Episode Transcript
[00:00:00] Speaker A: The views and opinions expressed by the no nonsense show and its hosts do not necessarily reflect views consistent with political correctness or the Rare Sonics 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: That's a brand new year, right? 2024.
[00:00:17] Speaker C: No, this will actually come out. What? What day is New Year's Day?
[00:00:22] Speaker B: November 1.
[00:00:23] Speaker C: I mean, November 1.
[00:00:24] Speaker B: New Year's Day.
[00:00:26] Speaker C: Monday. Monday, yeah. And you know, it sucks because this could have been episode 800 had we not had the kerfuffle that we had, right? So this would have been like a special one.
[00:00:36] Speaker B: Is that german?
[00:00:37] Speaker C: What?
[00:00:37] Speaker A: Kerfuffle?
[00:00:38] Speaker C: I don't think that's a real word.
[00:00:39] Speaker A: Oh, I've heard that word plenty of times.
[00:00:41] Speaker C: Yeah, but just because. Have you ever heard Tinky winky?
[00:01:00] Speaker B: You're listening to the no nonsense show. 10% less bullshit than any other podcast, guaranteed.
No, that's just stinky pinky.
Stinky pinky. Is that the same thing?
[00:01:17] Speaker A: I haven't heard of that one.
[00:01:21] Speaker B: It sounds like you got into a kerfuffle if you got a stinky pinky.
[00:01:25] Speaker C: Like, blah, blah, blah. That's not a word.
Those don't really mean anything.
We accept.
[00:01:31] Speaker B: We don't say blah, blah, blah, blah.
[00:01:35] Speaker A: Yeah, this could have been 800.
[00:01:37] Speaker C: This would have been 800. So we would have to do something special. And I guess they just knew we didn't have it in us right now.
[00:01:42] Speaker B: That's right. The next one we going to turn up ever. 800? What?
[00:01:46] Speaker C: Not the next 800?
[00:01:48] Speaker B: No. For the 800?
[00:01:49] Speaker C: No. How? What? There's nothing special that's happening.
[00:01:52] Speaker B: Doesn't matter.
[00:01:53] Speaker C: But it would have been the magic of it being the first.
[00:01:55] Speaker B: I'm bringing strippers, something.
[00:01:57] Speaker C: So we're going to do it at your house.
[00:01:58] Speaker B: Yeah, that's fine. That's fine. Let's do it. I'll fucking install a pole and everything.
[00:02:03] Speaker C: Got you. And we should have the goat ceremony, too, with the witch doctor and shit at your house, right?
[00:02:09] Speaker D: Yeah, I don't care.
[00:02:10] Speaker B: Listen, bro, I ain't scared, okay? I got the blood of Jesus covering me. Got it. We're afraid of no voodoo. That's not true. I am. Voodoo scares me because I know that everything else is.
You feel it? I feel like voodoo is real action. They're doing something right now to try to impact you where it's not like they're just praying now. There's a ceremony. There's like some Santa Taria shit. Are you cutting off a chicken?
Putting some blood on a pitcher or some shit like to do, though, like back in the Old Testament, I'm not sure.
[00:02:50] Speaker D: They used to sacrifice lambs.
[00:02:52] Speaker B: Oh, yeah. Shit was getting sacrificed. Yeah, there was sacrifice. I mean, shit, he was going to sacrifice his son.
[00:02:56] Speaker D: See the difference?
[00:02:56] Speaker B: Honestly, a llama chicken is different. Especially if you got tastes different. Especially if you got alpha gal syndrome.
You can't eat that fucking lamb. It's funny because I thought I had told my mom about this whole shit, and I just was talking to her about it last night, and she's like, what? I don't believe it.
This sounds amazing. This sounds like some shit. And I was like, listen, I got details. I got articles. Here, let me show you. First, let me start you off with some plum island shit, right? Let me show you where it could have possibly been generated and made at, right? Like, again, but this is different. This motherfucking.
This thing is real, though. Like, as far as this afgal allergy is real shit. Because again, I still can't eat. I don't know if it's ever going to go away. Hopefully. I've been trying to micro dose right again, like they do with little kids with peanuts and shit. And then I'm able to get away sometimes, right? Like, I can eat a little bit of something and not feel the adverse effects, but then there's other things that it just kind of seems to hit differently. And I'm just like, gosh damn it. But hopefully there's been reports, I've read articles that some people have known to kind of grow out of it. Like asthma. Some people, like, I had asthma as a kid pretty bad.
[00:04:16] Speaker C: What are you going to grow to, though? You're already grown and I'm still growing, man. What the fuck are you talking about, man? My bad.
[00:04:22] Speaker B: Years equal growth, I think. Right.
[00:04:24] Speaker C: How much taller are you this week than you were last week?
[00:04:26] Speaker B: Just about a millimeter.
[00:04:28] Speaker C: Okay.
[00:04:28] Speaker B: Just a millimeter.
[00:04:29] Speaker C: Your ears are growing. Your nose is growing.
[00:04:31] Speaker B: Yeah. Is it?
[00:04:32] Speaker C: Those grow forever. That's why old people have big nose than ears.
[00:04:35] Speaker B: I didn't know that.
[00:04:36] Speaker C: Look how big old people's ears are.
[00:04:38] Speaker D: And they get the droopy earlobes.
[00:04:41] Speaker B: No, I just started looking around. I'm sorry.
Reggie's the first one because Reggie's got the most smallest ears in.
[00:04:54] Speaker C: Smaller than.
[00:04:55] Speaker B: No, but they're baby ears. But that's his mentor, so he's just trying to be, like, smooth. He was hoping to get to there one day, but no, there's the whole thing about the earlobe bottom, right? Like the ones that are stuck, right? Or unstuck. Oh, yeah.
[00:05:08] Speaker D: The ones that they connect at the bottom type thing. Or you got those.
[00:05:11] Speaker A: I don't know.
[00:05:13] Speaker B: Yeah. Your earlobe is snatched to your neck. You got a snatched earlobe, right?
[00:05:17] Speaker A: What do you mean?
[00:05:18] Speaker C: There's a piece of skin at the bottom of your earlobe you don't have. Whereas mine is like flopping.
[00:05:24] Speaker D: There's some that go like this and then there's something like that.
[00:05:27] Speaker C: You're not flopping the front of it, you're flopping the back of it. The front of it is connected to your.
[00:05:31] Speaker B: Exactly.
[00:05:32] Speaker A: Now let me see.
[00:05:37] Speaker B: Yeah, it's weird. And I don't know what that means. I know that there's certain people gay.
You knew it was going to go.
[00:05:47] Speaker A: If anything, it's the other way around.
Now, that's why y'all should not stick together.
[00:05:52] Speaker C: Now, bro, I need my shit to flop like balls.
[00:05:56] Speaker B: I need earballs. You ain't got earballs. You got Earlavia.
But no, that's like the thing that I was talking about how the ring finger on women, you know what I mean? If it's longer than the index finger.
[00:06:09] Speaker C: That's bullshit.
[00:06:10] Speaker B: It's not.
[00:06:12] Speaker A: The ring finger being longer than what?
[00:06:14] Speaker B: So if the ring finger is longer than this.
[00:06:20] Speaker C: The blisters don't know what.
[00:06:21] Speaker B: Than the index finger, your pointer finger. Right. That means that they're very likely or possibly inclined to.
[00:06:29] Speaker C: So stupid.
[00:06:30] Speaker B: Lick the clam.
[00:06:32] Speaker C: That's so ridiculous.
[00:06:33] Speaker B: It's not. And it goes for men too. So if you're a man and you got your index, your ring finger is shorter. You might not like pussy as much as you think you do.
[00:06:42] Speaker A: So your ring finger is shorter. My ring finger is longer.
[00:06:44] Speaker D: I'm about to say, what if your.
[00:06:45] Speaker B: Ring finger is supposed to be longer?
[00:06:47] Speaker C: My ring finger is longer too. So index finger was longer than I like.
[00:06:51] Speaker B: Guys, you might not like pussy as much.
[00:06:55] Speaker C: What about you?
[00:06:55] Speaker D: Yours look about the same size.
Mine's like way longer.
[00:07:00] Speaker C: You got an index that likes, dude.
[00:07:03] Speaker D: The middle finger is longer, but the other two look like they about the same.
[00:07:06] Speaker A: His ring fingers longer. From that angle, from looking early, that's all I need.
[00:07:15] Speaker C: He's trying to squish that motherfucker down.
[00:07:17] Speaker D: Bringing that index finger down.
[00:07:20] Speaker C: That's bullshit, man.
[00:07:21] Speaker B: I don't know, man. This is all I knew. And I used to use that to get chicks to lick other chicks pussies. And it worked. So if they had that longer.
[00:07:33] Speaker D: Oh, I must be gay, what the finger says. So it must be all right.
[00:07:37] Speaker B: Listen, again, the fact that it worked, right, that's what I'm saying.
[00:07:42] Speaker D: They wanted to do that shit anyway.
[00:07:44] Speaker B: Because of the longer evidence.
[00:07:46] Speaker C: Can't be that you've gotten girls to do it and that's how you know it's true. That can't be your evidence. You've got some dummies you've been messing with.
[00:07:52] Speaker B: No, I'm just saying it's just 100% fact. Right? Like, they're scientifically proven.
[00:07:57] Speaker D: 100% fact. Scientifically proven.
[00:07:59] Speaker B: Right? Because again, so if it was shorter, them is the ones be like, nah, Stickley, dickly. I get it. Because your fingers say so. I'm not even going to push the fact, but if that finger is longer, let's go to the strip club.
[00:08:11] Speaker D: I just wonder if you had flipped the script, if it would have turned out different.
[00:08:13] Speaker B: Let's go to the strip club. And then they'd be like, oh, shit, that is some fucking.
[00:08:17] Speaker C: But what person doesn't like looking at pussy at a strip club?
[00:08:21] Speaker B: There are some women that are not into that. You got to be true.
[00:08:25] Speaker C: That isn't true. Because when you go to a strip club, maybe it's different for me, but when I go to strip club, I'm not going to look for my wife. I'm going to see some exciting, different shit.
[00:08:35] Speaker B: Right?
[00:08:36] Speaker C: Everybody's interested in that, not just guys.
[00:08:39] Speaker B: I know that. I've seen chicks that are not willing to go to a woman's strip club because they're like, I don't like that. I'm not into that.
[00:08:46] Speaker C: I don't like what? No, father.
[00:08:48] Speaker D: They don't know. They think they don't like that.
[00:08:50] Speaker C: I don't want to see a fatherless woman put something inside of a giant and then shake it loose. Nobody says no to that. Oh, no, everybody wants to. Amateur night is the worst night and the best night at the same time. Because not only are you watching women do crazy things, but they're shy and they're like, should I be here? So you're going to see all that shit happen real time. And that makes it even more exciting. Like, I'm watching this woman be deflowered in front of us. She's shy when she starts out, and.
[00:09:17] Speaker A: Then she gets into it because she.
[00:09:18] Speaker C: Gets cheers and now she's a straight.
[00:09:21] Speaker B: She's putting koolaid and fucking other shit in it. She's shaking it up, pool balls in her pussy, folding dollar bills with her kuchi.
[00:09:30] Speaker C: Tell me one woman that doesn't want to see somebody make a martini in their pussy.
[00:09:34] Speaker B: Listen, and it's weird because, you know that I'm arguing against my own thing because I say they all are. I think they're all lesbians, right? I think bisexual.
I think that's just natural for women.
[00:09:46] Speaker C: Okay, I'm there, too.
[00:09:47] Speaker D: I just think it just depends on. It just has to be the right scenario or situation.
[00:09:51] Speaker C: So I'm thinking now, okay, I've said my words. I'm thinking now, would I be interested in seeing a dude make a martini in his asshole?
[00:09:59] Speaker D: No, because it's not the same.
[00:10:00] Speaker A: It's not the same.
[00:10:01] Speaker D: We already talked about this.
[00:10:02] Speaker A: You thinking about it still?
[00:10:04] Speaker C: I'm trying to decide, like, somebody who's willing to do something crazy themselves, right?
[00:10:11] Speaker B: Like a male donkey show.
[00:10:13] Speaker C: Right? I'm trying to think to myself, like, would I be so disgusted that I couldn't get the entertainment out of it?
[00:10:19] Speaker B: I ain't going to lie. I would go to a male donkey show. I would go to a male donkey show.
[00:10:26] Speaker C: Because, look, we're being hypocrites right now.
[00:10:28] Speaker B: Yeah.
[00:10:28] Speaker C: If we're saying that all women should want to see a woman put a pool ball in her pussy.
[00:10:32] Speaker D: No, because we talked about this.
[00:10:34] Speaker C: We already talked about how that's a lie. You just said that. I really believe that just makes you feel comfortable. That's not real.
Exactly. That every woman is a little bit gay.
[00:10:44] Speaker D: I just think it's more inclined.
[00:10:45] Speaker A: I think society.
[00:10:47] Speaker C: And that's why I don't think every woman is gay.
[00:10:50] Speaker A: I think it's more that has to do with society than women.
[00:10:52] Speaker B: Look, this goes back to what we.
[00:10:53] Speaker D: Were talking about before. If you was raised in a scenario where all you knew was gay shit, you had gay dads and all you knew was gay shit, you probably would be society.
[00:11:02] Speaker C: More than my argument.
[00:11:04] Speaker D: That's my argument.
[00:11:05] Speaker C: My argument is that women, just like men, want to see exciting things happen.
[00:11:09] Speaker D: Entertainment and somebody entertainment. But I think a woman is more willing to go see a woman than a dude is to go see a dude. Like a straight woman is willing to go see a woman versus a straight dude.
[00:11:19] Speaker C: I'm not looking at like that. I'm not looking at. She's going to see a woman. I'm looking at she's going to see somebody make a martini in their pussy.
[00:11:25] Speaker B: I've seen some weird shit that involved dudes on videos, right? Like, this is back in the day. I remember this motherfucking nailed his balls to a fucking wooden plank, right? Like the skin through the skin. And I was like, yo, that's wild, right? And I saw another motherfucker put hooks in his fucking nuts and lift some weights up off the ground and shit, right? And I was like, yo, that's fucking wild.
[00:11:46] Speaker C: Have you ever seen that dude who wraps his dick around that little pole like those indian dudes, and they stretch that shit way out?
[00:11:51] Speaker B: Oh, no. I saw another motherfucker shoot fucking aa batteries out his dick.
[00:11:57] Speaker C: Would you watch a dude get a ball peam hammer and smash the head of his dick with it?
[00:12:00] Speaker B: Oh, no.
[00:12:01] Speaker C: That's what I'm saying.
[00:12:07] Speaker B: That shit happened in real time. Hold on. The initial reaction was like, no. And then I was like, I feel.
[00:12:14] Speaker A: Like watching these things. I would feel their pain somehow.
[00:12:17] Speaker C: It ain't got shit to do with being gay. It's like, yo, this nigga is really.
[00:12:20] Speaker A: Going to smash his dick with a.
[00:12:21] Speaker C: Ball paint hammer, right?
You're not going to ever see that again. If you don't get it this time, you won't get a chance to see that ever again.
[00:12:28] Speaker B: I don't think it's any different than the shit that you were talking about, Pac. We used talking about that shit.
[00:12:31] Speaker C: First of all, we have to say to the listeners, Pac is in a moment of distress. You don't even know what to say.
[00:12:37] Speaker D: I'm just dumbfounded.
[00:12:39] Speaker B: But it's not much different than what you were talking about. That shit that you saw, or whatever you called it, I forget the name of it. Where the chick runs up and kicks the dude in. The.
[00:12:49] Speaker C: Cock and ball torture type.
[00:12:51] Speaker B: Yeah, cock and ball torture, right. So that's not that much different just because it's a girl doing it.
[00:12:55] Speaker D: No, just to be clear, just to be clear, when I saw that it was on Family guy, it was on a cartoon. It wasn't a porn.
The dad, Stan, his boss, there's been a couple episodes where he's been, like, with a hooker at the strip club, and that's what he pays him to do, right? And the one grabbed a bb gun and starts shooting his nuts and shit. That's where I got that from.
[00:13:17] Speaker C: So, in real life, I don't think.
[00:13:19] Speaker D: I can watch that in real life.
[00:13:20] Speaker C: In real life, there's a club, they have amateur night.
[00:13:24] Speaker B: Oh, I know.
[00:13:24] Speaker D: They do this shit in real life. I just don't think I can watch it.
[00:13:27] Speaker C: Okay, but if a nigga say, yo, he's about to get his ball shot with a bb gun, I might want to be there, bro.
