3:21:04

INSOMNIA STREAM: LATIFAH TOLERANCE.mp3

06/19/2024
Numbers Lady
00:00:00 26319.
00:00:06 26319.
00:00:10 378-423-7842.
00:00:20 80120.
00:00:25 80120.
00:00:30 78362.
00:00:35 7.
00:00:36 8362.
00:00:40 37425.
00:00:45 37425.
00:00:49 97702.
00:00:55 97702.
Speaker 2
00:01:14 Your VIP. Let's kick it.
Speaker
00:01:21 Nice.
Speaker 2
00:01:26 Alright, stop. Collaborate and listen. Ice is back with my brand. Will keep it. Saltin grabs a hold of me tightly flow like a harpoon daily and nightly. Yo, I don't know. Turn off the.
00:01:37 Night and I'll glow to the extreme. I walk a mic like a vandal light up the stage and watch the Trump.
00:01:42 Like a candle.
00:01:43 Chance sticking that boom I feel in your brain like a poisonous mushroom when I play a dope melody. Anything less than the best and the felony love it or leave it. You bet I can't play. You better get pulls out the kids. Don't play. If there was a problem, Joe, I'll throw off.
00:01:57 Kick out in the hook while my DJ revolves in.
Speaker 4
00:02:11 OK or not?
Speaker 2
00:02:16 Now that the party is chomping with the face kicked in and The thing is are pumping quick to the point to the point. No freaking cooking them sees like a pound of baking, burning them, getting quick and nimble. I go crazy when I hear a symbol and a high hat.
00:02:29 With the souped up tempo, I'm gonna roll. It's time to go solo. Yeah, my 5.0 my rack. Top down so my hair can blow the girlies on standby. Waiting just to say hi. No, I just drove by. Kept on, went to the next stop. I must have left. And I'm heading to the next block. The block dead. Yo, so I continue to A1A.
00:02:49 The girls were hot, wearing less than bikinis. Rockman lovers driving their bikinis? Jealous because I'm out. Getting mine shave with the gauge and vanilla with the 9 ready.
00:02:58 For the trip.
00:02:59 On the wall that Trump's acting there because the full headed ball, gunshots ringed out like a bell, I grabbed my 9. All I heard boy shells falling on the concrete real fast jumped in. My car slammed on the gap from by the buffer. The avenues pack. I'm trying to get a waiver for the jackets Jack.
00:03:15 You know what I mean? They passed me off to run it on, but don't get there was a problem. Yo, I'll solve it. Check out the hook on my DJ.
Speaker 5
00:03:35 Yeah.
Speaker 2
00:03:39 Hey key because I'm a lyrical Poland. Miami's on the scene. Just in case you didn't know, hit my towns. That created all the face sounds. Another shaking kick. Holes in the ground cause my style is like a chemical people rhymes confusing and conducted their form. This is a hell of a concept we make.
Speaker 6
00:03:43 No.
Speaker 2
00:03:54 Type and you want to print this shape. Plays on the face slots like a ninja cut like a razor blade so fast. Other did they did was a drug. I'd sell it by the gram. Keep my composure when it's time to get loose. Magnetized by the mic while I kick my juice. If there was a problem too, I'll solve it. Check out the hook while.
00:04:11 Dishe revolves it.
Speaker 7
00:04:30 Let's get.
Speaker 2
00:04:31 Here where to your mother?
Speaker 3
00:04:42 Baby.
Speaker 8
00:05:17 Yeah.
Speaker
00:05:19 Did you feel the babies?
Speaker 4
00:05:33 Wait, wait.
Speaker 9
00:05:37 Sweet, sweet.
Speaker 10
00:05:44 Hey.
Speaker 2
00:06:03 Yeah, it's about that time. So bring them in the last mine. So get yours. I wanna see sweat coming out on the House. Just strictly for the entire.
Speaker 11
00:06:22 Phil.
Speaker 9
00:06:22 Let's feel it.
Speaker 2
00:06:24 Still by precious precious.
00:06:44 It's good. Like really want to know who done this.
00:06:49 Problems and prove you and I'm here to prove to you. Then we can party.
00:06:56 Rhythm is my occupation to build my grace. Come on, come on.
00:07:02 Fill it, fill it.
00:07:05 Great.
00:07:21 Funky breakdown.
00:07:39 Donnie, these on the back up truck free. So put the crack up. Don't need for speed on meantime DIUGIE my body healthy, wealthy. And before you want me to bring you a show with the winter vacation. Come on. Feel the vibration.
00:07:56 Yeah.
Speaker
00:07:58 You feel it, baby.
Speaker 12
00:08:01 This.
Speaker 2
00:08:18 Now we're gonna come for you to get up your hip hop. Don't tell him if you ain't win it. Look at the hell.
00:08:19 The red side.
00:08:33 My break.
00:08:51 Come on, come on, come on.
00:09:04 Still.
Devon Stack
00:09:56 Welcome to the insomnia stream. And with the way for my air conditioner to.
00:10:01 To turn off for some reason, it doesn't just turn off.
00:10:06 You tell it to turn off and it's like alright, I'll turn off, you hear? This is why This is why I turn it off. You see so much quieter.
00:10:15 So much quieter all of a sudden.
00:10:19 You can hear the crickets outside.
00:10:24 There's a first of all, I'm your host, of course Dev and STACK. This is the insomnia stream. Latifah tolerance edition.
00:10:34 We'll get to that in a second.
00:10:37 Yeah, the uh.
00:10:39 The bugs are out and about.
00:10:41 There's this.
00:10:43 My bathroom, which to make it even more awesome.
00:10:48 There's these the the the screens on the on the windows in the.
00:10:51 House or they're either not there at all.
00:10:54 Or they're really old. They're metal, which I actually prefer. They're metal.
00:10:59 And they're basically painted.
00:11:02 Into the wall.
00:11:04 In this case, very thankfully.
00:11:07 And the the windows.
00:11:11 Again, this House was built.
00:11:14 I don't know.
00:11:15 Like like parts of it is built in pieces. It's like the Winchester Mystery House because they kept adding on to it.
00:11:22 You know, ignoring building codes as they went.
00:11:25 And so a lot of it.
00:11:27 Was built, I don't know.
00:11:28 From the 40s to through the 60s.
00:11:31 Or 70s I think.
00:11:33 And in the.
00:11:35 The bathroom. There's one of these old crank windows, you know, like.
00:11:39 Kind of like an old in a camper kind of. You know, you turn the crank and the window slowly opens up.
00:11:46 And they don't quite close all the way anymore. And so there's a little tiny crank.
00:11:52 So the window is basically it's even if it's closed, it's always kind of open.
Speaker 6
00:11:59 But not, not, not, not by much, not by.
Devon Stack
00:12:01 Much you know, it's not an airtight seal by any means, but it's, you know, it's not like it's.
00:12:06 Super open or anything.
00:12:09 And the other room in the bathroom.
00:12:12 And I look up and silhouetted.
00:12:17 On the screen.
00:12:19 Is a.
00:12:21 Tarantula.
00:12:24 Like and I'm like, oh, holy ****.
00:12:30 And I don't know how he fit in there.
00:12:32 But he managed to to.
00:12:34 To wedge his way in between the metal screen.
00:12:38 In the window.
00:12:40 And.
Speaker 5
00:12:42 I.
Devon Stack
00:12:43 After I got over my.
00:12:44 Initial, what the ****? I I.
00:12:48 Was actually kind of fascinated because I'm like, wow, well, I know he.
00:12:50 Can't get in because he's.
00:12:52 On a metal.
00:12:52 Screen and it's painted shut and he can't get into the cracks. So even though he did some kind of weird ninja **** to get it.
Speaker 14
00:12:58 Like where he.
Devon Stack
00:12:59 Is he's kind of just in there.
00:13:02 And so I could get like, you know, right up on him and and and, you know, close up mode and you know, CC, his underside cause he was facing, you know, his his his top was facing away from the house if that makes sense. So I'm like underneath him.
00:13:18 And so I blew on him. Was like, you know, just to see if it was alive. And he moved around and.
00:13:24 That little ******.
00:13:26 Was in there for like a couple days and I was like **** is he stuck in there and I have to like.
00:13:30 Get him out. But now he's gone. But yeah, a little.
Speaker 15
00:13:32 Creepy.
Devon Stack
00:13:33 Crawlies like that or or starting to appear.
00:13:37 And a little baby tarantula, in fact.
00:13:42 Made his way inside the inside the pill box and I scooped him up and put him.
00:13:48 Outside those, those those, those there's.
00:13:51 Actually, a lot of these tarantulas, I don't know what they're called. There's like, they're not like the movie ones. They're not like the big black movie ones, but they're big. I mean, they're. But they're not like.
00:14:00 The movie ones, I don't know what they're called exactly, but there are certain kind of tarantula, but they're everywhere out here. Like, they're everywhere out here.
00:14:09 They they Burrow little holes in the ground. When I first moved here.
00:14:15 I remember walking around at and when I was planting like my garden and going where all these holes out.
Speaker 15
00:14:22 And I thought there must be some kind of.
Devon Stack
00:14:24 Weird. Really small rodent, you know? But because. Yeah, it's not like a huge hole, but it's not small, you know? Not like, not like a pinhole or anything like that.
00:14:34 And the first time when I was, I was spraying water on the ground and some of that water started to pour into one of these holes. And the A tarantula ran out.
00:14:43 I was like ohh God.
00:14:47 But now I'm just used to it now.
00:14:49 I'm just used.
00:14:50 To it.
00:14:51 Yeah, the first, the first summer here, I was out here I.
00:14:53 Was like.
00:14:54 Uh, I was very.
00:14:57 I was never like.
00:14:58 I mean, I never loved bugs. Let me just put that way.
00:15:00 I never loved bugs, which might be surprising.
00:15:02 Too. So you now cause you know, do the bee thing. But I was never like, freaked out. Freaked out by bugs. I was never. I never had like, a phobia. But I always lived in, like, for the most part, I always lived in cities.
00:15:14 And there's just dramatically fewer bugs in cities, and I never. I always thought bugs.
00:15:22 My bugs always kind of like not freak me out, but like moths. I hated moths because I don't. I think because they were up, their flight paths were always so unpredictable. So like if a moth like if I went to my apartment late at night and like the light came on and like a bunch of mobs like flew away from it or something like that. I was always like.
Speaker 16
00:15:42 What the ****?
Devon Stack
00:15:45 But I had to get over that ****.
Speaker 16
00:15:46 Real quick out.
Devon Stack
00:15:47 Here because.
00:15:48 Lots of moms in the desert. Lots of moms.
00:15:51 But I you know, I'm now officially desensitized to all these creepy crawlies. I guess I built up a tolerance.
00:16:00 I built up a tolerance which is a good segue into what we're going to talk about Tonight, Knight Nation review.
00:16:09 Actually sent me a an MTV propaganda film.
00:16:16 I think like a week ago and.
00:16:19 Well, we're not going to go over that one tonight. That one's coming up. I started looking into when I was, when I was tracking down that one I came across.
00:16:29 Some other search results.
Speaker 10
00:16:30 Yeah.
Devon Stack
00:16:32 And MTV, of course.
00:16:34 He has a giant propaganda machine owned by Viacom's Sumner Redstone. You know it. I think he died. I think he very recently died.
00:16:48 But you know Turbo Jew extraordinaire, basically a Rothschild.
00:16:52 Ran ran Viacom, which ran.
00:16:56 He was, like, the grossest thing about this guy. He was one of these. I'm 95, and my girlfriend's like 17 kind of a thing, you know?
00:17:06 But the the MTV.
00:17:10 Was was literally just a a propaganda machine. It was a propaganda machine, but it's shocking how much.
00:17:17 Like.
00:17:18 Wider it was when it first came out. In fact, one of the accusations against MTV in the very beginning was that it was racist, and that's because they were about, you know, it was a propaganda machine. But, you know, at the end of the day, Jews are really good Jews will will especially.
00:17:39 When they're getting a product going, they still want to make money, right? Like.
00:17:45 People say the.
00:17:46 Left can't mean it's like, no, the left can mean really, really well. And and their memes make millions of millions of dollars to.
00:17:54 Give them even more money so that when they want to make more memes, they can spend millions of dollars on those memes. In fact, their memes are so good, a lot of right wingers pay money.
00:18:06 To experience their means and and by merch.
00:18:10 Related to their memes and you know.
00:18:15 LARP, you know, dress up like characters and their memes and buy, you know, like a Halloween costumes related to their memes and dress up their kids. And in the leftist memes. So this idea that the left can't meme is is absurd and.
00:18:33 And MTV was a part of this machine.
00:18:37 And because at the time the the demographics had had begun shifting in 1965, obviously, right, I mean that was the when the the big dramatic shift begun. But when MTV started in the early, what was it like in 80, it was I think it's early 80s.
00:18:57 There, there wasn't a lot of money.
Speaker 17
00:19:00 And.
Devon Stack
00:19:01 In these other demographic groups, at least not significantly enough to where that justified, having lots of music videos that would cater to these other groups.
00:19:14 Because that's not who was buying the products that they were advertising. And quite frankly, if they wanted that demographic shift to continue.
00:19:24 That's not who they had to talk to, anyway.
00:19:27 That's not who the propaganda had to be for, anyway.
Speaker 10
00:19:30 Yeah.
Devon Stack
00:19:31 You know, if you're trying to brainwash.
00:19:34 A bunch of white people into accepting their displacement.
00:19:39 Into accepting the the the radical changes that were taking place in their country.
00:19:48 You you don't need to play music videos that that white people don't like. You know that that in fact, that's kind of antithetical to your to your goals.
Speaker 15
00:19:58 So they were accused.
Devon Stack
00:19:58 Of playing mostly white people, music videos and that would rapidly change throughout the 90s, but I think honestly a lot of that was because the well twofold 1 the demographics were also rapidly changing in the 90s.
00:20:18 But they had already done such a good job of glorifying black culture and basically getting white.
00:20:29 Suburban kids to embrace black music that that was just where the demand was now.
00:20:36 You know they they it in in the 90s.
00:20:40 Real well, it's like it's like zoomers today. How many? How many white zoomers are there that that don't listen to rap?
00:20:47 Watch TikTok, how many tik toks by white zoomers singing rap songs are there? You know, the 90s were very similar, lots of of white suburban kids listening. And even if you.
00:21:01 Weren't full on Wigger.
00:21:02 Mode right? Like even if you weren't sagging your pants and.
00:21:06 And, you know, dressing like like the the white. Like, if you wanted to not be full Wigger, you could like kind of kind of pretend like you weren't really being a wigger. You were just dressing like a skater, which just so happened to be like 60 to 70% Wigger, which is to be honest.
00:21:27 Kind of the route that I took.
00:21:30 I have the I have the saggy jeans and I had the wallet chain and everything. Yeah, super, super gay but.
00:21:36 That that's, you know, it is what it is. And then you had the the full on full on Wigger types that that were made fun of and a lot of comedy sketches at the time and we're, you know there's entire movies about these types where they start trying to talk like black people.
00:21:56 They start to in some cases, and I knew people like this would would habitually lie about like you knew. They were like a white kid from a suburban neighborhood because they were from your neighborhood. And they're telling people like they were from some kind of, like, black ghetto. And you're like, no, you're.
00:22:16 You're not, though you're. You live like 2 streets away.
00:22:21 And uh, you know, they they literally are trying to turn black and the same look, you see the same stuff with zoomers today. A lot of the the Zoomer lingo.
00:22:34 Or, you know, jargon, I guess, or whatever. A lot of the the popular phrases it. Where does it come from? It comes from black Culture, 90s, but it was no different. You know, you had people that when a new, when a new word would would come out, it would it.
00:22:51 Would become it. It would.
00:22:52 It would have the same kind of.
00:22:54 Life cycle.
00:22:55 Right. So for a while it would be, oh, just the black people are saying that, you know, I'm going to use, like a stupid example, but.
Speaker 18
00:23:05 It's it's not.
Devon Stack
00:23:06 Completely crazy. Like I remember. You know, for a a short while, right, black people would say, oh, that's the bomb. All right, that's the bomb, you know.
00:23:16 And so you'd hear black people say that's the bomb, and it's in a couple of rap songs.
00:23:22 Right.
00:23:23 And then young white kid starts saying that's the bomb, right? But then, like old white boomers start saying that's the bomb and they start putting it in commercials to try to relate to the kids. And that's when it it dies, it dies immediately and it becomes what it, well, even saying cringe now.
00:23:43 Is, is is becoming passe but like it you know it's it became cringe I guess right and then the new word, right the new.
00:23:52 Uh.
00:23:53 Blackism from the black song would come out and that would filter its way into white suburbia again, and it would run its course. And then it would be in commercials for, like Kraft macaroni and cheese. And that's when you knew it was done.
00:24:10 So, you know, not much has changed, not much has changed. And I would say this is a tradition, unfortunately that goes back quite a while probably.
00:24:23 At least half of the the American 20th century, that is kind of a a process that would would take place. You would have black culture with their slang and you know, their their euphemisms and and.
00:24:43 You know their, their, their phraseology and even even you know the the stupid when when you hear Zoomers say that do be you know that do be he he do be like that or like trying to sound like a basically like a dumb basically is what it boils down to right. You had the same kind of stupid **** happening.
00:25:04 All throughout the 20th century now just not to the degree because I think that Ebonics has actually.
00:25:12 Oddly devolved like it's somehow devolved. It's gotten it. It's it's gotten worse. Or you can just say that the evolutionary paths have diverged even further. You know, the black use of the English language. It's never been. They never quite mastered the English language.
00:25:32 And it's just the the even like even.
00:25:36 Even and this is, This is why I always knew that there was something up with black people. Even when you get, like, a an educated higher class black guy with a handful of exceptions. But like, even like a very wealthy, successful black guy, they still struggle with with a lot of the same basic things that other black people.
00:25:56 Struggle with with the English language and it makes total sense, right? The English language was a a product of English biology, right? It was a A A software package that was developed on, you know using.
00:26:12 Using white people hardware in the laboratory when they were developing it, it wasn't designed to run on on black people hardware. And so there were always, you know, you could get it to run.
Speaker 15
00:26:25 But well, you know, I always.
Devon Stack
00:26:26 Have you know glitches here and there, you know.
00:26:31 But we anyway, so you had like, this, this novelty of the the the curious ways in which ******* would express themselves with the the English.
Speaker
00:26:44 Language.
Devon Stack
00:26:46 And I think that.
00:26:48 If you look at like really old movies, right where the there's like the Manny type character, it's more comedic, it's more comedic, you know, that's where Black Face comes from, right? Like, it's it's. Oh, that silly little *****. It's it's kind of funny. And we're not going to emulate that. You know, we.
00:27:08 We might. We might.
00:27:10 Parrot some of these things that they say or or dress up in blackface and and make fun of it, but we're not going to try to start talking like them. I mean cause.
00:27:19 It's we. We don't see them as anything to admire. We don't see this as anything to aspire to.
00:27:28 It's more of like a joke.
00:27:30 That the you know, the way they can't pronounce things the way that they they dance even on all this.
00:27:34 Stuff. It's more of a joke.
00:27:37 And then.
00:27:38 Somewhere along the line, the the Jews in Hollywood begin to not just normalize this this black culture, but you know, quite frankly, begin to promote it.
00:27:55 And they were very successful.
Speaker 15
00:27:57 White people ate it up.
Devon Stack
00:28:00 They ate it up and I'll have a very disturbing example in tonight's show.
Speaker 19
00:28:05 Sure.
Devon Stack
00:28:07 I I I don't. I don't know why exactly.
00:28:12 It was so successful, but it's always been successful and.
Speaker 14
00:28:17 Part of it.
Devon Stack
00:28:18 Might be the denial of of cultural opportunities to other groups. You know when you've got Jews who are deciding what kind of.
