#RolandMartinUnfiltered - Judge Halts Fed Freeze, MAGA AGs Go After Costco, White GA DA on Trial, Coco Elan for Sensitive Skin
Episode Date: January 29, 20251.28.2025 #RolandMartinUnfiltered: Judge Halts Federal Freeze, MAGA AGs Go After Costco, White GA DA on Trial, Coco Elan for Sensitive Skin A federal judge temporarily blocked the Trump administration...'s freeze on federal grants and loans, which could total trillions of dollars. We'll talk about who that freeze will affect the most if it goes into effect. Executive orders aimed at trans military service members may be decided in the courts. MAGA state attorney generals are demanding Costco drop its DEI policies. The Georgia district attorney is on trial for refusing to charge the three white men who gunned down black jogger Ahmaud Arbery. In tonight's Marketplace, we'll hear from the creator of a deodorant and skincare line specifically designed for people with sensitive skin. #BlackStarNetwork partner: Fanbasehttps://www.startengine.com/offering/fanbase This Reg A+ offering is made available through StartEngine Primary, LLC, member FINRA/SIPC. This investment is speculative, illiquid, and involves a high degree of risk, including the possible loss of your entire investment. You should read the Offering Circular (https://bit.ly/3VDPKjD) and Risks (https://bit.ly/3ZQzHl0) related to this offering before investing. Download the #BlackStarNetwork app on iOS, AppleTV, Android, Android TV, Roku, FireTV, SamsungTV and XBox http://www.blackstarnetwork.com The #BlackStarNetwork is a news reporting platforms covered under Copyright Disclaimer Under Section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976, allowance is made for "fair use" for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
This is an iHeart Podcast.
Hello, I'm Isaac Hayes III, founder and CEO of Fanbase.
And right now we're accepting investors in our $17 million round
to revolutionize the future of social media.
Today, for just $399, you can own
60 shares of stock in Fanbase at $6.65 a share. Go to startengine.com slash Fanbase and invest today.
While the big platforms have grown too massive and disconnected from their users,
Fanbase is building a platform where creators and users truly come first. We've already raised
$4.8 million from everyday investors
who believe in this vision,
and now you can join them.
This is your chance to invest
in a social media tech company
with over 1 million users
that is disrupting media
by allowing anyone to reach
all of their following
and monetize their content from day one.
The market is changing,
big platforms are failing
to serve their users,
and Fanbase is
stepping up to fill the gap. Don't wait
until it's too late. Invest now.
Invest for yourself and your
future. Go to startengine.com
slash fanbase and own the future
of social media.
The Blackstar Network is here.
Oh, no punches!
I'm real revolutionary right now.
Thank you for being the voice of Black America.
All momentum we have now, we have to keep this going.
The video looks phenomenal.
See, there's a difference between Black Star Network and Black-owned media and something like CNN.
You can't be Black-owned media and be scared. It's time't be black on media and be scared.
It's time to be smart. Bring
your eyeballs home.
You dig?
It's Tuesday, January
28th, 2025.
I'm attorney Robert Petillo,
sitting in for Roland Martin tonight.
Here's what's coming up on Roland Martin Unfiltered,
streaming live on the Black Star Network.
Look, we tried to tell you.
Welcome to Project 2025.
We're seeing the entire Project 2025 agenda being executed by the Trump administration
with over 300 executive actions in the last
week.
Just today, a federal judge blocked the Trump administration's freeze on federal grants
and loans, which could total trillions of dollars.
We'll talk about who that freeze will affect and what will happen if it goes into effect
on Monday.
Also, another executive order aimed at trans military service members may be decided in
court. And I remind people, the same laws that protect trans individuals protect African Americans.
If the court decides that Donald Trump with an executive order can ban trans people from the military,
they could use a similar executive order to ban African Americans or other protected classifications.
It's all under the same
constitutional scrutiny. So don't say simply because it only applies to other people,
it doesn't matter to you. All these cases matter to you. We'll talk more about that later on the
show. MAGA attorney generals are demanding that Costco drop its DEI policies. We've seen in recent
weeks and months since this extreme MAGA agenda has gone into place, corporations across the country have gone back on those 2020 promises to help black folks.
Remember our corporate partners, our corporate friends?
For the minute they could drop black folks, they did.
Costco stood up to them.
We're going to talk about what these MAGA attorney generals are trying to do in order to reverse those policies.
Also, in my home state of Georgia, the district attorney who refused to prosecute the three
white men who gunned down Ahmaud
Omri is in court facing
criminal charges of her own. We'll talk
about that later. And in tonight's Marketplace,
we'll hear from the creator of the
deodorant and skincare line
specifically designed for people with sensitive
skin. It's time to bring the funk
on Roller Murder Unfiltered, streaming live on the
Blackstar Network. Let's go.
He's got
whatever the piss, he's on it.
Whatever it is, he's got the
scoop, the fact, the fine.
And when it breaks, he's right on time.
And it's rolling. Best belief
he's knowing.
Putting it down from sports to news to
politics. With entertainment
just for kicks kicks he's rolling
it's uncle ro-royal
it's rolling martin yeah
rolling with rolling now
he's funky fresh he's real the best You know he's rolling, Martin
Martin
I know a lot of cops, and they get asked all the time
Have you ever had to shoot your gun?
Sometimes the answer is yes.
But there's a company dedicated to a future
where the answer will always be no.
Across the country, cops called this taser the revolution.
But not everyone was convinced it was that simple.
Cops believed everything that taser told them.
From Lava for Good and the team that brought you Bone Valley
comes a story about what happened when a multibillion-dollar company
dedicated itself to one visionary mission.
This is Absolute Season 1.
Taser Incorporated.
I get right back there and it's bad.
It's really, really, really bad.
Listen to new episodes of Absolute Season 1,
Taser Incorporated, on the iHeartRadio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Binge episodes 1, 2, and 3 on May 21st
and episodes 4, 5, and 6 on June 4th.
Ad-free at Lava for Good Plus on Apple Podcasts.
I'm Clayton English.
I'm Greg Glod.
And this is season two of the War on Drugs podcast.
We are back.
In a big way.
In a very big way.
Real people, real perspectives.
This is kind of star-studded a little bit, man.
We got Ricky Williams, NFL player, Heisman Trophy winner.
It's just a compassionate choice to allow players all reasonable means to care for themselves.
Music stars Marcus King, John Osborne from Brothers Osborne.
We have this misunderstanding of what this quote-unquote drug thing is.
Benny the Butcher.
Brent Smith from Shinedown.
We got B-Real from Cypress Hill.
NHL enforcer Riley Cote.
Marine Corvette.
MMA fighter
Liz Karamush.
What we're doing now
isn't working
and we need to change things.
Stories matter
and it brings a face to them.
It makes it real.
It really does.
It makes it real.
Listen to new episodes
of the War on Drugs
podcast season two
on the iHeartRadio app,
Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get
your podcasts.
And to hear episodes one week early and ad-free with exclusive content,
subscribe to Lava for Good Plus on Apple Podcasts.
Last night, President Trump plunged the country into chaos.
Without a shred of warning, the Trump administration announced a halt to virtually all federal funds across the country. perhaps trillions of dollars that directly support states, cities, towns, schools, hospitals,
small businesses, and most of all, American families.
It's a dagger at the heart of the average American family in red states, in blue states,
in cities, in suburbs, in rural areas.
It is just outrageous.
Just outrageous.
The twice impeached,
criminally convicted,
felon and chief,
Donald the Khan Trump,
is a new order could impact
billions, if not trillions,
of dollars of funding
allocated to state
and local government
if it goes back to an effect
on Monday.
U.S. District Court Lauren Alley-Khan blocked the action Tuesday afternoon,
minutes before it was set to go into effect at 5 p.m.
The administrative stay pauses to freeze until Monday.
Bobby Kogan, the Senior Director of Federal Budget Policy at the Center for American Progress,
joins us to discuss who may be affected by this decision.
Bobby, how are you doing?
Doing great, Robert. Thanks so much for having me on.
Well, thank you so much. Talk a little bit about who exactly this order,
this executive order would impact if it was to go into effect on Monday.
Sure. So it is, they say it's not Medicare, it's not Social Security, and it's not payments that go directly
to individuals.
So that means not something like SSI and not something like veterans' compensation.
But it's much of the rest of the aid that the United States government gives.
That's stuff like Section 8 housing.
That's stuff like LIHEAP.
That's stuff like Title I education grants.
That's stuff like IDEA education grants for
kids with disabilities.
It's most of the things that people actually are relying on.
Now, the asterisk here is that after kind of spelling out over 2,000 budget accounts,
internally, externally, the Trump administration walked it all back. And so their internal messaging implies that it's lots and lots and lots and lots of programs that Americans rely on.
And their external messaging implies that it's nothing.
And so, as we've seen before, when President Trump was running for office, he said, I know nothing about Project 2025.
I've heard nothing about Project 2025.
I don't know who these people are or what's happening. But this is directly out of Project 2025. I've heard nothing about Project 2025. I don't know who
these people are or what's happening. But this is directly out of Project 2025. So should we
believe their external messaging that we saw at the White House briefing today, or believe the
internal documents which truly say they want to gut these federal programs? I think we should
believe the internal messaging. If you look at the budget request that Trump made when he was
president last time, he called to eviscerate the social safety net.
He called to cut SNAP in quarter.
He called to cut Section 8 in third.
He called to cut Medicaid in half, right?
So they clearly want to do this.
Whether their walkback is all a show or they got scared and wanted to lie about their initial
policy I think is a different thing.
But it's very, very, very clear that externally they were feeling the heat. But to your point,
I think that we should assume—and we had, you know, there were reports today of folks,
of states logging in and not being able to get their Medicaid money for the upcoming quarter.
There were pauses on Head Start grants and that sort of stuff. So
it's very clear that they were working towards pausing huge amounts of the federal government.
And what we've seen thus far with these 300 executive orders plus that were still coming
down the pipelines is it seems that they're attempting to flood the zone, that if you throw
enough crazy things out there minute by minute, hour by hour, there will not be enough money for
lawyers to challenge every single one of these executive hour by hour, there will not be enough money for lawyers
to challenge every single one of these executive orders in court. There will not be the scrutiny
to be able to dive into each of these things, because before you get through one, another
crazy thing is going on. What can people actually do to fight back against these orders? And what
does this administrative stay mean? Yeah, I think that that's astute, right? I mean,
the common theme of the Trump administration, the thing that runs through all of it is chaos
for, you know, for the American public.
I'm not sure what an individual can do, per se, that if there are missed payments, any
of the agencies or states or facilities that misses the payments will know, and then they
will sue.
And that will presumably put another stay, right?
So you referenced the federal judge today who put a pause on it, but just through Monday.
That's kind of fortuitous for the Trump administration for stays, because February 1st, the beginning
of the month, would have been a huge period of a lot of federal outweighs.
So you'll have to wait for someone to get standing due to a missed payment, and then
that person can sue.
I would just say, if you're listening and you are not getting a benefit you are supposed to
get right now, I strongly encourage you to talk to your local reps and also to your district
offices for your federal reps, because right now, part of the issue is it's very difficult
to understand what is going on. The chaos, the uncertainty is a feature rather than a bug.
And from a constitutional perspective, Chuck Schumer said it earlier, Congress has the power of the purse strings.
When the president takes his oath of office, he says, he raises his right hand and says, I will support and defend the Constitution.
I will dutifully carry out the edicts of Congress.
Does the president have the power, does he have the ability to simply say, I'm not going to
distribute money which has already been passed by the Congress, signed into law, and put forward?
No, he does not. If the president doesn't like this spending, there's actually a special path
that's filibuster-proof. It's easier to pass than a normal bill to help rescind and peel back unused funds.
If a president doesn't like a law, you can try to change the law.
But what you're not allowed to do is simply ignore a law that you don't like.
What you're not allowed to do is just not carry it out.
Now, I will quickly say there are paths to legally pause spending, but President Trump
did not take those.
He didn't take them when he was in office in 2019 and illegally paused Ukraine funding,
and he didn't take them this time, right?
So what we see is a direct willingness to flagrantly violate our spending laws.
And on that point, he knows he can't do this.
He knows he can't suspend the 14th Amendment when it comes to birthright citizenship. He knows he can't do this. He knows he can't suspend the 14th Amendment when it comes to birthright citizenship.
He knows he can't do many of these things.
But what is the plan for people and for parties and groups to really fight back against this besides paying lawyers absorbent fees to go before federal courts?
And then as a codicil, we have so many judges that President Trump appointed.
Is there a chance that a 6-3 majority on the Supreme Court, if it gets that far, may just decide to give him these additional powers?
I would be skeptical if the Impoundment Control Act is overturned. What President Trump is
pushing is radical even for him. Now, of course, I say that, and then every week he comes out with
another even more radical executive order. But the argument behind what he is trying to say is that spending
and only spending laws are optional, and that Congress may not bind the president to spend.
And what that would mean is that Social Security is unconstitutional. What that would mean is
Medicaid is unconstitutional. What that would mean is Medicaid is unconstitutional.
What that would mean is Medicare is unconstitutional.
It would mean that when you are owed your Social Security check, the president always
has the option to say, no, I don't feel like giving it to you.
That is a really radical legal belief, and that is what has to kind of undergird the
idea that the president is always able to impound, right?
He argues that the president has inherent impoundment authority.
And that has to mean that the president can't bind any spending.
I can't imagine the Supreme Court saying all of our entitlement law, all of our spending law is unconstitutional.
That is a bridge very far.
