Episode Transcript
[00:00:00] Speaker A: The views and opinions expressed by the no nonsense show and its host do.
[00:00:02] Speaker B: Not necessarily reflect views consistent with political.
[00:00:05] Speaker C: Correctness or the rare sonics podcast network.
[00:00:07] Speaker A: So to get the show started right, we want to wish any officers of.
[00:00:10] Speaker C: The sensitivity police a heartfelt fuck you.
He can't do it. I don't think. I don't think he can do it, man.
[00:00:16] Speaker A: Who?
[00:00:16] Speaker C: Your boy?
[00:00:17] Speaker A: No, your couch.
[00:00:18] Speaker C: Your couch, mate.
[00:00:19] Speaker A: No, he can't.
[00:00:20] Speaker C: He looked so uncomfortable.
Uncomfortable doing what?
[00:00:24] Speaker A: Intro in the show.
[00:00:25] Speaker C: Intro, like, you looked like. Oh, somebody else. Is it me? Is it somebody else? Is it me?
[00:00:28] Speaker B: Oh, I just think Jimmy Mack is the best at it. Yeah, yeah.
[00:00:32] Speaker C: If he had ever finished a sentence and I was.
[00:00:33] Speaker A: I'm sorry, I was over here loving up the doggy dog, right? He was. We just had a moment and shit.
[00:00:40] Speaker C: So you nut it?
[00:00:41] Speaker A: No, he almost did. No, see, look, it's just the thing. Look, see, look at him. He just. He's just burying his head in there.
[00:00:46] Speaker C: Things not out, though.
[00:00:47] Speaker A: No, it's good. This is true love. This ain't homo love.
You are listening to the no nonsense show. 10% less bullshit than any other podcast, guaranteed.
[00:01:13] Speaker C: Okay.
[00:01:14] Speaker A: He just. That's that good shit right there. And I think that forever, like, we get. We have a connection.
[00:01:20] Speaker C: Right?
[00:01:20] Speaker A: Because you brought him here. Yeah, I put him on. Like, I mean, sure. You guys take a. Thank you. Thank you, my nigga. Like, listen, like, you will. I will ever, forever be grateful to you, my nigga. Like, it's one of those things, like, where people or don't appreciate shit.
[00:01:32] Speaker C: Yeah.
[00:01:32] Speaker A: Duke ain't that nigga. Duke appreciates what I did for him in his life. Like, he understood what life was before the honest household and after. Like. And he's like, listen, bro, you know.
[00:01:42] Speaker C: We'Ve moved them to soft food now. Like, real food.
[00:01:45] Speaker A: Oh, like in those chubs.
[00:01:46] Speaker B: Farmers?
[00:01:46] Speaker C: No, it's all pets from pet friendly.
[00:01:49] Speaker A: Or pet smart friendly or pet friendly. Yeah, I've seen that. What's the name? Snowflake do that. She got. She got her dogs on it.
[00:01:54] Speaker C: It's expensive.
[00:01:55] Speaker A: That's what I'm saying. I can't do it.
[00:01:56] Speaker C: They love it, of course. And they've gotten in shape. It's real dog food, and they're in shape.
[00:02:00] Speaker A: I mean, it's like real food.
[00:02:01] Speaker C: They used to be fat and chubby. They're not. They're in shape.
[00:02:03] Speaker A: I don't know if they were ever fat and chubby, but it's real food.
[00:02:06] Speaker C: Dog's abdomen is supposed to go up to where their dick is, right? Our dogs were just flat all the way across.
[00:02:12] Speaker A: That's a good point. Yeah, but it is expensive, man, because you're paying for real food.
[00:02:16] Speaker C: But it's worth it. Our dogs will probably live a few, you know, a couple years longer.
[00:02:19] Speaker A: Yeah, yeah. And like I said, it's like different strokes. Like, you know what I mean? Like, you know how Willis and Arnold appreciated, right? Being, you know, Mister Drummond.
[00:02:34] Speaker C: So are you. Have you changed your mind about surgery for dogs or. No, you said, like, that's not happening.
[00:02:38] Speaker A: What you mean surgery for dogs?
[00:02:40] Speaker B: Getting them fixed.
[00:02:41] Speaker C: Like they're having a real bad problem.
[00:02:43] Speaker A: And no, I'm more like a heart condition.
[00:02:46] Speaker C: Like if your dog had arthritis.
[00:02:48] Speaker A: Yeah, so my dog does have arthritis, and I'm about to get him. I'm leaning into surgery.
[00:02:52] Speaker C: That's growth, bro.
[00:02:52] Speaker A: No, it is. And I, again, so we both have, you know. Cause you was a blender. Throwing a nigga in a blender. Dog in a blender.
[00:03:00] Speaker C: I don't know what you're talking about.
[00:03:01] Speaker A: You don't remember that, huh? I know you don't remember. Cause that was before.
[00:03:04] Speaker B: But I remember he used to not like dog.
[00:03:07] Speaker C: You remember that? They gave you an idea of who I was.
[00:03:10] Speaker A: But, you know, before he had it, before he had Mosley, which was the original, he was like, fuck a dog thought I'm a fucking a blender. Like, like when I'm niggas was throwing iPhones and blenders and not with doing a test. That's like, you.
[00:03:27] Speaker C: French metabet. Well, it was a bet. A million dollars. I said for a million dollars, I would grind a puppy up. That was a long time ago.
[00:03:34] Speaker B: You won't do it now?
[00:03:35] Speaker A: No, he did. Fuck no. He's a dog lover.
[00:03:38] Speaker B: Tax free.
[00:03:38] Speaker A: He's a dog lover, bro.
A million dollars, he's a tax free.
[00:03:44] Speaker C: Not my dog. I mean, it'd be some freshest pit bull or something.
[00:03:47] Speaker A: He'd have to deserve it, right?
[00:03:49] Speaker C: Like how many little youngsters.
[00:03:51] Speaker A: I'm just doing.
[00:03:51] Speaker C: Who did he mo.
[00:03:52] Speaker A: I'm just doing God's work here.
That's how I feel. Like, again, being the assassin. Only, only bad people, Dexter style, right? It only, it only works with the, with the, the scum of the earth. You don't just go ahead and get innocence, right? That's not how it works.
Like, I wouldn't say just, you know, one color of people or anything like that.
Like, you know, I love black people. I ain't go. I mean, I know that's contrary to.
[00:04:22] Speaker C: What uh, you don't? I love Kamala, but I don't think you love anybody else.
[00:04:26] Speaker A: No, I do. I love. I mean, shit, I was in a fucking. Before I got here to publix black people everywhere.
[00:04:33] Speaker C: I was fine.
[00:04:34] Speaker A: No.
[00:04:36] Speaker C: What a dick.
I promise I didn't break out of hives or anything.
[00:04:39] Speaker B: A black neighborhood.
[00:04:41] Speaker C: I was just walking and talking like any other person.
[00:04:46] Speaker A: I just blended right in.
[00:04:48] Speaker C: That's so stupid, bro.
How that sounded was ridiculous.
[00:04:51] Speaker A: I didn't finish.
[00:04:52] Speaker C: I was in public.
[00:04:54] Speaker A: Finish. You didn't let me finish. That's the problem. I was gonna talk about how many fine women were in there, you know what I mean? And it's like, yo, it's cracking right now. Like, I mean, there's work up in this publix right now.
[00:05:08] Speaker C: This one over here?
[00:05:09] Speaker A: Yeah.
[00:05:10] Speaker C: Oh, wow. Yeah, I guess I went on the wrong day.
[00:05:13] Speaker A: Yeah. No, I mean, last time I went.
[00:05:15] Speaker B: In there like that.
[00:05:16] Speaker A: Oh, let's see, again, you might be prejudiced.
[00:05:18] Speaker C: Yeah, you might. No, you definitely are. Cause you like light skin, but you don't really like american. So it's like you have a very, like. You and your girl are perfect because she's not american and she's light skinned. That's why y'all work.
[00:05:29] Speaker B: What did you say? I don't like american.
[00:05:31] Speaker C: Come on. Come on, man.
[00:05:33] Speaker A: Cuz, you know, I mean, you do.
[00:05:34] Speaker C: Think you're better, right? You think you're better?
[00:05:37] Speaker A: I mean, we are stepping stone. We're, like second class citizens to a third world.
[00:05:42] Speaker C: Like, these niggas in America have all this, and they don't even know what they fuck them like. I don't like none of them.
[00:05:46] Speaker A: Right?
[00:05:47] Speaker C: That's his idea.
[00:05:48] Speaker A: Again, we're lazy. This, that, and the other.
[00:05:51] Speaker C: What is it? We're. We have entitlement.
[00:05:55] Speaker A: Like, he always said, none of y'all niggas gonna outwork me, right? Like, there's no one. There's no one in America.
[00:06:00] Speaker C: You lazy.
[00:06:01] Speaker A: This is what I feel bad.
[00:06:02] Speaker C: American.
[00:06:02] Speaker A: This is what I feel like. I know that there's none of these american lazy ass niggas gonna outwork me.
[00:06:07] Speaker C: So you don't get a girl who's american, and then you also get a light skinned girl. You just hit both the best of both worlds.
[00:06:13] Speaker A: Isn't that what you like, team light skin?
No.
[00:06:16] Speaker C: All right, Mac, you're not team light skinned. Yeah.
[00:06:18] Speaker A: I mean, real light. No, you team real light.
[00:06:22] Speaker C: Your team. No melanin or low melanin. I'll say everybody has melanin, but not the Irish.
[00:06:30] Speaker A: She not Irish, because the Irish can't tan. I knew a nigga that could not tan, right? And he would get red as fuck, and I'd be like, oh, that's it, right? Like. Cause after the red is gonna turn brown, right? Nope. He go back to white.
[00:06:45] Speaker C: Yeah.
No.
[00:06:51] Speaker A: No, bro. How about, you know, what you doing? I'm just. I'm filibustering, trying to help you out. My dude.
