God like a father. He has two children. He has his he has Man, that's his son, and he has Satan and that's his son. And Satan is a jealous brother. A jealous brother. It doesn't like like Satan doesn't like the way God treats man. He's jealous of the relationship between God and man. So what he does is he goes about ways to show man ain't ship to God. He's setting him up right. It's like it's like if it was a father and two kids, right to two sons. And you know, um, he said a knife right here,
he told his little he stold. He told his brother, stabbed a pillow, It's gonna make you feel better. And then he stabbing a pillow, getting the stabbed a pillow. And when the dad walks in, he like, Dad, look, she I told you he ain't ship and you just with the knife looking still. I genuinely believe intellect is more than the ability to process. I think it's like vision, even outside a quick wit, just vision, and you gotta
have vision pass what you can see. Um. But but back to the I digress, right back to what we were talking about. Um, like if you don't have the economics so people like people from our community, right, like people from where I'm from, they don't really genuinely believe they could change their circumstances. That's the that's the trick, I mean, and from years and years of like and I hate using that term systemic opression because it's being thrown around by a whole bunch of oppressors right now.
And racism was lost as many It's horrible. Um, I'm talking about the real deal. You know, somebody being at the bottom of the totem pole right where for whatever reason, you know, um, that group has really been ill afforded opportunity to change circumstances. Um. So it's like water memory of suffering, I mean, where it's like you already in a hole because of just generations of being in the hole, right,
just literally just generations. I mean most people, like I said, why I grew up at right where I grew up at, they start off with bad credit. Yeah, so when they when they turned eighteen, a motherfucker will have bad credit. Shout out to my man Tommy Soto Mayor, who does a great job of talking about your mom and dad putting the electric bill in your name when you were five years old and you wake up one day with your own credit that it's already destroyed. Yeah, so that's
happening for real. That's not that's not just an expression, right, that's a real thing. And so outside of just generations of being pushed in the hole, right, as as a black person in America, Um, you start off your own life being put in the whole. And you know when you grew up where we grew up at, right, there's
so many opportunities. There's just this lack of opportunities. And like I said, if you and Watson Compton, there's these are very much urban communities right that that really have careers right in range like walking distance, there's careers and walking distance where we're from, where you could pretty much make a livable wage and take care of your family and start your kids off with an extra opportunity to
even go further than you. But my whole life, I've never met anybody that worked in those facilities on Alameter all these you know, thousands of jobs that's available right there. Um, so we could talk like cryptocurrency, I knew I'd love to have on to talk about this. A guy who I bumped into a few times My first job out of college was waste management on else A gundoing Alameter Richard Sherman's dad was I met him. I would love to get that guy in the podcast. Yeah, I met him.
He's a dope though, and Russell Westbrook Pops is dope too. I don't know, um, But and I think what happens amongst black people, right, I think there's a definitely a a sentiment altogether that something is wrong. I think everybody agrees that the treatment of people that are isn't correct in America. But I think the issue is how they
all see it. So, like, I definitely know black people that's been successful that feel like what's funny is like you should feel you know, you gotta pull yourself up by your bootstrap, as crazy as that's saying, Like it is people in our community right that feel just like that, And that I think is the problem. Like I don't, I don't truly believe people get the real way to oppress somebody is through economics. The brutality is nothing, Yeah you know, I mean economics is the true way to
oppress somebody, to strip somebody of identity, opportunity. It creates monsters, right, So with that being said, no seilings, Gil Peter Us. Yeah, we just own some ship right now. So y'all just chill funk with it. It's crazy. But I think that's the problem. I think all the whole, like my whole, the whole black community is not on one accords. There's too many conversations, right, there's conversations about justice, m right um,
their conversation. Like I was looking at the NBA last year right in the playoffs, Like we're in the playoffs this year, but last year they had all of these things on their jerseys and it was like, oh, justice or equality all this crazy ship, And I'm like, it's hard to make it work when the wealth of the black community don't understand. The problem is economic and opportunity. Yeah.
The reason, I genuinely believe the reason police treat black people bad, it's because they are Humanity treats it's poor bad historically. Yeah, you know, back in the day, it's easy because poor people can't defend themselves. So in America, black people are the face of poor people. And I think it's a problem, but I think it's a big problem that I don't know what how would you describe the term like leaders of black rhetoric play that card all the time and project out that message to the
rest of the country all the time. Well it's a business, of course. Yeah, I'm just saying it's not helpful. Well they weren't, I don't think. Remember we were just talking about good and evil being like a really you know, fine line. I think they start off with like the right intentions. I think they genuinely start off obviously to help people, and they start off to be like, well,
you know what, I can make a living helping people. Um. But I think along the lines, they start getting information that makes them believe it's something they can't fix, and then money becomes the main thing, Like it becomes a real business, and you start to get some disincentivized factors as far as fixing things, you know, because the reality is it at some point, if the problem that is your life's mission is no longer a problem, you've lost
the mission, you know, to some degree. Well yeah, but but I think as you get in more doors, I think you have these beliefs. I think most most most brothers start off with a belief of what's going on, and they pit point it's so strong they pinpointed so well that they believe this is literally the problem, right, They literally believe this is the problem. And once they get through a couple of those economic and opportunity doors, that's not the problem. So then it becomes like, I
have no idea what's wrong. I just know something it's wrong, and I'm gonna give my money, but I'm gonna keep saying something is wrong. And I think as a whole, like my community, can't really all come together and realize the conversation is in economics and opportunity. That's the only problem. I don't give two funks about what no police motherfucker's doing.