Now, will some Supreme Court
justices say that? I'm sure some will. But maybe I'm too naive here, but I don't think that we
will see it overturned. I agree. And look, I want to be as optimistic as you, but I think we all
said Roe was settled law. I think we all thought that the North Carolina, the Harvard cases on
schools, that that was settled law and affirmative action. So for people who are looking at this and trying to find out what are the steps going
forward, can you talk a little bit about what happens if this administrative stay fails on
Monday and this goes into effect? What will happen to individuals who are depending on many of these
services like Meals on Wheels and other government programs? Yeah. So by virtue of it starting back up on the third rather than the first, there will be
kind of a little bit of respite.
Basically, they're targeting funds that get administered by other things.
The federal government will give money to a state or to an authority or to a facility,
and then they will carry it out. And so it's not that they can't continue to give out funds. It's
that the federal government may not give out any more. So what we're looking at is when the federal
government would miss the timing of a payment. Many payments come out at the beginning of the
month. Some come out quarterly. Some come out annually.
Some come out when grants are due.
So we are looking for something who's—we're looking—we're targeting something for when a payment ought to have gone out, but now because of this illegal order is not able
to go out.
And so it will—we will only start to see the effect when kind of that first missed payment happens.
And so it'll be program by program, right?
Eventually, if this were to go on long enough, eventually this stops huge swaths of the federal
government.
But basically, it would start slow, and beginning of every month would be one thing.
And then while some of these facilities have cash reserves,
so even if they missed a federal payment, they'd be able to keep going for days, weeks. But the
longer this goes on, that's when you start to see child care facilities and preschool facilities,
that's when you start to see them literally shut down. That's when you start to see people being
evicted from their homes because they're missing all of their Section 8 payments and can no longer meet their rent. And so with the new press secretary went into great
detail to talk about the programs that wouldn't be cut or wouldn't be affected by this spending
freeze. What programs specifically will be affected so that people will have a better
understanding? We talked about Meals on Wheels. We talked about Section 8. But what are some
things where people are going to tang to refill the effects of this?
Yeah.
So just to say the press secretary is taking the public view that, oh, we didn't mean anything that we said.
So that's where we have to—you know, if you take the press secretary's view, then we're only talking about some of the green energy things and the Inflation Reduction Act and the bipartisan
infrastructure law. And we're only talking, yeah, we're only kind of talking about those. That's
what they said publicly. What they said privately is that it is much larger. So for the tangible
effects for people, that would be your free or cheap preschool is now closed and you are no longer able to get that.
That will be your school lunch that you get from school.
There's no more funding for the school from the federal government.
So maybe you just don't get that because maybe the school can no longer provide it and the state and your local school district can no longer provide it.
So it kind of depends
on whether private entities are able to step in and fill the void. But the tangible effects,
if this goes on long enough and is as broad as they implied it would be and that their private
messaging says it would be, it is stuff like your nutrition. It is stuff like your education. It is
some of your health care, your community health centers and stuff like that.
And it is some of your housing.
And so before we run out of time, where can people get more information on this and really keep up with what's going on?
Because we've seen Facebook has got rid of fat checking.
Twitter has got rid of fat checking.
There's so much misinformation coming out, disinformation.
And we've got the press secretary who apparently now can just pick
the media that they want to have at press conferences. I don't know how many people saw
that earlier, but they announced that they will now be having podcasters, bloggers, conspiracy
theorists be in the White House press corps. So it's very difficult to discern what the actual
information is and how exactly we can address it. Where can people get accurate information from?
And what can people do to fight back? I think that's the biggest concern folks have. Sure. I put out a paper,
or it should be out in minutes if it's not already. It's my attempt at trying to explain
all of this. I would just say there's been tons of reporting from The Washington Post and The New
York Times, from Politico, from lots of groups that are trying
to lift it up. The difficulty is just no one really knows what's happening. In terms of what
you can do to fight back, this is going to sound like cold comfort, but I truly, truly think the
best thing that we can be doing is, to the extent that we are missing a payment that we know we are
supposed to get, we should be flagging that for journalists, for our local elected representatives or whatever.
Right now, the biggest advantage that the Republican—that Trump has, that the Trump
administration has, is the chaos.
No one really knows what's happening.
And any time we say this is happening, they say, no, it's not.
So to the extent that you are actually experiencing something, getting that to someone who can help elevate it is actually incredibly, incredibly helpful. And this last question,
we talked a lot about the fact that this is the real Project 2025 coming to fruition. This is what
we, as Roland would say, we tried to tell you that this was what going to happen. For the people who
were out there saying, well, Kamala is Indian and not black enough, well, now you might not have Meals on Wheels and Section 8 housing. But with that,
what are the next Project 2025 executive orders that you think might be coming down the pipes?
Well, speaking—I'm a budget person, so speaking just in my issue area, I expect to see even
broader impoundment. I expect to see even broader kind of—you know, they've been doing trial
balloons. On day one, they did kind of pretty targeted what they thought would be
politically advantageous, illegal pauses in spending. And that also comes straight from
Project 2025, where they said, we're not going to spend on the stuff that we don't like. We're
just going to have it follow the president's policy. They did trial balloons, and then they
did this big one, and then they immediately walked
it back. I expect to see a lot more of that coming through. But again, that's just my issue area.
And so for the other stuff, I don't feel super comfortable opining.
Well, I think it's something we have to watch. And if they are able to take the power of the
purse string away from Congress and move it into the executive. We are fundamentally in a different form of government than what our founders said. I grew up with conservatives saying
we want less power in the executive. We want small government. We want power to be more
democratically with the Congress and with the people. And as soon as they get into power,
all that goes out the window. I tell people all the time, don't listen to the flowery language.
Watch the actions that people are taking. Thank you so much, Bobby, for joining us. How can people follow you on social media?
I know a lot of cops, and they get asked all the time, have you ever had to shoot your gun?
Sometimes the answer is yes, but there's a company dedicated to a future where the answer will
always be no. Across the country, cops called this taser the revolution.
But not everyone was convinced it was that simple.
Cops believed everything that taser told them.
From Lava for Good and the team that brought you Bone Valley
comes a story about what happened when a multi-billion dollar company
dedicated itself to one visionary mission.
This is Absolute Season 1, Taser Incorporated.
I get right back there and it's bad. It's really, really, really bad.
Listen to new episodes of Absolute Season 1, Taser Incorporated on the iHeartRadio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. Binge episodes 1, 2, and 3 on May 21st,
and episodes 4, 5, and 6 on June 4th.
Ad-free at Lava for Good Plus on Apple Podcasts.
I'm Clayton English.
I'm Greg Lott.
And this is season 2 of the War on Drugs podcast.
We are back.
In a big way.
In a very big way.
Real people, real perspectives.
This is kind of star-studded a little bit, man.
We got Ricky Williams, NFL player,
Heisman Trophy winner.
It's just a compassionate choice
to allow players all reasonable means
to care for themselves.
Music stars Marcus King,
John Osborne from Brothers Osborne.
We have this misunderstanding
of what this quote-unquote drug thing is.
Benny the Butcher.
Brent Smith from Shinedown.
We got B-Real from Cypress Hill.
NHL enforcer Riley Cote.
Marine Corvette.
MMA fighter Liz Karamush.
What we're doing now isn't working, and we need to change things.
Stories matter, and it brings a face to them.
It makes it real.
It really does.
It makes it real. Listen to does. It makes it real.
Listen to new episodes of the War on Drugs podcast season two on the iHeartRadio app,
Apple podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. And to hear episodes one week early and ad free
with exclusive content, subscribe to Lava for Good Plus on Apple podcasts. On Apple Podcasts. All right, we'll be back after the break. You're watching Rolling Modern Unfiltered, streaming live on the Black Star Network.
What's up, y'all?
Look, Fanbase is more than a platform.
It's a movement to empower creators, offering a unique opportunity for everyday people to invest in Black-owned tech, infrastructure, and help shape the future of social media.
Investing in technology is essential for creating long-term wealth
and influence in the digital age.
The Black community must not only consume tech,
we must own it.
Discover how equity crowdfunding
can serve as a powerful tool
for funding Black businesses,
allowing entrepreneurs to raise capital
directly through their community,
through the jobs at.
Next on The Black Table with me, Greg Carr.
There's a lot of talk about the inevitability of another civil war in this country.
But on our next show, we'll talk to a noted author and scholar who says we're actually in the middle of one right now. In fact, Steve Phillips says the first one that started back in 1861, well, it never ended.
People carrying the Confederate flag, wearing sweatshirts saying MAGA Civil War, January 6, 2021,
stormed U.S. Capitol, hunted down the country's elected officials, built the gallows for the Vice President of the United States, and to block the peaceful transfer of power within this country.
On the next Black Table, here on the Black Star Network.
Now that Roland Martin is willing to give me the blueprint, hey, Saras, I need to go to
Tyler Perry and get another blueprint because
I need some green money. The only way I can do what I'm doing, I need to make some money.
So you'll see me working with Roland. Matter of fact, it's the Roland Martin and Sheryl
LaNueva show. Well, should it be the Sheryl LaNueva show and the Roland Martin show? Well,
whatever show it's going to be, it's going to be good.
Welcome back.
Let's go to our panel.
Today we're joined by Dr. Mustafa Santiago Ali,
former senior advisor for environmental justice at the EPA from Washington, D.C.
Benjamin Dixon, pastor, political commentator,
and author of God is Not a Republican out of my hometown of Atlanta, Georgia.
And also Dr. Larry J. Walker, assistant professor at the University of Central Florida,
joining us from Orlando, Florida.
So we've got to work our way through some of these executive orders.
I'm going to start with you, Mustafa.
You know, you worked in the environmental protection.
You are an expert in these things.
And these are the exact programs that he's going after.
What do you think it says that he is attacking these particular programs?
Well, he said he was running to lower the price of eggs and milk? Well, what it says is that he's willing to put profit over people. He's
willing to actually put our most vulnerable communities in the crosshairs of these executive
orders of, you know, taking these needed resources away from communities that have always been
under-resourced. And it's just saying that, you know,
whether it is a matter of you getting sick
or losing your life,
it is not of great concern to what's going on.
I mean, I think we gotta also give a shout out
to Judge Leo Kong for, you know,
the state that's currently going on
and making sure that giving people enough time
to actually take a quick breath
so that folks don't just get caught up in the chaos.
But we know that communities all across the country, when you look at what they're actually doing here,
you can think about Flint, Michigan, you know, because they're talking about taking dollars away from water infrastructure
or Jackson, Mississippi or a number of other communities out there that are literally, you know,
in many instances just hanging on when it comes to what they're drinking or what they're breathing. So we have a responsibility to, one, stay focused, to make sure, as Bobby shared with us earlier, that we're calling out if resources are not making it to the places and spaces they're supposed to and when they're supposed to. And then the most important thing also is that making sure that we are elevating the message, the stories about how people are being impacted across the country
based upon these decisions. We've got $1.1 trillion in grants that are out there, usually
on a yearly basis, and $750 billion in contracts. And when you start playing around like this,
we know who's going to be hit first and worst, but you also are going to create all
kinds of really just devastating impacts to both working class folks, the middle class,
and of course, our most vulnerable. And Dr. Walker, I want to bring you on this conversation
because we've been telling people about the dangers of Project 2025 for nearly two years.
We've had specials on it, town halls. We've sent out mailers, conversations.
People seem to be completely surprised
that Donald Trump is doing exactly what he said
he was going to do.
So what do you think has to happen for people
to understand that this is the Project 2025 agenda
and then start formulating plans
on how to fight back against it?
Yeah, I think this is a really important point.
You're right.
Roland talked about this a great deal throughout the United States, among other people who care passionately about how various policy issues impact the Black community. previous guests about, you know, what kind of entities are in place to kind of fight back against some of these policy changes. But I think there are a couple of things that we need to
consider based on the election and where we are right now, is that what you're seeing is an erosion
of the three branches of government. You know, we talk about executive, judiciary, and legislative.
What you're seeing is, you know, undercutting the power of the legislative and judicial branches and strengthening the power of the executive branch.
Also, what we're seeing here is essentially when it comes to the federal government, you know, eliminating it as the elimination of the administrative state.
And I think people need to understand that. And that's what we're seeing today in terms of people don't consider how the federal government impacts their lives
with billions and trillions of dollars on a daily basis. But now you're beginning to find out this
is destroying the federal government as an administrative state, as in terms of what's
been appropriated in this case by Congress, and now holding that money back. And the long-term
impact is going to—short and long-term impact is going to have on American citizens and also the
U.S. economy. Because now we're talking about eggs, eliminating Head Start and various other programs, or
at least pausing it, will prevent parents, et cetera, from going to work and stimulating
the economy.
So this is about a shock and awe.
And for those of us who not only study U.S. history but world history, this playbook has
already been written over the decades.
And so if you understand how authoritarianism works, you know, understand that shock and all
is all part of a multiple-step process. In addition, we talked about Project 2025.
They've literally had years, and the Heritage Foundation has been working on this for decades
to lay out a plan if we ever become in power with the right person in place. And so now,
once again, the dismantling of the federal government as administrative state has begun.
So it's not about whether systems are buckling. They've already buckled.
And Pastor Dixon, on that point about studying history and studying how authoritarian governments
rise, I thought about this earlier. If you think back to Greek philosophy,
you had Polybius who talked about the Anachronist,
the decay of society, the decay of governments,
where you have a democracy and that descends into anarchy.
You have an aristocracy that descends into an oligarchy.
And then you have what we have now, which is simply mob rule,
where you have a combination of rich tech bro corporate interests
coming together at a perfect Kairos moment with the conservative movement,
which has been trying to push these things for decades.
What do we need to put together on our side?
I think we have to be more solutions oriented.
We can only put out so many press releases and cry so much.
What do we need to do on our side to organize the same way that the Heritage Foundation did?
From the minute that the ink was dry
on the civil rights of the 1964,
these groups started figuring out ways
to turn that clock back.
Who's doing that planning for us?
