Episode Transcript
[00:00:00] Speaker A: The views and opinions expressed by the no Nonsense show and its host do not necessarily reflect views consistent with political correctness or the rare Sonnets podcast network. So to get the show started right, we want to wish any officers of the sensitivity police a heartfelt fuck you.
[00:00:13] Speaker B: I hope you're doing well. Shout out to y'all.
[00:00:16] Speaker C: Last episode was hilarious.
[00:00:18] Speaker B: I forgot.
[00:00:18] Speaker C: I wanted to make. I forgot what I wanted to talk about. Jamie Mack says something crazy. I forgot what it was. I forgot what y'all was talking about. But I had a. I'm gonna just have to listen to the show over. But I have some feedback for Jamie Mac.
[00:00:32] Speaker B: And please be honest. Tell that. Hey, please tell that French Reggie.
[00:00:41] Speaker A: Hey, you do not have to defend women that.
[00:00:44] Speaker B: That much, bro.
My God, you ain't let them be. Hey, women are heathens too. Hey, this nigga is on some Captain.
[00:00:54] Speaker C: America love women type, bro.
[00:00:58] Speaker B: It's gotta stop. Like, what you are listening to the no nonsense show. 10% less bullshit than any other podcast, guaranteed.
[00:01:26] Speaker C: So that message was sent to me December 11th. So let me look back at the episodes that we put out.
He's offended by you, friend.
[00:01:35] Speaker A: I know, right?
[00:01:36] Speaker C: He's offended by your. Your.
[00:01:38] Speaker B: I talked to him. He told me the same thing. He's like, man, tell French Rash, bro.
[00:01:41] Speaker A: It's not that like, this is my thing.
[00:01:42] Speaker B: It's like, what is your thing?
[00:01:44] Speaker A: I'm starting to realize like, like, like.
[00:01:46] Speaker C: He said, the best kind of masculinity is toxic.
[00:01:48] Speaker A: Some women are like. Like he said, a lot of women are heathens. A lot of women are ain't shit. Like, I'm with him on that 100%. But I realized, uh, oh, here it goes. This is when I'm 25, 30 year old friend. This is what I realized. Here we go.
[00:02:01] Speaker B: His chest didn't swell up a little bit.
[00:02:03] Speaker C: His chest got big.
[00:02:04] Speaker A: What I'm realizing is I think a.
[00:02:05] Speaker C: Beard grew out a little bit.
[00:02:06] Speaker A: As much as they are what they are. What Baylor just said. And I agree.
[00:02:10] Speaker B: Well, you won't say it. He said what Baylor said. But I won't say it again. I won't call him. Oh, Hazen again.
[00:02:14] Speaker A: A lot of women just. It's like I realize at the end.
[00:02:19] Speaker B: Of the day it's our fault.
[00:02:20] Speaker A: It's not even our. I'm not saying it's our fault. I'm not saying it's men's fault.
[00:02:24] Speaker C: Please let this man get his.
[00:02:25] Speaker A: It's not man's.
[00:02:25] Speaker C: Because I want this to be his own only.
[00:02:28] Speaker A: But for it to Ever change the. The men will have to start taking serious action. That's why, for example, I can.
[00:02:36] Speaker B: Such as.
[00:02:36] Speaker C: This sounds like Captain America. He sounds like you're Captain save a hoe.
[00:02:39] Speaker A: Not save a hoe. Not save a hoe.
[00:02:42] Speaker C: Okay.
[00:02:43] Speaker A: I'm saying the man, like, for example, like, you, like, you guys. You guys are. I like to consider you guys like righteous men, like men of character. The women that comes in your life, they're gonna move appropriately because you. The way you set up yourself, the way you handle your. They know like, damn, I can't be it.
[00:03:02] Speaker C: You believe that?
[00:03:03] Speaker A: No, they can try.
[00:03:04] Speaker B: No, no, no.
[00:03:05] Speaker A: This is not. No, no, no. This is what I'm saying. They can try to be heathens, they can try to die. And once they do that, they're gone. You know what I'm saying? I'm not saying some women are not gonna try you.
[00:03:14] Speaker B: Okay.
[00:03:14] Speaker A: But they will be gone right to the point. Once you look at your life, you'd be like, okay, the women that did stay, the women that are in my life or women of character. And what I'm saying is more men need to just be men of character. So the women, because they're followers, at the end of the day, as much as. As much as I love them, they are followers. They. They're really not leaders the way they think they are. They can lead in certain phases, but they are Muslim. I try, but they are followers. And then so it's up to us at the end of the day to create the proper guideline, the proper ecosystem for them to be that best version. Now, will a lot of women, because of society and the shit that they're told, the shit that they're programmed to say, will they still act like. And hoes, of course will allow them do. Of course. But I do realize, like, at the end of the day, it's the way. The way we control ourselves, the way what we put out forward will help change a lot of the women behaviors.
[00:04:13] Speaker C: What the. Did he just say, man?
[00:04:14] Speaker B: Yeah, I don't know, but it ain't. It ain't gonna work. Like, he. Like, we. We. If our energy such. They'll be different.
[00:04:22] Speaker C: They just talk for 10 minutes. So are you saying. What are you saying to Baylor in response to what he said to you?
[00:04:28] Speaker A: What I'm saying to Bailey is I'm not trying to be captain save a hoe. I'm just saying that so we can see less hoes.
[00:04:34] Speaker C: We.
[00:04:34] Speaker B: Somebody got to save them.
[00:04:35] Speaker A: We. No, we as a man gotta be a certain way. So they don't even become.
So you say what?
[00:04:42] Speaker C: So you saying all those women you in during that, that little. That period when you was just on a rampage.
[00:04:47] Speaker B: On a rampage.
[00:04:48] Speaker C: You shouldn't have done that.
[00:04:50] Speaker A: I did mine smooth. So I did smooth. Like I didn't, I didn't, I didn't.
[00:04:56] Speaker B: When I put it down like that.
[00:04:58] Speaker A: I didn't lie to them. I didn't do no deceiving.
[00:05:00] Speaker C: Were they married and got in a serious relationship with you so you made them you, you're a hoe maker.
[00:05:06] Speaker A: I don't think they're hoes. They still. Women can still have the freedom to have sex. Doesn't mean what makes them a hoe. A hoe is.
[00:05:12] Speaker C: So if women have freedom and have sex with 200 men in a year, that's okay.
[00:05:18] Speaker A: I look at it as a woman with a high body count and it's okay.
[00:05:21] Speaker C: You should be careful and it's okay. What makes a girl a hoe?
[00:05:25] Speaker B: There we go.
[00:05:26] Speaker A: What makes a girl a hoe is a girl that will do anything for male attention.
That will do anything to have sex with men.
Those what makes you're serious.