The problem is how people treat poor people. And in America, we are the face of poor people around the world, if you ask people, what's the face of poor people? Is going to be an African person with a fly on his eye, with a with a with a child to inflate the stomach. And again, because people are so horrible to each other, you know, they don't treat poor people correctly. The fact that we have wealthy and poor
people is the biggest problem to me and humanity. And I know that sounds crazy, but it's true because it should never be somebody with dirty bedrooms and two kids, and some you know, uh with two kids in the thirty bedroom house, and then somebody with thirty kids and the two bedroom house. There's no being a The verb of being a human being humane is literally just saying the welfare you know of other people. And I think we just do a horrible job at it as a as a as a as a world. We don't do
great as we can. But I also think, because you know, back to the concept of capitalism, not the base, not the base for him, right, that that that's the definition, but that extreme form that we all know what we're talking about. I think you start believing everybody has the same chance you had, and I think that's not true. And I think that's the one mistake human that's the one fatal flaw of human beings. To believe that we all are equal or we all started off the same,
it's just not true. And so no matter what system we're talking about, right, whether we're talking about courts, like if I'm from where I'm from, right, and and we grew up in this jungle, it's a real jungle, right, Watching comps is a real fucking jungle, And you know, it's a sense of justice. It's already a justice system. Funk with America's talking about these it's already rules and least that come with real punishments. So America could have
his overall sense. Right. But just like there's a federal law, right, there's a state law. Well, there is a neighborhood law, there's a community laws. So I say that to say when they say a jury of my peers, right, my peer is not somebody who lived in Orange County, you know, in Buena Park. Yeah, that that person is not my peer. And I think the biggest issue of me to go
back to your route of economics. If you have the economic means, you have legal counsel that will fight it out over a motion of a change of venue exactly whereas if you don't, you've got the phone and in guy who's getting the same page check from the same office every two weeks, like he does anything else for a living, and it's not his fault. See the thing about like back to the conversation we had about capitalism, who was talking about slavery. I don't believe it's the
white folk fault here that balls slaves. That sounds crazy but I think if you give any human being the opportunity to achieve or to to earn in a way that at that time is socially accepted, they're gonna take the opportunity. Like if like, if we had a society full of like where prostitution was cool, like nobody frowned upon it, right, everybody would be prostitutes, like women would like right now even in our community, right, Um, being a stripper, it's not a it's not a bad thing.
It's literally has been washed out. It's not a bad thing, bro, It's it's generations of girls becoming strippers. It's generations of girls dressing like strippers, you know what what I mean. So I think that's where it's all being confused, that like the true oppression is in economics. It's only in economics, Yeah, I mean, like the brutality portion is always gonna be overrated no matter what, you know, if if if if I pitched to Yo Pops or like somebody from you know,
Newport Beach. Hey, man, the police are killing black people. You know what, They're gonna show me. They're gonna show me how few was happening, because it's still only very little. I mean if it was three hundred motherfucker's get killed, that's very few. With billies and motherfucker's you gotta right. And they can show me crime statistics, which you know you still can't kill criminals. But it's also the problem. It's less care for criminals unless you're a rich criminal. Yeah,
it's it still goes back to poor and rich. So the oppressor, right, is using economic and opportunity to oppress. Now, I don't genuinely think it's done. I mean, just like with Satan, I don't think Satan thinks. Oh, I don't think Satan is like I just don't like Man, so I'm just gonna take it out on them. I think Satan is jealous of God's affinity and relationship with Man, and he's trying to get a market share. Well, he's trying to enlarge his market share, right, He's like, why
you like them? They ain't ship and PEPSI wants a foothold and and because no, no, so funny, So no, right, So I look at God like a father. He has two children. He has his he has Man, that's his son, and he has Satan and that's his son. And Satan is a of us brother, a jealous brother. It doesn't like like Satan doesn't like the way God treats man. He's jealous of the relationship between God and man. So what he does is he goes about ways to show man ain't ship to God. He's setting him up right.
It's like it's like if it was a father and two kids, right to two sons, and you know, um, he said a knife right here, he told his little he stold. He told his brother, stabbed a pillow, it's gonna make you feel better. And then he stabbing a pillow, getting the stabbed a pillow, and when the dad walks in, he like, Dad, look, I told you he ain't ship, and you just with the knife looking stupid. But God the whole time is like you got this boy the knife.
So that's to me, the dynamic of it. Well, that's what greed represents to me. It's like, you know, you know, people are like flawed, so like they already have their own issues, So when you exploit their issues for your own personal benefit, right, that's where it's sucked up. And I think that's what's happening. You have a bunch of people trying to have too much at the expense of people not having enough. Now, that may have not been
their attention. I don't think nobody walked in like I'm gonna get so much money that these niggas is gonna be broke, right. I don't think that was their intentions. I don't think that's the oppressors of intentions. Initially. I think it was like, yeah, I'm gonna, I'm gonna, I'm trying to make sure i get God's glory. I'm trying to get whatever the feeling I'm looking for. You feel me, and you know that's what I'm chasing because I don't feel worthy. I feel inadequate anyway. So I'm trying to
be worthy. And then what happens along the way, right, just like with the people that run knows like black lives matter, what happens along the way is um you. You you start dealing with what happens to anybody. As you accumulate anything, you want too much of it, right, you start having problems. You start you start realizing it's
probably affecting other things not correctly. Right. It's like like if you're a wealthy man and you realize, Okay, I'm going to get money and as you're getting money, you realize it's costing somebody else money. You start. Even as a drug dealer, that used to be my mind state, Like I used to be like yo um. I used to pride myself and selling the highest quality drug. Yeah, I ain't stepped on my I ain't cut my serne with no break fluid. Then I was only using and
drops and all either I was only using andy. I was using the highest quality ship. I never had bad ship. I never cut it to make more money, and I prided myself in it. And what I used to tell myself us man, people was making a conscious choice to come by. I'm just the person selling it to him, and I'm selling them the highest quality ship. What I what I got lost with was once I realized they wasn't making a conscious choice to buy, then I knew it was wrong. And that's the time when human beings
just start making other decisions. Because I made other decisions, I was like, that ain't right, man, Like this girl pregnant and I just sold her some shurn. Okay, that's not a rational decision because now you're not making a decision for yourself, You're making a decision for somebody that's not even on earth yet, you know. I mean, that hasn't even came into the world, that haven't came out your womb. That's not rational. That day I knew, I
was like, this is different. When I was selling it to us, I didn't mind selling it to a sixty something year old lady in her fourty year old son. I thought that was rational. When when that pregnant lady came and bought Concern, I was like, that day, is it changed it. It's like, oh, they don't. This ain't rational. This is a real you know. Obviously I started reading more and it became more chemical. I'm like, oh, that's that chemically dependent, like like me with white sugar, like
refined sugar. I'm just as chemically dependent on it, maybe even more. But that was the time I made a decision to be humane. I made a decision to stop being oppressor, being the oppressor, because I was an oppressor at that point. No matter what a motherfucker say, as a D boy, my mind, not every D boy, because every D boy don't have the intellect to think what I'm thinking. This is just how they make their living. They're not even It's like McDonald's like a chef and
