 of slavery and since the days of rigid segregation. One of the things that we can joyously point out is that legal segregation is dead today. The kind of crime that we see in many black neighbors is entirely new. I grew up in the Richelon Housing Project in North Philadelphia and we didn't go to bed to the sounds of gunshots. Many people they did not lock their door until 11 o'clock or 10 o'clock at night when everybody was home. I grew up in Harlem in the 40s and 50s. I never heard a gunshot. There were old men who you could see sit on a hot summer night sitting out doors into the wee hours playing cards or checkers or whatever. It was a different world. Most black kids even under slavery had lived with two parents. And that was true all the way up until the 1960s. In 1880s the 75% of black kids lived in two-parent families. Children raised without two parents present. That was about 22% in 1960. One generation later it was 67% and it's gone up a little since then as well. And also the last time I went to the welfare the lady told me said if you have a living horseman that they couldn't get you no help. Why did black Americans prove susceptible to that change first? Because they were poor. I don't think that many Asian American girls who are preparing to go off to Stanford or Harvard are going to say, hey, I can live on welfare. Why should I abstain? But I know that if you are born and you find out that your mother is 14 and your grandmother is 30 and you don't know who or where your father is, that is a hell of a start on life. You're doomed to repeat that cycle. Now, if you say that racism is the cause of that, well then you'd have to explain why was black illegitimacy 12% in 1940? Or why was black teenage pregnancy in 1918 less than white teenage pregnancy in 1918? And surely it was much more racial discrimination back then than there is now. In intellectuals and race, the famous black writer James Baldwin, he's writing in 1960, people in Harlem know they are living there because white people do not think they are good enough to live anywhere else. In a new housing project in Harlem, they naturally began smashing windows, defacing walls, and you'll forgive me but this is his language, urinating in the elevators, close quote. What's wrong with his thinking? Oh my gosh, you need a couple of hours. But it so happens I grew up in Harlem in the 1940s, 1950s, and you didn't expect to find people urinating in places where black people lived. In fact, there's very little attention given to the fact that the public housing of that era was radically different from the public housing of today. I remember we had a relative of ours got into some public housing. We were so proud because you had to have a certain character, a record and so forth to get in. These were not places where you had dumping grounds for people who were at the bottom of the pile. In Intellectualism Race, you cite an observation by the intelligence expert, IQ scientist James Flynn, that just stopped me cold. After the Second World War, you've got large numbers of American troops remaining in Germany. For that matter, there's still several tens of thousands there today. And both black and white American soldiers had children with German women. And Flynn discovered that those children growing up in Germany showed no IQ differences at all. The black kids and the white kids the same. Quote, quoting Intellectualism Race, Professor Flynn concluded that the reason was that the offspring of black soldiers in Germany, and now you're quoting Professor Flynn, grew up in a nation with no black subculture. Close quote. Which means what? Which means they experienced exactly the same expectations? No, no, no, the expectations are external. The culture in which they grew up was not the culture in which black kids grew up in America today. There's no gangster out. That way, whenever I go live or post any content, you'd be one of the first to view it. Also, if you'd like to support this ministry finance, you can do so by clicking the donation information below at the bottom of this video. Thank you, those of you who have been supporting this channel and this ministry with your gifts and your prayers and also your support. I want to also just make this statement as well, too. For those of you who have been following this channel, the BCV broadcast, the Love Life and Marriage channel, there have been some shadow banning going on on my particular channel, the BCV channel. Therefore, if there's any of those of you who would like to donate and support this ministry, we have been encouraging all of you to just do so by clicking the donation links below. Reason being is because the numbers that I have far as subscribers, I know they are more than that, but unfortunately, YouTube has not been reflecting that. And also, the donations and smart or the super chat, excuse me, that have been sent. Thank you again, but the math is not mapping when it comes to the revenue being presented at the end of every month. So these are some of the things that I've been dealing with and have been engaged in regarding YouTube. That's why we're making changes. My wife and I are going to be adding another website along with the channel as well. But we want to try to start funneling and sending our subscriber based also to the website. So that'll be coming up very soon this year. We'll keep you posted and keep you informed on that as well. So happy Sunday. Happy Lawyers Day to all of you. Thank you to those of you who are in the chat, Facebook family. Welcome, YouTube family. Welcome moderators. Thank you for holding it down. We definitely really appreciate your diligence and your support. I have a great and interesting broadcast to bring before you today. I know you're going to be in for a treat. This brother that I'm about to bring on is going to be new to most of you. But after this live, you will be familiar with him. I had the opportunity to watch a video interview with him, actually on two separate channels. One was with Sister Keisha King. Shout out to her. And then also with Chuck. That's the guest committee guest with Chad Jackson. Chad old Jackson. If you don't know Chad old Jackson is he's the creator of Uncle Tom parts one and two. And what was watching this young brother man on this on this on this interview. And it just just was encouraging. And his his insight is his information that he had presented regarding the black community. It just it just it just floored me. It really did because it's one thing when you hear yourself present facts and present information and you produce receipts and things like that. But it's another thing when you have somebody else that's that's not crazy. And you sometimes think that you only one that's out here in the social media streets out here, putting out this information trying to help our people. And it seems to fall on deaf ears, but it doesn't God always has a remnant. He always has a remnant. And so I was able to connect with this brother and come to find out he he's from the D like me. So there's going to be a little bit of bias up in the