie evering came in with 228 28 donations. So I think that puts her backup in associate executive producer Lance will make sure she's credited properly. first note, thank you for what you're doing. I love listening and learning. And then the second one, do you listen to the
new york times daily podcast called the daily? No, I have in the past but now, the Tuesday May 4 episode population slowdown was so weird. The interview sounded like an infomercial for population control. And they talked about population decline and women's decision decisions but then did not mention men once, as if men as if men don't raise children to also immigration. Anyway, I love listening to you and Adam, you're both so informed and so
good at sharing your analysis. Well, we may have to go back and listen to that one. Tuesday, May 4. Yeah, Michelle has tended to be population in it. That's one of the goals that what they're doing here. Oh, totally. Well, this is what we're talking about. Yes, we're saying, Yeah, this conversation we're having right now. Oh, yes. Oh, totally. Yeah, totally. And we've we've been talking about this for a while in different roundabout ways. Michael Myers $25. Thanks, Mike. Robert Conti.
Thank you guys. Keep up the great work. $25 Joshua Jackson 2021 says thank you for the hard work on the show small requests. I hear the term gaslighting in many places including this podcast, I don't know exactly how to define it or understand the difference between gaslighting versus lying or deceiving. Can the mo facts podcast please provide a clear definition preferable with a clear example? Thank you in
advance. Yeah, that gaslighting is basically lying on a continuous basis with with something that that is just not true. And you tell someone over and over again that it is or vice versa instead of a lie. That's it wouldn't wouldn't one part one part I just keep pointing the part out is both party knows you're lying. Well, the party being lied to knows it's a lie but then eventually just believes it because the lie come so often. And if you are saying but yeah,
they know it's not like they don't know it's a lie. It's like they know it's a lie. But it's a form of Mind Control seat. See? UFOs Yes. That's it. That's your example right there. We're good to go. capital T. Says, dating timeshares was an offline offering. That's Dutch for holy crap. What an episode speechless since it's my birthday. I just need a biscuit and can go bad on how to wait.
Wait. Yes, that's that's that's Dutch. Yeah, the first sentence dating dangers what's enough flavoring are put into the Spanish translator. And it came back what episode? Really? Yeah, I didn't get the first part. That's why I put That's weird. Now that is weird. QA. But even that second part, I don't see how the how the Spanish translator could have done that. I don't I use Google Translate. I was like, What is he saying? I figured it was like
I said maybe Spanish? I can't tell anything and I saw you No. No's the Jays and you know that was like okay. So the first two words dating timeshares is kind of like a it's like an explanation is like holy crap, is what it actually is. Historically, it's it's a weird thing to digest, but it means holy crap. What's enough flavoring means what an episode. Yeah, tan j is translated as tea and I was like that can't be
teeth. So that's exactly what it is. It touches his teeth Wow, it must you may be you hit it must have recognized Dutch there's no way could have recognized the Spanish sir. Google guys man you didn't. You don't know what's going on behind the Spanish. capital T always give me a biscuit on my birthday. Alright, Ramon, thank you very much. Chris Jerome. $20. The most important podcast in the universe This is he says please D dead beat me.
Congratulation, you're no longer dead beat ISIS. Next up on the list is a D Dushan. Keep up the amazing work mo you have blown the cobwebs from my eyes. Sincerely, Jerome. Abbey newbie. $20 in the morning mo and Adam gratitude for Episode 62 Thank you, Louis Lombard, $20 god bless continue the information war with knowledge comes understanding and peace to hear that. Paul E. Lovato. $20 says appreciate the infotainment Susan $20 to access for Episode 62 My heart aches for the addicted.
