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AirPods That Translate? Tech, Hate Crimes & Dating Truths image

AirPods That Translate? Tech, Hate Crimes & Dating Truths

E256 · Unsolicited Perspectives
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AirPods Pro 3 live translation, South Carolina’s missing statewide hate-crime law (Jarvis McKenzie), Pastor Joel Webbon's inflammatory comments, the Jeffrey Epstein/Trump birthday card, and brutally honest dating advice — all unpacked with sibling banter on Unsolicited Perspectives. In this Sibling Happy Hour episode we test tech that could change language, explain why hate-crime legislation matters for whole communities, call out dangerous rhetoric from religious leaders, and give practical, budget-friendly first-date tips (balcony vibes, picnic moves, and honest money talk). If you care about tech culture, race and justice, or real dating talk — hit Subscribe, leave your take in the comments, and join our Patreon for After Hours Uncensored. #podcast #airpodspro3 #hatecrime #techandculture #HateCrimeReform, #datingtruths #unsolicitedperspectives 

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Chapters

00:00 Welcome to Unsolicited Perspectives 🎙️🔥

00:48 Sibling Happy Hour: Sips, Laughs & Sibling Shenanigans 🍹😂

01:42 Mind-Blowing AirPods Translation Feature Revealed! 🎧✨

04:12 Breaking Down Language Barriers with Tech 🌍💬

08:56 Political Commentary: Leadership Crisis 🏛️💭

11:06 Trump's Controversial Birthday Card to Epstein Exposed 📝😳

18:17 Racial Violence & Hate Crime Laws 😔✊

20:10 Understanding What Makes a Hate Crime 📋⚖️

22:51 South Carolina's Missing Hate Crime Legislation 📜❌

25:46 The Reality of Existing While Black in America 💔🖤

29:10 Pastor's Controversial Racial Comments Spark Outrage 🤬🙏

36:25 Shocking Crime Stats: The Truth Behind Racial Violence 📊😮

39:38 Pastor's Controversial Claims About Race Spark Heated Debate 🔥🎙️

45:30 Dating & Honesty: Can Guys Be Real? 💑💭

49:35 First Date Safety Tips & Red Flags 🚩⚠️

53:01 Budget-Friendly Dating Tips That Actually Work 💝💰

56:26 Dating Within Your Tax Bracket: Real Talk 💸💯

01:01:02 Closing Thoughts & Show Information 🎬👋

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Transcript

Introduction & Topics Overview

00:00:00
Speaker
Technology evolving, laws devolving, and dating. We're going get into all of it. Let's get it.
00:00:13
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. Join the conversation or follow us wherever you get your audio podcasts.
00:00:26
Speaker
Subscribe to our YouTube channel for our video podcasts, YouTube exclusive content, and our YouTube memberships. Rate, review, like, comment, share. Share with your friends, share with your family, hell, even share with your

Technological Innovations: Apple & Language Translation

00:00:40
Speaker
enemies.
00:00:40
Speaker
On today's episode is the Sibling Happy Hour. I'm here with my sis, J. Andrea. We're going to be dilly-dadding a little bit. Then we're going talking about a hate crimes. Then we're going talking about interesting situations in dating.
00:00:53
Speaker
but That's enough of the intro. Let's get to the show.
00:01:04
Speaker
What up, sis? What up, brother? I can't call it. I can't call it. Yo. I sent you and our brother something in the group chat today that blew my mind. you were just like, oh, this is kind of dope.
00:01:21
Speaker
So the new AirPod Pro 3, is that what it's called? Yes. Yes. The new AirPods Pro 3 have live translation.
00:01:32
Speaker
With live translation powered by Apple intelligence, you can listen to people speak in different languages and hear translations through your AirPods Pro 3. To respond, just speak naturally and your words will appear in the other person's language on your iPhone screen.
00:01:48
Speaker
To make the experience even more magical, if you both have iPad Pro 3 and Pro 3, You can each speak in your own language and hear translations through your iPad or iPods, AirPods.
00:02:01
Speaker
i It's is all of that. AirPods, iPads, it's all of that. We don't need to learn how to speak languages anymore. Hell, I barely can speak English today, but we don't need to learn how to speak other languages anymore.
00:02:15
Speaker
Yeah, yeah, it's crazy. ah Our brother said though they were on some Star Trek stuff and I'm like, yeah, this is essentially it. Because when you watch Star Trek, like you hear all the aliens speaking English, but they're not. They're speaking whatever language it is. They just have the little translators so everybody can on understand each other.
00:02:38
Speaker
Like, i I think, I don't know y'all. actually i never watched Star Trek, but I feel like that's how it works. So initially it's going to have English, French, German, Portuguese, and Spanish.
00:02:52
Speaker
And then Apple like plans to expand by the end of 2025 to Italian, Japanese, Korean, and simplified Chinese. Now that's the one that should have been. It should have been English, Spanish, and Chinese, simplified Chinese as the initial language. The Chinese speak Mandarin, right?
00:03:09
Speaker
Mandarin or Cantonese. Okay. yeah Mandarin is the the main language. Yeah, it's the name like they but I mean, there's China is an incredibly large country.

Political Discussion: Democratic Party & Mentorship

00:03:21
Speaker
So there's a bunch of different dialects and stuff. So simplified Chinese, I think, is like.
00:03:27
Speaker
The characters are simple, simpler. It's like speaking, I guess, standard American English as opposed to one of our many regional dialects.
00:03:39
Speaker
But yeah, I mean, it's crazy. um It's crazy. Like that that's not like, is that not crazy? Like two people speaking a completely different language in real time can be conversing, you know, just with their phone and a pair of AirPod Pro three s Well, so this is the next evolution of a technology that has recently come out maybe a year ago. When I had to get a new cell phone begrudgingly about a year ago, it was like, hey, man, you don't want to jump on. You don't want to look at these Androids. I was like, no, I'm team Apple all the day.
00:04:17
Speaker
Like blue text. That's that's I discriminate. That's my color discrimination. Yeah. And so the person that was like, I don't know, man, they got Google Translate built into the phone. I was like, what you mean? Yeah.
00:04:30
Speaker
It's like you push this button no matter where you are in the world, you can communicate. They could speak into it. It'll translate it and go back and forth. I was like, wow, that's dope. Now we have access to Google Translate on our iPhones because I recently had a cleaning lady who didn't speak a lick of a English.
00:04:47
Speaker
And I only speak un poquito Spanish. Right. Right. So we could not even congressverse converse converse in just my little bit of Spanish. So I was like, yeah hold on, let me break out my phone. And so we were able to go back and forth to have a conversation with these. I use Google Translate a lot.
00:05:04
Speaker
I do. Sometimes I use Google Translate just so it can tell me how to properly enunciate American words. Yeah. It's really. It's also useful for that. Yeah. yeah Because ordering ordinances, which is going coming up in the second segment.
00:05:19
Speaker
Yeah. Really tough word for me to say. Just make sure you hit that D. Ordinance. Yeah, no. It's just a tough word for me. Ordinance. Hit that D hard. That didn't sound like that was right to me. But anyway, this is going to be- didn't sound right at all. I wish I had not said that on air. Yeah, that did.
00:05:35
Speaker
oh found I was like, I don't think that's how you're supposed to say it. No, I wish I hadn't said that specific sentence on air. But you know what? It's out there now. And that's podcaster, folks.
00:05:49
Speaker
Yeah. Y'all, before we started this show, I normally nail that intro in one take. I've been one take Bruce for, I don't know, maybe like 100 shows straight.
00:06:01
Speaker
Yeah. I was telling Jay before we even got started, as I read through the rundown, i was like, oh, I'm going to have a tougher time than usual talking today. I

