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Welcome, Welcome, Welcome, Welcome, Welcome, Welcome. Okay, everyone, welcome home.
It's getting harder to say welcome home in an environment that is treating us like we are on foreign territory. Completely shocked by the rapid pace, not necessarily the rulings, but the rapid pace in which we are seeing the Supreme Court undo voting rights, undo the protections of civil
and human rights in this country. We just got news, of course, last night that in Wes Allen, Alabama Secretary of State versus Marcus Castor, that they have agreed the Supreme Court has allowed Alabama to proceed with the original maps before there was a court order redrawing districts to ensure that Terry School Congress from Terry School and Shamari Figures, who is a new member of Congress serving his first term, would both be able to have seats in Alabama, a
place that has a huge black population. Well, the Supreme Court just yesterday says, you know what, We're going to
go back to how things were. We're going to go back to the original maps before the court order and we are going to do that, despite the fact, despite the fact that on Tuesday, May nineteenth, an election for which ballots are already printed, that have Terry Sewle's name on them, that have SCHAMAI Figure's name on them, Despite the fact that people have already early voted, Despite the fact that folks who received absentee ballots, despite the fact
that military officials who are overseas have their ballots, have probably already cast their ballots, have probably already mailed in their ballots right have voted. What this country is doing to voting is something that is an abomination to us. All our ancestors are rolling over in their graves, and yes, white folks, even yours, even yours. As you seek to protect and defend democracy, as you fight for liberty and justice for all, particularly in this hour, your ancestors too
have to be rolling over in their grapes. Unless they were the Confederates, then maybe they celebrate. Maybe they're celebrating. But speaking of the Confederates, I also want to turn our attention to Louisiana. What is important to know in this moment is that Memphis no longer has a majority black district. There was one majority minority district in all of Tennessee. We can get to the demographics of these states. Surely, maybe somebody on our team can pull them up. What's
the black population in Tennessee? What is it in South Carolina? What is it in Louisiana? What is it in Mississippi? What is it in Alabama? We should know these things. But the only black district in all of Tennessee. The state legislature last week acted in a line met with what the Supreme Court ruled in Louisiana versus Calais. Calais, by the way, was an insurrectionist who was on Capitol Hill on January sixth. Being a terrorist has a Supreme
Court decision in his name. Now where they have decided that they would side with the Confederates, where they would side with white nationalists, where they would side with white supremacists, and strip us of our voting power, diluting our voices in congressional races.
So here we have it.
Louisiana said, hold my beer. Their election is on Saturday. Alabama, as I said, is on Tuesday. But Louisiana's election is Saturday. It is this coming Saturday again, just like Alabama ballots have gone out. These members of Congress, Troy Carter, Cleo Fields, Cleo Fields, who fought for decades to ensure that Baton Rouge would have a black voice in Congress, hasn't in there long at all.
Seed is now stripped.
Most likely, they have until June first in Louisiana to come up with a congressional map that makes sense, long after this Saturday primary, Long after these politicians who say they're protected democracy and clutching their pearls at voter fraud that does not freaking exist, are creating the environment for electoral dysfunction, for voter suppression, and for people to have to have their voices counted not once, but twice and then a third time if you count the general election.
So in Louisiana, this is what Governor Landry had to say when he appeared on CBS sixty minutes.
Let's listen.
In the United States, we get equal rights, no one gets extra rights.
This past Tuesday, we went to Baton Rouge and met Governor Jeff Landry at the governor's mansion, a close ally of President Trump. He dominates louisianaics. The colorful conservative Cajun was the state's Attorney General before winning the top job in twenty twenty three.
You cannot say that we are all created equal, and at states must treat everyone equal on at a law and then allow a law to sort people based upon race.
Following the Supreme Court decision, Governor Landry declared a state of emergency and abruptly suspended Congressional House primaries right as voting was starting, ordering a do over at a future date, leaving voters dazed and confused.
You declared a state of emergency. What exactly is the emergency?
We've got? The highest court at Alliance says the map that you have is unconstitutional, So we don't have a map under which our voters can vote on.
This country has held elections during the Civil War, during two World Wars, elections still went on.
We're gonna have an election, and we're actually gonna have an election or election day.
But voting was already happening as we sit here right now. More than forty five thousand ballots have been returned.
What happens to those voters?
Ballots are discarded and those voters will vote again in November.