building. It's going to be a little bit of bias. Okay. It's going to be a little bit of bias is letting you know that right now. He's rocking his D hat. I was going to he was he was tempted me to go go ahead and get mine and pull mine out. But I said, I'm a I'm a hold off for for this live today, but I may I may do it at another time. But anyway, his name is Chuck Middleton. Name is Chuck Middleton. He goes by the handle. Teach him Chuck. And you'll see what I mean after this live. So I wouldn't be further ado. Let me bring this brother on Chuck Middleton. Welcome my brother to the broadcast. How you doing, G? It was going on man. It was good. It's it's it's little to actually little to that's a little. I'll say middle to now. Yeah, it's little to my father. It's cool. People say middle 10 or they like they like to say little John. I get called little John a lot. Yeah. Little John. No, it's it's it's little to know. But yeah, good. My father, my father, my father, good, good, good, man. I'm glad to have you here, man. And I'm glad to hear research you coming on. We've been trying to we've been trying to link up for four four four four four four four five. Few days now. But I saw your your content, bro. And I said, man, I got I got to bring this dude on, man. I got to bring them on. And we've been we've been conversing, you know, offline and and so and so here you are, man. So little bit tell a little tell the audience a little bit about yourself, man. You know where you from, of course, they can see bad on the hat. You have to run me out. You have to run me one of them one of them black ones, bro. I got I got get one of them black. Yeah, yeah, yeah. I got one. It's actually like a it's like a tan one. It's like the, you know, like the weak color Timberland. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. I followed at this one store years ago, man. And I haven't run across another one since. So what about that 313 store? You been to the 313 store yet? No. They got up there. Yeah, they got one. They got up up in in the deep, man. I haven't had a chance to go there and but I have been calling them. I said, man, I got to get some of y'all's merchandise, bro. Okay. Yeah, yeah, yeah. But anyway, tell the audience about yourself, man. Okay. So I guess I'll tell the audience how I made it here or how I came across to you pretty much. You know, I just recently started doing social media. I will say maybe over the past two and a half to three years. I didn't really have a presence on social media, you know, when it came to, you know, big tech and, you know, and I was in college early on. This is when, you know, Facebook and my space and everything really began to take off, you know, as far as black, you know, we had, you know, black planet and all that little stuff. But, you know, I was never a part of any of that. You know, my conspiracy antennas were always up. You know, I always thought that Facebook in my space was some sort of, you know, government. Yeah. You know, get the public used to, you know, having their lives surveilled constantly by willingly giving up themselves to the public when prior to much of what we did was of course private. Yeah. So I always thought that was a bit strange. And so I never was a social media guy until recently, you know, with everything that has been that has been going on the United States politically, you know, friends of mine, family members or whatever close to me or just sort of sick and sick and tired of hearing me. I mean, I'm not one of those type of folks to just, you know, bring a conversation to you that you don't want to try and, you know, beat you over the head with something that I am in fact passionate about. But if the subject comes up, you know, and I'll speak my peace. So people say, man, you know what, man, you know, I'm not trying to to my own horn or anything like that. But it's just like a, hey man, you know, you got too much knowledge, right? You know, too much. You got, you know, what you know needs to be needs to be out there. It needs to people need to hear it. You have to be, you know, you know, you have to get out there. Right. So, you know, a close friend of mine introduced the idea to me of starting up a podcast with him. And he and I sort of started dibbling and dabbling with it a little bit, but it never really kind of took off. And he we sort of, you know, party ways when it came to that, that venture, but from that point forward is when I really started to dig into social media a little bit because he ended up convincing me that Chuck, if you're going to do a podcast, you know, you at least have to have a presence on social media. Unfortunately, this is the way of the world is how it works. This is what we do. And, you know, I started doing a little Instagram and, you know, I wanted to have one of those Instagram pages where you didn't know who I was. Right. You know, most of the things means stories or whatnot, but I didn't, I didn't want my face to be shown. Yeah. And after a while, you know, so much for that. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. I was putting out, you know, content, little stuff here and there. And then one day out the blue, man, you know, I get a direct message from Chad O Jackson. And he said, Hey, man, you know, would you want to talk to me? And I said, bro, bro, say no more. You know, the pleasure will be on mine because I was already a fan of Chad's by there because I had already seen Uncle Tom one in two. Right. Right. I said, cool, man, let's let's do it. And then he and I, we did a YouTube live of months back and me and him being clicked tight of a sense. And then from there, you know, I'm just branching off and I'm just, you know, meeting other people. You know, Chad told me, you know, because Chad, he gets a lot, you know, DMs and people sending them stuff and want him to check out this, check out that. Or perhaps people are sending sending him their own content with just something that I never did because I don't, you know, try to solicit or, you know, anything that nature, you know, and someone sent him a real or something I did. I don't know what it was. Somebody said he sent it to him and he said what caught his eye was, you know, the way I, the way I look, the way I was dressed. He said, you know, the ball cap and the urban tire. He was kind of intrigued. So he said, let me press me hit, let me listen. And he said he was surprised. He was shocked because he thought that he would hear the opposite of what he heard. But then he said, wait a minute, this guy is saying the exact same thing that I'm saying. Yeah, yeah. But I didn't expect it to come from him given the way he appeared. Yeah. And so that kind of caught his attention and then from there, you know, we just been sort of clicked tight and, and that's when you came across me and we exchanged information and I reached out to you and, you know, here I am. That's what's up, man. That's good. And I appreciate that. That you took time out of your schedule, man. Let the people know a little bit about your demographic. Married man, you got any kids, you