Hodgetwins Podcast - CLIP | Hodgetwins & Officer Tatum POP OFF About Black Culture & Black Fatigue In America...
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Transcript
Discussion (0)
Just so lost.
Yeah, like, we just saw this video with Taraji P. Henson.
We got that video?
Yeah, it's just like the typical.
The stupidity amongst black liberal women, man,
and brainwashing people that look up to them,
especially their stars, people listen to them.
That's what I say.
That's an infrastructure built to, like, just keep the black.
Yeah, y'all got that video with Taraji?
Yeah, this is crazy.
You know why black people run away when we laugh?
Because we weren't allowed to laugh on those plantations.
This is stuff that lives in us, y'all.
Crazy.
Just saying that new y'all, that's why y'all know, oh, what?
Yeah, it lives in us.
That doesn't just go away like she said.
It's crazy.
And if we don't start unpacking it seriously, it will also be the end of us.
What slaves experience on the plantation is passed down onto your, genetically.
No, they jumped over all these free black people to go back to slavery.
I don't understand.
Like, when you talk about the people.
Madam C.J. Walker and some of these people who are highly successful after slavery.
Frederick Douglass. I mean, you go down the list. Booker T. Washington.
All these men and women who were highly successful after slavery, built stuff, the Black Harlem in Tulsa.
You got, I forget, the Renaissance, the Harlem Renaissance.
You go down the list of all this black success.
I didn't even know that when Rosa Parks sat in the back of the bus, or she refused to sit in the back of the bus,
that the black people had a bus line already.
they were doing the same thing
that Black Lives Matters doing today.
They would stage these controversial situations
to get an agenda pass.
I didn't know black people already had the own bus.
I didn't know that either.
Here's another thing.
They wanted a white bus today is better.
Right.
Just like you can see them, they talk about it
when they integrated schools.
I forget the young lady.
I should be ashamed of myself.
It's the young girl that was escorted
by the National Guard to school
and Little Rock.
Little Rock.
Don't feel bad.
I forget to.
I forget that.
Now I got Google.
I can look it up.
But the young girl in Little Rock, so she's a grown woman now,
she gave her testimony, how she used to be at a black school,
and then she was suggested to go in the integrated school.
They had black schools and black teachers that could teach black curriculum.
But instead, they were trying to go to white schools
and integrating white schools,
and now they're mad because their history is not replicated.
So, you know, these things, to me,
and even Harriet Tubman, people never,
I just, I took Africana studies in college
and I didn't know this until more recently.
I did not know Harriet Tubman was married.
Did you know she was married?
Did you know her?
Somebody actually married her?
Those pictures I saw her.
She was so up.
She looked crazy in those pictures.
So she was married.
People think she was out on a plantation,
get beat over the head,
and then one night she just snuck out.
That's not what happened.
She was married to a black man who was free.
He was a free man.
They lived together.
Yes, they lived together.
You can look it up.
Do the research.
It was a, her husband was free.
She had a job.
Now, her husband did not, you know, did not agree with her to start the Underground Railroad.
So she decided to do it anyway.
Thank God she did.
I thought it was an honorable thing to do.
But they don't tell the story about her real life.
They don't talk about the fact that the first black slave owner in American history,
legal slave owner was Anthony Johnson, a black man.
They don't talk about the fact that hundreds of black men own black slaves.
Right.
They also don't talk about the fact that in the past,
voting was based on property ownership or land ownership.
And a lot of black people on land and some white people didn't.
And so black people could vote when white people couldn't.
And then, of course, they removed the rights for blacks to vote and then gave it back.
So people like this idiot that act like she know what happened on a plantation.
They couldn't laugh on a plant.
So they asked, like she knows, like she was there.
Right.
They laugh and they go out there and woof him.
You can't be laughing when you weren't.
I don't know if that happened like that.
And there was different slaves, man.
Everybody wouldn't out on a plantation.
was the house negro.
Then there were slaves.
There were like servants.
They were driving.
There were chauffeurs.
They would drive around and do things like that.
I mean, of course, slavery was a horrible thing.
And there were slave owners that abused their slaves.
But there was some that didn't abuse their slaves because they needed them to work.
They went out an auction and paid all that money for them.
They ain't just beat them.
They can't work.
So there was a plethora of different experiences that occurred.