You say that like it's not a big deal.
Well, it's it's not a big deal. It's not my fault. If anybody has agrievance, take it to the United States Supreme Court.
It's not my fault.
But what is your fault, Governor Landry, is the fact that you called a state of an emergency to suspend an election or at least part of an election, when there is no emergency. You said they are going to vote twice. They're actually not going to vote twice because you have to have another election where they vote for their representative of not choice but force. Because they're representatives of choice are Cleo Fhiells and Troy Carter, And now one of them will be out of a seat. So
it actually is absolutely your fault. You do have the ability to do something. And the people of Louisiana are speaking back. They're saying, you're saying it's not your fault. Well, we say recall. And so what has to happen now is there has to be consequences for when people exact harm on the black community.
You are diluting votes.
You are siding with white supremacists with Confederate mentality to strip us of our voting power.
And so I think that is what's important. Thank you all.
I'm seeing a lot of your comments. Somebody said, I love angry Angela. I am so angry, but really it is deep grief because I don't believe that we deserve to go backwards in this moment. There is someone who's been fighting on the Senate Government Affairs Committee in Louisiana.
He is the nephew of Congressman Troy Carter.
His name is Senator Gary Carter, and I want you all to hear the very righteous protest he engaged in in a committee hearing where he asked a very simple question. He said, the Secretary of State is always here for a hearing. Where are you today, sir? Let's roll the click.
The reason why we're here today is because there's a suspension of ongoing congressional elections, and so I guess before we start the agenda, I like to hear from the Secretary of State or someone from the Secretary of State's office.
Nobody is here from the Secretary of State's office.
Well as chair of the committee. I have some very important questions that I would like to be addressed. We have an ongoing election for Congress, and at the time, the Secretary of State issued a statement declaring an emergency. I would like to know how many people have requested early ballots. Do you have that information, mister chairman? How many people have requested Earlsenary?
I have not, But have you reached out to the Secretary of State before this meeting?
I can't recall a meeting of the Senate Government and Affairs Committee where someone from the Secretary of State office has not been sitting off to the side. So it was my expectation that the Secretary of State would be in this committee meeting to know, quite honestly, how many people had voted at the time the governor suspended the election, and what happened to those ballots. Are those ballots being preserved somewhere? Are those ballots being counted? Can you tell me?
Can you tell me, mister chairman, how many people had voted at the time the governor has suspended Louisiana Louisiana's congressional elections.
No, I cannot.
But there's already an ongoing election regarding congressional maps that are in place, and my simple question is what's the status of those votes that's already been cast. Are those votes are going to be counted or are they going to be discarded?
Simple question.
I can't answer that question.
My first question was about the votes that were already cast before he ensued the suspend.
Didn't take a recess right now?
Why I only as like two questions, mister chairman, as I was saying before our break, I want to know from the Secretary of State's office, and I demand to know before the next meeting. Is my understanding this committee is going to meet.
Well, and we can continue to play this another time. Dere we can go ahead, Thank you. I'll get your attention. I want people to see that clip. Will make sure that we put that up on social again. Gary Carter was holding the line. He was pushing for the Secretary of State to answer what happens to these people who've cast their ballots. It is so important that legal advocates across states are paying attention to the disenfranchisement of voters.
Of course, there are people like Clarence Thomas on the Supreme Court who would argue, well, they're voting on something that's unconstitutional anyway. On what basis, sir, On what basis there is representation, There is taxation.
Included in the constitution.
There was nothing that allowed for you all to jerry mander in a partisan way districts, and certainly certainly not by disenfranchise black voters. Now you could say, Clarence, I'm trying to go back to win black people, particularly in the South. We're counted as a part of the three fifths compromise for the purposes of representation and taxation.
You can do that.
You can do that, but you're gonna burn in hot, fiery hell. You will burn in hot, fiery hell for that, because what you're doing is disenfranchising people of your same hue.
Sir, What is the justification for that?
