Talk FNF

Elon Musk's BM Disses Him on New Podcast, Amanda Seales BODIES Black Conservatives, and Destiny's Son Loves Nick Fuentes

Talk FNF tv Episode 102

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The line between entertainment and political commentary blurs as Absurd Rhetoric and Farrah dissect the strange intersection where billionaire feuds, racial politics, and internet culture collide.

When Elon Musk's "non-committal fluid breeding vessel" (her preferred term) launches a podcast apparently backed by Peter Thiel's company, we witness how billionaire rivalries play out in uniquely petty ways. Ten thousand dollars to crash out on your baby daddy? That's the level of spite only the ultra-wealthy can afford.

The conversation shifts to Amanda Seales' masterful takedown of black conservatives in a recent debate. Her powerful refutation of false equivalencies between immigrant experiences and descendants of slavery highlights a troubling trend: the comfort some find in tearing down their own community. As one host poignantly observes, "It's not about when we call out individuals, it's about how easily we swipe at us as a culture."

Perhaps most disturbing is our analysis of Nick Fuentes' blatant white supremacist rhetoric comparing JD Vance's Indian family to Gavin Newsom's "pure" white one. Yet Fuentes polls highest with black men at 10% - a statistic that prompts a deeper examination of why some are drawn to voices that openly despise them.

The episode rounds out with a look at Microsoft's list of 40 jobs AI will likely replace and a warning: without legislation ensuring everyday people benefit from AI advancement, we're heading toward a bleak future where technology serves only those who already have too much.

This isn't just commentary - it's a call to recognize how power dynamics shape everything from our media consumption to our political allegiances. Because understanding these forces is the first step toward not being manipulated by them.

Speaker 1:

So this is our fearless leader, the entity known as JD Vance. He's fat. We'll just zoom in here just so you can get a better look. He's visibly obese and very ugly. He's got a fat face, no jawline, no chin, and he's quite ugly. He had to grow a beard because his face was so ugly. The Ozempic didn't even help.

Speaker 2:

Yo what? Anytime there's more than one black person or migrant in the same location, it's automatically a gang. One is a criminal, two is a march, three is a cartel.

Speaker 4:

So that was like.

Speaker 5:

She getting her shit off?

Speaker 3:

Yeah, that was, she is getting her shit off. Yeah, that was she is getting her shit off.

Speaker 5:

We had a black president, just in case you didn't know.

Speaker 4:

Okay, I hate when people say this we had a black president. Do you know there's countries in the Middle East that have had women presidents? Do you think they're a bastion of feminism? I'm just being and I'm not talking about when you hear stupid people on the internet that want to protect one individual black person and say, oh black people always tear each other down.

Speaker 4:

No, I'm talking about when we're talking about us as a culture. We so easily swipe and say, oh, like this clown, little sweet uh, that was on there talking about old black culture is toxic because you just covered up the lame with the with money.

Speaker 3:

But you need to heal the lame nigga in you before you cover it up with with money that get the. Because now you scaring the hoes. But you got money, so the forcing themselves to stay. But in the back of their mind the hoes is is scared for real. I think men be getting drunk and sucking each other's dicks secretly. You think that's just like the wave of niggas. I think that happens more than we think it happens.

Speaker 4:

There was one woman on there who said now you can't say that black people weren't more resilient in the day than they are now. How do you measure resilience? Is it in cups or ounces? How do you measure resilience?

Speaker 3:

It's these Harlem niggas that's the problem. Harlem niggas are the problem. I've been saying this for years, like y'all look white except for the eyes. I mean, she's got a point there Y'all look white Make fun of him all the time for his dad being Destiny. So he had to take a hard left and was like no, I'm the complete opposite of my dad.

Speaker 5:

I actually hate women, and your whole life is revolved around talking about other people's lives this podcast is sponsored by graffiti tax services.

Speaker 3:

For all your tax preparation needs, you can go to graffiti taxcom. We're going to put the link right here. It should be somewhere. And yeah, you can head to them for during tax season. And if you have any financial or tax preparation questions, head to graffiti tax services. They're our new sponsor. Thank you to graffiti tax preparation services. That's it.

Speaker 4:

I just feel like I have to explain what the output looked like this week, because the internet went out Like very, very inconvenienced, inconvenienced, the whole house. Monday AT&T. I'm calling you out. Yeah, went out. I'm literally working and the internet just go out. I'm talking to myself. Now I'm calling you out. Yeah, I'm literally working and the internet just go out. I'm talking to myself. Now I'm pissed off.

Speaker 3:

The problem is the summer of love. You know what the summer of love is.

Speaker 4:

You got to wake it up for me. Teach me something.

Speaker 3:

The summer of love is like. There was at one point where all the cable and internet providers met and they decided that they were going to split up the areas.

Speaker 3:

I've heard about that before, so that there would be no competition amongst them, because Fios would be bending y'all over and f***ing y'all. If that was my bad, it's too early, but if all the providers were available everywhere, I think Fios would dominate for sure, because nobody else is faster. Well, I mean like even when I had to go through. This is not a commercial. We sound like a whole commercial.

Speaker 4:

We're trashing them right now. You talking about Pfizer, but I'm trying to figure out here what's going on. So I'm like how is it going to be? On a Monday we get a crash on the Internet, like this is literally the last day this is supposed to happen. You, they used to text me be like, hey, we about to do something today, yada, yada. So I called my, my dude, who came up here before. He's like our side guy, he works for the company, but you know, he told me I could hit him up directly anytime we got a problem. So he was off. So he still picked up for me because I'm one of them guys, but hey, don't hate. And he told me like, hey, I don't know what's really going on, but it might have been some issues. He gave me another number for somebody to call. So I called them and apparently the center like there was like a damage at the hub okay, so there better have been.

Speaker 4:

This is like a. This is like a central issue for the area. But I'm mad because every time I go on the line to check to see if it's an outage, it tell me it ain't one. So it's pissing me off. I'm looking at a dead router and then I'm looking at my phone. It's telling me two pieces of different information. That's pissing me off. I had to like figure out how to surface internet through another means. It was very inconvenient. It was very inconvenient If you wasn't that nigga.

Speaker 3:

You wouldn't have even known what was going on for real. Yeah, but you know.

Speaker 4:

that even makes it worse when you know what's going on, Because it's like you got this inner web of understanding that.

Speaker 3:

Oh, all right, All right, that's eight. All right, that's eight.

Speaker 4:

You don't ever want to see, like I gave you an inch and you took a mile for real, of course, but it gave me. I was over there trying to get my nephew a tablet because he's in college like well, first I had to actually convince them that it wasn't tablet. I mean, they tried to get my laptop and I'm like you don't need no laptop. Just give him a tablet with a little keyboard. He needs a laptop, he does not not in this day.

Speaker 3:

He does not need that in this day and age For college. No, not in this day and age. You know how inconvenient an iPad is when you have to like.

Speaker 4:

Not these ones. You got Word and everything on there, all right, and they have a better mic on a lot of those too, so you can just read your words and you don't have to type.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, but the iPad apps be garbage, garbage and some a lot of the apps don't actually have ipad versions. I know this because I have an ipad.

Speaker 4:

That's why you and the ipad versions of the apps be garbage yeah, that's why you copy it and email it to yourself and then you put it in the word in the library let me just have your parents get the man a laptop for college, because that's the more sufficient tech.

Speaker 3:

It's not, that's honestly dated tech because especially he's not even like he's on campus. This nigga's saying laptops are dated, Like they aren't being advanced at the same level that iPads are. If they needed what?

Speaker 4:

they what he's doing now in school. He needs something compact, something he can just carry on. He don't need no.

Speaker 3:

Grandpa, laptops are also compact. They're not as compact as macbook airs.

Speaker 4:

That are even thinner than ipads and it's way more utility like he's not doing. No crazy software program, uh, civil engineer then they could need a um, a tablet a tablet is what make that joint look even better, because you have all the graphics and stuff you can do. I know what I'm talking I'm over here mad because I'm the person in in the family who has been most recently went to college. Why am I not being discussed? Why are things not running through me?

Speaker 3:

I don't think they run things through you. That's the problem.

Speaker 4:

That's the problem with the family. If we're being honest, you're the youngest child.

Speaker 3:

Why would anything be ran through you in the family? Because I'm the golden child, you're the youngest.

Speaker 4:

Why would?

Speaker 5:

anything be ran through you in the family, because I'm the golden child, you're the youngest. And the golden.

Speaker 3:

There's people in your family directly with much more responsibility that have proven themselves over and over again and not in the manner that I have. Why would anybody go to you first when you have two older?

Speaker 4:

siblings, because I'm like way more doper. I think it's way more evident.

Speaker 3:

All right, can we get to the song now?

Speaker 4:

You don't ever want to shine anymore.

Speaker 3:

You shine in the ways that you shine, but like if I'm your mom, I'm calling one of my older, you know.

Speaker 4:

Not for this In any way. Let's just get to the music.

Speaker 3:

Nobody wants to believe in you and then you turn everything into a thing. It's gonna take up mad energy just to ask you a question that's the beauty of me, honestly, if we're keeping it I'm playing a song.

Speaker 7:

She got me Sleepin' in charge. I bought a cell phone and I don't need much callin'. New imports make her feel important. No, bullshit, nigga. No Ben Gordon.

Speaker 6:

Get her information. Take her on vacation, give her dope dick. Now she under the sedation, wake her in the morning breakfast where she slept at, tell her go shoppin'. I can't wait till she get back. Louis flip-flops and a pair of pink sweatpants wear that on my jet. I fuck her at the jet lag. I take her to the vet Cause she a bad bitch, you can't be broken. Happy To me. I'm man, rich, I'm talking young money, shit. She love the way I think. L'oreal all over my bathroom sink, bessie Johnson all over my bathroom counter. My pocket's too deep. I fuck around and drown her. All I do is ride around and drownin'.

Speaker 3:

Oh, my God.

Speaker 4:

Oh, you're one of those girls that, like Chris Brown Ew.

Speaker 3:

This is obviously a Lil Wayne moment. Did you forget he was on the song?

Speaker 4:

I didn't, but I'm just. I just saw a clip that said that that was talking about some of the girls you like. How?

Speaker 9:

many times have I gotten on the show and shat all over. Chris Brown.

Speaker 4:

Shut your goddamn nigger mouth right now. It was a Twitter post.

Speaker 7:

I can open my nigger mouth whenever I want to, all right.

Speaker 3:

You see, nigger, this was a better time, was it?

Speaker 4:

Yeah, I feel like it maybe was an illusion of a better time.

Speaker 3:

This is an illusion of hell, so I would prefer that I remember. Everyone tried to memorize Busta's verse, and look at me now because he did it all fast.

Speaker 4:

A lot of people caught cramps trying to do that one. Yeah, that wasn't a move. All right, you are now listening to Talk FNF TV. I'm your host Absurd Rhetoric and I'm with my lovely and amazing and gorgeous co-host, Miss Farrah.