McDonald's flipping the burger. He don't, he's just making a living. Glasses had the intellect and division to understand that I became the oppressor and and once you know, now what's up to you once you can understand. So back to the point when we're talking oppressors and the reason a motherfucker can't save no money. They're not making a livable
wage to even save money to change their circumstances. So they consistently do things to make themselves look better than they feel because they want you to treat them better. And it sounds crazy because you're like, well, you could just change your own circumstances and you will feel better, but they don't believe they can because of generations of economic oppression, right for fun being slaves and being hung. Let's say let's say a hundred thousand slaves was hung,
could be more. It's millions of motherfucker's that wasn't paid to work, millions of motherfucker's that wasn't paid to work. That's e can coonomic oppression. To be denied the opportunity to vote on on things that change your economics, that's economic oppression, not the opportunity to go buy property and somebody else's bomb ass neighborhood that you know it's gonna be worth something later. That's economic oppression. Fuck all the
bullshit niggas are talking about. Fuck that this group of people that the NBA players are saying, Oh, you know, criminal justice for blah blah blah, police reform, man, don't funk what you do to them. I don't gonna fun how you reform. You can't reform the mind going into the job. That's what you have to reform. You have to stop. They have to stop seeing black people like
the bottom of the fucking earth. And to make that happen, and to make that happen, they got to come up because I don't give a funk with nobody say you will never treat shock the way you treat little Boo Boo. Now you put your motherfucking hands on Shack. I don't get funk hot that nigga. Dark is the night that that motherfucker's skin dark as the night. If you do something to him, you have a world of ship as
a police officer, as a as a precinct. It's gonna funk with your life because this man got it, and the world sees his value. That's why Look, look what happened with these with the with the whole Asian anti Asian ship. That's because people don't see them as the poorest people in America. They don't see them like that. Until six weeks ago, the biggest systemic issue involving Asian people was the fact that Harvard deliberately set a higher
bar for admission for Asian people. Exactly what's ship, and they still jumped over that ship. It was funny, but in fact, I'm saying, because they value their dollars, mm, they don't have to do nothing for us because we don't got no fucking money. And then once we get money, right, we disconnect from the people who don't have money, because we'd be like man e mother gonna run us broke, because really we'll be lying about how much money we got in the first place. I think most of the
rap contracts is a damn lie. I think most of the nigga is publishing the net worth is a damn lie. I know it's a lie because I know how you how you build up. Miss Charlotte Mayne argue about this all the time. That's a lie and if it's not a some assets that are not what they are commonly
perceived to be. So, but that's my point of this conversation. Though, sure, sure, sure, so I was fired now I'm just think about it, though, think about it like the way you really oppress human beings, you deny them economic if that's is an opportunity entirely, that's the only way there's there. And there are great examples, I mean examples of people like I mean, I have a you know, a fair number of interaction with with
people that I have known personally and whatnot. Who who came here from communist China back in the seventies and eighties when it was when it wasn't the communist China we're talking about today, the the fuzzy nights. Everybody's got some much like honestly, this communist trying to low key is worse. Nobody would ever say it. But if you, if you oversane, what they do more dangerous. It is crazy.
Well I'll say this much though. I was actually when I was four, I was a ring bear in a wedding between two people named Lee different spellings and um the groom that it was like my dad's best friends his dad fled mainland China to Hong Kong, to the United States, and when the wow, what the funk? Not the great recept but whatever the term was that I think maw or his UH subsequent leader had put in at that time was he's like, you got to see the writing on the wall, They're gonna kill all of us.
He fled literally with the clothes he had on, and they killed his whole family. Like there's not a single there's not a lead back there. So like but again you come here different landscape. You look at the Baltic States right now, they're doing very well, they're very free economically. The former Soviet republics, you know, I mean thirty years ago you're under the USSRS, Lithuania, Belarus, something like that. Yeah, you know, not at all, not a thing at all.
But we live in a constant, a constantly evolving landscape. And and this is a every landscape and time is unique. It's different from what was behind it, and what's coming in front of it right now is different than that they call, you know, an information age. There's a lot of readily available information two be distributed in ways that are easier than it has ever been before, and I do perceive a lot of that stuff is a crisis of information because I ain't that crazy and information age. Yeah,
and then that's it's saturated an irony. There's no question about that. I would personally and again like this is all a matter of just I would like to see blank happened. It could There are people that can benefit from this conversation that I feel are missing out. And with that being said, I you might talk about the baseline, whether it's the most common or it's the lowest standard deviation on a on a earnings chart within the two or three zip codes and make up the watch area.
And I think it's five nine zero to zero nine zero two zero two one nine zero five nine nine zero zero zero two nine two. How the hell did that one get down there? That's so strange. Yeah, because the twos, the nine zero two dot dot, that's all the Compton ones five is Compton is l A. That makes sense because you're like six six or zero zero six threes like West South South area nine zero four four is because nine zero zero one it's like city Hall.
Yeah it is. Where is it? It's somewhere up there? Huh damn, huh. I believe, but I thought it was somewhere in that area. But I don't. I don't want to get lost yet. But yeah, the way you truly oppress of people is through economics. So I think as Brothers is coming up, they they start like, you don't hear them. You don't hear the brothers at the highest levels preaching reparations. Now, I'm not saying the conversation should be. I'm saying you we as a complete community, right my community,
Black community gotta realize the thing is in economics. It ain't about you can't change them people mind if you broke it. Just it ain't no respect for poor people. It's just it's not it's around the world. I mean, the average human being in the black community don't treat poor people like it could be motherfucker's in the projects and they're gonna talk to a bum bad hm, which
I think is a human being issue. Yeah. Well, not to get more like super mathematical on this, but and again this is not the numbers I'm gonna say are purely conversationally hypothetical. I didn't look up the numbers. I'm just throwing numbers out just so we're clear. If say, one in ten blackmails that grow up in nine double oh five nine hit it out of the park and some capacity they're going to leave, you know, and you know what they're gonna take with them, the how to
information if they had it in the first place. Well, they they they bounced, so they went to college and got I'm saying that the earnings left if they had the information in the first place. Yeah, because I don't think I think se successful cases from where we're from, they kind of didn't know what happened. That's fair. I'm excluding that crowd. But but I'm saying, well, go ahead, so they shake, so they take the economics? Yeah, how to you take the money and the knowledge with you
when you leave and you leave who behind? And A common talking point about various social evolution government programs and the and and the arc of progress in the greater Black community is the ratio on single mother households from six till today. Well, what I don't know if that is accurately reflective from a number standpoint of that dramatic of a shift in behavior so much as it is if you look at the numbers side, if you're economic
outcome standpoint two, earning homes. You know, it's obvious. Yeah, but that also you're gonna have statistically less kids there, so on the aggregate. So with that, so like that per cent that was single parent households in sixty eight or whatever over to three generations two. Now, however many it is, what two or three, they might have incrementally more kids than that didn't it's going to have less.
