¶ Intro / Opening
fruit trees and the popping trees.
¶ Intro
More facts with Adam curry for January 26 2022. This is episode number 74. Did you miss us? We sure Miss Jones. We're back on our steel sticks Adam curry coming to you from the heart of the Texas Hill Country and time once again to spin the Wheel of topics all the way from here to Chile, Northern Virginia. Please say hello to my friend on the other end Mr. Mole facts How you doin Adam? Mo i love this track. I'm familiar with the song of course, but not
with this particular version. And then she kicks in again and again here this is Kanye. This is Kanye. Right? Track. Yeah, that's easy. I love it is really good. Hey, man, how you doing? What's going on in your world? Fired?
¶ Fired!
You're waiting to play that for a couple of months. Wow. All right, tell us free. Tell us free. Tell us what's going on? Hey, I got the after 15 years of service with the company that I was employed formerly employed by and now you start you started at a low level position there right and worked your way up in the in the in the company? Well, I mean, I started out as a technician. That's a whole nother story for another day. That was the easiest door to get
in. Even though I had the qualifications for an engineer. But I mean, I always start you know, saying start where you can start and work my way up a management position. And they sent me a formula. Right when they fired you with a form letter? Yes. And no phone call? Nothing. Dude, okay, just just for people who are new just recount what this is all about. If you don't mind, just so we can understand how you're free. You're first of all, congratulations, MO. You
are free. You are completely free. And this is where the journey begins. I'm very excited for you. And I am literally how they'd like to say a free man talking. Yes, sir. I'm fine. All I can say what I wouldn't look out, look out all the shit. He's gonna say everybody now it's actually. Because when you work for a company, and I would never mention your name, but it just mutual respect for how, you know, I was able to feed my family by providing my services
to them. And it's no hard feelings. But my issue is this being a capitalist, a company can be able to run the company how they want to. But my issue is that collusion this going on between the United States government and corporations to force people out of their employment because of their health decisions. That's my problem. Because the way these whole timelines played out. Just mysteriously I get the letter. On the Day when they drop. The OSHA. Mm hmm. OSHA mandates?
Yes. The corporation pushed the time to get vaccinated a day before the OSHA mandate came out. So it's clear collusion? Allegedly, let me say that allegedly. Right. So So okay, it's just we understand they had a mandate. You said no, I'm not going to comply with the mandate, then put you on inactive? Oh, yeah. And just just for everybody, I mean, cuz Yeah, cuz there's three months, I'm working at home. Let's put this um, first of all, I'm working from home. So I'm a threat to no
one. But I mean, company policy says, you know, you have to be vaccinated by this date. Or, you know, you will be terminated. That's fine. That's, that's their choice. I decided not to know. Is that the vaccine? Life? Yes. Yeah. So I knew it was coming. But the thing was, they did it where they left you lingering? And I'm Limbo to say your own leave without pay. So you can't even file for unemployment, write it for Stata. And they did it right before the holidays.
Of course, you got to be as shitty as possible. So but that was that was clearly just to keep you in limbo to get you to think and decide, oh, I should probably do this. Well, so quit if they want you to quit or leave to go to the right job or do or make the decision to take it. That was that was the force there. So I'm not gonna say my more issue is as crazy that the collusion of it because the time the timing,
he can't that can't be coincidental. And all the OSHA did was say, hey, we'll we'll tip the scale will be the case. lives for all the corporations to do what they want to do. And then you can hide behind us. And it was clear collusion between the two in my in my law and order degree from SVU. Right. So So what So what you're saying is that they wanted to shed staff, and they did it on the last day of OSHA of the of
the OSHA mandate before OSHA said, we're dropping it. And that was the 90 day the day before the OSHA mandate came now. That's Oh, I see. I see. Clearly, you're clearly doing some Backchannel. But like I said, I'm, I'm in a better position, because then I was because the OSHA mandate drops. So there are corporations and companies that will hire unvaccinated people. So, so now, and so, now, you and I've been speaking for a long time
about this, and in a way, also about this day, privately. You clearly have a skill set and you can continue in your field, I would, I could only presume that outside of the outside of mandates, you would be a highly desirable hire for any company in the same field. Correct? Especially because, excuse me, my friend, you are bipoc. So you know, you tick all the boxes, brother, you got you got bipod box, got almost almost all your boxes are ticked, you know, but you got
the bipoc. So, but you could you could continue in that field, I guess. I mean, I don't know if it's, if that field is now just locked down if every corporation is doing the same thing. I don't even know how the industry is. Do you think there's a reason why they wanted to get rid of people? Is it just to weed out people and bring new ones in? Or what is the point of their exercise on multiple different levels. And this is why this topic of
this show is going to be pertinent to what's going on. On one level, peer pressure. My company being you know, seeing itself as a Silicon Valley type company. It was the woke thing to do right to there's some government financial incentives for doing it. And three on a very conspiratorial level, but I believe, true level, and it's a way to get rid of your problem people. It's like, oh, you you don't buy in completely. You know, this is a clear way to see who's completely bought in,
right. And this is this is no disrespect to anybody. I want to make it clear, I'm pro choice. If you choose yours and take the vaccine for your life, that's your choice, you should have the right to the same way people don't want to do what you have the right to. So just with that said, I think you have the people that's more compliant, and non compliant people. They get dealt with. So interesting, because if I was running a company, I had won all
the people who weren't compliant. Hey, these people, these are fighters, I like them. But I guess that's a corporate decision. Well, we got to talk about understand where that comes from. So I guess well, I mean, I'm like, No, talking. Well, one seconds. This is an important moment. Yes. So just taking into account, you could do other things. But you're going to focus on the shows. I'm going to focus on growing my entertainment company and other
enterprises. So honestly, I see it, I see it. I see it from today. I am retired from working for somebody else, because I've done that for since 15 years old. So that's 26 years. I've I've gone without a job. I've had a job since I was 15 Except for maybe a six month period from when I graduated college.
And nobody wants to hire me because like even the menial jobs and I will say that disrespectfully but you know that I'm even McDonald's and places like that one hire me because as soon as we hire, you're going to you're going to move on. So that's the only way you're overqualified job. And so I took a job at a computer chip companies, I mean, not not this one, but another one, packing boxes. And that's how I got in the door, pass my resume around, moved up loose and moved over,
moved up and then just from there, just constant up. So this is just me starting over again. And I want to say that for people who enjoy this, this podcast, you enjoy it. You've been enjoying it for 73 episodes. If you want it to continue, Mo has options. So you will have your opportunity you will be thanking people who have been supporting the work in our donation segments but It's
¶ Chapters are worth the wait!
now more than ever. This is why you need to support your independent media if whatever you think it's worth is value is up to you. Wow, okay, good. Yes, go ahead. And one last thing said not only options are gone being employed by somebody else but just opportunities that present themselves from the news and producers and a family instant I met through this journey. So there there are a lot of options on the table in B BT stay tuned. As long as they stay tuned.
There are big things coming has a lot of people who are rooting for you and a lot of people who want to help I know that so I'm very excited to see where you go and I can always say I was there man. When Moe facts and entertainment enterprises LLC, I NC LMNOP when it launched, I was there. I was there. Alright, how about we spin the wheel topics you were
¶ Spinning the wheel!
gonna do for this episode of MO facts of Adam curry. Here we go. We're rolling around. Run around who goes where it stops? Nobody knows Moe knows because he put it together expertly for us. What are we going to discuss on Moe facts with Adam curry episode number 74. The topic is it is a high tech lynching. Ah yeah, I've been looking forward to I knew this was
¶ A high tech lynching
coming this episode I knew it was coming. This is good at as mentioned on the Jesse Smollett episode, justice for juicy I said I would cover this topic of lynching, the use of lynching the psychological and trauma weapon that is it that is wielded against people by the saying by the higher ups by day,
the Capitol, I call them Capitol day, you know. Um, but so now we got to see you, one we're going to talk about not more of historically what it is, we'll get into that, but more of how is used to bring people into to heal and that How about to heal? Well, not to heal, but how is used to manipulate people. I've said this before on other shows that the narrative of slavery and all that comes with it is just as effective, if not more
than the actual event. Sure. And I know that makes a lot of people shudder and cringe, but what I mean by that is how was wielded today through trauma and mind control. Right? It's very, it's very harmful. And I was very disrespected by the whole Jesse Smollett. situation and how was used so I'm gonna do my best to explain while I'm irritated, how it affects the mind specifically of the A das person or how was willed it to affect our mind? So I guess what we need to do and warning, some viewers
disturbing discretion is advised. Yes, I was ready for you. We need to we need to warn everyone trigger warning. And I'll say that because I left a lot of the musical beds in the clips. So just to keep in mind, how was meant to engage, but the music is a part of a part of the whole packaging, huge component of it. And you can see, you'll hear it, and you could point it out as um, as necessary. But I did leave that in there just for people want to know, it wasn't just
happenstance. It was just, it's purposeful. So I guess we'll go ahead and get into this clip. Let's see number two, and this
¶ It's all about submission
is from the Equal Justice Initiative. And they came up last show. They're the ones that built the the lynching Memorial, I Oprah there. Yes. Yes. Let's go and get the museum, the lynching that was in the museum, right where the Mauryan slash museum Yes, with the hanging plates through represent hanging, right. Okay. I think it already
after slavery was prohibited in 1865. formerly enslaved people in America were granted full citizenship, the right to vote and under the 14th Amendment protection from racial violence, formerly enslaved people were promised land and opportunity, but most got nothing because America quickly devolved into an era of racial terrorism and oppression for black citizens.
White people in the South were angry that people formerly considered property were now equal citizens, many turned to violence in the years immediately following the Civil War. 1000s of black people were murdered when they tried to
claim their rights. Soon afterwards, federal troops were withdrawn from The South, ending a brief period of racial progress known as reconstruction, nationwide resistance to racial equality resulted in the reestablishment of racial subordination through bias laws, disenfranchisement, and terrorism most dramatically enforced through lynchings. Wow, where to start with that one. I have to give them credit because they do an accurate job of their depiction of, of history in this clip. The issue
I have with me, like I said, is the is political driven. And, and just like first a little foreshadowing, we're going to look at how this is used, and voting rights. And they're used in combination to say, if you don't vote for us, you're going to lose your right to vote and go back to lynching. Basically, slavery, that's pretty much the message. Yeah, that's the narrative. And then you hear Jim Crow, Joe Biden, say, Jim Crow,
so it's a lot baked into this episode. Um, and we're going to look at the parallels between this and the vaccine mandates. And I know, once again, that peoples are rolled, but it's all about submission. lynching wasn't for the most part, it wasn't about the violence just for sake of violence. It was about for the use of violence, and the threat of violence for
control. Witchcraft, I mean, if you if you want to take it on that level, it was a mental, like a scale that you could use to kill one person and control 1000s With that one dead body because of how because of how it was done. Yes, correct. Correct. And just the mechanics of it, you putting a noose around someone's neck and lifting them high up. So all kosi, you know, and so, but I want to get more to the control mechanism of lynching before we get into the actual historic, historic aspect
of it. So we have to understand who pushes this who was pushing lynching? And is this the tool of white supremacy so we need to go back and use your saying re visit the definition we use for racism as a slash white supremacy. Give us us by Neely fuller? Well, there's we are on a system of white supremacy, that's the
most powerful government that the world has ever seen. And that's the title of it, by the way, it doesn't go by and you know, the title, even though we sometimes call it by the titles, but the accurate title by the government that we are under, is, in capital letters. The system of white supremacy worldwide is just one world government and national only government in town, the only government on the planet that really counts. That is worthy of having a title of government.
Right, a classic mo facts clip? Moment, actually, cuz moment. Yes, I think a lot. Yeah. Cuz like this is this gives opportunity to say if we believe in the Davos groups, or all these groups that we say you're saying white supremacy, right? When you say this, it is more due to because we see that they can assign white to whoever they want to assign it to. So it's not about phenotype. Because they, you know, at first it was, but now it's about maintaining
the system. And I think the binary now is between compliance, who will completely comply and who won't. And we're seeing that play out now. And it's like, I always say it started with us. It starts with us. But we see this system, like growing like a tumor. Like people to just let that soak in for a second. This is one of the things that I love so much about doing the show with
you Mo is exactly what you just said, it starts with us. I've that you've been telling me that since the day we first started talking. And what Moe means is it really literally starts with them, and then goes to everybody else. And we're at that moment Clearly. Clearly, I'll give you it was starts with us, like mentality. Everybody's like, oh, the masks are coming off and yeah, that kind of thing. I'm like Nah, bro. Start isn't worth it is just starting.
You don't understand how this system works. You're saying it ratchets down to and releases one and a ratchet down to releases one so you think like Who was that? really what it's like? No. And that's the same thing we didn't last clip was slavery. It's like, oh, slavery is a wolf. It's like, Nope, we got some terrorism for you a cat. I'm saying I'm saying also known as the KKK, which was government sanction in an instant inspired. Yeah. But that's another story for another
day. So I'm saying this to say, if you're listening show, like all listening and that, no, this is what this is about submission. And like I said, this goes a lot into my mindset for saying no. To the mandate, sure, no, this is my body. He was saying, and we're going to get more to that you were saying, but I guess now with this is some new clips I have from nearly fuller Oh, really? Oh, yeah. Nice. So we can go
¶ The mindset behind one world government
more into the mindset behind the one word government called white supremacy, oh, black people are spokespersons. They're not leaders. They're spokespersons. They can ask. And then they can make, they can go to the second thing. You can make a request. And when you ask twice, now you're begging. But we are all in position of being in Vegas, because the world is a prison. And when you are a prisoner of war, you are a beggar. If you are talking to
the prison Master, you have begun. You can't go off somewhere and say, Well, if he doesn't want to do what I want done, I can do this. I can go back to my sale and I can do this and I can do that. You got to remember you in the master of the prison sale to white supremacist said back and say, Hey, what we are doing is working by hand, because we are not confused. Our job is to dominate non white people. Everybody who's black, brown, red, yellow, beige, purple,
orange, go, what not? Everybody who is not white. As a white supremacist, it is my duty to dominate and mistreat them bought ever. That's the white supremacist agenda. That's what it is. And I am not confused about that. And nobody can confused me about that. And I am some kind of efficient with it. Tell us about Neely fuller Jr. Again, just so people know or
¶ Nelly Fuller Jr.
where to look, look, look up more about him because he wrote he was Doctor He wrote books. Yes, he wrote the book that I was saying that explains the mechanism of racism and white supremacy. He's very lot he's very, I appreciate his work, because he's very logical. I don't agree with a course or anything. I don't agree with everybody. I don't agree with everything except person says that I bring the clips to the show. But for the most part, how
¶ Order out of chaos
he's broken, like you say, like, just for example, these clips, he looks at it from a logical standpoint, not emotional standpoint, point and lays out one what this system is and to how it operates. And three, how we respond to it. And the reason why I bring these clips to the table is that don't be confused. They're confused. Yeah. They operate is called order out of confusion, order out of chaos. I mean, chaos confusion, the same but the same point of their movements are so I'll give you
an example. We protect Ukraine's border but our borders wide open. Yeah. Hello. Yes. Trade example, a great example. And it leaves you in a spot of just hopelessness and helplessness. And this is what they want it to do and success we have done with black people, to disenfranchise us from our newly found rights. And now like I said, it started with us. Just franchising. That's a very good point. That's, that's always an important factor in any psychological operation.
Am I right? I'm going to cover this like I said, in a later show, but racism is the original mass psychosis. Definitely, the way to light this is use this mask or use the way that you know the vaccine is used is for a bigger purpose is for you know, the mental the mental just like said no oppression capture. Yes. So that actually, I'm covering this. You're going to see a lot of parallels and then what happens when people try to get free and try to stand up and there's more than one kind of
lynching. As the ISO understand kind of alluded to, there's the you know Physical lynching, there's the you know, nom, nominal. I think it's nominal the name you're saying they basically drag your name through. Yeah, yeah. Um, and then they have, you know, basically a high tech lynching.
