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Trump Booed, Neil DeGrasse Tyson Truth Bombs & Diddy Exposed image

Trump Booed, Neil DeGrasse Tyson Truth Bombs & Diddy Exposed

E322 · Unsolicited Perspectives
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32 Plays7 days ago

Trump walked into Madison Square Garden for the first Knicks NBA Finals game since 1999 and got a reception Fox News refuses to admit happened. That alone would carry a Sibling Happy Hour, but Bruce and Jay are just warming up. Neil deGrasse Tyson sat down with Shannon Sharpe and calmly dismantled everything America taught you about race, and Bruce and Jay break down why the science says one thing while the history books were built to say another. From the Michael Jackson movie going head to head with a suspiciously timed Netflix documentary, to Serena Williams serving 120 mph at 44 years old, to the hacked Diddy footage that has the whole internet using three letters, to a UFC cage going up on the White House front lawn, this episode covers the stories everybody is talking about and the uncomfortable parts nobody wants to say out loud. Jay had a bad day, the snark is at full power, and the third segment is absolutely parental advisory. You have been warned.

#TrumpBooed #NeilDeGrasseTyson #Diddy #NBAFinals #knicksvsspurs  #MichaelJackson #SerenaWilliams #ShannonSharpe #Juneteenth #BlackPodcast #CultureCommentary #Podcast #RaceInAmerica #ufcwhitehouse 

Chapters:

00:00:00 Trump Booed, Neil deGrasse Tyson Truth Bombs & Diddy Exposed 🔥🎙️😱

00:00:51 Trump, Truth Bombs And Tiny Problems: A Normal Happy Hour 🍊🧠🤏

00:02:15 NBA Finals Return: Knicks vs Spurs & A 7 Foot 5 Freak Of Nature 🏀😤🗽

00:03:04 Trump Gets Booed Out Of Madison Square Garden, Fox News Spins It 🍊📢🚫

00:08:38 Michael Jackson Movie vs Netflix Documentary: The Bias Problem 🎬🕺⚖️

00:16:44 Serena Williams Back At 44 Serving 120 MPH: Retirement Is Boring 🎾👑💪

00:19:17 The Uncomfortable Part: You Don't Get To Declare Your Own Legacy 🏆🪞💭

00:21:37 Shannon Sharpe Interviews Tyson & Jay Says He Ain't That Sharp 🎤🧠😂

00:25:07 Neil deGrasse Tyson Dismantles Race As A Scientific Category 🔬🌍🧬

00:27:01 Scientific Racism Was Invented To Justify Slavery & Colonialism 📚⛓️🧠

00:28:15 Fresh Off The Boat & The Assimilation Trap: Stop Chasing White 🏠🪞🤔

00:32:08 Bible Timelines vs Science: Humans Are 230,000 Years Old Today 📖🧬🕰️

00:34:29 Skin Color Is A Melanin Adaptation, Not A Hierarchy Of Humans ☀️🧬🤝

00:39:20 Neanderthal DNA Found In Europe, Zero In Africa: Stereotype Dead 🧬🦴😅

00:44:07 Egypt Erased From Africa: Pyramids, Pulleys & Stolen Credit 🏜️🔺📜

00:50:36 The Uncomfortable Part: History Has Always Been About Power 📖⚔️👁️

00:55:32 Hackers Leak Diddy Footage & The Internet Discovers His Secret 💻😳🤏

00:57:02 Itty Bitty Diddy: Micropenis Is Real & It Explains The Rage 📏😡🤏

01:02:02 Joe Budden Said It: Small Hardware Is No Excuse To Be A Jerk 🎙️🚫🤷

01:05:48 Trump LDE Rumors & A UFC Fight On The White House Front Lawn 🍊🥊🏛️

01:10:24 Freedom 250 Confusion & The Real History Of Juneteenth 1865 🎆📅✊

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Transcript

Introduction and Episode Overview

00:00:00
Speaker
We're in the upside down. Ghetto fights on the front lawn and America's ideology is being challenged. We're going to get into it. Let's get it.
00:00:21
Speaker
Welcome. First of all, welcome. This is Unsolicited Perspectives. i am your host, Bruce Anthony, here to lead the conversation in important events and topics that are shaping today's society. Join the conversation and follow us wherever you get your audio podcasts. Subscribe to our YouTube channel for our video podcasts, YouTube exclusive content, and our YouTube membership.
00:00:40
Speaker
Rate, review, like, comment, share. Share with your friends, share with your family, hell, even share with your enemies. On today's episode, it's the Sibling Happy Hour. I'm here with my sis, Jay Andrea. We're going to talking about Trump getting booed, Neil deGrasse Tyson challenging America's lies, and little pee-pees.

NBA Finals and Trump Controversy

00:01:00
Speaker
But that's enough of the intro. Let's get to the show.
00:01:11
Speaker
What up, sis? What up, brother? I can't call it. I can't call it. I want to warn everybody, and I know that you're going to give me another indication to warn people. The third segment, ladies and gentlemen, is parental advisory. ah but There's a reason why I said little pee-pees in this intro.
00:01:31
Speaker
Yeah. We're talking little peepees, y'all. We're talking little peepees. But that's in the third segment. That's in the third segment. In this first segment, we're going to be deadly dabbing a little bit. And, Jay, I don't know how if you've been watching the and NBA Finals. I know you're going to be watching the World Cup. That starts yeah tomorrow. So I know you're going be watching that. But have you been watching the NBA Finals at all?
00:01:51
Speaker
I have not. I've heard about I heard the Knicks are doing pretty well. Yeah, the Knicks are. You know, the Knicks are taking on the Spurs. The first time the Knicks have been in the NBA Finals since 1999. Crazy. It is crazy. San Antonio, the first time they've been back to the Finals since 2013. Yeah. And they're led by a freak of nature. Not a freak of a human being. Freak of nature. Just, he's a video game. I literally created him 20 years ago in a video game. Mine was named...
00:02:27
Speaker
My creative player was called Othello Hamlet. Okay. You ain't reading neither one of those. i No, that's not true. I did Othello in high school.
00:02:41
Speaker
Okay. Okay. Now, Hamlet, I did read the Cliff Notes. Anyway, Madison Square Garden hosted the first NBA final since 1999 this past Monday. Nope, Wednesday. Nope.
00:02:56
Speaker
Today's Wednesday. Monday. Yep. This past Monday. Okay. One of them days. It was one of them days. And President... Donald J. Trump was invited by the owner of the Knicks, James Dolan, to come and partake in the very first NBA Finals games at Madison Square Garden.
00:03:14
Speaker
And you were watching Fox News, hu They said that Trump was just cheered. There was a little bit of booing, but just cheered. If you actually watched the broadcast or seen any of the videos from people that recorded while in the arena, he was booed out of the arena.
00:03:36
Speaker
Yeah. So here's the thing. Of all of the entertainment sports, right, the the major league sports, Basketball, I feel like, is the most liberal.
00:03:50
Speaker
And so if he gets booed at American football games, he's definitely going to get booed at an NBA game. So I found that very surprising that he actually went, not to mention the fact that it's in New York, again, a liberal city.
00:04:09
Speaker
But the city that he's from. He's from. He's a New Yorker. Yeah. Okay. So, and and he was liberal until he had these designs on being emperor of the world.
00:04:22
Speaker
Well, he was a Democrat, not necessarily. Well, yeah yeah, he was a Democrat or he was registered as a Democrat. We don't know that he was actually a Democrat. Well, he gave money to the Clintons until, I don't know. I don't know what the fallout with him and the Clintons actually was.
00:04:36
Speaker
They called him and his cult degenerates, and they're not wrong. Before he ran, before he started to run, there was some type of fallout.