Speaker 3:

Hi guys.

Speaker 4:

She losing her step man. You seen that she getting tired, she being overworked. I'm running a slave ship over here.

Speaker 3:

And I was outside last weekend. I haven't really had rest.

Speaker 4:

Lost her phone again. That was what we should have talked about that's not.

Speaker 3:

I mean, I thought losing my phone would be boring, but wi-fi going out was even more boring. I let you take the lead and you fucking airballed it damn that's how you feel. I felt like I made that interesting you're a hater, yo no, you made it a little interesting. That's what I'm saying.

Speaker 4:

Man like you see how it is. This is what it is with women, man. They just want to shoot you down. I lost my phone.

Speaker 3:

We had to go pick it up at a restaurant, at a random pizza place. The man told tells us his name is marco he didn't even tell us.

Speaker 4:

He couldn't even really tell us because he couldn't speak english.

Speaker 3:

No, in the in the thing his name is marco. I we pull up, we like we looking for marco, zoom in, showed him the picture they're like there's no marco by the. There's nobody by the name of marco that works here.

Speaker 4:

We don't know this man at all it was like a white guy that was in the picture who was looking for a fat white man so we standing outside, a small mexican man comes out.

Speaker 3:

I'm like, excuse me, I don't even know what marco looks like. I was in that back of that uber toe up, so was. So was my friend. Neither of us know what he looked like. See, he comes out and then he does google translate. He's like your phone is in my car, I'm gonna go grab it. And I was like thank god.

Speaker 4:

Thank you, marco, or whatever your name is I don't care what your name is.

Speaker 3:

I don't think he wants us to know what his name is the hispanic uber driver. The miscellaneous hispanic uber driver shout outs to you all right, man.

Speaker 4:

Uh, so we got to get into some stuff. My one of my ops that I love to bring up, elon musk man, it's really bad for him.

Speaker 3:

His baby mama didn't start a podcast yeah, you're too rich to have your baby mom talking this much honestly, hold on I got, but that be happening.

Speaker 4:

That do be happening with her right here. She's pissed, though, like and again I want to apologize because I shouldn't have called her Elon Musk baby mama. I should use the term that she likes to use, which is noncommittal fluid breeding vessel. She used that term like 10 times in this like 30-minute episode, so I want to play it because she has some interesting things she says here.

Speaker 2:

Well, after a year of unplanned career suicide, many questionable life choices and a gap in my LinkedIn profile that cannot legally be explained, I've decided to start a podcast, not because anybody asked, but because because, statistically speaking, it was either this or join an MLM. So here we are and, unlike your Ben Shapiro's or your Megyn Kelly's, I'm not starting this because I think my big brain thoughts and my podcast mic are the greatest gift to humanity. I actually think I have the worst ideas, so consider everything out of my mouth a cautionary tale.

Speaker 3:

You had Elon Musk's baby.

Speaker 4:

So it's funny because, like I said, she said she's about to get evicted and then she's getting $10,000 from this company called Polymark. Do you know who owns Polymark? Who's part of the owning group of it? Elon Musk. No Peter. Thiel, who's Elon Musk's op. Group of it. Elon Musk, no, peter Thiel, who's Elon Musk's op? So remember, I told you about.

Speaker 9:

Peter.

Speaker 4:

Thiel, that's one of Elon Musk's ops, and they're not really necessarily ops, they're part of the PayPal.

Speaker 3:

He's the one that Elon slapped in the warehouse right.

Speaker 4:

No, that's the treasury dude that they got into something with he is the dude who did the PayPal mafia with, so he's like the crazy little gay guy I told you about, who's kind of like the rich version of, so I just thought it was hilarious. Where it's like these rich dudes don't play fair at all like these billionaire bros.

Speaker 3:

They just like will pick at each other in like the weirdest of ways, like I couldn't imagine one of my homeboys just hitting up the baby mama and being like hey bro, I'm gonna give her 10 racks just to crash out on you, because that was what her first segment was if I had enough money to be that petty, I would be that petty I would be cameron levels of petty no, that's the next level.

Speaker 4:

With it, though yeah, I would.

Speaker 3:

I would use my time, energy and money to exact my revenge on multiple people especially with how she's literally put the episode first episode on on his app.

Speaker 4:

Then she deletes it, so, like, only way you can see it. If somebody who's like reposted it, she took it off to her page so I'm pretty sure he sent her something there. It's just so much, that's so messy. And then, like it was like this weird combination of like racist feminist rhetoric where, like she would say, like some anti-black shit and then like some anti-man shit, all combined into it, white women hold on. It was literally the epitome of like white woman.

Speaker 2:

Like, oh, I'm so depressed feminism yeah, hold up and I know there's I. I have to start out with what everybody's been waiting for me to talk about the story that's dominated the headlines, the one that made the entire world go. This can't be real life. We must be living in a simulation. Elon Musk, Elon Musk's big balls and, for the uninitiated, big balls is the nickname of Elon Musk's doge crony, Edward Cortisone and recently he got beat up. He got attacked in Washington DC and, depending on who you ask, Big Balls was assaulted by a violent gang. In reality it was two teenagers, but you know Fox News has a strict policy that anytime there's more than one black person or migrant in the same location, it's automatically a gang. One is a criminal, two is a march, three is a cartel so that was like she's getting her shit off she is getting her shit off I think it sounds like a comedian wrote this for her.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, like it sounds like a roast.

Speaker 10:

Yeah, when I was listening to.

Speaker 4:

I listened to. The whole thing was like only 30 minutes. It definitely sounded like she was reading from a script, like she kind of interjected her own thoughts here and there but you think that's why she had sunglasses on? Yeah, so she you could tell she wasn't reading yeah so I think this was very much a planned, like peter tilling them got some folks together and was like hey, let's embarrass your baby daddy real quick.

Speaker 3:

What white comedian do you think wrote this?

Speaker 4:

this is tough, like I feel like this is like somebody like underground, something like, because this is not like no theo bond or like nobody like that this is like a tactician kind of dude like this is somebody who's probably on the left. You know like when you go through your your feed and you just see, like them, random comedians and you don't really like remember their name the ones that are just like doing crowd.

Speaker 3:

They're always skinny.

Speaker 4:

They really have a similar disposition. I feel like one of them dudes did, the dude who always does Gaza content where he talks about jokes about the Israel-Palestine war. He makes jokes basically about Israel.

Speaker 8:

You've seen that before. You had to have seen that.

Speaker 4:

His stuff be going crazy viral. He'll have an Israeli in the crowd every time, and then for some reason, he'll just make it super awkward. But I think somebody like that would be.

Speaker 3:

It's hard when you don't be knowing these people. No, but I told you we live on two different worlds on the internet.

Speaker 4:

But he's kind of like that little. What's? The little black boy that was on the Daily Show with Jon Stewart, the one you like. Show with Jon Stewart, the one you like.

Speaker 3:

He's really like bashful looking Josh Johnson.

Speaker 4:

Yeah him, Josh seems like somebody who wrote this. I can see Josh writing that for her. That was kind of like the vein of that.

Speaker 3:

Yeah. It gives like nighttime news comedy vibes.

Speaker 4:

Yeah, like somebody who's just on a daily show kind of program. But we'll have to meet more, though. It's kind of tough to find those out unless they really in your algorithm. But but we'll have to meet more though it's kind of tough to find those out unless they're really in your algorithm. But it was just so crazy. She went in like she was talking about the big balls thing and that's what's actually been kind of taking over DC. That's the real reason. Well, the thing that initiated why Trump has taken over the nation's capital with the police.

Speaker 3:

I think it's really crazy and the National Guard, everything.

Speaker 4:

It's so insane. National Guard, everything, it's so insane. I actually talked, because y'all know I'm from there. I actually talked to my brother about this. What did he say? So I asked him about you know what his thoughts was and he said actually the night before I talked to him, he said that he was out and about I think he was with one of his daughters and the authorities were by him. They said something to him. He said next thing, you know, he turned around. He was surrounded by officers. For what reason? Nothing. They just they. They called out to him. He didn't listen, he didn't hear them. So he didn't just kept doing what he was doing and they took it as, oh, not listening to a you know a command and he said he ended up. They all surrounded him. So I'm asking him, like we're discussing it, but he's talking about this, like it's a good thing, like he's happy this is happening why is there a lot of crime in dc.

Speaker 3:

Do the people in dc like?

Speaker 4:

there is. There's a a lot of crime in regards to, like, the big balls thing that she was talking about.

Speaker 3:

He got carjacked and that's what kind of sparked that, and there's been a lot of carjacking I have a friend that lives in dc who deals with her car break, getting broken into and like, makes jokes about stuff like that. So I get that part. Atlanta has the same problem.

Speaker 4:

Even when my brother and I were talking about it, he broke down this one story where he said he was across the street and he saw a dude call a locksmith. The locksmith came in, opened the car up and apparently the car that he opened up wasn't the correct car and the guys were able to get the car going and steal it, basically essentially implicating the locksmith in it. But as I was talking to my brother, I was just trying to you know.

Speaker 3:

That locksmith knew what he was doing.

Speaker 4:

I mean, I don't know about that, but this is what my brother said they cut him they didn't pay him off and they just sped off with the car as soon as he opened it up. For Well, my brother and I were talking about it and I was like he was like, yeah, that's why the officers are needed. Man, there's all this stuff going on To myself thinking and I kind of asked him like how the police would have stopped that. The police wouldn't have been able to stop that at all. The police just would have shot at the car. They wouldn't have stopped it because there was nothing going on. Nobody knew a law was being broken until it was broken, until they were speeding off.

Speaker 8:

Yeah like.

Speaker 4:

This idea that adding police to any environment is going to make it better is just. It doesn't make any sense to me. I don't think I don't get why people think it's going to work. It's just this idea and, like I said, we're going to talk about a little bit more when we get into the man. This happened with Amanda Seals and the 20 V1 that she did, but like it's just really comfortable for us to like shit on our own, like even more than the past, and it has been.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, it's really disheartening when people fall for the propaganda Mm-hmm.

Speaker 4:

No it seems like it's easier for them to fall victim more and more, and I think that would probably be like a theme of this show, honestly, today, just because of some of the stuff that we're going to be talking about. But we can get off of that. It wasn't too much more.

Speaker 3:

Regarding that, I just think that when these billionaire bros start beefing this, they just ain't playing fair.

Speaker 4:

Do you think she's gonna have a second episode or do you think it's just the one and done? She deleted the episodes.

Speaker 3:

I don't think it's not like on youtube or anything not that I found when I went to her page.

Speaker 4:

Honestly, when I because I went, literally went to her page to see it and I couldn't find it anywhere, I had to go search her name, find other people who did a quote tweet of it, and then it still lived on there. So even when you clicked on, it would say nothing to see here, so you couldn't comment on it, you couldn't uh, quote, tweet it, like it or anything you just could watch it again, so it was still on there that way.