¶ The agenda
Yeah. So. And that's where you're saying once again and then there's juicy small Latin a whole different category. Right, which like I said that that's in itself because I don't want to belabor the point. But let's just go ahead and get into I guess the next and final clip from nearly fuller Jr. Because I have a confidence that I'm not trying to accomplish that forefathers before me accomplish that we have this
down to a scientific perfection. And we got these people so spaced out, you know having an idea not only about who they are and what they are here for, they got no idea about nothing. That I don't tell, that's the white supremacist agenda. Because it's an agenda that works, you have to understand that the entire
world is dominated by the white supremacist. And if you have color in your skin, you are a person who has been assigned to be mistreated because of your color, because of the way you are boy, because of the way that to create you, if you are a person of color, a non white person, the creator put color in your skin, and the white supremacist are saying, well, regardless of who did it, it means you are eligible to be mistreated by me, because I'm a white person, and you are not
white. So I have the power and the authority, and the privilege. And all of everything is supposed to be of benefit is supposed to be around me. And you are only supposed to get what I say you can have because you have color in your skin. Which now you see the color of people's thing. Um, what I believe that this system has given rise to a white supremacy, World World Government has come up with is that it's about ideology now. Do you believe in the system? And do you believe
in the religion, their religion of science? Yes, that's what it boils down to science. It's like, whatever science tells you, you have to believe it follow the science, that bias does just that term alone. I mean, words matter, follow Jesus follow the science, right? And if you don't follow the science, then you're a heretic by everything he said. And yeah, we have the right to take away your livelihood, your freedom to move around your, you
know, your freedom to buy things. And it's gonna get to the point. I'd rather drastically interesting hopefully don't say but tragically say that. He's going to get to the point where you're not going to be able to leave. Yeah, yeah. So unless you have the money to buy a private jet. And see that's how white supremacy partisan is like, well, you know, saying like, say rules for the but not for me. Yeah, I think that's that is the motto of white supremacy.
Yeah. And, and, and I am, I'm sad to report that in the United States when it comes to the law, all forms of it, but certainly like tax law, etc. There's just two tiers, at least two tiers, kind of, there's really kind of three, three tiers. And if you have money, then you can get around any problem. And that's sad. But that is that is that's the the systemic white supremacy in America. It truly exists. But it's not, of course, about color of skin.
It's not a color scheme, because you see how they're operating is that it doesn't matter. It's about your belief. Now. It's kind of like, oh, when the Catholic Church or whatever would like, like, kill heretics, or savages or whatever they call them? Either, except, except news and the belief or perish? And that's exactly where we're at now. Yes, hyperbole? No, it's not and what's really fascinating, you know, I stand
back and look at everything. And we think, oh, you know, the, they were killing people back in the day of the heretics, right in the church, like I was people just weren't sophisticated back then. No, that's, that's what people are people get into this mode. That's your mask formation, psychosis, if you want to add that part to it. Right, that that's people are controllable throughout the ages, and we're just arrogant about it. Like oh no, they can't can't do that to me. I got an
iPhone inside out me. I got Google. Yeah, I can via I'm smart. And it's not true. But they been using mass communication. Of course, of course, the Birth of a Nation was basically the recruiting firm for the KKK, painted black people to be savages. Just less than human. And even we're gonna get into the science promoted the idea that black people were less than science. So it's like, maybe less than human. So it was
the black people were a fantastic tool. Right? I mean, not just for for as workers in fields, but for the propagation of white supremacy. Yeah, and the way they will portray, like, in Now You See, fast forward, it doesn't matter if you make the decision to say in I'm not speaking specifically about the the about the VAX, but that's part of it. But even if you say, okay, men and women mentioned compete against women in sports, right? Science says
that they're the same. My eyes are telling me that they're not the same. You don't believe in science, you're fired, you're canceled, you're kicked off the internet, you know, thing your D platform disenfranchise, I mean, this is this is literal disenfranchisement. And the greatest, I said, in this all plays into lynching because this is the psychology of the purpose of lynching was you it makes you think about how you act before you act. When you process your information through that
mindset. That's white supremacy. That's thinking with the wide mind when you walk halfway across the parking lot with a man without a mask. And then you think, Oh, God, they're gonna judge me when I walk into the store. Let me go back and get my mask. That's white supremacy. Yep. It's just what it is. I mean, because if you felt like you, cuz I'm not saying and listen closely what I'm saying. Not you, Adam. But I mean, like, I'm listening closely. Anyway, MO. I'm always up here. But.
But, but what I mean by that is, if you feel like wearing the mask was the right thing to do. You were to put the mask on. And you say, I'm doing this to protect myself, which if that's what you believe, more power to you. But if you say I need to go back and getting a mask, because the way I'm going to be judged by people in the store, and your actions change, because of the perception of how you're going to be seen. That's white
supremacy. And the reason why I'm harping on this point is, I remember when COVID first kicked off, and I think you said you went somewhere without a mask. Oh, yeah. Yeah. And I went into Whole Foods, and it wasn't when it kicked off, but it was, it was somewhere, like early 2020. We've been in for two years. I know, early, and I went to Whole Foods. I'm like, I'm just
not gonna wear a mask. I'm just so tired of it. And I was like, and and here's the kicker Of course, I did put in my back pocket in case right which this tells you everything about it. And what was crazy as I went in, no one gave me shit. But I felt so weird. And it was that feeling it was that and then you see one other guy you know Hey, fellow traveler gave me a little nod. Hey, brother, I gotcha. You see now you see now you understand
and I don't remember what episode we talked about. Um, but so but it's important that people understand is especially white people. Non a DOS, when you talk when we talk about white supremacy, the confusion is always in the color of the skin you have to understand that the true white supremacist from back in the day the royal families, they had all of skin that all kinds of color skin and it was just whatever they
¶ Throwback - color of skin makeup
determined that to be white the same way. Asians are now lumped in with whites. You know, when it's when it's convenient for people when it's sorry, I said Middle Eastern people Hispanic people. I mean, exactly what whenever it's convenient or whatever the situation is so we have to I don't remember what episode we did that on we talked about the Domenico I think it was the for the women with with their with their makeup.
Okay. Yeah, I can't I don't remember either, sadly. But I remember I remember the episode not the name. Yeah, I don't remember. Anyway, Will Black don't crack maybe? I won't want to send people in a while. We need a librarian ladies and gentlemen, but this is why it's podcasts. 2.0 I'm sure the link will be there. I address dribs and drabs. Scott is going to figure it out. He's going to paste the link right into the chapters. Exactly,
exactly. Okay, but so but that's as we move forward, kind of when we say white supremacy has been so connected to skin color by
¶ Not distracted by the color white
the mainstream. But as you can hear going back to this guy, this guy's from the 30s Neely, Jr. Neely Fuller, Jr. He was he, he had historically figured it out. And so we just have to not be distracted by the color white, but about the movement and the elites and the people who belong in that upper echelon determined by both factors that we go through, of course. Right. So I guess now we'd like people like, well, we need to go
¶ TBC: why the smollett case didn't make sense
back a little bit. And these these are two because two clips from the previous show, one covering Jesse Smollett and why his case made no sense is the first one. A juror who convicted after just a small lot for making up his story about being attacked on the streets of Chicago is speaking out today. He was actually the lone black juror on the case and he's confident he made the right decision because
to him smell it's testimony made no sense. The lone black juror on the Jussie Smollett trial is speaking out for the first time. In this exclusive interview with W LS TV Andre hope says small let's claim that he was attacked in a hate crime by the osundairo brothers simply made no sense two o'clock in the morning. Cold Outside when you just use your common sense as what's there. Yeah, it just didn't add up. Hope said one critical piece of evidence that convinced him
smell that made up the story was the news. Which police video showed Smollett leaving on his neck for cops to see as African American person I'm not putting that noose back on at all. Yeah, exactly. Did away tell a big tell Jesse Hello. But and I share the sentiment with Andre hope. First of all, you're not getting that noose around my neck. Yeah, because So December more. The vulnerability went up, just like I said, the
mechanics of it to the symbolism three. The fact that he said he didn't recognize that that would have been the first thing that I would recognize those people having in their hands. So not to belabor the point but the use of this story for the political game that we covered in that same episode about passing the anti lynching review so you know, anything you'd like to say before we are getting to that clip No, no, no other than I think it's very powerful to understand that
now Jesse is not a Doss. But even you know, some something in him should reject that whole notion and the fact that he can get beyond that tells a lot about him. Right? I mean, really putting a noose around your neck I mean, that's crazy. He he put it back home. The thing was for the for the photo op with Rob and just the imagery of that being seen that way. You were never saw me with that noose around my neck because of the it means your comp called captured now, you know, less than a man
all these things and we won't get more to that episode. But yeah, this the symbolism of that noose would have never went back home. But now we see that it was utilized, if not planned or
¶ Orchestrated / utilized
planned and orchestrated. Yeah. At mo at the bed, I mean, at worst it was utilised will say that to push the anti lynching bill by Kamala Harris and Cory Booker, James Baldwin once said that, quote, not everything that is faced can be changed, but nothing can be changed until it is faced. And that is why we are here again today to face the history of lynching in this country. From 1882 to 1986, the United States Congress failed to pass anti lynching legislation,
when it had the opportunity more than 200 times. We have an opportunity once again, to write this wrong and face the ugly history of lynching in America. And let's recall this stain on America's history. lynching. It was an act of terror. It was murder. These were summary executions. Victims of lynching were dragged out of their homes. They had ropes wrapped around their necks. They were hanged on trees. In many cases, they were castrated and burned as crowds of people watched and applauded.
And the premise underlying all of these acts was that black people were Not full human beings. According to the Equal Justice Initiative, lynching was used as an instrument of terror and intimidation 4084 times during the late 19th and 20th centuries. You know, did we ever actually look at the text of, of this
¶ The anti-lynching bill
bill, which the full name is the Emmett Till anti lynching act? I did not look at the full text. I look, I mean, I'll solve so many, many videos on the topic, doing the research for this show and other shows, but I haven't read the whole bill itself, but it's the name itself is, is purple soon. To go ahead. And I'm gonna follow, I thought what I was going to say is, it's very easy to do
because it's literally one paragraph. I mean, if you if you take, I'm looking at it right now, when I put it in the show notes, I had not looked at this myself Mo. I'm kind of kicking myself. You know, besides the title and Mathil, anti lynching act, it has, it has findings. And of course, there's 15 points there about how horrible lynching is, and lynching and
lynching, and here's what this act does. It specifies lynching as a hate crime by inserting after paragraph three in United States Code, blah, blah, blah, the following whoever, whether or not acting under color of law, willfully acting as part of any collection of people, assembled for the purpose and with the intention of committing an act of violence upon any person, causes death to any person shall be imprisoned for any term of years, or for life, find under this title, or both.
That's very interesting. That sounds like the historical definition. And you're gonna we're gonna hear it later in the show. Because paraphrasing, I think it's three or more people,
¶ Modern lynching overview
aka, right, right. You're saying attack a person and kill them? Yeah, that's, it doesn't have to be a rope in a tree. And no, no, no, no. And that's the thing like lynching. And I didn't cover this with any clips, but that's why police shootings and killings have replace the imagery of the actual hanging man, right? Haha, that's right. The hanging man. Oh, my goodness, I grew up seeing that around. Right. So that's that's the neon like St. George Floyd was a
perfect imagery. Good mean for modern day lynching. So yeah, it's, it's, it's not just specific. I mean, MLK, that was another land master question. So yeah. Tell me about the the, the Hanged Man, would that just be hung up around? Is that just psychological terror? get that image out there so that people are reminded a you know, hey, just so you know, is that the idea? Yeah. And that's what bubba wallace played into the NASCAR guy. They Oh, they put the noose and put the noose in
Yes. Yeah, right. Right. He ended up driving light his car into becoming the Black Lives Matter car. Yeah. And it was kind of fun. That was a door pool thing that they have to tie modern day lynching aka police
violence, to pass history. They use that with police are the original slave catchers, they do all this and they do all this not to bring attention to the issues, which I would have no problem with, because it just furthers the case for atonement, aka reparations, because it just land to your saying what was experienced during slavery and understand and what came along not just forced labor but the mind control that came along with it. My issue is they use it as is ironic in a sad way. They
say you should be scared. Not because we're the white supremacist. They're gonna lynch you. But we're the ones that stand between them and you. Yeah, we're the ones who tell you Yes, yes. Yeah, we're your protectors. You but you want to be with us because you know, otherwise boogey man gonna get you? Right. It's kind of like those old westerns where a guy will come to town becomes the sheriff and then become corrupted. Yeah.
And he will be worried he will be worse than the guy that they were originally they were worried about Yeah, right because he has the legal power to act. You're saying we hit him with his discretion. He's backed up by the shield. See a lot a lot of stuff plays into it but yet which which is which is very interesting, because Oh, wow. What I said Oh, wow. Because In that case, it really truly was like in the in the Westerns, it was the sheriff who became the
bad guy and corrupted. And here is all the administration and the end the middle layer of government government
¶ The new black is unvaxxed
management, and they are hiding behind the sheriff saying it's the sheriff who's the bad guy. Right. And that's your defund the police, which is another historical thing for America. The corrupt cop? This is this is this is he d. Brad, my, where's my gummies? Hold on? Alright, let's go. And the thing is, is the app once again, I don't bring this up, but for the history, the storks have it, but it's more of history repeats itself. You know, then the new Black is
unvaccinated? Yeah. And I That ain't me telling you that that's go to New York, go to DC. I go to San Francisco. You know, you got to get your foot in the back door. You can't come in here. You're saying Let me see. And but the thing is, if they had some kind of way of marking you, it would be exactly like being black. Because now you can still live in your closet of being invest but people not knowing. But imagine if you had to wear
something that says unvaccinated like a yellow star. Or a mask? Yeah, well, yeah, they come out say, Well, if you're a that people don't have to wear a mask. But the unpacks do. Yeah, that way we can see who's who. And that's one of the things that they wanted to do it places of employment that I couldn't get behind, or what it will be, of course will be standard on your phone.
And if you don't have the, you know, the right if you're not vaccinated or whatever it is, because it's not just about health will be other things that your phone sends out a beacon, a Bluetooth beacon. And yes, people walk by like, oh boop boop boop. Oh, there's one of them walk around them. Exactly. Would it be a mess? Like I said, Rice was the original standpoint, like, oh, there goes one. You know, what are you doing over here? You know, what are you doing every
night? And so I guess some people may be saying, well, American history interesting, even history predate and America has always used lynching, and hanging as a form of punishment and their truth is true. So let's go ahead and get into this next set of clips from infographics, infographics show, a rebellious gang of teenagers feel like constant some trouble they go out at night blackening their faces, and no one will
spot them for no reason at all. These unruly kids just start cutting down trees and after that they find a rabbit warren and take a rabbit or two just because well because they feel like they take things a step further when they get into the town. And they're they pickpocket a man and take a
watch which in today's money is worth about 40 bucks. The last thing they do on this crime spree is mindlessly wreck a fish pond, the teams then hang up their gloves and call him tonight, only to be arrested the next morning as they chow down on their porch. Can you guess how many capital crimes they committed that night? Answer a lot. In the late 17th century, there were around 50 crimes in England that were punishable by
death. But by the end of the 18th century, that number was more like 221 of the crimes those kids committed that could have seen them hanged, was blackening their faces at night with the intent to commit a crime shoe polish was for shoes,
not faces. They could have also been hanged for cutting down trees, stealing a rabbit stealing something worth about five shillings or 40 bucks today, and they could have also faced the gallows for doing that destruction job on the fishpond, some of those offenses, you will no doubt agree or not exactly major crimes. But the English invented these strict measures because they thought it would prevent crimes from happening in
the first place. Some people at the time said there was no other country on the planet where so many crimes were punishable by death. Being a team back then was risky, to say the least at least if you were the kind who broke a few rules now. And again, as you'll find out, things improved. But in the era of what's been called the time of the bloody code, things were pretty crazy. In the 60 years between 70 and 70. In 1830, Around 7000 people were executed in England and Wales.
