Episode 787

October 17, 2023

01:58:45

Where Trust Comes to Die

Where Trust Comes to Die
The No Nonsense Show - A Funny Experiment In Black Experience
Where Trust Comes to Die

Oct 17 2023 | 01:58:45

/

Show Notes

The No Nonsense Show Episode #789

French feels like WWIII is on the brink of explosion. How can you blame him? It looks as though the world is about to witness some sort of reckoning. One universally important issue is that most of us don't know what the hell to believe. It is no longer possible to use common sense or morality to decide if information you are receiving is accurate. There is an incredible amount of misinformation and disinformation. The people who we have been told to trust have been caught lying time and time again. And here we are with a new war on the horizon and you can't believe what anyone is saying. Both sides are calling the other terrorists. To be honest, they both kind of are. We certainly don't condone terrorism. But who gets to decide what terrorism is? And can you complain about terrorism and then do terroristic things and still expect global support? You rememebr when you could turn on the news and get a run down of the days events? Remember how you used to trust that...and the people they had on? I don't think there is one trustworthy non-agenda medium left. America and the year 2023 has become the place where trust comes to die.

Mack wants a prenup with a weighty proposal. His spouse can not weigh more than ____. He didn't actually do this. But he does support it. When you have been married, you do understand that people stop trying as hard once they know that you are going to stay. So get it together or lose me, he says!

