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Drunk on Truth: Reflecting on Life, Goals & Freedom image

Drunk on Truth: Reflecting on Life, Goals & Freedom

E221 · Unsolicited Perspectives
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22 Plays7 days ago

Why do we stop partying as we age? How did Trump illegally deport a man protected by court orders? In this raw episode of Unsolicited Perspectives, Bruce and J. Aundrea dissect the shocking case of Kilmar Armando Abrego Garcia, Trump’s defiance of the Supreme Court, and the rise of authoritarian tactics in America. They also dive into aging, identity, and why authenticity trumps societal expectations. From hyper-masculinity in Black culture to healing from patriarchy, this episode blends personal growth, political outrage, and cultural analysis. #podcast #socialjustice #aging  #culturalidentity #deportation #unsolicitedperspectives 

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

#podcast #mentalhealth #relationships #currentevents #popculture #fyp #trending #SocialCommentary 

Chapters:

00:00 Welcome to Unsolicited Perspectives 🎙️🔥💥

01:09 Sibling Happy Hour: Spicy Takes & Drinks 🍹🌶️

01:45 Mind-Blown Moments: Identity, Growth & Shower Thoughts 🧠💡

04:11 From Sports to Zen: How We Outgrow Escapism 🏀➡️🧘♂️

08:21 Real Talk: Breaking Free from Masks & Patriarchy 🔓🎭✊

21:02 Midnight Movements: The Shocking Kilmar Armando Abrego Garcia Deportation 😡✈️

33:29 America’s Crossroads: Democracy vs. Dictatorship ⚠️📉

34:17 Defying the Highest Court: Illegal Deportations & Power Plays 👩‍⚖️🚫

35:41 Mapping the March Toward Dictatorship: History’s Warning Signs 📜🔒

37:56 Headlines vs. Reality: Media Fallout and Public Outcry 📰🔥

43:13 Couch Over Club: How Aging Changes Our Party Game 🛋️🎶

53:34 Pandemic Lessons: Falling in Love with Home Again 🏡❤️

01:01:17 🎤💫 Mic Drop Moment: Wisdom to Walk Away With 🌟

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Transcript

Introduction to 'Unsolicited Perspectives'

00:00:00
Speaker
We're talking about deportations, the illegal ones. And then we're talking about what it's like getting old and why we don't want to be outside no more. We're going to get into it. Let's get it.
00:00:21
Speaker
Welcome. First of all,

Introducing Co-host J. Andrea and Key Topics

00:00:23
Speaker
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 to follow us wherever you get your audio podcasts. Subscribe to our YouTube channel for our video podcasts and YouTube exclusive content. Rate, review, like, comment, share.
00:00:42
Speaker
Share it with your friends, share with your family, hell, even share with your enemies. enemies on today's episode. This is Sibling Happy Hour. I'm here with my sis, J. Andrea. We're going to be dilly-dadding a little bit, and then we're going be talking about an illegal deportation, and then we're going to talking about getting older.
00:01:00
Speaker
But that's enough of the intro. Let's get to the show.

Sibling Happy Hours and Scheduling Challenges

00:01:10
Speaker
What up, sis? What up, brother? I can't call it. I can't call it. We back to a Friday sibling happy hour. I know some people going to be excited to the fact that we coming back to the to the weekend. Yeah, because, I mean, it just don't feel like a happy hour unless it's on Friday. Yeah, I mean, people can do a Tuesday happy hour, which is what they've been doing, you know, since you started grad school. But you hit me up when you was like, um'm ah I'm available for an extra day for a little while. And I was like, cool, because my Sunday fun days have been taken up. And it's just a lot to record in that amount of time.
00:01:41
Speaker
It is. It is. So I'm glad we're splitting it up a little bit.

Identity and Belonging: A Personal Journey

00:01:45
Speaker
I had an interesting conversation today. Okay. Okay. with a very, very intelligent friend of mine. and car And I don't know how I... I've been having some epiphanies that that shouldn't be epiphanies, that are pretty self-explanatory.
00:01:58
Speaker
One is why so many white Americans are following along with Trump and MAGA. And I realized... you mean why they're okay with a ah dictatorship, but not diversity?
00:02:13
Speaker
Right. and And I realized... just as Black people, not all, not all, but ah more than a large portion, were defending OJ Simpson when we know his ass was guilty, that defend R. Kelly, that defend Bill Cosby,
00:02:32
Speaker
we identify with our Blackness. When people ask us what we are the first thing that we say is Black. We don't say American. For many white Americans in this country that can't trace their lineage back and say, I'm exactly this or I'm exactly i'm Irish, I'm Scottish, I'm 100% Italian, it's a mixture.
00:02:51
Speaker
So the one thing that they can say, i am this, is American. So they defend that idea because they're a part of something. And without it, what are they?
00:03:03
Speaker
If you take away my Blackness, and I feel like i'm more than just that. But if you take away my Blackness, that's the majority of my identity. How do I describe myself without describing myself as Black?
00:03:16
Speaker
Black, as a Black man. As a Black American man, which is different than Black men in other countries, but a Black man. Yeah. But as I'm going through these epiphanies in my head, my nighttime showers, my nighttime showers go one of two ways. They either go, I'm arguing about it ah to myself from a past argument, like I'm reenacting an argument from the past. Yes, yes, for sure. Or getting ready for future arguments and debates that I know is gonna happen.
00:03:44
Speaker
that That's my shower time madness. Either I'm doing that or I'm literally in the shower just in thought. okay And another thought came to my mind about how much I've changed.
00:03:56
Speaker
That some friends that I've had for decades, right, maybe wouldn't be my friends if I met them today. And friends that I have today, that I met today, probably wouldn't have been my friends had I met them 20 years ago. And just that evolution. And this is like...
00:04:13
Speaker
I don't watch sports anymore like that. Like, you know me, I used to be a huge sports fan. don't watch sports anymore like that. And my friend said, hu Well, maybe it's because you don't need that escape.
00:04:25
Speaker
Or you found that that escape wasn't working for you. I said, what? What do you mean? was like, yeah, you know, I mean, most people that do these things and have these hobbies and sports and things of that nature, they're trying to escape something because their job sucks or they don't, that maybe their family situation the greatest, or maybe their family situation is great, but just time consuming and they just need a moment where their mind relaxes. Yes, yes. And to get away.
00:04:52
Speaker
And then maybe that stuff for me was an escape because let's face it, I've gone through bouts of depression. i have severe anxiety. Maybe those things were a way for me to escape. And at some point, I don't know, within the last 10 years, it it's just been this gradual thing.
00:05:11
Speaker
that I just don't use sports anymore. And it was like, okay, so what's happening here? and And my friend was like, was probably all of a sudden, I was like, no, it wasn't all of a sudden. I just realized it suddenly.
00:05:23
Speaker
Yeah. The change was gradual, but I realized it suddenly. like And it's interesting because in this third segment, we're going to be talking about why we get older we don't want to go outside. But I think we don't talk enough about why our mentality changes as we get older.
00:05:39
Speaker
Like yeah hopefully you're evolving. Have you noticed anything like that