[00:05:36] Speaker C: That's what's crazy.
[00:05:37] Speaker A: No, that's what makes a girl a hoe.
[00:05:38] Speaker B: So you're talking about all these thirst trapping hoes on social media.
[00:05:41] Speaker A: So those girls are hoes cause they do anything for male attention.
[00:05:45] Speaker B: All of the ones that got a dude but still got pictures and they don't take pictures front face. No more like I don't even know when the last time I seen a girl take a picture.
[00:05:53] Speaker A: So this is what I'm saying.
[00:05:54] Speaker B: This is a gasp from the back. Like what? Like this is what I'm saying.
[00:05:58] Speaker A: Jamie Mack this is perfect example. A lot of these girls are hoes. Those girls that are posting pictures of their ass. Only that one angle so their hips look like fucked up but so the ass could look right. Yes, they're hoes. What I'm saying is they because they are followers for that to change, for us to ever see a change. We could sit here and say they're grown. They should be able to not not do that. They have dads and at the end of the day it's up to men to be able to control their own sexual discipline.
[00:06:25] Speaker B: So don't smash those hoes. Don't give them the attention is what you're saying.
[00:06:28] Speaker A: I'm not. Don't give them the attention.
[00:06:30] Speaker C: Smash them and then forget them. That's a whole French. That's what hoes.
[00:06:34] Speaker A: That's All I'm saying is the men, for that to ever change, men will have to start.
[00:06:39] Speaker B: Don't reward that.
[00:06:40] Speaker A: Don't reward that. And I bet you they'll stop, right? Don't like the picture, don't like the. Don't them, don't that hoe go fuck girls, but don't fuck that hoe.
[00:06:49] Speaker B: So go work hard, right? Not smarter.
[00:06:53] Speaker C: Or the one who's already basically advertising, right?
[00:06:57] Speaker B: Like yeah, I mean the easy work. He said don't pick these low hanging fruit hoes.
[00:07:01] Speaker C: Like challenge yourself, young man.
[00:07:04] Speaker B: Yeah, step in, step up.
Go to the college where they got the PhDs and ain't nobody got on social media and all of that shit, right? Okay, that's fine.
[00:07:12] Speaker C: Make these hoes work harder.
[00:07:13] Speaker A: All I'm saying is they're following. So if they see if a young girl is growing up and she's seeing the girl that post their asses, the girls that are showing their naked bodies, all the one getting male attention, they're gonna fall victim to that. They're gonna fall victim to that. But if they start seeing like, yo, all the boys around me, all the men around me are not giving those type of women attention, they will change because they're literally. That's what I'm saying. Does that mean hold them will stop? No. Does that mean some men will not continue to fuck hoes? No. But I'm saying if we ever want to see a change in that perspective.
[00:07:44] Speaker C: I just want to make sure it's.
[00:07:44] Speaker A: Gonna take us men to practice our own sexual discipline and so on and so forth to ever see that change.
[00:07:50] Speaker C: I just wanna make sure that we're still on the same point. Baylor was saying you don't have to save them that much. And you're saying that the reason why you go so hard is because men need to form some type of new resolve that allows them to not want to somebody who's showing them their ass on Instagram.
[00:08:12] Speaker A: You saying it at a surface level.
[00:08:14] Speaker B: What I'm saying, because again, let's be.
[00:08:16] Speaker C: Clear, surface level is what we're talking about, right?
[00:08:18] Speaker A: Right When I'm speaking, I'm not speaking on a surface level, which is why it sounds like I'm trying to save them. All I'm saying is if we don't like what we're seeing, for them to ever change, we need to change ourselves. That's all I'm saying.
[00:08:30] Speaker C: And you're saying that you man in the mirror.
[00:08:33] Speaker A: But what I as an individual think, I think that let hoes be hoes. Just don't. If you don't want to deal with hoes, you don't have to deal with hoes. And you could.
[00:08:42] Speaker B: Willie D. Said you could create a.
[00:08:43] Speaker A: World in your life where you don't meet those type of women or you're not even interacting with this type of women.
[00:08:48] Speaker C: But then what if your daughter is one of those type of women and you've done everything you could to not.
[00:08:53] Speaker A: There's a risk in that. There's a. There's a risk when you.
[00:08:55] Speaker B: No, but what. Not. Forget the. We all know there's a risk. But what if. Then what.
[00:09:00] Speaker A: That's your challenge in your life as a father. That you have a whole daughter and hopefully you.
That's. That's that, you know, because society could. Could play a role.
[00:09:09] Speaker C: Or do you think that there's no way possible somebody who's a strong dad could have a daughter that's a ho?
[00:09:14] Speaker A: No, I think it's still possible because that's what I'm saying. They're still individual.
[00:09:17] Speaker C: So then you're. If that's the case and your premise makes no sense.
[00:09:21] Speaker A: What? My premise is not to fix it 100%.
[00:09:23] Speaker C: No, my premise is not to fix it if a strong dad could still have a whole daughter. Your premise makes. Doesn't make any sense. It doesn't even matter because even your dad is doing the right thing and your ass is still out here hoeing. So, like.
[00:09:36] Speaker A: But the environment that she's growing up and can influence why she became a hoe, even though her dad put the right intentions in place, the environment could still be like, you can make 5,000 just by posting this one picture instead of working at Wendy's.
[00:09:49] Speaker C: And you're saying that if all men banded together and was hard on hoes, we could fix the whole problem if most men.
[00:09:56] Speaker A: Because I think that will still be a thing. Because a lot of men won't be.
[00:09:58] Speaker B: You know what's going to happen? That's like, that's like it again. So like, hey, we're not going to fish these waters, right? Fishermen, right? And all the fishermen band together and like, hey, we're not going to fish these waters. And then there's going to be a couple fishermen. Like, you know what? I'm going to kill the game over here. Like, because there's nobody else fishing over here. Like, there's so many fish, right? Like, I'm gonna just be over here and then somebody gonna see like, this is killing the game fishing this water. Like, I'm coming too. And. And the Next thing you know, everybody's gonna be fishing this water again. Like, I mean, until it's it. Till there ain't no fish.
[00:10:32] Speaker C: This is the, this is the.
[00:10:34] Speaker A: I'm not saying this is a solution to fix it 100%, but.
[00:10:37] Speaker C: No, the problem though, French, is what he's saying. Like, this is the body enhancement argument as well. Like, we're telling women, don't, don't go get bbls. Don't do all this stuff, right? But if you was not getting attention that you wanted before, and then you go get a bbl and you start getting the attention.
[00:10:56] Speaker B: Mission accomplished.
[00:10:58] Speaker C: Yeah, my, my morals and what I think about you getting surgery mean nothing.
[00:11:04] Speaker B: Nothing.