[00:13:33] Speaker B: What's the COVID I might not go, but I'm definitely going to ask what the COVID is. Because if it's cheap enough, if you.
[00:13:40] Speaker C: Say, I have no interest in that, I feel like you're lying.
[00:13:43] Speaker D: Listen, you don't feel like I'm lying? Because I don't think I would really be interested.
[00:13:47] Speaker B: I've gone to Tijuana just to see shit that you can't see in America because of the shit that I'm a little twisted that way. I ain't gonna lie.
[00:13:55] Speaker C: So you're telling me if there was a woman, if there was a place like, yo, come to this club and this woman is gonna let this other lady throw darts at her titties, you wouldn't go.
[00:14:05] Speaker B: That? I probably would, though.
[00:14:06] Speaker C: Exactly. And I'm saying there's no different than a nigga saying his dick is out and they're going to throw darts at his dick. I'm still interested, probably what?
[00:14:13] Speaker D: Kind of interested in that, though.
[00:14:14] Speaker C: Why? Because you're looking at it as like, oh, that might be a dick I want to suck. Like, it don't have nothing to do with.
[00:14:19] Speaker D: Well, one, because I'm thinking about it, about the pain factor. And like Reg said, I think that that would kind of resonate. I would feel the pain.
[00:14:26] Speaker C: And so I don't want to hate women.
[00:14:30] Speaker D: I'm also kind of turned on by the Snm thing.
[00:14:33] Speaker C: I'm not turned on at all by a bitch with dart.
[00:14:39] Speaker D: I get turned on by the thought of tying a bitch up and doing some shit to her. For real? Yeah.
[00:14:45] Speaker A: Okay.
[00:14:46] Speaker B: Stretch them out.
[00:14:47] Speaker D: Look, I may be twisted in that way, but I get off on that kind of shit. So to me, seeing that happen with a chick, that might be different.
[00:14:56] Speaker C: Would you put a bitch in the.
[00:14:57] Speaker D: Iron maiden if we agreed? To a degree, and it's not like in their short spikes, maybe just a little pirk. Just a little pirk.
[00:15:11] Speaker C: I don't care. That's come out looking.
[00:15:12] Speaker D: But I'm very bad that way, though. And I know we're supposed to be. And the bad thing is too. And the bad thing is too. I know when it comes to my kinks, I'm not fair. And I know that I even call myself an equalist and all that kind of stuff because I believe that at the same things that go for dudes should go for females and blah, blah, blah, blah. But I know when it comes to my kicks, I'm not an equalist.
[00:15:30] Speaker B: I'm not at all. Did you hear that? That's not a real word.
[00:15:32] Speaker A: Equalist.
[00:15:33] Speaker B: No, blah, blah, blah, blah.
[00:15:34] Speaker D: Yeah, blah, blah, blah is not a real word.
[00:15:36] Speaker C: Let me ask you a question, though. So what's the difference between a fetish and a preference?
[00:15:41] Speaker D: A fetish and a preference.
[00:15:43] Speaker B: I don't know.
[00:15:44] Speaker C: So, like, say you're into.
[00:15:45] Speaker B: That's a good question.
[00:15:46] Speaker C: Into.
[00:15:46] Speaker B: You're into feet.
[00:15:47] Speaker C: Yeah.
[00:15:48] Speaker B: Because there's a lot of fetishes. I think maybe there's a preference.
[00:15:51] Speaker C: Why? I just like feet.
[00:15:52] Speaker D: What about a preference of a fetish?
[00:15:56] Speaker B: Is that what you mean? No, he's just asking because there's different.
[00:16:00] Speaker D: No, I'm saying there's a whole world there.
[00:16:02] Speaker C: Let me say you're.
[00:16:04] Speaker A: That's why I said feet. If you like feet, that's under fetish.
[00:16:06] Speaker C: But let's do it.
[00:16:07] Speaker A: But if you say, I like light skins, that's preference.
[00:16:10] Speaker C: Is it? Or is it a fetish? Because it.
[00:16:12] Speaker D: That's what I'm saying. That's a great question.
[00:16:14] Speaker C: Big girls. I like big girls.
[00:16:15] Speaker A: Right?
[00:16:17] Speaker C: That's a fetish. No, it's not. That's my preference.
[00:16:19] Speaker A: I don't like pretty bitches.
I think the reason why I said feet is fetish. Because everybody got feet.
[00:16:25] Speaker D: Is it a look or an action, though?
[00:16:26] Speaker C: Everybody got feet.
[00:16:27] Speaker B: Yeah.
[00:16:28] Speaker A: Unless if you.
[00:16:28] Speaker B: Not everybody.
[00:16:29] Speaker A: But I'm just saying most general able body people have feet.
[00:16:33] Speaker D: Are we talking about what we're attracted to or what type of action?
Because to me, that's how I see it.
[00:16:42] Speaker B: This is a can right here.
[00:16:44] Speaker D: More of something I'm interested in doing versus a preference is something I'm attracted to. Certain thing.
[00:16:51] Speaker C: But fetish is something you attract.
[00:16:52] Speaker B: You're right. You're attracted to your fetish.
[00:16:53] Speaker D: But I guess it can be in the same because if you only want to sleep with big girls or only with midgets, like, there's a name for that, I'm sure.
[00:17:01] Speaker C: Yeah, but I also just like midgets or big girls. That's just my preference.
I like short bitches and big bitches way better than I like skinny and tall.
[00:17:10] Speaker A: You see, for me, that's a preference.
It's not like him fucking the big girls is different than fucking a skinny girls. You just prefer to fuck big girls. But if I say I like feet, it's like when I'm fucking, I have to do something with the feet. That's to me.
[00:17:23] Speaker C: That's why.
[00:17:24] Speaker D: Let me ask you this, though. Let me ask you this though. So for example, right? Say I like redheads, right? Preference.
If you look at races of girls in general, right? I've said it before on here. I have a preference for white girls, right?
[00:17:37] Speaker B: Yeah.
[00:17:37] Speaker D: But even dumbing that down a little bit more. My preference, if I'm choosing, would be a redhead.
[00:17:42] Speaker B: Right?
[00:17:44] Speaker D: I'm thinking, like, to me, that's a preference.
[00:17:46] Speaker A: I'm with you.
[00:17:46] Speaker B: Right.
[00:17:47] Speaker C: But some people would say that's a fetish.
[00:17:49] Speaker B: It's a fetish.
[00:17:51] Speaker C: I feel like it would only be.
[00:17:52] Speaker A: A fetish if he's fucking a blonde and he told her put a Red are gone.
[00:17:55] Speaker B: Exactly.
[00:17:55] Speaker A: Or he's fucking a black chicken, told her to put a red.
[00:17:57] Speaker D: Like if a redhead, that's when it's a fetish. And that's all I'm willing to do. And I'm not willing to do it with you because you're not. But if you make that change, we can do that. To me, that's a fetish.
[00:18:07] Speaker A: Yeah, I think he just likes redhead.
[00:18:08] Speaker C: All that sounds like a preference to me. Everything.
We agree.
[00:18:12] Speaker D: You can really make that argument.
[00:18:13] Speaker C: Either way, none of it is fetish.
[00:18:15] Speaker A: So you think everything is under preferences?
[00:18:17] Speaker C: Yeah, I think the whole idea that.
[00:18:18] Speaker D: Your preference is your fetish, then fire crotches, boy.
[00:18:22] Speaker A: What's the definition?
[00:18:24] Speaker C: I don't know, but I don't think fetishes are real. I think that's bullshit.
[00:18:26] Speaker D: Just to me, that's the difference. To me, the preference is what I'm attracted to and the fetish is what I like to do. So for example, my preference would be redheaded white girls, but my fetish would be like blowjobs.
That would be my fetish. Like, I have a thing like that.
[00:18:43] Speaker B: I think I got it. I think a fetish is something that is less socially accepted. Right? Like it's not universally accepted by everybody or endorsed by everyone. That was what makes that a fetish. A preference is something that you can find in any standard.
Any demographic is going to have this, right? Like, is like big people, skinny people, big asses, flat asses, big titties. Those are not necessarily fetishes. Those are just preferences that everybody you can find is going to fall in line in one of those categories. I think a fetish, to me, now that we're talking about it, is something that is an outlier of something. Like not everybody's into feet, right? And not everybody's into big boobs, but everybody's into boobs, right? So it's either big boobs or little boobs. So then that makes it a preference. It's not like you're saying I like big feet or I like small feet.
It's unique. That itself is not common. So I think that's what kind of would put it in a fetish category for me. Redheads are. Who fucking doesn't like a redhead? Right. Come on.
Let's be clear whether it's a red bone, whether it's white or fucking whatever. Fucking the red.
[00:20:02] Speaker C: That's weird you say that because there are a lot of people who feel like the word ginger is a derogatory remark and that people don't like redheads because they call them Ginger.
[00:20:13] Speaker B: They must have never watched fucking Gilligan's island.
[00:20:19] Speaker C: Why?
[00:20:19] Speaker B: Because Ginger was that, like. Again, like Ginger was that bitch. She was. She was the fucking bombshell and she was Ginger, and she was a. And what does that do with anything? Ginger. We're just talking about gingers.
[00:20:33] Speaker C: Is that where that comes from?
[00:20:35] Speaker B: I'm not sure, but she's definitely.
[00:20:36] Speaker D: I have no proof, but I have a theory that it comes from that.
[00:20:41] Speaker B: She'S the first ginger.
[00:20:42] Speaker D: Because she was bad.
[00:20:44] Speaker B: Of course. She was a sex pot.
[00:20:46] Speaker C: Yeah.
[00:20:46] Speaker D: No, she was bad. That's what I'm saying.
[00:20:49] Speaker B: What you talk about French.
[00:20:50] Speaker C: Reggie, have you ever seen Ginger from Gilligan's island? Do you know what? Gilligan's island.
[00:20:53] Speaker A: I've heard of it, but that's why I'm googling it right now so I.
[00:20:56] Speaker C: Can see how Gilligan's island?
[00:20:57] Speaker B: Yeah.
[00:20:58] Speaker A: So I can look, the girl that.
[00:20:59] Speaker C: He'S niggas know the song?
[00:21:01] Speaker B: Yeah.
[00:21:01] Speaker D: Fuck yeah, I know the song. Because my mom used to sing that shit all the time, and she would replace all the characters in it with her grandkids.
[00:21:08] Speaker C: Oh, wow.
[00:21:09] Speaker D: So I know it very well.
[00:21:11] Speaker A: She was the first redhead that was, like, bad in media.
[00:21:15] Speaker B: Yeah. Well, so again, is she bad?
[00:21:17] Speaker C: Prince? Is she bad?
[00:21:18] Speaker D: I don't know about first. Right.
[00:21:20] Speaker B: So again, her name was Ginger. Right. And she was a showgirl. Right. So her thing was all. She exuded sex.
[00:21:28] Speaker D: It dripped.
[00:21:29] Speaker B: Right. So the other chick, she wasn't bad, Marianne. But she was a farmer type of girl, next door type of chick. But Ginger was the sex pot. Know was out there probably doing that damn thing. And maybe that's kind of where I got that preference from. Right. Because I'm right there with you, man.
If I had my druthers. Is that the right part? Yeah, I think it is.
Give me a good redhead. And again, it could be red bone. It could be redhead. I just think that they're just a little bit different.
[00:22:04] Speaker C: As long as it's not black. Can I ask you all the question?
[00:22:06] Speaker B: Red bone is a black.
[00:22:07] Speaker A: What's the difference between red bone and yellow bone? I never could the color but I always look at them both as light.
[00:22:13] Speaker C: What's the undertone of their skin? The tint? Is there a yellow tint or a red tint?
[00:22:18] Speaker B: Okay. And then red bones usually have red hair, right?
[00:22:22] Speaker A: I'm talking about the black, red bones. No.
[00:22:24] Speaker B: Yeah, the black red bones.
[00:22:26] Speaker A: Really?
[00:22:27] Speaker B: Yeah. I don't know. What are you pointing.
[00:22:28] Speaker D: What he said is correct.
[00:22:29] Speaker B: What do you mean?
[00:22:30] Speaker A: No?
[00:22:30] Speaker D: So again, the ones you're talking about, we called those turf work.
[00:22:35] Speaker B: What.
[00:22:39] Speaker A: Turf work?
[00:22:40] Speaker B: I don't know.
[00:22:42] Speaker D: When you see them girls walking the.
[00:22:43] Speaker C: Block, girl that dyed red hair.
[00:22:46] Speaker B: No, I'm talking about born with.
[00:22:49] Speaker D: Are you talking about born with?
[00:22:50] Speaker B: Yes.
[00:22:50] Speaker C: No. There aren't enough people that are black that have red.
That's not a thing.
[00:22:55] Speaker A: There's a few of them, but that's.
[00:22:57] Speaker C: Not like Blake Griffin.
[00:22:58] Speaker B: There is a thing.
[00:23:00] Speaker C: Right.
[00:23:00] Speaker A: I'm telling you, it's not like.
[00:23:02] Speaker B: What are you talking about? In this country, I'm sure the answer is yes.
[00:23:07] Speaker D: Oh, yeah.
[00:23:08] Speaker C: Here it's about the undertone of your skin. Because there's a difference between somebody who has a yellow undertone or a red undertone.
[00:23:15] Speaker D: That's what I'm aware of.
[00:23:16] Speaker B: I was born with red hair. I had red hair.
[00:23:18] Speaker C: You're not a red bone because of that, though.
[00:23:20] Speaker B: I don't know. I'm not.
[00:23:21] Speaker C: They might just call you red.
[00:23:22] Speaker B: They did call me.
[00:23:23] Speaker D: Where's the red head now, Jamie Mac?
[00:23:24] Speaker B: You know, hair's changed.
[00:23:25] Speaker C: Hair color.
You don't believe. Where's that now, Jamie Mac? What happened to those?
[00:23:31] Speaker A: Because they say that if you have red hair, that's a strong gene.
[00:23:35] Speaker C: So it's like no other way around. It's a recessive, a weak gene. Yeah.
[00:23:40] Speaker B: So my daughter was born blonde, and then her hair turned to not blonde. So she was a blonde up until I think, like four or five, and then she turned into a brunette. So just because you.
[00:23:53] Speaker A: Or dirty blonde.
[00:23:54] Speaker B: Brunette. Okay. So again, I don't know what to tell you.
[00:23:58] Speaker C: Friends don't believe nothing.
[00:24:00] Speaker B: He didn't believe shitty nothing.
[00:24:01] Speaker A: Right?
[00:24:02] Speaker C: He's like, I don't believe you, dirty blonde.
[00:24:04] Speaker B: So dirty blonde. Let's be kid. Strawberry blonde is red.
[00:24:07] Speaker C: Yeah. I don't know what is not red.
[00:24:09] Speaker B: Yeah.
[00:24:10] Speaker D: That's a very deceiving title, though, because I knew a girl and I called her red and her shit was red as fuck. And it was strawberry blonde. That was the color that she was dying.
[00:24:19] Speaker B: It. Yeah.
[00:24:19] Speaker C: No, speaking of that, you know how black folks, or the woke black folks are smart melanated people and isn't that.
[00:24:25] Speaker B: Yeah.
[00:24:25] Speaker C: You know that everybody has Melanin, right?
[00:24:27] Speaker B: Yeah.
[00:24:27] Speaker C: Okay. I just wondered, did most black people know that?
[00:24:30] Speaker B: No, they don't.
[00:24:31] Speaker C: Yeah.
[00:24:34] Speaker B: Okay, let's not do it. We're going to do that episode.
[00:24:36] Speaker C: It's all melanated, right? And when it's no longer melanated, it's gray.
[00:24:40] Speaker B: Right.
[00:24:40] Speaker C: So everybody has Melanin in their system. Everybody.
[00:24:44] Speaker B: Unless you're albino or what's his name? Who turned fucking silver? Fucking. What was his name?
[00:24:50] Speaker C: Is that a real.
[00:24:54] Speaker A: Baseball player?
[00:24:56] Speaker B: I love when you do that.
The actor, what was his name? Not chubby Chase.
[00:25:00] Speaker C: We're not talking about a real person. Steve Martin.
[00:25:03] Speaker B: Steve Martin, yeah. Steve Martin is fucking. His shit's been silver since.
[00:25:07] Speaker C: But prior to that, though, right?
[00:25:09] Speaker B: No, he wasn't. He definitely had.
[00:25:11] Speaker C: There is not a person on this earth, unless they're albino, who is not melanated. So it's so melanated people that. My melanated people.
It's just so annoying.
[00:25:21] Speaker D: The black woke folks.
[00:25:22] Speaker B: Is that what you said?
[00:25:23] Speaker D: That's what that shit is. That shit's annoying.