That sounds reasonable. And this is this is who eventually the mindset that came to America and shaped it you know, this is how you maintain order. kill people. But the only difference is that this was if you're a criminal, not a court, and of course you heard that stealing a rabbit was enough to get you hung man, right? But in America, it was being black was a crime. And what I mean by being me rephrase that being black and having a free mind was a crime. As long
as you kowtow. That's fine. You're saying you were better able to live. But if you said you know what? I don't I'm not No, I don't I'm not gonna go go along with this. I'm not gonna listen to that. I'm not gonna look down. I'm not I'm gonna St. remet tear was killed allegedly for just whistling at a white woman. You're saying if you didn't hear to the social norms, not even laws, just norms that made you Sam could be punishable by death. Oh,
wait, man, wait man women? Maybe goggles. But so the way I'm now already piecing this together, is that the whole race issue has really been used to remind us that we all need to comply, because they have the power to kill to lynch to do everything, historically. And it is a reminder to everybody else. Yes. It's to the, to the least of these. Yeah, to you know, the kind of whatever happens to them, could happen to you? Well, no, but it's, it's being
regurgitated to remind us to remind everybody else. Hey, Ryan, you know, if you don't comply, as you say, the material that was that was a social norm. It was a social norm. And, and, and it was it was a message to everybody, not just to a black man. It was a hey, here's the power, we have the only thing different color of the skin just so you know, that's not a big difference. Correct. But it was visible. And now is the the way this comes to
¶ Social credit score?
a head and all connects together is with the invention of modern technology, social media, all of these tracking mechanisms, you're not going to be able to have hide anymore. Right? So how my blackness is evident, whoever you are, is going to be evident and you're going to be judged by the system based off of that, your social credit score. There's, there's no good, there's no, there's no longer I mean, we're at the point now,
there's no longer any privacy anonymity. You know, everything you say is going to be interesting, and you're going to be judged on it. Yeah. And like I said, it's gonna be similar to when I walk into a room like you were saying before, when I walk into a room, Judge judges are made of my parents, right. Which I don't give a rat's ass about, but the same way we whoever walks into a room, it's my Oh, their scores. No saying this a scale of one to 100 other 70 or 60. Yeah. Oh, you're saying, Oh,
we are unvaccinated? Oh, you've made homophobic comments. Yeah, like, and that's why we see David Chappelle. That's why Dave Chappelle was so big to stand up and not apologize, because he represented a hangable offense. Right? He did, he did. A right. And you see, that's what the Boulay phone is about. You're You're teetering on a hangable offense, answer the phone and pivot. We got a little problem with what you're doing over there, son.
Right. And that's the kind of thing when that's how, that's how quickly things can shift. And it's like, when people look at, like, how could they be like that? Look at now, look at what we're saying. I mean, we got people openly calling for concentration camps. We have people calling for if you don't do what needs to be done, you can't get medical assistance. Hell soon he's gonna be Vax hospitals and non Vax hospitals. Now, we're still waiting for the drinking fountains. You've
called that one a long time ago. Oh, I mean, the way they got around it, I saw I've heard in companies, you know, not saying a specific company was they turned all the water fountains off? Yeah, just no water. Just as good. No water for your kids? Well, that's the, you know, saying this, to do that, you know, they understand the imagery. In this way, it's a weird thing to watch to say, wow. Like, how are they gonna thread this needle to say this is not segregation when the
segregation? Yeah. And once again, I'll say they start with us. But let's go. Yeah, so just be. That's why we have to be mindful of history, because we will quickly see it repeat itself. But let's go ahead and get to the second part of the world's worst punishment in history. When we say kids could get in serious trouble in England,
¶ Worst punishment in history part two
we're not only talking about people in their late teens, a lot of actual children went to the gallows to there is a recording at a church in England, that tells us a girl by the name of Alice Glaston was hanged in 1546. And she was only 11. At the time, the information about that event doesn't tell us what crimes you've committed, but we're hoping she did more than steal someone's prized vegetable. Kids had no
protections from hanging. And at one point in time, you could read in the law that strong evidence of malice and a child of seven to 14 years of age could result in them going to the gallows during the hanging frenzy of the late 18th and early 19th centuries, quite a few kids were hanged for crimes such as breaking into a house stealing from a shop owner, or
even forgery. And while other teams were executed for worse crimes, such as murder, let's now have a look at when hanging started, when it went disastrously wrong, and how it ended well, mostly handed, you might be surprised to hear that this kind of punishment is still around. In some places, hanging as an execution wasn't exactly a science when it first came about. There's evidence of hanging in Roman law. And you
can see that it happened in ancient Greece as well. You can also read that it was often the go to form of capital punishment as early as the fifth century in England. There's a history of hanging as a form of capital punishment all over the world. So it's better if we concentrate on one place. England seems to be the place to start because those guys perfected the procedure. I like this guy's read. He's makes it sound so exciting.
Yeah, and if that's the struggle, I had to go through, like some of the stuff like that. He's like, Hey, man, looks like 11 year olds. I mean, it's crazy stuff. Let's go. Let's find out more about
¶ Commentary
hangings in England. Yeah. Now you see there, the OG Of course, the lizards man. And we have to humanize the lives lizards. Well, that's technically not possible. But okay. No reason why is in their mind is for the greater good. In their mind is for the greater good. We take the population down to 10%. Yeah, you know, but it's always been that it's been that all of these elite groups, The Population Bomb, that's what climate change is, it's always been about the Georgia
Guidestones. Look at all this stuff. They you're absolutely right. And they, you're right. They feel as though for the greater good. And they the majority look at Prince Charles, is, you know, feels that most human beings are useless eaters, if that is what he has literally said to. And I think they believe that. And the reason why I had to humanize these people, because they, they can't help themselves. No, they're wicked.
I mean, let's just beat they're there. And the reason why I call them lizards is because they operate out of the fight or flight mentality is that either I had to kill it, on my run from it. That's the only that's the only two modes of thought they have. And it's they've tried to run from it. Coming to America, and it followed them, whatever they think that is. And they've tried to build a utopia here and they looking around nurse and look at all these fat, lazy, unhealthy, mentally unstable,
people need to do a great reset. Good. Yeah. You know, I should I feel like I might, I might agree with him to some degree there. And that's when that's the thing is like, but the thing that what you start with that will stop you? Just like, you know, like, if somebody gave you that button to mash? Yeah, you'll be like, Nah, I can't do that. I mean, these are human beings. No, we could maybe try and get everyone educated, how to be healthy. You know, there's a lot of things we could do.
Right? That's not where they're at with it. with it. And this is how they were saying it back in the history. It was like we got we came here we created America is nice and white. We can't let these black folks get to populace. We can't let you know we got to keep them and especially not coming over. I saw the towel. Oh, no. No, I mean, that that's their mentality of it. So it's like, okay, what do we do? You know,
saying we got to instill some kind of mind control. We understand it propaganda, whatever you want to call not not unique to America, by the way this happens is happening everywhere. Every country has this. No, what I'm saying about unique to America is America was like, Abraham Lincoln's words was supposed to be a white man's country. It was like interesting, nothing. I have no problem with that, you know, saying like, everybody should have their own saying, if you want to have your own land,
that's fine. But my issue he couldn't he tried to send us out of the country. That's right mentality. So it was like, well, we can't send them away. What do we do? And it's like, okay, we need to keep them segregated. And he what they're trying to figure out how to do unvetted people. Now, what do we do? I mean, that's the this is how this is not a history show. This is a we're at that point, again, they're gonna say, Okay, what do
we do? Right? Nobody was in a room that made a decision to take my job away from me to say, these are humans we're talking about here. That you're going to fire it No. Cause their own they're like well, they're not complying. Yeah. So I'm just saying like, be careful where we're headed cuz and that's why they're like crime go cuz they're gonna create criminals the same way. hanging, you know, create chaos, chaos, right? They're gonna have this and then they show up and
say we've got the answer. We have to reset everything, the money, I think they're gonna reset the money first. There was a Nate and a United Nations, the Secretary General, literally had here's the plan for 2022. Number one fight, you know, defeat COVID. Number two, change the global financial system. I'm like, What, When? When was that on the list except for Klaus Schwab? That's how I usually how fast and it's before it's before climate change. So they're saying that
then climate change. So that's a little switch there. But anyway,
¶ Letting the pressure build
my point is that, yeah, if they really want to have some chaos, and then have stuff break really badly that people take notice, because this stuff is breaking all over the place, the price of gas is broken, let's just start right there. When people really start to take notice, then they're going to have a solution, which will be something financially oriented, probably. That's pressure. All it needs. Like I said, don't know, not
you, but don't be confused, that they're confused. No, that's pressure prices going up means you cherish your job even more, gives another booster, what's your number? You're saying? It's like, where are you going to crack it? Are you gonna crack up the five booster six boosters. And that was the thing where I made my decision not to make the show about that too much, but to say, I know, now, I can't do that being a man because Second
of all, my children will never get it. So it's like if I didn't go take it, I mean, if they're never gonna say and then if I took it, and then I say they don't need to take it. That makes me look like a hypocrite. And that d values me within my household, of course, which is also part of the point which is a porter point of get the fighting Yeah, in the in the house, but I get the in household strife going as well. Brian didn't to make you crack to their wheel, the same thing
¶ Lynching: the entertainment value
with lynching. And so we'll just get back on the story. This is a weird history. Out on the frontier hangings were more than just a method of executing the guilty. They were a form of entertainment that offered spectators an escape from their everyday lives. Like many modern forms of entertainment hangings weren't just empty spectacle. They also conveyed important messages to onlookers. hangings were a stark reminder that while the West may
have been wild Law and Order still exist in there. Today, we're going to take a look at what it was actually like to be at a frontier hanging. New Movies typically open on weekends because that's what most people have time to go to the movies. Frontier hangings were often held on weekends for the exact same reason. It was considered a form of entertainment, and it wouldn't be unusual to see an entire
family come to watch. Spectators would often Bring blankets and picnic baskets to stick out seats and pastime while waiting for the show. On occasion, attendees could even purchase concessions and souvenirs. How big did the crowds get? It is believed the hanging of convicted murderer Charles Waller, which took place in Marshfield, Missouri in 1867,
was attended by approximately 8000 people. With Mary's sir at Lewis Powell, David Harold and George at Surat were sentenced to hang for conspiring to assassinate Abraham Lincoln. interest was so high, authorities had to make it a ticketed event just to keep the crowds at bay. Though 1000s applied for them. Those tickets went mostly to Union soldiers,
court officials and other dignitaries. While the general public couldn't attend the event itself, people still gathered outside the gates of the penitentiary where it was taking place. A contemporary reporter wrote that the streets were filled with Restless impotent people willing to spend hundreds of dollars to get in you know, you see the old paintings and you see in England clearly old England it was an event and it's good to know that
America saw the entertainment value. And I've I've always said and maybe since we're seeing this history repeat mo maybe I can finally bring back my my clear shot winning television format. I've always felt we should put to capital punishment. You know, when we put someone to death, we need to put that on television reality show. US have a shot of the phone. Is the governor gonna come to you? No, I think I think when people are in this form of of hypnosis. They want stuff
like that they find it entertaining. I wonder if that would work again. I bet it would. And maybe throughout history and and I'm talking about recent
¶ Canceling: A form of lynching
history, even when the G Man would kill gangsters. They will leave them laid out in the street. Yes. Yeah. I mean, I actually Bike poles, their bodies for the arms, paper clippings. And so it's this human goes to the mass psychosis. I hope I'm saying that right, but it's the this person is at threat. So not only I'm glad you're killing them, I'm gonna take enjoyment with you. Mm hmm. You know, this is the, you know, this is a scary person, so it's justified to
kill them. And that goes into the psychosis of how they paint. every black person is scary in this country, you know, and limps to, you know, saying the fear. So the reason why I play that clip is to say the spectacle part of lynching is not exclusive to black people. It's to make you believe that they'll make you believe it. But clearly throughout history. The I don't know the death of whoever has been condemned is a spectacle to people. And I think it's still that way to this day,
but it plays out a different way. The way canceling works, because canceling is absolutely Hell yeah. And once it starts to trend, you see the mob forming. Yeah. And then the mob wants to jump in and get them a piece. Yeah, you know, so that kid retweet it. It's like, oh, he responded to me saying that. Yeah, like flipping a guitar pick into the audience kind of like, right? Yes. Well, in lynching, they will go and collect pieces of the body. Yeah, sure. The person but that
psychologically, because we live in an information age now. And you said, They shall ask you though, like, why won't they do so you're saying just go through and do what you're saying a false flag of a real hanging. Because the psychological aspect of castling lasts way longer than actual physical death. You know, cuz every time that person pops his head back up here since another lynch mob, like to come kill it again. You're not gonna
zombie. It'll die. And you know, come back and bite. Yeah. And history repeats, it's like Whack a Mole. Right? Once you get your name on it can. And I'm not. I'm not being facetious when I say this, because this is going to be the modern day lynching and the canceling. When you're saying when they have you posted up, and then like said, then that makes it to the news. And
then it becomes even a bigger spectacle. And then to everybody, all the pundits want to get there quick jab in, you know, it's the same mentality. Yeah, that's, you know, I've never equated it to the, to a lynching and seems so obvious. And it's so appropriate for what's been going on and how this is how lynching has been used on everyone psyche is very, very small. Yeah. But it's very
¶ The main stream versus the meme stream
smart. It's, it's, it's such a great tool, you know? Yeah, especially for America. That's the plan of it is like, we don't need any bodies anymore. We need good news stories now say this, and we can go and get to the next clip. The problem is when they took it to the information, we don't need the munitions to fight back, as in like, say something kinetic or violent. Oh, that's why the memes. Yeah. are important. I keep stressing this point people is the mainstream versus the mainstream.
Oh, nice. They have television channels. That's how they project their information, their propaganda out, but on social media, it's kind of like guerilla warfare, that a meme will come up on your timeline and like, just explode your brain. You know, that's, that's the that's the mainstream media right there. And I consider my part of it, myself part of it that we were saying truth bombs. Yeah. When you when you when it hits you is like,
oh, I can never see anything the same again. And that's why they keep saying, oh, people to do their own research, these independent podcasters. You know, it's like, they're trying to demonize. I know, this. I expected mo I knew that was coming. The demonization of podcasters we stopped that shit. Yeah, because you're operating outside the system, because you don't have a Blu ray phone. I mean, they could get to you. I
mean, but there's no connective tissue there. They could say, let me call somebody they can call Adam and talk some sense into, you know, that kind of thing. Right? I'll call mo to talk some sense. And good luck. That Nast was dangerous. And that's why like I said, they're, they're at a disadvantage. Oh, I completely agree. It's just it. Can we get people to see it in time? I guess is the question. It'll take a while but they're
they're moving pretty fast. Now. That's, that's our job in this information war, and that's how I take it. It is what it is but and and we can do it and be entertaining. See, right. And that's the point. That's the beauty of it. They do it every day. sucks when they when they communicate and they tell you what to do. When we give you some ideas, it's fun, because they're losers. Or loser, Jason. But let's go
¶ Racial terror lynchings
ahead. Number eight racial terror lynchings of black people defined a shameful era in America. These lynchings different from the hanging of white people in places where there was no functioning criminal justice system, racial terror, lynchings were directed at all black people. They enforced compliance with racial hierarchy and white supremacy and ensured racial segregation and denial of equal rights. In 1916. In Cedar Bluff, Mississippi, a young black man named Jeff Brown accidentally
bumped into a white woman while running to catch a train. A white mob stopped him and lynched him, beating him and then hanging him from a tree for his insolence and carelessness. His public murder was not about criminal punishment, but was instead about maintaining racial hierarchy and terrorizing the black community. White town residents proudly sold photographs of Mr. Brown's brutalized body hanging from the
tree for five cents each. The Equal Justice Initiative has documented 1000s of racial terror lynchings between 1877 and 1950 ej AI has confirmed the lynchings of over 4000 Black people who were tortured, maimed, beaten, shot, hung, and burned alive by crowds of white people, often with the cooperation of law enforcement or government officials. And where was this from? Again? This is from the people who did the museum.
Yeah, the Equal Justice Initiative was working with Oprah 60 minutes special which which we speculate that not put words in your mouth, but that kind of was the Greek grease the skids for come out of hair. So it's totally our room. Yeah. All part of the the anti lynching bill that everyone knows everybody. Small, a small print, big prep there. You know, they got us into the conscious of the people to start talking about lynching again. And then the camallo Harris. Mission video came about if
people didn't listen to episode 73. It's genius. Because you hear it, you're like, of course, it's so obvious what they were doing. And how pathetic was it really. It shows you like, oh, this, there's still lizards that are not geniuses. Alright, so let's go ahead and get into now this is for one I want this is one of the ones I want people to listen to, for the psychological manipulation and mind control. Because the
economist is not known for his takes on history. But this is part of that political rollout and the political political manipulation also is this a recent thing from the from the economist, this was around the same time as the initiative Equal Justice Initiative. Okay, this was rolling out at the same time, it's important to know that the economist got a new editor in chief, a very left political operative. I forget what the
woman's name is. So it whatever was going on at the economist, I'm sure it played into that because she's she's part of the Democratic Party machine.