We need to have an all-hands-on-deck solution,
and it requires every one of us,
every one of your listeners, every viewer,
we need to be able to move in a
concerted action. That includes a general strike. That means a consumer strike. We need to withhold
our dollars. We need to do far more than just one boycott. We need to shut this down, because
corporations are comfortable with the idea that we will still consume, even though we're being
crushed by the decisions that are being made by the Trump administration. They idea that we will still consume even though we're being crushed by the
decisions that are being made by the Trump administration. They assume that we're still
going to go to the store. They assume that we're still going to buy, buy, buy, which is what we
normally do. And if they can count on that, then they have no problem continuing to crush us.
They also have a second plan, which is to absorb as much as they can without consumption,
because they want to weaken us. We must absolutely
respond. I don't know personally whether or not we should respond in the streets like we normally do
with massive protests because they're waiting for that. Donald Trump has a commander, or rather,
he has a secretary of defense that is willing to unleash the military on us in the streets.
But so I think we need to respond in kind in terms of withholding
our dollars at every possibility, every possible chance that we can, because we see right now that
they mean business. And if anybody didn't believe it before, they should honestly see it right now.
What they intend on doing is crushing the government to the point where we are out here
helpless without anyone to help us at all. And if people can't see that at this point,
I'm not sure how to help them see it. Well, I think what these people realize that here's
the foundation, these other conservative groups, this is their one shot. They're not going to get
another bite of the apple. They are unleashing everything they can at the beginning to make
sure that they're doing spaghetti method. They're throwing all this stuff at the wall. Half of it
will probably get struck down by the courts,
but the half that stays will reshape our government
for the entire future of our country.
Pursuant to that, on Monday,
the twice-impeached, criminally convicted felon-in-chief
who never served a day in the military
signed multiple executive orders
that could have a significant consequence
on our armed services.
These directives call for the extensive of essential changes in military, affecting troops
who are discharged years ago for COVID-19 during the COVID-19 vaccine mandates, eliminating
policies and programs that deal with race, gender, sex and other things, quote unquote,
for merit, and also an executive order restoring America's fighting force eliminates race-based
and sex-based discrimination within the armed forces for the United States.
Trump also claimed that the principles of diversity, equity, inclusion had corrupted the military and stated that this approach would no longer be in effect during his administration.
His executive order reinstated a policy from his first term banning transgender individuals from serving in the military. This order
rescinds a measure
put in place by former President
Biden, which allowed transgender people
to enlist and receive health coverage
for gender-affirming care.
On Tuesday, two national
LGBTQ IAPK Plus
advocacy groups filed a federal lawsuit
challenging the executive order that on behalf
of six active-duty transgender members and two prospective service members, the group argued that the
ban violates the equal protection clause of the Fifth Amendment.
So, look, I want to bring you all back in here because let's think about what he is
doing.
When they say that we are getting rid of diversity, equity, and inclusion programs, he was not
saying for those frontline troops.
Black folks, y'all can still be in the infantry.
Latinos, y'all can still, you know, go out there and look for the landmines
and get shot with a bullet.
I know a lot of cops, and they get asked all the time,
have you ever had to shoot your gun?
Sometimes the answer is yes.
But there's a company dedicated to a future
where the answer will always be no.
Across the country,
cops called this taser the revolution.
But not everyone was convinced it was that simple.
Cops believed everything that taser told them.
From Lava for Good
and the team that brought you Bone Valley
comes a story about what happened
when a multi-billion dollar company
dedicated itself to one visionary mission.
This is Absolute Season 1, Taser Incorporated.
I get right back there and it's bad.
It's really, really, really bad.
Listen to new episodes of Absolute Season 1, Taser Incorporated
on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Binge episodes 1, 2, and 3 on May 21st,
and episodes 4, 5, and 6 on June 4th.
Add free at Lava for Good Plus on Apple Podcasts.
I'm Clayton English.
I'm Greg Lott.
And this is Season 2 of the War on Drugs podcast.
We are back.
In a big way.
In a very big way.
Real people, real perspectives.
This is kind of star-studded a little bit, man.
We got Ricky Williams, NFL player, Heisman Trophy winner.
It's just a compassionate choice to allow players all reasonable means to care for themselves.
Music stars Marcus King, John Osborne from Brothers Osborne.
We have this misunderstanding
of what this quote-unquote
drug thing is.
Benny the Butcher. Brent Smith from Shinedown.
We got B-Real from Cypress Hill.
NHL enforcer Riley Cote.
Marine Corvette. MMA
fighter Liz Caramouch. What we're
doing now isn't working and we need to change
things. Stories matter and it brings a face to them.
It makes it real.
It really does.
It makes it real.
Listen to new episodes of the War on Drugs podcast season two
on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
And to hear episodes one week early and ad-free with exclusive content,
subscribe to Lava for Good Plus on Apple Podcasts.
But when it comes to the leadership of these organizations,
he wants it to be a 1950s version of the United States military,
where you have the madmen at the top and the black and brown people at the bottom with no chance of advancing.
And even on this order with regards to transgender individuals, as I said at the top of the show,
the same laws, if they're allowed to stand to discriminate against transgender people
today, can be used to discriminate against African-Americans tomorrow.
Mustafa, what do you think is the impetus behind these things?
Well, you know, first of all, I'm thinking about the words of Dr. King when he said,
injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere.
And that's meant to all the folks who often forget,
you know, that when we allow one group to be attacked,
then there is a next and a next and a next
that they are coming for.
So we should just be mindful of that.
You know, the game that they're playing
is really one about making sure
that all the amazing gifts, especially that they're playing is really one about making sure that all the
amazing gifts, especially that black folks have and others, you know, are not brought forward
in leadership. We understand that when you have diverse leadership, you have a stronger
organization, whether we're talking about a nonprofit, we're talking about a corporation,
or we're talking about the military. When we look at, you know, just the other day,
so many of us were making sure that we were lifting up the Tuskegee Airmen,
making sure that people didn't know about not only how amazing they were, you know,
as Air Force pilots and everyone else who helped to support that, but that their story was often,
you know, kind of hidden, if you will. And that is because they didn't want folks to know, you know, how amazing they were and also, you know, how they were just excellent at what
they did. So when you're able to strip away the ability for folks to be able to move up through
the ranks, then you can also bring in those old adages that they're not smart enough or that they
don't have the technical skills that are so critical for these types of positions.
So the game is to break down the civil rights infrastructure, to break down diversity, equity, inclusion infrastructure.
And then we should also call out the fact that even though DEI is so incredibly important,
that we haven't always been the beneficiaries of that. We know that white women in many instances have
been able to ride that horse to the top in many organizations. By no means do I not want folks
to be able to have, you know, an equal opportunity to be able to be successful, but we know that we
are the ones who have carried the burden. We're the ones, you know, who had to blaze these trails,
and we know that we also are the ones who should be able to reap the
benefits of everything that we put into this. And Pastor, on that same point, the Republicans
who were able to properly demonize D-E-I-C-R-T the same way that BLM, if you make something an
acronym, it makes it scary to people who don't know what's going on. And it's hard to say,
I'm against diversity. I'm against equity, I'm against inclusion,
but it's easy to say the DEI means did not earn it and brand it that way.
Why do you think so many people still right now do not understand
that these programs are in large part what was able to help build the black middle class,
build our officer corps and our military, build these corporations up where they actually have black folks in the front door and not just sitting by the door taking tickets and taking coats.
Why have we lost the messaging war on this?
Well, I think you already nailed it, right?
We lost the messaging war on it in the first place.
One, because we did not have a significant enough investment in media.
Roland Martin talks about that on a regular basis, particularly black media.
We didn't have a response to the thousands of hours that conservatives have put into their own media infrastructure.
That's number one. But then number two, it's so easy to divide us.
It is extremely easy to divide us.
And so there are people who are going to support Donald Trump because this particular order is targeting the transgender community. And what we have seen throughout history is what we're seeing right now, is if you can find a group
that can get people to hate them, then it doesn't matter how far down the totem pole that they are.
If you can get Black people to oppose this or to support this, rather, because it's a transgender
community, then it becomes imminently easier for them to do that to us, just like if you can get black folks to start supporting ICE, Immigration and Customs Enforcement, and start
calling the snitch line and getting that bounty because they despise immigrants all of a sudden.
It becomes imminently easier for them to do that to us on the backside.
And Donald Trump knows this. If they're intelligent about anything else,
they are extremely aware of how to divide and conquer.
And we're living in that reality right now.
And before we go to break, Dr. Walker, talk about a little bit how they were able to separate black folks from these other minority groups.
We saw this in Chicago where you had black folks calling the cops on Latinos who they thought might be illegal.
You have black people supporting the anti-trans bans and why don't like transgenders, but not understanding that these same things will affect us directly.
Yeah. You know, I think that, you know, there's a, there's a, there's a lot of,
we talked about misinformation, right. And, you know, propaganda war, we've lost the propaganda
war. And as it relates to the black community, some of the examples you provided is a lot of
this, this, this misinformation propaganda has, and we know
going back from the first Trump campaign, we know that Russia and a lot of, we have to talk about
this in terms of how they purposely spread that misinformation in the Black community,
and that continued through the Biden and then in the next election after the first Biden
administration. So the Black community, in terms of all this misinformation that is spread throughout our community regarding groups with
similar challenging experiences, has bought into drinking the Kool-Aid, so to speak, as we say,
in the Black community, but to our own detriment. And so the idea historically when it comes to
civil rights, fighting for civil rights, meant that everyone has to kind of sit at the table.
And when you bring constituents together,
you know, from the Latino community,
Asian American, Pacific Islander community,
et cetera, and Black community together,
we know we're more likely to be successful overall.
But you have an erosion of that,
and now we're in the position we're in today.
And look, I tell people that if you take rights away from one group,
ain't but so long until it's going to come back to you.
We're going to talk more about this after the break.
You're watching Rolling Modern Unfiltered streaming live on the Black Star Network.
We'll be right back.
Hello, I'm Isaac Hayes III, founder and CEO of Fanbase.
And right now we're accepting investors in our $17 million round to revolutionize the future of social media.
Today, for just $399, you can own 60 shares of stock in Fanbase at $6.65 a share.
Go to startengine.com slash fanbase and invest today.
While the big platforms have grown too massive and disconnected from their users,
Fanbase is building a platform where creators and users truly come first.
We've already raised $4.8 million from everyday investors who believe in this vision, and now you can join them.
This is your chance to invest in a social media tech company with over 1 million users
that is disrupting media by allowing anyone to reach all of their following and monetize their content from day one.
The market is changing, big platforms are failing to serve their users,
and Fanbase is stepping up to fill the gap.
Don't wait until it's too late.
Invest now.
Invest for yourself and your future.
Go to startengine.com slash fanbase and own the future of social media.
Hey, what's up? It's Tammy Roman.
Hey, it's John Murray, the executive producer of the new Sherri Shepherd Talk Show.
It's me, Sherri Shepherd, and you know what you're watching, Roland Martin Unfiltered.
Welcome back.
The Justice Department has fired more than a dozen employees who worked on criminal prosecutions of the twice-impeached,
criminally convicted, felon-in-chief.
If you look at what's going on from January 6th,
this is very clearly retribution against lawyers
who work for special counsel Jack Smith's team,
and this is the latest sign of an upheaval in Texas.
I know a lot of cops, and they get asked all the time,
have you ever had to shoot your gun?
Sometimes the answer is yes.
But there's a company dedicated to a future where the answer will always be no.
Across the country, cops call this taser the revolution.
But not everyone was convinced it was that simple. Cops believed everything that taser told them. From Lava for Good and the team
that brought you Bone Valley comes a story about what happened when a multi-billion dollar company
dedicated itself to one visionary mission. This is Absolute Season 1, Taser Incorporated. I get right back there and it's bad.
It's really, really, really bad. Listen to new episodes of Absolute Season 1, Taser Incorporated
on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. Binge episodes one, two, and three on May 21st
and episodes four, five, and six on June 4th.
Ad-free at Lava for Good Plus on Apple Podcasts.
I'm Clayton English.
I'm Greg Glod.
And this is season two of the War on Drugs podcast.
We are back.
In a big way.
In a very big way.
Real people, real perspectives.
This is kind of star-studded a little bit, man.
We got Ricky Williams, NFL player, Heisman Trophy winner.
It's just a compassionate choice to allow players all reasonable means to care for themselves.
Music stars Marcus King, John Osborne from Brothers Osborne.
We have this misunderstanding of what this quote-unquote drug man.
Benny the Butcher.
Brent Smith from Shinedown.
We got B-Real from Cypress Hill.
NHL enforcer Riley Cote.
Marine Corps vet.
MMA fighter Liz Karamush.
What we're doing now isn't working, and we need to change things.
Stories matter, and it brings a face to them.
It makes it real.
It really does.
It makes it real.
Listen to new episodes of
the War on Drugs podcast season two on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you
get your podcasts. And to hear episodes one week early and ad-free with exclusive content,
subscribe to Lava for Good Plus on Apple Podcasts. The Justice Department, it reflects the administration's determination to purge the government of workers who he perceived to be disloyal to the orange one.
Remember when we said Project 2025 said they were going to fire between 50,000 and 200,000 federal employees?
They're doing it. The felony chief granted pardons to more than 1,500 individuals connected to the January
6th events, including some who assaulted police officers just hours after his inauguration
last week.
All right, and so let's bring the panel in on this conversation.
Dr. Dixon, I want to start with you on this.
What do you think happens if we give the president this unilateral power
to circumvent the Civil Service Act, to circumvent labor laws,
and simply fire anybody within the federal government
who's not an ideological lockstep with them?
How is this different than McCarthyism?
Oh, it's, well, it's McCarthyism on crack, right?
It's on steroids.
It's the ability to put in loyalists.
It's the ability to completely strip down the administrative state
and create a scenario where you must swear allegiance to Donald Trump.
And sadly, there are millions of people across this country
who have already bowed down before that particular fatted calf.
