Hodgetwins Podcast - TWINS POD CLIPS | THIS Is Why Black Culture Is So Horrible...

Episode Date: August 20, 2025

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Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 Time for Twinspot. And I'm getting sucked off. Yeah. You know, I hate the N-word. Sometimes I use it, not the hard ER. I use it. If I'm feeling it, I say it. But I don't really use that word too often.
Starting point is 00:00:15 It just sounds funny. It just sounds funny. But the thing about black people when they use it, they want to set a double standard. They don't want white people to use it, right? But whenever I see a black man or a black woman having an argument with a white woman or a white man, the first thing they call them is the N-word.
Starting point is 00:00:33 Yeah, they call them N-word. Yeah. What's you doing? It's weird. Yeah. What do you think about the case in Cincinnati where the guy supposedly used the N-word and so they basically almost beat him to death?
Starting point is 00:00:46 You know what? If he used the N-word, you're not entitled to jump someone and beat him up. Yeah, it's just a word. I mean, growing up, it really hurt me, but I became an adult and it's just a word. You know what I mean? It has no influence or impact on me now.
Starting point is 00:01:03 Nothing justifies what they did, but it just comes from that mindset. It's just like we have this, what's the word? Black people are so fragile because they've been raised that way by politicians and by everything they see on TV. So they think this outrage, like they showed in Cincinnati, that was justified. The actual government, local government there, is calling for them to actually arrest that man who got jumped and beat up. I saw that.
Starting point is 00:01:30 Yeah. Yeah. That's wild. Yeah. Which is... This guy? Yeah. This is like a party for them.
Starting point is 00:01:41 This is like a party for them. Yeah. They take pride in this. Like, if the roads were reversed, and that was a white... If the roads were reversed, this country will be burning down right now, literally. You're right. Mm-hmm. I think...
Starting point is 00:02:06 They got them... I forget what they charged him was. But I definitely think that's a hate crime. What the... Yeah, because I know that was racially motivated. Of course. Yeah. I think it's because black people in our schools,
Starting point is 00:02:22 in the way the government has addressed problems in the black community, has been catered to in the same way, if you have a problem child and you're constantly worrying about them being satisfied and them being happy and them having everything they need, they're going to think they're entitled to everything. Yeah. Nothing's going to satisfy them. It's like reparations.
Starting point is 00:02:40 I get the logic behind it. And if you're a descendant of a slave on a plantation and that plantation is known and we know where that money went, maybe in some cases, yeah, you're entitled to that money. But in general, it's like white Americans have been net taxpayers for decades for 100 years. And black Americans have been net tax recipients. Right. So we've paid our reparations and then some. Oh, yeah. thousands of white people have lost their life so I could have the freedoms I have today.
Starting point is 00:03:08 Yeah, you know what I mean? White men actually free blacks here in America. Right. And around the world. I mean, the British Empire fought wars in Africa to free black slaves in Africa from black Africa. Do you think the, because when I look at the black community and I compare them to other ethnic groups like Latino, I mean, we're the absolute worst in every category. Do you think reparations will repair the black family? No, I don't think so.
Starting point is 00:03:35 I don't think by giving people a handout that you encourage hard work. You have to teach a man to fish. Common sense. It makes it worse. Yeah. Yeah, to give them a taste of the good life. And then when that money's all up, oh, that wasn't enough. Right.
Starting point is 00:03:49 It's like people who win the lottery. They end up broke. Yeah. Yeah. I think over women of majority in them are like over 90%. Winning hundreds of millions of millions of dollars, they're broke in seven years. It's crazy. Well, when you look at people in the NBA, the NFL, they make millions of dollars to go broke.
Starting point is 00:04:04 Yeah. There made a huge documentary about that on ESPN. They said majority of all the NFL players, basketball players, professional sports in general. Like the certain amount of time, they all broke. Like the black community, do you think that's genetic? Well, I think everything's a combination of genes and environment and culture. So I think part of it is, but it's not immutable. I mean, genes change over time. And it depends on what the culture selects for.
Starting point is 00:04:31 Africa, sub-Saharan Africa, didn't have the world. wheel or two-story buildings before European settlers got there. That's crazy. What was they using squares? Well, the wheel was only invented like 3,000 BC. It's more recent than people think. No, but... You think they would have got around to it?