00:28:26 Stuff gets made and what doesn't get made because they run literally run and this was from the beginning, from the beginning. Jews have always run the record companies.
00:28:37 Like that's not. That's not like ohh, you know, Jews came in and took no like they from the beginning.
00:28:43 Yeah, you had Edison, I guess in the very, very, very, very, very beginning. But Colombia and all that stuff that was.
00:28:51 Basically, stealing Edison's technology just like they stole it for the the the film industry that that was all Jews from the very we're talking like 78 RPM crank record players like I've got, which I've got. I've got one of these old.
00:29:06 Record players that you crank up.
00:29:10 And you drop 78 RPM record on it which has almost I mean because it's spinning so fast has almost like no time on on you have like maybe one or two songs on each side.
00:29:20 And you can look at the names of these. Again, these are these are those, these are the before vinyl. These are lacquer records from that are over 100 years old, some of them and they are they're they're all Jewish names like not just the the company but a lot of the performers are also.
00:29:40 Jewish last names or anglified Jewish last names.
00:29:47 And so you had, you know, Jews running the the music industry for basically the entire well, I guess still now, but like, you know, going from from the beginning.
00:29:57 You had Jews running Hollywood from the beginning, and so a lot of this music that was being produced was also being injected into the movies. And when you get all the way up to the 90s.
Speaker
00:30:05 Uh.
Devon Stack
00:30:15 You know you had the same sort of thing happening, but it was a well oiled machine.
00:30:23 And by the 90s they had lots and lots and lots of, you know, rappers being promoted on MTV, and it was no longer the the all the accusations of only Michael Jackson could get a get his music video on on MTV. And that's because it was a hit record. You know, it was like, no, they were introducing new artists.
00:30:45 On a regular basis on on MTV.
00:30:49 So anyway, MTV did a series of propaganda pieces that were overtly propaganda and and then basically telling white people that you know, and instead of trying to ****, **** them subtly with the music videos and reality TV shows.
00:31:09 With the real.
00:31:10 World and and uh, you know, just like the the just the talking heads that were on there, the VJS and all this other stuff and the, the the you know the the constant commercial.
00:31:23 MTV and we want to have to do a stream just on this at some point. The PSA's they would produce were just, you know, constant constant constant because they wanted MTV to not be like a a network when you flipped it on because they wanted, it always had to be like the cool, the cool TV network.
00:31:41 So even the commercials had to be cool, and they had.
00:31:48 Even even these big advertisers that would, you know, even if it was a commercial, as an example, for for frosted flakes or something like that, it was always very sexual in nature or, you know, it's always very deviant or edgy, even if it was a children cereal that they they would remake or they would make a commercial specifically for MTV, so that it would fit.
00:32:07 Into the MTV experience, when you're a teenager and you flip on MTV at home, there's never like this. You never get pulled out of that. That hypnotic.
00:32:23 I don't know the hypnotics state that you're in as you're watching MTV.
00:32:29 So anyway, this is a a different one than what Night Nation review. Samuel, we're going to cover that one too, where it has.
00:32:39 Queen Latifah, Queen Latifah this is I believe this came out in 1991.
00:32:46 And I think it's kind of shocking a lot of the stuff that even just last year or two, I heard a lot of people on Twitter saying I can't believe we've.
Speaker 15
00:32:57 Come to this.
Devon Stack
00:32:59 I can't believe the race relations have gotten so bad that it's come. It's like.
00:33:05 No, this isn't new.
00:33:08 This isn't new. This isn't like like. Again, you don't remember this because in 1990, maybe you weren't alive, or maybe you were like 7 years old or something. But this is this isn't new. In 19901991 all of the same **** was happening, you know, in the same way that we've talked about how all the the kind of the George Floyd.
00:33:28 Type incidences and the the riots and all that stuff. That's not new, that goes back to, you know, forever. Basically, since the Emancipation Proclamation.
00:33:39 The the the.
00:33:41 Solutions, the proposed solutions and the kinds of racial sciences that were going on at the.
00:33:48 Time.
00:33:50 Were the same exact same exactly the same in in the 90s as they they are today with just, maybe, maybe a couple little differences.
00:33:58 To you know, to make it more acceptable, but not not really a whole lot. So we're going.
00:34:05 To go and start this off.
00:34:08 They start off of course, with again. This is this is no different than what they did today. You know, in a stream not that long ago, we talked about how they they they make up accomplishments that black people never, never did, you know, like oh, black people invented the light.
00:34:26 Bulb or whatever.
00:34:27 So they come out right?
00:34:28 Out the gate with one.
00:34:29 Of you know some of this ********.
Speaker 16
00:34:40 Super Cool 90s.
Devon Stack
00:34:44 Animation.
Speaker 20
00:34:46 Some historians say Beethoven had a black mother.
Devon Stack
00:34:49 OK, so who are these historians?
Speaker 21
00:34:56 Who are these historians?
Devon Stack
00:34:59 Some historian and and it's funny that they could.
00:35:01 Just say it like that, you know and.
00:35:04 I mean cause I guess you.
00:35:05 Could say about anything, you know, some historians say.
00:35:08 That Hitler was actually a Cyborg from the planet Neptune. It's oh, OK, you can just say whatever you want, and then it's cool. Apparently, as long as you say, as long as you preface it with some historians say.
00:35:28 You know, then you're good.
00:35:29 So that you know, they say Beethoven's.
00:35:31 Mom was black.
00:35:34 This is Beethoven's mom. She wasn't black.
00:35:40 Obviously. But anyway, then they they go to their next.
00:35:45 Or actually before that you.
00:35:46 Know what you know, Queen Latifah.
00:35:50 Queen Latifah, with her little with her crazy theories.
00:35:54 In in 1990.
00:35:57 About Beethoven's.
00:36:00 Beethoven's mom being black. You know Beethoven's mom.
00:36:04 Wasn't black.
00:36:07 But you know who was black and gay?
Speaker 15
00:36:10 And he didn't talk about that.
Devon Stack
00:36:13 Was Tupac so at the time that she's shooting this?
00:36:19 That's the other thing too. Is is everyone acts like you know, Tupac's like this ******** gangster ******* guy. It was all an act. That's the best part. It was all an act.
00:36:31 You know all this? Not all of it, but a lot of this gangster rap that was being produced by Jews and and shoved into suburban white neighborhoods in, in living rooms with MTV.
00:36:42 They were they.
00:36:43 Were basically operating the same way that the CIA might operate with, you know, some kind of SIOP or some kind of, you know, asset where they they would seek out people who had a a dark secret and a certain personality type that was.
00:37:01 They didn't have a father.
00:37:03 And so they'd be easy to control, easy to manipulate, and you could always blackmail them. Tell them they're going to take their big secret out. Well, the Jewish record companies and. And you know, why would we be surprised? Right? Because I I feel as if the reason why our intelligence agencies probably started behaving in this way was because of the Jews that.
00:37:22 Were in intelligence.
Speaker 16
00:37:22 And then.
Devon Stack
00:37:23 Agencies have these ideas.
00:37:26 The Jewish record companies operate the exact same way where they would get these, you know, black kid. Well, how hard would that be? Right. Find a black kid without a father. So boom, you already. I mean that, you know, that opens the door to like, most black kids. You find one that's a closet *** and you you can blackmail manipulate them.
00:37:47 Whatever you want, and you know I'm not saying that that's what was happening in the case.
00:37:50 Of Tupac but.
00:37:51 ************ was a fad, so you can go back and try to to rewrite history about Beethoven's mom being black. But funny how you won't talk about how your your tough gangster rap Tupac guy is a *******.
00:38:04 Mag.
Speaker 22
00:38:06 We to work together. So we went all across the country, San Francisco, doing a show. My first show over $10,000 like, which was a New Year's Eve show at this cool gay club in San Francisco. I was like, yo, I'm here. He's like, yo, we'll hook up with you. So Tupac came to the club with me, and I was like, yo, come with Tupac.
Speaker 23
00:38:26 In the building they went crazy in there. I was like they going to tell you out. Your clothes come here. He's like man, he took his shirt off anyway. We had so much fun.
Speaker 18
00:38:38 You don't buy them.
Speaker 14
00:38:39 Again.
Speaker 5
00:38:40 OK, my name is Tupac Shakur and I attend Taliban high.
00:38:46 And I'm 17 years old.
Speaker
00:38:47 Do you like things? Thank you.
Speaker 5
00:38:50 And it's like 17 such a weird age that's in the middle age. You're not 18 yet. You are older than 16, but like it was nice. Just like a learning stage for.
Speaker 24
00:39:02 Do you wish you could be 18 and when you get some more rights?
Speaker 5
00:39:05 Well, 18 and doing lots of responsibilities that don't want but will bring respect that.
00:39:11 I feel like.
00:39:12 That's the only way I can get it. You know, I try to be as mature as I can be and demand it where I can do it, but 18 is like you're an adult. Like today when I decided to release form, I feel so bad because I couldn't sign it myself. I had to go get my mother's and all that. But I'm 18. It's just societies.
00:39:32 Of saying that you're ready when you get out there. The responsibility is staggering and I'm ready. I'm going to be a little more ready than someone is going up and.
Speaker 6
00:39:42 I get it.
Devon Stack
00:39:45 Yeah. Ready for getting railed in the ***?
00:39:47 By some old Jewish guy.
00:39:49 So anyway.
00:39:53 So yeah, they don't talk about that. They and then they go and talk about how. Oh, yeah, not only was Beethoven's.
Speaker 16
00:40:01 Mom black.
Devon Stack
00:40:04 But did you know? You know, this is. This is Beethoven's black mom. But did you know?
Speaker 20
00:40:11 And few people know that reggae legend Bob Marley's father was a white Anglo-Saxon Protestant.
Speaker 15
00:40:17 Ohh, look at that.
Devon Stack
00:40:19 Bob Marley's dad was lost, which is true.
00:40:24 There's, there's his dad. He was basically like a.
00:40:29 Like a slave driver.
00:40:31 Like he was, he was, he worked.
00:40:33 On a plantation and he banged all the the black slaves. I mean, they I don't think they were technically slaves, but they were basically slaves. And he made some race makes abominations.
00:40:49 And one of them was Bob Marley.
00:40:53 But it's again, it's like. So what? What's the point? You know, what's the point? So Bob Marley's half white, all right.
Speaker 20
00:41:00 Does this news make you think about these artists differently?
Devon Stack
00:41:05 Well, not Beethoven because it's ********. And with Bob Marley, it's like, well, he had that might have. That might explain his success.
00:41:13 The white admixture would explain some of his his success.
00:41:17 And and maybe even his wider appeal to white people is that that he had, you know, he wasn't just some random full blown African DNA, Jamaica.
00:41:29 Young guy, so maybe that made him more relatable. I mean, I don't know. What am I? What's?
00:41:33 What's the answer?
00:41:34 What? What am I supposed to watch this in the 90s and be?
Speaker 15
00:41:38 Like oh, I I don't hate.
Devon Stack
00:41:41 I don't hate Bob Marley anymore because his.
00:41:43 Dad's white like, it doesn't make.
00:41:44 Any sense, but OK.
Speaker 20
00:41:51 Do these facts make us reevaluate our own misconceptions, stereotypes and racist points of view?
Speaker 12
00:41:51 Your eyes.
Devon Stack
00:41:57 Again, not really.
00:41:59 I mean, all I can think of is maybe black people would find that shocking and they would not like Bob Marley as much because.
00:42:07 Because his dad was white. I mean, I don't know. I I don't know. I don't understand why they included that, but OK, it was a different time, I guess.
Speaker 20
00:42:16 And what is racism anyway?
Speaker 11
00:42:18 Get up.
Speaker 18
00:42:18 Ignorance, which is the mother of violence and brutality.
Speaker 25
00:42:22 Maybe slow boogies pretty slow downstairs in their feet, but he's pretty fast upstairs in the Cabeza.
Devon Stack
00:42:33 Ohh, this this insufferable Mexican here? You know this? So they have.
00:42:43 Oh, why is my thing? They have Carlos Santana.
00:42:46 Yeah, one one of the more popular.
Speaker 26
00:42:48 If, if if not. Well.
Devon Stack
00:42:50 Definitely at the time, the most popular Mexican artists, probably of all time at the time or very, very high up there, boomers loved Santana. He had no problem getting gigs.
00:43:03 Or or selling records and made lots of money and he's sitting there complaining.
00:43:09 About, you know, being Mexican, it's hard. It's hard.
Speaker 20
00:43:16 And what is racism anyway?
Speaker 12
00:43:18 Get up.
Speaker 18
00:43:18 Ignorance, which is the mother of violence and brutality.
Speaker 25
00:43:22 It's coming up all over again and something really needs to be done.
Speaker 27
00:43:25 About it.
Devon Stack
00:43:26 OK, then you got, you know, Jackson here.
00:43:33 Janet Jackson.
00:43:35 I wasn't sure if that was Latifah.
Speaker 28
00:43:37 For a second.
Devon Stack
00:43:39 Oh yeah, I'm sure she's she's had a rough life, right? So she's umm, you know, for those you know, that's Michael Jackson's sister, who, in addition to coming from tons and tons of money, like ungodly amounts of money coming from the the going all the way back to the Jackson five days to obviously her brother.
00:43:58 Michael Jackson and by the 90s, you know that the Jackson for.
00:44:02 Was was through the ******* roof. She had no problem getting record deals. She didn't have to be talented or anything like that. She was she was a made made woman, you know, right out the gate, MTV played her videos all the time. It wasn't a big deal. And it went on for decades when she was way past her prime going to the.
00:44:22 The scandal with the you know the the nip slip or the, you know, obviously the very staged wardrobe malfunction that took place during the Super Bowl with Justin, Justin Timberlake years later.
00:44:35 So they have nothing to complain about.
00:44:38 And then they they interviewed KRS-one.
Speaker 10
00:44:42 You just don't communicate and one side feels as though they don't have to communicate.
00:44:48 Racism begins.
Devon Stack
00:44:50 01 side I wonder which side that is. I wonder what side that is that he's talking about now, KS one he was, he was basically, you know, he wasn't straight up. I hate Whiting.
00:45:03 He massaged it. He massaged it and tried to go like the boomer. I don't see race kind of a thing. Or maybe that's not the right way to characterize it. He would ***** and ***** and ***** about white racism, but then he would say, oh, but black.
00:45:19 People do it too.
00:45:21 You know, at the very end.
00:45:23 Right. So KRS-one was was in many ways like a like a black power rapper back in the 90s, in fact. So here's one of his songs. It's literally called the racist.
Speaker 10
00:45:38 I've been taught to respect my elders and behave even if when they were young they sold slaves. Truth and understanding is what I crave in the land of the thief, home of the slave. Turn your page to have reached them and station now in 90 is strictly information I'm giving teaching on a regular basis and this lecture is about the racist.
00:45:58 We're not out to exaggerate or diss them, but show the symptoms and facts of racism. Understand the racist ain't equal. There's about 5 different types of racist people. First of the five different types of cases is the individual brought up racist. Here you have young men and.
00:46:14 Women brought up in the great white, white opinion this opinion introduced by the parents of the civilized, become transparent and civilized. Man could look through the faces, make the analysis and see the races #2 face, which almost here is the individual races out of fear. Here you have people in fear African.
00:46:34 And conjure new ways of trapping them. #3 is the unconscious racist. Not knowing they're racist.
00:46:40 Saying basis space, they say I'm not a racist, I'm not a bigot yet they allow us to, for warning, won't admit it. #4 is the money racist? The one that used to talking subject economics? They say owning a criticism for the black man. He don't want that. Yet they went to his land. Damn, that's like a rock and a hard place. You don't have your land yet. This ain't your.
00:47:00 Space America. We've got by every other race except the European that runs this place.
Devon Stack
00:47:07 So it's literally.
00:47:08 In 1990, that's all of the talking points that that made it to mainstream by 2020.
00:47:17 There's all these different kinds of races. There's the racist who's just, you know, overtly racist.
00:47:24 And you know, everyone knows that he's the racist. Then there's the racist that, you know, like the, the, the, the white ally. Right. The one that says that, you know, they've got a black friend or or whatever, but that's not enough because they're not anti racist, right.
00:47:41 And then there's the kind of racist that, that, that allows it to happen or and there's the kind of racist that, that by by not economically enriching black people, they're being right, you know, it's it's the same kind of. It's all the same categories that they break up white people into.
00:48:02 You know, 3030 years later.
00:48:05 And this was the 90s. This is the early 90s and he was pushing all this stuff in his music. That's how this stuff gets filtered out, because this isn't just propaganda for the white kids listening. And look, I knew a lot of white kids that loved KRS-one and they listen. They probably have this album.
00:48:23 They probably this is the kind of **** that when I would hear that, I would just I I would ******* hate I like.
00:48:29 I knew. I knew I was up, even at an early age.
00:48:31 When if I.
00:48:31 Heard a a song like that. I was like, yeah, **** that. And I wouldn't. I wouldn't listen. They're they're any of their music ever again. Cause ohh. OK. You clearly have a problem with white people. Why would I spend money on your music? You know? But a lot of people didn't care. And a lot of zoomers don't care, right? It's it's that's it hasn't changed. A lot of white.
00:48:49 Kids will just be like, oh, whatever, and and they'll they'll still.
00:48:52 Pay for the.
00:48:54 But it wasn't just for the white kids. It wasn't just to brainwash the white kids into taking on the white guilt themselves, or maybe brushing it aside. So they're getting desensitized to hearing it and not having to never pushing back on. They're just got a lot. Just what?
Speaker 16
00:49:09 You know, black people just say stuff like that.
Devon Stack
00:49:11 You know, they're they're just, you know, they they they learn to ignore it, you know, they learn to to grow like, you know, scar tissue and and not be sensitive about this sort of a thing. But it's also telling the black kids.
00:49:25 It's telling the black kids that you are being you're being oppressed not just from the the overt racist, not just the racist that's going around calling you a or whatever like that, it's it's every white person, every white person. There's a classification. You know, there's there's, like, a hierarchy of racism, but every white person, basically.
00:49:46 Participates in this hierarchy and even now KRS-one, who has somehow gotten uglier as he's gotten older like this, is and fatter like he like. He doesn't even look like a human.
00:50:03 He goes and he does these these talks in front of college kids and he tries to. He tries to buffer it, right. He tries to make. It's not as in your face as you know. **** you painting kind of a stuff. It like he tries to.
00:50:18 Act as if. Oh no.
00:50:20 You know, it's not just, it's not just white people and you know, ultimately, we're all. We're all humans or whatever, and you shouldn't necessarily blame white people specifically.
00:50:32 But you should blame.
00:50:34 Colonialism well.
00:50:36 I mean, that's white people. I I don't. I don't have any black people that were going around colonizing.
00:50:43 So and and in the song too. Notice how he also does the same, the same line about, you know, we live in this country, you know.
Speaker 15
00:50:51 The people built.
Devon Stack
00:50:52 Everyone built except for the Europeans who run everything.
00:50:57 And that's that's, that's the one of.
00:50:59 The last lines right?
00:51:00 It's like, really, really everyone except the Europeans.
00:51:04 Built America.
00:51:06 OK, well again, this is the this racial narcissism of the blacks, you know this we was King's attitude. That's not new either. That's not new either. Back in the in the wonderful 90s, you know, that was still being pushed that. Ohh no, we can't really point to any actual accomplishments but.
00:51:26 Beethoven's mom was black, I think. And you know, peanut butter and stuff. And we built this country.
00:51:34 Every everyone except everyone except.
00:51:36 White people built this country.
Speaker 15
00:51:41 And then of.
Devon Stack
00:51:41 Course they have the B roll of the KKK and.
00:51:45 All that fun stuff.
00:51:58 With an obvious push to race mixing, that's all throughout the the.
00:52:04 Special is because it's it's MTV. They're selling sex to teenagers. There's a lot of interracial stuff, whether it's even if it's just if it's just quick edits like this stuff, right, where it's just like.