Personal Growth and Authenticity Post-Divorce

00:05:43
Speaker
happening with you? Were just things that you were like really, really into? Like now you're entering your forties and you're like, I don't do that as much as I used to.
00:05:51
Speaker
Yeah, I would say like film. Film and television. I used to watch movies and be into film and television a lot. Now ah my my TV is barely on.
00:06:03
Speaker
If it's on, it's just like background music. Mostly for the dogs. Like, I... And I used to love going to the movies and I just don't do it anymore. And it was it was, you know, like a creative thing for me, but also, yeah, it was a form of escapism.
00:06:24
Speaker
And I think... I think as I get older and I become more grounded in my life and I become more content with my life and the direction that it's going because I'm, I'm doing the things that I want to do and making things happen for myself and all of that. I think I need those outlets less and less. And, and and i I don't need a form of escapism from a job that I hate because i'm I'm doing something now that I enjoy.
00:06:59
Speaker
Right. um You know, I don't get those. We talked about it last week, those Sunday scaries, you know, or the, you know, those job nightmares or things like that. Like, I don't have those issues anymore.
00:07:14
Speaker
You know, I always, yeah I always have anxiety. It's generalized. Yeah, it's generalized. It's We could be there in general. If we could get rid would show enough way? So there are still things that I do that that's kind of like born out of that. Like they say watching the same show or something like that over and over is emotional regulation.
00:07:33
Speaker
i do that with music. I listen to the song same song on repeat over and over and over, and that's a form of emotional regulation. So I'll do things like that now. But yeah, I think as you...
00:07:44
Speaker
as you start I think anytime you start to kind of take more ownership of your life and take in stock, like as you get older and realizing, okay, am I happy right now? Am I happy doing what I'm doing? And if not, then I need to make some changes. And like then making those changes...
00:08:07
Speaker
you need those coping skills less and less. Yeah. ah I'm about to get real personal about myself. Ladies and gentlemen, I don't know what it is. I just, I don't know is. You feeling some type of way today. Is is ah Saturn in lemonade right now, something like that?
00:08:22
Speaker
I think Mercury is in Gatorade. Okay. Is it orange or fruit punch? As far as I as i know, it's glacial ice.
00:08:32
Speaker
Whoo! That's the reason why I'm feeling the way I'm feeling. Which is really just cherry. yeah It really is just cherry and has a weird aftertaste. But I still love Gatorade. But OK, so I'm about to get personal. OK, so as I'm having this conversation with my friend, more and more doors and windows are opening to me.
00:08:49
Speaker
And, you know, you hit the nail and ah on the head about happiness. Yeah. Also, i am a person who is goal oriented. Yeah. I set a goal.
00:09:01
Speaker
That goal needs to be accomplished. Whether i even want to accomplish the goal anymore during the process. Like I say, I want to do something. i'm going to do it. And then I have to do it.
00:09:13
Speaker
yeah So I was thinking to myself, when did this shift happen? And it happened after my divorce. And it probably happened when I came to the realization that the plans that I had made for myself weren't going to be the plans that came out.
00:09:30
Speaker
Right. Yeah. Yeah. If I was going to get married and have kids, it wasn't going to be on the timeline that I had set it out to be on. Right. And then I

