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Can We Still Listen to Diddy? Georgia’s New Election Rules & Body Odor image

Can We Still Listen to Diddy? Georgia’s New Election Rules & Body Odor

E168 · Unsolicited Perspectives
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In this episode of Unsolicited Perspectives, host Bruce Anthony and his sister J. Aundrea dive into a mix of provocative and entertaining topics. They kick things off with a fiery debate over Diddy's recent indictment, exploring whether it's still okay to enjoy his music despite the controversy. From there, the conversation takes a more serious turn as they dissect Georgia’s new election rules, critiquing the potential pitfalls of hand-counting ballots and the risk of delayed results, all while raising broader concerns about democracy and voting rights. Finally, they wrap up with a personal yet humorous chat about body odor, hygiene, and cultural perceptions around smell. Throughout, the siblings bring their signature blend of honesty, humor, and critical insight, offering both personal stories and societal commentary that’s bound to keep listeners engaged. #UnsolicitedPerspectives #DiddyIndictment #ElectionRules #GeorgiaElections #BodyOdorDebate

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Thank you for tuning into Unsolicited Perspectives with Bruce Anthony. Let's continue the conversation in the comments and remember, stay engaged, stay informed, and always keep an open mind. See you in the next episode! 

Chapters

00:00 Welcome to Unsolicited Perspectives

01:04 Sibling Happy Hour Begins

04:50 Discussing Diddy and the Indictment

28:19 Georgia's New Election Rules

38:08 Mark Robinson's Controversial Past

40:14 The Importance of Social Media Scrubbing

42:24 Political Allegiances and Personal Boundaries

50:22 The Obsession with Body Odor

53:55 Cultural Perspectives on Hygiene

01:05:26 The Importance of Voting

01:06:58 Closing Remarks and Call to Action

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Transcript

Introduction to 'Unsolicited Perspectives'

00:00:11
Speaker
Welcome. First of all, welcome. This is Unsolicited Perspectives. I'm your host, Bruce Anthony, here to lead the conversation in important events and topics that are shaping today's society. to say Join the conversation to follow us wherever you get your audio podcast.

Sibling Happy Hour with Jay Andres

00:00:24
Speaker
Subscribe to our YouTube channel to watch our video
00:00:33
Speaker
On today's episode, it's the sibling happy hour. I'm here with my sis, Jay Andres. She's going to be talking about her response
00:01:04
Speaker
What up,

The Value of Brutal Honesty

00:01:05
Speaker
sis? What up, Bretto? I can't call it. I can't call it. that Just, I'm going to let you, you gave me a little heads up before we even started filming, being like, hey.
00:01:17
Speaker
How do you want me to respond to this? You gave me two options and I said, go full force. yeah you know ah This is what the audience needs to understand is that growing up in our family, we were always brutally honest. And if you had a position that we didn't agree with, you defend your position and it may come off as a an attack, but it's not meant to be an attack. It's meant to be a well-thought-out, educated critique. And so you have one of those for me, and I am all ears.

Humor in Physical Discomfort

00:01:51
Speaker
But before we jumped on here, I just want to let you know that your brother's in a little bit of pain. Oh, Lord, why? Because I almost my got darn back out sneezing. Yeah. Oh, that's a sneezing and coughing.
00:02:08
Speaker
I will pull a muscle in my mid to lower back. Yes. I don't know what happened. If something's going on, it might be my allergies. There's a little frog in my throat. I think my sinuses are draining. So I'm sneezing. Yeah. And I sneeze as I was in preparation for getting ready for this show. And then I almost threw my back completely out. Yeah.
00:02:30
Speaker
I do it all the time. if i if No, a cough or a sneeze, I dread them because I'm like, I'm going to pull my my right thoracic muscle.

Body Issues and Podcast Comfort

00:02:45
Speaker
If I'm not careful, if I don't try to loosen up first, and then if the cough catches me by surprise, if the sneeze catches me by surprise, I'm pulling that muscle.
00:02:56
Speaker
ah oh And now I got to go lay down. Yeah, well, my back is hurting right now. And people don't know I'm not technically in the chair. I'm in a little stool. So this ain't the most comfortable thing. You got to get a chair. I'm in a chair with a sciatic cushion.
00:03:14
Speaker
Well, I'm not kidding. I am. So you can't just sit on the stool. Now, that ain't enough. well We are post 40. Well, I do have a posture. Plus, I have the wall that's basically behind me. So I don't really need a back to the chair. But I'm in a little bit of pain. So ladies and gentlemen. You need the back to the chair for your back, not the wall. that well Well, look, you're probably right. But we know I do a lot of dumb things. and That's just wonderful. I mean, you're sitting on a stool is great for your core. but Oh, it is fantastic from the core. Yeah. But is it okay for your lower back? Oh, it's not my lower back. It's, it's, it's my mid back. So time is it good for your thoracic spine and musculature?
00:03:58
Speaker
All right, that's not enough of this. And my goddaughter texted me this morning, listening to the last podcast. She was like, what do you what are you on with this whole stinking thing? I'm just going to stay on it in this third segment because it needs to be addressed. Yeah, and I'll give you guys some context and background, like, on young Bruce ah and his issues his body up there so that you'll understand why this is such a big deal for him and why he cares so much about this.