Speaker 15
00:52:17 Oh, whoa, whoa. And then it's oh, pregnancy. Ohh. Kiss the black guy.
Devon Stack
00:52:24 It's the black guy, you filthy ******* Asian. Ohh pregnancy mix with the blackies mixed with like. Like there's that stuff all throughout, but then they.
00:52:37 Get even more explicit towards the end.
Speaker 16
00:52:41 So racism points of view.
Speaker 20
00:52:46 By the turn of the century, and it's just nine years away, more than 1/3 of all Americans would be members of a racial minority, such as Latinos, Asians and blacks.
Devon Stack
00:52:59 Again, the white replacement was forecast even back then. People already kind of.
00:53:03 Knew this stuff.
00:53:05 And here's the graph that shows what was going on. So if we zoom into 19/9.
00:53:12 Windy.
00:53:15 You know that would be.
00:53:17 In between 1960 and 2010 there, that's when you have that rapid decline and it's even worse than that. Like if you look, it's real hard to find actual numbers because if you look and and and see well, what's that Gray line and what's that orange line, you know, they're fudging with the numbers because that orange line.
00:53:33 Is white.
00:53:34 And you're like, oh, well, what's the Gray one? And then it's non Hispanic white. So they're lumping Hispanics in there to really kind of pad the numbers and make it look like there's way more white people than there actually are.
00:53:47 Yeah, I don't know how they decide that, but whatever. So the.
00:53:53 In the 90s you could see the decline had already rapidly was rapidly underway.
00:54:00 And that blue line that's coming up, that's Hispanic of any race. So the Mexicans were, uh, were increasing. But as we're basically every other racial group, every other racial group.
00:54:15 You know blacks, everybody. It was going up as the white people were plummeting and again they knew this in 1990 and they said that, you know, by by 2000 they projected that there would be. And this is you remember in 1990, if you're a white suburban kid at home watching MTV, you you there's at least a possible.
00:54:35 Reality that you live in a a suburban neighborhood that's almost exclusively white. Like maybe there's a couple tokens here and there, but almost exclusively like that's possible. Still in the 90s.
00:54:48 And that you?
Speaker 15
00:54:49 Might even go.
Devon Stack
00:54:49 To a school where, you know, depending.
00:54:52 On what part of the country?
00:54:53 You were in where your class?
00:54:55 Is almost exclusively white like this. This kind of a thing was still possible even in in some of the more major metropolitan area.
00:55:03 Areas there were still segregated like even like in on the East Coast in in, like in and around New York City and Philadelphia and in places like.
00:55:13 That you still.
00:55:14 Have these little pockets of of white.
00:55:18 White people. And so it was still possible.
00:55:22 And they're they're.
00:55:23 Basically telling you at the time, hey. And and just in literally 10 years.
00:55:28 That shift's over.
00:55:31 Like in 10 years, that Shift's over.
00:55:34 And so it's not like.
00:55:35 Anyone. No. No one knew this.
00:55:37 They were talking about this in 1990.
Speaker 20
00:55:42 But as the numbers of ethnic groups rise, so does the tension, which often explodes into crimes of hate and racism. There's no shortage of racial confrontations making the moves.
Speaker 6
00:56:01 Not duty, not duty, not duty.
Speaker 20
00:56:04 Crimes of hate have reached record levels.
00:56:10 On college campuses last year, one in five minority students reported some kind of racial harassment. And this.
Speaker 15
00:56:17 See and this.
Devon Stack
00:56:17 Is this is the other thing? Well, they talk about and we all know.
Speaker 14
00:56:22 That.
Devon Stack
00:56:23 In which direction a lot of this racial violence flows?
00:56:30 Right. In fact, this example they use here.
Speaker 20
00:56:35 This spring in suburban Long Island, New York, a black high school student was nearly beaten to death with a baseball bat just because he was soon talking to a young white woman at a party.
Devon Stack
00:56:46 OK, so when I heard that I.
00:56:48 Was like, OK, that's.
00:56:48 Probably ********. I didn't know to what?
00:56:51 Degree it would be.
00:56:51 ********. But I figured it was probably.
00:56:53 ********. At first, I couldn't even find it happening.
00:56:59 You know, I thought like this must be like a big case if they're talking about it in this special that a bunch of white kids, you know, took a baseball bat to a black kid simply because he was.
00:57:08 Talking to a white woman.
00:57:10 You know, that sounds pretty intense, right? Like that's a.
00:57:15 That's that. That seems like a big case that they would want to lean on and to prove their their point about white racism or what.
00:57:22 And I couldn't find it. And I was doing searches through newspapers for, you know, because they don't don't they don't give a name. And I found story after story that looked more like this because I'm looking for high school. You know, you can see the search terms I was looking for baseball bat.
00:57:41 Yeah, things like that and Long Island because there on Long Island. And so I was finding all these cases of, you know, in this case it was some Mexican kid getting beat up by other Mexicans.
00:57:54 But it was like that. It was like story after story of either non whites beating up each other or blacks beating up Mexicans or whites or whatever. And I really struggled to find. I finally asked on Twitter. I was like, does anyone know? And I and I tracked it down thanks to some people on Twitter.
00:58:15 And it was this guy here.
00:58:17 And I was like, OK, well, what's the?
00:58:19 Story.
00:58:20 Was it really just this guy was talking to a white girl? And so a bunch of people went and beat him up? Or or, you know what happened?
00:58:29 And this is Alfred. Germaine Ewell.
00:58:33 And what their story was is.
00:58:35 It wasn't about race at all.
00:58:39 It wasn't about race at all. The Jewish DA made it about race because it was, you know, it was about race in terms of, you know, who it was. He was a a black athlete.
00:58:51 From a nearby high school, people actually knew who he was. It wasn't like he was just some rando, and he went to a party that white kids were thrown.
00:59:00 And it wasn't because everyone knew who he was. It was a very mixed and, you know, upbringing for a lot of these kids, it's not like, oh, who's this ******* and our at our party. Like they all they all kind of knew who he was.
00:59:14 And it wasn't that he was talking.
00:59:16 To the white white girl.
00:59:18 Or that it wasn't because she was white, it's because it was the ex-girlfriend of this guy here, Shannon Siegel.
00:59:27 That that the fight broke out, he couldn't he.
00:59:31 Would have been.
00:59:31 If he was a white kid, it would.
00:59:32 Have been the same thing. It was over a girl.
00:59:35 But the Jewish DA and the Jewish lawyer for Ewell wanted to make it about race they had.
00:59:43 They're pushing the the new civil rights bill in the early.
00:59:48 And these and they wanted to have examples of of white hatred and and and so that's what they did. In fact, some of these white kids might even be Jewish. I mean, I I don't know. I know Segal, you know, is is pot. I mean, he doesn't look Jewish at all. And I tried to find information his.
01:00:08 You know, I couldn't find any about him being Jewish. Ian Pearl. I mean, it's kind of, you know, Pearl's kind of maybe a Jewish last name. They lived in a neighborhood that was very Jewish.
01:00:22 Gregory kosoff. I mean, that's obviously like Eastern European of some sort. Again, he he doesn't look Jewish. In fact, the guy who looks the most Jewish, James Peralta, and and he might be South American.
01:00:34 Jewish. But it's this.
01:00:35 Is the problem with America?
01:00:36 Right. It's just like it's.
01:00:40 Now it's like all these ******* people, and Donahue, obviously is is Irish. But anyway, that doesn't matter. The point the point is these guys didn't attack him because he was a black guy talking to a white woman. They attacked him because he was hitting on.
01:00:58 Shannon Siegel's ex-girlfriend.
01:01:01 And.
01:01:04 Yeah. So that, that's that. That was the big thing. And I was like, OK, well, it's funny because there's all these cases, lots of cases. It's not like magically the FBI statistics, you know, it's not like, you know, they they they swapped at some point, you know, it's not like if you go back to 1990 and look at the FBI.
01:01:25 World Book or, you know, statistics crime statistics on, you know, as they relate to.
01:01:31 Then all of a sudden, 13 doesn't do 50 like that's that never happens, right? Like it's pretty consistent. And yet they decide to focus on on this.
01:01:41 Story for obvious reasons.
01:01:44 So they present.
01:01:44 This idea that white people are going around with baseball bats beating up black kids just for being black, and that affects, of course, not just the the white kids at home who are eating the supplements, MTV, MTV. That's like the coolest thing in the 90s.
01:02:01 And if MTV's saying it?
01:02:03 Then you know and you want to.
01:02:04 Be one of the cool kids, you.
01:02:06 Better you better.
Speaker 16
01:02:07 Go along with it. You better accept it.
Devon Stack
01:02:10 You know, this is like the equivalent of of like the.
01:02:14 The biggest YouTube.
01:02:15 Streamer in the world telling you something right, like in terms of social capital, the you know MTV is the the voice of the cool kid God.
01:02:24 So you get this impression that's what's going on, and if you're a black kid at home, the same thing, you're getting this impression that white kids are going around beating up black kids for talking to white girls or whatever and.
01:02:35 It's just the context.
01:02:36 Of it's kind of interesting. Anyway, the idea that, you know, race mixing is what, what the the horrible. The horrible thing that.
01:02:44 That the evil racists were trying to stop was race mixing and and that's both thing. The very thing they're trying to promote. So they have, you know, these ******* ****.
Speaker 29
01:02:54 Growing up in a house as a kid where your parents prejudice against somebody, then you're obviously going to pick up those same.
Speaker 28
01:02:59 Things.
01:03:00 It's built in to your friend.
01:03:03 The moment you start perceiving the outside world, you start getting it in subtle ways.
Speaker 20
01:03:12 And.
01:03:12 Not so subtle ways.
Devon Stack
01:03:17 Yes, because the most relevant depiction of what happens in the media in 1990 is that clips from a Jewish made, by the way Hollywood films from like the 1930s, you know, and that's what they always have. They have to do and they still have to do.
01:03:32 That today, right?
01:03:33 They're like, oh, yeah, look, see, the media is racist.
01:03:36 Look at that. The media is racist.
01:03:40 Here's a clip of a Jewish film 60 ******* years ago. Look how look how racist the media is. That is what is informing white children that that, that when they start to form these ideas about race, when they because as they'll they'll say later on, you know when kids are brand new.
01:03:59 You know, right out the ******* box. And you know they they don't start off racist. You can put them in a playground with with other kids, other racism. And you know there's not going to be a prejudice or whatever.
01:04:12 That's true to some.
01:04:13 And, you know, racism is a learned behavior just or learned it's it's a recognition of of patterns right to some extent. But it's it's not learned as it like. No one's getting racist watching Hollywood movies.
01:04:31 Or at least not towards blacks. OK like.
01:04:34 They're getting maybe.
01:04:35 They're getting racist towards whites watching how?
01:04:37 Movies. But that's. Yeah. No one. No one's sitting there watching Hollywood movies. And after, like, they they, they they they walk into the theater. Right. And they're like, I have a dream. The Little Black Boys and little white girls and they sit down and they watch the movie and they come out of the theater like ******* like that. That's literally never happened.
01:04:57 That's never happened.
01:05:02 But that's what they do. They they, they act as if, oh, yeah. See, because there was, you know, black face.
01:05:09 And black comedians, by the way, and the black comedian stuff.
01:05:14 This was one of this was.
Speaker 23
01:05:17 I mean, they might.
Speaker 16
01:05:18 Say ohh look, they make us look.
Devon Stack
01:05:19 Stupid or whatever. No.
01:05:20 It's just that's what comedy is.
01:05:23 Have have you heard of the movie? Dumb and Dumber like you think they're acting like really smart white people? No, that's just what you do in comedies. You act like a ******* ******. That's why people are laughing.
01:05:35 And so they use all these examples that aren't even bad, right? Like these. None of these examples are like, look at the black guy violently attacking the white woman. Like, I don't even think that exists in.
01:05:45 A in a.
01:05:45 Hollywood movie it's just that. Oh, look, they're.
01:05:48 They're singing and dancing.
01:05:49 OK. How is that bad exactly? In fact, this is this is probably good.
01:05:54 You know, this is this is a good thing because now white people are getting the impression that, oh, yeah, what's so bad about having black people in my society? They're they, they're good singers and and they're very entertaining. Right. They have such a unique, interesting way of of speaking. In fact, I'm going to start copying that because it's so it's so.
01:06:14 Unique and new and and trendy.
Speaker 7
01:06:17 So it's it's it's.
Devon Stack
01:06:18 Completely ******* stupid these examples that they use.
Speaker 15
01:06:22 Like oh look.
Devon Stack
01:06:23 I'm going to accept black people in my society cause that guy doesn't scare me. He's goofy.
01:06:28 Why would I be afraid of some bow tie?
01:06:30 Wearing black guy that gets like a a pancake throwing his face or whatever, right?
01:06:35 Like this is the opposite of what they're saying it is. They're acting as if this is. This is all of your bad feelings about black people. All of your suspicions about black people. It all originates from 1930s movies where black people were funny.
01:06:51 I mean, it doesn't make any ******* sense.
01:06:53 But that's what they.
01:06:54 Push and that was the that was the party line then. And and still now the idea that somehow the media is what's pushing. I mean if by the media they mean reporting the news.
01:07:05 Reporting the news, which obviously I think to some degree that they did mean and they can't say that obviously right and now they don't report the race of of criminals, especially if they're black.
Speaker 15
01:07:15 So they act as.
Devon Stack
01:07:16 If you know 1930s comedies were were influencing the racism of white kids in the 90s.
Speaker 10
01:07:23 Yeah.
Speaker 30
01:07:25 Growing up, we should be able to look.
01:07:28 At television and read the media and get a positive image of his people and not just the negative images. And it's not just black people, it's.
Devon Stack
01:07:37 And this is another interesting thing.
01:07:39 That lets you know that they know what they're doing.
01:07:42 When they recast.
01:07:45 These characters in movies, these white characters, they replace them with blacks.
01:07:50 When you see that these the only way really you can get a role as a white male in a movie is if.
01:07:56 You're a villain.
01:07:59 They understand the power that that, that, that has the influence that has on the viewers.
01:08:06 And so, because all throughout the 90s and and even going on till today, they're always complaining that and which is rich, right, because this this is Will Smith who at the time is in a hit television sitcom playing a positive black.
01:08:24 Character and he's acting as if that the only way you know. Oh, it's terrible all the same thing, right? Because there were black comedies in the 1930s or whatever that blacks are always portrayed as as *******, you know, violent.
01:08:41 Apes in movies.
01:08:43 Which literally doesn't exist. I'd love to find these these ******* movies and television shows that they're talking about. They don't exist.
01:08:51 So he complains that you know it's really important for us to have positive role models. It's like, well, what?
01:08:55 It mean like.
01:08:56 You like the? I mean, this is the 90s, right? So you had, you know, family matters. You had the Cosby show, you had, you know, the The Fresh Prince of Bel Air. I mean, it was given the the population, the share of the population that.
01:09:11 Black people had in America. They had an over representation of positive characters in television, so they were complaining about ******* nothing.
Speaker 30
01:09:21 It's Mexicans. It's Puerto Ricans. It's everybody needs to see positive images of themselves.
Devon Stack
01:09:27 Everyone but white people notice how those people were left.
Speaker 16
01:09:29 Down.
Speaker 20
01:09:34 But the machine.
01:09:34 Isn't melting for everyone.
01:09:36 The concept of multiculturalism, where ethnic groups put their own culture first, is gaining prominence.
Devon Stack
01:09:44 This is kind of funny. It's kind of interesting. They talk about multiculturalism as if it's like this, a paradigm shift, and it was.
01:09:55 Prior to the 1990s, the idea was that it was going to be assimilation.
01:10:02 Prior to the 1990s, the idea was black people were going to just essentially become different looking white people.
01:10:12 And when that?
01:10:12 Failed to materialize after decade and decade and decade. And, you know, billions and billions and trillions of dollars really in blood being spilt for the this this.
01:10:25 Pipe dream of black people just essentially becoming white.
01:10:28 People or these other immigrants, you know, the Mexicans coming across the border at in the South becoming just a, you know, like a darker shade of white person, but, you know, preserving white culture and embracing it and becoming a part of it, that never happened.
01:10:47 It never happened and and white people were. We're kind of aware of that at this point, but the brown and black people were super aware of it because they knew they were never going to assimilate. There weren't, wasn't even like, an effort being put in.
01:11:00 And so this is when they were kind of dropping that whole facade like this comfortable lie that they were telling white people that no. Yeah, these other people are going to come in and they're going to. They're basically going to be.
01:11:12 You.
01:11:13 They're going to be you just a different color. They're going to be you and just a different color and everything will be fine.
01:11:20 So Queen Latifah mentions that, you know, multiculturalism, is this new way of viewing it, where they're going to be.
01:11:27 Separate.
01:11:28 They're going to embrace their own culture. We have all these little different pockets of different cultures, and it's going to work somehow.
Speaker 20
01:11:37 As evidenced by the explosion of Spanish rappers.
Speaker 12
01:11:41 This is for the rasa, rasa.
Devon Stack
01:11:46 And Larossa, actually, you know literally translates to the race.
01:11:50 So they're, they're that's and you know, I'm not.
01:11:54 Going to do the.
01:11:54 Whole. If white people did this. But you know, that's The thing is no one for some reason nobody cared. You can you can have a song on MTV where you're saying this is for my race. And if you were not white and.
01:12:07 It was totally cool.
Speaker 20
01:12:08 Afrocentrism, which asserts the importance of black history and culture, is also gaining momentum.
01:12:16 Some young black Americans have begun establishing their own separate Proms, graduations and schools.
Devon Stack
01:12:23 Now this is one of those things I was telling you that everyone just a couple of years ago on Twitter, it's like white people just realized that this was happening even though it was going on since before the 90s. This was produced in 1990 and released in 1991. So this was already going on in the 80s.
01:12:42 And white people, it's like they were just asleep at the wheel. They had no idea that black people were having their own Proms and their own graduations and their own schools. I don't know how they didn't know this. I mean, they had their own all kinds of stuff.
01:12:55 And so it was. It's kind of amusing that in, you know, 30 years later, you have white boomers on Twitter going. Well, that's not that's not the melting pot. That's not assemble letting you know, there should just there shouldn't be African Americans. There should just be American. All these hyphenated Americans, that doesn't make any sense.
01:13:15 How are we ever going to solve racism if you guys? I mean, that's segregation. Did you know that's segregation? We're going backwards. We're going backwards. The Democrats are the real. It's like ******* a dude.
01:13:28 Like this was this isn't new.
01:13:31 This this had been going on for at least like about 40 years.
Speaker 15
01:13:37 This has been going on forever.
Devon Stack
01:13:40 For as long as they have the.
01:13:41 Ability to make this go on.
01:13:43 This has been going on.
01:13:48 And they're doing it because it's preferable. They're doing it for the same reason that if if white people could get away with doing this and look they could, they could if they weren't a bunch of ******* *******, they could. They could say we're going to do a white prom.
Speaker 10
01:14:02 Yeah.
Devon Stack
01:14:04 We're going to do a white prom. We're going to a white graduation. We're tired of having these events.
01:14:12 Where black people ruin it.
01:14:15 And sometimes people die like they don't just ruin it like it's dangerous.
Speaker 15
01:14:20 So we're going to have our own little thing.
Devon Stack
01:14:24 If all white people got behind that idea in the same way all black people.
01:14:30 Got behind this idea.
Speaker 16
01:14:33 This wasn't like fringe.
Devon Stack
01:14:36 This wasn't like some fringe crazy idea.
01:14:41 In fact, white people got behind this idea.
01:14:46 You might have some some young white people. In fact. I'm about to play a clip of one of them that it it can't wrap his head around it and it's like, wait, wait a second. This is the opposite of what you've been telling me my whole life. That they were all supposed to be, you know, be together and and if and if you know, and he does, like, the whole boomer thing because it's the 90s. This was actually kind of a problem.
