No Jumper - Tariq Nasheed on Hate Speech, Kanye & Kyrie, Tiffany Cross Beef & More
Episode Date: December 28, 2022Flakko and Tariq reconnect about the headlines of some of the past few weeks. ----- 00:00 Intro 2:38 Flakko speaks on how Tariq's "opps" keep on falling from grace 5:02 Flakko on Ye losing brand de...als and almost 2 billion dollars 6:44 Tariq reacts to Ye, Nick, and Milo hanging out together 15:49 Flakko talks about Ye loving H and doing some good things 27:08 J. Jones photo from 1957 in Little Rock and if he should be held accountable, the same way Kyrie was fined 34:42 Flakko and Tariq discuss "Black Panther: Wakanda Forever" and if it is worth watching 36:35 Which TV shows and movies have a hidden agenda 38:24 Tariq talks about the historical inaccuracy in the movie: "The Woman King" 40:22 Tiffany Cross on how people shouldn’t listen to Tariq Nasheed or Kevin Samuels 50:02 Tariq on hiring a N to build his pool and firing him after finding out 54:04 Tariq brings up how secret agents infiltrate certain societies 54:50 Tariq on the Bureau investigating him for his followers 58:45 Flakko asks Tariq about Takeoff and if Hip Hop has a problem 1:13:20 Flakko asks Tariq: "If he knew he was going to get got, would he stop doing what he's doing?" 1:16:45 Flakko talks about Tariq's book 1:25:30 Marriage 1:35:50 Tariq on tricking ----- NO JUMPER PATREON http://www.patreon.com/nojumper CHECK OUT OUR NEW SPOTIFY PLAYLIST https://open.spotify.com/playlist/5te... FOLLOW US ON SNAPCHAT FOR THE LATEST NEWS & UPDATES https://www.snapchat.com/discover/No_... CHECK OUT OUR ONLINE STORE!!! http://www.nojumper.com/ SUBSCRIBE for new interviews (and more) weekly: http://bit.ly/nastymondayz Follow us on SPOTIFY: https://open.spotify.com/show/4ENxb4B... iTunes: https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/n... Follow us on Social Media: https://www.snapchat.com/discover/No_... http://www.twitter.com/nojumper http://www.instagram.com/nojumper https://www.facebook.com/NOJUMPEROFFI... http://www.reddit.com/r/nojumper JOIN THE DISCORD: https://discord.gg/Q3XPfBm Follow Adam22: https://www.tiktok.com/@adam22 http://www.twitter.com/adam22 http://www.instagram.com/adam22 adam22hoe on Snapchat Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
No Jumper, coolest podcast in the world, and we're back again with,
listen, Tarreek, you got so many titles, man.
Yeah, yeah.
We're back with Tarik Nishit, but what should the people know Tariq Nishit asked, man?
Author, filmmaker, activist, game advisor, so many hats.
Museum owner, so many things I do.
Revolutionary?
Yes, indeed, absolutely.
Yo, listen, Tariq always shows up with a fresh hairline, right?
Yes.
Now, I just found out that this is like a, so it's a ritual, right?
So we're, because to Rique and a few guys in the office as well, they get haircuts, well, not haircuts, but like just like the shapeups, right?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Right?
Every week and then get like the fade, you know, like you're right about retouch every like two, two, three weeks, right?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
I just don't find the need in getting the shape up retouched every week and just wait until the haircut in two weeks.
That's an FDA thing.
That's how I go off camera.
That's kind of an FBI thing to keep the hairline crisp.
Why, though?
Like, because look, as we came out of slavery,
this Foundation of Black Americans,
we wanted to make a good impression on the world
because they made us so raggedy during slavery.
When we came out of slavery,
we wanted to say, hey, now we have the opportunity
to show you how fresh we are.
Some of the first barbering schools
were black people. They were running them.
Black people were some of the first barbers in the country.
They were cutting white people's head.
You had some of the first barbering schools
coming out of Philadelphia.
which is why Philly is known for some of their most thorough cuts.
So we've always had a thing about having fresh fades, fresh lineups and all that.
So it's kind of an FBA culture.
Yo, here, Russell, look, so if I get fresh shape up every week,
would I be able to blend in as a FBI?
You might.
You might.
We've got to wash the Joloff stains off,
but you might be able to blend in.
See, talk about a lot of say these things join hit up like every two weeks.
See, that's non-FBA stuff right there.
Because y'all be trying to save money.
Y'all are a little more frugal
You know, mad frugal, bro.
I'm talking about, listen, man, like, as a kid, bro,
like my dad had us, like, like, like, like,
like haircuts every month, right?
And that's why y'all asked him was getting lit up
and roasted in school.
I'm sorry, my brother, it was bad, bro.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
It was horrible, man.
It was bad, man.
No, Bob, with a fresh haircut, though,
how closely will I, will I be able to pass off as an FBI?
Well, the thing is, you can.
Or is the accent just, you know.
Yeah, the accent will know from the accent.
Sometimes some y'all get the haircuts and y'all trick niggins.
Yeah.
But yeah, we know the accent.
But yeah, we're all good.
This is my brother.
Yeah, man.
Yo, Tareke, you got to have a praying mother, man, because your enemies have been falling, man.
Yes, they have.
Yes, they have.
Man, here, bro, like, we would actually talk about, I think one of them later on, right?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
But let's get to Kanye, man.
A lot happened this morning
But let's just first backtrack first
And then we can get to this morning
So what was your whole take on the whole Kanye
DefCon
Like DefCon 3
And his whole I guess
Folks was I guess
I guess labeling Kanye as anti-Semitic
Right right right yeah
See the difference between Kanye and Kyrie
We've been defending Kyrie
Kyrie didn't do anything anti-Semitic
He didn't say anything anti-Semitic
He shared a link that's on Amazon
That anybody can get
He didn't put any context to it
He's like, hey, check this out.
So they tried to reframe him as being anti-Semitic.
We were totally against that.
Kanye is a little bit harder to defend because Kanye was like,
I'm about to go Defcom 3 on Jews.
So you can't really defend that.
You don't say stuff like that.
That's not going to go.
Well, isn't like DevCon 3 kind of like, like,
so like the U.S. military has like the DefCon system, right?
Where like pretty much like DefCon 3 just means, you know, like we are now ready to defend
ourselves and like we have like label like this particular target as necessary, right?
Right.
So if, so if Kaya is saying that DefCon 3 means, yo, I'm just ready to defend myself
against, let's say, people who have been attacking me.
Right.
Yeah.
He didn't specify like that.
Gotcha.
You said I'm going DefCon 3 on the Jews.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
So I don't, you don't say stuff like that.
You don't go in on an entire group of people.
They're Jewish people who are actually cool.
There's Jewish people who are not racist.
We like to point out, even with me, people look at me as, um, you know,
like a prominent black figure about justice.
I don't really go in on white people.
I go in on white supremacy.
Absolutely.
There's a difference between white people
and white supremacists.
Because all white people are not white supremacists.
Within Jewish society, you don't go in.
I'm going to go in on the Jews,
because there are some Jews people
who are not on that bullshit.
Absolutely.
You do have some anti-black races
within that society.
You go in on them.
You specify who you're going to go in on.
You just don't label people
and just hit them all at once
as one monolithic group based on their ethnicity.
That's a problem.
Yeah, in effect.
Now, do you think the punishment was,
I guess, do you think, like,
his, like, punishment fits his crime
when I guess Adidas canceled his deals,
Billings-Dagher canceled his deals,
he lost a lot of partnerships?
Yeah, well, the thing is,
Kanye walked right into that one,
because if you're a black man in a certain position,
you've got that kind of paper,
they want you to make a mistake
so they're going on you.
He walked right into it.
I mean, he walked into that so easy,
and they started snatching billions from this dude within days.
You've never seen somebody lose billions.
Two billion in a day.
In a damn day.
You've never seen that.
So as a black person, you've got to be on your P's and Q's
and you have to be cognizant of what you say when you are running a corporation like that.
Now, Kanye opened himself up to some of his white employees to sue him which many of them are doing now.
Wow.
You see?
So you got to be very careful when you spew certain things.
When you get that kind of position, you don't have to say everything that's on your mind.
your mind. You have to have some decorum about what you do and be more codified with your language.
Yeah, man. Now, there were black people saying, yo, this is just a grand plan. He's self-sabotized
so he can be free. Like, what's your response to that? That's goofball talk. That's not how you do it.
Because he's not free. He's not, nobody's doing business with him like that. He went into
sketches. They threw him out of the sketches building. He's trying to get connections. You need
connections if you're in that type of industry.
And you have a lot of people who are looking at him with a black cloud over his head.
It's going to be hard for him to make some real good deals now.
You don't throw money like that away.
You can do so much more with that type of money for the community than to just sabotage yourself like that.
Now he's running around with a bunch of these suspected white supremacies now.
Your boy, Nick lying ass quintas.
Nick got on here and lied.
Bro, speak on it, man.
Nick said that, well, Tarik, that little whiny white supremac.
Tarek, you know, El Tarek, we've never asked him to debate me.
I showed emails of him and his people repeatedly emailing me, offering me money to do a damn debate with him.
So that wasn't a lot.
But running around with Nick Twentez, man, I mean, that's a bad look all the way around.
You don't want that kind of energy.
This guy says reckless stuff about non-white people, black people in particular.
And Kanye running around with these all right people, that's not a chess move.
It's like, what is this guy doing?
What's Kanye's agenda?
How does Kanye view other black people?
Absolutely.
With Milo and Candice Owens who hates black people
and some of these other people who spew anti-black racism.
What's your purpose of being around these people?
That's why I can't really defend Kanye like that.
No, that's the fact right now.
Like, give me your initial reaction to when you've seen he was...
Because, like, I think Milo is now his manager, right?
Like, Milo is now his...
Something like that.
He's like his campaign manager or something like that.
So it's all over the place.
When I first heard about the whole thing, when he was, well, first of all, before he went
Def Khan on the Jews and all that nonsense, he was running around, remember, with White Lives Matter
shirt, so he was already prepping us for the bullshit.
And people try to chop it up as him being bipolar.
I don't know if bipolarness makes you into a coon, because he's doing some real coon in right
now.
That's just not a good look.
Yeah.
So, speak with that White Lives Matter shirt.
So people, so like, you know, folks will say, yo, Kanye just wore a shirt that says white lives
matter. If he never says black lives don't matter, then like, it's not really cool. And so like, just
speak on him wearing that white lives matter shirt. Like, like, white lives matter. That whole
narrative came out of the opposition to black people saying, hey, we don't want to be killed by race
soldiers out here. Yeah. Which is part of the so-called black lives movement. And I don't like to
speak on the black lives movement too heavy because that was controlled opposition. You had people
infiltrate that and rebrand that into an all-lives matter situation.
within itself because when black people got killed, you had a lot of activists on the grassroots
who would go out here in the streets and stump for justice for them. And then all of a sudden,
we see these activists who were funded by white sources come out there talking about, yeah,
black lives matter and black trans matter too. What? What? And black Asians and just all of this
stuff, it turns into an all live matter thing. And then when the money came, all of these other
groups started getting money, no black organizations really got.
got any of that paper, the black masses, we didn't benefit off that.
Yeah.
So who infiltrated it, though?
The dominant white society and the left-wingers were the main ones who were infiltrating
because, see, they go out there and act like they're the allies, say, hey, yes, we're with
you, we're going to march with you, and then they start putting up these Act Blue donation pages
all over the place, and then all of this money starts coming in, and nobody knows where the
money goes.
They said that the Black Lives Matter, as an organization, collected, like, what, $90 million
dollars or possibly more than that.
But the only people that they point out
mismanaging the money are a few black
people. You know what I'm saying?
This black person right here had six
million. This other black person had four million and
they bought houses. Okay, where's the other 80 million?
Absolutely. You did?
The white people who got that money.
What did they buy? Because we damn
show didn't get it as a black community.
So we got to call all of it out.
Right. Wait, so like you even just like spoke on that
to like the one lady, bro, like
again, I hate count impocococals.
Right?
Because like how do I say that her buying five houses is from that money, right?
Right.
Exactly.
So that's why I didn't jump on that thing because the white media was throwing that out there.
Oh, this woman who's the leader of Black Lives Matter bought all these houses.
So I'm like, okay, that's her paper.
She could do whatever she wants to do with her money.
But you're going to have to put everybody out there.
What did all of these other groups buy to?
You got to put the white people out there too because the white people made the bulk of the money
and that money did not go to producing any type of justice for black people.