Yes and Shannon Shelton. Also two x's 210s for opening my eyes. Thanks. Kevin Willis $15 I'm now slightly less of a deadbeat. You are completely dead meaning you're good. Congratulations. You're no longer dead v Ray Cooper 1234 hours and $12.34 value for value. Thanks for the thoughtful content and we appreciate the return value clay James Holly. Always a pleasure. Keep the mo karma coming. We can do that for you. 1033 Susan says Episode 61 was the bomb and sends us 10 spot for
that. Thanks, Timothy Poland sent a link Did you look at this black libertarians matter I did not but I gotta find a way out of my watch later in the system. Andrea $10 awareness and understanding is half the battle maybe even more that Susan says here's an X here's a 10 spot for you. Thank you very much Andrea again. So $20 combined for this
show pink elephant just what I thought wow greatness. Michael Hanna $10 with no note value for value for Episode 62 says David Ackerman with $9 Vinson Ferro 555 keep them coming Sam smock again with five oh to add a little add on to my monthly with a note for the show thanks mode out and for providing the tools to calmly and factually counter the nonstop nonsense the last show illustrated perfectly now the M five m doesn't just tell you what to think they tell you what to think about it and how
to what to think about you go to me your show is about planting the right seeds in order for the next generation to grow much love the hoax Oh man. Maui goods $5 can move go nationwide and
will munia ever be freed? Any idea? Who are the white people in the BLM move rallies are they paid to be fillers actors to look like a lot of people when you're going to talk black and oh and when are you going to talk black Israelites that's coming soon okay and i would say i don't think you need to pay any any you there's plenty of people who will show up for that. But I guess we'll look into it is people getting paid in that group now may not like the beast placed place fillers but like to
be headhunters people get into. Yeah to bring into into fourth wave. a cult fan for 44. Mon Adam, thank you as usual, I want to point listeners in the direction of JP Sears aka awakened with JP. Both his YouTube and podcast awakened with JP calm. And Terry, the human subscription, who is still waiting for us to and this is all coming. And this is on me now. Terry, the human subscription is waiting for subscription service with Pay
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associate executive producers so we thanked earlier for producing Episode 63 of mo facts with Adam curry to support us for 64 which will be part two of this episode. Please go to mo fund me.com mo e f u n d me calm board just our homepage mo facts calm. Alright, so we're coming down, coming down the homestretch. And
¶ New Money
the most disgusting part of Maxine Waters pandering is I'm sure she's aware of survival six, which we talked about the eighth episode. And this is a snippet of a clip that we use
¶ Survival sex
in there for Tiffany Graham, and she kind of explains survival sex and how prevalent it is. Survival sex is an enormous issue too. Now, what do we mean by survival sex, in principle, survival sex is part of the wider commercial sex trade. People who engage in survival sex do so because they literally have no other way to survive. So they exchange sex for money they exchange sex for shelter, they exchange it for food, clothing or any other good which is the necessity of life
and that's why I find disgusting right there. That is people out here a lot of people out here that actually have to use sex as a you know, way to make them make money and their only way to make money. And I'm sure Maxine Waters is aware that knowing with her district, and the known six area straight the street workers in her her district. That's what I find the most
disgusting and the last handful of clips that we have here. I called him to tell it to diamond, because it's about two six workers both named diamonds. As we saw our players club and their journeys throughout the
¶ The tail of two diamonds
sex work industry. There's a girl over here that just came into the game show Mona. She's scared and she got this tight pussy and she got perky tis She's trying to figure this out for the first time and she and your man come around and be like, baby allow some money for you. Can you give me experience that I never had? He still love you though. He appreciates you though. She don't give her the house. The car the credit. But she just she
just the main. The main diamond. We got the cup. Drink it up. Okay, right. I got a little bit left ship. Were you drinking? Well, I decided to try dark liquor because white liquor I don't know it's a bit not been agreeing with my stomach. So I'm trying to say what do you do? Do you drink pretty much every time you go to work? Oh, I have to you have to? I have to because if I don't drink, I'm in there like, but it's like, how do I talk to people? How do I interact? How do I do this?
Because this is all new for me. I'm telling you been doing this. It's only been three years. And three years. It's really new for you. It's a little different for me. My story's a lot different. How'd you get into it? I had to survive baby. I had to survive. That's what survival sex looks like. Yep. that a woman has to try her all her last valuable thing to make a living. And you think a lot of people didn't go all the fans and I say people not only women doing the COVID lock downs
and it's for themselves. Only fans that that boom is is not is definitely tied to COVID you're talking about people that wasn't getting any money you know are waiting on stimulus checks or whatever. And you're stuck in your house. What can you do cut the camera? Is this diamond USA she was actually working to blade out of Figaro. But we you don't have anything else to sale. And men do this too. But it's not we don't sell our sex we sell our back. We sell
our I know, our physical strength. Yeah, it's like you know if nothing else, you're a mule if you don't have anything else to offer, dig that ditch or carry this heavy load that kind of thing. So it's similar in both cases. But that's why I found that's what disturbed me about what Maxine water did because you're saying these people doing what they only could do is audacity if these people these are not keep saying people and I'm going to expose what I mean by wet now. Wet does
¶ We Are People!
not stand for wet. A P stands for we are people we are we are people man you you're selling people into slavery. And that's your number one talking point about in our race. And you're lying to us women to be another Sarah baartman. And you're applauding them for doing it. When you don't give them any opportunity to win this country prints, friggin trees and trees and dollars you have women feel like their only choice. I say feel it may not be. But perception is reality.