Speaker 4:

So I don't know. There's like a deleting portion. That happens when you do videos that yeah take some time, but I'm glad I was able to watch it because I didn't know she was going to delete it that fast. I think she deleted it, like I said the same day, but the rest of it she really didn't get into much else. Like I said, she was just into the white whining. You know white girl whining. That's all it really was.

Speaker 10:

Mm-hmm.

Speaker 4:

All right, okay. So since we're going to talk about this we already her up, let's get into the amanda seals, the 20 v1 that she went on. So I know we've already talked about like jubilee before, like kind of like our general stance on it, so I don't want to rehash that yeah I don't think anything from this argument or this uh debate that they had changed any of that no, we.

Speaker 3:

I think both of us have the same opinion on just the structure itself.

Speaker 4:

Yeah, like I kind of just reinforced it, what we kind of thought about it did yes and I'm just not gonna be, you know, shameless about it.

Speaker 3:

Man of sales, content does good for us so I mean we're gonna talk about it yeah we're gonna talk about it.

Speaker 4:

We're gonna continue to talk about it so it was interesting, though I mean it was, it was enlightening.

Speaker 4:

It brings to light, to the main like takeaway I had from it just brings to light a really sad truth that I think is not even just bleeding over from black conservatism, but just in like the way we discuss blackness as a whole, especially when we see ourselves like having some sort of like upward mobility, and it's like this outward hate of black people, like there's no other way that you can wrap your mind around it. It's just outward hate of I hate black people. I think that in mass, black people are less than I. Just think I'm better than them for whatever reason. I think that's the main thing. When I have that conversation with a lot of people, that's what the gist that I get from them is that they're holding up this idea of blackness because it makes them feel like they're better.

Speaker 4:

That they're one of the yeah, and I think that to this day, a lot of people are still living with that principle and idea and it like it's. It's to me, it's, it's close to me, so I I see it to amongst people a lot. In regards to that conversation, it I'm just being dead ass and it's insane I'm just saying, I see it it's insane behavior.

Speaker 4:

It is though, and even when we did an interview with um, with chill, he said something similar to that where he was talking about niggas and stuff like that, where it's like it. We don't realize how common we make tearing down us to each other. We don't, we don't even think about how easy it is in regards to, and I'm not talking about when you hear stupid people on the internet that want to protect one individual black person and say, oh black people always tear each other down.

Speaker 4:

No, I'm talking about when we're talking about us as a culture. We so easily swipe and say, oh, like this clown little sweet nigga that was on there talking about.

Speaker 3:

Oh, black culture is toxic, like no, you can't make black culture a monolith like that. Like it's insane. He thinks that black culture is just like trap music.

Speaker 4:

He was like everything they produced that's so hateful, without even considering the fact that we don't even fund the things we produce. That's what I'm Like. Their arguments were so terrible. They all started from a horrible place, but I'm going to play this one. This is the one that All of them like actually ignored nuance Actively. Well, that's what you have to do for conservatism.

Speaker 4:

Yeah, all right, hold on, let me play this, this one. This is with the fat. I think he's gay conservative, which is always hilarious to me where it's like you, fat, black and ugly.

Speaker 8:

And gay and gay.

Speaker 4:

And you know, those are all the things conservatives hate.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, they wouldn't fuck with you. Not one of the intersectional ways.

Speaker 5:

Who fought against slavery to have to pay for people that had slaves.

Speaker 8:

One. From my understanding, you are more interested in preserving the fairness of those who didn't have slaves than the fairness of those who are the descendants of slaves. That is priority to you than finding a fair way to accommodate those who have been the descendants of slaves.

Speaker 5:

Well, our ancestors wasn't asking for handouts, they were asking for equal opportunity.

Speaker 4:

That's what we call a red herring.

Speaker 5:

And we have equal opportunity in this country. We had a black president, just in case you didn't know. Okay.

Speaker 4:

I hate when people say this we had a black president. Do you know there's countries in the Middle East that have had women presidents? Do you think they're a bastion of feminism? I'm just being dead ass.

Speaker 3:

That's what people usually do, like when you're, when you're like not winning argument, you kind of, just, you kind of just take the left lane, make a, make a quick right turn, just so you can avoid the fact that you just got ate up. But sometimes it's completely OK to be like you know what what? Let me take that back. I didn't know what I was talking about, you're right oh no, they can't do that.

Speaker 3:

Conservatives have have almost learned a playbook where that doesn't allow for that you can't conceive and I think that's why these, a lot of these arguments like aren't structural at all and they're not helping in any way, because people are just like dancing around, like trying not to be proven wrong.

Speaker 5:

We had a black president and we had a black vice president. I mean I think she was black. They said she was black, I don't know. So we had a black president, and you know who voted for that black man? White people, because you can't win a popular election in this country without white people. So Barack Obama is the product of white people. So let's get off this thing where?

Speaker 4:

oh, america. So then this is where I thought it was stupid for him calling Barack Obama a product of white people. So then it makes sense why they're okay, comfortable voting for him. He's not someone who's going to step out of line. They know that they've conditioned him and that he is in a belief, in a way that will maintain the structure he felt safe for them. And that's like literally what you're saying here. So that doesn't mean I'm okay with blackness. I'm okay with a form of a black person that I can control that also has absolutely nothing to do with slavery and excusing.

Speaker 3:

Excusing slave owners versus like.

Speaker 4:

What was the initial argument in the first place, it morphed into so many different things yeah, that's what it's it's frustrating to listen to at one at some point no, it definitely was because, again, like you said, they were discussion of the topic was reparations, and so that's where, basically, they were having that conversation on why reparations are needed. But this is the other one. This is the one that everyone kind of like been either you love or hate, depending on who you are. So let me get this one. This is with the African boy.

Speaker 9:

You can give everyone here like a $50,000 check, especially people that are in the streets who are committing violent crimes consistently. A $50,000 check. It's not going to fix anything. It's not going to increase the median household income in the next 10 years by 10% or 20%. For example, we had the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882. We prevented Chinese people from getting citizenship and even entering the country. We discriminated against them and basically put them under apartheid, even here in the United States. Yet they have the highest median household income. How is that possible? How come they don't complain and feel entitled consistently to beg for reparations and beg for this when they are killing each other 90 percent of the time, which is the rate that black people kill each other, according to the FBI oh, young Matt yet white people are the oppressors.

Speaker 8:

I'm not sure where your education came from, but they lied to you stats don't lie though statistics lie all the time, so let's start there particularly okay.

Speaker 4:

So this is what I want to discuss too, just a little bit, where he said that stats don't lie. If you don't understand the stats and you don't actually put them in perspective, then, yes, the stats will tell a story, if you allow it. So I had this conversation. I remember, back on spaces a while too, where this guy kept regurgitating fbi talking points. So let me, this is what you have to understand if you listen to fbi talking points, you have to come to one or two consensus one.

Speaker 4:

If you are listening to fbi records, then crime is almost nothing because of the percentage of actually what's going on versus what they report. That is nothing. That is almost not even a percentage of actually what's going on versus what they report. That is nothing. That is almost not even a percentage of anything In regards to the amount of incidents, incidences that we have enter as people together, in regards to what actually sparks a crime to happen.

Speaker 4:

Or you look at it another way that they're only showing you the information of what their intentions are. That they're only showing you the information of what their intentions are. What I mean by that is that they're looking for black bodies when they are the offenders or alleged offenders and they are looking more intently when the victim is a white person. That is what FBI statistics show us, because we know you got to use a little sense here, ladies and gentlemen. You got to know FBI can't get every crime that's being reported. We all know that. We all know there's tons of crime that's not going reported. So then these numbers don't mean anything. But when you pull them out you try to say, oh, most black people kill other black people. Most people die by people. They know you mostly die by people.

Speaker 3:

That surround you. They're just crimes of like proximity. Asian people kill asian people, white people kill white people.

Speaker 3:

Black people be killing black people because we be living together and if you look at it in regards to social economic classes generally, most of the people all act within the same range in regards to potential violence and things of that nature but when you want to skew statistics to prove a point, then you could hone in on one part of the statistics and not look at the bigger picture and try to prove and be like, hey, this is what's happening, but if you zoom out a little bit, that's not what's happening and it's it's disingenuous.

Speaker 8:

When the statistics are coming from the sources that gain from the statistics being shown a different way. So if you're going to start your argument on stats being shown a different way, so if you're going to start your argument on stats, don't lie.

Speaker 9:

You've already lost the argument.

Speaker 8:

They lie all the time. One comparing Chinese people, who are immigrants that made a choice to come to the United States, and comparing the continued effort of black people to ground themselves in a nation that continues to make impediments for them to show and live and exist in their true citizenship is a false equivalency.

Speaker 9:

I don't believe that happens at all. No one here is in.

Speaker 8:

Are you acting right now? Do you really believe this?

Speaker 9:

I'm telling the truth, there's no systemic racism that I've experienced here in America. What system is racist? I think the only racism we've actually seen recently systemic racism that we've seen is the application of systemic racism against white people. The University of Western Washington, for example, has been trying to segregate dormitories using black-only dormitories, because black people feel safer amongst each other.

Speaker 3:

He sounds as corny as he looks too.

Speaker 9:

White people are able to kill them. That's just the truth.

Speaker 3:

He said what systems are racist?

Speaker 4:

Banking, housing, policing and she brought that up One of the things I felt like she didn't do. I don't think, the one thing I don't think she did enough of, because she ended up. You know people were trying to talk about her calling name calling. When you call something ignorant or someone ignorant, that's not name calling, that's an observation. Name calling would be like calling you stupid, dense, uh, retard, like those would be. I wish that her name called.

Speaker 3:

She did that more but then like that wouldn't. That's not conducive to any type of situation because I would have started each of my rebuttals like you, stupid motherfucker. Like she wanted to, I know she wanted to. I know she probably went back to like her people. It was like yo, that's what everybody does after they do one of these.

Speaker 4:

Yeah, that's what they all do. But one of the things that kind of I wish she would have been, I guess, a little bit more prepared for was to discuss, like the actual historical relevance of what he was talking about, because Chinese people and Asian people by and large have got a lot of grace in this country in regards to being when they had to pass out minority loans and things of that nature, they were used to reach the quota and so that it could create a buffer between the black people and white people, like these were things that have been done. You see plenty like the Asian girls on TikTok go around talking about how some of their families, when they came over here, had particular opportunities, and then you also go into the effect of, like she said, you can't compare someone who willfully came over here to a country who might have intelligent reason to want to send people over here so that they can have operatives and things of that nature. Just people, eyes on the ground, can report back what's going on.

Speaker 3:

And we're not going to act like proximity to whiteness isn't a factor, like y'all look white except for the eyes. I mean, y'all look white. Y'all are way more acceptable to them than the rest of us are. Right, y'all are way more acceptable to them than the rest of us are. And then also a lot of Asian people like as far as how they feel, like they've accepted the love for the proximity to the whiteness, yeah, they prefer it.