Yeah, now, I don't know if it's a rumor or if it's true, but it said that George Soros has a, like, has like an intricate role in Black Lives Matter. Is that true?
Yeah, they've been pointing out for years that George Soros has underwritten a lot of these nonprofits that's connected with Black Lives Matter.
Oh, wow.
And we do know that the DNC, a lot of top brass from that organization, they get money from lobbyists and then they funnel that money into these Black Lives Matter organizations.
and then all of a sudden they start talking about black trans,
and then what happens is the white LGBT starts getting a hold of all of that money,
and then we get laws passed to protect white LGBT people instead of black people.
So it's a big finesse that goes on.
Not big finesse.
Now, can there ever be an instance where a program ran by white money for black people
can still have, I guess, the purest of interest for black people, right?
Like, like, if let's say like a program for saving black hands, if that program was ran purely by white dollars, can that program still be for black people?
Well, let's look at history.
Many programs for so-called black people, they've been run by white people.
And how has that worked so far?
Look over in Africa, many of those save the children programs and feed the children programs are solely run by white people.
It has not gotten better.
These are finesse games.
over there saying, hey, look, we got some rice for the hungry babies.
We're going to feed you.
And by the way, when we're feeding you, we're going to be mining all the cobalt over here.
We're going to be getting all the diamonds, but you're going to get a nice bowl of rice.
So aren't we so great?
It's a hustle, man.
Right.
And dry stew with no meat.
Exactly.
It's a hustle.
They've always sent them the missionaries than the military.
You understand?
That's been the tactic of the white supremacists since they started getting around indigenous people.
Yeah, man.
And like, do you feel, though, like the, like, the Republican Party have used Kanye as their blackface?
Or, like, you know, I think, think, like, he even spoke on, like, how Elon Musk would kind of, like, parade him around to these parties as his cool black friend, right?
So do you feel, like, feel like Kanye was being used by that party for years?
Yeah, but he wanted to be used.
He's the one who ran around with that MAGA hat, um, hugging on Trump, like a plantation sandbow.
He's doing all of that stuff.
So they're just utilizing his.
ignorance. He's going along with the program. And of course they're going to use him as a mascot.
Notice, with all of this stuff in the backlash going against Kanye, you don't see too many
people from the right defending Kanye. They're not defending him. He's out here shooting himself
in the foot using these right wing talking points, but they're not saving him and they're not
doing anything to help him. Yeah. Do you think that Kanye is high IQ? Because like, okay, so,
so like when Kanye spew these like talking points, right? They sound like incoherent.
know, like less solid than like when I hear less like Nick Fuentes or a kid, it's always
or like Milo, right?
Like it's like they got the sauce until I make that shit sounds good.
See Candace Owens, Nick Fuentes, they know they're full of shit, okay?
That's the thing.
They're intelligent to know what they're saying, the talking points from a think tank.
That's all it is.
They're spewing white right wing talking points from these think tanks.
Kanye believes that stupid shit that he'd be saying.
And that's the problem.
He thinks that that shit is deep.
And it's not.
And he doesn't understand that he's spewing talking points from these groups who don't give a shit about him.
Man.
Now, speaking of self-sabotage and stupid shit, let's, like, fast forward to now,
Kian West went on Alex Jones this morning.
Oh, my God.
Okay.
So, like, when you first heard that Kian West was going on Alex Jones, did you at least have any type of, like,
encouragement?
Like, you know, maybe he would, you know, you know,
you know, present himself well.
No.
No, no.
I said, Lord, why is he doing this?
And it's almost like they're setting him up to fail.
Yeah.
Why would the, if you had some real people around you,
they wouldn't let you go on one of these platforms
where that type of rhetoric is kind of known
and it can be cultivated and it can be misconstrued
because nobody on those platforms are going to,
they're not going to pull you back and stop you.
You understand?
So he gets on Alex Jones talking about Hitler,
wasn't that bad?
And I'm like, oh my God.
I mean, they're letting this do.
They're giving him the rope to hang himself.
Yeah.
And what's even more dangerous to me is, is they was like letting him go while saying, oh, no.
Yeah, yeah.
Oh, no, I hate him.
Yeah, yeah.
And he did the same thing on Timcast.
It was the, the other day.
The Timcast, kind of pushed back a little bit with a fake pushback and Kanye got up
and walked off.
So he's all over the place with it.
Yeah, I mean, like, it's kind of like, yo, oh, no, speak, make us money.
Yeah.
And like, hell of no.
Oh, God, we're going to oppose what you're saying, but keep talking, that type of thing.
Yeah, they want him to say all that stuff.
Right.
Now, now, like, his boy Nick was there as well, right?
Now, Kanye saying, I don't hate Hitler.
I like Hitler.
I like the Nazis.
Can there ever be a nuanced conversation about people like that?
Because, like, look, so, like, if he says, listen, man, like, I'm a Christian.
I see the good in everybody, right?
That don't work.
When you use Hitler, you shot yourself.
in the foot. That's like a white person
saying, well, there was some good slave owners.
You know, if you say that, hey, what are you talking about?
They do, though. They do try to.
Do you watch them Thomas Jefferson? Yeah.
But it makes them look bad when they try to go down route.
So Kanye talking about Hitler did some good things. There's no coming back from that.
There is no coming back.
Is he done now?
Man, it looked like it's going to be all downhill.
And we have to understand, you don't put yourself in that position to sabotage.
to sabotage yourself
and lose all of that money, all of that
affluence that you had
because you had a lot of affluence.
You were in a position where you could help
a lot of people. You don't have to say
every little quirky thing that pops
in your head if you're in that position.
So, Kanye, I don't know what his goal is
now, but he's messing up big time.
Now, let's assume Kanye
never wore the white light's
matter shirt, right? And he never
I guess ostracized himself among black folks.
Let's assume Kanye West was still
while black folks were still rallying at Ralph Kaya West.
Could he have survived the cancellation of the Jewish people?
Well, the problem is he's rolling with the alt right now.
You did what I'm saying?
He's literally rolling with the alt-right.
So these guys are bad news.
So the reason he was using those talking points,
those are talking points that the white supremacists like to use.
Because white supremacists never like being called out.
When you call out white supremacists,
They say, oh, no, it's not us.
It's the Jews who's really running stuff and doing everything.
So that gets the heat off them.
So I don't fall for that.
White supremacy is the problem.
It's not Jewish supremacy because they're black Jewish people who are decimated
and they're discriminated against and they have no power.
It's not a religious thing.
It's a racial thing.
And it's a racial group, the white supremacists who are dominating and controlling everything.
So we have to point that out.
Yeah.
Now, like, they even spoke about being outside of the Matrix and going for who actually
run things. So from like your perspective, man, because like we can say like Trump, Biden, like,
they don't run shit, right? Like, who do you think run all of this, man?
The code of white supremacy runs everything. They think there's not some wizard of Oz in a room
somewhere pushing buttons. White supremacy, it gets his power from all of the participants being
on code. That's why the most lowly white person has more power than the most upstanding black
person. For example, Bill Cosby,
damnly a billionaire.
It was broke white women
that took him down. You understand?
Kyle Rittenhouse
is a trailer trash hillbilly.
That man had a million dollars
worth of whiteness because he went into a
courtroom and the courtroom bent over backwards
to protect him. That's what
white supremacy means. A black person, we
couldn't pay for what happened with Kyle Wittenhouse.
A judge to sit there and act like your
lawyer and then the white media
to sit here and protect you too?
whiteness has a monetary value.
So when a person says,
well, my family came over here to America
and we didn't have no money,
yo, yes, you did.
You had a million dollars worth of whiteness.
And that whiteness meant something.
That's why you brought your broke ass
over here from the slums of Europe
to come over here and enjoy the benefits of your whiteness.
Yeah, man.
No, but I speak on Cal Rittenhouse, right?
Because even me, like, I've always said,
man, and he was being attacked
and he shot back in self-defense.
So if I see that, man,
how can I, like, truly say,
to lock up this 17-year-old kid in jail for life,
because life is a long time, you know?
If a black person was on video saying,
hey, those protesters need to be shot.
I wish I had my gun.
I would shoot those protests.
You sang this on film.
And then there's another film of you beating up a girl.
Like, Cal Rittenhouse,
there's a video of him beating up a girl at school.
Yes, yes, I seen that.
Then he goes out here with a white supremacist group,
the proud boys and the other ones,
looking for trouble.
Yeah.
Nobody told them to go out there.
He crossed state lines illegally with a gun that he wasn't supposed to have.
It's too young to have it.
And then you go out here instigating a situation because there's also a video of Cal Rittenhouse running up to black people.
Because it looks like he wanted to ambush black people.
But black people saw what he was trying to do.
Hey, we know you're pointing your gun at us.
They were saying to Kyle, you pointed your gun at us earlier, man.
We ain't rocking with you because Kyle was running around acting like he was a medical guy, like he was a medic.
Gotcha.
Wasn't a medic?
I was ever seen your own kid.
Yeah, I know.
He wasn't a medic, he had no medical training, and he's running around.
Hey, you need medical?
They were like, no, you tried to shoot at us, man.
Get the fuck out of here.
So the white cats stepped in because they saw what Kyle was doing.
They were trying to get him out of there.
And then Kyle started busing, which was the plan.
They were going to try to ambush people, which he did.
And then you get into a courtroom and a judge is sitting here saying,
we can't show the video of you saying you want to shoot protesters.
We can't show videos of you beating up a girl.
We can't call the people you killed victims.
That was white supremacist.
on display all day.
Yeah, man.
Yeah, man.
Now, like, he's actually, bro, like, he's now on Twitter popping his shit, man.
Yes, he's popping his collar.
And then you get out and you're, you have a video game called the turkey shoot.
He has a video game when he's shooting turkeys.
A black person just never do no shit like that, dude.
Come on.
Yeah, man.
Now, do you, like, like, think that he would have a future or, or like, it's his 50 minutes of
fame about it be up?
Here's the thing.
You got to understand how white supremacy works.
Because even in Jim Crow,
even though the white supremacists
enjoy the privilege of white supremacy,
they knew how evil
each other were.
They knew how they were.
They didn't trust each other.
That's why they didn't raise each other's kids.
They would get black people to raise their kids for them.
You know what I'm saying?
They didn't want to leave their kids
with other white supremacists.
Not enough facts, you feel me?
Yeah, they didn't hate us too much.
They knew they were taking the kids.
So same thing with the Zimmermans.
Like, Zimmerman was a hero for a minute,
but don't know white society
ain't really fucking with Zimmerman like that
he's a killer yeah
they know
written house
they know that this guy is off the chain
they're not going to really have him in a serious setting
that that could be
a civil
lawsuit
potential lawsuit hazard having this guy right out too
he's being sued yeah so if you really employ this guy
and he does something crazy knowing his background
so that's some kind of litigation
nightmare for some corporation
And so he will be propped up as a hero to the far-right supremacists,
but they ain't really rocking with him in legitimate white society.
Their own code with them, though, to the point where they're not going to punish him.
But rocking with them, we're going to back up off you like that.
And that's true right now.
Like, you also spoke on George Zimmerman, right?
Yeah.
Now, what's your take on this, man, right?
Like, there's just always, like, I think Jay Z said this, right?
But, you know, like, y'all killed X and let George Zimmerman live.
The streets is done.
So, like, what's your take on that it took a white man to see him in public and bust him?
Yeah.
Do us as black folks have to own that?
Well, you know, to be fair, they have been hiding this guy.
You know what I'm saying?
Because don't nobody know exactly where he is now.
I heard he was in Arizona.
I don't know if he's still in Florida.
So nobody knows exactly where he is.
They kind of been low-key hiding him.
So I'll give him that.
Now, if this was a situation out here in L.A.,
they would have found his ass.
Oh, no, bad.
They would have got his ass.
Zimmer was out here.
They would have been waiting around at every bar,
whatever he frequent.
They would have got him.
But, again, nobody really knows where he is at this point.
Yeah, man.
Now, speaking of Kyrie, right?
Yeah.
Now, when you seen the list they gave Kyrie,
was that buck breaking at its finest?
That was them trying to degrade that, man.
I'm glad he didn't go for the fall for the base.
that was overkill, them trying to make him apologize and get money.
$500K.000.
Yeah, trying to get $500.
That was buckbreaking all day.
And I'm glad he didn't go for that.
Because right now with Jerry Jones,
they're sweeping the Jerry Jones situation under the rug.
And Jerry Jones was actively engaging in Jim Crow racism on camera.