And so we have a serious problem in front of us.
We have to see if, as a democracy, whether or not we can survive all of this madness for the next two years
and get in a House of Representatives and a Senate that can actually hold them accountable.
But it's really a touch-and-go situation because even if, even when, not if, even when we take back power in
the midterms, the truth of the matter is that so much damage is going to be done between now and
then if we are not able to be resilient and to withstand it, both in terms of the institutions
and the structures and as individuals who are going to be suffering as a result of this,
then it really won't matter as much. So we need to focus both on resilience as well as taking back power in 2026. And Dr. Walker, we've seen he's firing the inspector generals. He's firing
Justice Department officials. He's firing literally anybody who is in diversity, equity,
and inclusion, including, quote, unquote, secret diversity, equity, inclusion programs.
He's saying that if you know somebody doing diversity, equity, and inclusion,
if you don't snitch on them, you will be
fired also. He campaigned
on, I want to make sure that we make
eggs cheaper. And when he got
in the door, he immediately
launched this extreme agenda.
When people say, how
exactly can we fight back when we don't have
control of the House, we don't have control of
the Senate, Donald Trump has already appointed a majority on the Supreme Court, and so do my
peers to be in poor health. He's appointed hundreds of circuit court judges. How do you
stop people from becoming hopeless in this situation? Yeah, so I think that we have to
understand that what's happening here is an attempt to dismantle or reverse the Great Society program's civil rights
laws of the 1960s. So I guess, you know, it's like back in the day, we say castor oil tastes
nasty, and you had to still take it sometimes with family members. I have some, you know,
uncomfortable truths for people watching this. This is going to hurt, right? There are going to
be significant setbacks as it relates to civil rights, and we're already seeing that. This is
the very beginning of that. So I want to be clear about that. There's, you know, it's going to be significant setbacks as it relates to civil rights, and we're already seeing that. This is the very beginning of that.
So I want to be clear about that.
There are—you know, it's going to be a challenge.
But you also have to understand we have to organize in terms of focusing on economic
and political social disruption.
Obviously, some of the lessons we learned from the time of the Civil War, fighting for
equal rights for the last several decades.
But then also, we have to understand that as it relates to what I could describe as the 3M era, misogyny, misinformation, and mismanagement. So we have
to understand that we can still apply some of those lessons learned from, like I said,
economic, political, and social disruption, but for a new age, particularly, like I said,
and how do we battle misinformation, particularly in the Black community and other minoritized
communities. But we're in it right now, and there's significant challenges. And look, we're two weeks,
not even two weeks into the next administration, and we've got several more years to go.
And so the fact of the matter is, what does that mean? So that means collectively we need to come
together as a community along with other minoritized groups, and we need to come up
with a comprehensive plan in terms of how we're going to survive this new nadir.
Because we're in it now,
but we have to make sure we have, once again,
we have a clear and comprehensive plan on how to respond.
And Mustafa, just piggybacking off that point,
this morning I was on the train
and I was listening to a debate
between Malcolm X and Bayard Rustin from back in the
60s, kind of debating the different pathways forward for African Americans. Of course,
Bayard Rustin was talking about the need to work within the system to pass exactly these types of
laws that we're talking about, to sign these types of executive orders that we saw coming out of the
Johnson administration, to work our way into the great society, to advance socially, to increase
our ability to vote,
to make sure that we are first-class citizens, not second-class citizens as we were at that time.
And Brother Malcolm made the argument that we need to be working on independence and self-determination,
that as long as you are within a system, that you will always be subject to the system.
And now as we're seeing the conditions of our community where so many people are dependent on Section 8, which
might be gone on Monday.
There are so many people who are dependent on Meals
on Wheels, might be gone
on Monday. There are people who are dependent
on early childhood education, free lunch
programs, Head Start programs, that could
be gone by Monday.
What do you say to people who say, well, maybe
this is the time where we start concentrating
on the concept of black nationalism and how we can build our own communities within this community.
So we in the future, the next time this happens, we will have some fallback or we can depend on ourselves and not simply have to depend on the government.
Well, you know, the words of El-Hajj Malik El-Shabazz, better known as Malcolm X, continue to ring true today.
I mean, it has to be about
community. It has to be about each of us supporting each other. You know, when we talk about whether
it is child care or education, you know, for decades upon decades upon decades, we used to
make sure that we were also educating our children to make sure that our stories and that our contributions were a part
of reading and math and science. You know, when we talk about the opportunities around housing,
we used to come together and help each other build houses, or we used to, you know, make sure
that families were still together because we were living in the same buildings and those types of
things. So when you hear the words of Malcolm X, there's a lot of
truth that's in there because we see other groups who stay close and how they are able to, one,
play a role in the other things that are necessary around making sure that laws are in place and
making sure that resources that are part of our tax bases are actually coming back to our community.
So that's definitely important. But the other part that's more, for me, critically important
is to make sure that we are following, you know, whether it is the lessons of the Black Panther
Party or the lessons of those who are, you know, who follow some of the traditional African ways of doing business and of living and culture,
or the culture of our own people right here in the United States for hundreds of years of self-sufficiency
and making sure that we are lifting each other up.
So, you know, we can do both, but we can't also just forget about where we come from
and how we were able to not just survive,
because in many places, in many locations, we were actually thriving. And we understood that when we thrived, you know, we saw some of the things that happened because people were jealous
of the success that we were able to pull together. And Dr. Walker, you know, Mustafa makes a great
point. When we see these cuts to DEI, I think people need to realize
they're not cutting these programs because they didn't work.
They're cutting these programs because they work too well.
They're cutting these programs because they started having to compete
with black and brown people who are smarter than them,
who are harder working than them, who had a better knowledge base than them,
and all they needed was an opportunity.
And once we got in there and started running circles around them,
as most deaf said, you start keeping
pace, they start switching up the tempo.
And so instead of working on making themselves
better, building up their communities better, getting
fathers back into the home and many of these white
communities, not having so many people
on methamphetamines and all these other
drugs and the opioid epidemic, they said,
well, let's just take opportunities away from other
people so we won't have to compete as much.
How do we as a community understand and get into this mindset of we can no longer allow other people to dictate whether or not we have opportunities?
We have to create those opportunities for ourselves because, as we saw, you can have an executive order signed by LBJ in 1965.
It can be undone with a strike of a pen, and we cannot leave our communities that vulnerable
again.
That's a very important question.
I think a few things we're going to see is I think we're going, this is going to force
us, not to say we haven't already, this is going to, from the black community in terms
of a continued increased investment in black institutions, whether you talk about HBCUs
or freedom schools or various other things that we've utilized in the past.
It's going to require utilizing our resources to invest in these things and where institutions
and where we invest in black youth and adolescents and young adults.
That's going to be critical in terms of where we are right now, because I made the point
about economic, political, and social disruption.
It will allow us to create not only in terms of strengthening intellectual wealth and political
and social wealth, but create another generation of those economically who have the money to
reinvest in our communities.
But I think the other thing to keep in mind is that, you know, when we talk about, you know, other groups in envy, that is as old—tail as old as America itself.
And so we've seen this, you know, whether we go back and talk about the Tea Party or birtherism and some of these other issues, this has been, you know, where we are today if you—once again, if you study not just U.S., but world history, we know we're getting here. So we are going to have to be prepared not only to educate our community and, once again,
increase the investment in Black institutions, but also understand that we're going to need a
short and long-term plan, just like as we've talked about the Heritage Foundation, we've been
fighting for decades to reverse many of the Great Society programs, as I noted earlier.
And Dr. Dixon, piggybacking on that, when we look at these
cuts to the DOJ, I want folks to really take some time and dive into these things. Don't just
read the headlines. Read the articles. Read the orders themselves. What Donald Trump is doing
is specifically undoing all the process made during the George Floyd summer. He's nullifying
all consent decrees that the Justice Department has entered into with jurisdictions that have abused African Americans. He has shut down, essentially, the
Department of Civil Rights and the Justice Department, and they're going to be going
after people who are doing anti-white racism as opposed to enforcing civil rights laws against
African Americans. They are using the same words, the same laws that were meant specifically to
protect the formerly enslaved and using them to discriminate, the same laws that were meant specifically to protect the formerly enslaved
and using them to discriminate against the African-American community.
Can you talk about the impact of when we give this group the ability to essentially undo 150 years of American jurisprudence
and advancement for African-Americans with the strike of a pen?
This is the Confederacy rising again. This is the South rising again.
We should have put them down completely during Reconstruction.
And this is what happens when you have to do a job, when you don't put a demon out completely.
These white supremacists have had it in their blood ever since they lost that first Civil
War that they wanted to undo and destroy any progress for black people.
And their great, great grandchildren are equal to the task.
And so we must be extremely wise as serpents but harmless as doves.
We need to know exactly what's going on, and we need to make sure that we don't give them
any opportunity to strike at us with their violence, because they are extremely ready
for violence.
The police are ready to knock our heads
exactly like Donald Trump told them to. And so we need to be extremely vigilant on the front end,
but we also need to be resilient. We need to connect with ourselves, Black people. We need
to connect and make sure that we have ways of feeding one another, to make sure that we have
ways of sheltering one another, to make sure that we have ways of providing resources
and giving people job opportunities.
If there's somebody that needs to cut your grass, make sure it's a black person.
If there's somewhere you're going to buy your beauty supply stuff, make sure it's not from
some immigrant in that community that's not getting deported right now.
You notice they're not deporting the people who are in our beauty supply stores or in
our restaurants.
They're deporting the poorest people amongst us.
And so as black people, we need to be aware of what they're doing. We need to rally around ourselves, but we also need
to be strategic in how we interact with this government because they are fascist and they
are extremely excited about making the South rise again. And Mustafa, I want to piggyback on what
Dr. Dickinson said. We got to tie a couple couple points together. There are three geographic subdivisions
in the Western Hemisphere that have a majority white population, the United States, Canada,
and Greenland. Donald Trump wants to annex Canada and Greenland. We talked about the deportations,
as was just mentioned. You're not deporting British students who overstate their visa.
You're not deportstate deporting engineers
who are here from Norway, who are here illegally
but married. You're deporting
brown people back across the border
and building a wall there
and threatening their government's sanctions
if they allow their people to come back across.
So when we talk about what's
going to happen in this country, it's very clear
that, and Elon Musk has talked about this deeply,
about Western European and American birth rates declining to the point that they know they will be a minority,
not just in the United States, but globally within the next 50 years.
And how do you fix that? Put 10 million people out in the country.
You annex Canada. You annex Greenland.
You make it more difficult for African-Americans to have the economic wherewithal to build a community, to build families, to support one another.
And then you were able to create that same leave it to be and you have made America great again functionally.
So I want you to kind of clarify to people exactly what this whole plan is that is deeper than simply cutting the budget.
It's deeper than simply cutting the budget, is deeper than simply cutting the deficit.
It's about wholesale changing
America back to that utopian vision
of a European settler
colony with manifest destiny from sea to
shining sea. The nation of, as
Jefferson said, small farmers and what he
meant with plantations, where
now you have the Latinos being gone,
the immigrant labor being gone, and guess
what the new black jobs are going to be?
They're no longer going to have to enforce diversity, equity, inclusion programs.
Talk a little bit about that.
Yeah, and also the prison population.
So we also have to pay attention to how many more of us that they will try and incarcerate
to be able to fill those jobs and not pay folks to do the work or pay pennies on the dollar,
if you will. I mean, we just got to understand, you know, Roland often talks about white fear,
talk about the browning of America, and that's exactly what it is. They understand that this is
one of the last opportunities to be able to structurally change how America operates and
who has power inside of America. If you take a look over the
last 20 years, even though we know we still had a long way to go, there was some slight shifting
in power. You know, the black middle class was growing, even though we still have a number of
brothers and sisters who have not yet been able to find a path yet to be able to do that. But still,
they saw that. They saw that we were
making sure that, you know, sisters and brothers were getting more educated and being able to
create their own businesses, even though we had to navigate, you know, the labyrinth of things
that you have to deal with and being able to get financing. So they saw all these different types
that were things that were happening. And I'm of the mind that they followed a model, both an apartheid-esque model that they saw effective in South Africa, because they knew
that even as the browning of America was happening, if they could put these things in place,
if they could get the judges, if they could make sure that legislation and policies were actually
reflective of their needs and not the needs of folks in the greater population, then that they
would have the leverage that would be necessary to be able to continue to hold our most vulnerable
down and find a way to be able to continue to lift themselves. They also understood that it
is about the money, because money in the United States is connected to power. So they wanted to make sure that they had that. So when you see
Donald Trump doing these types of things that he did recently with the freezing, it is about
monetary. It is about being able to say, I can redirect resources where I see fit. And of course,
based upon his executive orders, his part of ICFIT does not support environmental justice.
It does not support housing justice. It does not support transportation or economic justice.
So we just got to understand the game that is going on and that they've done three things,
and I'll close with these. One is around messaging and storytelling, because if you
can create a narrative, then you can get people to
believe whatever it is that you're trying to sell them. I know a lot of cops, and they get asked
all the time, have you ever had to shoot your gun? Sometimes the answer is yes. But there's a company
dedicated to a future where the answer will always be no. Across the country, cops called this taser the revolution.
But not everyone was convinced it was that simple.
Cops believed everything that taser told them.
From Lava for Good and the team that brought you Bone Valley
comes a story about what happened when a multi-billion dollar company
dedicated itself to one visionary mission.
This is Absolute Season 1, Taser Incorporated.
I get right back there and it's bad.
It's really, really, really bad.
Listen to new episodes of Absolute Season 1, Taser Incorporated
on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Binge episodes 1, 2, and 3 on May 21st and episodes 4, 5, and 6 on June 4th.
Ad-free at Lava for Good Plus on Apple Podcasts.
I'm Clayton English.
I'm Greg Lott.