Speaker 4:

Oh for sure that's why they were so gung ho, fighting for something that wasn't really helping for them DEI from the schools, yeah, and then y'all ended up getting fucked because y'all didn't realize that y'all are the diversity. They think they white, they always do the lighter, especially the lighter they are or the more accepted they are.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, oh my God, I was about to be like they all pretty light, don't see like a dusty looking Asian and they get a little bit of attention from the whites.

Speaker 4:

They think they the shit looking doofy, hanging out being the token Asian they've completely indoctrinated y'all in their beauty standards, in their social norms don't be the token chopstick. Yo real talk, don't what. I can't say that I don't think so I thought that was hard. The token chopstick, that's hard.

Speaker 3:

What if somebody was like oh, don't be the token, watermelon slice I agree. I agree, that is a microaggression.

Speaker 4:

I agree, don't be the token watermelon slice.

Speaker 3:

Oh my God. Don't be that that's not cool. Listen half of Talk F and f does not agree with that statement stop asian hate all right.

Speaker 4:

So what did you think overall of amanda's performance?

Speaker 3:

I thought she bodied it especially I. I only watched like that last like 35 minutes when we were in the car. But, um, the last statement that she made where she uh, when she was talking about like black people and caribbean people and how people immigrants come here. Yeah, I got that, yeah I thought that was you needed to hear that I was about to take this and knock you over the head with it like I didn't fucking get a a in African-American fucking studies.

Speaker 4:

And then you still be with the shade on the African-Americans.

Speaker 3:

Okay, I'm going to shade the African-Americans, because Haitians before everybody.

Speaker 4:

Okay then.

Speaker 3:

So don't act like don't get mad, but don't act like I came here and started doing that cocoon bullshit, Like I don't know the plight of African-Americans, Like I don't appreciate African-American culture, Like I don't know the plight of African-Americans, Like I don't appreciate African-American culture, Like I don't know what the fuck it is. Close your mouth, for real.

Speaker 8:

The daughter of an immigrant. It is imperative that black people from other places understand the disparate difference that they exist from black people in the United States. It is not the same period and ultimately, the best effort that we can do as a diaspora is to lead in understanding, not in judgment. So when I am talking to somebody from Sudan, from the Congo, from Angola, I am listening to understand their experience, not to undermine it, and I refuse to allow anybody from Grenada, from Angola, from any other place, to come and try to undermine the experience of black Americans.

Speaker 4:

I want to do one actual question. Why do you think because you are an immigrant? Why do you think that most immigrants tend to skew conservative when they come to the country?

Speaker 3:

Why? I don't think it's most immigrants.

Speaker 4:

I've seen well, black immigrants, let's go, black immigrants, I don't think it's most immigrants I've seen.

Speaker 3:

Well, black immigrants, let's go. Black immigrants, I don't think it's most black immigrants, the ones that I've always seen as black immigrants, Because it's the inner well, first of all, that's unfair, because that room was only conservatives. So of course, if there are some immigrants in that room, they're going to be conservatives too, and if you're only, if you're only, and if you're only if you're only, what's interaction with most immigrants is on the Internet, and of course that's what you're going to see. I live in New York, where most immigrants are liberal.

Speaker 4:

When I and again, I live here in the south and where I've met the most immigrants here.

Speaker 3:

You know, the ones don't skew right Most of the. I've never met more right-wing African-Americans until I moved here too, so I don't think that's fair. I think Southern people are usually a little bit more conservative-leaning, and then people in the North East West are usually a little bit more liberal. I don't think it's fair.

Speaker 3:

It's not just about to shit on immigrants and be like oh, they're this and they're that, when you don't actually have. How is that shitting on immigrants? I think, because I think right wing people are stupid. So I think you're shitting on immigrants.

Speaker 4:

You don't think immigrants have a high duty to religion they personal code, and that, generally, is what gets people pulled over to the right I'm not saying, it is what gets a 50, 50 thing.

Speaker 3:

But even when you look at statistics like I'm just saying I didn't like, I didn't like how you said most, so take that away, okay, why do you think some?

Speaker 4:

why do you think some skew right then? Okay, um, especially when they come from countries that have been heavily authoritarian and whatnot.

Speaker 3:

I think religion has a lot to do with it. I think a lot of Caribbean people play with the respectability politics and I think that hip-hop culture shocks a lot of them. I think that they also have this kind of like, kind of like.

Speaker 3:

that's a little hypocrisy too, because y'all have some wild music too not all of the caribbean countries all of our hip-hop music is okay, so whatever so, um, the ones from the places that are a little bit more conservative can think that, um, damn, I forgot what I was gonna say. I think it's also like, kind of like our culture is better than yours type of like we think we're better than you.

Speaker 4:

Yeah, elitism 100 see, and do you think that comes from the fact that maybe they have like more autonomy in their country, where they came from? Yeah, we came like from where there's only us because you got to think about it, like even when you said how you told me where you grew up, like y'all had people who worked in your house and cleaned up around your house and stuff like yeah, and they were also black yeah, so I mean that that was neither here.

Speaker 4:

I'm just talking about, like the class of people that have to be to even think about immigrating to another country and like where you have to be financially on that totem pole, like I think the reason why we see a lot of them skew right is because generally capital found them a little bit easier a little bit counterparts and so when they come here and we talk about this capitalism, free game, free market, everybody has a quote-unquote chance, which they really don't they fall for that hook line and sinker, thinking that it's their ability opportunity sometimes it's that and sometimes it's just they had the bigger balls than the people back home, like in my situation.

Speaker 3:

For for my family it wasn't because my parents were better off financially, it's because my parents had the bigger balls, like they took the chance. My dad came here with a journalism degree and had to wash dishes for years before me and my mom were even able to come here. So he came here, held it down for seven years and then sent for me and my mom, him and my uncle. So, like it was, you have to have a network of people that are already here to help you a little bit.

Speaker 4:

It helps if you already have family that's here, but if you don't, then it's either finances or big ass balls reason why another reason why I say that too because, like, I remember having this experience with this guy, he was cuban when I was living out in texas. He was telling me that he was like really anti castro or whatever, and I was realizing, like as just talking to him, because I had talked to other people who were blacker cubans and they had more positive things to say about Castro.

Speaker 4:

And I realized it was like it's not necessarily that the oppression was like this ruthless leader he was. It was like nah, he told your grandpa and them niggas they had to come up off the farm and they was pissed. So it wasn't like y'all was actually being put into poverty, Y'all just weren't allowed to live in excess the way that y'all were and y'all took it. Y'all took that as a slap in the face, like y'all deserve better, because like that's the thing.

Speaker 3:

Who were in poverty probably have a completely different view yeah, because they're like yo, I'm not a slave anymore yeah like yeah, I can actually eat every day.

Speaker 4:

So that's why I just think that it's it's interesting seeing how a large portion of that room where what you know what would be called tethers because they was there living in there which you could believe to be black people spewing, uh, anti-black rhetoric. But um, I do want to just finish up with one part of this where we go, and it's just like this idea that the conservatives think they are like these individuals who live in reality, when they quite literally and they think that we're the ones that are indoctrinated in some propaganda and like when they quite literally every word that they spew.

Speaker 4:

Like there was one woman on there who said you know, you can't say that black people weren't more resilient in in the day than they are now. Bitch, how do you measure resilience? Is it cups or ounces? Like, how do you measure resilience? How are you able to do that so clearly? You're the one living in a deja vu world where resilience is, uh, two dollars a gallon. Like I'm just trying to figure out. Like how can y'all say this when y'all have to be the one that brings up all the fake stuff that happens? I have this conversation with some of my conservative friends in regards to like the information they'll process and receive is nowhere near the the outcome and the result that they processed out. I'm like, where does your brain get this information? None of this. Was there not everything that you just said didn't happen.

Speaker 3:

So a lot of them were just making things up out of emotion, which is my, my problem with a lot of conservative people too they just be emotional.

Speaker 4:

It's just how you feel she did do that a little bit, because she got debunked in one of those situations, which I don't think it's too fair, because they talked about the correlation between low production in school and going to prison and she tried to say that they monitor those things to try to continue the flow of prisons and they're like, oh, that's been debunked they're never going to tell us that like no one's ever going to tell us that, and if they do tell us that, no one's going to believe the person who tells us that.

Speaker 3:

So and who. I don't know if they monitor them, but I think they know that there's going to be some prisoners that come out of these low-income schools that we give absolutely no resources to like it's just bound to fucking happen. They've seen it over and over.

Speaker 4:

If you don't give them opportunity, they can't know the law, and then you can.

Speaker 3:

Just you don't have to watch the system that you set up to fail. Already you know it's gonna do what it it it do, it does yeah it's been doing it for decades, yeah, centuries now.

Speaker 4:

So that's why I, just to me, I I wish that she would have been more fact-based in her debate just because I know as a woman, they're going to try to tear you down and be like, oh you, could you be an emotional when, like that's all they are going to do the entire time, like they're the biggest snowflakes in the world I think it's.

Speaker 3:

It's hard when you're having a back and forth with somebody. There is a little bit of like emotion involved in it and then also like you can't stop someone at each point they're making to make your point, like that's not how it was going and she didn't have like a pen and paper to write down, to be like, and then when you said this, this and this like it, she, she did the best she could, I think yeah, no, I mean, I'm not too upset with her, I'm not gonna like tear her up and be like oh you are trash, you dumb bitch like I'm not about to know.

Speaker 4:

Aanda's always been smart, but no, she, she held it down. I just again, I just know what they're gonna do and what kind of talking points. But to be fair, this is this is a good way to determine something right, especially between amanda, like in that fat black gay dude. Amanda ain't said nothing online. He's been online begging, trying to act like he. He's been coping so hard trying to get people to be on. I know we why y'all so mean and why all this name calling and all this stuff. I'm like yo, I thought the conservatives were the tough guy. I thought y'all had the Cajones. Y'all got all of these fruity boys out here trying to mess up the brand name.

Speaker 3:

He probably got his aunts and uncles calling him.

Speaker 4:

Oh, they don't love him. Come on. You know he got kicked out the house a long time ago, Calling him all types of slurs he got kicked out the house a long time ago. Not a I know a nigga that who had to sleep at 15 outside.

Speaker 3:

A bag of f***, a maggot. Bleep that you said it.

Speaker 4:

so low part, a low party to pick it up nah still bleep it, but this again, black conservative is what happens when you mix your politics with god. You know that's just what happens. You know you end up like lamar jackson retweeting charlie kirk what lamar jackson do, what he retweeted charlie kirk what was the tweet? Something about god, something like it's always about god type shit. It was really dummy, dumb shit this is why I was like I wouldn't expect that.

Speaker 4:

I wouldn't expect that from him, because any man like lamar jackson, who would be a public friend to kodak black, I can expect you to do something stupid like retweet the known racist charlie kirk, just because he said something about god. So it just. It's just the flaw of the black conservative, you know, of the black person in general, man.