Where Trust Comes to Die #TNNS789

Support the show by paying your laugh tax or becoming a  premium subscriber HERE

Get Show merch here: MERCH

Follow us at: Twitter Instagram Facebook

View Full Transcript

Episode Transcript

[00:00:00] Speaker A: The views and opinions expressed by The. [00:00:01] Speaker B: No Nonsense Show and its hosts do. [00:00:03] Speaker A: Not necessarily reflect views consistent with political correctness or the Rare Sonnets Podcast network. So to get the show started right, we want to wish any officers of. [00:00:10] Speaker B: The Sensitivity police a heartfelt. Fuck you. [00:00:13] Speaker C: Can I just say I'm done with fucking. What's her name? [00:00:16] Speaker A: What's her name? Yeah. [00:00:17] Speaker C: I don't even want to mention her by name. I want to treat her like Voldemort, Will Smith's wife. [00:00:22] Speaker A: Oh, man. [00:00:22] Speaker B: We're not about to talk about her. She's so funny, man. Capping like crazy, bro. Tupac proposed store. [00:00:28] Speaker C: Come on, man. [00:00:29] Speaker A: But it's not just that. There have been several. There have been a few, like, hot takes. [00:00:34] Speaker C: All of them are hot takes. And I'm just like, how your hair growing back? You got alopecia. [00:00:38] Speaker B: They tell my she went to Turkey. [00:00:40] Speaker A: She said Tupac had alopecia, too. [00:00:41] Speaker B: You saw that? [00:00:45] Speaker C: Why are you slandering dead people? Come on, man. [00:00:47] Speaker A: There was when I said it was funny, there was like, jada Pinkett confesses that she never even knew Tupac or something like it's like claiming she said. [00:00:55] Speaker B: That they were soulmates, but they didn't have chemistry. I don't even understand that. [00:00:58] Speaker A: Yeah, she's stupid. [00:00:59] Speaker C: She sell crack. U are listening to the no Nonsense show. 10% less bullshit than any other podcast, guaranteed. She was she's a crack dealer. [00:01:25] Speaker A: I didn't see that. [00:01:26] Speaker B: Yeah, she said that her and Will been broken up since 2016. So why did he say, my wife, when he slapped Chris Rock? [00:01:32] Speaker A: She said she was surprised because they still married. Yeah, she said she was surprised that he had that much pushback for when he said that about her and that Chris Rock was trying to date her. And that's why he was mad. Because he was mad because she dissed him. [00:01:45] Speaker C: Come on. [00:01:45] Speaker A: Yeah. [00:01:46] Speaker B: Come on. [00:01:46] Speaker C: And it's funny because there was a time when I think that she was endearing to people, especially the culture. [00:01:53] Speaker A: Low down, dirty shame. [00:01:54] Speaker B: Yes. [00:01:54] Speaker A: That was 45 years ago. I know, but I didn't even think. [00:01:57] Speaker B: She looked a good I don't think. [00:01:58] Speaker A: She looked good in Set It Off. I thought she looked I know. They tried to make her look homely. [00:02:03] Speaker B: Right. [00:02:03] Speaker A: And she did. [00:02:04] Speaker B: Yeah. [00:02:04] Speaker A: That was a bad move. Yeah, that was a bad PR. That's probably what ruined her career. [00:02:08] Speaker C: Set It Off was, I think, again, she was still in the good graces of the culture. Yeah. [00:02:14] Speaker A: Low down dirty shame. And maybe different world. [00:02:18] Speaker C: Okay. Yeah. [00:02:18] Speaker A: That's it. Everything else was trash matrix. No, she was too old by then. [00:02:24] Speaker C: Yeah. [00:02:24] Speaker A: And she didn't really have a real part. Yeah, she was a punk. [00:02:29] Speaker B: She just had a good hairdo. Did she? [00:02:32] Speaker C: I don't even know what it was. [00:02:33] Speaker A: It wasn't her hair, though, obviously. [00:02:38] Speaker B: She had a show called Hawthorne, like, she who cares? [00:02:41] Speaker C: But that's the thing. I think that there was a time that we didn't despise her, though. As the culture. [00:02:46] Speaker A: She was cute as hell, low down, dirty, shame. Everybody was like, everybody despise her. Now, I don't know about despise. Despise the hard word. [00:02:53] Speaker C: Okay? Right. But I think that she's very annoying. I think that nobody no patience for her. Right. I think that the leash that she gets with us. As far as me, and I'm not going to speak for all black culture, but it's just like, well, you can't move on. [00:03:08] Speaker A: You're a coon first. [00:03:09] Speaker B: Move on. [00:03:10] Speaker C: No, but I'm actually more like the average black person than any nigga in the hood. [00:03:14] Speaker A: How so? [00:03:15] Speaker C: Because I just am. [00:03:16] Speaker B: Okay? [00:03:17] Speaker C: That's scientifically proven by which science. [00:03:22] Speaker A: Whose science has predicted, I mean, claimed a few white scientists. Lucky for you they were white scientists. [00:03:31] Speaker B: They don't have any idea. Like, yeah, that's black. [00:03:33] Speaker A: That's definitely black. [00:03:36] Speaker C: No, but I'm just like, I know she's trying to sell a book, and that's where this whole new thing is coming from and her new cycle in our face. But I'm like. [00:03:49] Speaker A: I would think at this point in our social sophistication, that we're past that. Falling for that is always more no, not the lie. Not a lie. Just the idea that I got something coming out. So I'm about to shock the world with some crazy hot takes, and then here's my book. [00:04:08] Speaker B: That's the lie, though. [00:04:09] Speaker A: The hot takes. There's not a lie. It doesn't matter if what she's saying is true or false. You're missing what I'm saying. It doesn't matter what she's saying is true or false, just the fact that she's coming out with these ridiculous things that she's saying. And people are like, oh, man, let. [00:04:22] Speaker B: Me go check out this book. [00:04:23] Speaker A: I don't think that works anymore. I don't think people are going to. [00:04:26] Speaker B: Go check out the book. But it keeps her name right in that weekly cycle. [00:04:30] Speaker A: But French, the purpose of doing that would be so that she could sell something. [00:04:33] Speaker B: But isn't it if her name isn't that weekly cycle you just got what isn't it you need to sell 5000 to become a number one bestseller, I'm sure, if you have that many. Yeah, I think I remember I was. [00:04:45] Speaker A: Reading that doesn't seem like very many books. [00:04:46] Speaker C: Yeah, I feel like there I mean, I do see a lot of books that say number one bestseller. [00:04:51] Speaker A: And that wasn't my take. I was saying that aren't we more socially sophisticated these days to not that doesn't move us anymore. When we know somebody's coming out with something and then they start doing some weird shit, we kind of just start ignoring them. [00:05:06] Speaker C: I thought, I'm down for it again, but I was so annoyed because every time I turned on Twitter is it. [00:05:14] Speaker A: Because it was tupac? [00:05:15] Speaker C: Well, that part of it, too, right? And I think there were so many. [00:05:21] Speaker A: Rebutes in a two week period or. [00:05:23] Speaker B: One week in a single week period. [00:05:25] Speaker A: Yeah, 5000 a week is a lot of books, though. [00:05:27] Speaker B: That's a lot of it's a lot of for books. But so if everybody's talking about you and your book and whatever you're saying for at least four days out of that week, I'm assuming by the math, 5000 people might go buy the book just because you get multiple engagements online. So some people will say, oh, let me go check this book out, because she talked about her and Will being separated since 2016. So I can read the book to really figure out that separation aspect. [00:05:54] Speaker A: Yeah, but that would only matter if your goal was to be a number one bestseller. I don't know if that was her goal. You just said that. I don't know if that was yeah. [00:06:00] Speaker B: I mean, if you sell in the book, what's the goal? The ghost not make your profit from it. [00:06:04] Speaker A: Yeah, but number one bestseller is only 5000 books, so that can't be the goal. [00:06:07] Speaker B: Oh, I mean, you're hoping for more than five. But I'm just saying because you were saying, why do all that gimmick if nobody's going to go buy the book? And I'm saying they do all that gimmick to create the engagement. That way they can at least get. [00:06:18] Speaker A: A small are we talking in a hurricane or something? He's missing my point and making a new point for me. Do you see what I'm saying, Mac? [00:06:26] Speaker C: Yes. [00:06:26] Speaker A: I said, aren't we socially sophisticated enough these days to not get pulled into that? [00:06:32] Speaker B: We're not. [00:06:32] Speaker A: And you're saying the goal is to sell 5000 books. Like, when was that ever the goal? [00:06:41] Speaker B: I thought we were, though. [00:06:42] Speaker A: We're not. [00:06:42] Speaker B: You are, but not the majority. Sorry, did you buy the book? No. [00:06:46] Speaker C: Are you going to? [00:06:47] Speaker B: No. [00:06:47] Speaker C: Are you going to let G money get it? [00:06:49] Speaker B: She's probably not even a fan. [00:06:50] Speaker A: Would you let her, though, or would you stop her? [00:06:52] Speaker B: She's her money. [00:06:53] Speaker C: There you go. There you go. Back to the old French. I like the other French about keeping them in the kitchen and all that. [00:07:00] Speaker A: That was wild, right? [00:07:01] Speaker C: 90 percenter. [00:07:02] Speaker A: What did she say about does she listen to that show? [00:07:04] Speaker B: She tell me nothing. But she don't mind. [00:07:06] Speaker A: She likes the kitchen. [00:07:08] Speaker B: She would want that lifestyle. [00:07:09] Speaker A: She doesn't like shoes or the kitchen. She doesn't like shoes or the other rooms in house. She's like, I just like being barefoot in the kitchen. It's what I desire, so it worked out perfectly. I love cooking, and I like shutting up. I like quitting my bitching and getting in the kitchen. I like that. [00:07:26] Speaker C: That should be a T shirt. Quit your bitching and get in the kitchen. Damn it. [00:07:30] Speaker A: That is a sure I'm I'm sure. [00:07:32] Speaker B: Sure. It's probably trademark and everything. [00:07:34] Speaker C: And so let me ask you this, though, French. Do you admire Will? Because I know you admire the cuck. [00:07:40] Speaker B: Admire what? [00:07:41] Speaker C: Will Smith. [00:07:42] Speaker A: He admires what he's able to no. [00:07:43] Speaker B: I'm actually worried about Will Smith because I'm like, Why are you letting her embarrass you like that? Because you can come out. [00:07:49] Speaker C: You heard his rap, right? [00:07:50] Speaker A: Get jiggy with it. [00:07:51] Speaker C: No, he came out with a rap. No, like, mind your business type rap. He's capping about how he's big Will. He's out of retirement. He's doing this. He's like, but stay out my business, though, right? [00:08:06] Speaker B: Your ex wife, apparently is telling the business. She wrote a whole book about the business. [00:08:13] Speaker C: But I think in his mind, he just was still saying, you know know, I'm not going to answer to none of think. [00:08:19] Speaker B: I think Will Smith is just playing a good husband because she said that, like, no matter what, even if they're separated, they'll never get divorced. So whatever the reason why they have that pack, I'm assuming he's just sticking to that code by not saying anything. Because if they have this thing where, yeah, we're going to not be together, but we're not going to get divorced, so I'm assuming whatever the reasoning behind. [00:08:40] Speaker A: Yeah, but she's not following the protocol she's doing. [00:08:44] Speaker B: I'm assuming the reason why he's so quiet is because he wants to be like, I'm a man of my word. I'm a stick. [00:08:49] Speaker A: I thought you were worried about him. [00:08:50] Speaker B: But I am worried about him. I am worried about him because she's, like, purposely embarrassing you. [00:09:01] Speaker C: So what if it's this, right? So let me first ask this question. Do you think his stardom would be tainted or dampered if he came out and said that he was gay? [00:09:11] Speaker A: No, I don't think he's not gay, though. [00:09:14] Speaker C: Stop it. Listen, I don't think anybody gives a shit who's gay. [00:09:18] Speaker A: I've never felt like they did. [00:09:20] Speaker C: Right? So that's my point, you know? [00:09:22] Speaker A: Who cares if he's gay? Women that want him, right? Everybody else doesn't give a shit, right? I don't give a shit. Mac, you give a shit? [00:09:28] Speaker C: Nope. [00:09:28] Speaker A: French, you give a shit. I don't think anybody does. [00:09:31] Speaker C: And it's funny because I don't think even the women that want him would care, right? Because they didn't care about Prince. Nobody knew a Prince was really gay. [00:09:37] Speaker A: Prince wasn't gay. [00:09:38] Speaker C: But I'm just saying you don't know that. [00:09:40] Speaker A: Come on. [00:09:40] Speaker C: Bisexual, gay, bisexual. Who? [00:09:42] Speaker B: Name a nigga who fucked him. [00:09:44] Speaker C: I don't know, but exactly. [00:09:48] Speaker B: He was five. Five. That's it. [00:09:51] Speaker C: Come on. [00:09:52] Speaker A: I can't even go that high. I try to do the Prince, I can't even go that high. [00:09:56] Speaker C: Because my thinking was that maybe she was thinking she's just keeping his secret, right? [00:10:03] Speaker B: Secret that he's gay? Yeah. If she wanted to embarrass him, that's the secret to last year. [00:10:07] Speaker C: She ain't did it like that again. And that's why he's still holding up. [00:10:11] Speaker A: She will get canceled for making fun of him for being gay. [00:10:13] Speaker C: Right. She's holding up her end and being. [00:10:18] Speaker B: Like, I think something happened where Will probably did something to upset her. That's probably why they got separated and then she got a grudge, and now she's getting her look back. I think that's exactly what it and I think that's why Will's staying quiet. Because Will know, like, I did piss you off. [00:10:33] Speaker A: Will should have doubled down. [00:10:34] Speaker C: The one that really killed me was that Jaden is Tupac's son. [00:10:38] Speaker A: She didn't say that, man. [00:10:39] Speaker C: Are you kidding me? [00:10:40] Speaker B: No, she didn't say that. Was just a rumor. [00:10:42] Speaker C: Is a rumor. [00:10:42] Speaker B: Yeah, she didn't say that. The one that killed me, though, related to a similar thing like that is Willow, when she was a kid, wrote a letter to Tupac. That's a real like, why your kids know about your mysterious to the point where she felt like she had to write a letter to the dead. [00:10:59] Speaker C: This is my thing, too. To come back back to when you first asked me. I think the reason why I do have a big issue with her is the Tupac thing. It's like you've been eating off this nigga's bones forever, right? And the reality is we don't even know if this nigga even liked mean, it's like fucking Jay Z, you know what I mean? When he fucking made me and my bitch off know, biting Tupac's song, like nigga, first off, we know he didn't like. So so you can't fucking copy his song. [00:11:24] Speaker B: You absolutely pay for the sample, for the publishing, whatever. [00:11:27] Speaker C: You don't know what he paid for. [00:11:28] Speaker A: You don't pay for a sample. When somebody publicly distributes something that's domestically released. All you have to do is just not change. Well, okay, in that situation, it's different. Normally, if I wanted to do a remake of your song, all I do is pay the Harry Fox agency. I think it's like a Nickel album, a sale or whatever. And I can redo your song as long as I don't change the order of it. I keep it if it's intro, bridge, verse, hook, verse, hook, B section, bridge, whatever, as long as I keep it in that order. Whatever you did, I can do your song without even asking you. Now, as far as interpolations or samples, I do have to get that clear. But it doesn't come from you. Jay Z didn't make that music. [00:12:07] Speaker C: You mean Tupac didn't make it, right? [00:12:09] Speaker A: I mean, Tupac didn't make that beat. [00:12:10] Speaker C: Yeah, but again, it was his premise, right? He made it and it was where. [00:12:14] Speaker A: Did he get the music from? I don't even know if that was. [00:12:16] Speaker C: An original, but I'm just saying about the idea, right? Me and my bitch was him and his guns, right? That's what he was talking about. And you came out with fucking light skinned Taylor Swift and fucking that's Beyonce. [00:12:28] Speaker A: Okay, so you think Taylor Swift has surpassed Beyonce? [00:12:34] Speaker B: Yes. You think so, too? She got white America behind her. [00:12:38] Speaker C: And I don't know where Beyonce been. Where Beyonce at? [00:12:40] Speaker A: I mean, Beyonce did well, Beyonce makes music for gay men now, so it's a smaller market. [00:12:44] Speaker C: Okay. Yeah, and Taylor Swift is, like, changing the NFL. Now she got motherfuckers for other teams. [00:12:50] Speaker A: Nobody's fucking with her in that team. They're all like, Get her off this. [00:12:53] Speaker B: They've been winning. [00:12:55] Speaker C: No, no, there's people on other teams, like, when they go to play whatever, the other team got Swifty jerseys. That ain't even you know what I mean? It's like, what the fuck, Swifty? [00:13:03] Speaker A: That's her team. [00:13:04] Speaker B: That's her hive. Beyonce got the beehive. [00:13:07] Speaker A: Yeah, the Swifties is I'm sad that you guys are even talking about this. [00:13:10] Speaker C: On our show, man. It's out there. [00:13:14] Speaker A: This is the third time you brought this bitch's name up. I'm sad that that's where we've gotten to no nonsense legacy. [00:13:23] Speaker C: I told you all back when I first brought it up, I'm low key a Swifty, bro. Let's go. When she gave up the loot to the common people. You know what I mean? [00:13:36] Speaker A: I'm not a hater. I'm not a fan. I don't even spend 1 second of my day thinking about Taylor Swift or it's just yeah, this is where we've got this is the no nonsense. This is the beginning of the. [00:13:53] Speaker C: Look, not if she could do for us what she did for the NFL, we might blow the fuck up. [00:13:58] Speaker B: She come here. [00:13:59] Speaker C: We in. [00:14:01] Speaker B: But who the hell would we be. [00:14:03] Speaker A: Doing a show for? I don't want to talk to her fans. [00:14:06] Speaker C: What? [00:14:07] Speaker B: They'll cancel this. I don't want back to the old episodes. [00:14:10] Speaker A: I don't relate to any of Taylor Swift's fans. I don't have very much in common with them socially, so I don't know that. [00:14:16] Speaker C: Yes, we do. [00:14:17] Speaker B: Nice teenage girls, bro. [00:14:18] Speaker C: I'm talking about me and you. I'm one. You got a lot in common, bro, so don't do that. You're generalizing right now. But the reality is there's a 40. [00:14:29] Speaker B: Year old market for Swifties people who. [00:14:32] Speaker A: Are also Taylor Swift fans. I'm such and such, but I'm also a Taylor Swift fan. I could probably deal with those people. But people say, I am a Taylor Swift fan, and that's it. Nah, bruh. And they do other things, possibly. [00:14:43] Speaker C: Nah, it's in the and the only thing is the reality is I couldn't say any of her songs. I don't know any of her songs. [00:14:48] Speaker A: Not even one. [00:14:49] Speaker C: Do you? Not off the top of my head. [00:14:52] Speaker A: Damn. [00:14:53] Speaker C: Because, again, my fandom didn't come from her music. It was the way she treated people as a fucking star. You know what I mean? And I think a lot of times, motherfuckers get up and they think that they're better than and I think that. [00:15:05] Speaker A: You'Ve seen one example of how she treats people, and now you're sold it's. [00:15:10] Speaker C: Better than the fucking one example that I see from everybody else and how they treat know. And it's just things I noticed. Like, I watched this motherfucker, what? Jameson Williams yesterday for the fucking jameis. Jameis. [00:15:22] Speaker B: Quarterback. Backup quarterback for the no. [00:15:24] Speaker C: So that's Jameis Winston. Winston. I'm talking about jameis'son the receiver. Yes. [00:15:29] Speaker B: For the lions right there. [00:15:31] Speaker C: You he's he caught a touchdown for the fucking first catch of the year or whatever and shit after he was off suspension. And his teammates come to celebrate. And this nigga's running away from everybody, and he's just doing his own thing to the fans. And I'm like, Nigga, this is your first one. Let us celebrate with you. And that's just that bitch move, like. [00:15:54] Speaker