But this idiot probably making a ton of money.
Yeah.
It's talking about it lives enough.
She claims she don't make enough money because she's black.
these people.
This is what's wrong with,
this is what's wrong with black people.
Yeah, I know.
Two things.
One is unforgiveness.
Because I'm a big believer in forgiving people.
And the black community has never
forgiven white people from slavery.
They still holding on that.
White people that moved on.
Everybody else, Mexican will move on.
Chinese people that moved on.
Right.
Jews that moved on.
Black people still holding on to that.
Only people talking about it is black people.
Only people still complaining.
We live in the greatest country
on planet Earth, bro.
You can't. Look at us, man.
We're black and we're successful.
You can do anything you want if you put your mind to it and everything
ain't going to work. Everybody's going to be a billionaire.
Yeah, I think life is based on relationships.
Right.
That's the biggest thing about life, man.
If you can build relationships, you can have a successful life.
Without relationships, you can't do anything.
I don't care what you know.
That's why we became so successful relationships.
And you got to have a work ethic.
You've got to have an objective perception of the world.
Right.
You look into a racist land.
You are screwed because I lived like that.
Because we voted Democrat.
I voted for Al Gore.
Voting for Clinton.
I remember standing in line voting for Al Gore.
I was waiting like two hours because I thought Bush was racist.
That's the only reason why I was voting.
That's the only reason.
Yeah.
I remember we got there, right?
They say, you got an ID?
See?
See?
He asked for ID.
He calls them black.
He knows who I'm voting for.
He knows who I'm voting for.
I don't blame them now looking back on it.
But see, I don't think that y'all crazy or stupid or ignorant for doing it.
It's just that brain.
brainwashing. That's why it take people like us to
get the word out there, even with a comedic relief, you know, to get people in tune.
Because I used to follow y'all before y'all were political.
When y'all doing the fitness stuff, talking about suckers.
You're like a sucking off.
I'm trying to get sucked off.
I'm going to leave them nuts hanging out.
I've been before my mama passed away.
Keith and Kevin, y'all stop all that damn custom on YouTube.
You know, you got your uncles, your cousins, everybody watching y'all.
And then, you know, it was crazy?
My sister's pastor was looking at us.
When I walked into that black church, I felt so uncomfortable.
I felt like I had a pitch for it.
He made me feel good because he's like, I love you guys.
That's what the pastor said.
Right, right, right.
That's funny, though.
Yeah, but, you know, the progression will happen if people stay consistent and open-minded.
Unfortunately, it's just a trauma.
Like you say, that woman, she said slavery is passed down with us or whatever the case in
it's in us.
No, these dumb people keep passing it down.
That's why.
Which is the problem for the next generation.
Her children and the children of those people, they don't have a chance.
They don't.
Because racism is taught, man.
When you young, man, you don't care you play with.
You know, my kids out there, my kids are playing with everybody.
It's learned.
Yeah, they teach them, and you learn.
And the kids learn that, and they become their focal point.
They become their reality.
Right.
And it's hard to shake that until you get older and you begin to get life experience.
You start getting exposed to other people.
Right.
Like I was racist.
I was racist against white people when I was growing up until I got to college.
I was too.
Because I thought they were all, you know, hate black people and I started thinking about slavery.
I'd never forget this.
When I took Africana Studies in college, we had to take, what was it?
It was Africana Studies 101.
We started talking.
It was the introduction to lynching.
And bro, I was hot.
One white girl in the class.
And gets the question, she, I didn't know that there was lynching in the country.
Every black person in there was like, heck no, man.
Your privilege did you don't know
that was lynching in the country?
Right.
But after that, I was infuriated.
I hated white people.
It made me hate white people more.
And if I had got her number.
I'd have gave her the black experience.
Hey, but that's something you mentioned that.
I remember growing up and my mama was really into anything
that was about racism.
I remember when Roots came out.
Remember Roots?
Yeah.
We was watching Roots.
See that, keep him, I'm looking out.
Look at the white people.
Look at what they do to us.
They're blue-eyed devils.
Look at them.
That's a devil right there.
I remember, I remember
and I would go to school
after watching that.
But I understand when my mom was coming
because she was traumatized.
She grew up in the gym,
Crocrow, South.
So I hated white people.
I liked it to women, though.