You know, back in the 1950s.
And they're trying to make that seem like it's ancient history.
But they're burying that under the rug.
So with black people, they have to do overkill to try to making an example out of Kyrie.
Because he's a proxy for all of us.
So they're trying to smack him around to say, hey, you other black folks, you better get in line.
And they weren't used to the pushback that they're getting because we're not going for that.
Yeah, man.
Now, for a lot of folks like myself, right, who, you know, I don't really understand, like, most things, right, when it comes to, like, Kyrie saying, I know who I am in terms of he is a Hebrew, right?
So what's black folks, I guess lineage that trace back to like, you know, like the Hebrews?
Yeah, now there are black people who have Jewish lineage and when you go back in history,
you'll see that they were black Jews.
They were black Hebrews.
There's tribes over in Africa now, South Africa, Zimbabwe, who are jet black.
They could trace their ancestor.
And they've done DNA tests showing that their lineage goes back to Judah, to Israel.
So these are facts.
There are black people who, um,
have Hebrew backgrounds.
So as far as us here, we can do DNA testing
and we can kind of do lineage testing
and see who's who, but we're so mixed up
with different cultures now,
it would be hard to tell to a certain degree
if we haven't been practicing Judaism
in decades or even centuries.
So that would be kind of hard to tell.
Now, the thing that's interesting,
why there is anti-Semitism
and why anti-Semitism became prevalent in Germany
was because the,
Nazis and the other white supremacists, they said, well, the reason we don't like Jewish people
is because they're really Negroes.
That was them saying, wow.
Yeah.
You look at Mind Kampf by Hitler and he's using the word nigger all in the book.
Wow.
He kept referring to Jews as Negroes.
Wow.
So that was the issue that they had with Jewish people.
They had these Negro genes that they're trying to sneak in around us strong Aryans.
So we have to get that Negro gene out of here.
So when they say a black person is anti-Semitic, what that means,
you're anti-black to a certain degree
because what they don't like about the Jews
is the black gene that they say that they have.
Wow.
It's a real heavy dynamic.
Wait, like, so like if,
if Kanye knows it,
why would Kanye even like, like,
co-sign that shit?
Because Kanye is all over the place.
Yeah.
He's hanging around with a bunch of people,
these white supremacist groups,
who's spewing this nonsense
and he's not articulating himself.
Yeah.
And that's the problem.
Yeah, McKay probably
don't even know you, right?
He's just like regurgitating, man.
Now, Jerry Jones, right?
So Jerry Jones, a picture came out
from 1957.
He claims he was 14 years old.
And he was
with a group of people
that was trying to stop the desegregation
of North Little Rock High School.
Now, he says,
yo, I was 14 years old.
I did not know what was going on.
I was just coming to see.
Now, one, do you believe
in statements of,
I was not involved.
I was just curious.
No, no, no.
He wasn't there as a damn cheerleader for nobody.
You were there practicing racist.
They were beating the shit out of the black people.
He's right there dead in the mix.
So don't act like you were just standing there watching.
And I don't want to hear about that.
He was a baby.
They tried a baby five my wife or something.
Oh, he was so young.
Look, Tamir Rice was young when they killed him in Cleveland.
12, right?
Yeah, 12 years old.
Mike Brown was 18 when they killed him.
Trayvon Martin was 17 when they killed him.
So black teenagers,
are punished and killed regularly.
And also, this whole, it was so long ago,
let's just let it go.
There was an 18-year-old woman in Nazi Germany
who was a secretary.
They found her recently,
and they wheeled her ass in court,
and they gave her a breathing machine or whatever.
They're like, we don't give a damn
how long ago that was,
if you were a teen who didn't know better.
You participated in something that harmed our group,
so you're going to bring your ass to court right now.
Yeah, right?
So, yeah, everybody should be punished.
If we're going to punish one group, punish everybody.
Yeah.
So what do you think the appropriate punishment would be?
The same thing that they tried to do with Kyrie.
Give some money to black organizations.
Give a few million.
Apologize to black society.
Set up some scholarships and give money to some of these nonprofits.
Fight for Kaepernick to come back to the lead.
You did?
Stuff like that.
Wait, wait, wait.
Like, can Kapp still play?
Cap can still play?
Yeah.
And Jerry Jones was one of the people telling folks not to kneel and all that stuff, remember?
That's true.
Yeah.
And he worn him.
Yeah, he was worn to people like a plantation owner.
So now he needs to have a Colin Kaepernick shirt on.
He needs to be represented for Colin Kaepernick, apologizing to Colin Kaepernick.
Do the same thing that they tried to do to Kyrie.
Yeah.
Like, do you like feel like, here, right?
So, um, Kyri, right?
So do you feel like Kyri was only punished because the,
I guess the commissioner was a Jewish guy and who says, yo, like, again, I ain't never seen him so like, because he usually a easy-going calm guy, but he either said and thrust to Kyrie, yo, like, I'm going to see you.
You feel me?
Right, right?
So you feel like Kyrie, like the bulk of like his punishment, actually came from because the commissioner was a Jewish guy?
No, you know what it came from?
Kyrie had been standing up to them people anyway.
Yeah.
Because remember, they tried to give him the jab and he wouldn't take it.
So they look at brothers who do that as little uppity negroes.
So they want to make an example out of them because he stood his ground.
He was like, hey, I just won't play.
I ain't taking that shit.
They don't want other black people getting that kind of vibe because that becomes contagious.
And if you have so many other players being influenced by Kyrie saying, hey, I'm not going to do everything these people tell us to do.
Let's stand together in solidarity and let's shut this bullshit down and let's start making power moves.
See, that's where that will lead to.
So they have to make an example out of the black person who's running off the plantation, so to speak.
So that's what they tried to do with Kyrie.
That whole thing where they manufactured, that's a manufactured beef, him tweeting a link to a movie without any context to it.
And then labeling him anti-Semitic.
That's a bad faith argument, you know?
But they use the I'm white and I say-so narrative to try to punish black people.
Man, right.
So now, like, let's actually like transition into Twitter.
Yeah.
Now, Elon Musk just purchased Twitter.
Now, he's saying he's for free speech.
Yeah.
And he's saying he's about to start unbending accounts.
He, like, unbanned Trump, unbent other people, right?
Yeah.
Now, are you pro him unbanned a lot of these guys who got banned?
I am.
I am because I think they unbanned Minister Perricon too.
Oh, really?
Yeah, yeah.
So, yeah, I don't like banning people if, you know, they just have an opinion that's different.
Yeah.
Now, if people are getting into dangerous behavior,
you have to check these accounts.
Yeah.
But some of these, I didn't want him to ban Trump.
I didn't think that was cool.
No.
I didn't think that was cool at all.
Let Trump say what he has to say.
Let people see what's popping with it.
Yeah.
The thing is what he is doing, from what I understand,
they're starting to ban people who speak against police brutality.
Now, that's not cool.
You know, a lot of people who, yeah.
So don't do that.
Don't say I'm all for free speech,
but when people are talking about non-justice,
you ban them.
Yeah.
Don't ban nobody if that's the case.
How do we deal with hate speech?
Because I think like Jordan Peterson says,
there's really only two options, right?
Is we ban it all in terms of rights, right?
And then figure out which rights to grant as time goes on
or allow everything, right?
Now, and he also said, yo, like,
the only possible option for like communal harmony
is to allow it all because once we start figuring out what to ban,
that's when we get into, okay, who's going to decide what to ban?
And that's an easy road to like tyranny.
So, like, how do we deal with hate speech?
Do we just allow people to rebuttal them online, or should we ban them?
Well, the thing is, a lot of hate speech will lead to normalization of demonizing a group of people,
which is what they did, the black people.
It started off with nigger, nigger, nigger,
and then let's lynch that nigger,
and then let's bury that nigger,
and then let's run all the niggers out of here, you know what I'm saying?
So it'll start with words,
and then it'll turn into something else.
So you want to nip certain things in the bud
before it goes to another level.
That's why all of these other groups are protected.
You can't say a negative Asian epithet.
You get banned shit down real quickly.
You're out of here.
You damn show can't say a gay epithet at all.
Yeah, absolutely.
You think you're out of it.
here, these other groups are protected.
They have not been marginalized half
as much as black folks. A lot
of anti-black racism is
allowed to go on, online, and
in real life. You can have white people running around
here yelling nigger, nigger, throwing stuff
with black people and they won't even get a hate crime charge.
You bump into an Asian person. They're going
to hit you with an hate crime charge.
So we have to make
it equitable, meaning that we have to have
the same protection for black people as per
the Constitution. People protection under the law.
Yeah. But
if we start, let's say,
banning in, like, hate speech, right?
Like, okay, do we trust
the powers that be that
already had it out for us, that
already, like, fucked us over?
Do we trust them to the side?
Like, what, like,
what, like, hate speech is?
Well, the thing is, they're already in power.
So we're already subjugated to them
to a certain degree. And it's already dictated by them.
Like on Twitter, you can say, nigger, nigger,
all day. No, nobody do anything.
You can call black people,
is you can say all types of stuff.
Nobody really does anything.
Yeah.
But we can't say anything about other groups.
So there's always that the racial double standard is already there.
That's what white supremacy is all about, a racial double standard.
And that's what we have to push back against.
That's the struggle we're in now.
Man, right?
So now, what kind of movie, right?
What's your thoughts on that, man?
You know, I didn't see the movie, but just the premise of it kind of threw me off
because it's too agenda-based.
We're talking about Wakanda.
This is the mythological African society.
The last one, the last Black Panther was phenomenal.
Our brother Chad's, he died.
So the logical thing would get to get another replacement for him.
That would be the logical thing.
But now they've all-lives matter, the damn Wakanda.
They had the women running stuff.
So there's like a feminist agenda there.
agenda there. Then they had
a lot of Hispanic people
in Wakanda. I don't know where that came from. I don't know if they
were. Oh no,
I've seen it one nigga. Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Yeah, I'm like, it was Hispanic people.
He was one of the leads. I'm like, how do you
go from Tachala to Tacholo?
He went from that to that.
So I don't know where they're going with it now.
So it's all over. They've all live mattered.
So my thing is, when it
comes to us, we don't have to
dilute everything and all lives matter
everything. We can't have a black franchise with us in there.
Listen, like, so I'll be real. Like, the movie itself was subpar.
I heard, I heard. But you have to acknowledge, man, Lupita new body is crazy, man.
Oh, yeah, LePeter's body is off the chain.
Wait, is that like a BBL or a San Antonio, bro? I don't know. I'm like, if you saw her on the
red carpet and there was all types of dunk standing up, I'm like, did she get some
Vibrarium in that ass.
You're right.
Bro, bro, I said,
nah, come on.
So, like, I was like, no.
But now it's like,
everybody is now, like,
paying more attention to her,
which is the cool and all, right?
Oh, yeah, she's beautiful sisters.
Right, man.
Yo, but, like, let's speak on, man,
ambush agendas in these TV shows, right?
Yeah, yeah.
So, one, tell me, like,
which TV shows, like,
do you think, like, have, like,
ambush agendas?
But, you know, I don't really watch TV like that.
Well, like, you said, like, power.
Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Stuff like,
damn it,
all of them.
A Peaballie?
Yeah, yeah.
These shows that
cater to black people,
they all have an agenda.
Now the cartoons now,
you can't even watch cartoons now.
You watch the Disney Channel
or the Disney app
and these cartoons have men
kissing each other
and boys kids.
It's weird now.
But when you watch these black shows,
they like to ambush you with these agendas.
Like you're watching power.
It's about drug dealers.
And then all of a sudden,
in the middle of the show,
Two the bug breaking
Yeah
All of a sudden
Hey man
Put the dope down
And come bend over
I'm like whoa
Whoa whoa
Where the hell that come from
Yeah
Like two dudes just getting it in
In the middle of the show
And they have to ambush you with it
Because they know if they lead up to it
People are gonna tune out
Yeah
Like a romantic scene
Some sexual tension between a man and a woman
People are like wait let me watch this
And see where it goes
But these shows they never have it like that
It's like out the blue
The next scene
Two dudes getting it in
And they're like whoa
that's an agenda. That's called ambushing.
And they do that on a lot of black shows now.
Now, how effective do you think
those ambush agendas are? Like, for example,
like, do you think that...
Because I feel like, as adults, though,
like, we won't watch like that and be gay, right?
So, like, but for the kids, it's probably different.
Right, right, because you normalize it with kids.
Yes.
You dig? That's what that's about.
And even with cartoons, you start putting stuff out there
over and over again, it becomes normal.