And this is season two of the War on Drugs podcast.
We are back.
In a big way.
In a very big way.
Real people, real perspectives.
This is kind of star-studded a little bit, man.
We got Ricky Williams, NFL player, Heisman Trophy winner.
It's just a compassionate choice to allow players all reasonable means to care for themselves.
Music stars Marcus King, John Osborne from Brothers Osborne. We have this misunderstanding of what this quote-unquote drug thing is.
Benny the Butcher.
Brent Smith from Shinedown.
We got B-Real from Cypress Hill.
NHL enforcer Riley Cote.
Marine Corvette.
MMA fighter Liz Karamush.
What we're doing now isn't working, and we need to change things.
Stories matter, and it brings a face to them.
It makes it real.
It really does. It makes it real. Listen to new episodes of the War on Drugs podcast season
two on the iHeartRadio app, Apple podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. And to hear
episodes one week early and ad free with exclusive content, subscribe to Lava for Good Plus on Apple Podcasts.
The other part of it, as I just mentioned, is around money and being able to control where dollars flow, how they flow and who has access to those dollars.
And then the last one is about infrastructure. weakened infrastructure, then you can create these chaotic situations so that you swoop back around and then say, look at all I did to actually rebuild the foundation of America. So in my mind,
those are some of the points that are important for people to think about and do their own research
and then figure out how they want to engage moving forward.
And Dr. Walker, on that point about communication, what we saw during the last election was the progressive movement, the liberal movement, the leftist movement, the Democratic
Party has an inability to connect with people on a basic level. They're great at the cocktail
parties. They're great at if you're doing a thesis at Vassar or Wesleyan. But when it comes to talking
to brothers and sisters on the street as to what these dangers are and what exactly you have to lose, there was a lack of knowledge and lack of information around that.
There are no longer trusted communicators for the African-American community.
And what we saw at inauguration is many of the people that we thought were trusted communicators can be bought for a very small amount of money.
And we'll get up there and sing and dance and shuck and jive for 30 pieces of silver.
So when it comes to communicating
these messaging points to our community,
who has to take the lead?
Who has to be the people that we are listening to?
Because folks aren't listening to the news.
They're not listening to their pastors.
They ain't listening to their parents anymore.
They're definitely not listening to the politicians.
How can we make sure that we are not smacked upside the head with
Project 2025 again? Because now
that they know they can do it one time, do you know
they're going to push it to the umpteenth?
I think one of the things
that we have to note is that
the black community has never
I mean, listen, we're playing
we've continuously played catch-ups since
1619, particularly when it
comes to economic power,
right? So you know that there are various platforms out there, some of them allegedly
black-centric, that are putting out misinformation as misinformed voters, particularly black male.
We talk about black men. And putting wrong information out there about, you know,
whatever other group you want to talk about, and that somehow black men are benefiting.
So economically, this goes to my point earlier, that we have to be able to reinvest in our
community so we can counter a lot of propaganda and create our own platforms by providing,
you know, actual truthful information.
Then let's talk about it.
VP Harris talked about—had a very clear program in terms of issues that benefit black men.
But some brothers voted.
They vote for it.
They voted against their best interests.
Now, we have to also acknowledge
that the Democratic Party is not very good,
and we see that just in the last couple of days,
last 48 hours,
at putting out information to counter
some of the false information
that's always being put out,
and we'll continue to see that.
So we need, once again,
have a comprehensive plan
on how to speak effectively to folks within our need, once again, have a comprehensive plan on how to speak effectively
to folks within our community, particularly brothers, about what's in our best economic
interest. Not only Black men, but we have to make sure we understand what's important to make sure
we empower Black women so that they're successful and that, you know, their lives continue to
thrive, so the entire community thrives. But we have a lot of work to do, and once again, it has to begin to invest in our community
and finding ways to counter misinformation to make sure that people understand clearly
what policies and procedures will benefit you and what are those that are being undermined,
dismantled, that will not only impact you, but the lives of your children, nieces and nephews,
et cetera, cousins, and other folks in our community.
And Dr. Dixon, we saw in 2008 when Barack Obama won, Donald Trump, for some reason,
had this personal rivalry with Barack Obama, where he thought, how dare this African be up here
running for president? That's not his place in this society. He went searching
for his birth certificate. He said, well, how could he have good grades? He wanted his college
transcript, et cetera. This is what set the basis for this attack on DEI, the personal rivalry that
Donald Trump has with Barack Obama and willing to prove that somehow he was an affirmative action
or a DEI hire. And so he's repealing these things across the board writ large.
But what we saw Republicans do was
they invested in state and local elections.
From the time Barack Obama
entered office to the time he left office,
Democrats lost 1,044 elections nationwide.
We're talking about state rep seats.
We're talking about county commissioner seats.
We're talking about state board of election seats
across the nation.
After the 2020 election, Donald Trump
didn't go lay down in a hole and die
and say, woe is me, and go on a speaking tour.
At 1 a.m. after he lost, he said,
I ain't lose, and I'm running for re-election immediately.
Then they launched 60 lawsuits
nationwide to change voting laws.
Did they work? No, but they changed
the narrative. 26 states
passed voter suppression laws, voter
integrity laws, making
sure that you can't give out water bottles and
snacks in Georgia, that in Texas
you can have any individual challenge
the electoral status of somebody
just based on their outward appearance.
They got rid of election
drop boxes, making it harder for individuals
to vote. They took voter
absentee ballots and said, well, you need to
have a state-issued voter
ID that you can make a copy of and send in just for you to be able to vote in some states in those
elections. What was the net of all this, of four years and billions of dollars of efforts to change
those voting laws and of all the state and local seats being changed that facilitated that on these boards of election in these state houses.
You saw that in 2020, Joe Biden got 81 million votes.
In 2024, Kamala Harris got 75 million votes.
So 6 million votes disappeared into thin air.
The population didn't get smaller.
The number of people who voted got smaller.
And that's what voter suppression is about.
So when we talk about this mandate from Donald Trump, he got about 2 million more votes than the number of people who voted got smaller, and that's what voter suppression is about.
So when we talk about this mandate from Donald Trump,
he got about 2 million more votes than he got in 2020, four years later.
There wasn't some huge landslide victory.
What we rather saw was the immediate impact of voter suppression nationwide.
So what will it take for us to understand and follow that roadmap,
follow that model and say,
we have to start investing in these elections on the state and local level.
We need to be in these school board meetings.
We need to be running for board of elections.
We need to be putting money behind county commissioners, state reps, any job that there is, attorney general, secretary of state, et cetera.
We can't just go for the big job at the top and only show up for the presidential elections. We need to have this apparatus in place to get out, educate, and move people to the polls year-round, even between elections, and we want to really come back on this.
What do you think it will take for people to start investing in these types of efforts?
First of all, Dr. Petillo, you are spitting. I mean, you are laying it out right there,
and I really appreciate it. I think we need to get a grudge ourselves.
I think we need to have the same type of grudge against white supremacy as they have against us.
I think we absolutely need to get in the trenches.
And I'm sorry, as much as I love and respect Michelle Obama, we should have never tried to go high when they went low.
When they go low, we go to hell, and we go as dirty as we have to go.
And God will forgive us because we're fighting for our lives.
We're fighting for our children. we're fighting for our planet. We can't even get action to preserve this planet.
This is how deranged these people are. And yes, Donald Trump is jealous of Barack Obama,
and he has been doing everything that he has done because Donald Trump feels as though he
is entitled to the United States of America. And now, to be quite honest with you, he has beaten
the United States of America. He's beaten the institutions. He's beaten democracy.
And unless we return in kind, we will remain in this defeated state. So how do we do it?
We get in the trenches. We fight back. We crawl tooth and nail. We fight like hell and don't give
them an opportunity to fight against us in a manner where we're
sitting back as Democrats, like you put it earlier, at the cocktail parties. No, while
Democrats were getting drunk and having a high good time with everyone in Washington, D.C.,
Republicans and conservatives were conspiring. For 60 years, they have been working on this project
while Democrats thought everything was fine. They need to wake up. And if they don't wake up,
God bless them, they need to get out the way.
You're absolutely right.
And, Mustafa, on that point, it could not be said better,
but when we talk about many of these talking points,
many of these issues that are coming out of Washington, D.C.,
they are disconnected from the everyday lives
of individuals around the country.
And so we... You're an environmentalist.
When we run around talking about global climate change
to people in Brunswick, Georgia,
they may not understand what you're talking about.
But when you say it is snowing in Georgia
and it's on fire in California,
that ain't normal and we need to do something about it,
that is how people can actually process that information.
If you are in Houston or New Orleans and it is snowing,
you should probably know something
is wrong. So how exactly can we get
to a point where we can message things in ways that
they actually penetrate? My wife always says,
are you talking to hear yourself talk?
Are you talking so people can understand
and process what you're saying?
Yeah, well, Joe Madison, who has mentored
a whole bunch of us, either formally
or informally, used to say, put it where the goats can get it.
And what he was talking about is that we got to bring it home, right? So whenever I talk about
these issues, you know, I'm sitting down on people's back porch or in their kitchens,
and we're having a conversation that everybody can understand about the things that folks are
dealing with every day. So, you know, if it's a Black farmer and we're seeing all these changes
that are happening and you can't continue to grow the things that you once did, then we have an understanding. Then we take a deeper look
at what's transpiring, whether it's, you know, lack of rain or some other things that are going
on or extreme heat events that are happening. So, you know, we just got to make sure that we're
talking about issues that folks can relate to. You know, I can't talk about air pollution,
you know, parts per million, parts per billion, but I can talk about asthma and folks will understand that because they see whether it's their nieces or nephews or
grandchildren who are dealing with it or talking about, you know, the various types of cancers
that are popping up inside of our community and then linking it to, you know, some more scientific
things. So we just got to stop, you know, as other brothers have shared, you know, tonight, you know, we got to stop having these Ph.D. conversations and just have a conversation that everyday folks can see themselves represented in.
And we got to stop talking at people and actually begin to listen to people about what it is that's going on in their lives and what would they like to see moving forward.
And then not just take that, that we
listen to them, but we got to actually put action behind it. And then we got to share with folks
where the wins are actually happening based upon what they share. And you're absolutely correct.
And look, in the words of the prophet mystical, he said, stop your crying, Heffa. I don't need
all that. It's time to stop crying. It's time to start complaining. It's time to start fighting
and organizing
and getting our stuff together.
Ain't nobody going to come help us.
And Gil Scott Heron said,
ain't no such thing as Superman.
Nobody is coming to rescue us.
We have to rescue ourselves.
If we can beat Bull Connor, Strom Thurmond,
LBJ and the Klan, we can beat Donald Trump.
If we can beat Andrew Johnson, Stonewall Jackson,
and the Confederates, we can beat Marjorie Taylor Greene.
If we can beat Pharaoh and make our way out of Egypt
to the promised land, there ain't no way in hell
Lauren Boebert is going to stop us now.
We are the parent people.
We have DNA that stretches back mitochondrially
to the African continent to 2 million years ago.
We have had civilization for 250,000 years.
Ain't no way in hell you're going to tell me that we will be defeated by Donald Trump and Project 2025.
I refuse to be the generation that drops the baton on the long march towards justice.
We'll be back after the break.
You're watching Roller Martin Unfiltered streaming live on the Black Star Network.
What's up, y'all? Look, Fanbase is more than
a platform. It's a movement to empower creators
offering a unique opportunity for everyday
people to invest in Black-owned
tech, infrastructure, and help shape
the future of social media. Investing
in technology is essential for creating
long-term wealth and influence in
the digital age. The Black
community must not only consume tech, we must own it. Discover how equity crowdfunding can serve as
a powerful tool for funding Black businesses, allowing entrepreneurs to raise capital directly
through their community, through the jobs ad. the job's at. Next on Get Wealthy with me, Deborah Owens, America's Wealth Coach,
women of color are starting 90% of the businesses in this country. That's the good news. The bad
news, as a rule, we're not making nearly as much as everyone else.
But joining us on the next Get Wealthy episode is Betty Hines.
She's a business strategist, and she's showing women how to elevate other women. I don't like to say this openly, but we're getting better at it.
Women struggle with collaborating with each other.
And for that reason, one of the things that I demonstrate in the sessions that I have is
that you can go further together if you collaborate.
That's right here on get wealthy only on black star
network.
Next on the black tape with me, Greg Carr.
There's a lot of talk about the inevitability of another civil war in this country.
But on our next show, we'll talk to a noted author and scholar who says we're actually in the middle of one right now.
In fact, Steve Phillips says the first one that started back in 1861, well, it never ended. People carrying the Confederate flag, wearing sweatshirts saying MAGA Civil War, January 6, 2021,
stormed U.S. Capitol, hunted down the country's elected officials,
built the gallows for the vice president of the United States,
and to block the peaceful transfer of power within this country.
On the next Black Tape, here on the Black Star Network.
Hey, what's up, y'all? I'm Devon Franklin.
It is always a pleasure to be in the house.
You are watching Roland Martin Unfiltered.
Stay right here.
As part of the administration's continued effort to destroy diversity programs in every realm of American society,
19 Republicans, attorneys general, demanded that Costco abandon their diversity, equity, inclusion practices.
During last week's meeting, Costco shareholders voted against a proposal to reevaluate the company's DEI initiatives.
This vote followed the orange man's recent executive order
to close federal government DEI offices.
In a letter addressed to Costco president and CEO Ron Vischer,
the company was informed that DEI policies might violate the law.
The letter requested that Costco eliminate a DEI policy within 30 days
or provide an explanation for failing to do so. So, Dr. Dixon, we see that this is a full court press.
They don't simply want to eliminate diversity in the federal government.
That's just step one.
They want to eliminate diversity programs and corporations.
We already saw the Supreme Court struck down diversity in universities.