Michael Jackson Documentary Debate

00:04:46
Speaker
It doesn't matter. or We're going to talk enough Trump later on. I don't know why he went.
00:04:51
Speaker
I don't know why he went. Like, that was the dumbest. Why would you go? Why would you go there? Because he wanted to be the story. As progressive as the NBA is, like just as a league, I don't i don't know why he thought he would have any fans in there.
00:05:13
Speaker
I'm sure there were one or two, but... Yeah, i mean yeah no there I mean, New York is still New York. There are certain segments in the... I mean, the young man was killed in Bensonhurst in 1989 or 88. Black man just riding his bike and killing Bensonhurst. So, I mean, there's some people that... Yeah, i mean, Long Island and Staten Island still exist, so I get it. My best friend is from Staten Island. I said what I said. Okay, but also Wu-Tang Clan.
00:05:39
Speaker
Okay, so. And that's the only thing. Long Island got Rakim, God MC. Come on now. Okay, that's all that's come out of there. Okay, whatever. There's more than that. That and racism.
00:05:54
Speaker
All right. we're starting to We're starting a detour. But here's why i already told you before we started that I i had a bad day. So, ah listen, ladies and gentlemen, y'all in for it.

Serena Williams's Tennis Comeback

00:06:07
Speaker
I'm going to have a lot of snarky things to say. Well, there's more to the problem is the reason why he got booed. Because he calls two hour plus wait times for ticket holders. The and NYPD shut down surrounding blocks and watch parties were canceled. So yeah if you had been paying attention...
00:06:30
Speaker
to new to the series. The first two games were in San Antonio. New York City, they were still surrounded. People in Madison Square Garden, outside of Madison Square Garden, around Madison Square Garden, just doing watch parties. The city is abuzz for the fact that they back in there.
00:06:47
Speaker
Yes. But when a president comes to an event, there are certain security measures that had to be put in place. Yeah, especially because people keep shooting at this dude, allegedly. Allegedly. We both say that at the same time. We both know that it's made up. Well, one of them... Well, I mean, he did have a cut on his ear from some glass or something like that. Let's not minimize... You know wrestlers used to cut un cut leg ah yes He somebody behind him. He was like, cut my ear, cut my ear. No, okay. Look, i we're not going speculate and throw out conspiracy

Neil deGrasse Tyson on Race and Ancestry

00:07:25
Speaker
theories. The whole show called unsolicited perspective. So I'm going to speculate that it's all actors, the paid actors, and it's all fake news.
00:07:36
Speaker
to garner sympathy that does not exist. So please stop with the fake shootings. Like, nobody, literally nobody cares. Actually, to say that people out there don't want them dead, that's...
00:07:51
Speaker
That's not true. people There are people out there that absolutely want them dead. I'm not one of them because I don't want him to become a martyr. But there are absolutely people... Also, I just don't believe that we should just wish people dead. Right. I don't think that's don't think we should do that in just as human beings. so But there are people that absolutely... And you know what, though?
00:08:12
Speaker
Those people tend to be of a certain persuasion because they're not used to being... persecuted against. But that's neither here nor there. Because talking about somebody who even in death is still being persecuted.
00:08:28
Speaker
Yeah. Michael Joseph Jackson. So I had an interesting conversation with somebody the other day. And they were talking about how they were watching ah Fox channel program.
00:08:44
Speaker
And they were saying that young kids were listening to old music. yeah She was like, did you know that Beated is number one on on the charts right now? It's the hottest streaming out out a song? I was like, yes, because he has a movie out right now. yeah And the person was like, oh, you mean the documentary?
00:09:05
Speaker
No, I mean the major motion picture that's in the movie theaters. The one titled Michael? Michael. Oh, yeah, I heard about that. but I've been hearing more about this at this documentary. And why? That's full, bold-faced lie, because I just saw an advertisement for this documentary. This movie been on the tip of everybody's tongue for weeks. It's been on the tip of certain people's tongues. Yeah.
00:09:30
Speaker
All right. I feel like that's a lie. No, I can see how certain people... Look, if you're watching Fox 5 program... mean, Fox 5. Fox 5 is a station here in D.C. That's a local Fox affiliate that is at Fox News. But if you're watching Fox News programming, I can see how you might not know that there's a Michael movie out, but that you would absolutely know that it there's a Michael Jackson documentary called The Verdict. That's trying to bring attention again to the allegations that he was found not

Racial Narratives and Historical Erasure

00:10:02
Speaker
guilty of. Repeatedly.
00:10:06
Speaker
Repeatedly. And Charlamagne Tha God keeps saying something that isn't true. He keeps saying that Michael was investigated for 18 years. That's not true.
00:10:17
Speaker
It was a two-year investigation, but he's been involved with the FBI because the FBI used to investigate life threats against Michael Jackson. Like, Billie Jean is written from a story... Billie Jean is a song from a story of a person who was writing Michael saying that the child is his and he never met her before.
00:10:41
Speaker
And listen, Michael was like, listen... wrote a whole song about the kid is not my son. that was very definitive. Even though eyes look like mine, oh, no.
00:10:59
Speaker
He got a little nervous. I didn't think I met this woman before. But here's the problem that I have. And this was the the same problem that I had with the Mackenzie Shirell Netflix documentary.
00:11:14
Speaker
and and And what has been becoming a trend with Netflix documentaries, and somebody who has done a documentary herself, you can understand this, that there is always a little bit of your bias in a documentary as you try not to be as a filmmaker, because a documentary is literally a thesis paper on film.
00:11:33
Speaker
Right. You try not to be biased, but your bias is going to slip into your work. no matter how professional that you want to be. Yes. Netflix has started to lean into the sensational with their documentaries. That started.
00:11:50
Speaker
Huh? That started. i Well, I thought... Their documentaries are, to me, always sensationalized. But I mean, saw a part of it, like...
00:12:02
Speaker
you do add a little bit of razzle-dazzle, right? But you still want to be true to, like, what actually happened, or at least if you don't have the

Media Bias in Documentaries

00:12:13
Speaker
truth of what actually happened, present both sides equally.
00:12:17
Speaker
But, yeah, you're going to put a little razzle-dazzle on it. You want people to watch, and you want them to be entertained by it, as well as learn something from it. Okay. Sensationalize, it wasn't the right word. I should have just stuck with bias. But it's...
00:12:33
Speaker
sensationalized and then biased when i watched tiger king it gave me just everything did it kind of try to paint people to be villains yeah like making the murder they kind of too but even with that documentary making a murder they presented the case so clearly i'm still like i don't know if he did it or not yeah now these documents listen i was hating on carol basket i don't i do not know that lady i do not know that lady at all. And we don't know what happened to her husband. do. We have no clue.
00:13:04
Speaker
But boy, they made it seem like she had done something. she was Well, they they gave the facts sensationalized. Right. Like, they didn't say that she did it, but look at Look at the picture we're painting in between the lines. um I think that's when it kind of started with these Netflix documentaries. It's already been stated. And I will not watch this documentary because I i knew what it was and soon yeah i knew what it was as soon as I saw the trailer. It's not a pro-Michael Jackson documentary. And I don't need necessarily a pro-Michael Jackson documentary. I just don't need an anti-Michael Jackson documentary. Just give me
00:13:45
Speaker
The facts. Yeah, just give me a Michael Jackson documentary. I mean, but we've had so many, and including ones that