Societal Anger and Inauthenticity

00:09:39
Speaker
need to be OK with whatever life brings me because the goals had changed.
00:09:44
Speaker
Yeah. And then there was also a point when I was younger, which I probably would never have admitted. probably didn't even really realize it, I kind of didn't like myself. yeah I was a mean drunk back in the day.
00:09:57
Speaker
Back in the day, I would get drunk and turn mean. And it was because I didn't like myself. And the reason why I didn't like myself is because I wasn't being authentic to who I am. I was faking the funk, not necessarily to fit into the crowd because I'm always the person that will go off or do this thing. My boys that I've known since high school always say, you never want to do what everybody else is doing. You always got to go against the grain. So it was never me trying to fit in, but whatever it was, I wasn't living authentically. And at a certain point,
00:10:27
Speaker
when I stopped living for the goals that I had set in the timeframes that I had set, yeah I was more reflective and like, yo, I'm kind of like a badass.
00:10:38
Speaker
Like the things that I've accomplished in my life yeah is iss kind of it's kind of dope. I've done some really, really cool things. I've done so much in my life that there isn't actually anything that I need to do anymore.
00:10:55
Speaker
Do you know what I mean? There's nothing I need to do anymore. And there's a fulfillment in the fact that ah don't want it to end right now. If it ended all now and my life flashed before my eyes, there's not going to be any wasted moments.
00:11:11
Speaker
There's not going to be any what ifs. The what ifs are what if I didn't decide to do this and didn't decide to do that, but not what if I had done that. Yeah.
00:11:22
Speaker
Because I didn't do it. Right. You didn't waste any opportunities. I didn't waste opportunities, not opportunities that I wanted. Did waste opportunities? Something that other people would be like, well, you had opportunity to do this and this and this, but that's, I know what path that would have led me down and I i wouldn't have been happy. I wouldn't have been content.
00:11:40
Speaker
And I think this reflectiveness, you know, you say it all the time, I get drunk and I get like real happy and it's because I'm freaking happy. And that's really dope to come to that realization that, you know,
00:11:52
Speaker
There's nothing that that I have to attain. There's nothing that I have to do that I'm just happy. And then part of that... You can pursue things you want to do now at this point. Right. And part of that is I can i don't need... I probably still use it with the music like you do because I say i play the same playlist all the time. Mm-hmm.
00:12:13
Speaker
But it's not like it was. Yeah. Right? When we get together now, it's not me saying, well, let's let's turn on CB4 and fear the Black hat. It's not that. It's just, hey, we can do whatever, because I just love hanging out with my brother and sister.
00:12:27
Speaker
Yeah. Yeah, I mean, I think that also comes with being on your healing journey, right? All the things that you used to need, like to get through the day and to get by, you don't need anymore because you aren't even that person anymore.
00:12:43
Speaker
Yeah. yeah Yeah. i and And so when I look at the reason why all this happened, the reason why I was thinking about this so much in the shower yesterday because so many people are just so angry. yeah And it's because, yes, you could absolutely be hang angry at a lot of things that's happening out there.
00:13:02
Speaker
It is a enough to piss you off. But sometimes people are angry for what other people do that doesn't involve them, that doesn't even really hurt anybody. And I'm like, why are you angry at that? Why are you angry at that person for living their life?
00:13:17
Speaker
Right. Yeah. Like, why why does that bother you? And it's because you're unhappy with your life. Yes. Yeah. ah I follow... ah a really great writer and performer, Alok, Alok Vaidman, and they talk about constantly how when you see ah trans person, right, and you're you're you're feeling angry about the way that they are showing up in the world, it's because you yourself are not living authentically. Mm-hmm. Yes.
00:13:55
Speaker
Yes. And it's because you yourself, you don't know how to love yourself the way that that person loves themselves. Mm-hmm. You can't even conceptualize the kind of love that it takes for yourself to live authentically.
00:14:13
Speaker
You realize you're not brave enough. Yeah. You're not brave enough. in that And to find out that you're not brave enough, to find out that you're scared... yeah That is an attack on your ego.
00:14:26
Speaker
And yeah, people gonna lash out. and And it's not like, you know, ah depending on what it is, right? It's not like, fear is unfounded. Like sometimes it's hard to show up authentically as yourself in the world if what you, if your authentic presence isn't, isn't, you know, something that society is like accepting of, right? Like, like if your authentic presence is showing up as, as non-binary or trans, but not, you know, passing, right? Like, like very outwardly trans, like,
00:15:05
Speaker
and And so many people in society for a myriad of dumb reasons have have a problem with that. Like there's like that fear of living authentically like that can be real sometimes.
00:15:20
Speaker
But I mean, if it's just like you you like books, but you don't want your friends to know you read, right? Like, yeah you know what I mean? and Like, is your, you have to start questioning everything in your life. Like even are my relationships authentic if they don't know who I am? Right.
00:15:42
Speaker
Yes. Yes. Like all of the different parts that make me up, like they don't know them. Mm-hmm. Are my relationships even authentic? And then when you start to think about things that way, it can be very isolating and depressing and because you feel like no one knows me and I'm too afraid to be known.
00:16:08
Speaker
And ah that that keeps everybody at arm's length, but that also keeps everybody at arm's length. Yeah. Yeah, you know, i always talk about being authentically yourself.
00:16:23
Speaker
And I can say that now. It's easy for me to say that now as 44 about to turn 45 because it took me 36, seven, eight years before I truly, truly started.
00:16:37
Speaker
yeah and And it was because it was patriarchy, right? Because a lot of the things that I do, are, would be, dick would be deemed as non-masculine.
00:16:49
Speaker
Right? Dangle earrings, wearing pink. yeah Wearing... properly fitting clothing. yeah Right? ah Being messy.
00:16:59
Speaker
Yeah. um like singing, like dancing, right? Wish I had done theater like I should have in high school, like all these things. Patriarchy told me that's not what men do. And not what straight men do.
00:17:14
Speaker
And specifically, that's not what Black straight men do. Exactly. Because there's a so this is a different sort of masculinity in in Blackness or a ah different ah it's It's almost... It's hyper-masculine. Yes, it is hyper-masculine. it's it's I think it's, well, it's not just black men.
00:17:35
Speaker
I will say that it's Latino men. It's Italian men. It's Irish men. I'm going to say that the hyper masculinity comes from yeah
00:17:49
Speaker
non white American born men, not to say that white American men aren't sometimes uber, ultra masculine.
00:18:01
Speaker
But there is this thing when you are the other man. Yeah, yeah. That you have to be even more, you have to have even more machismo. Yeah. Machismo, that's what Razor Ramon used to say.
00:18:14
Speaker
yeah to To be accepted. Because you got to you have to be more than. Yeah. And so, I don't know. These were just things that were going on my head ah last night when I was in the shower. And I kind of liked those instead of me re-arguing arguments from 1992. Yeah. Yeah.
00:18:29
Speaker
yeah yeah Yeah. Because, I mean, those are gone. Yeah. There's there's the it is nothing you can do about that. There's nothing I could tell Kendra. Yeah. Now, I don't we remember her last name.