So you might be talking about not so much of a radical behavioral change among the community, but just simply a mathematical change. And that mathematical change would lead to because with the negative outcome correlation, everybody who leaves takes with them the value and the knowledge, and that is problematic. And like I was talking about on a podcast a while ago, the correlation between property value, property tax, and edgercation. Yeah,
you get this gravitational circular situation. And now you know, we're in a time frame. It's it's different than nineteen five. And as far as being able to access knowledge and information, and there is a critical mass of people who have I mean, you can look at the last episode of California, I mean Mobile, Riverside, Palmer, all those places, a lot of places. That's why the demographics shift in South, particularly
East Side South, it's so changed like Mexican movement. Well they had to move into somewhere, they had to move into a vacancy, so that was affordable. Yeah, well that was made afore because somebody else moved out, you know, whether it's affordable or not, somebody whoever got the coin to get on because because nobody was seen in the Bay Area, because nobody moved, because I need to get my family, the wattes, I'm gonna move to I E.
I'm gonna move to move out. It's like either you start making money, you're like, I want to get the other brand new track houses out there. Let's go. You're not moving from a ghetto to another ghetto. Yeah. At the time, yeah, you usually you didn't figured out something, and now you want more house for your money exactly, and used to get the same thing with like the Bay Area, Oakland and Richmond have changed demographically a lot. Pittsburgh, Oakley,
places like that have changed demographically. That's the new I E of the Empire, the new of the bank. No, no, that's a good point, but it's still circles around the simple concept of no opportunity minus the gang banging. That's nothing. It's easy to get rid of gang bankers. I promise you it's easy. I know that sounds right. It's easy to get rid of gang banging. That's not hard, Like it's some kind of confusing that that's hard. That's not hard.
People only of the people doing it don't have anything else to do. Yeah, I don't. I perceive gang banging. I perceive game bang as a symptom. And and I don't even know if it's a symptom, right, as much as it's the it's the economy. Has you nothing better to do to match the disease? And gang bang is a symptom. Yeah, I mean, wait a minute, no, the symptoms yeah, okay, okay, or symptoms it's another word I'm looking for. Yeah, I guess symptoms is the right word.
It tells it's like a harpie is the bump. This gang banging is just it's not sure if you got if you got the flu, if you got the flu, it's not actually the snot out of this game bag. Sure, it's the virus is in your body. Okay, so yeah, so yeah, the snotty knows is a symptom of the flu. Okay, sure, but if back to so back to the point we're talking about earlier, about you know, why people feel better, why they want to look better than they feel. They
don't genuinely think they can change what's inside. Think about it, right, You're seeing a lot of sisters, right go out and get plastic surgeries that every last one of them, right, will lie and say, and not just the sisters, this is women. I take that back. You see a lot of women going to get plastic surgeries, right because whatever they feel, and and the and the first thing they'll tell you is, oh, I did this for myself. That's the last person you look at yourself the least. Yeah,
anyone who believes that garbage assalone, God help you. But that's their life. But they don't realize And I genuinely think that for me to get a better man. No, I hope, I hope that's not. That's my fear, that that's what that thinks, that's that's the thought of it.
But I would be hard pressed to believe otherwise. Oh my god, I hope that's not true because it But the point I'm saying is right is because this is the same thing, right, you want why because when that other guy pulls up in that five point oh, you feel a lot better being and that other guy's car that he bought. Yeah, because you can't the five point
of references from an earlier. Um, you do feel better if you attract the man that has more money even though you don't have more money, And that's what you were saying. Or you can trap that son of a bit. Yeah, that's why I always say, gentlemen, spend as much money on the prenup as you do as the ring, if not more. Back to our regular schedule protract. I get it, though, I get it. Um, mind y'a, I'm not getting the pre nup. Yeah I'm not. You heard that somebody's in
boxes about some problems. So but dig dig right, So I would say, Um, that's why to look better than we feel, because most most of us, even the wealthy of us, can't identify the true oppression from the oppressors. Like today, all day it was George Floyd, George Floyd's the one universe, George Floyd. You know, bro, this is not just about George. This is about but the problem is,
that's the problem. If if if you can treat somebody, if you shot somebody with a gun, and you also scratched them with a key, and all you have to do is worry about the key scratch. Look I got your best interests. You see me patching up this he scratched. Feel me out did on your leg? Look I like you. Meanwhile you bleeding and everybody screaming about the key scratch, Like the bullet hole don't exist. The reality is the bullet hole is the economic oppression. That's where the oppression is.
The oppression is in that lack of opportunity. It's not about police reform, it's not about none of that. It's literally about when you from Watts and Compton, it's an urban community, there are thousands of jobs on a lameter yea thousands of jobs livable wages four seven, eight nine thousand dollars a month. The amount of just simply CDL jobs did exist between Slowsing and the ocean and the seventh ten and the one ten is extraordinary. And and
that's the true oppression. The true oppression is the people who inhabit those communities that don't have those careers. That's the problem. The problem is in the fifties, right when they build Compton when they when they started Excuse me, they didn't build Compton in the fifties, but when Compton became what it was in the fifties, and now they had this fourth bond that this bomb mass set up where you could just walk to work, you can walk home,
you know, and it was great. You could shop there, you could live there. Everything just like her she like we were talking about earlier where her she built in Pennsylvania. You built the then you built the industry, and then you built the livabool you live. You built a community around that's there still that's in Competon and Watch right now, still there. The problem is that's said community. Compton and Watch don't have those thousands of jobs. That's why there's
no gangs in Lakewood. Show me a place where's poor people that in l A where there's no gangs. City city was poor people people poor. It's like can ghetto. I'm gonna take a I'm gonna take a complete and utter cop out scam of an answer on this, and you know exactly what I'm gonna say. No, this is a chicken ship cop out answer. It's just trying to into interproving your point. Skitter Row and there's gangs, there's a there's a skid Row gang. Oh what are they
as East Coast? First Street? First? But that's not the point. The point I'm saying is, which is that was a great cop out, and I'm glad I was able to top you because it's true. But I know a lot of them too. But they must be the most paid. A lot of people say they don't exist, but I know some dudes from there now. I talked to Coast with my boy and I was like, because I was trying to figure out he would answer me the question straight. I was like, we're I was like, we're exactly as
East Coast original like geography. He's like, oh, we are first Street. We weren't here, weren't here, And I'm like from because it was built at What's funny is as gangs kind of became this thing that's so divisive. It was built to bring people together. It was a bunch of kids that created an idea to unite people. M and obviously anything you do to build unite people historically right whether so. The point I'm saying though, is um, I think that's where the oppressor is truly the hardest
and that's where you become the oppressive. And could I play a white devil's advocate and this and this is gonna be gritty like because the devil a white devil's advo. You don't understand how crazy that sound. We'll go ahead. It's a great devil entang But I'm glad so you use the gunshot key scratch reference and I'm gonna use the other end of the observational spectrum gunshot reference on that. Let's say you and I have a as if track and field races were set up on the way boxing
matches were. You and I are gonna raise a hundred meters on August one, and we're gonna start training tomorrow. And I got better shoes, and I got better weights, and I got a better coach and all the other ships, and thirty minutes before the race starts, you blow a hole in your kneecap and then blame the fact that you lost on my better coach and better shoes, you know. So that's kind of like what was Marino Valley in
nineteen It was a horsetown. There's nobody there. By nine seven, it was would frames of a lot of houses waiting to be sold by two thousand seven. People I knew called it Murder Valley, you know, And that was the people that moved largely like out of a lot of the East Side neighborhoods to go kids over. Then they started gangs and along the same lines when you were not what's the word receptive two like, you know what fifty dollars a month times ten years probably is exactly
with some earnings behind it. It's probably about eighty grand if you go from twenty three to thirty three and whatever your vices are, that a month. Yes, I don't get that. Don't run that cop out, and you don't believe and you do not believe it is something you know what that is? That's the guy who stands in front of me pissing me the funk off at seven eleven, buying a lott of ticket and the blunt every day at the expense of not paying all of the bill whatever.