¶ Anti-lynching bill hand-in-hand with voting rights bill
And before you play this clip, I was like, just remind people to listen to this with him, keeping in mind what is going on now with the Voting Rights bill. Because these two things play hand in hand, the lynching bill and the voting right Bill made saturating his body with gasoline in the chained him to the top of the schoolhouse. Maintenance set fire to the base. Above the crackling here, this young man screaming, I didn't do it.
Many people know about this era of lynchings. But one of the reasons why blacks were lynched, was to suppress the black vote, which is still happening today. I'm black. I'm from the south. So this means a lot to me, because my ancestors were lynched. My research examines the extent to which historical lynchings are correlated with voter registration rates of
blacks today. And what I find is that blacks who currently reside in counties that were exposed to a higher number of lynchings are less likely to register to vote, and they're less likely to indicate that they voted in a recent election compared to their white counterparts. Voting is a social norm. Why are you voting? because the people around you are voting. But what happens if their parents didn't vote, and their parents didn't vote in their parents didn't vote. All of this is rooted in
historical racial animus. What happens? If you can walk outside? You see a body hanging from a tree? If you don't vote for me, join black. I'm glad you said that. Now you see, if you don't vote at all, then you have the slave mind. And if you don't vote for me, then you ain't black. Yep. This is what they're saying here. Good reason why people don't vote. And I can understand some
of the logic behind that. But but that no, they're over exaggerating the point that people in these counties are scared to vote, because they're scared, they're gonna be lynched at the polls, right. But that's the same fear mechanism. They used to say. If you don't vote for us, then it's gonna go back there. Yeah, you'll be back in chains. Well, he's actually said that. Yeah, I know. That's why I bring it up. Of course, he actually literally sat down. But that's basically all going down
to Georgia, doing what he did there. The camallo Harris theme, the voting rights bills thing is to play off of lynching at the end of the day. lynching. Yeah, hand in hand. It's like, it's kind of sad, not just for people that are saying I'm not a Dawson nonblack descent. It's kind of like if you don't pay your taxes, what fill in the blank. You go to jail, of course. That's Hand in Hand me like, even missing. Everybody. Everyone know, everyone knows this. A 10 year old knows it. Right?
So that's the same mentality won't when you're saying if you're saying if you don't vote, if you don't vote democratically go, you're going you're saying you won't, you're going back in the change, right? But at the same time, right. Okay. So what they've done is they've just refined the message. It used to be we don't want you voting at all. No good. And then they got wise. And of course, they needed the numbers. And then they changed it to E you can vote but you better vote for us.
But we got to remember these locales she's talking about used to be democratic strongholds. What they like to call Dixiecrats, right, right, but it's like now we had it. That's why the switch in the messages. The Democrats in that town was the ones that didn't want you at the polls right? In the south. Now it's like okay, now these people may not be engaged in voting. Now. We had to scare them with that same ghosts are ghosts. That's the weirdest. It's the damnedest thing.
Yeah, they're using their terrifying history to scare people into coming to them. Yes. No, and we're using this the the Sonics and the sounds in the minute we made that loop nip back manipulation that you heard. Did you hear that sound? Did you hear? Oh, Mo. Mo. I'm like, I'm almost thinking that what we should do for our show. You know, we should have a second let me see we should play Yeah, how about that? I should crank it up love we can do I can do a really awesome song. Okay.
I'll just say. So, yes. So that's what they need to do. Using Sonics like that, to influence you manipulate, of course it goes up and down your spine. Right. And in this is the, this is what I find disgusting. Because you're still tapping into that same ghost. And just to remind people to earlier listeners, this is the same thing Marianne Williamson did when she tried the trauma. Yes. And people start flipping out. Right now you see why I say
racism is the original mass psychosis. And that's on both sides, white people and black people. Yeah. Because both sides are under that. That was it. 30 and 30 split? Yeah,
I mean, mass form. I'm not sure if it's actually mass formation in the classic sense of the word, but it is mere I think mass psychosis is very appropriate because this is programming that has been put in you know, this was not a you didn't have for circumstances that this happened This is programming from early days that's been handed down has been
¶ Legs whiteness is a new invention
reiterated has been reinforced through entertainment and everything and literature. It's just it's it's it's a it's a part of our DNA, I would say probably imprinted on us. The reason why I say that. Whiteness legal whiteness is a new invention. Correct? Yeah. They had so many mixed race people and black people, they're like, well, we need to have one.
That's the one drop rule comes in. So this is the Jim Crow and modern day whiteness, or you know, legal whiteness is a new invention, not and that's why we always got to go back to say, when we sound like this, we're not talking about phenotype. Now, they were saying, we could base it around phenotype. With this, they need to pump their numbers up naturally start letting the Irish come in and tell you right, even Catholics, I mean, Catholics were seen, as you know, just as black bad as
a, m, a phenotype or ethnicity. It was the same thing. So. So yeah, so that's all I'm just saying is, if I understand the definition of maybe I say, mass psychosis, of it's based around a fear. One is white people are based around the fear of if you start mixing with black people, you're going to be taken off the face of the earth. That's the fear on that side of it. And
then the fear of losing is for black people. It's like, don't go around white people because they will kill you because they think that you're trying to wait them out the face of the earth. Right? For that some that that pretty much is what most facts tries to figure out in a nutshell, everybody how that arrived. That's the original sin of America right there. That's it. It's like, somewhere in the back of my mind. I know if I
mess with Moe, he's gonna He's gonna shave me. You know, it's like, that's always their MO. Not Not Not only that, but it's not even shipped me this is you're going to mix your genetics and with my genetics. That's that's the fear. That's the whole brain and we'll get into Yeah, but can I just say something about I see that much more holistically. We have actually been doing that for almost two years, our genetics have been melded together into a stream of ones
and zeros of mp3 format. Our DNA has melted and it seeped into
¶ And Proud of it
others. And it's now you see it play out once again, going back to the vaccine analogy, the pure bloods versus Devang it's the same thing. Don't come around me. You're saying you hear people that come in, my wife is even walking around, and I'm so done with this shit. I'm just gonna speak my truth. I'm a pure blood and proud of it like Whoa, yeah, yeah, floors. This is what's happening. But what forced you there? This supremacy course? The Vax? Yes.
So it makes you accept your whatever saying whatever your status is. And be proud of it. Yes. And as part of that. Yeah, back power Black Power. We're not back power. Oh, no, no, you know what I mean? We don't give him any ideas. No. Sorry. That's a free meme. Yeah, that didn't mean to do that. Yes. So let's go ahead and get to number 10.
¶ Emmet Teal
Scary. Image sales. lynching is very iconic in American history. He was a 14 year old boy from Chicago, who supposedly whistled at a white woman and was kidnapped, tortured, beaten, killed, and Biden was dumped in a river. One of his killers was interview, the first reason he gave for killing immaterial was voting. That as long as he lived, and as long as he could do anything about it, knickers weren't going to vote in his area. Because if they did, they control the government.
lynching since the signal, you vote, you die. You have no protection, you have no rights, we will kill you. That's the power of lynching. The rise of lynching was after slavery. Now African Americans were no longer property. And now they had to be put back in their subjugated place. All the southern problem born 300 years ago with the introduction of slavery is that the Negro today and Dixie there are almost 9 million colored. Blacks were actually seen as a political threat. In a lot of
southern counties, blacks were the majority. And so when black men were given a right to vote, if they voted a certain way, they could actually change the political structure of the South. That goes more into the politics of it. And I know we're running a little long in the first segment. So um, I don't want to belabor the point but I just really collected those clips you Hear this psychological manipulation and even tying it to to voting. And we see the same thing with now with George
floor it. He's like the modern day me too, you totally. And there was also a little bit of the, you know, with the lynching and yeah, I'm innocent I didn't do it you know, can't breathe hands up right in the grace because notice nothing on the policy side for the democratic change and this is not a point of making a one party better than the other I'm what I'm saying is the party that tends to lean on the black vote to be successful, nothing changed in their policies towards black people, it was
just more fierce start stoking your fears. And without that, no George Floyd, who knows how the election goes, because that was the thing that we always talked about on the channel is the activation. That was the activation of the of the black vote of the Black Lives Matter of use of the all of it, getting out on the streets. The third way which the third wave is, you know, going crazy right now, with all these smashing grabs
and that kind of thing. I don't think they're going to bring them in anytime soon. So I don't think so either. It's all it's all going according to
¶ Lynching history
plan, right. So I guess we can go ahead and jump on down I guess to number 12. Because of that, for just the sake of time, and just doing get into more or the reasonings behind one of the reasons behind lynching when we talked about political power. But there's another Vatanen reasoning. And this is more on fear of genetics. lynching actually begins in the Revolutionary War years. And it's named after the brother of the man who founded Lynchburg,
Virginia. And lynching took place as extra legal justice in quotes, takes place during that period of time, because not too many courts, it's sort of difficult to get to them. This is a period, the British are also in place in many places in the south. And so it becomes very dangerous to move around. And so this is a form of justice, a local justice, that is not condoned by a formal court.
It's interesting, it's not until 1886, that the number of black Lynch victims actually exceed the number of white men, Schmitt victims. So this is an American tradition that becomes racialized later, for a number of reasons. There you go. There's a constant struggle over the meaning of who deserves to protection and rights that are talked about in the US Constitution. And what happens, of course, is that one of the function of a stereotype for racial stereotype is to show
that someone is undeserving of first class citizenship. And until rather recently, first class citizenship was seen not as a right but as a privilege. Oh, yeah. It's back baby. Yeah. So they're looking for ways to say you're not human to dehumanize you. And that's why I struggle, I will be a hypocrite not to try to humanize everyone, because that will put me in my
lizard brain. If I use and dehumanize people now, that doesn't mean I have this set or even, you know, at least we know we're dealing with this is what they've always been about. This is how it is and when they it's a it's a system, you know, you get ushered into it, you go along with it. It's like newsrooms, it's like television stations, like radio stations, like companies, I've been in so many of them, things just go a certain way you go with the
flow. And before you know it there you are they what they like to call company culture. Yeah, it's just the corporate culture call corporate culture. Yeah, exactly. Is this that thing? Like, you know, uh, you know, my main company is like, how that company itself are operated specifically? It's, you know, I mean, like, when we think
Amazon, we have a certain company culture. Yeah. So, the way of how we do things around here, right, you know, Starbucks kind of laid back, you know, that kind of thing, you know, so it's the, it's the company culture and in America, it was based off of the rulership. They're saying that formed it, fear, fear here. Yes, you use the word system. And one of the most talked about systems around a lynching is the willie Lynch letter, which by because they had it, I think it was later
proven to be fabricated. But the reason why I want to speak to it's just gonna click on me to fold is one, even though it may have been fabricated, it could it could still be factual. And you know, that's kind of like your remake a movie Escher with fictional characters. But, you know, it's based off of a true story. I think that's what the willie Lynch letter was. And this is the Honorable Minister Louis Farrakhan, speaking on it,
because he has been digitally lynched. So, I think it was apropos to use him to speak on this, that if you will follow these protocols, you will not have to kill your slaves. They'll be your slaves for the next 300 to 1000 years. It's almost 2012. And Willie Lynch is still in business. Now, here's what he did. Willie said what I have is foolproof, what I want you to do is look at the differences among your slaves and make the differences bigger. Pit the differences against each
other until it becomes self perpetuating. Right, we start with age, take the young nigra and the old Negro and put them against each other. And then after age, do color. When we first got from Africa, all of us was black. So we'll introduce color. Put a little white germ life germ into the black woman, and she'll bring forth the baby has burned. Then put a little more weight in the brown to you get a lighter brown, then a yellow, then one that can almost pass, but not enough for us to
accept them. Didn't put all of them against each other. Has a working? Mo I thought we were friends. Man. You've been holding this clip from me for 73 episodes. Seriously? about timing. It's time. Why did you all discuss the timing when to pull the trigger odd. He's ready for this thing about time everything is about timing. So not specifically this. That's hilarious. I love that this is good. But that's what's happening. Now. Of course, it's
so obvious that out against the gender. Yeah, everything they know and we don't we need more strife and gender. Let's get some more genders. Well, next and who's to say you should have a gender at all? Well, ultimately, no genderless, faceless sitting and even the people that say you say well, we need to have more genders, a person who was so fragmented now. That is who you just say I need to have a gender at all. It was that we got to that point. I know. I know.
I know. But what and and what's the crazy thing is Farah Khan was the platform. He was one of the first him and Alex Jones. Yep, we're first to go first to go. So that lets you know, I'm obviously they're afraid of what they had to say, just to take them off the internet. And they were all both saying similar things about the jab. And I'll just leave it there. Um, so they had to get them off the air first. But one of the things he pointed out is all the shades of brown. So what the Democratic
¶ lumping them all together with science
Party in the left in one word, that wing of they just trying to do is squeeze them all together again and to color people. Mm hmm. See, it's like, Okay, now we need to because catering to all these different groups is good. It's good. Yes. No, it's tiring. You know, cuz like look at look at the Democratic Party. Now. It's like, oh, well, eight off people saying you're doing this for Hispanics. And then you had to cater to the Asians. You
have to cater to the, you know, the Yeah, the LGBT Yeah. And it's like, well, we need all these people together. And we need to find one issue that they all can get on board on. And I think that one issue is science, though belief in science, whether it's global warming or a or You know, Assam medical issues, all of that is, you know, just jam them all
together. And that's what they're trying to do is basically create a one group out of all these subgroups, which is almost impossible because the programming, as you start heard him saying the letter it can go from 300 to 1000 years. That's why they're having such a fit of trying to squeeze all these people together. Hmm. So So with that said, let's go ahead and get to the second part is clip.
¶ More division
And then he said, if they got course here are fine here, divide them on the basis of hair color, age, divide them on the basis of whether they live in the north, the south, the east, the West, divide them again, if they live on the hill, or in the valley, divide them again, based on status on the plantation, and then divide them on the size of the plantation of one master, as
opposed to the slaves that are on a smaller plantation. And then divide them male against female female against male and it keeps going when you get to gays and lesbian you keep on dividing just make them all confused. Look at your beautiful people. But Willie Lynch is still in power. Willie Lynch is still in power and every black leader that has tried to unite us has gone away disappointed disaffected because the thing that Willie Lynch set in motion is kept going. White people keep
it going. And black people keep it going. White people say Oh, you're so different. Yes, sir. Different than her. Right? Yes. So intelligence so man or Robo that's not insulting. That's the but that's the blue light play. Right? The talented 10th Or you're so special. You're different from them. You know, just let's just bring you over here and give you a platform and you know, show how different you are. And that
ostracize you from the group. Yeah. Which when they do that, then your own group Lynch's you This is how sickening system I'm telling you this is sick. It's genius, though, because it's just humming along. Yes. I mean, well, they knew see they have forms, or some some of the most brightest people come together around the world, right thing? How can we keep dividing people into the point of, you know, for isolation, and you see it with all the alphabet used to
be just gay people. I mean, it was just like, I mean, that's what everybody's kind of like, okay, I'm young, gay, but it's like, no, we need the gene to be the T and just just keeps in in everybody's night fighting for their piece of, you know, a intersectionality. And it's like, hold on, we're all fighting for this little piece of pie. It's like now we're,
we're fighting for justice to be left alone. I mean, that's, that's the real trick of it. They have your standards so low, that we're just happy that we can go outside. So true. Mo. So true. I mean, I'm just sitting here Yeah, okay, you're absolutely right. So, um, let's go ahead and get back into now following along,
¶ Ranking people
Farah Khan had to say, number 15. In the late 19th century, and evolving scientific theory claimed that human beings could be categorized and ranked by such constructs as social standing, and group affiliation. drawn on Charles Darwin's theory of biology, that the fittest will survive. This science called Social Darwinism perpetuated various myths about how societies evolved. One particularly destructive myth was that black people were inferior to white people.
And therefore, there was the justification to suppress the advancement in all areas, this the society as a whole be brought down.
There had been prejudices always around color. Ever since, you know, the first Africans came to the US, but they change and in the late 19th century, with the advent of social Darwinism, and the need to think about black people and black labor and black bodies and a particular way, you begin to see this idea that blacks are actually beginning to devolve down the evolutionary scale devolve into more primitive identities and with primitive of course is lasciviousness and lack of
control, lack of character, lack of honor, etc. And scientists actually sought to prove these things empirically.