So a kid says, okay, if I do this
and I let somebody do that to me,
well, I saw it on TV, so it can't be that.
bad. So that's
not cool. I'm not with that agenda stuff.
Now, speak of Woman King.
Yeah. Yeah. So what's your
issue with that? The
Woman King movie, and I love
our sister, what's her name,
the lead actress,
Viola Davis. Yeah.
Wonderful actors. Love her.
A lot of people had an issue with that movie
because of the historic
inaccuracy about a lot of it, because
the Dahomey tribe, they were major
slave traders. They were the ones
working with the European powers
to help facilitate the slave trade.
In the movie, I think they kind of made
it seem like they were almost against it
to a certain degree, but which is not true.
One of the last slave ships
that came to the Americas, the people were
caught by that Dahomey tribes.
So it was a very
tedious type of relationship
that we historically have
with those tribal groups who
help facilitate the slave trade.
Yeah, man. Yo,
again, like, so
I had a conversation about that.
I think it was like last week or so, right?
Now, do you feel like Nigeria has to cough up something?
To a certain degree, they might, because the thing, I'll say this.
It wasn't us, by the way.
It was Nigerians who did that.
Right.
But the thing is, I will say this.
Those countries don't really exist.
Nigeria didn't exist at the time.
You know what I'm saying?
We're in the slave trade.
Nigeria, it became a nation state later.
So it would be hard to say Nigeria owes something.
We have to look at some of the nation states.
The process is the dog.
Yeah, we look at some of the tribes, but they don't really have any power like that.
And most of the wealth was absorbed by the European power.
So, you know, we're going after the European sources of everything right now.
Hey, man.
Like, again, like, I guess I don't know the exact tribes yet, man, but, bro, it's 300 million people.
No, sorry, it's like 100 million people right now in Nigeria.
Oh, yeah.
They can come up with something.
We'll focus on the, once we get our money from these, folks, we'll focus on them and see who's who.
I'm focusing on the main corporate right now.
Yo, so speaking about your praying mother, man.
Listen, man, you got to be, you have to be protected by something, man,
because whenever you have an enemy who cross you, something bad happens to them, man, right?
Yes, indeed.
Let's speak on Miss Tiffany Cross.
Yeah.
Aunt your mama, Mammy, Tiffany Cross, man.
Tiffany Cross.
What's your beef, man?
It wasn't a beef, man.
Tiffany Cross, she was on MSNBC for a long time, Democratic Shield.
She toes the lines for the Democrats.
She got real comfortable up there thinking that she was talking.
Yeah, she was talking, Greece.
And one day my name came up.
She blocked me a long time ago on Twitter for nothing.
And then she got on TV in front of a million saying, hey, you black people out there,
don't listen to Kevin Samuels.
listen to Tarek.
No, fall in line and get out there and vote like you supposedly, that type of shit.
So she called me out by name.
I'm like, okay, we're doing that?
And then not too long ago ago after that, she got fired.
White Daddy gave her the pink slip.
Yeah.
And now she's walking around here, you know, with the struggle phase.
But, bro, it's insane because I heard she got fired because she said that Florida is the dick of the country.
Yeah.
And they also said they fired her because she was spending up a lot of money using you.
Yeah, she was using a lot of the networks money for lavish trips and stuff like that.
She got boozy.
Yeah, she got boozy.
She thought that she was in on the plantation and they sent her ass right back to the big house.
Now, here, because I heard, like, I think somebody said, like, she was only getting paid like $250k a year, right?
But was acting like a $20 million host.
Yeah, right?
Yeah.
God damn.
The last thing, black folks get in these positions, you get around some of these white liberals and you think that you're in there with them.
and you think you can start talking greasy
and you can start calling shots and black men shut up
and boy those right wingers need to shut up
you better understand the white liberals
and the white right wingers
they're brothers and sisters and cousins
so they're still on cold with each other
so you better watch what you're talking greasy
like you in there they're like hey no no no no you're still talking
about my mama my mama's a Republican
so get your black ass out of here you did
yeah could not but how do we tell like the difference
right between so there's like let's say
you know like there's some
black commentators, right, who let's say they're speaking out against, or like they're correcting
certain things they see in the black community, right? How do we tell the difference between
that and black commentators who are being controlled and puppet master by the white supremacists?
Good question, man. See, we know when somebody's keeping it 100 with us. Yeah. We know. We know
somebody's giving us some constructive information as a black group. Because usually what you'll do,
you will do it among us. You see? You're not. You see? You're not.
go to a black organization and you'll sit down, look, hey man, the white people ain't here.
Fuck all that.
We need to do this.
Niggas need to stop with the drugs and, you know, stop the gang shit.
You know how to sit somebody down and just be on some scared straight shit when you're talking to them.
When you get on national TV and you get around your white buddies and all these black people, y'all smoking all this crap, now you're performing for white people.
And we know when you're performing and we reject that.
Like Stephen A. Smith, that nigger performs for white people.
You dig?
That nigg is a tap dancing sambal.
and his messaging to us is really a performance for them.
And we see it, and that's why he gets called out.
Yeah.
Now, she said that black men should not listen to men like Tariq Dishia.
Right, right, right.
What are they afraid of?
Because I'm not beholden to any political party.
I'm going to tell black people to vote for your best interest.
What are you going to get that's tangible?
I'm not going to tell black people to do something that's going to shoot them in the foot.
When I tell black people to do something,
or insist or just implied to do something,
it's going to be something that's going to benefit
black people tangibly.
They don't like that because they know that white society
don't want to give black people nothing,
and white society will give them,
these hand-picked black commentators,
give them their little nigger trinkets
to tell other black people
to just settle for symbolic gestures.
You dig? So I don't do that.
I don't want them to give me something
and then shit on all the other black people.
That's not a good deal for me
because I know they're going to ultimately
shit on me like they shit on Tiffany
Cross' ass.
You know, listen, like,
that's actually, like, rare.
Yeah. Because, like, you offer
like, some of these niggas five million hours
a year to just come in a lie to
cool me a couple, bro. Exactly.
They'll take it. They'll take it. But look, man,
see, that's why I always say
when you do business, man, don't go in the store
hungry. Don't go in the store hungry.
Just like they say, you don't ever go to the grocery
store hungry. You just start buying bullshit.
Yeah, of course. You don't go to no business
deal needy and desperate because they can see it in you.
You did?
They can see when you're starving.
When I used to do business deals out here, man, I was hustling.
So I came in with the fresh cars, the fresh gear.
So I had the same shit that they had.
So I wasn't taking no janky little bullshit deal.
I know how to go out here and get it in the mud.
So when they throw some nigger trinkets at me, I'm cool.
I didn't been around the world four or five millions, I mean, four or five times.
I didn't have been everywhere.
I didn't drove every car, been with every bad broad.
I didn't wrote books about the game.
So they're not giving me nothing that I ain't seen.
So I can say, hey, look, what are you going to do for all of us as a group?
What are you going to do for my folks?
Because I'm not trying to sit up there, cock-kind and kiki in with your ass.
Well, here it didn't, right?
So give them some game, right?
Yeah.
On how they can avoid taking a bag and be self-sufficient?
Because you managed to avoid all agendas, avoid a bag, and just be self-sufficient.
How can they do what you do and be self-sufficient and not be needy and greedy for the white men's bag?
You have to be in a position where you have a base that trust you.
Yes.
That's the main thing.
I've been putting our products for over 20 years, man.
Quality products, quality books, quality films,
and people can trust that I'm going to do the right thing.
So I have a strong base audience.
So I don't have to go to the dominant society with hat and hand
because what they'll do is try to use you as a middleman to sell things to your base audience,
who's not really your base, and they're going to be pulling the strings.
And black folks are not done.
We see when somebody's coming to us with an agenda.
Yeah, you just got to come at people with the realness,
and you just got to bring them quality products.
You've got to be 100 with them, and that goes a long way.
Yeah, because I'll be real, man.
You're probably the only person who I would trust and say, like, I.
If to re-reke is doing like a crowd-funded thing, for something,
because you've actually like delivered on each and every one.
Every single one.
Every single one.
And over-delivered, and that's the thing.
And fast.
If I say I'm going to do something, I always do it.
We do it quick.
We do it fast and we give them, we overperform and we exceed all expectations.
And that goes a long way.
People can respect that.
You just got to be a person of your word.
And that comes from some street shit.
Because out here, you couldn't be running around here saying some shit and not being a person of your word.
It's trying to blow your fucking head off out here with that dumb shit.
Nah, that's a fact.
Right.
But how do you have to time?
Because you do like a thousand different other shit, right?
I do.
I do.
How do you have to time?
to still give these projects
enough attention
to where they're being
done and fulfilled based on your vision.
Because we need it, man, because we need
to have networks of other black
people with the same mindset of
empowerment so that we can grow and build
especially for the next generation. So that's
why I do these projects. We just had a situation
in Washington, D.C. We had a rally for reparations.
We got that organized in like two or three weeks. Like 4,000 people
showed up. Wow. Phenomenal turnout.
We got an event in
Dallas coming up Memorial Day next year, that's going to be the FBA Expo.
We're going to have a lot of black business people there showing their products, showing
who they are so we can network with them nationwide.
We need to start networking with brothers and sisters because I go around the country,
I see amazing brothers and sisters who run businesses and a lot of folks don't even know about
them.
So I like to have us networking with each other so that we can do business without having to grovel
to the dominant society.
Yeah.
How big, big, big, like, is your team?
I got a pretty good thing.
team. I have different teams all over the country. My team here is pretty thorough. And I'm always
bringing in new people and we have volunteers. So when you're doing some progressive, people
want to come in and just help. So I'm always getting people who want to join in and help out.
Oh, like speak on that though, right? So how do you vet people to know that like they're not
coming in as an agent of chaos? Yeah, that's another thing. So you got to look at people's
background. You got to see what they've done in the past. And you kind of have to
work with some people, and that's a risk.
Anytime you work with new people, it's a risk.
I've been skeptical about working with new people,
but unfortunately you can't think like that
because you might block out somebody who's thorough.
So I've worked with new people who are just completely thorough.
I've worked with new people, and I said,
okay, I'm not working with that person again.
So it's a trial and error thing.
So you kind of test people and you kind of vet them
and see how thorough they are when you bring them in
if they're doing what they're supposed to do
and they're not being janky
and they don't have some type of ulterior motive.
you keep them on the team and you build and grow with them.
Yeah.
Now, what type of things, though, what's up, like, for example, if you go on, let's say, a potential
partner or, like, a potential employee, Instagram or Twitter, like, what type of things
would you have to see to say, you know what, you're, like, you're disqualified?
You know what, I had a dude some years ago who's going to build a pool at my house.
And white dude.
Yeah.
And he came.
He was kind of cordial.
but just a weird vibe from the dude.
And, you know, I put down a little deposit,
but I just got a weird vibe from you do.
Then I, let me look this guy up.
I looked up, look the guy up,
and this dude had Nazi tattoos on his stomach and shit.
So I fired his ass.
He's fast.
Yeah, I'm like, keep the deposit, my brother.
I'm good.
But, yeah, sometimes you just get a vibe.
And sometimes when you start researching people,
you just got to let him bounce.
Yo, but your pool is amazing.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Bro.
Yeah.
I see you doing like, like, live streams and shit like that, man.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Man, bro, like, a lifestyle like that man with, like, with, like, no daddy, like, no masa.
Yeah, no, that's a dangerous lifestyle, right?
Like, sorry, no, it's dangerous because you know that, like, like, they're watching.
Yes, they are.
Yes, they are.
Yes, they are.
Had they ever, like, I'm trying to get you on, like, some taxes, right?
Like, like, Custra hair, right?
Like, for every black man who get some coins, right, and they're independent, there's always
Uncle Sam coming in, you know what, like, like, right?
Like trying to like just look just like too deep into it, right?
Had they tried, tried same bullshit with you?
No, because I make sure of my accountants, I overpaid when it comes to taxes and all that
stuff.
But they try the bullshit all the time.
They always send agents among us.
Even in D.C. a couple of weeks ago, there were agents all over that place.
Really?
They weren't effective because you had so much of us on code.
But afterwards, there was this right-wing girl.
I'm not going to say your name here on YouTube.
She came out to do coverage of the rally.
She's like, oh, yeah, look, the Tarika, and they hate white people.
Let's see how much why they hate white people so much.
And they started interviewing all of these people who were supposed to be connected with the rally.
Wow.
Who were clearly plants.
And they were up there, the Jews, fucky Jews.