Illegal Deportation Case: Garcia's Story

00:18:39
Speaker
If I could find her, there's something, Kendra, I need something. got to tell you something.
00:18:43
Speaker
Because when you snapped at me and everybody in the cafeteria was laughing and I can't even remember what you said, but I had something that I would, you know, if I could have, if I could have just said it at the time, I'm not as mean back in the day as I am now. Now I'm truthful. Now I would say it.
00:18:59
Speaker
Yeah. Yeah. i'm I'm happy. I don't have a lot of those moments where I'm like, dang, I wish I had said this. No, because you just, you say it. Yeah. Yeah. You don't your tongue.
00:19:11
Speaker
I mean, look, if something sound dumb to me, I'm going to say it sound dumb. Yeah. I saw a meme. I posted a meme. I reposted a meme yesterday. and And it's now gotten to the point where I just say, when people say something dumb to me, I just say, okay. Or I just agree with them just to get them to shut up.
00:19:29
Speaker
Yeah. because i Yeah, you pick your battles. You pick your battles. I'm tired of talking to people about this. But with that being said, people being angry, this, I think,
00:19:40
Speaker
is a reason why people should be angry. And it's about the illegal deportation. And we're going to get into that next.
00:19:57
Speaker
Jay, something happened a while ago, but it's really now starting to get national news. Yeah. Because of a press conference that happened a couple of days ago.
00:20:07
Speaker
And you know what? I'm not even going to and mention the two men that had the press conference, the president of the United States and the president of El Salvador. I'm not going to mention them by name because they laughed at a reporter that asked them if they were going to do anything for Calmar Armando Abogaro Garcia.
00:20:27
Speaker
Nope.
00:20:29
Speaker
but yeah Okay, you try it then. Kilmar Armando Abrego Garcia. I wasn't that far off.
00:20:39
Speaker
and Okay. Abrego is where I messed up. Yeah. All right, whatever. Okay, so a lot, I've been seeing it. I actually got into a... I'm not going to say heated debate because I didn't let myself get that heated, but a debate about this person and the person that was debating me just didn't have all the information.
00:20:58
Speaker
And I'm seeing that a lot. I'm seeing it a lot because the administration is out there putting out lies. So what am I going to do? I'm going to tell you the honest to goodness truth. These are facts.
00:21:10
Speaker
You cannot dispute them. They're not facts. they're um These are facts. They're not alternative facts. They're not opinions. These are facts. I'm going to give you my opinion later. But right now, I'm just going to give you the facts.
00:21:22
Speaker
So Mr. Garcia is a Salvadorian national who lived in Maryland right down the road, our home state, approximately 15 years before being mistakenly deported to El Salvador in March 2025, despite a standing court order prohibiting his removal due to a credible risk of persecution in his home country.
00:21:42
Speaker
Let me just repeat that. He was deported to El Salvador despite a standing court order prohibiting his removal due to a credible risk of persecution in his home country of El Salvador.
00:21:56
Speaker
His case had become a flashpoint in debates over immigration enforcement and due process, executive judicial power in the United States. Look, this guy was born in El Salvador.
00:22:07
Speaker
his I think he's a cancer like me. July 26, 1995. that a cancer? July 26, no, that's a Leo. ah july twenty sixth no that's a leo Is that a Leo? All right, so he's a part of your gang? All right.
00:22:19
Speaker
He came here because his mother ran a store out of her home. And the local gang, the Barrio 18 gang, was extorting and threatening his mother.
00:22:32
Speaker
He, at the age of 16, escaped the gang violence and came here to the United States. He settled in Maryland, where his brother... who is now a U.S. citizen lived.
00:22:42
Speaker
He worked at construction and later became a first year apprentice with Smart Local 100, a sheet metal workers union. Okay. So this man has been in here in this country 15 years working, being productive, paying taxes too, by the way, part of a union. yeah He's part of a union.
00:23:00
Speaker
Yeah. He lived with his wife his wife, Jennifer, who was a U.S. citizen, their five-year-old child, and his two stepchildren, both u s citizens with special needs. He was actively pursuing career advancement and supporting his family.
00:23:14
Speaker
Yeah. Though he did enter into the United States without inspection, that means illegally, in 2019, an immigration judge found his testimony credible and granted him withholding of removal to El Salvador, recognizing a well-founded fear of future persecution by Barrio, that gang. So what does that mean?
00:23:37
Speaker
The judge said, hey, look. You basically was going to come here for asylum anyway, because the gang situation down there, you were going to die. Either you did, we're going to force you to be in the gang or you were going to die. If we send you back there, you're going to die. You've been here for, at that time, 10 years.
00:23:55
Speaker
Yeah. Right. You're working. You got a family. You've got no criminal stuff going on right now. Yeah, no, we're going to make sure I'm going to write this order to make sure that you're not being deported.
00:24:07
Speaker
and And what year was this? This is in 2019. Who was the president in 2019? Good question. It was Donald J. Trump.
00:24:17
Speaker
I'm not going to date people. I don't know. Okay, but this the the court order specifically barred his removal to El Salvador, yeah a protection that was still in effect at his time of deportation.
00:24:28
Speaker
He was arrested in March 2025, detained by ISIS agents while driving home from work with his son. He was not charged with any crime. Despite the court order, ISIS deported him to El Salvador on March 15th, citing an administrative error.
00:24:44
Speaker
The U.S. government later admitted his removal was illegal. The U.S. government did. Of course, he's been already deported and he's in that prison in El Salvador with everybody said in inhumane treatment and torture and it's not good. Right. Yeah.
00:25:02
Speaker
So why is the Trump administration saying he's an MS-13 gang member? Well, the U.S. government has claimed that he is a verified and ranking member of MS-13, designating him a foreign terrorist organization. However, he's never been charged with any gang related crimes here or in El Salvador. And his family has vehemently denied these allegations.
00:25:24
Speaker
The gang allegation appears to be based on a police investigation. Yeah. interview sheet and in isis i two thirteen form but the government has not produced these documents in court the original immigration judge found ah mr garcia's testimony incredibleible and consistent with no evidence of gang violence yeah I'm going to get into more about what the U.S. Supreme Court did, but just putting it out there.
00:25:53
Speaker
The lies have been that he's been part of a gang. He's not part of a gang. And I'm going to get into more detail about that later. The U.S. government has openly admitted that he was deported illegally. yeah Right.
00:26:06
Speaker
And the president of the United States and the president of El Salvador are laughing ah about the Supreme Court ruling that ordered the administration to facilitate his return to the United States.
00:26:19
Speaker
yeah Yes, I'm angry about this. I'm angry about this because if people just like, well, he was here illegally. OK, if he was here illegally, And he's making the steps to become a citizen. And a federal judge says, no, we're not going to deport him.
00:26:34
Speaker
Under the Trump administration, right, federal judge says this, we're not going to deport him. yeah And they deport him, but they do so in measures that are illegal.
00:26:45
Speaker
yeah Shouldn't the government be held to a greater standard than a person trying to escape a horrible situation? Yeah, because the fact of the matter is, yes, this man was undocumented, but he had legal protections to stay in this country.
00:27:03
Speaker
He had legal protection to stay in the country for for fear of what would happen should he be deported deport it back to el Salvador. is it's It boggles my mind how...
00:27:21
Speaker
People have zero empathy for just the value of human life. If you know sending him to El Salvador is tantamount to a death sentence to the for this man, for things that he is now received as a 16-year-old kid just trying to escape gang violence,
00:27:48
Speaker
For things that are outside of his control. And you have the capability as a country to say, hey, you're paying into our system. You're staying out of trouble. You're just raising your family and trying to, you know, live your life.
00:28:06
Speaker
Yeah, we can protect you. Like the fact that people... just have no sense of just like care for a human life is is what's so astounding to me.
00:28:22
Speaker
So are you. ah you well Well, not everybody. Listen, colonial, just because you came here as a colonialist power doesn't mean that you are here legally. You created the system that has given you the, ah ah deal where you assumed authority over this land.
00:28:44
Speaker
That doesn't mean that you belong here. Let's get that straight. You came to a place, created a system that says you belong, and other people can't.
00:28:58
Speaker
And then you're literally basing your entire political philosophy on that fallacy or that lie, right? Or the thing that you engineered.
00:29:14
Speaker
So let's not, first of all. and then And then it's just, but this is a human being. But they don't look at him as that.
00:29:25
Speaker
Right. people And that's the problem. When I was having this conversation with this person, I said, the reason why you feel the way you do is because he doesn't look like you. If he looked like you, you feel a little bit differently because it would hit closer to home. No, that's not true. I was like, that's absolutely true. That's how human nature works. When it when something happens bad that you can identify with, it hits closer to home. You have more empathy when it's at a distance and you can't den identify with

