Episode 835

September 24, 2024

01:02:22

Harriet Zubman

Harriet Zubman
The No Nonsense Show - A Funny Experiment In Black Experience
Harriet Zubman

Sep 24 2024 | 01:02:22

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Show Notes

The No Nonsense Show Episode #835

 

Harriet Zubman #TNNS835

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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. [00:00:13] Speaker B: Okay. Im turning over a new leaf. [00:00:15] Speaker A: Uh oh. [00:00:15] Speaker B: Yeah. Like, I know we talk a lot of shit. [00:00:17] Speaker A: No, I dont. I talk nothing but facts. [00:00:20] Speaker B: You talk a lot of shit about these motherfucking Gen Zers, too. [00:00:22] Speaker A: No, no, I love Gen Z. [00:00:24] Speaker B: Me too. I think that. I don't know. I. See. That's what I'm thinking, right? Like, I'm starting to understand their viewpoints. Right? [00:00:34] Speaker A: A little bit. [00:00:36] Speaker B: Yeah, a little bit more. Right. Like. And it's. It's. You know, if we were to go back to slavery days, right? And. And. [00:00:44] Speaker A: You mean now. Kanye said. That's. Now. [00:00:46] Speaker B: I know. [00:00:46] Speaker A: Yeah. [00:00:47] Speaker B: So. And it's. Well, what happened was I was talking to my. I was talking to. I had a family fantasy league, right? And we are all in there, and one of them, you know, we're talking shit. And one of my nephews was like, yo, I'm on the plantation. Master don't allow me to have my phone. I can't, you know. Cause he was quiet for a long period of time. And I was like, y'all niggas really think that, right? Like, that's you. Y'all equate a job? A job to. [00:01:13] Speaker A: Well, first we have to introduce our guests. Kind of. Cause you're deep in your. You're deep in this thought already. [00:01:19] Speaker B: Yeah, yeah. My bad, my bad. I forgot about locks. My bad, dude. I don't know why they get. Cause they flowing. [00:01:23] Speaker A: Yeah. So is it locks like lox or what are we talking about locs? [00:01:30] Speaker B: Yeah. Not lock. [00:01:32] Speaker A: You gotta talk into the mic. So would it be lock? Nah, that's like G. Loc is Lokes. Those are glasses. Think about it. Come on, Mac. You're from the west coast. They can't take Lokes. [00:01:44] Speaker B: Yeah, you're right. That is Lokes. [00:01:47] Speaker A: It's got maybe lok ass. That's gay. That's gay. [00:01:53] Speaker B: I don't know. [00:01:54] Speaker A: Removing the Seattle locks is gay. But it works. It's not. It's not gay. [00:01:59] Speaker B: I don't know if it's gay. [00:02:00] Speaker A: That's a gay. [00:02:01] Speaker B: Is it gay? You are listening to the no nonsense show. 10% less bullshit than any other podcast, guaranteed. [00:02:25] Speaker A: You know, it feels good when you. [00:02:27] Speaker C: Talk about it, when you sell it. [00:02:28] Speaker A: L o K. French is French. So he understands that other languages have gender. Americans don't use gender and language. No, but almost every other language does. And to me, if I saw the word l o c k, that sounds like, you know what I'm saying, masculine. But you remember that c, it's like, very soft. Is very, you know, saying it softens it up. [00:02:49] Speaker B: I feel you on that one. Yeah, I feel you. So what do we. We just going to say it? How about that? Since we ain't writing an essay. [00:02:58] Speaker A: You are an engineer, so you need to know that you have to be pointed into the mic. [00:03:03] Speaker D: Here we go. Can I hear me? [00:03:05] Speaker A: Yeah. [00:03:06] Speaker D: All right. [00:03:07] Speaker B: Yeah, for sure. You. If you are an engineer, right. You can't be doing that french reggie shit. [00:03:12] Speaker A: Right, exactly. This is one of my homies. He's a fellow engineer, and he wanted to be on the show today, so he dropped by. We threw a mic in front of his face, and he is acting like he doesn't know how to use a mic now. [00:03:22] Speaker D: Yeah, man, I just wanted to tap in with the ogs. You know, I'd be listening every now and then. [00:03:26] Speaker A: You're still moving away from the mic. [00:03:27] Speaker D: All right. I just wanted to tap in with the ogs. I'll be listening every now and then, you know, past six years. That's what's up. [00:03:35] Speaker A: But it's been ten. [00:03:36] Speaker D: But I tapped in six years in. [00:03:38] Speaker A: Okay. [00:03:40] Speaker C: Yo, that's a pause. That's a pause, right? I. I tapped in six years. [00:03:44] Speaker B: I don't know. [00:03:45] Speaker D: I would have caught it. I would have caught it. [00:03:46] Speaker B: I don't know. Fredgey, listen, you're the expert, so if you say it, I agree. You like what they say? [00:03:52] Speaker D: I came here just to pause everything. That's why I came here. [00:03:56] Speaker A: Are you a Gen Z or are you millennial? You're a millennial, right? [00:03:59] Speaker D: I mean, 97. What's up? [00:04:01] Speaker C: I think that's the end of millennial, right? [00:04:03] Speaker A: I think he's a Gen Z. [00:04:04] Speaker D: In between. [00:04:04] Speaker A: I think he's a. No, I don't think it's in between that. [00:04:06] Speaker B: That's Gen Z. I mean, you just asking. You got a job. [00:04:09] Speaker A: 97. That's definitely DMZ. [00:04:11] Speaker B: How do you feel about. [00:04:12] Speaker C: How do you feel about millennials, 1981 through 1996? [00:04:16] Speaker A: Told you. And he don't have a job. He's a full time engineer, and he. [00:04:19] Speaker B: Was born in 97, so 96 is before. So that would include. [00:04:24] Speaker A: He was born in 97 and it ended in 96. I'm gonna let you do your math. [00:04:28] Speaker B: Later, but if you're going backwards, right? [00:04:30] Speaker A: You don't go backwards. Why would you go backwards? [00:04:31] Speaker B: Well, because that's where you're going, so. Okay, you're right. [00:04:36] Speaker D: That's malicious. [00:04:37] Speaker C: Gen Z is. You're a Gen Z, 1997 to 2012. [00:04:40] Speaker B: Yeah, you're right. Gen Z. I was looking at it from the beginning. I was looking at it as the beginning. [00:04:44] Speaker A: He's the leader of the Gen Z. [00:04:47] Speaker B: He's a cusp. Yeah, he's a Gen Z cusp. [00:04:49] Speaker A: Oh, yeah. [00:04:51] Speaker C: So what's. So what's so good about the Gen Z is Jamie Mac? [00:04:54] Speaker B: I mean. Well, I think the. The way that they're looking at the world, right, the workforce, the work world, right? Like. And it's. Like. It's unfair, right? Like, this is not. This is nothing. We're not built for this shit, right? Like, this is not. This is not the way we as humans, which is true. No, it is. [00:05:13] Speaker A: But guess what? [00:05:14] Speaker C: Every generation said that. [00:05:15] Speaker A: But guess what? This is gonna end poorly for them. But no, this is gonna enter horribly bad. So wait a minute, they're gonna just kill them all? [00:05:23] Speaker B: I think so. Do you think that every generation said this french regular. I don't know what generations you were around in the here. The every generation said. [00:05:31] Speaker C: Every generation went through the phase of the dollar that they were earning. Felt like there wasn't enough to live. [00:05:37] Speaker B: That's not what. That's not what Gen Z'ers are saying, though. They're not talking about the dollar. [00:05:40] Speaker A: That's not what they're saying. [00:05:41] Speaker B: They're saying that there's no hope. [00:05:43] Speaker A: What's the point? [00:05:44] Speaker B: The work process, the way that it's constructed, is inhumane. It's not the way humans are designed. This is not good for us as a human race. We should not be. [00:05:55] Speaker C: That is them. Okay? [00:05:56] Speaker B: Yeah. We should not be living like this. We should not wake up to work, to go home, to fucking rinse and repeat for your entire life. [00:06:04] Speaker A: You know what we should do? [00:06:05] Speaker B: What's that, man? [00:06:06] Speaker A: We actually have a Gen Z. Let's ask what he thinks about this. [00:06:09] Speaker B: Okay. [00:06:10] Speaker A: If he's actually here today, so. [00:06:11] Speaker D: Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. No, I believe a lot of people feel that way. [00:06:15] Speaker B: What about. What about you? What's your feelings? [00:06:18] Speaker A: Wow, that's a great question. Well, you got. You gotta have that answer in the mic, though. [00:06:22] Speaker B: Yeah, yeah, yeah. [00:06:22] Speaker D: That is a great question. [00:06:24] Speaker A: Goodness. [00:06:26] Speaker B: He's like, edit me. [00:06:30] Speaker D: Fix it later. You fix it later. [00:06:31] Speaker A: No, ain't no fixing. Get it right. [00:06:34] Speaker D: I mean, ever since I left the nine to five work life, you know? [00:06:37] Speaker B: So you. So you already out? [00:06:39] Speaker D: Yeah, I'm already out, so I can't. But I can barely discuss this situation. [00:06:43] Speaker B: No, you can fully discuss it because you are. [00:06:46] Speaker A: Has it been at least. It's more than five years. How many years has it been? [00:06:49] Speaker D: Like eight, actually, no, it hasn't been long. Anyways, so what are they saying? [00:06:58] Speaker B: What we say. [00:07:04] Speaker D: What we say. [00:07:05] Speaker C: As a young millennial, I think I definitely have that thought, too. But I guess for me is I understand this is part of this world, like, this cycle of work. You have to either figure out how to get in and get out or learn something to make yourself get paid through. Not necessarily clocking in nine to five, but I think what they going through, I feel like if we do reincarnate, I think what's happening? [00:07:33] Speaker A: What the fuck? [00:07:34] Speaker C: What are we talking about? Reincarnation? [00:07:35] Speaker B: Okay, if we do. [00:07:36] Speaker C: If that's a real thing, I think what's going on with Gen Z is they're the generation that's waking up like, yo, I felt this before. I've been through this before. Why the fuck are we still doing this? Why haven't we evolved to a different way of life? [00:07:48] Speaker A: I think they're the first ones that ever had that. [00:07:52] Speaker C: I'm not saying they're the first one that they're having that thought, but I think there's a strong whatever. Those souls that came back, those souls, they are connecting to that