Power and Historical Myths

00:13:53
Speaker
are, like, in his own words, he was involved in the documentary. Like, we've had so many. This has been worked to death. Like, honestly, it really, really has. And the fact of the matter is, he was found not guilty by a jury of his peers. So that's...
00:14:14
Speaker
I mean, that's the end of it. Yes, was the movie Michael a pro-Michael movie? Yeah, it was made by his family. Of course it was. But you're right. Yeah, we don't need, like, anti-stuff, especially when we already know the answer is that he was found not guilty.
00:14:30
Speaker
Mm-hmm. It's just like people, you know, like have I ever watched Titanic with Leonardo DiCaprio? No, I already know how the movie ends. What do I need to watch that for? I've never seen it. It's very long and I don't want to sit there when I know what the ending is. It's funny. It's funny. all right.
00:14:47
Speaker
All right. If you say so, I'm never going to see it. and I was laughing in the movie theaters while everybody was crying. That actually made me laugh even harder watching everybody's head. I was like, this is not... This ain't no John Q. John Q, I can understand you crying. John q boy. If you don't cry at John Q and Denzel Washington, you don't cry at that, do you have a soul? Look, when he puts the gun to the head, take my heart. You put my heart in his heart. Look, let me tell you something. I've said it before on this show. Just watch John Q if you want to be in your feelings. yeah But Michael, I'm going to keep watching the Michael movie.
00:15:25
Speaker
I'm not going to watch this biased documentary from Netflix. And I'm really pissed off that they came out with this documentary. Right along with Michael Jackson movie. Look, Netflix got to make their money.
00:15:38
Speaker
So I get it. You know, they keep raising prices and stuff. they They have a lot of very expensive programming. And so they got to make up their money somewhere. And that's going to be with these documentaries. And yes, there is an audience.
00:15:53
Speaker
for a documentary like this. There absolutely is. There absolutely are people who are anti-Michael Jackson, who want this documentary and who will watch it and will talk about it, just like you got engaged in a conversation about it. Will I watch it I don't know if I'm bored one day. I might. Just to...
00:16:14
Speaker
make sure that I'm keeping up. Sometimes I do things just to make sure I'm keeping up with pop culture so I don't get, like, left out of the conversation. But, you know, we ain't asked for it. But Netflix is gonna give it because somebody asked for it.
00:16:25
Speaker
Yeah, I don't have FOMO, so i don't really give a damn. i I can miss this in pop culture. I'll be just fine. All right, one last thing before we end this segment. Serena Williamson came out of retirement four years away. Her last match was in the 2020 U.S. Open, where she kind of retired.
00:16:41
Speaker
She came back on June 1st. She came back. She did a couple of doubles, still serving serves up 120 miles per hour. Her husband and daughters were there to watch her. She's undecided about doing wimbles's ah Wimbledon. m Wimbledon? Wimbledon.
00:16:58
Speaker
I don't know why i put a T in there. Don't know why I did that. Singles, she's just taking it day at a time, but the fact that she's 44 years old is a question of, yo,
00:17:11
Speaker
When Michael came out of retirement for the Wizards, people have a lot of revisionist history, but I was there in the moment, and i was like, oh, he's not as good as what he was. But now in retrospect, he was a 41-year-old man still dropping 20 a game, making all-star teams. So yeah Serena still coming back, doing 120 mile-per-hour serves. Let me tell you something.
00:17:32
Speaker
I can't do that. Now, is she, you know, she she got her semaglutide, and so she dropped that baby weight, and she's in good shape, and... ah And so she's like, you know... When was the semaglutide?
00:17:48
Speaker
The GLP? The GLP-1. She on her GLP-1 and got, you know, got back into fighting shape, and she looks good. She's not a fighter. Why did fighting shape? She be out there grunting like she fighting. Yeah.
00:18:02
Speaker
ah She is fighting. She fighting for them trophies. So shout out to her. I mean, hell, like if you feel like you're not done and you still got more in the tank and you're still out there competing, like at that level, like do it. I don't know. What are you going to do? Just sit back and enjoy her millions and billions?
00:18:23
Speaker
that's boring she's only 44 I know that that's old as an athlete and yeah but not as a person hell no that's younger than me yeah it ain't old yeah so like i can I can definitely see and especially when you devote your whole life to something it's kind of difficult to retire from it yeah that's all you got to say about that no just shout out to her I love Serena okay Come on, girl.
00:18:52
Speaker
Swing them rackets. But for me, here's the uncomfortable part people don't want to talk about. What's interesting about all three of these stories is that they force us to confront how we measure greatness, popularity, and legacy.
00:19:09
Speaker
Donald Trump can be one of the most powerful people on Earth that still walk into an arena and hear thousands of people

Shannon Sharp Interviews Neil deGrasse Tyson

00:19:15
Speaker
tell him exactly how they feel. Michael Jackson could be one of the most influential artists in human history and still have his legacy debated decades after his biggest legal battle ended.
00:19:28
Speaker
Serena Williams could step away for four years, come back at 44 years old, and remind everybody that greatness doesn't always follow the timeline we expect. Because legacy isn't something you get to declare for yourself. It's something people decide after they've seen the entire picture.
00:19:45
Speaker
The accomplishments, the mistakes, the controversy, the impact. And sometimes the hardest thing for people to accept is that no amount of fame, power, talent, or success allows you to control how history remembers you.
00:20:02
Speaker
History always gets the last word.
00:20:14
Speaker
Jay, I sent you something the other day because our dream guest was on yeah Club Shay Shay. Which is like, it's such a, it's like a knife to the gut because i would have definitely asked much better questions.
00:20:31
Speaker
but all right Hold on. He's got a whole team behind him to help him craft the questions. The questions weren't horrible. And he stinks. No, they weren't horrible. Shout out to Shannon Sharp for getting... don't do no research. He reads the questions on that card. Yes. he Okay. Yes. He don't do the research himself. He reads the questions on the card.
00:20:51
Speaker
Because you could tell in his follow-up questions. Let's go to get to that. Look, Shannon, we don't mean to knock you. However, however, you're bad at this. though He's not bad at it. He's bad at it. At interviewing. I now watch him when he does a sports commentary. He's very good.
00:21:14
Speaker
I'm not even going to take that away from him. When I i was watching, actually, I was watching. him the other day. It was a It was him and Ocho Cinco and somebody else. Yeah, it's another podcast because he ain't First Take no more after had that little dialogue with that young girl.
00:21:29
Speaker
Right. so So sports commentary, great. Top tier. That's his lane. Trying to interview an astrophysicist, that was somebody set him up.
00:21:41
Speaker
but Because who, why? Who did this? Who said, Shannon, you got this? Look, when i said to you that when I sent you that clip, I said, Shannon is yeah and okaying him to death.

Breaking Down Racial Constructs

00:22:00
Speaker
Because Neil deGrasse Tyson has this tick. When he's explaining something that is extremely complicated because he's an astrophysicist. Yes. He asked a rhetorical question.
00:22:11
Speaker
yeah And it's basically, you understand and you get it? It's rhetorical, right? It's not meant to be answered. But Shannon was damn sure answering... Every you single time, yeah and okay. And I was like, you yeah and okaying me to death. And no, you don't understand. And sent you the text. Shannon out there.
00:22:29
Speaker
Don't even know what rhetorical means. to Stop. He might know rhetorical. He is a college graduate, I think. Savannah State University, HBCU down in Georgia. Down there in Georgia. Don't put He didn't do his schoolwork. Whatever. I sent you that text and I said, Shannon is fighting for his life. Do you remember what you said back to me?