[00:06:58] Speaker C: Doing circles, bro. Cartwheeling.
[00:07:01] Speaker A: Yeah. I mean, how many spins was that.
[00:07:02] Speaker C: On the free style on the. What is that called? The windmill? How many windmill spins was that, bro?
More than that australian chick, I swear.
[00:07:14] Speaker B: My bad. That was my fault. My bad. I don't know why I thought that was yours for some reason.
Remember that one topic we had a couple weeks ago where Jamie Mack was talking about should. Whether relationship is easier with kids or without kids?
[00:07:26] Speaker A: I do. And maybe that's why you assumed.
[00:07:28] Speaker B: Yeah, yeah, yeah.
After that, I was starting to think about it even more. And I was thinking, especially in today's economy, right? Because I was reading something. Let me go back. I was reading something after we had this topic, and it was this guy that was talking about, back in the day, chinese and japanese architecture and how they used to have, when they gave birth, back in the day. Because the way the lifestyle was when a person gave birth to a child, that child could become an expert at, like, sculpting and things like that. Because it was such a sedentary lifestyle, right? So that kid.
[00:08:06] Speaker A: Say that again. What's that word?
[00:08:07] Speaker B: Sedentary. Whatever. I'm not gonna say it again.
[00:08:09] Speaker A: No. But I don't even know what it means at first. I'm not even trying to be that.
[00:08:13] Speaker B: A regular lifestyle, it wasn't, like, constructed by the nine to five system that we are accustomed to.
[00:08:19] Speaker A: Okay?
[00:08:19] Speaker B: So the kid, early on, at six, seven, 8910, eleven, could start picking up sculpting. So by the time he's 40, 35, he becomes this master sculptor, where you see those crazy buildings in Japan and in China and things like that, while now you can no longer become an expert of that magnitude due to the nine to five cycle that we have. Right. And then I was saying, now, the lifestyle that we live now doesn't make it so.
[00:08:48] Speaker A: I'm sorry. Cause I looked it up. So, sedentary, right?
[00:08:51] Speaker C: Sedentary is where you sit around all the time and you get exerting the energy.
[00:08:55] Speaker B: So that's where people could focus on one thing and master, like, sculpting and things like that. Back then, we used to have those people that were great at that because the lifestyle wasn't like the nine to five system. And over the time, even with this said, this is why we have summer vacation, because they needed the kids to help with the farm and all of that. So they had reasons to have kids throughout certain time in life in this world.
And then now we have the system, which is you go to school, you go to work, and blah, blah, blah. Does this system now make it overrated to have kids versus back then where there was actually a good reason to have kids?
[00:09:32] Speaker C: When I first had kids, my thing was like, yo, I got slaves now. And then I realized that they're terrible slaves.
[00:09:39] Speaker A: Terrible slaves.
[00:09:39] Speaker C: Kids are the worst fucking slaves. That's a little black kid, I would think. A little black kid.
[00:09:43] Speaker A: You would think you would be engrained in them.
[00:09:45] Speaker C: You should be primed to come out.
[00:09:47] Speaker A: Just picking up your DNA using there.
[00:09:49] Speaker C: Picking your toys up and putting them in the basket, you know, or at.
[00:09:52] Speaker A: Least fucking following orders, right? Like, come on. Like.
[00:09:55] Speaker C: Or else they don't even get the. Or else these little kids need to get beat. What kind of slaves are these? Back when I was young, slaves used to know they place right. And you rarely got to beat one. Rarely.
[00:10:06] Speaker B: Because it was just like, nobody was.
[00:10:07] Speaker C: Willing to get beat, so they wouldn't do shit. You know, you never had runaways and like, that was just every now and then. But I. These kids.
[00:10:14] Speaker A: No, these kids, they got God given rights.
[00:10:17] Speaker C: So you're saying that the idea here is that.
[00:10:19] Speaker B: Because I feel like the time that we live in now makes it overrated for us to have kids compared to previous.
[00:10:25] Speaker C: When you say the word overrated, that's.
[00:10:26] Speaker A: Why I keep falling well, because I feel like what's happening is that him and G money are having these discussions, right? And they're like, kids, do we really want to have kids? Like, what would be the value of bringing that aspect into this relationship? Like, why would we end up having kids? And for what? For who? Like, again, I think a lot of times it's like, you know, there's a, you know, societal thing. Like, you. You need to have kids by a certain age, or you need to have kids, period. Right? Like, that makes you whole as a family or as a person, right? Like, you. You have the whole thing. You get married, you have kids. That's part of the whole process. And if you're somehow you don't do that, whether it's either they're not getting married or they're not having kids, it's like, well, what's wrong with you? Why didn't you. Why didn't you go through with the whole plan? Like, the whole thing is this, this and that. But you're saying you don't want kids. Is it because you can't have kids or are you selfish? Like, why everybody loves a baby, right? Like, I mean, come on. Like, it's one of those things. Like, sure, everybody loves puppies, but then when the motherfucker get older, it's on your carpet, right? And now it's got arthritis and you got to fucking pay for surgery and shit. It's like, fuck, maybe I didn't want to pop in shit. Maybe your puppy was cool, but I. Wow.
[00:11:37] Speaker C: Did you just say you didn't want your dog?
[00:11:38] Speaker A: No, I'm just saying, like, you wish.
[00:11:40] Speaker C: You had never met your dog. That's what it sound like you said.
[00:11:42] Speaker A: I'm just saying it becomes more than just the cute, cuddly, fluffy puppy part of the process.
[00:11:50] Speaker C: But what French is saying is that back in the day, kids were a utility.
[00:11:54] Speaker B: Yeah, there was like, my grandma had ten boys.
[00:11:58] Speaker A: I mean, that's lucky, though. Our props know what he was doing. He had aim.
[00:12:02] Speaker C: Ten boys.
[00:12:03] Speaker B: Yeah, she had twelve total. Two died. One at birth. One.
[00:12:06] Speaker C: Those are both boys too. Yeah. So she can't make girls. Yeah, yeah, I heard that. If you put your dick in the back of that pussy, that's how you get boys. And if you. Bullshit, that's how you get girls, huh?
I mean, you know, I'm two in one, so I was. I was doing damage a couple of those times. The one time I was. I wasn't quite sure.
[00:12:22] Speaker A: You was just play Pippin'I.
[00:12:23] Speaker C: Was playing.
[00:12:24] Speaker A: You're just like, ah, I'm not. My whole heart's not into this one.
[00:12:27] Speaker C: Like, I think French is scared he's gonna have all girls.
[00:12:31] Speaker A: And this is the thing too. As far as your answer to your question, French, is, is are they overrated kids?
[00:12:37] Speaker B: Especially now.
[00:12:38] Speaker A: I don't know. What are you trying to get? So again, if you're looking for them to be util. Utilitarian, right, like, to be something that services you as a parent, then, yeah, you're not getting. Fuck no.
You might as well not have a kid nowadays because that's not what. You're not gonna get that anymore.
[00:12:55] Speaker C: Why do people have kids other than. Okay, cuz in my. In my mind, the only reason to. Only reason to have a kid is to extend your. Your family name.
[00:13:05] Speaker A: Right, your legacy, rest that shit.
[00:13:06] Speaker C: You is all unknown. You don't know if they're gonna be successful. You don't know if they're gonna be smart. You don't know if they're gonna be nice. You don't go. You don't know anything about what they're actually gonna be. All you know is that they're gonna have your name. Right, if it's a boy.
[00:13:18] Speaker A: Jeffrey Dahmer's parents didn't know that was gonna be the case, right? Like, you know, I mean, like, you didn't know that when you was pregnant, you know, I mean, you were so happy, and you ended up with that nigga, you know? I mean, like, you just never know. But I think a lot of it. We talked about it a couple weeks back when Pac was on the show. It was accidents, my nigga. Like, ain't no one out here, really. I mean, sure, there are people that intentionally say, hey, let's have a kid. I don't know them like that. Well, that hasn't been.
[00:13:45] Speaker C: I do know people who didn't say, let's have a kid, but they said, if we have a kid, good. Or, like, they're like, we're open.
[00:13:53] Speaker A: We're open.
[00:13:54] Speaker C: We're open.
[00:13:54] Speaker A: We're not trying not to have a kid, right?
[00:13:56] Speaker C: And we're not trying, but we're not. You know what I'm saying? Like, we haven't already painted the room, right.
[00:14:01] Speaker A: And if you are open to it, right. I think it's just one of those things. Like, it's like, I hate to keep bringing up pets. It's like, willing to have this extra thing that enhances your life. Like, you want to take care of something, like you want to. Especially for women. I think that's an aspect. They want to have something that they can care for, right?
[00:14:21] Speaker C: Has that ever been real, though? I think that's all just what we tell we said. Women are. The women are bad mothers. A lot of them.
[00:14:28] Speaker A: Yeah, right? They. Again, it's like, when you get a puppy, you think, oh, this is gonna be great. And then, like, seven years, right? You're like, gosh damn, I still got a dog like this nigga sitting and eating, right?
Goddamn. Like, you know, I got a. I gotta schedule my life around it. You know what I mean? Like, you know, it needs to go out, you know, regularly.
[00:14:51] Speaker C: Like, I gotta keep coming home, right? Every day. I don't want to come home.
[00:14:54] Speaker A: Like, what if I want to go on vacation? I can't now. You know?
[00:14:56] Speaker C: I think kids are actually a little worried.
[00:14:57] Speaker A: Oh, for sure.
[00:14:58] Speaker C: You can't even leave them in the car when you go to grocery store.
[00:15:00] Speaker A: No, you cannot. You cannot shit. You can't have a dog, man. That's a fucking. Got arrested the other day at a Sam's club.
[00:15:05] Speaker B: I saw with the windows.
[00:15:07] Speaker A: Yeah. I'm thinking the car.