They were talking crazy.
I'm like, these things ain't with us.
They clearly plants.
So stuff like that, yeah.
And plus, we saw a little sharp shrews.
Shooters all over the place.
Wow.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
So, you know, that's going to happen.
So we understand what we're getting into.
Anytime you're talking about black empowerment, they're going to come at you.
But you got to understand this.
Even if you are not about black empowerment, they're going to come at you.
The people that get killed by cops, these are people who will be on some, hey, man, ain't nobody
Supreme over me.
And when you get pulled over by a cop, you start talking crazy and then walk right into an
ambush.
Yeah, they're going to get us no matter what.
So we might as well be empowered in this game.
Yeah.
Now, that story just reminded me of some other guy called Grand Master Jay, right?
I think.
And he was just sentenced for essentially doing the same shit, like, Kyle, like,
right in the house there, right?
Which is he, he, like, went to a rally under the pretence of, yo, I'm trying to, like,
protect my people.
Now they claim he pointed his gun at one of, like, the federal officers.
And that was enough to get him like, what, like, seven years, I think?
Yeah.
So, like, what should take on that, man?
Well, well, Jamaster Day, many people, you know, they're, you know, they
kind of think that this guy may or may not be an agent.
There's a real funny style stuff going on with him
because there's video of him doing security for Trump
some years ago.
So people are trying to tie in.
How are you doing security for Trump?
And then you out here, the leader of this militia group
that's running around talking about white folks,
this and white folks that.
So we're seeing what's going on with that.
There's some real funny style stuff going,
so we have to see how that's going to play out.
Yeah, right.
Would they really, like, send one of their agents,
though, to jail for, like, some of it?
Has he been to jail yet?
No.
They said they sentenced them to jail, but, you know, he ain't in jail yet.
So let's see how that's going to play out.
Yo, like, they'll be a cold game, though, bro.
Like, they get you to, like, turn on your people.
And then as soon as you do what you do, like, they don't like your ass up.
Yeah, they'll say they're sending you to jail and they'll send you somewhere to club med somewhere.
And they don't know where you are saying that you're in jail.
So, you know, they do all types of slick stuff, man, to pull one of their agents out.
There was an FBI agent for an asset.
He wasn't a technical agent, but he was an asset with the FBI dude named Dothar and Perry from the 1960s and 70s.
And he did interviews talking about how they utilized him and how they put him out there to all of these different groups to infiltrate.
And they would threaten him with jail if he didn't do certain things.
That's how they get you.
If you don't act out what we tell you to act out, we're going to give you a certain amount of years.
So it's a real funny style thing, man.
Man, but like speaking of the right-winger coming to your rally, right?
Yeah.
I've seen Candace Owings went to the doorsteps of Patrice Culler, right?
Yeah, yeah.
Man, Tareke, if one of these freak motherfuckers comes to your doorstep, what's happening, man?
Well, it's going to be a little different.
It's going to be a little different.
It's going to be a little different.
But, you know, the FBI, they visited me a few times.
Oh, yo, speak on that, right?
Because I think you mentioned that the last time, but I just, like, like, totally, like, forgot.
and glossed over it.
Yeah.
There was a dude in New York who bust, I think, on like the subway, right?
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
He didn't kill nobody though, right?
I think he did.
I don't think he did.
No, right?
I don't think he did.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, right?
So mentally ill dude.
Yeah, yeah, he went out here.
But then he's on like YouTube and shit, like, like,
he's a big fan of Umar, you, you, you, you, you know, right?
He followed me on Twitter.
Oh, oh, okay, okay, he followed me on Twitter.
So they're gonna come asking me, well, do I know him?
I'm like, no, a gazillion people.
follow me. Yeah. They did the same thing
when Michael Johnson down in Dallas when he
shot all those cops. They came, this was
2015, something like that.
And the FBI came to the house. Did you know
Michael Johnson? So anytime there's a
nationwide crime or something that happens,
they use these intimidation tactics
by going to certain prominent
voices, go to us and start
trying to say, do you know this guy?
When the Michael Johnson situation, they went
to Dr. Boyce, they went to
Professor. Really? They went to a few people because
of that. That's an intimidation.
to say, hey, y'all don't be saying nothing out here that's going to influence people.
You know, we're watching you, basically.
Bro, that's scary because, like, bro, listen, man, like, don't folks probably have to
come to me once, maybe twice.
Uh-uh.
Before, I'm out of here, you just start buck dancing and you're like, you're having a white
Lives Matter shirt too, brother.
Yo, right, right, right, because Meek Mill says, like, said something very similar,
where Meek Mill said, listen, man, I'm, I'm.
I'm out here pushing for like, um, for like prison reform, right?
Yeah.
But, hey, if y'all, if y'all want me to stop, stop, stop, just tell me, right?
Mm-hmm, mm-hmm, mm-hmm.
I'm gonna lose my livelihood.
Yeah.
Right?
So, like, if me was that honest, though, right?
Yeah, right?
Do you at least respect somebody who is that honest and up front?
You know, I can't respect that because sometimes, you know, you don't want to put yourself in jeopardy.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Look, sometimes we didn't sign up.
I didn't really sign up for this shit.
I didn't say I'm going to be a damn activist.
That's just kind of something that happened.
People just kind of start looking to me because they like my opinions on certain things.
That's why I tell people I'm not a leader of anybody.
I've never designated myself as a leader.
I'm not the leader of an organization.
People just happen to like what I have to say because they know I'm going to be honest about it.
Yeah.
Like, why do you think your message resonates more than like a lot of these other dudes, right?
Because, like, you like, you actually put a little bit of comedy
into it too, right? Yeah, yeah, yeah.
One, yo, like, you should for sure try, like, stand-up comedy.
People always say that.
That shit goes to, like, you're just a naturally funny dude, man, right?
So why do you think, like, your message resonates more than other dudes?
Because they know I'm going to be real honest about certain things, and I'm going to
tell things, tell people things based on my experience and based on my reading, because I
study a lot and I like to read a lot.
And I just like to give it to people real plain.
And people like my message because I'm one of the few people that can cater to an intellectual crowd and the street crowd, which is kind of a difficult thing for a lot of people to do.
If you are an intellectual, usually you don't really have any street savvy.
And a lot of dudes who are street savvy, they don't really have the intellect to go to a Yale.
I've done lectures at Yale before.
So I'm one of the few people that can really talk to both crowds and bring both crowds together.
So that's why when you see my movies, I have these scholars in there, have rappers in there,
I have a couple of street dudes in there, and I can bring everybody together because all of
us are needed.
And we can show the messages from all different sectors of our society and show that that message
can be utilized by all of us.
Man, man, like facts, right?
Now, let's speak about a takeoff, man, right?
So takeoff got killed.
Yeah.
Now, do hip-hop have a problem, man?
That wasn't hip-hop related.
That was some other street shit that was going on.
They were in a dice game.
Yeah.
Some words got exchanged.
Quaving those dudes shouldn't have been out there gambling with those dudes.
At all, bro.
I tell, look, man, when you get a certain level of paper,
certain crowds you don't really have to be in.
You got people who ain't really got shit to lose.
Yeah.
And you don't need to be around that, man.
You can upgrade your audience, upgrade your crowd.
You ain't got to be out here with dudes gambling and all that on some street shit.
because you're asking for trouble
with people who just don't have nothing to lose.
So they ain't got really nothing to do with hip-hop.
Unfortunately, a rapper got hit.
And, you know, hopefully we understand
that everybody ain't on the same page with us.
We think just because we got a bunch of adoring fans,
we can get around some cat in the dice game
and he's going to be a fan.
No, that motherfucker might be an undercover hater
who can't wait to get you out of here.
You know, like, so like one of the dudes
who's being, I guess, investigated,
Man, bro, you go to his Twitter, man.
He's been hating for six straight years.
Wow.
So the kid right now is like 20, right?
And he was hating since middle school.
Just a lifelong damn hater.
You, man.
So he's old.
Man.
Say fuck Quabble, fuck the Migo, those hate this shit.
Right.
You got to watch folks like that, man.
We better understand.
There's some cats out here who they feel like they won't ever get anything
popping in their lives.
And then when they see another black person shining, they feel like that's a,
an offense to them.
That makes them look bad.
Why this nigger's shining and I ain't shining?
So let me bring this nigger down with me with these bullets.
So we got a poison mindset with some of these folks out here.
And they ain't got shit to do with hip-hop because even before the rap game,
you had a couple of dusty niggas out who would take somebody out who's shining.
So that's just what it is, unfortunately.
But here, right?
But people always say that I'm cooning when I say,
I don't hang out with certain niggas after 5 p.m.
But, boy, I'm a non-FBA, so, like, so, like, I can't say shit like that, right?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
But it's true, right?
Like, listen, like, Quaver them should not be in no surroundings with no dusty niggins after 5 people.
Right, right, yeah.
It's very big, but now, is black-on-black crime a thing, or is black-on-black crime just the same as, as, like, why don't like crime?
No, there's no such thing as black on black crime.
Crime is crime, because all groups.
commit the same level of crime.
Look, Asians commit crime
against Asian. They have a whole Asian mafia of the
yakuza. These people will kill the shit
out of each other. It's not
promoted on television all the time.
The biggest drug dealer in the world is Asian.
You've got the Asian El Chapo. Y'all Google
Asian El Chapo. That dude has like a 50-something
billion dollars. They just got that dude.
You don't hear that on the news.
See, we hear about the El Chapos
and the black criminals and all that. We don't have
black organized crime. Black
crimes are overly massed.
So we think that we're just out here committing more crime than anybody and we're just not crime is crime
People are going to commit crime in proximity
So any capitalistic society there's going to be a level of criminality because the haves and the have-nots are always going to be going after each other anywhere you go
So there is no black on black crime you have crime and you have dusty niggins who can be crime
Bro like bro it's like I said the exact same thing man but but some people like like folks were
killed me for that, but then, right?
Yeah, yeah.
Bro, like, because I like, so, here, right, so, so, so like, dusty niggas is a term
that I use on damn near every video, right?
But hey, listen, man, so I'm not a cool man.
So let me, right to Rico more now.
Yeah, see, they're probably getting at you because you're talking about the dusty
niggas here, but you're from, what, Liberia?
Oh, there's nothing out there, too, man.
Yeah, yeah, all right.
We're going to talk, we're going to talk about some dust.
There's some dusty motherfuckers over there, and that's probably why.
Hey, look, look, look, what about the crime over
You can't hang with niggas in the morning.
Look, look.
Shout out to Liberia.
No disrespect.
I'm going to show you, though, like the dusty niggas up there.
Yeah, yeah.
Library of child soldiers.
Yeah, yeah.
Let's show you a dusty niggins.
Yeah, that's the thing that kills us.
People come from Liberia.
We got to stay away from the Akadas.
And there's a nigger running around a six-year-old
with a machine gun over there in Liberia.
Wait, so, right?
Right, right?
Yeah.
Nah, but that's true, right?
Because, like, I definitely would feel comfortable being with dumb niggins after two in the afternoon.
With a little um-dugay with a machine gun.
Nah, I mean, but not, I mean, like, that's a fact, man.
But, okay, but now let's, like, I'm talking about the, so this is a new, new little, like,
train now called depopulation, right?
Where now is being grabbed by the Alex Jones-Kenn and Zones, where they're claiming.
that now there's a newer order now to depopulate.
Now, I think the UN now just got like a whole new organization.
I think it's called the UN Population Fund, right?
Where now they're being tasked to kind of make sure the population is under control.
Do you feel like we are over, like we are over populated or, you know, is that some newer order shit?
No.
When they talk about, we got to understand code words.
When Alex Jones and the Nick Fuentesis, when they talk about overpopulation,
they mean too many black people.
Yeah.
And not enough white people.
The white numbers are dwindling.
All of the white scientists are saying this.
Their numbers are going down.
Over here in the United States, there's a negative birth rate,
meaning they're dying faster than they're being born.
So they want to do something about that.
But what are they going to do about that?
What they want to do, because this is nature.
You can't really do anything about it.
If your numbers are dwindling, your numbers are dwindling.
Even if all the black people were just cornered off somewhere on the other
part of the world locked in, their numbers are still going to be dwindling because, in fact,
it's going to dwindle faster because they're going to get into incestuous relationships
and the neurological diseases is going to kill them even faster.
So what they want to do is create a global apartheid state.
They want to have a position where all the black people, it's like South Africa.
The small white minority is ruling the large black majority.
