¶ Thank you to Dreb Scott for The Chapters he's baking!

Moe facts with Adam curry for April 5 2023 Episode number 91. Hey, did you miss? We're back with another
¶ Intro
manufacturer of Adam curry. That's right month of April 2023. I'm Adam curry coming to you. From the heart of the Texas Hill Country time once again to spin the Wheel of topics from here to Northern Virginia. Please say hello to my friend on the other end, ladies and gentlemen, Mr. Mo facts.
Hydro Adam,

a good mo How about yourself?
I'm doing well. Doing well.

I'm so happy to hear that now. It's it's been a man. Let me see the last time we did a show was I think February. I'm not mistaken, middle of February. And a lot of people missing us missing the regular shows. And Moe and I have been talking and kind of came to a conclusion that there was some big changes in your life. Moe. We started this show how many years ago? Is it been now? It's been for almost four years.
I think we're heading into the fourth year. Fourth year. No, no, no, no, we're headed toward the fourth year to the fourth. Yeah, exactly.

It's good. I remember because we first started talking when I was on my honeymoon. Right, which I remember. Remember that may 9, may 19 2019. And it was yeah, it was a violent man was maybe a couple of weeks after that after we were talking back and forth. And we decided, hey, let's do this show. Of course, things were very, very different than
you had. You had a corporate job you were kind of set the way you wanted your life to be the way that you expected it and then boom, not only did COVID hit, and they came out with the backs mandate, and that really changed everything, didn't it?
That took my life into a whole nother trajectory that I didn't expect, and has caused some time tension. Other
¶ The future
anything else? Because when I do this show, I'm dedicated 100% to making the highest quality product possible. And if I can't do that, then I guess we might need to make some changes. So as it looks right now, we're going to be bringing the show to end. But not right now. We're going into the final season, I guess that's how I look at it, we got I want to get to the 100 number. Because I think that's that's significant to me, as far as
accomplishment. As you know, I know, who knew I was gonna be a podcaster. First of all,

also, you were forced into being an entrepreneur, I mean, you have, you had to set up a whole different business just to really keep some consistency going and your family fed.
That's correct. And what people don't understand what the whole vac situation and why we talked about it so intensely on several episodes is, it wasn't that I was losing one job, and you go to another job, for what field I am in, there's kind of like a bureau were blackballed for lack of a better word, if you're not vexed. And so I had to, like I said, Go out on my own be an entrepreneur. And that's consuming far more time than I thought it would. But that's my
foundation of wealth. And as I told you, when we first discussed this, I'm torn between two families, my natural born family or you know, my actual birth family, and affects family. And this wasn't an easy decision. But I'm not going to look at it as a negative, I think we had 10 episodes to go, and we're gonna make a party out of it. That's the only way we can do it, and only fashion, and I have some episodes I've been dying to get to.

And also, I want people to know that, you know, it'll probably take me so the reason for the time in between episodes is literally because Moe has to do so much work. Ben, it was different when you had the corporate job was easier for you to find time to do that.
Allow me to explain the mechanics of that across the four years of us doing this show. When we first started, I was an individual contributor at my job. And I could consume a lot of content podcast, as you know, people consumed a level of content is being consumed. I could consume that while running my investigations and experiments. And I could make notes of timestamps as I was doing it. And then there was a change when I went into management, where you're more in
meetings, that's not that free airtime that I used to have. And that's when the show became a little bit more sporadic because I'm at the wheel of my family, my job, you know, Sam and myself squeezed in there and to end the show, and then it went from there. And then now I'm working for myself and it's even less time to actually digest the information. I want to let people know that, for instance, this show Listen to 90 pieces of information, some range and up to two hours. I don't do any
1.5x, as you pointed out, it's unhealthy. And I've never done it not good. It's very unhealthy. So I actually consume it. And then then you go on to the clipping process. And then the ranging and I'm very critical, I must tell myself when I'm doing this, because like I said, I'm a professional at doing this. I didn't start off that way. I mean, because this is my first first foray into podcasting. But what a hell of a way to do it with the guy who created I'm trying to tell
you, that's, that's a movie. We're gonna make a movie out of this once it's all said and done, because who How does that work? You know, how does that even work?

And also, we, you know, we you never know what the future will bring. And of course, we become friends, we become brothers throughout this process, and you will always be in fact, it was, the hardest part is because the show has to be fresh and us not really communicating beforehand, that's always been my rule. And that work? Well, you even would not listen to no agenda, which is how we how you found me in the
first place. And so we really couldn't even talk that much in between shows this because we didn't want to ruin too much of the show. And it just kept getting wider and wider. And, and, you know, you came to me and said, hey, you know, this is just what's going on. And I think it's the right decisions. Definitely the right decision for the show of suffering. No,
no doubt for your family, and you got four kids. And when I heard that you were falling asleep on the couch at night with your shoes on this is it but you know, we've we're gonna round it out, we got to including this 110 More episodes to go. So they will be spread out still, we'll be able to probably schedule them a little bit better now that we have less stress of trying to get stuff done. And you never know what the future will bring. You never know. So
you never know. You never know. And, and of

course, we're still valued for value. And we appreciate all the value people have given to the show, which has certainly helped income it certainly helped during the transition. But you becoming an entrepreneur, and we appreciate all of that. And we're you know, it I agree it's been to take this to 100 is going to be a it's also timeless, right? It's a it's a beautiful document, that that people will be able to
listen to far into the future. And and who knows what, what the next chapter will bring.
And that's the whole point of before we get to the wheel is that I want to make a product that you can start from one. And if you find it five years from now, if you're that one that found it five years from now, is still relevant. I try to unpack the history behind things. We hear a lot of surface talk, especially on the topic of race. We're not erased exclusively on this podcast. But that's what brought us to the
table right what Malcolm said exactly. And I think for years, we've been having a four year conversation where we didn't start off where we were friends today let's do a podcast. We have become integrated each other lives off of this conversation and and then what we take away from it back into our everyday lives. So hopefully we provide that value to other people that they can open up and have a conversation with someone
or at least have a better understanding about it. So like I said, this next, I'm trying to tell you these next 10 We're not going out on a date. I hated that. I brought it up I told you that before the wire my favorite television show went one season too long Game of Thrones, but one season too long. You are one thing about you always leave them wanting more. And in sports. You don't want to be the old Kobe. You see I'm saying like it this is not a retirement. I'm just saying the
retirement of this conversation is gone. Nobody did what we did and nobody will ever be able to do what we did. I'm certainly that

I'm very proud of the work we've done so far. And I can't wait to get all the way to one double. Oh man. Very exciting. What do you say? Syndication? Syndication we spin the wheel Malinche here we're gonna do today there is the
¶ Spin the wheel
wheel of topics run around it goes where it stops nobody knows course no facts does because he set it all up for us once again. A dynamite show the topic from olfaction Adam curry episode 91
is it's okay to be white.

Oh, oh, this is a show for me. It's okay to be white. Nice.
Okay, Adam. We're not we're not sure with the whole Rasmus poem. And and Mr. Scott Adams data interpretation. Yes. We had to talk about this. Scott Adam was right. And Scott Allen was wrong. So we're gonna have to fit by The end of the show, we'll figure out which is which homeless and what he was.

Do you realize how happy Scott Adams will be to know that a whole show was done about this particular chapter in his life?
I hope he hears Oh, believe he will

believe me. The love hate relationship with with Scott. I mean, I'm a fan. But what he did personally, I understood, I think I understood exactly what he did. I got it, you know, I need to kind of know his situation. I don't know if it's, if it's unpacking exactly the way he expected. But he's in a position I think, to where he can, you'll ride the wave, whichever ways it goes. And then of course, I'm really excited to hear what you have to say about and
the thing about it is I don't know how you this is this is the essence of this show. I don't know what your tapes were there. I stopped listening. Whenever there's something I'm going to work on. I think it's going to be on the no agenda show. I stopped listening. Yeah. So I don't know what your take is. And you don't know what my take is. But we're gonna walk through this. We're gonna walk through some, some some history, as we always do, and why maybe his statement was
taken that way. So let's just hop right in and newspaper drops
¶ Dropping Dilbert
Dilbert
We turn now to the fallout from the racist rant by the creator of one of the nation's top comic strips. Newspapers across the country are dropping Dilbert and Stephanie Ramos is here with more. Good morning, Stephanie. Hi there. Rebecca. This isn't the first time Dilbert comic strip creator Scott Adams has made some controversial comments, but he is now experiencing possibly the
biggest repercussion of his comments about race. This morning, another newspaper is dropping the popular comic strip Dilbert after its creator was accused of going on a racist rant. Dilbert is being canceled all over the country. The Star Tribune in Minneapolis is joined to the Los Angeles Times, Washington Post and USA Today, no longer printing the cartoon poking fun at office culture. After creator Scott Adams revealed his interpretation of a poll from recipes and reports.
If you nearly half of all blacks are not okay with white people, according to this poll, not according to me. According to this poll, that's a hate group. That's a hate group. And I don't want to have anything to do with them. And I would say, you know, based on the current way things are going, the best advice I would give to white people is to get the hell away from black people. Adam says he was only advising people to avoid hate and claims his quotes were taken out of context.

So first of all, not a single person reached out to me and said, Hey, man, you haven't done a show with Moe. Is that because you're taking Scott Adams advice? No one thought that no one thought that just
because we have an intelligent US producers. So I was shooting him. I said, that's what it is. He's taken Scott advice. So I had to be honest, the thing I was triggered about is the hate. Right, you let a minority of a poll. And I think it was really 13 Black people asked if my numbers are correct, somewhere around there, less than 20. That's more
¶ Always noodling for a reaction

than enough. That's just fine. And you let a minority
we're saying hey, they're a hate group, especially with what that term means. Now, we're not we're in a whole different world. When you start labeling people like that, that's all that's a hate group or that this and that. And then audacity thing, he could just join the black race, we didn't draft you in the race draft. can't join, you have to be drafted.

So here's here's how I took that one when I first heard it, and I'm going put it differently. In general, I like Scott Adams, what and I don't know really know him that well. But the only thing that I've never liked is the constant playing around because you know that everything he does, he's thought about, he thought about how he's going to do it. He's thought about, you know, what he's going to accentuate or exaggerate. And it's all it's all to mess with people's heads
to get a response to get a reaction. And I got tired of it. Like, I don't really know, when he's doing stuff, if it's the real Scott Adams, because that actually is Scott Adams. He's always noodling in people's heads to get some reaction to do something with it. And I personally as a human being, I got tired of it.
It is tiring. And that's to be honest with you. The only thing you're going to hear from Scott Adams, other than two clips, is that is the mean, because what we're going to do here is examine him he became a mean, yo, yeah, he became a viral sensation. This is what he wanted, but he doesn't understand and it wasn't black people were really upset because I'm gonna be honest with you. A lot of black people don't
know who Scott Adams is. Now we know Dilbert. You know, we've seen him in the newspaper we've seen And I'm on the what staples ads or whatever OfficeMax whatever as it was, I mean he was doing big promotions with what we don't know Scott Adams as a person. I was a little perturbed as a person witness that the vaccine his life, the way he the way he handled that. That's kind of how he came across my radar is more his take
on the VAX. And I think this was a distraction from that. Oh, interesting because he took so many ELLs he was getting he was getting mean to death off of his takes on Novak. So it's like, oh, let me stick my finger you know, and this socket to you know, a you're going to have a built in fan base. Let's be honest. Racism has a built in fan base. As soon as you say something that can be taken as racist. You have a built in fan base. Yeah, automatically and they assaulted him to like God
level when he said this. Yeah. Finally Scott Scott's telling the truth. Yeah. Which, as you know, me, Adam, um, what hurt? Weren't percent against force integration? Yes. More understanding. If you don't want to be around me, I don't want to be around you. That's perfect. I talked about this several times on the show. Like I said, The only issue I had with was the was the hate part. Because we know it be bi it was bi No, black identity, history and bi that that can be taken in a
whole nother way. And like I say, it'd be mean and shocking to be used for that. But I said enough

about that. But that's exactly the point that and that's that's the exception of all he had with what he's done. He puts the hate the word hate in there on purpose to trigger that's that's why he did that purposefully.
Correct. Which, I'm gonna shoot him some bail and bail him out. Sorry about that. It's a it's just one thing. I gotta give him the same benefit of doubt I gave Kanye Sure. Because he did the exact same thing I did is I have enough money where I could pretty much say anything. And it really does affect my day to day life. But oh, he was wrong.

Well, that's interesting. Because when DeVore I brought it up on no agenda. I said, I'm Scott, one full Kanye and to Warwick was laughing because he got it. He said, Oh, yeah, that's exactly exactly what it is. He went full Kanye. But I think he, he did it in a smarter way. I think he, when I saw him, and I knew it wasn't true. When I saw him go on Hotep and said, this is the this I did it all for this. I just want to have this one interview with you with Hotep. I'm like, Okay.
Well, we'll see was kinda true. I think he did some other stuff. But I thought that was a good wrap up. I thought it was a fun way for him to bring this thing to fruition.
Right. Which, as for my take on it, I can't tell if that was a damage control, or if it was pre planned. Same way with Kanye, you don't know. Reacting to the the blowback and he's AKA, spin it this way. Now.

I think he was looking for the seminal black man to have a conversation with should have been you honestly. He was looking. Because Hotep gets stuck on certain topics, which I think made and go beyond what Scott Adams understands about black Americans. And I'm certainly the I mean, does he really understand the Hotep culture? I don't understand it
fully. So that's right. That's taking it to another degree. But I think he was waiting for maybe he would have wanted more of a Jason Whitlock I think that probably would have been what he wanted. Just my guess that would have been more appropriate for him to roll out what he was really saying, but it worked well enough. And it wasn't too long was good. I enjoyed the I
enjoyed that episode. He didn't like okay, I got you. And yeah, it was and the only thing I then took into account is like, I I don't think I think it's a shame that he believes locals is the way to go. I mean, he's not doing it for the money. I would
¶ Taken out of context?
have preferred to have seen Dilbert value for value. That's all that that'd be my only thing. Wow, that there was a better way to do that. But okay.
Alright, so let's go on and get to the second part of GMA clip,
Adam says he was only advising people to avoid hate and claims his quotes were taken out of context. That is things that I went on live stream and said, stay away from black people, every one of them. There's no exceptions, whatever you do, just ask yourself do it wasn't really thinking behind it. Yeah, what was maybe a why to that that you haven't heard yet? If you heard it in context, what do you disagree with it? And the answer is, I haven't seen anybody disagree.
For three decades, Adams produced his comic strip Dilbert which satirizes office culture Dilbert appeared in 2000 newspapers in 65 countries and 25 languages, guys. All right, Stephanie.