Governmental Overreach and Historical Parallels

00:29:49
Speaker
it. You have less empathy.
00:29:51
Speaker
that It's not human. They're not human to you. So you don't care what happens to them. and And my argument was, yeah, they're here illegally. Well, the country did something illegally by deporting them.
00:30:03
Speaker
Who should be held at a higher standard? Right. Legally. Okay. Well, I think that's a dumbass argument. But okay. So let's talk about the government's allegations. Or no, not even the government's allegations. It's the administration's allegations. And I almost cuss. Stephen Miller.
00:30:21
Speaker
Oh, boy. God. Mm. God, I can't stand that person. And him going on and on about MS-13. Guess what, Stephen Miller? Guess what you are?
00:30:32
Speaker
You are a part of a gang as well. You're a part of an illegal gang. You know what that illegal gang is? White supremacy. Yeah. You're a white supremacist. Yeah. That's a domestic terrorist. yeah That's a real domestic terrorist. Yes. Anyway, so the government's allegations of gang membership have been unsubstantiated and contradicted by prior judicial findings.
00:30:52
Speaker
Let's get to the main thing. Mr. Garcia has no criminal record. Multiple sources indicate the presiding federal judge confirmed that Mr. Garcia has no criminal record, not only here in the U.S., s but also in El Salvador, and has never been charged with any gang-related crimes.
00:31:10
Speaker
and a court and and In a current legal proceedings, the government has not introduced the forms that were used to identify him as a MS-13 member, right right? The confidential informant, officials have also claimed that the confidential informant that alerted them to Mr. Garcia's alleged gang ties, but this hasn't been substantiated. and and And let's talk about this confidential informant. The confidential informant was from a police officer Right.
00:31:39
Speaker
The police officer pleaded guilty to police misconduct and has a history of falsifying informant.
00:31:51
Speaker
Information. Information. Yeah. OK. That's the reason why the court threw it out that it's not credible. This person said he was wearing Chicago Bulls hat. You have Jesse Waters on Fox News saying he's in Maryland. He lives in Maryland. Why is he a Chicago Bulls fan if he's in Maryland?
00:32:09
Speaker
Ayo, check it out. Jesse Waters. I live in Virginia, lived in Maryland. I'm a Chicago Bulls fan. I'm not in any gang. Sometimes people are just... but Jesse Waters never makes sense.
00:32:20
Speaker
He says men shouldn't be able to go shopping with their wives. That's not what men do. He's an idiot. But these are the people that's on Fox News right that are that are giving people information, false information. And people are like, well, it's on the news. It's got to be true. No, it's not true.
00:32:35
Speaker
And it's the same it's the same people watching it that live in Cleveland and are, you know, Warriors fans. And they're like, well, it makes sense. He's Maryland and Chicago Bulls fan. That's odd.
00:32:48
Speaker
The same thing applies to you. Like, I don't understand. so So what they're basically saying, because MS-13 do use Chicago Bulls hat as kind of a gang affiliation hat.
00:33:03
Speaker
But what they're essentially saying is, if you are Latino and you wear a Chicago Bulls hat, we can deport you because we can say that you're a part of MS-13. So if you're Latino out there, can't be no Chicago Bulls fan.
00:33:14
Speaker
And that's not the... That's not America, right? yeah That's not the principles that the that we were supposed to be founded on. Yeah, but we haven't lived up to that in a really, really long time. so like Everything that's written on that um that little tablet in Ellis Island, Statue Liberty, Bring Us Your Poor Huddled Mass, we haven't lived up to that in a very, very long time. so
00:33:44
Speaker
It's just like, here's the thing. And this is what everybody should be afraid of. Right. And this is what should make everybody particularly nervous.
00:33:57
Speaker
They made up evidence and illegally deported this man. And have no intention of getting him back.
00:34:09
Speaker
And as far as I know, el Salvador has no intention of returning him. The president said, I can't help you. So everybody should be concerned that they could make up things about you with no evidence, substantiated, not at all.
00:34:36
Speaker
Even when asked to by a federal judge and even when ordered by a federal judge not to deport you, they will do it anyway. The Supreme Court, nine, nothing.
00:34:48
Speaker
All of the Supreme Court justices. Now, remember, it's supposedly 6-3 conservative, right? There's two... ah Supreme Court justices that were specifically appointed by Donald Trump.
00:35:01
Speaker
Yeah. All nine Supreme Court justices said this was this deportation was illegal and that the administration needs to do whatever they need to do to bring him back because it wasn't right.
00:35:14
Speaker
And this administration from the Supreme Court is saying, F you. We don't have to do it. This is what people need to realize because he's hinting that he'll even deport Americans to this prison.
00:35:28
Speaker
I'm talking about American citizens, born citizens. They're hinting at it. They are pushing the letter of the law. They are challenging the Constitution. They are becoming a dictatorship. And this is how it happens.
00:35:42
Speaker
This is the same thing. that Hitler and the Nazi party did in Germany in the 1930s. yeah It's not, it doesn't happen all in one night. Just like I didn't come to this epiphany ah last night in the shower and it it didn't happen just right then. It was a gradual process of my evolution to changing.
00:35:59
Speaker
yeah Evolution of this country changing is not a small process. It started all the way back in 2016. It started then. Here we are eight years later, about to go into nine years later,
00:36:10
Speaker
the moves that they're making, and this isn't the only person that they've disappeared illegally. There have been numerous cases. This year, we are only in April, right? This year, there's been numerous cases of people being disappeared. And where do they who are they disappearing?
00:36:26
Speaker
People that they don't agree with. People who are challenging their authority. yeah They're disappearing. ah So there are people out there that feel like, hey, I don't have this no connection to this person. It doesn't affect me.
00:36:40
Speaker
I can't even identify with this person. Y'all are crazy. yeah This is an overstep. That's not America. This isn't what's going to happen. I'm telling you right now, these are the steps that we're going towards.
00:36:51
Speaker
And if you don't wake up, It's going to be y'all because I'm to tell you us it ain't going happen to us because we we not going to allow something like that to happen. enough We would go down.
00:37:04
Speaker
to El Salvador to get one of us. a group of, there would be a group of people that traveled down there and would go get them. if Even if we had to go to war personally with the whole government of El Salvador, we would make it happen.
00:37:17
Speaker
yeah So I'm telling y'all, this is for your benefit, not ours, because we see it coming. Y'all need to wake up. We need to wake up. we where Where are the protests?
00:37:29
Speaker
Well, you know, it's it's become real popular this week. Maybe there'll be some protests this weekend. the The positive thing that I'm seeing is that the news is really hammering them.
00:37:42
Speaker
yeah Even Fox News, even some people on Fox News was like, yeah, this was an illegal deportation. You still got your Jesse Waters that are going to hold water for the administration. They're hacks. They're not real people. They are bought chills.
00:37:56
Speaker
Like they have no backbone. They have no spine. They'll never stand up for anything right. They'll always fall in line. but But you have the news, news organizations putting this out there. People are talking about it. it's it's This was March 15th, right? So this was a month ago that he was deported.
00:38:14
Speaker
And it's really starting to pick up pace because what they did in that Oval Office was a bad look. There's going a lot of people that support the president that was like, yeah, that's right. Get him out of country. But even people that voted for him that have a conscience are like, no, wait a minute, hold up.
00:38:34
Speaker
There's a process. There are laws that we've established that when we deport people, we're going to follow this this way of deporting it. Hey, you know who's the president that deported the most people?
00:38:47
Speaker
Who is that? Barack Obama. He deported the most people. Joe Biden deported a lot. it's If you're here illegally, either you take the steps, we give you the steps to become a legal citizen, or you got to go back.
00:39:00
Speaker
And you got to come through and try to come to this country legally. I am not opposed to deportation, but we have a structure. We have certain rules and standards when you're caught here illegally before we just send you off.
00:39:18
Speaker
Mm-hmm. I'm tell you who did that. Fidel Castro.
00:39:25
Speaker
Adolf Hitler. Do you want to be tied to these type of figures? He does. I'm saying to the American people out there that are listening, that voted for him, because they do hate watch us or hate listen to us.
00:39:38
Speaker
Do you want to be tied to that? Well, here's the thing.
00:39:43
Speaker
There were plenty of people at that time that were tied to that. Mm-hmm. Plenty. The only way that these people got in power was by the support of the people.
00:39:56
Speaker
So I don't know. and you i don't know. changing that but but um But today, ah luckily today, U.S. District Court Judge James Boasberg determined that there is probable cause to hold the Trump administration in criminal contempt for violating his March 15th order halting deportations.
00:40:16
Speaker
What? So he has given the administration until April 23rd to respond. And if no satisfactory action is taken, he may identify responsible officials and request prosecution, potentially appointing an independent attorney if the Justice Department declines. So ah ah the Justice Department will absolutely decline. Yeah, of course.
00:40:39
Speaker
Yeah. But district U.S. s District Court been Judge James Bosper, EA players. He ain't playing. I know they're going to defy this. They defy the Supreme Court. They defy the Supreme Court. Of course. They don't care because he 100% determined to be king.
00:40:55
Speaker
of course so they don't care because they he is ah hundred percent determined to be king So he doesn't care. He thinks none of this applies to him. And guess what?
00:41:08
Speaker
History has shown that it doesn't. Yeah, that's doesn't.