Speaker 3:

My name's Kodak Black, but when you see me I'm white.

Speaker 4:

I had a funny little segue.

Speaker 3:

It's not what the cops think.

Speaker 4:

Kodak. So update on the black scientist with the oil. So apparently the reason why he went disappear because his baby mama was trying to expose him online. Now this is all a legend, but this nigga baby mama posted his id that's illegal she scraped it out. She scrubbed it. Okay, sensitive information out. Oh my god, yo y'all over here. Oh, they ain't trying to take down the black, no, you just doing all some regular normal nigga shit, like that's all he said.

Speaker 4:

He was on some normal nigga yeah we assumed normal nigga trying to evade the baby moms. That's's all Nothing wrong with that man, we all do it. All right, man. So I want you to listen to this. This is hilarious, okay.

Speaker 10:

Man just revealed a huge secret about homosexuality in the Mexican community.

Speaker 11:

Old school Mexican dads will cut off their sons for being gay, but they won't cut off their boys that be sucking their dick when they get drunk.

Speaker 10:

That's a conversation y'all don't want to have bruh, because when mexican motherfuckers be getting drunk they be doing some gay ass shit. Did you hear what he said? He said many mexican fathers are on the dl but they will disown their openly gay sons, even though they enjoy sleeping with their friends when they're drunk. He went on to share that he had a friend who was gay and his father treated him like he did not exist. But then he found out from his cousin that his cousin was sleeping with that same father like it was nothing. He says that when you see a group of Mexican men together and they're all drinking, it's very likely that by the end of the night they're gonna start touching each other and fooling around, and they use drinking beer and powder as a cover-up so they can act like they don't know what's going on. But they know what's going on because once the man does it to them, they always return the favor.

Speaker 11:

And if you're thinking, yeah right, that's just one man's opinion, well, this woman says it's absolutely true and if you're not Mexican and you're seeing these videos about Mexican deal, man and you're like is that true? Yes, bitch, it might as well be called fucking Brokeback Valley, not Brokeback Mountain. The way these fucking uncles be getting down.

Speaker 10:

So the next time your Mexican uncles do a beer one and it's taking them hours to get back these guys are saying they might be doing more than just buying beer Escándalo. Indecente descinto.

Speaker 4:

I was looking up how they say down low in Spanish.

Speaker 3:

Okay, because that didn't sound like you said anything.

Speaker 4:

That's what it said. That's what it was. It was like indiscretional descinto or something like that. That's what it was. But all right, speaking of gay Mexicans, nick Fuentes.

Speaker 3:

That's what. I was trying to say I wanted to talk about the gay mexican uncles a little bit well, we can get into it.

Speaker 4:

But then we get into nick fuentes. He's gonna be a gay uncle one day, so I don't think it's just the mexicans.

Speaker 3:

Oh for sure. My only reason I play. I think men be getting drunk and sucking each other's dicks secretly. You think that's just like the wave of niggas. I think I think that happens more than we. Oh for sure, my only reason I play. I think men be getting drunk and sucking each other's dicks secretly. You think that's just like the wave of niggas. I think I think that happens more than we think it happens. I think more men have experimented with a penis once in their life more than they'd like to admit. There are a lot of men who have touched a penis who will never share it with anybody other than the penis that was touched.

Speaker 4:

They wouldn't even share it with them. They don't even talk about it again.

Speaker 3:

Yeah.

Speaker 4:

Like they're real with it.

Speaker 5:

Yeah.

Speaker 4:

But that's insane. Don't be just putting dick touching on niggas, because y'all be flicking beans and shit off the like 12-year-old sleepovers.

Speaker 3:

That's crazy. That's what all the stories. I was here Like sucking a nipple maybe, but like now, that's not crazy either. No, that's less crazy than flicking beans.

Speaker 4:

Well, my thing is this we always hear about like black. I was doing it at the sleepovers.

Speaker 3:

Where was I? I wasn't inviting me to the bean flicking sleepovers. No, girl, y'all could't inviting me to the bean flicking sleepovers. No, girl, y'all could've invited me to the bean flicking sleepovers. I swear to god, you would've told no, I wouldn't have.

Speaker 4:

But no, I just think like for some reason, like black DL always gets like the shine, but like not, all y'all niggas be getting young.

Speaker 3:

Yeah.

Speaker 4:

And that's why I was trying to do this.

Speaker 3:

It's just black men be DL the hardest, because black people be homophobic the hardest.

Speaker 4:

I don't think that.

Speaker 3:

Like I said, in the United States.

Speaker 4:

Some Hispanic niggas be DL. Be shaming too. They be like hey, I'm sorry, one of these funny business guys.

Speaker 3:

Those are immigrants. We talking about everybody here. I'm taking it, I'm taking the light off. Oh, we're not the only d aliens. Okay, it ain't just black men out here being dls.

Speaker 4:

Oh, I'm just saying that's why y'all the most intensely dl. That's why we're exposing nick fuentes, because he is a dl mexican and white apparently nick fuentes was sucking dick.

Speaker 3:

Was that who you were talking about?

Speaker 4:

I told you.

Speaker 3:

I said that on the show yeah, yeah, but no I just think that's still crazy, like I'm gonna bring it up for a second episode in a row because nick fuentes was well okay, so we can I guess.

Speaker 4:

Allegedly we can go into that way, and then we'll talk about this other thing that he was doing. So, yeah, so that was the thing about with destiny that I told you about, where it was a video that came out that was essentially saying, like Destiny was like giving Nick head or whatever in the video, and this is all legend or whatever. But it's come to find out that Destiny's son, who is like 14 years old, is now like a grouper and if you don't know what that is, it's like part of Nick's crew. That's where, like that's all his partners are. Like that's his, his partners are like that's his, his his uh, what is it like?

Speaker 3:

his barbs? Yeah, I think it's really funny that in this day and age, where we say grape and uh uh, we say grape instead of rape on the internet, just for sensory purposes, and you decided to name your fan base groupers like that's, that's a choice.

Speaker 4:

So I want to play this clip. Hold on, let me see, because this is, like I said, destiny's son, who just went like on an interview where he's kind of discussing his new affinity for nick, and I just don't understand like I don't want to talk too much about the kid because he's only 14. He's not even 18 yet. I'm going to talk more about his dad in just a little bit, but I just think it's so crazy for you to be a fan of the dude your dad was topping off.

Speaker 3:

He doesn't know that, though it was all over the news, this kid is 14 years old. Yeah, he knows that he knows.

Speaker 4:

Dan was out there getting topped up by fucking, or he was topping up Nick Fuentes. Somebody who's told him that before? Somebody has said that to him. He's been embarrassed. He even went on a whole little spiel. I'm going to go through all of this real quick, because he even went through a whole little spiel about it Defending his dad.

Speaker 3:

No, he defending his dad, no, he's talking shit about his dad. Actually, I really think that the only reason he's probably a fan of nicks is these little red pill white boys in his school probably make fun of him all the time. For his dad being destiny so he had to take a hard left and was like no, I'm the complete opposite of my dad.

Speaker 4:

I actually hate women and you know, but his dad has been kind of looked like as a doof on the internet as well, like the fact that the way that remember he was having an open relationship with one of his wives and she was like getting nailed by other dudes and all that stuff like you're gonna look like a lame. Like I can kind of imagine why your son would grow up and be like I don't want to be like you.

Speaker 3:

Was that his mom?

Speaker 4:

the open relationship woman I don't think that was his mom, because he's been married, definitely been married twice okay, so hold on I'm gonna play the interview that he did. He sat down with tyson hockley and tyson you're you're kind of a piece of shit for like, exploiting his little boy honestly uh, you've been saying that you're a groiper.

Speaker 9:

Now what is it like? What is the main thing that made you decide to become a groiper like? Was there a certain thing that made you decide to join the movement?

Speaker 7:

I just feel like those are the final people on the internet that I can relate to. Discord. No one in the DGG chats talk to me anymore. Dgg hates me on Twitter. They banned me in the Reddit. Yeah, so the GloryPers are kind of the final people I can come to and I agree with most of them and I find myself kind of in commonality with most of them. Most find myself putting commonality with most of them, most of them being around my age or a little bit.

Speaker 4:

That's the scary part, where he said most of them being around his age. That is that many kids who's kind of on that kind of time? I was thinking about how scared I would be if my son would have turned out like this You're going to Haiti, you just have turned out like this You're going to Haiti. You just would have sent him there. You're going to Haiti.

Speaker 3:

Like I remember what the fuck is you talking about. I'm sending you to my grandmother and she gonna teach you about life for real. Nigga, like you're not about to have internet for the next two years and you gonna come back an actual, real life, human being. And then think about that again.

Speaker 4:

I just couldn't imagine like. I just remember the first time I see him like send me my son sent me like a post about political stuff and it was like oh, he's not an idiot. Like I thought it was bad. Like, I'm gonna be honest, I thought he was gonna go through a similar path like this because he had like joined the hustlers university thing.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, I remember that, like so I was sitting here, he was holding his chest.

Speaker 4:

He almost had a heart attack but see, the thing was I couldn't let it show them and I think that's one of the things that like parents of the past would be like oh you gotta tell your kid no and don't do this stupid thing. Like I have, a fundamental understanding was like you have to learn to fuck up on your own. You kind of have to understand.

Speaker 4:

Stuff is stupid unless you fucking up a lot so instead, what I said to him was, when he said he was doing it, I sent him whatever little cash, whatever he needed to go do it. I said you're gonna learn. You said you're a smart kid, you're gonna learn. This is stupid. If you're not, I mean if you're not a smart kid, you're just. You know there's no hope for you, no way, so there's no point of tripping about it.

Speaker 3:

There are some things that aren't that serious and you can take that approach for sure, but, like teenage pregnancy, I'm taking you to the clinic well, I mean, that's what I'm saying where it's like it can't get too worse.

Speaker 4:

That's why I'm like what, what? What can I say? Like I already had, you when I was your age.

Speaker 5:

Teenage pregnancy that nigga done, got me wiped out honestly, but no you just got to let them kind of fall.

Speaker 4:

But I mean, and this is what kind of Destiny was talking about, because Hasan which is kind of funny, that's who he's dressed like, the old version of Hasan Destiny was reacting to Hasan, basically saying, like the kid wants you, he wants attention from you.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, obviously.

Speaker 4:

This is why he's acting like this, but this is what Destiny said about it.

Speaker 11:

Bro, it's so cringe, Bro, everybody obsessively trying to influence Nathan's politics or following his shit or looking at his Twitter. Listen, nathan's on some unhinged shit right now. Okay, let him be unhinged. I've said the same thing a million times.