[00:25:25] Speaker C: And. Yeah, never mind. I'm not even going to get. Mac is enjoying it too much.
[00:25:29] Speaker B: I'm not even going to enjoy. Me, too. I was about to say we could have that episode. We could talk about these motherfuckers.
[00:25:37] Speaker C: Because for the new year, you can.
[00:25:39] Speaker D: Call me Uncle Ruckus and shit.
Don't trust them.
[00:25:47] Speaker B: You know, it's funny because Montoya, that's his fucking fantasy football team name. Dim new niggas.
[00:26:00] Speaker D: I like how you spelled it, too, because you said new, like kn e w. You're right.
[00:26:05] Speaker B: Who's in the finals? Do we know anything?
[00:26:08] Speaker C: You all suck.
[00:26:09] Speaker D: I stopped paying attention.
[00:26:11] Speaker B: I got robbed.
[00:26:12] Speaker C: Yes.
[00:26:13] Speaker A: How'd you get robbed?
[00:26:14] Speaker B: Because of fucking. So I lost to fucking TJ because I didn't put a quarterback in and I lost by two points. And then I fucking.
[00:26:24] Speaker A: So you ain't got robbed.
[00:26:24] Speaker C: You made a mistake.
[00:26:26] Speaker D: But it sounded like he made a mistake.
[00:26:27] Speaker B: I robbed myself. So what?
[00:26:29] Speaker D: What happened to Puka Nakula? How did you not have Puka no more?
[00:26:33] Speaker B: Because I traded him for. That's how I got robbed. I traded him for Justin Herbert and then Justin Herbert went. Broke his hand the last game of the season and I lost the.
[00:26:40] Speaker C: Sound like you just lost like a man.
[00:26:42] Speaker B: No, and then I lost.
[00:26:42] Speaker D: Sounds like a poor decision was.
[00:26:44] Speaker C: No, he was killing decisions like a man.
[00:26:47] Speaker B: Nigga, you can't predict injury.
[00:26:49] Speaker C: And then I lost the fucking lose like a man.
[00:26:51] Speaker B: I lost to fucking what's his name?
I lost to King Kunta by four points. He only scored me three.
[00:26:59] Speaker C: So how does the work? Four people or six? Okay.
[00:27:02] Speaker D: Out of four, Sean Diggs got me.
[00:27:04] Speaker B: What?
[00:27:04] Speaker D: Six?
[00:27:05] Speaker C: So who are the six?
[00:27:06] Speaker B: Let me see right now. I'm about to see.
[00:27:08] Speaker C: Give them a shout out here on the show.
[00:27:09] Speaker B: Well, no, it's the finals week now, so it's the last two. Let's see who's in this bitch.
[00:27:14] Speaker C: Well, this would be last week because this is coming out next week.
[00:27:16] Speaker B: Oh, yeah. So the championship.
Someone's been crowned.
[00:27:20] Speaker D: Congratulations to whoever it is.
[00:27:26] Speaker B: Congratulations to you.
[00:27:27] Speaker D: Are the winner.
[00:27:28] Speaker C: Is Cam wall in it?
[00:27:29] Speaker B: Yep. Cam wall should be in it. Unless he lost this week. Let me take a look. Playoff bracket.
All right.
It is Cam wall against Darice. God damn.
[00:27:42] Speaker C: Okay.
[00:27:42] Speaker B: Fucking Reese made that shit with that old boot.
[00:27:45] Speaker C: Nor is that same last Houston coach, 45.
[00:27:48] Speaker B: Boy, look at that. Versus cousins. Makes dozens. And he did like I did. I'm in the finals this week, too. With a seven and seven.
[00:27:58] Speaker C: You did.
[00:27:58] Speaker B: No, I'm in two other leagues, and they're more buy in, so there's better pot. So. Come on, bro.
[00:28:04] Speaker C: We don't care that you're making more money somewhere else. You didn't win this one. This is all that matters.
[00:28:09] Speaker D: You're saying that because he's basically trying to tell you that he wasn't taking this one as seriously.
[00:28:13] Speaker B: I'm not trying to say that. I really was. I just wish this was a deep league. This is a 14 team league. Most people don't play in 14 team leagues because even Weston even didn't want to play in a 14 league.
[00:28:23] Speaker C: Lose like a man, bro.
[00:28:24] Speaker B: Stop it, man.
[00:28:25] Speaker C: Lose like a fucking man.
[00:28:26] Speaker D: Say it again.
[00:28:27] Speaker C: Lose like a goddamn, bro. Just take the Mac.
[00:28:31] Speaker D: Been over here making excuses for, like.
[00:28:32] Speaker B: The last five minutes.
[00:28:33] Speaker A: You said he got robbed. And then I'm thinking it was something that happened, like last year.
[00:28:38] Speaker D: System screwed him or something.
[00:28:40] Speaker A: Like a player got a heart attack in the middle of a game.
[00:28:42] Speaker C: No, mammy called Cam wall and get him on the show.
[00:28:44] Speaker A: He was like, no, I just traded my player.
[00:28:48] Speaker D: I didn't put in a quarterback.
[00:28:49] Speaker B: All I'm saying is that nigga was seven to seven and he's in the finals. Okay, what are you? Seven to seven.
[00:28:55] Speaker C: But you're not. Why?
[00:28:56] Speaker B: Because I didn't.
[00:28:58] Speaker D: Points.
[00:28:58] Speaker B: Points?
[00:28:59] Speaker D: Yeah, because it wasn't snowflake. Seven to seven, too.
[00:29:02] Speaker B: Yeah, there was a bunch of people at seven to seven.
[00:29:04] Speaker C: So something separated you guys?
[00:29:06] Speaker B: Yeah, and it was points.
Derise, go ahead, man. Put this motherfuck out his misery.
[00:29:11] Speaker C: Oh, man, don't be that guy.
[00:29:13] Speaker B: Yeah, I'm going for the underdog. I'm always rooting for the underdog.
[00:29:17] Speaker D: It's kind of cool, though, because they came up. They came up.
[00:29:20] Speaker B: Cousins makes dozen. He just talks shit.
[00:29:23] Speaker C: He's all kind of like you.
[00:29:24] Speaker B: Yeah, we both Eagles fans, too. That's what makes it bad, because we root for the same people. And I don't like his success, though, even though he.
[00:29:38] Speaker D: What do they call the crowd? Ads in the bucket.
[00:29:40] Speaker B: I got hateration. I got some hateration in there. No matter. All in this affiliation, in this dance. Arie give a shit. Yeah, but no, I don't really give a shit who wins, tell you the truth. Because I ain't in it.
[00:29:55] Speaker A: All right.
I was talking to some friends the other day about, like, you got friends? Yeah, we were just talking about how the difference are they straight each four years? Because I have older cousins that are four years older than me. Right.
[00:30:09] Speaker C: Are they friends or cousins? What are we talking about?
[00:30:10] Speaker A: It was a group. It was a group of. Between cousins and friends.
[00:30:13] Speaker C: Right.
[00:30:13] Speaker A: It was a mixture.
[00:30:14] Speaker B: Homie, lover, friend.
[00:30:15] Speaker A: So we were talking about how, like I said, I have a cousin that's four years older than me, and the difference in mindset between me and him are not that vast. But I have another cousin that's four years younger than me, and we're completely different. And then there's another four years younger than that. So we were just talking about how.
[00:30:32] Speaker B: Like, is it the years or the person? That's what I would want to ask.
[00:30:38] Speaker A: We was talking about the years because of the generation.
[00:30:41] Speaker B: So you think that the four years after you is so different than the four years?
[00:30:45] Speaker A: Yeah.
So I'm 94, my other cousin, 1990, but I think 94 and 98, especially the 98 2002. That one is crazy.
[00:30:56] Speaker B: Right?
[00:30:57] Speaker A: The 98 2002. That four year difference is crazy.
[00:31:02] Speaker B: It's weird that you say that, because I was talking about that with someone, and it's like, the difference is that I think we were into shit that kids nowadays aren't necessarily into the same things, like partying. Right. We would go and drinking and doing those. That was our entertainment. Right. I think that was the kind of the things that we did in our spare time is if you weren't at home, then you did it, you went outside and you weren't supervised. And because you weren't supervised, it led to other decisions. Right. Which is being out at the baseball field drinking, or if you had people at parties. I don't know a lot of kids now that go to parties on a regular. That was a weekly thing when I was growing up, every weekend there was a party that you were going to go to or find something to go to. And in that party was going to usually be, especially if there were no parents around, drinking, smoking, some of that type of stuff. The kids nowadays, they don't seem to have that same desire.
[00:32:13] Speaker D: You're right, though, because I actually tell these stories to my kids, and they're just like, dumbfounded that this is the kind of thing we did.
[00:32:20] Speaker C: Yeah.
[00:32:21] Speaker A: I think the problem with these kids now, they got too much information because they just know too much random stuff.
[00:32:29] Speaker C: And then they don't know how to.
[00:32:30] Speaker B: Computerize it because do what to it.
[00:32:33] Speaker A: I created word computerized.
[00:32:35] Speaker B: Okay. All right. Just wanted to make sure I was on.
[00:32:38] Speaker A: It's like when you were twelve, regardless if things were bad at the house, you never said you were depressed. But now we have, like, legit twelve year olds.
[00:32:47] Speaker D: Like, we didn't have social media either.
[00:32:51] Speaker B: So this is amazing.
[00:32:53] Speaker A: That's where I'm going.
[00:32:54] Speaker D: But what I was going to say, I was going to let you say it all first. But what I was going to say is that every generation, there's always something new. And that new generation comes in the world with this as a norm. Whereas the generation before learns about this thing and it becomes part of their life, sort of thing. For example, right?
[00:33:13] Speaker B: Television.
[00:33:14] Speaker D: Television is a great example, right?
Whereas there's people that came up before television, they did different things than people that had television, right? Because people that had television, I mean, they spent time watching the television, right? Whereas when people that didn't have that television, they spent that time doing something else. And it's the same thing. Just like everybody has personal devices now that have this access to this endless, vast river of knowledge that they can sit there and scroll for literally hours and hours a day. You know what I'm saying? Whereas our generation didn't have that, so we did different things.
[00:33:52] Speaker A: But what happens is, okay, your generation didn't have that, but because you lived.
[00:33:56] Speaker D: A life, you had video games, though.
[00:33:57] Speaker A: But because you live a life and.
[00:33:58] Speaker B: You had to go to arcade and.
[00:33:59] Speaker A: You understand how society works. So when you see that information on the Internet, you may analyze it differently. But if you were born with that information since day one in the palm of your hands, you don't know how to necessarily process that information. So you might take every information that you see as law. And that's the biggest problem with these kids now.
[00:34:17] Speaker B: No. So let's go back to this, right? Because again, when I was coming up, not all television was color, right? There was still black and white television, right? And before that, there wasn't even televisions, right? And I remember being young and people nicknaming it and the things that they would call it, like the boob tube or the idiot box, right? Those were the things that. And I don't get it. I feel like I'm getting information. I got schoolhouse rock on this motherfucker.
There's fucking sesame street. There's shit educational on here. So for it to be called these derogatory names like the boob tube or the idiot box. But what I think people that were around before television saw was how it magnetized and got people to stop doing actual things. Again, this is what he's just talking about. You used to do other things before you sat your ass down and just watched this thing incessantly for hours on end, right, in whatever it put out. Even back there was a time where tv shut off, right?
At a certain time, it was off the air. It just went off the air and you just got static in that sound and it was over. You ain't nothing else on until the morning.
[00:35:34] Speaker C: Cartoons came on three.
[00:35:36] Speaker B: Right?
[00:35:37] Speaker C: Saturday or on the weekday before school, after school. There was only, like a few hours there. There was no cartoon network. There was no thing that kids had all the time.
[00:35:46] Speaker D: I remember when Cartoon Network came out.
[00:35:48] Speaker B: I do too.
[00:35:50] Speaker D: I was dumbfounded, dude. I spent so many hours in front of tv because I'm like, this is all the time.
[00:35:54] Speaker A: Yeah.
[00:35:55] Speaker B: Fucked up my.
[00:35:56] Speaker C: So what happens now?
[00:35:57] Speaker A: When you have a group of kids that grew up with this device and then all they get is just random information and random information, and then you put them in a social setting. They don't know how to talk to people.
[00:36:09] Speaker D: Exactly. Just like now, right?
[00:36:10] Speaker A: Yeah.
[00:36:11] Speaker D: We talk about this all the time when we were growing up, right? I don't know. You can probably relate to this, but I'm talking about you all when we're growing up and shit, right? Like, if we went to a party or something like that, where there was, like parents and kids, right? The parents would come in, the kids would gravitate somewhere the fuck else, away from the parents. We would hook up with each other and we'd get into shit. And the parents, they go do what they doing or whatnot. Somebody might come check on the kids at some point or whatnot, right. Nowadays, these kids don't fucking leave your side and shit.
[00:36:38] Speaker C: Yeah.
[00:36:39] Speaker A: They actually be like, mom, when the.
[00:36:40] Speaker B: Fuck are we going home?
[00:36:41] Speaker D: They're kicking in with you the whole time and there's all these kids and they're not talking to each other because it's awkward. They don't know what to do. They don't know what to say to each other. Like, it's the craziest shit.
[00:36:51] Speaker A: The reason why I was bringing all this up, because we always talk about how we're programmed, right?
[00:36:55] Speaker D: Yeah.
[00:36:56] Speaker A: But now I've been trying to figure out what's the next programming? Is it just because we're malleable? We accept anything now? Everything could be purple. Everything could be you, could be whatever you want. But my thing is, I'm just trying to figure out what's the end goal.
[00:37:10] Speaker B: Because the end goal of what?
[00:37:12] Speaker D: The end goal is to feed the machine.
[00:37:15] Speaker B: Okay.
[00:37:15] Speaker A: What happens when you, like.
[00:37:16] Speaker D: You've seen the Matrix, right? You've seen the Matrix, right?
[00:37:20] Speaker C: Yeah.
[00:37:21] Speaker D: All the shit that happens in the program, all that doesn't matter. It's just to make us happy. So all the shit styles and whatever, all this kind of. I guess it's all the detail, I.
[00:37:29] Speaker A: Guess, for me, like you said in the beginning, you said, every generation is always. My thing is. Yes. If we go by the graph of every generation or every time these things get worse and worse and worse, eventually that worse and worse is going to be at the worst it's ever been and we can't bounce back.
[00:37:44] Speaker B: It's always the worst it's ever been.
[00:37:45] Speaker A: Yeah, but eventually you're going to really reach that point where there's no point of return or there's like, we got to hold up. What's going on?
[00:37:53] Speaker D: Where's the rock bottom?
[00:37:54] Speaker A: We got to reset this shit.
[00:37:55] Speaker B: Well, it's been reset before.
[00:37:57] Speaker D: It's a cycle, right?
[00:37:59] Speaker B: There's been resets before.
[00:38:01] Speaker A: So are you saying now we're about to start a new reset?
[00:38:03] Speaker B: I don't know if it's about to start. And I think that's what's happening, right? Like, you guys are doing it to me because I don't know if it's fate. You know what I mean? Because I've just seen this shit in a movie, fucking tomorrowland, and where they were fucking talking about the despair of the world, right? Like, where he knew when the world was going to end, right? And it was only really because the signal from Tomorrowland was being fed down with this information to people that it became a self fulfilling prophecy, right? Like the radio waves of this demise and doom were being fed into us subliminally and because of that, you talk about these twelve year olds that are depressed, right? It's like you don't feel like there's any hope, which then if you don't feel like there's any hope, you don't behave like there's any hope. So then therefore you create a future that is hopeless, right? And it just is kind of a steamrolling, self fulfilling prophecy. And I think either you are or you ain't, right? If you are a person that is into that, right? Like, if you think that the world is like, they talk about, they did a poll and these young people and their fucking worst things that they fear about the future is climate control, right? Like, this is climate change. It's like, oh, yeah, information. This is what's going to kill us all, right? This is the worst thing that's happening to the planet is climate change. I'm like, again, we had a whole dust bowl, bitch. Again, there was fucking nothing from fucking the midwest to the east but fucking dirt and sand for a minute. I grew up in a town back in the day, when I was a little kid, we had a fucking, like, eight year drought where it didn't rain for eight years and it would get to 115.
So it was hot as shit. And I fucking rode my bike and partied and kicked it and did everything else because I didn't have that fucking good time, bro.
[00:40:01] Speaker D: I had a great time. We didn't know this was the worst thing going on at the time.