Diddy's Leaked Video and Personal Insecurities

00:22:50
Speaker
I said, Shannon ain't that sharp.
00:22:56
Speaker
That's so corny. But I chucked my ass off. because it goes is court Corny don't mean it's not funny. That's true.
00:23:07
Speaker
Right. However, going to tell you why he did a good job. Because he got something out of Neil deGrasse Tyson that he has said before on multiple platforms. But on this platform, it gets amplified because of the audience. yeah A lot of times Neil deGrasse Tyson is on these platforms. And let's just say that we're not representative of the audience of those particular platforms. Not to say that like he's sorting them out But a lot of times he's talking about astrophysicist type type stuff. yeah And, you know, I mean, not to say that we don't have a lot in that field because there's Neil deGrasse Tyson right there. yeah It's just to say that where he goes, like people aren't going to those particular platforms for entertainment.
00:23:56
Speaker
Ain't nobody listening to StarTalk. That's not true. on their ride to

Cultural Standards and Personal Challenges

00:24:00
Speaker
the club. I... because that's his podcast. Yeah, I love StarTalk. Yeah. but um But if you're talking about the the same people that watch Shannon Sharp are not... Okay, no. Chances are. No. the f look Let me tell you, the people that watching Shannon Sharp was probably pissed off that it was Neil deGrasse Tyson and not somebody like, I don't know, even though I love her, gloilla but Glorilla. But Glorilla's already on there. I about to say Sexy Red, so we were already sync there. Yeah, we was in slinnc there. yeah But Neil deGrasse Tyson...
00:24:32
Speaker
like I said, I said these particular things before. Yeah. But on this platform is starting to get traction within certain communities that haven't heard these.
00:24:44
Speaker
And what he was basically doing was arguing about ancestry and exposing the fact that these racial hierarchies in America are false and they could, yeah they collapse under

Fame, Power, and Public Perception

00:25:00
Speaker
the pressure of science.
00:25:02
Speaker
Yes, because, again, race is a social construct. It is not based in science. None. So some of the key takeaways from the interviews were, like, modern humans, all humans, all modern humans origin originated in Africa.
00:25:19
Speaker
Everybody is from Africa. yeah Skin color is an environmental adaptation, not evidence of a separate race.
00:25:30
Speaker
right Africa contains the greatest genetic diversity on Earth. You can literally find every kind of person on the continent of Africa.
00:25:44
Speaker
They're indigenous to Africa. Once again, ladies and gentlemen, for those of you who are confused, Africa is a continent. A continent.
00:25:56
Speaker
Yes. Not a country. Y'all kill me with that. oh he's from Africa. There are 52 countries. Yeah. On the continent of Africa. You can't just say somebody's from Africa.
00:26:13
Speaker
Neil deGrasse Tyson showed, he was like, in his interview, he pointed out like, how big is Africa? be Because it gets misrepresented on maps. yeah He said, it takes five USAs to fit into Africa.
00:26:28
Speaker
That's how big Africa is. And I might be wrong. He might sit he might have said five North Americas because Canada