Controversial Correspondence: Trump & Epstein

00:06:10
Speaker
don't know why. It's probably because I'm tired.
00:06:12
Speaker
But I'm going to have a tougher time than usual talking today, which is always a problem. and and And another reason why I never learned Mandarin When you start throwing different characters for letters at me and my dyslexia that can barely see the letters, that's just regular, like American, left not American letters, just the alphabet, A through Z, right?
00:06:34
Speaker
And you start throwing different signs out there, you might as well forget it. I'm not catching it. So this is for us who were never able to learn another language. I took Spanish from seventh grade to sophomore year of college.
00:06:47
Speaker
We have Spanish-speaking people in our family. Yeah. I've dated Spanish-speaking women. here I've been to Miami too many times.
00:06:58
Speaker
I can't speak no Spanish. So this yeah this helps me. because you know Mandarin's also difficult because it's a tonal language, which means...
00:07:10
Speaker
the way you say a syllable can completely change the meaning. So you could say ma, ma, ma, ma. Like it's like, and it can mean completely different words.
00:07:23
Speaker
And so English is not a tonal language. So it's like, it Mandarin is for people who don't speak tonal languages are is probably very difficult to learn.
00:07:35
Speaker
Yeah. man but I ain't even gonna try. This is another example of technology actually making us dumber. No, I think this is an example of technology bringing us together and bridging gaps.
00:07:47
Speaker
You know what else can bring us together and bridge gaps? If we learn multiple languages. We're the only country, we're really the only country that doesn't even attempt to learn multiple languages. like That is not true. You have foreign language as a requirement in school.
00:08:02
Speaker
Yeah, but we don't really attempt it. You know how I know this? Because I got into a debate with a person yesterday. And they were like, yeah, you know, i don't understand how you've been here 15 years and still can't speak the language. I was like, one, American English is very complicated. They say it's one of the toughest languages to learn.
00:08:19
Speaker
It's like number one. And number two, I was like, we don't have an official language. I mean, but we do. i was like, but we technically we do not have an official language. Yeah, the United States of America is not declared official language. They're trying to change that, though.
00:08:35
Speaker
They're trying to. Yeah, just like they changed the Department of Defense to the Department of War. And they're trying to say it's the Gulf of America, not the Gulf of... It's dumb. It's dumb. Just stop it. Don't worry. Gavin Newsom's going to change everything back.
00:08:51
Speaker
I'm just not going put all my eggs in a Gavin Newsom basket. i mean, i like Gavin Newsom. I love the things that he's doing right now, but like I'm just not... The fact of matter is, I'm not going to get too political. I'm just going say this one thing. a Democratic Party has done an incredibly poor job of mentoring the next generation.
00:09:09
Speaker
They've just done a poor job. They have instead decided to hold on to power, even though they 150 years old, each of them, instead of reaching back and training up the next round of leaders. But that's both parties. That's politics. they Nobody...
00:09:27
Speaker
prepares the next generation. Nobody prepares the next generation. I feel like the Republicans always have a next candidate on deck. Do you remember when Trump was running the first time when they had 16, 17 people on stage?
00:09:41
Speaker
Yeah. How many do we usually have? I mean, this last time we had a lot too, but typically it's like maybe three, four. and yes so we And we always got people- They have a lot more candidate options. We don't. We don't we got, it's usually like every every election cycle, I feel i we're choosing between like two and three people.
00:10:02
Speaker
Yeah, that's how like that's how that works. the the The next generation hardly ever prepare, the previous generation hardly ever prepares the next generation for anything.
00:10:13
Speaker
Yeah, because Gen X, y'all ain't too diddly jack for us. ah Well, they're the ones preparing Gen Z because they though Gen Xers have Gen Z kids. Gen Xers don't have millennial kids.
00:10:26
Speaker
If they do, good God. at that I mean, I suppose it's possible. I mean, it's absolutely possible. Yeah. It's absolutely possible. But I'm yeahm just saying.
00:10:36
Speaker
I mean, technically, I'm a borderline Gen Xer millennial, and I could absolutely have a millennial kid because we have cousins that are like... 15 years younger than I am, some of them 20, who are