01:15:06 Less.
01:15:08 Dated argument that, hey, if we did this this.
01:15:10 Wouldn't you wouldn't allow it.
Speaker 20
01:15:17 A controversial move.
01:15:18 Which they say is an important step towards self-determination.
Devon Stack
01:15:22 Yeah. So look, see, look, it's all the.
01:15:24 Same stuff that that.
01:15:26 The white people say today, but here's here's on Oprah Winfrey. They did an episode on Segregated Proms.
01:15:34 And someone from the audience and look at those white people. They look so uncomfortable. Look at, look. Look how ******* every single one of them. Look at the look on their ******* face.
01:15:46 I'm going to zoom in on this ****.
01:15:50 My mouse would start working.
01:15:53 Look, they're all like, ah, ******* a. What the ****?
01:16:00 Does it? Does this look like they're happy about multiculturalism?
01:16:04 Do any of them look happy about this?
01:16:09 Any of them look at them. They're all just like *** ****.
01:16:14 Well, that not a single ******* one of them.
01:16:20 Every and this is an Oprah audience. Maybe what they're getting into, going to Oprah.
01:16:30 They're all just like what the ****? *** ****. When is this gonna? When is the pain going to end?
01:16:38 It's never ******* ending with these people. It's always something.
Speaker 16
01:16:42 It's always something.
Devon Stack
01:16:52 And again, listen to this young kid as he tries to use the reasoning now that we all know doesn't work.
01:17:01 But might have sounded kind of unique or or like a good argument, at least in the 1990s.
Speaker 18
01:17:07 It.
Speaker 14
01:17:07 Be called the unique cultural experience. If whites had their own problem be called.
Speaker 29
01:17:11 A Klan rally?
Speaker 9
01:17:14 If we did it.
Devon Stack
01:17:16 If we did it, you'd call it racist.
01:17:28 How come? How come you you know, it's not fair. You're getting special treatment.
01:17:35 Yeah. And nothing's new. Nothing's new. The limp, wristed arguments of the white people going. Oh, that's not fair. Well, who cares?
Speaker 15
01:17:44 What do you do about?
Devon Stack
01:17:45 It ******, like, literally what?
01:17:47 Do you do about it? Nothing, obviously.
Speaker 31
01:17:49 Blacks or any minority group choose to do something to celebrate themselves. It is not a negation of you, it is a celebration of our self.
Speaker 15
01:18:00 All right, has.
Devon Stack
01:18:01 Other of you, it's a celebration of ourselves, and you can tell Oprah's about to.
01:18:04 Clap and they cut away from it.
Speaker 15
01:18:07 See. Look, she's she's.
Devon Stack
01:18:08 Wash her hands. She shifts her microphone because she wants to start clapping. Well with the audience and.
01:18:13 They cut away real fast, but the audience claps.
01:18:20 And the white people are just baffled. They don't know. They don't know.
01:18:23 How to ******* react to this?
01:18:25 See look at this. This guy right here. He's.
Speaker 15
01:18:26 Just like what?
01:18:28 What the **** is this ****?
Devon Stack
01:18:31 That that, we were told, we were told that we were. We were all going to assimilate, that we were all going to get together.
01:18:39 Like every white person in this audience looks ****** *** because it's the exact opposite of what they were told.
01:18:46 It's the exact opposite of what? How they were sold. This whole diversity program.
Speaker 10
01:18:51 Yeah.
Devon Stack
01:18:52 The blacks were going to assimilate and become part of of white society and they didn't have to really. We'll have to worry about. There wasn't going to be African American. There was just going to be American. It was going.
01:19:03 To be fine, well, that's just not.
01:19:07 That's not how reality works.
01:19:09 But they're still, they're all still very surprised.
01:19:12 They're all still really ******* surprised because it doesn't seem.
01:19:15 To add up with how?
Speaker 10
01:19:15 Right.
Devon Stack
01:19:16 How they were sold this this stupid idea?
01:19:18 Yeah. And then you know again what happens.
01:19:22 40 years later, literally 40 years.
01:19:24 Later on Twitter, white people are making the same dumbfounded, stupid ******* faces going.
Speaker 16
01:19:29 Well, I don't get it.
Speaker 6
01:19:31 Well, I'm good.
Speaker 15
01:19:34 Why are they doing this?
Speaker 16
01:19:41 Oops, I got it muted.
01:19:42 There.
Speaker 27
01:19:46 Kind of a.
01:19:47 Thing where you want self determination. Unfortunately for Black youth, what we have been told is that we are to aspire to an American dream, that there's some great melting pot do unto others as they do to you.
01:20:00 Violence is wrong.
01:20:02 I have a dream type of situation and unfortunately that has not turned into me controlling my own business, me controlling my own thoughts, me controlling my own school system and me and my people having the power that's necessary to make decisions about our own lives.
Devon Stack
01:20:22 It's a little disturbing that she lumped in.
01:20:25 The golden rule and and violence is bad with some of this stuff, but anyway, yeah, she her point is that maybe white culture, which includes violence, is wrong. And to do unto others, you know, she is basically saying white culture is incompatible with her.
01:20:45 My expectations.
01:20:47 She wants self determination. She doesn't want to assimilate, she doesn't want to become part of White America. She wants to do things the way black people do, things which apparently is through violence.
01:20:59 Which will illustrate a little, you know, a little more here further and then into the the special and and look, white people should have been listening to this.
01:21:12 Instead of listening to the the the music that because she's I think a member of Public Enemy instead of listening to music and just going, oh, they're silly *******, they're so violent, they they should maybe have been thinking to themselves. They're telling us they're telling us they're different and that they're violent and that there there is no fixing this.
Speaker 20
01:21:30 Many people thought that racial minorities would be given that political power by the landmark civil rights bill of 1964, with 27 years later, civil rights is still a divisive issue in America, and the current civil rights bill, which centers on the right to vote, is expected to be a major battleground in the 1992 presidential campaign.
Devon Stack
01:21:52 So then they talk about how all this civil rights legislation that we covered in the I think the last string or the string before.
01:21:58 That.
01:22:00 That wasn't enough, because it's never going to be enough. It'll literally never be enough, because you can't. You can't fix this problem. It's a biological difference that you can't fix. You can't fix it, and you can't.
01:22:12 No matter. It's like with my my not to use the B reference again, but it's like I have the killer bees and the European bees. They've got totally different genetic behaviors. They act completely different. I can change the environments all day long. I can swap their hives. I can feed them. I can. I can start to be extra nice to the Africanized bees while being extra mean to the European bees.
01:22:33 It won't change their behavior.
01:22:36 It won't.
01:22:38 It won't change their behavior.
01:22:41 The Africanized bees are always going to be psycho mean bees and the European bees are always going to be chill. They were bred to be like that.
01:22:52 And the ****** ** thing is the legislation she's talking about, the Civil Rights Act of the early 90s.
01:22:59 This is a lot of what ushered in the quotas and made people afraid of, you know, at the corporate level of black people. So what? What this altered, what this changed. The first thing was the burden of proof.
Speaker 10
01:23:14 Yeah.
Devon Stack
01:23:16 In other words, if a black person decided they were discriminated against in the workplace, it was up to the company getting sued to prove that they weren't being racist.
01:23:32 Like it wasn't up to the black person to prove that like they were being racist.
01:23:36 It was up to the company getting sued by the random black guy to prove that in a positive way that they they couldn't possibly have been racist. Well, what what kind of policies do you think that that's going to enact inside of a workplace? If if a company now has legal liability?
01:23:55 You know about if any black person sues them, they have to prove that they weren't being racist to the black person.
01:24:04 Like what? What kind of what? You know, you want to know.
01:24:06 Where all these. Oh.
01:24:08 Diversity officers and EI and all that stuff came from, well, those are reaction to stuff like this.
01:24:14 The company now has to prove actively that they were not being racist if they ever get.
01:24:19 Sued.
01:24:23 It also changed the the punitive damages.
01:24:27 So it was enough if you had a a black guy that you fired.
01:24:33 Not only did you have to prove that you weren't being racist when you fired him.
01:24:38 Let's say that guy made you know, 20,000 a year.
01:24:43 Well, now if he sues, he doesn't just.
01:24:47 Have the ability to sue you for the lost wages of 20,000.
01:24:51 A year or whatever it is.
01:24:53 He now has the ability to sue you and and get punitive damages, which means well, think Alex Jones.
01:25:03 You can get whatever you can get. Whatever they'll give you.
01:25:08 You can get whatever a jury will decide.
01:25:11 And it so it could be anything.
01:25:15 You could lose a billion dollars if if the the Johnny Cochran lawyer of the black guy you just fired can convince a jury that you were being racist and that you're an *******. The jury could just destroy your entire business, take it all away and give it to him.
01:25:35 And it's even worse then they did this thing. They they they they addressed with what are called mixed motive cases.
01:25:44 So the mixed motive cases.
01:25:48 You could they what? They could make an argument that, OK, maybe the maybe one of the reasons you fired Jamal.
01:25:57 Was and you've got documentation that proves this that he was stealing from the company, right? He was stealing from the company. And. And you. You. You warned him three times with HR and you've got video of it and whatever like you have the proof that you had cause to fire Jamal.
01:26:17 Well, because of the this new law, if Jamal can prove that well, that might be true. I was stealing from the company, but it was.
01:26:25 Also because you.
01:26:26 Hated black people.
Speaker 16
01:26:32 If Jamal can convince.
Devon Stack
01:26:34 A judge or a jury?
01:26:37 That, sure, they had cause to fire him, but one of the reasons they was they they was still racist. They were still racist just because I was stealing.
Speaker 15
01:26:48 From them they.
Devon Stack
01:26:49 Were still racist.
01:26:52 You can still lose.
Speaker 16
01:26:55 You can still.
Devon Stack
01:26:56 Lose.
01:27:00 And then they had protections against retaliation. So you could have a Jamal not get even get fired. Maybe Jamal just doesn't get a promotion.
01:27:11 That he that he thinks he deserves it. Instead, you promote some white guy.
01:27:16 Jamal can now still sue you.
01:27:20 With all these, all these things applying still right where the company has to prove that that you know, not just well, you know. No, you know Peter was a was a much better candidate for.
01:27:32 The promotion than Jamal.
01:27:34 You still get because.
01:27:35 Of the mixed motive thing you had to prove that and we totally weren't racist in any other way.
01:27:42 Right. Like it wasn't just, you know, even if that if.
01:27:46 If Jamal can can somehow convince a jury that even 1%.
01:27:50 Of that decision was because he was black.
01:27:54 You can still lose, right?
01:27:57 And.
01:27:57 And he can.
01:27:57 Still, Sue you and and you can't.
01:28:00 You can't do anything about it, so even if, like let's say, he loses the lawsuit or or whatever, you can't punish him at work, you can't fire him.
01:28:09 So you you now have these these.
Speaker
01:28:11 Yes.
Devon Stack
01:28:13 Black people. And you're that you're being forced to hire in the 1st place because.
01:28:17 This thing about getting fired, you might just not hire Jamal in the first place.
01:28:23 And now you can see you and you have to prove that you weren't being a racist when you didn't hire him.
01:28:27 You have to prove that you weren't being a racist when you didn't give them a a raise. You have to prove that you weren't being a racist when you gave someone else the promotion.
Speaker
01:28:37 I mean it. It's it's.
Devon Stack
01:28:38 Insane what this legislation did?
01:28:43 And there's nothing you can do to retaliate. You can't. You can't, or even anything can be perceived as retaliation.
01:28:53 Because then you can just see you again.
01:28:59 So all these black people, not just black people, all these non whites that are now in companies, Gee, it seems like it might be pretty easy to move up in a company now.
01:29:11 It seems like even if there's not a a law explicitly telling companies that they have to promote black people if they apply for promotion, it seems like they're kind of actually is.
01:29:28 It seems like there actually sort of is a a law that says if a black person applies for a job, you better ******* hire them, and if he wants a promotion, you better *******.
Speaker 16
01:29:38 Give it to him.
01:29:40 And if you.
Devon Stack
01:29:40 Want to fire him? Maybe. Maybe think twice about that.
01:29:51 So that's the legislation she was talking about and and and that's the the cause of a lot of where we're at today. And again, these people want to go back to the 90s. I want to beat a dead horse or whatever like, this was obviously very early 90s ninety 9091, you know.
01:30:08 So this this isn't like new either. All this stuff you know this is this is from way back when and a lot of it the reason why a lot of this stuff because you might ask yourself well, how did all this stuff get ******* passed?
01:30:22 And boomers, if you want.
Speaker 15
01:30:23 To know why people are ****** *** at.
Devon Stack
01:30:25 You guys, even when I love.
01:30:27 It When boomers try.
01:30:28 To complain like we weren't around for that and we weren't around, we were definitely.
01:30:32 Around for this.
01:30:37 You were definitely around for this and look, ultimately it's because of.
01:30:45 You know what this Jew has?
01:30:46 To say.
Speaker 17
01:30:48 Really.
Speaker 8
01:30:50 We thought had been fought and won.
Speaker 28
01:30:54 In the 60s.
Speaker 24
01:30:55 Look like you're going to have to.
Speaker 8
01:30:57 Have to be, you know, fought again.
Devon Stack
01:31:00 Because people wanted to relive this ******* 60s.
Speaker 15
01:31:09 Well, you know, I thought.
Devon Stack
01:31:10 All the problems that were that.
Speaker 15
01:31:12 Were we were fighting against in.
Speaker 16
01:31:13 The 60s where we.
Devon Stack
01:31:14 We won those battles, but turns out we had to fight the man again, right? It turns out we didn't fix racism.
01:31:24 Turns out that we didn't somehow alter reality.
01:31:29 No matter how many ******* drugs we were on, we we're never going to.
01:31:32 Actually alter reality.
01:31:38 So we had to do it again. So a lot of people are out to lunch, like a lot of conservative whites were out to lunch on this ****, because why?
01:31:45 Well, the same way these companies were now and forever beyond this, we're going to be afraid of, of not hiring Jamal, not promoting Jamal, not, you know, giving the Jamal the raise that he wants.
01:32:01 The general public was also kind of experiencing a Stockholm syndrome.
01:32:06 It was it abundantly clear what the high class view, if you were a middle class, if you're a social climbing middle class American, your whole you had there was the American dream, all you wanted out of life was to start, you know, pull yourself up by your bootstraps and work hard at your job and become a millionaire. That's that was the big dream.
01:32:27 Right. That was the ******* dream. If you could just go in there.
01:32:30 And punch your.
01:32:31 Clock and keep your head down and work real hard. You were to become a millionaire. You know, you could be president someday. You could be whatever you want. That's the American way.
01:32:44 And so middle class people that have this mindset, middle class boomers that have that mindset where they're very sensitive to the the kinds of social attitudes that would be acceptable to upper middle class and and high class people, they didn't want to be viewed as the unwashed masses. They didn't want to be viewed as the low class racist.
01:33:04 Blue collar people that were never going to amount to anything if they wanted to join the ******* club. They had to follow the ******* rules of the club. If you want a job, don't dress for the job that you have. Dress for the job that you want.
01:33:20 And that's exactly what these ******* boomers were doing. They weren't behaving.
01:33:27 Like the middle class people, they were. They weren't behaving like the middle class people that they were and protecting the interests of the middle class people that they.
01:33:35 Were or their.
01:33:36 Children. No, they believed in some fantasy where instead of wearing a power suit to an interview, they basically wore the the, the, the social.
01:33:47 Equivalent.
01:33:51 You know the the the, you know, I know it's a tired term, but the virtue signaling equivalent.
01:34:01 And in fact, that's another thing that motivated them to raise their kids as little anti racist because they, you know, to some degree, even the boomers, believe it or not wanted their kids to be, you know successful if if for no other reason that it would reflect better on them.
01:34:18 So they had to make sure that they programmed their children to believe all this same ********.
01:34:26 Because they didn't want some low class blue collar kid saying something embarrassing in front of their upper class friends.
01:34:46 So they let it happen. They passed that legislation.
Speaker 20
01:34:49 Or a music for many. Say that if you're a minority rocker, you're going to have a harder time.
Speaker 29
01:34:53 Making I think of little Carl with a white band. They probably sold three times as many records as they sold and it's really sad that something like that it is the way it is. People just can't accept the fact that.
01:35:09 Black people are are are playing the music. That living color is playing.
Devon Stack
01:35:15 Yeah. Or more realistically, living color was a.
01:35:17 One hit wonder.
01:35:20 They had one good song that was played endlessly on MTV and endlessly on the radio, and they never made another good song.
01:35:30 Had nothing to do with them being black.
01:35:35 Nothing had nothing at all done.
01:35:38 In fact, the the record.
01:35:39 Company Jews would have loved it.
01:35:42 If they could sell.
01:35:44 If they could sell a Black Rock band to the American kids, of course they would do it. Of course they would do it. They just couldn't get that to work.
01:35:55 This for the same reason. Really they couldn't get like white rappers to really work beyond a one hit wonder, like the Nilla ice you get. You get one good song out of them. Maybe, but.
01:36:06 Yeah, that that was it.
01:36:10 So we go back to the the, the, the Galaxy brained Mexican, Carlos Santana.
Speaker 18
01:36:17 Because I'm Mexican, you know, you kind of have.
Speaker 16
01:36:21 To do 2 two.
Speaker 12
01:36:47 You are cool girl.
Speaker 18
01:36:56 We're four times what this guys do in order to get some kind of attention.
Speaker 16
01:37:02 It's cause I'm Mexican essay.
01:37:05 It's cause I'm Mexican.
01:37:08 That's why I'm only like a a Super Rock star with millions of dollars. I could be so much bigger if I wasn't Mexican.
Devon Stack
01:37:18 Why are you wearing a? Is that cultural appropriation? He's wearing a African shirt.
01:37:25 It's got the map of Africa and the weird Africa flag that was big in the 90s.
01:37:31 So anyway, then they they they they complain. The funny thing is, they complained that in living color couldn't make it because they were, they were black, but then they they complained about.
01:37:43 Vanilla ice trying to make it because he's white. They weren't doing the same kind of argument. They weren't saying like, yeah, just like living color, couldn't break into the the the rock'n'roll industry because they were black, you know, vanilla ice really struggled to break into the rap industry because he was white.
01:38:04 No. In fact, they criticize him for for stealing the white man or the black man's music.
Speaker 10
01:38:09 Yeah.
Devon Stack
01:38:14 And for those who don't know, at the time like look, every it was the 90s, there was tons of black television tons. There was Arsenio Hall. There was the the, you know, like all the shows we mentioned before, you know, with the The Fresh Prince of Bel Air Family matters and The Cosby Show and.
01:38:35 What was the what?
01:38:35 Was the spin-off The Cosby Show?
01:38:37 Like the kids in college.
01:38:39 Like something's not small. Wonder. Something wonder, I thought wonder. Anyway, it doesn't.
01:38:44 Matter. So there's.
01:38:45 Much of these ******* shows and you know, in living color, of course, famously with Jim Carrey, made fun of vanilla ice. They all made fun of the vanilla ice and any kind of white wrapper, any kind of white person that tried to enter.
01:39:00 Into the rap industry that made fun of.
01:39:05 They didn't do the opposite, they weren't there were there was no Saturday Night Live skits, making fun of living color, being a bunch.
01:39:12 Of you know.
01:39:14 Black gangsters posing as as rock'n'roll stars. So it's it.
01:39:19 Was complete ********.
01:39:20 I'm like I, you know, I don't need to tell you guys this. I'm just trying to explain this. This is the sort of thing was happening in the ******* 90s.
01:39:27 So then they go and and and talk about how.
01:39:32 Uh.
01:39:32 You know it's it was so difficult for.
01:39:38 Or or they or they just say that it's difficult for black rappers, so it's it's hard for black people to break it out in the rock industry and in the rap industry because of ******* white people, basically.