Thank you, God. Thank you, Stephanie. Good report.
Thanks. So I don't buy that. There's no way you can take what he said out of context. Now you can say I was trolling to get attention, you know, to bring, you know, attention. I might be willing to say, Okay, that's a possibility. But what he's saying verbatim, and I've got it in the show a few times to remind us what he said, because that's why I'm a little skeptical. Because it's like, come on, like, how can you say black people becoming a hate group? And take that out of
context? Like, if you're saying I did this as a social experiment, maybe, but this could be taken out of context and then say, what was the other one just get the hat stay the hell away from them. That kind of thing? Where How can you take that out of context and be honest with you how many black neighbors do Scott out of really have riches a year? I mean, that's that's the thing is like, he just woke up one day as I'm leaving Harlem, you will say
like, come on, Scott. I mean, but it's two things. One, that it's okay to be white, we're gonna examine that it's a meme in itself, and then to the climate. I don't know if you're aware or not, because we know we have different Twitter timelines. And my timeline is kind of weird in itself. It there's a lot of videos showing black people attacking white people. Have you seen this? Is it showing up on your timeline? Yes,

yes. Particularly on like the subway. I've seen a lot of those videos.
Ooh, buses, the kid. Oh, yeah. Oh, yeah. Oh,

that one? The kids? Yes, I did see that. Yeah. And you know, I'm intelligent enough to know, is one video. But I can also see show you Sixth Street of Boston, where it's everybody's beaten up on everybody, you know, it was like, doesn't matter what color you are. So that's awesome rock, we're also in just a very violent, upsetting time for people. So those people just pissed off.
And it's no context is no timestamp. No, because feral people that when you remove these from the internet, you know, I'm not with it, you know, it's free speech, put it out there. And now the victims want to, you know, take legal action, that's another thing, because you should be able to protect your identity from being you know, to create it as a viral video and be you know, have that follow you for the
rest of your life. But these these videos can be 10 years old, who knows, but this is the this is the climate he chose to leap out in headfirst first, and say, Okay, stay away from black
¶ The algo's put the opposite in your timeline
people, because they're their hate group. And it's a lot of people that see these videos like, Yeah, but what I find interesting is, is the same people that can say, How can black people look at 15 second clip of a cop shooting, you know, and not know, get a you know, a certain, you know, how can they look at it and not know the context and get upset over the the saying people are getting upset over 15 seconds violent at, you know, clip, and they're getting upset over which
we all know, all this is fails. And

yes, exactly, thank you, you exist spells because what you would no one can take into account is what the algo is doing. And you know, I've studied this a lot. And algorithms certainly on Twitter, are divisive. They are meant just the American media model is, if you're, if you're anything here, the opposite will be brought in to your timeline. That's just so and it'll be the opposite of what you like. That's how the general American media model algorithm works.
It's what the television does is what politicians do. The only one funny enough, that doesn't do just tick tock, and they figured, but they got their own problems. But they like Bo, you're all black over here, you're all white over here, you're right over here, your left over here, your blue, your red, etc. So what we don't know is I have as you prefaced, I don't have your timeline. And you don't have my timeline. And then there's no way to ever know exactly what it is. But what
you're saying is correct, is different. And it's, it's intended to be triggering. And none of its real is to spell.
Right, and it's working very well. And another media adage that that was very popular is if it bleeds, it leads, I'm sure that is that's factored into the algo as well. And one more just to add some context and when he said the statement, right when he said this statement was the video of the legit kid, I mean, the kid allegedly attacking his teacher over a Nintendo Switch, right. That was simultaneously being said, I mean, happening when this is being said, I'm sure he
did not know. Right, so he stepped right in it. Just like I don't know, if Kanye knew that the ADL was having their, their annual meeting, when you said what he said, you know, or DD. I mean, these people are very intelligent. So who knows, but I'm just wanting to give context to how it was received. But for the most part, I didn't hear black people's being, oh, that Scott Adams, you know, that was the Boulais, the media class, the intellectuals.

I also don't think, really upset he did not intend to communicate with black people. He was communicating with white people. Right, no one else and when he went on Hotep, he knows Hotep. God, white people watching. So I correct and I don't think he would even attempt to communicate with black Americans. Honestly, I think he's smart enough to know, I really don't know.
He said he was in the family doesn't mean so it's like, yeah, you're leaving a little bit of adversity. He just bailed on us. Okay, got it goes. So I have a local report. And this is from this is what I witnessed on my local news. And I wanted to play this because we know once it goes local, this is like, Whoa, it was trending on youtube or twitter or Tik Tok,
¶ Trending...
or wherever. Let's get it into local news and get it out to the masses. And this actual segment is called trending. But this is Wu wsa. Nine and DC
trending this morning, fans of the comic strip at zilver will have to find their laughs elsewhere. Global Media Company Andrews McMeel. Universal has cut ties with the cartoonists behind the comic strip, Scott Adams following his recent social media commentary on race relations, in air quotes in America. Yeah, Adams was responding to a poll asking black Americans if
they agreed with the statement, it's okay to be white. The poll said just over half of the respondents agreed with the statement, Adams decided that made black people a hate group and said this. And I don't want to have anything to do with them. And I would say, you know, based on the current way things are going, the best advice I would give to white people is to get the hell away from black people.
Adams failed to acknowledge the phrase it's okay to be white was popularized by white nationalists online and is often used to troll people, newspapers across the US, including the Washington Post have dropped Dilbert. In response to these comments, Adam said on Twitter that he was only quote, advising people to avoid hate and suggested free speech and America is under assault.

And before before we talk about this, having been in corporate America and corporate culture Did you read about you look at Dilbert, did you identify with Dilbert corporate culture? I mean, is that something that they I mean, I've never really looked forward to the next Dilbert because I've never really been in in corporate culture that way. Right? Were you
I was more of a courteous fan. When I was reading comments, I mean, I haven't had a newspaper and how long so that was another thing that we don't buy newspapers anymore. I think he's bigger deals is probably with licensing and you're in the books and whatever. So Well, like I said, you aware who Dilbert is it's an icon you know that that that the head the artist style? Yeah. You know, the head yeah. Is iconic,
but we don't really know. It just isn't it doesn't it's a bad example to use with Scott Erica. We just it's lack of knowledge to be upset. You know?

Who Yes, exactly, I understand. Yes. Precisely. Alright,
so I think I have two more clips. Let's go ahead and breeze through these two right quick and we'll get I just want to get your reaction to her reaction. Like she did her report now he comes to editorial information.
I'm so I'm gonna let me just say this. I am so disappointed. She black.
Yes, this is I forget her name. She's an icon in local news here in DC.
So I'm gonna let me just say this. I am so disappointed. And exhausted. Yes. And even with and you've got to consider the source here. Is this are the pollsters are they leaning one way or the other? Is this meant to divide? Is this meant to stir up controversy? Why even have that statement is okay to be white. Of course, it's okay to be white. It's okay to be black. It's okay. You know, and so the question itself is, for me it just a question meant to troll
and this person fell for it. And to think that that's really what I have to say about. It upset me so much as a black person to really believe that that is what was gleaned from a poll that in my MBM was meant to divide in the first place.

Okay, interesting. So I think she's right that that Scott Adams is doing this because he thought the poll was bullcrap. You know that he's like, what is it? What is going on with these polls? I'm pretty sure he thought that right. For her, though. You know, it's not to does she really know not know what I mean? This is the first time I've heard a news person questioned a poll. Typically, it's always Orange Man bad. Yeah, we all know that. Oh, yeah. white nationalists on the
rise. But now when it comes down to this, and I think that that was kind of that, that gives me a little pause here that Scott Adams at least got through because she was like, well, this poll must be just a triggering thing. And and of course, she thinks he's dumb that he fell for it. That I think is rather humorous. And
he fall for the pole busy dumb because he fell for the pole or the dumb because he he's a dumb white guy lacked awareness that it's okay to be white is a is a trolling question.

either. That's the point. He's intelligent. He didn't follow it didn't know. He was using it. He was using it and that she didn't see because she doesn't know Scott. She thinks the Dilbert guy.
Not only that, I think her ratio reaction is performative. You know, I'm exhausted. I can't really go home and his fall on the couch. It's like, oh, racism. Is so draining. Anything you do we appear or have to appear?

That's that's a good point, though. I mean, because you can hear her co hosts. I don't know if her co host is white or black. Just like to
know is the black, maybe. LGBT member? We're gonna hear a little bit later, but

But yeah, I agree. I mean, I've known you for a little bit here. I don't think you go home at home. Honey was so much racism today. I mean, yeah, you. Exactly. So, performative is a good way of looking at it. I agree.
And it's expected and this goes to show you, like, I'm sure not, I'm not gonna say I'm not gonna put this on her. But say, your white coworkers hear this. And you come into office, right? This has become office culture for a minute, is like just kind of standing around your desk like, oh, waiting to hear your reaction, like psyched to hear about the Scott Evans thing.

I wonder. That's a good, you know, I wouldn't put it pass some people in today's climate. Oh, man. Did you hear about Sharon me? Man, I hope Did she hear about Scott, have you talked to her about it? Yeah.
Right. Right. To where

we are aware of what's going
on, put it in a group text, you know, put it on Slack. So
exactly.
That's the thing that was this is why this conversation important because we don't do this performative. Oh, oh, hi. Could you say that? Oh, I'm supposed to be hurt my post be butthurt right now. So let me know St get to act. And no, I don't ask me. Is it okay to be white? Go ahead. Ask me.

Is it okay to be white?
I don't know. I never been white. No, I'm saying so if I answer that question, I'm saying this. I'm being flippant, but at the same time, if I answered that poll that way, now, I'm in a hate group. Because I don't know what was that mean? Most people to dodge that question. Look, I don't know what that means. You know, what is it? What are you saying? Like, is it okay, like being like, I wouldn't know, I never had the experience, or is it okay to me if you're white?
Which I don't I don't care. You know, I'm saying like to be honest with you know, this is it was

a, it was a stupid poll on the whole, the whole idea of it is just lame.
Alright, so dealer choice, you can jump in three C, or you can go jump to force your choice. Now

let's do three C, as this is more local, more local. More local stuff, please.
Yeah, it's It's remarkable. This, someone as smart as him with some low hanging fruit in that manner. Right. It's even more disturbing that he wants to really think he's racist. I think those comments on the back end about white people need to stay away from black people, because certainly that's not true, either. I think what you have is kind of the series of unfortunate events that have
taken place. But really, if someone's kind of making these comments, their lies and truth internally within themselves, that they believe things that they're saying he also he I think he also said that he's, you know, he spent a lot of time helping black people. So we did not need your
help in that way. And whatever you're serving now, hope you have a lot of time to sit down and really think about it, but I also think that When sure sort of canceled, you know, people would that word, you know, do you do you think about it and say, You know what, what I said was really short sighted and ignorant? Or do you get more sort of, you know, do you double down on how you feel, because now you feel isolated and empowered, because, you know, other people feel the same. Listen,
the redemption tour will give it about three months, okay? And then the redemption tour will start and then he'll start meeting with all of the leaders that he thinks are important in that community. Right to try to get back into his good graces. I didn't like Dilbert anyway. All right.

So something just dawned on me, the most interesting thing that came out of all this, that I remember, I'm not sure if he said it on his own thing, or if it was on Hotep Hotep that he had. And he had never mentioned this as far as now that he had really reached out to Black Lives Matter. And he had said, Hey, I really want to do something want to help you and that he had come to the conclusion that was a huge scam. That that was really interesting. Because they don't feel heard that
was the heads up, Scott. Yeah, right. Was the cartoon that a lot of time a lot of money. With information. Good

point. Good point.
Which we had to remember Scott Adams is our was I don't know what his political affiliation now is. It was a liberal. Yes. By his own by his own admission? Yes. So it was like, Oh, now I can go join the blacks. That's the that's the weakest thing I can do is go join not not support the blacks. No, no, no, no, no. I want to embed with them. And it says their culture is my own. It's just that that it's it's like it's a jacket you can wear, you know, just like just to put it
on like, Oh, let me see. Let me get a 30 day test trial if I don't like it on day 29. O box. And Cindy, right back, you know,

Rent the Runway.
Right? So that's the thing, but with these people, let me be honest with you. As always, the blue light class, yeah, is scared if Black Black Pete white people don't want to be around them. They're like, No, no, no, don't say that. Scott, you know, what, if White people actually get away from us? What will we do? You know, because a lot of their lives is

I don't even know what he I'm sure he's hearing this. I know if he knows what the Boulais is.
The ones I'll say, I'll make it easy for Scott Adams. any black person, you know, personally? Probably I can't say is it's probably Boulais. Because the bank say what? It's this performative thing that the Boulais have to do that they have to be extra upset. And like said their whole existence is certified by whiteness. Look, at my degree on my wall, they're saying look at the neighborhood I live in looking at, you know, look at my friends and looking this kind of
thing. So this, they can actually be triggered by this. Because it can is not necessary that white people are going to have white flight, you know, which most of these people talking live in white neighborhoods. Let's just be honest, and predominantly white. Oh, sure. Um, right. So this is not like they're going to leave your neighborhood. What's going to happen is, as you get you're invited to brands wedding must be lost in the mail. That's how you get away from black people.
Because it's a lot of white people. I'm alleging I'm assuming. I'm assuming that feel obligated like, Oh, we got a white the only black person to office to our wedding, you know, say because it'll be off we don't. So that's how this thing materializing manifests itself is that they don't they don't get millas antivirus anymore, you know? Right, right. Right. Yeah. So that's my take on it. But I give it to Scott Adams.
¶ The FU Money Mentality
He's amassed enough money, where he can say what he wants to say. And I have this black clip from several years ago. DJ Vlad, more specific. And he's talking about fu money.
What is fucking money according to Scott Adams? Well, this this concept comes from the regular workplace you know, from I think finance people came up with it first. And the idea is that once you have enough money that you don't need a boss, nobody can tell you what to do. You know, the public can't stop buying your product and her you because you have enough money already. Your boss can fire you because you don't need him. So you're not really free. Until you can say fuck you
to all your customers and your boss. Okay? Now, I don't say that to my customers because I you know, I'm just appreciative every day that they care about anything I do. But I can. I can. And if anybody follows me on Twitter, they know I do on a regular basis about 25 times a day. There's some You're just, you're just deserves to be given that treatment.