Moral Dilemmas in Music Choices

00:04:32
Speaker
yeah I will give you all some context that I think is because you're missing it, you're just, you don't know where this is coming from. And you're just like, why? Why? Well, I'll tell you, i I'll tell you why. So we'll get to that in the third segment.
00:04:48
Speaker
Okay, but let's go with Diddy and your response to what I said my feelings were. Oh, and i so to be clear first, your position is you're gonna listen to the music. My position is that I feel great shame in listening to the music. Yeah. But I'm not gonna stop listening to the music because so many memories, it's literally bad boy or anything that he's been associated with yeah is a soundtrack to my life. So unless I could come up with a cognitive way of going back to those memories and erasing that music in the background, i'm I'm not going to stop listening to the music. Okay. I just,
00:05:42
Speaker
found that disappointing. I mean, we've talked about this before. um So this is not the first time that I've heard that. Yeah, okay, it's a soundtrack to a lot of memories for you. It's also a soundtrack to a lot of memories for the victims as well. I think if you're feeling shame, you should probably go with that. You should probably lean into that. ah if you're feeling If you're feeling bad about it,
00:06:08
Speaker
If you're feeling some shame about it, you should probably lean into that. That's your body telling you, that's your conscience telling you that you really don't want to listen to this music. But you feel that for some reason, like the smell of apple pie on a window sill, that's the only way that you can recall these memories is to listen to this music, which I feel is... No, that's not that's not what I said.
00:06:37
Speaker
So then what exactly is so endearing? Because I'm going to tell you what it sounds like. just Just go with what it sounds like. don't but Don't focus on me correcting. Just just and go with what you heard. It sounds like a manga supporter. Ooh. That you could overlook the truly terrible things
00:07:06
Speaker
that Donald Trump has done and continues to do in order to support or his economic position or your distrust of immigrants or whatever, that you're willing to compromise yourself in that way. You don't sound like an ally to the victims.
00:07:30
Speaker
um And And I've said this before to you, I don't think that my enjoyment of this music is worth more than the lives that he's ruined. using this mute I am making myself complicit.
00:07:50
Speaker
I'm almost making myself an accomplice by continuing to listen to the music when I know he used that business to coerce and intimidate and kidnap and assault and hurt so many men and women by continuing to support that and continuing to support him. And I understand that while he did have some accomplices in the music industry, for sure, and whether or not that will come out in the indictment is ah as it proceeds remains to be seen, but I don't think this is something you can accomplish on your own just with unlimited funds. I feel like you need people who are willing to be complicit in accomplices in this in order to get this done, and a lot of people. But I'm sure that there are people that he's worked with
00:08:46
Speaker
um that he's produced, that he's managed, that he's represented or collaborated with that have absolutely nothing to do with these freak-offs. And it hurts them and their business and their pockets for us to completely divorce ourselves from Diddy and Bad Boy. I understand that. Okay.
00:09:16
Speaker
I still don't care. like i don't and okay it I mean, I understand that, but I can't control that.
00:09:28
Speaker
I can't control that. I'm sorry. I cannot, in good conscience, continue to support that man or his enterprises. He belongs in prison for the rest of his life.
00:09:42
Speaker
he does he he And I'm gonna tell you why I say this before ah really only the indictment is out. We haven't even seen what's gonna come up in Discovery, what kind of evidence collected in those raids. I'm saying this honestly off the strength of Cassie Ventura, because without ever seeing that surveillance tape,
00:10:10
Speaker
because he purchased it for $50,000, she recounted in her civil suit that incident in the hotel of her trying to escape and being beaten no with excruciating detail, like it happened yesterday. And his apology was garbage He's garbage. It led me to believe, honestly, and I don't think that I'm wrong, we need to go ahead and believe these victims. Because what he didn't want, another thing, what he didn't want was for that case with Cassie to enter the discovery period, because that's when she enters in evidence, which is why he settled that in less than 24 hours.
00:11:10
Speaker
because the next period, once he files his answer, is the discovery period. I'm not an attorney, but my previous job involved a litigation, so that's why I know this, okay?
00:11:26
Speaker
So just on the strength of those two things alone, and his BS apology from some tiki hut, wherever the hell he was, and the,
00:11:39
Speaker
desperation and fear of going to jail, so much so this man was willing to offer up his properties, his plane, $50 million, dollars all of his kids' passports, his passport, even the baby. The baby? He offered up the baby's passport.
00:11:59
Speaker
And they said, no, the judge said, no, you are a danger to society. There was enough there for, for the 12 jurors that the prosecution presented their evidence to us say, do we have enough for the indictment? There was enough there for not only for them to say yes, but them to add racketeering and for the judge to say you're a danger to society. This is, this is not somebody I can support.
00:12:29
Speaker
Okay, I hear everything that you just said. I don't think you did. No, no, no, no. I did. And you're right. And if you, I said in my response to having great shame that I was absolutely being a hypocrite and I made the comparison to MAGA and Trump supporters and things of that nature. Here's what I'll say. There might be a slight loophole.
00:12:52
Speaker
Whereas MAGA supporters say they say they you know think that Trump is going to be better for their economy, and that's the reason why they vote for him. Or they feel like their guns are going to be taken away, and that's the reason why they vote for him. Well, they think, for some reason, he's tough on in immigration when right he has not shown that in any way. But OK. He talks a bit gay. But let's say that these are all the things that they vote for him, ignoring the fact that his policies are going to hurt.