Starting point is 00:04:50 Eventually, yeah, in time. No, I mean, the environment was different. In Europe or East Asia, you had to survive the winter. And so you had to save seeds. And you could just consume every... Yeah, to plan ahead. Right. And so the environment was just different in that part of the world. And so it's selected for different attributes. It's not bad. It's just we have to recognize there are really deep-seated differences. But I think we have to be forward-looking. And I think part of intentional communities for me is the freedom to set your own standards and say this is what we're trying to become. And if you don't have that intentionality in how you get together and organize, well, then anyone can come in from anywhere. And then you don't determine that. culture you don't have control over it and it's going to be probably the least common denominator
Starting point is 00:05:37 yeah i just don't get how um our community they embrace like the worst things in society i got to think i mean when i listen to our music because you go back in the in the past our music was very beautiful yeah yeah like motown back then and the music meant something like now when you listen to the music is just like it's like satanic Yeah, I think that's getting pushed by big corporation and nobody calls it out and then you try to call it out They they call you a sellout well I think that's the Jewish community I think that's the Jews the music labels Well they own a majority of them yeah yeah you think the Jewish community will let like Jewish kids
Starting point is 00:06:21 Rap that garbage no hell no and behave like that they would never let that happen But they'll let the black community do it and when I say these things the black community is like oh shut up just a sellout. That started real early with Jewish producers, you know, leading things in a certain direction. Tim Pan Alley, like Harlem in the early 20th century, it was Jewish producers setting a certain tone. Didn't know that.
Starting point is 00:06:50 Wow. So like I don't believe in systemic racism the way black people twisted, like the white man's trying to keep me down. I think it's more of an environmental thing that society is created for black people. and they've accepted it because for whatever reason they haven't called out the
Starting point is 00:07:10 Jewish producers or the filth that they brought in our communities. Like, you go into a black neighborhood, there's liquor stores everywhere. There's Planned Parenthood. You don't see that in the upscale white community. I was in Huntington Beach. They got a liquor store on every corner. There's no crime in Huntington Beach, California. It's all white.
Starting point is 00:07:27 Yeah. It's a lot of Latino, but you don't see it. But when you put it in a black community, it's just because of the music we listen to. I don't know. But the white people don't go out there, they listen to it, they'll go out. They'll robber and kill it there. But white people, they know how to turn it on and turn it off. Blacks don't for some odd reason.
Starting point is 00:07:43 Which is crazy. Like, you know Nick Fuentes, right? Sure, yeah. He brought up a very interesting point. He says, blacks, I hear this argument. It's because of our music. It's because of our culture. Well, a lot of white people listen to that same music,
Starting point is 00:07:59 but we don't do the things as detriment to our communities is black. Yeah, white people. That's why I say whites, I think. I think it's a capacity phase. It's got to be. It's like we stumble across this word epigenetics. And I think that explains it. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:08:16 Do you think that's... We come from different environments. So we think different. We behave different. Like you see all the twerking that black women do? They've been doing that in Africa since the beginning of time. There's nothing new. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:08:30 Yeah, I wouldn't say it's immutable, though. Yeah. You know, just like I was saying, the Germanic tribes were as violent as sub-Saharan Africa is today, a thousand years ago. So, or 1,500 years ago. So it's going to take 1,500 years to fix that. Well, I mean, we can maybe get it going a little bit faster. Right. Right, right, right.
Starting point is 00:08:49 Yeah, like, white culture brought us the first black president in this country. He was raised by his white grandparents. Mm-hmm. That's crazy. I think that's beautiful. So I think you're absolutely right. It's not immutable. You can change these things.
Starting point is 00:09:08 And there are some parts of what America means and what Western civilization is that are universal in a good way. It's not just of whites and four whites. I believe there's a deep European heritage that's worth preserving that I feel like I'm a part of. The people of European descent are a part of. We ought to protect it. But also, like all of the science that. we discovered and shared with the world, that's not just ours. We don't have some monopoly on truth and government and equal rights and how we can get along as a society at whole, as a whole.
Starting point is 00:09:43 I don't think that, you know, whites should be in charge of that. And if whites aren't in charge, then we can't maintain it. I think America can move forward very successfully with all different groups of people, with different backgrounds, not because it's a white civilization, but because it's based on true principles of justice. So I think you can have both. And this is one thing I see on the right. People try to conflate that America is all about ideas. And white culture doesn't exist.