Yeah, I disagree a little bit because I don't think it's an amount of money. I think it's also a mindset. Now, I think I have fu money I tell people to eff off, if necessary. But that's not because I have enough is because I have enough diversified income. I can person to go away, I don't need you. I've send money back to people. I can't believe I don't need and believe that. Oh, what's your pay pal? Man, I'm gonna send it right back to you right now. I have
this sounds like something I would do. Of course, because Go ahead. And the thing is, is we all aspire to have fu money. And it's not millions of dollars. See, this is the thing, it's in our game. This, this is where it's kind of takes a long time to show because I had to think about the clips was I
think about I mean, once I clip it. And to be honest, this is the problem with the middle class, according according to the elite, once you get your mortgage paid for and you have a pension, knows that, hey, your car is paid for and I don't really you know, need to interact with outside society anymore. That's also a few months. That's fu money. That's what scares them about the middle class. Because once you achieve that, and that's why I'm aspiring to be so I can be an
old GRUMPY MAN. yells at the kids get all my kids get all my law, you know, saying that kind of thing or that uncle that has no filter. That's what we secretly secretly we all do aspire to have that in one way or another. I'll be a hater. If I said, you know, Scott Adams shouldn't exercise who's right? When you exercise it right? You You're, you have to be critique, if you know if there's some pushback as necessary. But it's a

good point. Because it has indeed become this concept. Oh, if you mind that means you got so much. By the way, that all depends on how much you spent spend. I mean, I've had more than fu money, I spent it all. And it was great.
I had a good time doing it. But yeah, you're right. If if your mortgage is paid off, you've been you own your car, and you have some set of money that will pay for your taxes, your property taxes and, and your inflation doesn't go too high, which of course is what's happening or the government doesn't steal your pension. Or your retirement. Yeah. I think a lot of people I think that's almost uniquely American to be
like that. It's like I got a got the nice clothes that I want. I can I can wear I could wear the same, you know, sailing outfit every day if I want. And just right and I can afford a reasonably priced drink and I can have friends over. That's kind of that yep, I would say the middle class, or at least what I grew up with the middle class American Dreams ahead. He's retired. Oh, cool, man, congratulations. I'm doing my thing. I can play some golf. That's fu money. Now that is
part harder to obtain now for a number of reasons. But yeah, it's not the amount. It's, it's how you got yourself set up.
And the paradox is harder to obtain now, but more people have the fu mentality. This is why people are not working. Yes, it was a lie. It's I'm making it somehow. I don't know. You know, today, I have shelter over my head. I'm not going to work in that job. And you're saying to be told no. for X amount of dollars? No. I'll just f you know, I'll just float alone life. Yeah, you're right. That's the crazy thing like that actual people that can say it is shrinking. But the attitude is
spreading like a virus. Good point.

And, and it's, I hear more and more like, work doesn't define me. Okay, um, then you should be a barista. Go ahead or whatever, whatever it is. You write, you write, and there's more like, what is the term not quiet quitting, but like minimal work Monday and that kind of stuff?
Right, the Great Recession, all of that was, I was given an offer that I had to refuse. In a way I had to say, fu because

you actually said fu you said fu without that net? You said no. I'm an American man. I'm not gonna be controlled by you.
It's too many opportunities out here. That's the thing about it and you have if you have belief in yourself, and not only just go back to last show, security comes within sounds like okay, I'll secure myself. So this is where we're at. And that's why I thought the show to be fascinating because it's a crossroads of a lot of different topics, but let's go ahead and get to a clip number five,
but you didn't necessarily have a boss for a long time, though. I mean, you were I mean, you worked with this company, but you're creating your own product and the product is rolling along. Yeah, I use boss
loosely to mean anybody who can control your fate. But yeah, whether it's your specific boss or just people control you right now, when you when you talk about fucking money are you really talking about I no longer have to work for the rest of my life and I can still maintain the kind of lifestyle that I want? Yeah, I mean, it's sort of a loose, loosely defined thing that's going to be different for everybody. But everybody has in their mind, if I made this much money would never work again.
Yeah, until you get used to a certain kind of lifestyle, you realize that's not going to work. So I made that much money and it's free. I'll never I'll never need more money or anything. I'm at four times that now. Still don't feel any closer to quitting. Because the work has its own benefits and like you said, you reach a certain lifestyle and you're helping a number of people around you, which is more rewarding, actually. Then I'm not very materialistic beyond my house.

Which is pretty, pretty big.
Yeah, it's clear he shows us indoor tennis court. Indoor. Scott gonna be all right. I mean, let's let's not work, by the way. All right. I

think he has that I'm kind of jealous of his own. His floors are heated. Oh, nice. Yeah, I had that an Amsterdam one heated marble, but not everywhere. Not the whole house. His whole house has heated floors is nice. That is nice.
That's that's really nice. I will have a bowling alley though. Instead of Yeah, that would be something I have. But if you want to have fu money, I'm Alicia in a little tip. Control your debt? Yeah, a lot of us can say Fu. Because you have to car payment not to just I'm just saying that you have so many obligations, that you have to stay in a situation even though you know it's not best for you. And we saw this with me to all these other things. You get to a certain
¶ Mal-information?
level somebody gives you an offer that you should refuse but you can't because so much is tied to your identity as a as your your occupation as your identity. So um, yes, I'll wrap that up. Let's go ahead and get to talking about some disinformation misinformation in Mt information. Now there
are three different types of content as identified by first draft that is an organization fighting to bring you truth on what you read and watch disinformation, misinformation and Mal information. Collectively, these three groups are known as information disorder, let's start with the first disinformation is intentionally false. It's designed to cause harm, that's often backed by motivations to make money to have political influence or
cause trouble just for the sake of it. The second misinformation that's also false content, but the person sharing it doesn't realize it's false or misleading. This is driven by socio psychological factors. These people want to feel connected to their tribe, whether that's the same political party activists for climate change or those that belong to a certain religion, race or ethnic group. Finally, Mal information this is genuine information shared with the
intent to cause harm. An example is when Russian hackers hack the Democratic National Committee and Hillary Clinton's campaigns and emails, they leak certain details just to damage reputations.

I love I love that. That's actually misinformation in itself, because of course, we know it wasn't. It was an inside job. It wasn't the Russians. That was hilarious.
So mount information. Yeah. I think this is okay to be white mean, is mouth information because of the definition is genuine information share with the intent to cause harm? Yeah. Who would everybody would well according to the poll 80% of the people or whatever said it's okay to be white. That you know, that's the thing. Now my question to you the reason why I play this clip from the show ad is that what do you think? If
you had to classify Scott's Adam Scott Scott's actions? Which one do you think it would be because I'm not sure just yet and as we've discussed here, we don't know what his intent was. But if you've had Which one did you file this under?

Well, I can only find it file it under manipulation Yes, I mean, that's what he does. He's manipulating it for he knows. I mean, okay, let me see if I can classify it. Now. Let
me go okay. Okay, let me I gotta go through him right quick is this information is you know, is wrong. You know, it's not you know, what's wrong, and you share why right. Me Information is you are unaware that it's wrong. And you share it right? And the amount of information is true. You know, I'm gonna give you a sample mount information from my standpoint, and this goes into this story. The fifth that 1550 thing, right, you know, 50 50% of murders is caused by
1530 1530 It's gonna be 5013. That's it. 50% of the, you know, murders is caused by 13% of the population, right? That is true. But the way it's being used and say, oh, yeah, 13% extended populations, murderers, right.

I mean, it just doesn't fit into any one of those categories. For me personally, because I know that
couldn't either I want to see I just wanted to run that by

manipulation. That's what it is. He's manipulating it to, to make a point to the point of freedom of speech, because I think I heard him we'll get to that, I'm sure. Where he's, you know, this is what it costs me to have freedom of speech to be able to draw what I want, say what I want and be who I want. Yeah, I mean, he paid a much bigger financial price, but then I did. Because I 15 years ago, I just said, I'm checking out you know, I'm just gonna do my own thing and do it with the Vortech
you know, I had had to reduce my costs a lot. But I've had my complete freedom of speech since that day and and you know, just another way of going about it, I guess.
Yes. So now we got against it. It's okay to be
¶ "It's ok to be white"
white because this thing had been floating around for five years. Were you aware of this? I didn't I wasn't aware of this. Oh, it's okay to be white. Um, yes,

I am aware of it because wrapped up in Austin, you know, other places about say on like signs. And the minute you see that this started a couple of years ago, actually, I think. And it was immediately labeled as racist white nationalists who were saying this but no, it was it was the beginning of BLM let me just see if I can tell you how far back that goes.
Why you laid out so this this is kind of like the All Lives Matter kind of thing. Right? And whoever comes up with these tag lines or memes, or do you want to call them they're in genius and function

22 cars 2020? May 2020 I think is the first time we had a it was an Yeah, it was Van Jones I think was moaning about it. You know, so
it goes back further. Stephen it was like four or five years old, so I'm just gonna give you Yeah, so make America great again. Why all eyes matter? Yeah, when Kanye day white lives matter, right? It's okay to be white. If you respond that to that. You're racist. How can you know but how can you know? Whoever created it. You say Oh, I'm not I'm not with Magga he's like, Oh, you don't want to make America great again. Right. He'll say Oh, you don't think you don't think oh
being white is okay, it's brill. You don't think all lives matter? Yeah,

it's like you just got to stay away from it because you're never going to be right is rubber
and glue man is rubber and glue so so let's go ahead. This is a local another local report. When neighbors get upset overseen the it's okay to be white flyer
flyer that's been making the rounds in one Beaverton neighborhood has some left wondering why our CO Miller looked into this. He joins us live from the sexton mountain neighborhood with more coal. Well, Jennifer, good evening. I'm told those flyers have been showing up on streetlights. And they read. It's okay to be white. One neighbor here telling me that this part of town is a melting pot, and she just wants everybody to feel safe.
And on a lamppost, there was just right smack in my eyeline like somebody I'd put it there intentionally because I instantly wrecked it down. Mary Elizabeth summer couldn't believe it. This flyer found just down the street from her front door. She says it made her so upset. She took it home and then ran it through the shredder.

White Lady, I'm guessing.
Yes, yeah. Yes. And this is let's go. Let's go and jump to the second part. And then we'll talk about the other side. This is this her being upset more
others around Beaverton Sexton mountain, spotting them to my neighbor Naomi. She also came across one today and sent me a picture image. That flyer it seems is not unique to these streets far from it. The Sacramento Bee just earlier this month reports identical ones popping up around American River College and in Florida. The anti Defamation League says a target employee plays this card with that same message in a box of diapers.
They're what started as a prank on the online forum, 4chan is now reported as being associated with white nationalism. I am married to a half black woman. And this neighborhood is very cool.

That's great. Here's this woman.
I am married to a half black woman. And this neighborhood is very culturally diverse. We have onions, we have Jewish people we have, you know, every color you can imagine. I love it.

Well, just just as a separate point, we have Indians, we have Jewish people, you can't say Jews. Notice she doesn't know that. And they're not
very culturally diverse. We have Indians, we have Jewish people we have, you know, every color you can imagine. And if it were me, I was up the street of my neighborhood. And I saw that I would not feel safe. And I don't want any of my neighbors to not feel safe. Summer says there's no place for any of that here. And once those neighbors to know, they're more than welcome. If you see these signs, that is not how we feel. That's not how that is not Sexton mountain.

It's so amazing. You see those?
It's so amazing how we for you know,

it's okay to be Indian. It's okay to be Jewish people. It's okay to be any color color people, as you rightly pointed out, but it's okay to be white. And that and that is I know that Dvorak and I laughed about this stuff on the show. By the way, no one gave up their donations or came at us with axes or anything like that. Like, come on a bit. This is performative, but unfortunately, this white lady really feels bad about this. It's okay to be white. Does she I think, Oh,
yeah. Oh, yeah. Oh, yeah. Oh, it's Oh, she really she feels that this is a hateful thing to say. Because you can
find it. I don't know. Call them bull crap.

The context is this. It's she, like, I remember I think as a kid, it's okay to be gay. I'm glad to be gay. I think it was that saying if you're glad to be gay, it was it was a hit song for a while seeing if you're glad to be gay. Sing if you're happy that way. And it was okay to be gay. It's okay to be white. But she is it's okay to be white. She just hears it differently. I think that's that's what she's hearing. And that's programmed into her maybe from her half black wife. I don't know.
What here's the thing is, and this is why it's hard for me to separate because the same way I said the news I was being performative. Will you see that sign? I think it's the good amount of people's like, this is what expected of me, you know, is I have to be torn up my day. I have to go get that sign and not throw it in the trash. Oh, no, Lord, I had to take it back to the house and shredded, you know, to show how broke I am.

That's yeah, that's the performative part. I guarantee I guarantee you mo I guarantee you, she felt horrified by that sign. The performative part I had to go shred it and all that and as I get the, the amount of psychological operations that has been performed on American citizens, I 100. I'm not gonna say at five by five, I believe. She feels that as a hateful sign. Everything else she did about it was performed, which in her core being she believes that is a hateful thing to say.
I believe her, I believe your take as well. But I'm saying to the degree that people take it too is where it becomes performative. Okay, I'm gonna give you a sample that's just like I hate litters. I think that's one of the dumbest things ever that you just chunk us out of saying I can or cut out the window, but I'm not pulling it over and going to get the cup the guy in front of me throughout. He's saying,

Stop, stop. So here's a white lady experience. My grandmother with the she was like Marilyn Monroe, man, she was badass. Drove convertibles had five ex husbands. If she was behind the car at a stoplight and someone threw some trash out the window. She got out of her car, she picked it up. She knocked on the window and said I just picked up your trash. So see,
see, that's the that's what I'm talking about. But I'm just saying for myself. I I detest litres. But I'm not. I'm saying she could attest what what she thinks is being represented towards that. But it's the performative Parson coming, I took action, and you go back to the office and like, look, I always say you had the little shavings, and a Ziploc bag and like see, it was saying this is why anti racism

agree, I'm just saying I grew up a middle white middle America, at least until age seven. But you know, there was back and forth. This was it was all performative. In the middle class, right middle class, white people would be like, Hey, man, keep America clean, and do this. And it was very, like, you know, you've got to do these certain things,
you've got to be like this. i It's hard to explain. But it's the other side, you know, remember, it's the other side of how black middle American middle class Americans would be, oh, boy, the kids got to dress up nice. We're gonna go visit those people, whatever. You know, it's like, it's performative. But it's deep. It's very, at its core. I think it's deeply ingrained in us.
I agree with you. I agree with you. And I'll add to your point that the reason for the performance is deeply embedded, yeah, the knee, need to perform, you know that I just want to go over to my friend's house where some clubs regular clothes home, but that need, you know, to be accepted. And the reason why I'm stressing this point is, this is the cost is
going to call it cost Scott Adams. I'm letting him know now what you wanted to happen to black people where you don't invite them to weddings and functions and stuff like that, that Oh, no reverse card is going to be played on you. Because it's like, you know, we can't have Scott at the wedding. Yeah, he just went through a NASware. That's where the system really kicks in. You're saying, Hey, we he's persona non grata they have a word for it. Is No, we can't have you have to stay
away from Scott Adams. He's a hate group, you will say that he projected out, it's gonna fall upon him. And he's bigger than money, bro. As big as this system is bigger than money.