fact. [00:08:01] Speaker A: How does soul ties work at the reincarnation phrase? [00:08:03] Speaker B: Ooh, yeah. Do they get severed? [00:08:07] Speaker C: I don't think there's a tie. I think with the reincarnation. [00:08:09] Speaker A: Wait a minute. [00:08:10] Speaker B: Whoa, whoa, whoa. You believe in soul ties? [00:08:11] Speaker A: You believe in soul ties? [00:08:12] Speaker C: Yeah, I believe so. I believe there's exchanges that can create. [00:08:16] Speaker A: He's asked to assembly. You said no. So you think it severs at death? [00:08:20] Speaker C: The souls? Yes, the soul tie. [00:08:22] Speaker A: That's weird, because I thought souls were eternal. So. [00:08:24] Speaker B: So what else again? Like, what about it? Like, you. You don't recognize, like, an old soul or somebody that's french, maybe french say with your chest. [00:08:32] Speaker A: He don't know what. He don't know what he's saying. [00:08:34] Speaker C: I'm just saying because you. Because I'm not talking about soul ties. All I'm saying is the souls that are coming back as Gen Zerse are souls that. A lot of them. A lot of those souls are carrying that energy of like, yo, we've been there before. We've done this before. Why the fuck are we still doing this? Why has humanity not evolved to another way of life? [00:08:55] Speaker A: And I'm asking, what's wrong with your soul? Why didn't it catch on to that? [00:08:58] Speaker C: My soul caught onto that, but at the same time, my soul understand this is the way of, like, my soul understand. This is the Kylie Yuga timeline. [00:09:05] Speaker A: The who? [00:09:06] Speaker C: The Kali Yuga timeline. [00:09:07] Speaker B: Say it again. [00:09:08] Speaker C: Kali yuga timeline. [00:09:09] Speaker B: What's that mean? Thank you. Yeah. Dude, dude, dude. Like, look that shit up. [00:09:13] Speaker A: Kali yuga? [00:09:14] Speaker C: Mm hmm. [00:09:15] Speaker A: I've never heard that word before. Only word I've heard closer. That's caligula. But that can't be what you're talking about. [00:09:20] Speaker B: It better not be. [00:09:21] Speaker A: Cause there's such thing as a caligula timeline. I've never heard of that either. [00:09:24] Speaker B: Yeah, I mean. I mean, it might be a party I go to. [00:09:28] Speaker A: A cali yuga. No, don't do that. You might get something stuck in you. [00:09:33] Speaker B: Nah, bro, I'm just staying today. I got. You gotta. You gotta. You gotta know how this bobby weave. [00:09:38] Speaker A: No, bro. Once the spirits start flying. Once they let the spirits loose. [00:09:42] Speaker B: Okay, so what am I. Where is it? How do I know what I'm looking at? [00:09:45] Speaker C: Just read this. Bulletproof. [00:09:46] Speaker B: Just read those. [00:09:47] Speaker C: Bulletproof. [00:09:47] Speaker B: So let me just. [00:09:48] Speaker C: What bullet points? [00:09:50] Speaker B: Bulletproof. But it's cool. I feel like he print. Watch it. He print. Watch it. But. Okay, so let's just be clear for the listeners, it's Cali and yuga. Two different words, almost like yoga. And Cali's with a k. Okay. All right, so start. Kali Yuga began in February 17 or 18th, 303,102 BCE, after the death of Krishna. So this is some Holly Krishna shit. [00:10:16] Speaker C: Just keep reading points. [00:10:18] Speaker B: Okay. All right. Two. During Kali Yuga or duration, Kali Yuga will last 432,000 years or 12,000 divine years. I don't know the difference, but that's cool. [00:10:33] Speaker A: And neither of those matter anyway. They're both abstract numbers. Like, who's gonna be alive to even. [00:10:38] Speaker C: Know the cycle of time? [00:10:40] Speaker A: How the fuck do they know? [00:10:42] Speaker B: Listen, end. Kali Yuga will end in the year. Who gives a fuck, bro? [00:10:48] Speaker A: You're a great, great, great. [00:10:52] Speaker C: Because you asked me a question of. [00:10:53] Speaker A: Why I didn't know that we were about to do this year. [00:10:57] Speaker B: 4420 8899 CE. The next yuga, the next yuga, Krita Satya Yuga, will begin after the catalyst at the end of Kali Yuga. [00:11:11] Speaker A: And that's 400,000 years from now. So, yeah. [00:11:13] Speaker B: The hindu God Vishnu's final avatar, Khalken, will appear at the end of Kali Yuga to destroy the wicked and usher in a new age. [00:11:25] Speaker A: But that's 400,000 years from now. [00:11:26] Speaker B: Yeah. [00:11:27] Speaker C: This timeline is like. [00:11:28] Speaker B: So let's be clear. Let me just give it some more facts. This is Hinduism. This is hindu astronomy. [00:11:34] Speaker A: So you said facts. [00:11:35] Speaker B: Yeah. Okay, you're right. [00:11:37] Speaker A: What are we talking. [00:11:38] Speaker B: I just want to. [00:11:39] Speaker A: You just told me that they've already calculated 420,000 years from now. [00:11:42] Speaker B: Well, the fact that this is what this is connected to, that's the fact, not the details of it. [00:11:47] Speaker A: I need. I need. If you're gonna make an outrageous claim, it needs to be something someone can observe. You know what I'm saying? Nobody. Nobody that's alive now saw the beginning of this, or we'll see the end of it. [00:12:01] Speaker B: Right. Or their kids. [00:12:02] Speaker A: Right. [00:12:03] Speaker B: Or their kids kids. [00:12:04] Speaker A: You may not even have a descendant. [00:12:05] Speaker C: That explained what happens in this forger and listeners. [00:12:08] Speaker B: I don't know why Fritz, Reggie doesn't want to read. [00:12:10] Speaker A: He said explains it. [00:12:11] Speaker C: Okay, let's hear that tells you why. [00:12:15] Speaker B: Cause this is your thing. You read it. [00:12:16] Speaker C: All right. In Hinduism, Kali Yuga is the fourth and final age in cycle of the four ages that makes up the universal time. So it's about the universal time. It's one of the stages of the. [00:12:26] Speaker B: Universal time, because you understand this a lot better than I do. [00:12:29] Speaker A: He said that shit like it's one of the stages of the universe. Like we talk about. What the fuck is the universal time? [00:12:33] Speaker C: Universal time is pretty much the cycles of things that are gonna happen in the universe, different energies. [00:12:41] Speaker A: You mean like years? [00:12:42] Speaker C: Yeah. All right. [00:12:43] Speaker B: That's like one of those things where you have the definition as the word. What is it? Go ahead, Fred. [00:12:50] Speaker C: So the age that we are in right now is the age of Aquarius is the age of spiritual degradation. So. [00:12:56] Speaker B: Whoa, whoa. [00:12:57] Speaker C: Degradation? Spiritual degradation. [00:12:59] Speaker A: Okay, what's that word? Spiritual. [00:13:00] Speaker C: Spiritual. [00:13:01] Speaker A: Oh, spiritual. Got you. [00:13:02] Speaker C: Yeah. [00:13:03] Speaker A: So this is when the spirits gets. [00:13:05] Speaker C: Yeah. And this is. People are going to be more focused on the physical world and less on who they are, and then this cycle is going to last 432,000 years. And this is why, ever since we know of our world history. [00:13:16] Speaker A: So let me ask you. [00:13:16] Speaker C: So the world has been the way it is. [00:13:18] Speaker A: So if that's the case, yes. This contradicts your idea that Gen Z has their souls have awakened, and now they're saying this is bullshit because what you just said was. [00:13:29] Speaker C: No, not necessarily. [00:13:30] Speaker A: In this age, we're gonna focus on the body and not the internals. [00:13:33] Speaker C: Not necessarily. What I'm saying is it's taken 432,000 years, but in those 432,000 years. Several cycles of. Yeah, this is current time right now. [00:13:48] Speaker A: It said. Didn't say it's BC. I started. [00:13:52] Speaker B: Yeah. [00:13:52] Speaker A: So 400,000. So it's 300 BC is when you think it's tomorrow. [00:13:56] Speaker C: No, it started in three. [00:13:59] Speaker A: No, we've only done 2000 in the commentary. [00:14:02] Speaker C: It started in 327,000. [00:14:05] Speaker A: There was three said 300 BC. Right. [00:14:07] Speaker C: What if it started something, like, in BCE? Jamie Max also set right and said that it's gonna end in, like, 4000 something. So we are currently. [00:14:15] Speaker A: You said 400,000. [00:14:16] Speaker B: 400,000. [00:14:17] Speaker A: And he said 300 BC. That's 300 years back to common era. So we're only talking 300 plus, however many years we've lived, which is 2024. So we're looking at, what, 23. [00:14:28] Speaker B: 23. Yeah. [00:14:29] Speaker A: We're not even close to 400,000. [00:14:31] Speaker C: That's what I'm saying. [00:14:31] Speaker A: This is not observable. Why are we even. Why are we even believing this? I mean, never mind. I know what y'all do. Y'all zealots. [00:14:38] Speaker C: We're zealous. [00:14:39] Speaker A: Yeah, kind of. [00:14:40] Speaker C: But this is why. The original question is, why do I. Why do I. Why am I not worried? It's because I understand that in the universal timeline, this is exactly what's supposed to happen, listeners. [00:14:51] Speaker B: I'm sorry. I'm sorry. [00:14:53] Speaker A: He's not worried. [00:14:54] Speaker B: The reason why we all laugh at the same time was his mannerisms. What he did that displayed the universal timeline as if he was actually pointing out something that made sense and it didn't. I don't know what that. What that was. [00:15:12] Speaker A: Yeah. It's like a rainbow. [00:15:15] Speaker B: But it's funny because he is serious. [00:15:18] Speaker A: Sure, he's sure. [00:15:19] Speaker B: He's sure. Yeah. [00:15:20] Speaker A: Like, why don't. Why doesn't bother. [00:15:23] Speaker B: We're in the universal timeline right now. [00:15:25] Speaker A: Christina told me. [00:15:26] Speaker B: Christian. [00:15:27] Speaker C: All right, so there's four stages. [00:15:28] Speaker B: Have you ever seen them niggas at the airport? [00:15:30] Speaker C: There's four stages. There's the southeast yuga, also known as the Golden Age. [00:15:34] Speaker A: Oh, yeah, I've heard of this. [00:15:35] Speaker C: This is the most spiritually advanced age. There's the Treta yuga, also known as the Silver Age. There's the. [00:15:42] Speaker B: Which is what you give us is known as something else, though, right? Aka what? [00:15:47] Speaker C: I mean, they didn't give me the Aka. [00:15:48] Speaker A: They didn't tell you that one? I thought you