00:13:21
Speaker
especially people of color, but by and large anybody from the working class, middle class, poor class, right? That's directly affecting other people. yeah I will say unless He is still collecting money from the music that he produced. He is. I don't know that. It's called royalties. Yes, he is. But he gave oh a lot. He gave the rights back and their publishing to all the artists that were on Bad Boy. You think he's still not collecting royalties on that? I think the reason why he gave away the publishing
00:13:58
Speaker
for bad boy is because he milked all the money out of it that he possibly could and said, there's really nothing else to milk out of this. And here you guys go. um Or that person has become no longer useful to him or he's already got them on tape doing something compromising. So he doesn't need their publishing to hold over their head anymore. So there is a myriad of reasons. There are some loopholes. One of my friends who was in agreement with me and, and We understand that we're being hypocrites, right? Like we absolutely understand that we're being hypocrites. We don't want to give it to music. music and And he was like, well, maybe, you know, if he's still making money off of the music, it could like be diverted to like domestic abuse or something like that. That way we could still listen to music because we don't want to give it. It's.
00:14:44
Speaker
Like I said, people always have their pressure points, right? It wasn't a big deal for me to give up R. Kelly music. I wasn't that big of an R. Kelly fan. This hits different. You know, the reason why I don't watch the Michael Jackson documentaries are, I don't think it's true, but is it? I don't think it's true or because I don't want to believe it's true because I don't want that music taken away. It'd be like if this came out, if Diddy was Prince, if Prince had done everything that Diddy had done.
00:15:09
Speaker
ah Would you really be able to give up? Absolutely. You are more principled in a lot of ways than I am when it comes to this. I have strong issues and principles about other things, and I hear exactly i hear everything that you're saying. it's It's coming off that I am not being, what's the right word, empathetic to the victims. It it is coming off as that. I don't want it to come off like that.
00:15:36
Speaker
I am empathetic to the victims. I do believe that he deserves to be in jail, under the jail. I just don't want to give up the music. And and I know that's hypocritical. And I know that's disappointing. We all have things about us that's disappointing, right? Bitch or not? Like, I know. I'm disappointed in myself. I wish I could let it go. and And I also said that maybe the shame will become so great that I won't be able to listen to music. And I have to be honest.
00:16:07
Speaker
That's not true. I listened to Jodeci not too long ago. But like if i had if I hear a song and I hear his voice, bad boy, bad. Something comes over me and I don't listen to it the whole way through or cut it off at that point. like I may get to that point where- Yeah.
00:16:21
Speaker
I'm not going to be able to listen to the music, but he is wrapped up in so much. He's either been a manager, producer, executive producer to just about yeah any and everybody that has done music over the last 30 years. You're going to not listen to A-Ball or MJG because he was their manager. You're going to not listen to Rick Ross because he was his manager. Instead of being in all of that, realize that he amassed this empire. Yeah.
00:16:52
Speaker
and what he used it for, what he used his connections to other people and the trust that they put into him to take their careers to the next level or whatever he promised them, only for him to manipulate and abuse that and put, we don't know how many people, how many tapes that they recovered, where he put how many people in compromising positions so that they were beholden to him. yeah If they ever wanted any shot of accomplishing what was their dream is now quickly becoming a nightmare.
00:17:43
Speaker
And when I hear his voice come over the speaker, somebody plays some bad boy, I hear those victims. I don't hear him.
00:17:57
Speaker
And no, so I can't, I cannot enjoy it. And I think what you're gonna find is if you keep looking for loopholes, yeah, you can find them.
00:18:09
Speaker
But do you want to turn into the kind of person that's looking for loopholes? I think everybody looks for loopholes for certain things in their life. Do you want to turn into the kind of person who looks for loopholes? I think, mm. Aren't I already that person? Do you want to continue to be the person? To become the type of person who's always looking for loopholes.
00:18:37
Speaker
I hear everything you're saying. I don't, I um don't have an answer. I don't want to know. I don't want to. I'm not saying that this is not a complicated situation. I'm not saying that this is not a difficult situation for the public to wrap their minds around because of who he became to so many people, especially people in the black community in America. I don't care about him as a person. It's not about him as a person. Yeah. I thought I'm not an admirer of Sean Combs. Never have. I've always thought he's been, I don't use the word weird. I think it isn't. There's an extreme negative connotation with weird and it's dismissive. ah just i'm going to ah Well, I'm going to say that before all this stuff came out, he was a unique character that wasn't my type of flavor on a personal level. like it There was never a time when I was like, man, I bet Puffy would be cool to have dinner with. No, there was never a time of that. Yeah.
00:19:43
Speaker
and And for the most part, his solo stuff, I never really was a fan of it. It's just what he's right. It's all the stuff that he's associated with. Yeah. He's associated with so much. And then we we start to have a problem as more and more people, more and more artists, what have you, filmmakers, directors, studio heads, singers, writers,
00:20:09
Speaker