Hate Crime in South Carolina & Legal Implications

00:10:50
Speaker
millennials. And I'm like, oh, yeah, and no, that's absolutely possible. So yeah, that could work. yeah Anyway, you said that you didn't want to get political, but you did want to bring up one other political thing.
00:11:03
Speaker
Yeah. So that, you know how it's been out in the ether that Trump has sent a birthday letter to Epstein back in 03.
00:11:13
Speaker
Birthday card, but yeah. birthday card, birthday letter, whatever it is. Well, it finally got released. the Democrats released it. And it's weird.
00:11:25
Speaker
um
00:11:28
Speaker
It's weird. So the card is like this imaginary exchange between Donald and Jeffrey. And then like,
00:11:39
Speaker
around the letter around the text, which is centered on the page, which is weird, it is like the body of ah woman, an armless woman with little boobs.
00:11:53
Speaker
And that's it. I don't know. But the text is, gonna read it to y'all. It's suspect as hell. Like, okay.
00:12:06
Speaker
So it starts with voiceover and the voiceover says, there must be more to life than having everything. Donald. Yes, there is, but I won't tell you what it is.
00:12:17
Speaker
Jeffrey. Nor will I, since I also know what it is. Donald. We have certain things in common, Jeffrey. Jeffrey. Yes, we do. Come to think of it, Donald.
00:12:29
Speaker
Enigmas never age. Have you noticed that, Jeffrey? As a matter of fact, it was clear to me the last time I saw you, Donald. A pal is a wonderful thing.
00:12:39
Speaker
Happy birthday and may every day be another wonderful secret, Donald J. Trump.
00:12:47
Speaker
I wonder if he found out what Enigma meant because he saw a Batman Forever. Because that seems like a big word for him. It does seem like a big word for him. um That's the only reason why I think this might be a little suspect.
00:12:59
Speaker
Because him using that word, I don't know. That don't sound like him. He didn't use big adjectives. And at this time, it was 2003, so the internet was around. so he could Yeah, definitely it was internet.
00:13:11
Speaker
Yeah, I mean, he could have had thesaurus with him, too. could have or he could have heard it somewhere and decide to use it yeah i think it was still weird the way he used it enigmas never age like what does that mean exactly but i mean very strange enigmas are mysteries correct yes yes mysteries do absolutely age yeah and then it's like hello it's weird but it's fair but but you know oh god i'm not on here defending trump what i will say is this guy language is weird in and of itself that's what i'll say when guys communicate to each other when we're doing our bro stuff it's weird we're we're weird gender but knowing epstein's
00:14:08
Speaker
Crimes, his horrible, horrific crimes. To say that enigmas or mysteries never age.
00:14:17
Speaker
Knowing he was a, a letter, a letter file. ah like Out of China way to say that we stay monetized. And then, oh yeah, that was clear to me the last time I saw you.
00:14:31
Speaker
Have a, I hope every day is another wonderful secret. What? So here's the thing about these Epstein files. And and and we haven't talked about it much in the show because whatever. I feel like there's this is important for the victims. But i feel like there's more important things going on in the world. Kind of like, I don't know, an attempt for a dictatorship.
00:14:55
Speaker
Yeah, I mean, that's definitely happened. What I will say is there are so many powerful people that are wrapped up with Jeffrey Epstein. This could break down everything.
00:15:05
Speaker
And people are like, well, show us the list. And I do believe the list needs to happen. But I think some people are on one side thinking that the list is going to show a bunch of people. And it probably will.
00:15:16
Speaker
And I know yeah ah some people on the other side are thinking is that it's going to show people from the other side on the list. And it probably will. I think yeah people are going to realize it's like, oh, some of these people that we put in power, not very good people.
00:15:33
Speaker
No. So just as I think, you know, Trump was at that island. I also believe that I can you can also convince me that Slick Willie was also on that island. Yeah, I mean, I don't know. I really don't know. i don't think if there is Bill Clinton, y'all.
00:15:49
Speaker
I we all got it. No, I don't know. People know who Slick Willie is. People might not know that. Know that term. Yeah, I mean you know, if there is a list, I don't know that he actually kept a list yeah that umt people. like if they I don't is this list...
00:16:08
Speaker
see why would but if there is this list And that the Trump administration is not going to release it because it's probably got him and a lot of people he knows on it. So he's not going to release it. like and there And the weird backpedaling and let's just stop talking about this.
00:16:28
Speaker
You know, that is kind of like, that's your signal. Yeah. that whatever information they do have is not great.
00:16:39
Speaker
When people try to change the subject, when y'all talk about something, and they tried to say change the subject. Nah, they got some heat underneath them feet. Yep. They got some heat underneath them feet. all right. Well, technology is crazy.
00:16:53
Speaker
Like i yeah said earlier, but some of our laws are devolving instead of evolving. And we're going to get into that next.
00:17:11
Speaker
Jay, something interesting happened now the other day. and And no, I'm not talking about the murder on the train, even though that is a sad situation.
00:17:23
Speaker
And I pray for that young woman's family. This is about another racial crime. And I don't even think that was racial. It just happened to be interracial violence.
00:17:35
Speaker
But I'm talking about something else that's interracial violence. And it's from the AP. It's a story written by Jeffrey Collins. And the title of the story is Black Man Shot At While Waiting to Go to Work.
00:17:47
Speaker
Says South Carolina needs hate crime law. So for y'all that did not know, South Carolina is one of two states that doesn't have a hate crime law. But A black man named Jarvis McKenzie was shot at by a white man while he was waiting to go to work in South Carolina, leading to renewed calls for statewide hate crime legislation. McKenzie survived the attack and local ordinances that were limited in their penalties are currently unpaid.
00:18:14
Speaker
the only tools for hate crime charges in South Carolina, which remains one of only two states without a statewide hate crime law. So