[00:11:05] Speaker C: The point was you were unhappy and now you're some semblance of happy. All that cost you was whatever thousand dollars and some two lines under your breast or whatever. Like, you know, that's all it was. And now everybody thinks you're more attractive. And if you were fucking ugly before or if you were bad bodied, who the. Can I. Who am I to say, nah, don't do that, right? And that's the same thing. If you're not getting any attention, but you start, and you start getting attention and now you're getting the fulfillment that you need, who the hell am I to try to fight that? I don't understand how you can fight that.
[00:11:39] Speaker B: And it's, I mean, and it's such a slippery slope because again, where do you stop it? Like, okay, because braces, right? Your teeth is crooked now. You got straight teeth veneers, right? Like, whatever, you know, I mean, like the, the, the, the things that people do to get the attention or make themselves feel better because other people think differently about them is a slippery slope. Like, and I mean, sure, you could end up with fucking a bunch of niggas, but it's a lot of shit going on before. Well, before that, you know, I mean, that's going, that is happening where people are doing things that, to adjust themselves.
[00:12:14] Speaker A: I'm not disagreeing with none of those.
[00:12:16] Speaker B: No, I understand. But again, the hoe, this is the, this is the journey of a hoe. And, and the journey of a hoe starts off with, listen, let me, you know, get my veneers right. Oh, TIF is. No, now is looking at me a little bit different because I don't got that crooked smile right? And now, okay, let me go ahead and inflate the ass or swell up the titties. Oh, damn. Now every time I walk is breaking their neck staring at me. Okay, now, you know I dropped a on a few. And now they didn't ran and told other. And now all they homies is checking for me because they know I got good throat or a deep or whatever. The now hella people is in my DMs. And all of this, right? Or if I post some. All of this just is a. Is just like a gradual progression, right. And next thing you know, like you said, your body count is high, but you don't give a. That's part of the. That's part of their plan. I mean, you ain't tripping about a high body count.
[00:13:11] Speaker A: Who me?
[00:13:12] Speaker B: No, women. These women, they don't give a fuck about their body count. But I just saw something on social media. Like I said, it's fucking horrible. I don't like looking at it half of the time, but it's. It said that black women make up 60% of new HIV cases in women despite only being 13% of the population in America.
[00:13:28] Speaker C: I don't believe that.
[00:13:29] Speaker A: You don't believe that.
[00:13:30] Speaker C: That shit be so stupid. They be moving those numbers around however they want to. Like, based on what and in what context? Like, you got to give me more information.
[00:13:37] Speaker B: They are 17%, 17 times more likely to get HIV. White women, 25 of women are diagnosed late limiting. Black women are diagnosed late limiting treatment options.
[00:13:49] Speaker A: So what does that mean? Does that say. Is that saying that a lot of.
[00:13:53] Speaker B: Dirty dick out there is what they're saying?
[00:13:55] Speaker A: Like yeah, but. But yeah, that's weird because I feel like because there's more white people, it still should be more white people with HIV than black people.
[00:14:05] Speaker C: Just because I'm sure there are.
[00:14:06] Speaker A: Oh, okay. It's making this okay. It's just with black women, there are the majority of the new cases.
[00:14:12] Speaker C: 60%. Right?
[00:14:13] Speaker B: Yeah. 60% of new HIV.
[00:14:15] Speaker A: Like that still don't make sense in women mathematically.
[00:14:17] Speaker B: Oh yeah.
[00:14:17] Speaker A: Because if there's more white people, there still should be the higher percentage of new cases, even if black people per.
[00:14:23] Speaker C: Like, unless black people are the only ones.
[00:14:25] Speaker B: Sounds like I made the right choice.
[00:14:27] Speaker A: Yeah. Or wow. Wow. That's that wow.
[00:14:31] Speaker C: Wow.
[00:14:31] Speaker A: That's crazy. Wow. And then if I. This is why I would defend black women right there and Baylor would think I'm defending women because he'll say some stupid shit like that. But see, I feel sorry for black women.
[00:14:41] Speaker C: I'll just say wow.
[00:14:42] Speaker A: Yeah, but I'll defense.
[00:14:43] Speaker C: Yeah, I'll just say wow, wow.
[00:14:47] Speaker A: Because that's what black women be going.
[00:14:49] Speaker B: Through comments like this.
[00:14:51] Speaker C: No, no, that's where that's where it happens.
[00:14:54] Speaker A: Right.
[00:14:55] Speaker C: When you start empathizing and being 2% of you.
[00:14:59] Speaker B: Right.
[00:14:59] Speaker C: That's when it goes.
[00:15:00] Speaker A: I feel them. I feel them. When they hear those type of.
[00:15:02] Speaker C: You feel them in your vagina.
[00:15:03] Speaker A: No, I just be like, damn. Oh, I see why they be getting so upset.
[00:15:06] Speaker B: Man. That ain't nobody. Nobody flexing on, on Eve. You know, I mean, she got a white husband.
[00:15:14] Speaker C: Yeah.
[00:15:14] Speaker B: And nobody tripping over, so nobody. So it's okay for the white, for the black woman to, to, to, to.
[00:15:20] Speaker A: Date, but I don't think white black women that are dating white men say, this is why I went and got a white boy.
[00:15:26] Speaker B: Yeah, Yeah.
[00:15:28] Speaker A: I don't.
[00:15:28] Speaker B: They talk about, they talk about black dudes.
[00:15:31] Speaker A: I'm not saying some of them are not talking about black dudes, but it's not as in your face compared to the black dudes that don't like.
[00:15:38] Speaker B: So hold up, let's be clear.
[00:15:39] Speaker A: That's what I'm.
[00:15:40] Speaker B: The black women that date black women. I mean, black that date black men talk shit about black men. Hella hard.
[00:15:46] Speaker A: Yeah.
[00:15:46] Speaker B: Like, let's be clear. Like, even if. Even though they still dating black men, they talk shit on black.
[00:15:52] Speaker A: I'm not talking about the talking shit, but I'm talking about saying statements like, this is the white folks. The white person is better. This is why I like white people.
[00:15:59] Speaker B: No one said better.
[00:16:00] Speaker A: Yeah, we was talking about HIV. And you like, this is the right choice.
[00:16:04] Speaker B: There's 60% fucking. No. Like, so again, like one of my favorite comedians back in the day used to be.
What was his name?
The Mother Goose. What was his name?
[00:16:16] Speaker C: Dickory.
[00:16:17] Speaker B: Dickory.