[00:40:05] Speaker B: Just what it was just fucking live, right? But again, I think you're right because again, but it's back to that tomorrowland shit, right? They're being bombarded with this despair shit, right? Like this fucking nonstop fucking doom and gloom that makes them feel like there is no reason to fight, right? Like there's no real reason to live. What's the hope for? Like, they're getting the hope sucked out of them. So then, therefore, if you are the future and you're already fucking hopeless, then that kind of makes the future hopeless just by fucking proxy. There's no way that the future can't be hopeless if the motherfuckers that are going to be leading the future are already starting off hopeless by all the dumb shit they've seen.
[00:40:45] Speaker A: Yeah, but the information thing is, it's starting to bother me because I see it happening now because it's election season and how the shit Denver, Colorado just did with Trump. You're not supposed to do this in America.
[00:40:56] Speaker C: It's illegal. But how are they doing it? They're not. It's stupid. It's going to be turned over. It's dumb. There has to be a republican and democratic choice. You can't have just a democratic ticket. That's illegal.
[00:41:07] Speaker A: But you see a bunch of information about how they can do it. It's starting to happen. And there's this video I'm about to play.
[00:41:13] Speaker D: That's the problem with the Internet, though, is you can say whatever you want.
[00:41:16] Speaker B: Listen, this is the thing, right? And I feel like they do this shit in plain sight. And it's like, whatever, right? When the fucking Internet was invented, right? We don't call it what it was when it was called. When it was invented, right?
The World Wide Web. And what is a web? A web just fucking ensnare something, right? Like, at least the webs that I know of, like a spider web or any other web, is just something that gets something else ensnared in it.
[00:41:41] Speaker C: No, what kind of web? You know, that's not what a web is.
[00:41:44] Speaker B: What is a web?
[00:41:45] Speaker C: A web is just interconnectivity between the elements.
[00:41:47] Speaker B: Well, not a spider web.
[00:41:48] Speaker A: Spider web is also.
[00:41:50] Speaker C: Spider web can be anywhere on that web. And when your ass lights up on it, it sends a signal to him wherever he's at.
[00:41:56] Speaker B: But you also get stuck in web.
[00:41:57] Speaker C: But that's irrelevant.
[00:41:59] Speaker D: He's talking about the hardcore, the name web and what it is. That's what he's talking about.
[00:42:06] Speaker B: Most webs that I'm familiar with are spider webs.
[00:42:08] Speaker D: I get what you. Most spider webs, you're right, are used.
[00:42:11] Speaker B: To fucking trap their fucking victims, right?
Sure. But again, that's what they use. The spiders in my house, they post up by the lights. Why? Because that's where all the fucking moths come, right? And they fucking put their web up there and that shit flies into it and it gets stuck. And then they just, like you said, it lets them know that they're there and they come down and they fuck. Can have dinner, but it's the tool to ensnare fucking dinner. They're not out fucking with a fucking fishing pole, catching moths. They use the web to catch the moth. And so the web is used to trap things. So I don't know, at least spider webs.
[00:42:46] Speaker D: I mean, like I said, he's writing the technical name, but you're not wrong.
[00:42:50] Speaker A: I see the analogy. He's trying to.
[00:42:52] Speaker D: I see exactly what he's saying. I mean, think about it. We literally use systems like Facebook and things in order to do whatever the fuck it is that we do with them. But it's been clearly stated why these things were created. They were to take your data. That's literally why they're created.
[00:43:08] Speaker B: And not even only that, but people.
[00:43:09] Speaker D: Don'T give a shit about that no more.
[00:43:11] Speaker B: You just talked about motherfucker scrolling constantly for hours, right? You don't think that the year is fucking trapped in that moment.
[00:43:22] Speaker D: I love the name because it's not a good thing.
[00:43:25] Speaker A: Because that misinformation shit is. I didn't know it was at that level. I didn't know it was that easy.
[00:43:32] Speaker C: I'm plugged in all the way up, down one.
[00:43:34] Speaker B: Yeah.
[00:43:35] Speaker C: Okay.
[00:43:39] Speaker B: Nice. You hit play? Yeah, you got to hit the. You see where the speaker is and it's got the little line through it.
[00:43:45] Speaker A: Everything is playing, guys playing.
[00:43:48] Speaker B: I don't know.
Maybe you need an Android.
Yeah, you and technology.
[00:44:01] Speaker A: The volume is up. The guy's talking.
[00:44:08] Speaker B: Unless if the back end of the.
[00:44:10] Speaker A: Cord is not plugged in.
[00:44:19] Speaker B: Maybe you had it upside down.
[00:44:22] Speaker A: Bring the volume up.
[00:44:23] Speaker B: See if it.
[00:44:24] Speaker A: Because you just reconnected.
[00:44:27] Speaker B: I don't. I don't know which buttons on an iPhone work up and down. That kind of closed your screen. Whatever.
[00:44:34] Speaker D: You said you don't know how the buttons work up and down.
[00:44:37] Speaker C: Try playing something else. Like try play a YouTube video or something.
See if anything else plays. I don't know what's going on.
[00:44:44] Speaker B: You got any music on your phone? What kind of music are you listening to?
[00:44:50] Speaker C: I'll go to the music.
Not in the same app, obviously.
[00:44:56] Speaker B: What's next up on your playlist?
Tells us a lot.
[00:45:00] Speaker C: You could just send it to me and I'll play it.
[00:45:02] Speaker B: This tells you a lot about.
[00:45:04] Speaker A: I was listening to Nick Grant, by the way.
[00:45:06] Speaker B: Who?
[00:45:07] Speaker A: Nick Grant.
[00:45:08] Speaker B: Is he related to Ed Sheeran?
[00:45:09] Speaker D: Why are you getting it set up? What are they talking about?
[00:45:13] Speaker A: It was a guy that was talking about how easily you can just create misinformation.
[00:45:19] Speaker B: Shit.
[00:45:20] Speaker D: Go on the Internet and say something.
[00:45:21] Speaker A: I see your instagram. Be honest.
[00:45:23] Speaker C: Oh, I don't know what that is. You should have just sent me the text.
[00:45:25] Speaker B: Oh, yeah. I said be honest. A lot of Instagram shit.
[00:45:29] Speaker D: It's probably just about as effective as sending me Instagram shit.
[00:45:32] Speaker C: I don't even know how to check it.
[00:45:34] Speaker B: You got to go to a Snapchat.
[00:45:37] Speaker A: I sent you via text as well.
[00:45:39] Speaker C: Okay, yeah, I can do that. I can do text.
[00:45:43] Speaker D: I love when I hear other people like me send me a text message for real.
[00:45:49] Speaker C: All right, let's see what this is.
[00:45:50] Speaker B: Am I on TikTok.
[00:45:51] Speaker E: I paid the media to create a fake news story and it went viral. This all started on five, where I literally just typed in r article and found a whole load of different listings from different websites, all offering to post your article to their website for a fee. Which made me curious of how much they actually cared about what they published. And could I publish something that isn't actually true? So I wrote a whole article about Pedro Pascal playing Steve in the upcoming Minecraft movie, which is fake. He's not going to be in the Minecraft movie. I made it all up. And to put that even more to test, I literally put my name in the article. As you can see, surrounding Sonic the Hedgehog 2020, directed by George Mason. That's me. And I never directed Sonic the hedgehog, but to my amazement, they didn't care. And they published the full article. A, saying Pedro Pascal was going to be Steve in the Minecraft movie, and b, that I directed Sonic the Hedgehog. This cost me about $130, but it was worth it because you won't believe what happened next. Suddenly, so many different news outlets started reporting on this exact story that, as I said, is not true. And they were spreading my fake rumor. It literally got to the point where Pedro Pascal was added to the IMDb listing.
[00:46:40] Speaker D: Literally.
[00:46:40] Speaker E: As of right now, if you google the Minecraft movie and go down to car, it literally says Pedro Pascal as Steve. See if this video teach you anything. Don't trust everything you see online because I could be the one behind it. And that's how I paid the media to create a fake news story.
[00:46:53] Speaker C: And look what's next.
Here's my problem.
[00:47:01] Speaker B: Send that to smooth.
[00:47:02] Speaker C: I know. Smooth has got my algorithm so messed up now everything is midgets, man. I scroll up in that video French Reggie sent me, and it's this midget, and she's jamming like a motherfucker. She is killing this bro.
[00:47:13] Speaker B: You sent that one video, and he really was in love. He like, that'd be sexy to him. So is that a fetish or a preference?
[00:47:18] Speaker C: I don't know.
[00:47:22] Speaker B: That's a fetish. Because everybody's not into midgets. Everybody would not universally be like, everybody's.
[00:47:27] Speaker C: Not into light skinned chicks.
[00:47:29] Speaker D: Not everybody's in the boob.
[00:47:31] Speaker C: This chick told me one time. This chick told me one time she could not date me because she don't like the way light skinned people smell when they sweat.
And she was dead ass serious. This is why we didn't and we did not date.
[00:47:41] Speaker B: That's weirdest.
[00:47:42] Speaker D: You can't date somebody like that.
[00:47:45] Speaker A: They said a fetish is a form of sexual desire.
[00:47:48] Speaker D: That's where I was going to say to me, fetish is related to a.
[00:47:51] Speaker A: Sexual desire in which gratification is strongly linked to a particular object or activity or part of the body other than.
[00:47:58] Speaker B: The sexual organ, like little legs. Is that a part of the body?
[00:48:02] Speaker A: I think the midget is the whole entire body. Right? I think that's what.
[00:48:05] Speaker D: It just depends. But it's a particular type of body type of thing, maybe. I don't know. Like me particularly. I have a mouth fetish because I'm deaf.
[00:48:12] Speaker C: You have a mouth fetish? Yeah.
[00:48:14] Speaker A: What do you mean? What do you mean you have a mouth fetish? Like, you like to kiss a lot. What does that mean?
[00:48:19] Speaker D: I can make or break a chick's attraction based on how her mouth looks.
[00:48:24] Speaker C: Like some guys who don't like women with bad feet.
[00:48:27] Speaker B: Yeah.
[00:48:27] Speaker D: I was about to say, dude, what's his name on boomerang?
[00:48:29] Speaker B: Yeah.
[00:48:29] Speaker C: You don't fuck her feet. Right.
So what is it?
[00:48:33] Speaker A: Like, dick sucking lips? It's good. But if it's, like, white people lips.
[00:48:36] Speaker C: Because you say you like white girls.
[00:48:37] Speaker D: White girls, bro, we could talk about this for a long time. There's so many things. But I want to hear it, uncle.
[00:48:43] Speaker C: Because white girls really don't got lips like that.
[00:48:45] Speaker D: It's not even about thickness of lips. Even though I do love some good old dsls, except for the ones that are hella big and.
[00:48:50] Speaker A: Yeah, that's the surgery.
[00:48:51] Speaker D: Fake those. No, none of that.
[00:48:54] Speaker A: That's Miss Piggy.
[00:48:54] Speaker D: But I don't know. There's just certain ways that they'll do their lip curls and stuff like that. And I don't know, maybe it just works in my brain. It's like, ooh, if she doing that, what would that feel like on the. You know, I think it's stuff like that. I don't know. But really, honestly, I think it just developed because I read lips all the time. So when I'm looking at a chick, I don't really look at her eyes, I'm looking at her mouth.
[00:49:16] Speaker A: What do you mean you read lips all the time?
So when you talk to somebody.
[00:49:20] Speaker D: I'm deaf, so I have to read lips to understand what people are saying most of the time.
[00:49:25] Speaker B: Okay.
[00:49:26] Speaker C: Oh, wow. So the reason why you're able to do this is because you have headphones on?
[00:49:30] Speaker B: Yeah.
[00:49:32] Speaker D: But the funny thing is I'm reading their lips constantly.
[00:49:36] Speaker B: Oh, wow. Yeah.
[00:49:37] Speaker A: So you're really good at that. Shit, they're reading lips.
[00:49:39] Speaker D: Yeah, it's subconscious at this point.
[00:49:41] Speaker B: Well, you have an accent with your lips, so it's probably your shit.
What the fuck? What did you say? Oh, lazy mouth motherfucker.
[00:49:50] Speaker D: That actually might happen if we're talking. I go like, wait, what type of thing? Which I do do sometimes.
[00:49:55] Speaker A: That's interesting. So because of that, I wonder, the people that are really deaf, like, they can't hear shit at all. I wonder if that's a thing for them, too.
[00:50:04] Speaker B: What do you mean? It could be?
[00:50:05] Speaker D: Of course it could be.
[00:50:07] Speaker C: Just like, you're very in tune with know, you can read dicks. You can look at a poster, be like, congo, and you can tell what country they're from. Like, let me see. You know how shoe salesmen, when you walk into it, they're like, oh, size eleven.
[00:50:19] Speaker B: You know how they just know that shit, right?
[00:50:21] Speaker C: French know that shit. When you just see somebody walk away from Congo, size eleven.
That's your talent, man. Embrace it.
[00:50:29] Speaker B: It's like that one lady on that one commercial where she knows if it's going to fit, you're going to need extra four inches.
That's not going to fit.
You just look at him be like, oh, that'll fit.
[00:50:44] Speaker C: So with the video that he played, though.
[00:50:46] Speaker A: And if you Google Minecraft right now, Pedro Pascal still isn't the cast.
[00:50:50] Speaker C: But that's what I was telling y'all. Google is not.
Google's first page is probably all incorrect information now. So you can't win arguments with Google anymore because there's so much misinformation in Google.
[00:51:00] Speaker B: You did say that. Because you can't.
[00:51:02] Speaker C: It's just like, there's.
[00:51:02] Speaker A: So you got to do peer review studies.
[00:51:05] Speaker C: We've passed the point of using Google as the authority. They're no longer the authority because anyone can post. And now that anyone has the ability, they are. And sometimes it's real and sometimes it's fake.
[00:51:14] Speaker B: It's like, what was that? Wikipedia. Right? Like, motherfuckers was able to.
[00:51:18] Speaker A: You can edit.
[00:51:19] Speaker B: Edit shit.
[00:51:20] Speaker D: You can edit that shit.
[00:51:21] Speaker C: Yeah, but at least there's a gatekeeper on it. Okay, you know what saying, like, it can be pulled down if it's been correctly.
[00:51:29] Speaker D: Now it can. Yeah, but for a while it wasn't like that.
[00:51:32] Speaker B: Yeah, and I remember that. I was like, oh, so anybody could just edit this shit? Like, goddamn, let's fuck all of that. But that's where we're at, right? And I think it's one of those tactics, is what I would call it. Right. It's like you are inundated with so much data that you don't have the bandwidth to process effectively, right? You don't have the time. You don't have the fucking patience. You don't have any of that shit to fucking really process it.
I guess you do. Saying you don't is just saying taking the easy road. You just have to make the time, right. If you really want to get to the truth, because we talked about this before about how do you know what's true and what's not true and where do you go to get the truth? You just have to do more work now. Before it was like you could just be like, hey, let me go here and see if I can get facts. Nah, you can't do that no more. You got to cross reference shit. You got to fucking, you can't just go one source.
[00:52:35] Speaker A: But think about it now at all. This guy in the video, just talk about a little article that he wrote. Think about deep fake and all this shit you could do now with deep fake.
[00:52:43] Speaker C: Well, I thought I made it a topic about the dead Internet. Didn't I make that a topic recently?
[00:52:47] Speaker D: I believe so.
[00:52:48] Speaker C: Where like 80% of the Internet is fake. It's all written by AI.
[00:52:52] Speaker A: Oh yeah, you did say.
[00:52:53] Speaker C: And those aren't even real articles. They don't lead to anything. It's just somebody decided to make an article that doesn't have real access, it doesn't have real connection to reality. It's just an article. And of course after a while it gets its own legs. It becomes a form of reality. Even though it was written from nothing, from an AI.
[00:53:13] Speaker B: Like a memory.
[00:53:16] Speaker D: Yeah, yeah.
[00:53:16] Speaker C: I don't know, I don't trust Google as much anymore. I mean, of know, there's some times when you absolutely have to look things up, but I look it up now with the grain of salt because like that guy, that's crazy that he was able to get that far with it.
[00:53:28] Speaker B: But he just had to pay, right?
[00:53:29] Speaker C: That's really what it is.
[00:53:31] Speaker D: That's really what it is though. That's like Google, right?
[00:53:33] Speaker A: Like he paid 1500 or 2130.
[00:53:38] Speaker B: Well, because think about it, right? Just think about, you just step outside.
[00:53:41] Speaker A: You lose 130 between putting gas in your car, getting some food.
[00:53:45] Speaker D: Honestly, it doesn't cost much to host things on the web.