[00:15:08] Speaker C: My car has dog mode. Literally, there's a button that says dog mode. You push it and it keeps the car cool. And it says, hey, sorry, your owner will be back soon. On the screen.
[00:15:17] Speaker A: Wow. But you got to hope that people understand it, because what happened was this dude, I guess he just ran into Sam's club and he. He was like. I could hear him saying it. I wasn't even in there that long, and the dog was still alive. But the motherfuckers had already called the police, and fuckers were sat around in his car. They was, like, ready to have a protest.
[00:15:35] Speaker C: Who? What race? Call the police. Though. Honestly, I don't think anybody in our mind saw a black person call the police.
Even though I know my wife is a animal nut.
[00:15:45] Speaker A: Animal nut.
[00:15:45] Speaker C: I don't think that my wife would call the police.
[00:15:47] Speaker A: She picks up straight.
[00:15:48] Speaker B: She would have waited until that nigga came back.
[00:15:50] Speaker C: She. Not yet.
[00:15:51] Speaker A: And then gave him, like, the fucking.
[00:15:52] Speaker C: Like, some water, like, and snuck it through the window or something. But she's not confused. Everybody knows who that is.
[00:15:59] Speaker A: Yeah. Now, black people don't. I think black people in general don't tend to call police officers.
[00:16:03] Speaker B: The police might turn on you.
[00:16:05] Speaker A: Right. We just know that, listen, this other person might be black, too, and they might not survive this encounter. So we're not going to do that. We're not going to take that chance. But, um.
[00:16:13] Speaker C: Is that what you think, that the police kill black people at a disproportionate.
[00:16:17] Speaker A: Rate than white people? Yes. No, for sure.
[00:16:19] Speaker C: I don't.
[00:16:20] Speaker A: Yeah, no, I think that they definitely kill more. I mean, I think the numbers say.
[00:16:24] Speaker B: That white people died more by the hands of the police than black people, but maybe it's just because there's more white people.
[00:16:29] Speaker A: Hmm.
I would like to see that number.
[00:16:32] Speaker C: It's everywhere, but it's okay.
[00:16:33] Speaker A: Yeah, I would like to see it.
[00:16:34] Speaker C: I mean, I know you're a Democrat all of a sudden recently, so I get why you're on the side of it, but. Yeah, I don't think it's accurate.
[00:16:40] Speaker A: Yeah. No. So I guess then all black people are Democrats because all black people feel that way.
[00:16:44] Speaker C: I don't.
[00:16:45] Speaker A: I know you don't.
[00:16:46] Speaker C: French doesn't.
[00:16:46] Speaker A: I know fridge ain't real black.
[00:16:48] Speaker C: Okay.
[00:16:49] Speaker A: I mean, I'm talking about black Americans.
[00:16:50] Speaker C: Oh, okay.
[00:16:51] Speaker A: Yeah. Black Americans feel like, yes, the police fuck us up at a disproportionate rate. Like our encounters with the police in badly more than white people's encounters with the police. I mean, I literally have seen.
[00:17:03] Speaker C: Literally come.
[00:17:04] Speaker A: Yes, literally. I have seen white privilege in accurate. I've seen motherfuckers cussing out.
[00:17:08] Speaker C: Fucking black people do that, too.
[00:17:10] Speaker A: Nah, I ain't seen no black people do it. I seen a fucking Mexican flip a police officer off and get his ass back beat. Like. Like, he got. He got his ass beat.
All he did was give him the bird. He didn't even say no words.
[00:17:22] Speaker C: Right.
[00:17:22] Speaker A: And so I.
[00:17:24] Speaker C: That's your proof?
[00:17:24] Speaker A: Yeah, I know it's anecdotal, but.
[00:17:27] Speaker B: So you. So you. So you agree, Matt, kids are overrated.
[00:17:30] Speaker A: Well, if you. It's. What are you trying to get out of it? If you're trying to get some use out of it, then, yeah, no, you might as well don't do it like.
[00:17:37] Speaker C: Well, no, hold on, because there's. Okay, before you say that, because I think that there is still a use in having kids that you're not going to make slaves like we were talking about.
[00:17:43] Speaker A: Right?
[00:17:44] Speaker C: For instance, I guarantee you, Shaq's dad, his biological wish he had done more.
[00:17:49] Speaker A: Oh, for sure.
[00:17:50] Speaker C: I mean, like, there's still a reason.
[00:17:52] Speaker B: LeBron's dad, in real talk.
[00:17:54] Speaker A: In real talk, that's what a lot of people are doing nowadays, right? Like, they're trying to over invest in.
[00:18:00] Speaker C: Their kids to make him LeBron or.
[00:18:02] Speaker A: Whether it's a LeBron or actor or whatever, it's like, look, you're gonna make me some money. I mean, at some point, you know, and pay me back somehow for the investment that I put into you.
But. But that's not. You know, I mean, how many people are successful? Like, I mean, there's fucking thousands and thousands of AAU kids that all of their parents swear that they're gonna be.
[00:18:28] Speaker C: The fucking next, and 95% of them will never see.
[00:18:31] Speaker A: Exactly.
[00:18:31] Speaker C: A pro court.
[00:18:32] Speaker A: Exactly. Right.
[00:18:34] Speaker C: Well, no, no. AAU does present a lot of d. Yeah. It produces a lot of college players. But the. Of course, just the amount of teams don't allow for there to be an incredible amount of kids playing.
[00:18:46] Speaker A: Right.
[00:18:46] Speaker C: You know what I'm saying? There's only.
[00:18:47] Speaker A: I mean, it's 30, 32 team.
[00:18:48] Speaker C: 30, 30 or 32.
[00:18:49] Speaker A: I think it's 30 30 teams with 15 on a team.
[00:18:52] Speaker C: Yeah.
[00:18:53] Speaker A: That's not going to get you. I mean, the numbers again, you're a.
[00:18:57] Speaker C: Zero point something percenter. You're not a 1% or even. You're even better. So I think that there is still. There is still that.
[00:19:03] Speaker A: Is that gay?
[00:19:05] Speaker B: Yeah.
[00:19:06] Speaker C: Is it gay for a male dog? Like another dog's ear? Yeah, I would say no. Another male dog's ear? I'd say no. Because what I know of that is that's actually Mosley tricking Duke into thinking that he's important. More important. That's really. That's really dominant behavior. I thought it was the other way around. I thought it was Mosley being submissive to Duke. But actually he's a. What's the word I'm looking for?
So he feels like it's his job to soothe his brother.
[00:19:37] Speaker A: So he's the more.
[00:19:39] Speaker B: Because he is older than him.
[00:19:41] Speaker C: He's older by a few. A couple of months, but he's the more able. So he's soothing his younger brother.
[00:19:45] Speaker A: And Duke is with it. Yeah. Duke, ain't you ever had a woman.
[00:19:50] Speaker C: Look in your ear?
[00:19:50] Speaker A: I'm not with that.
[00:19:51] Speaker C: Okay.
[00:19:52] Speaker A: I don't like that. Yeah.
[00:19:53] Speaker C: I mean, not spitty.
[00:19:54] Speaker A: No, I don't need. Don't put a tongue in there.
[00:19:56] Speaker C: Kiss on it.
[00:19:58] Speaker A: So the earlobe you can get. Don't put. Don't have. Go in the. Don't go in the hole. Yeah, don't put anything in the hole. Don't know. Liquid in there.
That's all. Fucking bumper stick with that bitch on it. The other day.
[00:20:13] Speaker C: Nobody. I don't know why anybody gives a shit about when she goes to pair. Like, hot two is in Paris and, like, why are their cameras following it?
[00:20:19] Speaker B: This is so you're trying to make something out of her.
[00:20:22] Speaker A: And she ain't the first one. Like, I mean.
You mean sloppy toppy, been around.
[00:20:27] Speaker C: Yeah.
[00:20:27] Speaker A: Like, you. You ain't. You ain't saying that. New.
[00:20:30] Speaker B: I don't know. But the whole kids thing is weird because I think my generation is really choosing to opt out because they feel like there's no benefit. You know me, I still see some benefit because, I don't know. I came from a good family. I know the importance of having a family, having that community, keeping taxes.
[00:20:50] Speaker C: Yeah, but see, that's what I'm saying. What kind of nigga shit is that? I'm not having kids because there's no benefit.
[00:20:54] Speaker A: Yeah, that's what I'm saying.
[00:20:55] Speaker C: Like, that's the fact that that's your standing.
[00:20:57] Speaker B: Yeah.
I'm glad you said I'm glad.
[00:21:00] Speaker A: I don't know if our generation ever even thought about it, like.
[00:21:02] Speaker C: Right.
[00:21:03] Speaker B: Well, I'm glad you said nigga shit, because I want to. I want to go back to the CMB topics we've always been talking about.
[00:21:10] Speaker C: I'm going to read y'all the most important song we've ever talked about.
[00:21:13] Speaker B: All right.
[00:21:13] Speaker C: The us population.
[00:21:18] Speaker B: The us population makeup for minority groups in the 1980s was blacks, 12%, Hispanics 6%.
[00:21:26] Speaker C: And what is this for? What number is this?
[00:21:27] Speaker A: The.
[00:21:28] Speaker C: What percentage?
[00:21:29] Speaker B: Minority groups that do what in America? Population. Make population.
[00:21:32] Speaker C: Okay, start over, please.
[00:21:33] Speaker B: In 1980, for blacks, it was 12%.
[00:21:36] Speaker C: Yeah.
[00:21:36] Speaker B: Hispanics, 6%. Asians, 2%.
[00:21:39] Speaker C: Okay.
[00:21:39] Speaker B: In 2024.
[00:21:41] Speaker C: Yeah.
[00:21:42] Speaker B: Blacks 13%.
[00:21:44] Speaker C: Yeah.
[00:21:45] Speaker B: Hispanics 19%.
[00:21:47] Speaker C: I knew that.
[00:21:47] Speaker B: Asians 6%.
[00:21:49] Speaker C: Yeah.