Where do you think the logical end to this is with these attacks? We're always seeing companies
like John Deere, Target, McDonald's, Walmart scaling back or destroying their DEI programs.
Where do you think this ends? I don't know if that's a good question to ask me because I've
been studying these white Christian devils for a long time.
And I know that it's on their radar for violence in our communities against black people specifically.
They're creating the framework. They're creating the arguments.
They're creating a new level of dehumanizing black people.
They are regarding all of us as rapists and degenerates, just like they are doing to the immigrants. So if you ask me, the logical endpoint for this is that there is a segment of MAGA that
won't be satisfied until they have us back in the position of oppression, outright oppression,
not just economic, not just spiritual or emotional, but outright oppression.
That's what they're doing.
And they're making it evident that they don't care about the separation of the federal government
and the state government or even the markets. They don't even recognize the separation of the federal government and the state government or even the markets.
They don't even recognize the markets of capitalism.
They're trying to constrain Costco from doing what it has a right to do.
And they're trying to put pressure on through force.
And so they don't want any resistance of any kind.
They can't have any outliers.
So I'm sure they're going to go after Ben and Jerry's next.
Why? Because they are totalitarian. What does that mean? They absolutely don't expect anyone
to get out of line. And if you dare step out of line, they will use all the force of the federal
government, even to the point I believe that they will use literal force of the military to do
whatever they have to do to keep people in line. That's if we allow it. That's if people kowtow,
if people start backing down and people
start showing that they don't have any spine right now at this moment, while we still have some laws
left. If Costco folds like Google folded and decided to name the Gulf of Mexico, the Gulf of
America, if more corporations begin to fold out of cowardice, then we will see fascism is here much
sooner than we thought it would ever get here.
And Mustafa, on that point, you know, back in 2020, all these corporations had all those ad campaigns after we burned up a bunch of cities.
And they said, well, we love y'all black folks.
You know, we're going to invest $20 million, billion dollars into equality.
It's all the commercials where all the happy black people, every commercial you see now
has a black woman
and a happy white man
sitting on a couch
eating Cheerios all the time.
You know, they said
that they really loved us
as a people.
Everybody remembers that, right?
And now, as soon as they
get the opportunity,
as soon as the money
and special interests
are behind it,
as soon as Donald Trump
has his inauguration
with a literal row of billionaires, Elon Musk, $400 billion, Jeff Bezos, $270 billion, Mark Zuckerberg,
$200 billion, the dude from Google, the dude from TikTok, trillions of dollars standing
right there. And they were sending a very clear message.
I know a lot of cops and they get asked all the time,
have you ever had to shoot your gun?
Sometimes the answer is yes.
But there's a company dedicated to a future where the answer will always be no.
Across the country, cops called this taser the revolution.
But not everyone was convinced it was that simple.
Cops believed everything that taser the revolution. But not everyone was convinced it was that simple. Cops believed everything that taser told them.
From Lava for Good and the team that brought you Bone Valley
comes a story about what happened
when a multibillion-dollar company
dedicated itself to one visionary mission.
This is Absolute Season 1, Taser Incorporated.
I get right back there and it's bad.
It's really, really, really bad.
Listen to new episodes of Absolute Season 1, Taser Incorporated,
on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Binge episodes 1, 2, and 3 on May 21st, and episodes 4, 5, and 6 on June 4th.
Add free at Lava for Good Plus on Apple Podcasts.
I'm Clayton English.
I'm Greg Lott.
And this is season two of the War on Drugs podcast.
Yes, sir. We are back.
In a big way.
In a very big way.
Real people, real perspectives.
This is kind of star-studded a little bit, man.
We got Ricky Williams, NFL player,
Heisman Trophy winner.
It's just a compassionate choice
to allow players all reasonable means
to care for themselves.
Music stars Marcus King,
John Osborne from Brothers Osborne.
We have this misunderstanding
of what this quote-unquote drug ban is.
Benny the Butcher.
Brent Smith from Shinedown.
We got B-Real from Cypress Hill.
NHL enforcer Riley Cote.
Marine Corvette.
MMA fighter Liz Karamush.
What we're doing now isn't working,
and we need to change things.
Stories matter, and it brings a face to them.
It makes it real.
It really does.
It makes it real.
Listen to new episodes of the War on Drugs podcast season two
on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
And to hear episodes one week early and ad-free with exclusive content, subscribe to Lava for Good Plus on Apple Podcasts. To every corporation in America, you do not have the money to compete with us.
The federal government is the largest consumer in the world market.
So the federal government simply says, we're going to stop using Ford vehicles as our fleet vehicles,
and we're going to use Teslas as our fleet vehicles.
Ford will be bankrupt tomorrow.
They would have absolutely no ability to replace all those explorers
that you see the federal government using
and replacing those orders.
So corporations in large part have to bend backwards,
have to turn over when it comes to these large corporations
or the federal government
and these billionaire individuals who have that power.
So in the future, the next time they come back
and they're scared and they say, black folks, we love you again. How can we parse out and make sure
we're making true demands that we're not simply as we did in 2020 saying, well, we believe you,
we trust you. We think you're going to make those changes because what we saw was executive orders.
We saw empty pledges and promises. We saw very little pull through on it. Never got the George
Floyd justice of policing yet. Never got the Tyree Nichols duty to intervene yet.
We never saw those hundreds of millions of dollars promised by those corporations to invest in our communities.
What we got was a nice press release and maybe Jay-Z controlling the halftime show at the Super Bowl.
How can we actually make sure we're getting tangibles out of these fights?
Well, you know, as was said, you're tearing it up, brother.
But, you know, James Baldwin once said that I can't believe what you say because I see what you do.
So when folks were making those pledges in relationship to our dear brother George Floyd being murdered, you know, all you had to do was pull the veneer back.
And you saw that there was no real sets of resources that were there and no transformative actions in relationship to the
policies that they were moving forward on. And if you dug a little bit deeper, you would have saw
that very few of them made any significant moves in relationship to black contracting or brown
contracting. So, you know, that pretty much gave you the clear idea. But what do we do in this
moment? For one, we have to buttress
those institutions, those entities that are trying their best to stand with us as an ally,
because if we don't, then we know that others are going to continue to place pressure on them.
Here's the interesting thing. This is how easy it is for them to move away from whether it's
diversity, equity, inclusion, or just doing the right thing in relationship to black communities, that you have not seen any major boycotts
from the right side of the equation on these entities.
So they very easily move away from the positionings that they said that they were serious about
and the love that they said they had for our community.
And I don't think most people pay enough attention to that. Second part is that we have to make sure, whether it's Costco
or whether it's a number of others that have still sort of held their ground, that we got to make
sure that we're also utilizing our dollars to make sure that folks know that we're serious.
And we got to make sure that we're continuing to raise our voices and tell the stories that
are necessary. Because if we don't do all of those things, and then we have to make sure as we are
deciding when we're going to give folks our vote in the midterm, which will be here in the blink
of an eye, that we've got to make sure that if politicians are asking for our vote, then we have
to have our own agenda. You know, you used to have the contract with Black America or covenant with
Black America. You know, you had a number of other types of things.
We have got to get ourselves together, make sure that we are going to stand hand in hand
with each other and decide what those seven, 10 things are that we have to make sure happen.
And if we don't do that, then folks will continue to find a way to separate us.
They'll throw a few dollars over here to someone so that this black person
says negative things about this black person or that this program is really not that critical
to our community. We all know the playbook. So it's time for us to flip the script on them
and to make sure that not only our sets of needs and our sets of things that we cannot deal without
are going to be honored.
But we also got to make sure that the resources are flowing the way that they're supposed to.
And Dr. Walker, on that point, I haven't seen a sustained economic pressure campaign in the African-American community work,
seemingly since the Montgomery bus boycott.
But I think back to a year or two ago when Bud Light had a commercial with a transgender in it,
and then the conservatives lost their mind.
They demonized Bud Light, and I'd be damned if it wasn't a month later they had a redneck with a pickup truck and a guitar and a horse,
and that was a new Bud Light commercial.
They made sure that they responded.
How can we ensure that we are actually putting a sustained pressure campaign corporation by corporation?
Walmart gets rid of their DEI program,
we get rid of our Sam's Club membership,
and we get a Costco membership.
If Ben & Jerry's is keeping
their DEI program, but
Haagen-Dazs isn't, then we're going to go eat
some damn Ben & Jerry's. How do
we make sure that we're actually able to sustain a
campaign the way the conservatives are able to do
on their side?
I think it just goes back to my point I made earlier about economic, political and social disruption.
But that goes with slash plan, right?
So those three areas, we need to find a way to disrupt the system.
But also—but before that, there just needs to be a short and long-term-range plan.
And I made the point earlier, you know, look, we talked about this letter that was sent out.
Let's highlight also that that's political overreach.
The last time I checked, you know, I thought that some people believed in a small government and less intrusive government.
But this, once again, is an example of how you lose a propaganda war. So sending a letter to a private entity, a private corporation to say you should—whatever policy it is—is not considered intrusive.
So, once again, we have to be able to—you have to be able to win the propaganda war in terms of laying out what's right and what's wrong in our society. But as I point out earlier, we're constantly
playing catch up because we, you know, as black folks, we know we have a strong moral compass,
but we just don't always have the money to invest in, you know, platforms, entities that can counter,
you know, all the things that we're seeing just within the last, you know, to less than two weeks,
let alone the last several decades. So that goes back to my point about economic, political planning and disruption. In my opinion,
that's the only option. Mustafa talked about the contract with America, Covenant of America.
There are various, you know, ways in which we've gotten together collectively as a community
to say specifically, this is what we need to do. So in order to have a boycott work like the
Montgomery bus boycott, you have to, first of all, have a plan, understand that it's going to be some disruption, and understand that it's going to make you feel uncomfortable as well as others throughout the country.
So, you know, there are certain things you won't be able to do.
Our folks committed to, once again, not only making others uncomfortable, but you being uncomfortable for a period of time.
And Dr.
Dixon, when we're looking at
these corporations that are
now behind Trump, we're looking
at that billionaire's row that was behind
Trump. Literally the entirety
of modern communication
was standing there behind Trump.
Trump's being supported by Twitter,
Facebook, Instagram,
WhatsApp,
TikTok,
Google.
Go down the line.
Anything that allows you
to communicate
in the 21st century
is being supported
by the MAGA movement.
There's no longer
truly an alternative way
to disseminate
and get information.
If you are a social media
influencer
and you make videos
on YouTube,
that's Google. That's supporting Trump. If make videos on YouTube, that's Google.
That's supporting Trump.
If you're on TikTok, that's supporting Trump.
If you're on Instagram, Facebook, that's supporting Trump. We now live in a generation where people want change without sacrifice.
They think that they can sit home comfortably in their underwear and say, well, I changed my profile picture to all black for Trayvon, and that's all that I need to do to be part of the movement.
Black Lives Matter now.
But they don't follow that through with going and running for state's attorney,
going and being on your monitoring trials at your actual courthouse,
working with police to do the things necessary to create those reforms.
And when people don't have this sense of actually being in pain,
because remember those Montgomery bus boycotters, they didn't have no Twitter, they didn't have this sense of actually being in pain, because remember those
Montgomery bus boycotters, they ain't have no Twitter. They ain't have no text messages. They
had shoe leather. People walked to work. People carpooled. People worked together for nearly two
years in order to push that thing through. Who's going to be that leader to bring us together or
what is going to be that cause that brings us together to tell people, look, you can't use
Amazon Prime to get your groceries here in an hour.
You have to get up and go to the store.
If you want to actually make change, you want people to actually believe you when you say you want change.
Because right now, all they do is say the black people are mad.
Send Snoop Dogg, Nelly, Rick Ross, Waka Flocka Flame and Setsi Redd out there.
That will shut them up. I think first thing we have to do is clean house in the black community and identify
all those people who are Judas's, whether they know it or not.
Not all of them are taking 30 pieces of silver, but they are listening to some people who
have given them been given 30 pieces of silver to to divide us.
There is a gross inability for us to organize as a black community right now, specifically
because we have people talking division amongst us, dividing the diaspora. a gross inability for us to organize as a black community right now, specifically because
we have people talking division amongst us, dividing the diaspora.
One of the most foolish things that is happening right now are people who are dividing the
diaspora globally, especially when we see that there is no division amongst white supremacy
globally.
It doesn't matter if you're German, Irish, Italian, Australian, British.
It doesn't matter.
They are unified in their white supremacy.
And so we must smoke out every individual who's trying to divide the black community
here in the United States or divide us globally and unify globally. This is going to require
international action. We simply do not have the resources we need internally, as we've seen,
but the power of the conservative boycotts. They're demonstrating their economic power. We have the
ability to withhold. I think we must get the discipline to withhold our spending, to not be
consumers, to be net savers. If we can get that discipline, that's the first step. The other thing
I would say is we look at the Montgomery boycott, as magnificent as it was and a model to be honored
and studied, it was a city.
We have to organize a nation.
We have to organize a digital space.
We have to organize internationally.
And so we need to look at the lessons and the structure and the wisdom of the Montgomery boycott, but realize we've got to step it up some.
And look, on what you were just saying, and this is where I will officially get in trouble for the show.
We talk about this effort to divide black people along ethnic lines.
What we saw during this election
cycle was, and I think everybody knows it on their
social media, all of a sudden a bunch of
super pro-black accounts
that you have never heard of showed up on your timeline.
Those were
being financed by these same
white special interest groups.
There was COINTELPRO in a modern context.
So all of a sudden you started seeing people saying,
well, if you're black and Indian, you ain't really black.
If you're black and Haitian, you ain't really black.
If you weren't here during slavery, you weren't foundational to America.
What they started to do, they said that your relationship to your blackness
was not based on your DNA.
It was based upon your relationship to European enslavement.
If you were enslaved by the French,
you were fundamentally different
than being enslaved by the British,
and you're different than being enslaved by the Dutch,
and you're different than being enslaved
by any other group.