¶ Catching blackness
There's a science for you. Yep. Wow. Science told us black people were subhuman. Which and carry disease. Which why you had different bathrooms, different water fountains? Yeah, it was called Negritude if I'm not mistaken, that you could catch from black people, and it will turn your skin black. This is stuff like the site. Yeah. Well, I gotta look this one up Negritude. Yes. Negritude Okay. Negritude if I'm not mistaken. I forget the doctor's name. But I'm
actually have a file opened up on this one. And it's basically is a disease that you could catch. That would turn you black. And I don't doubt you just this year, the search just may be polluted with some other stuff that for some reason, I'll trust me. I have a whole I'm sure you have it because this goes into the mass psychosis thing. Yeah. The root of the mass psychosis that so you could catch blackness was that was based so like, like the Rona.
Exactly. That's the whole point. And then the other thing was, you don't catch it if you don't catch it from them. And you're saying your daughter's around the Blackboard she get pregnant and then here she she comes with sub human genetics. Yeah. Which was while it was enforced on understand on that level. So I'm just I'm just saying all this to say this is a lot of this stuff was done out of name, the name of science. Justified,
justified. So you know, as to being bullied to be subhuman and things that nature, but let's go ahead and get into a number six,
¶ Sexuality
where we start 16 Yeah, this guy's getting 16. And from there, they begin to also think about the notion of what is happening to women ID around women's sexuality begins to change in this period of time as well. This, this need for this passionless sort of idea of white women who need to maintain the purity and the purity of the race, which is one of the fears the bugaboos that come up around interracial relationships and this charge of rape.
While there was no shortage of reasons for discrimination against black people by white in this period, the emerging myth of the threat of the rape of a white woman by a black man became a tense focal point and the often false accusation of rape the chief justification for lynching it is even baked into the whole King Kong thing and the Bron James
Oh, King Kong Oh of course. Yeah. And in LeBron James got himself some hot water cuz they did a video I think provoke where he was basically portrayed as King Kong with a white lady under his arm and you can you can look it up, but the bat to the number two is an EG RITUD. Yeah, and it's it's called a disorder of being black. Right? Dr. Benjamin Rush for people that want to look it up. But yeah, that's the sign. Now you see it. Now you see why when I saw this Rona thing
coming? I'm like, Oh, okay. I see where we're heading here. We're about to make a whole nother subset of, of people have no whatever you want to call it. Above ground and below ground people. Right? This is people that are compliant and people are not
compliant. And notice they haven't been a COVID 20 a COVID 21 a COVID 22 is COVID-19 and we're gonna push this thing and make it where you know you're fearful of the same thing that how bladt used to be feared of. Or I mean, I hear some crazy thing where there's this is kind of like an intro to a lot a lot of shows I got cooked up you know, saying I are building another thing I'm hearing this thing called a white people calling each other a Neanderthal or Neandertal How do you
pronounce it and troglodytes? What. What's the second one? troglodytes? troglodytes is kind of like cavemen. So basically, they're saying people that don't adhere to science. As a caveman So, what I'm saying is the same trick they're going to use. Just say, Okay, people don't believe in science. They're so they're subhuman. Right? And I'm hearing the language fly around. I'm like, Okay, this is where we're getting into dangerous times.
And I say this and you're saying just to say, but that you know,
¶ The OG Karens
back then you have a white woman said, Oh, this black man disrespected me. Oh, you know, he bumped into me we heard the story I'm saying previous episode with her immature whistling we hear all these things of how you know, it would incite the white man to act interesting and protect him. Mm hmm. That's that's the OG Karen's it's something of this is old. This is not new. This is this is a very old psychological you know when I say profile, you know that that like, oh, look
he's not wearing a mask right? You're not see he's not that was now feel that in light. Look at this black man. He's in his shop. He doesn't need to be here. Somebody do something. You see those white lady's flipping out all and not specifically white lady. Because, I mean, there's just as many black Karen's in our brown Karen's. But what I'm saying that is a allusion back to that profile to say, Oh, he's not doing what, what what the system requires him. You do something quick?
Like when you see somebody without a mask? Yeah. And then they're actually crazy. What I'm saying is that the programming and the mind and the mental mind control has drove driven news into paranoia. Yeah. So it was the same thing man with black people. It was like, Oh, they're gonna break our order. Oh, man. So this is this is just that was all training wheels. Man. This is the big show. Right? Because now it's but it's the same thing. It's like you're
not do somebody do something quick. He didn't have a mask. That kind of thing. So it but just now we need to go back to
¶ TBC61 mark my words
the throwback clip for 61. And this was Mark my words. This is where Karen's the latest nine to be using as an insult. They've been caught on tape ranting and raving. causing a scene threatened by complaining about what sure seems like nonsensical things. illegally selling water without a permit. Social media is dubbing them Karen's that's Karen and she's calling the cops. And the phenomenon even has a Wikipedia page. A woman perceived to be entitled or demanding beyond the
scope of what is considered appropriate or necessary. I am not a racist person, you just you just made you need to go home. So why the name Karen, as far as we can determine the first woman to be tagged as a Karen was Kate Gosselin of Kate Plus eight fame. This meme started circulating on social media in 2014. Real Jamie Cohen is a new media expert. It's a name that represents an age. And that age ranges from like 35 and 55 at this point, and so it's a specific age, it's
Oh, really just an age. Interesting. Is that another separation? Yeah. So I mean, I say all this to say all of these things that you don't understand why people are react that way. Um, when people see a caring spazzed out like this, specifically a white woman in the sense, it goes back to that mental imagery of a lorry and that kind of thing, you know, that that's where it goes. But the thing is, now is not following the Jim Crow law is following, you know, saying there, you know, the VAX law.
Yes. And it wants something done about it, and they want somebody to step in. And if somebody was to go and drag the unmatched person out of their store, they will be satisfied. And that's where we're at with it. So that's that's the first segment of the show. I can't wait to see what comes next. This is good. I like it a lot. But first, we got to thank the people you're seeing to make this possible. So I guess we can go ahead and and thank them.
Yeah. And as always, we'd like to get into our donation segment
¶ Value for Value
with some wise words about what this show is about. Right Man and the black man have to be able to sit down at the same table. The white man has to feel free to speak his mind without hurting the feelings are both Negro and the so called Negro has to feel free to speak in the mind without hurting the feeling of the white man, then they can bring the issue under the rug out on top of the table, take an intelligent approach to get the problem solved. What's the only way we'll ever do it?
Yo, and we put out a pretty clear call on episode 73 In anticipation of the changing situation for Moe, and that was heard by some people and we'd like to thank a number of them our executive and Associate Executive Producers kicking it off with Carla 20 blades on Ambala Rob Stephens is the big baller comes in with $1,000 which is unbelievably generous no note that this is a clearly because he he supports the work that is taking place here mom
we can get a car I mean I don't know we have a common big enough Yeah. Here's what we got. The same can be said for Steven Dean or Stephen Dean $500 from him also executive producer for episode number 74. It says Love your show. Figured the least I could do is shoot you a portion of what I owe for my education. He is always indeed Vikon Steven of the Fox River Valley in the Chicago suburbs. That's very kind of you Steven. Thank you.
Greg Kohler 174 50 In the morning, please D dead beat me always happy to do that. Congratulations. You're no longer a dead V. This value for value is long overdue as I've been listening since show number one I've learned so much from both of you. Thank you for your courage. Also, I would ask for a biscuit for my 50th birthday. And as a believer in karma, could I ask for some more karma? Well yes, they always
give me a biscuit on my birthday. You've got mocha for those of you who are new value for value is what it is. You just decide that you want to support the work and whatever value you get out of it. You put it in you put the number in yourself and that's all it takes. It's no one can determine the value but you so the pricing is honest. David roll $100 mo can I expect gingerbread traphouse kits for next year's
holiday season? Interesting little promotional item we could we could put together Ah, man babysit the food just yet? Yeah. Oh, yeah. Good point. Yeah, food complicated. See, there you go. He's looking at you entrepreneur. Food too complicated. Also, it's awesome. You get that no agenda news guy from MTV, you know Kurt Loder? Douchebag as he's making fun of me. I know I'm in a system and he says Can I have a next talcher course? The shortest jingle request ever. Thank you
David. William Taylor. $100 second best podcasting universe. Can I get a whoosah Great job fellas from high Hawker. Yes. Andrew supports us with $100 He says my brother thank you for all you do. Sir Bates. Did he send you an A card? Yes. I got the Christmas cards from the PO Box. Yes. And I wrote what he put in the car. Okay. $100 on this card. Ma mo love the show. You're a fantastic storyteller and educated I look forward to 2022 Merry Christmas. Happy New Year to you and your family. That's
very sweet. Another car in the car. Another card from Alexander of middle castes Cadia tis the season wishing a wonderful Christmas filled with memories. You'll always treasure. Yeah, well, we were late to the PO Box. It was kind of a mess on the roads in in Virginia. It was a complete mess. I'm led to believe melody Mugler 7470 Which would be a show number donation.
Thank you very much Mr. Mo facts and Adam. It's time for this deadbeat to donate to that other podcast on my mp3 player and having the proud title of that other podcast show clubs 747 I would ask that any and all future donations of 7470 be known as the Soul Plane donation. Oh, the plane used in the movie was a 747 Okay, purple. Yeah, I was thinking so playing a 2004 movie of mixed reviews could use an update. Maybe the two of you could create the script for Seoul
rocket. What could go wrong with a big purple colored rocket on a movie poster? He says please, dead beat me. Sure. Congratulations. You're no longer a deadbeat and ends were thank you both for your insight and education on the topics you cover sir anthrax, Chris Bailey 74 Show donation love is lit John Taylor 74 Not that. Not that John Taylor he says meaning John Taylor from Duran Duran, jingle. Eric p 6141. Thank you, Eric. Associate Executive Producer.
Yes, these are good Associate Executive producers. And Murray porter $60. Thank you. Then we have our $50 Associate Executive Producers Steven Kirkpatrick $50.33. Tobias Williamson, $50. Mo, I'm sitting here listening to justice for juicy and we've come to the topic of lynching. I'm from Madison, Wisconsin, Virginia, aka God's country, but currently live in Lynchburg, Virginia. As we heard in the clip earlier, a town named after its founder John Lynch, people often think of its more dubious
history of lynching. Interesting enough, the first ever Republic hanging in Virginia was indeed here and a marker denotes the spot in the Old City Cemetery, a white man slave owner was hanged for the mistreatment of His slaves. doesn't quite fit the narrative of history, though. Anyway, keep up the great work. It goes boots on the ground. Now, appreciate that, and timely as well. extremely timely. Nicholas vog and filer $50 Thanks for the dose of reality. Thank you for the support
Nicholas capital T says I need to donate way more often. This is way too good. Thanks guys. Hopefully, you don't ever have to consider your day job anymore. Mo just a little karma for the whole fax, fax machine, the fax machine. I like that. I like that one the fax machine and I'm good to go all the best as Ramon and got he wanted to karma yes karma sorry about that. You've got $50 from anonymous Thank you very much anonymous. Mike W Lexington Kentucky love the justice for juicy episode. Thank
you for all you do. Curry is the best in the biz. And you guys are great team. God bless $50 Thank you. He cut to Galois sir ah from San Francisco in the morning value for value no jingles? No karma. Thank you so much, sir. Ah, and Mike coupe pliki I think pliki $50. Thank you, Mike. We got a card from Terry Wentz who writes Hey, Mo fax, your insistence to humanize to see and appreciate all people's humans and individuals really resonated with me. Thank you, you and Adam, our treasurer
Terry Thank you very much. And then I wanted to will be thanking more of our donors later on. I wanted to thank a few people who took time out to try a new podcast app and to get
¶ New Podcast Apps
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¶ Boostagrams
of Bitcoin you can try one of these apps out at new podcast apps calm. Just run through them quickly with some of these messages. 3300 from cost Poland to thanks for the show. 100 from Mary Oscar 500 From Cape for and then we have Dred Scott who does all of our chapters was expertise. He sends us 100,074 SATs for a massive, massive big baller boost that may get let me guess. Cuz I'm working on my SAT. Yeah, yeah. 100 It's nothing.
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flightless birds 500 Thank you cape to was several love boost for us. We got ace Ackerman with value for value episode 43. We appreciate that. We got another 2200 from WHO? homeo I think I pronounced it. Then we have another Dred Scott. This was earlier in the week. 350 333 says answering the whale call. Keep up the great work. So that's, that's over 100. That's like 150 160. And that's why I want to make sure you're saying we get people in the right range. Yeah, no, of course.
Of course, of course. I mean, this is also new and I could be missing stuff. I mean, it's the technology is just getting deployed. What I do like is that he says the whale call and what came through on the system is a whale and a telephone emoji. That was that's kind of cool. I didn't know you could do emojis through it. It works. Appreciate Chad Pharaoh. He has supported us with multiple, multiple boosts. And then we had Scott and that was his first value for value boosts and he did it for
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fun coupons, PayPal cash app, go to moe facts.com. Or directly to our donation page. Mo fund me.com moe f u n d me.com. And thank you all for supporting us and being executive and Associate Executive producers, Episode 74 of moe facts with Adam curry. And before I can see what this next part of show, I would like to thank the newly named fax machine, the people thank you
for that great idea. But for the people that have donated their time and talent, trust me, I have a lot of stuff here saying that we're going to bring it to you all, on the facts fam fam, the Hall of Fame is definitely going to be kicking off here soon as we see some people, even to the day crossed the threshold to be in the Hall of Fame. So we're gonna produce a nice segment for that. And we will start you know, start. So start getting your calculations together. So you can be
recognized this, yes, you met that threshold. Very exciting. Very, very exciting. With that said, let's get back into the
¶ Nelly Fuller: The silly mode
show. And so we pick back up with Neely fuller again, and he's going to talk about the title was clear, it was called a silly mode. And basically, they want to keep us in the silly mode and not the serious mode. Now, the non white people who understand that this is the setup, and this is the dominant government of the entire planet, then the white supremacist will understand that you understand
this. And if enough people understand it, people can't go against something about the man that says, you don't go against something that I mean, you can't ignore something, if you understand, particularly when it's working against you, that data keep bothering you, until you will have a tendency to do something about it. Now, that's what the white supremacist do not want. They do not want black people to be logical. They do not want black people to think about anything except something
that's real silly and real stupid. This is why we they always glorify stupidity in black people. If you're if a black person has this tendency to show stupidity, or silliness, that black person, the white supremacist immediately have seize upon them. And say this dispersion is doesn't show any signs of being serious about anything. So these are the black people that we want to become more and more prominent. And we
will feed into their silliness. Anything stupid they come up with or we come up with bore them, we will glorify it, as long as as stupid and silly. Anything as serious and constructive. We don't want them to be logical. We don't want them to tap into that. That's not the way we want. And if people of color the elbow thing. Oh, yeah, this is why the entertainment business and complex is so important. Yes, because they vet only the silly people
put the black man in the dress. Well, not only and I'm glad you brought that up because thinking the guy name is Billy Porter. This is a perfect example because they're very serious homosexual men out there that are serious I mean like serious, but they won't a person like that to be the face of the movement because he's a caricature and that when you become a serious black man or a serious for example and this to take away from black first
second it's okay if you're as a clown to you're saying talk speak against the VAX or any political movement like the q&a
¶ Demonizing and mocking those being serious
Shaman on you see how they use him to represent the people who are saying January 6, you know, they always go to a caricature. Yeah. So they can demonize him saying and laughing mock at it. They don't want any serious people to step forward. So when you step up and be serious, and be smart and logical, that's very dangerous. Not sure is that what it is? Look at when the doctor says serious doctor starts coming up saying, You know what, something's not right about what's going on. Right. I
know about this and the vaccine, right? This like, full attack mode. Yeah, they know, they don't like that. Now, if you were silly about it, no problem. But you can miss pan when they say the one thing they hate for you to say is what? I did my own research. Yeah. All that caused him to know. And because it's like, hold on, he can be taken seriously in logical. That's why they had to, I believe get when I mentioned before a fair con and Alex Jones off the air. Because to their listeners,
they're taking seriously now, outside not as much. But when you have that kind of, you know, people with that kind of cachet of being right. It's like we got to get him on here to Dr. Ochs and all the doctors while they are with a Joe Rogan. Because he brought serious people on there. Yeah. It's like you can't give serious people a platform. Now you know, if you if it was somebody like stand up comedian or something like that, well, they kind of give. They kind of demean Dave Chappelle to say,
Oh, he's just a comedian. But that's their, they can't really lynch him like they want to Oh, they know. They're diggin that they're not gonna let that die. But it's like, okay, we'll just know write them off as a comedian. Well, exactly, exactly. That's why and, and when all the comedians became afraid, you know, and they became afraid to speak.