But I couldn't stand.
I couldn't stand white people, man.
And then, but I started getting some white friends.
And it was crazy.
Like, I had white friends, black friends.
Like, white friends, we played kickball.
You know, we out there playing baseball.
Baseball.
and stuff, right?
Did I hug up?
Yeah, did we?
Let's go for a merry-go around, right?
Then I got some black friends, and we just walk in the streets.
We just walking.
We just walking.
We just walking.
I said, what y'all going? We're just walking.
Right?
And then we was walking.
Say, man, let's go hit the store over there.
So they walk in, and all of us, well, not me.
I'm just standing now.
So as we walked in, all the black people scattered like roaches, like somebody
turned the light on.
Right?
And I was like, what did everybody do it, man?
I go around the corner and they just,
Still, they still.
They still.
Right?
I said, hey, man, then they run out.
And then this, uh, it was an Asian guy that had the store.
He was calling us all kinds of,
you can't blame.
Yeah, yeah.
So we go running off of the streets and they eating all these chips and can.
I say, man, let me get some.
It's a man, get your own, man.
But that was my experience with like, my black friends.
I remember one day after basketball practice, the point guard of the team,
robbed me
they put a gun on us
put a gun on us
God
we're in sixth grade
that's insane
he was a six-rater
yeah we're in like
he was in high school
yeah middle school
was he high school
he was in six-rate
no he was a six grade
with a gun
we're going to practice
that's insane
comes up to us
a sticks a gun up the shelf
and tells us
hey give me somebody's man
got no money
I'm poor his head
you're a fool
if you're robbing
so but the basketball
coach saw it
yeah so next day
I'm in the room with basketball.
At the principal's office.
Name was Mr. Hayley, and then it was his white man right there.
He said, what happened?
That white man was looking at me and said, man, if you say anything, you're probably going
to die.
He had just look on his face and Mr. Hayes said, go and tell him, it's okay, Kevin.
Go ahead and tell him.
I said, yeah, dude Woods, he robbed me.
Yeah, yeah, he put a gun to me.
He got expelled and everything.
That's since the sixth grade, bro.
Yeah, that was sixth grade.
That's insane.
And I can go on about all my experiences with my white friends.
Like the worst thing I did with my white friends,
they took me to a farm and we was trying to cowtel.
Black friends?
Say, look, we're going to rob the pizza man.
We go, it's a vacant house over there.
We're going to call Domino's over there.
We come down, I'm going to come up with this back.
We're fed to eat.
I mean, that that was just.
A commissal felonies.
Yeah, that was my experience.
Same with me, man.
I got arrested for smoking marijuana in a vacant house when I was,
how was that, eight?
Yeah.
I think I was eight.
Oh, yeah.
and my brother was 10.
But then our cousins go out of the way up to 17.
So it was all of us in there.
And we were smoking wheat.
We were smoking weed way back then.
I'm talking my blunts.
We weren't just smoking a little joint.
My cousin rolling blunts.
Yeah.
And we ended up hanging out with them.
My daddy, because they were poor.
And my dad, we were kind of like the,
they called us rich.
But bro, we were like lower middle class at that point.
Right.
And so my daddy used to give us a little $20 bill so we can eat and we stayed with them over the weekend because they had our money.
Right.
And so they had a little.
Yeah.
Yeah.
$20 for the whole weekend.
And bro, back then, the little chicken house,
they had the fries this big,
whole tray of fried dollar.
Right.
And so, you know, we had-
I remember buying a loaf of bread for 50 cents.
So we had plenty to eat.
But my cousin used to take the money
and go buy weed and then give us a change.
And I don't know how much that weed costs.
Who knows?
Yeah.
You know, he comes back and give us whatever we got.
He took half your share.
Half of them gone.
Had weed from last time.
And he took our money.
But, you know, that's the experience I had, man.
I think a majority of the reason why
we had those experiences with our black friends, none of them had fathers.
Yeah.
I didn't recognize at the time, but all my black friends, they didn't have a, I had a dad,
we had a dad, but they didn't have no father figure.
I think that's what it had to be.
Yeah.
Yeah, all my friends that did poorly in life, they didn't have a father, they father with nobody.
Right.
Selling drugs and really not an example.
Or, you know, I tell you the worst, another thing that's right on that fatherless thing
is the women I dated.