So what they want to do, they want to start getting transhumanism things.
going on, robots, like in San Francisco, they just passed an ordinance where robots can kill
people.
Wow.
Y'all Google that.
In San Francisco, they just passed an ordinance saying that the police robots can kill people
like they killed Michael Johnson down in Dallas.
Who do you think those guns are going to go over?
Robots aren't killing white people.
All right?
That's going to be aimed at us.
You know?
When they talk about population control, they mean controlling the black population while the white
numbers are dwindling.
Yeah.
Bro, that's insane though.
Because like, at that point, though, like, bro, I'm not driving, bro.
Yeah, yeah.
Like, I'm afraid of side.
You dig?
Right.
Because they already got automatic cars up there in San Francisco.
Look, a lot of experiments come out of San Francisco.
They already got these automatic cars out here, and they've done studies saying that
some of these automated cars disproportionately run over black people.
You dig?
I'm not even bullshit.
Google what I'm saying.
So it's already starting, man.
Oh, brother.
They're trying, man.
They'll tell you in the movies.
Look at movies like I, Robot and all this shit.
They'll tell you what they're going to do in their movies, man.
It's real heavy.
Bro, that's insane, right?
Like, how the system has white supremacy.
Yeah.
And now they're programming in robots.
Robots to do it.
So now if a robot goes out here and kills somebody, who are you going to sue?
You know?
Or jail.
Right, right.
You can't put the robot in jail.
Oh, that's brilliant, right?
Because it's a robot killer, nigga.
Yeah.
What, like, who are you going to do?
Yeah.
Oh, my God.
We're going to take the battery out.
Yeah.
You know?
It's a rogue robot.
Yeah, yeah.
They're going to blame it on a malfunction.
That's the whole con game they're going to run it on, man.
Nah, bro.
That's insane, though, man.
Oh, oh, I knew I wanted to spill on something, man, the Revost Summit.
Yes, yes, yes.
Man, yo.
So, I never got to actually watch it, but I heard that you, Rizzler, and Van.
Yeah, shout up the band.
Was on a pin together, talk about reparations, or what?
Yeah.
Oh, yeah.
Oh, yeah.
Yo, here, right?
So, like, recap that.
So like, what did y'all talk about, what the conversation is about?
Oh, man, what did we talk about?
That was so long ago some months back.
But we just talked about the importance of reparations, how reparations would look.
It has to be lineage-based.
Certain political policies we need to do in order to get the reparations.
Some of the same stuff we talked about at the reparations rally in D.C.
We're beating the drum, letting people know that reparations is the agenda.
We're not going to be sidetracked into something else.
Because when we talk about reparations, which means cash money to find out.
Foundation of Black Americans.
They try to switch up and make reparations something else.
Well, we need some environmental reparations.
Green tree and green.
No, no, no, no.
We need green money.
We need paper.
So we're keeping the agenda of reparations based on lineage and based on cash payments.
Man, now speak on the D.C. March, right?
Yeah.
Now, who I did was to just like come together and like do that, right?
And then, too, man, I heard you really like United people.
You brought out boys walkers.
You brought out, like, bro, a bunch of other, like, black leaders, man.
So, like, yeah.
So how did that come to be?
That was my idea to come up with that.
How did I come up with that?
I came up with that because we kept talking about what we needed as black people.
And the dominant society kept telling us, well, we need some sexual agendas, this, we need that.
We need environmental stuff.
We need HBC loans and just a whole bunch of BS.
And I said, let me organize a rally for D.C.
Well, we can tell the world exactly what we want.
And that's what we did.
Man, no, man, but that was powerful, right?
Because I feel like Boris Watkins is a need of leader, right?
Yes, he is.
Yeah, right?
Very thorough, brother.
Yeah, right?
But, like, I don't know, man, like, if it's probably, like, the YouTube algorithm or the
white, but he's kind of being, like, edged out, right?
to where, like, I don't really, like, care from him as much, right?
Yeah.
Is he, like, still, I guess, like, heavy and consistent on YouTube,
or has he, like, moved to other...
Yeah, he's still on YouTube.
A lot of times, YouTube's...
It kind of messes with the algorithms of certain black speakers.
Like, a lot of times you don't see their videos promoted like that.
A lot of times they get shadow banned, too.
Yeah.
So, you know, that's a thing, because we've got to understand.
There's a lot of folks who work in some of these tech companies.
They're the same people who's on 4chan and some of these...
of racist sites.
Same exact people,
yeah.
Yo,
but speaking of like 4chan,
right,
which is why,
like,
I thought that,
like,
your, like,
website was needed,
right?
Like,
right,
right,
like,
if they have,
if they have,
like,
forcham,
then, like,
there should be a site
where,
like, you know,
there's people who go in and ask
he, like,
find out who's typing,
right?
Yeah.
And they have a list of,
yo,
like,
he's like an officer,
right?
So,
like,
would you ever,
like,
think about bringing that back?
Yeah,
I am.
We're thinking about doing that now.
We're trying to do that.
Look at the legal logistics of it.
So, yeah, we're definitely thinking about doing something like that because we need it.
Bro, like, listen, if that comes back, just ready, man.
Because, bro, you will have judges coming for you, right?
Yeah.
I'll tell you, man, feel of me?
And we're talking about doing a website now where black people, because there was a situation down in Mississippi.
A black man was walking and some white people following him.
Then, like a few weeks later, like a month later, they found the black man's body in the woods.
Wow.
was dead. We need to come up with an app where if we're in danger, we can kind of hit a button
and say, hey, somebody in the area come through and kind of look out. Something like that.
Nah, that's dope. That's dope. We just kind of look out for each other. Like Trayvon Martin,
when he was being followed by Zimmerman, going back to Zimmerman, he didn't have anybody to call.
He called his home girl, and, you know, she couldn't really do anything. So we need damn near like an
Uber for people to come in and just kind of pull up and make sure we're good if we're in a
situation where we're uncomfortable.
So that's something that we're looking into.
Do you ever, like, get to a point where, like,
like, damn, bro, like, I'm doing a lot.
Like, where, like, like, yeah.
My wife and mother says that all the day.
My wife don't like a lot of shit.
I just like, oh, Lord, y'all got these FBI coming to the house.
Yeah, right.
Yeah.
After a while to Tariq, like, you're going to get to a point where, like,
you can be a political leader, right?
If you ever, like, feel like, yo, man, like, they took out MLK, Malcolm X.
Like, like, there's, like, mad, like, oh, my God, man.
I think it was in, like, St. Louis, right?
Like, we're like, there was, like, a bunch of, like, the Michael Brown.
Activists.
Yeah, yeah, but getting killed now, right?
They were killing activists in St. Louis left and right, because we got a lot of stuff done in St. Louis.
We didn't get people out of office, so the police didn't like that.
So they were ambushing a lot of the black activists out there.
And yeah, man, look, I do what I do because I have children, and you guys have children,
and your children are going to be my children's peers.
Yeah.
So whatever I teach my children, I want to teach your children because I have to raise your children to a certain degree.
Yeah.
So that they can all protect each other.
We have to protect the next generation.
I can't just be quiet and let the next generation of kids walk into this white supremacist system blindsided.
They need to know what the hell they're getting into, and they need to know the rules of it.
I studied the work of Dr. Francis Kress Wellcing and others when I was younger.
That's why I love that woman to this day.
God rest her soul, she's passed.
If I were much younger and had that kind of wisdom,
I would have understood racism earlier on
and I would not have made certain mistakes as a youth.
So I don't want the youth out here to make mistakes out here in this white supremacist system.
So we want to give them the game as much as we can as young as they are.
Because the white supremacist kids, they learn white supremacy early.
You turn on an Xbox or PlayStation, you hear a little white kids five, six years old yelling nigger, nigger, nigger.
They teach their children white supremacy early.
We have to teach our children black empowerment early.
Now, here's a real serious question, right?
If you can see in a crystal ball where, and that crystal ball says, if you keep on speaking for black people and being a fearless leader, these people are,
are gonna kill you on this day.
Would you stop?
Oh, that's a good question.
That's a good question.
If they said they were gonna kill me on a certain day,
that means they planned on killing me anyway.
So I would go harder up until that damn day.
I would go harder until that day
because they're gonna get you anyway.
And if I had a crystal ball, I would find out
who was gonna do it and get his ass before they got me.
Not, you see, man, listen, man, and like, that's a beautiful answer, right?
And that's why guys like you are needed, right?
Because have these Sambo's will stop for $500,000, even take care of a month, right?
But you wouldn't even stop even if it's your life is on the line.
Yeah, they're going to get me anyway.
You might as well go in.
You might as well go all the way in.
Listen, man, I haven't gotten to that point of fearlessness.
Yeah, you know what that, right?
If it's death, hey, man, listen.
Tell me what.
See, what they'll do, man.
You play these games with them.
They'll give you a lot of money, and then they'll neutralize you.
Yeah.
You see, you got all this money, and now you have a black cloud over your head,
so now you're stuck, and they'll take that money right back from you.
Yeah, man.
Now, black folks, we, like, protest the Gucci for like a week.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Should we now protest Balenciaga?
Ain't anybody going to do shit.
But that shit with Bolivia is.
What Balenciaga did with them kids, that was some real disgusting stuff.
It bonded.
Yeah, that bondage had kids with that bonded stuff.
And again, they're trying to normalize that type of stuff, that pedophilia.
That ain't cool at all, man.
You know, so they should be called out for that.
But let's be real.
A lot of folks in our community, we love name brand stuff.
So we're still going to rock the Belenziaga and all that, which we shouldn't.
And we have to start learning how to appreciate our own brand.
See, we got this thing where we put a lot of stock in a white brand.
and wearing a white brand gives us a certain sense of significance,
we have to start doing that with black brands.
Here, Rex, yes, but, like, I'll blame women for that, right?
Like, because, look, because, like, if females valued fubu,
it was giving up the cakes to niggins who were in fubu,
then every nigga here would be wearing fubu, right?
Yeah.
So should our women have that message of, hey, listen, start valuing black brands?
Well, you know, and that could go another way, you know what?
Because sometimes, look, sometimes, man, if a dude's mouthpiece is crisp enough,
you can get shows no matter what kind of clothes you got on.
You dig?
That's true.
So it really goes into the dude's game.
If you're just wearing certain name brands and that's going to get a chick,
you know, a name brand is going to get a superficial goofball chick.
Yeah.
A chick with some quality to her, man.
She wants quality mouthpieces from dudes.
A dude who's spinning some real game.
And, like, I use L.A., for example.
Brothers out here can wear T-shirts and some Swat Meat khakis and pull dimes out here.
So it's about the name brand.
It's about your game brand.
It's the game brand, not the name brand.
You did?
Yo, listen, man.
So, perfect segue.
Because I always said this, man, Tariq is the godfather of all this shit, right?
In terms of, like, the Red Pills, the Approach games, right?
Like, it's Tariq.
Yeah.
So let's speak on game, right?
So now, I kind of hate.
it, right?
The Tariq wrote the art of gold digging, right?
Because, like, who gave us the, I'm talking about like the Bible with the Art of Macon
on how to fuck all these holes?
And then you gave dumb the game on, like, on how to finesse was out of her money.
But the thing is, but the art of gold digging was for women who had game, who were getting
that game goofy dudes.
The kind of dudes that I was telling women to get that paper from were dudes who wouldn't even
the art of Macon, you know?
And there's a bunch of dudes out here who egotistical feel like they don't need no game.
Oh, I don't need to read that bullshit.
I got all this money.
I'm like, women, get his ass.
That's who that book was for.
Oh, yeah.
Oh, yeah, wait, wait, right?
So the Art of Macon will save you from these gold diggers.
Oh, yeah.
Oh, yeah.
It'll make the game equal.
The Art of Macon makes the game equal.
Having your mouthpiece, that makes the game equal.
And look, the game is predatory.
It's the have and the have-nots, the gets or the got-d-d-d-god.
So you want to be thorough out here in the game.
And a lot of women would read the book, The Art of Matthew.
Women appreciated the game in the book.
And it was a fun book.
It was a lot of satirical stuff in the book, but it was a lot of real game in the book.
And I think that's why the book sold like half a million, a quarter of a million copies.
So it was a huge bestselling book.
And people respected the realness of it.
Man, facts, man.
Now, do you feel like all women are hypergamous?
Like, they all just have that natural innate behavior to just go after men who are over,
upper echelot, you know, who can increase their status?
Yeah, water seeps its own level.
If a woman can get a dude who's bawling out, she will usually go for the dude who's
balling out.