[00:53:48] Speaker B: So just go back to this, right? Like we just. The evolution that we were talking about when televisions came out, there was a cut off time, right? So there was content from maybe, I don't know, six in the morning or.
[00:54:01] Speaker D: Seven in the morning, 05:00 a.m.
[00:54:02] Speaker B: When the news came on to eleven at night, right? And then your midnight or whatever the fuck, right? But it didn't roll over until the next day. It did not go to past midnight.
[00:54:11] Speaker D: It would come on in the morning. When the news came on, the first news would come on, and then when the late show would go off at night, then it would go off the air, right?
[00:54:19] Speaker B: So there wasn't a demand for an uber amount of content because you only had a finite space. Now, there is no finite space. The Internet, the web is everywhere. It's expansive. It's always, right. So you have a demand constantly for new content. So motherfuckers are paying for content, right? This is what he's saying. I will pay you. Or you could pay me, I should say, to put information out on some shit, right? And I don't even give a fuck. I just need something to put out there. So you give me the money and it's good enough, I'll put it out there. And who gives a fuck if it's real or not? It almost goes back to Fargo. It's a fucking movie that says it's real, but it ain't. It's based on facts. But it doesn't even know. We don't even need it anymore. All we want to see is the fucking donkey show. We want to be entertained. We want to fucking see my fucking nail his nuts.
We want entertainment. And it is so much out there.
[00:55:20] Speaker C: That we want to see a guy make a martini his ass on top shelf, all right?
[00:55:29] Speaker B: You got me with the top shelf? You got me with the top shelf?
I'm just saying. Yes.
I can't lie again.
I've watched some bestiality shit. That's not my jam. But it's interesting because I've never seen it before. And I'm like, listen, does this shit really happen? Now, I would probably cut the line at fucking necrophilia, but I would rather.
[00:55:53] Speaker C: See that than somebody else.
[00:55:54] Speaker D: Wait, but based on that same thought process. Based on that same thought process, it sounds like you can stomach watching a bunch of gay porn because you've never seen that before.
[00:56:05] Speaker B: No, I don't know.
[00:56:08] Speaker D: I'm just saying, based on that same perspective.
[00:56:11] Speaker C: A mile too far, bro.
[00:56:12] Speaker B: Yeah. I don't know.
Again, I don't see how. Okay? Because again, to me, you could fucking just walk down the street and see gay diggers, right, doing gay shit. So that's not exciting and that's not different.
That's everywhere.
[00:56:28] Speaker C: That's just their version of sex. But seeing a person do something od with their body is exciting because it's like, what?
[00:56:35] Speaker D: To me, that's different than Bcality, though.
[00:56:38] Speaker C: I couldn't watch Bcality.
[00:56:41] Speaker D: And honestly, to me you have. And honestly, to me, the stuff that you guys are talking about, like the dude hammering his dick and all that, to me, that's not like a sexual thing, right. But to me, bestiality is a sexual thing. So to me, those are like, I watched it.
[00:56:55] Speaker B: Like I said, she put peanut butter on her pussy and a dog, I guess that's a sexual thing because he was licking her pussy.
[00:57:00] Speaker C: Yeah, I think I'd want to see that.
Whether that sexual. I think I want to. Yo, you are weirdo. Let me see. Right?
[00:57:08] Speaker B: And again, the video where the girl, she was in a harness underneath the horse and getting it.
[00:57:17] Speaker C: That was wild horse dick.
[00:57:18] Speaker B: She was taking mad horse.
[00:57:20] Speaker C: I don't seem like it could be real.
[00:57:21] Speaker A: There's no way.
[00:57:22] Speaker C: But have you seen a horse dick, bro?
[00:57:24] Speaker D: Look, they got videos where they got it, bro.
[00:57:27] Speaker B: Brutal.
[00:57:27] Speaker D: Both arms in a bit.
[00:57:29] Speaker C: Pussy type shit for human beings.
[00:57:33] Speaker B: Look up brutal. Like, that's a whole genre and ain't none of. And the shit that they're using is shitting on horse dick. Like, looking at horse dick. Like, get out of here with your little ass fucking. What's the small ones? What's the smallest country?
[00:57:45] Speaker D: Open up huge.
[00:57:46] Speaker A: Korea.
[00:57:47] Speaker B: Korea. Get out here with your korean dick.
[00:57:49] Speaker D: That thing open up huge, bro.
[00:57:50] Speaker B: Babies come out that bitch.
[00:57:52] Speaker D: It open up big.
[00:57:53] Speaker A: A baby's leaving that. It's not going in, nigga.
[00:57:56] Speaker D: It's still spread, passing through. It's still spreading, but it's still passing through. It's that whole fucking big ass thing come through that bitch.
[00:58:04] Speaker A: How do you get to that? I'm trying the horse dick that day. Like the first day of trying the.
[00:58:09] Speaker D: Horse dick because you've been getting ran by so much and maybe that shit don'tickle it. Don't scratch the itch no more.
[00:58:16] Speaker B: It's like a fucking drug fiend. Right? Like, again, the first hit button, it don't hit like that no more. So you take more, you need more. And then you try something harder and stronger or something, right? And it's fucking like, listen, even when I first started smoking cigarettes, right back in the day, that was almost like a drug. Yeah.
It did something to me. Like, it made me high when I smoked a cigarette, right? Cigarette of the day, that head changed. Well, the only thing that I would smoke cigarettes. How I got started smoking cigarettes back in the day when I was a teenager was because if you smoked a joint about maybe hour or so after smoking a joint, you started to feel like your high is going down. You hit a newport that would fucking bring that fucking high right back. But it's not the fucking weed high no more. It's the fucking tobacco high. And it's a different kind of. But you don't know because you're already high, and now you feel different again, and you're like, whoa, I'm fucked up again.
That's not anything to do with fucking weed. It's only because of the tobacco. But then after fucking smoking cigarettes for a year, you hit a cigarette, it does nothing for you. It doesn't do any of that anymore, right? That effect is gone.
And it's weird, because I remember I had stopped smoking cigarettes, and I was working at a loan company, and it was the end of the month and shit. And I was fucking stressing about loans closing and shit. And I was like, I'm going outside. Let me get a cigarette. And I walked outside, and I got about halfway through that motherfucker, and I realized I had made a mistake. This is not what the city like when I used to smoke cigarettes. I could smoke cigarettes, and it didn't have an effect on me. About halfway down, I knew that if I finished this cigarette, I was going to be fucked up. And even this fucked me up. I had to go sit in the bathroom in the shower stall and fucking lay down for, like, 45 minutes because the shit was just spinning me. Like, I was just fucked up. And I was no good for about an hour. And I was like, yo, that's clear, obviously, why I don't smoke cigarettes anymore. But, yeah, you cut some shit off. It's just a tolerance thing. So put it to your perspective. She had a fucking congolese dick for a while, and she's like, yeah, that's great, but I think I want more. And then she did it herself, right? She got the bigger size fucking dildo. And then she's like, okay, well, that don't hit the same no more. When I first got this bitch, it was stretching parts of me that fucking ain't never been stretched, but that shit ain't doing it like that no more. I need something bigger. I don't know. I'm just imagining, because, again, the chicks that I watch in those fucking brutal movies or those brutal scenes that are using those fucking giant ass, fucking clogged looking log fucking dildos, it's like, goddamn. You can't just jump on that. There's no way you can just jump on that. You got to build that shit up. It's like the motherfucker with the stretched out neck or the fat hole in their earlobe. You don't just come in with that one gauge, right? Like, you go a little bit and a little bit and you stretch that bitch out until you get it to where you want it. That's the only way I think about it. And I think that if you got to, maybe a bitch used to be part of a donkey show, and she's like, listen, that shit was wild. It don't hit no more like that.
[01:01:26] Speaker A: Some people will go to for just pleasure. Pleasure and boredom.
[01:01:30] Speaker B: The lengths that people will go to pleasure, are you kidding me? There's fucking no length. Like, people won't go to fucking for pleasure, right?
You can imagine, really? People do some wild shit. There might be a hostel in the name of pleasure, especially in a world where you don't always have pleasure, right? Fuck. So I don't know. I think that nothing surprises me when it comes to pleasure. Like what people will do for pleasure. Like, shit, I don't know. People do snuff films for pleasure, you know what I mean? And that's some wild shit.
But some people get pleasure out of that.
Speaking of bad Santa too, or some weird shit, that motherfucker said something about necrophilia or some pussy, and he's like the midget, he was trying to dis them, and he's like, what are you trying to say? You trying to say that I'm above necrophilia? He said, rick and mortise just make the pussy tighter. I fucking fell out. Like that shit was fucking common. I am telling you, bad Santa, too, is so much harder than fucking bad Santa. The regular one, the shit that they do and say in that one is wild. And the little boy is a dude, which, he's 21 now. I don't know how the fuck he grew up so quick, but he's still as stupid as he was in the first one. He's just that same on my head, that nigga.
[01:02:49] Speaker C: I'm not sure where the hell we are.
[01:02:50] Speaker B: Me neither.
[01:02:51] Speaker A: Everywhere.
[01:02:52] Speaker C: Where are we supposed to be?
I'm not even sure where we're supposed to be.
[01:02:55] Speaker B: Well, for Treju was talking about.
[01:02:57] Speaker A: We was talking about information, how my thing is I'm seeing with this election season that's about to start, the misinformation about to go crazy.
[01:03:05] Speaker B: Well, come on, man. You know that that's right. Every election season. Right? Yeah.
[01:03:08] Speaker A: But I think, like, this year, they're about to go ham with the defects.
[01:03:12] Speaker D: Different.
[01:03:12] Speaker A: Yeah.
The new tech is. They're going to show the new tech.
[01:03:16] Speaker D: It's different, though, because.
Okay, I'll put it this way. It feels different because I know there's always been misinformation. There's always been tampering. There's always been those things. Right. But it just feels different now because it seems like it's part of the platform.
[01:03:32] Speaker A: Yeah.
[01:03:33] Speaker B: Yeah.
[01:03:33] Speaker A: That's what I'm saying. Yeah, you're right.
[01:03:36] Speaker C: Did we talk about that Denver thing on the show or just talked?
[01:03:40] Speaker B: We said it wasn't going to happen.
[01:03:42] Speaker A: Yeah.
[01:03:45] Speaker C: It amazes me that we're still doing this.
[01:03:49] Speaker A: We've been trying to put Trump down for. Not we, but whoever his haters been trying to put him down for the longest, and it's still not working well.
[01:03:57] Speaker C: Because it's not based on anything. It's like somebody just saying something and then, hey, yeah, I agree with that. Let's say it for real. Let's say it louder.
[01:04:04] Speaker B: It reminds me of, to be honest with you.
What was it? Kung fu panda.
Yeah.
[01:04:19] Speaker D: I knew a movie name was coming, but I did not expect kung fu.
[01:04:25] Speaker B: What was the panther's name that was locked up in fucking.
[01:04:28] Speaker D: Oh, yeah, that was the third one.
[01:04:29] Speaker B: Yeah. So kung fu fan, the three. And he was saying, listen, you trying to prevent this usually creates the demise that you're trying to stop. Right? And I think that's what's happening. So he went and sent more fucking. He sent the goose to fucking make sure that the fucking rhinos locked this nigga down more and did more shit, right? And really all he did was by sending the goose, got this motherfucker released, right? Like, that feather was the key to his fucking freedom. And sure, it's the same thing with these motherfuckers trying to knock Trump down. Like, the more that they try, the harder that they try. I feel like the stronger he gets.
It just has an adverse effect each single time.
[01:05:12] Speaker D: I agree.
[01:05:13] Speaker B: And so, I don't know, again, you might want to just stop and just what they say, just let it happen.
And then if it goes bad, right, like, if he does try to fucking turn into a tyrant, right, and doesn't want to relinquish his fucking presidency again, then.
[01:05:32] Speaker C: Well, they said that last time, and he did. So I don't get why are we doing this again? They said he wasn't going to ever leave the White House, and he did. So what are we talking about?
[01:05:39] Speaker A: He just left and said, I don't.
[01:05:40] Speaker B: Think he tried not to.
[01:05:41] Speaker A: No, he just said, I think you all cheated.
[01:05:43] Speaker D: I heard what you're saying.
[01:05:45] Speaker C: Wait a minute. Okay, so wait a minute. Wait a minute. Are you sitting here and telling me that you don't think that there's any way that the Democrats cheated him out of the election?
[01:05:53] Speaker B: No, there's always cheating.
[01:05:54] Speaker C: No, that's not what I said. I'm very specific what I asked you. Are you sitting here and saying that you believe that there is no way the Democrats cheated him out of that election?
[01:06:03] Speaker B: No, I don't know that.
[01:06:04] Speaker C: Right. And I think that the idea that we're all supposed to be convicted, that he's full of shit. Oh my God. You know, he's, what? Really? Are we really convicted? I'm not convicted. Because Democrats are pieces of shit too.
[01:06:14] Speaker B: Right? Of course they are.
[01:06:15] Speaker C: And they cheat too.
[01:06:16] Speaker B: Of course they do.
[01:06:17] Speaker C: And they fuck elections over too.
[01:06:18] Speaker B: Of course they do.
[01:06:20] Speaker C: And they tamper with the boxes. The boxes too.
[01:06:23] Speaker B: Yeah.
[01:06:23] Speaker C: So the idea that we can't fathom that maybe they stole the election from him because everybody hated him is ridiculous. Because everybody didn't hate him.
[01:06:32] Speaker B: No. I mean, he barely lost. I mean, he didn't lose like a landslide. It wasn't fucking decacus.
[01:06:38] Speaker C: So the idea then that it's obvious he's lying and he's just doing this to try to stay in the office, I don't know. That necessarily is a fair perspective to hold.
[01:06:49] Speaker B: That's right.
[01:06:50] Speaker C: And as much as I may say I don't believe they stole the election from him, I'm not saying it's outside the realm of possibility. In fact, it's probable that they stole it from him. It's probable.
[01:07:00] Speaker B: Right.
[01:07:00] Speaker C: Just as probable as that he stole it from Hillary the time before, right.
Anybody has stole it.
[01:07:06] Speaker B: When Bush had the, I mean, it wouldn't be the first time that some fucking shenanigans.
[01:07:12] Speaker C: It's most likely they stole the election from him, but at the same time it's most likely that all the elections are rigged in a certain way.
[01:07:19] Speaker B: I would agree with that.
[01:07:20] Speaker C: It's most likely that this next one is going to be rigged too, especially when you have states saying we're not going to include his name on the ballot, which is illegal.
[01:07:28] Speaker D: All that is going too far again.
[01:07:30] Speaker B: And what happens is that too much?
[01:07:36] Speaker C: And why, do you know why they're saying he's not on the ballot?
[01:07:39] Speaker B: Because he's an insurrectionist or something.
[01:07:40] Speaker C: Because his participation in January 6. That's not a crime unless he's convicted of it. What are you saying?
[01:07:48] Speaker B: Right?
[01:07:48] Speaker C: What are we doing?
[01:07:49] Speaker B: Right? He was just fucking flavor Flav.
He was just the hype man. He wasn't the fucking person that actually was.
[01:07:57] Speaker C: He even.
[01:07:58] Speaker B: Oh, he is a little hype man. I saw the speech before.
[01:08:01] Speaker D: He's definitely a hype man.
[01:08:03] Speaker B: I saw the speech before. He got the motherfuckers worked. Ain't.
[01:08:06] Speaker D: Look, but at the same time, if you ain't going put Travis Scott in jail for Astroworld, why are you going to put him in trouble for that?
[01:08:14] Speaker C: Because those people, they crush each other or whatever.
[01:08:17] Speaker D: They said he was inciting it. That's why they wanted to get him to answer for it, because they said that he was encouraging it until it got out of hand. But at first he was inciting it or whatnot. And that's honestly the same thing. He was just inciting people that believed what he was saying, basically.
Unless they got him on tape saying, go in there and do this, when.
[01:08:38] Speaker A: Are we going to hold people accountable for their own actions? I don't give a fuck what Trump's incite.
[01:08:43] Speaker D: It depends on who you are that you can get the answer.
[01:08:46] Speaker A: Those are grown adults. I don't give a fuck who Trump incite. Because Trump said something doesn't mean you.
[01:08:50] Speaker C: Have to go do it. Well, okay, I'm going to be the bad guy here, I guess.
[01:08:53] Speaker D: I'm going to take a devil's advocate.
[01:08:55] Speaker C: I'm going to take a different. No, this is what I believe. So I'm not being the devil. I'm not doing it just for the sake of being opposite. I believe this.
[01:09:01] Speaker D: I like this better.
[01:09:05] Speaker C: What kind of country did you think this was? What I thought we were all fighting for. What I thought we were all upholding was the ability for us to say, we don't like that our government is doing this and we're going to stand up against it.