knew. [00:15:50] Speaker B: The flaunting age. The fucking. Anything for likes. Age. What age is that? Like, what? That's the age we're in right now, right? [00:15:58] Speaker C: Like, no, we in the Kali yuga right now. [00:16:01] Speaker B: So what is, what is the aka of that? What are. You said we were more in the. The superficial, not the internal. [00:16:07] Speaker C: Yeah, we're in the materialistic. Yeah, we. We analyze material things in this age. [00:16:11] Speaker A: Let me guess, was this book written during the material age? [00:16:14] Speaker B: This is not even a book. [00:16:17] Speaker A: Oh, this is what? [00:16:18] Speaker C: Hinduism. Hindu. [00:16:20] Speaker A: So I thought I said Hinduism. [00:16:21] Speaker B: I thought he said wisdom. [00:16:22] Speaker A: Yeah, hindu wisdom. [00:16:23] Speaker B: Yeah. And I just really thought it was. He just got it off the Internet, which he did. [00:16:27] Speaker A: He's looking at right now on his phone. [00:16:28] Speaker B: Yeah, it's a, it's a link. [00:16:30] Speaker A: It's not even an official. [00:16:31] Speaker B: So when you said, when you said book, I was like, that's, that's just a stretch. [00:16:34] Speaker A: I mean, they may take a screenshot from the book. French, what the hell are we talking about right now? [00:16:40] Speaker C: You had to ask me why about the souls? And I was like, the reason why my soul is not necessary. My soul understand in this timeline that there's going to be a lot of chaos, a lot of bullshit. And part of that is work is the fact that people got to clock in and clock out. It's going to be a thing in this age. So for me is the best thing to do is figure out a way to either find something you don't mind doing for the 8 hours a day or figure out a way to build yourself a way out of that matrix. And some people figure it out, some people don't. I'm still. [00:17:09] Speaker B: Doordash is not the way out. [00:17:10] Speaker C: I never said Doordash. [00:17:11] Speaker B: I'm not saying like, that's not. You can't, you can't like, uber your way out this bitch. [00:17:16] Speaker C: I never said that. [00:17:17] Speaker B: No, but that's what they're doing. Like, let's be clear. [00:17:19] Speaker C: Well, some kids, some kids are doing that, but I don't think that's their final plan. I think they, like, they don't have a plan. [00:17:24] Speaker B: Let's be clear. [00:17:25] Speaker A: I'll tell you what's not the plan. [00:17:26] Speaker C: Scamming first, for sure. [00:17:28] Speaker A: Did y'all see that newer one the happened to chase a few weeks ago? [00:17:31] Speaker C: Yeah. Niggas really did that shit. I can't believe they really thought that shit was gonna work. [00:17:34] Speaker A: It's just so crazy that young people see what they don't understand is that when you mess that bank account up, that's not, you're not just ruining your bank account chances at that bank. If you do fraud, yeah, your chances are ruined at every bank, every bank and every job application is gonna say that you are convicted of fraud. This is not something that goes away ever. And I mean forever. This. This is one of those crimes that never goes away, right? And if you're 19 and you let somebody deposit something into your bank account, and then they. And then the check is fake, and they pulled the money out already, you're gonna owe whatever, thousands or who knows how much money is in that. And forever your account is. Your name is done. [00:18:14] Speaker B: So that, you know, even if you. [00:18:16] Speaker A: Pay it back, you're still a fraud. You're still fraud. [00:18:18] Speaker B: So the ones of us that are old enough in this room to understand or remember the check systems, that was a. That was the thing that was back in the day. Like, if you wrote a bad check on your account. [00:18:33] Speaker A: Yeah. [00:18:34] Speaker B: And, you know, you never paid that shit. Like, use, like, I got enough money and you didn't have enough money, and your shit went fucking south. You could not get, once you was in check systems, go ahead and try and open up a bank account somewhere. It's not happening ever. [00:18:48] Speaker A: No forgiveness. [00:18:49] Speaker B: You could go to, like, rehabilitation programs and shit. [00:18:53] Speaker A: What, you know what they. You do? Rush card. Get you a rest card. [00:18:55] Speaker C: That's how it all came out. [00:18:56] Speaker B: No, I actually, I went through. I went through some shit. This. I went through some shit, cuz. I ain't gonna lie. I was in check systems, okay? I mean, like, I mean, I had to go through some. Some county sponsored classes and this, that and shit. And then. And then what it was is they were with wa moo at the time, and so, wahmu, if you went through all of this shit, then what? You could get a bank account at Wamu. And then once you reestablish your. Your somebody with somebody, right, then you could then get back into the world, you know? But until then, it was check caches, you know? I mean, like, I mean, I was. [00:19:27] Speaker A: A. Oh, yeah, 10% or. Yeah, 12% of your whole check. [00:19:32] Speaker B: Yeah, I'm taking my check every week with cash. [00:19:35] Speaker A: It's like, niggas know, you just cast it. [00:19:37] Speaker C: Just cash out of the dirk deposit. [00:19:40] Speaker A: Wait a minute, wait a minute. Do y'all realize, though, this is the first time ever they convinced these idiots to scam these scammers to scam themselves? Cuz they were putting in their own accounts, they were writing checks to their own and put them in a real account, and then they were withdrawing funds from those checks. And then when the check hit and said, oh, it's negative or whatever, boom, it would just take all that money. [00:20:03] Speaker C: Said it was a glitch, and chase, so chase I thought it was. Chase usually only let you even if you write a $700 check on 25. Yeah. [00:20:10] Speaker A: Yeah, right. So that's how you would do your own account. But let's just say you and I had an agreement. I said, hey, man, let me use your account. I don't have no account, but if I put this. Let me put this $250,000 in your account or whatever, $10,000 in your account. You give me. You give me the money. Then when a check clear, you can have it, and I'll give you a little extra, some on the top. [00:20:26] Speaker B: Fun fact that I got. I got scammed like that. [00:20:30] Speaker A: How? [00:20:31] Speaker B: Back in the day. [00:20:32] Speaker A: How? [00:20:32] Speaker B: Because it's. It's. It's like how they. How you. [00:20:35] Speaker A: Fun fact is a horrible fact. [00:20:36] Speaker B: No, it's. It's. It's a fun fact because it's like how you get scammed, right? Like, I mean, how do anybody get scammed? How do. How do most people get scammed? They're. They're greedy. Is greed. Is it right, right. [00:20:47] Speaker A: That flower you tried to give me to be a part of this. [00:20:50] Speaker C: Susu, susu, not a scam. You just. You get. [00:20:54] Speaker A: So please, okay, I need to break it down for you because Mac didn't see it at first either. Listen, nigga, that starts. The flower is fucking all of y'all in ass. And you don't even realize, I mean, he's just saving. Is you getting your money back with a little. With basically a pinch. [00:21:10] Speaker C: Oh, no, I don't keep. You not supposed to make more. It's just. [00:21:14] Speaker A: Yes, it's just someone is making. [00:21:17] Speaker B: Right. [00:21:17] Speaker A: There's one person. [00:21:18] Speaker B: That's the funny part, that he just admitted it. You're not supposed to make more. Yes, you're right. You're not. But someone is right. [00:21:25] Speaker A: Everybody else, whoever's first, it's my time to get it. It's my time to get whoever's first. [00:21:28] Speaker C: That didn't give out all that money yet is. [00:21:31] Speaker A: No, I don't think you remember how I started. There's a buy in. There's a buy in that starts the whole thing off. [00:21:36] Speaker B: Right. [00:21:36] Speaker A: That person just takes the buy in extra, and it's like commission almost. [00:21:40] Speaker C: Yes. Yeah. [00:21:41] Speaker A: And then the money goes through the flower. But some. [00:21:43] Speaker C: Some sushi, not like that. Like the caribbean households, they just do it to help people save without the scamming portion. [00:21:49] Speaker A: Sure. That's how. That's how we always got the third worlders. [00:21:55] Speaker B: That's why they just were like, we. [00:21:57] Speaker C: Saving the same amount. It's just, I need the money now. And then the next week, president, bro. [00:22:03] Speaker A: That's why y'all can't get a prime minister or whatever y'all got. [00:22:05] Speaker B: That's why they. That's why Hillary got over. [00:22:07] Speaker C: So are you saying the Gen Z ers are Uber? Doing Uber and Doordash to get out the nine to five system? Because you still got a nine to five. [00:22:15] Speaker A: What are they doing to. [00:22:16] Speaker C: To really make money on Uber, you slick. Gotta do the 8 hours. [00:22:19] Speaker A: Well, look, locks. What are they doing? What are y'all doing to get out of nine to fives? No, not everybody. [00:22:24] Speaker B: What are the legit. [00:22:25] Speaker A: What are the legitimate people doing? [00:22:26] Speaker B: Okay, just real quick on that scam. Let's go back to the chase real quick. What I heard is that if you couldn't use your ATM card, then you could do the digital thing. Right, to get into your account. And. But most people, there's some people weren't like, you have to log out. It's not like when you get your card back and you're like, okay, the transaction is completed. [00:22:45] Speaker A: It. [00:22:45] Speaker B: There's something that you had to do to make sure that when you leave, it's not accessing your account. And what was happening is people were coming in after people and. And they hadn't logged out completely in their account, and then they were taxing them. [00:22:58] Speaker A: That was about two years ago, Mac. You're somehow something else. [00:23:00] Speaker B: No, I saw these niggas. All I know is these motherfuckers were passing the fucking ATM card like they were in. [00:23:06] Speaker C: Nigga making a joke about the niggas doing. [00:23:08] Speaker B: They were like they were in a fraternity that was. [00:23:10] Speaker C: They could make in the skit