01:39:49 And then you know the the the best, the iconic. If you want to see what white people thought was cool in the 90s.
01:39:58 Look no further than Dennis Leary. Ah, yes, Dennis Leary. The the potato edgy boy of the 90s.
Speaker 15
01:40:09 His whole shtick was.
Speaker 16
01:40:10 I smoked cigarettes and I'm mad.
Devon Stack
01:40:13 Which was a lot of weirdly, that was a lot of white entertainment.
01:40:19 In the 90s and it kind of makes you wonder, why is it? Why is it that white people really related to chain smoking, angry people in the 90s?
01:40:28 Almost as if there was like some some rage bubbling just underneath the surface. Right. Also, if white people were were all kind of experiencing like a lot of anxiety and rage in the 90s. And so, you know, knowing this Hollywood Jews were like, OK, well, we need to find some.
01:40:46 Like you know.
01:40:48 White people that that kind of.
01:40:51 Can connect to this energy.
01:40:54 That they can connect to this this chain, smoking anxiety filled, rage filled angst that's building.
Speaker 16
01:41:02 Up in white people.
Devon Stack
01:41:04 Out of nowhere, I'm I'm sure. Right. Just I can't imagine where all this anger is coming from. And you know, just channel it in the right direction, channel it in the right direction.
01:41:14 Not at any of the actual problems, but maybe as as a funny Jewish trick in a way to exacerbate the problems. Let's let's make it even worse.
Speaker 6
01:41:25 Let's let's get all the.
Devon Stack
01:41:26 All this, this rage that you feel all this contempt that you feel and you're not sure exactly why. Because you've been so programmed to ignore the obvious. Let's try to get all this rage and anger and and channel it towards something like, oh, I don't know other white people instead.
Speaker 32
01:41:45 One folks. Racism. One more word. Earth. Anybody on this planet gets more modest space. That's gonna be the mailing address. OK. He's right. He's right. He's yellow. He's black. I don't like him cause he's different from me. Something my head is not based on color or creed. It's based on performance. OK, I have a cousin, a white Irish cousin. Looks just like me or something. He's an idiot. He's lazy.
01:42:05 He's good. He's a huge pus filled boil on the *** of society. I'm a spit. I'm a nick. I'm a rock. I'm.
01:42:10 A Jew and.
01:42:10 Where do you all live? New York. Great folks get in the pot. OK. Getting a great big giant melting pot because we're making soup. American soup. I got 2 words for you, David Duke. Two more words. Nose Jack.
01:42:20 OK. Yeah. I think you hear me knocking, David, and I think I'm coming in and I'm bringing a black guy, a Jewish guy and a whole South Vietnamese family with me, and we're all gonna sit down and watch. Do the right thing until we get it right this time. OK. And guess who's making the popcorn?
Devon Stack
01:42:38 Wow, so tough, so tough. That's right. We're all gonna. We're gonna get a bunch of black people and Mexicans. And and Asians. I'm going to beat up David Duke.
01:42:50 And meanwhile, all you other white people, you know that the real the real problem is other ****** white people.
Speaker 16
01:42:59 Like my my cousin he's, he's a he's a filthy Mick.
Devon Stack
01:43:03 He's a filthy, lazy Mick.
01:43:07 I'm cool. You can tell I'm cool cause look, I'm mad. I'm mad. I'm so mad and I'm smoking cigarettes and I'm tough and I'm wearing a leather jacket.
01:43:22 Look how cool I am. I'm like in some urban environment. Well, I'm sure there's like security nearby.
Speaker 10
01:43:28 Yeah.
Devon Stack
01:43:32 There's Larry did a whole bunch of PSA's like this back then a whole bunch of this was just, you know, the one that they played during.
01:43:38 This.
01:43:40 During this special.
01:43:41 And I'm glad they left it in.
01:43:44 Good old MTV.
01:43:46 And then they go the other route.
01:43:49 You know, not only do you need to be upset and the other thing, by the way, I forgot to mention. Now that sounds like I don't care about race. I care about merit. Yeah, well, we all know that that went out the window because. Well, because.
01:44:02 It seems to be.
01:44:04 Inexplicably tied to.
01:44:06 Race. You know who would have thought? Who would have thought?
01:44:09 So then they go the uh.
01:44:10 The white guilt route with this guy.
Speaker 24
01:44:14 And somebody just told me he was driving a cab and he said you damn Arab, your phone will go home. What you doing here? It hurts so much.
Speaker 16
01:44:24 It hurts so much.
Devon Stack
01:44:27 They they they tell me. You you done foreigner? What? What are you doing here? What are you doing here? And it hurts so much.
Speaker 16
01:44:37 And racism?
01:44:39 Don't be * ****.
Speaker 7
01:44:43 It's easy for somebody getting stereotyped to fall back on that as like.
Devon Stack
01:44:47 A Dennis Leary didn't didn't do the trick.
01:44:51 Now when you get these these racist whites.
01:44:54 Who again, these. These are guys that these are the exact arguments that you're going to hear from white boomers today. And the reason why it's because that's what they were saying in the 90s. These were the boomers in the 90s saying these exact same things in the 90s.
01:45:06 Like, well, you know, I don't like this. I don't like the way things are going because it seems like, uh, we should all be the same. And you know, maybe you're using this, this DI stuff as an excuse to not perform or whatever.
01:45:19 Well, you know.
01:45:20 Sorry, but those arguments didn't really do anything. Did.
Speaker 6
01:45:22 They.
Speaker 7
01:45:23 It's easy for somebody to getting stereotyped to fall back on that.
01:45:26 Has like a scapegoat.
Speaker 30
01:45:29 They have Black History Month. They have black Awareness Month and we have Hispanic month. What happened to American month?
Speaker 6
01:45:35 White mom.
01:45:38 Yeah, it doesn't matter everybody.
Speaker 11
01:45:38 It's because they're lazy. They're lazy, they think. Well, I can use this as an excuse.
Numbers Lady
01:45:42 To stay on welfare and just blame everybody else.
Speaker 16
01:45:51 Don't stereotype ignore patterns.
Devon Stack
01:45:54 Ignore patterns.
01:45:57 All these things that these white people that were saying that is absolutely true that yeah, you're you're having all this special treatment for non whites that we're not getting. You're using all these excuses of racism to explain away your bad performance. But again just like last stream they avoid saying the obvious.
01:46:17 Just like last stream, that's the only conclusion that they can come to if you're not offering the other option, which is, guess what? You're just incompatible with this society.
01:46:28 You're just not going to work. You're not a good fit. We've tried to make you fit. We've tried to legislate. You fitting.
01:46:36 And it doesn't fit. That's right, classified, Ken.
01:46:43 So then they they talk more about, you know, this other black group that sucks and has a hard time, but then they kind of.
01:46:52 They kind of take.
01:46:52 This weird detour like this didn't actually make any a whole.
01:46:55 Lot of sense.
01:46:56 To me, I didn't understand why they went this direction, because I thought the whole idea was they're trying to show.
01:47:03 White or black groups that can't be.
01:47:08 Good at at rock'n'roll because white people are racist. You know? Like that it it that flies in the face of of the historic record. You know, like it's not like black musicians playing popular, popular popular music was like a new thing in the 90s and they were they were.
01:47:27 Countless popular Michael Jackson, just as an example like the number one pop star in the world at the at the time that they made this was a was a black person.
01:47:39 That, and most of the albums were being purchased by white people.
01:47:43 So it you know, the argument didn't make any sense, but anyway it doesn't make any sense here is that they they try to flip it.
01:47:49 Around.
01:47:51 Saying that and then also white people have a hard time getting into rap, but they didn't exactly.
01:47:59 Use white people.
Speaker 21
01:48:02 Official killer. I'm a woman thriller. I want to see you, girl. I'm gonna join.
01:48:10 That's the man right there. That's the man who kicked you all off for us. The cap.
01:48:17 We started all this. He's the one who always got us into the rap, you know, I didn't really like rap until he.
Speaker 32
01:48:25 Yeah, you're Sicilian.
Speaker 17
01:48:28 You wanna play with your Mario game? I had a big rings. It's a big tame.
01:48:33 Does Mario might be Super Bowl and super duper with a big tuper says no one's going to hit it like me because Mario has a big sheet. But I got a plus on that test because he's a big mess.
01:48:48 I'd be a Super Thurman, but I'm going to have a big day. He might have went through the past and the future, but I'm going to make a new game, have the nature and the model can't play like the two dogs on the man. Man, you want to hit it down with your big town.
01:49:07 Really can't be like a big brand.
Speaker 2
01:49:14 Spaghetti. Spaghetti. Spaghetti. He's nervous, but on the surface, he looks corn spaghetti, but he keeps on spaghetti. What? He wrote down the whole crowd goes so loud.
01:49:27 He opens his mouth with spaghetti, won't come out. He's choking. How? Everybody's choking now. The clocks run out. Times up. Spaghetti snap back to reality. Oh, there goes spaghetti.
01:49:39 There goes rabbit, he choked. He's so mad, but he won't give up spaghetti. No, he won't have it. He knows his own back. That he's broke. It don't matter. He's told spaghetti. He's broke. He's so stated that he knows when he goes back to this mobile home. That's when it's back to spaghetti. Better go back to this moment.
Speaker 9
01:49:59 Selfie.
Speaker 12
01:49:59 Love.
Speaker 2
01:50:01 It's better never let it go. You only get one shot. Do not miss your chance to blow. This opportunity comes once in a lifetime. Spaghetti better. Never let it go. Do not miss your chance to blow. This opportunity comes once in a lifetime.
Speaker 21
01:50:24 This for everybody rapping what you feel rapping.
01:50:27 Is what you have inside.
Speaker 5
01:50:29 Feel like if you can't respect yourself, then you can't.
01:50:31 Respect your waste.
Speaker 21
01:50:32 Not just for blacks. Wait, these aren't whites? They're Italian. These people, they sing about their own race. You know what I wanna sing about is everybody. No matter what they call or, no matter what, everything is. I want to think about the world.
01:50:52 All my friends are wrapping. It's like when we go out and party and hang out, we're hanging out cooking. You know, we're hanging out, eating dinner. We'll we'll make a line at it. But I'm saying that and I'm looking at all good. That looks so good. I hate some pasta. Vazul. Nice to you.
Speaker 6
01:51:00 Way.
Speaker 32
01:51:07 You're Sicilian, huh?
Speaker 21
01:51:10 No matter what you do, stay clean and sober, and then my wreck is over.
Speaker 3
01:51:21 Cause you.
Speaker 32
01:51:24 Your part eggplant.
Devon Stack
01:51:31 Yes, I couldn't really understand. I don't know the.
01:51:35 I didn't get the the whole point of that. They were just like and then these black guys are bad at rapping. They're like.
01:51:42 OK, OK.
01:51:47 Could they have found? Look. Could they have found worse, like white rappers?
01:51:54 I mean, for ***** sake, this ****, what is this ****? Like? What? I I didn't. I didn't do this. This is what's in there.
Speaker 21
01:51:58 My soul is for everybody rapping what you feel rapping.
01:52:11 My friends are like when we go out.
01:52:13 Party and hang out. We're hanging out. You know, we're hanging out, eating dinner. We'll we'll make a rhyme out of.
01:52:19 It, But I'm saying that and I'm looking at all good. I look so good. I ate some pasta puzzle.
Speaker 7
01:52:26 This is.
Devon Stack
01:52:28 I mean, that's anyway.
01:52:35 It's all fun. So we're we're just having fun. We're all having fun. Settle down there, spaghetti.
01:52:45 Oh, I just like, oh God, I I and I cut up there's, there's a lot of like.
01:52:51 I could have made that so much worse.
01:52:55 I don't know where they found these box anyway anyway.
01:52:59 So they talk about how.
01:53:02 White people have hard time rapping. I guess. I don't know.
01:53:07 Ah yeah, anyway.
Speaker 19
01:53:10 He asked me if I worked out if.
01:53:11 I.
01:53:12 You know, was into working out in the gym or in the Nautilus and or whatever, and I told him no, that I just work out at home and it looks everything else. You you colored, you know, I must be in your jeans or something and.
01:53:23 So I just kind of if you want them.
Speaker 27
01:53:24 The magic *****.
Devon Stack
01:53:27 And you start getting the uncomfortable thing. You can't even say something nice.
01:53:35 You can't even say something nice. Oh.
01:53:39 You don't work out and you're, like, all ripped. That must be in your jeans or so that's that's. That's like they have that something bad.
01:53:49 But this is when they they start doing that ****. Well, you you can't even point out a difference that's positive. You can't say Asians are good at math. You can't.
01:53:56 Say.
01:53:57 You know, black people have an.
01:54:01 Easier time building muscle mass.
01:54:04 You know, Rush Limbaugh, and in fact famously lost a job. Pretty pretty. I don't know what the timeline I'd say maybe like within a decade of of this being produced because he mentioned that there was a a black football player.
01:54:21 There would be faster because it was black.
01:54:25 That that he had like an advantage because he had black jeans basically.
01:54:30 And and that was enough to get it. He they fired him from it. It was like.
01:54:32 I don't know if he was ESPN or whatever it was.
01:54:35 But they had him as a sports commentator, briefly.
01:54:39 And that's what that's what did it was that he acknowledged that black people might be more athletic.
01:54:48 But you can't do that.
01:54:50 Because.
01:54:53 Yeah, black people could say it, by the way.
01:54:56 In the same way, you can't say but, but black people.
01:54:59 Can say.
01:55:00 You can't say things positive about black people, but they could say it if a black person were to say, well, of course I'm running faster. I got these black jeans.
01:55:11 All the white people be like, oh, you're correct on that one, Sir.
01:55:17 They wouldn't call him a racist.
01:55:21 So basically, white people were the **** end of of of this, of every stick involved in this this ******* experiment.
Speaker 12
01:55:39 Call me.
Speaker 29
01:55:43 ******.
Devon Stack
01:56:02 And that and that's that's what constituted is is us getting along in the 90s. This was the edge.
01:56:08 A black guy calling you ****** and a white guy calling him like it, which is very much in line with that, that anti racism special we we went over with that chick from 9 of the Jewish chick from 90210 where she was like, oh, look at all these and ***** and fagots, you know.
01:56:27 And I was like, what the?
01:56:29 Because this was, paradoxically, well, you couldn't say nice things about black people. Somehow we were going to break down the barriers by by doing this **** that you would never be able. You're only allowed to do if a black person or a Jew is standing next.
01:56:44 To you telling you to do it.
Speaker 21
01:56:51 YD.
Devon Stack
01:57:08 Ah yes, racism solved. So edgy, edgy MTV.
Speaker 28
01:57:15 I'm sure that I'm racist because.
01:57:20 When I look at.
01:57:20 Myself.
01:57:21 When I think of how my kind of my reactions to other people, the way I live with other people, I think I'm racist. I'm going to face up to this and it's something I got to deal with.
Devon Stack
01:57:35 See, this was the beginning of all white people are racist again. People talked, you know, 1010 years ago. Remember what everyone flipping the **** out when black people were just saying this? Well, why wouldn't they be saying this?
01:57:47 Let's go back to the 90s before this ****. No, this ****, this is 1990.
01:57:54 This was already.
01:57:56 The the social order is being passed down.
01:58:00 If you're white, doesn't matter if you're literally in a in a a propaganda piece.
01:58:07 An anti racism propaganda piece when you can't be.
01:58:10 Any more of an ally quote, UN quote.
01:58:14 Than being some white **** that shows up.
01:58:18 Looking like a deer and ******* headlights.
01:58:23 Trying to tell all the white people watching that they're they're evil racist.
01:58:32 You're still, you know, you're still one of them. You're still one of the racist. You're one of the baddies. All white people are racist. So it's again. It's not new. Nothing's new.
01:58:41 Pattern recognition is bad, you know. Here's here's this.
01:58:43 Whole trope, if you will.
01:58:46 Where? Oh, white women are scared of black.
Speaker 15
01:58:48 People where they they ******* should be.
Speaker 20
01:58:50 What makes?
01:58:50 Uncomfortable about people who aren't like ourselves. Racist ideas and attitudes often stem from ugliness.
Devon Stack
01:59:01 They should be.
01:59:03 They ******* should be.
01:59:08 But then it's MTV so that what they do is they say, you know, white people, you know, what would would solve all this racism, all these misconceptions that you have of black people? It's really out of ignorance. It's because, you know, prior to the great needle migration, you didn't really have any proximities.
01:59:27 People you know, all your younger millennials and whatnot that are that are watching this on TV thanks to the the white flight of your parents and grandparents, you're probably living in like some Lily white suburb and.
01:59:42 So you just don't.
01:59:43 Really have a lot of experience.
01:59:45 With black culture and so if you want to know why you shouldn't be afraid of a black man in an elevator, I mean, that's just it's it's, it's just ignorance. It's ignorance, really, on your part to be afraid of the this look, he's wearing a suit and tie, right? He's wearing a suit and tie.
02:00:05 So yeah, I tell I tell you. Educate.
02:00:07 Yourself writing.
02:00:09 Educate yourself.
02:00:10 And what you should do is is, you know, maybe listen to rap music, rap music would probably give you a better indication as to what the black struggle is.
Speaker 4
02:00:21 Right.
Speaker 20
02:00:21 Rap music has replaced that ignorance with information about black culture. It's also provided a glimpse at the pervasive problems of race and society.
Devon Stack
02:00:31 OK.
02:00:33 OK. In that case, let's let's take a look at some popular rap music and see.
02:00:39 What? What, what?
02:00:40 Are black people all about? Let's just let's just see.
Speaker 33
02:00:56 Hours in this house. In this House there's some hoes in this House, there's some hoes.
Speaker 11
02:01:04 537 days a week.
Speaker 33
02:01:07 There's this.
Speaker 34
02:01:09 Ohh, good week. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. You ******* with some whitish.
02:01:19 Bring up *******.
02:01:25 Everything you got this.
02:01:38 Let's see right in your face. It's like a credit card.
02:01:41 White.
Speaker 15
02:01:47 Huh.
Devon Stack
02:01:48 So that's is that the black? Ohh. Devin, you're being unfair. You're being unfair. That the times are different in the 90s.
02:01:57 Times OK.
02:01:59 OK, the Times were different in the 90s, right, the 90s we keep getting told there was so much better back then. So how about I get this random sampling in fact that just to make it easier because I know you guys are white. So a lot of white people have, especially if you're from Europe, you might have a hard time understanding the vernacular, the accents of the black people.
02:02:19 Especially in the 90s, and it was a little bit different. You know, times have changed.
02:02:23 Changed and so use maybe terms you might not be familiar with. So what I did.
02:02:29 Is I created this AI? I created this AI that would randomly choose rap songs from the the 1990s and as it would play the rap songs from the 1990s, it would try to extract the the messages of black culture.
02:02:49 And display it on the screen for us. So what this AI is going to do is it's going to listen to these totally random songs from the 1990s. When you know on the time period that this was produced and it will try to display for those of us who are white.
02:03:09 And might not really understand the the black struggle and and understand black culture. The AI is going to, you know, do the hard work, the heavy lifting for us and it's going to show us in, in plain English, you know, white people, English that we can understand.
02:03:25 So that we can maybe relate and understand and see why white women shouldn't be afraid of a black guy in an elevator. You know it's it's just, it's all out of misunderstanding. And MTV says this is this is the prescription, right. This is the prescription that we need to take in order to solve this illness of our, of our internalized white racism.
02:03:46 So let's just have a look here.
Speaker 9
02:03:50 1994 S Central Cartel is back in the House prodigy having the wine son and the mouthpiece, and we straight. Yeah, something didn't sound like I said.
02:04:12 And only for the real profit.
02:04:18 It's me. I'm in charge. I don't think so, because I gotta throw stash and break it down for 189 with the hustle as well. They wanna know.
02:04:38 The OG.
Speaker 10
02:04:39 Came up in the hood. That's a small.