The Constitution should never be something that is interpreted word for word without the idea that black people would one day be liberated. Now, Clarence Thomas is what they call from constitutional law scholars a strict constructionist. That means he wants it to be interpreted word for word, letter for letter, whatever the framers meant, whatever they wrote. He wants to interpret it in that very strict way. The problem is,
Clarence's ass wouldn't have been on the bench. He would not have been on the bench if he interpreted it word for word. So what he does is he tries to apply to us one way and he gives himself out another way. We're not here for that, but I want to I want to lean in here. We have some comments coming in. One that I really really appreciate is this question from Ken Lawn. I hope I say your name right, Jones, Thank you so much, he says, Sis ANGELA worst case scenario, Where do you see things
in the next ten years? Kin ln I'm trying to get through the next ten days, the next ten months, and what I think we really have to understand. We are rapidly approaching this country's two hundred and fiftieth anniversary, two hundred and fiftieth birthday the Declaration of Independence. The anniversary they celebrate is July fourth, seventeen seventy six. Well, Frederick Douglas asked us, what to the slave is the
fourth of July? We got to ask the same question, what to the enslaved person's descendant is the fourth of July? If they are denying us independence, if they are denying us our ability to select representatives of our choosing, what is this holiday to us?
Really? What should it be?
And then the question we have to ask ourselves is if this government does not seek to represent us.
It is not beneficial to us. What is our place in it? Really?
Sure, sure we need people inside, we need outside strategy, but we are rapidly being pushed.
Outside, and you're seeing it so much so.
That our elders had to go into a hearing in the Louisiana State House and Senate to remind people that it was a mere sixty one years ago where Bloody Sunday happened. It was a mere sixty one years ago where Lyndon B. Johnson was forced to sign the Voting Rights Act. It was not that long ago. That is my parents' lifetime, y'all. Seriously, so let's hear from some of our elders. I'm going to bring up the clip from miss Leona Tate.
I need you to understand what it feels like to stand here, to have walked through that mob as a child, and to now watch elected officials do that same thing that the mob was trying to do, just with better suits and a parliamentary procedure. I'm a Leona Tate, November fourteen. In nineteen sixty, I, along with two other six year old girls, walk through an angry mob to integrate mcdonadh nineteen elementary school in the Lord ninth Ward of New Orleans.
I was one of the McDonald three, along with Tessei Prevost Gail Etienne. We became part of history because our parents believed that we deserved an equal education, that we deserved dignity, and that we deserve the future without the change of segregation.
I went through something no child should.
Go through to desegregate our state, and now sixty five years later, I'm watching as law makersttempt to go backwards and segregate us once again through disgraceful voting maps. Many of the supporters of this action seem to think people believe them when they argue this is not about race. Let me be clear, none of us believe that race and partnership are deeply tied, particularly in Louisiana in the South, and I'm not going to give you all a history
lesson to explain why. So now we move backwards with the Supreme Court decision that will go down as one of the most racist rulings in our nation's history, a decision that tells Black Louisiana's that they representative representation. We earned that we watched for that we bled for can simply be drawn away by politicians with a.
Pen, can simply be taken away from by a politician with the pen.
This is a woman that had to endure.
Near death to integrate a school, and she is reminding us us of what it is like to be disenfranchised, to be excluded, to be treated as invisible, to be the courageous one. We've integrated our political systems to ensure that people who think like us and represent our best interests are present. I really want us to walk this through. There are a lot of folks who are like, I don't vote, I don't care. What is redistricting? What is jerry mandering? What are all these big words? What does
it mean to dilute a district? Let me tell you what it means to not have people who think like you passing laws that represent your best interest. Southern University Xavier Dillard, if they get any state based funding, no longer have advocates to ensure that they even get a modicum of what they would normally get. They're definitely not getting on par with other schools that are traditionally white institutions.
They're not even getting the money that they are supposed to get and particularly southern from the state, they are inadequately funded.
What it means to not have.
People who think like you in higher office is you may not get the wages you deserve, You may not get the additional government benefits that you deserve. When the midterms come and go and they cut SNAP and Medicare and Medicaid, you don't get the healthcare or the food you deserve it to have access to. And you have no vocal champion because let me tell you something, to be very clear, they went for Congress. Now the state legislators are absolutely next.
These people have no floor.
There is no floor, and we're busy fighting them on their terms and we don't even have We've not even taken the moment, the time to think about what is their body?
How low will they go?
Right?
Former First Lady Obama said, when they go low, we go high.
Damn that we got to go meet them in the basement to figure out where.
They are and how low they will go.
They hold the keys to the power of this infrastructure, this system that are hard earned tax paying dollars pay into.
They hold the keys. We gotta go get the keys.