[00:21:49] Speaker B: Every other group doubled, if not more. But blacks remain the same.
[00:21:53] Speaker C: Right?
[00:21:54] Speaker B: Here's the kicker. The 2050 census prediction shows.
[00:21:59] Speaker C: Yeah.
[00:21:59] Speaker B: Hispanics 25%, Asians 9%. Blacks still will remain at 13%.
So is it the abortions?
[00:22:11] Speaker C: It's that.
[00:22:12] Speaker B: Is it the black on black crimes or we just not fucking like, what's going on?
[00:22:16] Speaker A: Well, it might be kind of you, too, my nigga. You're saying, like, I'm not gonna do it.
[00:22:22] Speaker B: That's why I was talking about my generation. That's what I'm saying. So I'm seeing a lot of people that look like me, that are my age are saying like, hey, I ain't about to have a kid.
[00:22:30] Speaker C: So there's a trick in the numbers you just read, right. And you probably didn't even notice it, but you didn't notice. You didn't call out the white number.
[00:22:37] Speaker B: Dude, it was about minority groups.
[00:22:38] Speaker C: I understand, I understand. But the thing is, though, is that.
[00:22:41] Speaker B: Are the white numbers declining, too?
[00:22:43] Speaker C: They have to be. In order for Asians to increase and hispanics to increase their. Because we're talking about percentages, not my people talking about percentages. In order for Hispanics to double and Asians to also double by the year 2050, that means somebody has to be taking a loss. You've proven that it's not black people. So then what's wrong with the birth rates of white people? See, that probably would be something that'd be easily overlooked in that stat. But it's important here.
[00:23:06] Speaker B: So is the question be, what's wrong with the birth rate of native born Americans?
[00:23:10] Speaker C: There you go. So then, if we're talking about native born Americans or I groups that.
Because I would say that a lot of hispanic people that are here are american also.
[00:23:21] Speaker B: Yeah.
[00:23:22] Speaker C: They would consider themselves to be american, but also hispanic.
[00:23:24] Speaker B: Yes.
[00:23:25] Speaker C: They would consider them to be american, but also asian. I think that there's something about. There's something culturally that. That we're doing, and that's not black or white. That's american. American. Like the hot two Americans are. Don't tread on me, Americans.
[00:23:38] Speaker A: Right.
[00:23:39] Speaker C: There's something that we're doing differently now. What that is, that might start with all of it. The dating shit.
[00:23:46] Speaker B: I think the biggest thing in that, I think, is the community aspect, I think.
[00:23:50] Speaker C: And you know what? I've been seeing a lot of. Go ahead. I'm sorry.
[00:23:52] Speaker B: Yeah, I think it's that. Cause, like, people now automatically think daycare. I'm like, yo, I grew up off grandma's house. I never did daycare like it was grandma's house.
But the grandmas want to be outside now.
[00:24:07] Speaker C: Well, they're still young now.
They're still working age, and they're still busybody. Like, they're still. Mama got a. Mama gotta have a life.
[00:24:15] Speaker A: Mama gotta have a life, too.
[00:24:17] Speaker C: Yeah, I think.
[00:24:18] Speaker B: I think the big. I think outside of the.
[00:24:19] Speaker C: No, I'm sorry. Did you see. Did you see the. Tyrese has come out and said that he doesn't like being rhymes to this day. Because in that movie, he wasn't acting. He really. He really put himself into. Not like Tyrese. I mean, I know you're a movie guy. That's why I thought this would be interesting factoid. He doesn't like Ving Rhames, and it's because vingrams treated him like shit. Because Ving Rhames was not playing a part.
[00:24:39] Speaker A: Right?
[00:24:39] Speaker C: He's like, this nigga don't like me, right? And he's. This is, like, personal. That's crazy to me.
[00:24:43] Speaker A: But, yeah, he went Daniel Day Lewis on that nigga.
[00:24:47] Speaker C: There's guns and it's butter.
You a butterhead.
[00:24:51] Speaker B: Yeah. But I think outside of the. Obviously, the finances, because everything went up and things, like, I think it's because I'm like, Hispanics, they got that community like Jimmy Mack was saying. Twelve of them will live in the same house, right? Asian, same thing.
[00:25:03] Speaker A: Yeah, asian.
[00:25:04] Speaker B: Same thing. Even me as a Haitian, we have that, you know?
[00:25:07] Speaker A: And.
[00:25:07] Speaker C: And I think that Hispanics and Asians stay on code. Like, they know the hispanic code, they know the asian code, and they don't try to expand it. They know that there are certain limitations to who Hispanics and who Asians are, and they figure out ways to thrive inside of that and not. They've agreed upon what we are and what we're gonna do. And they don't really go outside of that, it seems.
[00:25:30] Speaker B: Yeah.
[00:25:31] Speaker C: Whereas black people seem like, you know, they're constantly saying, we're not a monolith, but they go every. And they do. They go every direction, but somehow we still come back to having to say the same thing. And if we don't say the same thing, we're called non black and coons and sellouts, and. I don't get it. It's the oddest thing in the world.
[00:25:48] Speaker A: Yeah.
[00:25:48] Speaker C: What do Hispanics call sellouts from the hispanic race? Never heard it. What do Asians call sellouts? Never heard it. I've never heard their word for this.
[00:25:57] Speaker A: Bananas.
[00:25:59] Speaker B: Is that a real thing?
[00:26:00] Speaker C: No.
[00:26:00] Speaker A: Yeah. It's the yellow on the outside, white on the inside.
[00:26:03] Speaker C: Who says that?
[00:26:03] Speaker A: That's what they. When you act in white, when you. When you are. When you're asian that acts white.
[00:26:09] Speaker C: What do Asians say? That's some shit you made up.
[00:26:13] Speaker A: I did not.
[00:26:15] Speaker C: I'm talking about what do Asians say? So their thing of Oreo is a.
[00:26:21] Speaker A: Banana as a banana.
[00:26:22] Speaker C: I don't believe that.
[00:26:22] Speaker A: It is, Mac.
[00:26:23] Speaker C: I don't believe that.
[00:26:24] Speaker A: Okay. No.
[00:26:25] Speaker C: Have you ever heard that phrase?
[00:26:26] Speaker A: No. Of course. Neither one of you are asian. I'm not.
[00:26:28] Speaker C: You're not asian either, nigga.
[00:26:31] Speaker A: But in California, there's plenty of them, and I've heard that shit.
[00:26:35] Speaker C: The point I'm making is that we have these things. Yeah. Americans.
[00:26:38] Speaker A: Like, I'm gonna text a vietnamese nigga right now and see if he can confirm it.
[00:26:43] Speaker C: Sure.
We have these things. French in our culture. And I'm talking specifically, don't tread on me hot to spit. Motherfucking Americans. We have this thing where if you're not on code, then there's a name for you. There's nigga lover, there's coon. Well, think of all the names that they have for white people who don't aren't on code and black people are on code. I don't know that there's a not on code word for those other.
[00:27:06] Speaker B: There probably isn't.
[00:27:07] Speaker C: Or even if they all know the assignment. Hate. I hate to use a trendy.
[00:27:11] Speaker B: Do you think it's because we. We try to preach diversity so much in America? That's why the Americans have lost their weight in their own culture, maybe.
[00:27:20] Speaker C: And, you know, there's an argument on both sides for diversity. Yeah, go ahead. Go ahead, Matt. What'd you learn?
[00:27:25] Speaker A: No, no, not yet.
[00:27:27] Speaker C: There's an argument on both sides of diversity, whether segregation or diversification is better. You know, there's obviously stats that show good things for both of them, but maybe. Maybe that's what it is.
[00:27:40] Speaker B: I think that's. I think when it comes to that aspect, I think the diversity is what is also creating some problems, because are they counting, like, a mixed kid as part of black or part of white?
[00:27:52] Speaker C: That's so weird, man. And, you know, being a mixed person is. That's weird. Like, what is. What does the future hold for people like me?
[00:27:58] Speaker B: Well, the future is gonna start looking like you.
[00:28:00] Speaker C: Yeah. I don't believe that.
[00:28:01] Speaker B: I mean, in 2015, yeah, they'll look like you.
[00:28:04] Speaker C: It will. But there's gonna. I don't. I don't believe that that is the solution that. I don't believe that America's gonna let that be the solution.
[00:28:12] Speaker A: Not at all.
[00:28:13] Speaker C: You see? I'm saying.
[00:28:14] Speaker A: Not at all.
[00:28:14] Speaker C: That's gonna be a hill battle. That's not. It's gonna happen just because people are mixing. Yeah, but that's not gonna be the solution that America is gonna allow to happen. I think that they're gonna.
[00:28:24] Speaker B: They're gonna bring wife back.
[00:28:25] Speaker C: I don't know, man. I don't know what they're gonna do, man. I don't have any idea.
[00:28:29] Speaker A: Well, so French, Reg said, lost our way, right? And I think it. For me, it was.
I don't know if we ever knew our way. I think that's the part of the american black problem, right? Like, I don't. I don't know if we ever had a way, right? Like. And if. When we did have. I think earlier on, when we were more pro black and afrocentric, that shit got crushed, right? Like, in those. All those movements that promoted that type of mentality and preached that to the. To the community that she got. That she got smothered out.
[00:29:08] Speaker C: But did the people want it either, though? So, I know that. I know we constantly say systemic racism is what got rid of Black Panthers and got rid of positive, conscious rap or whatever, but did we want conscious rap? Is that what we wanted? Or did we want gangsta rap?
[00:29:23] Speaker A: Okay, so I. I stand corrected. Okay. I did get a reply.
[00:29:26] Speaker C: Okay.
[00:29:27] Speaker A: So from when I hit up two of my vietnamese homeboys, and one of them said, there's no such term that an Asian would use. The whites, I think, use banana or Twinkie.