got any parents, you got any felonies on your, on your, on your roster. Blood type, all that. Let him know, bro. Let him know. Yeah, let me, let me say, you know, I got a couple of misdemeanors, no felonies. Right. Yeah. Yeah. I, you know, I was, I was tried. Well, I was, I was, what's the word I'm looking for? I was charged with the felony once upon a time for doing something foolish, but then, you know, I played guilty to a lesser charge with Angela being a misdemeanor of, what was it? Resisting arrest and obstruction, obstruction of justice or whatever it was. So it is that, you know, I was like in my early twenties back then, that's a whole another story, but, you know, I'll get it to it if you like. But here I am at, at, at, at 39, you know, married four kids. I say from Detroit born and raised. Yes, sir. In the middle of my life. What up, though? We got, we got some, we got some what up doughs in the chats too. Yeah, we got some what up doughs in the chat. And he'll, man, when you hit me up and when you DM me, you said, what up, though? I said, oh man, you from the D. Yeah, come on. When you shot me up, when you shot me on non-brows, I, oh man, that ain't a three one, three area call. Yeah, I guess, you know, you relocated, you know, a lot of us, particularly those of us in the D, you know, we relocate to Georgia or Texas, Florida, stuff like that. Right, right, right. But yeah, man, you know, married now, you know, with kids, I don't live in the city proper any longer. Of course, I'm in the suburbs now, you know, fortunate enough to sort of pull myself up by my own bootstraps as, as us conservatives like, like to say. And so now I'm in a much safer area, you know, better for my family, you know, my children, I certainly wouldn't want my children to have to, you know, grow up in the same environment that I did. Yeah, that's good. That's good. Hold on, Seco, before you pull up, pass it back to you. I just want to put this disclaimer out there, because Seco, he's such a nice guy, he might not, you know, he might not let you all know. But, you know, I know, you know, that, you know, your audience, you know, you have a, you know, a church going, you know, you know, Christian audience, I mean, you know, by, you know, book chapter verse, you know, that's what we hear. That's what it's all about. But, you know, for those of you who may sort of traverse over to some of my content from here, you know, like I told Seco before, prior to coming on, you know, I'm not perfect, you know, I'm on Florida a bit, you know, when I'm on my platform and on my stuff, you know, I have a more brash delivery. I'm more of a, you know, but I'm, I just want you all in the audience and out in the world period who may, you know, you know, come across this, you know, just give me a little grace, right? And listen, you got it here. You got it here. You know, I'm not, I'm not, I'm not, I'm not a preacher. I'm not a theologian. I'm not, you know, I'm not a man of the cloth. I talk, I told Seco over the phone when we spoke, you know, I would defer to you when it comes to matters of scripture. But I do have something valuable to contribute to the overall conversation when we're talking about the state, the country and the state of the so-called black community more specifically. But just no one to warn you guys, you know, I'm not, I'm not holier than thou. Yeah. But, but you have, but you have talked, we have talked and you have, you have given me your conversion and how you became a Christian. So just for the record. And this young lady right here that's in the comments, do you see this young lady on the screen right there? Yeah, that's the misses. That's the misses. So she said more brash than me. There's some history behind that. So everybody that knows me, yeah, it's a shock. So, but, but yeah, that's the misses, man. So she does when the position like she said, she said, you good over here, bro. You good. We good over here. So, but yeah, just for the record, man, again, if you, if you feel free to share your, your, your conversion and how you became a Christian, like you said, you know, you're not, you know, nobody's perfect enough like that. So we're not professing that either. We're just forgiving just like you are. But share your story so people can know a little bit about your, your, your walk. Okay. So, you know, you know, and I was, I was younger, you know, I always, you know, I took an interest in, you know, history, you know, politics and, you know, philosophy, whatever, whatever. I mean, ever since I was, you know, a teenager and you know, being black, you know, you sort of, you know, you take some things for granted, right? You expect that those who quote unquote look like you have your best interests at heart. And so, you know, why would they, why would they lie? Or, you know, why would they tell you something that was, in fact, detrimental because the propaganda is so, I don't necessarily want to say it's subtle because when you are on the outside looking in, it's quite obvious. But perhaps you don't know it when you're younger. But, you know, all of the, the, you know, racial idolatry, the white hatred, the bigotry, the anti-christian sentiment, the anti-conservative sentiment, the anti-republican sentiment, et cetera, et cetera. I mean, it was so baked into the culture, you know, about during your formative years, you know, by the time it's just there. And so, you know, a lot of, you know, and my whole thing was I wanted to understand. It's sort of like I love the way Thomas Sowell puts it when he tells the story of why he was in fact a Marxist in his younger days, you know, even after having sat before the great Nobel Prize winning economist Milton Friedman. He actually took a class with Milton Friedman at University of Chicago and he, you know, according to his own personal testimony that he walked away, still a Marxist. And it wasn't until Tom Sowell got a job as a civil servant working for the government, his opinions on things began to change because he found out how wasteful and effective the government was and how the government showed no real interest in actually solving the problem. You can clearly see the difference. You can see class inequality. You can see, you know, all these things going on and for reasons that, you know, we may or may not get into during the duration of this conversation, there is only one side of the story being told, right? And that is, of course, the side of the left. And so, you know, Tom Sowell said the exact same thing. He said that the reason why I think the Marxist world view seemed to be the only world view that was even attempting to provide an answer or not even so much a whole other answer and a solution but also the cause. And so, you see the problems, you see the inequalities and so that's what I naturally took to, you know, from, you know, Dr. John Henry Clark and Dr. Joseph Ben-Yakonen and Ivan Van Sertema and Chancellor Williams and, you know, Chancellor Williams and his book Stolen Legacy and the Philosophies of Marcus Garvey and all of the sort of go-to kind of books that you