Race, Religion & Societal Perceptions

00:18:24
Speaker
I was talking to a person about this yesterday because they were talking about the stabbing and the killing on that train.
00:18:33
Speaker
Mm hmm. and And I brought up this story. I was like, yeah, you know, South Carolina, because they were bringing up how the prosecution wasn't giving the family information. And I was like, yeah, South Carolina on some other shit because they don't even have a hate crime, statewide hate crime statute.
00:18:50
Speaker
Yeah. Then they tried to. The other state, Wyoming, I'm kind of saying that. I was going to get to that later. Oh, OK. OK. I was going to get to that later.
00:19:01
Speaker
But so I was telling i'm telling a woman the story and she was like, I don't even understand why we have hate crime laws. And I was like, excuse me? She was like, yeah, you already lost me. Right. But her oh rationale was even dumber.
00:19:14
Speaker
and okay It was, if you commit a crime against me, isn't it already hate? I was like, no. no no Sometimes you just owe me money. Yeah.
00:19:27
Speaker
Okay. All right. Yeah. So I'm like, no a hate crime has it. do I was like, you don't understand what a hate crime is. So for everybody out there, who's probably want to say the same thing that she did.
00:19:40
Speaker
Because, you know, people don't ever want to say, well, they got killed because of their race or gender. it wouldn't It had nothing to do with that. No, it had absolutely everything to do with that. So a hate crime is a criminal offense such as assault, vandalism or murder that is motivated by bias against certain characteristics of the victim, including their race, ethnicity, ethnicity.
00:20:05
Speaker
Religion, national origin, sexual orientation, gender, gender identity or disability. So it's not solely people say hate crime. You know, it's always black and white. What about when black people kill white people? First of all, gonna get into crime statistics later.
00:20:22
Speaker
But did that black person kill the white person because they were white? Or did they kill him because they owed him some money? There's a difference there. There's a lot of reasons. And that can be a hate crime as well under hate crime laws, if that were the case.
00:20:42
Speaker
So it's not purely about racial. It's about gender and sexuality. Well, you know, I don't even agree with the sexuality and the gender. know What about disabilities? What about somebody it was out here killing folks because they was in wheelchairs?
00:20:56
Speaker
You wouldn't consider that a hate crime? Oh, well, I mean, yeah, okay. So you just want to pick and choose what you decide to get. Pick and choose, yeah. Which communities you think deserve victimhood.
00:21:07
Speaker
Right. And that is you're going have to interrogate within yourself. Like, that I can't help you with that. if yeah That's why we say Black Lives Matter, y'all. That's why we say it.
00:21:17
Speaker
Because you all pick and choose which communities judith you think deserve to be victims. Right. And if it's a community you don't think deserves to be victims, y'all come up with every excuse in the book as to why the harm or even the murder of someone is potentially justified just because of the community that that person belongs to.
00:21:45
Speaker
The reason why hate crimes are more harmful than that same crime without... Than a non-hate crime.
00:21:56
Speaker
Right. It's because not only do they target the victim, but they also target the community that that victim represents. So not only are you harming that victim, you're threatening an entire community. that's And that's putting a bunch of people now on the defense, right?
00:22:14
Speaker
it's It's impacting the safety of an entire community. So... very There is a significant reason why hate crime legislation is important.
00:22:25
Speaker
Yeah. So in this particular case with jaar Jarvis McKenzie, going to paraphrase the story. So he was waiting outside in the same spot that he's been waiting to get picked up to go to work for ah decades.
00:22:38
Speaker
Right. White man pulls up in a pickup truck, pulls his rifle out, takes a shot that goes above Mr. McKinney's head and says to him, you better get running, boy.
00:22:56
Speaker
Basically, like, why are you in this neighborhood? Right. Security fit a footage captured the event and the perpetrator was charged under county level hate crime laws.
00:23:07
Speaker
However, they only carry misdemeanor misdemeanor penalties of of up to a month in jail. Right. This is the reason why we have hate crimes in 48 other states.
00:23:20
Speaker
ni Because when somebody takes a shot at another person based off of their race, ethnicity, religion, national origin, sexual orientation, gender, gender identity, or disability,
00:23:39
Speaker
That crime should be escalated and the penalties should be escalated because it's attacking an entire community. So there is a push in the state to make a statewide hate crime law in South Carolina.
00:23:58
Speaker
Like I said, certain jurisdictions have ordinances. Look, I jo just can't say that. That was actually the best case. like pronunciation that you've had so far.
00:24:09
Speaker
Yeah, I mean, but that, hey, we grading on a severe curve, but but but but we getting there. and on And Mr. McKenzie has become an activist and trying to push for a statewide hate crime law.
00:24:23
Speaker
About 20 local governments have passed their own ordinances, but these are only misdemeanors and only carry a minimum census. This is the same state that Dylann Roof went into that church that was just mass this and yes and massacred the people.
00:24:39
Speaker
That's all of a reason that you need to have hate crimes. There was a reason why there was a Stop Asian Hate. There were some violence that was being done towards the Asian community throughout the nation.
00:24:51
Speaker
Those are hate crimes. If you attack somebody because of their sexual orientation gender, and you might not like it doesn't give a damn. You can't attack them for it. And if you do, that's a hate crime.
00:25:05
Speaker
So, yeah yes. So I thought this was an interesting story. And I want to get some more of your thoughts on it because I'm going to paint a picture of why there's been an escalation of hate crimes over the last, let's say, eight years.
00:25:22
Speaker
But just your thoughts on just a man just waiting to go to work. Yeah. Taxpayer. A taxpayer. Minding his own damn business.
00:25:35
Speaker
Dude roll up in a pickup truck, point his rifle outside the window, shoots at him, says, get out of here, boy. Yeah, this is not an uncommon occurrence. We just don't always call the police.
00:25:48
Speaker
then Like, let's be honest. This is not an uncommon occurrence. And since the since the Black Lives Matter movement has brought a lot of these cases to the fore,
00:26:01
Speaker
What we just know to be true is that existence in a Black body anywhere is unsafe. Not at the grocery store, not at church, not anywhere.
00:26:13
Speaker
You can't stand on the side of the road waiting to go to work. You can't be anywhere and be safe in a Black body. Now what we are seeing with these blatantly racist immigration laws and is that you can't be in a brown body and exist anywhere.
00:26:35
Speaker
Not even at the courthouse for your immigration hearing. It can't exist anywhere. and so the critics who argue, according to Associated Press, that a bill imposing harsher penalties for hate crimes is divisive or duplicative.
00:26:56
Speaker
And they say that like existing laws are sufficient if judges impose maximum sentences when hate is a factor. there and These are not people who are taking in the totality of of really what's involved when someone ah harms another person due to bias, right? like It's like I said earlier, it's not just the victim who suffers, it's the entire community that they belong to.
00:27:23
Speaker
And Mr. McKenzie still lives in fear. Right? because Because there is no meaningful reform that can give him any kind of sense of safety.
00:27:44
Speaker
And he's not the only one. we just have his name. He's not the only one. South Carolina governor, Harry McMaster, who's also a former prosecutor, and maintains that current statutes allow for harsh punishment and fears a hate crime law would involve policing thought rather than conduct. Listen to me.
00:28:05
Speaker
Listen to me right now.
00:28:08
Speaker
wherere We are policing the conduct the law and the impact, the emotional, societal, cultural, the community impact.
00:28:22
Speaker
I don't care about anybody. Listen, most people's thoughts are biased. I would say 100% of people's thoughts are biased. But when you start to act on that, act on that bias, yeah, we got call we're gonna police the conduct and the impact.
00:28:41
Speaker
yeah It's like dropping a pebble into a still pond. It ripples out. And they need to suffer the consequences of the fact that it rippled out.
00:28:54
Speaker
You ain't lying. And honestly, when we come up against things like this, like... enacting harsher penalties for hate crimes or passing a bill to ensure the kids get lunch in school. Like these cops, these kinds of things that were like, okay, if you're a human being, this feels like common sense, right?
00:29:23
Speaker
Because honestly, who is being harmed with harsher penalties for hate crimes? The perpetrator?
00:29:35
Speaker
Yeah, I assume it'd be harmed. Yeah, perpetrator. Where is the downside to that? What do you mean a bill like this is divisive?
00:29:47
Speaker
In what way? Dylann Roof walked into that church in Charleston, sat there for an hour and prayed with those people and then killed them and left one alive to tell a story and they took him to freaking Burger King.
00:30:01
Speaker
before taking him to the damn police station for questioning.
00:30:07
Speaker
Are you telling him me we want to protect the rights of a person like Dylann Roof? yeah Yeah, we don't want to we always have to protect people's rights.
00:30:19
Speaker
No, no, no, no. I mean, we don't want to subject him to the punishment commiserate with the crime.
00:30:30
Speaker
yeah Okay. Yeah, that's a better way to say it. You said not protect their rights. We do want protect their rights. I mean, i'll go I don't really get a damn about his rights, but that's another story. but like yeah i mean we got Yeah, I mean, I get it. Due process. here yeah yeah We all are allowed to get it, but we ain't all entitled to Burger King.
00:30:47
Speaker
Well, if you're going to tell on yourself, that's that's like par for the course. You didn't see it in many shows in first 48, they feed you. They give you some Shasta and ah and some Lay's potato chips these days. They don't come in there with no two-piece and a biscuit. I've seen plenty of first 48 episodes and you get what's in the vending machine.
00:31:11
Speaker
Okay? That's it. You don't get no whole... Nah. You brought up something and I think and pretty much centered on humanity, right? Like why are these things where we're talking about feeding kids and and passing and hate crime laws, like why why is this difficult?
00:31:28
Speaker
Because humanity says that that these should be easy issues. You know what also says that? Because everybody loves to say that this nation is built on Christian ah christian principles, right?
00:31:40
Speaker
yeah This is a Christian nation. um And if you were to believe that and you were to believe in Jesus's teachings, then, you know, clothing and feeding the poor, clothing and feeding poor would be kind of