No, no, no, I know what you're trying to say. You Dice Clay and that said like, you know, was talking about, you know, secondhand smoke. Like he can smoke because he used to smoke on stage all the time and you know, talk shit about how dangerous and how bad secondhand smoke was. And that nigga first, that look like I made the right choice there. Right? Because he got first hand smoke. Like, like if second hand is all of that what you just told me compared to firsthand, I feel like I made the right choice. So all I'm saying is that if 60 of new is. Is a, is the. Is where the demographic that you saying that I should be with, you know, I mean, like. Okay, well, maybe let me let that drop a little bit then. Let me, let me, you know, I mean, like Kendrick said, like, you, you know, you need, you should need one right now because shit's getting weird. Out there.
[00:17:03] Speaker A: Yeah, Tricky right now.
[00:17:04] Speaker B: It's tricky right now. You got. It's.
[00:17:07] Speaker A: All I'm saying is. I'm not saying the black woman that date white men or other races don't have. Don't sometimes talk shit about black men. What I'm saying is what we do see as far as from a volume standpoint, is when a black man choose a white woman for to make that choice seem respectable, they have to put the black woman down.
[00:17:27] Speaker B: Nobody gotta put down nobody. I didn't put nobody down.
[00:17:29] Speaker A: That's all I'm saying. I'm saying when you do see that.
[00:17:32] Speaker B: And the funny thing is when you.
[00:17:33] Speaker A: Do see that, the black dude tends to put the black woman down instead.
[00:17:36] Speaker B: Of just this is that. This is the. That what French. This is what.
[00:17:41] Speaker A: Talking about.
[00:17:42] Speaker B: Because that black woman.
Because these. These black women are. Talk about a regular calling him square, right? Like in. As if it's not a diss, right? Like as a. That's not.
[00:17:54] Speaker A: But she chose a black dude.
[00:17:56] Speaker C: So.
[00:17:56] Speaker A: I'm not talking about that. I'm not talking about.
This is what I'm saying. I'm talking shit. I'm not talking about that. Women of all races talk shit about that, man. That's just a women thing. I'm not talking about talking shit. I'm just talking about when you see an interracial couple, especially when it's a black dude versus a white girl with a white girl, that black dude, to make sense of his situation, he tends to put some black women down.
[00:18:19] Speaker B: Examples.
[00:18:20] Speaker A: One example is, yeah, I chose a white woman because 60% of the black woman gets HIV AIDS. Instead of just saying, I chose a white girl because she's funny, she's cute, she makes me laugh. You use your words because you. That's really it. That's all I'm saying. They could just say, yo, I chose this white girl because she's funny. She makes me laugh. We share the same interest. No, they be like, I chose this white girl because black women got attitude. Black women talk.
[00:18:42] Speaker C: No, you just get them friends.
[00:18:44] Speaker A: That's all I'm talking about. That's all I'm saying. Yo, you could just. I don't have a problem with you choosing a white girl, but just choose the white girl because she makes you feel a certain way. Don't say you chose the white girl because black women didn't like you. Or black women think you were square. Black women think you were corny. Or black women only like hood niggers. I just don't like those excuses.
[00:19:02] Speaker B: Right.
[00:19:02] Speaker A: That's what I'm talking.
[00:19:03] Speaker B: And those are the excuses that you see.
[00:19:05] Speaker A: Yes. When a black dude tends to try to big up a white woman and talk a black woman down. That's. Those are the things they say.
[00:19:11] Speaker B: Okay, so first off, before I ever saw this, this statistic.
[00:19:17] Speaker A: You always are.
[00:19:17] Speaker B: Right? So, so, so, so that don't. That don't.
[00:19:21] Speaker A: So that's what I'm saying.
[00:19:22] Speaker C: They math that statistic because of you.
[00:19:24] Speaker A: So that's what I'm saying.
[00:19:25] Speaker B: Instead of using that statistic, I'm not.
[00:19:27] Speaker A: Just say you like the white girl.
[00:19:29] Speaker B: Because she's let me be funny when I want to be funny. That was a joke. Like, again. So again, that's the whole thing. You, you took a joke and you wanted to be fucking like, come cap and save a joke. No, nigga, I was fucking joking. And you wanted to be a co, like, hey, no, no, no, get off our black women. This is what I can't stand about blah, blah, blah. And this is exactly what Baylor talking about. Fuck these fucking old man ass women.
[00:19:51] Speaker C: That's not what Baylor said.
[00:19:52] Speaker B: Well, then that's what I'm saying.
[00:19:53] Speaker A: What I'm saying is. Yes, you joking. Cool. We're doing a podcast. We want to entertain people. Cool. What I'm saying is, yes, that joke is the joke. Every time a black man choose a white girl is to. The joke is say something negative about the black woman to bring up the white woman. That's the joke. Yes, it's a joke. But the constant joke is always attitude. It's always something.
[00:20:15] Speaker C: No, you know what?
[00:20:15] Speaker A: For instance, that's what I'm saying.
[00:20:17] Speaker C: I think you're right. I think that there is a problem with that. But I think it's also perpetuated by the way that people come at black guys.
[00:20:24] Speaker B: I was just about to say it.
[00:20:24] Speaker C: With white girls, you just about the great point. You're putting them on the defense and then they feel like they need to justify why they're with that white girl. If you had asked them in a, in a different way, they could have probably come. They probably would have told you the stuff they like about her. Like, oh, she got a good smile. But if you come, why you always dating white girls? And now, now I'm in a position where I'm not talking about how great this, how great Sally is.
[00:20:47] Speaker B: Right.
[00:20:48] Speaker C: I can't even tell you how wonderful Megan is. You know what I'm saying?
[00:20:51] Speaker A: Yeah, that's a valid point.
[00:20:52] Speaker C: I have to protect myself because you're coming at me with fire. So I'm like, well, nah, nigga. White black women. And that's where that happens. So that could be also the offense of the person attacking the guy for having a white girlfriend. But there are some who put posts up showing you why they date white girls and ain't nobody asked him to do.
[00:21:12] Speaker B: Yeah, like that Arizona State that just proposed to his girl, right?
[00:21:15] Speaker A: That place for the Commanders.
[00:21:17] Speaker B: No, was it the Commanders?
I thought it was a college. So after the. The college football game and proposed, and it was a white girl. And I'm telling you, the comments, like, again. And it just goes back to what B was saying was coming for him, especially black women. And it's like, come on. See, again, you know, if. If you don't. What is. I don't know what he would say, but I know that it would be defensive because there's so much offense that he's receiving because of whatever his choice was. And it doesn't matter, you know, I mean, like, so, you know, it is what it is. Saquon Barkley. This. Him and his daughter had a handshake, you know, before the game, and. And then they showed him, you know, he got two mixed kids, and then his wife is white, and then, you know, they kissing him, you know, and then the comments underneath that, instead of like, this lovely family. Well, it was just about him and his daughter having this moment. It was about his white wife and how he fucking wiped up a white girl and how he got mixed kids and blah, blah, blah, blah, blah. And I'm like, if y'all don't sit all the way the fuck down.