Now, how about how about this matter, this meta part of it? Man, he doesn't give a shit. Maybe he doesn't care. So that kind of makes him actually in a way racist.
We shouldn't care because he had fu money, understand the social cause. He was saying the social costs to being the old grumpy old man is nobody invites you to the cookout in the neighborhood. It's like you can we can invite you know, say whatever, whoever you know, they say oh, you know,

well, little, little little secret. I don't think Scott Adams actually leaves his house that much at all. Well, it
¶ Racism has a built in fan base
works and works well for him. So I don't think that's going to be much of a problem. It may not change his life very much.
Okay, so I'm just saying that to anybody that gets cancelled with money. People are how bad can it

be can you know can be bad? It can be very
bad. You get the worst tables. You get set by the bathroom. When you go to restaurants you can get on the you know? Get a reservation. Yeah, good point. Good. Robert. Scott. I'm sorry. You know, he's just been busy lately. So now,

I have to say one more thing. I can't tell you who told me but it was someone who knows him personally. And he's an I don't I Call Bull crap on it right away. It was. Oh, man ever since I did that life's been great. And I'm getting laid like crazy. Direct quote. I'm calling I believe it. I'm calling bull crap on
bro. Like it I'm telling you racism has a built in fan base. Okay, I'm not saying it's Arden is not may not be that large. I'm talking about people that look for new people to claim to like, Oh, this is our hero. Are you somebody else makes the same statement. Oh, that's our hero. Like Scott was the guy named Scott when it was named petite. Dave potently whatever his name is over at the sports gambling outfit. I don't know. Anyway, he went online

Yeah, yeah, I know he's talking about
it was him in the guy from MSNBC the old guy that's kind of like off his rocker right now. named Keith Olbermann with his whole recent thing college basketball. They said it lady was a was was it classes piece about bit are pointing to a ring? Yeah, it was she was pointing to the rain Taunton. It was a black girl, taunting a white girl and then they said that the white girl or he had done it earlier. Earlier game to
another player team or something. But the whole point is that with Dave and Keith Olbermann, who is far left as you probably can get, when you do something that can be perceived as racist, there's an instant fan base there, guy. So I'm with you. And with this case, it doesn't have to be a person it can be. It could be a pole. So we have to go to Rasmussen, the actual creditor the pole and I have a clip from them speaking on the actual numbers.
Do you agree or disagree with this statement? It's okay to be white mindblowingly? Or perhaps not, the vast majority of American adults agree 72% and 58% strongly agree only 12% disagree, and only 6% of those strongly. Now, 17% of Americans are not sure. And that's a pretty big number for a question like this, which shouldn't be a simple question to answer. To me, that is the standout number, people paraded or guilted so much that they won't anonymously
submit a response to an IVR call or an online survey. Now, just for those wondering if we took out the nod shores, then 86% of Americans agree with that statement. A whopping 70% strongly. We just proved that the vast majority of Americans 88% either agree with or refuse to answer whether they agree with a statement that the Southern Poverty Law Center has literally labeled hate speech. I think that's a big deal.

Wow. Where to dig this up? That's great.
It actually from their website, he went to like a whole hour it just get people to the name of the video and go found on YouTube. Rather than ends poll. It's okay to be white. And then the second part of this is about is who can be racist, which will may touch on another show at another time. But I'm not ducking away from that, either. But we will focus on it focus on if it's okay to be white or not. But yeah, he goes and breaks down the numbers. And as you can see, Scott Adams was wrong.

Right. Oh, my good boy. Here's, I mean, it's crazy that the Southern Poverty Law Center is now the gold standard of, of what is hate speech and hate hate, basically hate? Yes. And they're, they're the biggest hate group I know.
And they used to do somewhere or allegedly used to do so much good work. But yeah. So as he said, you might have asked white people, they don't know if say if it's okay or not. So the best thing is, I don't know. And you can have black people. Is this a trick question who was caught on my phone? And now you have these numbers. You know, that can be a fact that you can factor in the yeses and noes, but it's convenient to add I don't know the buff your number. Of course, of course.
It's only this amount to say it's okay to be white. So I just wanted to break that down. But as we can see, hate can be weaponized from both sides. You need this kind of stuff fuels
¶ Hate fuels both sides of the media
both mediums. And I have two examples. I want to go look at here. And one of them is the read report with me some joy. Surprise. Yeah. used to say Das was a hate group. Yeah, I mean, I'm putting you in the same bag as Scott Adams. Oh, no, it's yeah, it's very interesting, but I want you to hear this wind up before the pitch.
We begin tonight with the supersized panic of the American right. Post Obama backlash may have escalated the panic more than 10 years ago. But then Donald Trump poured the freakout with gasoline. It was Trump who unveiled the racism and misogyny that was always there, but through it wide open, normalize the depths of the country's prejudice even made it fashionable for conservatives. Their vision of America crystallized online within our government to the post Trump age
of open fascism. We saw open demonstrations of hate from white nationalists using tiki torches to light up Charlottesville to the attempted Confederate takeover of the Capitol. Once the Pandora's box of bigotry is open, things get out of control quickly and in a horrifying way. People don't even feel bad about their anti blackness these days. They are grossly you actually kind of proud of it. Case in point, Dilbert.
Wow,

there's a lot in there, like the Confederate takeover of the Capitol and this. Yeah, that's what those black people and Asian people were doing. That's confederates, man.
You see that wind up though? Before she even gets to Scott Adams. She put the Trump thing on there, man. Everything, all him saying this and look, Scott Adams if he was being truthful. Thank you for being honest, the most, the best thing you could do is be honest with the person and I'll shake your hand. You all want us around, and you don't want to be around
us. Great. Oh, that's not far off from Wow for you, you know, because like I say, if you want to go to black town, you want to go to white town, you want to go to agent town you want to go to you know, wherever these communities, you know, people create their own communities. That's great. That's awesome. You know, we don't need the thing with diversity is it wants to flatten everything into this consumer culture. No, I'm a big
supporter. And we need to have these enclaves a culture. And when we had it, it made America great, but it can't be sanctioned by the state to be separated. And you can't feel forced either. So I'm right there in the middle. You know, if people want to be around each other great. Yeah. But if somebody wants to be around me, they shouldn't be forced. That's that's the that's the in a nutshell. So that's, that's her. Why don't you want to hear more questions?
¶ Joy on Dilbert

I can't wait. We need some joy read. Let's go
Dilbert the widely Syndicated Comic Strip about office culture that appeared in 2000 newspapers around the world. You may be familiar with the comic, but maybe not its creator, Scott Adams. Frankly, I had no idea who the guy was, well, until he went on a racist rant on YouTube last Wednesday. I think it makes no sense whatsoever, as a white citizen of America to try to help black citizens anymore. So I'm gonna I'm gonna back off from being helpful to black America,
because it doesn't seem like it pays off. If you're nearly half of all blacks are not okay with white people. According to this poll. Not according to me. According to this poll, that's a hate group. That's a hate group. And I don't want anything to do with how black folk ever survived without you, whoever you are. Okay, there is a lot to unpack there.

She's so annoying.
Thank you. Thank you for saying that. Because that's why I left that last part in there. And I really didn't want to hear from her other than that wind up. There Scott Adams is the representation you know, of whatever when he was just on your team not too long ago, right. That's that's the thing about is this. This team thing is not working out. Because this is you have to be a complete 100% loyalist. You can't have any diversity in thought so correct. But yeah, she is
annoying. I think she's trying to be Tucker Carlson or the anti Tucker Carlson or something. Delivery has changed.

Yeah, I mean, but also whoever you are, like, she knows exactly who he is. Yeah.
Six months ago, she would have been dying to eat dinner with him. Let's just keep it a buck here. I mean, we're gonna stop playing. Like, come on. Come on. So no, so just to bring some humor into it. I think the SNL had a good little
¶ SNL dilbert
skit where they interview actually interviewed Dilbert.

Yeah. Didn't have the Dilbert doll like the big doll in the on the weekend update.
Right he was actually a mascot.

Yeah, Scott Exactly.
Let's go here Jose was around the country are dropping beloved comic strip Dilbert. After its creator Scott Adams went on a racist rant last week advocating for white people to get the hell away from black people. By the way.

You know, the reason why they say in all television racist rant, these they love alliteration. Anytime you can do the same starting letter, you know, racist rant, you know, beautiful bootcamp. I just want to build
that better. Bill, thank you advocating white people to get the hell away from black people off the record. He's got a point here
Hey, Michael, Heidelberg, So had you ever seen this side of Scott Adams before? Michael, I think I can speak for myself and the entire all white staff at the Dilbert offices when I say this was a total shock. I mean, most cartoonists are weird, but racist, weird. Let's just say I didn't see that meme.

Michael Che is kind of he's always slipping and stuff like that all the way. Which and how do you feel about that?
With this particular one? It was his true look, making the Don Lemon. I mean, I think that was kind of because they have these clips of Don Lemon sand exact same thing Scott Adams is saying. So these, these media types, the intellectuals the first chance they get in this

did Don Lemon say yes, it's true. That what? Well, what I'm referring to is this black people off the record. He's got a point. Off the record. Yeah, point. Yeah, that part. Yeah.
Yeah, that's the point. Yeah, I just want I'm saying that, that kind of lends to what Don Lemon was saying, like, pull up your pants. You know, this is why our community the way it is, and sound a lot like what Scott Scott Adams did, and I have these clips. I didn't clip it, but just to give people a trigger warning, I have some Larry elder coming up. Like, he played Delaire. And he played the Don Lemon clips of him
saying basically the same thing. And I think it's a mindset, you know, Don Lemon, and Scott Adams have more in common to me and Don Lemon.

Right. This just got me I got you. I got you. Yeah.
So that's the point I'm trying to make there. But let's go and get to the second part of this pretty good. SNL clip.
Now I knew he was bad. He made me go into the office every single day during COVID and he knows I'm auto immune. Your auto immune. Do I look like somebody who's not auto immune? Yeah, I'm a real athlete. My hair is skin Michael. Your hair skin? Yes. I cannot stress this enough. My hair is entirely skin. And it has been the great tragedy of my life. I'm very sorry. No, I'm sorry, Michael, for racism. Maybe I was just blind to it. I mean, my glasses are literally opaque white. To
me. He was just Scott, the funny guy, the Trump supporting cartoonist who did magic in his spare time at a great Kevin Hart impression. Well, that sounds like a racist to me. Well, turns out he was a racist. And I was surprised creation. I mean, what does that make me? I want an answers. So I took a god forbid personal day and really started to dig in on the concept of what is work right. Reading Karl Marx, Stokely Carmichael, lots
of the black radicals. And I realized something. Even mundane work serves to uphold a capitalist system built to maintain a racial hierarchy. But that's all about to change. race wars coming. You ready? Michael? What? Are you ready because Dilbert is ready. I woke up this morning ready to take the streets and paint the city with a blood of the white man. It's pretty intense, man.

I think they kind of nailed it. But
I was pretty good. And eerily when I saw this image of deer weird or this rendition of Dilbert is it intentional that he looks like the falling down guy? Remember the movie falling down? The guy just snapped. Yeah, he started going crazy when? Michael Douglas, I think, yeah, he had the sleeves rolled up the glasses. Is that a tissue and a necktie with the short sleeve shirt. You know, that kind of thing? Like, I wonder if it's, I don't know which which one to imitate.

I was gonna say, I don't know who's been around longer, but it is it is clearly the same character, the one who's going to snap him like, like Dilbert just did. blood draw the white man. Yeah.
And then what little factoids, and as I was reading Mike Lee Stokely Carmichael, excuse me, and, and Karl Marx, black revolutionaries. Well, we talked about Karl Marx, potentially being black. Yeah. Because he was called, the more we look at the pitcher, he could be, you know, passing. So, so I was just like, they slipped that in there. That's pretty. It's funny, because these people perceive it not to be true. That's what made it funny, but could actually be true. So I thought that was a pretty
¶ I identify as...

good, you know, it's like if you could have thrown in the FBI guy, you know, what's his name? Right? Over? Exactly. Exactly. You could have thrown that in, but no one would have gotten that joke. Only us.
Right. So that was a pretty good setup. But yeah. Let's, let's go ahead and move on. I got like, I promise. We got some lair elders, and he doesn't disappoint. All the
¶ Larry on Davis
hands. He couldn't. Okay.
Yesterday, we played the Dilbert comic strip creator Scott Adams, reacting to a poll by Rasmussen saying at this point because blacks have become so anti white. He wants nothing to do with black people who think that way. Now he mischaracterized the poll, most blacks in fact, 53% say it's
okay to be white. 26% said it's not 21% said they don't know. So in fact, a quarter of black people disagreed that it is okay to be white, not a majority of blacks, as Adam said, but still Adam makes a valid point. As we identify Ah, wait. Because I don't want to be a member of a hate group, I'd accidentally joined a hate group. So if you're nearly half of all blacks are not okay with white people, according to this poll, not according to me, according to
this poll, that's a hate group. That's a hate group. And I don't want to have anything to do with them. And I would say, you know, based on the current way things are going, the best advice I would give to white people, is to get the hell away from black people. Just get away. Wherever you have to go, just get away. Because there's no fixing this. This can't be fixed. And not too surprisingly, the fit here to Shan hundreds of newspapers have now canceled his trip.