Aging and Changes in Social Preferences

00:41:12
Speaker
Because this man has slip-slided and skated through every single controversy, every single court case, every single guilty verdict.
00:41:23
Speaker
And he still became the president of the United States. And he's still defying the law. He's still refusing to acknowledge the separation powers. This man don't give a damn.
00:41:35
Speaker
He does not care. Not slip, slide it and skate. Slip, slide it and skate it. Get through everything. So if history is telling him I am above the law.
00:41:49
Speaker
Do you think he is going to care about this judge holding him in contempt? No. No, because he already sees himself as King Trump and he thinks he is above the law.
00:42:01
Speaker
And congratulations, you idiots. You have just empowered a psychopath. ah That's all I got to say about that. And that's all that need to be said.
00:42:21
Speaker
All right, Jay, in my... this This has really been a self-absorbed show, but in my last night shower... Okay. I have a lot of plans this weekend. I got a plan tonight.
00:42:34
Speaker
People that listen to the After Hours Uncensored know what's going on tonight. I'm not about to tell you on this main show, but I got plans tonight. And I got a lot of plans this weekend. And it's WrestleMania weekend. And what I truly want to do sit in the house.
00:42:47
Speaker
And watch WrestleMania, sure. And watch WrestleMania. But also, all I ever want to do is not go outside. Yeah. I used to love being outside when I was younger. i don't want to be outside. And I'm learning that this is this is a common occurrence to a lot of my friends who are up there in my age. yeah All we want to do is sit inside the house.
00:43:06
Speaker
yeah So you know me. I had to be like, well, why is that? Why is it that we want to sit inside the house the older we get? And ladies and gentlemen, I got some answers for you. I went to my favorite site, vice.com.
00:43:21
Speaker
And the name of the article is, I don't feel like partying anymore. Am I depressed or just getting old? By Jaleesa Pringles.
00:43:34
Speaker
By Miss Pringles. Now, are we 100% sure about that? What? The name. No, that's absolutely the name.
00:43:45
Speaker
OK. It's Miss Pringles. And then the first name, Dejanlisa? I think it's like Django where the D is silent. Well, you can't be sure, but let's say Jan-Lisa?
00:43:57
Speaker
Jan-Lisa, yeah. Jan-Lisa? Yeah, maybe. Pringle. There's no un. There's no un in there. Anyway. Anyway, yeah so why people go out less as they get older.
00:44:08
Speaker
One of the main reasons is changing priorities and responsibilities. As people age, their lives often become busier with work, family, and other commitments. The energy and free time available for going out, especially late at night, decreases.
00:44:23
Speaker
yeah Many find that staying out until the early hours is less appealing when weighed against early mornings, childcare, or simply needing the rest. So, yeah, that kind of makes sense because I tell you what I don't like doing.
00:44:39
Speaker
Trying to function in a day where i only have four hours of sleep. That part. Yeah. I think as you get older, you start to prioritize rest.
00:44:51
Speaker
And yeah. Yeah. first Yes. Because but when you're younger, you can you can still function and operate off um little sleep.
00:45:03
Speaker
But as you get older, it becomes more and more difficult to do. And then as you get older, you have more and more responsibilities and things that you have to do. And you need more rest, like just to recharge.
00:45:19
Speaker
So the more i need to, that's less and less time I have for being in the streets. Yeah. Look, let me tell you something. Sometimes I even get eight hours of sleep and my alarm goes off and I'm like, no, it ain't that, it's not time yet.
00:45:34
Speaker
Why am I still sleepy? I need more rest in eight hours. What the hell is going on? And yeah, we're more, we're, we're a lot busier. Like when you're younger, you got a job, maybe. You ain't got no, you ain't got no real responsibilities. I remember in college, me and my friend were,
00:45:51
Speaker
Drinking and getting high, watching Martin playing video games, having a grand old time. That sounds like fun. that it was That was our normal occurrence every ah Wednesday or Thursday night. I think this particular night was Wednesday night, but we had Spanish paper due the next day.
00:46:08
Speaker
Neither one of us had started working on it. It's 2 o'clock in the morning. I'm about to go back to my dorm room. He's like, you going get up early and do the paper? I said, no, I'm going to the paper tonight. He's like, what? He was like, you're drunk and hot. I was like, yeah, I'll do the paper tonight and proof it in the morning. But I'm going to do the paper tonight because getting up in the morning and doing it then is not going to happen. Yeah. Right.
00:46:29
Speaker
yeah So it it took me about an hour, right, to write it. So I went to bed at three, woke up around seven, eight o'clock, proofed the paper, actually did really good. was drunk and high. That's probably the only time I could be fluent in Spanish is when I'm drunk and high.
00:46:45
Speaker
Went to the class. I think class started like 9, 30 10. Went to the class with paper in hand. I looked over at him. He's haggard. Mind you, I've only had five hours of sleep just like him, right? maybe i maybe had less sleep than he did because I stayed up to this paper.
00:47:00
Speaker
He didn't do the paper. I said, man, you didn't do the paper? Nah, man, I couldn't get up this morning. I was like, yeah, I told you to do it last night. Yeah. I can't do that now. Yeah, I remember...
00:47:12
Speaker
ah being 18, 19 years old, working at at the restaurant until late, and then going to a friend's house and partying until who knows what time, past an hour, waking up at 6 a.m., driving home, take a shower, get dressed, and head to class.
00:47:33
Speaker
yeah Yeah. And living that way and being completely fine. Now I go to the grocery store, gotta take a nap. like Let me tell you something. On Friday, normally go to the liquor store and the grocery store. It's gotten to the point now because I do my cleaning on Friday too.
00:47:51
Speaker
Then I'm like, I'm just going to have the groceries and the liquor delivered. I'll pay the extra fee because I'm exhausted. Yeah. i had I've had a bunch of stuff delivered today because was like, i i don't have time to go out. I'm too tired to go out.