Speaker 11:

I'll continue to say the same thing a million times. Kids are crazy. Let him be crazy for a bit. Be still like this at 18. We'll have some concerns or whatever, but this like obsession of trying to prove like also. I like how it's like. My mom and dad are hardcore MAGA. The rest of my family, basically, is all MAGA. I'm like a hardcore, the number one Trump hater in the fucking world. My kid's mom's family is all insane MAGA. I don't know where. Like my kids. My. How do I say this? Is there a quicker way to say this?

Speaker 11:

My kid's mom's mom, so his grandma. I'm not trying to be mean here. Fuck, oh shit. I'm doing the loose, loose, loose thing where I'm revealing more personal information. I think I've said this before. She believes in the prosperity gospel. Okay, like watches TV with the pastors who think that if you donate more money to the church or whatever, that you'll be more safe, like I like all these people exist.

Speaker 1:

He's just trying to.

Speaker 11:

He's just trying to let us know how stupid they are selling, it's because he's trying to save face.

Speaker 4:

Really, that's what it is, all right. So this is what his son went on a little twitter rant and I'm gonna read a little bit of it. I want to make sure this is in the right order normally, please I can't read it like him you said he's 14 so he said, the problem is not the internet, the problem is my father.

Speaker 4:

The problem is my mother. The problem is I had grown up without a concurrent present father in my life, while being berated and yelled at by my mom constantly and always being the target of non-stop shaming. It is not my fucking job to raise myself, but my dad made it my job to learn how to become a man without a father. My mom made it my job to become mentally stronger than she, in spite of her constant belittling. I'm just fucking sick of living the way I am. I hate everyone and I don't have any actual friends, only two. I don't have any plan for my life and I don't care. I just don't care about anything anymore. Sounds like typical teenage angst young.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, like he's just going through the typical shit.

Speaker 4:

Your teenager usually goes through and he said I do not respect my mom. I do not respect my mother, I do not love my mother. I only live with my mother. There are good times, but every good time I have with her is overshadowed by even worse time. My father isn't even my father. It feels. No one has actually no one took actual time to raise me. Fuck everyone.

Speaker 3:

I want to kill my mom. I want to kill my dad. Why don't you love me? I want to kill my grandpa. Hold on, I want to kill my like. That's what you sound like, but he's 14. Like that's all of us.

Speaker 4:

He's 14, though.

Speaker 3:

All of us have gone through that. Like my parents don't understand me, they don't love me, blah blah, like they might not have actually been great parents. We don't know that I mean, but at the end of the day there was no point where I was like oh, my parents aren't good parents. I was just like these niggas are assholes and they're stopping me from having fun.

Speaker 4:

But in any way too, though he kind of is overreacting a little bit when it's like bro, look what your dad does, he's a streamer. That nigga got to work hard for his money, he got to go do events, he got to be all XYZ in here. So that's just a part of the game. Yo Like as a nigga whose dad had to make his sacrifices for him to live a dope life. Pops, I appreciate you, my nigga.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, but Not every kid is going to think like you think I didn't think like that either until I got older Every time the shit comes up.

Speaker 4:

Bro, I had a friend right that nigga dad was always around, that nigga dad sucked. That nigga didn't have no car, that nigga just was there All the time.

Speaker 3:

Would he say that about his father? Yeah, pretty sure, I don't't think so.

Speaker 4:

I don't like how, how, open, especially the way he is. Your mouth was especially the way that he is. That's crazy especially the way he is and the way that he give it up for his yeah, he would definitely say that his dad was on some bull. Okay, that's what I'm saying. Like that whole your dad being around, no, nigga, make some motion, nigga, make some fucking motion. My nigga over here crying, oh my dad then. Then you got his op over here rubbing it in his face a little bit. Nick saw that.

Speaker 9:

Hold on, let me play it the generational runner on red pill destiny, son lol I don't know.

Speaker 1:

I don't want to get mixed up in that, because you know what happens when you got kids is when you're 14 years old. Okay, people got to lay off this guy. He's 14 years old. You know people are on his Twitter. Oh, he's a Nazi. He's this, he's that. He's on a show. Look, he's 14 years old, and I'm not saying that to belittle him. He seems like a very intelligent young guy and seems very precocious. Look, he's 14 years old and I'm not saying that to belittle him. He seems like a very intelligent young guy and seems very precocious, so I'm not belittling him.

Speaker 3:

And when you're 14, I still believe you're a young man.

Speaker 1:

But people should really be considerate and not treat it like a big spectacle, him going out there and saying what he's saying. You know there's family, there's clearly some family thing. He's griping about his mom, about his dad on his twitter on his discord. I thought that was obviously. He's saying he's a groiper. He's saying he likes hitler, his dad is like a famous leftist, like there's a. There's a personal dimension to it as well. So you just gotta wonder what is best for him as a young man nick, y'all you're so.

Speaker 4:

You're so wonderful, nick, how much he cared. You can tell he didn't. He didn't really want to go in, no, because that's a child. Well, I don't think he wanted to go on a child, but like that could have been a great time to shit on his dad yeah, like you're looking, I got. I got your dick in my mouth and your son my dick in your mouth and your son.

Speaker 3:

Okay, I'm glad you.

Speaker 4:

I cleaned it up. Yeah, that's what he said to her.

Speaker 3:

That would have been crazy, that's what I would have said. I would have been on that time too, even if I didn't want to let other people know.

Speaker 4:

I did that, put my kids in your mouth and then took your kid. Yeah, crazy nigga what you doing. Then he was over here beating his dick off to galvin newsom last week. Did you see that? Excuse me, nick?

Speaker 4:

oh, my goodness, nick fuente like actually no, he wasn't, but he was doing a reacting to a video. So now, basically because of how he's been slighted by peter till and jd vance and all these guys, he's kind of gone on the attack and now he's been promoting galvin newson. So let me play this little clip of it. I swear during this video that's who they're saying.

Speaker 3:

Like it's gonna be like the next president. Remember when we talked about that, that was who I said and then now everybody's kind of getting on.

Speaker 4:

You know what I've been. You know, sir, it was right. But this man, nick, I thought when he was doing the live stream he was about to pull meat out and start stroking it for Gavin Newsom, the way that he was talking about him. But I got this clip right here where he was talking about the family, the wife and the kids. So hold on.

Speaker 1:

Gavin Newsom's family. Ok, now, this is who the Republicans want you to think is literally the devil. Okay, this guy is Satan. This guy is evil. This guy is woke. He is a left-wing socialist Muslim. He's a radical Muslim socialist like Barack Obama. But you know, right off the bat, we could just make some observations. You know he's white.

Speaker 3:

That's what I was going to say that's the only observation you could make.

Speaker 1:

Hold on, hold on, listen to what he's saying. We could just make some observations. You know he's white, he's tall, he's handsome, so you want to suck his dick. His wife is also white, she's tall, he's handsome, so you want to suck his dick. His wife is also white, she's tall, she's good looking.

Speaker 9:

His children Four of them Also white.

Speaker 1:

All white, beautiful, and they're all white, with blue eyes and blonde hair, and they're in California, or maybe this is Hawaii, I don't know.

Speaker 3:

They're colonizing Like colonizing, but they're in a beautiful state, our beautiful land.

Speaker 4:

This is about to go into the craziest thing you've ever heard in your life, their beautiful blood and our beautiful land in America.

Speaker 1:

If only there was some way to combine those things, their beautiful genetics, their genes. Weren't Republicans just talking about that? Beautiful genes, look at these beautiful genes. Look at these beautiful genes on display and look at our beautiful genes. Look at these beautiful genes on display and look at our beautiful land and look at the beautiful landscape our beautiful soil.

Speaker 3:

All for us, that's Hawaii. This beautiful virgin soil, separated from the world by the oceans that we control. And those beautiful genes that conquered and tamed it.

Speaker 1:

It's really a sight to behold. This is our enemy, they say. Now here's the other image. This is our fearless leader, the entity known as JD Vance, the entity known as JD Hamill.

Speaker 1:

So he's white, but his wife isn't Operating system update is now JD Vance. This is his family. Now let's make some observations here. So this is our fearless leader, the entity known as JD Vance. He's fat. We'll just zoom in here just so you could get a better look. He's visibly obese and very ugly. He's got a fat face, no jawline, no chin, and he's quite ugly. He had to grow a beard because his face was so ugly. The Ozempic didn't even help. Yo, what Some other observations. His wife and kids are not white. You know a lot of people debate whether I'm white. People say if your last name's Fuentes, are you white? Oh my God, maybe I am, maybe I'm not.

Speaker 3:

I know this is definitely not white.

Speaker 1:

He said it. I look, maybe I'm not.

Speaker 3:

I know this is definitely not white, okay, brown skin, black hair.

Speaker 1:

A hindic phenotype.

Speaker 5:

A hindic phenotype.

Speaker 1:

This is an Indian woman. As a matter of fact, she is from the subcontinent of India. Her parents are Indian. They're actually from India. She's first generation Wow. The kids, like the wife, are also visibly.

Speaker 3:

Indian. They're even dressed like.

Speaker 1:

Indians, they don't just look like it genetically, their clothes are also Indian.

Speaker 3:

They're culturally. How dare they culturally also be?

Speaker 1:

Indian. They've got fine black hair going on, or I guess that's more like a thick black hair. They have a brown complexion, brown eyes. The other one does as well over here.

Speaker 11:

Oh my God, yo he is hilarious.

Speaker 4:

That's why I feel bad. He's my favorite white supremacist.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, I get why you say that he said look at them, they are white. I thought he was gonna say something with a little bit more nuance to it. No, nothing about nicked nuance. He said these are whites.

Speaker 4:

And then he said some people say I'm not white, who knows?

Speaker 8:

but these kids no, definitely not what do you say?

Speaker 3:

phenotype?

Speaker 4:

oh my goodness that nigga is Wow, that nigga gotta be stopped.

Speaker 3:

Nah, I like my racism loud and funny, like Nick Fuentes, oh, my goodness.

Speaker 4:

And then so he essentially turned this whole movement into. Now the whole internet's basically drooling over Galvin, galvin, newsom so far. To the point where, like he's kind of even like interacted with these guys. They've been putting up pictures of like Galvin when he was in high school, the next to pictures when JD Vance was in high school. You know, jd Vance is like fucking Bobby Hill.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, yo, he literally looks like Bobby Hill with black hair. Yeah, he's just like Bobby.

Speaker 4:

Hill, yeah, and you see he likes brown women, like Bobby too. He's just basically fucking Bobby Hill without a father and then he's fucking. I got a picture of Galvin he's talking about oh, I missed the scarf. He got a Burberry scarf on Talking about I missed that scarf Flexing Him and his internet team. They went full Trump when basically, like they've been doing funny memes and like putting a patch over his ear.

Speaker 3:

Like he got shot. What the Democrats need to do for the next cycle is to plant seeds of beef between all of the right wing streamers and like not politicians, journalists and stuff like that. Like plant seeds of beef because obviously their morals are not founded in what they actually believe. It's what gets them the most clicks. So now that nick is on the outside, he's I think he's gonna do a full, probably flip I don't think he's gonna flip.