Dating Honesty: Financial Struggles & Relationship Dynamics

00:31:59
Speaker
a human thing.
00:32:00
Speaker
yeah But have you heard a Pastor Joe? Now, I gave him this nickname, but his name is his name is Pastor Joel Wilbon, Webin. Have you heard about him?
00:32:12
Speaker
No. Okay. So recently he stated that white Christian parents have a parental duty to explicitly teach their children to be cautious around black people.
00:32:25
Speaker
claiming this is necessary for their safety and asserting that failing to do so is neglectful parenting. He described having the talk as an obligation, telling parents they must sometimes explain that certain areas in town are off limits and certain individuals should stay they should stay clear of.
00:32:45
Speaker
He differentiated between parenting. individual black church members and strangers, asserting that groups of black strangers pose a greater threat than groups of white strangers and argue that it is unwise to raise children believing all races are identical in risk or character.
00:33:04
Speaker
Now, what he said was, because I saw that ah saw the clip, what he said was exactly that. how he phrase it yeah How he phrased it was this. He said, look, we got black members in our church. They're okay.
00:33:18
Speaker
We see them all the time. We know them. When you go out in the street and you're around a group of strangers, need to be a little weary. I was like, okay, I actually, that statement, singular, that statement, yeah, when you outside, little weary of anybody.
00:33:34
Speaker
then That's not what he said. Hold on. Hold on. He even said white people. He said, be a little weary white people, but who you really have to be Larry of are black people because you're 30 times more likely to be hurt by them than you are anybody else. That's just fact.
00:33:51
Speaker
and And as I was reading, watching that clip, I said, well, that's not fact. No, this is this is a this is a number. They are constantly trying to say black people commit more crimes than white people.
00:34:02
Speaker
Yeah. And this is just not true. Here's some crime stats for you folks out there. of violent incidences involving white victims, most involved white offenders.
00:34:19
Speaker
Yeah. Followed by black offenders and Hispanic offenders. But I'm about to give you the numbers. Violent incidences where it is white victims, white offenders in these situations, 15.8 million incidences.
00:34:36
Speaker
For black offenders, 2.38 million incidences. And for Hispanic offenders, 1.5 million incidences.
00:34:47
Speaker
So what they're trying to tell you is, I don't even know the math on this, but 15.8 compared to 2.38 million, vastly different.
00:34:59
Speaker
Yeah. That's like and and seven times more. You're seven times more likely. Yeah. He he said and his statement and on his podcast that.
00:35:12
Speaker
And this I would love to know where the hell he got this stat. He pulled it out of his ass that black strength, a crowd of black strangers are, quote, 30 times. Yeah, 30 times. That's what we say. More dangerous than a crowd of white people.
00:35:26
Speaker
Where you get that from? He came up with that. He came up with that. He came up with it. Let me hit y'all with a little something else. Because we were just talking about hate crimes. And hate crimes are absolutely a real thing.
00:35:39
Speaker
OK? Let's not get it twisted. Hate crimes are absolutely a real thing. But interracial homicide, that's Black on white and even white on black, it's far less common than intraracial homicide, meaning white on white and Black on black.
00:35:56
Speaker
So for all you people who are not good at math out there,
00:36:03
Speaker
white victims, the overwhelming majority of the time, White people are the offenders, not Black people or Latino people. Definitely a very, very small number of illegal immigrants, though yeah those are the stories that they want to put in the news to make it seem like it's a big thing.
00:36:22
Speaker
Not a big thing, okay? yeah So for all my white people out there, they're listening. And if you watch the show regularly, we already know that you're part of the team. We already know. But if you had some friends out there, I know you do, that are always saying, I'm more scared of black people than I am anybody, you need to be more scared of your own people because they're the ones that are hurting you.
00:36:43
Speaker
They're the ones that are attacking you. They're the ones that are assaulting you. They're the ones that are killing you. it's It's them. Overwhelmingly so. yeah So, yeah, it just bothered me. And and in when you said humanity, I'm like, this is a pastor.
00:36:58
Speaker
This a pastor of a church. This is a person who calls himself a pastor. Well, yeah, well, true. Literally preaching hate. yeah You don't need to be scared of Black people. Let me tell you why you don't need to be scared of Black people.
00:37:11
Speaker
If all you do is don't act scared around Black people, you'll be just fine. is when you act scary around us, we go we're going to give you something act scared around.
00:37:21
Speaker
We're going give you a reason to fear if going act scared around but No, we don't. Huh? No, we don't. We be laughing at y'all. Sometimes. But me in person, like you if you clench your purse, if you clinch if you get the elevator with me, I live in a building, you clench your purse when get in the elevator, I'm going to do a quick jab set. Like, what am I to do? Steal your money? I got more money than you.
00:37:42
Speaker
I know for fact, because I can tell that purse is a Michael Kors purse.
00:37:50
Speaker
That might be your response. I'd be laughing. I'm laughing. It's like, okay. Okay. Yeah, whatever. But he's this is this is another quote here.
00:38:05
Speaker
that I just want y'all to really understand what this man literally said out of his mouth. He said, quote... and it is And it is actually a failure of your parental duty, white parents. Please hear me.
00:38:20
Speaker
If you teach your children growing up, if you lied to them and say, all people and all races of people in our country are the same, they are not. you are actually depriving your child of factual, truthful information that could save their life.
00:38:35
Speaker
And that factual and truthful information, he means that black strangers are 30 times more dangerous, which is, again, not a fact. It is something he pulled out of his ass.
00:38:47
Speaker
so But if he had said, it if he had said, using that same sentiment, if you raise your children and saying that we are not equal because historically...
00:38:59
Speaker
Black people and brown people have been historically discriminated against. Right. Then I'd be like, you know what? That's good. That's a good lesson to try and teach your kids that historically they have not been treated equally.
00:39:14
Speaker
But that's not what he's saying. What he's saying is you are 30 times more likely with some black strangers. And this is a crazy thing. I literally was having this conversation with somebody earlier. but Black people are so damn welcoming.
00:39:27
Speaker
That all you got to do is not act scared around us. And we go't we are so welcome and we'll be like, we invite too many damn people to the barbecue, to the cookout.
00:39:38
Speaker
Because all you got to do is act like you ain't afraid of us. That's how traumatized we are in this country. Where we will accept anybody else who is just simply not afraid of us.
00:39:50
Speaker
Yeah. Even the people who are afraid, right? um I don't know what kind of face Dylann Roof had when he walked into that church in Charleston, but what did them people do? ah They embraced him.
00:40:03
Speaker
They welcomed him in and they prayed with him because that's ultimately who we are and what we do. But this is the same man, by the way, who wants...
00:40:16
Speaker
to repeal the 19th Amendment. he believed He stated on his podcast that he believed part of his vote was stolen from him as a result of the 19th Amendment, which cements women's right to vote.
00:40:30
Speaker
Oh, yeah, that's been like a ah big push recently. They trying to pull women back. Some women are even down for it. Yeah, I don't think I should have the right to vote. some Some women I've seen in these interviews, you know, and like, we you don't think you should get the right to vote? No, I'm not smart enough.
00:40:47
Speaker
Yeah, well, their whole position is that families as a unit should vote with the man leading the decision making and voting process, right? Like it's just like our households should vote.
00:41:00
Speaker
Um, no. Yeah, nah. I got some real, I got some real cool homegirls that tell me stories when they go back home and how their family, they're white.
00:41:14
Speaker
Some of my homegirls, homegirls specifically I'm talking about, they're white and they go back home and their, their home, their family is all MAGA and they are the complete opposite of that. I'm like, how do you even deal with that?
00:41:25
Speaker
And they're like, don't go home that much. And I was like, oh, yeah, I guess. I guess that's tough. You know? Yeah. Yeah. You know, me personally, I just turn, I just say, okay, well, I'm not gonna rock with you no more. But I guess, you know, maybe if you're a mom, you're a dad, you might have a, you might have a little trouble.
00:41:42
Speaker
Not me. But luckily my parents ain't like that. Right. Yeah. But ladies and gentlemen, I just want to just point out, you know, ah we bring truth to power, power to truth. It's a bringing back to the first episode.
00:41:56
Speaker
Yes. Stop this damn myth that black people are going to harm you. Not. Not going to harm you. Not because you're white. We literally.
00:42:09
Speaker
We literally are cool just being left alone, to be honest with you. And it feels like every time, no, it doesn't feel like, every time we set up our own thriving communities, y'all be like, y'all be like, F your couch and y'all come in and you destroy them.
00:42:27
Speaker
But you want us segregated, but you don't want segregated. hey being equal or having equity. No, they want to segregate it and not successful.
00:42:37
Speaker
Yes. That's what it is. And not everybody. Ladies and gentlemen, once again, I feel like I have to stress this all the time. i'm not talking about all white people. see speaking in generalities here. Speaking in generalities here, and we're speaking a lot to the systems and the structures, not solely to individual people, but I am speaking about this pastor.
00:42:55
Speaker
Pastor Joe, and and he's a person that prays the Lord. But don't get me started on Americanized Christianity that is based solely in racism. Yeah.
00:43:06
Speaker
ah Sexism and homophobia and transphobia. All that stuff. All right. This, Jay, do you guys have any more to to talk about on this one? Because I'm off this now. this is depressing. Yeah, when you're fighting legislation that really only harms perpetrators of crimes, like, and not really harms them, but just holds them accountable, ask yourself why.
00:43:30
Speaker
Why are you so concerned about the penalty for a perpetrator of a crime? Why are you so damn concerned ah about the penalty for a perpetrator of a crime?
00:43:48
Speaker
It's because you don't want them to suffer harsher penalties for hurting disadvantaged communities. Because at the end of the day, you don't care about vulnerable communities.
00:44:04
Speaker
Just say that. Like, you're already kind of saying the quiet part out loud, but just say that. Message.
00:44:20
Speaker
Jay, can guys actually be honest in dating? I wish you would. free So I came across this post on Instagram and it and it created