A: Where it's just about they got to do anything, bro. [00:15:56] Speaker C: No, I'm just saying that that's when people get up, they usually are very narcissistic and selfish about their fucking fan. It's like, oh, I did this all by myself. No, you didn't, motherfucker. Stop it. No, you didn't. Nobody got to the top fucking by themselves, and so you didn't get to the end zone fucking by yourself. Fucking let's all us fucking celebrate together. You know what I mean? And that's the reason why I like the jets in the beginning of the season, because they had a rule. Where are we at, bro? What? [00:16:21] Speaker A: Matt a French, I need you to give me directions to where we're at. [00:16:27] Speaker C: The jets had a fucking rule that you can't celebrate alone. He called out one of his players and called him lame for running away from his teammates. He's like that's a lame. No, the Lions or the dude who plays for the Lions is the one that's why I said I like the jets. You got to follow on B. You got to stay with me. [00:16:46] Speaker A: But you said he ran away from the people. That was the lions. [00:16:49] Speaker C: That was the Lions guy, right, bro. [00:16:50] Speaker B: You are so he's saying that. [00:16:52] Speaker A: What street are we on? [00:16:53] Speaker B: Give me that lamb. [00:16:54] Speaker C: I don't understand where you need GPS. [00:16:56] Speaker A: Let me show you. I do. [00:16:57] Speaker C: Again, when I hard knocks. This season was about the jets, okay? And the coach of the jets said, we ain't doing that. And he had an example of one of the teams running away. We ain't running away from our when we score. [00:17:09] Speaker A: He saw the video that he ain't. [00:17:12] Speaker C: The only thing because it's like, I didn't already gave you fucking what's? The shit that used to print out MapQuest. I already gave you MapQuest a GPS. You got a. [00:17:26] Speaker B: Law. [00:17:26] Speaker A: I promise you that. [00:17:27] Speaker B: People are listening are like, people are lost. [00:17:29] Speaker A: No, bro. [00:17:30] Speaker B: People listening to you are like, well. [00:17:32] Speaker A: What is this nigga talking about? [00:17:33] Speaker B: All they got to do, they're like, thank you, B. [00:17:36] Speaker A: They got to rewind 10 seconds over and over. [00:17:39] Speaker B: I'll summarize. All Jimmy Mac was trying to say is he hates when people get up from something, when they accomplish something, and they act like the people that helped them along the way so they don't celebrate with them. He said he likes Taylor Swift because Taylor Swift recognized those people and get back to those people. He was comparing it to NFL standards because the guy from the Lions when he got his first touchdown from Celebration. [00:18:01] Speaker A: Is he the receiver on the level of Taylor Swift? [00:18:03] Speaker B: No. Okay. [00:18:04] Speaker A: So I don't see how this is. [00:18:05] Speaker C: Because, again, he caught one pass and exactly acting like he was a fucking king of the world. [00:18:11] Speaker B: Yeah. From suspension. [00:18:12] Speaker C: I'm on right? St Brown, who is the real nigga on that team, was, like, chasing his nigga like, come here, man. Let me celebrate with you. And he's, like, waving at the audience. He learned that from the as soon as he gets off the field, right, where you could take your helmet off. What's he do? Take his helmet off. [00:18:26] Speaker B: Look at me. [00:18:27] Speaker C: And I'm like if this he learned from AB, though. Nigga don't sit his ass down. [00:18:30] Speaker B: That's typical wide receiver characteristics. [00:18:33] Speaker A: No new wide receiver. That's new wide receiver shit. Old wide receivers were workhorses. [00:18:38] Speaker C: And AB is different, too, right? That dude is no, he was not. [00:18:43] Speaker B: He wasn't a Taylor Swift of receivers when he was playing. [00:18:46] Speaker C: He was given back by behavior. [00:18:47] Speaker B: You mean by behavior? By skill set. I was just talking about I don't. [00:18:50] Speaker A: Know if he's taylor Swift is one of the best ever. [00:18:53] Speaker C: Right? [00:18:53] Speaker A: AB is not one of the best ever. [00:18:55] Speaker B: When he was playing. I'm talking about AB when he was. [00:18:57] Speaker A: Playing is not one you're comparing him to Jerry Rice? [00:19:01] Speaker B: No, I'm talking about what are we talking about? Tyreek Hill when he was playing. The six year run he had. Who was fucking with him? [00:19:10] Speaker A: Jerry Rice. We're saying Taylor Swift is one of the best ever is what I thought y'all were saying. [00:19:17] Speaker B: But she is taylor Swift already submitted. [00:19:19] Speaker A: So, again, y'all are trying to compare stuff that don't have shit to do with each other. Some one nigga who finally caught a pass and ran away from his teammates don't have shit to do with Taylor Swift. [00:19:28] Speaker C: But the concept does. [00:19:29] Speaker A: It doesn't. I'm calm, bro. I'm calm, bro. [00:19:37] Speaker C: And then again, what I used with the jets as an example. [00:19:44] Speaker B: I'm the one that summarized nigga, then how the. [00:19:46] Speaker C: Fuck you go say everybody's lost if you got it? Goofy ass. [00:19:48] Speaker B: No, he recognized I recognize it, but I can understand from the listener standpoint, just like, be honest could get lost. [00:19:54] Speaker A: He recognized that you was in a cab and you jumped out the backseat and jumped in another cab real quick, and you didn't pay the first guy. [00:20:00] Speaker B: You just took off in a second. [00:20:03] Speaker C: Get the fuck out of he gets. [00:20:05] Speaker A: It because you got it right. [00:20:07] Speaker C: So he's going to definitely side with that. [00:20:09] Speaker A: Sure. [00:20:10] Speaker B: Good. [00:20:10] Speaker A: Cop out. [00:20:11] Speaker C: It's not a cop out. It's the clearness. Because he obviously understood what the fuck I was saying, but said he didn't. [00:20:16] Speaker B: Who, me? [00:20:17] Speaker C: Yes, you did. [00:20:18] Speaker B: I said I understood, but I can understand how the audience I don't understand. [00:20:21] Speaker A: That you are so angry because I. [00:20:23] Speaker C: Don'T understand that what you mean. What you just said the listeners are lost. [00:20:27] Speaker A: Their listeners are lost. [00:20:29] Speaker B: Talking about being lost, do you think. [00:20:30] Speaker A: That drink to clarity? Are those my shot glasses? [00:20:36] Speaker B: Yeah. Okay. [00:20:37] Speaker A: Those are the new ones. [00:20:39] Speaker C: Yeah, these are. And you know, it's funny, I thought these were doubles. No, because how big they were, but. [00:20:43] Speaker A: They'Re just skinny and tall. Yeah. [00:20:48] Speaker C: What is that? Y'all drinking some of that Casadoris again. [00:20:52] Speaker A: Okay. [00:20:53] Speaker C: Left behind. [00:20:56] Speaker B: Yo, y'all think y'all think World War Three is about to start? [00:20:59] Speaker C: Nope. [00:21:00] Speaker B: I think it is, man. Election season biden. Got to do something, bro. [00:21:04] Speaker C: So who's going to be this World War Three? [00:21:07] Speaker B: The world? [00:21:08] Speaker C: What are you talking about? [00:21:09] Speaker A: He said who's going to be the world? [00:21:12] Speaker C: But there has to be sides, right? Like who's fighting who? [00:21:15] Speaker B: Yeah, who's fighting who? So it's going to be the west versus the east, the Western world versus the Eastern world. [00:21:21] Speaker C: So England is on what side? [00:21:23] Speaker A: The west. The west. [00:21:24] Speaker B: So Europe is with us. Australia is with us. Russia. Russia's, the east. Russia's an op. [00:21:30] Speaker C: Okay. [00:21:30] Speaker B: Russia's the app. China's are op. France, that's Europe that's with us. [00:21:35] Speaker C: Okay, so it's Russia and China. [00:21:38] Speaker B: Russia and China, the captains of the you know, Russia got all the little the babies that follow them. [00:21:45] Speaker C: Okay. [00:21:47] Speaker B: We already supporting Ukraine, so we kind of already in that Russia war in a sense, because we're giving Ukraine all this money. Palestine and Israel are going crazy right. [00:21:56] Speaker C: Now, but they're right next to each other. So who's on what side on that? [00:22:00] Speaker B: Technically, we're on Israel side. [00:22:01] Speaker C: I get that. So they're obviously we're going to have. [00:22:03] Speaker B: To help Israel because Palestine went off the other day. The Hamas I should say represent Palestine. So we're paying Ukraine now. We got to have Israel's back. So we're already funding two wars right now before we start fighting ourselves. [00:22:18] Speaker C: But are we going to start fighting. [00:22:20] Speaker B: If we funding eventually? [00:22:21] Speaker A: We have two aircraft carrier battle groups on station. [00:22:24] Speaker B: Say that again? [00:22:25] Speaker A: We have two battle group, two aircraft carrier battle groups on station in the Mediterranean. [00:22:30] Speaker B: So when you say on station, give a little bit more detail to sitting. [00:22:33] Speaker A: Off the coast, waiting to launch anything they need to launch if anybody were to step in and help, and how. [00:22:38] Speaker B: Much damage that launched. [00:22:40] Speaker A: One aircraft carrier battle group is, and I don't remember, it's been a long time, but an aircraft carrier battle group is basically an aircraft carrier that holds 200 plus airplanes on it, 5000 people. So it can think about the size of that. It's like four football fields long, right? It can hold as much ammo as can be dropped on somewhere, but then that's just one ship. It's a battle group. So you have a destroyer or two, a battleship or two frigates, and then you have a nuclear submarine that's underwater. That's a battle group. So if we have two of those Mediterraneans that are right off the coast of Israel, just waiting. Gerald Ford was there first, and I think another one got sent. [00:23:19] Speaker C: So this is my thing. From what I understood about what's going on over there is that Hamas is kind of like the neo Nazis of that. [00:23:31] Speaker A: No, not not right. Flip it. Israel are the neo Nazis? [00:23:35] Speaker C: No, but I'm just saying as a comparative to America, so, like, if the. [00:23:39] Speaker A: Neo Nazis I'll give you the perfect example. Palestinians are black people back during Jim Crow and Israelis are the white. [00:23:45] Speaker B: And yeah, that's it. [00:23:47] Speaker A: But the world doesn't really get to see that because they've silenced all of it. [00:23:51] Speaker B: Yeah. [00:23:52] Speaker C: As far as their ability is what I was thinking of. Not necessarily any ability. [00:23:57] Speaker B: What are you talking about? Their power, strength, their military force. [00:24:00] Speaker C: Right. The ability of what they are doing, able to accomplish. It would be like an alt right group of the it would be like. [00:24:10] Speaker B: If black people find a way to finally get together and find a way. [00:24:14] Speaker A: To hurt white people back. [00:24:16] Speaker B: That's all they did. [00:24:17] Speaker C: But there's already can we compare that to a group that is already in existence in America? [00:24:22] Speaker A: For what purpose? What are we trying to gain to. [00:24:24] Speaker C: See like, let's just say if the. [00:24:26] Speaker B: Black Panther never got shut down by. [00:24:27] Speaker A: The FBI, they went, Nah, nah, much different. It's not that at all. Because Hamas is a government is a government body. [00:24:37] Speaker C: Okay. [00:24:37] Speaker B: Yeah, they got funding. [00:24:38] Speaker C: See, I didn't know that. That's what I'm thinking. It was like it was some rogue. [00:24:44] Speaker A: No, they're recognized as being one of the governing bodies of Palestine. So there's the PLO and Hamas, they jointly rule Palestine, so that PLO is the Palestinian liberation, whatever. And then Hamas is, quote unquote, a terrorist faction of the Palestinian government. But they're both recognized as being governing bodies, so they kind of co lead. [00:25:06] Speaker B: So that's how they get the funding to do the things that they've done. [00:25:09] Speaker A: Well, they get the funding from other Islamic countries, hezbollah and Iran and stuff like. [00:25:19] Speaker B: That. Who's their, I guess, ally with? [00:25:23] Speaker A: Like Iran. [00:25:24] Speaker B: Definitely Iran. Okay. [00:25:28] Speaker C: I'm American in the muffler because I. [00:25:29] Speaker A: Say Iran, whatever the prime minister or president or king or whatever it is, of Iran was headed to an airport with weapons and consultants and everything to aid Palestine, and Israel blew up the airports so they couldn't land and they had to go back. [00:25:48] Speaker B: Damn, that's a good counter. [00:25:50] Speaker A: Maybe, but civilians were all in that. I mean, they're talking a lot of shit over there, but they're not talking the right shit for me. It sounds like a bunch of mush. [00:25:58] Speaker B: But this shit's been going on ever. [00:26:00] Speaker A: Since I was a kid. [00:26:00] Speaker B: I've been here before you were a kid. Yeah, but I've been hearing Israel all your life. [00:26:06] Speaker A: Literally all of my life, too. [00:26:07] Speaker B: Yeah. So I'm like, when is it going to really end? [00:26:10] Speaker A: Nobody wants I'll tell you when it ends. When the. United States stops because it's us. It's not. [00:26:14] Speaker B: So what's the end goal for the US? What are they getting from this? [00:26:19] Speaker A: Can I just play you something Joe Biden said? [00:26:21] Speaker B: Oh, yeah, please. [00:26:22] Speaker A: Let me play you something Joe Biden said, and we can see what they think. Hang on a second. [00:26:27] Speaker C: This goes back to Isaac and Abraham. [00:26:28] Speaker B: Yeah. Ishmael ishmael whether or not in Israel. [00:26:31] Speaker C: The United States of America would have to invent an Israel to protect her interest in the region. It is the best $3 billion investment. We're not in Israel. The United States of America would have to invent. [00:26:44] Speaker A: So basically, if you couldn't catch what he said, that's Joe Biden back in his day. [00:26:47] Speaker B: He sounds smart. [00:26:48] Speaker A: He said if there were not an Israel, we'd have to create an Israel to protect the interest in the region. What is that telling you? [00:26:57] Speaker B: What's in the region? [00:26:58] Speaker A: What do you think's in the region? [00:26:59] Speaker B: Oil. [00:27:00] Speaker A: What is Israel? Where is Israel? [00:27:01] Speaker B: The real Jesus story is written there. [00:27:06] Speaker A: See, that's the crazy part, that they're trying to pretend like this is about religion. I don't think that first of all, let me say this. I don't know shit. Most Americans don't know shit. I've even been to Israel. I've been to Haifa, I've been to Tel Aviv, and I've been to Bethlehem, Jerusalem, all that area. I've been there. And you don't see it there. At least I didn't when I went in 96. I didn't see it. But according to a lot of documents, it's not what we're seeing. But the problem is that we need Israel to be on board, because if you look at the area that it's in, just to the west is the Mediterranean Sea. That's Egypt. All the northern Africa, southern Europe, which know Turkey, France, Israel, India. Over to Spain. India is. No, India isn't. [00:28:01] Speaker C: I told you I cut a lot of that. [00:28:02] Speaker A: You can't get to India. You have to go the other way. [00:28:04] Speaker B: To get to India. [00:28:04] Speaker C: I cut a lot of. [00:28:08] Speaker B: There was. [00:28:09] Speaker A: Something called the Suez Canal. You ever heard of that? That was built basically between Egypt and is that Saudi Arabia, maybe Israel right there. So the idea here is that Turkey was mostly Muslim at some point and then mostly Christian at some point, and then mostly Muslim. It was back and forth. The Otoman Empire. You've heard of them? Yeah, that was Turkey. So just to the east of Turkey, though, that's where you get into. If you go north, that's towards Russia. If you go south, that's the Middle East. So right there, right in that little elbow of the Mediterranean, is Turkey, Israel, Egypt. And the Suez Canal goes between Egypt and Israel. That area, right. But just on the eastern side of Israel, you have Jordan, Syria, Iran, Iraq, Saudi Arabia, all that. So we basically have the protection of the Mediterranean. What Israel gives us is the protection of the Mediterranean because we have so many bases in Italy and France and wherever, we have all these bases right there, and it's just right there on the elbow. So we have the ability to have counter strikes, launch pad, whatever we need, right in that region without actually going in that region. So what a lot of our battle groups do is they go through the Suez Canal, they come into the Mediterranean, they go down through the Suez Canal and they go back around the backside to get to the Persian Gulf. Inside, the Persian Gulf is on one side is towards India and all that stuff. On this side is all the bullshit. Iraq, iran, Syria. Jordan back. So Europe. So instead of having to go all the way around there and now we're surrounded by nothing but enemies, basically, you know what I'm saying? There is Dubai and Bahrain is all that in there, but for the most part, they're not helping us if some shit really, really went off, you know what I'm saying? So we're in the Persian Gulf, we're ass out over there, but if we just crawl right back around up the Suez Canal into the Mediterranean, we can be in Israel one day and attack the whole Middle East in another day. [00:30:02] Speaker B: So because of that so we have to go kill all the to? [00:30:07] Speaker A: No, well, that's collateral. [00:30:08] Speaker C: What do you mean? [00:30:09] Speaker A: We that's collateral? [00:30:10] Speaker B: United States. Because if United States funding that what do you mean? Okay, collateral. [00:30:16] Speaker A: Well, we need to be able to be in the Middle East. [00:30:18] Speaker B: Why can't we be in the Middle East without needing to kill them? [00:30:21] Speaker A: Where would we go if we already. [00:30:23] Speaker B: Got a relationship with Israel and Israel already occupied that lane? Because they already did all the killings from all back in the day. [00:30:30] Speaker A: All what killings? [00:30:31] Speaker B: Taking over that lane. That used to be but see, that's the thing. [00:30:34] Speaker A: They didn't take shit. In 1948, the UN decided to give that land to Israel. To Israel. Israel wasn't a thing before 1940. There was no name. That was Israel before 1948. That was a creation. And we I don't care what anybody says, they say the United Nations, the United States gave Israel, they created Israel and gave it to the abolished Jewish people from Europe who were getting fucked over in the war. And so they went and occupied a state. That's what it really is, just an occupation. Occupy Wall Street. This is Occupy Palestine. That's all that it is. They went there and they were given the state. And so for 75 years now, however long it's been, since 1948, they've basically been the landlords, the inhabitants, all that, of this land. [00:31:26] Speaker B: And due to that, some Palestinians are going to die in the process. [00:31:30] Speaker A: Well, I mean, wait a minute. [00:31:32] Speaker C: So Mia Khalifa is right. [00:31:34] Speaker B: Yeah. [00:31:34] Speaker A: What do you mean by right? See, that's the problem, is that we don't really know a lot. [00:31:38] Speaker B: Mia Khalifa pretty much said the reason why harmless even became a thing is because all that bullshit happened. So fight back. [00:31:44] Speaker A: Yeah, but I can't validate that. I can't validate whether that's true or not. [00:31:48] Speaker C: She said there was no Israel before 1948. [00:31:50] Speaker A: There wasn't. Yeah, there was not. [00:31:52] Speaker B: But you can validate that if Niggas been fucking you up and you found a way to create a group to fuck them back up. [00:31:57] Speaker A: Yeah, but see, the problem here is that what we saw, that what we were given vision of, of what Hamas did, where they paraglided in and killed those teenagers and young adults and stuff like that. That's what they're saying. I don't know. That's what it is. That's what they're saying. What the problem is, though, is I don't think anyone agrees with that. I don't think anybody sane person thinks that Hamas flying paragliders in to murder people in the streets who are just partying or whatever. I don't think anybody agrees with that. But they can't just say that and then not tell you all the shit that Israel has been doing to them for 75 