[00:29:39] Speaker C: You see what I'm saying? This doesn't exist in other cultures, bro. This is just american shit. This whole thing that if you're not on code, you're. This thing that's american shit. I don't think people do that in other places. They're just race. They're just regular races everywhere else.
[00:29:52] Speaker A: Right.
[00:29:53] Speaker C: I don't like you. You look different. Yeah, we're better. You're worse.
[00:29:55] Speaker A: Yeah.
[00:29:56] Speaker C: Here we got this whole thing where it's like.
[00:29:58] Speaker A: He's like, we would not eat. We would not say that we. There's no. There's nothing we would say that would. That would do that in our community. So. You're right.
[00:30:04] Speaker C: Yeah. I don't think that's a thing. And I don't know. I could be ignorant.
[00:30:07] Speaker B: No, no, that's not.
[00:30:08] Speaker A: This is straight from the. From the vietnamese mouth.
And it's so funny because my. My dude, he's, uh.
He leans into the Viet Cong.
He. The. The aspect hardcore, like, his fantasy football team is called Viet King Kong. And I'm.
And I'm like, I guess you don't. I mean, again, Viet Cong, I don't think was ever a good thing. Right. But he's like, I'm here. I.
[00:30:38] Speaker C: Well, no, no, I think that we made that something. It wasn't right. I think that's what they were actually called.
[00:30:43] Speaker A: Vietcong. Okay.
[00:30:44] Speaker C: Yeah.
[00:30:45] Speaker A: And we. And if we. Since we were fighting with the south, we didn't like them. That was just North Vietnam.
[00:30:49] Speaker C: We call them gooks and Charlie and all that stuff.
[00:30:50] Speaker A: Right.
[00:30:51] Speaker C: Viet Cong is what they were.
[00:30:52] Speaker A: Okay. Okay.
[00:30:53] Speaker C: Yeah.
That wasn't a derogatory term.
[00:30:58] Speaker B: So you were saying that you don't think America's gonna allow.
[00:31:03] Speaker A: Nope. The light skin blending of America, like, where everybody, they. Even.
[00:31:08] Speaker B: While economic farm even said by 20 something it would. Light skinned girl with green eyes with blonde hair.
[00:31:13] Speaker C: They said, like they said is a cautionary tale, though.
[00:31:17] Speaker B: That's how most people, we don't deplete the universe by 39.
[00:31:21] Speaker C: Yeah.
[00:31:24] Speaker B: And I've been seeing the mixing, not.
[00:31:26] Speaker C: Just from black coming, you know, they're.
[00:31:27] Speaker B: Coming asian and white, indian and white. Like, I've been seeing mixtures of. Of them all.
[00:31:34] Speaker C: I've seen Hillary Clinton put a baby's arm in her mouth and pull it out like a nigga at Buffalo. Wild wings, no meat on the bone.
[00:31:41] Speaker A: Straight bone.
[00:31:44] Speaker B: Hearing Alex Jones say nickel would be funny.
[00:31:46] Speaker C: Yeah, Alex. My Alex Jones first age is terrible, by the way.
[00:31:52] Speaker A: It's so terrible. It's good. Yeah, it's like that.
[00:31:55] Speaker B: Like, he kind of really do talk like that, which is weird cause he didn't start sounding like that back then.
[00:32:00] Speaker C: I think they beat the. Beat the straight talk out of him.
[00:32:02] Speaker A: Hell yeah. For sure. Like his regular voice got fucking sued the fuck out.
[00:32:06] Speaker C: Yeah. Now, what were you saying, French? I'm sorry.
[00:32:09] Speaker B: I don't know why you said.
[00:32:10] Speaker C: You said the World Health Organization said that they're gonna. Or. No. Who is it? Well, economic forum, they said that by.
[00:32:15] Speaker B: 2050, it's gonna be something like, it's gonna be. The majority of Americans are gonna be light skins.
[00:32:19] Speaker C: Do you believe that? I mean, do you believe the majority will be?
[00:32:23] Speaker B: I think so. Cause when I see new couples. Yeah, it's a mixed couple.
[00:32:26] Speaker C: It's never tv, but not a real life. Right.
[00:32:29] Speaker B: In real life, you get a more of a. You see the regular white and white, but you still see a lot of mixed couples.
[00:32:34] Speaker C: I don't see a lot of mixed couples. I see the normal amount. It's always been. I don't know. Are y'all seeing more mixed couples now?
[00:32:40] Speaker A: I don't know, but just like yesterday when we were out at the thing and then.
[00:32:43] Speaker B: I'm not just gonna start talking black and white. Okay, well, she wasn't white.
[00:32:47] Speaker A: She wasn't white even like we thought. Right. But she had a. That obviously, if that's the grandma and she's with a black baby, you know, her grandchild, then there has to be some mixture.
[00:32:58] Speaker C: Yeah. That kid didn't look like what he's talking about.
[00:33:01] Speaker A: You're right.
[00:33:01] Speaker B: It was a black.
[00:33:02] Speaker C: It was obviously a black kid. Brown kid. It wasn't light skinned. It wasn't middle ground like me.
[00:33:07] Speaker A: What's weird is my. My oldest daughter, she's Hawaiian Filipino. Her mom is. And she's black, but she's. She's dark.
[00:33:18] Speaker C: Right.
[00:33:19] Speaker A: She doesn't. I mean, besides the hair being curly.
[00:33:22] Speaker C: And whatnot, you would think. If you just looked, you would think, oh, that's a black kid.
[00:33:25] Speaker A: Yeah, yeah, yeah. So I don't know. Again, I think you. I think you have to kind of. I think you do need white in order to get light. I think if you go on indian and black.
[00:33:34] Speaker B: Yeah.
[00:33:35] Speaker A: Right. I don't think you're necessarily gonna get a light skinned kid, per se. I mean, you could.
[00:33:39] Speaker B: All I'm saying is the world is mixing, like, especially in our country. Like, sure, that was bad.
[00:33:46] Speaker C: Sure, it's bad.
[00:33:47] Speaker A: No, I know. I'm just saying he sounds very democratic right now. Right.
[00:33:52] Speaker B: The world's mixing, it looks like, with our race, the black race. It looks like we're tend to start. We procreate with other procreating.
[00:34:00] Speaker A: Bro, I thought you was gonna give up. I'm glad you came back and knocked it out.
[00:34:03] Speaker B: With other races than our own. I think. I think we've seen that a lot too, with our race.
[00:34:08] Speaker C: Do you know why?
I do. I know.
[00:34:11] Speaker A: Why wouldn't that increase our population then, like, our percentage then would go higher?
[00:34:16] Speaker B: Depends if they count those people as blacks.
[00:34:18] Speaker C: I think that.
[00:34:19] Speaker A: Of course they do.
[00:34:19] Speaker C: I think that we've gotten to a place in America where black people recognize that the only way that I can be upperly mobile without anybody giving me a permission to do so is by having a lighter skinned kid. Because now my blood goes into a place where there may be privileged or advantages because of the color of my kid's skin. Black people have felt like, okay, well, if there's no way I can take this shit. And every time I try to stand up, y'all sit me back down. Okay, well, check this out. Now, my kid is lighter, so that means he's gonna have a little bit less trouble than I had. And I know this is terrible, but I believe it's. But I believe it's ingrained in us.
That's why you had grandparents like, don't bring no dark skinned ass girl home with you and the paper bag test. That was all because we need to get out of the situation. We don't see another way. And that's terrible, but I feel like a lot of people just are ingrained.
[00:35:15] Speaker A: I knew people growing up that were. That had that mindset. Like, you know, when I fuck with a white girl, it's. It's retribution, right? Like, it's not. Not only retribution, but it's like it's balancing the scale. So she's not having any more white kids, and then I'm having. We're having more quote unquote black kids. But these black kids are a little bit lighter, which then afford them a different, maybe opportunity than a fully black kid. So I'm giving them a little bit more of a leg up while also taking it away from the. The hierarchy. Right. And I swear to God, I know people that have thought that. So.
[00:35:54] Speaker C: So what do you think the reason why the black population hasn't grown and isn't projected to grow?
[00:36:00] Speaker B: I think it's the abortions, man.
[00:36:03] Speaker A: You think that black women have abortion abortions more than any other race?
[00:36:08] Speaker C: I do too. I think.
[00:36:10] Speaker B: I think it's per capita now by the numbers, is gonna look like white people are doing it more because there's more white people than black people. But from a per capita. Yeah, it's way. It's crazy.
[00:36:21] Speaker A: I mean. I mean, I've known.
[00:36:22] Speaker B: I mean, and then I was thinking the black on black killing too, but, yeah, I think it's really the abortions, man.
[00:36:29] Speaker C: Yeah.
[00:36:29] Speaker B: Because at the end of the day, what's really killing us is heart disease. It's not like niggas shooting niggas. I know we. That. That is a thing. But what's killing men on a day to day basis?
[00:36:38] Speaker C: Men are black men.
[00:36:39] Speaker B: Black men, okay? There's heart disease. More than.
[00:36:42] Speaker A: So you think that heart disease affects us more than it does white people?
[00:36:46] Speaker B: Yeah.
[00:36:46] Speaker C: Well, there are stats for that.
[00:36:48] Speaker A: But don't we all eat the same nasty shit?
[00:36:50] Speaker B: Our bodies is the way their body.
[00:36:53] Speaker C: Absorbs it, and I don't know. I'm out of my depth, even though I know you want me to be dunning and krueger.
[00:36:59] Speaker A: No, I don't know this one.
[00:37:00] Speaker C: Like, there's something about diet, the way that our bodies digest.
[00:37:06] Speaker A: Process.
[00:37:07] Speaker C: Not just digest, but process. Yeah, the food. It's weird. We end up with either more hypertension, more high blood pressure, more things that cause stress to the heart. We just do.
[00:37:17] Speaker A: Huh.
I mean, you might be right, because I think I.
I feel like I see so many functional fat white people.
[00:37:29] Speaker C: What an incredible way to do this. This research.