Speaker 4:

I think he's gonna change it in his way where, like, what he's doing here is, I'm focusing on the things that I like the fact that he's white, he's got a white wife, all this stuff, like I'm gonna show you.

Speaker 3:

He going to start shitting on the right wing people though more often Okay. So if he just keeps on doing that, in hordes plant seeds of beef so that other people keep turning against each other, and now we just getting civil war amongst the right while the left finally hopefully gets their fucking shit together. To to um, provide us with a cohesive plan to move forward that's what I'm down for.

Speaker 4:

Let's, let's, let's, bring them down internally yes, make them fight each other. Yes, and then we'll, you know, pick up and clean up like they did to the black community 100, I'm down with it and the fathers. But man, nick, nick is nick is totally insane. But I thought it was very interesting too. I want to just bring this up. There was a report that went out that kind of talked about where his popularity kind of lies with and which group. What group do you think he had the highest popularity?

Speaker 3:

White men.

Speaker 4:

No.

Speaker 3:

Below 20?.

Speaker 4:

No, it wasn't white men.

Speaker 3:

Was it black?

Speaker 4:

people. It was black men that he polled the highest with at 10't white men. Was it black people? It was black men that he polled the highest with at 10. White men were three percent. So again, there may have been more white people who actually liked him, but they just didn't report that they did because it was like they were doing like a favorable. But it was actually like the black men who showed 10 black men are always disappointing.

Speaker 1:

America, white people, white conservatives. Because it really is an issue. I encounter that all the time. People say, oh, you know, a lot of the Groypers are black and brown. It's like, why are white people all like worshiping Israel? You know who's shoring up support for Israel and America White people, white conservatives, white evangelicals. Same thing with feminism. You know, shoring up support for, like women's bullshit it's white men. It's white men that are putting up with women the most.

Speaker 4:

But yeah, I think it's very telling kind of what we were talking about with the Amanda Seals thing, where we're so comfortable of being put into a particular box and Nick does like that old school racism of putting black people and stuff in boxes that it brings an unfortunate comfortability, whereas like you kind of are used to that kind of bad. So that's where you go to, that's where you find comfort and solace and something that's always been familiar and I think that's why a lot of black people follow too. So I don't know if you've seen that page where it's like the cartier family or something, but they're a bunch of black guys and they'll react to you know content, either like the news or leftist tiktoks and things like that, or even nick's post and like it's really sick because it's just like a bunch of black niggas saying, oh yeah, he's right about black people talking down about black people, but they get a whole bunch of views for it.

Speaker 3:

It's kind of vile, honestly and we would never do that, regardless of how much uh this types of that type of content pays, I could never lay my head and comfortably go to sleep. I would literally be. I would be playing the the coon shit that I said back in in my head every single day, every night, when I lay my head on my pillow and there's no more, there's not, there's not enough money in the world and I know we've we've laughed and had a good time, but I do want to make sure you understand that we, we are nick frontes's enemy yes we are going to be his ops till the end.

Speaker 3:

I do think it's hilarious that was good he's. He was calling the white people white, like obviously, yeah, but he wasn't talking about black people in that one.

Speaker 4:

So like it's cool for that one. It's like I got one in here where he was going crazy.

Speaker 3:

No, thank you, you don't play that one.

Speaker 4:

No, you be going wild, I'm okay, all right, well, also a reason why we we know he's gay because he said this is something, only I want to drink it straight from the tap, I want it raw I don't want to wait a moment.

Speaker 1:

Right when the milk is good, I want to start drinking the milk. Same thing goes with women. I don't want to turn 30 and find some 20 year old, 29 year old woman that I have something in common with and it's like hey, properly aged like wine. Women don't age like wine. They age like wine. They age like milk.

Speaker 3:

White women age like milk.

Speaker 1:

That's not how their hormones work.

Speaker 3:

But that's the only option you have.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, I got to find my 16-year-old wife Probably when I turn 30 or something, because here's the thing I don't want to be like. Let's say, I get married to an 18-year-old now, six-year age difference when I I turn 40, she's going to be 34. Ew, what if I'm 30? 14 year age difference when I'm 50, she'll be 36. When I'm when I'm, she'll be 26. Now we're talking here. Now we're cooking with gas. Now you can see an alternative vision for how things could be. I want a 16-year-old that's untouched, untouched, pristine, untouched, uncorrupted, innocent. That's what we all want.

Speaker 4:

That's how you know he's gay. Yeah, that's exactly how you know he's gay. Like what you want. That's how you know he's gay, yeah.

Speaker 3:

That's exactly how you know he's gay. Like what you want someone that knows how to suck a dick.

Speaker 4:

And that's why Mark Lamont Hill said that he was a piece of shit. So I do agree with that. But I enjoy covering Nick, though he's fucking funny. He is funny Low key he's funny.

Speaker 3:

Stupid ass cracker young.

Speaker 4:

Stupid ass, pe low-key stupid ass cracker, young stupid ass. He's ignorant, but it's, it's. It's comedic. No, when we get him on the show, that's gonna be crazy.

Speaker 3:

It is. That's gonna be nuts.

Speaker 4:

I am going to just like you're gonna have to hold me back because I'm gonna be disrespecting him at every chance, like he's gonna be like uh, can you protect, can you keep your little colored woman in check over there, sir? Like so we can have this conversation. I don't need her attacking me. Okay, am I safe here? Oh man, okay, uh, so I wanted you to hear about this because remember how I like was trying to bring you like this new idea of what we could do for, like, potentially for a patreon where like we kind of have these in-depth conversations about us and it's like yo, you want to see this, you want to see this kind of real marriage talk.

Speaker 4:

You got to get it behind the paywall. And then I saw this Maury clip and now I'm just scared to do that.

Speaker 3:

I don't know why you weren't scared in the beginning.

Speaker 4:

I'm scared to do it because I don't know if I can respond like how he did to this. So he's with his wife, the Asian woman Connie Chung, and they're talking. You never seen her before, you never seen his wife before. So they're doing like a show together where they're sitting down and talking. He's trying to do his Michelle Obama impersonation and this is what they talk about. You became a big star.

Speaker 11:

Well, no, I mean whatever, and you kind of messed around with stars. Oh, you didn't. No, I didn't mess around with stars. I think you can name a few. No, I'm not. No, no, I did not. I did not mess around with them, I knew them. You messed around with them. It's in the book. Yeah, it is, you messed around with him. It's in the book. Yeah, it is Warren Beatty. You know what my sister said about Warren Beatty? Yes, Every woman who came to California had to go through him.

Speaker 4:

It was like an immigration system, so basically they had a conversation about a man that she slept with while they was together On the first episode of his podcast, he dropped it.

Speaker 3:

it. That's how you do a first episode yo young.

Speaker 4:

I don't know how there would be an episode two after that. And what did you expect from maury? I didn't think. I thought maybe he was gonna be like yo I'm not the father yo like, or something like there's no, I would expect nothing else but salacious bullshit.

Speaker 3:

Transparency yeah, that's tough. And then he spent most of his career exposing other people's messy bullshit. I like that.

Speaker 4:

The first episode that he he did, he's exposing his own messy bullshit if y'all want us to do that, let us know and we can like have like some particular conversations Like she can tell the story about, like how my penis goes all the way down to the ground and you know it's almost impossible for her to take it Like. We can just do stuff like that, conversations like that on the, on the Patreon. What we have to do We'll be like what when we start at Like $5?. What we have to do, it'll be like what how will we start at? Like?

Speaker 4:

five dollars I feel like five dollars is fair for the patreon.

Speaker 3:

See how see how you want to take it to the next five. No, I was gonna say 399.

Speaker 4:

Oh you know three.

Speaker 3:

Oh, I'm too much yeah oh damn, I thought we was flying, no, I think 399 is better because I feel like people gonna be like five dollars, like 399 is a good like all right, we can like that you don't think 399 is a lot okay.

Speaker 4:

Okay, it's a little more, but if I see five, I'll be like five whole dollars like so we were right about plat boy max. I thought like if you go back and look at our conversation, we talked about him and little baby and this is before we realized he just did a stream with little yanni. We were 100 correct about why you need to not be entertaining these hooligan ass nigga rappers.

Speaker 3:

There's been a couple instances. That's proven that he needs to not be around these hood. Ass niggas.

Speaker 4:

And I think that he, as a content creator, even just a little bit musical, he don't need it. That's the crazy part. Like the shit that yadi pulled on this last episode one, it wasn't even just the whole playing the song with george floyd. Like we know, yadi is an idiot. Like we know, his brain doesn't even have the capacity to understand race-based issues like that.

Speaker 3:

We've talked about this on the show no, he's disappointed us over and over again. We're correct.

Speaker 4:

Behavior is not something we expect from someone like lil yachty but for him to then go on this rant and like perpetuate this low brow, stupid negro idea around, like oh, we're the cool guy because even little baby was talking about this.

Speaker 4:

Where it's like oh, y'all streamers need us because we, the cool guys the streamers make more money than y'all but they, they're, like, they're really under this impression that like they have some type of leverage of cool, like I promise you, my nigga, that cool shit died a long time ago. Y'all niggas are not the arbiters of cool. Y'all are not the harbingers of what's fly. Y'all niggas are not it, no more.

Speaker 3:

And we, being honest, especially you two niggas, specifically little baby with your fucking upper thigh baddie tattoo and little yachty with the. Well, he got the jawline fixed, he got it chiseled, so I don't know what to say about him when other than you're a fucking babbling buffoon and you went under the blade like you were baddie okay, okay. Both of them is baddies for real, it's crazy Grown man, 30-year-old man.

Speaker 4:

go getting cut up like he, Drake or somebody. You going underneath the blade, man.

Speaker 9:

That's your man's Well, I ain't mad about that though.

Speaker 4:

But these niggas think they hard in doing it though that's the crazy part Like Yachty crazy. Like yadi really thought he was awesome. Yadi, you have never been cool like no. Like when you came out you were the lame nigga pie like the name nigga rapper with the red hair and you were the joke. And you still have been there. Like the only reason you think you're cool is because drake gave you a cosign. But you're not like. None of these niggas are not like fabio foreign.

Speaker 3:

You're like 35 and still read with your finger and you're not really that nigga outside of New York for real, Like nobody is checking for Fabio Foran outside of the five fucking boroughs of New York City and what I've been hearing is niggas ain't really checking for him there either. Not really he's kind of falling off, because who's the fat black nigga? Who's in New York? That everyone— Chef G, no, no, the sexy drill, nigga Cash Cobain. That's the New York nigga, for real, you think that nigga sexy. I said sexy drill.

Speaker 3:

That's the music he makes.

Speaker 4:

Okay, I was just checking.

Speaker 3:

You need to be more tapped in with like music, like a little bit.

Speaker 4:

Maybe I've heard of his name before, I just wasn't, yeah, but you should know that like yeah, that's what he makes.