That was the dark moment, man. Because the comedians are the ones that have always gotten the truth out the court jester always is able to do something. Right. But it has it but they have a certain like, you look at your George Carlin. Yes, he was being serious, right? Yeah, it was just, it was just funny. But it was serious. But they don't want those kinds of people. They don't know an artist. They don't want anything to do with seriousness, because that's what
seriousness comes authority, right? And what the system you can't have any authority except medical. Well, even if you Well, if you step outside the lines and start questioning things, yeah, they'll they'll do you know,
¶ Nelly fuller cont
saying pull the rug off and on your leg Phone? Phone? We've seen it. With that said, let's get to this final clip from Neely Fuller, would have been sitting down and slowly thinking things through and trying to be problem solvers rather than problem makers. No, we don't want those type of non white people to get out from
under our surveillance. You watch them very closely is like that dangerous black person on the plantation, who was always going around trying to read something, or trying to figure things out, asking questions, trying to figure out how to plantation is run, that is a dangerous Negro on this plantation, shout him down a river, or give him a good weapon. And stop him from being curious about serious thing.
Keep him in a silly mode. That is the category that black people always supposed to be in the silly mode, the destructive mode, don't let them think about anything serious, because then they become a danger. So and here's the weird dichotomy that you were put in, because one, if we're silly, mass media puts us on a pedestal and amplifies our message, right. But if we're serious, we
have one or two things happen. Either you get co opted by parties, like the liberal movement, I'm saying like feminism, the left hand side, or if you choose to join the right hand side, you're not black anymore, right? So it's like, I'm screwed either way. It's like, either, I had to stay silly. even go to the Democrats and push their narrative, which is what we just laid out. I'm saying for detail, right? It's just a manipulation of the fear, or is to be ostracized from your
people. And then you get called like, farecast that you're different, or you're different. You're different. I've heard that all my life and I know what that means. Like, but that's not a compliment. No, let people know that they're just not aware of how that comes across. It's like, oh, you're not the stereotypical now would you say that? I mean, like this. I don't know a lot. I think a lot of people would just start racially
awkward. And they don't know. It's like, oh, you're you know, you're different ignorant. is completely completely ignorant. It's a
¶ Getting the truth out there
100,000% stupidity, ignorance, of course, and that's the thing. That's why I commend Malcolm Senate that's coming to the table, we can tell each other how these things are received and perceived. And that way we can understand understandings, like seek first to understand then to be understood. So that's when you say that just know how it's going to be received. Um, now, for a person, you know, like myself, I understand what you mean. Um, you're not like how
the media portrayed. I know, that's what you mean. But how it's heard is your it could be heard is that you're not the stereotypical of how the media portrays. So right there, but that's the weird place they put you. It's like, Okay, do I, I'm not gonna be silly. I'm never gonna be a silly person. I'm all I'm all. I like to have a fun time. But I'm always no, I'm not no silly person. But at the same time, I'm not going to push the
narrative. So then that leads me to isolation, which, if you don't care about being ostracized or isolated, then that's real freedom. And that's where I'm at right now. It shows, it shows. It's very obvious. It's, it's nice. It's nice to listen to. Yeah, so I mean, but that's just so but you're not, you know, you're, I tell the difference. But you, I mean, you, you're pretty good filters, you were able to separate stuff pretty well. But now there's just an extra layer
is come off. Watch out, watch this. Watch this man, ladies and gentlemen, an extra layer was that you never want to be fancy for the sake of being offensive. So it's like, okay, I know, people that I work with, listen to the show. I don't want to make them feel a certain way. Because my decision, but now it's like, okay, you've put me in a position to be speak freely. And I appreciate that, like I said, and who keeps me in that position? Are the producers. I mean, that's why it's so
important for them. Yes, is that I'm gonna continue to keep giving people the truth. And I've always getting the truth, but at the same time, it's like, you know, just being respectful out of respect, and I still have respect, but it's just, you put me in a weird spot. But I digress. So let's go ahead and get back. So I'm not gonna play for 28 because we just what we covered last week, as well as show 43 for NPR that says the prevalence of communism and sharecropping, we've talked
¶ The summer of 1919
about on several occasions, but this is an example of serious black people not had to lay this out a little bit. So basically, you had two things going on in 1919. You had the red summer 1919, which was by riddle with a huge number of lynchings. But at the same time, you had what they called the Red Scare of 1919. Yep. Which was the Bolsheviks. Yep. So what we covered in last week's show, and there is a there were serious black people
that were considering communism. And they were taken as a serious threat and and a lot of those lynchings were politically based. Now we talked about the genetics and fear of crossing and fear of disease and that kind of thing out of the thing is, they saw black people as a threat, if the Bolsheviks slash Russians could activate us for their good. So you had these two things going on in the same summer 1919. So let's go and get into number 26. The voices of freedom.
The summer of 1919 is the crest of one of the most vicious years in American history. There are riots that was gonna sweep the nation. There not just southern riots. Not only have segregation and the underlying ethos of Jim Crow gone national, but the commitment to reinforcing and defending them through through terroristic violence is also national. Jim Crow was following the Great Migration northward, and both have landed in Chicago.
In the last two years alone, an estimated 50,000 black people had arrived in the city, almost doubling Chicago's African American population. While you arrivals crowded up uneasily against a huge influx of immigrants fleeing Southern and Eastern Europe. Those European migrants were divided by religion, language and ethnicity. Have they held one thing in common and antipathy toward black people? So, two things I want to point out in this clip, one that she
said the Jim Crow era followed him north. This myth that the North was so much freer this house course, that's that just that we have to think that way because you know, Democrats, but that's how it was bait. Like I said, That's how this mind control is baiting and all they were freer in the north, as you see known. And then you can even tell us even maybe even you can make the case for being worse. Because hearing people fresh
¶ Indoctrinated that black people are bad
coming here from other places, and there and quickly indoctrinated that black people are bad. And I think it was, I think there were a lot of polish in the early days that went to Chicago, there's a good movie, what's it called? What is it, Fargo that shows this with Chris Rock? That shows how the Polish then it would be the Jewish then it would be the blacks? And the Irish? Fighting for their piece of the pie? Yeah, and this
resulted in a lot of gangs and mobs and that kind of stuff. So, um, yeah, so it was everybody was fighting for their piece of the pie. But it just tears down the narrative that the sound was so much worse, or chorus or yeah, in Jim Crow, but they also had to paint that because they were running a lot of black people offer their land. Using the KKK wasn't just fear out of, you know, segregation, it was also a political tool to get black people to either, you know, forfeit their land or sell
their land. Right. So and they needed. It's convenient how the mass migration also aligned with the, with the World War One. See in 1914 is like when it really cool. Yeah, immigration kicked off. And world wars have always changed the world in many, many ways. And whatever World War Three is, which we're probably in, once it's over, we'll have a change world. Yeah, but the thing was, was the it's kind of like they knew they were going to be sending the large population or the white
men out to fight. So they needed, you know, basically workers in from the south, forced to the north to backfill those jobs. And then what was happening in 1919, a lot of those guys were coming back from the war, looking to get their jobs back, along with the newly immigrated and the newly migrated. And that's what made this a powder keg. And to be honest with you, we see a lot of these American cities in the same boat. It's a powder keg in the same way. Yes, right now.
Because you have mass migration, and you're saying coming from the south southern border. You have a lot of these cities like San Francisco and Chicago and even that's why Minneapolis in Minnesota keeps popping up because they have the huge rally. Yeah. So these people are fighting for their piece that you're saying for their piece of the pie, or they're saying their piece of the cake. So this is what causes this hotbed. But at the end of the day, everybody's gonna be against black people.
Even Somalis? That's the crazy thing. That is the funniest. Yeah, it makes that go to show you it's, it's a it's a Mind Control. They're under so I guess we can go ahead and get into the second part of this 1919 clip.
¶ The Chicago Powder Keg
Basically, so owners exploited racial tensions, frequently using black workers to undercut wages and break strikes. Marriner Henderson travels to Chicago in 1990. That's basically a powder keg. And it has many of the conditions that you'll see in cities across the country. There's pressure on housing, there's competition over jobs. There are returning soldiers black and white. Black soldiers, angry about their world war one experience and convince that they've earned
their full citizenship right. And white soldiers determined to keep African Americans from acting on their convictions. More Sammy afternoon of July 27 14 year old Eugene Williams was killed when his wife drifted into the white section of the 29th Street Beach. A policeman refused to arrest his assailant. Fights broke out between black and white bystanders. So, this is what I was talking about. He was the image seal of the North that nobody talks about. Eugene Williams
¶ Eugene Williams murder
at We've mentioned him on the show before, I think we did. And now a little foreshadowing, you're saying, to get to this point that you hear about Emmett Till even to the point where you highlighted that they named the bill after him. But you need Eugene Williams, murder was actually suppressed. Here's an even by black publications because they didn't want to
break the narrative that black people need to come north. And a lot of that propaganda was put into the black newspapers and distributed to the South that the North was this Mecca, or this, you know, this utopia for black people, which made them you know, want to seek out coming to the north. What's his name again? Eugene Williams. So just the story while you're looking it
up, is he was a 14 year old kid that was on a raft? Ah, yes, he floated from the black side of the beach, to the white beach. Yeah. And he was stoned to death. Because he was trying, you know, they threw rocks at him until he was saying he drowned, right? And this is the lynching. But they won't, they didn't highlight like that, because they wanted to portray
the South as the problem, right. And God was put on us. Also, just saying, just to highlight the point even more, which destabilize the voting power that black people had in the south, that they feared that they were exercise. So it was kind of like, let's just redistribute, you know, black people across America that kind of took away their, you know, potency. And then we go into, you know, saying, you know, urban renewal and that kind of thing, how they created projects
¶ Playing on fears of the red scare
and those kind of things to houses. And so I'm just saying this is the kind of thing that was going on. And the Russian saw the Russia saw a we got a real opportunity to foment you know, division. They saw me and they see it now. That's what I'm talking about. Yeah, this is not a history show. This is this is a real deal. I'm consequences. And people are seeing you're seeing this country divided and they're going to play on it, as
they did in 1919. With the Red Scare, but the last committee wasn't only interested in foreign and leftist groups in isolation. They also claimed that these groups were planning to radicalize African Americans to help overthrow the government. This reflected a common view of African Americans as Bolshevik sympathizers during the summer of 1919. We saw widespread race riots in dozens of American cities. African Americans were labeled Wobblies that's an eye
WW. Remember socialists, Bolsheviks or anarchists if they criticized orthodox American politics or capitalism, resistance and questioning Jim Crow laws or black disenfranchisement was linked in the eyes of many to Soviet Russia. black newspapers were monitored and investigated by the US government for fear that these periodicals would attempt
to both advise African Americans. J. Edgar Hoover even referred to the black community newspaper The messenger as the Russian organ of the Bolsheviki in the United States, and he believed that the weekly Negro world advocated Soviet Russian rule and Bolshevism. The US Military Intelligence Division even concluded that the civil rights organization, the NAACP was controlled by Bolsheviks.
Oh, okay. So yes, this is not a history show. What you're telling me is that the Marxist leaders self proclaimed professional Marxist organizers, etc. of Black Lives Matter, Inc. That that is on purpose in order to hate black people. Yes. Oh, my goodness. And also to say that they're also putting the far right are anybody on the right in bed with the Russians? Wait a minute, say this again.
They're notice every Trump is right. I know. I got that. But But yeah, basically is Trump. Putin, you he was saying if you like Trump, you're Russian. Right but that that plays off against the the the communists? I'm not quite sure either. Either way they could put you in the bed with the Russians. Either your Marxist communist Russians. Are you pro? Yeah. It's like it doesn't mean Russian. Yeah, whatever. Russia is just the universal bad guy. Doesn't matter which side you're on.
Correct. Well, that's very smart. It's really working. Well, I'm impressed into just doing it for the what fourth time now. Yeah. And I'll give you a sample of it. Now, and I am and I don't want to speak this into existence. I had to point it out to people. Now you realize Kanye West is going to Putin. Talk to Putin. hang out in Russia, right? Oh my goodness. Yeah. Trump, cognac to Trump Trump Putin kinase the Russian stooge
Yep. So I'm just saying that they're gonna leave black people holding the bag on either side of it either next thing if you go to the Democrats then you're a Marxist or communist and if you go to the Republicans then you're down Yeah, yeah. Oh, this is so smart. But it's doing the same thing for years and years and years. And we just keep fought we just keep falling for it. We are numbnuts man
they got they got good propaganda. But that's the kind of wow like wow, these shows like what we do here important. And I know that was a shorter segment, but now we got to go back and thank the rest of the people. Yes, we do. First let's talk about our like brand new money.
¶ Value for Value
I just I don't want anybody around me is not I don't want to have a new one that our brand than an old 20 That's kind of dumb. But there's some new money that excites you like $100 bills. Hello, money. Oh, most beautiful thing on earth is $100 bill. I haven't seen a woman is good looking as $100 bill. Our buildings have we like the $100 bills. We also like smaller bills doesn't matter its value for value. That's what it's all about. And I'm gonna go as fast as I can through this because I know
we're all very excited. Now that we've caught up we know where we are in this repeat of history. I can't wait to find out what happens next. Because then we'll be able to prepare. But first let us thank a few people who came in under $50 Justin D. He says the juicy episode I was about to foolishly skip or I'm glad you didn't. We got a couple of 3330 threes from Christopher
Raymer. Who says in the morning Adam mo thank you for most informative and entertaining show Johnny Irish 3333 Hey, Mo and Adam started listening from the Star Report says but middlee Oregon Thomas, I think but middly. Better Betty? Can you go back and get Douglas muhc Oh, I'm sorry. I'm sorry. Yes, Douglas 4999. I missed that for me. We started well, then we really busted. There's no
promise of that here. Betty Solero are the 3333 So please, you've added a peel box so I can add you to my bill for a monthly subscription. Just a tip. This is cool. Yeah. Just you can do that from your bank, which a lot of people did do that. I'm seeing checks come in. Do bill pay. So nice way to donate as well. subscription base, you can just schedule it. Just the tip of the iceberg of the value I've received from
your work. Thank you Adam. Thank you mo Episodes Episode 69 is really all anyone listen to you to figure out what is going on and COVID 1984 Yes, that was a good fun episode. By the way really enjoyed hearing you on behind the scenes the behind the schemes with blueberry. Lots of fun blessings to both gesture gesture 33 appreciate you both for your courage as you tackle things if you were willing to approach with honest and true intentions truly can't find this education anywhere else. Wishing
you good fortune Mone regards to your place of work. But I have faith. You are exactly where you're meant to be either way here here you were both the light in the darkness love you guys wish you the best. I'd like to request karma for both of you, as well as the rest of the effects family always willing to do that. You've got
Matthew Medina 30. Thank you for that. Douglas angstrom 25 MO You said decriminalization by judges and DJs on the left and big cities will have a pendulum effect and lead to a new crime bill. What if it is a deliberate attempt by the left to stick the new crime bill with the next Republican president and congress in 2024. The left can't talk about the 94 crime bill because Joe Biden wrote it and Bill Clinton signed it after this the left can rail on the right for a racist crime billing
the media and still profit from the prison system. They've invested so much money in just the thought. Thank you. Love you guys. Yes, well, Sir Douglas instrum, I would say that's just the tactical bits. We're looking at the overall strategy in this episode today, I think shows us is much much bigger than this. Correct. That's just now play that into your favor because then it goes to show you that there that's totally we're trying to protect you from harm if it plays out that way, it'll
actually be beneficial to them. So exactly. He has a point there are at least Jenna mo enjoyed the last episode. About most years. Smalley eight. I've been enjoying the last tapes as well. Thank you. Yes, lots of tapes. Max. Pham always, always welcome here, and vice versa. Susan Tillet Keep up the great work.
