 Yeah, we on boss talk one-on-one. So, mayhem, when you say you was not at 18, you put the cripping down. How did you do time separating yourself from the different groups of people that were there? One day at a time. No, I didn't get it. No, when I got into prison, prison had a lot of niggas who was claiming to be crisps. Like he was saying, I ain't locked seat with nobody. I don't know who you is, who is you? Like you say, who is you? I don't know you. Yeah, you a cripper, you ain't did no work like me. I don't know you like that. You ain't did no drive-bys, you ain't robbed, nobody, you ain't did nothing to me. So don't try to come up here and lock seats when we tell them I chose sit. I was locked in with people from Cleburne and Killeen, Texas. Johnson County. It was all type of Black Panther, Gangster, Cripp. One dude told me you were Black Panther, Gangster, Cripp. I mean, I was just, so the more I got in prison and got rent because everybody in prison was, is not real. Everybody, and I went into prison back in the night. See, this is like he was telling me, it's a new prison now. I went to prison, and prison taught me one thing. See, another thing that I wanted to talk about too, I didn't gang bang in prison. I never had the gang bang. That's what I was asking about. I was a man before anything else and I was in numerous race rides and I'm glad that I was in race rides like he was talking about because one thing about, see, and I came back in the 90s when prison was violent. When I walked in the TDC, they said, you gonna fuck, fight or bust a 60. The law told you that. Now, no, it made. The officer told you that. Then they said, get into the day room. I was 18, I was a powder pink nigga walking in there. Well, they just cut my hair off. They, I looked friendly than the mother and I told you, people got online and I had to introduce myself immediately and let them know this is who I am. And that's why people were like, okay, well, that's why I didn't have to crib. When you go on there fighting, everybody embraces you. Everybody embraces you. You go in there punching the nigga in the face for disrespecting the nigga like, I like that nigga. And I'm from the city. I'm from the city. Everybody knew me. I came in with the reputation. I came in, everywhere I went, I already knew people on every unit I went on. I knew somebody from the street. And they were like, nigga, you ain't cribbing? I was like, you ain't cribbing? They were like, all right, cool. You know what I'm saying? Nobody questioned it. And people kind of liked it. Like he would under, if I went around him personally, I'd say, hey, Percy, what's up? And you're like, man, I gang bang with you. And I told Percy, I said, yeah, Brian, I'm doing my time. I ain't gang bang it. He gonna say, I understand. You a lie. No, I'm just saying. No, you and I'm on, you and I'm on, you know. You was on Ferguson. You was on, I was on Cofield. So I don't know. You was on Cofield? I was on Cofield. I was on Rasker unit. Tariff for unit. I was on Ferguson. Listen, I was on, I was on the Smith unit when he talked about the biggest ride in state jail. Right? I was on the biggest ride in TDC period with the, on styles, on, on Smith unit with the, with the, on April 2000 with the, with the essays, right? But one thing I loved about being in this, I hated, I hated being there, but the wisdom and knowledge in this, in that ride, I seen niggas who we did not get along, we come together. Yeah. You feel me? I seen black people who were Crips, Bloods and everything, they came together immediately for, for the sake of all of us. And I, like I say, this is in, in prison. You hear me? So when, when I seen that, it, it, it let me know that despite what people say, when black people are in compromising positions, they do come together and they come together. A lot of time they only come together in that situation when something goes bad, when something goes bad in prison between, like you're saying, when somebody violates a racist, no matter what, who, who you don't like. As black people, we unite quick. Let me ask you this, guys. Cause I got to ask this question before we end this. How do we, how do we help affect keeping our people, our young black men, because the majority of our people are in prison? Like when you go and look, the black people overpopulate the prison. So how do we try to help to stop them from going to prison? I'll let you go first, Melvin. Well, actually you got to look at the laws which are in prison and you have to also understand it depends on the demographics and where you at, like for California, I speak on California. We have to get these youths because there's a lot of illegal immigrants over there. We write on the border. A lot of jobs are being taken up where they're being paid up under the table. And they want you to be bilingual. The school system is three areas that has to be dressed when it comes to inner cities, whether it's where Obama calls it pockets of poverty. That's what he called inner cities across America. Trump might call it rat infested, like he said. But either way ago, they was talking about communities such as where we at now. So it's three areas I think that need to be addressed. The Unified School District, that's where congregation and youths all the way up. Parks and Recreation where niggas gather and hold a sorrage. And then we got the juvenile justice system. Those three areas has to be addressed. But also, more importantly, you have to go to your elected officials and those that are in power that get into funding to make sure that funding is going to the proper resources to get what is directed to. A lot of times we have these organizations, particularly when you got city council members, board of supervisors, state elected officials, they're controlling the funding that comes from the federal government. So we have to know how this works. But we also, you can't go and get somebody to turn their guns in for no concert ticket either. But they're turning them in for a gun or where they can feed themselves. They have more susceptible. If you can feed them, they willing to listen more. So those are three areas of I think need to be tech at all levels from preschool up to the highest level. And we have to start looking at these laws that are being voted on because we don't vote and power and voting. So it's a lot of things, but those are the three areas that I would address on from an inner city standpoint. Thank you. Try to make it. Yeah, we on boss talk one on one.