need in order to say, you know, yeah, right on, you know, on to the people, I could pretty much, you know, verify and solidify my black card. And so, you know, and it's interesting the way that works because when you are going into, right, adulthood, and I think that I can safely speak for a lot of people when I say this is that you are, you want to sort of make your impression on the world, right? You want to go out, you're always told you can change the world and you can make a difference and everything sort of begins with you, etc., etc. And so, you have this unearned sense of self-esteem, quote-unquote that keeps on you solely on the basis of your skin color, right? And so, it's easy to fall prey to that narrative because going out there, going out into the world and standing on that ledge alone is a very terrifying proposition because you don't have anything to fall back on at that point. You don't have your family, your mother, your father, your race, or anything like that. And so, it's easy to fall behind behind that because, again, you get this unearned sense of praise based upon a kind of exclusivity or feeling of exclusivity that you are, in fact, given by way of the people who claim to speak on behalf of those behind the velvet rope. Just so long as those outside or on the other side who aren't a part of this secret club is made to look inferior or immoral, particularly in comparison to you. And so, I bought into a lot of that stuff, you know. And so, as time went on, I began to notice this cut to the chase passing back to you, Seiko. You know, all that did throughout my 20s was, it held me back slow down my progression in life, my growth. You know, I walked around for the better part of my 20s, you know, bitter, angry, resentful, couldn't quite understand why my life was turning out the way I thought it should, you know, because you know, I'm, you know, when is, when is justice coming? When am I going to get what is owed to me because of the terrible things that my ancestors went through and so on and so forth? Mind you, I think or I believe that I have the intellectual substance to back what it is that I in fact believe in. But after a while I said, you know what, this isn't bearing any fruit. I have to cast this aside. And so my Christianity of what brought me back because of course, everything that I'm talking about, right, which is in fact this sort of afro, this afro Marxism, this pan-African kind of you know, narcissism which is, you know, in fact what it is in my humble opinion you know, they they issue the entire Christian tradition because everything that exists outside of the context of African culture now Valley culture as they see it is somehow a bastardized or counterfeit version of what is in fact truly sacred. And so people who are really your righteous power to the people, you know, that whole notion of well, things like Christianity is the white man's religion, right? Christianity is something that was talked to your ancestors. Now why would you believe in something that was made that was given to your ancestors in order to make them submissive and subservient right and by way of right this actual historical analysis that is in fact inaccurate but that's what we all were taught to believe and so I said, let's screw Christianity because that's just something that your oppressors gave you to control you. This is what I believe right but then, you know I began to realize that no something is wrong here because the people who actually believe that and the people who actually peddle that I began to notice how immoral they in fact were. And I said, wait a minute this doesn't make any sense to me and then once my you know, my political wheels and gears started to turn and I got told you say that kind of brought me back to the spiritual because belief in the God of the Bible was the only thing that I could the most concrete thing that I could go to to justify my politics because what what politics to me does, it is instructs a human being on how they ought to be in the world and how you ought to be in the world is based upon what is in fact moral thus what is objectively true and what is objectively false and so without the God of the Bible what do you have left where you have man and that's when I knew I say no because believing in man and trusting in man is how we got to this foolishness in the first place and so it brought me back it brought me back to God because I could see what my own two eyes what a world without God would look like and it terrified me and I said I gotta find God, I gotta get back to God because that was the only refuge that I saw because I could no longer trust man I could no longer trust politics or this philosophy and that philosophy the God of the Bible and Christianity was the only thing that made sense to me alright well for those who are just joining I have Chuck Littleton not Middleton it was a full part of my part at the beginning of the joint Chuck Littleton and we're going to be discussing the black family the state of the black family has the state of the black family progressed or have we today regressed and so you heard some of the clips that if you have joined us at the beginning of this live you heard MLK Walter Williams, Thomas Sowell back and forth and so and if you are an objective thinker if you are an objective individual if you believe in facts then you would also conclude that the black family the black community is far worse far worse today than our ancestors could ever imagine or even concoct a dream of and so the question we have to ask ourselves is why is that why is it that as a people group over 90% of the black population votes overwhelmingly democrat why is it that the black family as of today has been inverted in its morality in its family structure i.e 70% over 70% of the black family that we have in our home are ran by single mothers that was unheard of years ago but now here we are in a culture and society today where the woman is king no pun intended where the man is now minimized he's not a factor and if he is in the home then what role is he functioning in that home so there's a lot there's a lot of nuance and there's a lot of issues that we have going on in our society particularly within the black community now we're not we're not talking any pro-black stuff but we as a people i'm like paul i wish for myself to be a curse for the sake of my people so paul had an affinity for the Jewish community because he himself was Jewish so i'm a Christian but i'm also a black man i'm also part of a people group that represents high crime i'm also a people group that represents immorality in ways that was foreign not say it didn't happen but to where it's being praised and being celebrated it was unheard of in our community so this is where we need to discuss what we're going to talk about today so i'll tell you right now if you don't have any hazmat protection you may need some because we're going to be slinging it if you don't have any PPE you may want to get some because we're going to be stepping on toes and smacking some heads so we're going