Because when I got to college, I'll just be honest, bro.
When I got, well, first of all, I was around nothing but black people.
Right.
And so, especially going to Paula and his dumb boy, everything was Afrocentric to me.
I never date a white girl.
They're ugly, flat booty.
They came down.
They got no swag.
That's what I thought going to college.
I went to college and it blew my socks off.
I'm like, I don't know what they feed these girls up here.
Yeah.
But the white girls was fine.
Yeah.
Without the attitude.
Without the attitude.
And here's the thing.
I end up having a kid with a girl when I was in college.
And my son, he's 13 now, a great kid.
But the girls that I dated from the time I started having dates and relationships,
all the black girls didn't have a father, bro.
The first girl I dated, and she was, I don't even if I could say that.
I mean, I don't know if I should say that on this thing.
The first guy I dated, I lost my, I lost my Virginia at 16.
This girl was a freak.
I wasn't into it, right?
I was nervous.
You know, my brother.
He was Christian.
Bro, I was kind of.
Weekend Christian.
But, bro, I was shy.
I was shy, bro.
I wasn't trying to.
My brother was different.
He was a different world, bro.
He had all out there.
I remember one time, bro, I lied.
Right.
Because I was a virgin.
You know, and I don't know if it's just black community.
It's probably all community.
They encourage you.
Oh, bro, you're a virgin.
Like, you're gay or something if you're a virgin.
Right, right, right.
And so I felt the pressure, bro.
So I remember lying when I was in the ninth grade, lying in my brother.
I'm like, I just picked some random girl that I know they'll never talk to.
I'm like, yeah, yeah, she came over the crib, man.
But when this girl, this situation happened,
this girl was like fast, bro.
And I'm going to tell you the reason why,
and it's very unfortunate.
But she was fast, bro.
And my brother was dating her older sister.
And they left me in the car with her.
My brother went in the house.
And this girl took advantage of me.
And I didn't, you know, I was like, all right, I got, you know.
You took advantage of you, huh?
Made you get in arrest.
Forced you to get arrested.
She called.
the direction.
Right.
Man, that must have been horrible.
Yeah, yeah, it was terrible.
I still got trauma from that, that experience.
You was at 16?
16.
We was damned in 19.
Really?
Well, that's a good thing.
Yeah, me and Kev was really shy.
Not really, man.
If I had a time machine, I'd do so many times.
I've been going up to all these white girls.
I thought these white girls hated me.
These white girls wanted to kill me.
That's a white devil.
That's a white devil over that.
But you know what?
A lot of these music nowadays, I think,
is replacing, like, mothers' fathers,
especially as rap culture.
Yeah.
100% because who you like more?
Your daddy, they go to work every day
and lame or a homeboy that's a dope boy
with all this money and jewelry and seem popular,
famous, got all the women.
Exactly. I see every kid nowadays, they deress just like a rapper.
Right.
The modern-day black kid or mother,
I mean, female growing up,
they're being raised by rap culture.
Right.
and the Beyonce's of the world and just and they don't realize that Jay Z.
Nymn can get away with having branches in his head, that ugly hair he'd be able
because he's worth billions of dollars.
Beyonce can get away with looking like a skank on camera because they got so much money.
What they don't realize that when you broke, you can't be doing stuff like that.
You can't just dress like these foods and then go on the job and then they're going to give you
opportunity.
You got to make yourself, you know, you got to.
to get yourself to a point of being wealthy for you to even be like that.
But then also, these people ain't really who they act like they are.
Right.
You know, Rick Ross used to be a, Rick Ross used to be, just marketing.
Rick Ross used to work at the jail.
Yeah, he's a correction officer.
He used to be a correction officer.
How you go from, boss?
You were a correctional.
Where was the drug dealing in the current?
I just want to know, you were grown in that picture, and down you all of something
with a kingpin.
Yeah.
So, and these dudes, they go live a lavish light.
They live in the white neighborhood, in the gated community,
with security and all this stuff.
and they still act like they gang-banging.
Yeah.
But the young boys take it and eat it up,
and they really game-banging.
And dudes that's really doing it are doing time right now.
Yeah.
If you really thugging like that, you're doing time.
Yeah, you think we could change it?
Because they already demonize us.
Look, bro, we can change.