Your data points are, man.
[00:37:36] Speaker A: Like, I'd be on the road, and I'd be watching these white people in there, these truck stops getting, you know, these jugs of sodas and all this junk food in there.
[00:37:46] Speaker C: Crazy, man. How. What's the ounces on that soda?
[00:37:48] Speaker A: Oh, it's liters, so you got to put an ounce.
[00:37:52] Speaker C: So, like, you know that 32 inch ounce big gulp.
[00:37:54] Speaker A: Yeah. It's probably at least 64 and above.
[00:37:57] Speaker C: That's four pounds of, bro.
[00:37:58] Speaker A: Yeah.
[00:37:59] Speaker C: That's four pounds of soda.
[00:38:00] Speaker A: Yeah.
[00:38:01] Speaker C: It's hard to drink that when you think about it being pounds.
[00:38:04] Speaker A: Yeah, I didn't even think about it.
[00:38:06] Speaker C: Of soda.
[00:38:07] Speaker A: Right.
[00:38:08] Speaker B: Crazy. Now you make me never want to drink a soda or not a big.
[00:38:10] Speaker C: Gulp, because you're drinking two pounds of soda.
[00:38:12] Speaker A: Yeah.
[00:38:13] Speaker C: Like, a big gulp is two pounds of soda. 32oz.
[00:38:16] Speaker A: Yeah.
[00:38:16] Speaker C: Two pounds of soda.
[00:38:17] Speaker A: Yeah.
[00:38:17] Speaker C: That is stupid.
[00:38:19] Speaker A: Yeah.
[00:38:19] Speaker C: That is so stupid. It makes me. And I'm a soda dude. That makes me, like, what the fuck?
[00:38:25] Speaker A: Right? And then not only that, you know, snacks and all this shit. And I'm watching them, and then they're just walking around and functioning, right. And I'm just like, well, if this nigga's still alive, like, I honestly feel like I got some more years. Like, I feel like I got more summers because I don't do it like that.
[00:38:42] Speaker C: Right.
[00:38:42] Speaker A: You know, I mean, and this motherfucker seems like they've been doing it like this for a while.
[00:38:46] Speaker C: Yeah.
[00:38:46] Speaker A: And I don't know how long they're gonna keep doing it like this. But, I mean, I'm out here in the obesity thing is for real. And it's. I see.
I see more white people like that. Honestly, then I'm not saying I don't see any black people like that, but the majority of the people that I see that are fucking just over nasty is. Or white. And I'm just like, whoa, that's. That's interesting.
[00:39:14] Speaker C: I wonder if we could cross section Hispanics and just Hispanics and black people. Cause I think that typically they are discriminated against in a similar way. Yeah, they have. They. They tend to have same opportunities as we do. Or lack of opportunities, I should say.
[00:39:33] Speaker A: Right.
[00:39:35] Speaker C: But they have a lot of kids.
[00:39:37] Speaker A: Yeah. They don't. They don't. They don't slow down.
[00:39:39] Speaker C: So maybe French is right. Maybe it is all abortion.
[00:39:43] Speaker A: Yeah. It's funny because whenever you do those.
[00:39:46] Speaker B: 20 million a year, man, whenever you.
[00:39:49] Speaker A: Do the surveys, right, where they're, you know, asking for your identity, I've always thought, like, they were the ones they asked her, like, you're not Latino. Like, you are this, but not let you. Not Latino though, right? Like, I mean, like, they seem to really want to make sure that you're not Latino. You could be this but not Latino though. Right? Like, you. You're something but that.
[00:40:11] Speaker C: Affirmative action, though. I think there's a reason why they have to ask that specifically as opposed to any of the other ones, I think has something to do with affirmative action.
[00:40:18] Speaker A: Yeah. To me, it always felt derogatory or, you know them.
[00:40:21] Speaker C: Right.
[00:40:22] Speaker A: About the Latinos. Like, listen, are you good? But you know, this, but not. You can't be white, non Hispanic. Right?
[00:40:28] Speaker C: Black, non Hispanic.
[00:40:29] Speaker A: Right? Like, you just don't be saying you're this, but you're really Latino. I need to know if you're Latino. Don't be front. I was claiming something else.
[00:40:37] Speaker B: I was also thinking maybe would you be considered Latino technically hate? Yeah. Oh, not in America's. Wouldn't view me that way, but technically I am.
[00:40:46] Speaker A: So when you fill out that thing, do you do black, non hispanic?
[00:40:50] Speaker B: Yeah, because that's why they view me as I was thinking too. Maybe because a lot of black people, especially in the country, probably don't even fill out their census. So they may not even have the accurate percentage of black people.
[00:41:05] Speaker C: Or maybe they're not even going to those neighborhoods.
[00:41:07] Speaker B: Yeah, that's what I was thinking too. Could, could that be a factor too?
[00:41:10] Speaker C: How do they do census now? Cuz they don't go door to door, do they?
[00:41:13] Speaker A: Last time I seen, or as far as that is concerned, was a door to door. Someone came. I was fucking was the nineties. Yeah, someone came to the door and they were like with the census department and wanted to know how many people lived in the house and you know, that type of shit. I'm like, yeah, exactly.
[00:41:33] Speaker C: That's what most people.
[00:41:34] Speaker A: That's a.
[00:41:34] Speaker C: That's probably why the numbers don't change a lot, right?
[00:41:36] Speaker A: Like you said.
[00:41:36] Speaker B: So I'm wondering if it's too between abortions and niggas just not reporting.
[00:41:41] Speaker A: You're gonna tell my section eight? Like, you're not gonna get me kicked off section eight. There's two people here.
[00:41:47] Speaker C: How crazy is that? That's also a way that the civil rights acts and stuff fucked us up. Because niggas don't like, you can't even say, oh, there are eight people here because, right, who's the 8th? There's only is you and six kids. Where's this 8th person come from?
And then you lose your welfare.
[00:42:06] Speaker A: Right, exactly. Yeah. Or if you say, you know daddy, like, oh, well, then get your money from him, nigga. Like, if you know him like we coming for him and he's like, no, don't tell him. You know me, say unknown, like, cuz, you know, I mean, I'm still here. But you don't say unknown. Because if you say no, nigga, then they're gonna make me pay. They're not gonna pay.
There's a lot that goes into. And is that only us, though?
[00:42:31] Speaker C: I'm surprised. Yeah, I'm surprised, Mack, that you didn't. One of your cases wasn't that, you know, the police are killing so many black people. I thought you would have said that. Because you were saying earlier that black people are killed disproportionately more than any other race. So I would have thought you would have said, that's why there's so few of us.
[00:42:47] Speaker A: No, I don't think it's that. I don't think that happens at a rate that would qualify.
[00:42:51] Speaker C: So it's not that much of an issue.
[00:42:53] Speaker A: No, I think it's disproportionate to what other encounters are and not necessarily Mexicans. I think. I think minorities in general. Right? Like, so let's don't do that, b. Because if we go back to the. The origination in creation of police, it was for the fucking fucking up of niggas.
[00:43:10] Speaker C: Says who? I mean, yeah, that was a thing that was out there to catch runaway slaves. That's one thing that was out there before I. But we just believe that. Did anybody do any research to find.
[00:43:18] Speaker B: Out police has always been around? Cause what did you say about other countries?
[00:43:21] Speaker C: Right, exactly. It's police in other countries. We believe that. Cause it felt good and it sounded right. But do we ever check that to see if that was real? That's some shit a nigga said.
[00:43:30] Speaker A: I think you need two warrants if you got two locks.
[00:43:34] Speaker B: I think police was always a thing as part of security. But I think because of the slavery in America, the police did a lot of the that to the slaves of.
[00:43:44] Speaker A: The routing up in there.
[00:43:45] Speaker B: But I think police was already a thing because we needed to protect our laws.
[00:43:50] Speaker C: Right.
You don't. You looking it up?
[00:43:54] Speaker A: Yeah.
[00:43:54] Speaker C: Okay. Yeah, I think that was just something we kind of went with because it was cute and it was trendy for a little while and nobody. How do you disprove that? How would you even disprove it? I don't even know if that's. If it's possible. Does it say we're the first? I guarantee the first policeman was not in America.
[00:44:08] Speaker A: So. This is from the naAcp.org dot.
[00:44:13] Speaker B: That's a.
[00:44:14] Speaker C: That's Rachel. Rachel Dozey. I wrote that article.
[00:44:17] Speaker A: Hey, shout out to her. Cause she's.
[00:44:18] Speaker C: She was the.
[00:44:19] Speaker B: That's not a biased source, though.
[00:44:20] Speaker C: That is definitely.
[00:44:21] Speaker A: Of course it is. But it says the origins of modern day policing can be traced back to the slave patrol.
[00:44:27] Speaker C: See how they put all those words in the origin of the modern day? But there were police officers in other countries before we were even a country. So. This is ridiculous.
[00:44:34] Speaker B: And that's what I'm saying. If slavery was something that was.
[00:44:38] Speaker A: So the earliest formal slave patrol was created in the Carolinas in the early 17 hundreds with one mission, to establish a system of terror and squash slave uprisings with the capacity to pursue, apprehend, and return runaway slaves to their own.
[00:44:52] Speaker C: So in the 1650s, there were no police officers. Come on, man. People had goods back then. They had laws they needed to uphold before that. It's just. I get it. NAACP. You gotta paint the narrative. I mean, you're not you. I respect it. I'm glad you guys doing that. That's what the anti defamation league does for jewish people, so. Yeah, do it for us, too.
[00:45:12] Speaker A: Okay, hold on now. This is from the New Yorker. Okay.com. and this is a little bit liberal.
[00:45:19] Speaker C: Still, but go ahead. Well, okay, but still liberal. I just wanna make sure we know this is sources, the.
[00:45:27] Speaker A: The early. So this is fucking way. So the police is to maintain law and order, but the word derives for police, the greek city, blah, blah, blah.