Societal Decency & Hope for Change

00:44:32
Speaker
a very interesting...
00:44:34
Speaker
topic that people were talking about in the comments. And I was like, oh, this would be interesting to talk about on the show because I just think that it's it's an interesting question. Like how honest can a man truly be?
00:44:45
Speaker
So a guy sent a woman that he was dating or hanging out with. It didn't say what level of dating that they were on. um okay This is what he sent to her. He sent her a text message. Hey, I want to take you out.
00:44:59
Speaker
but I'm effed up right now. I can afford wine and takeout if you want a vibe on the balcony tonight. And my question is, was his honesty the best policy?
00:45:12
Speaker
And should men communicate with, let's just keep this um heterosexual relationships. Should men communicate when they loan funds with women?
00:45:24
Speaker
Yes. Please let us know so that we don't go out somewhere and get embarrassed. What you get embarrassed? What do you mean? Because, look, ah y'all go out there and then we order stuff that you can't afford, but we don't know that.
00:45:43
Speaker
Then the check comes, the card gets declined. Now I got to go in my place. It's all embarrassing for, like, it just puts, it makes it embarrassing for both of us. Yeah. Just let me know.
00:45:54
Speaker
We can do something else. We can do something else till you get back where you, I could do something for you. Like it don't, it's cool. Like, look, you want to spend time with me, but you can't afford to do it right now.
00:46:08
Speaker
Okay. How about you come here, I cook and we so watch a movie or something. Like it's not, like you give me the option to give, to come up with other, you know, we can do other stuff.
00:46:22
Speaker
So I went into the comments because a posting that the person that posted this was like, hey, ladies, what do you think? And so I was reading the comments of the ladies and I was. It was refreshing. and But also some women brought up something that I didn't even think about.
00:46:37
Speaker
Right. So most of the time they were like, love to honesty. Baby, you ain't got to order takeout. I'll cook something. Vibing on the balcony seems like the best thing ever.
00:46:48
Speaker
And I have a balcony and my balcony overlooks the courtyard. I've had many a dates where we eating food, listening to music, especially at night because the the light reflecting off the pool and I got lights on my balcony. It's a total vibe out there.
00:47:02
Speaker
yeah but My house is a complete vibe, but it's a total vibe out there. So yes women are like, yo, I'm feeling this more so than going out. yeah A lot of women brought up was, is this the first date?
00:47:16
Speaker
Because no, if that's the first date. And I understand that because you don't go over to a man, ladies. You don't go over somebody's house on that first i don't care how long y'all been talking. Yeah. First date, don't go to that house.
00:47:29
Speaker
Don't go to his house. And it's got to a very long time before they know where you live. ah You know, it's funny. The last girlfriend I had, she was like, you never made the moves on me. I was like, woman, you never gave me an opportunity. Because the very first date that we had, I went to her part of town.
00:47:46
Speaker
Mm-hmm. And she didn't have me pick her up at her house. I took an Uber. She didn't have me pick her up at her house. She had me pick her up at a bus stop close to her house. I was like, safety. Cool. I dig that.
00:47:57
Speaker
We go to a restaurant. We eat. I'm like, here, I order an Uber back, and I'll have it drop you off at your house, and I'll go home. She's like, uh, uh, uh. I was like, what you think? I'm to stalk you?
00:48:08
Speaker
It's like, you're fine, but it's not that serious. I just want to make sure you get home safely. You can order your own Uber. But like, I'm going to be passing by that area anyway. So and so even then she put the address. it wasn't the right address.
00:48:24
Speaker
The second time, the second date, I walked her home, but I didn't get to go inside. The third date. think I was inside. It may have been a fourth date where I was actually inside and it wasn't until the fifth date that she actually came to my house.
00:48:39
Speaker
So I was like, yo, this is, this is, like, I'm cool with that because yeah safety is a major issue. So some of the women brought up, if it's first date, that's a no-go. One woman brought up something In response to if it's the first date that I was like, that's also a good point where she was like, if you can't afford the first date, why are you dating right now?
00:49:00
Speaker
And I think that's a good point. If you ain't got it right now, get straight before you have to go out there and date. Don't try to be dating broke.
00:49:12
Speaker
I really don't feel like that should necessarily be a barrier, right? Money? Because the first date, okay, so say it's our first date.
00:49:24
Speaker
He sends me this text. I want to take you out, but I ain't got it right now. I can afford wine and take out if you want a vibe on my balcony tonight. My response, if this is somebody that I do want to get to know, would be, that sounds great.
00:49:39
Speaker
How about we just move it to a picnic in a local park?
00:49:44
Speaker
Yeah. Because we're just getting to know each other. And that, ah like, you bring the wine, I'll bring the takeout, we'll meet up, and we'll we'll kick it. Like, that we could do that. Like, it I think you shouldn't offer a first date to someone you can't afford. Right.
00:50:03
Speaker
That's what she was essentially saying. Right. like Right. Like, so, yeah, I mean, I always think you should probably try dating your tax bracket. But like, I don't ever I'd be I'd be out there trying to date the women that got that money. You know, I mean, but if it and but if if there is like ah income difference, like a substantial income difference, you got to get creative, my boy.
00:50:27
Speaker
And it doesn't mean that you can't lock down somebody in a different tax bracket. You just got to get creative. And I feel like he was there. He was almost there.
00:50:38
Speaker
had this Had this been a first date, he was almost there. He should have suggested a public place like a park and there something like that. But like, he was almost there. Like, I still probably would have rocked with that.
00:50:53
Speaker
Because you can have a good conversation at a picnic. Oh, you got this conversation. And people watch it. Right. Look, let me tell something. Let me give you guys some free game. so Because I'm i'm a reformed player.
00:51:04
Speaker
Reformed. Reformed player. OK? Give you guys some free game. That first date, don't do a no movie. Don't do no dinner. You don't even technically have to do drinks.
00:51:15
Speaker
What I used to do when I used to go out on a bunch of first dates, I used to date like from 2015 to about 2009. I was on a ah lot of dates. And in this area.
00:51:26
Speaker
2015 to 2009? 2019. I'm going to say 19. I'm getting older. I'm getting older. And in D.C., mad expensive to go out even just to have a couple drinks.