actors, all the artists out there, all this stuff where we enjoy the artwork. they they A lot of them, stuff is coming out and it's very problematic. yeah And I know a lot of people say, well, let's separate the art from the artist. And sometimes you can, sometimes you can't. I don't know if it's morally, I don't know what the right answer is.
00:20:31
Speaker
But things keep coming out. We're not going to have no TV shows that we can watch, any movies that we can who can watch. Yeah, I mean, think about the reach of the Weinstein Company. Exactly. That's what I'm trying to say. So where do we draw that line of still enjoying the art, but not supporting the people that are problematic. That's where I'm finding it very, very difficult. And that's the reason why- That's the line. He's not problematic. He's a predator. If there's people who are problematic, it's a it's a case by case basis, right? So if we're going on a case by case basis,
00:21:17
Speaker
He's not problematic. that No, he's a predator. But but should Devontae Swang and JoJo and KC and Mr. Dalvin be punished? We don't know anybody's involvement in this. I'm just saying that he was, he would he executive produced them. Puffy is a part of that music. Yes. So if I say that I'm not paying it, if I'm not rocking with anything that he's been associated with, that means I got to cut out Joe to see.
00:21:46
Speaker
because again, I don't, he had accomplices. I think it would be ridiculous to assume that he did it. I don't know who those accomplices are. Well, you know, I'm gonna tell you, I'm gonna tell you what happened because Rico.
00:22:00
Speaker
ah Rico case. Typically, there's multiple defendants. Yes, not one defendant because it's a racketeering and criminal organization case. He's it's racketeering conspiracy. And um I believe sexual assault.
00:22:18
Speaker
What are you talking about? What RICO stands for? No, the charges that he, there was three charges. So conspiracy traffic sex trafficking and in a prostitution across state lines. But it was, you know, it was racketeering and conspiracy. So that leads me to, but you can't conspire with yourself. So, but he's the only defendant. You know what that means right now. no no You know what that means.
00:22:42
Speaker
there are 50 witnesses in this indictment. The co-conspirators have already turned on him. That's the reason why he's the lone defendant. So the people that that are responsible for helping him, that helped him, turned on him. That's the reason why this indictment is so strong and the reason why the judge was like, nah, you already have a history of intimidating witnesses and people that are that you've wronged um in this last six months. No way you're getting out of jail. There's nothing that you could do. He's all alone because all of his accomplices have already turned. Yes, they've already not all enough.
00:23:26
Speaker
ah Enough of them, 50 of them. It was enough of them. Not all. Some are witnesses, yeah but not all. I refuse to believe all. I think likely, but the names of that they have not been released. I don't know who's involved. you know Muhammad Ali made this great analogy in regards to racism, but I think it applies here too. He said, what if there were a thousand snakes?
00:23:54
Speaker
and and they were coming at me and I had a door that I could shut. Ten of those snakes wanted to protect me. Ten of them wanted, didn't want to bite me. Should I let all the snakes in hoping them ten band together and protect me or should I close the door and keep all of them out? Because my mother didn't raise no fool, something like that. Okay? And I think it applies here too. I don't know.
00:24:21
Speaker
where, how far this goes. We have no idea the reach of his criminal activity until I know the reach of his criminal activity and who was involved, who was not involved. I don't think that we'll ever truly know the full list of people over time because a lot of people are dead. Oh, well, yeah, yeah, that's true. It's kind of weird how many people around him have died.
00:24:51
Speaker
Well, it's pretty clear by this indictment that he's a mob boss. Clearly, but. For his ah just for his own personal.
00:25:04
Speaker
Gain like it's not. It's not to benefit the quote unquote family, the bad boy family, right? It's not to, but it wasn't for- It's never really true. When the mafia and the mob, it's not a waste for the boss, it's not really a benefit to Fairmore. Right. So that's, I mean, I don't really have much to say as far as like him, he belongs in prison for the rest of his life and to have his entire empire dismantled and he deserves to be forgotten.
00:25:34
Speaker
thats that And I think that's probably the greatest punishment that you can give him is that he deserves to be forgotten. I i don't agree with that. I don't think he deserves to be forgotten. I believe that he deserves to live in infamy, that this should be a story for people to learn and to watch out for certain things so that this doesn't happen again. Yeah, so let me amend that. The persona that he wanted us to believe right yeah deserves to be forgotten.
00:26:03
Speaker
But yeah, I mean, you know, you do what your conscience tells you. I think your conscience is telling you something. And I'm thinking that you are trying every way imaginable to ignore what it's telling you. um Good luck with that.
00:26:23
Speaker
I'm going to be all right. I'm going to figure out a way to to to deal with this. And who knows, you know, my morals, like I said, you know,
00:26:33
Speaker
My morals, i you um the reason why I'm tongue-tied, ladies and gentlemen, is because i like this is very, very complicated for me. I know listening to the music is wrong. And technically, you know aside from Jodeci, I haven't really listened to anything that he's been associated with, but giving up Jodeci, giving up Biggie,
00:26:57
Speaker
Right. Biggie don't have nothing to do with this, but given that up, whoo. Biggie was also ah a problematic character. I would say Biggie was problematic. Yes. Well, ah you I mean, yeah he was also a criminal. Well, I mean, does kind of sell drugs to the community? Uh, no, because he is a frequent abuser of women. Okay. Yeah, that is true. Yeah. did Yeah. Yeah.
00:27:22
Speaker
I can forgive the selling drugs to the community. I can't forgive abusing women. Right. But he still made great music. On that note, as I've disappointed my sister, I'm going to unclench my butt cheeks after she tore into me. and And we're going to decide to divert our attention to the Georgia election board.