Speaker 3:

Like it's it's like r&b drill. It's like a little thing that he did on his own.

Speaker 4:

I don't listen to street, so he's he doesn't make street music. So fabio was having a conversation with jim jones and you know my feelings of jim jones. It was it was literally everything that I say personified in that moment of just ample levels of a 40-year-old plus man being stupid, passing that on to another 35-year-old man who was also stupid.

Speaker 3:

It's these Harlem niggas. That's the problem. Harlem niggas are the problem. I've been saying this for years Harlem niggas think the sun rises and sets in the crack of they ass. They think they the flyest, coolest. They think that in the dictionary, next to the word cool it says Harlem nigga.

Speaker 4:

Hold on, I want to play this clip real quick. Uh, fabio.

Speaker 3:

I actually don't know where Fabio is from.

Speaker 4:

He, he challenged, uh play Black Boy, black Boy Max, to a boxing match. Somebody tell a Black Boy.

Speaker 5:

Max nigga, we got a box. I see them hosting boxing matches.

Speaker 4:

I see that's what they do. All right, I see what this nigga doing, having his weak-ass song in the back. So he's getting a nigga cut for it. So let me cut that shit off with the quickness. But this is what I'm talking about here, where it's like this is what I'm talking about here. Where it's like this kind of all stemming from that stream that he did with remember, they were smoking and black boy max kicked them out for smoking in the air yeah, yeah this is where it all kind of stems from.

Speaker 4:

It's just like, bro, your immaturity and your inability to like, grow up as a human being is a detriment. And like black boy max, please, bro, I know niggas like you, like I went to college school with niggas like you who came from good families, but they just had artistic endeavors. You don't have to be around these niggas. Not gonna like you don't have to be around these niggas is low lives at the end of the day you.

Speaker 3:

They're they're dragging, they're gonna end up dragging you down. If these are the people that you attach yourself to, it's only gonna be a detriment. If you're an actual artist who is extremely passionate about what you do, regardless of um what, what um music, art or whatever like, regardless of what it is, you cannot. You cannot attach yourself to people like this but even like and you're gonna be fine on your own with your talent, but I do feel like yadi kind of falls into that category of people.

Speaker 3:

What you're saying too that nigga is corny and what happens is when you're ugly your entire life and then you get a little money it, it flips and then it's a. It's a ego switch and it's it's too inflated and I feel like yadi needs to go do some ayahuasca, have an ego death of some sort, come back and realize that you were ugly, you still are and you still technically, genetically are and physically he did get. That jawline did make a huge difference that don't matter.

Speaker 4:

If a nigga taking some salt paper to your fucking chin, yo like I don't care.

Speaker 3:

Okay, but it's it still made a difference. Like you got it done, we can tell the difference, but like you need to, I don't know. Melt. Melt those two together better, because you just covered up the lame nigga with the nigga with money. But you need to heal the lame nigga in you before you cover it up with the nigga with money. That get the bitches, because now you scaring the hoes but you got money, so the hose is forcing themselves to stay, but in the back of their mind the hose is scared for real.

Speaker 4:

They still. They always going to be scared on it.

Speaker 3:

It was never, it was really nothing you could do.

Speaker 4:

You still make horrible music, so like, at the end of the day, also I was going to say that about black boy the beats.

Speaker 3:

I heard you about black boy the beats. I heard you don't like him. No, he got some tough ones. I like the. It was only two that I heard, but the ones that I heard I was like the. The one that that yadi was like. He was like this sound like the matrix, like you just running from something, and that's exactly what it sounded like. I was like these are too many elements, but sometimes tyler gives me that a little bit in his production.

Speaker 4:

So I also wanted to how many beats is he really out here really making? Like, how many of this is not just people just sending it to him and maybe he playing around on him? Well, I would hope that he's not on stream talking about he made this beat when he didn't no, I'm not saying that he's lying per se, but I mean in regards to a creation of something. You know it's a team effort, so, like some of this stuff could be other people doing the baseline frame of something, and then he's adding on.

Speaker 4:

They make garbage together I mean, I'm not saying that's not garbage, I'm just saying I could just imagine if he's having to work off of other people's art. I can imagine that being a tough sell because, like I said, the beast that he's playing for little baby I didn't have a problem with.

Speaker 3:

I thought I didn't hear those. I heard the ones that he was playing for little yadi and them shits were booty cheeks I mean.

Speaker 4:

But then to be fair, he was with yadi so he thought maybe that would be appropriate. Yeah, but I want to see black boy max when he's high on the complex just this year. I think that there is a realm and a future for him to really dominate, especially because I think ddg doesn't really want to do music like I think he wants to just do like the love of and all the other little corny stuff. I think he can really champion that role and really jump up to be probably like one of the ones, because I think when he taught five, if I'm if I'm not mistaken- I don't pay attention to the double xl.

Speaker 3:

It was not. That was his conflict. Oh, oh the the streamer list. Well, the yeah, the content hip-hop media list yeah, I think he was in the top five. Yeah, he was up, he was. He was up in the top 10 at least.

Speaker 4:

Yeah, I know for sure he stopped it. So I want to see.

Speaker 3:

I thought you were talking about the double xl freshman thing for a second. Nobody cares about that, nobody gives a fuck about the double xl freshmen anymore because they're not like the pick less maybe. Pick maybe like three a year, like three actual like talented musicians that are up and coming that people should pay attention to. Because I remember I used to go on the double xl um freshman playlist back in like when I was in like high school and I would actually go listen to the artists that I didn't know in their music because there would be a lot of artists that I liked, that I admired, that were up and coming, that would end up on that list and I'd be like, oh okay, let me listen to whoever else is on here because I like these three, but now it's like, who are these people?

Speaker 4:

All right. Before we wrap up, microsoft put a list out of 40 jobs the top 40 jobs with the highest chance of being removed due to AI.

Speaker 3:

Ooh, let's do the just rattle off the top 15 real quick.

Speaker 4:

I was just going to do all of them because it's not that many, it's only 40. So it's not that many, it's a word. It wasn't like I'm reading sentences, I'm not a dumbass. All right. Interpreters, translators, historians, passenger so if you hear your job, take a shot. Passenger attendant. Sales representative of service writers and authors. Customer service representative, cnc tool programmer, telephone operator, ticket agents and travel clerks, broadcast announcers and radio DJs Aw. Us Broadcast announcers and radio djs oh. Us. Broadcast announcers and radio djs uh. Brokerage clerks, farm and home management educators, telemarketers, consigliors uh. Political scientists, news analysis reporters, journalists, mathematicians, technical writers, proof readers, copy makers, hosts and hostesses, editors, business teachers, post-secondary public relations specialists, demonstrator and product promoters, advertising sales agents, new account clerks, statistical assistants, counter and rental clerks, data scientists, personal financial advisors, archivists, economic teachers, post-secondary web developers uh management analysis, geographers, models, models is crazy, uh market research.

Speaker 3:

That's why I didn't want you to go through the whole thing, because I don't think that's even like plausible it is to replace yeah.

Speaker 4:

I just make a figure. They literally can make a piece of a person and he just put the new clothing on them.

Speaker 3:

Yes, but not on the fucking runway.

Speaker 4:

They don't. It's not a runway model. It's just talking about a model that you would need when you're selling something.

Speaker 3:

OK.

Speaker 4:

And then market research analysis, public safety, telecommunications, switchboard operators, library science, teachers and post-secondary. So I mean, yeah, everything they told us to go to school for 15, 20 years ago. It's about to be out the door. So I told everybody beforehand we need to be acquiring legislation that assures that everyday people get a portion of these profits and revenue that these ai companies are getting. If we do not push for that now, the future will be bleak. That's what I gotta say. I y'all know the phrase that pays around here on that show, on this show here, sir, it was right. So I told y'all niggas about galvin news.

Speaker 3:

I tell niggas things I just or just legislation that does not let AI take over these jobs in the first place. Maybe that?

Speaker 4:

Well, to me, the only reason I don't push at that is because there is a world where, if it can be taken from us, Another one, host.

Speaker 3:

How is AI going to walk you to your table? Well, they don't need that, they'll just put a little light is how is ai gonna walk you to?

Speaker 4:

your table. Well, they don't need that. They'll just put a little light up and you just follow the light to your table. You know how that's gonna?

Speaker 3:

that's that's probably in, like the applebee's and stuff, but in the fine dining establishments, like that's gonna be unacceptable. Oh, I mean I could in luxury markets, that's gonna be unacceptable. Sales associates and luxury retail unacceptable. There's no way AI is going to replace human beings.

Speaker 4:

It just depends In some tiers of things. I agree that there is a certain amount of money people will pay to have a visual feeling of servitude over people.

Speaker 3:

Hermes Chanel not replacing sales associates with AI Point blank period. You can't even buy the bags online To me right now.

Speaker 4:

I don't think it happens in the future, where it's just a voice type of thing. But what if they're able to make a hologram that is just as comfortable, makes you feel just as?

Speaker 3:

I mean that's gonna be way further down the line.

Speaker 4:

Yeah, that person can't call out. That person don't get sick. That person don't have a bad day because I'm gonna call out, you know. So I mean, that's where it happens.

Speaker 3:

It just depends on but then, like are you gonna? I don't know, maybe it has to be a different. It has to be a different generation, a different society, because you have to be comfortable with, like, interacting with this hologram on a regular basis, like it's your, your friend, like you have to let it know what you like, you have to trust its opinion, baby baby, people are doing that with chat g. I know it's just weirder in a store.

Speaker 4:

But we said that beforehand, Like just imagine all the stuff now that we're doing now that we would've thought was weird. Doing what we're doing right now was taboo when we was in high school.

Speaker 3:

If we would've bought some cameras and put it on already a thing I really.

Speaker 4:

I wanted to be a youtube girly when I was in high school, when we was in high school in 2000, maybe like elementary school we'll say elementary school, then this was like taboo.

Speaker 3:

But when we were in high school I fully had a camera and I would record myself.

Speaker 4:

It was still people. I maybe because you were in new york and maybe things were moving a little faster there was still people here I'm just like there's still people out here who, if you was doing that, they you was looking weird, like oh, why are you putting stuff on internet like that?

Speaker 3:

okay, well, yeah, beauty influencers were a full thing that were already making money by the time I was in high school, so I already wanted to do that. I should have did that.

Speaker 4:

I should have been sat myself in front of a camera since, like 2009, for real we had like even then, though it was like vloggers and stuff like that were going on, but it still was it was looked at as still a little bit weird. When we was coming up I, I don't know again. We're a group of people, but I remember just different groups of folks who were just having conversations about it, even from folks who were fluent, folks who were at school for the last little scholarship. It was always discussions that were around that like that, all right, we're going to wrap it up here. I think we did a pretty good job. Yeah, you've been listening to Talk FNF TV. We greatly appreciate your patience, your time and your enjoyment of our show. So, baby, tell them what they need to do.

Speaker 3:

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