00:51:42
Speaker
There's this spot. that everybody in this area knows about. it's actually It's actually ah borderline between DC and Virginia. There's this park and it's right outside of National Airport, right? But it's also along water.
00:51:57
Speaker
And everybody goes there all the time to watch the planes take off. Kids are out there with the kites and all that type of stuff. yeah I used to go get wine, Crackers and like, ah it would be like a little tray of stuff that you sha could just buy.
00:52:15
Speaker
Yes, but it was ah yeah was it poor a poor version of a charcuterie board, but it was like some meat, some cheeses and some crackers. yeah so That's all a charcuterie board is. Okay. Yeah. yeah And I use it. That was my first date for everything. I would get two bottles of wine, one red, one white. I would have the glasses, the the ah the ah cover, use your phone for music, and you just vibe and talk.
00:52:38
Speaker
I did that so many times and it always worked. And if you want to get them back to your house, all you have to do is make them feel comfortable like that's not the point to get back to the house.
00:52:49
Speaker
Because the park and public places are going to eventually close or it's going to get dark. And then you say, hey, you want to go back to my place and watch a movie? And if they're comfortable, then they'll come.
00:53:00
Speaker
And if they're not comfortable, they probably don't really even like you that much. So you just move on. Incorrect. I know that's incorrect. But this is free game. This is free game from all them young players out there that's like, man, these women are expensive.
00:53:12
Speaker
They don't have to be expensive. And if they are, if they want the full nine on the first date, odds are that probably ain't the one for you anyway. Yeah, I mean, if you can't afford it, know, don't... even if you can't afford it. If they asking for all of that on the first date, no.
00:53:33
Speaker
No, somebody... Somebody, a content creator, I saw them on Instagram. He had a great analogy for this. You cannot walk in to the poor Porsche dealership with 15 grand in your pocket.
00:53:48
Speaker
I mean, that's true. but That's just. I mean, you 15 grand in your pocket. Yes, you definitely can. 15 grand in your bank account. No, you can 15 with 15 to spend.
00:53:59
Speaker
Oh, well, you put down payment on that and get to go. No, no. You can't go in. You can't be. Swinging. Actually, actually, sometimes, sometimes, yeah, sometimes, yeah.
00:54:16
Speaker
It is what it is. And people are allowed to be accustomed to a certain kind of lifestyle or a certain kind of treatment. or like And if that's not what you can afford, you don't get it.
00:54:33
Speaker
You don't get it. If you can't afford the BMW, you can't get it. That's a good analogy, yeah, because a lot of dudes out here like, man, these women always want this and that. Yeah, I mean, if they're accustomed to that, I mean, why should they settle for anything less? Because you wouldn't settle up for anything less.
00:54:48
Speaker
And the purchase is the first date, but you still got maintenance. Right. You still got to put gas in it, get the oil changed. You still got money. okay Money got to come out.
00:54:59
Speaker
yeah Okay, we talking about cars, because I'm not paying for no maintenance for no woman. She can maintain herself. Okay, then that's not a, you ain't going to be in them luxury dealerships. No, I'm not, I'm not paying for the hairs done nails, not dating. If you my girl, special occasion.
00:55:18
Speaker
Yeah, but that stuff gets expensive. Sometimes nails be costing $200. And you know what? That's, and that's, that's full, that's full Xbox or PS5 games.
00:55:29
Speaker
That's full of them. Yeah, I mean, it's just where are your priorities? Like, where they at? If your priority is on getting them PS games... And not paying for nails.
00:55:41
Speaker
Don't date the woman who expects to get her nails paid for. no, wouldn't. That's the answer. It's not hard. It's not hard. But people make that mistake every damn day.
00:55:53
Speaker
Well, I wanted to talk about this because the manosphere is always blaming women. And here is a prime example. There were there were but there were thousands. Yeah, I think it was thousands.
00:56:04
Speaker
Thousands of comments of women saying, That was so dope that he was open and honest. Yeah, baby, we could do whatever. No, you don't got to order takeout.
00:56:16
Speaker
I'll cook. Vibing on the balcony sounds so dope. So for the men out there, if you are effed up financially and you're like, your're you don't have they don't have to be your woman woman, but you're all dating.
00:56:28
Speaker
Yeah. It's okay to be honest and be real. Like, look, I ain't got it like that. Then stretch yourself. Because yeah when you stretch yourself, you're just going to be mad that you done stretched yourself for her. And really, you should be mad at yourself for not just being honest.
00:56:42
Speaker
Don't be embarrassed. Everybody get little effed up sometimes. Everybody. And her response in if her response is messed up, then that ain't then now you know.
00:56:53
Speaker
Now you know if you get on hard times, this is not a person that's going hold you down. Right. Now, you know, move on. Yeah. So it's always best to just tell the truth because then you get, at least you get the answer.
00:57:06
Speaker
You get the answer one way or another. Either it's a person who is like, I'm not worried about that. We could, we could do something. We could to, damn, I got a membership to the museum. We can head over there. They got a new exhibit open. it Like that's free. Like, you know, if you don't have some, but if her response, oh, you ain't got it.
00:57:24
Speaker
yeah love here and Then you already know, you know what it is. And the worst thing you guys can do outside of line is not say anything and not attempt to do anything because you effed up.
00:57:35
Speaker
You're like, I ain't got no money, so we can't go nowhere, i do nothing. No, man, there's a bunch of free things out there or low cost things that you can do, man. Look, Aldi wine is good wine.
00:57:46
Speaker
Good wine. $3. Trader Joe's. $3. three yeah get you two bottles of wine. $6. Get you some crackers and cheese and some meats. You only spend about $10 to find you a little park.
00:57:57
Speaker
You got music on your iPhone. Vibe. Look, $10. Look, most women out here, we drinking barefoot, baby. We not out here drinking $200, $300 bottles of wine. Okay? you I ain't never had no $200 bottle of wine. In my life. If I had, I wouldn't have drank it because I'd be like, that's $200. We ain't drinking that. That's $200.
00:58:18
Speaker
I be trying to figure out how much it is per sip. Like, nah, man. Like, that's... So, fellas, be honest. It won't hurt.
00:58:29
Speaker
It can only help. Stop avoiding stop voing the truth just because you can't handle the truth. If she ain't feeling it, then that ain't the one for you. the The end. Okay. people in your life for a reason and a season that's what I say I know I stole that line from you Jay I did I stole