years, which also includes shit that looks just like Jim Crow. It looks just like Jim Crow. Like Jew only roads and Palestinian roads. Like what? [00:32:41] Speaker B: They were in areas houses. [00:32:43] Speaker A: Yeah, like they'll close off an alley because one side of it will be the Jewish settlement and this side will be the Palestinian settlement. The Palestinians got their back door sealed because that alley is a Jew only alley. That sounds like white only restrooms and white only water fountains. [00:32:57] Speaker B: My confusion is we have to do all this to control the Mediterranean. I feel like we can form a relationship with Israel since we already told them this is your land. [00:33:08] Speaker A: What do you mean we can create a relationship? We already have. [00:33:11] Speaker B: That's what I'm saying. I just don't see you said that the reason why this war is going to continue to happen, because he didn't say that. Okay. In general, all what I remember you were saying that the US interest is evolved to continue to create this chaos. [00:33:29] Speaker C: Because of the whole I didn't say any of that. [00:33:31] Speaker A: They need the land because it's the launch pad to all of the Middle East without actually having to be in the Middle East. We can operate from the Mediterranean. Even if we go into Israel, even we put troops in Israel, we're still basically in the Mediterranean. We're not actually in the Middle East. Even though it's touching the Middle East. We have the ability to get the hell right back out if we need to, but this gives us the ability to launch attacks or just have a stance in the region. Everything that happens in Israel affects the Middle East and vice versa. [00:34:02] Speaker C: It's like having an like that. [00:34:05] Speaker A: But Okinawa is an allied base now. That area is allied, whereas Israel is kind of know we're right here by Jordan we're right here by Syria. There's Palestinians, there's Hamas, there's Hezbollah, there's all these things that are right here, but we're able to be there without actually having to be there. They're almost like our proxy. They're an extension of the United States, even though they're their own thing. Israel is its own thing and it's its own state. [00:34:28] Speaker B: So niggas just got to move out of there if they can. Who? Palestinians. [00:34:31] Speaker A: Well, they gave them 24 hours, right? And then they were bombing the caravan. So it's like you ain't really even see that's the problem. I don't think that anybody agrees with what Hamas did on that day, if that even happened, or how the way it happened. I mean, I don't think anybody agrees with the way that that happened. But they're not giving you all the information about what Israel has been doing this whole time. And I'm not saying that what else are the Palestinians supposed to do, but I am saying that the shit ain't right what they've been doing to Palestinians for 75 years. And it's also not right what Hamas did to them. [00:35:05] Speaker C: It's war. But to answer your first question, it ain't war. [00:35:08] Speaker A: I don't think that it's not war. It ain't war. Imagine if when Katrina happened, right? Do you know, were you here when Katrina happened? [00:35:17] Speaker B: Yeah. [00:35:18] Speaker A: So you remember that they moved all those people from Louisiana here. Imagine if when that happened, the government said, okay, the people are coming from Louisiana. We're going to move them here, but this is now going to be New Louisiana. Yeah, right. And then Georgians were like, what the fuck? I've been living here 40 years. Like, you can't just take my land. Okay, well, this is what we're going to do. We're going to split it up. So it'll be like a two state government. So it'll be a new Louisiana and Georgia. And what will happen is we're going to give everybody 50%. So you may not get to stay where you live before, but we'll put you just here. And this will be the Georgia area. And this will be the new Louisiana area, right? And then everybody's like, that's bullshit. Why the fuck would we why are we letting them come take our land? That's not right. But the government has deemed it so. So it is what it is, right? So you've moved now across this line. That makes you're in Georgia now. And New, Louisiana. Where your house is is now New, Louisiana. So you don't own that property anymore. You had to sell it or whatever. I'm not even sure how that works. And then New Louisiana is like, well, this is some bullshit. We have more land in New Louisiana. We don't like these things. So we're going to extend this border right here a little bit, and we're going to just shave a little bit more off of the Georgia land and add a little bit more to New Louisiana. And then 20 years later, you recognize that 72% of Georgia is now New Louisiana because they've continued to breach the lines, and they've continued going against whatever. But then not just that, though. Sadly enough, all the water and electricity companies and everything that exist in Georgia happened to be on the New Louisiana side. So they control all of it. So now they're like, well, if you all don't stop tripping about this 70, whatever percent that we've taken, we'll just cut off water to you guys, and we'll do it a little bit at a time so it won't be like. [00:36:53] Speaker C: Whatever humanitarian type shit. [00:36:55] Speaker A: And then when you all come to New Louisiana, you all aren't going to have the same rights as us because fuck y'all. [00:37:00] Speaker B: That's what happened. [00:37:02] Speaker A: That's what's been happening. That's what's been happening this whole time. So not acknowledging that is bullshit. Because you can't keep pretending like, oh, we're going to defend ourselves. What would you expect us to do to defend ourselves? What do you expect them to do if they're defending themselves? How do you fix that? You can't keep well, United States fixes it. [00:37:22] Speaker B: But you just said how important this land is. So United States probably want the chaos to keep control. [00:37:27] Speaker C: Why would they want the chaos? [00:37:28] Speaker A: But whether control it, but whether it's right or wrong, you asked me what should they do? [00:37:33] Speaker B: Okay, yeah, you're right. Yeah. [00:37:34] Speaker A: So what should America do is pull out. Because if America pulls out, it's over. Israel going to have to figure that shit out. The only reason they're still there is because of us. [00:37:42] Speaker B: Why they keep saying that Israel got a better Central Intelligence than us, I don't understand. [00:37:47] Speaker A: Know, people's talk. [00:37:48] Speaker B: Everybody's saying it. It's not just one thing I'm like better than us. [00:37:52] Speaker A: People say shit. I don't know. [00:37:54] Speaker B: All the taxes I pay, we better have the best. [00:37:57] Speaker A: So let's just say I'm just saying, of course this is going to go into the stereotype, but let's just say that the Jewish nation is more in bed with the world banking and more in bed with the shadow governments, right? If they're in tune with all that, if they're connected to all that, then they would have access to more things, right? [00:38:15] Speaker C: It's not just their intelligence agency. It's whoever else is that. They have more. [00:38:21] Speaker B: I feel like they're still with us. [00:38:22] Speaker A: Satellites. Well, that's because we made them. The United States made them. And I know that they say the UN, but the United States made them. There have been so many. Look up a guy named Noam Chomsky. N-O-A-M-C-H-O-M-S-K-I-S-K-Y. Noam Chomsky is a professor here in America, but I guess I would say that he's one of our times best philosophers. When you think back to the days of the great philosophers, he would be something along those lines today. Okay, he's almost 100 years old. Now. So he's lived through all this. He's never changed his stance on the Israel occupation because that's what he calls it. It's an occupation. It's not a diplomatic state. It's not a democracy. It's an occupation. There was no choice given to people who were there already. They were occupied and told to move, and now they're being told to move again. And at this point now, if you don't see it, you're not even trying, I think, as an American, because we have access to so much stuff, if you can't see that at this point, you're not trying. There are so many similarities between civil rights, black people and Palestinians. And I'm not saying that so that black people like, oh, we stand with palace. I don't know the politics enough. I'm telling you right now that we don't have all the information. So everything that I just said is probably ignorant in some senses, for sure, but it's better than what most people knowledge they have. [00:40:00] Speaker B: Yeah, well, I don't think most people even know everybody's just supporting Israel just because I don't think so. [00:40:05] Speaker A: I've seen a lot the other way, actually. [00:40:06] Speaker B: Yeah, but I guess when I said everybody, I'm talking about, like, all the. [00:40:10] Speaker A: Major companies they have to trump does. If Biden is supporting it, then the country, the big media networks that they have to go along with it. Barack supported them. Trump did. Incredibly. He's the one who made the catalyst, the change. For the reason why we got where we are now is mostly because of policies that Trump put in place, because he legitimized and validated everything that they were trying to do during his pregnancy. I mean, pregnancy, but I mean, it kind of is a pregnancy. He birthed something. [00:40:41] Speaker B: So if America pulls out, what happens to them? Controlling that not pull out. [00:40:47] Speaker A: America has to stop doing this bullshit because it's us. The reason why people are holding back. [00:40:53] Speaker C: Is because of us, because they know we got two battle groups. It's like when you got your brother or your family is that dude. [00:41:02] Speaker B: But I'm saying, okay, we pull back. Let's say we say, all right, fuck it. So my thing is, we pull back, what happens to that territory? [00:41:12] Speaker A: They got the most central Intelligence and they got the Iron Curtain and they got all they say, but let's see. [00:41:18] Speaker B: How that works, because you all been. [00:41:20] Speaker A: Oppressing a group of people for 75 years. Let's see what happens if we're not part of this anymore. [00:41:25] Speaker C: Right? [00:41:25] Speaker B: So that group might fight back and fuck them up. [00:41:29] Speaker A: Here's the crazy part about all of it. It's not even their fault. Like, imagine if you were given land and you were told, here you're going to go, this is where you go set up your stuff. You know what I'm saying? We're working out deals with the people who are in that area. Don't worry, they'll be taken care of. And now you've built 75 years worth of a culture in this place, right? And now they're telling you, oh, you don't belong here. Leave this unoccupied this place and leave here. You're like, what the fuck are you talking about? I spent 30 years buying this house. I've devoted my life to this culture. I've helped with the schooling, and I've gone and done talks. And you're really a part of this culture now, so how is it right to tell you to leave too, at this point? [00:42:08] Speaker C: And if you think about it, if you're 75 or under, this is all you know, you're not occupying anything. This is your home, right. This is where you've always been, right? [00:42:18] Speaker A: And you've been raised to be racist against Palestinians. [00:42:20] Speaker C: Oh, yeah, for sure. [00:42:21] Speaker A: And so it's just in you because. [00:42:24] Speaker C: You think that they're the enemy. You think that they're trying to take your shit. [00:42:26] Speaker A: They're terrorists and they're savages and they're super thugs. Listen to the way it sounds. They're savages, they're super thugs. They're the same thing the Native Americans were here. You would have to be really blind to not see the parallels in all of this. [00:42:43] Speaker B: So do you think if we do. [00:42:45] Speaker A: Pull out we're not going to. [00:42:47] Speaker B: Okay, but let's say we do. Will the violence get even worse? [00:42:50] Speaker A: Violence against and for what? I mean, it would be a different kind of war then, of course. Because the way it looks right now is like imagine if a tribe of, I don't know, the amount of force that Israel can impact Palestine with is nothing compared to the amount of force that Palestine could do to Israel. It's like shallow in comparison. Most of the weapons the Palestinians use against Israelis are rocks. [00:43:19] Speaker B: Okay. [00:43:20] Speaker A: I think I watched a news journal the other day. I don't know if this is true or not. The guy was saying, and it was a black dude, he was saying that I think 300 kids are arrested every year, and the majority of those Palestinian kids are arrested every year, and the majority of those, it's like twelve year olds are throwing rocks. And when they get arrested, they get beaten and stuff by grown people, like stuff like that. There's absolutely no consideration or care given to the people, according to those reports. [00:43:51] Speaker B: That's so sad. [00:43:52] Speaker C: So your first question about the war. [00:43:55] Speaker A: Yeah. [00:43:56] Speaker B: This is going to happen because there's a whole nother one. We're not talking about China and Taiwan. China been brewing that shit since I was in China. And then we're funding that, too. I mean, our American company, I don't. [00:44:06] Speaker A: Know that that's as big of a problem as this is why taking their time, why this is a big problem is because there are nukes involved. That's why they take iran has nukes. Turkey, I think, has nukes. And now Turkey is saying they're not cool with how this is playing out. [00:44:22] Speaker B: Which one? [00:44:23] Speaker A: No. Israel and Palestine. They sent at least a couple of cargo planes full of supplies for the Palestinians because yeah, so this is a. [00:44:33] Speaker B: Hot topic because that's other world countries, Jamie Mac trying to link up with their allies. [00:44:40] Speaker A: This is a hot topic because Iran has already said they don't like the way this is going down either. So you're talking about people who aren't really fucking scared of us, and they are all saying, well, I don't know if we agree with like, we've let this go on for so many years. I don't know that we're agreeing with this. And so now the world has to get a lot of knowledge. We have to learn shit real quick, foreign policy wise, because Americans, we don't know shit. [00:45:02] Speaker C: We don't know shit and we don't care. We do not care as long as we can go shopping and fucking footballs on Sundays. [00:45:09] Speaker B: He just said something. He said, if Iran says, I don't like what's going on, and Iran calls Putin that's what I'm saying. [00:45:18] Speaker A: I don't think the Russia has the ability to fight two wars right now. I'm not sure. They may. [00:45:21] Speaker B: I know, but if Iran calls him, he's going to listen to that call. [00:45:24] Speaker A: If he help him in Ukraine. [00:45:26] Speaker B: Yeah, that's what I'm saying. And that's how you start to get the world involved. Because now when that happens, now the US got to call to Europe and they got to have a conversation, and then this is how the shit starts. [00:45:38] Speaker A: Yeah. It turns into a situation where people are furious and they're blinded by that fury, and it doesn't matter that it's the US. Anymore. [00:45:47] Speaker B: Yeah, because then World War II is because Hitler hit Poland, and then France was like, what the fuck? And then now we were in World War II. Right. That's not how it kind of started. [00:45:55] Speaker A: I don't remember the exact catalyst. But this is all this was created because of World War II also. Yeah, like the Jews that got exiled or whatever, they gave them a state. But what's so crazy to me is and this is all nuanced, right? But it's amazing to me that they were treated that way and then went somewhere and started treating the people who are there that way. [00:46:18] Speaker C: Well, that's just how that works, right? [00:46:20] Speaker A: That means hurt people hurt people. If hurt people, hurt people. [00:46:25] Speaker C: Get an opportunity and turn around and bully if. [00:46:27] Speaker A: Hurt people, hurt people as a country. That's what's going on right now. But that's sad, though, because there are people who are our age in Israel right now who are Jewish, who don't understand why well, let me change it. They may have more understanding because they're there, but they don't feel like it's fair for them now to have to shed all the things that they've built for themselves, all the hard work they've put in to shed that now, because the world doesn't feel like what they're doing is right. It's a hard sell. [00:46:58] Speaker C: Well, again, so if your great grandfather was a squatter on airbnb, and that's how you guys got your house and you grew up in this house, and you come to find out that the reason why you got this house in the first place was fucking ill gotten, you got to realize that. [00:47:15] Speaker A: Okay, yeah, but you're a grandkid at this point. What are you going to do with your realization? You're going to just give your house away? [00:47:22] Speaker C: You got to realize the fact that this wasn't really my house to begin with. We got this. [00:47:26] Speaker B: Well, then you're not just going to give it up willingly. [00:47:29] Speaker C: Why not? [00:47:30] Speaker A: But see, then you have to go. [00:47:31] Speaker C: Into then, well, where do I go now? [00:47:33] Speaker A: No. Can a person own a house? Can a person own land? Like, if we're getting that deep, let's get all the way deep. Who says the land belongs to Palestine? Palestinians yeah. How can somebody own land if we're going to talk about owning land, how can somebody own that's what that's what. [00:47:49] Speaker B: The natives was thinking about. And that's how we got Manhattan. [00:47:51] Speaker A: That's what saying. So, like, it's not fair. [00:47:53] Speaker C: Manhattan. [00:47:54] Speaker B: Yeah. [00:47:54] Speaker C: So we got all of America. [00:47:56] Speaker A: This isn't fair to the people of Israel who are Jewish. It's not fair to them either. It's very, very complex. It's not a simple, like, who's right and who's wrong, because there's so many rights and there's so many wrongs. [00:48:09] Speaker C: That just made me think of Native Americans sitting back left and like, what the like, ain't nobody standing up for us. Like, shit, still don't nobody give a fuck about what got took from us. [00:48:19] Speaker A: Or black people, though. [00:48:20] Speaker B: Really. [00:48:20] Speaker A: Nobody cares. Nobody cares about any of this shit. And that's why it's funny to me that so many people are just blindly just oblivious to the ideas and all the similarities that are popping up about what America has been doing around the entire world. Another thing. Please check out Noam Chomsky. Look, just type in Noam Chomsky and Israel Palestine or something like that. Look up any interview you can find of him. I think he's got some recent ones. But go back go back 20 years. He's been talking the same shit for 20 years about how ridiculous this is, but he was talking about how they're using the word genocide, and they're just so freely. He said, I can't even use the word anymore because it doesn't have any meaning. What they're saying is a genocide basically just means something that the America doesn't support where people are getting killed. Because when Americans do it, we don't call it a genocide. But if America's not doing it and people died, a couple of thousand people died, it's a genocide. He's like, I can't even use the word anymore because it doesn't make a difference because it's not even a real word. And that's a lot of our language, actually. [00:49:23] Speaker C: But I'm going to have to look him up. [00:49:26] Speaker A: Yeah, look him up. [00:49:26] Speaker C: He definitely sounds like somebody I could. [00:49:27] Speaker A: Fuck look him up and he's not scared to say it. [00:49:30] Speaker B: So what do you think? You think a year from now, two years from now, where it's going to be, quote unquote, official? [00:49:34] Speaker C: What? [00:49:34] Speaker A: No, that's going to happen way sooner than that. [00:49:36] Speaker B: This is, this is way sooner. [00:49:37] Speaker A: Yeah. What's official? [00:49:39] Speaker B: Like World War Three? [00:49:40] Speaker A: No, it's brewing right now. I don't think you need to wait for a start date. I don't think they're going to send out a memo. Okay, we're officially in, guys. It's already