to be doing that and you're going to be getting hit in the snot locker in the nose with the truth this is not personal but we're going to state the facts so let's talk about it bro you don't know all of the stuff about the present to you because i wanted to be i wanted to be real and live in reaction but we did talk about our position so our position is pretty much is spot on when it comes to politics when it comes to what we see in our society so let me just ask you this question bro why is it that in the black community when we have conversations regarding worldviews we have conversations regarding the democrat party why is it that the democrat party has overwhelmingly has the black community in its back pocket why is that in your opinion of course okay well see a lot of people they link the black vote and you know how it fell into the hands of the democrat party in the 1960s i mean a lot of folks have this very simplistic view of American politics they don't really understand the the bottom up you know small our republican nature of the of our governmental structure the way it is vertically and horizontally integrated right and so the president for many becomes sort of like the end all be all right and of course you know throughout the 60s well at least from 1960 to 1968 you know you had successive democrat administrations right you had JFK and his presidency was tragic because short of course and then Lyndon B. Johnson took over as vice president from there and then you know he would he would run again at 64 and he was eligible to run again at 68 but he did not do a large part to the foreign policy disaster that was the tech offensive but you look at 1964 when the passage of the civil rights act and the rights act of 1965 people say well black folks pretty much give the democrat party the credit in a sense for having a past such you know landmark legislation that led to something positive for you know the black community and that is in fact highly debatable to put it lightly never mind the fact that it wasn't that the 1964 civil rights act was in fact unconstitutional and it was unneeded but and still I like the way my friend Tatto Jackson puts it where when he talks about MLK when he talks about what MLK in fact did was he officiated the marriage between the black vote and the democrat party much what you know black folks as a whole got out of the civil rights arrangement we became a democrat so this is what a lot of people like to look to they look at it they say well this is JFK and Lyndon B. Johnson there was three photographs in every black home it was MLK and it was JFK wait a minute but again you know the civil rights measures were in that time were originally introduced in 1957 under the white eyes in our but it was filibuster this was the longest filibuster in legislative history which was led by of course Al Gore's father but if JFK's photograph was already on the wall then something else occurred prior to 1964 which was the passage of the civil rights act the black vote became or should I say the democrat party seized the black vote not in the 1960s they in fact seized it in 1936 with FDR the so-called negro vote as they called it back then became a part of the what was known at the time as the FDR coalition so the negro vote in 1930s became a part of the FDR coalition and what FDR had behind him it wasn't so much that his policies and this that in the third were beneficial for the black community what FDR had at his disposal was a well organized New York City run media machine because the same exact thing that you see going on as far as liberals and democrat parties concerned today FDR would utilize those exact same tactics back in 1936 FDR he won originally in 1932 of course his predecessor republican president Hoover did a horrible job to be fair to be honest when it came to handling the great depression which jumped off in 1929 and so FDR came with this whole new right way that he was going to solve the economic problem by way of federal intervention and you and I know you're a fan of Walter Williams, you're a fan of Tom Soler, Milton Freeman, you know that state involvement in the economy does not in fact fix the economy it slows it down but nevertheless this was the prevailing attitude why because FDR was one of the leading progressives of his day he and his wife he and his wife particularly Eleanor Roosevelt again they gave the appearance that they were in fact for the Negro and you had other black intellectuals and black progressives or progressives intellectuals tomato tomato they were in league FDR at the time individuals like Mary McClew Bethune who a lot of you have probably seen her photograph in the classroom as you were growing up Mary McClew Bethune is one of those people who you probably had to do a book report on at some point when you were in junior high well it was her because she had a prominent role in FDR's administration and there was another man who was the head of the Chicago chapter of the NAACP named Harold Ikes those two were heavily involved in the FDR administration from 32 to 36 and the whole goal became in 1936 to try to bring black folks over to the Democrat party so not only did they institute the help of the NAACP you know various organizations but they also implemented the services of the black church there were two there were two prominent slogans and I can't remember who popularized this quote but the moniker was because apparently there were a lot of black homes at the time who had photographs of Abraham Lincoln in their home the phrase became turn Lincoln's picture to the wall the debt has been paid that became the slogan the second slogan became and I know you may be familiar with what is his name what is his name Adam Clayton Pile yeah Adam Clayton Pile Adam Clayton Pile you know I think what was the head of Harlem Ebenezer church yep one of his famous lines was let what was it let Jesus preach to you or let Jesus lead you that's what it was let Jesus lead you and let FDR feed you feed you yeah so that became the popular refrain so you had NAACP and all of these black intellectuals i.e. aka black Marxists and progressives who convinced blacks again that the federal government is the way that we can get ourselves out of this mess and if you understand the tenets of progressivism right then it makes all the sense in the world and they use the plight of the black community to consolidate power to centralize power on the federal level so that they can direct society in a sense create society in their own image and this has always been a part of the progressive project in fact I wanted to touch on one point because you had mentioned in your talk to get to bring the black the black community over to the democrat party that's key what did you mean by that bro you said to bring the black community over to the democrat party what is that pre-suppose well the pre-suppose is that the black vote was belong primarily to the republican party up until then and it took time over the years because in 1936 particularly in the north there were a lot of southern blacks that were