We have to for context, I don't think we explained that earlier people. Scott, when when it was like identify as identify as a woman identify as of this. And he was like, oh, identify as black that was, you know, haha, okay. And he but he kept that up for a couple of years, like identify as black. That's, you know, so he's adding that in there. Like, you know, I was black identified as black and I don't want to be part of the hate group,
which is provocative because it does bring up the question how you can be trans everything else is set racial. Which I'm sure Larry elders. Anyway, now, let's say I digress. But this is what makes it hard on Larry.
Like, the poor Larry.
He's the king of Mount information. 90%, maybe even not the 9% of the stuff he says is true. But it's the it's the way he uses it. You know, how can you say yeah, he was kind of right. After you say he missed represent the poll, and they you sandwich that in between what he actually said like, I don't care where you have to go, it was at Larry's like, that's what I've been saying, you know,

where does this actually air where does this Larry elder stuff air? Where do you get that on YouTube? Man? You got you got to? He's got a whole YouTube thing going on?
Yeah. So that's why I get it from she has a podcast and maybe even a radio show. But he's got the

whole castle radio show as you're doing this on YouTube alone.
I'm not sure I can't verify that. But I know for sure he puts these clips on YouTube, which like I said, 90% of the stuff he says it's factual. But it's the weaponization of it, you know, that makes

him so successful. I mean, he's contrary he's controversial.
Correct and which is no problem with what Ben That's why you run into the issue have when, you know, when you try to speak to black people, yeah. And bring the facts which like I say a lot of stuff he says is true, but it's the it's the it's the weaponization of not to be redundant but now we're gonna go and watch him deflect at night that's the only thing he said
about Scott in the whole clip. There he goes he plays the the Don Lemon clips which I've mentioned before and then he Clint yeah he cleans it up with this right here the always go to deflection let's go let's hear eleri
rather than think Adams for saying out loud but clearly a lot of people feel including a lot of black people are saying and feeling so we could have you know a healthy discussion about this growing black anti white racism if not hatred. Adam is not counted.
stopped right there. He said instead of thanking him for everything that you just heard. We should be thanking him Larry I'm gonna say this that's a bold statement they're thanking

him so what he's saying is he's saying is true
what were hate group was part that's what I'm saying like Are you saying it's true

that the dead black people in America hate white people? That's what I asked
for not for that poll. That's the thing is like from the poll is saying it's it's amazing they get take a piece of information. The reason why I'm harping on this is to just bring home the scale point. They can play you the clip that he explained he broke down the whole poll, how it was being misrepresented by Scott and his people are Hager I've been
trying to tell you that he just got bad information. I usually they came to me I couldn't get you some stuff that really proves that there a hate group

Hotep Larry been told you exactly.
Rather than sick Adams for saying out loud. We're clearly a lot of people feel including a lot of black people are saying and feeling so we could have you know, a healthy discussion about this growing black, anti white racism is not hatred. Adam is being hounded. Shut down canceled. And notice the most respected black leader in America says absolutely
nothing I speak of course about one Barack Obama. The idea here's a man who got elected with a higher percentage of the white vote and John Kerry did four years earlier

on. Does Larry think Barack Obama is black?
Destined to make sure. be intelligent? Oh my god. Can you put that on our book? No,

no, no, no, no, no. All right, here we go.
Here's a man who got elected with a higher percentage of the white vote than John Kerry did four years earlier, who walked into the Oval Office a third week of January 2009, with a 70% approval rating, blah, blah. I love it. I love it. Why? Because even people who didn't vote for Obama felt that at the very least, at the minimum, he could bring us together racially, but he did the opposite. He said among other things, the Cambridge Police acted stupidly. No, they
did not. He said racism is in America's DNA. That's a lie. The first time Gallup in the 1950s asked Americans if they would vote for a black president. That number was in the 30s. Now only a tiny percentage of whites say they would not vote for a black person if they thought he or she was qualified

that talk about performative but he's literally he's a performer. So no, slide. And he's funny. I think it's funny me it's funny to hear this like, okay, Larry,
he's good at what he does. No, no, don't mistake, my critique of him is not saying he's good. No, he's great. Is the fact that like, it's just that the mount information thing for me. Are you trying to, as I always say, are you speaking to reach or to be right? There you go. When I speak, I try to reach people. You know, that's why I always humanize people in let's figure, let's learn from this thing and not just come up here. We could have easily done this for four years. And I could have
got up here and just ranted and raved. And you could have ranted and raved.

But But then that was the Barack Obama Bruce Springsteen podcast, so we didn't want to do
every copycat after us. I just had to say like, this is, this is my victory lap right here. You folks, I'm telling you that what we're what you're witnessing, you're not gonna see it again. Because me and Adam are not ingrained prior to having the conversation where we were complete and total strangers. I know your public persona, but not to get to this level of conversation. No, it's not. I don't think it's gonna be repeated. But yeah, so that's, that's Larry, and finishes like,
come on. I mean, come on. So now we have Karen. Karen Hunter,
¶ Karen walking the line

oh, wow, the fan of the fan favorite of the show.
So watch how she walks the line, because I think she's, she's a journalist, I believe. And so it's one thing, she probably has friends that are friends with Scott or this kind of thing. But then she also has to stay to the performative black reaction. So I want you to just listen to how she we use our way through this.
Now he's trying to call himself being an ally. Obviously, some people believe that he's not, you know, I mean, you believe that he's been an ally, because I see the nuance in his in his conversation and when you go beyond just the you know, the the soundbite clips that you can pull out and make them look really crazy. I see what he's right what he thinks he's attempting to do on that spin that space. But I also feel
like he's very bitter as well. And you know, if you live in a country where you're seeing people progress, like I'm sure in your space, lawsuits.
Can I just heard something I had her before, but she does the same. Her whoever's doing the call and response. You know, this is a call response many people talk about she does the same. Yes. From the guy on the local news report. Right? Yeah,

yes, yes. Yeah, you're right. He was
on that spin that space, but I also feel like he's very bitter as well. Yeah. And you know, if you live in a country where you're seeing people progress, like I'm sure in your space, you got a lawsuit so your your progression looks like oppression to somebody that's used to seeing you in a subservient role. So every place you turn we got up the President was a black man now we got a vice president they just put a black woman on the Supreme Court

Indian Yeah,
maybe. But this is what I'm saying. You know, to you and everyone listening, Nicole, that that that that foments into is jealousy. It's it's insecurity, its weakness, but in a mob setting, which we saw with the capital is deadly. And vigilant, you know, and you're right. You're

Wow, she I mean For joy read to take it to the Capitol. Okay. But for Karen hunter to do it in this way. And
by the way, you see where she started it though. Yeah. Well,

you know, this is very interesting. Well, two things I won't get to the capitalist. Yeah, well, first the capital. So, yesterday me, I'm driving back from Austin and I'm listening to some of the coverage of the indictment of 40 5am. And because they had nothing, they all too Oh, January 6, it's all that's like a standard thing. Let's just go
back to January 6, go back to, to the to the insurrection. But what I find fascinating as both Larry elders and Karen Hunter, clearly black Americans, both of them, just pretend that Barack Obama and Kamala Harris are black Americans. And that farce that pisses me off.
It's that you have to stick to the screw is dissonant.

I know, but it's disingenuous. And how come the lady on the phone doesn't say you know what, to just not block it? The skin color, but what I get,
that's the basis that's the
answer insecurity, it's weakness, but in a mob setting, which we saw with the capital is deadly. And I need us all to be vigilant, you know, and you're right, you're right. I think with this guy is nuanced, but all it takes is one group, you know, to put this on Reddit, and now they you know, he's their
hero. Whatever he intended I don't know You know, I don't know what's in that man as far as Nicole but I do know that this kind of language left unchecked is dangerous because I saw it happen in Nazi Germany so

Oh, she by the way, she's 103 years old because she saw it happen and now Nazi Germany she was there boots on the ground baby
you You're right. Yeah, you know,

what is that? Oh,
maybe she's right that we've seen this before Mr. Walt Disney. We know what you did. If you want to go there, but I bet you won't go there. So Wow. Wow. That's yeah, that we know no animation

and also you know, since when was January 6 ratio. I mean, if she had said, you know, like, Forget Joy read you know, so this is a you know, the tiki torches. Also farce, but okay, at least that would have gotten a little closer to racism, but January 6, I don't think that's that's been seen as racist as it been. Did I miss a memo?
The media class, specifically the black media class has been tasked with panning This is racist. You know, that was a she better get the people dealing with other white people. You know, that's, that's I looked at the capital.

She, she better read her memos. Because in case you didn't know it, can Hunter Black is out trans is in is January 6, was clearly transphobic.
Thank you. Sure. Well, we're done with you to the side, we know we got about 90% of your vote, and you're saying 2024? So I mean, we're good. We need it. We need to push the trans. You know, and and I want you since you brought up alliterations Larry elder need to update his his talking points because it's no longer anti white racism is reverse racism.
And I heard Trump drop that a couple of times and his address over so I think there's a pivot yet to reverse racism from anti white racism, which is the problem that it worked out it was who

because because I would say a couple of years ago, if you said That's reverse reverse racism, people say reverse racism is racism. Okay. Yeah, of course it is. Racism is racism. That that's a good point. But it is now accepted as a talking point reverse racism. Interesting.
Let's just listen for because I heard him say it and I was like, that's, that's a good alliteration. But at the same time, it rolls off the tongue better than anti white racism and reverse racism ages just flows. So that's the that's the wrap on the what the happenings of the Scott situation, I think we need to Thanks for people now we shared the white
man in the black man have to be able to sit down at
¶ Value for Value
the same table. The white man has to feel free to speak his mind without hurting the feelings of that negro. And the so called legal or has to feel free to speak his mind without hurting the feelings of the white man, then they can bring the issue that are under the rug out on top of the table and take an intelligent approach to get the problem solved. That's the only way we'll ever do it.

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I want to be clear on one thing. I, I have the utmost confidence and what me you have done to the point where I gotta fill in, he's gonna be like Dave Chappelle Show, is gonna be like the wire is gonna be like reasonable doubt. And that's not high praise on myself. It's to the point where I think this show is gonna be bigger later, when people go back in like, the hour talking about that, and 2020 2021 2022 2023 like, that's where you have a great record keeper that you built with
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hilarious movie because in 20 years, we'll be the same age I am now and yet you're gonna sound like, like an 80 year old.
I'm embracing it. Like I'll tell you I'm embracing my old age.

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I was triggered well I become for me that so we're
¶ Monolith?
hearing black we're hearing white the waves got I was told everybody in one lump, you know a black stay away from blacks. That's the monolith thing right? All when you hear people come in all black people are not we're not a monolith. I think we need to visit or revisit. We're a monolith. With a proper definition. This is from I swear English on YouTube, which I love his definition videos. Great work. So
monoliths countable noun, monolithic as an adjective monolithically as an adverb, I guess. Okay, a monolith is a well the original meaning it's a single block of stone, which stands vertically notice monolith as to origin. Okay, mono, one. And lists from lethal force. Yeah. Meaning a stone in ancient Greece. Yeah. Where it comes from Latin monoliths made of a single block of stone. Okay, and that's the idea of, of
a monolith. But we use this word to describe other things. We can also use a monolith to talk about a very powerful large organization. Yeah. I think in this case, we were using it a bit critically. Yeah, we're suggesting that it doesn't want to change. It's not interested in the individuals. So a monoliths a huge organization. Yeah, that doesn't really care about the individuals.

Okay. There you go, monolith.
So it's just the group is bigger than the individual kind of thing. And I have some proof here, going back to the 1960s that black people have never been not to live but in a description white and black in itself, those terms a monolithic course, you know, to have it you know, it's, you know, this is white, this is black.

This is white, that's a good point whenever this comes up, but is it okay to be white? So excuse me, we're not a monolith. In fact, Asians are considered white.
When they're Asian see, like, that's the monolith, though they're the Asian, there wasn't the they have the acronym for now?

Exactly. There is just like, yeah, just
like the Latino and the Latin X and Latino communities. You know, they just lump them all together, which the, their politics is very diverse, that we've seen with the voting numbers, trans, you know, say that's a model live, it's like, you know, everybody, you know, everybody is tick tock teachers. You know, the trans community, in a great amount of lift is the gay gay community, you know, the LGBT community, you as you pointed out very early on not? It's not it's not
a monolith. But when you use these terms, you're implying it in the term itself. When you say black, what is black? What does that mean? What mean? Only thing blacks me is not white. Right? That's, that's, that's the governmental term for it. Because what did we call them? Were what were white, they gotta be black, you know, a colored that they expanded it colored people or people of color, that is white Bester model live, and
you have everybody else in the group. And we're just gonna lump them all together as people of color, which I found that term to be so disgusting. That's why I say colored people, because it's that mentality that you're standing out of, you know, you're not individuals. But not to belabor the point, I want to get to this 1960s. I don't know who was doing the recording, I
couldn't find much history on it. But this is wealthy, middle class black people in Los Angeles, and listening, how they talk about their southern blacks that are pouring into Los Angeles at the time.
You recall in our last meeting, we discussed the problem with integrated housing. And we found out that almost 1700 negros are moving into Los Angeles, by 1970, they'll probably be a million vehicles in this city. And I know that people are concerned about this. They may not talk about it very often. But I certainly heard them chatter in church, when he said there'd be a million negros in Los Angeles, we shut it because we were saying, in essence, the majority
of these people are not like we are. And we felt that we maybe some of us felt we left this out because we were getting away from this problem. We are a part of this accident, too. But we may be embarrassed by the fact that here we're going to have a mass element come in, that's going to create a tremendous social problem in the community, to which we find a great deal of difficulty relating to

Oh, I like it and we forgot that. monoliths negros. Yeah, another great,
always a term African American, is that reinvent this term over and over again, to keep it monolithic, but you hear here, they shuttered shuttered with the idea that there were million need. Why? Why? Why? Because I don't want people to think they're like me, you know, look at them. If this isn't a this is the boot. This is the Boulay mentality, which is the I am different mentality. I traverse you know, I traverse
blackness to reach this pinnacle. I don't I do damned if I live in LA I'll be damned if I let Black these commoners come here and be smashed my name you know, that's that kind of mentality. And this is the 1960s that was 60 years ago yeah, that they were talking like this but I'm frustrated. Oh, we should overcome we need to integrate, but not willing to integrate their own

color, mono color well into
their community, but you can't come to our community we shudder to think of the thought of that. But I have more. Let's see another one.

Let me ask you Do you consider a das to be a monolith?
A Das is a designation and that's why I was so important important because I am a descendant of American slaves and the person that identifies with that has the same lineage you know we politics is different. Solutions is different you have communist you have Marxist you have capitalists, you know you have anarchy is you know, the political ideas is different. The thing with black misapplied This you pointed out yourself. Look how they do it. Brock
Obama, black, he's black. What does that even mean? He's not even black, brown. And I'm thinking starting to think he's Indonesian. The eyes start Yeah. Well, you start looking at the president, Indonesia, you look at Barack Obama, and you see where he comes from? I'm just saying like, we're not gonna go there. And the same thing with Kamala Harris. Is your Jamaican Indian but no, you're black. We're going to dismantle that we have to keep this monolith. And it's out of necessity because we
need this is the one voting bloc, we can count correct. It's all everybody else. All monoliths

are political. All Yes.
All it's a voting bloc. Which a monolith did well block a stone was solid, you know, is indistinguishable from his other other parts. Right. You know, it's, it's, you know, so I just wanted to bring that up. Let's go. Sorry.

I don't know why that happened.
So let's go ahead and get into the second part of this fascinating clip.
Oh, my phone, I could do gooder. Because I really am not, and I'm someone else. But I just think with these people coming in who are not our intellectual Isa, nor are they of our socio sociological bracket. They're not to be a handicap to us, they'll find their own level now to sound like a snob, but I don't mean it this way. But they're used to living a certain way. And they might rise rise above their art. And might one day be out associates.

What? Yes, they could rise up, they could watch that not the definition of uppity.
Yeah, this is like I said, this is the blue light, I don't know who got their camera in there are pieces are getting together and play some bridge or whatever, you know, bring the camera. And we you know, we're going to talk about why it's a problem with these Negroes coming to Los Angeles. You know, right, we made it here first. And we've established and this is, we talked about this before. This was common in New York, Philadelphia, everyone black people were migrating out of the
south to these places. This is what not only were they met with the racism you're saying from quote unquote, white people or non black people, because I mean, it was kind of fluid who was white at that time, you know, you had the, you know, had the Italians and you know, the Irish and those kinds of things that hadn't been annexed into whiteness fully just yet. So not only you had to deal with that buffer class, you had to deal with sure the, you know, the, the internal buffer class of the
Boulais. It's like, Oh, my God, they're gonna think we're like them. The same thing with the lady with the I am white. I mean, it's okay to be white poster. I don't want them to think. I don't want you to think we think like that. Right. It's the same mentality.