There are another number of comments that I'm hopefully we can we can put up. There's one that says, don't kill me, y'all. But I have read Clarence Thomas's book and I kind of understand him. The only thing is he has been obviously corrupt for past ten years, but his earlier years he was a Democrat. Well he's changed and he's gone to Hell in a hand basket. Shout out to Jenny, who's also a member of the Tea Party.
Jenny would be his wife. Next, we want to hear from Lieutenant General Russell Honore, who was a tremendous advocate fighter on a rescue mission during Hurricane Katrina. Will forever be a legend in many of our eyes. But Lieutenant General Honore also went to testify before this committee last week.
Let's hear what he had to say.
I'm a native of picher B Parish by way of Saint Charles Parish and the destra Han Plantation. I will not speak to the details of that journey, but because of the public schools of Louisiana, I got educated to a point in made the Southern University and spent thirty seven years in United States Army defending this nation abroad.
In a home. What this topic brings up stairs memories of the past, a pass where I caught a bus at six' ten in the morning to go to a school Of New, roads and there was a school of mob from a. House The Supreme court don't always get it. Right because at that time it says separate but equal was good. Enough AND i got on that bus and passed that school a mile from my house to go a way through cane fields and cotton fields and make my way To New road to go to school for
four years because The Supreme court said separate but. Equal they don't always get it, right and they didn't get it right until the issue was redressed years. Later graduated from high school in sixty. Six and The montredis will be judged by the content of our, character not the color of our. Skin and the state constantly made. Improvements AND i was proud to come back to this state in two thousand and nine to move back home to volunteer, here to be a part of a place to help improve the.
State and, Again Russell honore has done so much For. Louisiana but there he's talking about what it's like to be bus way past your house to be inconvenienced to go.
Learn that was not that long.
Ago he's talking about the importance of understanding that he he just graduated from high school in nineteen sixty. Six that's a year after The Voting Rights act became. Law there's another, comment why do other people think we have been voting? Forever The Voting Rights act is around sixty years. Old my grandmother couldn't. VOTE i don't know why people think. THAT i think they probably believe because it was enshrined
in The constitution with the Thirty. Amendment but what they don't understand is that didn't apply to, women and it didn't apply to Many southern states where they had to pass literacy.
Tests they had to.
Answer how many bubbles were in a bar of, Soap they had to count how many balls were in a. Jar all of these things right here is the part so somebody else is raising we need to realize that as a, community we are grounded in someone else's, house someone else's house that we, built that we have a birthright to have access to because we built.
It we can get our own.
Place but also, this the comment went, on but also we know that this is, ours AND i think that some of what you see is this righteous indignation around having to forego something THAT i know we, built and that is a real challenge for many of. Us it's, like why should we have to do anything when you aren't just accommodating. Us you're giving us what we, deserve which is, access and it hasn't even been fair.
ACCESS i don't even know what this. Means we can strike. That what does this?
Mean you can't put this on young people trying to do something for.
THEMSELVES i don't.
Know black leadership industrial complex is a term where you think you're sounding smarter than you. Are with all due, respect it's probably some shade that's. Unnecessary we need to not be divided in this moment at, all so we can move on from.
THAT i want to go to.
Our podcast co host who was ON cnn last night and he said something THAT i think is really important for us to pay attention. To, Also, derek if we have it the tweet that accompanied, It i'd love to put that tweet up after this clip, rolls because someone had something to say that was a little off.
Base let's roll the clip Of maccari.
If somebody fell asleep in eighteen ninety six and woke up today in twenty twenty, six they would simply, say the only difference is Now nigroes have A tv show and we wear nice. Suits they swapped out clan hoods For brooks brother. Suits and that is the. PROBLEM i. Mean PLUS. Cv ferguson was seven to one and it
gave birth to fifty years Of Jim. Crow what we have with this court right, now what we're seeing is watching people who have fought and died and bled so that we would have access to the ballot, box so that we would have access to our voices being heard In congress being ripped. Away AND i think that there is a casual laughter from people we believe to be our friends on the right who were showing us true colors.
Today because the most sacred or one of the most sacred acts you have in The United states Of america is the ability to cast a ballot and elect someone and send them To, congress the state house or mayorial seat that represents your. Interest and now black folks throughout The south are being. Silenced AND i don't find that to be a laughing.