00:48:08
Speaker
and And I don't want to leave the house. Another thing is when you're young, particularly when you're like a teenager or in college or something like that, you still live at home, you're not paying rent, mortgage, things like that.
00:48:26
Speaker
When you get to our big age and you paying rent and mortgage, you're like, I'm paying to live here. I need to be here. Right. like I want to be in the place that I'm paying for. Yes. i don't want to go out and spend money when I'm spending money to be here. Right.
00:48:47
Speaker
So I'm going to stay here and y'all can come. Here, see me. And not stay too long. And not stay too long. All right Shifts in social preferences is also a reason why we don't want to be for the streets anymore. Older adults tend to become more selective about how and with whom they spend their time. Experiences and disappointments over the years may lead to higher standards for social interactions and less tolerance for superficiality or drama, even though I still love some drama.
00:49:19
Speaker
but you love that But not when I'm in the drama. It's your favorite thing. Many people report becoming more introverted, preferring meaningful connections over large nory noisy gatherings. Let me tell something right now.
00:49:32
Speaker
If they if it if they playing loud music, I don't want to be there.
00:49:39
Speaker
If I can't have a quiet conversation, I'm gone. If I got to yell. for you to hear me or come in close and whisper in your ear in order for you to hear me, i don't want to be there.
00:49:53
Speaker
No. And I love trap music. It could be a trap spot. I can listen to trap music at home. Yeah. At home, in the comfort of my own home. And a reasonable volume.
00:50:03
Speaker
Yeah. i don't I don't need it. You know what else I don't like? Drunk people bumping into me, not saying excuse me, spilling stuff on me, messing up my shoes. I don't like none of that stuff.
00:50:14
Speaker
You know what else I don't like? Especially being here in Atlanta, YNs. we Oh, yeah, well. They're everywhere, and they just they make it so unbearable to live, and I just...
00:50:30
Speaker
I'd rather just stay. Yes, I'm an auntie. And I would rather just stay in my home and not deal with... with all these kids out here. There's a lot of kids out there. I can't go on U Street.
00:50:44
Speaker
You know, U Street used to be my spot. Yeah. I saw a video the other day, but last weekend, it was a big female brawl right outside on U Street.
00:50:56
Speaker
They fight, it was like 20, 30 girls. They fighting in the streets. They're not, know, I'm like, oh, I'm too old for all. This was fun when I was in my twenty s maybe even a little bit in my early 30s. Now in my mid 40s, no, no, this is some nonsense.
00:51:11
Speaker
The tomfoolery, where are y'all parents who raised y'all? Yeah. All right Another reason why we, as you get older, you might not be for the streets. Physical and emotional changes.
00:51:23
Speaker
The body's response to socialization, alcohol, and late nights often change with age. Recovery from night out takes longer, and the physical toll can outweigh the enjoyment.
00:51:35
Speaker
Emotional stability and self-containment also increase, reducing the need for external stimulation or validation. Look... I can still drink.
00:51:46
Speaker
You see me. I can drink at my pace. And you know why? Because I'm at home. What I can't drink is outside. yeah Because the music is loud.
00:51:57
Speaker
I don't realize I'm drinking fast. I'm socializing. I'm having a good time. Next thing I know, the next morning, I'm not moving so good. And if I'm not moving so good the next morning and I don't recover, then that means that whole day is shot. And I got things to do. So my days can't be shot.
00:52:15
Speaker
Exactly, like, listen. I got bills to pay. i got i got responsibilities. I got deadlines. I have deliverables that are due. i can't be out here in the streets with you young people at all times of the night spending $15 on a watered down drink.
00:52:38
Speaker
I don't want to no parts of it. I will be at home and I will have great, a fun kickback i'll have a great ah back And y'all can all come and be here.
00:52:51
Speaker
and that's, yeah we'll have a good time, but that's. Except for YNs. They can't come. No, they can't. They're not invited. I don't even know any. I don't. yeah now All right. Another one is burnout and energy levels. Burnout from work and life can set the energy needed for socialization.
00:53:09
Speaker
Exhaustion and stress to make quiet evenings at home more attractive than crowded venues or parties. The pandemic years also taught many to appreciate the comfort of home and the value of downtime.
00:53:20
Speaker
Yeah. Yeah, I think the pandemic definitely, you know, it forced us to slow down. It forced us inside. And then...
00:53:32
Speaker
People, you know, they started seeing what a little stuff needed to be done around the house and they started doing it. And then all of sudden it's a little more comfortable in here. I got a new couch and I painted a little bit, put some art up and now it's kind of nice in here.
00:53:47
Speaker
I didn't even like being in here before, but now kind of like it. and it and and And I'm forced to be here. I'm forced to be with myself and my thoughts or my family. And ah well, you know what?
00:54:00
Speaker
My spouse is actually kind of cool. Like I like talking to them. And next thing you know, you don't you realize you don't need to go out as much to find enjoyment or or you know or to socialize or things like that. You find that you don't need it as much or you find other ways to do it that actually work better for you.
00:54:26
Speaker
Or like we were harping on in the first segment, you become more content and you don't need the out outside stuff is to to placate whatever you got going on in your life. You can be at peace in your home. Yeah. Yeah.
00:54:42
Speaker
Which is funny because during reading this article and doing a little bit little more research, I was wondering what the hell was going on and this explains it. Increased social anxiety and discomfort might also be reasons why you don't wanna be in the streets of an older age.
00:54:59
Speaker