Georgia's Election Rule Changes

00:27:47
Speaker
That we can all get behind on disparaging.
00:27:52
Speaker
We're gonna get into that next.
00:28:01
Speaker
Okay, Jay, your state is tripping again. yeah Let's give ah people a little bit of the background. Georgia has instituted new election rules. Georgia's new election rules require that poll workers to count paper ballots by hand.
00:28:18
Speaker
Early this week, Georgia State Election Board approved a new rule that requires the ballots to be counted by a hand three times before the result is declared. Three of the Republicans on the board used their majority to create more rules that take effect for this upcoming election, including expanding ah county election board powers to investigate vote tallies before certifying. How bad could this be?
00:28:42
Speaker
It could lead to a delaying of the results. Ari Berman, a national voting rights correspondent at Mother Jones, stated on MSNBC that, so what would happen is that Georgia would not certify its electoral college votes in time. No candidate would get a majority in the electoral college as a result that would then throw the election to the House of Representatives.
00:29:04
Speaker
What would happen is the House would vote, but it wouldn't be the majority of the members of the House voting. It would be the majority of state delegations where Republicans hold an advantage. That's really the nightmare scenario. You could have a presidential candidate who loses the popular vote, who does not win the majority of the electrical college, but who could be selected by House Republicans who didn't even represent a majority of that body.
00:29:30
Speaker
If the presidential election gets thrown to the House of Representatives because of GOP shenanigans, a majority of state house delegations, not majority of members, pick the winners. That means Dems could retake the House, but Republicans still pick Trump because of gerrymandering and over-representation in smaller rural states. Once again, that's by Ari Berman of ah voting rights corresponding at Mother Jones. So I'll get into the lawsuits.
00:29:59
Speaker
later in what the state of Georgia is doing. But Jay, what's going on in your state? Another concerted effort to certify the results of the election. They decided to do a preemptive strike as opposed to waiting until after the election to try to fight. Like, let's let's let's start let's start early.
00:30:25
Speaker
what ah What a dumb ass thing to institute because there are machine. I mean, you got to understand most of our poll workers are volunteer senior citizens.
00:30:43
Speaker
Those machines are going to be more accurate in that count. Then somebody got put their glasses on. Okay. then like can't find the glasses like. The amount of money is going to cost taxpayers to train poll workers, to hire and train the poll workers to do this. The um ah amount of time is going to delay our election results because you're asking people to count multiple times.
00:31:15
Speaker
And you got a bunch of shucking and jiving. Not shucking and And people like, come like um oh God, what was her name? ah janice Janice Johnston.
00:31:34
Speaker
Yeah, Janice Johnston, she was one. But there's a there's a black lady that was also one of the supporters of this. I can't remember her name at this moment, which is good because to hell with her.
00:31:47
Speaker
but But yeah, I mean, it... um It's weird that they're sneaking this in under the gun a little bit. We have less than 50 days into the election and y'all are sliding this in ah you know at the 10th hour. Yeah, it's just ah another in a ah long line of strategies down here in Georgia to not just deny people the right to vote, but to change
00:32:17
Speaker
they already They are already preparing for the possibility of her winning the state, which is, is it a strong possibility? No, but there's a chance. And this is them preparing for that. This is them preparing to disenfranchise people.
00:32:38
Speaker
So this is a continuous situation. This is a continuation of election deniers. Yes. Right. This is a continuation of people saying that Joe Biden didn't win the state of Georgia and that there was voting irregularities. Mm-hmm. When Brian Kemp, the secretary of state, former lieutenant governor, all Republicans all said,
00:33:05
Speaker
No, there were no irregularities. You lost. You lost the election. ah but But he's been screaming and yelling. And I think, one, I'm pretty sure that he knows that he lost the election.
00:33:20
Speaker
yeah People that are election deniers, except for those people that are really, really far off. Most of the election deniers are smart enough to know he lost an election. They are purposely doing this because they want to win at all costs, which has kind of been like a Republican brand to to win at all costs. There are theories. I'm not saying that this is true. There are theories.
00:33:45
Speaker
that state that when Ronald Reagan was running against Jimmy carter Carter and the hostages was taken, that Reagan's team through back channels were making sure that the hostages wouldn't be released because that would benefit him yeah to win an election. Like I said, is it just theories? Is it just hearsay?
00:34:06
Speaker
But it's kind of on brand when you think about some of the things that Republicans have done throughout history to win elections. So it's not a matter of democracy, because democracy is everybody's vote should be counted. Republicans are systematically, since Reconstruction,
00:34:31
Speaker
systematically trying to take away votes. from people so that they maintain control. I know a lot of people are going to be saying, we weren't Republicans, it was Democrats. Yes, you are right. But those Democrats during Reconstruction that were trying to take away the votes, specifically from black people,
00:34:49
Speaker
joined the Republican party in the 60s. So this is the birth of what those Democrats were are now Republicans. Like that's how that got there. So stop getting on the name, right? By saying that, oh, those were Democrats. Yes, they were. They're now Republicans. That's yeah how that's kind of how that happens. And and that's been well trotted territory. stop Stop bringing that up.
00:35:16
Speaker
for the people who use that. Lincoln was Republican, he freed the slaves. Yeah, he wasn't that Republican. You know good and ill well. Yeah, with he wasn't y'all. That given the same choice, you wouldn't do so. Right, exactly.
00:35:31
Speaker
So this is just the continuation of them trying to maintain power. here's the good Here's the good news that even though they're trying to use this, there's already a lawsuit. So the state national democratic parties have filed a lawsuit arguing that these rules violate state law, which mandates that certification is is a mandatory duty. So they're trying to prolong the certification so that it gets pushed to the House of Representatives and everybody's votes don't matter, right? Georgia's hand counting rule can still be struck down in court with both Georgia's Republican Attorney General, Chris Carr, and Secretary of State Brad Roethlisberger saying that it is unlikely to survive a legal challenge.
00:36:10
Speaker
Why are Republicans doing this? Pro-Trump Republicans argue that the rules are meant to increase transparency and public confidence in elections. There's always been transparency and we have complete confidence in the elections. Y'all lost. He lost. Brian Kemp didn't lose. No. Brian Rathensberger didn't lose. No. Republicans won statewide. Donald Trump lost.
00:36:37
Speaker
Donald Trump lost. So, hey, that is what it is. Luckily, it doesn't look like this is going to stick. However, this is just another example of Republicans not playing by the rule and them actually trying to rig the election. Yeah, I met Janelle Kings.