They told you that your brothers and sisters in Brazil
who are darker than you
were not your brothers and sisters.
They told you that the Afro-Caribbean,
that the African community were your enemies,
and that the white people who used to own you were
really your friends. They injected
into your timeline. They injected
into your social media sphere this
conceptualization that somehow
you should vote against the
African American
and Indian woman because
Donald Trump was going to give you a plan for reparations.
Have you lost your damn mind?
And when you see someone like Elon Musk, who spent $44 billion to buy Twitter,
that was the reason.
That they can change your algorithm.
They can change who you follow, and therefore they can change opinion.
Reverend Jackson always says that voter suppression isn't about Bull Connor
standing outside with dogs and hoses anymore.
It's about skimming.
If you can get one out of every 100 voters to stay home, isn't about Bull Connor standing outside with dogs and hoses anymore. It's about skimming.
If you can get one out of every 100 voters to stay home,
if you can get one out of every 100 voters to get out of line and not say they can do it,
if you can get one out of every 100 voters to not be active in politics,
then you can change the outcome of a nation.
At the end of the day, when we talk about the 2 million votes Donald Trump won by, in reality, he won by about 60,000 votes in three swing states.
So when we're talking about Michigan, Wisconsin, and Pennsylvania,
as 60,000 people voted the other way or 60,000 more people turned out for that election,
then Kamala Harris will be the president right now. We will not be dealing with Project 2025
coming to true fruition. You mean to tell me there weren't 20,000 black folks in Philadelphia who didn't vote?
20,000 black folks in Detroit who didn't vote?
20,000 black folks in Milwaukee who didn't vote?
So the entire point of this operation, the entire point of this apparatus was never this
wholesale change.
It's about skimming off one out of every hundred or one out of every thousand
some situation voters that
have changed the entire nature
of this country
and so for our brothers and sisters out there you have to
understand that your blackness is not
conducted through
European colonialism
you were black before white people existed
scientists say that the DNA
for blonde hair and blue eyes and white skin is 7,700 years old, found in northern Spain.
The African mitochondrial DNA, as I said, goes back 250,000 years.
We've survived ice ages.
So when you say that you are only black because you were enslaved by the British or you were enslaved by the Americans,
then what you are forgetting is this long culture, this globe-spanning civilization that you are the genetic inheritor of. And we have to go back to a
place where we understand that who we are and what unites us goes deeper than this nation,
goes deeper than a political party, goes deeper than any political agenda. And we have to start
dealing with this conceptualization of nationalism when it comes to being black folks seeing
ourselves as a nation-state when you look at what's going on in Europe you
have Ukrainian Slavs versus Russian Slavs over this concept of nationalism
we look at what goes on in the Middle East you have Kurds fighting Sunnis
fighting Shias over this idea of nationalism but they told black folks
throughout the course
of the last 150 years that our fight is about racism,
not nationalism.
We don't need our own nation.
We don't need to control things.
And you have many folks who say,
I don't want to have our own free and independent
black nation, either economically, socially,
or politically.
I simply want a better piece of the pie in white supremacy.
I don't want to get off the plantation.
I just want a nicer bed in the plantation.
As long as I can get mine and be comfortable within my little enclave with my fiefdom,
I'm more than happy to be just as virulently racist
as many of the people who used to oppress me.
You can look on social media.
When Donald Trump said that Haitians were eating the cats
and eating the dogs, you have black folks saying,
yeah, that's right, I know they do that.
When you saw these abuses against African immigrants
coming into America, they said they're coming over here
and stealing all the welfare.
That's my welfare.
I'm the number one slave.
You can't be up here being a better slave than me.
This is the type of brainwashing that we've seen taking place in Western society since the Romans,
when they were going to an area and turned one ethnic group against the other ethnic group
so they could enslave both ethnic groups.
So we want to truly be free.
And we want to not have to worry about DEI because we already got NY, my own stuff. It's through this
concept of black nationalism, seeing ourselves as
brothers and sisters in a connected
web and a tapestry
that can truly bring our people forward.
We're going to talk more about this after the break.
You're watching Rolling Martin Unfiltered, streaming
live on the Black Star Network. We'll be right
back.
Hello.
I'm Isaac Hayes III, founder and CEO of Fanbase. And right now we're accepting
investors in our $17 million round to revolutionize the future of social media. Today, for just $399,
you can own 60 shares of stock in Fanbase at $6.65 a share. Go to startengine.com slash Fanbase and
invest today. While the big platforms have
grown too massive and disconnected from their users, fanbase is building a platform where
creators and users truly come first. We've already raised $4.8 million from everyday investors who
believe in this vision, and now you can join them. This is your chance to invest in a social media
tech company with over 1 million users that is disrupting media by allowing anyone to reach all of their following
and monetize their content from day one.
The market is changing, big platforms are failing to serve their users,
and Fanbase is stepping up to fill the gap.
Don't wait until it's too late.
Invest now.
Invest for yourself and your future.
Go to startengine.com slash fanbase and own the future of social media.
Hey, what's up? Keith Tony in a place to be.
Got kicked out your mama's university.
Creator and executive producer of Fat Tuesdays, an air hip-hop comedy.
But right now, I'm rolling with Roland Martin.
I know a lot of cops, and they get asked all the time,
have you ever had to shoot your gun?
Sometimes the answer is yes.
But there's a company dedicated to a future where the answer will always be no.
Across the country, cops called this taser the revolution.
But not everyone was convinced it was that simple.
Cops believed everything that taser told them.
From Lava for Good and the team that brought you Bone Valley
comes a story about what happened when a multi-billion dollar company
dedicated itself to one visionary mission.
This is Absolute Season 1, Taser Incorporated.
I get right back there and it's bad.
It's really, really, really bad.
Listen to new episodes of Absolute Season 1, Taser Incorporated
on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Binge episodes 1, 2, and 3 on May 21st
and episodes 4, 5, and 6 on
June 4th. Ad free at
Lava for Good Plus on Apple Podcasts.
I'm Clayton English. I'm Greg Glod.
And this is season 2 of the War on
Drugs podcast. Yes, sir. We are back. In a big
way. In a very big way. Real
people, real perspectives.
This is kind of star-studded a little bit man we
got uh ricky williams nfl player hasman trophy winner it's just a compassionate choice to allow
players all reasonable means to care for themselves music stars marcus king john osborne
from brothers osborne we have this misunderstanding of what this quote-unquote drug man. Benny the Butcher.
Brent Smith from Shinedown. We got B-Real
from Cypress Hill. NHL enforcer
Riley Cote. Marine Corvette.
MMA fighter Liz
Karamush. What we're doing now isn't
working and we need to change things.
Stories matter and it brings a face to them.
It makes it real. It really does.
It makes it real. Listen to new
episodes of the War on Drugs podcast season two on the iHeartRadio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
And to hear episodes one week early and ad-free with exclusive content,
subscribe to Lava for Good Plus on Apple Podcasts.
Unfiltered, uncut, unplugged, and undamned believable you hear me
uh today a georgia jury a deciding fate of the prosecutor who decided not to bring charges
against the white men who fatally shot ahmaud Aubrey heard opening statements in her criminal trial. For those of you who do not remember,
Ahmaud Aubrey was the black jogger down in Brunswick, Georgia, who was shot and killed
by the Michaels in their neighborhood after they claimed that he broke into a house under
construction and tried to steal construction materials, and therefore
they had to chase him down in a pickup truck and kill that individual.
We heard testimony today with regard to Jackie Johnson, who was the prosecutor in that case.
And to break it down a little bit, for people who don't remember the details of the Ahmaud
Arbery case, after he was initially killed, it was ruled to be in self-defense. The prosecutor
failed to bring charges against the individuals. The family kept fighting. The case was eventually
moved to another prosecutor who didn't bring charges. Because of outside pressure from groups
like Georgia NAACP, the Rainbow Push Coalition, other human rights organizations, it made its way to the Georgia Attorney General,
who then brought charges in the case.
And as a result of that, we finally saw justice for Ahmaud Arbery.
But Jackie Johnson, who was the prosecutor in the case initially,
she is now on trial for essentially obstructing justice in that case.
I want to bring the panel in on this.
Mustafa, do you think this is an
opportunity where we might actually finally see justice? Because we're in a place right now as a
people where we're not getting a lot of wins. Would this be a win seeing this prosecutor brought
to justice for essentially trying to cover up this murder? Well, it would be a win. It would
be a small step in the right direction. Of course,
you had mentioned also there was another prosecutor. I can't remember what happened
in relationship to that particular individual. I mean, it also sends a message across the country,
right? Do certain lives matter than others? Is justice only as much as you can afford or as much
privilege as you have? So we'll have to see how it plays out. But I'm
hoping that folks actually do the right thing in relationship to this particular case.
That's what Johnson and she's accused of protecting Greg McMichael and his adult son,
Travis McMichael, by instructing Glynn County police officers on the day of the shooting to
not to arrest Travis McMichael. They were Michaels and William Roddy Bryant were convicted on both state and federal charges
for Ahmaud Arbery's murder
and are currently serving life sentences.
Dr. Dixon, we see this happening so often
with African Americans,
where they don't get the type of national attention
that Ahmaud Arbery was able to garner,
where they're not able to really bring these issues
to national light.
And now with the diminution of the Justice Department, partner, where they're not able to really bring these issues to national light.
And now with the diminution of the Justice Department, the fact that we are moving to
a place where the Civil Rights Division no longer will have the teeth to be able to fight
these things, where do you think we would go from here for cases like this in the future?
I think so long as Donald Trump is in power, we're in a position where we won't get this type of justice because we see the states are more than happy to fall in line with whatever Donald Trump says.
So on the federal civil rights level or on state prosecution cases, I fear that we're not going to get much, if any, justice.
Now, does that mean we don't fight for it? Absolutely not. We always fight for it. We always pursue it. I would say also something else.
I think black folks really need to pause and really consider, not out of fear—nobody's
scared of these devils—but we need to be wise and realize that they are on a hunting
spree.
If you consider the type of murders that are happening in the state of Mississippi that
have gone unanswered, when you think about the various murders across the Southeast in general, the lynchings that
have occurred in the last five years alone that have gone unanswered, it's almost to
the point where there is a game, where white people are trying to see if they can get away
with murder.
And the sad reality is, is so many times they are able to, and that's going to only be exacerbated
more because of Donald Trump.
And so this is—what I'm going to say is not out of fear.
It's out of wisdom. Watch where you're going. Watch your six. Look after each other. Don't
trust these people. For the love of God, stop trusting them and thinking that they are your
friends. They are demonstrating to you in real time their willingness to destroy their own lives
for the sake of their white supremacy. They're going to be hurt the most by Donald Trump's policies,
but they're going to thank him for it.
Why? Because they would rather hurt themselves
if they have an opportunity to hurt us.
Why would we put our lives in their hands
and trust them when we go out and we go different places?
And, Dr. Walker, one of the big victories
that we had during the civil rights movement
was this idea of having a federal
backstop against local racial discrimination.
That when we were able to push through the civil rights set, voting rights, civil rights
in 64, voting rights in 65, public accommodation in 68, fair housing, Title VII, Title IX,
to establish the executive order in 1965 that actually gave some teeth to the civil rights act of 1866.
We saw that when we were discriminated against in the local jurisdiction,
if you were the victim of police brutality, if you were Emmett Till, if you were Cheney, Grutter,
along the lines, you could call in the federal government, you could call in Bobby Kennedy,
and they would prosecute the local prosecutors and bring justice.
We saw this under Christian Clark in the Justice Department.
We saw this under the Obama Justice Department.
But now that appears to be gone,
and it seems that they are changing the policies
where they may be gone forever.
So where do we go from here, as Dr. King would say?
Are we going to chaos our community?
Where do the new lines go in this fight for justice?
And do we simply say, as Brother Dixon said,
that we just have to keep to
ourselves and watch ourselves? Or are there
actually any kind of legal solutions we can have
that will protect our boys, our young men
and our young boys?
I'm thinking of deacons of defense
from decades ago, right?
You know, you had people in our own community
that made sure that, you know, if
someone came in a community and was looking to harm
someone, that we were prepared to make sure that didn't happen.
And I think we need to have a broader conversation about when people don't see your humanity.
And you can't—it's almost impossible to solve that issue.
And, listen, it's a more complex conversation when you have a very different time, you know, several weeks, days of conversation.
Also, when I think we need to really, when it comes to this particular case,
we need to have a really deep conversation about Black bodies and justice in America.
So I, you know, she should be thrown in jail for obstructing justice.
But is that justice?
You know, lynching, you know, in terms of members
of the Black community, Black men, has been going on for centuries. And how we are still dealing
with that today. So what does that mean for what it means to be an American and to be Black and a
male, and particularly in this situation? So I think, once again, we need to really have a really
important conversation about, you know, when need to really have a really important conversation
about, you know,
when it comes to destruction
of Black bodies and justice.
And we don't have enough time
to discuss that,
but I think we really,
as a community,
reflect on that
because I don't see this as justice.
A life was lost.
And I know the other,
you know, individuals
responsible for this murder
are in jail for life.
But in my opinion,
is that justice, considering
we've been dealing with these kind of lynchings for years?
And I think we need to talk about that.
Absolutely. And Mustafa,
I'm reminded of Dave
Chappelle and his seminal work,
Killing Him Softly, where he made this joke
that police could shoot a black person, all they had
to do was sprinkle some crack on them,
and everybody would believe that they were
a criminal. And that's very similar to what we saw in this Ahmaud Arbery case, where all these individuals
had to do was say, well, you know, he was violent, he attacked us, and everybody believed
them, even though there was video of them doing it.