[01:09:18] Speaker B: Right?
[01:09:19] Speaker C: So why, when it's Trump who is part of it? Oh, that's treason. That's whatever the idea of America is that we don't take shit even from government, right? And so when government is out of pocket, we're going to stand up to government being out of pocket.
[01:09:35] Speaker B: Right.
[01:09:36] Speaker C: It's a terrorist act when Trump does it. But if it were a Democrat saying, we're going to go storm it because Trump won again, is that going to be the.
[01:09:46] Speaker B: Mean? That's the whole belief behind the amendment, right. I mean, that's the reason why we so it's not just to have. It's to bear.
Can we.
[01:09:56] Speaker C: To protect from.
[01:09:58] Speaker B: We. We have the right to protect ourselves from tyranny. Right.
[01:10:03] Speaker C: But just because you call Trump a tyrant doesn't mean that he is one.
[01:10:06] Speaker B: Well, maybe what he's trying to do is protect us from tyranny.
[01:10:10] Speaker C: That's what I'm saying.
[01:10:11] Speaker B: Right.
[01:10:11] Speaker C: Just because you call him the tyrant so he can't be going against tyranny if he's the tyrant.
[01:10:15] Speaker B: Right?
[01:10:16] Speaker C: I don't know. Just because you call him that doesn't mean that he is.
[01:10:18] Speaker B: That.
[01:10:18] Speaker C: That's just what you're saying he is.
[01:10:20] Speaker D: I'm all with you on that one.
[01:10:21] Speaker C: My problem, though, is that I don't look at people who storm the Capitol on January 6 as being terrorists. I look at them as saying, this is what we believe America is supposed to be. You all not handling it, you all not carrying the water bucket like you're supposed to. We're going to hold you accountable.
[01:10:35] Speaker B: Right.
[01:10:36] Speaker C: And the only thing different between crime and a coup is whose perspective. No, whose perspective? It.
[01:10:44] Speaker D: Yeah, because that's my. Like, to me, I feel the same way that you just said, because as far as I understand how America works, you should be able to do these type of things.
[01:10:53] Speaker B: Right.
[01:10:54] Speaker D: And I think that they should have had the ability to do.
You know, we don't want to try to attack government officials and things of that nature. But as far as the message that they were trying to put across, yeah, I'm all for that.
At the same time, I felt like the same sort of way I feel about that is the same way that they should have felt about the black people that was storming the Capitol type thing, too. So that was seen way differently. That was responded to way differently.
[01:11:22] Speaker B: So it's like the tea party, right? Again, I think when you have a bunch of people that were like, we're fucking fed up and we're not doing this no more. Fuck you. Okay? Those people are considered patriots now.
They're like the founders of America. They feel like, okay, you stood up for the rights of our citizens, and now we have a better country because of it. Right? That's patriotism. I mean, there's a whole fucking Mel Gibson movie about it.
[01:11:53] Speaker A: I always joke about the Boston Tea Party. They went crazy over, what, 3% tax?
[01:11:58] Speaker B: We need to have another tea party about this.
[01:12:00] Speaker A: I'm like, where's the tea party?
[01:12:03] Speaker D: That ain't going to happen like that again.
[01:12:05] Speaker A: It needs to.
[01:12:07] Speaker D: They're not saying that the people will never band together to do it again, the government will respond differently.
[01:12:12] Speaker C: My criticism of the entire thing is when the government decides it wants to, I guess, balance things out, they send their arm, which is the police, and the police don't come in and be nice. They come in and wreck heads. So when the opposite shit happens to the government, I don't see that as different. Heads got wrecked, motherfuckers lost their lives. Shit got switched up a little bit.
[01:12:35] Speaker A: Some people had to go to jail.
[01:12:36] Speaker C: Wake the fuck up.
It ain't all great. Y'all can't just sit in Congress and just do this game. Y'all keep doing to us, right? Motherfuckers are paying attention and we're willing to come in there and get you, right.
[01:12:46] Speaker A: And I think that's one of the main reasons why they trying to not even allow Trump to even participate, because they feel like once, if he participates and just lose, naturally his supporters are going to go crazy.
[01:12:56] Speaker D: I think it's what you just said, but probably even more widespread than that, just the fact that he can spread this message and people are listening.
[01:13:05] Speaker A: My thing is, why is it just still them too, as the only option?
[01:13:08] Speaker C: Because that's where I, well, the Democrat is. Because Joe Biden's a dicky.
[01:13:12] Speaker D: No, that's where I'm at. Why is it a two party?
[01:13:15] Speaker A: I like Kennedy, but I don't think.
[01:13:16] Speaker C: Well, he can't, though, because Joe Biden is the incumbent. So the incumbent has to step down for anyone else in the democratic party to step up. He's not going to step because he believes it's him versus Trump. I have to weed out the Trump thing.
[01:13:29] Speaker B: You way too old. My lose.
[01:13:31] Speaker A: That's my problem with him. I'm like, why do you even still want to do the job?
[01:13:34] Speaker B: You way too old.
[01:13:36] Speaker C: Well, he's handicapping the Democrat party because he's an incumbent. He has to step down in order for another Democrat to go in. You should want to, but you, and on the other side, there's nobody who's more electric than Trump. And Trump is going to win.
[01:13:48] Speaker D: Exactly.
[01:13:48] Speaker C: And if you got to put, if he's able to there, it's going to be Trump again.
[01:13:52] Speaker A: Even if you don't go vote, Trump's going to win this.
[01:13:54] Speaker D: I don't care who they put him against. Trump's winning.
[01:13:56] Speaker C: And that's why people, if he loses, but look, though, stop for a second, because you just made a comment. You're saying if he loses, Trump, people are going to go crazy. What I'm saying is if he loses Trump, people should fucking go crazy because nobody likes Biden even.
Yeah, and if he wins something.
[01:14:14] Speaker B: Biden, Biden was able to somehow get, at least this is what it seemed like. The black vote, right? He's not getting it no more.
[01:14:27] Speaker A: He's not getting it this year. I don't even think black people will go vote.
[01:14:29] Speaker B: Like, it doesn't even matter.
You could put fucking. I don't know. Who is your vice president? It ain't matter. It could be fucking.
Well, maybe if he put Kanye.
[01:14:41] Speaker D: If he put Kanye, maybe. But I still don't think he's going to black.
[01:14:45] Speaker B: I would vote for that. I ain't going to lie. If Kanye was a vp, I wouldn't do. Why not?
[01:14:50] Speaker C: If Trump could be voting again, fuck it.
[01:14:54] Speaker B: I'm never voting if Trump could be a fucking president.
[01:14:56] Speaker A: What about the local shit like governor and senators?
[01:15:00] Speaker C: Fuck governors and senators and aldermans. Fuck them. I'm never voting again. You'll never see me at a ballot box putting my ballot in for any reason.
[01:15:08] Speaker B: I voted.
[01:15:11] Speaker A: That's how you make change.
[01:15:12] Speaker C: No. What are you going to change? What can my alderman do for me?
[01:15:15] Speaker D: What do you mean?
[01:15:16] Speaker A: Voting the right people in office.
[01:15:17] Speaker D: Look, Malcolm X had that shit right a long time ago, bro. He had that shit right a long time ago. That shit ain't real, dude.
[01:15:25] Speaker A: They do say they don't get elected. They get selected.
[01:15:28] Speaker D: They do. And even that person that gets elected, they answering to somebody too.
[01:15:33] Speaker C: Yeah, Trump didn't. Just like Biden's not responsible for the inflation. There are other people in charge. He's a talking head. Not a very good one, but he's a talking head. It would have been no different if Trump was in or Biden was. I do feel like there are small things that the presidents do play a part in. They make the waves flow a certain way. You know what I'm saying? Like, the ocean is moving and they may block it or do something to make the waves go a different direction. But other than that, the bigger picture is never them. There's always puppet master somewhere doing something so you'll never see me at the bows again.
My job can know that if I'm leaving for voting, I'm lying, I'm going.
I'm going to the mall or something.
[01:16:15] Speaker B: I'm taking my 2 hours and doing something productive.
[01:16:18] Speaker C: I am not going to vote.
[01:16:19] Speaker B: Fuck all of that.
All right, let me ask you guys a question real quick about some shit, man. Because I was fucking thinking and I'm contemplating, you know, I'm always on the race side of shit.
But I feel like people look at racism and they're like, oh, no, that's fucking bad. But I don't know. I feel like there has to be.
So there's no, I'm just saying.
[01:16:51] Speaker C: Like, there.
[01:16:52] Speaker B: It's a good side of racism because just like, okay, obviously we all feel like homicide is a bad thing, right? Like if you kill somebody, right? But there is such a thing as justifiable homicide.
[01:17:04] Speaker A: Maybe self defense.
[01:17:05] Speaker D: Maybe it's not such a bad thing.
[01:17:07] Speaker A: Like self defense.
[01:17:08] Speaker B: Justifiable homicide.
That's a thing.
[01:17:13] Speaker A: Somebody that raped your daughter and you saw him the next justifiable.
[01:17:16] Speaker D: Wait, hold on. So wait. He said racist, right? And then how. Racism. Racism may not be such a bad thing or whatever. But then you talked about homicide. Then you said justified homicide may not be a bad thing or whatnot. But you didn't say like justified racism or some sort of adjective before the.
[01:17:36] Speaker B: I'm just saying. Just because, again, I'm just saying that not all. So we just kind of blanketly think of racism as being like, oh, no, fuck that. This is that and the other.
[01:17:46] Speaker D: I'm sure most people think the blanket homicide is probably a bad.
[01:17:49] Speaker B: Sure. But there are sometimes where someone looks at like, fucking, okay. That fucking homicide was okay. That was a fucking righteous kill. That was warranted. I don't see that as, like, you could call it self defense. You could call it whatever, right? And self defense is probably the best thing, right? Someone's trying to fuck with you and you fucking, in the attempt to save your life, you fucking kill them. Right? So what happens to the same thing in racism though, right? Like, you are fucking done wrong? Maybe more than once. Maybe more than twice. I don't know what the number is. Right? And that's really my question. What is an appropriate amount of time that you get done dirty by a specific race before it becomes justifiable racism? Right? Like, before it becomes okay to be like, fuck them motherfuckers. Like, I don't fuck with them.
[01:18:40] Speaker A: Talking about the other way around. Like us hating.
[01:18:42] Speaker D: We are talking about justified racism.
[01:18:44] Speaker A: Black people hating white people.
[01:18:45] Speaker B: I'm just talking about any racism. Right?
I don't. Not that, because, see, this is the problem. Black people swear that they're the only motherfuckers that have been done dirty by white people. No, everybody's been done dirty by white people. Everybody. Even other white people. The Irish got fucked over by white people in this country. Like the Japanese, the fucking. Let's be clear, man. They put the motherfuckers, they just rounded them niggas up. Now, granted, they didn't make them slaves, but there's still been some fucking wrongdoings to every fucking culture. Let's be clear. I would rather be black than indian.
We're still around. Like I said this before, Indians are gone. They're like the way of the buffalo.
[01:19:26] Speaker D: Native american? Yes.
[01:19:28] Speaker B: They're like the fucking buffalo. They used to run the planes fucking in packs. Where the fuck are they now?
Come on, you got to go somewhere.
[01:19:39] Speaker A: Say a lot of black people were natives, too.
[01:19:42] Speaker B: What admin know?
[01:19:43] Speaker A: Some will say. Some historian will say that a lot of the Natives were already black. So it's like, that means they're still around. Like, they were black skinned. They were not.
[01:19:53] Speaker B: Like, what about the Native American Indians?
[01:19:56] Speaker A: That's what I'm saying.
[01:19:57] Speaker B: They were the tribal people. So you're saying that that's us now? We're just them? The Shoshone, the Blackfoots?
[01:20:03] Speaker A: Some people were saying that a lot of the natives were black pigment. That's all I'm saying. They were black pigment. You couldn't tell the difference between them versus the nigga coming from Africa.
[01:20:14] Speaker B: Okay, maybe. But the ones that you could tell the difference, the Redskins, the one that you can't change, they had to change the team name of. Where do you see them at? Right? Again. So, again, I think the people that were here on this land, and that's my thing, too, right?
If an Indian can't be racist against a white person, then I don't know, man. Not necessarily all white people, but white people in general, that's a fucking warranted, right? Like you wanted to say black people, right? But again, I don't think that we hold the monopoly. Like, we act like we do. We're like, oh, yeah, we've been fucked over the worst.
Okay, maybe I'm not saying it wasn't bad, right? But I don't know if it was the worst.
I just told you. The motherfucking Native Americans, nigga, all they got is a casino in their name. That's not even like. That's only, like, a family or two that get the fucking casino money. The other motherfuckers are on the reservation.
[01:21:13] Speaker A: Fucking drunk people in every region of the world, not just Africa, in the Caribbean, in South America. You can go to Papua New guinea. Like, they fuck them all over the world.
[01:21:24] Speaker D: White people literally in the country, have a celebration of the King Leo, of the extermination and the robbing of the indian people's land.
[01:21:33] Speaker B: Come on, man.
[01:21:35] Speaker A: I'm not playing victim olympics. I'm just saying that.
[01:21:38] Speaker B: But I'm just telling you that it sounds like you are. Because again, you're saying we won the gold, nigga. Like, all around the world.
[01:21:45] Speaker A: I think when it comes to what the white people should. Yeah, I think black people got the gold. When it comes to the worst things white people have done to a group of people, I think black people are number one. Yes, I have a question above the Native Americans.
[01:21:58] Speaker D: So the justified racism, isn't it the same thing as reverse racism? Yeah, that's what you isn't the same thing.
[01:22:07] Speaker B: No. I don't know. Because again, maybe you. Because were you fucked over because they were racist to you or was it just because something was done dirty to you? Right.
This is not a racism thing.
You have family members, right?
[01:22:25] Speaker D: Right.
[01:22:25] Speaker B: And one of them was killed by a certain race, another was raped by a certain race. This isn't necessarily done because they were racist.
The actions that they happen, it was a fight that started at a bar over a fucking football game. Right. Or whatever the fuck happened.
They were drunk and caught your other family member out walking home, whatever the fuck. Right. But my point is that after a certain. How many incidents or encounters negatively, could you, again, just be like, be with voting? Fuck it, I'm not doing this no more with you all. Like, I'm not fucking with you all no more. You all don't get any more opportunities to do. And it may not be all of you. Obviously, it's not all of you, right? There's nothing. That's all of it.
[01:23:17] Speaker D: That's actually where my next question was going to be is like, where is the line drawn?
[01:23:21] Speaker B: Well, again, there is no line, right? I'm sure there's fucking some good politicians. I'm sure there's some people in politics that are really trying to do right by their fucking citizens and make a difference and do that. But do you think b gives a fuck? No. You know what I mean? So again, I don't think that that matters at this point. I think you get to a point where you're like, fuck you and everything that looks like you.
[01:23:44] Speaker D: So anybody can make that decision at any time for themselves. Are you looking at when is it accepted by society?
[01:23:52] Speaker B: I'm just trying to think of what would be a good number encounters.
Again, could it be one incident, like, you get done wrong one time by somebody this color, and you'd be like, fuck it, I'm not fucking with them no more. Is that too excessive? Does it take two times.
Or does it matter on what the issue is? Right? Like, is it some Mexican killed my brother, so now I'm like, fuck Mexicans. Or do I be like, okay, it was just that Mexican this time, but then I got another Mexican that fucking robbed my mom's house and fucking beat her up in the process. And then I'm like, okay, well, now that's two Mexicans and two family members. I'm really like, I'm not fucking with these niggas no more. And then I get a fucking mexican teacher that gives me an f. And I'm like, fuck this nigga for show. What is it?
Okay.
[01:24:37] Speaker D: What would be acceptable, I guess, where I'm at, because I feel where you're going with this, but I'm trying to, I guess, try to see what the other side is. So, like, your example with the kid that's getting fucked or the person that's getting fucked over by the mexican kids or by the mexican people or whatever. So for example, right, my ex wife, right, her father grew up in Oakland and was jumped by black kids all the time type thing. So he don't like black people. So I get with his daughter. I treat his daughter like a princess. I take care of her, I'm taking care of her kid, all kind of stuff like that or whatever, right? So we go to get married, right? But because I'm black, even though I have this track record of being this wonderful person to his daughter, not doing what the typical niggas of Oakland would be doing to a white girl type of. Right?
[01:25:27] Speaker B: So.