about. [00:23:11] Speaker A: The one year term I was about two years ago. Okay, I think they've already closed that one off. Okay, but they say, always make sure your system is logged out before you walk away, though. [00:23:18] Speaker B: Yeah, like, I mean, cuz you're not. [00:23:20] Speaker A: Taking a card, right? Well, normally you take your card, that ends the transaction. But if you're not, if you're doing your pin to get in or your app on your phone and you have to tell it, hey, we're done. [00:23:29] Speaker B: And then they said that people were like putting super glue and shit in the ATM. So people couldn't use their ATM's and had to use the. So that way, you know, it increases the odds of motherfuckers not logging out. [00:23:40] Speaker C: The new crime people, because they document their crime, so it's easier. It's the best time to be a detective right now. Everybody niggas are documenting their crime. [00:23:48] Speaker B: It's easier. I mean, before, you just had to rely on snitching, but now they self snitching. [00:23:53] Speaker A: There. [00:23:53] Speaker B: There's a lot of snuff snitching. [00:23:54] Speaker C: You just gotta find that Wi Fi pin. [00:23:55] Speaker A: But I think. I think all that shit is different anyway. There's so many. There's so much information you can get just by, like, looking now. Cause everything is digital, so everything's already there. I think it's a lot easier just. Anyway. But, lux, what are they. What are y'all doing to get out of nine to fives, the legitimate people? [00:24:12] Speaker B: Legitimate. [00:24:13] Speaker A: And I mean, I know you. I know you're the people you hang around most of the time are gonna be, like, engineers or videographers stuff. But I'm saying, like, outside of that little. That little group of people, like, what are just a normal, average, everyday nine to five juice to be, what are they doing? [00:24:28] Speaker D: A normal person I know. Like. [00:24:30] Speaker A: Yeah, just a normal person I know. [00:24:30] Speaker D: Crazy. [00:24:31] Speaker A: No, just a normal. [00:24:32] Speaker D: What are you doing to get out of nine to five? [00:24:33] Speaker A: Yeah. Cuz y'all aren't working jobs, so what are y'all doing to make money? [00:24:37] Speaker B: It's not like this nigga know a lot of, like, like, low down, like, you know, allegedly. [00:24:44] Speaker A: He say allegedly? [00:24:46] Speaker D: No, honestly, I think most I'm dead ass. [00:24:49] Speaker C: Like, especially out here. Niggas are scamming. I ain't gonna. [00:24:53] Speaker D: Well, for. A lot of niggas are scamming. Or they selling pussy. Yeah. They selling shit. [00:24:59] Speaker C: Yeah. Weed, everything. [00:25:02] Speaker D: That's just the city. But, like, regular people. [00:25:04] Speaker A: Okay, as an engineer, you know that when you cover the mic. Okay, all the sound. [00:25:08] Speaker D: Regular people. [00:25:09] Speaker A: Yeah, just speak up, bro. [00:25:10] Speaker D: They might just be selling something on the side, like on some, like, rc shit or, like, regular. I don't. [00:25:16] Speaker A: That can't be possible. It cannot be possible for everybody in your age group to be doing that. [00:25:21] Speaker C: I'm gonna tell you, artists, a lot of the girls only fans, right? And I know some of them are not making a lot of money, but it still can crack in $500 to a $1,000. [00:25:30] Speaker D: Or they be scabbing old niggas. [00:25:32] Speaker C: Yeah, yeah, yeah. [00:25:33] Speaker A: But it's not possible for everyone in your age range to be doing this. [00:25:38] Speaker C: If you six and up and you at least got either titties and ass, $400 to $1,000 a month extra on OnlyFans without fucking, you can make that $400, still got a regular job at fucking old Navy or some. [00:25:56] Speaker A: So that's what I was asked, so. [00:25:57] Speaker D: They are working regular jobs, working part. [00:26:00] Speaker C: Time, and then they're using the extra time to either do the only fans on the side. If they're not a girl that's doing only fans. Like he was saying. They said they do art like paintings, but it's still seductive. [00:26:11] Speaker B: You act like you ain't here, but they're selling pussy part. Like, I heard that. [00:26:14] Speaker A: Like some of them, too. [00:26:15] Speaker C: But not all the girls are selling pussy. Oh, not all of them. Some of them are just selling you the idea that I'm selling pussy, but they're selling pussy. They're posting seductive pictures, but they're not really doing nothing crazy. They're just posting the pictures. And there's enough niggas that will pay for those pictures. [00:26:31] Speaker A: I wonder how much Sierra Rogers are charged for some pussy. [00:26:34] Speaker C: I don't think she's the type of girl to be selling pussy. [00:26:36] Speaker A: I knew you were gonna say that. [00:26:37] Speaker B: I confused. [00:26:40] Speaker C: She making good money. [00:26:41] Speaker A: What do you think gee money would say about your statement? How you say just cape for her like that? [00:26:45] Speaker C: I don't think she would say that. That was such a set. [00:26:46] Speaker A: French, don't fall for setups, man. [00:26:48] Speaker C: I don't think she'll say anything but what he was saying. [00:26:50] Speaker A: Can we call her and see? [00:26:51] Speaker C: No, I'm back to the topic. Come back to the topic. Come back to the topic. [00:26:57] Speaker B: Same topic. [00:26:59] Speaker C: Some of them are either selling something else or if they are artists or they got something to sell, they sell. A lot of them are doing hair. A lot of the girls are doing hair, too. [00:27:08] Speaker A: But French, what I'm saying is all these things you're saying, that stuff everybody's always done, but it couldn't be everybody in the group. You're not saying anything that Gen Z is doing new. I'm asking what? [00:27:19] Speaker B: There's always been barbers. [00:27:20] Speaker A: How could you possibly, possibly be surviving if you're not working real jobs? [00:27:26] Speaker B: No, and I think this. [00:27:27] Speaker C: See, I'm not saying they're not working real jobs. They're working real jobs and doing all these. They either work in a real job and doing one thing on the side, or they got four side businesses. [00:27:35] Speaker B: I'm off now. I was. I was on to start the topic, but now I'm off because I think this is why they hate. This is why there's like, oh, they who? The Gen zers. I can't get a fucking. I can't buy a house. I can't afford to do this. There's no way for me to do well, it's because. Because of the way you hustling, it's like, yeah, you coming in, you $400 to $1,000 a month. Of course you can't afford shit, right? Like, this is the problem that I didn't realize until we started fucking piecing this shit out. Like, I'm the reason why you're complaining is because the way you're hustling, I feel like there's a lot of hustling backwards from what y'all are saying. You know what I mean? Like, again, 4000. I mean, $400 to $1,000 extra a month that. I mean, you might as well sell nickel bags. Like, I mean, you ain't. That ain't. [00:28:23] Speaker C: That's a start. That's a start. [00:28:25] Speaker A: That's how. [00:28:26] Speaker C: But I'm saying that's how they get to become. Now it's actually selling pussy. It doesn't start with, I'm starting to sell pussy. It start by I post a picture in my bikini and I made four hundred dollars to one thousand dollars a month from posting that type of picture. Next month. Now I'm showing a little nipple. Next month I'm just playing with my pussy. [00:28:43] Speaker A: What stage is next month? [00:28:44] Speaker C: I'm not. She doesn't do that. [00:28:46] Speaker B: She doesn't do. Don't even try her like that. Why you keep trying? [00:28:51] Speaker A: This chick that French met at a club one night, or he said, I met her. And we were like, so tell us about that. He ended up, she just walked by and he said, hi. [00:29:00] Speaker B: They were in the same club. It's the same reason. It's the same way I hung out with Danny Glover at a comedy club. [00:29:07] Speaker A: Same way me and Jesus hooked up. I went to church one day. He was just. [00:29:10] Speaker C: And that's what I'm saying. And some of them are just living off. [00:29:13] Speaker A: He talked about he wanted more wine, too. He asked could he have my wine. You believe that? [00:29:17] Speaker C: Who, Jesus? Yeah. [00:29:18] Speaker B: Here's some water. I got a bottle of water for you. [00:29:21] Speaker A: Ain't this your blood? [00:29:23] Speaker C: But they are backwards. I can. I can agree with that. But I think the biggest problem with Gen Z is because they feel like what they making. Even if the ones that have a decent job, they don't have a lot of buying power compared to previous generations. I think that's their biggest problem. Yeah, but the ones that are actually working. [00:29:42] Speaker A: But that's actually not their fault. [00:29:43] Speaker C: Yeah, but I think that's their main grip with the, with the time. [00:29:46] Speaker B: Gripe. [00:29:46] Speaker C: Gripe my badge. But now I really can't buy shit, you know? Even if you. [00:29:53] Speaker A: But neither can grown people. That's the crazy part. Old people can't buy stuff no more. It's done, bro. This. This is over if you don't. If you don't own something or are in a position where you're about to be able to own something within the next five at the most, ten years, if you are. If you don't own something by ten years, you will never own anything about something. [00:30:09] Speaker C: You mean a house or. [00:30:10] Speaker A: Yeah, any property or whatever. It don't have to be a house, but land or asset, whatever. If you don't do it in the next ten years, you will not probably get a chance to. Just based off of the fact that how the banks are doing everything now. They're just buying. You don't think divisions. [00:30:22] Speaker B: Yeah. No. Right. [00:30:23] Speaker C: You don't think the crash will happen. [00:30:24] Speaker A: Because guess what happens when you crash. [00:30:27] Speaker C: You save the banks. [00:30:28] Speaker A: Everybody else crashes, right? We crash and they get bailed out. They're too big to fail. [00:30:34] Speaker B: And that's the problem. Like, you know, they, like you said, these fucking cash offers in everybody's. You know, these even new houses