Controversy Surrounding Mark Robinson

00:36:59
Speaker
Oh, who's what's what's up with Janelle Kings? Trash black conservative.
00:37:05
Speaker
honestly talk show host and she was appointed to the, she's the third person that was appointed to the, the board of elections and is in favor of the hand counting and all of that. She's literally want to count by head. This is crazy. It is absolutely crazy. Hey Republicans,
00:37:26
Speaker
They're not having a good week. Just to do a detour, did you hear about what was going on with Mark Robinson, the guy that's running for governor in North Carolina? Oh, boy, oh, boy. I was hoping we would talk about that. Let's jump on that for a quick second. Listen, and I've noticed an increasing trend in this election. Uh-huh.
00:37:49
Speaker
And he's just a the next name in a long list of brothers. Are y'all OK? We went to OK. All right, break it down for me. Are y'all OK? I don't know. I'm still listening to Puffy, so I'm probably not. What is happening? Y'all are so lost. This man was on Naked Africa porn. Talking about he is a black Nazi.
00:38:20
Speaker
that he wishes slavery will come back as if he wouldn't himself be a slave. He said, I'd like to own some, sir. Let me assure you today, you wouldn't be owning nothing. Not a thing. You would be 12 years of like it ma he't slave plus the rest of your life.
00:38:46
Speaker
No, honestly, 12 years, because this man ain't in the best shape, and I'm assuming a couple days in the sun, he's gonna take his ass out. Are y'all all right? Do y'all hate the idea of a black woman running this country so much that you are willing to align yourself with white supremacy?
00:39:08
Speaker
Well, it looks like he's always aligned himself with white supremacy. This wasn't recent. That's been in the sunken place, and they ain't coming back out. but He is one. They dug up stuff, and they drew all this. They did such great work, great it was technological investigation. It's not really. I used to do it all the time in my former job. It is a it is a program. It is a company that will scrub your social media using just cursory, it costs you $59.99 to do this well i guess what they find information on you. There is nothing that if you've done it on the internet, it can be found. It does not matter what it is, how long ago it was. There is a record of it somewhere, and it is very easy for people to find it. All they did was look up his email address that he uses still. And his usernames. And his usernames. They found his stuff from Black planet, ladies and gentlemen. If y'all don't know what Black Planet was, it was a social media site for Black people that I say it went defunct maybe 10 years ago, but it was popular 20 years ago. yeah They found all his stuff from Black Planet. ah and The funny thing is, is he's trying to deny it. I guess at this point, you got to deny it.
00:40:31
Speaker
Yeah, there's no there's nothing you can do yeah you got because he refused to drop out of the race. They was trying to get him to it. They was trying to own the Republicans. It's like, hey, look, we need you to go ahead and drop out the race on. This is just a Democratic conspiracy. No, bro, you did this. Yes. like And like they they got it time stamped. And there's a profile picture. What a stupid idiot. And and I'm going to tell you something, fellas.
00:40:59
Speaker
A lot of y'all, I posted this, but and I need to say it as well. A lot of y'all need to journal. A lot of y'all need to just journal, cause y'all gonna get caught on on technology. Y'all gonna keep getting caught on technology. Y'all need to go, some of y'all need to go analog.
00:41:16
Speaker
be na Just have a deal with the little lock on it and you put the little key on the chain around your neck and you just wear it. and i say we like around in that Okay, just like pre-teen girls do. Y'all need to go ahead and just get you a diary to keep this stuff in and keep this to yourself.
00:41:38
Speaker
Keep it to yourself. I understand why people ride. Why people are saying, I'm a Democrat and I'm a Republican. People ride for what they represent. Yes. Right? I mean, it's no different than people chanting USA. It's no different than loving your favorite sports team. It's no different than gangs, right? It's rocking your brand. Why are colts? Colt. But at a certain point,
00:42:07
Speaker
You got to exit the party when you have start conservatives like the former lieutenant governor of ah Georgia. What's his name? he's He's a CNN commentator all the time. I see him on there all the time. The former lieutenant governor for Georgia. um I know.
00:42:30
Speaker
All right, it'll come to us. But even he has been like, look. He's usually on, what, CNN? Yeah, he's always on CNN now. Even he has come out and said, look. Jeff Duncan? Yes, that's his name. Even he has come out and been like, I'm voting for Madam Vice President Harris. That's what I'm doing. I've always been a Republican. I'm still a conservative, but I'm going to vote for democracy. And I talk to people, and once again,
00:42:59
Speaker
i can't be hypocritical, as as we said in the previous segment. you know I'm having trouble getting rid of rocking with Diddy, so I kind of understand how ah at a certain point, people were- I think you want to rephrase that.
00:43:14
Speaker
What did I say? You say rockin' with Diddy. Let's say rockin' with Diddy's music. Rockin' with Diddy's music. If they were listening to the episode, they know exactly what they're about, man. But you never know, because sometimes the clips, they'll pull clips. I produced the clips. I produced the clips. I don't want people to take that sound bite.
00:43:35
Speaker
so And run with it. ah I produce the clips. So if I clip it and then that goes viral because of my idiotic ah producing, then that's on me yeah okay but that's on me. But the people listen to the show knowing I'm talking about the music, not Diddy. But at a certain point, even with Republicans, you got to be like, well, wait a minute now. If we say we're for democracy, adam we got to actually be for democracy. Right.
00:44:03
Speaker
And some of them are turning. Some of them are not. Some of them are staying true. And I'm going to tell you right now, if you have a friend of mine and you listening to this show or watching this show, if we haven't had the conversations, I purposely haven't had the conversations with you. But I can guarantee you, if you vote for Trump, we ain't friends. Don't talk to me like that no more. Don't call me to hang out. No nothing like that. I let it slip. I let it pass the first goal round.
00:44:33
Speaker
I didn't really let it slip the second goal around people just not telling me, uh, the way I unfollow and block people I've known for years after he won that first time and they felt comfortable finally talking about how they supported them and stuff. And I said, Oh, you was quiet this whole time, a block delete. No, I didn't, I didn't turn on people the first time around.
00:44:59
Speaker
I didn't turn on them. I turned them off. Well, and when that's ah you have sometimes stronger principles than I do. However, if when it comes to money now, you will do certain things for low bottom money that I wouldn't do for billions of dollars. So we have flexible for different things We've already had this conversation. And if y'all want to know, tune into the after hours uncensored when we don't talk about it. Oh, shit. All right. But I mean, you know either they're trying, either Republicans are trying to stay. And I say Republicans, I try to not be generalized, but this is the Republican Party. So yeah if you're a Republican and you're saying, that's not me, take the analogy that my sister used with the snakes and Muhammad Ali. Yeah, OK, but you still
00:45:46
Speaker
a Republican, so just putting it out here. This is what the Republican Party is doing myself in danger by letting you in the room. Either they're trying to manipulate the election.
00:45:58
Speaker
Or they're not standing on business, actually both. And at a certain point, you got to stand on business. Yeah, I think the craziest thing about Mark Robinson is either he wasn't vetted. Or he was vetted.
00:46:17
Speaker
and they either didn't care about what they found, or he wasn't vetted well enough to have found this. like I feel like CNN did just a cursory social media search. no Well, no, it wasn't CNN. It was another investigative ah body that didn't, and CNN brought it to light. Yeah, it was another investigative. I feel like, though, that that was a... You're supposed to vent.
00:46:41
Speaker
Well, the history of Mark Robinson was he has never held political office until lieutenant governor. He was like a social media person. That's how he gained popularity. So he's been in existence. what how How long is the lieutenant governorship? Like two, three, four years?
00:46:56
Speaker
um um ah The Democrats should have definitely done some opposition, but they probably was like, he's losing the election. Like he's so far in the polls that he's losing the election. They was probably like, we don't even need to release this stuff. Or maybe they did know about it and they released it right at the perfect time because ah one thing that Mark Robinson has been getting a lot of support from a one person is Donald J. Trump. And this really does not look good for him now.
00:47:25
Speaker
at all at all. So this could have been strategic. I don't know. I don't, I don't believe Democrats are that crafty. They don't, they don't play dirty like that. So I just think that this was poor investigative work when he first started running.
00:47:41
Speaker
um I think it was funny. First of all, ah J.D. Vance in general is a joke, but I just thought it was funny because he was interviewed, I want to say, by NBC News. And she the reporter asked, do you believe Mark Robinson that those were not his posts? And J.D. says, I don't not believe him. That's the...
00:48:06
Speaker
I didn't hear that. That's the first time I'm hearing that. Ladies and gentlemen, that is my reaction. You thought you heard that real, and in in the and a moment, that was my real reaction. Wow. That I don't, not, not, wow. Like, it's don it's literally the the most mid and, like, are you kidding?
00:48:34
Speaker
I don't not believe him. That means nothing. Wow. Jamie Vance is so useless. I don't know why they keep sending him on the Sunday shows. I don't know why they keep putting him out there. If anybody needs to be ah held back the way they say that Madam Harris was held back. No, she had less than 100 days to get an entire presidential campaign together.
00:49:02
Speaker
Homegirl was busy. OK, but they need to start a holding J.D. Vance back because he is making gaff after gaff after gaff because he's an imbecile. So basically, basically, ladies and gentlemen, in this whole segment, yeah, we were bashing Republicans, but I got bashed in the first segment. So I mean, I guess it's there. Yeah, it's all fair. Yeah. But up next, we're going to bash everybody who stank. We'll get into that next.
00:49:29
Speaker
are All right, Jay, you wanted to give everybody some context of why body odor is such a big deal to me.

