 About the balance being that responsible child, compared to, okay, when I'm with my friends, I need to enjoy my youth, you know what I mean? And my freedom, where that is concerned. Situations that may be seen as, I guess, apolitical as getting ice cream from an ice cream truck. I recall, like you just drug some memories, I recall, like even as a youngster, like when the ice cream truck calls the out street, you know, the usual routine, everybody come run, you know, I go, ice cream, ice cream, but I always had to make sure there wasn't a good humor ice cream truck. Okay. This is doing part to, it was ingrained in us, you know what I'm saying, in me particularly, you know what I'm saying, in my counterparts, but I remember this is in particular, being the fact that one of the cases that Chairman Frey was framed up with was the good humor ice cream truck. Correct. Don't boss talk one-on-one. So what we do, man, we do it a little different than others, man, we want to go back, we want to go back to your childhood, we want to talk about the man, you know what I'm saying? The kid, who is Fred Hampton Jr., you know what I mean? Yeah, yeah. How you were raised, where you were raised, how you were trained, the whole works. First and foremost, you know, I'm honored to be here. I've said a number of cases, I feel fortunate to have fallen from a tree with two freedom fighters, that of Chairman Frey and Hampton, and also of Accord and Jerry, for those known as Debra Johnson. Chairman Frey was Deputy Chairman of the State of Illinois at the Black Panther Party, in fact, he led the largest chapter of the Black Panther Party. He was assassinated, I don't know if I want to go straight to that, because I think I'll be remiss, because I just did this piece on African ancestry two nights ago. Oh, okay. And they, you know, lineage, they went back to the lineage, you know. How far back did you go? They went back, they went back on my maternal side. They traced it back to Niger, which is like right up, I think, on the northern tip of Nigeria, but it's not Nigeria, Niger. Niger. And it was the paternal, on my father's side, Gabon, you know, is West Africa. And they was talking about, you know, how rare it is to be able to trace a lineage, in particular, the paternal side, and, you know, it continues with the African, because they're taking into account what has been colonizing, you know, the plundering, the rape in particular, that, you know, that happened in regards to our people. I think it's imperative, so I'm doing some study on that also, so I'm saying, I'm going around the block to get to the heart of the question, is I think it's imperative that, you know, from once we come from. From now where you come from, before you know who you are. Exactly, people have a reactionary assessment. You say, who are you? And people like, they just came out of a vacuum, so I'm such-and-such, you know, okay, I'm chairman-free, I have the junior family. No, no, I think it's, you know, it's imperative that, what's we come from? I made a comment to somebody the other day, we're here at the Hampton House, we have a particular breed of dogs, known as the Hampton House Hounds. And this is across the road, German Rottweiler in the Cain Corsa. Brother come take some puppies out, he kept on grilling me in regards to the Rottweiler. What's the, are you German or are you American? And I, you know, gave him the whole bloodline and I asked him, I said, how's your children's grandparents doing? He said, I never met them. I said, that, wow, we don't, you know, you know our lineage, you know what I'm saying? So I just want to give you a little back on that. No, the dog in lineage is better than, you know, your own people. No doubt about it. That's why. No doubt about it. No doubt about it. I definitely wanna, I'm gonna mess with you a little bit. I wanna talk about the time when you was young, you were sitting on Sam's stoop, you know what I'm saying? You was a kid, you know, you were dealing with Maurice and Poo and Carlos, you know. Did, did, did, did, did, did, did, did, did, did. Okay, did, did, did, did, did, did, did, did, did, did, did. Wow. Whoa, you were way back. Okay, that's why I'm trying to go with you. Okay, I mean, I'm gonna let you in on that. Yeah, okay, you okay? Cause he was what, 12 at that time? Yeah, he was very young. 11, 11, 12. Yeah, we going all the way back to him. Wow. Okay, that's why I'm trying to take a little, we go to interview him, man. Right, right, right, right, right. Did, did, did, did, did. No, I just wanted to hit you with something, because everybody interviewed, but it take, it's something special to go the extra mile. They're trying to figure out something to where we're gonna take our interview somewhere that George ain't never been before. You know. And it's at the brain, it's like, you know, memories and stuff that I might, you know, so consciously blocked out, but okay, yeah, you can struck some memory, some memory of some flashbacks. Yeah, because it was just a thing where when we were talking to others about you, it was like, you were one at a very young age with big responsibilities at a young age. Where you might've had to pull up when everybody else was having a good time and somebody say, well, hey, hey, Chairman Fred Hampton Jr., you know, we got to go do this and you have to leave your friends at a very young age. So I just wanted to talk about some of those key elements. How the balance being, you know, that responsible child compared to, okay, when I'm with my friends, I need to enjoy my youth. And my, you know what I mean? And my freedom, where that is concerned. Well, the situation that may be seen is I guess apolitical as getting ice cream from ice cream truck. I recall, like you just struck some memories, I recall that even as a youngster, like even when the ice cream truck comes out of the street, you know, the usual routine, everybody come around, you know, ice cream, ice cream. Yeah. But I always had to make sure there wasn't a good humor ice cream truck. Okay. This is doing part to, it was ingrained in us, you know what I'm saying, and me in particular, you know what I'm saying, in my counterparts, but I remember this in particular, being the fact that one of the cases that Chairman Frey was framed up with was the good humor ice cream truck. Correct. In which I actually literally, well, we were doing this, we were doing this interview at, the case occurred walking this right on this corner. Okay. In which they had claimed that, the state had claimed that Chairman Frey had took $71 worth of ice cream. Right on, okay, right on. Ice cream and gave it to the children. You know what I'm saying? That was so ridiculous. Yeah. He flipped it. He said, okay, try to remember how the thieves that made me have to be a robber hood type of thief, still showing a true nature of a path that give it to the people. Correct. So that trickled down to even as a child, some of you may think as some of these minors, okay, man, get my good ice cream, but that even that dynamic, you know, and then I even just like, I mean, you know, you know, cutting school, we going, and I recall a situation we walking, and my mother, you, and just simple things like giving the alias name in other, you know, other youth, like, you know, why don't you just give me your name? You know what I'm saying? I'm like, man, y'all don't know how this go with me. And I mean, one time this, I think this round, I guess I'm 17. I'm going back and forth from, you know, age. That's right. Okay, no problem. And his brother, and I crack onto this day about this. His brother, we in the car, we riding, we going to be riding on the west side. And I come looking through the rear view mirror. He said, man, you got your license, you legit ain't you? I said, exactly. That's why I keep looking back. Yeah, yeah, that's right. I got the license. And it's something to be conscious of certain things, you know what I'm saying, to be aware, but to be, you know, it impacts everything, you know what I'm saying, from, you know, the school relationships, you know what I'm saying, to really communicate, not being able to lay out in a climate is, you know, it's this Mrs. Paranoia, something like that. I mean, a lot of young kids, he said, man, he think he back in the 60s, you know what I'm saying? And I, but I was the proud, like many others deprived of that correct, you know what I'm saying, that the summation, what happened to the black power movement in the 60s? Yeah, we on boss talk one on one.