Yeah, the only Maxine Waters job should be to obviously present all kinds of opportunities for it's all just talking point Mo. It's all done for political reasons. What they're doing with black men, how they're programming black women, the homeless, allowing homelessness to run rampant. It's all for political purposes and power. It's disgusting. And that's the bottom line of it. But now when you break it down, it just shows
the human tragedies is very, very deep. And it's been popularized and, and seen as cute when it's on Instagram and other places. Right? Because as I said in the last show with the drug addiction thing, if you have money, you have resources. Drugs is a small problem, right? I mean, you go you can go to rehab for $1,000 a week rehab get clean. Now, I mean, I'm not Pooh poohing drug addiction. What I'm saying is far compound it when you don't have resources. It's the same thing with these women.
But once you get into life, it's so hard to get out because so many, you know, interactions happening, you know, those kinds of things. So it it just irks me to my soul, having three daughters. And you know, numerous amount of other family members are women. that a woman that stands out say she's a supporter of women, with celebrate a young girl and young woman, excuse me. young woman and Magda stallion, that she has choices.
She's going to college, and you applaud her for selling her most valuable asset for what she thrills and you're saying so money. Come on, man. It just irks me. And it's, I guess we can get to part two a diamond. You meet a guy for the first time. Okay? Yeah, he's cool. He's got money. I don't care about that. Me. You have to dismiss certain things. When it comes to a man. You have to dismiss it. Quite. Okay. He got
¶ Prostitute interview
the grant writer, Peter, come in talking about some baby, I got all these racks. I can give him this. I can give them back. Put your own. I'll be like, okay, that's cool. That's nice. Okay. Okay. I should give you 1500 per night, pop it open. And we see you. Okay. Okay. Okay. Okay. Cool. And then, all the time, the minute you start trying to fuck me wrong, I devalue you. I devalue you. Because I'm gonna stop you and say, Oh, no, that is misuse protection. And I
don't care how drunk I am. One thing I will make sure about my bread and butter, my protection. But I really should say it this, I'm not my protection. First. I'm not a protection first, this about me, because this is the money. So I gotta protect it. Because the same way a guy has asked for me. He has asked for the next, the next mix and all the mixes that Sharon collected, he put in a put inside of me, and now want to invest that I've
been out here like that. But I've never had an STD. I've never had an STD that's the other part of never have an STD. That's because she entered the game as an adult and then make clear if you choose to do sex work, and you enjoy it, and you know you feel comfortable with your body and you do as an adult, more power to you. Everybody's have in life to have a choice to do what they
want to do in life. But that's she's the anomaly. You heard her even say it herself, that I mean, entering the game in my you know, saying she was referring to her age is not the normal way this happened. And what frustrates me even more, and I can't and it squeezes into this show or the next show that black women are women are the face of HIV and AIDS. you promote a song that pushes pull out game this week, which is implying that you're having unprotected sex, and you just do
it so flippantly. But every time I look at an ace commercial with these pharmaceutical companies, I see black women and black gay man in the face of AIDS and HIV. Yeah, that used to be called coming for you, Fauci. I'm coming for you. I got you on the list, bro. Cuz that's, that's some bull crap. Y'all got going? Oh, God, you know, you know that the next Pfizer is going to now they're going to come out with a flu vaccine from Madonna. I'm sorry. And an HIV vaccine.
Finally, it's here. They did it. Finally. Yeah, and they've been pushing this day and I'm not gonna go down the HIV rabbit hole. But I mean, know, what you're pushing or what you're pushing is sending a bunch of bad messages. And like I said, this diamond, the first diamond is the is the anomaly. The second diamond here is the you know, prototypical entry into prostitution and sex work. Alright, diamond. Hello.
Hi, diamond. Where did you grow up? I grew up like, in between, like, like 3034 Street thinking and also, like, stayed in like the Romanos area. Okay, so now you're in South Central? Yes. Back in November. And tell me about your childhood. You had both your parents? Um, no, my dad, he was incarcerated for eight years. He went to jail when I was eight years old. And he got out when I was 16. Whoa, as a kid, I think like I was the youngest child. And and
I was very active. I think I'm my mom's child. A lot of people sound different. And, you know, so as a kid, I was growing up. I was I went to a residential home in Utah. I was put away because, like, I was like, 1211, I started reading history. I started like gangbanging hanging out doing drugs. And I started surrounding myself. For people that didn't really didn't have my best interest in, then I just developed like a lifestyle a certain habit. And
this is something I've just been doing ever since. what age did it start? I mean, like when it comes to me acting out and stuff, you know, I was always put away. I'll probably was like a acting out but like when I started running away, I was like 1011 and you started working the streets at what age level? second oldest daughters 11. Yeah. This Yeah. Like I said, they look at these women like cardi B and in negative stallion and received some kind of power from him.