started. It started before this. [00:49:50] Speaker B: So when the history book starts, it's not going to say 2023, it's going to say 2020, because World War Two, they say 1941. [00:49:59] Speaker A: I don't know if that would have matter what it started, but we're in it already and we're part of it, which is crazy. The United States is already part of it. We haven't officially declared it, so I guess they'll wait till the official decree. We haven't officially declared it, but we're in it. We have two battle groups. You know how many human beings that is? [00:50:18] Speaker B: Yeah, you said it. [00:50:19] Speaker A: 5000 on each aircraft carrier. We got destroyers, battleships, frigates, subs, all this stuff, you know what I'm saying? There's 10,000 plus people, American people right now sitting off the coast of Israel, ready won't call. [00:50:34] Speaker B: That's all. [00:50:37] Speaker A: And what's sad about what's so great about the United States military and what's so sad is our might, our power, our force. Like we can change everything just by showing up. [00:50:48] Speaker C: Yeah. [00:50:50] Speaker A: So yes, I think World War Three is among us. Ukraine and Russia wasn't going to do it. Taiwan and China wasn't going to do it. I think this is what does it because that fight is already a fight. [00:51:02] Speaker C: That people resonate with it's polarizing. [00:51:05] Speaker A: No, because I don't think most people knew about it here, but I think the people who are involved in that fight, there's a lot of vitriol for the other side already, and has been for years, and deservedly so. If you know about what Iran has done, I mean, Israel has done to Palestinian settlements, know, basically hoarding the land, know, controlling the resources and stuff, you can't be blind and say that's not real, that's not fact. Well, no, these are documented not, this is not woo woo history, this is documented things. But the world has turned a blind eye to it because it doesn't affect us. [00:51:39] Speaker B: It doesn't affect us. [00:51:40] Speaker A: So we don't give a shit. But I think now people are starting to give a shit. And I don't know that we can't credit Kanye for. [00:51:49] Speaker B: Whoa, what does Kanye have to do with anything? [00:51:52] Speaker A: Because what Kanye did a few months ago, or up to, let's say a year ago it wasn't a year, but let's just say a year ago what Kanye did was he brought attention to the idea that we're not on the. Same team, right? [00:52:06] Speaker C: With Israel, with Jewish people. [00:52:08] Speaker A: Right? We're not on the he. [00:52:11] Speaker B: When you say we talking about Americans. [00:52:12] Speaker A: I'm talking about black people, okay? He made the claim. He said it in so many words. But the idea was, look how they're attacking me. Y'all aren't going to stand up for me. Look what they're doing to me. Look what they're doing to my brand, to my name, to my bank account. All because I didn't agree with them. All because I said something that they didn't agree with. Look what they're doing to me. And you guys are not protecting me. You're letting them do it to me. And no matter how you fell on that, no matter what side you were on, the Kanye side or the world side or whatever, no matter how you addressed it, you have to realize that that's what he was calling for. He was calling for solidarity among black people to say, hey, look at what's going on here. Even me, I'm a billionaire. [00:52:53] Speaker B: Kyrie too. [00:52:54] Speaker A: And even me. Kyrie's not a billionaire. I'm a billionaire, and they're attacking me, and they're going to take everything from me. Even me. So what do you think they'll do to you as a working class black person, right? So he put that out there, and then it started getting around, and people started having their views, and some people were standing up for him. Some people were saying he's crazy or whatever. Most people saying he was crazy were part of the major media, of course, because they're all tied into the government and tied into the superstate of Israel or whatever. But he brought the awareness to it, and now here we are six months later. We're in a place where now people are publicly saying, this is some bullshit. We see it. I don't think that people would have had the courage to do that before, especially because it was so close behind the Kanye. [00:53:40] Speaker B: Ever since Kanye did say that, more people have been always prefaced, like, hey, they don't even say the whole word. They say, you know those guys, they make the joke. [00:53:51] Speaker C: Jamie Fox flirted with it, and then he walked it back. But again, well, Jamie Foxx never flirt. [00:53:55] Speaker B: That was Jennifer innocent. [00:53:56] Speaker A: I thought what he said, if they. [00:53:58] Speaker C: Killed Jesus, what do you think they'll do to me? [00:54:00] Speaker A: Why are people walking it back? And that's the problem, right? Why are you scared of these? [00:54:06] Speaker B: Got it. [00:54:08] Speaker A: Okay, well, now it's time. But it's time of reckoning now, though. I think that's what I'm saying. The awareness that was brought to the not about see, the problem here is that what people are hearing is like, oh, so Kanye was right. That's not what I'm saying. [00:54:19] Speaker B: I see what you're saying. [00:54:20] Speaker A: What I'm saying is Kanye brought awareness to the question, and now every black American had to ask themselves whether or not they made the right choice, or they said the right thing. In the end, everyone had to address the idea. I don't know anybody who didn't black person who didn't at least think about it on the toilet, right? You know what I'm saying? [00:54:39] Speaker B: Right. [00:54:40] Speaker A: Like somewhere you had to address the idea of one of our beloved musicians, creators, et cetera, is being attacked by this group of people that are not us, right? And what is our stance on it? You had to reconcile that in your soul some kind of way. Like you said one or two things, he's crazy, or one of three things, he's crazy. I can't side with him. Or he's absolutely right. We need to do something right now to stop it. Or in the middle is like, I don't know enough about it's. [00:55:10] Speaker C: To me, I think the Jamie Fox thing was a little bit more eye opening because it was like, why? I mean, you could see that at least to me, there was a fear like, you know what I mean? The motherfucker's coming around and everybody's hiding their chains and shit. It's like, here comes this motherfucker. You can't say nothing about this that even may even seem like you are saying something, right? Because if you do, you might get Kanye, right? They might come for you like they was coming for Kanye. And he immediately ran it back. And I was. [00:55:44] Speaker A: Mean. He didn't even say what he was talking about. A friend, he said, yeah, he was. [00:55:48] Speaker B: Talking about it's because Jennifer Aniston saw it and was like, whoa, why are you being anti Semitic? Blah, blah, blah. [00:55:53] Speaker C: Again, that's my whole point, though, the. [00:55:55] Speaker A: Fact that it why do we allow them to do us like that when they don't stand up for our rights? Why do we give a fuck what they think? [00:56:02] Speaker B: Because they had the Holocaust. [00:56:04] Speaker A: No, that can't be. The real black folks don't give a fuck about come on, man. Black folks don't care about as much shit as we go through on a daily basis. [00:56:12] Speaker B: But I'm saying the reason why that shit has weight is because they can always reference back the Holocaust. [00:56:19] Speaker A: Yeah, I think what the salient point, though, of all this is that most of us don't know what the fuck we're talking about, including me. I don't know what the fuck I'm talking about. I've never lived under Israeli rule as a Palestinian, and I've never lived under Palestinian terrorism as an Israeli. I don't know that those things are the truth. All I know is what I'm being shown, right? No one should blame me for my opinion because it's all based off something I've been shown. [00:56:49] Speaker B: Yeah. [00:56:50] Speaker A: You know what I'm saying? And like, well, you should do more work and get to the truth. Where the fuck is the truth at? Point me to where the truth? [00:56:57] Speaker C: I'm not going over there to get the truth. I'm going to tell you right. [00:56:59] Speaker A: No, no, I'm saying, like, show me something right? You can't even trust it. Joe Biden just got through saying if there weren't Israel, we have to create one. [00:57:07] Speaker B: Right. [00:57:08] Speaker A: Show me where the truth is that. [00:57:10] Speaker B: Has so much power. That's why I'm saying, like, they kind of want this chaos. [00:57:14] Speaker A: Yes. [00:57:15] Speaker B: To say that we would have to make a one. It's just like Haiti. They need that area to be fucked up. [00:57:22] Speaker A: Well, they just need to be able to control that area. [00:57:24] Speaker B: And that's the only way you can, bruh, if you let the people grow and have a regular life, you can no longer control it. Right. [00:57:33] Speaker A: The problem is to they want to tell us that we need to listen to Net, Yahoo, and whoever is the ruling party, but they're full of shit, too. We see it. We've seen their practices. So I can't go to them for truth. If I can't go to Palestine for truth, I can't go to Israel for truth. I can't go to my government for truth. Where the fuck am I going to get truth? Especially if you're going to cancel me or blame me for being ignorant or being racist or being anti Semitic or whatever. Show me where I can go to get the truth that isn't compromised. [00:58:06] Speaker C: Yeah, and it's not fair. [00:58:09] Speaker A: You just got to shut up. That's the point. [00:58:10] Speaker C: And that's the thing. [00:58:11] Speaker A: Just shut the fuck up. Because your choices are one, speak potentially ignorantly or just shut up. And most people are like, oh, man, just shut up. So when does anything ever change? If it's wrong, then everybody shut up. [00:58:25] Speaker B: So how long you think it will be? Like World War II was like four years. You think it'll be like a five. [00:58:30] Speaker A: Six year I don't know, man. Because war is different now. [00:58:32] Speaker C: Yeah. [00:58:33] Speaker A: I don't know, but I feel like. [00:58:34] Speaker B: They can finish it real fast. [00:58:35] Speaker A: This is different now. [00:58:36] Speaker B: Maybe pop out all the countries fucked up. [00:58:39] Speaker C: Maybe like what do you mean? [00:58:40] Speaker B: Like atomic pop out. Boom. We send a little nuclear no, you. [00:58:43] Speaker A: Don'T see, you sent a nuke. That's years and years of fallout. [00:58:48] Speaker B: It's done though. Like, we ain't fighting no more, but. [00:58:51] Speaker C: The land is no more. Again, you lose the strategic advantage that you had because no one can sit there now. [00:58:59] Speaker A: What if they nuke Iran and Saudi Arabia and they ruined the oil electric. [00:59:05] Speaker C: We'Re not there yet. Stop it. [00:59:06] Speaker A: Come on. [00:59:07] Speaker C: Stop it, though. Hey, I saw this shit. [00:59:10] Speaker A: Are we done with that one? [00:59:10] Speaker C: I thought we were. [00:59:11] Speaker A: I want to make sure there's no more. [00:59:13] Speaker B: I just wanted to make sure we are aware that we about to be in the history books of World War Three. [00:59:18] Speaker A: Yeah, I think the biggest problem, though, is that we don't know what the hell we're talking about because we've never been given the truth. And you cannot blame us for not knowing. [00:59:28] Speaker C: Yeah, that's the fact right there. [00:59:29] Speaker A: So all that cancel shit get out of here with that, man. [00:59:31] Speaker B: Let's take a shot, man. [00:59:32] Speaker A: Go ahead. [00:59:32] Speaker B: To wealthy Spark. [00:59:34] Speaker C: Here we go. Yeah, that one's still been going around. They've been taking shots of that for. [00:59:41] Speaker A: The unattainable shot forever. [00:59:46] Speaker C: Still ain't going to happen. I saw this on the other day, and somebody was getting all upset because a guy put in a prenup or he had a prenup. Everybody's cool with prenups, right? There's not no wrong with a prenup, right? You leave with what you came with, and I leave with what I came with. That type of shit, right? That seems fair. But this motherfucker put in a weight clause on his wife. [01:00:11] Speaker A: Weight. [01:00:12] Speaker C: Weight. [01:00:12] Speaker B: Okay. Before or after baby? [01:00:15] Speaker C: So, again, I think he gave her some leeway for a kid, right? Obviously. But he gave her time frame to get back, right? [01:00:23] Speaker B: Like, again, what do he pay for surgery? [01:00:26] Speaker C: He didn't have nothing about surgery in there. The weight clause was such that she had to maintain a certain weight. Or if she didn't, then she's not. [01:00:37] Speaker B: Entitled to whatever the prenup is. [01:00:39] Speaker A: Right. [01:00:39] Speaker C: She's not entitled to anything extra. Right. [01:00:42] Speaker A: Is he really rich? [01:00:44] Speaker C: Yeah. [01:00:44] Speaker A: Okay, that's fine. [01:00:49] Speaker C: To a woman, I guess. Every woman was like, oh, that's some bullshit. This and that. You don't know what we go through. And people, you all gain weight, too. This, that, and the other. But he had one for himself, too. He was willing to maintain his weight as well. [01:01:02] Speaker B: Oh, he's being fair. [01:01:04] Speaker C: But my question is, is that foul, really? [01:01:10] Speaker B: It's not foul. [01:01:11] Speaker C: Okay. [01:01:13] Speaker B: I wouldn't do it, but it's not foul to have if you know that shit is going to piss you off and you're not going to be into your wife if she gained a certain weight. Put that shit in there. Yeah. [01:01:27] Speaker C: So my thing is this, too, right? If we can stop and then we. [01:01:31] Speaker B: Can take care of that, we can lose weight, we can Dr. Miami that shit. So this is a clause. We don't have to worry about solutions. [01:01:39] Speaker C: One of the things that I saw was, like, when we get married, you vow to love me through thick and thin. So don't get the prenup, whatever the case may be, sickness and health, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah. And so if I gain weight, you're just going to have to that's part of that, right? [01:01:56] Speaker B: So don't get the prenup if that's the case. Don't have a prenup if it's through sickness and health. [01:02:01] Speaker A: Sickness and health is not a contract, though. Prenup is right? [01:02:04] Speaker C: And a prenup is about because prenup. [01:02:07] Speaker B: Is like, just in case we don't make it through sickness and health. I got my shit. [01:02:11] Speaker C: But it's not if you don't make. [01:02:13] Speaker B: It through sickness and health, go through thick and thin. [01:02:15] Speaker C: Right. [01:02:16] Speaker A: It's more he don't want to go through the thick. [01:02:18] Speaker B: He wants to go through. [01:02:22] Speaker A: Here'S the thing, right? Shut up. This nigga got a lot of money. He got rules. Yeah, that's what you agreed to, the rules. Shut up. All this bitching and complaining, that's not right. Because we don't know we go, I don't give a fuck what you all go through. You've made a deal, 90 X. Did his wife get big or something? [01:02:38] Speaker C: Well, no, she didn't want to she didn't want to sign it. [01:02:41] Speaker B: Oh, well, good. [01:02:42] Speaker A: She shouldn't have signed that. Yeah, okay, but if she signed it shut up. [01:02:45] Speaker C: Right? Again, because there was one that did sign it and they said, this is it. There's no way you can void this after the fact or try to dispute this and say that it's not right. [01:02:58] Speaker B: Or get a divorce. You just won't get the money. [01:03:00] Speaker C: Exactly. [01:03:02] Speaker A: What is the complaint? [01:03:04] Speaker C: The complaint is that men this is bullshit for men to expect this type of thing from a woman, okay, so. [01:03:11] Speaker B: Bullshit to expect every man to have millions, too, to buy you birkins. [01:03:16] Speaker A: No, it's okay. It's bullshit. Now. What? So he shouldn't get married, right? [01:03:21] Speaker C: Yeah. Not to that one. [01:03:23] Speaker A: Right. Or anyone. No woman should sign that and marry him, right? [01:03:26] Speaker C: That's what they're saying. [01:03:27] Speaker B: Cool. [01:03:27] Speaker C: Yeah. [01:03:28] Speaker A: Is he crime? [01:03:28] Speaker C: No, he's definitely going to get someone to sign. [01:03:31] Speaker A: Of course he will. [01:03:32] Speaker C: Someone's going to be going to take. [01:03:34] Speaker A: Care of their body anyway, right? [01:03:36] Speaker B: Listen, that's the clause I was going. [01:03:38] Speaker A: To do that whether or not I only want kids, I can't have kids. [01:03:43] Speaker C: When I was thinking, too, is like because they were saying that the vows they brought in the vows, right? Like traditional vows to love and honor and all this other shit. And I'm just like is that the problem when you sit up there and you say these vows, right? This is what you're guaranteed to do for the rest of your life? This, that and the other. Is that the problem? Because, again, now you got an eternal job. Like if you got hired and they're like, look, it's like being a tenured professor, right? It's like I can pretty much do whatever the fuck I want now. To get rid of me is really hard to do. And maybe at this point, I don't teach the same way no more. I don't have the same passion because I have the security of knowing you can't get rid of me, right? Is that a problem with the vows, right? Like the institution of marriage itself? Because I think that's what happens, at least in my experience, is that in my experience and it's not just my personal experience, my experience is what I've seen in shit, right, is that people know that, oh, I got the ring, right? Or I'm locked it in. I put a baby in that, right? Or whatever the fuck you mean, that you think that enables you to this is now your long term deal, and you don't have to necessarily keep working for it anymore because of you've accomplished something you've already got the goal, right? You've made her your baby mama or whatever the fuck. Or you got the ring, or whatever the case may be. [01:05:20] Speaker A: What are the vows? Do you know them? [01:05:22] Speaker C: No, I don't. [01:05:24] Speaker A: For better, for worse, goodness and health. No, sickness and health. I don't see what I'm saying. [01:05:31] Speaker C: To death do us part. [01:05:32] Speaker A: We don't even know the vows we said. [01:05:34] Speaker C: But again, I know one of them is like, to death do us part. Right. So again, as long as we're going. [01:05:40] Speaker B: To work here, as long as we're. [01:05:41] Speaker C: Alive, this is me, and you ain't going nowhere. I'm not going nowhere again. And they assess what you believe that day. [01:05:49] Speaker A: Yeah, but what if you have a spiritual death? What if you check out on everything and for all intents purposes, you are dead? Does that count? [01:05:56] Speaker B: That's why I'm calling, Irreconcilable. [01:05:59] Speaker A: Differences. [01:05:59] Speaker C: Whatever. [01:06:02] Speaker B: Your spirit is dead. That's a difference. [01:06:03] Speaker C: He didn't even say the word. [01:06:05] Speaker B: Yeah. [01:06:05] Speaker A: No, I couldn't make him double down on it. [01:06:07] Speaker B: I couldn't say it. [01:06:08] Speaker A: Can you even say that word? [01:06:09] Speaker B: Yeah, after two tickular shots. [01:06:11] Speaker A: Do you have any idea how the word is? [01:06:13] Speaker B: Like, say it again. [01:06:14] Speaker C: No, you try it. [01:06:19] Speaker A: No, you were close. Go ahead. [01:06:22] Speaker B: Irreconciled. Difference. [01:06:24] Speaker A: Shit, you missed a syllable. Irreconcilable. [01:06:27] Speaker B: Irreconcilable. [01:06:29] Speaker A: Yeah, that wasn't it, but that's cool. [01:06:30] Speaker B: Yeah. [01:06:31] Speaker A: Toothically shots here's the problem, is that most of us don't know the vows, first of all, right? Second of all, those vows are very open. They're very vague in a way, good lawyer. But a prenup is not vague. Those are not the same thing. That prenup has specific language. Did he say how much weight? Like what was the limit? [01:06:50] Speaker C: Yeah, she's under like 135 or something like that. [01:06:54] Speaker A: There you go. It's cut and dry. It's clear cut, black and white. If you weigh 136, goodbye. [01:07:01] Speaker B: But what if the ass is fat at 140? [01:07:07] Speaker A: He wants a regular sometimes the fat lean ass, right? [01:07:11] Speaker C: He wants a jasmine