25 Edwin Taurus. 25 Thanks. GBG get back to guns. James Larkins. 25 Paul Branham says excellence with 25 Thank you Then we have a number of people with the $20 donations here 2022 From Jesper, Jennifer Kinsey. She says I experienced synchronicity in the grand design or God has created in this realm. I listened to 73 on January 9, the day before my birthday, dug around was some facts you were spouting and afine and I have the same
birthday January 10. As soon as your podcast ended, my downloads autoplay and I hear Dave Smith intro himself as deliberate libertarian to POC, peace and love to you both. Yeah, that's synchronicity for sure. Look for 1111 Brian shall not $20 Come for the Music Intro outro stay for the deconstruction always good for listen anytime in the morning, mon Adam. Brian Rose us as I'm no longer a deadbeat. Well, you're not now that's for sure.
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number 74. More facts with Adam curry support us at mo facts calm slash donate or mo fund me.com moe fundme.com. Alright, so now we got to come to the present day, and how the red, this this is a weird set of clips. This is Karen. Karen
¶ Thanks he Russians targeting black americans
Hunter, I believe her name is. And she's a favorite of the show. We haven't heard from her recently. But this is her talking about how the Russians had tar always targeted black Americans. Now there's two sets of clips that the first two clips and the second two clips. In the first two, she's going to praise all the black historians and black leaders quote unquote leaders that were supported by the Russians. But then she does is weird trick in a second set of clips. So let's go and get into 32.
Russia has for a long time been trying to infiltrate our this wonderful democracy Republic that we have here in the United States of America. And since they started doing that the entry point has always been the source of greatest value, meaning Baldwin said the black American if the black American ever woke up to this, the Negro must understand that we are the greatest threat to this democracy from this standpoint, that how we go is how this country goes. And we don't
recognize the power of that, right. And what that means is that we from the inside, and I'm not saying you know that this can happen or this should happen or what have you, but based on how we're treated determines the future of this country. Our reaction to it. The Russians have always understood that. So they've tried to come in they've had various attempts during the first Great Migration in the 20s and 30s. They came in with the
Communist Party. And they played a significant role in defending civil rights for African Americans. Right. A Philip Randolph probably single handedly was one of the most instrumental he actually planned the March on Washington. He bet Ruston and like it wouldn't have happened without him. But also in labor. He changed the paradigm and he was working similarly to Martin Luther King with the President and and desegregate a lot of workforce. But the Russians also had a hand in that Right. Right.
So what do we what do we say and what that whole clip huh? She said, A Philip Randolph wish I knew this, but I just want to lay out for people planned the March on Washington with the help of the Russians. And Hemet MLK we're working with. We know any of this one when did this all begin I knew this for my black history professor, Dr. Moseley, anti state, you know, Nakula, anti State University. I knew this. And he's really the one that really got me into like,
looking into things that were given to us. Yes. So a Philip Randolph was big on the March on Washington, him and Bay are resting, which we talked about Bejar numerous times show. Yeah. But what she's saying is the Russian was back in a Philip Randolph, and then they were working with the President. The I can't remember LBJ. Lyndon Baines Johnson. So what are we saying here? I mean, like, I just thought that was a weird. This nugget is very interesting.
Were they working on the inside with the President? I mean, like was LBJ working with the Russians? I mean, I really don't know. And what does now we got to talk about black Hoover. Right? Yeah. So I mean, yeah, you tie all this together, but I don't want to belabor the point. But I just thought that was interesting that, and she praises him by Oh, yeah. He worked with the Russians. Yeah, it was, it was all good. And then they continue on with the second part of the clip number 35.
Paul Robson, one of the greatest of all time. Yeah. So you know, they he actually they work with him to file a petition and title we charged genocide with the United Nations in 1949. Didn't go through, but they were trying to say, Hey, this is happening. He's saying there many, many, many times in Moscow. Yeah. 1960s and 70s, Black Panther movement. But my question is, right. And similar to what you were talking about with Namibia, people will always try to colonize or try to
attempt to come in, and this is a very weak part. And this is what I said, you know, America's hypocrisy will be her undoing. It's not black people's fault that America say We hold these truths to be self evident, evident that all men are created equal and then enslaved people. Yeah, it's not it's not black people's fault. They don't us no, no. And you know that at the end of the day, you know, if you are a person who subscribes to being white in America, you're subscribing to a system that was
in place to denigrate and destroy people. You're participating in the destruction of America, I believe. Right? And so Russia is watching. And during the 2016 election, while everyone's like Trump, Trump, Trump, who you referenced lynching today, as you know, being something that he's he's being strung out, you know, like, really, and people gave
him a history lesson. And again, the clay Kane show today was brilliant, brilliant, and unpacking that and why this President is so not just Wolf, I think he was he did that on purpose. So I don't think he's ignorant. He used those words, because he's trying to diminish something. Much the way we talked yesterday about Tulsa, Oklahoma, if you can erase people's actual experiences in history, then you get to go on and tell the story that you want. But it's not true.
Yeah. When you disrespect our history, you literally try to erase us. We're not here for it. Literally, literally, literally. A racist. Yeah. But which I find interesting that she pulls short is the system of white supremacy. See, when you're on a platform like that, you can't even say those words. Unless, unless they're sanctioned. Exactly. But you had to be given the green light like, Yeah, well, who you're invoking it towards all America? No, no, no, you can't use that. A certain
political party go for it. It's that kind of thing. So. So the, the point from that clip was that you have all I mean, they have this history of working with Russia and Paul Robeson and those kind of things. But then they prostituted themselves out for years and for media, a political narrative, which I find like you're basically doing what you're accused of being done. Of course. Yes, this is a this is something that happens a lot. Right? So um, we won't be that dead, dead horse anymore. Now we
¶ A different kind of lynching
want to go into who Paul Robeson was because she mentioned his name. And I want to give you an example of this is the different kind of lynching. And this is kind of what Clarence Thomas was saying about high tech lynching. Uh huh. This is when they bring you before Congress or the special panels or with the media with a media event. Yes, the media event was called the House of UnAmerican
Activities Committee. So this is interpreted by James Rhodes No one is probably the only man that could do Paul Robeson his voice. But this is I just want to point out it's accurate, but it is a reading by James Jones of what took place. And this is the testimony of Paul Roberts Robeson. Excuse me. Are you now a member of the Communist Party? Oh, please, please, please. That's a really Mr. Robson. What is the Communist Party? What do you mean by that? Are you now and member of
the con? Would you like to come to the ballot box? When I vote and take off the ballot and see Miss Chairman I respect you suggest what does it be directed? To answer the question, you are directed to answer the question, I invoke the Fifth Amendment and forget it. I respectfully suggest the witness be directed to answer the question whether if he gave us a truthful answer, he would be supplying information which might be used against him in a criminal proceeding, you are directed to answer.
In the first place, wherever I've been in the world, the first to die in the struggle against fascism, where the communists I laid many reefs upon the graves of communists, that is not criminal. Chief Justice Warren, has been very clear that the Fifth Amendment does not have anything to do with the inference of criminality. And I invoke the Fifth Amendment. Have you ever been known under the name of John towel? See,
there's somebody here want me to put up a perjury someplace? John Thomas, my name is Paul Wilson. And anything I have to say, I have said in public all over the world. And that is why I'm here. This is the Chairman, I asked you to direct the witness to answer the question. He's making his tie, I ask you to affirm or deny the fact that your Communist Party name is on the system. And
this is really good. The witness talks very loud when he makes a speech, but when he looks a fisherman, I can't hear him. I have medals for diction. I can talk plenty loud. When you talk a little louder. I invoke the Fifth Amendment loudly. Man, I don't know anything about this dude. So he, he was that he was a very huge figure is musician, right? Yes. Musician, I think opera singer actors, civil rights activists. Right. Right. Right. Right. His legacy is as a
communist. And I'm just saying, going to show you that. Once again, you can't hear from the sound of his voice that he's a serious person. He has no room. Well, this railroad just railroading they're doing over him invoking the Fifth Amendment is insane. I mean, if you did that today, it would be that would be an outrage, would it looking at January 6 People would it really wouldn't react now what we'll see. I mean, they bring the stones and Jones's.
But they're not showing it. You see, that's the problem. This, this was clearly a public hearing. They understand the optics of it. So I mean, that's why they're doing Skypes and those kinds of things. But I'm just saying that when you're on the wrong side of the system, now, this is not a fun place. It's not a fun place to be. And that's what they were telling Paul Robeson basically answers, boy, I don't care about your fifth amendment. Yeah.
Which he's right there basis and your rights don't protect you because you don't have them. So this wetland said, it being your rights being a privilege that can be quickly taken away from you. And once again, I'm not saying this is not for historical aspects. This is letting you know what is available. In their caveat of different tools. It's like yeah, it's like yeah, okay. We can pull this one out your fear, oh,
we don't care about your fear answers. And if you don't answer it, guess what you purge you do any of you even come to the FBI. He perjured yourself. And I'm gonna give you another example of a lynching. And like I said, when I use this word, I don't
¶ Barry Bonds
want to disrespect actual people that got killed. But um, we you take when you kill somebody's identity, likeness, image, rape, reputation, that's all forms of lynching General Flynn. General Flynn, and then Barry Bonds. Yeah, yeah. He paid the price for all baseball players. So I'm just saying I just want to point that out. You're saying before we move on, yeah, that's true. Example of a lynching when people say lynching and this Cosby, same thing, you know, and it's rightfully should he been
dragged through the mud? Yes. But when you see your peers not done the same way, and they're all passing out disco biscuits, it's like, hold on, and I'm gonna show you example of it. Coffee has this special show. Sam is done in a serious manner. With amazing how to use seriousness when it's to demonize but then we have a special on Hugh Hefner. It's
kind of like bubbly and like, oh yeah. You know, it's kind of it's kind of a culture, Batman, you know, to pass out pills and not not women out, you know, it's kind of, you know, kind of thing. It's like, whoa, like, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, where's the equity? You know, when these people start talking about equity? This is I say this to say, as a Karen Hunter was saying, yeah, the hypocrisy does give a stronghold for outside elements to come in and stir up trouble. You know, so and
especially in the town that we're in right now. But moving
¶ Russia thanks
forward, let's go back to I guess, number 34. And this is where they're not noticed. They were saying how great all the works that Russians had helped done in civil rights history. And prominent people, they support it. Now watch this quick. One ad they do. So So I say all this to say, Yeah. And you know, no, I think there's some people say, well, we just get rid of black people, then we wouldn't have a problem. But your problem is not black
people. Your problem is hypocrisy. Getting rid of black people will not change the reality that this country was based on. There'll be another black do another group. There'll be another group. Yeah, trust me. And it'll be probably even more horrific, because it's harder, because we're easy to see. Yeah. You know, the see. But But I say all this to say the question, is there a lot of people that will take that
Russian check. A lot of people that will take that Russian support that that and I even had one of my former classmates or classmates, one of my students are from Hunter College who was targeted by the Russians during 2016. Yeah. And and it was willfully targeting black people. Yeah. Which we'll talk about in a second. But my question is, do you think that the USSR, which don't no longer exist? Do you think that Russia
will treat black people any better? Then then America? Do you think after they use you to get what they want, because what they want is total destruction of democracy, democracy. And by any means necessary, any means necessary, even if even if it means shaking hands with your black ass, or even bolstering you giving you millions of dollars, they have money, even if it means pouring buckets of money into your organization, then, so the notion normally is the enemy of
my enemy is my friend. But what happens when the enemy of your enemy wins? Yeah. Because you help them win? Because you gave them an entry point. What happens to you? Yeah, what do you think happens to you when you're no longer valuable? Yeah. When was this? When was this? This? This was 2019. election, but this was the black box thing all over again. Right? The Russian bots, this was her take on it. Now you just sit here and say how Russia funding the civil rights bill, none. And you're
saying and you know, people are a Philip Randolph. And, you know, all this change that came about? These are her words. But then say, Oh, if you take Russian money now or in bed with the Russian now against the Democratic Party? Are they gonna have your back? See they did. This is often the same segment. This is this is all chronologically. You're saying? It's laid out chronologically. This is not me altering the conversation anyway. They went from how great the Russians were
in the past. To now it's like, Oh, do you really want to take Russian money and get in bed with Russian bots? Yeah. It's the cognitive dissonance for me. It's like she's writing hypocrisy. It does give the it does give the America a weak point. It does give white supremacy a weak point. That's why memes are so powerful. Because memes do nothing but point out hypocrisy. Yep. Yeah. And it can be as simple as some douchebag Governor having dinner at a fancy restaurant during lockdown.
Right. That's why it is powerful. But in the fact that she says, Well, you don't want to step out don't leave the blue plantation for the red Play. Oh, yeah. The Republicans but the Russians, yes. You know, they might be bad and I'm not saying take Russia but what I'm saying is if you are using your logic that a Philip Randolph and Martin Luther King got so much done with the help of Russians, I know the way we want to go.
It's it's a mind if it makes you it makes you crazy to think about what that's the chaos, right? But But I still love that it's, you know, hey, we're we're bringing these Marxist elements because you know, Black Lives Matter Inc. And it's really going to help us and we're bringing in the money and but really, you know, what's gonna wind up is it was gonna wind up hating y'all. And that's why we're doing it. I mean, the whole thing is so sick.
And like I said, this is in chronological, no manipulation. This is the this is how their conversation played out. Um, like our clothes like, I don't know where to go with this, are they saying they gonna take the Russian check? By I was confused when I first listened to it. I'm like, I don't understand black Americans need to get in bed with the Russians. But oh, no, no, no, this was just her way of saying a das or FBA or native blacks are basically in bed with the Russians. This is her way of
doing that's pretty sick. Oh, get sick or 35. Tell me about the 2016 election in the Russians and what you know. So what the would made me like the hairs on my neck stand up when when I saw, you know, when I saw some of the things that you were going to talk about today is because, well, we what, what happened in 2016 is that in all of the intelligence bureaus have said this right, even though the administration
continues to just sort of, like, ignore it. But all the Intelligence Bureau said that Russia was very specific about engaging, and try and engaging in infiltrating black social media circles. So they were very clear, and trying to create divides within the African American community in the 20s in the 2016. Election, by creating things like anti Hillary memes in, in Bernie, in Bernie circles, anti Bernie memes in in
Hillary circles. And also they were they spent the majority of their of their capital on trying to influence African Americans in social and digital spaces. Wow, this is totally Russian bots. Yes. Holy This is that's really good. And to say that black people can't come up with this on their own. You know, that's, that's the real smack in the face. You know, they can't No, you need Russians for that man. And he's just it doesn't work. Otherwise, she's.
So this is the Red Scare. Yeah. But this this, this is coming down from their power structure that hate Russia. And we're seeing it now. I mean, now you're understanding who pulls their strings. Oh, heck, yeah. Oh, yeah. Then, I mean, Russia is the favorite now. It's the perfect tool for anything. But then I got to also ask the question, she said Russia was handing out checks, is created new Paul Robeson. Going to talk to Putin, I mean, like, that's the interest, or will he be used
as that? Well, I hear you, I hear you interest that we need to bring in Kenya and put him before a committee. What are you doing over here with Putin? But you're saying like that kind of thing? I'm not saying he took money, but could it be portrayed? The same way they did Paul Robeson to say, can't bring cayenne. Oh, you know, he was a Trump supporter, you know, you know, the Russian dossier. And, I mean, they'll just lump it all on him.
Could be I mean, that's in the timeline, it would make sense. If, like I said, I wouldn't give any people ideas, but I'll
¶ The meme stream media
finish on this point about these clips is that now when I say memes, now you hear how powerful memes are? They were worried about anti Hillary and anti Bernie memes? You know these things? But like, Let's go Brandon. It's very disturbing to them. It is because it's, you can't really what do you how do you police that? I mean, when was F Joe Biden, you could hear all that. As vulgar. You know, you can't say that. I wish we see the sob thing with him saying it's like, oh, no, no problem.