It's like they're speaking for us. You know, they didn't they identify with us but they don't. And you know, rang my bell because this this foster care system, it's a lot of great foster parents out there. But there's there's real problems as a feeder system to the streets, by they say the prison, the pipeline, prison, the school pipeline. There's a definitely a foster home to the blade pipe pipeline. When I say the blade, I'm talking about stroke. 11 years old when she started turning true.
I started you're saying we're doing sex work. When when was this interview done? You know, this was done I think in 2019 or 2018. This is soft white underbelly. If people want to check it out. Both of these are there. And what he's doing is telling these people story allowing them to tell their self. This is the same one I got from from the guy that got hooked on heroin a fitting off last episode. And I want these people to tell their story. Not mo come up here
and tell their story form. I want people to hear what goes on out here. And how they just commoditize these people. I'm very frustrated so you please go to 44 I was always lying about my age everywhere I went. I went to jail my cousin one time and he was like, dang, you know, now think about it. You've been at for three years now. You know that you're working as a prostitute on figure? Oh, yes, yes. Yes. Not 11 that's the first time I turned my The first time you
turn the date. That what age because I still like on 51st and fake. So now on my way to school. I want to finish on my way to school. I was walking down the one way and this truck driver. I was like 12, maybe 11 or 12. So that's like what grade that's probably sixth and sixth grade. So Mikey. Do you remember that first time? What was it? Was that the first time you had sex? No, wasn't? No, no, no, no, I didn't. I didn't. I wasn't really haven't
fixed then. But I had the the section of favorite for the boys. Was there any abuse or anything like that in your childhood when you were younger? Um, yes. I was touched by a cousin of mine. And I never really told because, like, I was made out to be the promiscuous one or you know, I never really said anything. And then like,
I put myself in situations to our van. I was very vulnerable to mean and I felt like, like his rape, you know, straight away when you don't want to have to do something, but somebody's making you feel like it because you're uncomfortable. I've been putting a lot of those situations. You know. Figaro what she's talking about is in Los Angeles. Yeah. I don't know if it's in her district. But it's in her backyard. It is not in Maxine Waters district.
I believe it is. That it doesn't matter. I mean, your point is clear. Whether to Maxine Waters district is a mess. Everyone knows it. But yeah, but what I'm saying you're no I know. I understand. I understand. Your point is that she's, she's in QBO. You know what, actually it fits. She's sitting there talking to Megan, the stallion about, Hey, this is great that you're doing this whap stuff. And she thinks is
great, because that's what she's got going on around her. She sees all kinds of empowered young women on Figaro. The woman is delusional. She's an idiot. She's nuts. And you know what, I don't even I'm not gonna let off the hook like that, because I'm gonna say one thing and I'm gonna get through these last two clips. We saw the same thing when Barack Obama was in office. And Oprah did a special on the girls work in DC. And it was little black girls. I'm talking when I say little
black girls. I mean that literally Like this 11 1213, they could barely walk in heels. That was in the shadows of the White House. And nothing was done. But then Michelle Obama comes out and said, Bring our girls back for Boko Haram. Yeah. Yeah, yeah, there was people, Americans of all backgrounds were saying what? Hello, hold on a second. How about our girls here, but nothing to the extent of what we're discussing here.
when you really think about it, and how cynical and how lame It is to be focused on that one, this is going on a stone's throw from the White House. That's very, very good. You could see and it mean, like you see little girl, they could barely walk in heels going up and down the street, right in the shadows of the White House. And that and that's, that's what I knew. I was like, fixes in. But let's go and go to 45 Have you been roughed up and had bad experiences with some of the
customers? Yes, I have. I've been cheated and it fucking sucks. That's I don't like like working the streets. I really
¶ Prostitute interview
work to it. Yeah, so you do it through call and stuff like that? Do you still encounter guys that are problems? Their trouble? I mean, not so much. Like, there's just you might have to watch out for the fifth? No. Oh. So it's almost the same game. Just you're doing it online instead of on the street? Yes. And I came from my residential home in Utah. And ever since then, I've just been running the streets. Like, no, it's just become a way to I don't see myself doing nothing
else from time to finish high school. Almost. How much money do you make that night? In a day? It depends. Like because, you know, I spend it as I go, you know? So it depends, like, I'll be touching like, man, I'll be touching like, on a snow day, like maybe like 607. On a good day? Maybe? It depends. It varies. It really varies. Does your family know you do is I try not to have them. But I know they have a good idea. To have a destiny. What I mean by that is she's human, she knows this is
something not to be proud of. Right? I'm doing this to survive. So I've been in the streets since 11 years old. And this is the only thing I know. And this is what you're peddling. You should hear some of these lyrics. These young girls sing on these radio stations that are played owned in throughout the day, middle of the day. And the reason why it's so pervasive is
it's free entertainment. And if you don't have anything the radio, that's what I want people to understand the radio in the black community is free. So you don't have any any other source of entertainment. You're gonna cut the radio, and they're steady, pumping, pumping, pumping. I do this for money I do this for money. I do that for money, you know, saying you know, pop it open for money. And you hear a little girls hear this and no context no guidance for any
males or, or anybody else and role models in their life. And they think this is normal. And it's not just black girls, Mo the white girls, right there. Starts with us. Yeah, now guess what? YOLO girls might not be on the stroll. But that Tick Tock is Astro Oh Tick Tock. Yes. Yeah, exactly. Who's in there? dmws goostin no cash out who's sending them Tinder pizzas? eath eath. Man, the sending piece.