guy ass. [01:07:13] Speaker A: He wants a lean ass. He doesn't want a fat ass. Yeah, you better figure out how to get your stomach smaller so that booty can sit out. [01:07:21] Speaker C: And it's funny because there was a time that fat asses weren't what they are today. [01:07:27] Speaker A: I don't think fat asses are as much as you think they are today. I think that's just niggas. Everybody. The world isn't like, OOH, fat asses. I think that that's bullshit on Instagram. [01:07:35] Speaker B: Yeah, it's niggas. [01:07:36] Speaker C: So you think all these chicks running around here and it ain't just black chicks. [01:07:40] Speaker A: The Instagram crew is all about what black people are doing. [01:07:44] Speaker C: Okay, so I went to this taco stand the other day, right. [01:07:46] Speaker B: Mexicans, too. [01:07:47] Speaker C: Right. This Mexican chick. And the ass is clearly fake. Yeah, because it don't match the rest. [01:07:52] Speaker B: Of that's New Age girl. [01:07:53] Speaker A: Is she part of the Instagram culture. [01:07:55] Speaker B: Which is majority of New age I. [01:07:57] Speaker A: Don'T think the world gives a fuck about fat asses. I think that there's a certain sect of people, they're not black only, but black culture leads that sect. What black people wear, and I'm not going to say we because I don't dress cool, right? What black people wear and the way that they talk and the way that they walk and all the affectation and all the accoutrement, all that stuff that black people do. That's the instagram culture, and everybody wants to do that if they're part of that sect or that subsect. [01:08:23] Speaker B: Right. [01:08:24] Speaker A: I think that the world, though, is like, I don't want no fat cellulite ass. They don't want that. And they look at those people with the body build the bodies, like, even worse. This is even worse than the big booty ones that were natural. Yeah, I don't think they like that. [01:08:38] Speaker B: They think that's fat Drake guy line said, I'm with a girl with an ass is so fat that it's kind of embarrassing. She just takes over the room that her ass is so fat. And niggas don't want that. I want that, but niggas don't want that. You say you want it. [01:08:57] Speaker C: See, you're the problem then. You're why these chicks are out here getting these shots and shit and fucking their bodies. [01:09:05] Speaker B: You see me? I'm a squat guy. I'm like, we don't need to get the booty done. We just got to do some squats. Some squats. How do you protein diet? [01:09:13] Speaker A: Is this part of your degree that you know that squats will give you a shape? [01:09:17] Speaker B: Because I'm a Shape guy. You don't have to be fat, but I'm a shape. You got to have the shape. Some girls got the shape, but they don't have shapes. I'm a shape. [01:09:24] Speaker A: You could have like a little big. [01:09:26] Speaker B: Ass, but you got the little bubble. It pops. [01:09:28] Speaker A: You got to have curves to it. It can't just be all one curve. [01:09:30] Speaker B: I'm a shape guy. [01:09:31] Speaker A: It can't be like the equator. [01:09:32] Speaker B: It's got to be like straight up. And a squat always gets you to shape no matter what. Yeah. [01:09:36] Speaker A: And you know this because what? [01:09:38] Speaker B: Because I understand how the gluteus maximus. [01:09:41] Speaker A: You can't even say a word. [01:09:42] Speaker B: How do you understand how the glucose. [01:09:44] Speaker A: Macro works if you can't even understand. [01:09:46] Speaker B: How the gluz macros is said? [01:09:47] Speaker C: What about the minimas? What about the gluteus minimas? You can't forget that one. You can't just work on the maximum protein diet, ladies. [01:09:55] Speaker A: Squats and protein diet. You're a self help guru now. [01:10:01] Speaker B: StairMaster. [01:10:02] Speaker C: So my thing was I was thinking is like, this is the problem. Because again, I think it's easy to get lazy that way. Kind of like the tenured professor. I feel like, shouldn't it be that you always have to continue to work for it? [01:10:16] Speaker B: You shouldn't get I got to work for it after 20 years of working. Yeah. [01:10:20] Speaker A: I don't know, Mac, about what you mean. I feel like at a certain point, I've put in enough work to I'm good now. I would hope so, but 45 still working. If there were a rule in my agreement that I couldn't just accept that part, then I know that that's something I have to do. [01:10:37] Speaker C: Yeah, I don't know, man. [01:10:39] Speaker B: You would never sign that agreement with that rule. [01:10:41] Speaker A: I wouldn't sign that. Yeah, and she shouldn't either. 135 is light, man. [01:10:48] Speaker B: How tall is she? [01:10:49] Speaker C: She was five something. Yeah, she wasn't tall. [01:10:52] Speaker A: I don't care how tall you are. 135 is hard. [01:10:54] Speaker C: Yeah, that's a tough one. [01:10:57] Speaker A: If you said, like, 145, 150, now we're getting to the area where, like, okay, I had a baby. [01:11:02] Speaker B: Because if she's like 411, five foot 135 is as heavy on it starting to look heavy. She's like a 411 starting to look heavy. [01:11:10] Speaker A: Because I'm supposed to weigh 160 something, but that would look ridiculous on me. Yeah, I would look ridiculous. Even look like you got HIV and 160 something. So you're saying a little heavy. [01:11:22] Speaker C: You mean AIDS? Because HIV don't necessarily change your appearance. [01:11:26] Speaker A: 185 is lean and still little to me. So 160 something, I would look like a joke no one would be intimidated by. [01:11:36] Speaker B: I feel like that BMI only choose one body type for that type of graph because there's no way because niggas with brolic bodies, naturally, there's no way that should make sense. [01:11:44] Speaker A: It doesn't. It can't. [01:11:45] Speaker C: So you don't agree that you should have to continuously so you think after a certain time invested, I deserve the love regardless at this point for work. [01:11:58] Speaker B: He was talking about work, but I'm. [01:11:59] Speaker C: Talking about for the love. Right. Put it in the work for the love. [01:12:01] Speaker B: No, well, the thing about the weight thing, I think it's more of an attraction thing. Yeah, but I think it's like if I got to be with you for the rest of my life, can you look good? [01:12:11] Speaker C: Yeah, if you don't want a motherfucker being an adulter. Right, because, again, look good. [01:12:19] Speaker B: And if I got the money and we signed this deal because you know how important it is for me for you to look good. [01:12:25] Speaker C: Of course you can have trainers, of course you can eat, right. Of course you can do all the things that I'm going to give you the tools to maintain it. Are you going to have the work. [01:12:34] Speaker B: Ethic if you want to be in that marriage? [01:12:37] Speaker C: Okay. So again, outside of just the appearance, what do you think about having to continuously work for the love? [01:12:45] Speaker A: I take back my statement. I think you should have to continuously. [01:12:48] Speaker B: Work for the love or the work. [01:12:50] Speaker A: All of it. Jobs, all of it. I think that you should not be able to rest on your laurels because you put time in. I said that at first, but I'm thinking against that now because I think everybody has a responsibility to keep trying. [01:13:02] Speaker C: That's what I was thinking. I think what happens with I'll give. [01:13:08] Speaker B: You all these Super Bowls, let me lose some games. [01:13:10] Speaker A: Fuck him. [01:13:11] Speaker C: And that's why they're going to make his ass retire early. But that's what I was thinking is at some point, right? And I think that it all starts with the vows, right? When we go through that whole process. [01:13:25] Speaker B: What the fuck you got beef with the vow? [01:13:28] Speaker A: He don't like marriage. [01:13:29] Speaker C: But I don't. I think the institution of marriage is counterproductive to a good relationship. [01:13:36] Speaker B: To me, I feel you because relationship why? [01:13:38] Speaker C: Because again, once you get there, it's like, I've accomplished, I'm tenured now. I don't have to work as hard anymore. We're here, you me and you accepted me. [01:13:50] Speaker A: You give me the title, right? [01:13:52] Speaker B: You think it should be like licenses? How your license get expired? So once you get married after five years, your marriage license gets expired. If you all still love but what. [01:14:00] Speaker A: Does that mean though? [01:14:01] Speaker B: If you all still love each other, you can renew. [01:14:02] Speaker A: If not yeah, but what is that? Divorce. But if you do it, what's a clean divorce? If you got all the money and she had none, what's a clean divorce? [01:14:08] Speaker B: Why you got to keep a job then? [01:14:09] Speaker A: No, listen. What I'm saying A clean divorce if you started with all the money and she had none and now it's five years later, the renewal is coming up and you're like, I don't want to be with her. But if we get divorced, there's no such thing as clean divorce. [01:14:21] Speaker C: So what does that mean at all? [01:14:23] Speaker B: So what I'm assuming if we do it like that, the divorce is when you all don't want to renew. [01:14:28] Speaker A: It's not like I understand, but what happens to all the everybody go their. [01:14:32] Speaker B: Separate ways like boyfriend and girlfriend. So if I had all the money and you were just accustomed to a certain custom, we broke up either hopefully you learned some investments from me or you on your own. And I think that would make to Jamie Mac's point, that would make people stay in the relationship more. Because now, you know, shit, five years, he can decided to not renew. I'm going to keep giving him that head. I'm going to keep doing whatever. [01:14:56] Speaker C: I'm going to try to recircle this back to what we were talking about earlier when you were talking about Israel and. [01:15:07] Speaker A: Listeners, remember I said that we're ignorant as fuck and we don't know we're talking about. This is our application of that. J. Mac is about to compare marriage to the conflict. [01:15:17] Speaker C: But in this instance so at this point, right after all those years of her life being or his life being in certain way, and you're saying all of a sudden you got to give it up after what you've already invested or contributed during this time frame. How do you just give all of that up to say, okay, just because I don't necessarily want to be with you. I have to give up everything that I was saying. [01:15:45] Speaker A: Where do Israelis go? [01:15:47] Speaker C: Right? [01:15:47] Speaker A: We're saying, okay, you all got to pull out. Where do they go? That's their home. So where do they go? I get it. Same thing with the wife. She's benefited from ten years of marriage where everything was taken care of and all of her whims and wants and needs were all covered without any issue. And now you're saying, figure it out. Like, well, shit, that was ten years of my life. I could have been building these things, but I didn't because I was trying to help you build what you deemed as important. So now where's my homeland? Where do I go to now? [01:16:14] Speaker B: At this point? That's a good point. So if we do in the AHA. [01:16:18] Speaker A: Mac, he had to agree with you, but did he agree with you because I came? Of course he did. [01:16:23] Speaker C: Exactly. That's the only reason. Otherwise he'd have been like, they don't. [01:16:26] Speaker B: Run if we do it like the license thing every five years. Yeah, we got to put clause. Like, if there is, like, a money thing, like you're accustomed to certain life, husband make more money than you or wife makes more money. There's a percentage of alimony or whatever. Because we already have these things implemented with divorce. We could probably have these, like a prerequisite good word. [01:16:47] Speaker A: And you said it correctly establish. And then he tried hard on it. [01:16:51] Speaker C: But that R was very wish. He definitely ducked the fuck out of it. [01:16:56] Speaker A: He got it, though, on the first try. Congratulations. [01:16:59] Speaker B: And then five years come, husband don't want to be with the wife or whatever. They can use that format as the starting point to figure out how much money she should get because she did give up her work, her career to take care of. [01:17:12] Speaker A: See, but you're saying it like every woman gives up their work. [01:17:14] Speaker B: No, I'm saying before whatever the situation is, we have that format. [01:17:18] Speaker A: But there are a number of situations french, I don't think that can work. There's just too many variables involved in a ten year marriage of what a woman contributed or yeah, let's say it was the husband who had less. It was a Britney Spears and Kevin Federline. [01:17:32] Speaker B: Yeah. [01:17:32] Speaker A: You know what I'm saying? Like, what did Kevin Federline bring to the relationship that warrants him sperm, this much money now that they're broken up, even though he has custody of the kid, he's getting however many thousands a month or ten outside of the kid child support. [01:17:48] Speaker B: I think all that shit is bullshit with the alimony for him, for people, period. Because I think if you're a grown, able bodied person, get a fucking job. [01:17:56] Speaker A: Yeah, but then you just rejected the last five minutes of what you just said. Because what Mac was saying was if I've been living a certain way, if I'm Israeli and I've been living in Israel for 30 years. And I've built my life there. Or if I'm a wife who's been married to a millionaire for 30 years, and I've built my life based on whatever he needed because I wanted to support the cause, you can't just say, okay, get up and find another house, find another country. It's impossible. You're saying, I built 30 years here, and now I just have to walk. [01:18:28] Speaker B: Away from because that's different from Israel versus an individual that lost their marriage, that can still find a job, pay rent. [01:18:34] Speaker A: Yeah, well, they could find a house somewhere. [01:18:37] Speaker B: So my thing is, unlike Israel, you can bounce back Israeli. That's a whole population of people. That's a whole community of people that there's no land for them to go to. But you if you got an able body and you could work you could speak the English language, you know, some. [01:18:52] Speaker A: Basic Palestinians were able palestinians were able bodied. They were able bodied people. But look, they got pushed into these corners where they lost their land, and they got pushed into these corners of obscurity. I think there's some, like, 160 Palestinian enclaves within the Israel country. There's no solidarity between each other because they've been put into little pockets and little corner hunters. And so you're saying that Palestinians should have figured it out. They're able bodied. Just go ahead and figure it out. Or that wife should be like, figure it out. Or that Israeli young person should be like, figure it out. But that's not real, though. French. You're just saying that from a position of the couch you're sitting on in the upstairs of a nice square foot home in America with Central Air, because. [01:19:33] Speaker B: The cellular service you're right. We can't just tell them to figure it out. But from the divorce example, I'm strictly speaking, from a divorce example, okay? If you're an adult, you were married, okay? Whether husband or wife, you didn't stop working because for the marriage sake, for scheduling, whatever, I think because I was talking about the prerequisite, if that's the example of like the person has nowhere to go because they didn't have financial capital because of the marriage. Right. The husband or the wife, whoever had the money got to give some money to that person, okay? After the five years. [01:20:11] Speaker A: That's what we currently have. That's what our current system does. [01:20:13] Speaker B: Yeah, but that's like divorce. I'm talking about us. We just do the five like, every five year we renew. So if five years come, you don't. [01:20:20] Speaker A: Like so it's not divorced. [01:20:21] Speaker C: It's still divorced. He's just got a five year period on it. [01:20:23] Speaker A: But it's still divorced. [01:20:24] Speaker B: Yes, but now people have this but with that five year period, there's like, you know, it's coming up factual thing. Like, okay, five year period, if husband made this amount of thousands more than the wife or wife made this amount of thousands more than the husband, 25%. [01:20:38] Speaker C: Of the difference between what you're saying. [01:20:40] Speaker B: Or there's a fixed amount, like, no matter what, you get 25% of that person's salary or this amount of alimony, it's 33,000 a month. [01:20:49] Speaker C: I think the difference is what you're saying is between what you're proposing and what we have now is that we know in five years there's going to be this audit. Audit, right, where you could be fired or canceled or whatever at that time. Whereas when you go into a marriage, you think it's forever, right? And then therefore, you get lazy. Where if you know in five years. [01:21:11] Speaker B: So now you're going to know, like you were saying, you're going to always be in your best behavior, especially if you want to stay in that marriage, because, you know, five years, shit might. [01:21:20] Speaker A: Expire, but don't you think unusually cruel people will use that against their mate? [01:21:26] Speaker B: They already do it in certain marriages and we think it's forever. [01:21:29] Speaker A: Well, no, that's not what I'm talking about. I'm saying we're at year four, day 360, and I'm like, yo, you better get it together right now. You only got five days. I need you to do this, this, that, and then if you don't do it, fuck this marriage. [01:21:42] Speaker C: Yeah. [01:21:42] Speaker A: And then now you're controlling that person because you have more money than them and you're more in control in the marriage. Now that person is beholden to your craziest win. Think about the crazy shit you could come up with if you had five days. [01:21:56] Speaker B: But if this is the law, we already telling them that since you make more money than them, this percentage of whatever you're making is going to go to her. [01:22:04] Speaker A: That sounds real complex, friends. [01:22:06] Speaker B: We already have a complex system with divorce anyway. [01:22:09] Speaker A: No, not really. [01:22:10] Speaker B: What I'm saying is we just break it down. [01:22:12] Speaker A: Half. It's just half. It ain't complex. [01:22:14] Speaker B: I'm not even saying half. I'm saying 25%. I don't think it should be half. [01:22:19] Speaker C: I think that if you don't right, because again, before you ever do that, right, like when you're dating, you're not in that state, right? You never get to that state where you are complacent because nothing's guaranteed, right? And I think there should never be a guarantee on a relationship entered, right? Like there should never be anything where it's like from here on out, you're guaranteed XYZ about anything. Fuck that. Tomorrow could be the last day. Fuck A. Five years from now, tomorrow could be the end of it if shit ain't right. If you were constantly living like that today, I need to make sure that I'm doing what I need to do to earn a tomorrow. I think that is what would make it a better situation than anytime where you think, I got something in the bag or I got time before I present that, though. Fuck it, you don't got to present it. It's just the way it is. It's just the way it is. You're never going to get anything guaranteed at any point in time this could be done. [01:23:25] Speaker B: So that means whoever's making less money got to always make their own money. [01:23:29] Speaker C: Of course. [01:23:29] Speaker B: Okay, so you go back to what I think. But if you are able bodied person, always find a way to make your own money. So again, regardless if your husband or wife or vice versa makes more money. [01:23:39] Speaker C: So this is the thing, right? So we're in a relationship or we're dating, right? And you're like, oh, use a Brunch, just whoever, right? [01:23:45] Speaker A: Okay, I wanted to dig a little deeper on that. [01:23:49] Speaker C: And you're like, I want to start this fucking record company, right? Yeah, whatever. Okay, do it. Right? And if you say, Will you help me? Sure. Outside of whatever I got going on, right? But I'm not going to put whatever I got going on on fucking backhold or on the you have the record. [01:24:10] Speaker A: Label or French has the record label. [01:24:11] Speaker C: Whoever French is, Dayton's got the record