still loyal to the republican party but in 1936 I don't remember the exact number but somewhere between 70 and 80% of black voters in the north went for FDR now the majority of african-americans from my understanding in 1936 on the local municipal state level still voted republican but they pulled the lever for FDR because FDR was able to convince people that he was the president for the blacks he was the president that was going to fix everything was going to change everything and of course there were a lot of photo ops again without going into a ton of detail just putting it out there for people who can go out and do some research after the show if you're interested and learn about the tactics it was the same pandering propaganda and demagoguery we see carried out on behalf of so-called liberals today they were doing the exact same thing in the 1930s to try and bring in the black vote because by the 1930s we also have to bear in mind that we may go there during the conversation but by the 1930s the FDR administration was the first actual administration to recognize Soviet Russia as a country because it was FDR that appointed the first ambassador to the Soviet Union I believe it was William C. Bullitt I believe William C. Bullitt was the first ambassador to the Soviet Union because prior to FDR the United States had no relationship with the Soviet Union whatsoever so there was a lot of international political intrigue things that had nature going on because you had a collision taking place between fascism and communism in Europe at the time in the FDR administration we have contemporary historians but for those who were around and documented the goings on at the time compared FDR's administration to Benito Mussolini's administration because again even those inside of the FDR administration viewed Benito Mussolini's fascist Italy as a counterpart a European counterpart to FDR's New Deal so they admired Mussolini and the man in Germany as a matter of fact by referring to it as a piece of well-oiled political machinery it was the greatest example of political machinery in the world this was a quote by one of FDR's close advisors and others once again to piggyback once again on the black intellectual influence that was going on at the time with the NAACP and men like W.E.B. Du Bois W.E.B. Du Bois was also a huge fan of Germany and Italy at the time as a matter of fact this is a quote speaking I saw you play the clip from Tom Sow early in his book intellectuals and race which I read cover to cover in that book Tom Sow details or should I say he quotes W.E.B. Du Bois in intellectuals and race stating that it was W.E.B. Du Bois who said that the third Reich is the greatest example of democracy in the western world and so the American liberal slash progressive was a huge fan of fascist Italy and socialist socialist socialist let me say it again Germany and then of course an entire about face would take place once well I don't know you can say it but until the one that Kanye was mentioning in his the one that Kanye mentioned it wasn't until the Stalin peace pact with Germany was violated when that guy dated Soviet when he invaded the Soviet Union in 1941 did the American liberal slash progressive do an about face and then that's when that man became a villain because that man of course was proclaimed Man of the Year by Time magazine in 1938 he was no villain until he invaded the Soviet Union and the communists in the United States that had the ear of FDR convinced him to of course do an about face and the reason why I bring up communism and its relation to FDR because FDR's administration was full of communist apparatchics but the reason why I bring that up is because the so-called black activist tradition of the black civil rights tradition and the common turn or the communist party USA have been joined at the hip since the communist party USA was founded in 1919 so let's talk about two things and I know it's going to be the elephant in the room this is black history mine right as they call it and just a month ago the birthday of MLK was celebrated and commemorated right let's talk a little bit about MLK and we're going to talk about also these the so-called parties being switched which is why this I'm laughing because it's being told so much that people believe it's true and it was never true but just for the sake of record we want to put this out here let's talk about MLK and let's talk about the fact that people said that the parties with that's why black people are now Democrat and no longer Republican because the parties were switched go ahead run it now I think you know again you know they talk about the party switching because they make mention of Richard Nixon's southern strategy as it's called but it wasn't in fact Nixon's southern strategy it was Nixon's son built strategy because there was a whole to try and get the Republican vote out in you know southern Texas and Arizona Colorado that area so it wasn't so much Nixon's southern strategy as it was his so-called son built strategy but nevertheless no that isn't in fact true again you know I just detailed the fact that the so-called Negro vote it began to switch as far back as the early to mid 1930s it didn't take place in the 1960s or even in the late 1960s with with Richard Nixon that isn't in fact true and you can you know people who say that you know send they are being extremely disingenuous because without even looking at the political demographics in the country comparing the political demographics of the country back then versus today all you have to do is look at the policy positions that each party pursues I'm not saying that you know you know I vote Republican I've never voted Democrat I'm not here to say that the Republican party is perfect and I'm not here to say that Republican politician is perfect right the only person that has ever lived on this planet that has been perfect is well I think you all know who that was that man is not in politics because his kingdom is not of this world not saying that but if you again if you look at the Democrat party politics they have not changed from the days of Tammany Hall from the days of child slavery in the American South up until today they haven't changed so the parties did switch because each party still pursues the same political agenda and so it wasn't true that you know the reason why for example you know you looked at the south and again guys if you are you guys are familiar with Chateau Jackson you know he does a great job deconstructing and destroying a lot of these myths especially when it comes to what was actually going on in the American South prior to the civil rights I'm going to give you one more point if you write it down but I want to ask this one question and it's not about numbers for me but the expectation though dawg the expectation I thought regarding Chad's work and the heavy hitters that he had on his documentaries on his movies and for this brother to have the numbers that he has is disappointing to me it's a shame so can we talk about this just for a minute because I'm looking at