are being bought up by corporations. [00:30:42] Speaker A: It's not subdivisions. [00:30:44] Speaker B: Yeah, whole subdivisions. Like you, right? Yeah. You know me, like, come. Come rent. Like, I saw the thing and it was like whole new subdivision rentals only. And I would. [00:30:54] Speaker C: Gen Z ers. They don't mind renting because they don't. [00:30:56] Speaker B: Want to, that's all. [00:30:58] Speaker C: Like, they don't want to deal with the headache of being a homeowner. Like AC and shit. [00:31:02] Speaker B: That's like saying, I want. I want pussy, but I don't like it wet or whatever. Like, you gotta have to get. You got to take the good. [00:31:12] Speaker C: I want to get married. [00:31:13] Speaker A: It's the way to get it wet. [00:31:15] Speaker B: No, no, it's the. It's the way it comes, bro. It's. It comes wet. [00:31:19] Speaker A: So, like always, it don't always come wet. [00:31:26] Speaker C: So. [00:31:27] Speaker A: So if you were in prison, does that always come wet, too? [00:31:32] Speaker B: I don't know. There's no pussy in prison, brother. I would know. I would know. But I. [00:31:41] Speaker C: So you say they're hustling backwards for not. Because some people like to make a good argument is better renting than buying. [00:31:45] Speaker B: I don't know that argument, though. I don't understand. [00:31:48] Speaker C: A lot of people believe that. [00:31:50] Speaker B: Sure. If you don't want responsibilities, right? Like, if that's what you're saying, like, I don't want to have anything, you know, response. I don't want to be responsible for anything. Like maintenance or upkeep or fucking any of that shit. Like, if. If something happens, goes wrong, I just call. [00:32:02] Speaker A: None of that shit matter. The only thing that matters is what's your net worth. If you don't have a net worth that matters, you will not be one of the people that will be chosen for the next thing, whatever it is. There's just. There's just no way. Nobody's going to give it to you on a promise, on an idea of your potential. If you are not an owner of something, you have no collateral, right? And that's all that matters in wealth is what is your collateral? No, you cannot borrow money from me. Why? Cause you don't have any collateral. And if you've been a renter your whole life and you own nothing, you have no stake in the game. Now, the person who owns the property that you've been paying, they got. You've been giving them stake for however many years you've been living there, but you're not gaining any more ground to put yourself in a position to be able to leverage what you own for anything else. Because the only way you keep climbing is by having something to. Some collateral to borrow a little bit to make yourself, you know, I'm saying like that again, only way. There's no other way. And if, and if you convince everybody that they don't need to own anything, that means that you all talk about the caste system. That's the caste system. [00:33:02] Speaker C: Yeah, but they said that you'll be. You own nothing and be happy. That's the plane. [00:33:06] Speaker B: Is that in that link you sent? Or you just talk about, is that the divine timeline is project 2025? [00:33:13] Speaker C: No. That's what economic forum. [00:33:15] Speaker B: No, I thought there's the Holly Christian shit you just talked about. [00:33:18] Speaker C: Oh, no, that timeline is just talking about there's gonna be disaster. There's gonna be. It's gonna not be good for people. And that's part of it, right? [00:33:25] Speaker A: So which part of history was good for people, right? I just wanna. I'm just checking. Imagine for. [00:33:30] Speaker C: There hasn't been an age that was, like, perfect, if that's what you're saying. No, there's never been perfect age. [00:33:36] Speaker B: It hasn't been perfect for anybody. [00:33:37] Speaker A: We gotta take our wins. [00:33:40] Speaker B: I mean, but this is the thing, right? Like, regardless, and even before it was this age, right, like, we were in this whole, like, materialistic age and you still had to work, right? Like, even, like, if we go back to that series, 1883, or just that time period, right, there wasn't. Okay, so the the corporate system that we have right now wasn't necessarily in place, but you still had to work, my nigga. Like, it was. It was one of those things, like, if you don't kill it, you don't eat. So you had to get up in the morning to go to figure out how you was gonna eat tonight, right? Like, you. And you had to build your homestead. You had to clear the fucking land. You had to fucking do shit every day just to exist. So that's no different, right? I mean, we want to call it different. We want to make it seem like a job is different, but the fact is, you got to get up. [00:34:28] Speaker C: I think it's the nuance of the jobs today. I think that. I don't think it's because people. I don't think people have a problem going. Working. [00:34:34] Speaker B: Oh, I do. I think people are lazy. [00:34:36] Speaker C: I think it probably. I think the problem is they hate what they're all working on, what they're doing. I don't. [00:34:41] Speaker B: I think Covid activated these motherfuckers. Let's be clear. Covid acted because you got to sit home and get out of. Dropped out of the matrix, and money was coming in, but you weren't working. And you're like, this feels great. Why not? Why can't this be reality that. Well, actually, it is reality. Let's just keep doing it this way. Like, what? I think the other way. [00:35:04] Speaker C: I think Covid is a major part, but I think it's the influence in social media age that people see people that are not necessarily clocking in make hella money by just being online. And I think a lot of the Gen Z's have. That's their problem. Like, for example, right now with hock to a girl, she's about to do a podcast, got a major deal. That's not. I'm happy for a good. Good for her. She was able to hit a lick, but now you are telling young people that, damn, all you have to do is degrade yourself on a little video. [00:35:31] Speaker B: She didn't degrade herself. [00:35:32] Speaker C: It doesn't matter. It doesn't matter if Jamie Mack is that degrading. If you're a 14 year old girl and you like doing calculus and you see this girl that just said, oh, he's hot to her and about to get a million dollar pocket, I feel. [00:35:44] Speaker B: Like she gave great advice, Jamie. [00:35:46] Speaker C: Like, the point is, it's not something that you can inspire the younger generation to strive for, because the kids that are doing their homework, doing their schoolwork, getting their scholarship, and they're like, yo, I can't even make a hundred. I'm making one hundred k, and I'm broke. This girl just said, hot tour, and she's getting a deal. She's going to South Korea. [00:36:05] Speaker A: Yes, because. Let me tell you why. [00:36:06] Speaker C: Cause that's what the market says. [00:36:07] Speaker A: No, let me tell you. [00:36:07] Speaker C: That's what I tell you. [00:36:08] Speaker A: The market says yes. But let me tell you why. I. That's so everything that's happening right now happens in the music industry, and it's a complete. It's, like, identical. So around the time when Atlanta got really got on, you know, Outkast got on. No, no. [00:36:24] Speaker C: Outcast 2006. [00:36:25] Speaker A: Outkast. This is, after all cast. This is when lean with it, rock with it. [00:36:27] Speaker C: Zero six. [00:36:28] Speaker A: And all that shit was happening, right? What the industry recognized was, yeah, I could invest, give you a $2 million advanced record. You and all these big name producers and all this stuff and all these moving parts, and I can have this million dollar video, and we can do all these things for you, and it'll sell records. But guess what? I can also just sign every group in Atlanta for single deals, and let's see what they come up with. And we'll just keep letting them come up with. We're gonna give them 25,000 as opposed to 2 million now. So I'm gonna give you $25,000, single deal. You're gonna make a single. And hopefully. Well, I'm a firm. I'm assign you on a single that's already gonna be a hit. I take that one hit, and I'm gonna give you 25,000 so you can make some more sense. [00:37:08] Speaker C: Exactly. [00:37:09] Speaker A: And so everybody's making these simple ass beats and these simple ass songs. But I don't care if. If d four l has a great album. I just care if they got a single and maybe two. And if I can get two records off of that album and I get two from laughter, that's d four l or whoever. Who was the nigga spaceships in Atlanta? Who was that fable? Who is. What group is he in? You know, I'm talking about all those Negroes, all of that whole thing, right? I can just sign all of them. And I don't care that I don't get a lot of hits from it, because all I need is a couple. Cause two hits, three hits, a quarter, I'm good. And all those other. We only gave him 25,000, so it's not like we broke the bank, right? The idea here is that the music is easier, the rap is easier. I don't need you to be a specialist. I don't need you to be doctor Dre. I don't need you to be. You can be simple as fuck, have the dumbest rap whatsoever, because I know that I can make millions off of that one single, even if it's hit or miss. And it's so hit or miss. But I got ten singles out of this big group of people that I had, right? The idea here is I can make that happen over and over and over and over and over again with a little work for me. And I'm only giving $25,000 single deals here, so it cost me almost nothing. The fans love it. And now I have so many people to choose from. Same thing goes hot. Two spit girl, right? If I'm a company, I say, okay, well, this one girl, we can give her. Let's give her 20,000. Let's give her $30,000. We're gonna put her in a place to make a podcast, and we're gonna take so much money from her on the podcast side that that 20,000, or we're gonna send her to friends, we're gonna put her on all these little interview shows, and good Morning America. We can do all that. That don't really cost too, too much. It costs money, but it doesn't cost too, too much. But just the fact that how much money I'm gonna make off of that? And look, all she had to do was say hock to spit. What's the buy in for that. For somebody who's a content, the nigga. [00:39:03] Speaker