02:04:41 Top down here.
02:04:43 Pushing that **** since a young having everything you.
02:04:48 Candy paints on the pants with the most fat pants in the damn reputation. They're giving up love through the nation moving. Geez, on the airplane, hitting up the Midwest, dropping off cocaine. Then the gang went.
02:05:02 Full blow. She's going down in the hood and the goal is subtle, but not use a deep blood. Using them up the ************* as a decoy. It got bloody with them, texting them. Blocked him. I wish a would try to stop this.
Speaker 2
02:05:17 If you're coming to my town and try to slow the dog down, you must be casted down with rather be tried by 12 than carried by 6 not a. I saw my name in the.
Speaker 6
02:05:25 Book at your funeral.
Speaker 2
02:05:27 It's on my hip with their next triplets cause around would be tried by 12 be.
02:05:31 Carried by 6/6.
Speaker 6
02:05:33 Anybody.
Speaker 2
02:05:34 Saturday night and we like to party, but folks are flocking around, so we might catch your body early Sunday morning. Don't really wanna hurt nobody. See what they're trying to get. I already got it. Jump, *************.
Speaker 23
02:05:47 Just the schema.
Speaker 2
02:05:52 Will be tried by 12 and there goes another statistic running through Ballistics.
02:06:00 Witnessing I'm wicked, but that's how I kick it. But I'll be the ******** who blast and didn't get blasted or kiss some caskets. I'll put your wig back, kids. That sucker look who died. Body will be identified. Mama and Papa will cry. Your bitchass man says he'll testify.
02:06:16 To see me try.
02:06:17 But here's that line up on the same corner.
Speaker 9
02:06:20 So you did.
Speaker 2
02:06:21 And I'm still facing the bit because I rather be tried by 12 than carried by 6 not a.
Speaker 9
02:06:26 Not the flat, but I did anyway.
Speaker 10
02:06:37 Give me something you can't understand.
Speaker 12
02:06:39 Bam.
Speaker 2
02:06:42 Something you can't understand, something you can't understand.
02:06:52 Off the ground this we beat the information heard of US official Queensbridge murderers. Tomorrow comes equipped for warfare. Beware of my fine family who got enough shots to share for.
02:07:02 Photos who wanna profile and boast Rock You in your face? Tap your brain with your nose balls. You all alone in these streets, cussing every man for themself in this land we be gunning and keep them. Show crews running like they're supposed to. They come around, but they never come close to. I can see it inside your face it in the wrong place. I was like, I just get that whole.
02:07:22 Body laced up with bullet holes and such. Treat the wrong words, man, and you will get sucked. You can put your hold on me against my teammate. I guarantee you it'll be your very last time breathing. You're simple words. Just don't move me. You're my.
02:07:35 We've made the you all have been the game and don't deserve to be a player still made me have to pull your name out. You threw a step away. More gunshots to make. You never say I'm only 19, but my mind is older when the things get for real. My Walmart turns cold enough to get six. Another story gets told. It ain't nothing really. And you're done with Philly.
Speaker 11
02:07:53 This is.
02:08:00 LeBron James to take a look at a real life that's crazy and get ready to die. Any last words before your friend.
02:08:31 That tell me, do you have any laugh?
Speaker 35
02:08:33 Suicide to suicide. Whoever suicide to suicide.
02:08:38 Side suicide into suicide. Suicide into suicide.
Speaker 9
02:08:45 You wanted to die, commit suicide. Down 1800 cyanide line.
02:08:51 Right. Your neck and jerk it. The trick didn't work. Your lighting up from the first day of.
02:09:00 First, after watching Jackie Gleason, we'll get to what recent guns down the captain for no ******* reason and get some LSD or what drink from the bar for how you really crashed the car like this. This store got bought for the war in front of alligator. Let it roar back to the function.
02:09:20 And the caboose, the hell easily touched the third rail. You're locked up chicken. Now you just got fried.
Speaker 12
02:09:22 Visit.
Speaker 9
02:09:29 Because this is.
Speaker 4
02:09:35 Has a little.
02:09:36 Hi my mind starts stripping a tear drops my eye, my body temperature fall. I'm shaking and they breaking.
02:09:44 Trying to save the door.
02:09:46 Popping on my chest and not screaming, I stopped breathing. Damn my feet. Damon, dear God, I want to keep you. Save me. I can't dive my boots.
Speaker 2
02:09:55 They have my.
Speaker 4
02:09:55 Baby, I think it's too late for pregnant.
Speaker 12
02:10:02 Style to make you make it better.
02:10:10 Much better.
02:10:17 My eyes are closed.
Speaker 4
02:10:21 Murder was the case that they gave me.
Speaker 34
02:10:28 They gave me.
Speaker 4
02:10:32 Murder was the case that they gave me.
Speaker 20
02:10:34 So many white people. Rap music has replaced that ignorance with information about black culture.
Devon Stack
02:10:41 Wow, that was a lot of information about black culture. We just got there that was.
02:10:48 Yeah. And maybe they're right. All all white people had to do to know what black people were all about was to just listen to their music.
Speaker 15
02:10:58 That's all you had to do.
Devon Stack
02:11:02 And yes, I did throw in some Mexicans there.
02:11:05 Cypress Hill, although they there's a ice.
02:11:08 Cube was in the video.
02:11:09 I don't know if he helped make that song.
02:11:12 Ohh but yeah, that's so that was the big problem. And The funny thing is this is this was the cringe *******.
02:11:19 White guy look.
02:11:21 This you're going to watch this and it's just going to be it's going to be painful to watch, but you need to own up to it. White people need to own up to this.
02:11:34 Because this isn't boomers, this is this is well, he's probably a.
02:11:38 Gen. X or this guy?
02:11:45 After listening to all you know all that information that we just got about black culture thanks to my my super awesome AI that I developed.
02:11:53 That was able to extract that for you and put it in plain English.
02:11:59 Listen to this ****.
02:12:03 I I'm I'm I'm smelling spaghetti though I I have to admit.
02:12:09 As I watch this, I'm smelling spaghetti.
Speaker
02:12:13 Yeah.
Devon Stack
02:12:15 So I'm being a little liberal with the word white here again. But here's what we got.
Speaker 34
02:12:20 What do you like best?
Speaker 32
02:12:20 About Public Enemy.
Speaker 26
02:12:21 Oh, I like the way they rap about black rights and stuff. And it teaches us a lot of stuff, you know, about how black youth and stuff are struggling.
Speaker 15
02:12:33 I like. I like the.
Devon Stack
02:12:34 Public Enemy because it teaches us about black struggles.
02:12:41 It teaches us about the black struggle.
02:12:58 Straight up ***** worship.
Speaker 20
02:13:02 Members of racial minorities who have achieved material success often find that their improved economic status brings with it a different set of racial barriers.
Speaker 14
02:13:13 We woke up yesterday morning and couldn't get a cab. We had cab drivers turning on their not for higher signs. Every time we try to go.
Speaker 5
02:13:21 To a cab.
Speaker 14
02:13:22 The City of New.
02:13:23 Beautiful city in New York and I said, damn, I don't feel like being black today. Not meaning that I don't feel like being white today. I just don't feel like being white today. I mean, come back.
Devon Stack
02:13:35 Ohh yeah, even even if you become like a rich black guy and dressed like a mobster it it's still rough because it's harder, harder to get a cab.
02:13:47 Used to the struggle never ends.
02:13:50 It's hard to get a cab in New York.
02:13:54 It's hard to get a cab in New York. Look, we'll even play a little.
02:13:57 Part of a song about this.
Speaker 21
02:13:59 Mr. cat. Rapper don't like my kind.
Speaker 18
02:14:03 Of skin when we first first moved here in 86, we got this letter about a year after from our neighbor.
Speaker 25
02:14:16 The doctor. My name.
02:14:19 Is slow Rodriguez explaining very.
Speaker 18
02:14:26 Clearly that he did not like me for being Mexican and my wife for being black or African American, and that no matter how many albums I would sell or how many people like my music, I would still always was going to be trashed to him.
Devon Stack
02:14:43 Yeah, OK. Something tells me there's more to that story.
02:14:46 There there, there's a neighbor who's got a famous rock star that lives next door to him, and he's just like, you know what? I'm going to write that ******* beat her a letter that Beamer and his negress wife **** them.
02:14:59 **** them. I I live in Beverly Hills.
02:15:03 Then this big *** mansion. And I I'm just. I'm gonna tell I'm gonna give him a piece of my racist mind. I'm going to write him a letter and say you ******* ****** trash.
02:15:16 You're always going to be bean or trash.
02:15:21 Doesn't matter how many ******* records you sell.
02:15:26 You're always you're going to be garbage. Yeah, I'm sure that that's that's an accurate depiction of what was going on there.
Speaker 20
02:15:36 Being different is sometimes taken to extremes.
Devon Stack
02:15:43 You know, queue up the the burning swastika B roll.
02:15:48 And then we're going to interview a white racist, but we're going to clip out just the part that we find the most offensive. And because white racists at the time were media illiterate, no, they didn't. They didn't understand how they were going to be.
02:16:07 Edit it and and portray it and they didn't have a platform to respond to.
02:16:11 It right like this is this.
02:16:13 Is in an era when if if you got any kind of media play at all as a pro white.
Speaker 16
02:16:20 Person.
Devon Stack
02:16:21 You had. You should have understood. Many of them didn't.
02:16:26 That not only were they going to cut up.
02:16:29 What you said to only include the parts that would sound negative and shocking to the audience at home, you'd have no way.
02:16:36 Of responding to it.
02:16:39 In 1990, there was no Internet to speak of.
02:16:43 You couldn't take the Twitter and be like, oh, MTV News. They really mischaracterized what I had said. In fact, here's a, you know, some iPhone footage of the full. Yeah, you couldn't do any of that stuff.
02:17:00 But a lot of these people were convinced that.
02:17:03 You know, for one reason or another if.
Speaker 15
02:17:05 They were to.
Devon Stack
02:17:06 Accept these interviews with organizations like you know Sumner Redstones Viacom.
02:17:16 They they would get a fair hearing or that somehow their message would would reach people or, you know, somehow would be there would be some kind of positive outcome for them.
02:17:31 Well, obviously there wasn't.
Speaker 8
02:17:35 We will begin to expel all the Mexicans and Central Americans who come into this country and then we would encourage, through agreements, if possible, the black race to leave North America. The Asians would be immediately.
Speaker 14
02:17:55 Out of.
Speaker 8
02:17:57 Especially the Asians.
02:17:59 If it was resisted, then it would be handled.
Speaker 20
02:18:03 Tom Nexter is the leader of an organization called White Aryan Resistance, one of over 250 known hate groups in the United States. Now his media savvy son John carries the racist message to a new generation. He produces racist newspapers and cable television shows.
02:18:18 Which were reports on racial terrorism and hate group activities, as well as a steady stream of inflammatory images.
Devon Stack
02:18:27 And that's it.
02:18:30 That's what you got for that hour long interview you did with MTV. That's what they that they use. That's the footage they use.
02:18:38 You telling everyone that you're going to kick them out of America?
02:18:43 And then a bunch of B roll of flaming swastikas with white guys, with AK-40 sevens running around it, and, you know, throwing out the Hitler salute.
02:18:58 That's it. That's all you got?
02:19:01 That that was the your.
02:19:03 Your contribution to this, this piece of propaganda.
02:19:11 Is look at the scary white people.
Speaker 20
02:19:14 But what drives some people to take such extreme positions? Two causes are uncertainty and fear, concerns fueled by the current economic recession.
Speaker 8
02:19:24 A lot of people today around this country are.
02:19:26 Deployed when the factories are closing down, people are angry. People are searching, people are weak.
Speaker 32
02:19:32 At the time and.
Speaker 8
02:19:32 These groups take advantage of the weak individual.
Speaker 20
02:19:36 From the most extreme acts of hate, to the mildest forms of prejudice, most racism can be traced to ideas planted early in life.
Devon Stack
02:19:46 Yes, ideas planted early in life.
02:19:52 You know, like like experiencing patterns.
02:20:00 So then they they interview. This is the take away for the the parents at home that are watching TV and.
02:20:06 They want to be cool.
Speaker 32
02:20:08 It's never going to end unless it ends in the home we're trying. We really are.
Devon Stack
02:20:15 I bet you are we're trying.
02:20:18 It's never going to end unless we brainwash our kids to be anti racist.
02:20:23 And for our white daughters to go black guys. So then they go heavy into the the race, mixing stuff like just showing lots of footage of white girls with black guys and saying how awesome it is.
02:20:35 For white girls to be with black guys.
Speaker 20
02:20:41 So what about racism?
02:20:42 And love.
02:20:43 2% of all American marriages are interracial. That's over a million couples, yet one out of four Americans believe that such marriages should be outlawed. So it's not surprising that interracial couples get hassled from many directions.
Devon Stack
02:21:01 So I push that for a little bit.
Speaker 36
02:21:14 Racism is not something that you're born with. You could put a white kid, Mexican kid, Puerto Rican kid, black kid, Indian kid in a sandbox, and they'll all play until they're 80 years old, unless somebody comes in there and tells them something's bad about the other person. It's something is definitely taught.
Devon Stack
02:21:31 Yeah, but sometimes the person doing the teaching.
02:21:33 Is the black kid.
02:21:38 But that's how they end it. They end it with, you know, we're all the same. It's. And that was the. That was the view that racism was just this made-up bad ideology.
02:21:50 It was this superstition that that seemed to mostly afflict white people.
02:21:56 It was a superstition that had no basis in reality.
02:22:00 And so, because of that, it would be easy to salt and look it would have.
02:22:04 Been if it was right.
Speaker 26
02:22:09 If if all if all.
Devon Stack
02:22:11 Racism just came from a weird, primitive superstition that had no basis in reality. It was just this wrong idea.
02:22:21 Look, white societies have had lots of wrong ideas.
02:22:25 In the past that have, they've undergone some kind of revolutionary.
02:22:32 Discoveries that have, you know, changed the way they viewed the world.
02:22:39 And in a matter of a generation or less.
02:22:41 The entire society conforms to the new way of thinking because of whatever the you know, some scientific discovery or or whatever.
02:22:52 And it's no big deal. It's in the rear view mirror.
02:23:02 So why is it that if this is the case, right?
02:23:05 Like this is.
02:23:06 Another reason why we have to be honest about it, because just like if you don't give black people the reality option, if you don't give them the reality option that you know what? Sorry, that just on average black people do not are not capable of performing at the same level that white people on average are able to perform at. And so they're always going to underperform. That's just a a biological reality. You don't have to like it.
02:23:26 That's just the way that.
02:23:27 It is, and if we can't be honest about it, the only conclusion they can come to is it has to be some outside force that's causing it. There has to be white racism has to be what's causing it, because there's no other logical explanation. There's just not. There's not. So if you lie about it and and lie to yourself even, and and pretend as if there's not a difference between.
02:23:47 Black people and white people.
02:23:49 You force the black people to hate you.
02:23:53 Right, in the same way that's true. It's also true that if we act as if, well, it, it's just it. It is just like some false belief. It's this superstition. It's this thing that really, if we could just get one generation of kids and brainwash them into believing that, you know, we're all the same and we're all one happy.
02:24:12 Family and it's just a a matter of skin color and and whatever.
02:24:17 If it doesn't work.
02:24:21 Then what are you left to conclude?
02:24:24 If that's the reality that you're buying into because you're too afraid to be honest, that's actually not the problem. And that racism isn't just out of coming out of nowhere, right? It's not just something that's pulled out of thin air that the the concept of racial stereotypes is is is just based off nothing, right? Like if you, if you can't admit that, that's all ********.
02:24:47 Then what alternative?
02:24:48 Do you have left when it doesn't work?
02:24:51 And it doesn't work. Here we are all these years later and we're in the exact same ******* spot, if not worse.
02:24:57 Why doesn't it work?
02:25:04 The same answer. It has to be white racism. There has to be something unique about white people.
02:25:11 That causes them to falsely perceive a situation where non whites have different behaviors that are innate.
02:25:20 And therefore they treat these different groups differently.
02:25:23 To accommodate these differences.
02:25:29 And this is the whole systemic racism, the white supremacist society stuff that that look if if you're not, if you're not, if you're not willing, if you don't, if you can't grow a pear and just and tell the truth, that is the only other option. You're leaving people.
02:25:44 That is the only other conclusion you can come to.
02:25:48 Because we've thrown.
02:25:51 Good money after bad on this problem and it's not getting fixed. Nothing. It's getting worse. If anything, it's getting worse.
02:26:01 So why would it be getting worse if we're putting all these resources into solving this problem? That's not even really a problem. It's really just a problem that white people are creating by being ********.
02:26:16 Then the only the the only answer is white people are just inherently ********.
Speaker 10
02:26:21 Yeah.
Devon Stack
02:26:26 You know what? It's not just black people that are coming to that conclusion.
02:26:30 And it's not even just the fellow whites that are coming at conclusion. There's white boomers that that believe that.
02:26:37 What is this diversity experiments not working? It must be us.
02:26:44 It must be us.
02:26:51 And that's that's the that's the end of the the points of view. Racism points of view. And again, this is just one of many of the the propaganda pieces that MTV put out, the funnier one is I think going to be on on.
02:27:08 Saturday.
02:27:10 The one that was discovered unearthed by Night Nation review.
02:27:16 We will.
02:27:17 We'll go over that on Saturday, but I just thought it was important to show especially just the stuff like the like, the separate graduations, the separate Proms, a lot of people thinking that was some kind of new thing. That's not a new thing, it's.
02:27:31 Been around forever.
02:27:33 All the all the same complaints. I mean, it's never going to stop. It's never.
02:27:37 Going to stop.
02:27:38 This is the reality that you are damning your children to exist in. Only worse because that I guess that's the only thing that does change is it gets progressively worse every year as there are fewer white people to blame.
02:27:58 And The thing is is is the there are fewer targets to aim at.
02:28:06 As the white population shrinks.
02:28:10 You're increasing. All you're doing is you're increasing the.
02:28:12 Likelihood that you, you.
02:28:13 Or your children become one of those targets.
02:28:18 Because they'll there'll be fewer white human.
02:28:20 Shields in the way.
Speaker
02:28:21 So.
Devon Stack
02:28:31 So anyway, let's take a look at a. Let's take a look at hyper Chance here.
02:28:39 All right.
02:28:44 Racism points of view.
Speaker 16
02:28:50 Beach Boys.
Devon Stack
02:28:54 Beach Boys.
Speaker 32
02:28:55 Cash school checkout.
Speaker 28
02:29:02 I'd like to return this duck.
Devon Stack
02:29:05 Beach Boys says congratulations on your first link free hyper chat session last stream. Who says gay shaming doesn't work? Exactly. Yes it does.
02:29:15 Yes it does. It works for like a second, because then hammer authorizing.
02:29:20 Tamra thorazine.
02:29:25 Says I'm only sending this picture because it answers questions about odyssey that you've been asking for many months now, and it has something that you've asked for.
Speaker 16
02:29:36 Ah, well, let me.
Devon Stack
02:29:37 Tell you a look at this.
02:29:42 Oh, OK, this is about what the future of Odyssey.
02:29:48 According to ChatGPT 4, let's see what it says. As of 2024, Odyssey, the video platform, is owned by Forward Research. This acquisition was part of a broader strategy to integrate Odyssey with the our Weave network, which is known for its decentralized data storage.
02:30:07 Solutions. This move is intended to leverage our weaves blockchain technology to.
02:30:13 Create a more.
02:30:13 Resilient and censorship resistant platform. That's good news, I guess so far.
02:30:19 Library incorporated the original parent company of Odyssey, faced significant financial difficulties and was placed in receivership due to its debts and legal issues. Consequently, the company's assets, including Odyssey, were sold to forward research to ensure the platforms continued operation and development.