Conclusion: Power Dynamics and Legacy

00:26:35
Speaker
and Mexico, North America. So he might have said five North Americas. He said scientific racism was deliberately created to justify slavery and colonialism.
00:26:47
Speaker
The intelligence and in inferiority narrative survived because they remained politically useful. And African civilization was intentionally erased from popular historical narratives.
00:27:01
Speaker
Yeah. So one of the first things he said when he talks about all modern people originate from Africa He was like, people like going back into their gene pool and at a certain place that they'll stop.
00:27:17
Speaker
They'll stop at Italian, Irish, German, Swedish, and Polish. And he's like, no, no, no, no. no You got to keep going. You got to go to that generation before that and generation before that. And when you go all the way back, you'll find out you are African. But it's not beneficial for people in America to say that they're African.
00:27:39
Speaker
Yeah. Because if you say that, you can never, he doesn't say this. This is what I surmise. Because if you say that, you could never be white. Yeah. And I remember watching this TV show Fresh Off the Boat.
00:27:55
Speaker
Mm-hmm. And it was about this Chinese family that moves from D.C. to Orlando. Yes. yeah and And the mother says to her Chinese son. Mm-hmm.
00:28:07
Speaker
If you get lost in the grocery store and I can't find you, find a nice white family. You'll be safe there. And when the show first came out, I was just like, oh, that's funny, right? Because they they really wanted to be a part of white society. But now I'm like, no, no.
00:28:27
Speaker
Stop trying to assimilate, be who you are. And he's saying it doesn't matter that you are Chinese because guess what? You come from Africa. So a lot of people are just now finding out about this.
00:28:39
Speaker
And that's not even like the things white people tell their children. Like they say, if you get lost, find a black woman because she going you back where you need to be nowadays. yeah But yeah, it's absolutely true. Now it is not impossible, but virtually impossible to trace your ancestry from all the way back to Africa. And even in a lot of like the DNA to ancestry testing and stuff, they'll stop at whatever European country you come from. Like it won't go all the way.
00:29:17
Speaker
Because in a lot of because it again, it's also like how we're defining the information that we're getting from the DNA.
00:29:28
Speaker
Right? Like, it's also like saying, oh, you're you're Irish because people with your DNA predominantly come from this place. We're not going to go all the way back.
00:29:43
Speaker
to see where you all originally came from. We're gonna go back as far as like what's reasonable. And that- I would question what's reasonable to whom. Because- Exactly.
00:29:55
Speaker
Yeah, because people stop at Irish. oh even the Even these systems that we create stop at, this is where you're the most white. This a stop here. Because it's culturally beneficial to stop there.
00:30:11
Speaker
Yes, yeah. Exactly. Because again, even though this is race is not scientific, it is a it is a social construct and it is in a a form of identity that is so deeply ingrained in our all the systems and history and everything of this country. Not just this country.
00:30:35
Speaker
not just this country Everywhere. Everywhere. But America some... real different things around race.
00:30:46
Speaker
yeah Other people, and get they didn't get that harsh. but They didn't take it to where America took it and for how long America took it there. don't know. South Africa, the the the Danish guy, love. That's true.
00:31:04
Speaker
South Africa, You invited to this. ah britain Britain as well. Britain destabilized lot of. They abolished. Now, within the island of Great Britain, they abolished slavery and all of the things. Now, their territories, quote unquote, in mostly black countries.
00:31:29
Speaker
brown Black and brown. Don't forget about the Middle East. Yes. In black and brown countries, they did some real damage there. he ah So Neil gets a little flack from the religious groups because everybody is like civilization civilization started when the Bible said it started.
00:31:51
Speaker
like 6,000 years ago, right? Roughly around that time. And he is like, no. We've literally found fossils thousands of years older than that. 230,000. Yeah. He said the great migration out of Africa started 50,000 to 70,000 years ago. That's when the human population started to, like, look what what's over there?
00:32:15
Speaker
yeah I'm going to over there and see what that's about. What's what's yeah going over there? It's starting to get a little crowded over here. Yeah. So, yeah, it's it's just he gets a little pushback from people that are that are in the Bible that are that are super religious that says the Bible is a historical document of the universe. And he's like, no.
00:32:37
Speaker
No, it's really not. yeah er He was like, we've been here for 234 years. thousand years. ah Earth is millions of years old. The solar system and galaxy, millions of millions of years old. yeah It's been here a long time.
00:32:54
Speaker
A long time. And so have human and humanoid folks, right? Like we've been here for a very long time. You got to understand that the people who wrote the Bible were not around When any of this was happening, not okay they weren't. And that would be the same people that are like, Adam is the first man, but he's not.
00:33:20
Speaker
God created people on the sixth day. And also, if if he was, then how did his children have spouses? So, like, we were already here.
00:33:33
Speaker
It was really in the incest back in the day. That that was kind of a thing. Matter of fact, that only ended, what, in Britain in like, the 1800s, maybe? There's some cousin-loving going on. Yeah, it was a little different. Yeah. Well, it's a tiny island, so. It is. unless They should have migrated. So, skin color. Skin color often, often. And Shannon Sharp asked a question. And I was like, it was one of his detour questions. I'm like, stick to the card, brother. Stick to the card. But he asked a question about skin color. And Neil deGrasse Tyson says, look, when people migrated from Africa
00:34:14
Speaker
There was a separation. There was an ice age. There was there's things that separated land. it was all connected at one point. Yes. And there was underwater and people lost connections.
00:34:26
Speaker
Yes. So they evolved based on their environment. correct So the closer you are to the equator, the stronger the sunlight, the higher the UV exposure, the more melanin gets developed.
00:34:40
Speaker
yeah The further away, the less slo sunlight, less uv ah UV exposure, the less melanin gets developed. the The process takes place over thousands of years, and it's an adaptation, not a hierarchy. So when people are like, I'm...
00:34:59
Speaker
When people get on this thing and they start to say that they are superior because of a particular race. No, you're not. No. Your people was just either near the equator or not near the equator. Yeah. That is all.
00:35:13
Speaker
That is all. It's just a an evolutionary adaptation. That's it. That's it. But when you start to when you start to like dig in to these social constructs like race, like sex or gender, like sexuality, when you start to like dig into them, you realize like there's nothing substantive holding this up, right? There is actually nothing scientific or substantive holding up the idea of separate races.
00:35:56
Speaker
Nothing. It was made up. Everything's made up, stay woke, but it was made up. Stay woke? Yeah, like i when the Mormons said that we were, black people were descendants of Cain. I know y'all trying to sweep that one under the rug.
00:36:12
Speaker
But that's what y'all used to believe, and there are still cartoons that you can find on YouTube that they used to show all their little kids that was that. That was the lessons that y'all was teaching. But let's move on, because I'm not going just be attacking people the whole time. I'm trying to teach y'all something.
00:36:27
Speaker
He also talked about, and as I stated earlier, that Africa has the most genetic diversity. What does that mean? So a common stereotype about Africa is is an underdeveloped, poor, and behind. But what the science says is that the greatest genetic diversity on Earth comes from Africa. Most genetic variation of any other continent, most genetic variation within Africa then exists for the rest of the world combined. So there are more genetic variations in Africa alone than everywhere else combined.
00:37:03
Speaker
Yeah. It's so funny because you literally can find every hair color and type. every eye color and type, every skin color and type. And even like, i there was a ah content creator, there's actually several. i want to say that she is Nigerian, but she does like makeup and stuff. And a lot of Asian folks get into the comments and say she's Asian fish fishing because she has almond shaped eyes.
00:37:37
Speaker
But that's actually very common. On the continent of Africa, because you can find every single thing, like every single kind of way a person can present. You can find every height, every weight. It doesn't matter. Like you can find it on the continent of Africa.
00:38:01
Speaker
So a great way to describe this is Africa is the entire library. The rest of the world are selected books out of that library.
00:38:12
Speaker
Yes. that's That's what it is. Library and library. Did say library? I always say that shit. I swear. yeah You've been joking on me for years about that. What's some other words that say all jacked up? Y'all swear up and down and I say lab. What do y'all say? You say laptop. You do.
00:38:33
Speaker
You do not say laptop. I say, I put the P in there. i say laptop. I don't say no laptop. I say laptop. All right. Here's another thing. Yeah. That he pointed out. So, what?
00:38:46
Speaker
In the evolution, I'm about to... The the church people are about to be mad at me. But in evolution, what do they say? They say monkey, Neanderthal, man. Right?
00:38:57
Speaker