We're not white like Scott Adams. We're different ways.
Y'all, we're totally different. We don't think it's okay to be white around here. Oh, no, no, no, this Imagine that. That's crazy guy, it blows the mind. You know, the thing. You know, you can be as you said, and I agree with you manipulated to the point where you're embarrassed by your own identity. That's a fascinating mind screw right there. Let's go and get to the third part of this clip. The whole
tone of this meeting is a way of setting us up selves up as little puppet Jesus's we can't help anyone else until we help ourselves. The Nico has had two professions, his own medicine, dentistry, psychiatry, and entered the profession of being in April. And many of us who have come out here to escape from this second profession of being a negro. And we are out here while they were working in our own field, and then we find out that here are the same problems are falling on the
heels of 1500s negros a month that come into Los Angeles. Now, your eye problem is our own view with our own identifying with the Negroes that are coming in with a carpet bag that causes a problem

your carpet baggers. Nice.
Yeah. You hear what I heard when I heard it. I was like, I knew they thought this way when you read books, like our kind of people. One of the best books written on the Boulais

you don't hear joy read play in this clip.
This is joy. Yes, if I was a betting man when these intellectuals get around each other, and they start to sip wine And now look, I say we're not like whatever trend is on tick tock or you know, when they look talk about drill, rap or whatever else. It's like we're not those kind wasn't, you know,

anyway also kind of like Fresh Prince of Bel Air.
Yes, it was that that happens a lot on this. This idea mentality. And he think about it Phillip banks the character was a drum in from Yeah, he was a judge but his parent was pig farmers from South Carolina. And that's just the point. A lot of these people I want don't use the word rain, but left the South, establish yourself in the city. Kind of got to some kind of point of stasis. Know what was ever going on. And we don't want any disruptors we don't he called them problems. You hear
words like shudder to think. Yeah. Yep. So who are these people? One of the people that I respect a lot, Thomas Sol, he breaks down. And he identifies these people that are running from as the black rednecks,
black rednecks, who are they. These would be blacks who came out of the Southern culture and who carried that culture with them, a north into the end of the urban ghettos into the ghettos of the South for that matter, and who have not moved out of that cultural sense. over the over the years, both blacks and whites have moved away from that culture. But in the poorest and worst are the ghetto areas, there are lots of people who have not, and these kinds of,
it's a culture which didn't do whites any good. And it's certainly not doing blacks and a good today. And the tragedy is that people regard this culture as somehow the authentic black culture, and therefore you're not to interfere with it is to
be allowed to get so they're cheering people on. It reminds me of a scene in the Blue Max, where this general is encouraging this Daredevil pilot to do all kinds of wild stunts, you see, knowing that the guy is going to kill himself if he keeps doing this, and therefore the general will be rid of a of a political problem. Now, I don't think that the white liberals are doing this deliberately, but I think the
net results are the same. The sharing blocks on and doing things that are absolutely self destructive. What's the difference between a black redneck and a white redneck
color? Ah, once again, the same issue I had with Larry elders in a different way but in function. And it's not intentional. The Liberals are not doing it intentionally. This is where I kind of can't allow with him is the system of white supremacy is very intentional. Yes, fair. And one word government is very intentional in every one of their actions and deeds, letting their plans to let's throw that in there as
well. So when he gets to the point where I don't think it's intentional, Mr. Stowell, you're and I say that with the utmost respect, because thought leaders, I think he has a lot to offer. But when you say is unintentional, I don't know if you're unaware, or if you just don't want to, you know, if you start going like that, and then you get down into radical bucket. You know, you start talking about white supremacy
and is a system. Take the person, it's not personal. It's a system that needs to be maintained to say it's not intentional. Planned Parenthood. Clinics are built intentionally. Yeah, prisons are built intentionally. Policies are passed intentionally. The Crown Bill 2.0 is very intentional. And we're going to be getting to that very soon. Not in the show, but very soon. We saw it play out over these four years. Yes, and the reason why I knew because this is all play, and it
worked. So it's like they're gonna be very intentional. And I keep saying this word because that's what the rub with that's the rub with I hate to use this term every day black people and conservatives is that they don't know what they're doing. Oh, you're looking too much into this. You know, it's not intentional. very intentional, in my from my point of view, are are very lucky. One of the others even very intentional
very lucky. Oh, but yeah, that's the best of black retina and I'm going to answer a question of yours that you've been asking. Since I've been listening to no agenda. This is what happened to your teas.

Oh. Really? No.
This is what happened to your teas cuz I'm guilty of it. You know, in southern culture, we pronounced t f is age like bathroom. You're saying? Very soft on the end of words like ti he was known as saying a roll that was like watch. He'll say like, Hey, We trim the ended out words and that doesn't, that doesn't identify lack of intellect. And this is something they do to black Americans. That because we speak with a different dialect, it seems as unin you know, lack
of intelligence. But you have whole new broadcast and Pidgin,

the BBC especially well, and when we started the show, I remember it just took me a while to get ready to get used to x. And it was really when I discovered that that is, in fact, the way it was originally written. Way, way, way back when that I felt really stupid,
and it's not been reported. I was like, why is it if I say ask or ask, what's the what's the difference? You know what I mean? Not you, but the person listening knows what I mean. This is like I don't say to a Jamaican person when they say tree for three. He's a dummy. Yeah, it was a it's like karada, we do this well,

oh, well, this is blah. It's almost like wow, that's a good question. Because you expect Americans to be monolith monolithic in our language. So that that's where it starts from, I guess. Wow,
I will say many mana lifts many my mi n. Because like the the the common was that the New England or Canada I'm saying they have a way of speaking.

We have these diamond DOS, guys. You know, we have all Italians we have oh, us us. Huge, huge.
¶ Taking the fire out of it
No us like wow, oh, you like you use

us? I'm just thinking of Goodfellas with these huge dudes. But oh, no, that wasn't good fellas, that was my cousin Vinnie
might wish that showed the southern versus the northern event that takes race out of it. Yeah, that was that culture room. He was out there backwards thinking and you know, that kind of thing is and this is a struggle I have with being southern. You just want to take race out of it. We they be you when people hear your accent, they think you're at it. They just seem to push.

And I would say that, you know, white rednecks are without a doubt considered to be Oh, that you talk like
¶ Black rednecks
that. You're dumb. You're clearly a redneck. You're stupid. You live in a trailer park. That's always seen that way.
Black red is lesser than them. Yeah, you're under them. So this is yeah. So
what's the difference between a black redneck and a white redneck color? Same kind of people same attitudes? Oh, absolutely. Absolutely. And same kind of results. In terms of the violence, the the number of black the number of Chinese killed less than one year. And by Bob actually exceeds all the blocks flinched in the entire history of United States. In your opinion, what has to be done in the black schools or among black students in order to bring them up?
One, you get rid of the things that are dragging them down. You stop saying that speaking Black English, you know, is just as valid and all that kind of stuff. It may be it's just as valid to linguists and so forth. But the fact is, if you talk that way, you're not likely to get into med school, you're not likely to do very much in your life. If you're still living 50 years from now, what would you predict? There? The black race in this country would be Oh,
wow, we based on trends that you've seen. And in the last 2050, it could go it could go either way. If the current trends continue, it's going to be a disaster. But there's evidence of that the current trends are not unchallenged.

Man, what is this interview from?
This is from night 2005 interview on C span with Brian lamb and YouTube video was Thomas Sowell black rednecks is the title of it. But yeah, this is this is, um, we're gonna get deeper into this and the two points I want to make that came back to me. But yeah, this is where your T is go to. Because with anything, we mimic whatever's popular culture right now and ever since maybe the early 2000s, southern Hip Hop
¶ Southern linguistics
took over hip hop, Atlanta became the hub, Texas, Miami, these kinds of things and it took over the crown. I know start writing your hate email now. But the south took over the crown for hip hop. And with that, hip hop, Southern rappers, the change in linguistics, this is where your soft tees come from. And I didn't I didn't pay attention to and to use the break it up Yeah, but yeah, we say we say things differently.
Even if you're using the correct grammar, this the softening of T's and I, what's the other thing is teasing something else but Oh, and also the chopping off of words like, pod,

you know that funk Sam?
Fam pod you know, we we've been doing this for a long time now. But it's just that it became so in

fact goals are in fact if I hear another one of these, one of these, these millennial Zoomer Chicks Go dropping the T's I can say that's cultural appropriation should be ashamed of yourself,
you could if you want to participate in that information now just say like, but now it's, it's good. It's, it's, it's not a bad thing. But there's a dip between conversational English and formal English. And this is, this is where we need to make the the distinction because if you talk to me in conversational English, it'll be more than here. Like I say, I tried to I'm doing a broadcast. So I want to make sure I'm clear to everybody. I don't have
subtitles. So it's a it's a it's just different, different timing. But yeah, that's the point. I want to make about those two things that for that, that's good. It's good to know. Yeah, it was, but that's why Black redneck culture is prominent in pop culture right now, because of the elevation of, of southern hip hop artists. But the thing is, they found the most the caricature of southern people, like for instance, um, what was the what was the movie? That trick? Hustle and Flow?
That was a caricature of a southern hip hop artists we gave you outcast? Yes. Which was one of the most forward thinking forward looking groups at the time. But they didn't care. They didn't copy that. They said, We want the what's good for pushing this black redneck culture.

You know? This is really funny now that you mentioned that to me. Now I'm hearing now and of course, you we've known each other for years. Now I hear you say most and what? I hear you dropping the T's as never it's never occurred to me before.
Yes, now not like say it's natural. It's not like I know it's a tea bear. I know how to spell the word, you know. And I'll keep it on. Just keep it 100 People is when you're from the south, you will hear your grandmother, aunts or people when your family came down from New York. listen to them talk and properly. It was a no show, you can now hit toggle and all that proper reverse racism. Right. So that was the thing is like we're conscious not to get too proper, right? as well.
Unless it's your mom on the phone with like somebody build or something. Then Then you see the proper come out. But I just want to make that point. So let's just jump in. This is just a you can hear. This next clip is for show 14 victimization
¶ Colorism & Supreeeemacy
mentality. This is an example of a person that could be considered a black redneck, but they have moved to Chicago to give a better life to their children. And this is from the tenement.
Most of the adults who live in the tenement on South Ellis Avenue were born in rural areas of the South. They came to Chicago looking for a better way of life. They came to the south side of the city because they found that this was a place where Negroes were permitted to live. They came here without
much education or sophistication in the ways of the city. They came here poor about all that they brought with them where their hopes and our dreams will stay poles on his wife Gloria came from Alabama, where a man got a dream to have a dream and you dream of going in a place to make good to make it better for my family. That is the case and for my kids. These are the reasons that I came up
so that's that's your black red net. Right? They are what they would consider the problem the problem that we're making shutter a person like you know, the funny thing is Thomas Sowell parents moved from the Carolinas, I think it was North Carolina, really to New York, and have access to more for One more education is what put them on a path to boo hoo hoo, he
will. So it's a very, he brought up the Fresh Prince of Bel Air very similar backstory between Uncle Phil and Thomas Sol coming from southern roots,

but it's close to the heart you consider Thomas soul to be old school? Boulais?
No, they won't let them in. Okay, got it. You can work your off cold, he's off cold. Yeah, you know, we're, we're monetizing this blackness over here for our own games. And here, you can talk about some, you know, self accountability. No, you can't have stuff that's gonna mess up our our support base got it. We got to we got to keep them wanting more. So let's get back to speaking English. Let's get back to the Boulais. And this is the fourth clip from the wealthy middle class blacks.
Basic embarrassment that we as Negroes have, we want to live together yet we want to sort of scatter to the far wind and live amongst white people, we are born up in terms of this, that to have a dark skin to have to be a negro there is something wrong with it. And if you take a child and raise them by a child, very impressionable child, and having grown up in an atmosphere, where your color of skin is something that is looked down upon that there is something wrong with you that
you are not you don't have the abilities of other people. Even no matter how much education no matter how much training etc. You have a lot of these impressions stay with you. I feel that we have to search for a new image.

Wow. Well, this is also colorism, of course, when they really really dark skin.
Yes. Which that that was a function in it as well, which a lot of these people were fair skinned.

Of course, that's how they did it. Paper Bag test. Yes, you can't come in, you're not part of us.
Just to remind people want to show that we talked about Beyonce his father, he mentioned how even at Fisk in the 1970s, they had a color test. You know, this is nothing. I mean, this is the sixth season that's after the fact that these conversations is happening. And in the book I mentioned before all kinds of people, the author goes into how he went to these sorority and fraternity parties. And on the outside, it was like
the party will be the darker people. And the center of the party will be lighter and lighter until you get to the middle. So yeah, so colorism does play a big part in this. And it's funny, as you mentioned that this goes right on with clip number five.
This morning, I don't look in the mirror and say you are a negros therefore you will face life in a certain way I see myself as a person just like all the people that I work with. And the children that I deal with. And they're all people are got the brilliant idea of this consciousness of you've got to look in the mirror face yourself to go from this bit about being a Negro is very nice. Individual this concept was instilled in
you before you can think right. And first of all, we have every symbol in our community, the white straight hair brown hair as the symbol of the things as fat for now, there's nothing wrong with it, except that it represents the very fact that we are talking about the idea of the Negro in our society as a rejected job. There's no two ways about it. It's in Los Angeles in New York City isn't any place in the United States

doesn't have still kind of exists. The colorism aspect. In fact, oh yeah, the the N word is in fact used to describe often a very dark skinned black man.
Well, the N word now describes more mentality. Okay, then then a color but I would say yet distinct colorism still exists because look at politicians. It's a guy named Ford. out it's on MSNBC. Oh, he's really really first.

He on on the five on Fox was a different Ford
that he might he might be moving around but I'm just saying I know his last name is Ford. You look at I think it was being Chavis the mayor out here. He was running for governor out here I think in Maryland. A while back? Um, yeah. If you look at these politicians, especially the older older ones, yeah, there is a color is a colorism thing and
Taco Max. AK, aka wasn't what's his name? The it'll come to me but yeah, he was another show that he said that there's a there's a light skinned privilege that you can get in certain rooms. With being light skinned, Colin Kaepernick would have been seen too. All right, he been a dark skinned person. Yeah, so there is definitely, colorist is colorism still allowed as to what colorism is not exclusive to black Americans? You go to India you go to South America? No, this
tells you did this Latin America. Yeah, anyway, right? Sure. This goes to show you that everyone's racist is we're alive. Everybody's racist. Well, when you've been taught, Shaun King, Shaun King, yes. Thank you. Well, you've been taught that the image of beauty is this from the mass media.

Yeah. What does it You're right. Right.
This is why Black publications are so important. Because my beauty standards were set by jet beauty of the week, it was a U turn. So you got the jet was like, let me see what's going on. You saw women that looked like you, but were beautiful. And you saw women on perm boxes. That's a bad example. But hair product bottles that were a representation of our beauty, not through the lens of whiteness, and I hate to use that term, I cringe just using
it. But this is, this is how the white lady in the news, I mean, the news clip we listened to earlier, this is how her minds may shape because immediately you're a bad USA, you should be ashamed of who you are. Suddenly, this is what we're taught. By you know, saying this is real beauty. I mean, Lena Horn, you know, he was saying like, just keep going down the list. Our beauty and the older people weren't beauty had diverse blood, the light skinned first black

woman I fell in love with was Cleopatra Jones.
Right? I think that goes.