02:30:39 Forward researched the company that recently acquired the video platform. Odyssey is operated by Sam Williams, who is also the founder of the of our Weave blockchain.
02:30:51 Well, at least Williams doesn't sound like a Jewish last name. Forward research aims to integrate Odyssey with our weave network to enhance its decentralized censorship resilience capability, Loblaw.
Speaker 10
02:31:02 Yeah.
Devon Stack
02:31:04 There are sources confirming that forward research made the purchase of Odyssey according to an article based.
02:31:11 From based underground.
02:31:13 Ford research, led by Sam Williams, blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah. I don't know who Sam Williams is, though I wonder if we can find out easily and it's such a a basic name I I there's probably Brazilian Sam Williams that are going to come up.
02:31:29 Sam Williams.
02:31:37 Sam Williams, what was the name of the company?
02:31:41 Our weave. How do you spell that?
Speaker 14
02:31:47 Uh.
Devon Stack
02:31:50 Our weave.
02:31:55 I don't like the name forward though. You know, because the Jewish forward.
Speaker 23
02:32:01 Uh.
Speaker 16
02:32:05 Oh, is is he German?
Devon Stack
02:32:09 Williams isn't a German name, but.
Speaker 28
02:32:19 Hmm.
Devon Stack
02:32:28 I see if I don't see like just. I don't know. I'm gonna find. It's like a bio on.
02:32:31 Him. I don't really see like a bio on him.
Speaker 21
02:32:42 Well you seem.
Devon Stack
02:32:43 I'll tell you what, here's a quote from him that makes him sound like a.
02:32:46 Free speech guy at least.
02:32:48 I founded the RE weave protocol along with my friends at the R Weave team. Our goal is to create an open permanent collection of humanity's important ideas and history so well. I doubt he thinks my ideas are important. He might think it's important for historical context that could be good outside the control of any individual or group. That's also good.
02:33:08 We believe that free speech and expression is foundational uh foundational component of any just society.
02:33:15 Just as much in cyberspace as in physical space.
Speaker 10
02:33:18 Yeah.
Devon Stack
02:33:20 Well, that's, that's all positive.
02:33:23 All right, that's all. That's very positive. And I I will, I won't gay link you because you are correct, this is at least for once a relevant relevant link.
02:33:39 That's this is this seems like a positive development.
02:33:43 This is kind of what I was hoping for.
02:33:46 And at least at least I don't know, they don't mention that that there was a Jewish the literal Jewish supremacist that used to.
02:33:52 Run it but.
02:33:52 He was a free speech absolutist, so I don't know if he's still at the helm of Odyssey.
02:33:59 You know, it just doesn't own it anymore. I don't know. I forget the guys name, so I can't quickly look it up.
02:34:03 That's gonna. That's that's that's a positive development. So thank you there hammer of Thorazine. Potato.
02:34:13 Potato Mutt says Happy Juneteenth Day Vaughn just a quick correction on the sign off on your previous string, you said Robert De Niro's father was a fagot who left his family. This is.
02:34:25 Not true.
02:34:26 No, no, no, that's it is true.
Speaker 15
02:34:31 I'll look it up here.
Devon Stack
02:34:40 Almost 1000% sure. Parents. Yeah. Robert De Niro senior. Yeah. He was literally a ******. Yeah, you're wrong. Uh. Let's see here.
02:34:53 Bump, Bump, bump, bump.
02:35:00 Where was this at?
02:35:01 This, at least according to Wikipedia.
02:35:05 Yeah, he was a.
02:35:07 Here we go.
02:35:10 Yeah, right here.
02:35:14 Let's see. Well, his mother, alright, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah. Robert De Niro was born in Manhattan, blah, blah, blah.
02:35:22 His father was Irish and Italian, while his mother was Dutch. His parents, who had met painting in painting classes, blah blah separated when he was two years old after his father announced that he was gay.
Speaker 23
02:35:36 Hey.
Devon Stack
02:35:37 So there you go. According to Wikipedia, I'm not.
02:35:39 Wrong.
02:35:41 You said I I have a suspicion you're confusing with something you read about the Nero was something you read about OJ Simpson back when? Nope. Nope. It's right here. You can look at early life. Robert Deniro. Wikipedia. Robert Deniro's father was a heterosexual semi famous painter. Nope, he was a.
02:35:57 A gay famous painter.
02:36:02 You're you're just wrong. Potato mud.
02:36:04 I'm not, you know, I'm just I I understand because you are.
Speaker 21
02:36:12 I'm a potato. Big shot.
Numbers Lady
02:36:13 Always have to be lucky child.
Devon Stack
02:36:22 Yeah. So according to according Wikipedia, he was, uh.
02:36:28 He was a gay guy.
02:36:31 So yeah, there you go. What was the last thing you say upon his passing in 1933? His son dedicated his directorial debut. To him, a film of Brocks tell you looking at, well, what I'll possibly look into Brock's tail, but you're wrong about his dad being a fad. It says right here.
02:36:51 Says that he was a fad and that's why his parents got divorced.
02:36:55 And he died. Yeah. He died in 1933.
02:37:00 So he got the the year right? But yeah, he was he was a.
02:37:03 A *** painter.
02:37:06 So there you go, chosen Jawa. Dev. And I've heard you mentioned that the culture of critique quite a few times. I'm interested in reading it and was wondering if you could give a quick impromptu book review. Also. I've listened to some George Lincoln Rockwell lately interesting speeches. I'll catch the replay.
02:37:25 Yeah, it's it's nothing you can really.
02:37:27 Give a quick.
02:37:28 Rundown on it's.
02:37:29 It's a thick book. It I mean the the the simplest way I could break it down is it discusses Jewish.
02:37:39 Evolutionary survival strategies as a diaspora people in other countries you know and basically.
02:37:49 I mean it.
02:37:50 It just gives you a.
02:37:52 The scientific explanation as to the.
02:37:55 Behavior that we all.
02:37:58 Know about Jews like it just explains.
02:38:02 What we already know, like what we already observe, right, it's just a it's a A.
02:38:09 A very well documented and thorough explanation as to why they might behave that way. So like I said, there's no quick way to explain it, and I think most, most people kind of get it. It's on on a basic level, so I wouldn't be saying new.
02:38:29 But yeah, take take a look at that book.
02:38:32 I don't. I'm sure you can still find it just because it's not an Amazon doesn't. You can't find it. A lowly scribe in God's army says June 10th. The Jews in Houston, TX reveal or refuse to give up their slaves. So the army had to invade all the sugar and rice plantations are long gone now.
02:38:52 You know, the Jews did not want to give up their slaves, and paradoxically, they don't want to give up on making you pay for them.
02:38:59 Potato Mott says. I suggest chosen Jawa. Look up the video culture of critique for normies by the band YouTuber The Leftovers. It should be mirrored on bit shooting odyssey well. There you go. There's a perhaps a if you don't want to read the book, there's a quick run down that someone has produced there, but I haven't seen it so. But you know, Potato Month seems to think.
02:39:19 That's good, but.
02:39:21 Potato mutt, though also thought that Robert De Niro's dad wasn't a fagot, so he might be wrong.
02:39:26 Bellicose critique says you're the same age as I am, and we're not getting any younger. If you're serious about actually building a community, I'd be willing to invest $1 million into it. It can't be in the desert, though. For ***** sake. I don't know if I can believe you because your your hyper chat is $1.00 and you're trying to claim that you've got $1,000,000.
02:39:49 To invest.
02:39:51 I don't know. Well, I'll tell you what. If we get to that phase of.
02:39:58 Of I. Like I said, it's not the kind of thing I'm going to talk about on air, but I I will say that I have been in conversations with some people about what to do about this in terms of relocating people, and I've entertained the idea of not being in the desert. It would, depending on where I ended up going, it would make.
02:40:19 Beekeeping, as an example, infinitely easier. I'm not married to the desert. I enjoy the desert. But you know, I'll tell you what.
02:40:29 Talking to me about living in the desert in late June while my air conditioner can't be on because I'm streaming, that's the time to do it, I guess, right?
02:40:38 So, uh, you know, it's it's not my favorite place in the world, but I'll. I'll let people know if we ever we get to that that phase of things.
02:40:49 Potato, mutt says. Does anyone know whatever happened to the leftovers? He was pretty active around 2016, with YouTube and Patreon, and had similar videos about rules for radicals and homage to Catalonia, but vanished after getting banned. I've seen someone suggest he has alternative hypothesis.
02:41:09 But I can't confirm this. I'm not familiar with the leftovers, so.
02:41:14 I couldn't tell you. I couldn't tell you. Maybe someone in chat knows blue or blue. North Wind says every time I hear Marky Mark, I want to commit a hate crime. When I was growing up, he was our idol and he kept committing hate crimes.
02:41:31 He kept committing hate crimes. I'm not sure I understand that reference based Polish crusader says Hello Devin has requested I am providing you a link to the rest of the sensitivity sensitivity training video.
02:41:45 I looked up the production company for the videos, Copeland Griggs Productions, which led me to their founder, Lewis Brown. Griggs I found he still has an active LinkedIn site. The LinkedIn site had a link itself to his YouTube page. Oh really? Because I actually, I almost got that far in the rabbit hole. I didn't.
02:42:04 I didn't keep going with it though.
02:42:08 So that's actually quite interesting and maybe his other YouTube channel, his other stuff. All right, good job. So now see, these are the links I don't hate.
02:42:18 These are links that are appropriate.
02:42:23 So let me uh.
02:42:26 Let me copy this.
02:42:32 Yeah, we definitely need to go through the rest of those.
02:42:37 These don't come up via YouTube search. Well, man, that's that might explain it, because I I did search YouTube, I searched everywhere for like and I knew the titles of them and.
02:42:46 They.
02:42:46 Never came up. If the playlist disappears or you're having other problems, let me know. I can share the videos themselves as I have a local copy.
02:42:54 I also sent you this via DM on X. Keep up the amazing work you do, all the best to you and classified cat and churro well. I appreciate that. That's very cool. I'll. I'll take a look at those videos. I'm sure they're just as entertaining as the the Part 2 that we watched.
02:43:12 Full of lots of good information like how.
02:43:16 You know, black people invented every.
02:43:18 Rooster says. Have you ever seen the 1982 film The Last American Virgin? Perhaps the most degenerate and subversive Jewish film I've ever seen, could be worth covering on a future string. I've seen parts of it.
02:43:35 And I think.
02:43:37 I might even have it somewhere in my collection, but yeah, it was one. The reason I've only seen parts of it is one. It was one of those things that.
02:43:44 Like.
02:43:46 I clicked through it real quick. I was like, oh God, this looks. This looks terrible. And so I didn't.
02:43:51 Watch it.
02:43:52 So yeah, I'll have to take a look there my.
Speaker 15
02:43:57 Fat little ******** toe.
Speaker 6
02:44:07 Ohh.
Devon Stack
02:44:17 My fellow returning Toast says grocery store it was either me.
02:44:22 Or ******** ****** who had to come back first. I'll cover this tab to the to the cover. This tab to the next oh to the next year also. Hi, mom. Well, thank you for the the big grocery store. Dono there my fat little ******** toe and welcome back.
02:44:41 And also to your fat little ******** mom.
02:44:47 You had to know I was gonna go there. I'm sure you're a lovely woman.
02:44:52 White Lion says this stream is the bomb. Yeah, another another example. It's the bomb. You know, it's the bomb. Who let the dogs out like? Yeah, all that stupid stuff. It seemed to have a much shorter shelf life. Oddly back then.
02:45:09 Like a lot of the black isms that would enter white vernacular, it seems like.
02:45:14 Maybe it was just. There was always more new, newer, newer ones coming out.
02:45:19 It seemed like the black terms got passe really quickly. In fact, one of the weird things or genius I guess in terms of marketing that you might remember from 90s rap is they basically came with expiration dates, all all the big rap songs, right? They start going to 1994.
Speaker 21
02:45:39 Pitch.
Devon Stack
02:45:40 And so that way if you were listening to that song in 1998, it.
02:45:44 Felt dated already.
02:45:46 You were like uh, this was uh.
02:45:49 This is 1994. I need to go find the 1998 album.
02:45:54 I mean it had that effect. Yeah, it did seem old.
02:46:00 And yeah, they, they've every every big rap album, at least in the album, but certainly in a lot of the songs they they put expiration dates in the song.
Speaker 10
02:46:09 Yeah.
Devon Stack
02:46:10 Donald Duck, Tater says. Remember when you first saw the studio audience of Arsenio Hall show this was when many realized that the planet of the Apes is real and terrifying.
Speaker 15
02:46:21 Woop Woop woop woop.
Devon Stack
02:46:22 Happy Juneteenth, oh, I never saw the studio. I mean, like, you mean on TV.
Speaker 15
02:46:28 There is a.
Devon Stack
02:46:29 Lot of white people in that audience though, too doing the whole stupid whoop, whoop.
02:46:32 Whoop thing.
02:46:35 But yeah, I get your .9 makes your review says MTV was basically cable television of TikTok before there was a TikTok. It's that's that's a fair assessment.
02:46:45 That's a fair assessment. Another reason why they didn't cater to black people was it was on cable.
02:46:52 And black people couldn't afford cable.
02:46:55 So it wasn't just.
02:46:57 Because of, you know, they they thought the white people were going to buy more of the stuff that the advertising or advertisers were advertising. Black people just didn't have cable. A lot of white kids didn't have cable. Cable was a luxury back then.
Speaker
02:47:10 Yeah.
Devon Stack
02:47:11 Don Cho says, hey Devan, my first live stream. Love you Baba Lua **** the Spooks and the kids, Baba Lua.
02:47:23 Are you are you a spaghetti?
Speaker 17
02:47:28 Boobla Boobla Boo Boo.
Devon Stack
02:47:34 Alright, Dancho again says oh, I forgot. Can I get?
Speaker 16
02:47:40 A.
Devon Stack
02:47:46 There you go.
02:47:48 Dancho and welcome if you're how would you know about megabit? If this is your first one, you might be a replay gang, huh? Zazzy make Taz Bot says this stream you began by talking about how blacks don't use or can't use English properly. Well, I have experienced this. I was an artillery man for six years and noticed that.
02:48:09 Black NGOs kept calling shrapnel scrap metal.
02:48:13 They they create shrapnel for a living. They had been in the artillery for 20 years.
02:48:21 Yeah, there's a lot of the things like that and it's it's and it it's weird because it seems pretty universal.
02:48:28 You know, I mean, like it's it's not like.
02:48:31 Ohh, this black guy is is saying that word wrong. It's like every black guy.
02:48:38 Is saying that specific word wrong. You know, like it's it's like not like I you guys know I talk you know 3-6 hours a week live I say words wrong all the time you know it it's it's gonna happen but it's not like every white guy mispronounces the same word and every black guy they all.
02:48:58 They they mispronounced the exact same words and I'm telling you that's if you want a good example of or or or a good piece of evidence that shows that there's a hardware software compatibility issue. I think that would be it. I think that would be it that, that these these incompatibility.
02:49:17 Issues seem to occur.
02:49:20 Universally, throughout the the black people you know or you know with well, obviously with a few exceptions. But generally speaking they all mispronounce the same words in the same way.
02:49:33 Art Stanton says Queen Latifah briefly had a talk show in the 90s, and she once had Jared Taylor on. If you haven't seen it, it's worth a watch, if only for the comedy in it. Yeah, that would be worth taking a look at I I covered.
Speaker 19
02:49:50 Who was it?
Devon Stack
02:49:53 There was some other black lady.
02:49:55 He wasn't Queen Latifah. He was Whoopi. That's what it was. Who had Thomas Metzger on it. Now the guy that was in this, this MTV special, we covered that in a stream. I.
02:50:05 Think it was Whoopi Goldberg?
02:50:08 And and she actually gave him a fair hearing. Like it was oddly civil. And it wasn't. They didn't paint him out to be some kind of psychopath. Like uh.
02:50:19 It was actually pretty reasonable, so that might be worth taking a look at Jared Taylor on Queen Latifah.
02:50:29 I'll add that to my notes.
02:50:35 All right.
02:50:36 Water weight, says KRS. He's that fagot vegan activist rapper seems like eating exclusively veggies and being an insufferable ****** go hand in hand. Yeah, he's he's he's always been a lefty, you know, black power kind of guy, but the the light version of it.
02:50:57 Though because he always quickly follows it with like and blacks can be racist too, which you know, I guess I mean that's.
02:51:03 I'll give him that. You know, at least at least he's not saying kill ******. It's all ******. I mean, he kind of does, and then he follows it with the with the.
02:51:12 The qualifier of.
02:51:13 Black and blacks and do it too.
02:51:16 But yeah, he's.
Speaker 16
02:51:18 He was very.
Devon Stack
02:51:19 Popular in the 90s, very popular in the 90s.
Speaker 12
02:51:22 Henry Ford. Hello. Hello. Hello. Hello.
Devon Stack
02:51:31 Henry Ford RIP Asthmador of the crypto report. He was a leader in our spaces and gone away and gone way too soon. Yeah, you have to be honest. I wasn't super familiar with his work. I I kind.
02:51:47 Of knew who he was.
02:51:49 And I saw on Twitter. So I went back and and because I was like I'm I'm I had a hard time like.
02:51:55 You know, like really wrapping my like, who was that exactly again. And I looked him up and was like, oh, yeah, this guy. But yeah, I don't know all the details because that was the extent of what I had time to do. And because I just this was like last night and I've been working on this and other stuff all day today. But yeah, it's.
02:52:14 It's always sad to see.
02:52:16 One of the.
02:52:18 The the soldiers in this fight go down, but it's inevitable. That's the.
02:52:24 That's the way. That's the circle of life, I guess, as you could say, but you know FFS and chat for asthmador Epson chat seemed like a a decent guy from what I could gather in the short period of time that I had there.
02:52:39 They call me Mr. ****. They call me.
02:52:44 Mr. nags.
Speaker 21
02:52:45 With cash flow checkout.
Speaker 17
02:52:52 I'd like to return this duck.
Devon Stack
02:52:57 Hey, I'm still awake, says they calling Mr. Nags. Well, I'm glad you're still awake. Not sure what was. Is this a secret message to somebody?
02:53:07 Or just letting us know that you're still awake. Either way, think of the support there, Mr. Nags.
02:53:13 A man of low moral fiber says. Do you think your Africanized bees will be more nicer, more nicer? Come on, who's black now? If you got them from programs or got them some programs and welfare.
02:53:26 Yeah, exactly. Well, that's that is the point though, is even if I were to treat them better, if I were to make life easier for them, if I were to periodically go out to the bee yard and feed them sugar, water and and and and just and and even if I was taking honey from the the good, you know, the the nice European hives and giving it to the the African hives.
02:53:45 Africanized times. They would still be Africanized. They would still be murderous bees.
02:53:54 And it wouldn't matter how much I I changed their environment. I mean it would, I guess over the course of 50,000 years.
02:54:01 But it it wouldn't make.
02:54:02 A big difference in my lifetime or the lifetime of my children if all I was doing was changing the environment, unless I started making genetic changes. I mean, I guess I could.
02:54:15 Do like a hyper aggressive eugenics program.
02:54:19 Where I'm not actually injecting outside genes. If all I did was immediately kill.
02:54:27 Every extra bad queen, right, and reward all the gentle Queens and and made all my splits from the gentle Queens. Even then, I mean, gentle is a relative term, right? Gentle for an Africanized beehive means that they're not trying to.
02:54:48 Kill you.
02:54:50 As hard you know what I mean? And so it would still take a really long time. It would take a really long time and you got to remember generations for bees. You can have several generations in one year and to put things into perspective, the Africanized bees in Puerto Rico that arrived in Puerto Rico.
02:55:11 Want to say in the early 90s are much gentler than the Africanized bees? In mainland the United States because the waves of immigration you might.