Starting point is 00:10:12 Ancestries. That's such BS. Obviously. Yeah. Yeah. It's like I built my house for myself, my family. If someone puts me out of my house and takes my place but they have the same ideas, I don't care.
Starting point is 00:10:25 That's my house. Right. You know, so you have to care about your own, but also those ideas matter. It can be both. Yeah. So. Yeah, I think the white people that founded this country, they, they had a blueprint, what the family should look like.
Starting point is 00:10:38 And when you see other ethnic groups like Asians or Latinos and even blacks, when they assimilate to that culture, they do great. And they thrive. But so why don't you think, like, a majority of blacks don't want to assimilate to the blueprint that the founding fathers of this country laid out? I think because of this resentment that they have, that they were the victims of slavery, and victims of segregation and Jim Crow. And so, I mean, if that's the oppressor, you don't want to identify with the oppressor.
Starting point is 00:11:12 You don't want to be like to you. Yeah, exactly. But there's good and bad, just like there's good and bad in the black community. Like, Charlie Parker was a genius. Miles Davis was a genius. I think there's a lot of good that came out of the synthesis of black American, white American culture. And we shouldn't shy away from that. But no, I mean, you have to see the good and bad in everybody.
Starting point is 00:11:32 That's part of Christianity, too. Like, we're all flawed. All communities are flawed. All nations are flawed. All individuals are flawed. You have to have hope for the future. Yeah. I think that explains why black people came up with these ridiculous names.
Starting point is 00:11:45 They don't want to go with Keith and Chris and Steve. Michael. So they go with Rashonda. They came up with these. The danger. Defibular. Yeah. Defribella.
Starting point is 00:11:59 That's like a hook of disqual. I think it explains that. So you wouldn't call yourself a white nationalist. No, I wouldn't. I think it's way past that point. America was founded by white Europeans for white Europeans. But over the last 100 years, we have invited many people from around the world into our society. We've said you'll have equality.
Starting point is 00:12:23 under the law. So to try to renege on that and say now you're going to be second-class citizens would be morally wrong. I would not support that. It's also not feasible. Like there are 100 million plus non-white people in the country. Are you going to deport 100 million people? Right. Yeah. How? And some people have that attitude. I think it's not realistic. Maybe in some European countries where it was 99% white until a couple decades ago, repatriation is just because it was done under false pretenses. In some ways you can make the same argument here that like my ancestors came to this country thinking was going to be
Starting point is 00:12:57 a certain way and then that was we got rug pulled on what our country would be. But you have to balance these different interests from these different groups who are all valid and morally significant in their own right and have compassion for one another. I also believe that there's plenty of space in
Starting point is 00:13:13 America. We're a huge continental country and world superpower. And so we can still benefit from other groups thriving in our country as white Americans. And that doesn't mean that we don't thrive. But we have to get our government to recognize that, like, projects like mine are legitimate and are protected by our constitutional rights. Well, if they shut you down, they have to shut down the Jewish one. They have to shut down the black one. I don't see. I mean, it would look
Starting point is 00:13:44 really bad if they're coming in and try to wake all, wake over y'all's community. Because, like you said, y'all are not trying to impress anybody. You're just trying to build your own community and preserve your own culture. Yeah, it's a positive thing. We love our own. We want our people to do well. And I think some white nationalists have this mentality that we can only thrive if we control the country top down.
Starting point is 00:14:06 But it's just not the case. I mean, especially with technology today and new possibilities, we can raise our kids with information that, you know, my parents' generation didn't have. We can create more positive cultures. We can go back in some cases to a tradition. that was lost. I went to school for European classical music. I studied European classical philosophy.
Starting point is 00:14:27 I think we can resurrect some of that stuff, which the founding fathers were into, which, you know, the Renaissance, all these high periods of Western culture, that's what the great men were paying attention to. So we can learn that. We can also use AI in new ways. There's so many new possibilities in the world today,
Starting point is 00:14:44 having this complex that I'm not going to succeed unless this other group is totally eradicated. Right, right. Yeah. It just is not true. Right. Hey, I'm Derek from Oklahoma. I just won this RAM, $2,500, $2,500 and $10K and cash from the Hodge Twins.
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