Like, that's the evolutionary tree. Yes. the The common joke is... that black people are apes, right? like Like the racist, look, let me tell you something. The racist, just go back to there was a situation at Ole Miss, either this past fall or last fall, where it was a fraternity and it was a a young black student, young black female student,
00:39:23
Speaker
and they're debating with them and you hear them doing monkey chants. This was a year ago, two years ago. It wasn't that long ago. That's been the common misconception. The common like stereotype of Black people were monkeys, which is... is weird because we like natively are not...
00:39:42
Speaker
airy people or like it's just so strange for that to be it's strange well here's the kicker there have been DNA testing if and in European populations approximately 1 to 3 percent have neanderthal Neanderthal DNA yeah do you know how many present in African populations I was saying zero honestly exactly zero yeah like Neanderthals live primarily in Europe and Asians. yeah Those populations that left Africa encountered and mixed with them. So no. Right. So black people were not some not closer to primitive human primitive beings. And the science has said that that's wrong.
00:40:33
Speaker
Yeah, we're Africans, homo sapiens evolved in Africa. And that is what most of us have evolved from, homo sapiens, not Neanderthals.
00:40:45
Speaker
But i I know that there are a lot of folks in in very like northern Russia type area that carry Neanderthal DNA.
00:40:57
Speaker
oh I would have said it would have been the Vikings. That would have explained why they was whooping their for so much. Yeah, but no, we're not no damn Neanderthals. But this isn't about saying one group of superior because that's not what we're saying. It's about showing how completely backward the old racial narratives were and the evidence points in the exact opposite direction. So yeah what you say... Was that old saying, what you say to me sticks bounces off to me and sticks to you?
00:41:24
Speaker
It was something like I am rubber, you are glue. What you say to me bounces off me and sticks to you. ah But... is People often imagine racism coming from ignorant people, but the reality is it came from institutions. Yes. A lot of science. Key figures like Samuel Martin, Francis Galton. They created these sciences like eugenics and things like that. Phrenology and all kinds of bulls.
00:41:53
Speaker
Right. And it was all created, science to justify slavery, colonialism, segregation, and racial hierarchy. These ideas weren't a mistake. They were tools, and the tools were designed to protect power. Yes.
00:42:08
Speaker
and And this got me thinking because, like I said... You go to school and you learn certain things and you learn basically even us being in elementary school and me in Illinois and then in Richmond and then eventually in Lynchburg, Virginia, and you and our brother in Lynchburg, Virginia, you hear these these stories because they're from the South that basically implies that we're inferior in almost every way. yeah And when the science breaks down, then they start going to skull measurements and IQ tests and crime statistics and poverty rates, anything to perpetrate this yeah caste system that they've created.
00:42:55
Speaker
Yeah, because again, like I said before, it hast it has a basis in nothing. So they have to make up science and make up theological reasons, right? no We're descendants of Ham or we're descendants of Cain or something like that. You know, they have to make these things up because otherwise, any kind of scrutiny, the idea of race just does not hold up.
00:43:21
Speaker
Mm-hmm. And and ah often, you know, Egypt, Egypt often tries to get written out of African context. Right. Or even when it's explained or talked about, it's given away like those pyramids, the aliens must have came and helped them because how could they how could they create something? How could they have this advanced civilization And we didn't have this advanced civilization. They discovered pulleys sooner. I don't know what to tell you.
00:43:58
Speaker
They discovered pulleys and levers sooner. What do you want me to say? I mean, that is just the objective truth. There were universities...
00:44:11
Speaker
started by primarily like the Muslim population in Africa. There were universities and we were traveling and sharing knowledge.
00:44:22
Speaker
Like that that has come out of the continent of Africa. Like, I don't know what else to tell y'all. It's resource rich.
00:44:33
Speaker
That's why everybody trying to get a piece of it. I mean, we all saw, what was it? Was it the day after tomorrow, 2012, where like the whole world was destroyed except for Africa? It actually like rose. Everybody was fine. I don't remember which one it was. I want to say was the day after tomorrow or hell, it might have been 2012. I don't know. Whichever one had John Cusack in But like, what y'all want me to say?
00:45:02
Speaker
Huh? What want me say? We had written text, libraries, universities. You don't think we could figure out that if you give a triangle a base,
00:45:17
Speaker
that that it is a strong structure that will last in perpetuity? Well, Neil said the evidence of the fact that they built the pyramids is because of pimmer pyramids that weren't finished because the slope wasn't quite right to finish.
00:45:39
Speaker
So you see these unfinished pyramids and then the finished product. That's yeah the evolution of, oh, that doesn't work right. Oh, that that isn't. But it's tough. It's tough for certain people to to recognize that the architects that they had, the information that they had had at that time, made them more advanced.
00:45:58
Speaker
Might have worked out the Pythagorean theorem before Pythagoras. i it Okay. Might have. Might have. Pythagoras was a person? Yes. Okay. You learn something new every day. i wasn't That wasn't in my wheelhouse. That's outside of my wheelhouse, and you learn something. Ladies gentlemen, I'm teaching y'all something and learning something at the same time. Pythagoras was a name. What type of name is Pythagoras?
00:46:26
Speaker
Pythagoras is, believe it was Oh, it's Pythagoras. Yes. Okay. And it's the Pythagorean theme. And I want to say That sounds Greek-ish, and Pythagoras does sound like a name that somebody from the olden times would have had. But the only thing that I want to point out is that... Greeks had some names back in the day. ah Because of the name?
00:46:49
Speaker
Greeks had some names back in the day. Oh, thought you said he had some dames. No, he had some names. I'm getting older. We got, like, Theseus. Like, they had them names back in the day. Like, I don't know why they don't...
00:47:03
Speaker
They didn't keep that up. No, no, no, no. But basically what Neil deGrasse Tyson was telling you is that also all these social constructs that more specifically, i don't know what they teach anywhere else because I didn't grow up anywhere else. I grew up here in America. What they teach you in America is all a lot. And science proves it wrong. And, but we know how people feel about science. Cause Joe Rogan is still on his podcast talking about how, you know, what is it? A victim mean or a victim. I was what cured his COVID.
00:47:34
Speaker
And this a horse tranquilizer. That don't have nothing to do with nothing. Quintacin. kind kind main quaar I don't know what it was called but it ain't something we supposed to be taking so don't do it oh my goodness but yeah that so that was Neil deGrasse Tyson that's reason why I wanted to talk about it you know hey Neil was dropping knowledge and I'm hoping I'm hoping because Shannon Shay has a different audience that people pick up on that learn because yeah there are some people that of these groups that internalize that and know
00:48:12
Speaker
You should realize that these social narratives that have been put on us are all false. Yeah, there was never, ever any merit to them. And ah and it it goes back to that that idea of like, if you are superior, why do you need to actively oppress others?
00:48:33
Speaker
And then just look at the trajectory of Black people since we were brought to these shores. Yeah. And in what way have we ever shown ourselves to be inferior?
00:48:47
Speaker
i don't i don't see it. I don't see it. And they and i think the powers that be know this, right? So they don't want us reading.
00:49:02
Speaker
They don't want us voting. They don't want us in their schools. They don't want to seeking higher education. Yeah, there's all of these restrictions on, like, abortion access and it, but nobody's asking Black women to have babies.
00:49:16
Speaker
Hmm. Nobody's asking us to have babies. It's just criminalizing us when we don't want to have them. But, like, and criminalizing us when we do have them, right? Because then suddenly we're welfare for queens. It's all it's always always been a game of propaganda in order to maintain an unjust power structure. Hmm.
00:49:40
Speaker
And that's all I to say about that. Well, here's the uncomfortable part people don't want to talk about. What makes this conversation uncomfortable isn't the science.
00:49:52
Speaker
The science is actually the easy part. The uncomfortable part is what happens after you accept it. Because if humanity begins in Africa, if race isn't a biological hierarchy, if skin color is simply an adaptation, if Africa contains the deepest genetic history on Earth,
00:50:13
Speaker
then a lot of the stories that we've been told start falling apart. And maybe that's why people fight these conversations so hard. Because history has never just been about facts. History has always been about who gets to tell the story.
00:50:27
Speaker
And more importantly, who benefits from the story being told that way. People love to say history is written by the winners. Well, that's not always completely true. What is true is that the people with power usually have the loudest pen. They decide what gets taught.
00:50:45
Speaker
They get to decide what gets left out. They decide which heroes get celebrated and which villains get sanitized. Look at what happened after the Civil War. The Confederacy lost the war. But organizations like the United Daughters of the Confederacy spent decades rewriting how that war was remembered. They pushed the lost cause mythology. The idea that the Civil War wasn't really about slavery. The idea that Confederate leaders were noble patriots. The idea that enslaved people were somehow ah loyal, happy, and cared for.