his youtube channel dawg I'm looking at his youtube channel I'm looking at yours I'm looking at keysa kings I'm looking at all three of y'all's channels and I'm saying wait a minute wait wait dude had voted on part two he had larry elder on part one he had I mean you had to who's who to the who that on both movies on both documentaries and this brother I got more subs than he does and I'm not saying that for no shade I'm saying that because I'm like is it is it a lack of promotion or is it the fact that we as a people have been so brainwashed or because we we don't support our I don't know those questions bro so you help me because again I'm just asking you know it's difficult to say I'm gonna give you a little inside baseball you know when I went on the keysa kings show and she wanted to talk about communism and the civil rights movement and she wanted to talk about the LGBTQ and if their movement in fact infiltrated the civil rights movement or there's some sort of correlation or attachment there so that was the general topic we went into detail from there but someone sent her a message because of course when you're talking about the civil rights movement Dr. Martin Luther King Jr he is the titular he is the symbolic he is the civil rights movement personified at least symbolically speaking and so we broke the subject we we talked about him okay and she had told me that people close to her were upset and these are people who who considered themselves to be politically conservative and what have you and many of them are Christian you don't have to be a Christian to be politically conservative but if you are in fact if you are if you are a Christian not all conservatives are Christians but all Christians should be conservatives I've been saying that for a minute bro if I'm overstepping my bounds we on the same plan for you bro come on so folks were coming at her and they were saying you know who is this guy to be saying this I try to make this bogus comparison that you know of course she didn't disclose who it was and I didn't care she was just like some people were saying that you know what conservatives are doing when it comes to MLK is the exact same thing that the left is doing when it comes to our founders and I wish that conservatives would stop doing that because MLK had that one line where he talked about content of character over skin color and that just makes them a conservative when we have an entire slew I mean I can't even begin to tell you how much evidence and information exists out there out of the mouth of MLK himself included to speak to the MLK's politics and his true socialist beliefs and what have you but as far as the chat not having a lot of view I think it's still a deep shot to the system because I think that a lot of folks who self-describe as conservatives really don't quite know what that means and they aren't willing to come forward and reclaim the narrative and really sort of try in whatever sort of limited sort of purview not saying everybody has to go outside march and do this and do that if you talk to a friend or you have a family member who you're willing to have a conversation with about these sorts of things and just try and spread the message and do what little bit that you can even if that means having to topple some of our country's most precious icons like an MLK and I think Chad Chad does that man and a lot of things that he says there are people even people who are on our side they're just not ready and so fortunate but only thing you can do is just speak the truth and let those who have ears to hear let them hear and keep pushing and keep putting pressure on them because again MLK and these folks people like to say well Malcolm X was far more it's sort of like this tug of war going on between the so-called left and the so-called right over the legacy of certain individuals and I think that conservatives need to let go of the rope in that tug of war and really begin to define what true conservatism is One question on the screen is from Joanne she said didn't MLK vote Republican yes he was a heretic and a socialist you wanted to comment on that well yeah well of course he was a heretic I know Seiko could speak to this he had heretical views when it came to Christianity even as a child he inherited the tradition of the so-called social gospel from his own father who in Dr. King Seniors unpublished biography entitled Black Rebel in 1973 that he too embodied the social gospel tradition and this is the gospel tradition that he imparted to his son and it wasn't until and of course Dr. King by his own admission had abandoned his belief in the divinity of Christ by the time he was 12 years old and Dr. King being a man who graduated from high school at 15 graduated from Spellman with his bachelor's by the time he was 19 he excelled academically and Dr. King because of his stupidness because of his educational aptitude he began to develop this hubris and this arrogance about himself but he felt as though I as a human being with my own intellect you can see beyond the veil see beyond the fall and so that we as human beings can solve our own problems and he would sort of carry that self-insert sort of ego that he had about himself would become a centerpiece of his theology because King believed and you can go and read his papers they're all online for free you can just pull them up and Dr. King's papers he believed that Jesus Christ was not in fact divine Jesus Christ in essence became divine by way of his fealty and commitment to his God because in order for man we those of us who are not Jesus in order for us to sort of have that connection he felt as though it was a detrimental message as a follower and a believer in Christ to accept the orthodox view of Christ that his divinity was metaphysically bestowed because that would mean that we would develop this defeatist attitude that we could not be like Christ because we are not in fact divine so he rebuked the divinity of Jesus he in fact believed that again the point of the pulpit the point of the church and the role that the black preacher has in American society is to bring about social and political change and he was of course heavily influenced by a Protestant theologian an American German by the name of Walter Rauschenbush Walter Rauschenbush in fact a socialist I don't know if he was a member of the Fabian society but he became enamored with Fabian socialism as it is called and so that's kind of like a background on king he embraced the social justice gospel and never once did Dr. King speak when it came to his sermons that were in fact recorded did Dr. King ever mention salvation through Christ and through faith he never mentioned it once and apart from his heretical beliefs again the person asked the question yes he was also a socialist and he wedded his theological views with his Marxist views and he would even disclose his Marxism to his colleagues in private but he refused to allow them to tape him saying that he was in fact a socialist he also told his close age that if he were ever asked whether or not he was a socialist