For some, Social anxiety increases with age, especially if you if they go out less often. Meeting new people or engaging in large group settings can become more daunting, leading to avoidance of such situations. Let me tell you, when I went to that party upstairs, a wine and cheese party, I didn't want to go.
00:55:21
Speaker
I went. And I met some new friends. Yes. And it was okay. It was cool. But I didn't want to go. And I want to have those friends on my terms. I don't want them popping up at my house.
00:55:33
Speaker
I don't want them randomly texting me. I want my space. Why? Because I have severe social anxiety. And yes, I am very personable. And i yes, I am very likable.
00:55:44
Speaker
And no, it's not a complete act, but it takes a lot of my energy up. And then I just feel drained. And then I got to... Slip back into my little hole. yeah yeah and And get my energy back up to go out there to the streets. but yeah But that's... it's it's It's large distances now between doing that.
00:56:08
Speaker
Yeah. Yeah, same. Like, I think... I think that's also like a a byproduct of the pandemic, right? Like you started to develop more anxiety going out. Cause you're like, don't know, sick. I don't know, what's this person calling? Why you stand so close to me line?
00:56:29
Speaker
Like you start developing this anxiety around just like interpersonal content. And so, so yeah, you don't want to go out. i fully I fully see that that social anxiety is has increased.
00:56:46
Speaker
and I would say the pandemic, I had all those things before the pandemic. I'm saying it increased it in people. ah There are people, there are people i would say in general, there are people who probably didn't have any social anxiety or social discomfort and post-pandemic are finding, yeah, i I don't like to go out more and more because ah it just it just makes me uncomfortable.
00:57:16
Speaker
Yeah. Yeah, i I mean, I i really don't. I really don't like going out. I really, really don't. And you know what? Going out costs money. If going out was free, like living at home and being at home,
00:57:29
Speaker
then I probably wouldn't mind going, well, no, because then you got to get dressed up. You got to. There's a lot. There's a lot of steps involved. and And people might, maybe some people don't do this, but I do this.
00:57:40
Speaker
There's a difference in shower between me showering just because I'm going be sitting around the house all day. I know I ain't going nowhere. And me going out shower. Yeah.
00:57:51
Speaker
It's a much longer shower. It's two different showers. It's more involved. Yes. um Yeah. Yes. The grooming that it takes for going out. Yeah. It's different grooming. Some dudes are probably just like, what is he talking about? And you know what?
00:58:04
Speaker
Okay. yeah Yeah. We know. get it. Okay. If you're asking, sir. Then?
00:58:14
Speaker
We know what your drawers look like. yeah
00:58:19
Speaker
it You ain't want to say it but I do. When Ray J said, guys, y'all got to make sure that y'all wear dark colored drawers so they don't see your dookie stains, i was like, sir, yeah you as a grown man should not have no dookie stains in your drawers. You're grown.
00:58:35
Speaker
You're grown. And they make... There too many tools now. Look, I can understand maybe back in the day... They make wipes, bidets. Right. Back in the day... Maybe. Toilet paper wasn't that sound, wasn't that scientific. Now we got four ply, five ply. You know, maybe it was only one ply back in the day. You didn't have a bidet and you didn't have the wet wipes. Now you got all those things. Yes. Ain't no excuses.
00:58:58
Speaker
And if it's if it still don't help you clean yourself, jump your ass in the shower. Yes. That's what you need to do. And also consult a doctor because it shouldn't be that violent below that you can't get it under control with toilet paper, wipes, and a bidet. If you can't get it under control with toilet paper, wipes, and a bidet, go see a doctor. Go see a doctor.
00:59:24
Speaker
and Ladies and gentlemen, I have mine under control, but I'm just anal about that type of stuff. on and Pun intended. Yeah. and that All right, so ladies and gentlemen, you don't necessarily have to be depressed And that be the reason why you don't want to go out. It could just be that you're just getting old and you don't want to deal with the BS anymore. And that's okay.
00:59:45
Speaker
You ain't got to be for the streets, especially if you spent your younger years for the streets. Yeah. You had your fun. You had your fun. Leave the streets for those who, who can handle it. right I leave it up to the young.
00:59:59
Speaker
Y'all enjoy them streets. i have my time in them and it was great. It was glorious. Yeah. I don't need to go back because I'm too tired. It is fun every now and then.
01:00:10
Speaker
i love to do about once or twice a year with somebody that you that we both know that we're both very, very close to. and and every time me and that person get together, it's always a story about some shenanigans that happen.
01:00:24
Speaker
Every like to do that once or twice a year. yeah guess what? I plan for that. I know the next day is going to be a shot. yeah So I just like, OK, cool. That's what it is. I've built that into my schedule.
01:00:35
Speaker
You can't just say, hey, let's do something tonight.
01:00:40
Speaker
I don't think, I think everybody that knows me knows that they cannot hit me up to do something that night. I'm gonna let you know my computer has 2% battery. Okay, on that note, we gonna end show. We just gonna end it anyway. And Jay, what do you wanna tell the people out there?
01:00:56
Speaker
There is a quote by American author Sinclair Lewis, and it is, when fascism comes to America, it will be wrapped in a flag and carrying a cross.
01:01:08
Speaker
Just think about that. to read a moment And on that note, ladies and gentlemen, I want to thank you for listening. want to thank you for watching. And until next time, as always, I'll holler.
01:01:26
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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Speaker
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01:02:00
Speaker
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01:02:13
Speaker
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01:02:28
Speaker
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01:02:40
Speaker
Most importantly, I want to say thank you. Thank you. Thank you for listening and watching and supporting us. And I'll catch you next time. Audi 5000. Peace.