You're still not gonna pay all the bills, right, so you still don't pay all the bills? Are you saying? You're telling somebody to choose instant comfort over ideal What is my what is my life? Theme? The universe exists on a one dimensional spectrum, discipline and consequences. But that that's not what that that the problem with that concept right now, and I I agree, g. The problem with that is right is you would have to convince people of what you're saying to even first off, that's my point.
It's a crisis of information. But but it's not just information right. You have to be able to so like you just use the word receptive right to information. You have to believe these things are possible. Yeah, you know they're possible. See like you said the White Devil's advocate or Satan right like like roughly, Satan doesn't believe in God, Satan knows God. Man believes in God. Satan knows God. I don't believe in either of them. You're missing the point.
So you're feitl to get away. That's not the point I'm saying. You know what you're talking about. You know that you could turn that in the eight that's not even a matter of fact. You're not even gonna do it. Let's say this, you're not even gonna do it because that's gonna take you too fucking long. That that's but that's my point. That's a point. And let's say it's not eighty thousand. Let's say it's just sixty, so you don't want a red cent on that money the whole
fucking time, which is impossible. But let's just say it's sixty. You grab a twenty two year old and tell him, hey, look, for fox sake, smoke the weed out of a pipe instead of a blunt every day. It's two dollars a day. By the time you're thirty two, you have the down payment on a house. It doesn't hurt anybody to tell them that they can do it with it what they please. I just feel like there is a significant the you know, like there's an expression if you repeat something enough, people
start to believe it. I don't see the harm in repeating that concept enough until people start to believe it. Yeah, I'm not at some point if they start to believe it, Yeah, it might not change everybody's life, but it might change I agree, right. I think me and Sticks had this debate right about um being finance teaching financial literacy. Shout out to the vegan fucking sticks. Um. He wanted to teach financial literacy to a bunch of poor people, and I laughed him out of the room and and that's
kind of what you're saying. So that's dope that two of you guys are saying that I'm gonna think about a little harder. But I'm gonna tell you again to keep dealing with a key scratch over a bullet wound. See, and keep blaming the shot in your foot on the other guy's coach. Well, it's not the shade of your foot, right, you have to admit somebody else's shooting you know, you
shot your own foot. No, no, no, that's impossible. If you spend all your money everything you have any money, if you go today, before I left Vegas, it was seven twelve in the morning, I'm in line at seven eleven. You know what, the person in front of me was buying little tickets, tall cannon, same thing, lottle tickets, and exactly that's three dollars a day. That's ninety dollars a month. Sure, that's that's you know what's it's powerful. The seven twenty
dollars a year, exactly dollars thousands and made dollars. So that's a thousand eighty dollars a month, thousand eighty a year, a thousand eighty dollars a year n eighty dollars a year. That's a situation where like pain is as behaviorally powerful as hope. But but it's not pain, right, that's where it becomes oppression. No, no, but the pain of oppression.
So that means that means there is an aggressor. So it's not like self inflicted of course, like like if you look for a job every day, the oppression isn't self inflicted, but that but that's the But that's my point. Like pain is a symptom of oppression. So if you don't deal with the oppression, and I don't mean deal with it and that crappy way that every I don't want to reform the police. I don't go to fuck what then people do? I I'm saying, as an individual,
you can empower yourself. No, you can't self up by your bootstraps. You cannot eye glasses can, Charlotte, man can, Hove can. There's a handful that can. But the man of most people. Again, this is where I told you me and your ideas head too, because head agrees with you our ideas. Everybody else is right. No, it's not y'all don't believe y'all believe everybody was gifted with the same things. That's probably the worst mistake human beings made.
I'm not saying that much, but I'm saying you have to believe so when so when you're saying no, not no, that's a long way from what I'm saying. Because I do agree discipline is for everybody, so you like you learned discipline. I'm not saying everybody can become a millionaire. I'm not advocating equality. I'm not advocating equality. I'll come on afocany of that. I'm advocating a mitigation of despair. I'm advocating and the eventual aggregate improvement of a community.