Matter the truer words have not ever been spoke spoken WHAT i think is important here Is Russell honore, again when he was testifying before The Louisiana Senate, committee he, said sometimes The Supreme court gets it, wrong and he's cited the very same case.
That butkari just. Did in this.
Video he talked About plusy versus, ferguson a case that happened In. Louisiana, Right so here's what this man. TWEETED i don't know Who thomas, is but he says if someone felt sleep in eighteen ninety six and woke up, today they would see the only difference is now Black americans HAVE tv shows and wear nice.
Suits he has that in.
Quotes that's not exactly What bacari said he talked To he said. Negroes BUT i Appreciate, THOMAS i, guess for not saying that they swapped out clan hoods for bricks brothers. Suits horribly divisive, rhetoric he. Says From maccari sellers ON cnn. Tonight what's fascinating to, Me, Thomas let's leave the tweet.
Up what's fascinating to me.
Is it's Not bacari's, rhetoric which actually are facts that.
Are the problem.
Here the problem Here, thomas are the actions that The Supreme court took to strip away the voting power and the voting rights of a, people dialing our rights back multiple.
Generations that is the real problem.
Here SO i want to look at something that might Help thomas to just understand a little. BIT i want us to look at these. Maps so, today already we've talked About. Alabama we've talked About, louisiana we've talked About we didn't talk About. Tennessee we haven't talked About South carolina Or. Mississippi we've not seen proposed maps yet From South carolina or, Sorry South carolina Or, mississippi but we have Seen. Alabama alabama is saying they want to go
back to the map that existed. Before that's what The Supreme court is. Allowing so the current map is where you see here on the, right Where Terry sewell And shamari figures have districts that proportionally represent black. Communities the proposed map is how things were. Before there's not a huge huge difference in how the lines are. Drawn the huge difference is the racism that would seek to silence the voice of a community In.
Alabama when we go To.
Louisiana you see there is a long line down the.
Middle of the.
State, well part of the issues around, representation particularly and actually not just in the, south, y'all in every community is where people can afford to. Live so if we're going to hit geographical lines being drawn and how you balance that with the representational needs of a, community you also have to deal with property. Tax you also have to deal with the, costs the costs that are rising every.
Single day causing communities to be.
Gentrified those are things that you should be taken into consideration when drawing. Maps so, again what we're dealing with here is Either Troy carter Or Cleo fields will be drawn out of of the district with their, districts one of them or worst, case both of.
Them but The.
Louisiana State senate And house have Until june first to come up with and present these new, maps despite the, fact again, y'all that the election Is.
Saturday this Is.
Tennessee tennessee just changed their.
Map what you see here.
Is is not a lot of.
Change there are some slight changes being.
Made we're not seeing like a you, know a singular line and a bubble at the, end like A lollipop. District you're seeing some some maps here that don't really look that.
Different the difference.
Is that black people won't be represented in the district as, adopted, Right that's.
The problem that we. Have that is the problem that we. Have SO i think that.
When we consider where we, are we have to think about the tools we.
Have.
Legislatively there aren't that many tools, left particularly in state houses and state sentence in The, south because black people aren't in the. Majority democrats aren't in the majority Overwhelmingly black people Are, Democrats so being able to change things legislatively not really going to. Happen there are procedural things they can. Do there are bills that people can. Introduce
you think about the litigation, approach the legal. Strategy sure we can, sue but if you go the way of the federal, court you have to get to The Supreme. Court The Supreme court is being very clear they're not supporting what it takes for black.
People to be.
Represented they are supporting black disenfranchisement in The Supreme court arguing that it is partisan and either, way the court is supposed to be a political so they should be doing what's right by the. People by the whole of the, people not what's happening right now at. All they are
doing quite the. Opposite so when we talk about a legal strategy that is also very, Challenging i'm not suggesting that there shouldn't be a legal record that we should not force The Supreme court to rely on what it is said In milligan Around, alabama to rely on what it's said and past precedent in some of these cases Before shelby Versus, holder right around a representational needs around
how we interpret The Voting Rights. Act not suggesting we don't, push But i'm saying that those, options it's starting to look like we're foreclosing on those options and they're. Limited so we're talking about now where The south used to go to get protection was the federal. Government the federal government is also compromised One, democrats and therefore black people are not the majority in The, house are not the majority in The.
Senate we have The trump.