[00:22:25] Speaker C: But listen to the frequency of that, though, right? Like, let's. Let's talk about that frequency shit I was talking about last week. Listen to the frequency of that. How does that make you feel?
[00:22:33] Speaker A: Me or period?
[00:22:35] Speaker C: In general? No, you. In general. How does that interaction make you feel.
[00:22:38] Speaker A: As a black man? It could make you feel like, damn.
[00:22:40] Speaker C: No, no, no, not could. I'm asking how it does make you feel, what you just said. Z. Mac, how does that interaction between those people on that post and how does that feel? How does that make you feel?
[00:22:51] Speaker B: It makes me feel upset because, again, you judging a motherfucker that you don't know anything about this motherfucker's family looks happy, and you want him to be happy your way, right? Like, again, you want him to be happy the way you want him to be happy. Where this nigga found happiness, wherever he could find it, but that's not good enough for you, right? And Then. And then the thing about it is those kids are going to be part of what you are. They get like, so again, you. Are you gonna. You looking down at his family. But those kids are. Are black. They're, They're. I mean, whether you think so, like, if you don't know them, they roll up on you. You're gonna be like, hey, little black girl. You know, I mean, like, you and your dad, if you just saw him and his daughter out there alone without his wife, you're gonna be like, hey, little black girl. You're not gonna fucking shun her and not allow her be part of your culture. So again, what the fuck are you talking about? To me, that's my thing.
[00:23:44] Speaker A: For me, this is how I feel when I see those things. For me, I. I understand JB Mac's standpoint, but I also, what I. I understand the history of why this is what it is.
Like why the black woman gets so mad and offended when the black dude does date a white girl. Like, I understand the history, the history that comes with that, that vision. Like, one, black women, @ the end of the day, from what it looks like from the standard dating pool, they are at the bottom. Like, that's just what it is from a factual standpoint, whether we believe it or not, they are at the bottom of the dating pool. So now how do you get that?
[00:24:23] Speaker C: I've never understood how you can get that instead either.
[00:24:25] Speaker A: Yeah, because that's what they. They are the least likely to get chosen.
[00:24:28] Speaker C: What does that mean, to get. Are we based now off of the fact that there are more men that are single or how are we getting. That's what they usually.
[00:24:34] Speaker A: How they base it is because they're the least to get married. They're the least. They're the highest to get divorced and so on and so forth.
[00:24:41] Speaker C: They're not the highest to get divorced. They might be the highest, the least to get married, though.
[00:24:45] Speaker A: White people.
[00:24:45] Speaker C: White people definitely get divorced more than, like, way more.
[00:24:49] Speaker B: Right.
[00:24:50] Speaker A: What I'm saying is black couples divorce faster than white couples.
[00:24:53] Speaker C: I don't agree with anything.
[00:24:54] Speaker B: Yeah, I don't know.
[00:24:56] Speaker A: That's what the stats say.
[00:24:57] Speaker C: Yeah, I would need to see.
[00:24:58] Speaker A: Yeah, yeah, yeah.
[00:24:59] Speaker C: I. I think if those numbers are weir.
[00:25:01] Speaker A: I think there's more from a amount number that white people are. Because there's more white people. But from a percentage.
[00:25:07] Speaker C: I mean, percentage too.
[00:25:08] Speaker A: Oh, okay.
[00:25:09] Speaker C: I mean percentage too. I think that back in the day, white folks used to be doing right. But like, when they, you know, there's a stat that we always, that we've always looked at on this show even. And we could be looking at it wrong. Right. They're always saying that, you know, 73% of black kids are born out of wedlock.
[00:25:24] Speaker A: Yeah.
[00:25:25] Speaker C: But the problem with that stat is they're not taking into account how many white kids had a dad when they were born and then one year later and then grew up their entire life. Cause I know just as many white kids who grew up with that dad as black kids. They've been telling us this stat that dads are not in their Black dads are not in their kids lives. They've been giving us this stat that's.
[00:25:49] Speaker A: Actually the stat that out of all the dads, black dads are the most active fathers.
[00:25:53] Speaker C: But that's not the stat they were giving us. They were telling us black dads are not in the home, they're in prison and the welfare system is pushing them out. And I'm like, well, wait a minute. Growing up, I knew a lot of white people too. And a lot of them niggas didn't have dads either. So where are all these white dads that they're saying are at home? Oh, okay, they're divorced now and they live somewhere else and their dad don't live with them just like black people. So they giving us this stat about black kids have grown up without their dads and that's what's wrong with the world. And I'm like, nah, people have been growing up without their dads.
[00:26:22] Speaker B: Right.
[00:26:22] Speaker C: And you're seeing the effects of white kids and black kids not having dads in the household. It's not just black kids that aren't having dads at home. I know so many white kids. And I'm not talking about anecdotally one or two.
[00:26:33] Speaker B: Right.
[00:26:33] Speaker C: I'm talking about an equal amount of white people don't have dads at home that you know. And I guess as you get into richer environments and you know what I'm saying, more affluent classes, systems, everybody's dad is at home black and white.
[00:26:50] Speaker B: Right.
[00:26:50] Speaker C: You know what I'm saying? But if you go down back to places where we grew up. Well, I don't know about you, French, because you're rich in Haiti, but where.
[00:26:57] Speaker B: We grew up, he'd been rich everywhere.
French been rich wherever he been.
[00:27:01] Speaker C: Those stats look identical, bro. It's, it's not a whole bunch of, of poor white dads that's at the house.
[00:27:07] Speaker B: None. Yeah, I mean, and, and, and that like you said, in the neighborhood, it Was. It was equal, right? Like, I mean, sure, there was some. There. There was some not. And there's some that were. There wasn't about. And there was some that was. So there's. I don't think that, that, you know, that that's, you know, exclusive to us. I mean, like, I think that's our thing and it really is. And that's one of the things that I feel like I've always tried to railroad against this as, as a culture as black we. We try to own the worst of shits, you know, I mean, like Aiden, nobody knows like no other people know too. You ain't the only one that didn't had it bad, you know, I mean, and stop using that as an. As a crutch is my thing is like, okay, you can't say, well, the reason why you don't got a man is because they all dating white women. No, do better.
Do better. Like you. You ain't. Maybe there's a you problem. You can't put that on everybody else. And this is my thing too, in regards to going back to the original point is that it's hard to find real happiness. But for you to tell me that I'm isolated on some Dr. Umar type where I can only be happy out of this lane. You can kiss my ass. Let me find that anywhere. I'm. I'm Audi 5000. You can kiss my ass.
[00:28:38] Speaker A: Yeah.
[00:28:39] Speaker B: Let me find somebody that gives a about me.
[00:28:41] Speaker C: I agree with that.
[00:28:42] Speaker B: And wants to ride for me.