label. [01:24:13] Speaker A: So you went from smoke budies to poke buddies. [01:24:16] Speaker B: But you see, even with that example, we could have a separate contract for direct label investment. So whether we're married or not, we could have a contract. About that shit, we don't even have to be married. [01:24:25] Speaker C: But as far as the contributions, right, and the support, right? And all of this to where I start to sacrifice what I'm doing to make what you're doing number one. But when you are, when you become a union, right? I would tell that person when you become a union, though, right, and you become one supposedly, right? Then it's like, okay, well, then whatever we're doing, we're doing for us and for the betterment of us, right? [01:24:56] Speaker B: But again, if we're going by what you were saying that we got to fight for tomorrow, I would tell that person, since you about to make some sacrifices for the sake of that record label to become universal or whatever, make a contract for that record label, too, not just your marriage. [01:25:13] Speaker C: Again, you're missing the whole point. Because soon as you make a contract now there's something guaranteed, right? Again, fuck all of that. Because there's no guarantee. [01:25:19] Speaker B: No, but the reason why I'm saying you have to make the contract is. [01:25:21] Speaker C: Because we all live on a cliff and then tomorrow you could be pushed off this bitch. If if shit is well, if that's. [01:25:27] Speaker B: Because I wouldn't help with the contract. If tomorrow I can get pushed, why am I helping if I can't trust that I will get a return on that investment? [01:25:37] Speaker C: That's my whole point. [01:25:39] Speaker B: So I would not invest. The whole reason why no one's telling. [01:25:42] Speaker C: You to, I'm talking the whole reason. [01:25:43] Speaker B: Why we invest is because whatever the. [01:25:44] Speaker C: Investment is, you're thinking of it in business standpoint, that's what marriage is, right? See, that's the problem then, right? Marriage is a business. [01:25:54] Speaker B: Yeah. That's why the married people that raised me told me that's what it is. [01:25:59] Speaker A: The married people that raised you? [01:26:00] Speaker B: Yeah. [01:26:00] Speaker A: You mean your mom and dad? [01:26:01] Speaker C: I think that's what he said. [01:26:03] Speaker A: God, you being so professional. You don't even call a mom and dad anymore. [01:26:08] Speaker C: This nigga grew up at Microsoft or something. [01:26:11] Speaker B: They told me it's a business. They said love is involved, but please understand it's a business. [01:26:15] Speaker A: So your mom and dad weren't in love? [01:26:16] Speaker B: They are, but they understood. [01:26:19] Speaker C: Was that an arranged marriage? [01:26:20] Speaker B: No. [01:26:20] Speaker C: Okay. [01:26:23] Speaker A: So they just happened to also be in love? [01:26:26] Speaker B: No, they were in love, but they also understood what marriage was. They didn't treat it like it was just all romance. Yeah. [01:26:32] Speaker A: How much did your dad pay your mom to be with him? [01:26:35] Speaker B: Nothing. The only thing is, in 77, he bounced, she got pregnant, and a couple of months later they got married. But shotgun, they were dating for three years prior. So it's not like first fuck. [01:26:50] Speaker A: Well, I mean, you make this sound so transactional. I thought maybe he had paid her. [01:26:54] Speaker C: He definitely makes it seem transactional. But again, if that's what marriage is, then fuck it. Why even get married then, right? Why not just have contracts? [01:27:02] Speaker B: It is. That's why you go to the fucking city hall. You sign the fucking contract. [01:27:06] Speaker A: That's a bullshit contract. That contract is not legally binding. Nobody respects that contract anywhere in the world at all. [01:27:13] Speaker B: Well, all I'm saying is that's why. [01:27:15] Speaker A: It'S so easy to break and get divorced. [01:27:17] Speaker B: What do you don't look at as a business? If I have to give you part of the equity we built because I made more or my percentage is higher. [01:27:25] Speaker C: I don't want to look at it as a business. I don't want to look at a relationship as a business. Fucking thing. You might as well be gay. [01:27:32] Speaker B: Why everything got to go back? [01:27:34] Speaker A: Have that come in. [01:27:35] Speaker C: If your business partner is just fucking somebody you fucking making money with, make money. [01:27:40] Speaker A: Make money with a business partner that's a woman. [01:27:43] Speaker B: Why you got to be gay, dog? [01:27:44] Speaker A: Yeah, come on, dog. [01:27:46] Speaker B: My thing is, the way it's broken up is treated like a business. I got to give you a portion of whatever because I had more or whatever. If we had kids, we got to split that responsibility 50 50. [01:28:01] Speaker C: How do you business kids? [01:28:04] Speaker B: What, you mean child support? [01:28:05] Speaker C: No, but as far as not just that part of it. But again, so this is a business that we're running. Who's the business? Who's in charge of the management of the kids? [01:28:17] Speaker B: So it's both of us. 50% my time. 50% your time? When I'm when they're with me, I'm manager. [01:28:22] Speaker C: No, you're manager if you're still in a relationship, not separated. [01:28:28] Speaker B: We're co managers in a relationship. Yeah, we're both managing the kids. They live in our house. We tell them what to do. They live under our rules. That's two managers. [01:28:39] Speaker C: But again, so your dad didn't have or your mom didn't have more say, so no one had more say. They both had equal say. [01:28:48] Speaker B: So depending on whatever the trouble was. Certain things, my mom let my dad handle, certain things, my mom just disciplined me right then and there. [01:28:59] Speaker C: So again, you're necessarily talking about discipline. I'm just talking about period. Who had the final say on you? [01:29:06] Speaker B: They both had the same amount of say, so whatever they say, they were always on the same team. Let me just put it like that. [01:29:12] Speaker A: In front of you anyway. [01:29:13] Speaker B: Yeah, in front of me. They was always on the same team. So if I was in trouble, both of them told me I was in trouble. [01:29:18] Speaker C: Okay, but if you wanted something depending on what I wanted, that wasn't always trouble. Say you wanted something. You wanted a new pair of Jordans or you wanted to go to whatever, the concert or whatever the fuck you wanted. [01:29:32] Speaker B: I went to my mom. [01:29:35] Speaker C: So she was the executive? [01:29:37] Speaker B: No, I went to my mom once. [01:29:39] Speaker A: Because I was son's advocate. She'd be more of an advocate to. [01:29:42] Speaker B: Give me the shit that I wanted. I was a baby boy. [01:29:45] Speaker A: Everybody does that. Max, stop it. [01:29:47] Speaker C: No, I understand, though, because that's my point, is that there's no fucking equal this and this. [01:29:52] Speaker B: No, that was for that because I wanted some shit. [01:29:54] Speaker A: The pathway to get what you want is through her, because she will be the advocate for him to the dad. Okay? So even if your dad disagreed with it, if you get your mom on your side now, there's a conversation, but if you go to your dad, he's going to say no and it's over. Not because he's in charge necessarily, but just because he's not going to be your advocate. Name a dad that's going to be your advocate for some Jordans. You're like, Fuck that. Yeah, but a mom like, well, he's been really nice and he's getting tall. You're going to be able to get her to lean towards that sympathetic side and that empathetic side where your dad will be like, Nah, it'll make sense. [01:30:34] Speaker B: And being the baby boy has some advantages when it comes to moms. [01:30:38] Speaker A: Come on, everybody does that. Everybody would use that avenue. Unless your mom is a real bitch and then you on your own. [01:30:46] Speaker C: I just think that looking at it as a business again, deflates the whole relationship part of it. Then why you said there's no romance. [01:30:55] Speaker A: You said you're going to be gay. [01:30:56] Speaker B: I get it. [01:30:56] Speaker C: You said it's not romantic. That's what I'm saying. If there's no romance in it, I'm. [01:31:00] Speaker B: Saying don't make the romance be a decision. Don't make the romance be the decision maker. That's what I'm saying. [01:31:07] Speaker C: What do you mean, don't make the romance be the decision? [01:31:09] Speaker B: So don't be like, oh, God, I love her so much. She's the woman of my dream, I'm going to marry her. [01:31:12] Speaker A: Don't make that be the she got good earning potential. [01:31:16] Speaker B: What do you got all those factors? She got good earning potential. How's her psyche? Will she help me raise my kids? [01:31:22] Speaker A: Right? [01:31:22] Speaker B: How can she handle when I go broke? [01:31:25] Speaker A: Right? [01:31:25] Speaker B: Like, things like that. Yeah, those are all good, positive thoughts. Yeah. You got to have all these conversations. [01:31:30] Speaker A: To see if they're going to be. [01:31:32] Speaker B: A willingful business partner. [01:31:33] Speaker A: Willingful so you can have a 50. [01:31:35] Speaker B: Year marriage or however long which dictionary is that in? [01:31:40] Speaker A: Willing, fool. I need to look now, if that's even a word. [01:31:44] Speaker C: I don't believe that's a word. willingful is not American. [01:31:49] Speaker B: Old English. [01:31:50] Speaker C: It might be Haitian. [01:31:51] Speaker B: Shakespeare probably said that in one play. Otello. [01:31:55] Speaker C: Is it otello? [01:31:56] Speaker B: Isn't it? Othello? Othello? Yeah. [01:31:58] Speaker C: I thought there was an h in there. That's what I was saying. I thought you was talking about that brown cookie. [01:32:02] Speaker A: Sorry, man. Was it willful willingly but not willing? Full. [01:32:07] Speaker C: All right, man, I don't know. I just feel like you don't think. [01:32:10] Speaker B: Marriage should be you shouldn't approach it like a business. [01:32:14] Speaker C: No, I don't think you should get my thing is fuck marriage. [01:32:17] Speaker B: Oh, you just should be like, just get the roommate contract. [01:32:20] Speaker C: Well, just fucking if we together, we together, right? [01:32:22] Speaker B: Yeah. [01:32:23] Speaker A: That's how I thought when I got divorced, too, man. If we're together, it took me a lot of years. [01:32:27] Speaker C: Because I'm like, if we together, we together, right? Like, again, anytime. [01:32:31] Speaker B: But there's no security because just think about it. [01:32:33] Speaker C: Just think about the whole process, right? You get this fucking wedding, right, and you have this big ass party, right, which is not for you. It's for every fucking everybody else that's coming, right? If you elope, that's for you. If you fucking go to an island and it's just you two, that's for you all. But if you had this fucking big old wedding in front of everybody and everybody comes to do their whatever, the fuck, that's for them. That ain't for you. And again, and if it is for you, then I think that's a problem, too, right? Because, again, a relationship shouldn't need that. It's almost like being on Instagram. We don't need the acceptance or the fucking approval of all of our friends and family and everybody else to do this to that, to make it seem like we are who we are. Either we are or we ain't. [01:33:24] Speaker B: Yeah, I agree with all that. [01:33:25] Speaker C: So, again, I think when you start for me, this is how I look at it. Now, if we got to go down that road and it has to be like this, and if we rock it and we rock it, and if you need something else besides what you know, we got to know that we good, then that doesn't mean we're good, right? That means that we ain't good. If you got to have extra and that's just me, I know that ain't no woman going to fucking agree with that. But that's just the way I think. [01:33:55] Speaker B: The only reason why us men can see it and feel like, hey, we can just do it like that is because we know if you leave me, I'm a grown, able bodied person. I'll go get it in the mud. But with them, because they quote, unquote, give birth and they go through these things, they feel like, hey, I got something to lose if I make this investment with you. So I need some security. And I think that's what the whole problem creates, the whole reason why we need all these rules and regulations when it comes to marriage. [01:34:22] Speaker C: So they need security. Men don't. [01:34:26] Speaker B: Men just know at the end of the day, if I got able body, I'm going to get it. And if I got to go back to square one, I'm going to just go back to square one. Woman will view it that way. Because how I look at it, too, I was like, okay, yes, I understand you have to take care of the kids and all that, but you can walk. You can move, you can get a job. Now, that's how I look at it. Because if I had to take care of the kids and you leave me because you was oprah, I'm going to go get a job. That's how I look at it. [01:34:54] Speaker C: I think what you're comparing to is some old antiquated shit, right? Because again, you got the kids. Is that how it is all the time nowadays, where she always takes the. [01:35:06] Speaker B: Kids, the rules are still written. [01:35:07] Speaker C: No fuck rules. Is that what's happening? Do you think that in most instances that the woman always gets the kids? [01:35:15] Speaker B: Most instances, yes. [01:35:16] Speaker C: The woman I don't know about it. Not anymore. [01:35:18] Speaker B: Not anymore. [01:35:21] Speaker C: Not anymore. [01:35:22] Speaker B: Most is 51% or more, right? Okay. Yeah. [01:35:25] Speaker C: So maybe most. But it ain't like back in the day. [01:35:29] Speaker B: It's not like back in the day. [01:35:30] Speaker C: Where you were fucking I know there's a lot of dads that got their fucking kids. [01:35:36] Speaker B: Yeah, it's not like back in the day, but the rules are still written like it's back in the day. So as of today, it might as well be back in the day. [01:35:44] Speaker A: I don't know about the rules. I got custody of my kids. [01:35:49] Speaker C: See, you say rare. [01:35:50] Speaker A: But again, somebody sitting right in front of you, right? [01:35:53] Speaker B: And next to you, can we find the stats? [01:35:55] Speaker C: And next to you, out of the people that you know 100% had their. [01:36:01] Speaker B: Kids, he's the only one. [01:36:02] Speaker C: What do you fuck you talking about, nigga? [01:36:04] Speaker B: Oh, you out of y'all, too? But out of all the other dudes I know that got kids, they don't you all the two that got them. [01:36:11] Speaker A: Do you know that they wanted or didn't want the kid, though? Like, it could be that they were like, Nah, I'm good. You can take them. [01:36:15] Speaker B: Oh, it's always split. It's just split, split. [01:36:18] Speaker A: Custody? [01:36:18] Speaker B: Yeah. [01:36:19] Speaker A: Then they didn't get them then. What are you saying? I'm not sure they live with the mom, though, is that what you're saying? They got physical custody. They got sole physical custody and joint parental custody or something. [01:36:31] Speaker B: They can see the kid certain days, I don't know the exact word, but they don't live with the kid. But certain days they get the kid. [01:36:37] Speaker A: They get to live with the kid. [01:36:38] Speaker B: Or the kid can come to them. [01:36:41] Speaker A: I don't know that's nuanced. But you know at least two people though. [01:36:45] Speaker B: Yeah, I'm not saying dads do not get custodies, but I'm saying in general and from what we have seen outside of you all too, and a good portion of other men is that the court tend to favor the women. [01:36:58] Speaker C: Let me just put it okay, for sure you're talking about the courts, but again, you make it seem like these these are the same women that are barefooted in the kitchen, right? They're not. These women that are not barefooted in the kitchen. They got other things going on in their life that don't involve raising fucking kids. [01:37:20] Speaker B: Yeah, I know that they're not. And I think that's why we should live the way you're trying to say. But I'm saying because of that history and the way the rules are still written, for the most part, these things are still going to be implemented and they're going to keep using that as leverage to not update those rules. [01:37:38] Speaker C: If my kids were to ask me about marriage, I would tell them no, they don't necessarily do it. Like if you are happy the way you if you're happy right now, stay where you are. [01:37:48] Speaker B: That's what I was thinking about that too. I was thinking about like, okay, if we're good and we're happy and we're living cool, why we need to do all of this? My thing is, if that's the case, if we are happy and we're cool and you love me and I love you, why not cement it? Why not say, you know what, I'm going to let the world know. I'm going to even let the government know. [01:38:07] Speaker C: Tenured professor, I just told you there's a fucking complacency that comes in once you submit some shit, once it's cemented. Right. That's the problem right there. [01:38:17] Speaker B: But because option, it's not technically cemented because you could always leave me if I don't keep up my part of the bargain. If I don't remain a good husband or whatever, you can leave me because you're going to be unsatisfied. And if you don't remain a good wife, I can leave you because I'm. [01:38:33] Speaker C: You know how many things don't get done just by the smallest hurdles that are out there? Now you got this big giant legal hurdle as opposed to the words of just being like, I'm done. You know what I mean? That's enough now. Just saying I'm done is enough for this to be over with. As opposed to, now I got to get a fucking lawyer. I got to pay money. I got to go through this, I got to go through that. Do I want to do all of that? Right? And I think sometimes that's a deterrent enough to keep people in situations that they don't necessarily want to be in. But if you remove all of that and it's never there, and it's just as simple as, you know what? [01:39:18] Speaker B: I'm out. Yeah, some people can do that. I think we'll probably see more of that now. Yeah. [01:39:25] Speaker C: I mean, again, if my kids were to ask me, I would be like, if you're good right now, I don't see don't rock the boat. Just keep doing what you're doing, and as long as you're happy, there's no need to fucking put cement shoes on. [01:39:40] Speaker B: And not have a legal problem and. [01:39:43] Speaker C: See, because, again, cement, that's what marriage is to you. [01:39:47] Speaker B: So where's the security? [01:39:49] Speaker C: He's the one that cemented, right? [01:39:51] Speaker B: So we bought a crib. So what happens now? I break up with you, but your name was just on the deed. But I put my name on the mortgage. So what happens now? [01:39:58] Speaker C: Well, if her name's on the deed, then his name is on the deed. Then that's part ownership loan. [01:40:04] Speaker A: I just feel like marriage is more I would say more like joining a team. Like, you're on the Milwaukee Bucks now. [01:40:09] Speaker B: You're. [01:40:09] Speaker A: Damien lillard. You know what saying, like, I don't know if it's cement shoes necessarily for him to join the Buck. I don't really see how he fits in there. But he's on the team now. He wears a jersey. We acknowledge him as being a Milwaukee Buck. You know what I'm saying? That's how I kind of feel about marriages. Like, we need one more piece to get to the championship. [01:40:29] Speaker C: And you know what's funny as fuck about that is that's why I feel. [01:40:32] Speaker B: Like saying that every day. We gonna see if you're still in the roster instead of just making, say, you're in the roster for the next four years. [01:40:38] Speaker C: But it's funny that you just brought it, because that made me think of something I firmly believe in now is that your kids, whether you expect them to be a fucking LeBron or anything like that, put them on a team. They need to be on some sort of sports, right, so that they understand what a fucking team is. If a motherfucker's never been on a team, never been part of a team, and now that now they're a teammate, what fucking kind of teammate is that going to be potentially, right? So I think regardless of your kids fucking physical ability, whatever put them on some teams so that they know what a team concept is that they know that there is somebody that's going to have to be alignment and sacrifice or a fucking punter or