¶ TikTok is their stroll
It's a new it's a new thing. And Tinder pieces. Tinder piece. It could have a whole nother conversation to Oh, shoot. That's right. views. Crazy. Let's move on to 46 down sometimes. depressing. Yes. Yes, yes. Yes. Because I'd be wanting to have some note to talk to but I've find to Get
¶ Prostitute interview
along with the voices in my head now because like it's hard to explain somebody your lifestyle or like, what you think I know, like this will be going to It's hard to explain that to somebody and I get nothing I want to hear an answer but it's always like criticism coming along, you know, I don't know. I don't know. Like but I'm not trying to have a pity party for myself. But
people don't know till they really come here. You know, like you just get to Difference What's the hardest part of doing this for a living? Once you start you can't stop. And no matter how you no matter how you try to play it out you always come across certain it's like it's like a not like it's like it's like a tsunami or something. Wherever you go.
sugar addiction. Yes. What do you think the miss most misunderstood thing is about that other people don't quite understand what what goes on to you guys? Well, because a lot of when it comes from the women stereotypically me, you know, I'm the skill I'll say is because there is probably the men that be paying for it and they like to like, make that down because the way we dress uh, you know if but, you know, that's the business. That's what fills you know.
She says, We're wrap up on this cuz that was the last clip. She says one I'm dealing with divorces in my head. There has to be some kind of dissociative. This dissociation that has to happen to deal with that trauma over and over and over again. You're talking about $600 on a slow day. Let's just say at $40 a pop. I mean, we get rich that 15 times a day on a slow day. And then she says what I have like I have a sintomi baby girl that's called a stain you have a stain on you. And
women shame her. kidneys say man, women shame her. You know what if Melania Trump could be shamed for her sex work past anybody could be shamed for you never shake that shake you will never shake that scent or
stain from being a sex worker. I don't care what society says because look what these liberal feminist so called women did to her and not because I'm not taking up for her I'm just saying as pointing it out as an illustration to say when she a sex worker what she knew taking nude pictures what she is saying when she got home or whatever like this, so if you can do that to a First Lady, I love your prostitute to start working 11 years old.
This dealing with mental issues of course, mental issues come with you know like we work with the homeless issues come at what self medication drugs course makes the prime candidate for heroin when it's you can't afford in the morning fentanyl. And now we're in the same trap. But also it becomes a community and becomes their community on the street. That's right. Which is why it's it's much more powerful to do it you have your community you have your you have what keeps you going
Moe you've completely bummed me out. Appreciate that. That's all we got to have this conversation. Hey, man, wait, you know, I got women around me to get to step daughters. I got a daughter. I grew up with women. I hear you on all these points. And it's like saying with a bad guy for wanting to protect them. That's that's the that's the most that's the sickest part about it is like, you know, that guy over there is trying to protect you from the street. Yeah, he's your
he's your enemy. Well, I hope that we're coming to a point. And I and I've, I feel these changes with you too. Of course, I don't really know you in your in your regular work life. But I have to say and I think COVID helped a lot with that. Now, I'm always outspoken on the podcast, which is easy, you know, but I don't walk around town going, Hey, all bunch of idiots. But I'm getting better at it. And I'm definitely getting better at saying no, no, no, no. I'm just going to
counter what you're saying. Not just I don't disagree with you. Let me just let me just give you my view on this. And I'm not
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going to go along with this bullcrap anymore. I was gonna say at the same time, let's not dehumanize people like the second diamond or the first diamond or any of these girls even mega stallion. Let's not dehumanize them because they think they're doing the only thing they're going to be valued for. That's that's the real mind screw and know what we're, what we're talking about here and the things we're pointing out will benefit all women.