A lot of favorites. She goes, it was badass man, she was so badass.
And just now we gotta go to darkness, Francis quest Wilson, and discussed do black people really want to be white,
we have been taught under white supremacy to demean and degrade pigmentation. So that's, that's a mistake that we can learn from it. Like I was say if you know black people, black people in this area, were given a choice. I could say black people all over the planet. And given a choice if somebody said, Take this pill, and you could become white tomorrow, that the level of self hate of black people on the planet has been so great that 90% of black people would want
to become white by tomorrow morning. And you know, we just have to observe that and say, well, that's fascinating. But we do understand that we are in a system of racism, white supremacy. And each time that you turn on the television, you're getting a dose, a big dose, every time you open a magazine, every time you open a book, every time you go to a movie, if you go to a movie, and you just see white people, you're seeing the negation of black people, because they know
black people. So again, if you know our intelligence, meaning our ability to understand our environment will go up very high. This beginning to accurately decode the power system dynamic in which we find ourselves at this point in time.

This is actually now one of my favorite clips. We've talked about what she says supremacy but of course, what we learned what I learned is white supremacy I find it very important to to pronounce it differently from Neely fuller Jr. subarna MiSeq. And what she says here is that really it's been the elites who have SIOP the world for centuries. Probably because they own the medium printing press, you know,
etc, etc. all the way through to where we are today. That it has been the media who have taught us this that lighter skin is more supreme. And that goes for it goes for white people too.
Oh, of course. I mean, because there's this gradient so white, don't get it twisted because blonde hair blue out white woman, a ginger appearing right? Oh, yeah, even it's not a whiteness, you know. And when you watch television shows, the heartthrob and this is going when I was growing up. The heartthrob had to be the blond haired blue eyed. Now you know in the group now you had a brown boom there's your

Aryan race. There's your Hitler's, you know, blond, blue eyes.
Cray. This is where this is where it comes from. And when we go back for people To go back and listen to show 14, I think we discussed it, that when you lock people into these tenements and projects, and you put on anything you put through is the image of white America because And back in those days, the 60s, you know, you only had two broadcast channels. Yeah. And you only had Leave It to Beaver and all in the family and there was no recognition.

Wonderful people are on their way to the beach. Right? 60s television.
That's the thing because this is where they do. White people are so called white people a disservice. Because everybody thinks y'all have everything you need. You know, it does everybody right? Who's rich? You know, on television. Look at owl, but I'm gonna give you an example. Look at Al Bundy. He sold shoes. Yeah, he had a two story house. And his wife didn't work. Shoes. How does that work? You say like, you know, how does that work? I know it's tribute.

Psychological Operations, man.
And another example and the one that we got to move on is when you watch these house buying shows, you have one lady likes a part time pottery person. And the guy's like a teacher in an inner city.

Yes, yes.
I know, nearby, like a $600,000. Home. I'm like,

wait, wait, do they tell me these shows aren't are fake? No.
No, what it represents is because we need to if I was a person that just bought stuff on surface, it's like how the hell did you say I'm a teacher, and a part time pottery person about a $600,000 home, right? It just gets Oh, you know, that's that's privilege. And but the system, as you said, they own the medium. And this is what they constantly got to pump out to now. And now what you see is I was trans everything trans is right, you know, a trans person
go on a shooting spree and we stand with the trend. Yeah, that's to the point where he, like I say, This is why our mental health is so important and listen to shows like this and no agenda because I told you, you know, I was missing the no agenda show. Yeah. Because you got to hear people talk about stuff to you know, be the, weaponize it and discuss it in long form. But yeah, that's the power man. And you know what
¶ Confusion & self esteem
comes out of that when you watch that and you're not you're an outsider looking in low self esteem. Yeah. And we have the next clip with nearly fuller discussing confusion and self esteem.
Yes, the white supremacist do this in all nine areas of activity all of the time. Okay. In other words, the way to confuse people is to lead them to have questions with no answers. That's what confusion is. Lots of questions with no answers. Why is this happening? Why is that happening? What are
those people doing over there? Why are they doing it? No, like I see what in all the areas of activity the white supremacist say keep those dark skinned people views and that way confusion brings on what frustration oh you improve your self esteem by doing things that work. This is what self esteem comes from doing things that work.

I mean, he's so smart
and the reason why I bring you to the show so often in the back end is going to be heavy with him because logical is not his emotion is not you know, he's not even come up with solutions per se. His role is identifying what the problem is, you know, somebody else has to solve it and really all people can solve it ourselves. You know, you have to your control your actions. And this is where seven habits come in for me because being effective is the only reaction to this system.
That's how you don't get counseled. If you're if you're constantly effective, so I agree. Um, yeah, so let's go go you got anything you want to add? Oh,

no, I just bring me more Neely, fuller, Jr, man, love him.
Alright, let's get to the second part of self esteem.
That's what self esteem is, doesn't work against you. Your self esteem starts disappearing, when you are doing things that are working against you. I mean, it just starts slowly easing away from you, so that you don't have any left. But also called self esteem comes from you. You know what to do you know how to solve problems. So you basically that's it, problem solving. And that's where self is Same comes from, when you get through the place, you have a whole lot of
problems, you don't know how to solve them, yourself. And same goes. And then you just start doing any kind of thing and started lashing out at anything. Because you're frustrated, frustrated. Confusion brings about frustration, frustration brings about all kinds of chaos. And the chaos brings about all kinds of conflict if you're around other people, because you will just lash out at everybody, and then eventually lash out against yourself. That's why we are very toxic when we around
each other. We're frustrated, we're confused. We are angry. And you know, we just, well, we're gonna take it out on somebody. We don't want to keep this hidden ourselves upside the head all day long. So we hit somebody else up that day. Why? Because they look like us.

Wow, man. It's just so good. How do we what can what is him within our power to stop that for everybody? For All? Obviously it affects everybody. How do we stop that? Besides Okay, okay, here it is. Yes. Be
proactive. put first things first, begin with the end in mind. Synergy, sharpness style. What's that seek first to understand then be understood? More often? Yeah. But it made the seven habits because it's, it's what I do. Not not the environment, not everybody else not there's gonna be this messianic leader that comes along where he's orange MAN, or the next MLK or whoever else, I have to be effective. And the only definition of effective is realizing a goal that's
effective. I have this goal is realized, okay, I solved the problem. And this is where I don't have one person I go to for ideology. nearly full I go for him for understanding the code and the system. You go to other people, you know, Dr. Wilson, he says what, what solves problems, culture solves
problems. You know, saying like, so this is you have to take these tidbits of information, put them together and say okay, it's like, you know, a potluck, you know, let me get a little bit of this little bit add a little nibble the Nation of Islam, the way they understand the value of their health and their appearance. I want some of that, you know, awesome, awesome guns, you're saying Malcolm X. Let me get some of that and hopefully this is what's been represented show that I don't
come with one audiology. I come with what sound advice and what I think works. And you know, and culture is what you do to solve problems is like if there's a island over there and it's a bunch of food on it, we need to create a culture to you know, saying to go and get that food and bring it back you know, so okay, we might need to be a culture of people that use moraine you know, like boats, ships, Marines, central culture, you know, our naval centric culture or you know, that kind
of thing. That's what we do to solve problems. So just just, that's my opinion, is are they we could do is be effective. And in Dr. Covey, he laid out the habits, you know, and no, that's, that's my opinion. Hindsight, and you only you can solve your problem. Nobody else can solve your problem for you.

perfect moment to take a little break. Thanks for more people for sending us some new money, which we love. I like brand
new money. I just I don't want any money around me.
¶ New Money
It's not I don't want to have a new one than a brand than an old 20 That's kind of dumb. But there's something about new money that excites you. You like $100 bills? Money. The most beautiful thing on earth is $100 bill. I haven't seen a woman is good looking at $100 bill. There's something about a bill to excite

how we got a couple more people to thank who also supported us under the Executive Associate Executive producer level we start off with the anonymous Mo Bro from North Carolina $40 And he says for services rendered Christopher Dibiase $33 Sam Williams 25 Cory caps value for value episode 90 $25 Thank you. Malin, drip, I'm sorry Marlon drip. 2358 ITM
mon Adam, love the show. I will be very grateful if you can give a brief explanation of how do you produce the clips for a show and how do you organize them to record a show what programs and software do you use to get clips from long videos Oregon, oh my
goodness. Organize them and record a podcast? Well, you know, actually, if you go to pod father gear.com It shows you a lot of the stuff that I use for the production although I do have to update it but for the recording mode, maybe briefly, you can just explain what you use to to produce clips with
alright so to produce the clips get any video downloader I use 4k Video Downloader then I've figured out what parts I want to clip I put them you can use I think is Audacity or I use FL Studio but Audacity is free have no other option and then you could get all your clips together in a nest the hard border so that's what a tom is like because it's a it's a story I'm laying out or a so it can be understood you know it's is I need to explain this before I explain that so
that's the that's the short version of it and maybe I'll might do something where we can make more people effective in doing this work as well.

Yes, and I would say you make it look easy. So there is an amount of talent and perseverance and and being effective as you as you just discussed and you're very successful with that. Thank you Mel. Sam schmuck 2345 $23.54 Hope you deadbeats out there paying attention he says failure to support the show may result in complete reliance on state controlled information. Indeed support all of your favorite
independently produced media very important. Dame Jen of bead brush and cloth $22 Thank you damn Jen Derek McIntosh episode 89. He said my high school grad year okay, for a hence the $20.89. Then we have $20 from Dustin Zimmer Matthew Weaver at 100 ollar ser Jennifer Kaito Carol a chase grant Covey says Keep up the great work. Thank you. Justin Zimmer. $10 from Kyle tack. Or tacky Christie Carlton Jeremy Kavanaugh Daniel
white. Trenton Scoville Seth Peterson Michael Talbot. Arson nomics, Bo Baldwin, Aaron Sneed, Christopher bell, Lea, Dave Jones. I'm David Jones. Dave Jones. Nasir which one? SV Benjamin Barlow, Walter Foss, Teresa, Taryn Terrence Lynch, Vanessa Steinbach. Kyle tack again, Christie Carlton again Trent Scoble. Again, Daniel. Oh, these are people who are doing regular donations. Thank you, Seth Peterson and Michael Talbot. Melissa, a bite a bite a bite Adam for being the light
and Mo for being the love. Oh, thank you. Then 988 from Mark Jay Asher drew khabar 963 five and 55 from Vince Farrell, Jennifer being with five Joshua Goodson with five Moises Hernandez $4.20. I hear ya we're doing a baby and winding it up as always, Terry, the human subscription killer $4.11 Thank you all so much for supporting Moe facts with Adam curry episode 91. I look forward to your support for nine to two.
¶ Where Scott Adams was right...
All right, so this is where Scott Adams was right? Here we go. And I'm back here he's backed up by Mr. Neely. Fuller, black people should stay away from black people, according to Neely, fuller, and I support this. But unless it's one condition going on, and that's if whatever you're working out is constructive. If he's not constructive, stay away. And that's what Neely fuller says go ahead and get into 34.
This is to be expected. But we should understand. First of all, we are programmed this way. Black people are toxic. All of us are toxic. We are loaded with poison. Because the system of white supremacy puts that poison in us even before we are born. And when we are born, we are born into the system of white supremacy. We're not born into a system of lala land.
We're born into the system of white supremacy, the system of white supremacy is designed for everyone, including black people themselves, to have a hostile position, a hostile toward anything dark, and particularly dark people. That's just the way the world is run. That's the way the white supremacist set it up before any of us were born. So we have to first of all know that so we all carry that poison. It's in us we're not
aware of it. In one sense, you might say I mean then in another sense we are aware of it but we're ending now.

Wow. My brain my brain just blew up.
Toxic. Wow is and unless you're getting together to be constructive. You should avoid each other and this is where a validates my school of fish flock of birds with haven't mentioned in a long time Yeah. But as fish in a school respect each other's space, they acquiesce and move out of respect of the other fishes space. Now they're moving together, where there's a proper distance that's maintained between each fish. And that's the point why use the the school
of fish because there's no leader. You know, it's, it's, this is how we're moving, okay, we move to the left, we need to move up, we need to move down, they move in unison, but they're not bumping in your sand and knocking in each other know, when birds fly there, they fly in a formation. And that's the point I'm saying that we need to be respectful, if you feeling toxic. Just keep to yourself. Um, there's a brother named Al Conseco, and he said the three S's is solitude, sobriety and
selflessness. That's the solitude part. You know, if you're not at your best, you're not going to be constructive, wherever you're going with the cookout or the party or wherever else, stay at home. If you're just gonna get together to gossip, stay at home, you know, and I think a lot of people fall into this even, especially content creators, that they feel that they had to talk to say something, but their message is not constructive. And not being constructive is gonna lead to
disaster. So this is why I said nearly full, according to Neely Fuller, Scott Adams is right, in the fact that we need to stay away and that is not the other way for puts it. No contact, no conflict. Wow.
But we have to admit, first of all, we have this poison. And then we immediately should jump to what do we do about it? Well, the first thing you do, you don't want poison to spread. That's, that's a part of physics, the laws of mathematics. If you've got paws on one hand, you don't want to poison the spread. How do you keep the poison for spread, you make sure that every contact that every black person makes with every other black person has a plan beforehand, to do
something constructive, do our say something constructive. So we, every time we make contact with anything, we just spread poison, because we are loaded with poison. And we are contacting other black people, they are loaded with poison, and dynamite. And you're gonna get an explosion unless you tailor and suppress that poison, and tailor it in such a way that it's kind of shunted off to the side, or it doesn't manifest
itself. I mean, when we make these contexts, so I have it in the book, the textbook for victims of white supremacy, no contact, no conflict. If you minimize the contact, you minimize the conflict.