[00:28:43] Speaker A: I agree with that.
[00:28:44] Speaker B: I'm not gonna be like, oh, no, wait a minute. I don't want nobody.
[00:28:47] Speaker C: Hold on.
[00:28:47] Speaker A: Because what is.
[00:28:48] Speaker C: So what is your statement? It's your statement then that it's okay to date an Indian girl but just don't put down black women. Or are you saying you should date a black woman?
[00:28:56] Speaker A: No, I'm saying you could date whoever you like.
[00:28:58] Speaker C: Okay?
[00:28:59] Speaker A: Just don't put the. Whatever race that. That you are. Don't put that race down to make sense of why you chose a woman of another race.
[00:29:09] Speaker C: That's all exclusively or combined. Are you. Are you saying don't put black women down or don't put black women down? If you're comparing them to another race that you're interested in.
[00:29:20] Speaker A: All I'm saying is because again, you.
[00:29:23] Speaker B: Said that black women, just like any other race, gonna talk shit about their fucking women. The opposite.
[00:29:28] Speaker A: Women talk shit about the men of their race.
[00:29:30] Speaker B: So. So if you find a Mexican, but the men can't talk shit about the women of their Fucking men can talk.
[00:29:34] Speaker A: Shit about their race.
[00:29:35] Speaker C: So you're saying that you can only when it comes.
[00:29:38] Speaker A: All I'm saying is when you, you.
[00:29:39] Speaker B: Can, you can talk shit as long as you still dating that.
[00:29:42] Speaker A: No, I'm saying you can't. This is all I'm saying. When you, when somebody specifically saying why you dating Sarah instead of Shaniqua? And then you be like, because she's Shaniqua, we use whatever stereotypes that comes with the Shaniquas as the reason why you dating Sarah? I'm saying that.
[00:30:00] Speaker B: And what if you don't? What if you don't use stereotypes? What if you use experiences?
[00:30:03] Speaker C: Well, no, that's fine, but. No, let's say Shaniqua.
[00:30:05] Speaker A: But why, but why? Why?
[00:30:06] Speaker C: Why don't do that.
[00:30:08] Speaker A: Because that's the. Because when we keep using that, that's the first reason why you saying that. This is why. Now when an innocent thing like Saquon hugging his daughter and a black woman sees that, she's automatically mad because she's automatically thinking the reason why Saquon went with that white girl is because she's falls under the Shaniquas. That's why they get so mad. That's why they don't even see the beauty. Now I'm with Jimmy Mack. You should not get mad. You should just do better. That has nothing to do with you. Saquon met this guy at Penn State. They fell in love.
[00:30:37] Speaker C: What do you mean by do better?
[00:30:39] Speaker A: Like because somebody chose something else. That Saquon dating that white girl has nothing to do with him and his love for black women or his. You know what I'm saying?
[00:30:48] Speaker C: No, but you don't know what I'm saying. I'm saying, what if you don't fuck with Shaniqua's and that's the reason why you're dating a white girl. So you can't be okay if that's your. If, if that's what you feel, you're not okay to have that.
[00:31:02] Speaker A: So if I'm talking to homie and he tells me that it's cool, but what I do understand by him saying that, and if there's a lot of men like that says that when an innocent black dude is dating a white girl and they sit at a restaurant, black women are automatically going to be on the defense because of that. So now it's not fair, but that's what's going to happen.
[00:31:20] Speaker B: So you used my words against me earlier. So last week you said that we need to train these women, right? We need. We need to, we need to, we need to do, you know, not acknowledge or do certain things that we don't approve of in order for them to change their behavior for sure. What if that's what's happening? What if that's why are like, listen, this type of behavior I don't with and I don't get this in certain other areas, whether it be Asian, Indian, white, whatever the culture. I don't get this type of combative, competitive, I'm, I'm my own boss type of behavior. And because of that, I'm not fucking with it. And until you change, I'm not coming back. I'm not fucking around. I don't even want to worry about it because this is what you said. Like again, if we, I'm not giving no attention to that. If this is the way you want to be, be that way. But don't be mad because ain't with that.
[00:32:21] Speaker A: Yeah, you know what's wrong with that?
[00:32:23] Speaker C: What?
[00:32:24] Speaker B: I don't know, I don't have a problem with that.
[00:32:26] Speaker A: And then a lot of the women, when they start to get old and start to see, they start to finally look in the mirror, they change, they stop dating hood and do date a guy that's a stand up citizen. They start doing those changes and then.
[00:32:39] Speaker B: They, they make your sloppy leftover, no best seconds. Like you gave all your best to the, to the, to, to the, to.
[00:32:47] Speaker A: The streets, that's fine. But what I'm saying, you gave all.
[00:32:49] Speaker C: Your best to the white girls.
[00:32:50] Speaker B: Hey, nah, look, that's the government.
[00:32:51] Speaker A: That's fine with that specific example. But that specific example, it did work though because they do get to a certain point, they'd be like, I do have to stop. Like they do stop and they start behaving a lot better. Not all of them, but some of them do finally take a look in the mirror and see like, oh, this is why I failed at this.
[00:33:10] Speaker C: This is why my problem, friends, is that we villainize. And listen, I want to make sure that I'm, I want to be clear. I'm not arguing against you on this point. I just want to bring the point up so that we can argue about it.
[00:33:24] Speaker A: Yeah.
[00:33:27] Speaker C: This is to me no different than if a.
Let me reframe it.
I feel like people should have a choice. No matter what their reasoning is, it's their choice. You're saying that if they have a choice, having a choice is fine, but if that choice is because you don't like black women because of the stereotype, then it's wrong. My thinking is, why do we, anybody of us, you, me, Mac, anybody, get to put rules or guidelines on why somebody chooses somebody or not.
Like if you're saying it's okay for you to put on there, I love my black women. And you put all these positive things about your black women. That's the way you express your love. Why is it wrong for him to be like, I hate black women. This is blah, blah, blah, blah, blah. This is why I can't fuck with them.
You're saying it's okay for you to put your post, but it's not okay to put the other post. But what I'm saying, no, you can.
[00:34:20] Speaker A: Put the other post. Just be ready for the replies.
[00:34:22] Speaker C: But you feel like it's wrong. You feel like you want to stop doing that kind of stuff. Am I wrong?
[00:34:27] Speaker A: This is what more of my, my sentiment. My thing is we have, especially for us black people, we have to understand the historical reason behind why a Saquon Barkley just hugging his girl and his daughter, why our people get so offended. There's like a specific.
[00:34:44] Speaker C: Do we have to or do we need to just say, you know what.
[00:34:47] Speaker A: We don't have to, but we talk about those things. But like a guy like me, I understand how we got here, but do.