02:55:23 Say stopped because it's an island, right? Puerto Rico is an island and some Africanized bees got on the island. At some point, you know, hitched a ride like a swarm. Probably hitched a ride on a ship or something. And they they took over genetically. But they didn't have this constant pressure. They have this constant immigration of more and more.
02:55:44 Genes coming into the gene pool, and even then they still had what would you know, would essentially be?
02:55:51 A eugenics program of the the people living there, killing off all the aggressive hives and not killing off the the the less aggressive hives because no one they weren't bothering anybody. Right? So no one killed off the hive.
02:56:06 And even then, that would have been like 30 generations.
02:56:11 And so if you, let's say that that, that, that same timeline would work for humans. I don't know that it would. Let's just say that it would. That's 30 generations of aggressive.
02:56:25 Death penalty, like basically, you'd have to have 30 generations of aggressively giving all violent criminals the death penalty.
02:56:37 All of them, like just you have to be like really super aggressive with the death penalty and and then yeah, maybe, maybe maybe you end up with a different.
02:56:50 A different gene pool, you know, a but, but they'll never do that. They'll never do that. And even if they did, is it worth the investment? Why is it up to us to look? They'll never do it. So it's all just academic at this point. But Even so, why would it be up to white people to administer some kind of aggressive?
02:57:11 Eugenics program for 30 generations just to get black people to stop, you know, to get the 13 to stop doing 50. You know what I mean?
02:57:20 It's it's like there's there are far better solutions that are far more just and it's not rolling the dice like this is just a hypothetical. I mean, even if you have the ability to do this, you still don't know like you still don't know, maybe it wouldn't be 30 generations, maybe it's 300, you know.
02:57:40 You and so there's no way of even knowing if it would work. So and just like all this stuff and there's no undo button, you never get that time back. So even if you invested 300 generations, we're, you know, we're talking over 1000 ******* years at that point.
02:57:55 At the end of that, you might still be stuck with the same problem.
02:58:00 And so you.
02:58:01 Just threw away all that money, time and all those resources to alien people that are a problem to your people. So what's right? Why are you doing that? It doesn't make any sense. The the benefit is not worth the cost. And that's just the way that it is and people are.
Speaker 16
02:58:16 Afraid to say that.
Devon Stack
02:58:19 Now let's see here Scottish American jerk.
02:58:36 Scottish American jerk. Good evening, Mr. Stack, will you please review Donnie Darko? It was my favorite movie for the last two decades and tell my friend, tell me the lead actor is Jewish. Now, I don't know how I feel about it. Rosa. Red. Hi. Hi, drew.
02:58:53 What is this?
Speaker 10
02:58:56 Yeah.
Devon Stack
02:58:57 I'm no I'm black. I can't.
02:59:01 Hydrangeas. I thought that was. Was it sound like a word, though. All right. I don't trust her or I don't trust the FBI.
02:59:09 I mean, I I hated that movie.
02:59:17 I watched that movie like when it came out and I was just like, what the **** is this nonsense?
Speaker
02:59:21 What?
Devon Stack
02:59:22 What? What kind of what kind of ******* uh art student film? How did this get funding, you know, like this just seems like an an art, you know, a a film school project that goes on way too long and it's it's just not, I don't know. I don't think that.
02:59:41 Would be worth it to most people.
02:59:43 Because the I don't think it had a huge impact simply because of that reason. I think most people that saw it were just like what the **** is this?
02:59:53 So I don't think it was culturally important. I I look, I know there's a cult following and it sounds like you were part of that and whatever, but I don't think that it really was culturally significant. And and it would just be if.
03:00:04 I were to to, to.
03:00:06 Sort of. This is this.
03:00:08 Is more up the alley of those people that like to find esoteric meaning in everything. And it's just like, well, all right, I mean, all that's up to interpretation. And I guess if that's what you want to do, but I just don't think it was a a culturally significant movie. And I hated it. So.
03:00:26 And I even know that that little actor was Jewish. But there you go.
03:00:31 But thank you for the support, all the same Scottish American pure.
03:00:35 Love and division.
03:00:47 Love and division great show in the 1990s, I owned a European record store. I hated that white Americans were taught to hate European music. I have the feeling that the Jews did everything they could to separate.
03:00:58 Flights from the European heritage on the jeopardy game show people were expected to know hip.
03:01:05 Uh, yeah, that was, uh, you know, hip hop has been mainstream since the 80s.
Speaker 16
03:01:12 It's been.
Devon Stack
03:01:14 More mainstream than I would say, country music.
03:01:18 And absolutely more mainstream than classical music.
03:01:22 And now it's more mainstream than rock.
03:01:27 Right. I mean, I don't even know like who are the big rock bands in, in in the twenty 20s?
03:01:37 No. Part of that's just, I don't. I don't really pay that much attention to me. I'm sure there are. I'm sure there's popular rock bands, but why? Why do I hear about all these ******* rappers? I can name you rappers.
03:01:48 You know, I I know who the rappers are. I don't have any of the ******* rock groups are.
03:01:54 So it's it's and.
03:01:56 It's not because I'm like looking for new rapper like that. I don't.
03:01:58 Do that. It's just it's.
03:02:00 So part of the mainstream.
03:02:03 Black culture is the mainstream in America. Simple as.
03:02:08 That.
03:02:11 Let's see here.
03:02:18 I lost my place.
Speaker 28
03:02:21 Here we are.
Devon Stack
03:02:23 Urban quail farmer I love when a white dude calls me racist, like I won't enthusiastically agree and then berate them for being a homosexual ***** lover.
03:02:37 WFP.
03:02:40 What is?
03:02:42 WFP I have. I have a couple theories.
03:02:44 But I don't know for sure.
03:02:46 Yeah, look, just own it.
Speaker 16
03:02:49 Just own it.
Devon Stack
03:02:51 I didn't care if if you.
Speaker 15
03:02:52 Think well that that word is it depends.
Devon Stack
03:02:54 On it, like when people try to weasel.
03:02:56 Around and like well.
03:02:57 It depends on how you define racist. It's like no, just just who cares. Just say it. Yeah, I'm racist. Whatever. Who cares?
03:03:04 Just take the stigma from it.
03:03:06 Yeah, I'm racist. Yep.
03:03:09 I don't care what you what you think it means.
03:03:11 Or whatever, but yeah, yeah.
Speaker 10
03:03:14 Yeah.
Devon Stack
03:03:16 What? You're you're just not confident. If you can't, you know, if you have to be, like giving.
03:03:21 It qualifiers well defined race, you know, just just.
Speaker 6
03:03:21 Whoa.
Devon Stack
03:03:23 Say **** it. Who cares? Yes.
03:03:26 And then, if in conversation they say something wrong. Ohh, that's not what racist thing you just you got it wrong.
Speaker 28
03:03:33 What do you mean?
Devon Stack
03:03:35 Blue N When says.
03:03:38 You created an AI Gilbert Godfrey rap generator? No, that's actually, that was real. That was.
03:03:45 Gilbert Gottfried before he died, like one of the last things he did before he died.
03:03:50 Was he saying? Let's see if I have it here.
03:03:58 And he did a stream or something during. I think it was during.
03:04:01 COVID or something?
03:04:08 Yeah, that's him.
Speaker 34
03:04:10 Yeah, you ******* with some whitish *****.
Devon Stack
03:04:15 So yeah, that that was just a that was a real.
03:04:23 Uh Rorschach, 2112.
Speaker 28
03:04:30 Let's see here.
Devon Stack
03:04:44 We're shot, 2112 said. Just got back from a night out, so I'm catching the last half of the stream. It looks like a good one, as usual. I'll catch the full stream tomorrow. Well, welcome back and thank you for the support. Hopefully you had.
03:04:59 Had lots of wholesome fun while you were out.
03:05:04 The urban quail farmer says. I grew up in a majority white town and never thought about race. I thought my boomer parents were racist, but then I spent the last 15 years living among blacks. My racism is pure and unbridled, and it makes my parents nervous because they know I didn't learn it from them.
03:05:23 I don't leave my house unarmed, even though or even because of them.
03:05:28 Or ever. Sorry, ever because of them.
03:05:31 Would have moved sooner, but reef reified to a 1.75 percent 15 year mortgage and the value is rising. Still, I'm in a unique spot. I have dreams to take my 250K equity when I sell in the next year.
03:05:51 And pull it with like minded whites.
03:05:54 To community build.
03:05:57 All right, well.
03:06:00 Sounds like a plan. Yeah, I mean, like.
Speaker 16
03:06:03 I I don't.
Devon Stack
03:06:04 I don't look. I think there's a little there's amount of urgency to getting out of the cities, but I I don't.
03:06:10 I I don't think it's, you know, like, oh, you better get out. The zombie apocalypse starts next week, you know, or anything like that. So, you know, always good to always good to plan things, do things in a in a well thought out way.
03:06:25 But yeah, excellent zazzy mic Taz Bot says happy. Go **** yourself, ****** Day. Last Saturday I passed the Juneteenth celebration in the park. All white people, it's probably safer that way. Thanks for the show. Believe me when I tell you, I feel your pain. Devin. I work in a hot kitchen.
03:06:45 And the weather has been horrible rain every night and that's the worst. Humidity is the worst. Luckily not a lot of humidity. It hasn't rained in months here.
03:06:56 For four nights now and the mid 90s during the day I bring an extra change of clothes to change into after my lunch break like I'm at the gym, we suffer alone together. Well, like I said, I think you got it. You got it worse with the humidity, luckily.
03:07:11 It's.
03:07:12 It's extremely dry here.
03:07:16 But thank you for the support.
03:07:17 There blue north wind.
03:07:19 The actor Mark Wahlberg, AKA Marky Mark, has two hate crime charges under his belt. He committed assault and battery on a black guy and a Vietnamese guy while shouting ethnic slurs. Well, that's, I guess, kind of based.
03:07:36 And I don't think the Berg is a Jewish Berg, is it? It might be. I thought it was a German or something. Who knows?
03:07:45 Wasn't aware of the of the the hate crime history though.
03:07:48 Man of low moral fiber. The more nicer was word play, mocking one of the nigh unintelligible blacks you were showing in the stream earlier. Don't put that on me. OK? Well, I see what you were doing now.
03:08:04 And radio experts says blacks are non human chimpanzees. Same with Mexicans and Indians. Alright. Well, I don't know if I'd go that far.
03:08:15 But I I get where you're coming from. Vax champion says. Why do you want violence punished so severely? Death penalty only works to change the gene pool when administered before they breed more aggression. And whites would have prevented so many problems. You often discuss.
03:08:34 You your type, eugenics, have just ensured more scammers slip through the cracks.
03:08:41 I don't think that killing murderers is a bad idea. Death penalty for murderers and rapists is a bad idea in white or black populations. I don't want murderers and rapists. Murder and rape is not. Those aren't the kinds of attributes that are that, you know you you don't want whites.
03:09:01 Their *******, but, but selecting out murderers and rapists are not going to turn whites into *******. What you're thinking of? I think that has turned whites into *******. Is really more likely wars for Israel.
Speaker 10
03:09:13 Yeah.
Devon Stack
03:09:14 I mean.
03:09:15 Wars for Israel?
03:09:16 Or, you know, World War One. You could imagine how many white people warrior white people.
03:09:23 Have died and didn't breed over the past, just the past century, you know, or going back to World War One. So a little little beyond the the last century. You know, you've got at least from the American standpoint, you know, you've got World War One. You've got World War Two, you've got Korea, you've got Vietnam, you've got the gold.
03:09:44 War you've got, you know, the all the the War on Terror stuff that just hasn't stopped.
03:09:52 So it's it's been this.
03:09:54 Constant.
03:09:56 For several generations now, constant cooling of warrior whites and the West, but certainly in America.
03:10:06 And that, I think is probably more that and I think probably the the changes in diet.
03:10:14 The American diet to include a lot of like the soy and it's not. It's not just a meme and all this other garbage that that they're putting in the food and you mix that with the the constant propaganda and the education system and you get a bunch of white faggs. I don't think getting rid of murderers and rapists.
03:10:35 Is a bad idea, no matter how you look at it.
03:10:40 Let's see here.
03:10:43 The Foobar nation, the ***** nation.
03:10:56 The Foobar nation got up really early, popping in from replay gang, referring to your bee watering problem. A low tech way to keep mosquitoes out of your water barrels.
03:11:07 By adding small minnows or goldfish to eat the larvae appreciate we do. I wonder.
03:11:12 If they've survived the heat, though.
03:11:15 I mean, I paint the the barrels white and stuff and try to do what I can to keep them in the shade, but.
03:11:21 I mean, when the ambient temperature outside is like 110.
03:11:28 I don't know. I don't know. I mean it's it's one. I don't think I have to worry too much about it cause the evaporation it happened so quickly that I I don't think it's an issue like I'm having to always go out and fill those ******* things. So I don't think it's it's the worst thing right now my issue.
03:11:47 Is well, it's boring how you're gonna do it.
03:11:53 Let's see here. But yeah, thank you. The Foobar nation blue Northwind says the birds are conversos or conversos to Catholicism. Ohh, so they they are Jews, are they? They're they're the actual meaning of judeo-christian.
03:12:12 Interesting.
03:12:15 I don't know how I feel about that.
Speaker 8
03:12:17 You know that.
Devon Stack
03:12:18 That that blood's still in there, right? Prairie Dog says do you think it's a coincidence that Jim Teeth coincides with the execution of Julius and Ethel Rosenberg?
03:12:33 That's the.
03:12:35 That's the atomic bomb. Jews, right?
03:12:40 The rosenbergs? Yeah. OK, now I don't think that. I don't think that that matters. Yeah, I don't. I don't. I don't think they worry too much about that.
03:12:52 Yeah, that could be a stream. I don't think I've done a stream just on that I've mentioned.
Speaker 16
03:12:56 Them before.
Devon Stack
03:12:58 All right. Then. We got **** knuckle with the *** ****.
03:13:01 Don't know.
Speaker 6
03:13:02 Money is power. Money is the only weapon that the Jew has to defend himself with.
Devon Stack
03:13:08 Go, Julie, this *** is.
03:13:27 All right, Buckle says. Be proud of your race and become the best version of yourself.
03:13:33 Good stream Mr. stack wise words.
03:13:38 Wise words from **** knuckle there and yeah, that's in addition to owning up to being racist. You should obviously own up to being proud of of your ancestors. That's something.
03:13:49 That they've tried to.
03:13:49 Make you feel like it's it's it's an inconsistent thought or illogical irrational thought.
Speaker 16
03:13:55 Like you didn't do that. You didn't do that.
Devon Stack
03:13:58 You didn't earn.
03:13:59 Yeah.
03:14:00 And it's it's such a diabolical poison that they've added to the, to the minds of of so many white kids that they can't possibly be proud of what their ancestors did. And.
03:14:16 I'm sorry. You are your ancestors, quite literally.
03:14:20 So yes, you can be proud of that. That's you.
03:14:25 That's you.
03:14:28 That's your blood pumping the blood in.
03:14:30 Your veins right now is their blood.
03:14:35 So yeah, you kind of did do it.
03:14:40 You kind of did do it, and unlike you know the we was King's crowd. You don't. Which, by the way demonstrates how important it is to.
03:14:47 Have that kind of pride.
03:14:49 You don't have to make **** up.
03:14:57 You can look back at what your ancestors accomplished and now understand.
03:15:01 What you what?
03:15:02 You're capable of.
03:15:08 And you know it's possible because you've done it before.
03:15:11 And that's why they want to.
03:15:12 Rob, you of that?
03:15:16 They want to rob you of that.
03:15:21 And it's and it's, it's ****** **.
03:15:23 So don't let him take that from you.
03:15:26 All right, we got a ham radio expert. One last one here. ***** are horrible. Small ankle biting Asians from Vietnam. They are all over the cities in the Midwest. They fish without a license. They chop up live carp and eat them alive in the parks in front of children.
03:15:46 I'll take your word for that. I've heard of *****, but I know. Isn't that what the?
03:15:52 Is not that that blue movie? What was it called? Grand Torino. Isn't that what that?
03:15:59 That movie it has, is the the **** people are in that. I think that's the the people that are featured in there.
03:16:06 All right, let's take a look at Rumble, which might start auto playing.
03:16:11 Ohh the rumble break.
03:16:19 Rumble might have broke, it says.
03:16:21 Stream is over on the thing that's supposed to capture my, my, my rumble rants. I might not have any rumble rants, that's, but it's it might just be broken too.
Speaker 15
03:16:36 Uh.
Devon Stack
03:16:40 Yeah, if.
Speaker 21
03:16:43 Sorry rumble this.
Devon Stack
03:16:44 Is what I ******* hate about rumble, one of the many things I hate about rumble?
Speaker 6
03:16:47 Yeah.
Devon Stack
03:16:52 So I don't know if maybe no one sent a rant. If you did, I apologize. I had the thing up, but I did everything I was supposed to do.
03:16:59 And the the stupid plugin says that it's.
Speaker 30
03:17:03 Where?
Devon Stack
03:17:03 Oh, there you go. See, I knew it was going to start happening.
03:17:08 OK, now it's playing. Is working. Yeah, the stupid rumble rant collector thing.
03:17:15 Says that the string is broken, but I also might not have got any because I'm scrolling up through the chat. I don't see any. I didn't get any recently at least.
03:17:24 Because the chat is, I don't know how far back this goes, because that's nothing that rumble does. It's stupid. It doesn't time stamp.
03:17:29 This ****.
03:17:31 So how do I know how long ago you guys said this? I mean, I feel like I just scrolled up a lot.
03:17:36 Is there a way to look at the?
03:17:37 Timestamp.
03:17:40 No. All right, I think Rumble Lance is just no, there's nothing there, which is fine. All right, guys. Well, I appreciate you stopping by this Wednesday evening slash Thursday morning.
03:17:53 And like I said, we'll have a probably a much funnier one.
03:17:58 Set up for Saturday, although I don't know, I haven't watched it yet. It just I watched like I I clicked through like the first few minutes of it. It was just like oh wow, this is.
03:18:08 Really. They're they're they're pulling out the the the the shots of Buller. You know, bodies being bulldozed in the pits, you know that that that footage, OK, they're going hard right at the right at the starting line. So anyway, so look forward to that. In the meantime, have a wonderful rest of your week.
03:18:27 And for black pilled, I am of course.
Speaker 16
03:18:31 Devil's dag.
Speaker 6
03:18:35 They call them balls ball.
Speaker 3
03:18:39 They rolled into a white man's town.
03:18:50 Bringing Black Man's Lord he's black. He's brutal. He's boss Brett Williamson. He is boss.
Speaker 6
03:19:02 They call him balls ball Niger.
Speaker 3
03:19:05 I just formed your new deputy and made myself the sheriff.
Speaker 37
03:19:09 Being called a in public. Now that's $20 or two days and 10.
Speaker 6
03:19:33 Take your filthy black hands off me.
Speaker 34
03:19:36 He he just locked up the bank president.
Speaker 37
03:19:40 Well, you all been hunting black folks for so long. We just want to see what it felt like to hunt white folks.
Speaker 3
03:19:46 Part legend, part Devil, All man.
Speaker 20
03:19:53 That's just to satisfy your curiosity.
Speaker 15
03:19:55 Good morning, gentlemen. It's my pleasure to take.
Speaker 6
03:19:57 That.
Speaker 37
03:19:58 Sir, you are interrupting our breakfast. We never discuss business while we're eating.
Speaker 30
03:20:07 Where did you learn to talk like that?
Speaker 37
03:20:10 I've been wanting to say that to somebody for eight years, my slave master said that to me once. It sounded so funny. I never forgot it.
Speaker 11
03:20:21 Wake up the neighbors move.
Speaker 3
03:20:29 Leaving this town till I get to meet Jed Clayton Williams is boss Niger.
Speaker 6
03:20:40 His deputy. They call him balls. They call him balls.
03:20:41 They call them balls, they call them balls. Balls. You're so bad.