[01:25:27] Speaker D: But since he had that upbringing or since he came up like that or whatnot, when it came to get married, he wanted nothing to do with me. He didn't want to come to the wedding. He called his daughters a nigger loving bitch, all kinds of shit like this or whatnot. So is he justified in that? Because he was beat up by some niggas when he lived in Oakland to treat me that way or whatnot? Because I'm black and they were black.
[01:25:48] Speaker B: I want to say I.
[01:25:52] Speaker D: And that's why I said, you can make that decision. Because, for example, he made that decision. But is that acceptable in society?
[01:25:58] Speaker B: I want to say no, right? But I feel like, be honest. Feels in regards to politics, if this is all he's known, sure, you could be different. But if you don't know, if something is all you know, it's really hard to process the unknown even though you're looking at it. Right.
The perfect example is I dated a chick who grew up rough, you know what I mean? And all she knew was rough shit, right? Her fucking exes beat her. Her dad beat her mom.
Her uncle beat her aunt. All of this shit. This is what she knew, right? And my thinking was, okay, I could show different, right? Like, and if I show different, how the fuck aren't you going to fucking gravitate to that? She didn't even know what to do with it. She couldn't even understand it. She didn't even respect it and would constantly go back to that environment. So again, yes, you could say I'm showing, right? I'm showing what is different, right? But that doesn't mean nothing, because again, I don't know that to be real. You, to me, seem fake, right? And I'm just waiting for the fucking mask to come off and you to start beating my daughter. Because I know what I know when it comes to niggas that I grew up around, right? And this is what they do, you know what I mean? Maybe they didn't always just beat me up. Some of them may have been my friend at once or at least purported to be my friend, right? And then they fucking got money from me or used me for something, and then they fucking did it. Maybe wasn't always the ass whooping. It could have been like a shake of the hand. You my boy, but I'm just going to fucking rob you when I come over to your house, you know what I mean? Or some shit like that. Because I know people that used to do that too. I know black people that used to do that. They used to fucking date motherfuckers just to get to the crib so they can fucking rob the crib. Like, they don't give a shit about this bitch. They just want to get to the house so they can get in the house and fucking while one niggas fucking the rest of the niggas is Robin. Oh, yeah.
If that's happened to you and you are apprehensive, how many times you got to get bit by a dog before you go, I don't fuck with dogs no more. Right. Really? It's kind of the similar thing. If an animal fucking like a dog bites you first, okay, maybe it was just that dog, and maybe now this second dog bit me. But if I get bit a fucking couple of times, I'm just like, how about others don't fuck with dogs? Because guess what? I know. I know I won't get bit by a dog that way, right? And so I don't know if that's wrong in thinking.
I don't know if that's a wrong mindset. Maybe you could say, okay, maybe give one more dog a chance. But you could. But if you get bit, then what? Like again, you'd be like, I fucking knew it.
[01:28:46] Speaker D: The snake analogy.
[01:28:47] Speaker B: I fucking knew it.
[01:28:49] Speaker D: Why did you bite me? You knew I was a snake, right?
[01:28:52] Speaker B: It's a scorpion. Yeah, there's a scorpion. Scorpion and a toad.
[01:28:56] Speaker C: I don't know. I feel like I don't want to accept that. And that is just me. I don't think that there should be a number. You just got to keep trying. And I think that there's also, well.
[01:29:06] Speaker B: Why it says, the man who won't vote no more.
[01:29:08] Speaker C: Why don't you keep trying?
[01:29:09] Speaker D: I don't feel it's the same, but that's why I asked, is it a personal thing or is a societal thing? Because societal will say it's the same thing.
[01:29:15] Speaker C: It's not the same society, because I.
[01:29:16] Speaker D: Don'T believe it's the same thing. But I know that it'll always be purported to be that way with voting.
[01:29:21] Speaker C: The reason why I'm not going to vote is because it doesn't matter who I vote for, because the system is not run based off of who I elect. So that's not the same thing.
[01:29:29] Speaker B: I get that.
[01:29:30] Speaker C: I feel like there. And here's the problem with that racism issue. Black people, that I've heard some black people make the statement that they shouldn't have to do anything to make a white person feel comfortable. Say, for instance, they get on the elevator and they're 69 and they're 290 pounds and they got a hoodie on or whatever the element that makes white people scared, right?
People feel like, well, I shouldn't have to compensate or make concessions for this. White person feeling comfortable, uncomfortable, that's not my job. They just need to be a better person and accept that black people aren't all criminals. But I disagree with that. I feel like you should always give people another chance. There should never be a number to when you think racism is okay. But at the same token, a six nine black dude gets onto an elevator with a white person. I believe that it's okay for that six 9290 pound black person with a hoodie to make light of the situation and put a person that they're in the elevator with at ease because they know that those stigmas are there. And I feel like it's wrong to assume that you shouldn't have play any part in whether or not somebody's going to be racist against you, especially if they're the kind of person who got beat up by black people their entire life. And then here you come jumping an elevator to my, I shouldn't have to tell nobody nothing. Come on, that's not real. You know that there's shit that has guided people's, have influenced people to feel a certain way about a certain race of people. And when you do get to a situation when you're in an elevator or you're interacting with a person of another race who does have a stigma against your race, it's okay. And I feel maybe even necessary to make sure there's an olive leaf. Like I've extended the olive leaf. You recognize that I'm not here to hurt you, so there's no reason to put up these things. Now at that point if that person is still like, oh, I don't know, maybe this is a trick, maybe I wasn't going to think it, but now that he's pretending to be nice, maybe that's the trick. Now see, now we're going too far. I've done what I could do to make you feel at ease and you're still doing that. Now that's on you. And I'm not going to be racist against you, but I just know.
[01:31:36] Speaker B: Um, and it goes back to kind of what French Reggie was talking about his topic about the inundation of information and shit too, right? Because it doesn't just happen with experiences, right?
There is a bombardment of stereotypes that you get from other devices or tv or radio, all this other shit, right? I remember being in the early ninety s and I was visiting family in Chicago and everybody that I saw asked me as soon as they found out I was from California, what gang I was, you know, was I a cripp or a blood? And I'm like, listen, you gotta understand this is not everything in California. But at the time, this is all you guys are seeing on the news, drive bys and shit and this and that. Fucking movies that are coming out about this shit. But realize this ain't it. That's not everything. That if you're black, you're not either a crip or blood. It doesn't matter. It's not like that's just your only options in California, right?
And so I think that's part of it too. And people that don't have any other basis to go off of except for things that they may have seen or heard in reference to something have these stereotypes that they build up. And I don't know if that's Matt.
[01:32:48] Speaker C: Hold on. Check it out. Okay, let's say I'm in Chicago and here you come from California. It's not racist for me not to want to hang with you because I don't know if you're a cripper or a blood, right? That's just safety, right? Now, if I use my feelings of whether you may be a cripper blood or not against you, that's racism.
[01:33:09] Speaker B: Okay?
[01:33:09] Speaker C: Me just saying I don't want to be on this elevator with this six nine black dude because my ass has been beat by black people before. That's not racism. That's safety, right? Now, if I call the police because you're on the elevator with me, that might be racism.
[01:33:21] Speaker B: I'm glad you brought that up because the next place I was going was the altar boy in the church.
[01:33:27] Speaker C: Okay?
[01:33:29] Speaker B: After you've been violated and you like, fuck religion. I don't fuck with this no more. That's safety as well, right?
[01:33:36] Speaker C: No, that's sound. Because why would God let you keep getting your ass fucked? God's an asshole, and somebody needs to ask him about this.
[01:33:42] Speaker D: That still sounds like safety.
Trust God to keep you safe.
[01:33:46] Speaker C: It is. Yeah.
Can anybody push back?
Nobody can ask this nigga a question like, yo, what's up with these fucking altar boy rapes? Like, nobody. We can't question this.
[01:33:58] Speaker B: You didn't like. So that's why I don't think. I felt like you should have liked your honor. Because the daughter was so anti religion, right? And the things that she brought up and stuff.
This motherfucker wanted Abraham to sacrifice his son just to show how much that you love me, right? And this, that and the other. And then once you do, then I fucking tell you, no, you don't have to. But that's some janky shit to do to a motherfucker.
[01:34:22] Speaker C: Put him through that, right?
[01:34:23] Speaker B: To put him through that. And it's funny, because I think about it now. People talk about the patience of job, right?
[01:34:28] Speaker D: I was about to say job. That's some fucked up shit, too.
[01:34:30] Speaker B: Yeah. The patience of job is, like, a world renowned thing.
[01:34:33] Speaker C: This is the asshole you guys worship. Sorry, can't do it.
[01:34:37] Speaker B: The patience of job.
The patience of job, right? And that's a thing that people wouldn't aspire to have, like, the patience of job. But it's like, damn, you did this motherfucker the dirtiest. Are you allowed?
[01:34:50] Speaker D: No, I'm about to say. You didn't even do them dirty. You let that nigga do them dirty, right?
I just ain't even going to protect your ass. I'm going to let him. Just because I know you that down for me, right?
[01:35:00] Speaker B: I'm going to let the ops, and I'm just going to show you how my soldiers roll, right again. And you have to go through all of this. It reminds me of oceans 13, where they put the fucking diamond inspector through all of the bullshit, only to give him the coin at the end. Like, he fucking had the smell and the mites and all of the shit that he had to go through. But at the end, they gave him the coin where he got, like, $10 million, right? And it's like, okay, you went through some shit, but in the end, I made you whole. I don't think you can make Job whole because he lost his whole family and his fucking land and everything else. There was not too much left to job at the point when he was done getting fucking fucked up. But anyways, I digress.
I don't know. I just felt like, if you get done wrong, it's not saying that it's right, but I say it's understandable to me. I understand why people may have prejudices against whoever.
[01:36:00] Speaker C: I totally understand.
[01:36:01] Speaker B: Because of their experiences, right? Because of their experiences.
[01:36:04] Speaker C: How many times have we admitted on this show that there's these stereotypes about black people, but there are black people who are making sure those stereotypes hold strong, right? They're working their ass off to make sure that the stereotypes are accurate in some way.
[01:36:19] Speaker A: Jamie Mac was at the bus stop.
[01:36:21] Speaker B: With them for show, bro. Like, I'm telling you, all of them.
[01:36:25] Speaker C: And the white people who see those black people aren't wrong.
[01:36:29] Speaker B: Yeah, I want to stand with them.
[01:36:34] Speaker C: But you don't feel embarrassed?
[01:36:36] Speaker D: I'll probably be standing over with them talking about, man, look at them niggas over here.
[01:36:39] Speaker A: I'll be feeling so embarrassed when I see them.
[01:36:40] Speaker D: I'm like, damn, don't trust them.
[01:36:42] Speaker C: I feel embarrassed, too.
I don't internalize it, but I understand why you'd be embarrassed. Yeah, it's not cool, man.
[01:36:51] Speaker B: But everybody live, so, yeah. Shout out to Les who this is on Twitter.
Let go it.
Never look back. And she was talking about. Someone posted a tweet about what?
Serious question. Why y'all so ashamed of y'all bonnets? And she replied at no nonsense show. And I'm like, listen, if we could just reach one. Each one. Reach one. That made my heart glow. Because I'm like, God damn it, if she won't wear a bonnet out. If we've shamed her to the point where she don't put that bonnet out and go out in public, then my work is done. Like, these ten years have been productive. If it just gives one bonnet off the street, like, God damn it, we.
[01:37:37] Speaker D: Need that applause sound right there.
[01:37:41] Speaker B: If we could get one bonnet video.
[01:37:43] Speaker A: When they were surprised. A white girl wearing a bonnet in her own home.
[01:37:47] Speaker B: No. So there was this other chick, ao that's Nina, asked a question. And her question was like, why y'all ashamed of y'all bonnets? And her reply was at nonsense.
Like, it should be self pride. Like, that's the reason why you should be. But if we can instill that in you, and you be awake enough to be like, yeah, this ain't cool, then that's great, too. Sometimes you need to be awoke. I know we talk about woke black people, but sometimes there's awoke and then there's woke. Like, if you sleepwalking, there's never awoke. Yeah, there is.
Past tense awoke.
[01:38:32] Speaker C: That'd be past tense.
[01:38:33] Speaker D: Isn't woke past tense, too?
[01:38:34] Speaker B: I don't know.
I feel bad for cutting as many classes as I did.
[01:38:40] Speaker C: I don't think woke. Is woke even a word prior to being woke.
[01:38:45] Speaker B: That's a good question.
[01:38:45] Speaker C: I'm not even sure woke is a word.
[01:38:47] Speaker D: That's actually a good question. Because now that you said it, I'm like, is it really a word?
[01:38:50] Speaker C: Because wake isn't a word. You wake someone up, you can't just say, I'm wake.
[01:38:57] Speaker B: You know what I'm saying?
[01:38:58] Speaker D: Because if you said it in the.
[01:38:59] Speaker B: Past tense, come on, I'm wake, right? Get up.
[01:39:02] Speaker C: Woke isn't even a word. We just made that shit something that's not used that way. You can't use the word woke that way. But, hey, I'll let you all have it.
[01:39:10] Speaker B: No, yeah, that makes sense.
[01:39:11] Speaker D: They can have it. I don't use that word.
[01:39:17] Speaker C: I hope that most people have the ability to kind of not use that filter just because, like, for instance, father in law or whatever, there's no safety issue there necessarily.
[01:39:29] Speaker B: Right?
[01:39:29] Speaker C: That's just prejudice. Because if all the signs of what you've seen have been positive, then you're still holding on to that. And it's not even a safety issue. That's racism. But if you're on an elevator and somebody who's six nine and 290 and you're, like, five nine, that's safety, whether they're black or white. And just so happens that you got beat up by black people. And so now here's a black person. That's safety to me. Get off the elevator. And I don't feel bad about. I'm not going to post something about he shouldn't lose his job for getting off the elevator because were you going to stitch him up if that black dude had been a.
[01:40:01] Speaker B: Right, right.
[01:40:03] Speaker D: Oh, no, I'm all with that. I'm going to have to pull Jamie Mac. That reminds me of, like, the movie traffic when Lorenz Tayden and Ludacris was walking by Sandra Bullock and whoever the husband was or whatnot, and she grabbed her purse and he's like, see, that's what I'm talking right there. You know what I'm saying? They just see black people walking across, walking by them. And she grabbed her purse. He was like, yeah, but should she grab her purse, though? Yeah, probably. And then they went and robbed him.
[01:40:29] Speaker C: Yeah, exactly.
[01:40:31] Speaker B: That's the one where he got the dude's wife out the car and did a little stinky pinky with her. Yeah. Damn.
[01:40:39] Speaker D: Listen, Sandy Newton.
[01:40:40] Speaker B: Listen, I'm going with. Somebody's going to jail that night or, hell, something that's happening. You can't just finger fuck my girl and my wife.
[01:40:47] Speaker D: We're not doing that.
[01:40:49] Speaker B: It cannot end this way.
The night can't end. That's one of the things.
[01:40:54] Speaker D: When you all was talking, when Reg was saying, if you get beat up in front of your girl or something like that, her opinion of you going to be different at that point. You can't just let that shit slide.
[01:41:06] Speaker B: Yeah, you got to take an ass whooping. You got to go to jail. Something's got to happen.
[01:41:09] Speaker D: She was right to go sideways on that nigga.
[01:41:11] Speaker B: Yeah, for sure. If you just let that shit happen. Yeah, we got problems, that's for sure. He didn't say shit.
[01:41:18] Speaker D: Yes, sir.
She was all the way right about that one. And then I think it nutted up.
[01:41:26] Speaker C: I got something I've been thinking about.
This seems universal, but it's an issue. It's a problem. Have you guys noticed? Are you guys. Guilty is a better word of giving people great advice, like your self righteous advice about what people should do when they're out of pocket or when they're making a decision or whatever. But then you don't follow that same advice.
[01:41:52] Speaker D: That's a story of my life, especially.
[01:41:55] Speaker A: When it comes to being disciplined and working hard.
[01:41:57] Speaker C: What the fuck you all.
[01:41:58] Speaker D: Oh, no. That was all the way me until maybe a few years ago.
[01:42:02] Speaker C: What the fuck? We never check ourselves on it. Do you still do it?
[01:42:06] Speaker D: No, actually, I'm going to give you some props right now. Be honest. I even told my therapist this because I don't remember what episode it was. But you was talking about the importance of checking yourself.
[01:42:14] Speaker C: Oh, self awareness.
[01:42:15] Speaker D: Yeah. I'm not even going to lie. That shit literally changed my way of thinking about a lot of shit. And so I find myself doing that shit all the time.
Nick, I'll be wrong about a lot of shit.
[01:42:27] Speaker A: I checked myself. But by the time I checked myself, I already did the damage.