[00:34:53] Speaker C: You personally feel like him hugging his mixed daughter is a, a testament to how bad the black culture is?
[00:35:00] Speaker A: No.
[00:35:00] Speaker C: Okay.
[00:35:01] Speaker A: No. Not at all.
[00:35:02] Speaker C: Right. So if you feel like that, why is it not okay if you just be like, okay, well, I'm not out of my goddamn mind, so fuck them people.
[00:35:10] Speaker A: That's fine. All I'm saying is the only thing that I agree with Baylor when he was trying to criticize me is I do empathize because I understand the historical ties that comes with all of this.
[00:35:22] Speaker B: You said it many times that the black women have it the worst in the world.
[00:35:25] Speaker A: Yeah. I personally believe that when it comes to, from. Yeah, yeah. A social ladder perspective, yes, I do believe, because black men got it bad and they, they have the black factor in the women factor. So like you were saying, we'll never see a female president.
[00:35:41] Speaker B: So they're, they're double dosed. Right?
[00:35:43] Speaker A: Yeah, that's what I'm saying. Just like as they're a woman dose.
[00:35:45] Speaker C: They get the women. The fact that we're not going to have a female president is not a testament to how bad women have it. That is not. Those are not the same thing. The reason why we won't have a female president is because you said earlier or last week or something, you think women are not leaders. You said that, my nigga, that was your words.
[00:36:03] Speaker A: That's why we want a female president.
[00:36:05] Speaker C: Not because she's black.
That's not the same thing. Those are different things totally to me.
[00:36:12] Speaker A: I mean we can, we can, we can definitely keep that as two separate things. But what I'm. What I'm just generally saying is. What I'm generally saying is due to the historical ties and, and the jokes like Jamie Mac had mentioned earlier be. Not saying those jokes are not real. Not saying there's not some truth to it. But that seems to be like the joke that the algorithm push. Right. Even though there's a lot of black men out there, at the end of the day, 80% of marriage of black marriages are still black and black couples. It's not like we are leaving.
[00:36:40] Speaker C: Yeah, that's another lie. That's another lie.
[00:36:42] Speaker B: I love when this be dropping percentages like.
[00:36:44] Speaker C: Well, no, but he's. He's right there some kind of way they've twisted it to make it seem like all black people just when they get money they go to white girls. But that's not really the case. That's actually the opposite of what reality.
[00:36:56] Speaker A: And that's more my why I've empathized because I realize like, oh, they are targeting them.
[00:37:00] Speaker C: But friends you just. But they're not targeting them. It's. You just admitted that the stat is a. Yeah, but.
[00:37:06] Speaker A: But if they not. This is why I'm saying I empathize because they not necessarily aware because like they just grow up. They got the colorism jokes. They got whatever.
[00:37:14] Speaker C: No, they didn't. They're 80% married. These are lies.
Nobody.
[00:37:19] Speaker A: I'm not, I'm not. I'm talking about what they see as. That's why they. Why they get so mad when they see Saquon playing with his daughter. When Saquon didn't say shit about them. I'm talking about that energy. I'm talking about why they get so mad. Like why the moment a dude wins a football game and proposed to this girl that he probably knew since high school, but just so she's white, they get mad. I'm talking about why they so triggered. And I. And I'm saying I can I understand the triggering aspect. Do I condone it? Do I think it's right? No. But I am not going to act like I don't understand why they're triggered.
[00:37:52] Speaker C: Right.
[00:37:52] Speaker A: It's not fair. They're completely in the wrong. But I understand why they're triggered. That's all I'm saying. And because I understand it, I empathize and I try to move. I tried to at least hear them. And that's why it seems like I'm trying to play captain, save a ho. I'm not saying they're right, but I do understand why at times they get frustrated when they see those things without them even thinking, like, yo, this is just Saquon's girl since college. This is somebody that he met that he just fell in love with. It has nothing to do with you being black or her being white. It just they meshed and they said.
[00:38:27] Speaker C: There were plenty of black girls I fell in love with on campus.
[00:38:30] Speaker B: Would you say that you empathize more with black women or black men?
[00:38:34] Speaker A: I definitely empathize with black women more because I know black men. Because as men, men can. The thing is, men can handle their own shit. I at times believe that women do need help.
That's the.
[00:38:46] Speaker B: Yeah, there it goes, ladies.
[00:38:49] Speaker C: All this whole time, you thought this was on your side because he loved you? No, he thinks you're fucking retarded.
[00:38:54] Speaker B: And he's got Asperger's out here.
[00:38:59] Speaker C: This is that God syndrome, right?
[00:39:01] Speaker B: Like, savior syndrome. Yeah, yeah.
[00:39:04] Speaker C: They need us.
[00:39:05] Speaker A: In a sense. They do.
His swag change, Mac. His swag change.
[00:39:11] Speaker C: You see how he's bouncing out with his words?
[00:39:13] Speaker A: But this is all I'm saying, because women could sit here and be like, oh, my God, I don't need them. But at the end of the day, you know, you as a woman, and there's a whole. You move at a different frequency once, you know, you have somebody as a man that you can count on men, it'll be. It's great. When we have a wife that we can really count on, we feel better. Life is good. But we know if we didn't have that, we could still take care of our shit. And our frequency won't necessarily change. It just. Oh, we don't have to worry about certain things no more because our wife is good enough and she's our partner. That's why it's great when we have a wife. That's why the Bible says, he who finds a wife, that finds a good thing. But the Bible never said he. You know what I'm saying?
[00:39:55] Speaker B: But.
[00:39:55] Speaker C: But he never said he finds a black wife.
[00:39:58] Speaker A: But what I'm saying. That's what I'm saying. Like, women do yearn in for that. Yo. Oh, I can count on this person like that. Oh, this dude got it.
[00:40:08] Speaker B: That's what they got. Girlfriends For.
[00:40:10] Speaker A: Yeah, but they hate their girlfriends.
[00:40:12] Speaker B: Oh, here we go.
[00:40:14] Speaker C: Save them. Friends.
[00:40:17] Speaker A: I'm not gonna act like there's a. The. The. The reason why. There's a totem pole. The totem pole exists for.
[00:40:23] Speaker C: Can we. Can we drink arrogance?
[00:40:25] Speaker B: Yeah, Come on.
[00:40:30] Speaker C: This sheep, this wolf, and she's clothing y'all. Don't let it. Y'all.
[00:40:35] Speaker A: That's what I'm saying. We live in a world now, sure, women can handle everything on their own. Society provides that. But we always talk about when hits the fan, they're gonna look at us no matter what, no matter how independent they are. No matter how. Of course it's gonna look at Steadman.
[00:40:51] Speaker B: If you hadn't been looking. Is it fair for you to look at when the hits the fan? So up until the hitting the fan. Yeah, you got a whole different vibe. Hits the fan, and now you like black man where you at? Is that fair?