It doesn't. The actual clip was better than the article.
[00:45:45] Speaker C: What?
[00:45:46] Speaker A: Yeah, so, like, you know how when you first.
[00:45:48] Speaker C: If this has a derived from the greek, anything that's not. No longer. We're talking about slavery, we're talking about BC, right.
[00:45:53] Speaker A: So this says.
So the police, as a civil force, changed, charged with deterring crime, came to the United States from England and is generally associated with the monarchy. And then that's where I clicked on it and I couldn't find anything else that finished that topic.
[00:46:13] Speaker C: So the New Yorker, who's liberal, has also said that slavery didn't have anything to do with it.
[00:46:17] Speaker A: Yeah, I said that. It was like, here, like, again, it came over with the settlers as a way of.
[00:46:21] Speaker C: I mean, we keep using the word utility, but the utility of it here, of course, would also be extended to protect against you losing a slave.
[00:46:27] Speaker A: Right.
[00:46:28] Speaker C: Just based off the fact that that's a property, right.
[00:46:31] Speaker A: Yeah. I wouldn't want my.
[00:46:33] Speaker C: My property disappearing, especially if they can pick the cotton.
[00:46:38] Speaker A: I tried to tell somebody, I tried to have a conversation with someone the other day about slavery and this, that and the other. And it was the, you know, topic I've spoken about before, and they were like, you this. Can't talk about this. I was like, no, I've already said that. If I was a white person back when slavery was legal. No, what they said is that just because something's legal. Oh, what it was that we were watching this fucking movie called the jackpot with fucking awkwafina where the fucking lottery winner, you have till sundown before you, you know, to survive. But legally, from the time you win till sundown, anybody can kill you and take your jackpot. Whoever kills you wins the jackpot. But they just can't use bullets or guns, right. No projectiles, right. And it's a legal thing. And I said, would you do that? They're like, no. And they're like, would you? I'm like, it's legal. And they're like, well, everything's not legal. Like, slavery was legal at a point. I was like, hmm. And they're like, what? What are you talking about? I was like, I've already said that.
I probably, if, you know, I had the opportunity to have free labor at a time when free labor was legal, I would. And they were like, what the fuck? You know? Because me being a black person, that's just so appalling, right? But I'm like, I understand the concept of it. Like, I'm not gonna. If this is legal. But then I said, I just, like, I've said on the show, I would be a good slave owner. Like, I would be good to myself. She's like, no, you can't. Those are contradictory words. Like, you can't be a slave owner and good. And I'm like, no, I don't think that's the case. Because. Because there's worse out there than me. That's like saying, like. Like, you know I can't be the lesser of something, right? Like, the lesser to you. Yeah. So you. There's people out here that are gonna be fucking slave owners and horrible, but that ain't gonna be me. I'm not gonna be whipping you and doing all this other shit and raping you in the motherfucking night and all this shit. I'm gonna fucking treat you good. And you know what I mean? It's gonna be a different experience unless you run.
[00:48:41] Speaker C: Unless you run.
[00:48:42] Speaker A: Then I got to call the police.
[00:48:44] Speaker C: I'm gonna get one of them foot soft.
[00:48:47] Speaker A: I'm gonna have to call the police. But I was like, yo, I don't feel like just because, you know, I mean, legal changes every. I mean, we do all kind of shit now because it's legal. But you. You.
[00:48:58] Speaker C: You went. You went way deeper than you had to. You like, motherfucker, you gotta have an iPhone. Shut up.
[00:49:02] Speaker A: Right?
[00:49:03] Speaker C: Shut up.
[00:49:04] Speaker A: Yeah, shut up.
[00:49:05] Speaker C: And I mean, like, that's. It's crazy for that to be $30 to make. It's crazy. That's the mic drop.
Your clothes, your phone, your car, cobalt in your battery. Everything is based on slave labor.
[00:49:19] Speaker A: Somewhere, somewhere, somewhere.
[00:49:21] Speaker C: And you're just, like, so cognitively distanced from it. The dissonance is, oh, well, yeah, but I didn't enslave somebody to make this phone. Like, nah, but you're still buying the phone and you're still using it as if.
[00:49:33] Speaker B: And that's how they able to do what they're doing.
[00:49:35] Speaker A: Yeah, and that's why they keep able to. Hey, listen, I'm glad you said that, cuz I'm.
[00:49:40] Speaker C: Yeah, tell them, like, yo, I'm gonna hit him with that self righteous ass.
[00:49:44] Speaker A: Self righteous asses. Like, let's be.
[00:49:46] Speaker C: I would never have a slave. But you do own a cell phone. You've had that's like your probably 15th cell phone, right?
[00:49:52] Speaker A: Right. How many. How many little motherfuckers got whipped over that book?
[00:49:55] Speaker C: And that's new, right? Imagine walking around diamonds. You've known for years, right, that kids lose arms to get these diamonds to you.
[00:50:02] Speaker A: Yeah.
[00:50:03] Speaker C: And you still want to. You want to. You want the bigger rock.
[00:50:06] Speaker A: Yeah.
[00:50:06] Speaker C: Then they could better not give me nothing less than three months salary.
[00:50:09] Speaker A: All of this shit that made in China. Why do you think they make it in China?
[00:50:13] Speaker C: Right.
[00:50:14] Speaker A: Because they don't have to pay a motherfucker. You know what I mean? Like, it's. It's slave labor. You know what I mean? So. Yeah, yeah.
[00:50:20] Speaker C: And there's a lot of ungrateful people still. Even still, though, like, I was. I was listening to something the other day and they were saying that, um, everybody living right now lives better than the king in the 17 hundreds.
[00:50:35] Speaker A: Yeah.
[00:50:35] Speaker C: Like, all of your creature comforts, everything you like. The king would look at you like, oh, my God. What do you do for a living? Like, who are you the king of.
[00:50:44] Speaker A: Did you just push that button on the wall and water came out? The fuck are you?
[00:50:48] Speaker C: The king of the planet.
[00:50:49] Speaker A: Right.
[00:50:52] Speaker C: We've allowed our sensibilities of what's needed has grown so high compared to what we actually need. Because if you do go back to someone who lived in the 17 hundreds, there was no running water. Like, think of all the things that we have. Electricity, gas, Internet. Like, what things could you not live without right now? What are the things that you absolutely could not live without?
[00:51:16] Speaker A: Central heating and air.
[00:51:17] Speaker C: Electricity gets all that. Lighting. Electricity, central. I would even say gas to cook.
[00:51:23] Speaker A: Yeah.
[00:51:23] Speaker C: So electricity, gas. I must say Internet, too.
[00:51:26] Speaker B: Yeah.
[00:51:26] Speaker C: I could have a job. I mean, I would. I would. I would still exist, but this is. Would be weird.
[00:51:34] Speaker A: It would be way different.
[00:51:35] Speaker C: So those three things. Can you think of anything else?
[00:51:38] Speaker A: Mmm.
As far as a luxury plumbing man. Cars.
[00:51:45] Speaker C: You. You could not live without plumbing.
[00:51:47] Speaker B: Oh, you could.
[00:51:48] Speaker C: Okay, yeah, cars.
[00:51:49] Speaker A: You say cars?
[00:51:50] Speaker C: Yeah, I think I could get around and walk. I don't know if. I don't know if I necessarily need.
[00:51:53] Speaker A: Where you walk into. You can. You could walk so far you couldn't walk to life.
[00:51:58] Speaker C: But if there were no cars, things would be more close. There'd be. Yeah. You'd have a grocery store closer to.
[00:52:03] Speaker A: You than you be back on horses and shit, right?
[00:52:05] Speaker C: Yeah, whatever.
[00:52:06] Speaker A: Yeah.
[00:52:06] Speaker C: You are walking. Yeah. I'm just saying there would be. There would be a need to have a grocery store closer to me if I had to walk. So I can live without that. But electricity, gas, Internet even. And what was the last one you said?
[00:52:16] Speaker B: I'd say, like plumbing.
[00:52:18] Speaker C: Like plumbing?
[00:52:19] Speaker A: Yeah. No, plumbing is a big deal.
[00:52:21] Speaker C: Well, none of those things existed for the king in 1750.
[00:52:25] Speaker A: Well, shit.
[00:52:26] Speaker C: None of those things. None of the things you said you could not live without. None of those things existed in the.
[00:52:32] Speaker A: 17Th when we, when we talk about one of the shows. 1883. Yeah, that was some hard living. Yeah, and none of that. I mean, I remember she was talking about, oh, back in New York, you know, they got these where the wall, the water just comes out the wall. You know, I mean, like, oh, like this is fancy dancy shit. Like, they were talking about that in the city, but they didn't have that yet. They still were fucking and tubbing. Fucking water from the river to a tub and shit.
[00:52:55] Speaker C: 100 years before that.
[00:52:56] Speaker A: Right.
[00:52:57] Speaker C: Nobody, including the most. The richest nigga in the country, even had any of that. Any of the things you said. You guys are. We all agreed we couldn't live without. Nobody had it, including the richest nigga in the country. So it's us.
[00:53:13] Speaker A: It really is.
[00:53:13] Speaker C: It's us.
[00:53:14] Speaker A: And it's funny because was a magnificent. I just watched a magnificent seven with Denzel.
[00:53:19] Speaker B: My gosh.
[00:53:20] Speaker C: Four.
[00:53:20] Speaker A: Yeah, no, no, four. I'm gonna give it a four. Magnificent seven was good. Chris Pratt. Fucking haven't watched.
[00:53:27] Speaker C: Is that Quinton Tino?
[00:53:29] Speaker A: Chris Pratt. Who else was. Who's from training day? The white boy in training day.
[00:53:33] Speaker C: Ethan Hawk.