The Obsession with Smelling Good

00:49:43
Speaker
Yeah. is Because I guess I haven't given it to the people. I thought I did, but maybe I didn't. So go ahead and and give them the the background brown of why I'm obsessed with body odor. I honestly don't know where this is coming from. I do know that you have exhibited extreme behavior.
00:50:08
Speaker
when it comes to even the perception that you don't smell good. I remember in high school, you went to go get some food or something like that. And somebody in school said you smelled like that food. Okay, so that's not the story. What happened? Okay, this is a story. All I know is you came, you left school. Yes. In the middle of your school day to come home, shower, and then go back to school.
00:50:38
Speaker
All right, it all starts in sixth grade. In sixth grade, I would take showers, I guess, at night. You know, you're a little boy. Little boys take a little while. Little boys are disgusting. Yeah, little boys take a little while to to like start taking care of themselves with their hygiene. So you go from fifth grade to sixth grade, and it's a shell shock, right? Because you're a little kid, and then you're with people who are about to enter in high school. So that's a weird, middle school is a weird thing. And then your body starts changing. you start
00:51:10
Speaker
getting hit in puberty and you start getting funky. Little girl told me to ask him out one day. So from that point on, I took showers the morning that I had to get ready for school. If I wasn't able to take a shower the morning before, I took a shower the night before and put baby powder all over my body so that I wouldn't sweat in the middle of the night. yeah All because of this one person. Now the story that you're referring to, you were senior year of high school and my two friends who were neighbors, we were on the bus to go to school and they know, they knew about my
00:51:44
Speaker
obsession with with not smelling. Because that's what it is. It's not an obsession with smelling good. It's an obsession with not smelling. And in the process, you make sure that you smell good so that you don't smell. yes And on the bus ride, they said, you stink. And I said, what? What are you talking about? You're like, that low mane is coming out your pore because I used to eat low mane all the time. Chinese, blue low mane all the time. Still do. Yes. They said, that low mane is coming out your pores because you stink. You smell like low mane. I said, I do. They said, yep. So I got off the the bus, dropped us off at school. I got off the bus and walked my butt back home. Now here's the funny thing.
00:52:27
Speaker
They were joking with me. They stopped by the house. And we lived three miles from the school. Didn't matter. And it was winter time. It did not matter. I was not going to be at school when they said that I was funky. Now, they'd sit they came to the house after school and said, I can't believe that you really went home. I was like, yeah, y'all told me that I was stinking. I wasn't going to stink. I came home and took another shower because I took a shower that morning. It was like, Bruce, we were joking with you.
00:52:51
Speaker
I was like, well, don't joke with me like that. yeah So that's where all this comes from. But I sent out a little question questionnaire. Hey, if you had the choice between never walking again or you can walk again, but you stank all to be damn, the worst known person in the world, what would you do? And overwhelmingly, there were cultural differences in the responses. Yes. People of color were like, well, I guess I'll just be in a wheelchair.
00:53:19
Speaker
an overwhelming majority. There was a few people that was just like that were specifically men that were just like, well wait a minute, does my thang work? Because if my thang don't work, then I'll just be stanky. My response to that is, it don't matter if your thang work, you're going to be stanky, don't nobody want to mess with and white people were just like, well, no, I'll just be smelly. I would rather um would rather walk. and So I was like, you know this is crazy. This is this is a very- It's not that crazy. You got to think, especially if you were getting most of the responses from Americans.
00:53:53
Speaker
debt That tracks because black people in this country have a history of being perceived as ah dirty, even though I don't understand where that comes from, because we're incredibly hygienic. We taught white people how to bathe. like well That may have came from the fact that we just didn't have the resources to actually like bathe consistently. we We're talking about the 1700s and 1800s. That's where that probably comes from. We were always pretty hygienic. It was about dehumanizing us. Yeah.
00:54:30
Speaker
we were always hygienic. So you know when you have that perception in in order to dehumanize you, then it becomes that much more important to kind of fight against that stigma. So we always want to have our children be neat. And like that was always a real big thing with our mom, that we were always clean and neat.
00:54:54
Speaker
You know, my hair was always done. Our clothes were always clean. Like, we did I mean, yeah we were getting, you know, shoes from the grocery store. it No, we weren't. No, she took us to Stride, right? we used to get We used to go to Stride, right? I don't even remember. I don't even know that that store. Yeah, that's where we used to get our shoes. ah But, ah you know, our clothes are from Kmart. but That changed after elementary school. After elementary school, but you know, but we were all, you know, mom herself shopped at the $7 store for her clothes, but we were always clean and neat. And that was always, that's, that's kind of been, you see a little bit of us growing away from that. Cause sometimes I'd be seeing these kids outside and I'd be like, where is your, where is your parents? Cause why, what? but Is that, is that,
00:55:47
Speaker
is that not being clean and neither that's just taking, because we've always worn wild clothes, right? I guess you could, being neat wasn't the 44 size jeans that I was wearing in 1994. They're not brushed and their shirts are dirty. Like we ain't grow up like that.
00:56:07
Speaker
Well, distressed shirts are kind of in style. No, no, no. These shirts are dirty. I can tell that's a little bit of that was Popsicle. One point. And now it's all over your shirt. Well, first of all, if we got Popsicle, sit down. Yeah. Popsicle. Right. It's like it wasn't go run all over, like get Popsicle all over your shirt. You know, but I get.
00:56:31
Speaker
I'm not a parent myself, and I know parenting, but I know parenting is hard. So sometimes your kid got popsicle on their shirt, and that's all right. That's OK. We don't have to. We're not operating under that stigma anymore, y'all. Sometimes these kids, let these kids be messy and dirty. I get that. Yeah, because you routinely had a Kool-Aid mustache. You always had a Kool-Aid mustache. Retainly. Retainly. I don't know why I took the cup up so far.
00:56:52
Speaker
It didn't need to be tipped up so that ah the juice was coming over my top lip, but it was. ah That's the way I drank it. And I always have a little rib Kool-Aid mustache. Always. So, I mean, you know, you you live how you live, but but yeah, I definitely think, especially if you're getting ah responses. And then if you're not getting, if some of the responses are not from Americans, they're just different olfactory standards in different countries. Like, yeah you know, use antiperspirant and deodorant gear.
00:57:31
Speaker
There are places where they do not use that. And I am in ah classes with a lot of international students and I see it and I smell it. But for them, just normal bodily smells are not as offensive as they are in places like the US.