Conclusion & Call to Action

00:58:48
Speaker
that line I stole that line from you and two things can be true at the same time I stole that from one of my homeboys like I stole those two lines because those are two yeah good lines Jay yes what do you want to tell these people out here
00:59:04
Speaker
Man, human decency, wish they sold it in nest stores because some of y'all are missing it. And you don't even know why. You just really dislike vulnerable communities so much that common sense things you're not willing to invest in. is the It's the strangest thing of all time. But if anybody knows how to bottle decency,
00:59:31
Speaker
Please do so immediately because we are sorely lacking in it. Let me tell you, that store would go out of business yesterday but that because people just don't have it.
00:59:42
Speaker
But I have hope. Just Superman. I don't know why. Because I'm an optimist, I guess. I don't know. Well, we two sides the spectrum.
00:59:53
Speaker
I guess so. I'm a pessimist. I'm a realist. That's what I am. Not an optimist. I'm a realist. But I do believe that people can be better.
01:00:04
Speaker
And I believe that one day we will. Hopefully. Or the aliens take us over. Whichever one comes first. But on that note, ladies gentlemen, and I want to thank you for listening. I want to thank you for watching.
01:00:16
Speaker
And until next time, as always, I'll holler.
01:00:24
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.
01:00:47
Speaker
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01:01:06
Speaker
And once again, the key word there is uncensored. Those who exclusively on our Patreon page, jump onto our website at unsolicitedperspective.com. dot com for all things us that's where you can get all of our audio video our blogs and even buy our merch and if you really feel generous and wanna help us out you can donate on our donations paid donations go strictly to improving our software and hardware so we can keep giving you guys good content that you can clearly listened to and that you can clearly see. So any donation would be appreciative. Most importantly, I want to say thank you.
01:01:41
Speaker
Thank you. Thank you for listening and watching and supporting us. And I'll catch you next time. Audi 5000. Peace.