00:51:19
Speaker
An absolute lie. But they got that lie in the textbooks. They got that lie in the monuments. They got that lie in the classrooms. And for generations, people learned a version of Southern history that was designed to protect Southern pride instead of tell the truth.
00:51:34
Speaker
Now fast forward to today. We're still fighting over who gets to tell the story. In 2025, President Trump signed an executive order promoting what his administration calls patriotic education, targeting what is described as anti-American or diverse narratives in schools and cultural institutions. His administration also issued an order called the Restoring Truth and Sanity to American History.
00:52:02
Speaker
directly changes at institutions like the Smithsonian and criticizing historical interpretations centered on systemic racism. Now, whether you support these policies or oppose them isn't even really the point.
00:52:16
Speaker
My point is this. Everybody wants history taught. Nobody wants history taught in a way that hurts their side. Everybody says they want the truth until the truth challenges a story that we've been comfortable with. That's why I always tell people to do your own research.
00:52:34
Speaker
And no, I don't mean watch a random YouTube video and call it a day. I mean actually dig. Look at the sources. Look at who wrote the sources. Look at why they wrote the sources. Look at who benefited from those sources becoming accepted as truth. Because sometimes when you do your own research, you discover the source was mistaken. The source was selling you a narrative, a narrative designed to protect power, a narrative designed to justify what happened, a narrative designed to make certain people the heroes and certain people disappear.
00:53:06
Speaker
And that's why Neil deGrasse Tyson's comments ultimately force us to confront our history. Not where we come from, but why so many people work so hard to make us forget. And once you start pulling on that thread, you realize this conversation has never really been about ancestry.
00:53:27
Speaker
It's always been about power.
00:53:39
Speaker
ah right, Jay, now that you've done joking on how I say humanity. and Y'all, she was killing me during this break. Killing me, man. I know. i look i Look, certain words ain't the greatest with me. that is so man What is humanity?
00:53:55
Speaker
What do you study when you're in college? Humanities. Humanities. Yeah, that's what I said. Humanities. Nope. ah Or if you're from New York, human and humanities. Well, I'm from Maybe that's just how D.C. people say. They do not. Don't put that on D.C. Now, ladies and gentlemen, we told y'all from to jump, this segment, parental discretion is advised. Yes.
00:54:20
Speaker
Because we're talking about little peepees. And what do I mean by little peepees? Jay, I have not watched the video. I have not sought out to watch the video. I will not watch the video. I'm interested.
00:54:32
Speaker
But I've seen enough social posts to tell me about the video. And what video am I talking about? There have been some internet sleuths that have done some hacking and have gotten a hold of these Diddy Freak-Offs.
00:54:50
Speaker
Okay? Yeah. They've gotten a hold of the Diddy Freak-Offs. And there was something that was discovered by watching one of the most recent Diddy Freak-Offs.
00:55:02
Speaker
and And it's that Diddy has a little pee-pee. And yeah from what it's being described by not only the people that have seen the video, but also Diggler, who was one of Puffy's people that he hired to have sex with his women.
00:55:23
Speaker
Yeah, Sly Diggler, a yeah male content, adult content star. yeah Right. He said when asked, Vlad TV asked him how big Diddy's was. He was like, oh, it was probably about three inches.
00:55:38
Speaker
I was watching the Joe Budden podcast and they were like, he's got a micro penis. And it actually explains so much. Yeah, it does. it It explains so much of his actions, who he is as a person, how he reacts, why he reacts to certain things. this would That would legitimately make a man angry all the time.
00:56:02
Speaker
Just an angry, angry person. And of course, also pick on people that's smaller than him. Mm-hmm. Yeah, not surprised. They're calling him itty-bitty-ditty. This is not funny. this He doesn't have no control over it but he does because there are penis enlargement surgeries.
00:56:21
Speaker
No, I mean, micropenis is a real thing. It is a real thing. It is, you know, i don't know how to speak about the community. I don't want to be offensive.
00:56:31
Speaker
The reason that we're laughing about it is not the fact that he allegedly has this condition. It's the subsequent behavior that comes afterward where you're like, oh, that's that's little dick energy.
00:56:54
Speaker
Yes. It's kind of like, you know, when women would say men had all these fancy cars or these giant cars that they were compensating for something.
00:57:04
Speaker
um People tend to compensate when they're lacking in certain departments. Yeah. And i look, I'm not going shade those people that are in that community, the micropenis community. Look, that must suck.
00:57:22
Speaker
And I would almost rather... have missing limbs. And, Jay, you know how I feel about missing limbs. yeah You know I say take my whole life away. There is supposedly some floods. Absolutely ridiculous. There are some floods going on in the Midwest. And I was watching on TV while I was working out with a client the other day. And I said, if I got caught up in them floods, just go ahead and let me go away because I don't want to come back because ain't enough washing to clean me off of that dirt, being trapped in that dirty ass water for that long. Let me go. But you know what? I would rather that... just need you to value your life more. but i mean, I do value my life, but I also value how I want to live it. Right? stick okay i love I love my life, but I also realize that if you take my arms away, how am I going to hold my drink?
00:58:12
Speaker
How am I going to play video games? Yeah. how yeah go How am I going to touch a woman, caress a woman? You know i'm saying? How am I going to do those things? Life ain't worth living if I can't do those things. You take all the joy out of life, what am i supposed to do?
00:58:28
Speaker
There are plenty of people in the micropenis community that I'm sure lead very fulfilling lives, including sex lives. I'm sure that they do, because...
00:58:41
Speaker
Okay, I don't want to get too explicit. This is the sibling happy hour and I'm with my sister. But I've always said if a woman can pleasure herself with a finger, then pleasure yourself with a micropenis. But for Puffy in particular, there is penis enlargement surgeries.
00:58:59
Speaker
I don't know that... that is an option? Can work... I feel like you have to have a... Boy, I don't... I don't love this topic. I feel like you have to have a certain amount material. I'm almost through my headphones right now. I knew that's where you was going. I'm about to have a heart attack on here. I don't know. I'm not a physician, so don't know.
00:59:29
Speaker
you can't make a banana split without a banana?
00:59:36
Speaker
But I think if that was a viable option, you would see fewer people with micro-painers. You got to have more than just ah one apple to make an apple pie, huh? That's what youre basically say you said. The material has to be there. So...
00:59:50
Speaker
Yeah, that's like, I take a suit jacket to the, what do you call the people that, I don't know why. A tailor. Thank you. I don't know why that slipped my mind. Probably because I'm just tired. It's difficult to have clothing enlarged. You typically have clothing taken Take it in. Take it in. Not enlarged. So...
01:00:12
Speaker
but yeah i but But I don't know the the science, or not the science, the surgery aspect of it. I would love to have a plastic surgeon on the hair, but there are women who literally have no breasts. Yes. That can have breasts.
01:00:24
Speaker
So I'm saying, wait a minute. Transgender women can have penises through surgery. Yes. I think. ah wow yeah I don't know.
01:00:37
Speaker
Oh, Lord. Ladies and gentlemen, don't don't quote us on this one. Hey, this one is more of an after hours uncensored right now. We just free balling. No pun intended. No pun intended.
01:00:50
Speaker
right. So, hey, look, but that explains a lot about Puffy. Joe Budden was hilarious because he was just like, that should have been his defense. If that was his defense, they probably would have let him off.
01:01:01
Speaker
No. He didn't already suffer time.
01:01:05
Speaker
It had already suffered enough in life. It just doesn't give you carte blanche to be a dick. No pun intended. You sure? Seems like there was plenty of pun was intended. It wasn't at all. That was just the word that came to my mind. But, yeah, it does it it doesn't give you carte blanche to be an asshole. It doesn't give you carte blanche to be abusive. Yeah, you're right. ah it It just... He's just not free to do those things. Like, you can... Regardless of...
01:01:39
Speaker
Your, i don't want to say disability, challenges, right? Yeah, challenges. Like, regardless of your physical... I yeah think you can say a disability. ah I mean, it's a it's a doc it's a physically documented thing. That's a disability. I don't know that it's a disability. No, that sounds like a major damn disability.
01:02:00
Speaker
Well, don't... That fits the very dish definition of disability. ah I don't know. I don't think you get ADA a accommodations from my computer. You should.
01:02:11
Speaker
should. Okay. Well, I'm just saying that regardless of anybody's physical or mental challenges, you don't just get to be a jerk. True.
01:02:22
Speaker
there is still choice in there about how you want to live your life working around or with whatever challenges that you have. Like that you you still, you get to a crossroads where you gotta make a choice of like, do I accept this as part of who I am and try to lead the best and most fulfilling life as i can or should I take my frustration out on other people? Yeah, you're right.
01:02:53
Speaker