Women know their capabilities.
There's women who can't get a dude like that, so they'll settle.
But it's natural for people to find a dude who's a provider.
So a dude who's bawling has the appearance of a provider.
Just like we go for the women who look attracted.
What do we go for?
As tithies.
Nurturing.
Those are symbolic things of nurturing.
That looks like a nurturing thing.
So we look for women who have nurturing qualities.
So it's a nature thing.
Now, I feel like when you were giving game, right, it definitely was like balance, right?
Yeah.
But somewhere down the line, the Manosphere podcast niggas have gotten too far.
Okay.
The shit that we got now with the Manosphere stuff, because it looked like you said, when I did the game,
I was like the only one doing it at a long time.
And then about five, six years after I started doing it, then the pickup artist dudes came out all over the place.
And then many of them morphed into the Manosphere dudes.
What we have now are a bunch of dudes who are in cells, who are supposed to be given relationship advice.
And you notice there's this anger towards, it is almost the contempt for women to a certain degree.
That ain't got nothing to do with game.
These are dudes who are basically nerds who got a platform.
So because they have a platform, they have the illusion.
of power and power,
and they have the illusion of gain,
so they're given this real weird
ass advice on how to deal with women,
and it's coming from an in-cell spirit.
That's why it really doesn't work like that,
and that's why there's always some bullshit
associated with it.
Certain guys, I don't even want to name their names,
but they talk about this relationship stuff,
and they have women on their shows,
and there's always fighting and conflict.
That ain't got nothing to do with game, man.
That's all about domination
and projecting your own integrity.
on people.
Right, right.
Now, all right, so
if you were to like, you know,
like take less like an in-cell or a sip, right?
Now, since, since can be, like,
like, Sims can be saved, right?
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Just dudes, dude who just overvalue women, right?
Yeah.
Right, so they were, you know, like, you know,
like, I'm, you know, like pay for pussy.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
But, like, in Encel, like,
what would be, like, your advice on how to self-developed
to a point where you can actually back the chick
of your,
dreams. Good question because see
going back to a lot of these red
pill dudes, notice the women
that they have around are usually
strippers. Yeah. So the
relationships is a very transactional thing.
So these guys make a couple of dollars, you know,
streaming or whatever so they get their
money and bring some women around to kind of
verbally abuse them to a something.
That ain't no game. You're just kind of using
your money to do humiliation porn to a certain
degree. You got to have your mouthpiece, Chris
man. You got to be confident in who
you are as a man first and you have
to trust yourself. When you trust yourself, the women will trust you too. Women love a
dude who can trust himself and you can trust yourself by not having to jump ban at women
as a power play. That's an insecure thing when you have to jump bad at these chicks and talk
at them crazy. That's insecurity. Women can sense that. Women like a dude who has a calm
confidence about himself. They can respect that. Okay, so then how do you get like a rowdy,
I'm talking about like over the top chick in control without putting your hands on her and without
yelling? Well, you shouldn't even be around now.
kind of person. If you got to do all that, that's the motherfucker. You got to charge some
leave, leave, leave. You know, all pussy ain't good pussy, dude. You know, sometimes, man, it ain't even
worth their headache. If you got to do all that and you got to wrangle somebody in if they're so
rowdy, that's the person's whose, that's, their energy don't need to be around you.
Yeah, fair. For example, I'm going to give you a good example. My brother, Blueface. I love Blueface.
Oh, man. I like Blueface. I think Blueface is a solid dude. He had, he seems like he has
a good spirit. Yeah, nice guy. But that girl with my boy.
Crazy. Yeah, that's toxic as hell.
And I don't like that because that's going to get my man caught up.
Having that kind of toxic energy around, influencing you to do certain things.
Just being over the top.
It looks good for social media clout.
It gets your name in the headlines.
But at the end of the day, you'll get a serious situation dealing with stuff like that.
I know my man has an attempted murder charge going on right now.
When you have rowdy energy around you, rowdy shit happens.
Absolutely.
Just that whole vibe.
Even if that rowdy person
ain't with you at the moment,
just that energy
keeps you in a fucked up zone.
And you start getting into shit
you ain't supposed to be getting into.
I used to date, man.
Look, back in the day when I was single,
I dated one chick,
just rowdy-ass energy.
And everything I would do
would just be fucked up.
Even when she wasn't around,
just me dating her,
so I go do business deals,
the deals would be fucked up.
I go to the club,
I get pulled over.
God, damn.
Just an aura.
Sometimes people's energy who you're around,
their energy is on you,
and it draws more bullshit to you.
We have to learn how to charge
certain people's energies to the game.
Energy's a real, man.
Energy's are like magnets,
and you can attract positive
and you can attract negative.
And when people put their negative stain on you,
you start attracting negativity around you.
I'm telling you, you drop negative-ass people,
you will see your life will change.
All types of positives will start coming your way
just by cutting certain bullshit people are.
Bro, like that's facts, man.
Yeah.
But now how do men know distinguish the difference between a hoe just for fun and a wifey that
like you can actually bring into your orbiter?
Well, here's the thing.
With a lot of dudes, because a lot of dudes we're really dictated by a lot of physical stuff.
And usually the women with the fucked up aura, with the rowdy energy, the pussy be fired.
Facts, you dig?
You're not that fact.
So that's the thing.
And niggas have to balance that out.
You're arguing, you fussing, but that head is fine, and pussy is fine, and she's freaky as hell, so you don't want to let that go.
Absolutely.
So you hold on to some bullshit.
Had crazy everything.
You dig?
It's like the old story of the monkey in the jug.
It was a story, I think that's an African proverb, by the way.
There was, and I'm kind of paraphrasing the proverb, somebody put a banana in a jug to catch a monkey, and the monkey put his hand in there, grabbed the banana.
And while they were about to capture the monkey, the monkey couldn't run away because the monkey still had the banana.
and the monkey
ended up getting captured.
All the monkey had to do
was let the banana go
and he would have got him.
Not that's.
But you held on to
some superficial bullshed
that you will,
there's plenty of bananas out there.
But you held onto some shit
you shouldn't have been holding on to
then you got yourself caught up.
We have that mentality
when it comes to that crazy good pussy out there.
There's more good pussy out there
that ain't as crazy.
Not facts.
Not right.
Now, what's your take on marriage?
Because there's a lot of these red pill guys
who would say, listen,
marriage avoided,
it makes no sense.
sense to enter into a contract with a woman that she's incentivized to break.
Right? So what should take on marriage? Should men be getting married?
Yeah, you should be because I'm married. You should get married because it's a business contract.
It's a business endeavor. But you should be in business with people, especially when you have kids.
We have kids. So you want to have a business endeavor with your children because your children and
your family is an institution and you want to invest in your institution where that institution will have
an equitable payoff. You want your children to be as thorough and as nurtured.
and as learned as they should be.
We shouldn't have these little janky relationships
where a kid is here and a kid is there.
And so now these kids growing up in these broken homes
and then shit goes bad out here in the streets
and nobody's taken care of them.
So we should look at the institution of marriage
and raising our children together just as a community.
Yeah, man.
So why do you think that, you know,
I guess us as black folks are not getting married
as often now as we deal, let's say, in like the 70s and 60s?
Yeah.
A lot of it has to do with finances
because there's so much economic deprivation targeting black people.
So a lot of us, especially a lot of the men,
just don't have the resources they think to really maintain a family like that.
But I say if you come together with people, you and the woman,
you're on the same page, you guys can build with each other
and come up with ways to get your finances in order to maintain a family.
I'm telling guys, look, a lot of times your significant other
will give you some of the greatest ideas you need.
When you have a solid base with you, because my wife,
gives me a lot of great ideas
about doing stuff.
All black women, by the way.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
And sometimes I think
some of my interracial dudes, y'all with it,
white woman, the white woman might give you some good game.
She might know a lawyer somewhere where she can hook you up.
But definitely with the sisters,
you got you a sister who's thorough,
she's going to give you the real game.
And give your kids the real game.
Now, let's go back to the interracial shit
because if you got a white girl and y'all have kids,
you better make sure that white girl ain't sitting up here
telling you your kids are biracial
and you'll clear kids are black because the race soldiers don't look at biracial.
There's no biracial on the census.
You're white, black, and the system of white supremacy.
Man, like, nah, man, you know, like, and that's facts right now.
There's men saying, yo, man, these women nowadays, they're too masculine.
And then there's female saying, nah, bro, like, we're only more masculine because men are more feminine nowadays, right?
Is this just like which, like, is this similar to, like, which comes first to chicken or the,
or the egg or like who do you think,
think, like why do you think,
I guess women are more like masculine?
Is it just because men are less masculine?
Well, the thing is, man, starting in the 60s,
they started to incentivize women
to be more the head of the household.
Yeah.
That's the thing.
So when women are sitting around here
having to pay the bills and do everything,
and then the boys,
the men are taught to be feminized
by just the whole system.
When we start looking at,
television in the 70s, we started seeing the feminization of black men.
The 70s, we started seeing people like Flip Wilson.
Flip Wilson used to go on TV with a dress.
We started seeing it very early.
Then in the 80s and 90s, we started seeing more black men with dresses on.
Dr. Welsing talked about this.
She talked about it in the next 20 years, and she said this, what, 30 years ago,
we're going to see black men openly running around in dresses now, and that's exactly
what we're seeing.
That's a deliberate feminization of men
because black men have to be targeted
in the system of white supremacy.
It's a symbolic castration
to make the black man
less of a man. When you look at movies,
they always have the black man
in a subservient position
or a position under his woman
to a certain degree. Like the Woman King movie.
Look at the title, Woman King.
A king is a man.
And in the opening scene of the Woman King,
they're slaughtering a bunch of black men.
So that type of event
imagery, that goes into the subconscious minds of young people and they think, okay, this is normalized.
So it's a real, we got to understand how media works in this stuff too.
Yeah, because like I kind of always like says, right, that like I feel like men got more feminine now, right?
Like, like, like, life is easier for us, right?
Like, you know, like back then, like we had to get up at 3 a.m. and go hunting, right?
Come back, right?
Yeah.
And now like we can, you know, like older door dash, you know, hop in.
Right?
You know, so like as life can easier do, we become just more, you know, family.
Yeah, because as men, back in the day, when I was growing up, as a man, in order to go out here and get your money, in order to go out here and do stuff to meet women at the club or whatever, you have to go out here in a physical location and engage with physical people.
Women had to feel your masculine energy.
If you were at a club or a bar in the streets and there were other men around, there had to be a certain level of respect.
You couldn't be talking crazy to niggins because there was repercussions.
Now you got internet culture.
Niggas, fuck you, nigger!
Westside, you gang banging on Twitter.
You're talking crazy to niggas you ain't never seen before.
And there's no repercussions.
That makes you more of a bitch because you got a lot of bitch dudes out here
who gossip, talk trash on the internet, ain't gonna bust a grape.
And that feminizes you. There's no repercussions for you running your mouth like that.
So that by definition makes a dude into a bitch.
Yeah, man, bro. It's the commoner.
the other sections, the YouTube streamers, the, oh man, bro, those niggas have to follow us
mouth.
Yeah, they talk the most trash.
There's no repercussion.
Now, you know, you can't do all that woofing in person with nobody.
Yeah.
No, listen, right?
Now, listen, like, you got to start doing like, like, um, their videos like standing up, right?
Because if you do see that you're like six or seven in person.
Like six, five, six, five.
No, not, now, have enough.
Because, hey, these, like, six four, so like, okay, right?
And like you're like Rizzer height, right?
Yeah, I'm like a little bit shorter than Rizzer.
Yeah.
No, six-seven here.
Okay, okay.
Yeah, I'm a little shorter than Rizzer.
Yeah, right?
Yeah, right.
Yeah, right.
Well, six-six.
Yeah.
You feel me right?
Yeah, yeah.
Right?
Because AD, it's 64 and you tire over AD.
So that's a six six, right?
Yeah.
Yeah, if dude is actually seeing how big you was in person,
like, do you feel like the, um, hate all the line would, like, cease?
Yeah, yeah, but when they see me in person, it's never the same energy.
It's never the same when we get down in person.
You know, niggas get real humble in person.
But online, you know, cats can say whatever without any repercussion.
And, you know, back in the day, man, as kids, if we said, whatever you said, man, you have to stand on that.
And now cats literally live online now.
So, you know, that has made the game corny to a certain degree.
And women don't respect that shit.
Women don't like no yapping-ass dude who said on the internet, you know?
At all, man.
Now, like, how did you avoid getting canceled in all these years, man?