00:57:54
Speaker
where we will find it highly offensive. Some people find it highly offensive. find it highly offensive. To smell strongly in any direction. Like, I can't stand when people bathe themselves in cologne. Like I used to. Yes, and now we're trapped on this elevator. My eyes are watering. My nose is burning. Because you put on way too much cologne.
00:58:15
Speaker
So I hated when I was getting ready to go out. you like be shuttle The whole whole bathroom and outside of the bathroom, like that whole radius would smell so strongly of your cologne. It was too much. If you can smell your cologne, you've put too much on.
00:58:34
Speaker
When that was the problem, I couldn't smell it. But that was because my nose was stopped up. Your nose was stopped up. But also, you're supposed to be kind of nose blind to your own smell. When you smell yourself, you stay. Yes. OK. And it's already gone past the point of no return. Like, other people smell you. Like, there's no way. If it gets to the point where when we're typically nose blind to our own scent that you smell yourself, it's too late.
00:59:02
Speaker
It's already too late. And where did Black people come up with the universal term when somebody stank to either be stank or funky? And it's musty also. Musty is a good one. Musty is specific. Musty is, you smell like outside. No, no, no, that's not musty. That's your underarm. Yeah, musty is underarm. Yeah, musty is specific to your underarms. Yes. Outside. If you think that's your undercarriage.
00:59:27
Speaker
And smelling like outside isn't necessarily stink. Yes, it is. You smell like sweat and grace. Right, right. But that's not, sometimes that's not the person's fault. Especially during these summers. No, you just load the lawns or something like that. Well, no, no, I'm talking about, even if you just, I remember hanging out with my bestie. And we, it was, this was the hottest summer, well, because every summer is going to be the hottest summer there ever was. This summer was ridiculous. Yeah.
00:59:55
Speaker
We would go outside and immediately start sweating. And I was like, I know we smell like outside. And the outside is just sweat. But I know we smell like outside. For kids, I smell like outside of sweat and grass because they really run around with some grass and they just smell like kids sweat and grass. And you smell like outside. You need to get in the tub.
01:00:14
Speaker
like this
01:00:17
Speaker
You need to get in the tub. You heard those words yeah repeatedly through your childhood. So there, you need to get in the tub. Like this. Now as an adult, I'd be like, ooh, I need to get in the tub. You know what I'm saying? That's the reason why I'm in the tub twice a day, sometimes three down every times a day in the summer.
01:00:37
Speaker
And nobody's even taking a bath. Everybody's taking showers. But still, you need to get in the tub. You need to get in the tub. Yeah, that's just the universal. You need to get in the tub as meaning as you need to wash your ass. Yeah, but I definitely think kind of olfactory sensitivity that is is an American thing.
01:00:56
Speaker
Well, also, yes, it's American, but also there's cultural divides in America. right You know, when you have people that get on their podcast and they talk about they don't wash their hands after they go to the bathroom. Right. That's strange. Like, especially in a public restroom, you're touching things in a public restroom and you're not washing your hands.
01:01:20
Speaker
I'm on a bit of the extreme side, but you know, I take the bus and I take the Metro all around. yeah I purposely try to not touch the rails or anything. yes and these But sometimes you don't have no choice and immediately I make a mental note wherever I get to, when I'm getting to wash your hands. right Before I eat anything, and once again, I'm obsessive. It's almost OCD. Before I eat anything, I'm washing my hands. If I'm like, wait a minute, did I wash my hands? Because it becomes so routine, I'm like, well, since I can't remember if I wash my hands or not, let me go wash my hands again. Because people, do y'all realize that you've just eaten, if you don't wash your hands after you go to the bathroom, and you had a restaurant, you eating poop? Yeah. you Imagine if the people making your food,
01:02:05
Speaker
held that same view of I don't need to wash my hands. You get typhoid merry, that's what you get. A typhoid merry. COVID, there's a reason why COVID is still around. No, typhoid merry was cooking in these people's houses.
01:02:22
Speaker
and not washing her hands when she went to the bathroom and giving everyone typhoid and killing bugs. They quarantined her on this, they prosecute her. And she's still under different names, goes back into people's houses and still cooking and not washing her hands. And spreading typhoid. And it turns out she's immune to typhoid. Was she giving it to everybody else?
01:02:50
Speaker
that That's crazy. Basically, ladies and gentlemen, don't be funky. Don't be musty. Musty is worse than funky to me, because that's a strong burning smell when you musty. Your underarm shouldn't stink. My position is sometimes you stink. Sometimes. It's okay to stink in the conference at your own home, just not around other people.
01:03:13
Speaker
I think ah Stink is in the nose of the beholder.
01:03:23
Speaker
I think it's important for your just for your hygiene to bathe regularly and properly. Properly. But I think people's definition of what funky is is just like like for me, like I say, I don't care that you you could have the best smelling cologne. If you put too much of it on, yeah ah get away from me.
01:03:46
Speaker
yeah Basically, it burns your nose. Yeah, you stink. If your nose burning, get away from me. Yeah. You know what else makes my nose burn? Onions. You smelling like onions? Because sometimes people smell but like because sometimes you smell like onions. And not because you've been cooking them. That's going to hurt. That's going to hurt my nose. If you smell like onions, you need to jump in the tub and stay in the tub. Jay, what do you want to tell these people out here?
01:04:18
Speaker
Man, listen, you got to vote. And the reason why you got to vote is you can see it down here in Georgia. They will play with your vote. And so you have to make sure that the people handling, even at the state and local level, are people that really represent you and your interests.

The Call to Political Awareness

01:04:42
Speaker
You got to get out and vote. You got to get out and vote down ballot and get to know these people and their positions and their platforms, because let me tell you, they will get out here and they will work actively against your best interests and to deny you your rights. So voting has become more important than ever. And I feel like every voting cycle is going to be more important than ever because this country is in hell right now.
01:05:13
Speaker
even though we have a, we try I'm trying not to sound like Trump in his, you know, doomsday, but you know, thinking, trying to have some hope, but boy oh boy.
01:05:26
Speaker
If we get another Trump presidency, we're in trouble. So please get out there, excise your right to vote. And if you find in your state that they are, ah you know, trying to do a little underhanded stuff, you know, contact attorneys and see what kind of legal spending you have to make freedom to make ah court challenges to these things and support the people out here that are doing that.
01:06:13
Speaker
share our podcast wherever you're listening or watching into it. Pass it along to your friends. If you enjoy it, that means the people that you rock with will enjoy it also. So share the wealth, share the knowledge, share the noise.
01:06:25
Speaker
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