Do you think the elites of the world know this? Know what? Well, I'm just thinking about
it. We're full of poison. Well, they pop out poison 24/7. So I'm right,

but a nude Yes. Yeah. Okay.
Yeah, no, I'm just I was dead. Adam. I mean, this is B, they won't you did. Or to agree with him? One of the other you know, and it's the very, it's very hard to set that fat. And if somebody won't, if you're not fitting what they think is supreme, they want you dead, one way or another, you're gonna say it doesn't matter. So yes, I think they are aware, because the system is designed, and it this is not happenstance. And at the bottom is where it materializes, the clearest. And
you know, it is crystal clear. Because when you're frustrated, you've been taught that you're second class, and you accept the victimization mentality. And you bring other people here, anything for instance, like right now in New York, you bring other people here from other countries, you put them in five star hotels, you know, and I'm living in a rat infested you know, squalane tenement you know, steel America, these
tenements are still existent to this day. And you do this? Of course, like you say, when you ruin my self esteem, because I haven't seen any results from 60 years of civil rights, no results. Now I'm frustrated, and frustration turns to lashing out. And this is why I'll say to Scott Adams, we hate crime as much just as much as you do this the record labels in the media companies and make you think we like crime. Yeah, we hate
criminals just as much as anybody else. It's this model live that all black people are criminals every time they start talking. The criminal justice system you No. How do we reform criminal? We you see these, quote unquote, white people being attacked. And something that tragic and malicious happens to them. They always say what they had a record. They shouldn't have been out in the streets. Not Tada, 10 people in that record, were black people victimized first. Well, you know, in

an interesting way, in an interesting way, you're making a case for the Soros sisters. Because, you know, because of all of this taking place, black people have had a bad run of it. And they're always getting blamed for all of it. So we need to go easy on
know this, and that's the that's the mess. That's the media misrepresentation of the facts. Well, I don't want you to I don't want to be your experiment. I don't want my neighborhood to be your experiment and say, oh, is letting felons out?

No, I agree. I agree. But that's what they're using.
Yeah, of course, it makes sense. You're saying if you look at it that way, but that's, yeah, that's crazy. It's Don't be confused. They're confused. They know exactly what they're doing. Just like not to harp on the trans thing. They knew exactly how it was gonna sound when they came out and supported trans people after this shooting happened. Right. They knew how it was gonna be taken. And I want to give one example of I think people miss understand what's going on this
John? Pierre, whatever her name is.

Kareem Abdul John Pierre Van Damme?
Yes, her. She's very good at her job. People say oh, she's not she's dumb. She's this is that she's there to gaslight, you. You'll ask her a question. She asked another question without batting an eye. And what does it do frustrate you to report you want a part so that he knows this is this is how they've been dealing with

how they spin people up particularly white Republicans.
But maybe a spinning us up like that? Yes, for a very long time. Because like I said, they showed us all these cops shootings the same way. They showed the violent white crimes. Now, the algorithm force fed this on black people to the point that they were radicalized, and no, we don't want crime. And you know what the good thing like Thomas oil was referring to, there is some change. People are coming out now say we're not witness crime. And you know what that benefits
crime bill? 2.00? Yeah. Because you know, who asked for the first crime bill, black people do something about this crime? And they're like, whoa, aren't you? So it's like the vaccine, right? I'm just so happy to have some mRNA right here.

For the problem. Reduction solution.
Exactly. I just so happened had this crowd build, it might solve your problem, which is only gonna make the problem worse, because falling into fathers and this, this goes through the roof again. I'm just saying like, repeat repeat history. So and so that leads us right into this thing where they act like they can't solve the black problem. I'm more than aware of whenever white supremacy gets tired. Or they can work you into the corner to ask for what they want to do
already. They already know that they want to do the tricky they make you ask for. You know, just like just like this, the people that fear they're super spreaders. And I heard this firsthand. When are you going to vaccinate these people? What are you going to force that? Where are you going to start firing people who've been able to take the vaccine? I heard this Yeah. out of people's mouths. You were saying people that you weren't what you thought were you know,

and the funny thing is pretty reasonable. And you'll hear people say we're never letting them do that to us again. And I think though don't worry, you will you will you
beg for your demise. Yeah.

take me take me up to a higher level here. Mo I'm getting depressed
it this is this is nearly fuller talking about how they can wrap all gangs up in one afternoon.
¶ They're crazy!
Yeah, they train it oh, just like they train their black people. So they you know, they tell black people join a gang. You want to solve your problems, join a gang, you know, and kill your neighbors. I mean, your neighbors all look like you. That's what I want done. So y'all go at it. I'll sit and read the comic book while you look out the window. Why y'all doing it? You know? ain't none of you got no sense? I tell you everything that you need to know. You know, so I'll give you
all guns when you go kill each other. Now if you saw it coming at me. I mean, you know, you will find out what hell it is because I'm the inventor of guns. I know all about violence. You can't teach me nothing about violence. And the white supremacist talk it Yes, sir. I can wrap all the you all up and you know it. That's why you don't bother me with that nonsense over Yeah, across the tracks in the ghetto, none of you all do bad ones. I mean, with the tattoos and the darks,
AGF you scare each other with that nonsense. You don't scare me at all. I say they read a comic book behind that nonsense, and then wrap you up in your whole family, and all your games put together in one afternoon, and you know it. Why? Because I am a white supremacist boy, but white supremacist gal, and you knew it. And I don't have to tell you, you already know this.

Now break that down. So people understand because I got it because I've been around you long enough.
What he's saying is that whenever they want to solve the problem, or quote unquote, outright crime, a mayhem they can do it do it in one afternoon, Chicago, Chicago, what we saw in New York 33 arrests in one day. It was it

was it was Fox News embedded embedded. Reporter on the beat with him. Uh huh.
Well, we go in there and you know what the gangs know this. I will be honest with you. The people is attacking white folks, the black people, they crazy. Crazy. I mean, literally, because every self respecting and black person or you can't go around hurt white folks and get away with it. So they got to be
crazy. Yeah. I'll be honest with you, because when, and this is not me saying a criminal says I just went and did a robbery where you put your head over there and just go in Malibu, or Beverly Hills or USA or somewhere they supposed to be the collar criminals I say Are you crazy? You know what kind of heat they're gonna bring down on us? Seriously, they know their boundaries. You know, they the criminals know and in the people who are doing these like pushing people in trains and stuff, they
crazy. Yeah, cuz they know you can you can victimize black people all day, every day. I make a song about it. Yeah, you might get a few years if they come looking for you. But as soon as you heard a white person Oh, no, no, that's not gonna happen. And not there's a I got Neely fuller back me up with 37
That's why you would not think about messing with me. I don't care how bad you're supposed to be. Prove that you're bad to each other. I'll let you do that. In fact, I taught you how to do it. Keep at it. Because that mismatch. Okay, that's the white supremacist. All the black people out here robbing and, you know, we know who to rob we know how far we're
gonna have to run. If we rob somebody white or a little further than you rob it robber St. Robert Nozick you're gonna have to run you know, you get out there and get a you know, you can kill four and five black babies all day long. In a gunfight you kill one white child. And you ain't gonna run far enough find something to step out. Alright, if you do it by mistake while you're trying to kill that other negro. Alright, you made a mistake. And just that white woman's baby in
that carriage. Now you will be willing to fail. But yeah,
true. So yes, I'm just saying so the criminals know. But what's happening is you have a spillage and for several reasons you're having with gentrification people going into neighborhoods that were typically quote unquote, urban. And criminals, especially homeless criminals or mentally ill criminals. They're not leaving. They're terrorists or,
¶ The strategy of white confusion
you know, okay, how gentrified it is. And these people are going to crash collision, because you remember, let's go back to 1350. mean 30% of the people do 50% of the crimes, but 90% of that 50% is done against people who look like them.

Yeah, it's interesting or higher. You can see now that the like gentrified East Austin, cops won't even go there. Correct. That won't even go because you know
why? Because the main people that were gentrified was one they want to defund the police will show you blue flu, flu. What he wants to do, he wants to come out here and mediate. Now we don't do that you call us and you're saying to get it pick up the dead body. Yeah. And that's how they look at it. And there's another thing that I mentioned before, but this is one of the strategies of confusion, and it's called White sacrifice. I know people looking at me, like mo there's real
crime happening against white people. And I'm like, Yeah, I know. And it's used as a purpose is called White sacrifice and Neely fuller is gonna explain it in the next clip,
racial white sacrifice, confusion, white sacrifice, yes. Meaning when you drive down the street and you're looking at your car window, you'll see some white people on park benches, you see some white people who are out there barefoot in the wintertime. And you see some white people walking around talking to themselves and whatnot, and don't have anything. I mean, and you say, Oh, this is racism is over.
Because look, if you got white people who are poor, you got white people who don't have anything, you got white people who are suffering, just like black people. So it's not racism, it must be something else. No, the white supremacist operate on a percentage basis. They know that and they even put up have they put in position in the path of danger by a certain segment of white people, they'll just pick off white people, so to speak, and destroy them under the bus to distract non white
people to thinking that racism doesn't exist. But they do it on a percentage basis. See, for every 10,000 black people to take kill, they'll kill 10 white people and say, See, you know, it's not about race. I mean, you know, I mean, people just out here killing people. That's all it is.
White sacrifice and greatest example, that is the January 6 prisoners.

outstanding example.
Criminal Justice, nobody would come to say it nice. They're still in jail.

But I noticed and if you notice, they let the ringleader so called ringleader the shaman, they let them out? Yeah, same day 45 was indicted. You know, kind of make sure we don't talk about it.
Correct. When I'm just investors what and it's something I didn't put it in the show but I just want to address it because this goes back to those black people in the 60s that was making it the system has to gas gas gas and brake, they have white sacrifice on one hand it shows white people in the White appearing people in a bad light. Right just show that there can't be any racism because white people are being
affected too. Right? And at the same time they use this thing called racial showcasing where while we're putting white people down some a segment we're lifting up a segment of black people to say all we've got right billionaire rappers you know Bill billionaire billionaires, billionaire black billionaires, everywhere, you can't you just trip over them. It's so many black billionaires to start with say, see, it's
¶ Incompetent by design?
because you didn't do you didn't lift yourself up. That's the problem. You know, and they do these two things simultaneously. And I'm gonna give you a great exam called prot you probably seen it the hearing of this aviation whatever.

Oh, the black guy high high you know people like you got to play this you got it. I said, you know, there's something so wrong about what's going on right here with this guy. The way the way that
black people don't for the fall all black people about to take the fall. Like No Other fall you ever seen more dependent?

This guy? I mean, he he was nominated for FAA. When not Commissioner, Administrator, yeah. And he has 00 aviation experience he have never worked in an airport has never, he probably hasn't even flown that much. And I gotta tell you the questions that were being asked as a as an airman as a pilot, I had to look a few of them up. This was bullshit. It was it was but it was really so raw.
And tandem, that was white sacrifice and black showcasing all in one because I'm sure that a white person out there is more qualified than him. I'm sure there's a black person more qualified than him out there. But they highlight it to show you. We're going to highlight somebody who's incompetent in their field. I don't know that man's past. I don't know his history you're saying but in that field, he sounded very incompetent. And how they presented him this do
Aven Brent brags or whatever his name is the same thing. Have you noticed everybody's ground taking Trump down as black all of a sudden, everybody and what's interesting over represent they're over represented. And what's interesting is in, in white right wing media is being represented as Dei.

That's the issue. Like, reverse racism. wokeness wokeness, wokeness like, oh, I'll just wait people.
Where do these people come from all of a sudden, why are they being set up? Take the fall. All, you know, I mean not not to get into the details of it. I'm just everywhere you look, the Vice President, even the president, he's incompetent. Everybody's incompetent by design. Yeah. So when it's all said and done, they can do just like they did with the war in the Middle East, we didn't know, we didn't know, they didn't have massive weapons of mass destruction. Everybody gets
rich, nobody goes to jail, we didn't know. And Colin Powell gets left holding the bag,

holding the little file,
don't drop that cake.

I tell you're gonna lift me up Mo.
As far as I am, because I like it. At the end of
¶ The power to change is within us
the day, the powers within us, of course, you change. You can only change you. And once you realize there's a cost of racism, it should be an incentive to want to change.

I sure hope people listen, I sure hope they do.
And let's hear about that cost in the racism. This is John H Bracy. And I think it's a it's a very telling clip, to wrap it up, you know,
so that was fun and more effective to say that racism is not free for anybody, you know, if you paid a price, you know, for what has happened to African American people, that you're not getting off scot free. And that if you still believe in white supremacy, or any hints of white supremacy, and not at the absolute top of the socialist, you got to go
looking for somebody to be mad at. Because the benefits of being a white person are like, shrinking and shrinking and shrinking to be an ordinary white person, regular white
person, you know, not a wealthy rich rapists. And so the payoff for white supremacy, you know, the clientele for that payoff is getting smaller and smaller and smaller, you know, and in a sense, the majority of the white American population is dropping down to where black people are, you know, which is to say, your unemployment rate, you know, your living conditions, your level of debt, you know, your level of social anxiety is coming down to where we are. And I would like to say, welcome to
The Club. Misery loves company.

I would say I see that all everywhere around me. Absolutely. 105 by 510 by 10. completely true. And people don't see it, and they're blaming it on the wrong things.
Yeah, so I mean, but I have faith that the further further they back us into this corner, you know, is going to create some kind of understanding, and which is seek first to understand then to be understood, this is what this for your conversation has been with me and you that I pick your brain, you pick my brain, you fill in some blanks for me, I fill in some blanks for you, and we become better people out of it, which makes us you know, Santa's more likely to be
¶ Wrap
effective. So, but there is a cost of racism, there is a cost is like we need to assess is it worth it? Or do we need to go with a system of justice? Well, also,

I hope everyone looks at us. We're free men. We're American men. We don't take no crap. Nope. If you don't mind, I think that's exactly that's part of it. You know, and we are always trying to be productive together.
That's the whole goal of so that's my wrap on Mr. Scott Adams, and used to give some sand in the background and hopefully here's the show. And he has a better understanding because I'm speaking to reach not to be right. So

I hope well, we're looking forward to hearing from Scott TP might someone's someone's gonna send him this hill. Listen, I'm sure he will.
I hope so. And as I always say, pay attention to
¶ Pay attention to Everything and the Truth will reveal itself
everything and the truth will reveal itself

and we will reveal ourselves once again. On Episode 92, which would be in a couple of weeks we'll try and let you know ahead of time. Please remember us mo facts.com mov fu nd me.com For mo funmi.com mo thank you so much man. I enjoyed it as always.
Thank you as well Adam,

and we'll talk to you very soon right here on mo fax with Adam curry and tell them Take care everybody bye bye
bye bad attitude plan tell him out of more. No need for shame. I get mochi said slow speeds. gonna beat the game you're in control freak it's cold in my veins I'm below freezing snow season made me that note that our Sony must
face don't wanna grow also a smoke just in case. She saved me that global load of waste in the stroke that's just so got a little bit of space since che sent last night yet maybe right around the corner but I swear stormy waters in May if you're somewhere above you can breach and that's really all it takes we don't need them but tonight tonight world is so small today night building up a break. Break and she paid it when I come in it's late and it's late and it's late I don't
nine times out of 10 I get it wrong. So I wrote this song tell myself to hold on. I can feel my finger slipping in a motherfucking instant not be gone. Do you want it left for some mediocre? staring at the wall and a wall full of posters? Looking at my dreams? Who won't want to be I guess you got to see it who have been fooled but it's cool that's what human beings to keep your eyes to the sky never glued to your shoes. I guess there was a time when my mind was concerned with the sun
coming down now. Cloud storage don't tell me nothing but the truth. I'm tired. I don't gotta spare second. When it knows what it knows, I don't keep counting