Should I compensate by accumulating wealth, and fame and power and then using that to be abusive and oppressive to other people? That's a choice. And I don't think having a micropenis gives him a defense against a choice like that.
01:03:12
Speaker
I absolutely agree. And let me be clear, ladies and gentlemen, I'm not giving him a defense. I just think it's funny and I'm cracking jokes. ah But I also believe it explains a lot.
01:03:22
Speaker
It explains a lot. Not saying that these two things are equivalent and I'm going to get killed for this, but I'm going say it anyway. If you already know. well Well, it's my damn show. I'm going to say it anyway. As we know, most sociopaths develop from not being shown love from their parents as children and babies.
01:03:46
Speaker
Right? I don't know that i don't know the that's the mental health science behind this. I've watched so many documentaries and read books to to understand it. That's what it is, right? Yeah. Okay.
01:04:00
Speaker
There's a reason that they act out the way that they do. It's a lack of empathy. Yeah. Okay? Okay. The reason why Diddy acted the way he did is a lack of dick.
01:04:15
Speaker
And and up he did serious stuff. Yes. And he should be punished for it should be punished more. Yes. Because he was already punished at birth.
01:04:29
Speaker
Truly. But we're not going to stop there. Because it is evident to me, even though it is not documented, because he probably got people signing in NDAs right and left.
01:04:42
Speaker
Even though Stormy Daniels hinted at it. Hey, y'all, break them break them NDAs. No, because sometimes... What they gonna do. Sue you for everything. Yeah, no. you talking about Diddy? I mean, he's in prison. is yeah Well, this next person definitely will sue. So Stormy Daniels hinted at it.
01:05:01
Speaker
And every action that he does, I'm like, okay, yeah, this is... LDE. LDE. Mm-hmm. Me being here in Washington, D.C. this weekend is that stupid, most ghetto fight on the front lawn of the White House. Now, somebody said years ago, hundreds of years ago, that there was boxing matches on the front lawn. So I did some research. It's not true. Theodore Roosevelt, who was a practitioner of jujitsu,
01:05:31
Speaker
Used to bring in military aides and boxers and stuff like that. And and in his presidential, in the estate, and he would have a certain room where he would spar.
01:05:45
Speaker
Theodore Roosevelt was about that, getting that action in. It wasn't on the front lawn. It was indoors and closed off room. And it was with people that, like, he wanted to get a little workout in. yeah Very much like...
01:05:58
Speaker
Clinton taking jogs and people building tennis court and Obama playing basketball. Right. So this has never been done before. There has never been a fighting event on the front lawn. And the whole city is shut down because we can't move. I can guarantee this is the first UFC fight well you see but on the lawn of the damn White House. This is the most ghetto fight.
01:06:22
Speaker
So ratchet thing to ever occur at 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue. ain't lying. And it would be with the president of the most ghetto cult I have ever seen. Because y'all are crazy.
01:06:47
Speaker
fresh
01:06:51
Speaker
Look, let me tell you something. I'm so furious. My homegirl was like, hey, we're going to go to this bar. Her friend is coming to town. She was like, what are you doing this weekend? was like, I'm trying not do anything because I've been doing a lot the last couple of weekends. And my social battery just is ran out. Yeah.
01:07:07
Speaker
She's like, hey, my friend is in town. haven't seen you in a while. Let's go watch the FIFA Cup games. And was like, all right, OK, where? She mentioned this bar in the city. And I was like, this weekend?
01:07:19
Speaker
Like, you do realize the fighters this weekend, they are literally starting to shut down the city now for fight on Saturday. Ladies and gentlemen, we're recording this on a Wednesday. The fight isn't until Sunday.
01:07:31
Speaker
This is four days away, five days away, and they are already blocking off roads. They just told us, don't drive in the city. You're not going to be able to get around. If you try to drive in the city, which is already complicated anyway, you're going to...
01:07:45
Speaker
have more than just a little bit of trouble. So they shutting this down and just the presentation of it. And they said that they, it's bleachers and all types of stuff. And they said that they might not take it down. It might stay up there.
01:07:57
Speaker
If this ain't some broke down cars in the front of the lawn, because don't forget that he was trying to sell cars on the front lawn when Elon Musk. Everything that they thought Barack Obama was going to be, everything, yeah this man is doing it. Hey, everything that they thought that Kamala Harris was going to be, right? Because there was that. I forgot which is some white woman that said that it was going to be like an Indian call center at the White House.
01:08:30
Speaker
What? No, this is literally the tick tackiest thing that has ever occurred on them grounds. I mean, just...
01:08:45
Speaker
tacky it's tacky what's next rv parking on the south lawn i mean he said he was going to because of concert the freedom 25 250 concert basically was canceled you know yeah because everybody was like oh y'all lied about what this was for and who was hosting it. Well, there is a confusion because there's an American 250 celebration that is designated by Congress that they've been planning for almost a decade for this event.
01:09:16
Speaker
Yeah. All the money hasn't been allocated like it's supposed to. Instead, they've been siphoning money off for the Freedom 250, which is a Trump-backed situation. And I ain't going to lie. Some of the stuff that the Freedom 250 got going on, I was really wanting to partake in. They got an F1 thing coming into the city. I was like, oh, it's an I was like, oh, cool. I'm going to go check that out until I find out it was Freedom 250. I said, I can't go. They got a whole state fair at the mall, at the National Mall, ladies and gentlemen, not at...
01:09:45
Speaker
the mall, at the National Mall. It was gonna be different types of food and vendors and all types of rides. I was like, oh, I'm gonna check that out. That is Freedom 250. And I was like, can't go. i can Like, I'm not going to do anything just because it's not about America 250, which I got my whole issues with.
01:10:03
Speaker
a 250-year celebration. are you going to celebrate a country's existence when the country didn't live up to its existence until 1967? Not really, until women got the right to have their own credit cards and things like that. So maybe 19... Hell, at least that we could at least start at Juneteenth when everybody was free. At least start there. At least there, which was like, it was 1866?
01:10:30
Speaker
June 16th, 18... June 19th, 1866. 66, I think. Sixth or seventh. Ooh, Lord. Yeah, it was one of those two. So you got me on the whole celebration of the 250 anyway. But yeah i am going to celebrate. it's it's one but It's America's birthday somehow, so I'm going celebrate it whatever is. 65, 1865. It was because i thought that war ended Yeah, and they were the last about it. thought wasn't until a year later.
01:11:04
Speaker
No, it doesn't look like it Let me see. I could have sworn that's the history. The Emancipation Proclamation declared all enslaved people and Confederate states free on January 1st, 1863. But that didn't count.
01:11:17
Speaker
It was unenforceable. ok yeah So freedom did not come to Texas. It was Galveston, Texas. Until June 19th, 1865, when Major General Gordon Granger arrived in Galveston and read the general order. so I guess the Civil War ended in 64. I thought the Civil War ended in 65. But Galveston's Texas, Hall Mother, Knowles.
01:11:42
Speaker
All right. That's where Beyonce and them is from, Galveston. I thought they was from Houston. They're from Galveston. She rep Houston like she from Houston. i think I don't think Galveston is far from Houston. It's not, but it's not Houston. I've been to Galveston and I've been to Houston. We rep DC and we really from Gaithersburg.
01:12:02
Speaker
Well, listen, I don't rep DC. I rep the DMV. so I'm very clear about that. very I get it. I get it. But yeah so little PP Energy once again and holding this. And it's on his birthday too, by the way.
01:12:20
Speaker
And UFC fights don't even happen on Sunday. They happen on Saturday, but they got to be directly on his birthday. Some people have birthday parties the day after their birthday, the day before their birthday, because their birthday falls on a weird day. Not him. He don't care. He's going have everybody stay up late. It's going to be rocking and loud until well past midnight.
01:12:39
Speaker
Anybody who lives close to there is going to be able to hit it. Kids ain't going to go. Well, kids is out of school, so they don't really care. But still, just the most ghetto thing. And it's a it's a little pee pee thing. So two little pee pee people.
01:12:51
Speaker
Yep. Two little pee pee people do making our lives miserable. Yeah. What you want to tell these people before we get out of here? look like Look, everybody got struggles.
01:13:04
Speaker
Everybody got obstacles and things that they have to overcome. Stop making your difficulties other people's problems. wait them
01:13:15
Speaker
That's all I got to say about that. And on that note, ladies and gentlemen, I want to thank you for listening. I want to thank you for watching. And until next time, as always, I'll holler.
01:13:31
Speaker
That was a hell of a show. Thank you for rocking with us here on Unsolicited Perspectives with Bruce Anthony. Now, before you go, don't forget to follow, subscribe, like, comment, and share our podcast wherever you're listening or watching it to it. Pass it along to your friends. If you enjoy it, that means the people that you rock will will enjoy it also. So share the wealth, share the knowledge, share the noise.
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01:14:05
Speaker
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01:14:19
Speaker
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01:14:34
Speaker
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01:14:48
Speaker
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