[00:53:34] Speaker A: Ethan Hawk was in it. It was a lot of good people in this, right? And. But it was a country thing. And it was like, well, people were just. The premise dude just came and was taking their land. I mean, literally, he just came to the tan. He's like, I give everybody $20 for their, their plot and they're like, that's, that's fucking. You're robbing us. He's like, so what? Take it, or I'll be back in three days and I'm killing niggas. Like. And he burnt the church down. And he's like, I'm just, it's, I'm just going to take this. Like. And there's no one here besides the cricket cop that I already bought, you know, the sheriff that's going to stop me.
[00:54:04] Speaker C: But I tell you, bro, it's two worlds going on.
[00:54:05] Speaker A: And I'm like, it really was a. I mean, like, we complain about the shit right now. It was worse. There's, I mean, like, this ain't the roughest time.
[00:54:14] Speaker C: This ain't the worst time to be alive.
[00:54:16] Speaker A: This ain't the worst, right?
[00:54:17] Speaker C: Including for black people who are underprivileged and disproportionately killed by cops for what you say.
[00:54:22] Speaker A: And this was white on white. This is white on white. He's just like, listen, I'm coming to take the land, and I'm gonna mine it. But this is. And they're like, you robbing us? He's like, listen.
[00:54:31] Speaker C: And so that's what bothers me about black or people saying that, you know, like, for instance, if you said. If you made a statement about black people or black culture or whatever, like, well, what are you doing? What have you done for black culture? Right?
The whole argument is a little ridiculous when you think about the fact that every single black person, you know, lives better than the king of. Name your country in the 17 hundreds.
[00:54:56] Speaker A: Yeah.
[00:54:57] Speaker C: So is it us? Or is it living? Is it, like. Is it. Is it the bullshit that we've pretended to be and become.
[00:55:04] Speaker A: Yes. Yes.
[00:55:05] Speaker C: Because if we. If you went back right now with the things that you have, yes, you are richer.
[00:55:11] Speaker A: Yeah.
[00:55:12] Speaker C: Now, in those days, you might not be, but if you were able to bring back your stuff, with your existence.
[00:55:18] Speaker A: With you, they're looking at you like, what the fuck?
[00:55:21] Speaker C: They're gonna kill you.
[00:55:22] Speaker A: What kind of royalty are you?
[00:55:23] Speaker C: You're gonna figure out at first, I can figure out if you're magic. If you're not magic, they're gonna kill you.
[00:55:27] Speaker A: Yeah, yeah, yeah. And, I mean, I feel like, you know, we.
Do you want kids, though? I mean, I don't know, bridge. Do you?
[00:55:38] Speaker C: I mean, going back to the beginning.
[00:55:40] Speaker A: No, because. Yeah, no, I'm just saying, like, it's.
[00:55:43] Speaker C: Like, whatever you get bringing kids here for brand new granddaddy.
[00:55:46] Speaker A: But as far as black kids, right? Like, again, like you were talking about the black units and, you know, and what we are. Do they help or do they hinder?
[00:55:55] Speaker B: My kid will help.
[00:55:57] Speaker A: I hope so.
[00:55:58] Speaker B: I will hope so.
[00:55:58] Speaker A: What?
[00:55:59] Speaker B: I would hope so. I'm gonna try to instill good things. Who knows? He or she will take it. But. But you can't predict.
[00:56:05] Speaker A: And stealing still hasn't told me how they're gonna help you.
[00:56:09] Speaker B: Help me?
[00:56:10] Speaker A: Oh, you talk about help the culture.
[00:56:12] Speaker B: Oh, no, they're gonna help me out. Like, I'm helping my parents now with old age. I think when I get old, they're gonna help me out. They're gonna look over me if I. You know, hopefully they do. You know, who knows? They might be like, fuck, dad, maybe.
[00:56:24] Speaker A: That'S a long elder abuse, right? That's a long. That's a long way. Like, I mean, like, your parents, you know, mean had the way, but that's.
[00:56:31] Speaker B: How the cycle is.
[00:56:32] Speaker C: What does that mean, Mac? That's not the reason to not do it.
Cause one day you're like, man, I wish I put that long time in because, God, I can't change my own doppel.
[00:56:43] Speaker A: I personally want you go to the military. You get that good old va care.
[00:56:47] Speaker C: Yeah.
[00:56:47] Speaker B: I personally want kids for the idea of. I think you could travel everywhere in the world. You could make all the money in the world. You could do experience whatever this world has to offer. Offer. But I think watching your own kid and grow and spending time with your own kid, I think that's where you get the ultimate fulfillment.
[00:57:06] Speaker A: Okay? I think there is something to that, right? I'm gonna tell you, like, as a parent, there is a level of joy in watching a mini creation of yourself, right? Like, you watch, you know? And it's not all of you, right? Because half of that is that crazy broad that you had the baby with, right? But the rest, g money's crazy. No, no, I'm just talking about in general.
[00:57:31] Speaker C: Thought you somebody's girl. It's been a long time, bro.
[00:57:34] Speaker A: He hasn't. I thought you went back to have a baby, so I can't be talking about g money.
[00:57:37] Speaker C: I thought you went back to the red swimsuit.
That nigga. You couldn't even say boat for, like, two years.
That was wild, bro. That was a wild period in our show, bro, where you was just constantly talking about his.
[00:57:51] Speaker A: It was not wild because I was talking about. It was wild because you guys would always create this damn dynamic. We didn't create it.
[00:57:57] Speaker C: Listening right now, like, oh, shit. I remember.
[00:57:59] Speaker A: What Mac didn't know, and what was funny is that fridge Reggie, knowing the reality, bought into it. Like. Like, is he living in a different world? Like you said. What did you say? How many worlds are there?
Because I know you can.
[00:58:14] Speaker C: Morty came and got you, bro. What are you talking about? Everybody knows. This was a thing.
Everybody knows. Every listener right now is like, Mac, what the fuck are you talking about?
[00:58:24] Speaker A: I thought the jumpsuit was orange.
[00:58:26] Speaker C: Jumpsuit? See, I'm saying, like, nobody believes you because you're not even telling the truth anymore. There was a swimsuit on a boat.
[00:58:32] Speaker A: Oh, I wouldn't see.
[00:58:33] Speaker C: Yeah.
[00:58:33] Speaker A: And that's how much I remember.
[00:58:34] Speaker C: Look at you acting. You're acting.
[00:58:37] Speaker A: That's how much I remember acting.
[00:58:39] Speaker C: That's cool, though. I get it.
I'm sorry, what were you saying about his girl, his relationship again?
[00:58:46] Speaker B: I'll let you talk about the parent.
[00:58:48] Speaker C: I'll let you get that off.
[00:58:49] Speaker A: No, that is a good. I mean, that's the. That's a good thing about parenting, right? Like, is that of watching them develop, right? And then, especially if they do develop, you know, I mean, if they don't turn into a Jeffrey Dahmer, right? Like, you know, I mean, you're like, ah, that's pretty. That's pretty awesome, right? Like, to see him develop. Like. Like. So, for instance, my son started school today, you know, college. And he came home and he was like, he's going to state.
He's following y'all.
[00:59:17] Speaker C: Yeah.
[00:59:17] Speaker A: And he's like. He's like, listen, and, you know, this is different. Like, you know, he was just expressing that commute. Yeah, yeah.
And he's expressing, you know, like, oh, this is way different high school, right? Like. And I was like, he's like, man, it's. It's so different. Like, they don't. They're not on you. And I'm like, yeah, that's not. Because they got your money already, dude. Like, they don't give a shit about any of that. This is you. And he's like, yo, and you know, he went to a hood high school, shout out to South Gwinnett. And he was like, maybe it's the difference, because, you know, you always had those cats in the back, you know, doing their own thing, you know, fucking not paying attention or whatever. He's like, but I realized everybody here wants to be here.
[00:59:59] Speaker C: Right?
[00:59:59] Speaker A: Right.
Like, they. They're paying to be here, actually.
[01:00:03] Speaker C: Yeah. But the first time I went to college, I don't know, I was. I felt like I was a little too immature because I was trying my damnedest to get later classes. Like, anything you could do to be almost not in college, I was trying to do that.
I wasn't like, french, where it's like, doing, like, a double major type shit. No. Now, when I. When I came back from the military, it was a total different thing.
[01:00:24] Speaker A: Right.
[01:00:24] Speaker C: But that first go.
[01:00:26] Speaker A: Yeah, he's got all early classes, too, so maybe he's in there with those. Those kids that are, you know, early risers and all.
[01:00:31] Speaker C: I try to squeeze all my classes on Tuesday and Thursday. Oh, that was terrible.
[01:00:35] Speaker A: Yeah, he.
[01:00:36] Speaker C: That's the kind of student I wasn't.
[01:00:38] Speaker A: He's Monday through Thursday.
Yeah, but, yeah. And so having him come home, you know, and talk about that and watching his growth and watching his development there is a level of satisfaction that you get as a parent to watch that, you know, that growth in your input, in what you are, you know, able to kind of create. You know, I mean, in essence, you know, because you. You helped develop them. Obviously, your sperm is what created them. And then now, from that point on, you're responsible for their development. So I think it is a responsibility thing. So if you're willing to try to take on that responsibility and say, can I do something right, can you? You want to be a creator. You want to be, you know, something that. Or you could be a deadbeat motherfucker and don't give a fuck, right? But if you are a real person. I think, I was gonna say real negative, but you. You give a fuck. You want to see that this ends up in this best form possible. And when it happens, as you watch it develop, I think there's some satisfaction to that. And I don't know if it's what you're talking about. Worth, right? Worth having a kid or not. It. Maybe it isn't for some people, but I think that is a satisfaction that you do get out of being a. Yeah.
[01:01:57] Speaker C: Yeah.
All right, well, listeners, we appreciate you guys tuning in once again to the no nonsense show. Make sure you go out to the website restsignance.com, where you can check out all the shows on the network. Other than that, keep supporting us, keep interacting with us, and we'll keep bringing the nonsense because we realize that sometimes people just need to.
[01:02:14] Speaker A: Next time, 10% less bullshit than any other podcast, guaranteed.