something that doesn't get all the glory, doesn't do all of that, but is still contributory to the fucking overall success of this team. And otherwise you got everybody fucking joining teams thinking they're fucking LeBron or the fucking Tom Brady. And that's not conducive for good teams, most likely because most people yeah. [01:41:47] Speaker B: That'S interesting to you, Maggie. So you tell your kids not to. [01:41:49] Speaker C: Get I would and I regret not having them play sports or be part of teams. [01:41:56] Speaker B: Do you think if you were still married, would you still have the same belief? Yes. Okay, so this is not coming from like, a wounded perspective. [01:42:09] Speaker A: W what? [01:42:09] Speaker B: W-O-U-N damn. You can't spell either. [01:42:13] Speaker C: It was done. [01:42:14] Speaker B: You can't speak or spell tequila. [01:42:16] Speaker A: I need to get you that thing from Texas Instruments called speaking spell. Do you ever have that? [01:42:20] Speaker B: No. [01:42:21] Speaker A: What the problem is? [01:42:22] Speaker C: Of course not. [01:42:22] Speaker A: I'm going to get you a speaking spell. They probably don't know if they even make them anymore. I have to go on Ebay and get one. [01:42:26] Speaker C: Texas instrument still around, though. [01:42:28] Speaker A: Yeah. They make chips. [01:42:30] Speaker B: Yeah. [01:42:31] Speaker A: I'm going to see if I can find one for you, man. That'll be my birthday present to you next year. It's going to probably be ordeal to get one because it's like from my childhood, so I don't even know if they had they might have an updated new version of it, though. [01:42:42] Speaker C: So all experience doesn't create wounds. Right. So I wouldn't consider myself wounded at all. Really? No. [01:42:49] Speaker A: You look like your wing is clipped, bro. [01:42:51] Speaker B: You're over there mad marriage, you're saying? [01:42:55] Speaker C: So that doesn't mean that I'm wounded. [01:42:57] Speaker A: That means I compared marriage to a Mafia execution. [01:43:03] Speaker B: Of course you do. [01:43:05] Speaker C: For a nigga that's never been married. [01:43:08] Speaker A: You can't big chest say that like. [01:43:11] Speaker C: He'S talking about romance and business. Take it out. And he's so romantic about it. It's like, oh, it's so fucking beautiful. [01:43:16] Speaker A: You think marriage is beautiful? Why? [01:43:18] Speaker B: I think marriage is beautiful. [01:43:19] Speaker A: You think your parents marriage is beautiful? [01:43:20] Speaker B: No. I mean no, they had the ugly parts. [01:43:23] Speaker A: So where is this beautiful coming from then, if your parents didn't even have. [01:43:26] Speaker B: A beautiful part of it? I think it's just the willing to commit to the end goal. What's the end goal, which is being there for you and loving you no matter what. [01:43:36] Speaker A: Okay, you're back to that original idea. They're going to love you no matter what. But you're giving all these reasons, these conditions of why we should end the marriage, but you're saying love you no matter what. [01:43:46] Speaker B: So I'm saying if you can work through your marriage to get to that level where you said, yes, I was hurt during this era, you hurt me during vice. Whatever happens, ups and down, it doesn't have to be something crazy like disrespectful. [01:43:58] Speaker A: You said no matter what. What if she stops trying? [01:44:01] Speaker B: So this is the thing. No, this is the thing. If you get to the point where death do a. Spart. [01:44:10] Speaker A: That means that's day one, right? [01:44:12] Speaker C: Yeah, that is day one. [01:44:13] Speaker B: No, I'm saying, like, you all stayed married. You say when you get to the. [01:44:18] Speaker A: Point of death to us part, you. [01:44:19] Speaker C: Come home and Too expensive, got his shirt off in your bedroom, right? [01:44:22] Speaker A: Not on FaceTime, and he's not on FaceTime with you. [01:44:24] Speaker B: Why are you blocking them all? You don't like that idea? You fucking know my thought process. [01:44:29] Speaker A: Of course. He was, like, embarrassed me on the show. I said I would die this nigga to my whale. The fuck you mean, whale nigga? You want to have a fight with this nigga tonight? [01:44:40] Speaker B: I think what I mean by beautiful is if you are a couple that had hardships or no hardships, whatever happened, happened, and you guys was able to work through it. So when you said she stopped trying, I don't look at that as a couple that made it. [01:44:53] Speaker A: You said what a second ago? [01:44:55] Speaker B: But by no matter what that means, that was the point. You started trying. Because that's how we got to the point. No matter what. [01:45:00] Speaker A: No matter what, include trying or not. [01:45:03] Speaker C: Come on. No matter what? [01:45:04] Speaker A: No matter what. That's definite. That's final. No matter what, unconditional, that's what no matter what means. [01:45:12] Speaker B: So for me, when I look at it, no matter what, that means I will never stop trying. So if I said I'm going to love you no matter what, even if she stops trying, I'm talking about my vow. If I'm saying this vow, no matter no matter what, that means I'm never going to stop. [01:45:28] Speaker C: You're just going to be Will Smith. No, nigga, you're going to be Will Smith. [01:45:30] Speaker B: Hold on. [01:45:31] Speaker A: Let me finish, though. [01:45:32] Speaker B: If that person's telling me the same thing, I'm expecting them to be just like me. Hey, that means you're not going to stop trying. Now, Biana says, what if they stop trying? Yeah. Once they stop trying, that means you didn't fight me to no matter what because you stopped trying. [01:45:43] Speaker A: It ain't about you. [01:45:44] Speaker C: No matter right. [01:45:45] Speaker B: She stopped trying. [01:45:48] Speaker A: But you said no matter what. You didn't say no matter what. As long as you no matter what. You didn't say that. You said you were going to be beholden to no matter what. [01:45:56] Speaker B: But if she stopped so if she stopped trying and I'm still trying yeah, I can't get nowhere because she stopped trying. [01:46:02] Speaker A: That's not what you said, though. [01:46:05] Speaker C: You got to still keep trying. [01:46:06] Speaker B: Okay? I'm not the one filing for divorce. Let's say I'm going with that. Example. I'm not the one filing for divorce. I'm like, I've told this girl I. [01:46:14] Speaker C: Love, she filed for divorce. She just stopped trying. She ain't filed for divorce. [01:46:20] Speaker B: No. [01:46:21] Speaker A: She's like, I'm not doing nothing to change. I'm not getting better. I'm not going to weigh 135. It's over, nigga. That's not going to happen. [01:46:27] Speaker B: We never had I'm not going to cook. [01:46:29] Speaker C: Example. [01:46:30] Speaker A: I'm not going to cook. I'm not going to do none of that shit. I'm done. We're in this marriage, and I'll stay married to you, but I'm not doing anything else. I'm done. [01:46:37] Speaker C: And you're going to keep Will Smith in that shit? [01:46:40] Speaker B: No. I'll probably stop trying, too. [01:46:42] Speaker A: But you'll stay together. [01:46:44] Speaker C: Y'all just get separate bedrooms no matter what. [01:46:47] Speaker B: Some people do do that, no matter what. A lot of our grandparents so I'm not talking about that, no matter what. When I was saying no matter what. [01:46:56] Speaker A: All I was saying, no matter what, B. [01:47:01] Speaker B: No matter what, B. As long as both parties are willing to try. Once one party decide to stop trying, we can start talking about going our separate ways. But I love seeing two couples that fought, no matter that kept trying. After all the bullshit. And that's why now they're still together, and now they're happy that they both kept trying. [01:47:24] Speaker C: Of course you do, because it makes. [01:47:25] Speaker B: You think of your that's the beauty part. [01:47:28] Speaker A: I like, I don't know how beautiful that it looks. [01:47:30] Speaker B: Ugly. If you ask me, it's ugly. But I think it's like ugly, beautiful things. It's like an ugly dog, like a fucking boxer. They're ugly, but it's beautiful. They're cute. [01:47:39] Speaker A: Okay. [01:47:40] Speaker B: It's like, damn, you guys did it. [01:47:43] Speaker C: I almost spit my shit out of that one. [01:47:45] Speaker B: That's why I'm laughing. [01:47:46] Speaker A: I'm laughing at you. [01:47:47] Speaker C: He was just so quick. [01:47:53] Speaker B: It's like working out. [01:47:55] Speaker C: It's tough. [01:47:55] Speaker B: Like you break your muscles apart, but once you get the muscles damn, you really did that work. Damn. That's what I'm saying. That's the beauty about beauty. I feel you. [01:48:05] Speaker C: Right. Taking that relationship to the gym. I feel you. [01:48:08] Speaker B: Yeah, you all work that shit out. [01:48:10] Speaker A: Yeah, I hear you, man. I hear you. I like to think that my relationship has reached a place where we're good like that. I don't know. Of course it could get. Sentiments may change, but I like to believe that me and my wife are at that location to where we kind of got each other's backs. And we recognize that there are going to be some downfalls or some times. When one of us isn't really feeling like pushing as hard and the other one is patient with that person and willing to give them time and assistance or whatever. Or maybe to back off and not pester them or not bother them. I hope that we're at that location. I think we are. I like to think that we are. Anyway. It's all scary and tricky, though. And I know why Jamie Mack is as frustrated he is and why he says things like cement shoes and stuff. [01:48:59] Speaker C: He's the one that said cement. He brought cement into the whole conversation. [01:49:02] Speaker A: Why he scares his kids off with the boogeyman's, hide under the bed. [01:49:07] Speaker B: Jamie max example. If people were cool, like we're calm, cool, and collected, that would be great. But I do know people will be like, well, I put in 20 years. I need security. That's the reason why. Jamie max problem. [01:49:19] Speaker A: I think that's the big problem is that we have these ideas of what we deserve once we get married. And obviously women have been the culprits on this for most of our history, but guys are doing it kind of too now. Like, the shit you're talking about, she needs to stay in the kitchen and all that's. Kind of the other side of it, right? [01:49:40] Speaker C: Deserving like, yeah, I deserve to come home. [01:49:42] Speaker A: I deserve to have a home cooked meal every day, even though your girl works a job. And there's no compromise on any of that. So guys are starting to do it as well, but women are just known to be, okay, we're married now. Okay, I'm going to put on flannel pajamas and a face mask. And I don't really care about and to girls are like, me putting on the face mask is me caring. I'm trying to keep my face look. Yeah, but you come into bed looking like a Ghoul, right? You know what I'm saying? Do that shit in the morning or sometime when we're not don't involve us in your pretty care or whatever, you know what I'm saying? Don't do that to us because we don't do that to them. We don't make them come and count reps with us when we're at the gym, you know what I'm saying? We do that separate. We'll come back when we're done. But women have traditionally been the person or the people who have spotting you, who have worked their ass off to get a man. And then when they get them and they have the guarantee of marriage or whatever to protect them, then they just like, oh, shit, well, I'm going to take my foot off the gas a little bit and I can relax. And then next thing you know, it's. [01:50:49] Speaker C: The Beyonce song, put a ring on it, right? Once you get that again, I don't. [01:50:54] Speaker A: Have anything to do with that song. [01:50:54] Speaker B: Yeah. She was saying, if you like me that much, you better put a ring. [01:50:57] Speaker A: Yeah, I think again. [01:50:58] Speaker C: So again, don't try to make that your point. No, if I like you that much, I don't need to put a ring on it. All I need to do is fucking treat you good. All I got to do is fucking. [01:51:08] Speaker B: Be there for you. I got to be the niggas know it's yours. [01:51:12] Speaker C: You fucking said that you allow your girl to go into fucking have drinks other niggas. So she better let the other nigga know that she's yours. Why do I need to let the other nigga know? [01:51:19] Speaker A: Why are you so mad at him. [01:51:20] Speaker C: About because he got to stick to one point. [01:51:22] Speaker A: But why you mad? You let his girl go? [01:51:25] Speaker B: I asked. Because sometimes the rings already let niggas know. She don't got to tell niggas shit. So that's why I just asked. [01:51:32] Speaker A: I just wanted to know that ring don't mean shit. [01:51:34] Speaker C: The niggas niggas do not give a fuck about rings. [01:51:37] Speaker B: The niggas might actually be like, look at it as a challenge. [01:51:40] Speaker C: Niggas look at it like, I don't have to fucking do anything except for fuck, because you got somebody else, right? [01:51:45] Speaker A: I don't have to even give you 5 hours a day, right? Maybe 30 minutes while you at work on break or something. [01:51:51] Speaker B: Lunch. [01:51:52] Speaker C: I get them lunch breaks from your ass. [01:51:55] Speaker A: Yeah, man. We don't have time to get into the third topic. We got, like, ten minutes left, so if we're done, we can get done. If you got anything else you want to bring up, we can do that too. [01:52:05] Speaker C: No, I don't have anything. [01:52:07] Speaker B: I'm good. [01:52:08] Speaker A: So, listeners, I guess an important part of this is that all the stuff we talked about today is just we got to find a way to get more information that we can trust for sure. I don't think we have that. [01:52:22] Speaker C: That seems like an impossible task, though, right? [01:52:24] Speaker A: It's crazy. [01:52:25] Speaker C: It definitely seems like an impossible task. [01:52:27] Speaker A: It's crazy now when you can Google. You know, there used to be a time when we'd have an argument, you and I, and we could Google and get the answer. Now you can't even do that because the first four or five could possibly be fake. It could be bullshit, dead Internet answers. And you know what I'm saying? You're looking at it as like, oh, well, look, Google agrees with me. And then if you scroll down, you see that there are other variables to that. You know what I'm saying? I don't even think that you can Google stuff anymore and be absolutely, 100% sure that the information that you get is going to be accurate information. It may be accurate ish, and it may be a complete lie. And it's just you've created so many of these pages with that lie on it. So many people have said the narrative as opposed to the truth, that now that becomes what you get when you Google. SEO hits that first, and the first page may be that overabundance of the narrative, and you have to get to the third page to see the truth. [01:53:23] Speaker B: And if Google an American company, they're going to support what Israel so they're going to do all you saw how. [01:53:31] Speaker A: COVID happened when you tried to post something on Facebook that didn't go along with the narrative, that it was all debunked, by the way. All of it. [01:53:40] Speaker B: Yes. [01:53:41] Speaker A: When you try to say something against that narrative, they would delete your post, or they would make it so they would suspend your what is it? Ghost. The ghost shadow ban where nobody even sees it. You put it out, but nobody knows. [01:53:51] Speaker B: Even legit doctors was losing their licenses. [01:53:54] Speaker A: So the truth is hard to find, man. We're in a war on truth. [01:54:00] Speaker B: I feel like the book of Eli makes more sense now. When I watched that movie when they first came out, I was like, why niggas are going so crazy for books in the Bible? But now I get it. Now I get like, damn. Once you get rid of all once you confuse the information, not to say. [01:54:17] Speaker C: Those the books were right, right? Because the books were just where they paper Internet before there was the Internet, right? [01:54:23] Speaker A: They're even worse because back then we talked about this show a few weeks ago. You had to have an extreme amount of money to publish a book. It wasn't something you could just self publish like you can now, right? So in order to get in front of people to get published, you had to be talking about the right topic. You're not even getting past the gatekeepers. So we have an overabundance of information. Now. The problem, though, is that there's nobody fact checking the information and then the people who are fact checking are not telling the truth. So then it's like, well, fuck, who do you can be ignorant and you can be ignorant to the narrative and still be right? But you're just not matching the like. [01:55:00] Speaker C: I look at three different news sources, right, or at least regularly, and I know that they're all bullshit. [01:55:06] Speaker A: How many does Rupert Murdoch own? [01:55:08] Speaker C: So I go to Fox, that's Rubert, I go to CNN, that's the other one. And I go to owns that one. You can all see they're slanted, right? They all have their own agendas and it's evident. But I just want to at least get this side, that side and then decide for myself what seems more logical or feasible, right? Like, again, what seems less outlandish or more truthful. I mean, sometimes neither one of them seem you know what I mean? So it's rough. Like you said, it's hard to get the truth. [01:55:43] Speaker A: It's like there are people who are still on the sides and will say especially people like podcasters or public speakers or people who have to say things out loud, right? People sit on the sidelines of that and they say, well, you know what the truth is, you know what the right thing to say is. And those are two different things. The truth and the right thing to say are two different things. Especially when we're talking about something as big as this, right? We have been batted down and beaten down to. If you say anything about Israel or Jewish people, it better be positive, because if not, they're going to come for you. It doesn't matter if it's the truth. It doesn't matter where you got it from. If you say it, you know what you're supposed to say and what you're not. These are the talking points. Here's what you can say. Here's what you can't say, right? And up until now, we weren't on TV networks and we weren't in major media print. So we weren't beholden to those rules. But now that our voices can all be heard at the drop of a hat, now they're saying, well, you still got to be subject to those rules, even if it's not the truth. You know the rules, right? The difference is that TV network anchors get paid a lot of money to say the narrative as opposed to the truth, right? We don't get paid a lot of money to say the narrative instead of the truth. So what do we have then that's guiding us to do that? Nothing. So that's why you're starting to hear more voices that are not saying the narrative version and are saying what they think the truth is. The problem is, where are we getting the truth from? Yeah, we're all falling victim to that. Where do you get the truth from? And then when you get the truth, can you say it? [01:57:15] Speaker C: Yeah. [01:57:17] Speaker A: Are you allowed to say what you think the truth might be without fear of repercussion? [01:57:22] Speaker B: Better be ready, especially with them. [01:57:25] Speaker A: But is that right or is that wrong? Or what is that? [01:57:28] Speaker C: That's definitely wrong. [01:57:29] Speaker B: It's wrong. But you don't have the tools to fight that battle right now if you want us to start telling the truth. [01:57:34] Speaker C: It's like those little kids Palestinians throwing rocks. [01:57:37] Speaker B: You got rocks, budy. We got guns. [01:57:42] Speaker A: Well, anyway, listeners, we appreciate you guys tuning in once again, make sure you go out to the website Rareson.com where you can check out all the shows on the network. Make sure you go out and do some research of your own. I mean, of course, I don't even know where to guide you because the shit I may be looking at may be wrong too, so so if you find something, let us know, please, what you find, and then vice versa. We'll let you know if we find something. But in the meantime, keep supporting us, keep interacting with us, and we'll keep bringing the nonsense because we realize that sometimes people just need to laugh. Till next time. [01:58:11] Speaker C: 10% less bullshit than any other podcast guaranteed.

Other Episodes