C: That does the street interviews, then get famous from it. It's hard. I got famous. [00:39:07] Speaker A: Right? But my point, though, is that you're gonna meet a hot two spit girl every day somewhere, and she was drunk. [00:39:14] Speaker B: If she ain't drunk, I don't know if you come off, like, if you. [00:39:16] Speaker C: Go out to clubs or you go. [00:39:17] Speaker A: Out to places like that, you're gonna meet a hot tub spit girl every single night. [00:39:21] Speaker C: And that's the thing. So now this generation is seeing only that six as, like, someone. [00:39:26] Speaker A: And look what the buying is. All you gotta do is say something funny. [00:39:28] Speaker C: Yeah, and all these. [00:39:30] Speaker A: And then I can say something funny. [00:39:31] Speaker C: Not just, like, make enough money to buy groceries in the house. Nah. You got a little stash, too. You can invest. You got extra money, too. [00:39:39] Speaker B: So there was a. I saw a window sticker. [00:39:41] Speaker C: There was a time. [00:39:42] Speaker B: There's a window sticker down at the end. [00:39:43] Speaker C: There was a time, like, you wanted to be in the NBA. But your teacher was like, okay, your teacher can still get a car, can get a house, can have a decent life and have summers off. But now the teacher got to work core girl on the side and drive Uber on the side. So now it's not even inspiring to be the teacher. [00:40:00] Speaker B: And they getting shot. [00:40:01] Speaker C: Yeah, and they getting shot. So now this generation seem like, yo, okay, I can't even be the teacher no more. Like, at least there was a time I could. Yeah, I didn't make it to the league without always had a thing for math. And now I gotta push back on. [00:40:14] Speaker B: Something you said, though, real quick. Because you said, motherfuckers making one hundred k and still broke, that's just bad poor. That's just bad money. [00:40:21] Speaker C: That's bad money management. [00:40:23] Speaker B: Because I'm gonna tell you right now, I'm not making one hundred k. And I'm not broke. [00:40:26] Speaker C: I'm not broke. So trust me. But some are. Cause what happens is a lot of those people that got to the 100k, they changed their lifestyle now. Cause they making 100k. [00:40:34] Speaker B: That's. They're the best. Bad Mandev. [00:40:37] Speaker C: Also part of the design of. Not especially our culture, where we don't have financial literacy or don't even understand how this shit really works, you know? Oh, I got extra money now, so I gotta get the Benz instead of. No, it's still. Drive the Camry, nigga. No payments. That shit gonna last three hundred k miles. [00:40:53] Speaker A: No, I get the bins. [00:40:54] Speaker B: I was at. I was at. I was at an apartment complex and motherfucker in there had a Maybach. I was like, oh, wow. [00:41:01] Speaker C: We probably rented that shit, bro. [00:41:03] Speaker B: I mean, I guess niggas be renting cars, I guess. But I was like, yo, it's been in there for. It's been parking in there regularly. And I was like, why you? I get it, man. I mean, I get it. I don't. [00:41:16] Speaker A: But are they at least luxury apartments? [00:41:20] Speaker B: They inside the perimeter, but not a. Not condos or is it not regular apartments now? They definitely. [00:41:27] Speaker C: If you got a maybag that she got me in a garage. I'm sorry. It can't be in a. Yeah, you. [00:41:31] Speaker A: Know, one that was very old, I guess, like ten years old. [00:41:35] Speaker B: But it's still that. The problem with that is the maintenance, right? So again, it's old. Now you're gonna have maintenance and the maintenance on a maybache. I don't know what the fuck it. It is, but I know what maintenance on a Mercedes is. Yeah, it's a lot. You know, I mean, so to bump that up, you get a fucking new headlight, that shit gonna run you damn near grand. [00:41:52] Speaker A: What the fuck any that's gotta do. Harry Tubman, okay? [00:41:55] Speaker B: Because again, Harriet Tubman was the one to free the slaves, right? She was. She was trying to get them out of their. Their environment, right? Take them from their current slave mentality, right? Their mindset. And not to say that there was just a mindset. They wanted to leave, but they didn't know how. She's like, just follow me, my niggas. I'm going to take you all to somewhere, to a land where you can. Things could be different. It doesn't have to be like this. You don't have to live on a plantation working for this motherfucker, you know? This doesn't have to be your life. And I feel like that's what they're trying to do. Like the Gen Z is. They're trying to be like to everybody else that's working nine to five. Like, listen, we're going to do something different. And it's going, I don't know how great it is. Again, I don't. It might be a worse plantation, to be honest with you. At the end of this all said and I done. But we willing to take you somewhere else. We're willing to try to lead the way. [00:42:41] Speaker A: Harriet came back from somewhere like, yeah, it's good up here. [00:42:47] Speaker C: Trying to go. [00:42:47] Speaker B: I said, I don't know, but I know where they're not going. [00:42:51] Speaker C: I think the cool thing for Gen Z, because they have the Internet, there is an outlet. They can find a way to make money without necessarily clocking in nine to five. So they do have that. And I should explore that. [00:43:01] Speaker B: It just play video games. Like, I see these commercials, these motherfuckers, these ads and shit, wherever. Like, oh, play solitaire. And you can make this, that and $300 surveys. [00:43:11] Speaker C: There's niggas that do surveys all day for four or $500. [00:43:14] Speaker A: No, but not four or $500. They've done studies. That's okay. So see, this is where my brain comes back into like, no, all this is bullshit. These motherfuckers are not. There's one or two people that's hot, too. Spitting. Everybody else is broke as fuck. They're not making dollar 400 a month. Not even dollar 400 a month. There was a lady who she was like, training, aih. [00:43:34] Speaker B: Right. [00:43:34] Speaker A: And she was working for Amazon. Of course, Amazon's not paying her directly. They had a contract company that basically hired them. And what they do is they go and they train the AI. Like those little squares that have like, point out the bicycle, right? You do it. You do all those puzzles, things like that. Or say it'll show you a picture of a woman and then you outline the woman's shape so that the computer starts to learn what's a person and what's not a person, things like that. And you train. It's like eleven cents per thing. It's not real. It's all phony. And the problem is that people keep pretending like, oh, no, it's people making money. No, there are not. And if there are, wear the receipts. Don't give me no content creator that's got 10 million subscribers. Give me a regular person. Because that 10 million subscriber person is what's really abnormal, right? That's not real. That's almost make believe. It's one or two hot. Two spit is not talented. And we all see that and know that we don't think she's gonna have a future. I know. I mean, maybe we do. Do we? Does anybody? Cause French said it like he was proud. [00:44:30] Speaker B: Well, no, I'm proud of her. [00:44:33] Speaker A: He's like, I'm proud of her. [00:44:34] Speaker C: I'm glad she hit a lick, but. [00:44:36] Speaker A: No, but she didn't hit a lick. [00:44:38] Speaker B: Are we talking about that head game, what that mouth do or what? [00:44:40] Speaker A: Cuz I feel like she probably can't even suck dick. [00:44:42] Speaker B: She know how to keep it wet. [00:44:44] Speaker A: She knows somebody told her how to keep it wet. We don't even know she's talented at that. Like, I would need to see her suck a dick and do the hot tube on it if we're gonna call her talented. [00:44:52] Speaker B: Me too. [00:44:53] Speaker C: A podcast for what? [00:44:54] Speaker A: What the hell? You see I'm saying? Yeah, she has no future, right? I don't care what you think. Like, yeah, she can do it. And I remember me and. Me and Cam had an argument about t pain way back in the day. I was like, like, this shit ain't gonna last more than a summer or two. And of course, t pain is one of the biggest artists ever. I was wrong on that one. But, man, I haven't been wrong on many others. It's just there's some things that, you know. T pain also had talent behind what he was doing. It was a gimmick. But lucky for him, he actually had some real talent there. That was something to chew on once the novelty wore off. [00:45:26] Speaker C: Right? [00:45:26] Speaker A: Tell me, what? Hock two spit. Have you seen one of our interviews? [00:45:29] Speaker C: No. [00:45:30] Speaker A: Is she charming? [00:45:30] Speaker C: No. [00:45:31] Speaker A: Is she funny? [00:45:31] Speaker C: No, but they're gonna milk that meme to. [00:45:34] Speaker A: The milk is dry is the money's already been made. The money was made when they signed that contract because there were endorsements with that contract. [00:45:42] Speaker C: There's a. [00:45:42] Speaker A: They'll never make another pin. So what they made, they're gonna. I mean, of course they'll be the buzz. In the beginning, everybody's gonna want to. [00:45:49] Speaker C: Go see what the hot two spit. [00:45:50] Speaker A: Girl says, but then they realize, oh, she's not even charming. Yeah, okay, well, no, but they've already dick. [00:45:55] Speaker B: Like, I showed up because I thought. [00:45:56] Speaker A: She was a nasty mother. [00:45:58] Speaker B: She was gonna hock two spit on some shit. [00:46:00] Speaker C: But I think that's what's happening with Gen Z, is they are only. Cause I was saying, when you stepped out, I was saying, like, there was a time, like, yeah, you had the hoop dreams, but you still saw your teacher make enough money to get a nice house, drive a Camry, go on vacation in the summer, do things. But now the teachers gotta work Kroger and do Uber on the side. [00:46:17] Speaker B: Ooh. [00:46:17] Speaker A: What? Teachers work in Kroger and do Uber on the side? When I was in high school, that's called spending issues. You have a spending problem if you're a teacher with a. [00:46:25] Speaker C: They say teachers make, what, 40 to 60k? Are you kidding? On average. On