Because there's a bunch of your contemporaries who had their run on YouTube, man,
and then the guy, like, kicked up out of here and now they're nowhere.
So, like, how did you avoid being canceled all these years?
Yeah, because I only speak facts, and I don't do malicious stuff.
I don't just be saying shit, just be saying it.
Because a lot of times people get on YouTube and they just be beefing just for the sake of beefing.
And then you end up getting canceled.
You just can't do that shit forever.
Just talking reckless just to be a person who gets clicks.
Yeah.
You have a lot of that.
people who deliberately say wild shit for clicks.
I don't do that.
I usually come with a lot of substantive conversations
and people can respect that.
Of course, man.
Now, okay, so first off,
I do want to give you credit, right?
Because one of your old enemies,
he was in like the news headlights, right?
O'Shea, Duke Jackson was going at him.
Thomas Sotomay.
And they were laughing at clowning him
for now being broke and, like, sorry,
It's not funny, right, but being broke, bankruptcy, all the type of shit, right?
You actually, like, steer clear to that.
Yeah, because he's down bad right now.
You know what I'm saying?
And, you know, to see him down bad like that,
I think he kind of recently made a video saying,
I didn't even, when somebody's just down bad,
I don't want to be a bully.
Yeah, you did, because I've already done spanked this guy for years.
And it's kind of sad to see, you know what I'm saying?
It's like you're a boxer, you see an old boxer who's just raggedy and down.
You know, you kind of want to help him out a little bit.
Yeah. Right.
Look, though, right?
So he's like, and he's really smart, a great orator, right?
Mm-hmm.
Would you ever consider, you know, I guess, like, working or something together rather, like,
you start, start, you know, your own, like, production company, you know, and, you know,
and something to a little deal, you feel into, like, do a little podcast with him?
I wouldn't work with him because he has kind of a track record of, you know, biting people in the back.
Yeah.
I would talk to him just to see how he's doing.
I don't want nobody being fucked up in the game.
You know what I'm saying?
But I would sit down and talk to him.
Just to chop it up with him and just, you know, kind of bury the hatchet and just like, you know, we're cool.
You know what I'm saying?
Because I don't like any black person doing bad in any way, even if I'm beefing with him.
I'm like, um, me and him beef.
I don't want him to do bad.
I don't wish bad on that dude.
I want him to be successful in a school thing.
So Tommy, I would sit down with him.
Now I'm still do the Krispy Puppet.
Yeah.
But those who don't know, I did a puppet about Tom.
called the Krispy Puppet.
And that really fucked with him a lot.
And I stopped doing the Krispy Puppet
because too many kids were getting into it.
He called that colors though, right?
No, it's not, it had nothing to do
with the color of the skin.
The puppet was ashy.
The puppet was ashy, so we called it crispy.
But he just had so much talent,
it's just like sad to see.
It's like, if he would have just like really,
in just a little bit, right?
Yeah, but when he started doing pornography,
I knew it was down here.
You ain't no coming back.
You old and the motherfucker doing porn.
You out there, yeah.
Only fans, I know, right?
That's the thing.
Come on.
You all, though, you down bad when you released to that fan.
You know, at that age, if you're a young girl, like 21, 22, you know, you that age doing
porn, a girl, but a middle-aged nigger getting into porn, that's not a good look.
You are fucking looking like more.
looking like Morgan Freeman from the back.
Right?
That shit don't look good.
He was paying women, too, right?
Like, like, go to the fuck.
Like, what should take on tricking, right?
Because, like, let's say, like, so, you know, I have a favorite rapper, right?
Caw-Finnett two times.
All right.
Now, this dude, now, I think he was like an ex-pin boy now, right?
Right?
But he says, fuck her, leave her.
I'll do not feed her.
Like, she won't get into it.
Loster out of me is fresh fries.
And that's it.
Like, so he gets tricking in all for.
If you're in the game, yeah, you got to be.
Well, now, like, he's a rapper that, right?
Right.
But what should take on just, like, on just tricking in regular relationships?
No, if you're a young dude who's single, you shouldn't be tricking your shit off.
You know, you got to cultivate your mouth.
If you are a young dude, you shouldn't be tricking, especially if you're a young dude who
don't have any kind of notoriety.
Now, dude, like a celebrity or politician, that's understandable because that's kind of hush money.
Like, hey, let me give you a little something.
Don't put my business out there like that.
Or if you're in a situation or whatever, you got a little side joint, don't put my business out.
But if you're single, ain't no reason to be tricking off your fucking money.
Use your mouthpiece and go out there and get it how you live.
How do you cultivate the mouthpiece, though?
By being around other thorough dudes, being around men, that's how you do it.
Learning confidence, being around some dudes who got some game, getting around some older cats,
if you can find some older cats,
which is what I did.
I hung around the older cats
when I was younger
who would serve me with the game.
Don't be around a bunch of young goofy niggas
who don't know the same shit
you don't know.
Get you some veterans
and learn some games
so you can go out here
and start dealing.
And also get with some older women
if you're younger.
They'll teach you the game
so that you will know
how to move and shake around women
and you won't be out here
having to have a transactional relationship
all the time.
Yeah, right, but like how do you spot a cougar?
Like, how do you spot like an old bitch
who like,
Like, who's looking to, like, trick off somebody.
Not even, no, she can just give you some games.
You know what I'm saying?
She might not even throw some paper at you.
But she can just be an older chick who kind of gives you some game.
They'll pull you under their wing and kind of lace you with some game.
The younger chicks won't do that.
But an older one will kind of let you know, hey, you ain't, no, that ain't right.
This ain't right.
That ain't right.
And, you know, you got a lot of cougars out here.
A good thing, you got a lot of sisters out here who are older who look hella good still.
Of course.
And that's another thing.
Sometimes you don't know how old these motherfuckers are.
when you're out here at the club meeting them.
You know, they might look 25.
You might be with somebody's
57-year-old auntie.
You know, they might be in their 50s or something.
You'll do some of that civil rights pussy
and you don't even know it.
So there's a lot of older season women out here
you can learn the game from.
Man, nah, that's a fact right.
Now, let's get to Charleston white, man.
Yeah.
Do you don't know him?
Yeah, I know of Charlesville.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
So, like, what should take on his message, man?
Yeah.
Because people will say, listen,
and he spits the 50% truth,
but then, like, the other 50% is just some,
like other you know like wab shit right so like what should take him with charleston white and
i guess his war on street niggins and game members charleston white is the embodiment of
black people on the internet that's why they gravitate towards him yeah he and that's not
necessarily a bad thing yeah because he's actually real about a lot of stuff yeah even with the
bullshit you know that's real stuff like a lot of people get on get on him about with the
snitching and all that stuff about telling the police they i call the police
Here's the thing, man, most of these dudes out here, they'll call the police too.
It ain't just Charleston White.
He'll admit it.
You have these street dudes out here who'll get into an altercation and you put some on them.
They'll run and file charges on you.
Absolutely.
Quickly.
All of these niggins do that shit.
Ain't nobody really trying to catch a fair one, fair one.
I'll give Charleston his respect to say, hey, I call the police.
I got the police on speed down.
I can respect that to a certain degree.
He keeps it 100 with the fuck shit.
He's about the realest dude out here on the internet
Even I don't agree with some of the bullshit
But at least he's real about the bullshit
Yeah
I can respect that to a certain degree
I can't even hate on it
Yeah, right? Okay, so that part of yes right?
But like when he says death to all gay members
And like shit like that
Yeah, a lot of that stuff is for clicks
Yeah, of course
A lot of that's and again
That represents niggas because people do shit for clicks
At least he'll admit, hey I do shit for clicks
A lot of cats out here will do anything
and say anything for a YouTube click.
A lot of these niggas out here banging on the internet,
they ain't real bangers.
They're banging for YouTube clicks.
Charleston will admit that that's what he's doing.
I ain't got nothing to do but to respect that.
Yeah.
Now, like, you probably didn't like see this, right?
But Charleston White was banned from L.A., right?
And all the members said, bro, you cannot comment.
Oh, yeah, that I know.
That I know.
And he actually came back like two weeks ago.
And took off the type of pictures and videos.
Is that a black mark on whoever banned them
Or do you feel like
Nobody can really ban anybody from any city?
Yeah, you can sneak in.
Like Takashi came at 7 in the morning down in L.A.
taking pictures in front of the Nipsey mural.
He did it for like 60 seconds
And jumped in the car because people were on his bumper
Within 60 seconds.
He had to do that shit real quick
And then the word got out.
So yeah, you can sneak around and take pictures here and there
But as far as kicking it,
nah, you can't do that.
No, man, right.
Yo, listen, man, oh, but the last thing I do want to, like, touch on is the Shenzuela Robertson, man.
Yeah.
Yo, what's your take on that whole, you know, like, I guess that situation?
Yeah, that was Raggedy, the young sister who went down there to Mexico with her so-called friends,
and then they jumped on her and killed her.
And it sounds like they were plotting on doing that all along.
This is why, again, going back to energy and certain people around us, man,
we know with certain people don't have the right energy when their energy is negative.
Sometimes because they can be fun to be around, we accept their negative energy.
We have to get off that bullshit.
We got to get non-constructive people away from us because it can become deadly.
We got to be around people who are constructive, people who are about our empowerment, people who want to see us grow, people who are about handling business.
And let's put all the superficial bullshit aside and grow as a group.
Yeah, man.
Wait.
Okay, right.
So who do you go to then for a bike?
Because you like, like, spoke on me, Taney like a strong group.
Yeah.
So who do the person who has all the advice and all the answers, right?
Who do you go to for advice?
A lot of the people who are my elders who are in my movies,
I'm brother James Small, brother Kaaba, Claude Anderson.
Luckily, these people are still here,
and I get a lot of good game from them and I study them.
These are the people that I idolize.
So again, I always get people who are older who's been there, done that,
so I can get some wisdom and game from them.
Man, yo, no, I definitely, listen, I definitely like,
thing that Dr. Claude,
but he don't really, like, do much
like speaking.
He's done so much already, though.
I mean, he's done a ton of where this brother
has so many books out, get his books, get the
game. He already, he's done it all already.
So the game is already out there.
Dr. Wellcing, the game is out there. She wrote
the book, the ISIS papers, the most
important book about understanding
racism. It's out there.
Oh, wow.
You know? Oh,
and then the last thing,
again, this is like the
last question, man. Yeah, yeah, yeah.
We won't call names, man.
But I just seen the cartoon, man.
Of the crack habit, stealing for the grocery stories, man.
Tarree, wait, why was that made and then to,
were there ever, like, time of time where they can say, you know what, bro?
No mage, no maas.
I give up, Taree.
You won't, please leave us alone.
Yes.
So sometimes when people try to come at me, what I do,
like to mock them with puppets and cartoons.
That's kind of my MO.
I just make a, I turn it into a brand, and it's hard for them to come back from being
ridiculed with a cartoon or a puppet.
So that's what it is.
I kind of keep the beefs fun, and I don't take some of these dudes too seriously, and I
just do what I do.
To be fair, though, like, a lot of your enemies have reached out, and we've always
said no.
Right, right.
Because, one, like, y'all don't have nothing to really, like, it's a right to talk about.
And then two, you know, like, it's obviously a symbiotic re-reel.
It's like, for example, right?
It's a week is coming and giving us, like, good game.
The views is high as well, right?
Why would we trick that off?
Right, right, right, right.
Some unknown dickheads who's trying to get some clout, you know?
That's all it is.
Right?
Right.
So, you know, so, nah, man, feel it?
Real tall.
Y'all cannot come up here, bro.
Leave us alone, man.
Man, for Sareig, man, listen, I appreciate you, man, listen, like next month, I definitely
have you here.
Yo, so would you ever, like, do a debate with, let's say, destiny?
And he's a white liberal.
He's not a racist.
He's anti-racist, you know, but, like, you know, I don't know who that is, but let me,
give me some information about who destiny is, and we'll see what's going on.
Yeah, right?
Because he's asked somebody right now, like, like, and he's regarded as the best political
debater on the Internet right?
now.
Okay, let me look up his stuff.
I don't know who that is, so I don't know what his opposing views are.
But yeah, I look into it.
Yeah, definitely, man.
So no jumper quills podcast in the world.
Follow Tariq at Al-Turik.
Follow me on Instagram at Tariq Elite.
Follow me on YouTube at Tarek Radio.
Follow me on Twitter at Tarek Nashid.
Yes, sir.
It's your boy, Portaq Flacco.
Peace.