But but but it starts right, It starts with addressing If you buy a lottery ticket every day, you're investing in hope. But when you don't have anything else, the only thing you know what you have the price of a lotto ticket. Do you do because you gave it to the cashier, you don't. So how did you get the lotto ticket? Hope? You hoped You walked up and hope that in the general director of the cashier, Andy handed you allow ticket. You're hoping that this is the time. See,
you're still trying to apply intellect, and you don't. You don't understand that that's what you're doing. I understand that's what I'm doing because it's such a simple one plus one equals two things to you and to me, I think the same way. I'm like, it's one plus one equals that's not normal. You just don't and you head sadly, y'all don't believe that it is normal. It is normal. It's not normal to think this way. It's more people don't think this way. Most people do not think the
way we think. Pete, you can most people don't think the way we think. But I'm not even saying think the way I think. I'm just saying, think a little bit better tomorrow than you're thinking today. It's hard. It's so hard because and what's hard about it is it's like me telling you to do something when somebody's hitting you upside the head with a hammer and he's like, hey, man, don't worry about that hammer. Make the sandwich. Now, that's
too that's too extreme. You don't see. That's the issue, and that's the that's where separate, that's the severity of it. It's not it's not extreme this is the imagine, right you you and I don't. Yeah, I don't want to black issue. I don't want to black issue. I hate like I love black So shout out to I love it show. It's a great show. But I don't want to go through the history of of what's going on because you know even further what's been happening to that
specific group of people in this country. So it is that severe. It is somebody hitting you upside the head with a hammer, and then somebody else's were saying, make a sandwich. Let me ask you a question, And I have a similar I have this conversation a lot. You
know who thinks like you, our good friend Malcolm. Of course he do because he from the junk, he from the ghetto, and we both not and we both have the intellect, right, we both were gifted the intellect to see pass what it was when I first met Malcolm so oh so um, Malcolm May's y'all listening to this ship. Malcolm May's dope actor. He was in a Snowfall. He was Kevin and Snowfall. He was a South Paul. I first met Malcolm. Malcolm was a fifteen year old prodigy
at the sony lot for films just to scumback. So go ahead and now back to Malcolm that you're gonna tell me, because Malcolm is smart enough to understand what he's looking at. My bottom line. Okay, Like I could look at Malcolm, I can look at my friend Kai, same neighborhood, same high school. They're both doing just fine. Total different paths. Malcolm's path is so it's just an outlier that it's inapplicable to the human experience. Signed for glasses. Yeah, exactly.
So the other guy I went to college, good job, doing fine, move out whatever. My question is this. And again, like when I stayed in Oakland, I stayed with a guy from East Ockland, a girl from I went to lock and another girl from Richmond that was sc grad, cal Grad, cal Grad, and they're very smart. I'm not saying that to a Caligrad. It's hard to get. I couldn't get into Cow. I was a hamstring injury from getting I had to go in as a runner. That's
because you're white. Yeah, you're gonna make everything time tougher for you because it's tough being white today. And I'm not I'm not joking when I say it. That like literally white people position in this country is compromised based off of what happened in the past. One thing on the side, note, I want to do a whole podcast on my beef with the educational system, both high school and college. It's gonna be great. It's actually two pocket biggie yours with educational I would love to do fire.
I've always wondered like the UM because I went to a lot of colleges. You know, I went to SMU and Dallas is a private schools like the USC of the South. I went to community college in Orange County. I went to every community college in the greater Oakland East Bay area because the Peralta schools apparently don't have five classes on the campus at a time, so I
have four classes on four campuses. Joke. But like Merritt Laney all you know, Alameda, all those places that you know in the Arizona States, kind of probably somewhere in between. I always what I was like, Man, it was so hard. Like the two high schools I went to, we're both very high achieving high schools, but one of them was really hard. And I'm like, that was a great academic institution, but you know what, was hard to get a decent grade because the curve was competitive as a son of
a bitch. So there were people who couldn't get into that half a decent college because I only got a three point five at Corontin mar High School. It's like, dude, you got three or five Corona More High School, you should probably back your way back the U haul truck in the m I t R fucking genius. There's also one on on the flip side, like if I went to Lock, I didn't do any fucking work in high school, I could probably show up and phone in at four
a point oh and just escape. You know, I don't know, I mean, like the opportunity. But that's a conversation from the time. But given that and and and yeah, I think maybe I've started to answer my question mare I think about but a lot of people that I know from those type of areas, Yeah, because over the years I know in a lot who just stayed there and got lost and I just fell out of touch with him.
But I look at a pretty good number of guys and women that I know from down there aren't like superbly extraordinary, like, but they did their thing, and they did it. Well, they just just god the program out and it just worked out. Okay. Why is it that I, relative to you and Malcolm, have more confidence specifically like in the black individual in the inner city that you do the individual because I know them, like like how you know? Like how you know Satan? Forgive me? Don't
you forget it either? Because how you know the oppressor? I know? Man, I know Man, I know my we know our homies. It's not like so even as close as because you know, most people don't notice, but you have a different your ship with black people. You like, you really kind of you know, you don't give a fuck. It's like I funk with you, I don't funk with you. That's a great thing for especially in Southern California. Kid, you know that's kind of really not. You know, in
northern california's normal. In Southern California, it's no. Southern California is not as it's less normal. So that's dope. But as close as you could get to them, you could never know. And I don't want to say, like I want to go shout out to uh Omar Johnson. I don't want to go Omar Johnson because that ain't what I do. Crap, that's not. But when you talk to them, like Malcolm, like I have, you start seeing things are damn and dark in people. And when I'm saying them
and dark, I don't mean spiritual. I mean things are lost, pessimistic, not even not even pestive, like say spiritually pessive, like
like broken well dark not like not not like evil dark. Yeah, yeah, like like like the light bulb that you see when you come up in here and we start talking into that light go up in my eyes and my eyes light up, or Malcolm eyes like because I know both, I've seen both our eyes like a Baron Davis his eyes like I know jay Z eyes, like I see the light when you don't see that light in people see what I'm saying, And like Malcolm being from the
Jungles somewhat grew up in the Nicholsons and Hunters and glasses confident watch you know it and it's something. It's not a light there, like the same flash light that I used to search my brain. It's not available for all my partners. And it's the fuck up thing to say,
because it's a fun thing to have to admit. But I also understand my responsibility is to make sure everybody else know watch how you treat them, nigga, because if I'm not, if you're not going to shine a flash light up there, because that's really what we should be doing as human beings. God gave some of us the intellect to take the whole point of this exact episode exact. That's all I'm saying. I like, can you to distill
this whole thing down at the one sentence? Can you cultivate what we're talking about through an information type of campaign, even if it takes an you can't truly make the change you need to make. Don't get me wrong. It's like it's like Kaepernick doing the rights campaign. Cask you this question, but let me let me get this. Just hold that question Kaepernick's rights campaign like he's teaching kids
rights of like being a citizen. But if you believe the police, don't believe you have a right to live, what the funk are you talking about? So that lets me know maybe he is not where I'm from, because I would never be trying to tell my homeboys. Man, you know what, next time, tell that motherfucker you got the right that you can wait on the watch. I would never tell my homeboys that in life, because I understand we don't have the right to live. In some
people's eyes, happen to be police. So I think being financial literate works for a few. It just don't work for the most the most need Like its industry what made America great? The greatest idea America ever came up with. I mean, and I'm not saying they came up with it, but when they decided to industrialize the whole country, when when people started putting these factories everywhere, that was the greatest thing because so many people come into this world.