Let's go, Brandon. But yeah, that's the thing is clever. It gets to the point. And that's why I'm gonna keep pushing this point of it's the mainstream media, because I'd love to do the same thing. They do segments and news stories, too. There's no no get information out. A mean, does it like that? In a split second? It's like, oh, Spider Man. I'll point to each
other. I get that you're saying the hypocrites in how do you police that I know you can also idiotic, and imagery is very important because the AI can't really detect it that well at all. By Friday AI can't, as far as I know, is not really capable of detecting irony, humor, this kind of stuff very difficult for artificial intelligence to do so the memes always get through. And that goes to the point what you're saying that were entertaining and they're not Yeah, they were they that's
where it kicks there. But it's like, no, I stumbled into this. I mean, like, honestly, I mean, I've always done the research that I've done, but just into you know, Sam podcast and that kind of thing. And we're running circles around these people here easily. It's not about me, it's like, it's an it's 1000s. Other means it's gonna wake up and said, let me do my part. Let me
make, you know, make memes. Let me post social media let me a podcast or let me make clips and put them on, you know, for other people to find, like everybody's pulling their work. And we're kicking their ass and they know it. And it's like, how do we, you know, how do we get these people back in line? Is this why podcasting is under such attack? Man? That's a really hot, right, who's in charge of that? Who do we call the kick somebody off? Yeah, no. Can you say I plead the fifth? I believe
I will say it as as clearly as I can. I plead the fifth. We found the father of the pod. Cancel him.
¶ Clarence Thomas the OG digital lyncher
Let's go into the Clarence Thomas thing because this is I think he's the OG of the high tech mansion, because they can't make it messy anymore. And this goes, well, you're saying like, why can't we have bodies on the street kind of thing to toss flag it? And they don't they can't do that. So their method of doing it now is the high tech lynching. And here's 37 Clarence Thomas, did not occur.
When it came time for him to publicly respond to the allegations, Thomas turned the tables on his interrogators, and for all intents and purposes ended the debate. This is a circus so national disgrace, it is a high tech lynching for uppity blacks who in any way deign to think for themselves and it is a message that unless you kowtow to an old order, you will be lynched, destroyed character toward by a committee of the US US Senate, rather than hung from a tree. And
that was led by Joe Biden. Oh, yeah. Oh, no. It's still in my mind that he said this. I was there you know, I'm not there there. But it was all over the place. And we just follow this like, holy crap. But they but they did always highlight the silly Mo. We have we got clarens We always put the silly in with with what was going on with him. Right and Dong silver and all that stuff. You know, that cut down the Pew pubic hair and coke and all that stuff? Yep.
And they use a knee to heal as I carry. Yeah. See Canada that have a color. He hadn't have. How did he survive this though? How did he survive it? He had really strong backing on their own on his side. Yeah. And I think a lot of men at that time understood like, this was kind of like the beginning of the meat to sexual harassment
kind of thing. They made him the face of that. Yeah. And I'm gonna cover this, you're saying in the last tapes of how they actually use a episode of Different world made by Bill Cosby, to kind of bring that into the psyche of black people. Because they had like a false hearing. It was like a, um, a mocking of the Clarence Thomas Thomas trial. Oh, Harry. Okay. Yeah. So I mean, he has strong backing, so he wouldn't worry about that. But they knew. That's the thing. They knew they
couldn't keep him out. So it was like, let's, let's make him an ACO Tom, and make the women hate him. Right. You know, and it has to be a black woman. Now it has to be a black woman has got to have sisters against them. You know, that kind of thing. Like all of this was laid out to destroy him. And that's why he I'm proud of him to say and I don't agree with his politics, of course. But I'm proud of him to say that this is a lynching. Upworthy negros. Yeah, and worst thing you ever can be his
buddy. But mo, mo, mo, you're different. I know. I understand that. Yes. Oh, my daddy son. Yes. That is a
¶ Moe's litmus test
fact. And this is my this is my litmus test. And I know this speaks for a lot of black men. If I can't look myself in the mirror and see myself as a man anymore. I look my son and I just say I'm a man anymore. I can't do it. And that, like I said, just to bring it full circle about understanding the VAX decision. Yeah, it's, I can't tell my son, I don't believe in something and still do it. Now, my answers had to do that for many years saying like, just for the sake of survival.
What's the My life is not on the line per se, but my reputation is and I can't look at my son. I'm like, a dad had to do this for you. Now. I'm not saying because I've been blessed with other opportunities. I don't, I don't hold against anybody had to do that. And I could put anything I completely empathize. with you because this is how disgusting This is. This is why they put it in a safe way. And Food Lion and Walmart's because you had that one weak moment. He's like, man, let me go and
get the shot man. Like, and then you I'm not saying you regret cuz I haven't went through it I'm just saying that it's not an easy decision to the point I'm just gonna be 4% transparent. I've been having headaches and stress and I'm never stressor, but the uncertainty of it. And the lingering the way they left you leaving it hanging in limbo, this this was boom, I'm gonna give you an analogy and not saying this is not disparage
¶ Like they had me on my knees with the rope around my neck
anybody actually, actually Lynch. But this is how I felt. They had me on my knees with the rubber on my neck. And they say, boy, if you know your place you can go, right. I don't know my place. Because what I realize is, this is a very big world. And instantly your great reset is my great reset your bill back better is my build back better. Let's go. Right. So that's where I'm at with it. So I couldn't. And each person has their their
line in the sand. That was my red line to say. That was my red line. No, I can't do this. And I'm proud of you for Mo Yeah, you know, it was my red line two, but I have different set of circumstances, you have a much riskier position. And, and you can be proud of yourself. Right. And of course, I'm not a fool. I mean, I may add provisions, but yet and still, I have to do that to see these
¶ Stepping out on faith
things all the way out. Because this is I believe I met where I was supposed to be it. I don't think anything is by chance. All the doors that have been opened up for me and continue to open up for me. I'm stepping out on faith. And I just like that's the point of it. So, um, I guess we got a couple more clips that we get to, um like I said, I'm I'm cognizant of time, okay. Oh, man, I was saying cuz it just, I don't I don't want to make, you
know, make the show too long. But this, there's Clarence Thomas, and he's a very misunderstood man. And I looked
¶ Clarence Thomas: from seminary to Marxism?
at him because he had the same courage. He could have easily had the good life and be a Democrat you know, and and go that route because he was already there. A little people don't know, Clarence Thomas was damn near Marxists. In college. I didn't know that. Well, this list about 38 bad things were happening. My grandfather kicked me out. Kennedy was assassinated. I remember sitting there, Kennedy King Kennedy KKK. I remember right. Oh, my God, there it is
KKK you know. And it was, it was that was probably last straw. I mean, I didn't need a last straw. But that was it. That was the nail in the coffin for me. And for the first time in my life, racism and race explained everything and became sort of the substitute religion. A shoved aside, Catholicism, and that was just hymns all about. Every southern Black had known such moments, and felt the rage that threatened to burn through the mask of meekness and
submission, behind which we hit our true feelings. I'm angry with my grandfather, I'm angry with the church. If it's a warm day, I'm angry. If it's a cold day, I'm angry. I'm just saying, I'm angry. I'm sort of flying, lashing out at every single thing. Nothing is right. So this is him being radicalized. He was actually in
seminary. But when Martin Luther King got killed, and how his some of his brothers and seminary white brothers seminary treated assassination you're saying and was very racist about it? It kind of a weaponized him and a, what's the word I'm looking for? Not weaponized. Radek? radicalize Thank you. It radicalized him. So he went for seminary too far. Wow, I had no idea about the Marxist.
Yeah, he went from being raised in a strong patriarchal household by his grandfather going to seminary experiencing what happened with Martin Luther King and he laid out all the king Kennedy cameras and the two Kennedys and King the KKK assassinations to radicalizing him all the way to go to the other end. In the spectrum of being a Marxist Yeah. So I say that to say that it was a really recent statement by Joe Biden.
And we can just play it right quick just to remind people that he says that George Floyd was worldwide and Pat has more of a worldwide impact on Martin King. Yeah. And he's, uh, he's right. And I'll tell you why. On the other side of, he's going down at texted on June teeth, right. The first major massacre, literally speaking of the Black Wall Street, years ago, he's going to have a rally kind of a rally. And he doesn't wear a mask because he doesn't think I mean,
come on. But even Dr. King's assassination did not have the worldwide impact. The George Floyd's for what George Floyd happened to George Floyd. Now you got how many people around the country, millions of cell phones is changed the way everybody's looking at this? Look at the millions of people marching around the world, the world. So my point is that I think people are really realize that this is a battle for the soul of America. Who are we?
Okay, so the reason why I say he's right is Martin Luther King understands death. They were able to use the insane for riots in America, insane. A lot of the major cities burned in his mind. He said, Did you see this lynching? Oh, George Floyd, it was much better. It was global. That's what he said in his mind,
¶ Digital lynching
and I'm gonna show you how he went for one second, not knowing what the hell he was talking about saying. June, June, June.
¶ That's just Joe
Black Wall Street, but then when he's talking about controlling black folks, he perks up. Yeah, he. You heard him in his voice. He's like, let me tell you. What happened that Boy Floyd. Let's bring it in here. That was first funny. And he doesn't wear a mask if he doesn't. But even Dr. King's assassination did not have the worldwide impact. Then George Floyd's death, and I was there who wouldn't George Floyd happen to George Floyd? Now you got how many people around the country?
Interesting. What happened to George Floyd and he stops it like, hey, how many cell phones they got cell phones everywhere. Everyone saw this? Yeah, you're right. Right. And but you hear how he changed? Yeah. Yeah, cell phones. Cell phones. Yeah, it's changed the way everybody's looking at this. Yeah, he's Cognizant there. Yeah, peak. He gets it cuz he's like, Man, this kind of lynchin this having that pain. They're having voting for us for another 40
years. That's his mentality that all we have to do now is how to use that the rollout Dr. King said January, babies rollout George Floyd played a tape remember, you know, we're over there. Yeah. Yeah, these white supremacist who are running the show, they, you know, if that's their best guy. Maybe he's just the guy that throw away. Exactly. I just toss him out for collateral damage. And I know Joe did it again, another crime bill. But I mean, that's, that's their mentality. And he's
getting used. I mean, of course, but he believed I mean, I always think Joe Biden's gonna take the best deal possible. That's why he Joe Biden, bipartisan, bipartisan Biden, because he just wants to win. You see, like what Ukraine, whoever you know, matters and where's the money? Yeah, that's his mentality. But he understands he understands the psychology we talked about before he understand the psychological, psychological effects of black people and how these mind control mechanisms
affect them. And that goes to show you that's why I played this clip because Claire's Thomas went from seminary to being a Marxist. Yeah. Just from the MLK assassination. How many other people you know say it pushed him over the AFC and George fluid? It's the same thing. Yeah. And it's the same mentality of we're the ones that protect you from the bad people. So don't ever get out of line cut we'll let them go that's that's the message that's the part but they say they say the
quiet part out loud. That's the thing like don't let us get out of the way of these white supremacy string you up again. No, no, you please vote. That's that's the mentality and that's
why I find it disgusting. And it's why I've done this show and done the Justice show about it because when they pulled that it was triggering for me that you think you could trigger me me if that makes sense like You think that I'm net based and dumb and in low level thinking that you can just roll out these fear tactics and it works but it does work um but it's insulting because you see it right away and and in you know like like the jurors like come on man this is this is
crazy what are you guys doing? Correct So let's go ahead and wrap up I got two last final clips and this is just the the radicalization of Clarence Thomas. So I guess we start with a 1.2
¶ The radicalization of Clarence Thomas
and we found his way to Holy Cross, he was entering a society that was in turmoil and he found his way to other blacks at Holy Cross who were very radical and Marxist. Wow was supposed to be revolutionaries. So you go to the local army, navy store and wisdom and you get army fatigues and boots. Why that was the dress is beyond me, but that's the way we dress. I work carpenters pants we go shoot the cops was you know black brothers in the back.
We refer anybody who's kind of in your face to be Stokely Carmichael, like the age rap Brown. Brothers media maintain that they will failure until university willing to talk on that term. It could be Angela Davis. It could be Huey Newton. So the more radical tended to be the people we gravitated to. Wow, what was that from? What was that specials that's from his, his documentary created equal Clarence Thomas, in his own words, which I felt like I learned a lot of stuff by watching that I had no
idea about him. Like he didn't know any of this stuff. Yeah, but guess who else was a radical? Thomas sol. Sol. How you want to pronounce Oh, yeah. So so yeah. So basically, that's why they get on so hard because not only are they looking at him is, you know, right wing but kissers, they look at them as
traitors. Yeah. So they know their enemy. He was saying they live in, you know, they positioned and solve solidified and it continues to this day, and the programming is so strong that people smart people like Megyn Kelly, buy it. Russia bad. Yeah, it's kind of ingrained in that goes to show you the power of media manipulation because I used to feel that way. I mean, growing up as a child, you watch rocky for you watch Top Guns. Right. Right. Course.
What was the other one? A Red Dawn. I mean, all of these had you hate I mean, we will get finished watching the movie and like, ready to kill some Russian life used to be simply just wanted to go out and fight some Bruce Lee gang. And then we had to go fight Russians after the movie. Yeah. Right. So I mean, that's, but that's how they use even people from my age, like hate Russians, because it's like, you know, that's kind of how the propaganda they pushed us in the
80s. That the Russians were cheaters right before, right. You can't trust them, that kind of thing. They played underhandedly. but yet and still, you know, we see what was going on. But I got this final clip you're saying with Clarence Thomas, just a final wrap up about his radicalization and then how it were received from his father and his brother. And just keep in mind that Willie Lynch letter when you listen to this when I would go back home, the exchanges with my grandfather
were really hard. Talk about the revolution. I would not be drinking and wouldn't comb, my hair is bad. And he looked at me and he was saying, I didn't raise you to be like this after all, our sacrifices, this is what you become. And thought he was weak. And he thought I was I began up north and become an as he said damn educated foods that are went up north and they put all that foolishness in my head. And my brother who came back from the Vietnam War did like
what did he say? He told me that all of us should leave the country. Oh, you radical all of us to leave the country. He had no use for any. Oh, man. Divide them politically age, right, right down to the Abraham Lincoln solution. Yes. As probably pretty evil. And then somehow he was saying he went through the Spirit, just saying a cliffhanger. I'll leave you there. So you know, watch it
for yourself. He went through an experience that swung the pendulum back the other way that declares Thomas that we see today a more conservative person. So I'm just showing you that when Joe Biden said that when they do pull these stunts like the Jussie Smollett case, and all these things, they're
¶ Laying upon deep programming
Kerins. They're playing into a deeper programming. And it's often missed upon people that didn't go through experiences and understand how it's supposed to. And they're like, why are you so triggered but it's, I know how we're supposed to be meant. It's posted. Keep me in line. No vote the way you're supposed to vote. Choose you're saying believing science like supposed to be believing science? Or will D platforming like Farrakhan or are either Reza Islam interesting all those
people they just be platinum. Now you're out of here is even with pre COVID Because they knew they were gonna be a problem. They're like, No, no, no, we got to get the people out here ASAP. And like I said, it starts with us so we have the template I think you've explained that extremely well and appreciate and some of these these clips like the newer Neely fuller Jr. stuff was fantastic. Really good. I've learned a lot here. And you really know I think you you drove it home that
yeah, it starts it starts with you. But it's here. It's here for everybody. And we're playing right into it, particularly with the an intuitive intuitively, when I saw people coming out of the the, the COVID-19 days and starting to say hold on a second. This is stuff not right here. I'm like, don't don't ridicule these people. Accept them with love. You need to bring them in, you know, you need to bring them over. If we're just going i You idiot, I told you so it's not going to
help. It's exactly what what is what is desired. Because that's that's that another divide by Willie Lynch? Yeah, is this like, Oh, I was a true believer. It's I knew I
¶ Wrap
knew from the beginning. Whatever, whatever it was, you're saying many people you make you make a subset of the people that kind of want to get off the narrative, but it's like it's not safe. So they go back to you know, even pretending that they believed the narrative. We also now have fax machine.com That is pointing to our website, I could not resist. I like the name so much. Mo thank you so much. And thank you all to all our producers execs, associate
executives, the boosters out there, you know who you are. Mo facts.com support the show support the work. We'll be back in two weeks time and Moe once again congratulations on a new chapter in your life and thank you for another fantastic episode. I'm glad I could talk to you Adam. As always I enjoyed the
¶ Pay attention to Everything and the Truth will reveal itself
conversation that we have and we got a bright future ahead ourselves and I am getting my letter framed or framed go ahead and this is not the end of something but the beginning of something bigger and I am getting my letter framed. So and as I always say pay attention to everything and the true reveal
itself. Seven feeds berries, fresh fruit blood on the leaves black bodies exchange fruit hanging from the poppin trees pastorale see the gallon sounds them be balls in the air With the mouth of Magnolia clean and fresh then the sadness smell flash here is a fruit for the crows to plan for the rain together he is a stray