average? [00:46:28] Speaker A: No, I don't know about average. New teachers. When I was young, new teachers made 26 coming in the door. [00:46:33] Speaker C: That's when he was young. [00:46:34] Speaker A: That's when I was young. They make way more. They make 40, 50 now, probably out the door. And a seasoned teacher probably makes almost $100,000. [00:46:41] Speaker B: But he already said that $100,000 is you. You can't. You broke. [00:46:44] Speaker C: I didn't say that. I'm saying. [00:46:45] Speaker B: You did say. [00:46:46] Speaker C: I'm saying there's people that make a hundred thousand dollars and they're saying they're broke. I'm not saying I'm broke. [00:46:51] Speaker B: Well, if you make $100,000 and you are broke, you have a right. You need the budget. You need to figure. You need to get out of budget and follow that. No shit. [00:47:00] Speaker A: If you make hundred thousand dollars and you're broke all the time, you need to stop spending so much. [00:47:04] Speaker B: Right. You. The budget is not. Is not popping. Because I said I don't make a hundred thousand and I'm not broke. [00:47:11] Speaker C: So. [00:47:12] Speaker B: So again. And then you don't make a hundred thousand, right? [00:47:15] Speaker C: No. [00:47:15] Speaker B: So then why can't. We can't. [00:47:17] Speaker C: We can't. [00:47:17] Speaker B: We can't put that out there. [00:47:19] Speaker C: Then we can't use a rhetoric out. [00:47:21] Speaker B: There right now, but it's not reality. [00:47:23] Speaker C: But I'm just telling you what the people are saying that, what that they saying $100,000, they make it a hundred can. They're broke. Some are even saying a hundred thousand dollars ain't no money. [00:47:31] Speaker A: Yeah, but, but is this person also trying to be the man on Instagram? Cause you can't be the man for. For, you know, less than another locks. [00:47:39] Speaker C: Am I lying? That's all I'm saying. [00:47:45] Speaker A: About what those people have never done. [00:47:47] Speaker C: They never made a hundred k. [00:47:53] Speaker A: Nothing no more, right? They've never touched 100, they never seen 100,000. [00:47:57] Speaker B: That's what I'm saying. Like them hundred thousand dollar paycheck checks. Let me get you right, bro. Like, what are you talking about? Like bi weekly. Weekly. You, you go, you gonna see that. You gonna be like, ah, you're gonna. [00:48:08] Speaker C: Hate the taxes, but you're gonna hate Texas no matter, man. That's why for sure. [00:48:14] Speaker B: You'd be all right. Yeah, if you making. If you make it six figures. And you, you talk about you broke, you, you tripping. But I realized again, when I first started this thought process, I was like, okay, these gen z ers, are they the way they identify the workplace environment and they correlated to being like a plantation, right? Like, and they're like, okay, well, this is. This is slave work, right? Like, we're not designed to be like this, that and the other where me personally, I never even questioned it. I just, like, this is what it is. Like, this is what. [00:48:43] Speaker A: You're a drone. [00:48:44] Speaker B: This is what we do. You go to fucking work. This is. You got to have to do something to make a living. Like, the opposite of that. They have a word for it. It's called a bum. Like, I mean, like, I don't know. Like. And that seems like hard work to me as well, you know? I mean, you talk about, you know, doing all of that fucking AI training for eleven cents a minute. You're doing a whole lot of shit for nothing, right? Like, so niggas are standing out in the hottest. [00:49:08] Speaker A: Be like $72. [00:49:12] Speaker B: On the intersection and off ramp with a sign, nigga, all day. You know what? Ants crawling up in your ass. That seems like hard work to me, nigga. You know, I mean, sure, you're not working, you could leave anytime you want. [00:49:22] Speaker A: But the sun is fucking. [00:49:23] Speaker B: The sun is fucking you up. You got nowhere to go, diggy. You look bummy as fuck. Like, you hungry like that. [00:49:28] Speaker A: I hate those. [00:49:29] Speaker C: Nah, if you're a grown able bodied man, there's no reason why you should be asking. [00:49:32] Speaker B: That ain't. [00:49:33] Speaker A: That sounds just like a haitian. [00:49:35] Speaker B: That ain't. That's not. That's not. I mean, that's worked to me as well. And I don't. You know. I mean. And tonight, you still don't know where you're gonna sleep? Not me. Like, I'd rather be able to have a key to a. [00:49:45] Speaker A: So you're not. So you're. You don't believe in. The people that are on the side of the road are fakers. And they have nice houses. Not nice houses, but they have a house. And they just do this cause they don't wanna work. [00:49:53] Speaker B: Nah, not the way they. I mean, if they're really good actors, then. Because, again, like, they're like. Like fucking Daniel Day Lewis. Like, they. [00:49:59] Speaker A: Right. [00:49:59] Speaker B: They're like, really? [00:50:01] Speaker A: Like. I mean, I'm sure the guy with the dog, he's not faking it, but sometimes, you know, you like, are those Jordans? You got met? Did you just put some fake mud on your jordan? [00:50:09] Speaker B: So, like, just coming back from my trip, this chick hit me on that was coming off. On what? 53rd? Off of 285. Exit 53. I forget what it is. Exit 53. And. And the bitches. Sorry. She was tweaking. I think she was awesome shit. But she hit me with the universal hungry sign, right? Like, you know, can you got any food? So I reached in the refrigerator real quick. I'm at the light, you know, it's red. And I'm like, listen, I don't got no money. I don't keep cash on me, but I do have some food in this refrigerator, and I'm about to be done here. I got some shrimp and corn chowder. Girl from. From Sam's club. This shit is smacking. [00:50:44] Speaker A: Yeah, bro. [00:50:45] Speaker B: That shit was. [00:50:46] Speaker A: I would have said you if I was a bomb. [00:50:47] Speaker B: She kind of did, bro. And that's my thing. I was like, see, don't do me. [00:50:51] Speaker A: Like, she might not be. She might not. [00:50:53] Speaker C: She might be a. Yeah. [00:50:54] Speaker A: She might not be, like, hating on you. She might not like, what the fuck? Clams. [00:50:57] Speaker B: If you hungry. [00:50:58] Speaker A: No, bro. [00:50:59] Speaker B: No. You never seen a nigga hungry. [00:51:01] Speaker C: Okay, so it's. [00:51:02] Speaker A: Shit is sitting there and you hungry. [00:51:03] Speaker B: It's a nigga, and it got what in it? Niggas will eat the period corner if you get hungry enough. If you hungry. Raw animals. Nigga. [00:51:16] Speaker C: Animals and shit is two different animals. [00:51:19] Speaker B: But, you know. [00:51:24] Speaker C: You got two options. A raw animal, shit. [00:51:30] Speaker B: Right in the water. They could just eat that shit like on a low. You just grab that fish and eat that belly. You don't even. I've never been that hungry. But I'm telling you, if you are hungry, like on a remnant. [00:51:46] Speaker A: She wasn't hungry, bro. [00:51:47] Speaker B: When I think it caught that. No, she wasn't. She wanted some dope. She wanted some dough, because she looked. [00:51:52] Speaker A: Cheeseburger money. Stop being bougie. [00:51:55] Speaker B: I did have a salad in there, but I couldn't get to the salad, because, again, I'm at the light. Yeah, I did have an apple pecan salad. [00:52:01] Speaker A: I wouldn't want that, either. [00:52:03] Speaker B: Not is the chicken apple pecan salad. [00:52:05] Speaker C: That they sell saying, they're not Harriet Tubman. [00:52:08] Speaker B: They're not. They're not. I'm not following niggas. I'm not. Because again, I don't know. Like, he said, harriet had been someplace to say, this is where I know eyes, right? I know it's better. Follow me, right? Like, they're like, hey, make eye contact nowhere. I got no idea where we're going, but follow me, right? Like, I just feels right. [00:52:26] Speaker A: This feels like the right direction, right? [00:52:27] Speaker B: I just know I don't want to be on this plantation no more. But, you know, like, there's wild animals, nigga, and fucking other slavers out there that are fucking killing niggas and raping. Like, there's. The outside world. Ain't just. You mean this plantation, you got a three hots and I cot, and you. You. Yeah. You got to work there. You got to get up and do your shit. You talk back, you might get fucked up, but you just don't talk back, right? Like, this is. This is. This is the basics of this plantation, right? Not all plantations are the same, right? Just like not all companies are saying. Some companies are fucking great. They love working for companies. Like, I don't know where they got the fucking slides in the fucking bean bag. [00:53:02] Speaker A: Yeah. [00:53:03] Speaker B: All this other shit, you know, I mean, and great benefits and shit, you know, you getting all this time off, so there's different. Different aspects to it, all, right? But everybody is just like, fuck it all. Like, these Gen Z are like, fuck it all. I don't want to do none of it. Like, this is not fucking. The fluorescent lighting is bad for our health. We shouldn't have to live like this. Like, this is unconstitutional. This is my God given rights and shit. And it's like God don't exist. I feel like I just. I was happy to be in the way I was. You know what I mean? Like, no, I fucking. [00:53:34] Speaker A: I am not lying. I hated all that shit. And I may be part of the problem. I may have fed my children all of this, and it spread. I mean, not my fault by myself, right? But me and people like me probably are at fault. We saw our parents, we saw our grandparents work till they died, right? Even though that was back in the day, it's supposed to be like all these things, retirement, retirement, Social Security period. I still saw my grandparents, you know, work until very late in their lives. My parents are going to work until late in their lives. I'm gonna work until late in my life. I've put this idea in my kid's head that, you know, this is all bullshit, right? And it was rhetoric that I was just saying. But I think. I think our generation, we really taught the next generation that is bullshit. And then they taught that, and by proxy, the next generation, like, oh, well, if that generation, they're still kind of