Like, it's like the Titanic, man.
It's sinking.
You just got to try to save as many as you can.
There is people that can be saved.
Like, we all woke up, bro.
And now we have a platform, millions of people here,
content like this. And just imagine if y'all didn't wake up, me, Candace, and some other people
with big platforms. So it's a possibility that people are waking up from like us waking up.
Can't save them all, though. You can't say. You ain't, man. I don't know if, like I said, I think the
community harboring unforgiveness, they can't be blessed by God. I just really believe that.
I think that the turmoil and all the things that have happened to black people, they just,
they are not blessed because they hold on to resentment and unforgiveness. And that's what's happening
to them. Everybody else then moved on, man, Jewish people. Like I said, every.
Everybody else first and stuff black people.
Right.
And people can't get mad at say,
y'all just talking about black people.
Look at the numbers, bro.
Yeah.
The murders in this country,
half of the murders in this country.
Are they,
I see statistics.
Which is crazy because we make up,
what, less than 13%?
Then you got to break it down further than that.
13% is everybody.
Yeah.
Then you got to say,
you'll half as men,
half as women.
Right.
But then even half of it,
let's just say about 6%,
you still got older people in a 70s, 60s,
and you got little kids.
Right.
They ain't the ones killing.
It's between 60s.
and like 32 years old that the killing is happening,
which is like 1%.
1% of the population.
They account for 50% of the violent crime.
Violent crime.
Over half of violent crimes, about half of the murders.
Now, let's put this in perspective because the murders that occur throughout the year,
I don't know, 12,000 murders, maybe 300 million people in this country.
But the thing is, is that the violence that is occurring and the crimes that are committed,
and I'll say this, it has to be, you know, pointed out, that these are just convictions,
right. There are half of all the convictions.
In Chicago, I think their conviction rate or their arrest rate is like 30-some percent.
So most of these crimes and murders don't even get solved.
Nobody snitching. They don't know who did it.
So if they actually arrested everybody who committed the crime, I mean, black people probably make up like 70%.
And the reason why I believe it could be 70 percent, because just look at the news.
Look at the shooting and the thugging and the killing and the looting and all this stuff.
It's mostly by black people.
Right.
And so I think the number is higher than what is being represented.
These are just arrests that are made, and that's how they qualify them.
So, I mean, it's just completely out of control.
Look at the abortions.
I mean, we are not repopulating.
The Mexicans, and nothing against Mexican people.
I don't care.
I think we all the same in my opinion.
My wife's Mexican.
Right.
It ain't no big deal to me.
I think each is own.
You know, we all guys, too.
You got your own walk of life.
You all look good to me.
But at the end of the day, man, these other people are coming over here
and they're getting theirs.
And they're probably,
you think they have an abortion?
They're not making excuses.
Yeah.
No,
they got four,
five,
six kids,
about 15 of them
live in a house.
They're making their way
and black people
still complaining
and killing their babies
and having abortions
and murdering each other,
going to prison,
not educated.
Let me say that.
We can't make it like that.
That's why I say it's not ignorance.
At this point,
it's stupid.
Let me say this.
That's like both of our wives
are from Mexico,
right?
Yeah, they're American citizens.
They're American citizens.
They're legit now.
They're legit.
but it's just a different culture.
Black culture is just so horrible.
But like a Mexican culture,
like I go into Mexican neighborhoods,
you'll see a 65-year-old man,
old man, Mexican guy, Latino, I should say,
and he's pushing a cart selling ice cream at that age.
Like, I'm having a house built.
Who's building it?
Who's out there building it?
I see none but Latinos.
It's just a different culture.
That's why they can come here,
not speak the language,
and still thrive in its kind of.
country. And black people don't even realize that. They're at the bottom. Illegal immigrants are
doing better than them. And they don't speak the language, but it's the white man's fault.
They don't take no responsibility or accountability for what, for what they're doing.
And the Africans that come over here. Like people from Africa, Nigeria. They come over here
because the culture is different. So it's not the skin. Right. It's the culture. And we also
got to understand this. Jewish people were discriminated against just like black folks.
You look at those signs. No blacks, no Jews.
They own everything.
And like, this is where, this is where I feel like, this is what makes me mad.
You say that people get in their feelings.
It's the truth.
Right.
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Yeah.