If their friend Roddy Bryant hadn't filmed the entire altercation, they would not have
been convicted in this case. So if you're, back in the early,
or mid 2010s, early 2020s,
I gave a lot of speeches to high school boys
and to youth groups, telling them,
well, this is what you need to do
when you're interacting with cops.
Keep your head up, make eye contact.
Say yes sir, no sir.
Have your pants pulled up.
Do all this.
And I stopped doing that.
Because we do not need to prove our humanity
to anybody. I don't
deserve different rights because I can
cosplay as the best
little white boy
possible. I don't need to speak
the Queen's English and do a
little dance whenever I'm in the presence of a white person
to prove that I have basic human
rights and basic humanity.
I'm no less of a human being if I'm dressed like DMX or if I'm dressed like Carlton Banks.
And so I stopped telling these boys to try to prove themselves to white supremacy
because at the end of the day, Emmett Till wasn't wearing saggy pants and a hoodie
when they decided to kill him.
So when it comes to how we educate our community, how we educate this next generation,
to be in a realistic, and I put my emphasis on realistic, situation as we're looking at right now,
where there's no consent decrees, where Donald Trump is saying,
I will pardon officers and give you complete immunity,
where there's a movement at foot to pardon Derek Chauvin for killing George Floyd,
and that will more than likely happen before the end of the Trump term. How do we realistically talk to our young men and
our young boys about how they interact in the current political situation?
Well, I think the political situation may be slightly different than what's actually going on,
you know, in the street or in the country on dirt roads. So you have to actually make sure that you're being strategic
in the various atmospheres that we show up. So what I teach my nephews and my god sons,
you know, is that in each situation can require a different skill set. And you have to be able to
make a decision about what is going to be most beneficial for you in that particular thing.
That doesn't mean that you are less than a man, but it does mean that you have to be able to evaluate where you are.
If you're on a Mississippi road at 2 a.m. in the morning, there's a certain set of actions that might be necessary that would be different if you're in Jackson at 9 a.m.
So I teach, you know, the folks that I love and care about, you know, that you've got to have a
number of different skill sets. But you also have to understand, you know, that you are a man or a
young boy or whatever your particular age is and that you got to stand on that. But there are ways
to be able to navigate, you know,
the craziness that you might find yourself in
or how to not get yourself into crazy situations to begin with.
Absolutely.
And for our young men, there's a balancing act.
I'm not saying you've got to get out there dressed like Bill Bojangles
and start soft-shoeing whenever somebody asks you a question,
but you also, you know, don't be antagonistic.
Don't make things worse, and let's find a balance
in the middle. All right, we're going to keep this conversation going
after the break. You're watching Roland Martin
Unfiltered, streaming live on the Black Star Network.
We'll be right back.
Coming soon to the Black Star Network.
Well, y'all, when you're on that stage
and you're seeing
two and three, four
generations in the audience.
That's got to speak to you about the power
of what y'all have become.
Oh, most definitely.
I think we were doing our show before our break.
And remember, I was watching this kid.
I could not take my eyes off him
because he was about nine or so.
He was sitting in the front row with his parents.
Over on the right-hand side, yes, yes, yes, yes.
I was amazed that this kid knew everything. I was tripping to see how many songs this kid actually knew.
And he knew them all.
And he knew them all. We had to go over there and bring him on stage and take a picture with him at the end the end of the show and stuff because it was just that amazing. It's like this is crazy. You know the music travels
Everywhere, you know like
Like what Philip was saying seeing this young kid then you see hear our songs on commercials cold commercials
Then you have the younger ones that see and hear our music and animation.
I'm Russell L. Honore, Lieutenant General of the United States Army, retired,
and you're watching Roland Martin on Viltrox. One woman's journey with Sensitive Skin Challenges
led her to create a line of deodorants and skin care essentials she could use.
Regular products irritated Nikki Jett's inflammatory skin condition.
And after extensively searching for suitable products,
she ultimately created Coco Elan.
Nikki joins us from Houston, Texas.
Nikki, how are you doing?
I'm good. How are you?
I am outstanding. So tell us about this journey, because I think many of us, we grew up,
particularly if you're, I'm 40, so in the 80s, we didn't have all these black kind of detailed products. You know, you were using Bryl cream and whatever the hell they gave you in the store,
and that's just kind of what you had. Your hands would be all dry, all ashy because you were using Dove soap, et cetera.
Talk about what inspired you to come on this journey.
Right.
So in my 20s, I was diagnosed with a condition called hydrogenitis superativa, or HS for short.
And what that is is you get reoccurring boils or lumps under your skin.
And it usually occurs in like high friction areas.
So your groin area under your breast and under your arms.
And so to decrease the flares that I would get, my physician actually recommended that
I switch from using an antiperspirant.
At that time, I was using Clinical Strength Secret to a more natural deodorant. And I don't know if you've ever been on a natural deodorant journey,
but it's really hard to find one that is effective on odor. So I decided, you know what,
if I have to use this, I'm going to have to create my own solution. And so that's how my
company was born. You're not joking about that. I tried doing the Toms of Maine one time when I was in my earthy.
For people who were in Atlanta in the early 2000s, they will remember me hanging out in the park doing capoeira with long hair.
And I was that dude for a little while, carrying around a stick and a little African medallion.
Things change.
But that stuff don't work at all. So can you kind of talk about
why it's important for African Americans to have these sorts of products that are really
specifically built for us, for our skin, for our DNA, for our communities?
Right. Yeah. You know, that's part of my target audience. You know, I am a black woman,
so my target is black or melanated women with skin sensitivities.
With this chronic skin condition that I have, I often, with the flare-ups, I get acne-prone skin
and then those lead to scarring. And so, you know, my underarms were like unsightly. And so I wanted
to develop products that would, you know, would reduce those symptoms. So, you know, I have a
turmeric soap that'll help lighten dark spots. I have a charcoal tea tree that'll help cleanse
the pores because at the end of the day, the things that we would slather on our underarms,
we would never put that on our face. You know, our face is our moneymaker. We would never put
a product or an ingredient on our face that blocked our pores. So why did we do it for our underarms?
You're absolutely correct. Think about the aluminum and the other just kind of additives
that are there that we're putting. So I've got the products here. I feel like I'm a QVC model.
Let's see if we can get this on camera. we've got the uh what is this the tell us about
the product this is the soap coconut oil water sodium hydroxide turmeric powder fragrance oil
vitamin e oil and that's all tell me talk about how important that is so that box that you're
holding that i just developed a three-step system um this past December. And so the soaps are going to, the soap is going to be the first step.
So no matter if you use just a regular soap or my soap, which that one is a turmeric and
vitamin E.
So that turmeric bar is going to help with evening your skin tone.
The vitamin E is going to help nourish and clear up your skin.
And so that'll be the first step.
Your second step is, yes, the second step is the toner.
So I know a lot of people are like,
toner for your underarms.
But yeah, that toner is a witch hazel
and glycolic acid toner.
So glycolic acid is a gentle exfoliator
if you use it at a certain percentage.
And then the witch hazel is a natural astringent.
So it'll help clean the slate
of your underarm before you put on your step three which is the moisturizing deodorant yes and so
in our deodorants we do use like coconut oils and things like that to help moisturize the skin
but it also has powders in there um that will help absorb your sweat because that is the one thing with deodorant.
It allows your body to naturally sweat to control your body temperature.
But if it has powders in it, that will absorb the sweat so you don't feel as wet.
Absolutely.
Also, I just found out I got some ugly-ass hands on TV.
This is my doing.
I have TV hands.
Vanna White's job
is harder than I thought.
All right,
so let's go to the panel
if you guys have questions.
I know us as men,
often we do not take
these care issues seriously
unless there's a woman
in our life
who forces us to do so.
But,
Mustafa,
do you have a question?
Yeah,
well,
Nikki,
congratulations.
You have beautiful skin,
so you're just a person to.
Thank you.
Yes. You know, I saw a number of different elements that you have, whether it's turmeric or lemon or a number of other things.
How do you make the decision about which ones come together to provide the best experience for the people who purchase your product? Right. So with the turmeric powder,
because it's a powder that helps with evening skin tone to brighten the skin, I wanted to
add an element of fragrance oil that paired married well with that. So, you know, the
brightening just kind of awakening. And so I paired the lemongrass with that soap and it smells, it smells so good.
And then I have also a charcoal and tea tree soap.
And so if you know tea tree, tea tree can smell kind of harsh, but you know, it's doing a job.
It's helping to deep cleanse those pores.
It's great for acne prone skin.
So it has a job.
But yeah, that's how I kind of married the two together.
All right, Dr. Walker. Yeah. So congratulations on success.
And I'm wondering what is, you know, been the response from typically from the black community in terms of supporting your products?
It's been great, actually. You know, when I do pop up events or markets, you know, Black women come out and support Black women.
I mean, it's just bottom line.
They do.
They're like, you know, even though I don't use natural deodorant, I want to support you.
You know, I know somebody that can use it.
So they'll buy it.
And then, you know, also other groups.
You know, my products, I do target melanated women with skin sensitivities because that's who I am.
But my products are beneficial for, you know, also for men, for women and for children that are ready to use deodorants.
Dr. Dixon.
Yes. Congratulations on all your successes thus far.
My question to you is what are some of the things that you need to scale up and to spread your business further and wider?
So, yes, right now, funding.
You know, they say that black women entrepreneurs are the most founded, the least funded.
So I've definitely I've applied to different grants, but, you know, that can be like a lottery ticket.
But outside of that, it's, you know, I've been looking at maybe a line of credit or, you know, some other loan options.
So, but yeah, you need money to make money.
And so I've invested in myself for my business, but I didn't realize that just, it just wasn't enough.
So how do you currently sell products?
How do you currently make sure you can get these things to people?
Yeah, so I have our website, www.cocoelanco.com.
We also locally in Houston, we sell it at a brick-and-mortar called the Mala Market,
where there's over 40 local artisans and vendors. So come check us out there. And that's in the Montrose area. And then also Radiant Vita Spa. It's a spa in the
Heights in Houston. And so for our online website, when you go on there for the listeners today,
if you put in a code ROLAND, that will allow you to get 15% off your entire purchase.
All right. And so we all have to talk about this. And now we're getting out of Attorney road rolling, that will allow you to get 15% off your entire purchase.
All right. And so we ought to talk about this. And now we're getting out of Attorney Petillo.
He went to bed for the night. We're getting into Robert. And part of the issue that I think we have is throughout this show, we've been talking about what we can do economically to fight back against
some of these extreme agendas. What can we do as a community to fight back against what's going on?
And we understand the entire thing goes back to economics.
It goes back to money.
Can you support and sustain your own businesses?
So for everyone online saying we need to be boycotting Target
because they got rid of their DEI initiatives,
I want you to go to her website and buy directly from her.
You ain't got to worry about no DEI program.
She is diverse. She is equal. She is inclusive. So if her capacity is to sell 4,000 units a month,
I want y'all to buy out the 4,000 units. Let's make sure, and look, I say this all the time to
people. If somebody is your friend, don't ask them for a discount. You should want to pay more
for their product. You shouldn't to pay more for their product.
You shouldn't need somebody to entice you.
People come in all the time like, oh,
Robert, you're a lawyer. Can you give me some free legal
advice? If I'm your friend, why the hell
do you want something free from me?
You should want to see me grow,
see me gain, see me achieve.
Newbie intellectuals, growing, gaining,
and achieving. You got to reclaim that word if you're going to
use it. So what I want people to do is to make sure that you're visiting her on social media.
How can people follow you on social media?
Yeah, on social media, my handle for Instagram is shopcocoelon.
So go on there.
That's usually where I put my promos, upcoming events, things of that nature.
But, yes, go on there and follow me.
I would love to have you.
And, look, I want you not just to follow her. I want you not just to buy the product. I want you
to buy the product. I want you to take pictures and put it online. I want you to leave reviews
on every site possible. I want you to make videos talking about how well this product works. If you
can do that for everything else under the sun, you can do it for your own community. Thank you so
much. Give us that contact information one more time before we're out of time.
Yeah, so
our website is
www.cocoelanco.com
and our Instagram handle
is at shopcocoelan.
Thank you so much, Nikki, and we're going to make sure that we
support you. And I want you to come back and let us know
how it went. Let us know if these people
really cashed you out. I want to see a post
on your Instagram saying, we are out
of product as of tomorrow morning
because the Roland Martin Unfiltered family
not only came in and bought, they bought
it and sent it to their friends and their families, and
we are sold out. I had to buy a new factory
and a new warehouse and some trucks
because of what they did. I'm speaking
it into existence. I'm putting it into
the atmosphere. I'm letting you know that
it is going to happen for you today, and this will be the
catalyst for all that taking place. Thank you
so much. Absolutely.
Thank you for having me. All right.
Thank you so much. Great show today.
Got to thank our panel, Mustafa Santiago,
Dr. Walker, Dr.
Dixon. Got to thank Roland for letting me keep
his seat warm while he is
out. Make sure you tune in.
Make sure you like and subscribe to the page.
Make sure you comment.
You know, we're all going to want to see
at least a thousand likes on each of these videos.
Share, subscribe, mute everything you need to do
to get the word out.
We have to be our own salvation.
No one else is coming to help you.
Ain't no such thing as Superman.
We got to keep fighting.
When we fight, we win.
We've never lost a fight that we fought.
We've never won a fight that we didn't fight.
It is time for us to get up and get together.
Thank you so much to Attorney Robert Patilla.
Follow me on social media at Robert Patilla.
That's R-O-B-E-R-T-P-A-T-I-L-L-O.
Holler! Black Star Network is here.
Oh, no punch.
A real revolution right now.
Thank you for being the voice of Black America.
All momentum we have now,
we have to keep this going.
The video looks phenomenal.
See, there's a difference between Black Star Network
and Black-owned media
and something like CNN.
You can't be Black-owned media
and be scared.
It's time to be smart.
Bring your eyeballs home.
You dig?