[01:42:31] Speaker B: No, look, I was that dude in junior high, in high school, motherfuckers would come and ask advice, and I would have good advice. I could give you some. Really? Let's talk about it. Let's just break it down and make it make sense, right? And then let's just go through a process and come up with a game plan. And then they're like, man, that's fucking awesome. You guys always got great advice. And then I would be like, why am I so fucked up, though? I don't get it. Why can't I do this with myself? Why am I not doing myself, giving myself the same advice or going through this counseling with myself to where I go, okay, Jamie. And I do it better now more than I did back then.
[01:43:09] Speaker C: I was like, I don't think so. I think that you're lying to yourself. I think that I still give people advice and don't follow my own advice.
[01:43:15] Speaker B: No, I didn't say I was listening to what I'm saying. I do it better. So that's relative. So that's definitely relative.
[01:43:23] Speaker D: No, you're right, because, like, the same thing with me. I'm better now. But I know I still do this.
[01:43:27] Speaker C: I don't know that I'm fucking better. I don't know that that's true.
[01:43:29] Speaker B: Well, you probably started off good.
Or at least better than. Listen, I'm going to tell you I don't think so. I was fucked.
[01:43:36] Speaker A: You don't think you take your own advice?
[01:43:38] Speaker C: I think we're all guilty of this self righteous bullshit. I think all of us are. We're so willing to deride for what's right and what's wrong.
[01:43:48] Speaker B: It's easy when you're out of it, right. Because I think there's less emotional value, right. And you can just deal with facts, right? And you deal with. You don't cut, right. You go, listen.
Part of it is you don't have to do the work. So it's easy to say, listen, all you got to do is fucking chop down those trees over there. And you could fucking have a clearing into your house and it makes sense, right? But if you have to do, you're like, goddamn, I have to chop down all these fucking trees. That's a lot of work. It's easy to give advice when it's just the instructions, right?
Because again, what's going to have to be done afterwards is the action, right? And that action is what takes effort.
Sometimes I think we just don't want to do that effort, right? So I don't think we don't do it to ourselves because the effort is required. Where when you're giving advice, it's not, you can just be great at.
[01:44:45] Speaker D: It's just words.
[01:44:46] Speaker B: And even if you, even if it's hard, like, you know this motherfucker, listen, I know it's uncomfortable. I know that this is not fucking ideal or fucking going to be pleasant, but this is the right move to do, right? And you tell a motherfucker that and you're like, listen, it's going to fucking hurt. It's going to feel like this. It's easy because that's not going to be you. That's going to have to hurt or feel that way, right? So it's easy to give that information to them and be like, I gave it to you. Now whether or not you do it, but yourself is kind of like self preservation or self sacrificing. You don't want to hurt yourself or do yourself that way or narcissism, something. I don't know.
You're not that direct with yourself.
[01:45:28] Speaker C: Well, let me ask you this then.
[01:45:29] Speaker B: Now that we've gotten there, and I.
[01:45:30] Speaker C: Just want a simple answer there because there's more to it. So then is it wrong or is it right to do this wrong? You all agree it's wrong?
[01:45:37] Speaker D: I believe it's hypocritical.
[01:45:39] Speaker A: I believe it's hypocritical because at that same time is that person that's asking for that advice, not you asking that advice for yourself. So as long as you give that person sound advice, you did your.
[01:45:49] Speaker C: What do you mean by sound, though? You're not doing it. You've never done it. You're not going to do it, but you're giving someone the advice to do it. Is that right? So again, is it right thing to do?
[01:45:58] Speaker B: I'm going to be a zero sum motherfucker. Does it work when you did that advice and you sent them on their way, did it for them, put them in a better spot because of that?
[01:46:08] Speaker D: Right.
[01:46:08] Speaker B: So if it did, then I'm going to say, yeah, that's right. Whether or not you're willing to do it to yourself, that's irrelevant. If it helped them, you did your job. I think it was right.
[01:46:19] Speaker A: You didn't want to help yourself, but you definitely didn't mind helping John Doe.
[01:46:22] Speaker D: I like this because I think you can really flip it either way. I think you can say it's wrong, you can say it's right, and I think you can have his perspective of either one. But I just think either way it's hypocritical.
[01:46:33] Speaker A: That's fine.
[01:46:34] Speaker D: You can say that it depends on your belief. Like, to me, being hypocritical is wrong.
[01:46:38] Speaker C: This is another thing that I'm journeying on. This is another idea that I've come across that I want to deal with in myself. Because let's say that we think it's wrong. Let's just say that we all agree that it's wrong, right? Which one do you stop?
Do you stop giving advice or do you do the things that you give advice on?
[01:46:54] Speaker D: Do the things that you give advice on?
I say that because if you're going to choose one, right? If you're going to choose one, I would choose to make the changes in my own life that way. I am.
[01:47:09] Speaker A: That you benefit from.
[01:47:10] Speaker D: People see my example by how I'm living my life, okay? Not the words I'm saying, but how I'm living. And then they take my example and then help themselves in that way. I'm not saying that the hypocritical thing can't work because the words that I said could help somebody. But the way I see it too, is I look at the person that's saying the shit. You can tell me all the shit and magical words and whatnot. But I'm looking at how you live in your life. And if you ain't living your life a certain kind of way, then it's kind of like you just running your mouth and talking Shit.
[01:47:37] Speaker B: But I'm saying that you're making the assumption that all your advice has been beneficial.
[01:47:42] Speaker D: No, I'm saying in the case in which it is okay, because even in any case where maybe you're not doing it yourself, but the advice helps somebody.
[01:47:49] Speaker B: Right, but that's why I said it depends. Right? Because again, if the information, like all the advice you give gets people fucked up, then maybe you should stop doing giving advice, right?
[01:48:01] Speaker C: You don't know whether the advice you gave is actually going to be beneficial till later. So I'm saying you're at the point of, I have the opportunity right now to either give this advice or not give this advice. I know that I haven't done these things that I'm telling them to do, but right now, I can make a choice whether I give this advice or I shut my mouth and say, man, that's a terrible situation.
[01:48:19] Speaker B: Okay. You got to go, migos.
[01:48:21] Speaker C: You got to what?
[01:48:21] Speaker B: You got to go, migos.
[01:48:22] Speaker C: Go, amigos.
[01:48:23] Speaker B: Migos. Walk it like you talk it.
[01:48:25] Speaker C: Oh, my God.
[01:48:27] Speaker D: I didn't know what he meant either.
So are you saying you agree with me now?
[01:48:31] Speaker B: Yeah. Okay. Because if we're talking about good advice, again, like I said, it was all relative, because I wasn't.
[01:48:37] Speaker D: Again, that goes back to your assumption thing. Because we're assuming that all advice is good advice.
[01:48:41] Speaker B: Right?
But some people give bad advice. Let's be clear.
[01:48:45] Speaker D: That's why I just be clear.
[01:48:46] Speaker C: Who thinks they give bad advice, though?
[01:48:48] Speaker D: No one does. No one thinks they give bad advice.
[01:48:51] Speaker B: All the girlfriends. Oh, you're right. They don't think.
[01:48:53] Speaker D: They don't think they're giving bad advice.
[01:48:55] Speaker C: So there's no way to check this one. There's no self check for this.
[01:48:58] Speaker A: So you have to walk, zero sum.
[01:48:59] Speaker B: What did it happen?
[01:49:00] Speaker A: You can figure out if they.
[01:49:02] Speaker D: That's why I said that the change you make is, motherfucker, be like, man.
[01:49:05] Speaker B: I'm about to go rob this store, nigga, listen, make sure you do this, nigga. You know what I mean? Like, whatever. And you end up in jail. And you end up in jail.
That's fucking bad advice. So all I was saying is that.
[01:49:17] Speaker C: I'll be like, yo, you did it wrong.
[01:49:18] Speaker D: That's not what if the advice was to try to help them not get caught, right?
[01:49:22] Speaker B: But it's good, and they still got caught, right?
[01:49:24] Speaker D: So you gave follow the good advice.
[01:49:26] Speaker C: Or they missed one step, like, you know what I'm saying?
[01:49:28] Speaker D: Or it didn't go like they planned.
[01:49:30] Speaker C: And none of this matters, because you're at the point where none of this has happened yet. You're at a place where you have an option to either give them advice or not.
[01:49:37] Speaker B: Like I said, you got to walk it like you talk it. If you're telling motherfuckers to be this way, you got to be that way, too, because otherwise it just fucking rings off.
[01:49:45] Speaker C: That's a journey that I'm on right now, is learning to not give advice. If I don't have receipts, for lack of a better words. But then I can't have the exact receipt of exactly the thing that you're going through. But I went through something similar, maybe.
[01:50:01] Speaker A: You know what I'm saying, who say.
[01:50:03] Speaker C: I was even successful at going through it. Maybe I had a bad experience, but my lesson is that don't do what I did, but still, is that even good advice?
[01:50:12] Speaker B: So then what happens to the situation, right, where you encounter, like you said, it's not something you even have a receipt for, it's nothing that you've encountered. But that doesn't mean that you can't fucking high level see something and then maybe be able to say, listen, this is what I would do, right?
[01:50:31] Speaker D: I was about to say that because that's what I say about interviews all the time.
[01:50:34] Speaker B: This is what I would do, right? Like, I've never been in that situation before, but this is what I would do, right? And then kind of work it that way, right? And then you really have to stand on that, really be truthful, like, is this really what you would do? Would you do this? Right? Because again, it goes back to now the same thing.
If you encounter the same situation, are you going to do this this way or are you going to fucking do something different? But if you're being honest and saying, this is what I would do, and it really is that I think you're good. Because again, I think sometimes people need help, right? And they rely on the people that they know. And we don't all have the answers, but some people have good shit, right? And if you are a fucking thinker like you are, and you can fucking, at least, even if you've never been there, you can think through the process and go, you know what? If I'd have called you when I fucking first got to the motherfucking trap house hotel, you would have probably been like, nigga, leave now.
I'm on the way. Leave now like this, don't waste no more time.
That would have helped, right? So that could have been beneficial, right? You've never been in that situation. But let me run it by you.
Let me tell you all the points that are fucking the data points that I'm dealing with. And then you can now tell me what you think, right? And I think that there's value to that whether or not you've done it or not. So I think it's different. Like, if it's something that you've been through and I did something, like, I went left, but now I'm telling you in the same situation to go, right, that may be harder because again, I'm not in the same situation, I did something different. Than what I'm telling you now. If I'm doing that is because I went that way and I saw that it was fucked up left. Now I'm telling you to go right. That makes sense. But if I'm telling you that I went left, left worked great for me, but now I'm telling you to go right, that would be a problem, too.
[01:52:29] Speaker C: So as we're working through this, I.
[01:52:31] Speaker D: Think you said that, though, because what if you made a decision and it turned out fucked up for you? So you're telling them to go the other way.
[01:52:38] Speaker B: Right, but I'm saying. But if I went left and it did work out, you told them to go right, and then I'm telling you to go right.
[01:52:44] Speaker C: What if you go right and it didn't work?
[01:52:46] Speaker D: Purposeful, bad advice, though.
[01:52:48] Speaker C: What if you went right and it didn't work out and they went left and it didn't work out? So here's my thing. I think that what I've grown just in this conversation, what I've grown to is maybe necessarily giving the advice isn't bad, but it needs to be worded very intentionally.
[01:53:04] Speaker D: I agree with that.
[01:53:05] Speaker C: To make sure that you're giving the person the knowledge that, hey, I don't necessarily have this answer, but let's see if we can work through it together.
[01:53:15] Speaker B: Right.
[01:53:15] Speaker C: But let me tell you what starting this journey has corrupted me on, okay, advice from people. Now I listen to advice. I'm like, oh, my God.
[01:53:22] Speaker B: This is the details immediately, you guys, listeners, the eye roll was serious.
As soon as you start trying to tell him something, his eyes is in the back of his head.
[01:53:33] Speaker C: Like the exercise. That's bad. But that's where I'm at right now. The beginning of this journey is me not trusting anybody's advice anymore. Because I'm like, people give advice that they're not willing to do.
[01:53:43] Speaker D: Maybe necessarily bad, though.
[01:53:45] Speaker A: Yeah, that's not bad. Because maybe you would only want to take advice like we said, walk it like you talk it until you see that person being example.
[01:53:56] Speaker D: Even outside of that, you can be talking to a person that maybe even is an expert on the topic or whatnot. But he's just at a different point where he's just very selective about the information that he takes in, basically is what it sounds like.
[01:54:08] Speaker A: Nothing's wrong with that.
[01:54:09] Speaker B: Well, again, that might even be part of, like, what French Reggie was talking about with the bombardment of information, right. I think that there is some beauty to being selective about absorbing some of the fucking selective.
[01:54:24] Speaker C: I don't listen to any of it.
I'm the opposite of selective. It's just like, yo, I know that I'm a self righteous motherfucker to be able to give you some advice on some shit that I wouldn't do, right? And I don't deserve to give you this advice because I'm not willing to do what I'm telling you to go out there and put your neck on the line for.
[01:54:40] Speaker B: Right.
[01:54:41] Speaker C: So I'm wrong own in that sense.
[01:54:42] Speaker B: Right.
[01:54:42] Speaker C: And now I feel like knowing that.
[01:54:44] Speaker D: About me, you feel like everybody else is everyone.
[01:54:47] Speaker C: If I'm doing it, everybody's doing it.
[01:54:49] Speaker B: My question is, like my mama said, fucking you, she fucking everybody.
[01:54:52] Speaker A: What about those books that self help, not even just self Help books, but even books like atomic habits, just teaching you how to organize your time and shit like that. Would you not take those lessons from those books because they're technically advice?
[01:55:09] Speaker D: But that's really what it is, is advice.
Just because that worked for you don't mean it's going to work for me.
[01:55:15] Speaker C: Exactly.
[01:55:16] Speaker B: It's just like a diet. I mean, a motherfucking.
[01:55:19] Speaker D: To me, it's somebody's idea.
[01:55:20] Speaker C: Well, no, I just think that there's a lie in the name. There's a lie in the genre.
[01:55:26] Speaker B: Self help.
[01:55:26] Speaker C: Yeah, it's not self help.
[01:55:28] Speaker D: It's not self help because you're helping me at this point.
[01:55:30] Speaker C: So I really believe in self help.
[01:55:32] Speaker D: Like real self help.
[01:55:34] Speaker C: I don't believe in Tony Robbins.
[01:55:36] Speaker B: Right. Your help.
[01:55:37] Speaker D: Right.
[01:55:37] Speaker A: I don't believe with that genre. You don't think because you have to still go apply that work yourself? Like, I could read a Tony Robbins book, but I have to now go take that financial information advice and apply.
[01:55:49] Speaker C: It, or where were you not, where.
[01:55:50] Speaker D: Did you get the help, though?
[01:55:51] Speaker C: Where would you not have to take it?
[01:55:52] Speaker D: Where did you get the help?
[01:55:53] Speaker C: And which version of help do you not do it yourself when somebody is actually helping you?
[01:55:58] Speaker A: Okay, I guess I see what you're saying.
So what should they call it?
[01:56:02] Speaker C: I don't know. It's all a scam.
[01:56:03] Speaker D: They should call it advice. This is what they should call it. No, actually, I'm with you, b. They should call it a fucking scam.
[01:56:09] Speaker C: Opinion. A nigga's opinion. Niggas opinion.
[01:56:14] Speaker B: The opinion section. There you go. Because again, they do have that in newspapers, right?
[01:56:19] Speaker D: They used to have editorials, the op eds.
[01:56:23] Speaker C: Op eds, yeah. And those should be taken with a little bit more leniency. Right?
[01:56:29] Speaker B: This is somebody's opinion, right? Yeah, sure.
[01:56:33] Speaker C: You know what I'm saying. I just like to share that with everybody because that's one of the things I'm working on.
[01:56:38] Speaker D: That's some real shit.
[01:56:39] Speaker C: Is there anything else we got, guys?
[01:56:40] Speaker B: No, just check out all the shows on the network and then follow us on socials.
[01:56:46] Speaker C: Absolutely.
[01:56:47] Speaker A: So sign up for premium, too, because we're going to try to go crazy this year again.
[01:56:51] Speaker B: If you're still 2024. Fuck yeah. Let's roll. This is going to be a new year. This is going to be it. Yeah. This is going to be it.
[01:56:57] Speaker C: Confetti and all that, listeners, we're going.
[01:56:59] Speaker B: To get a new president.
[01:57:00] Speaker C: Yeah. 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.
[01:57:08] Speaker B: 10% less bullshit than any other podcast guarantee.
[01:57:11] Speaker C: It's Sam.