 I live out in Sacramento. I'm gonna be out here from Sacramento. So hi, David. How you guys doing? Talk about, it's gentrification, before I kinda step into a piece about womanhood, but I wanted to talk about gentrification and how in a lot of areas we are being pushed out as black people, as communities of color. We are being pushed out and I wanted to speak to that. So, it's funny how the streets start looking different when you creep up on your old black. They put up all these new stores, like the F your mom and pop shops. My folks, they still reside in, so I still rep where I come from, but the only thing familiar is the road that's made of asphalt and the sky is still blue. And money still runs all the big talks, and all my brothers still are passing, and all the old spots. Just now that I got to pay a little fee, so they be outside. Couldn't afford it then, and I was trippin' rent, it's too high. The old pole with the broke bow, when we used to roast in freestyle. They went and put up new aesthetics, they wasn't feelin' the broke aesthetics. Oh, you try, this ground is mine. I paid the price, the blood is dry, cool down, you're gettin' too loud, go somewhere down now, you want me more, findin' us some bone, don't go too far, don't cross the line, don't make this eye, what more you want, cool down, you're gettin' too loud, come somewhere down now, you want me more, find me. Minutes, five and a half minutes, kneeling down, find someone shaded in total silence. If somebody can help us, if your kids are back there screaming, and they may be mine, please help us keep this quiet in a moment of silence. This time we chose 5.5 because August 6th was the 55th anniversary for the Voters' Rights Act, which actually finally allowed black women to vote. 50 years after white women were allowed to vote. So, we're still fighting for voting rights today, and we wanna make sure we all have those conversations with our kids about what it means that black women weren't even allowed to vote when women were allowed to vote. 50, we're talking about 50 years. We're talking about so many issues of police violence and Davis that are affecting families like mine, all kinds of families that you would take for granted if you haven't had those things happen to you. If you've never been stopped by the police and asked if you have drugs or anything else in your minivan, like I have, then you can really take that for granted. But those freedoms need to be extended to the whole community. So, thank you so much for coming. Thank you for being part of the solution. We're gonna start 5.5 minutes of silence in honor of all the black victims that were... Victims of police brutality, the women. This is for our mothers, for our daughters, for our sisters. Okay, starting now. Go and sign the Yolo Power petition. Go and take some t-shirts and be creative about how you distribute them. And thank you all for coming. Please, please keep us in the loop. Wild Events Davis, we're gonna try and engage our community more and more in different ways. And thank you for practicing safety. Thank you for wearing masks. And thank you all. Good job, baby! As I'm made. As I'm made.