Dim whoever knows why, who knows the trauma human beings is a piece of ship. I mean, so it's traumas a thousand things. And then you add oppression, you add you know, mistreatment because you poor people seeing a certain way, all these things that you don't know how people deal with. Like I've been called I've been called nigger before it right when I was younger. I never let it shake me. I've been punched in the Facebook, I've been doping and dropped to a knee. I never let it shake me.
Certain things just ain't gonna shake me. But that don't mean, everybody deal with it the same way. Everybody don't deal with death the same way. I'm I'm driving on the freeway. I could see somebody then on the side, and I'm not gonna think about that, motherfucker, not another time. Maybe that's trauma, or maybe it's I'm just not letting it shake me. But you just don't know how things shake other people. And so what I'm saying is to get back to where we was at. People lights get dim
for whatever thing. Whatever happened in this country for us is obviously tons of oppression, tons of oppression, tons of oppressing, tons of oppression, years and years of oppression, betrayal, betrayal from the first continent that we can't betrayal, oppression or trust and betrayal betrayal. So people a lot more people come with their lights them and then you got motherfucker's now who taking drugs dim in their own lights to
get away from what they're trying to forget. I don't want to remember this, so I'm gonna funk with this. I'm gonna take this. I'm gonna dimn my light and then make decisions with that altered them light, the same decisions you would make because you know, if you thought about how they treated your people for years, maybe you would see you people differently. You're like, I don't want to remember that how they treat us, So I'm gonna dimn my lights with this opiod. I'm gonna dimn my lights.
And you forget exactly you didn't even forgot. Why are you trying to get away from this? And you start treating your people the same. Wait, most niggas that's banging, they're doing dirt off dope. They're not doing dirt sober. They're doing dirt off dope, whether it's alcohol, whether it's opioise, whether it's sharan. They're doing dirt off dope because they're trying to forget whatever oppression and didn't end up becoming the oppression. Yea, power is a funny thing that way.
Power corrupts. If we title a podcast something different outside of what we do, this one with power corrupts. Historically, every it fucks Sugar. Everybody. My homie was like, what do you think happened to ships? I'm like, Sugar is a good dude, Like I didn't talked to like Pops cool because he's a cool nigga. Like Pops, what you think happened to in power? If you give them motherfucker, that's what happens in gangbanging, bro, you give a sucker
nigga power. Like if you put a nigga on from the hood that never was nobody and now he has the force of a neighborhood behind him. Man, you don't know how that ship. Power is is the coldest drug out so especially somebody who's had power leveraged against them, you know, like that amplifies that outcome times a million if you've been I mean, the most obvious and universal example is like an abused child. You're only abused when
you're small by and large. At some point you're going to grow enough to become bigger than somebody else and you're gonna beat the ship out of that person first chance you get. And that's that crosses all barriers. That's that's any kind of abuse, for the most part, any kind of abuse. I think what most pedophiles are. It was some craziness. It's in the same num, it's the same number. Um. But that's my point. So if if we focus right, if we focus on everything else right,
so we can talk financial literacy. Yeah, they can stop taking that two dollars and buying that and all that. Let's deal with why he only got fucking two dollars. Let's deal with why the funk he always trying to drink? Not not saying because that's a hard and I get it, one is easier, it's effortless, it's it's a lot less effortless.
But if we deal with why this motherfucker is getting drunk every day, If we deal with why this motherfucker, why his baby mama calling him a loser that got him popping opioids and his dick now even getting hard because he's so fucking i and fucked up? Why does he Why do people feel like their life have no value? That's been three pronged question. One of them all scrap. But like we we can't say. What you're saying is
save the money. You're buying your medicine with you're saying, save the money you're buying your medicine, you're buying your fake medicine. It's real medicine, especially today, it's real medicine. You know that medicine, but even that's fake medicine. But that's real medicine. Because I ain't not a fake medicine, So it's real medicine, right, So you can't say, well, save the money you're buying your medicine with. That's and I think that's the problem. Like it's not about money
to me though, it's that's because you're white. No, because I mean you're going saying but like I'm going more into the psyche, like I don't think when I say the impact it would have on a person, because this is this is a psychological issue, you know, I mean greater than that, but like in that specific human being, at that specific moment, it's a psychological issue, not like you're psychologic you have something Obviously I'm not going I'm saying,
is it. Listen, if you're buying something because you're unhappy, well you're sick. Sure, in this case you're sick. How are you sick psychologically? But but you don't have a disease. But but that's but sick is sick again. Yeah, you get what I'm saying. You feel make me say something that we're supposed to get banned. Last time, we didn't get banned. Don't make me get banned this time. Because
it's a ton of people who are psychologically sick. And if you say that they're sick or something crossed, Yeah, I'm not saying that. That's I'm saying. The matter is it's an action in the response to how you feel and and and and in the microcurrency like being sick. Yeah, in the micro cursor, sure, but like being sick, same thing. Sure. Sure. For sake of arguments, same thing. I'm saying it. When I advocate what we're talking about as a remedy, I'm
not advocating the money as the remedy. I'm advocating the ownership and the control that you get from being able to say, like, all right, I'm getting bombarded by all this exterior ship that's sucking up my quality of life and I'm mad about it. The value that you can have and saying okay, well I did this little thing and now I have something. I have some element of control like people have eating disorders psychologically, it's a control mechs.
I view it, you know, between the ears as at least from the reason why I'm saying is it's it's not so much that hey, it's always easier to do something yourself in the way for someone else to do it. That's a given this is a situation. It's very large and it's a very big gap. So that's a lot of work too. It's really simple work. It's simple, but it just it requires commitment. Yeah, it's a lot of work. It's not hard work, but it is a lot of it.
It's a lot of simple work. Yeah, I just say, like, well, to what extent you said it's a small number of people. How vast could the impact of something like that be if it was put into practice? Uh, one in a hundred, one five, one in one, ten, one in ten thousand, one and twenty thousand. You think that if not are of not that are capable, but that not that are capable of but of their own you know, issues or whatnot, but that just literally numerically could be capable of it.
You think there's nine people in the city of Compton, nine nine? You think there are nine people nine? Okay, But I'm not saying okay sarcastically. I know I'm gonna sound crazy, and I'm thinking, like, am I being a Bighain? I can't believe it? Maybe I think it's fifteen thousand. There's people, Well, okay, a lot of people are old and kids, So like taking age out of them. But no, if there's twenty thousand people, you're asking people to not medicate.