caught in that shit. But I'm not gonna do it because. [00:54:31] Speaker B: I'm not even getting. [00:54:32] Speaker C: But I really think that the biggest problem is bond power. But Jimmy Mac did make a good point in hustling backwards, so that's probably the problem. But I think that biggest problem, because I remember when I, like, 8867 years ago, when I was like, 21, the shit I could have done with the little money I was making at that time, ain't no way they can do it now. 21 year olds can do it now. [00:54:53] Speaker A: But I think there's a problem with that whole concept, right? Because you're so interested in buying power. But the message shouldn't be increase your buying power. Unless the message first was increase your saving power or your investment or your portfolio. Buying power is the last power, not the first. So like, oh, I can afford a Benz now. I'm gonna go get that Mayback, right? That shouldn't be your first purchase if you don't have your investment, any kind of portfolio lined up, any kind of. [00:55:21] Speaker C: Yeah, that's true. But I'm speaking for the young person. [00:55:24] Speaker A: No, but that's what I'm saying. I'm speaking for the young person because you're not telling them the real. You're giving half the story. Just because you can afford to buy a Maybach in money, that doesn't mean you can afford to buy a Maybach in your life for sure. Have you done any work on investments? Have you done any planning for retirement? Are you investing in a 401K? Are you doing anything that's going to help you on the other side of this? Or is this all the money that you have. And, yeah, you can afford to buy it in cash, but can you afford to buy it in life? And that's what the message that they never got is, like, yeah, you have buying black people. People have trillion dollar buying power, so we're the one of them. Yeah, okay. I get it. But we don't really. Just because we have the money to spend doesn't mean we should be spending that money. So saying that we have that buying power is kind of a. It's kind of a lie. It's kind of like it misleads you. Yeah, yeah, it misleads you. [00:56:12] Speaker C: But you don't think. You don't think. [00:56:13] Speaker B: I say we need to get jewish and just be like, listen, we ain't spending shit. Like, we need to. We need to be known for being cheap, not flashy. [00:56:20] Speaker A: I think we should start call it blackish. [00:56:22] Speaker B: Yeah. [00:56:23] Speaker A: Yeah, that was a show. [00:56:26] Speaker C: Still ish. [00:56:26] Speaker A: Negrish. [00:56:27] Speaker B: Bluish. [00:56:28] Speaker A: Negrish. [00:56:29] Speaker B: It's kind of like a bluish. [00:56:32] Speaker A: That's a little offensive, I guess. Negris kind of too. [00:56:35] Speaker B: I mean, it's not necessarily the color, you know? I mean, I'm not talking about the ultra black. I'm not talking about them. [00:56:41] Speaker A: Come on, man. [00:56:42] Speaker B: What? [00:56:43] Speaker A: We're not talking about a color. We're talking about a people. [00:56:45] Speaker B: Well, so when I didn't. Bluish seemed to work. I thought you was talking about it being offensive because, you know, that's like, you know, blurple. You know? You calling a blurple. [00:56:51] Speaker A: Well, we're not. We're not black, though. [00:56:53] Speaker B: No, no, that's what I'm saying. [00:56:54] Speaker A: Do a color at all. Let's do something like. [00:56:56] Speaker B: Well, is it ooish from the. From the jew? Right. So you get the. The black, the bl, and then the. Ooh. From the jew, and you get the bluish. [00:57:05] Speaker A: It's not working. [00:57:06] Speaker B: Not. [00:57:06] Speaker C: That was a good one, though. You try it. [00:57:08] Speaker B: Like, I'm trying to make it work. It's not about a color. It's more about a combination of thoughts. [00:57:13] Speaker C: And we just culture CMB, man. Like. Like we always talk about. We just got to start doing CMB, and that's. That's the first thing. [00:57:20] Speaker A: So, locks, just based off all that we said so far on this show, what are we on point? Are we not? We're way off on Gen Z. [00:57:27] Speaker D: No, you're right. You don't want to work, but they got to work. [00:57:31] Speaker B: But then that's the thing. Like, nobody's ever really wanted to work. [00:57:34] Speaker A: Yeah, I didn't. I don't. [00:57:36] Speaker B: Yeah, yeah. I mean, no one's like, hey, I want to do. [00:57:39] Speaker A: My wife is the only person I know that loves going to her job like she loves. [00:57:43] Speaker C: But I think Gen Z, I don't. [00:57:44] Speaker B: Mind doing what I'm doing now. Yeah, right. It's just, I mean, it's. It's. I don't. I don't like, it's not one of those, like, my old jobs where I'd be like, fuck, I gotta get up and do this shit. [00:57:54] Speaker A: No, my wife, she's. She's created a family at her job, and she's the mama, so she loves it, I think. [00:58:01] Speaker B: I mean, that's what you gotta do. Like you said, find something that you can do that you like doing for 8 hours and you be straight. Right? [00:58:06] Speaker C: That's how you start. Cause I think the best thing to do is find a way to get out. Cause you. Cause the thing is, people just want their time. I think their problem is like, why the fuck do I have to clock in at night and leave that five? [00:58:15] Speaker B: This is the problem. Really? [00:58:16] Speaker C: What, that time again? That's really. [00:58:18] Speaker B: Let's go back to. Let's go back to pre this fucking corporate shit. You didn't still have time, nigga. Like I said, you still had to go fucking clear the field. You had to go chop trees. You still. That wasn't you. You couldn't just be like, I'm just gonna sit on the porch, nigga. No, you had to build a porch first. You had to go get the wood. You had to go do this. You had to. There was not a time where you could just fucking sit on your ass and the world was gonna be okay. Your life was gonna be fucked up if you didn't get up and do shit like you. You still had to get up at the fucking dawn. You still had to go fucking do shit. [00:58:48] Speaker C: Yeah, but that same generation didn't have to get on the phone and look at people their age and compare their lives and be like, oh, this girl don't have to do that. [00:58:57] Speaker B: That's the problem. [00:58:57] Speaker C: She got a. [00:58:58] Speaker B: That's what you're saying. [00:58:59] Speaker C: Reports, cuz she's just look good. Oh, damn. This dude, they have to do that shit, cuz. He hit a parlay. That was crazy. Yeah, like, and so they, they like, I don't want to do shit no more. And that's the problem. [00:59:11] Speaker B: So it all comes back to social media. [00:59:13] Speaker C: Yeah. Yeah. Cuz they not comparing lives. They like. Because think about if you a white girl, that's kind of cute, too. That's working her ass off, went to school, did all that shit. And then you just see this girl, just say hock to her and they throw in her bags, you're gonna feel some type of way. Now you gotta understand the reasoning, like, beyond. It's just. [00:59:32] Speaker B: Especially if your head gave. [00:59:33] Speaker C: But if you feel like, yo, I did everything they told me to do, do, and I just have to spend 300 in groceries, and now I gotta wait. [00:59:42] Speaker A: Also, the crazy part is you do everything you're supposed to do, and that means you get a 40 year career. It's not. You get a gift. [00:59:48] Speaker B: Yeah. [00:59:48] Speaker A: So it's stay here for 40 years. [00:59:50] Speaker C: So I think that's the problem. I think that's the problem is they compare watches. They compare. And because they're comparing lives, they're gonna be miserable. [00:59:58] Speaker B: And it's. It's. I remember we always had that kind of comparison thing. But I believe that before it was the social media, like, we had the live lifestyles of the rich and famous, right? But it was. The rich and famous was far away. Well, and they were. They. They had done shit, right? Like, they. The reason why they were rich and famous is because they were, you know, owners of fucking some, you know, major corporation, right. Something. Something, right, that qualified them to be rich and famous. When you see a motherfucker that's just a random. Become rich in your eyes or famous, then it's like, what the fuck? Why not me? [01:00:33] Speaker C: Yeah. And that's the problem. [01:00:34] Speaker B: And, I mean, it goes back to the lotto, right? [01:00:36] Speaker A: No, it goes back to music. I'm telling you, you know, how many rappers came out where you like, I could do that. Or better. [01:00:43] Speaker B: Or better. [01:00:44] Speaker A: The whole period after Laffy taffy. And so all since then, now it's still happening. That's what I'm saying. From the Gucci man to whoever it was, it's like, well, he's not that great, I think. Well, Gucci man actually is better than a lot of people, but, you know, you get the gist of what I'm saying. Anyway, listeners, we appreciate you guys tuning in once again to the no nonsense show. Make sure you go out to the website rareslance.com dot, where you can check out all the shows on the network, follow us on our socials. Other than that, you know what I wanted to ask? [01:01:10] Speaker B: Leave us a fucking. Some feedback, like, go on a fucking Apple podcast or fucking. And leave us a comment. Like, you know what I mean? Whether you like the show, don't like the show, anything. We used to get a lot of fucking, you know, five star reviews. Give us a review and tell us what you think. [01:01:25] Speaker A: I haven't even checked that in years. It might be. There might be some on there. [01:01:27] Speaker B: No, I've looked, you know, back on Apple. I've looked at Apple. Yeah, I've looked at Apple. It wasn't nothing in recent. [01:01:33] Speaker A: We haven't asked. [01:01:34] Speaker B: Yeah, we haven't promoted it. We used to promote it all the time. We wanted people to fucking go on and review us, and we would fucking holler back at y'all. So, yeah, let's get back to that. [01:01:42] Speaker A: All right, so keep supporting us, keep interacting with us, and we'll keep bringing the nonsense, because we realize that sometimes people just need to laugh. Till next time. [01:01:48] Speaker B: 10% less bullshit than any other podcast, guaranteed.

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