[00:41:06] Speaker A: It's not fair.
[00:41:06] Speaker B: Okay, then I don't want to hear that.
[00:41:08] Speaker A: It's not fair. I never said it was fair.
[00:41:10] Speaker C: He said in the beginning it wasn't fair, but I'm just saying they're wrong. But he empathizes. He did say, I want to listen to you, even though I know you're. Even though what you're about to say is. I want to hear you say this so you feel like it's not as bullshit as it is.
[00:41:23] Speaker A: It's really it.
[00:41:24] Speaker B: But I'm just going back to your. To last week when you were like, listen, if we don't want these women to be a certain way, we as a collective need to make a decision, like unionize up and train them, you know, by not responding to the actions that we don't approve of.
[00:41:41] Speaker A: Yeah.
[00:41:42] Speaker B: So n. Dating outside of black women. That's. That's. That's. That's.
[00:41:48] Speaker C: No, no, no. Women. He doesn't want, when they do date outside, to put down black women as a cause.
[00:41:56] Speaker A: But you don't have to put it down.
[00:41:57] Speaker C: He doesn't mind you dating.
[00:41:59] Speaker B: No. So again, if you don't. If they don't know that you already said they got Asperger's. If they don't understand why that you're dating else not them, then they're not going to change.
[00:42:08] Speaker A: So.
[00:42:08] Speaker B: So you need to let them know. This is why I don't with you.
[00:42:12] Speaker A: Yeah, but I don't think most dudes.
[00:42:14] Speaker B: And that's not negative.
[00:42:15] Speaker A: I don't think the average black is negative, but the average black dude that's dating a white girl I don't think it's because they don't like black women, though.
[00:42:22] Speaker B: No, but I'm just.
[00:42:22] Speaker A: I don't think that's the case.
[00:42:23] Speaker B: No. So then. Then. Then why get the. Listen, you're gonna have to figure one way.
[00:42:28] Speaker C: The problem here is that. Is that what I think Baylor was trying to articulate, and probably what I agree with, is you're addressing black dudes as opposed to addressing the people who should be addressed, which are the people who are on the bottom of Saquon Barkley's comments saying, ridiculous.
[00:42:44] Speaker A: That could be my mistake. Yeah.
[00:42:46] Speaker C: And you're. You're trying to fix dudes when the. I mean, dudes wasn't doing anything wrong. Saquon Barkley is dudes.
[00:42:51] Speaker A: Yeah.
[00:42:52] Speaker C: He was doing an intimate thing with his daughter. That's what he was doing.
[00:42:56] Speaker B: Well, I think what Baylor also is saying is what you admitted to. You empathize more with women than you do with men.
[00:43:01] Speaker C: Yeah.
[00:43:02] Speaker B: Like you like.
So that as a man, that's where he's probably coming from. Like, dude, you. Us. You. You with us. But how you.
Why you team. Why you team him?
[00:43:14] Speaker C: He's Mr. Steal your girl.
[00:43:15] Speaker B: Yeah, me.
[00:43:17] Speaker C: You. That's who this is. We just never had a situation where he was in a position to want to steal our girl.
[00:43:22] Speaker B: You wasn't. You wasn't.
[00:43:23] Speaker C: That's what this is. This is like, yo, you Wasn't that.
[00:43:27] Speaker B: When you were single? I mean, I think you said that was. I don't think you said that was. No, I think you said that it used to be your name.
[00:43:33] Speaker A: Take your girl.
[00:43:34] Speaker B: Yeah, bro. Yeah.
[00:43:36] Speaker C: You see how that. You said that popped up. I wouldn't. I didn't even remember that.
[00:43:41] Speaker A: You see how that popped up?
[00:43:43] Speaker C: His language is very. I'll take your. When you ain't looking like she gonna hear me talking this real shit. You know what I'm saying?
[00:43:49] Speaker B: Right? And she gonna come flock this way.
[00:43:51] Speaker C: Soon as you trip up, my nigga. I got you.
[00:43:54] Speaker B: Yep.
[00:43:55] Speaker C: Wow. Yeah, it is, listeners. I'm sorry, we haven't. We had a short show this week. French got to get out of here. We got some things we have to take care of, but. Okay, friends. New. New. Hey, Baylor. New year.
[00:44:07] Speaker A: This is all I'm saying.
[00:44:08] Speaker C: No, you said it already.
[00:44:09] Speaker A: No, no, no, no. You don't get to clear. I'm not clearing shit.
[00:44:12] Speaker B: Go ahead.
[00:44:12] Speaker A: I just. I just wanna.
[00:44:15] Speaker B: If you. If you wanna what?
[00:44:17] Speaker A: No, what you wanna do? I just wanna.
What I'm saying is, if you like any. Whoever you like, let's say you just like skinny girls. I don't think you should bring down fat girls to show your love for skinny girls. Whatever you like. All I'm saying is don't bring the opposite group of what you like down to showcase. Why you like that group.
[00:44:39] Speaker B: So if you like skinny girls, you can't be like, I don't like autumn roles on them big girls. You can't say that. That's, that, that's out of bounds.
[00:44:46] Speaker A: You can say whatever you want. Just understand, when you say certain things.
[00:44:49] Speaker B: Her name like a pack of hot dogs, that I'm not hungry.
[00:44:52] Speaker A: When you say certain things, whatever demographic that feels offended by that, they gonna also use the internal pain from being that demographic as a reason why you said what you said instead of just looking at it for face value, that you just don't like back rolls. That's all I'm saying. So when you say you like skinny girls for that reason, every girl that's fat or every girl that had a fat face, they're gonna use their internal pain for when they were fat or if they are fat, as another reason why. And that's why they'll go comment on your post instead of just letting you live. Letting you live. And that's why. And that's what I'm saying. I empathize and I at least understand. Like, oh, before I even call you stupid, I'm gonna realize, oh, you're a black girl. You probably face colorism. You probably dealt with a dude, so you say things that don't even make sense just because. And that's all I'm saying.
[00:45:39] Speaker B: And as the dude being a dude, right, I, I, I, we just said like, nigga, why are you. Why you don't fuck with us.
[00:45:47] Speaker A: I, with us.
[00:45:49] Speaker B: You already said that. You, you team, you, you team them.
[00:45:52] Speaker C: You team split tails, right?
[00:45:54] Speaker A: No, I just empathize with women more just because, like, I would empathize with children before I empathize with adults.
[00:45:59] Speaker C: Oh, God. Listeners, we appreciate you nonsense show. Keep supporting us, keep interacting with us, and we'll keep bringing the nonsense because we realize sometimes people just need to laugh. Till next time.
[00:46:10] Speaker B: 10% less bullshit than any any other podcast, guaranteed.