I'm saying, what what that medicine is giving you? You can get that from a different medicine. That's what I think, and that's why I do agree. It's very psychological, So we get that from a different medicine. It took me, me and Pete get that from a different medicine. I love when I'm able to refuse girls who trying to give me some pussy. That's the most powerful thing in my life. Awesome stuff like bro, like you think getting pussy make you feel special? Turning it down it's the
most amazing, no question about that. Like the strip you feel is top tier because like you are, I feel like Popeye, like punk ass bitch can't control me with this pussy. You know. The greatest line was to be in hip hop history. This is really juven on childish. But sugar Free had a song, Oh man, wasn't it was? It was all one of those features ones. It's I quit suck about deck about deck Yeah, greatest because but I get why it's a power in it. But so so I know we finning up. We okay, we're gonna
work through this. So no, no, so no. I think the discipline is medication for when your light is on. I think that's I think when your light is dimned, that's not even a true medicine. It's like taking night wail for aids. Yeah, like but that's but that's but that's I don't think this is something else mean and dja here he thinks most people are stupid. I'm like, most people are not incapable of learning. They're literally distracted, and the brightest minds are the are the toughest to
be distracted. Like intellag is not only vision around things you haven't seen, it's also h focus focus, right, so I think like you have to focus, and so it's hard to focus when things that feel so permanent, right, like, um, your mom on dope. I got one homey who took his mom being on dope and he turned around and so dope and changed his life. Like another homey who sold his mom is on dope, he end up doing dope. Yeah, so you know the light that's going on, you just
never no the lights. But the point before we get lost. Um, the medicine they take is the medicine they were taught to deal with the sickness that is oppression. Like, so you're saying, can we teach them? Can we provide and tell them this is the better medicine. The problem is it has no discipline, gives people that have intellect strength, because that's truly where you learn that, that's where you truly Floyd discipline. That's it's all about discipline, willing to
go to the gym. That's why motherfuckerking with Floyd's who gotta who got a six pack for twenty years? Yeah, that's that's that's a different discipline that that that's again, that's that's that's novelty level stuff that's inapplicable to the greater population. So but what I'm saying is we can deal. We can we can start talking about changing the medicine. You know, because I do agree that it does make
you feel powerful when you take your own ship. You know, I'm like that for real, because I know what happened in the Transatlantic slave trade. I know what happened in the South. I know I find my strength in controlling. I change everything I can change about my own life, and that's my focus. That's not normal. I find everything that's in my life, and I focus on that. I don't focus on what now one of them motherfucking people
be doing. I'll see it, but I'm not focused on none of that ship And so to not be able to not be distracted by what the world thinks, that's how you have individual thought. Think about how few people have individual thought. I'm not distracted by nothing y'all saying, hold up, what's the question? That's what we're all thinking about. I don't care what none of y'all saying. I'm gonna take this and I'm gonna think myself. I'm gonna read.
I'm allowed whatever light in me to light up that question and figure out all the paths to get to what I think. The average person don't got enough time. They are distracted, so they take other people's thoughts, not questions. What are they're distracted with? Yeah, I mean I perceived the sickness, Yeah, the oppression. Most people are genuinely so. But but they're not. But they're thinking about the distraction
that I'm thinking about it, you know what I mean? No, No, they are thinking about it like right there, Like you have a look on social media, bro. When um, whenever something happened like. This is one of the worst things I hate. I hate this, and I probably shouldn't be talking to a white person about this, but I hate this part. There's really nobody else left here. I know it's just us, it's just us um. But as the father of all humanity, I feel like everybody is a
part of me. From the whitest white man to the darkest. They all my sons and the father humanity. It's just how I looked like when it starts right, this is how I feel. Let me fiti this, let me go in his own flesh, just unbelievable. Look so like most people when ship happened, like when whenever something happened, like let's say the police mistreat Let's say when these funked up as racist as police mistreat somebody, right, or it's a challenge of of of authority, brutal force. Somebody dies
with brutal force. Right. The worst thing I hate when black people start sharing white people experience with the police. I hate when black people complain to white people about oppression. You've never heard me talk to you about man pete them police, you know. But I would never in my life complain to a white person about oppression. I'm not gonna tell a white person my life matters. I'm I
would never talk to you oppressor about being oppressed. He no, goddamn well he's oppressing me, So why the fuck am I? That's like talking to your rapists about, hey, you're raping me. You thought he didn't know, So just to have that
will right. It's just different. Well, that's kind of relates back to our original case, Like you wouldn't advocate for the greater commercial mechanism to go out of their way to accommodate the people of Watts No, so I think that could work, but it required the wealthy of our community to do the same, and I think that's why they don't do the same. You don't ever hear rich
black people talk about oppress. I mean reparations. I don't know one, well, the ones who benefit politically from it, But aside from that, which ones are wealthy that's doing it? All the ones that do it publicly? Which one is wealthy doing it? Maxine Lebron talked about that, Lebron, They never talked about reparation. No, let talk about police reform and all that bullshit Maxine has. There's that one wealthy Waters is very wealthy. Maxine got her husband's fealthy corrupt
through his ship with her. But that ain't even what it is. That that ain't what it is. Trust me. You don't hear the wealthy elite of black Folds talking about reparations, and I think that's where the change needs to happen. If that was the conversation, we still should be going to hurt there exactly, got it, I'll throw under the butt. That's not the point. But what I'm saying is, let's focus on economic oppression as the main problem. Now again, I'm not gonna go I'm saying I truly
believe the solution is an industry. It's the only solution. Solution is an industry. It's an industry. That's that's that's what may America the great country economically. It was mhmm. I don't think you could ever heal I don't know if you could heal how human beings treat poor people. I don't know if you could ever heal how human beings treat poor people. I don't even know if that's possible to heal that sickness. I don't know why human
beings aren't being humane. I have no idea that that's something. I don't want to get into that problem. That problem causes deep What I want to focus on is opportunity and economics for anybody who wants it, because that's what this country is supposed to be about. That's the idea of it. That's what capitalism that got so far out of control that they forgot it was because of here.
You built the ship here. When you took it someone else, you became the same slaver you was in the fucking sixties seventeen hundreds, Like we're talking about the China were they're working for minimum change and they got cold heaters and and they have nuts. When you jump out of the window to kill yourself, you get caught and to take you back to work.