Administration you cannot go to The department Of justice that is now working over time for white men in The Civil Rights division to go get. Protection they're not going to protect. Us so where we normally turn to in The south was to THE. Fed the federal governments for federal government for, protection can't go.
There so we're out on the.
Law we're out on, Legislation we're out on the federal the federal government and any protections. There what do we have? Left what do we have left? There you can keeping these comments, up but what do we have? Left our? Money we have our. Money the last thing that we can hold on to is an economic, boycott economic buy, ins supporting our, businesses but protesting and punishing those who aren't doing right by.
Us there are.
Multi national corporations based In, tennessee based In, mississippi based In South, carolina based In, alabama based In. Texas because we skipped Over. Texas texas was the case. Study based In, missouri skipped Over, missouri skipped Over. Indiana there are places that we can go to say we are going to withhold our dollar because you have withheld our, respect so you.
Don't get our. Money you don't get our.
Money we will withhold our, dollar support our, own build infrastructure around our own because you don't respect.
It you haven't said a mumbling. Word here's a.
Comment why are we fighting tooth and nail to live in a home where we have not been welcomed for. Centuries at this, POINT i don't want access to their house In. Hell i'm building my own home In. Salvation, Well i'd love to know where your home. Is very curious about. That but, we you, know, people, again we're going for what we. Know there's a system that we have poured our, life, sweat blood and tears into and it's gonna be hard to release.
That it just.
Is doesn't mean that we shouldn't be actively building. Something we should be actively building, something but we stay.
Talking about what we should be, doing AND i have yet to see a.
Plan where's the? Plan where's the. Plan i'm good with rapid. RESPONSE i know my skill, set i know What i'm gifted. At i'm down and was raised with supporting black businesses not my issue at. All down for the. Cause but y'all who want to build your other, thing let's build. It how you're gonna get veterans? Benefits what's your plan to make sure people can? Eat where are your kids going to?
School?
Right you want to live in a house? Here you want to stay? Here where are you paying your property? Taxes when The feds come for their money for taxes around tax return?
Time Where are you gonna send them?
Money are you paying into a whole separate system as? Well are you trying to go to another part of the. World what is the real? PLAN i hear us, talking BUT i don't know if we're really saying. Much, YES i just started talking about. That sean the beekeeper, says, Afternoon, angela can you elaborate a bit on what you would like to see us black folks to? COMBAT i think do him think of means to say black folks do to combat what's?
Happening? Now we have to withhold our.
Dollar we've got to identify businesses in each of these states who have been silent or worse, supportive and in their silence or their, support because the silence is, complicity that is indirect. Support in their silence or their, support they have to respect. Us if they don't respect, us we withhold our. Money it is time out for us to, say what is my little shopping trip going to?
Do what is my little oil change gonna? Do what is my.
Little purchase of said car gonna? Do it does a lot when we all stick. Together AND i also think we have to talk about our kids going to these schools to earn them all of this. Money and by the, way nil is a new, thing so they're just now starting to get paid for. That but they're earning these schools all this. Money where are the schools on these?
Things school leadership hasn't said word the First are are kids safe going into The Jim Crow south to play sports at your institution where you no longer want to teach them In African american studies or give them books that they should read to understand more about themselves in their. History are our kids safe in The? CONFEDERACY i don't know that they. ARE i would argue they are. Not
And i'm gonna tell y'all this not so controversial. Opinion if this was an Anti semitic issue and there Were jewish children on their way to these schools that have been silent on something anti, semitic what do you think would happen with that? Community they would come, together they would stand. Together those kids would not be in those. Schools what will it take for us to get? There to give kids an alternative to push them towards schools
in The, northwest in The, northeast in the. Midwest midwest is problematic a little bit. Too we just talked About Indiana missouri also getting trying to get rid of Seats Congressman Cleaver's Andre Carsons Congressman Andre carson's we got some work to. Do but in the, meantime we gotta go because this has gone a little long. Today BUT i do want y'all thinking about what is next for our. PEOPLE i do want y'all thinking about what a strategic
sustained boycott looks. LIKE i do want you to understand that it can, smart start, small start, small and. Grow but what we can't do is keep looking at this saying it's a shame and waiting for that shame to knock on your front. Door once it knocks on your front, door it's too. Late welcome, home. Y'all Native lampard is a production Of iHeartRadio and partnership With ree And Choice.
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