publicly he would deny it but you know his age would of course leak these private conversations to reporters and journalists and writers and what have you and now you know those quotes and those sayings and writings have been passed down to us as well as other exploits as well too Ralph Abernathy was one of his closest confidants matter of fact I believe he wrote a book and in it basically just going off of the information that was presented MLK treated women in fact it was rumored to believe if you want to use that term just for the sake on the safe side at the Lorraine Motel was where he had his last trist with one of the women that he was that he was with prior to his assassination but the interesting thing about that also his name was not legally Martin Luther King his name was actually Michael King his name was changed to Martin Luther King by the German reformer Martin Luther his parents changed his name so you have there's a lot of stuff like you said that people particularly within the black community we don't want to know we don't care to know because then it would force us to have to change our philosophical and mental paradigm on how we believe these people would be heroes I will say this as well and I'll let you have the mic back in just a minute but here's one of the reasons why for us as Christians we cannot afford to be biased because it affects our testimony we can't afford to be flip floppy when it comes to our favorites I tell people all the time that I hate and detest this Christian celebrity mindset because that's what men have done we've made idols out of men instead of worship the true guy that made all men so when you have individuals like Martin Luther King and his alleged abuse claims have come out on how he treats women but then we have people like John MacArthur who has now has been proven that he has been curving abuse claims of his church, of people being abused and mistreated women and children have been abused and some have been S.A.A.D. and the church has covered it up because of who the individual is and because of the quote-unquote great work that they have done and this affects the body of Christ across the board we have to as Christians I believe we have to sound the alarm we have to speak the truth and we have to let the church forward what they made and none of us none of us gets a pass when there is dirt that's being done because of the name or the individuals of who they are just wanted to put that out let me say two just so piggyback on that man you made a great point and it's funny because John MacArthur I came across that on your YouTube channel and I haven't had the opportunity to watch one of those videos yet because I don't even know the details it's very unfortunate because John MacArthur is one of the men whose doctrine is theology I told you say I'm still an infant in my walk where I try to have what we Christians like to say called a discernment but it was very unfortunate to see that with John MacArthur but to go back to King I mean you're absolutely right let me say this like a lot of people they say well listen you know okay he committed acts of adultery he cheated on his wife and it's down to third and see when people talk and there was suspicion J. Gauhover believed that the civil rights movement was a communist front movement and you had others like Republican Senator Jesse Helm and there were some others who were even the Kennedy brothers Bobby Kennedy who was the acting attorney general at the time when his brother was serving as president of the United States and they the story goes that they both jointly pulled Martin Luther King aside to warn him about some of the individuals that he had in his inner circle primarily of course Jewish lawyer and financier Stanley Leveson Stanley Leveson is a name but you'll hear a lot when you start talking about MLK because it was Stanley Leveson's connections that brought the spotlight to MLK and made MLK seem as though he was larger than life Stanley Leveson was in fact he wasn't far from far as my research has shown me Stanley Leveson was not an act of what they call a card carrying member of the Communist Party but Stanley Leveson was in fact a lawyer for many involved in the common term conspiracy like Julius Rosenberg he in fact was a part of their legal team of legal defense but a lot of what we know about Stanley Leveson comes by way of a man by the name of Morris Childs who acted as an FBI spy on our the Soviet Union from 1954 to 1982 and Morris Childs took 57 missions to the Soviet Union again acting as an American spy as a member of the Communist Party for almost 30 years and he was given the task of gathering intelligence on Stanley Leveson Stanley Leveson was subpoenaed to speak before the government in 1962 until this day the majority of Stanley Leveson's testimony has not yet been classified so we don't even know what Stanley Leveson told the United States government under oath but there is no two ways about it Stanley Leveson if he was not a member of the Communist Party he was what they called a fellow traveler and he and MLK were joined at the hip of what so that even when the Kennedys presented the information about Stanley Leveson to Dr. King he refused to take action and he didn't believe it and he asked for corroborating evidence and this and the third and I say all that to say that I get it right people talk about man okay the man cheated on his wife find me somebody who hasn't cheated on the spouse this and the third right I mean you know whatever if it were about Dr. Martin Luther King's personal indiscretions it wouldn't it would you know I mean sure is would it be worth talking about I suppose right depending on the certain to what have you but when you are talking about someone and Dr. King who was given the title Reverend when you think of a man and Dr. King who again is the moral exemplar of the 20th century he is the one who you know who showed that democracy works and incrementalism and so on and so forth but when you have a man who throughout the entire duration of his adult life engage in deliberate deceit and deception that is in fact what we're talking about we're not talking about you know rumors of his cocaine use and not only was he did he cheated on his wife but MLK it is it is said it is believed by investigators researchers who have put this information out people can ignore it if they like her man you don't want to believe it that's your choice but not only did he cheat on his wife but he had an affinity for prostitutes people say well you know and it was white women that he was with I don't care if you like white women like black women whatever that's the run of it but if you once again matches up because if you listen to another communist defector who gave us a whole slew of valuable information about the way the communist party operates that being author of color communism in common sense Manning Johnson Manning Johnson tells us that the white progressives who are who are above blacks within this sort of international communist hierarchy would send you know white honeypots or sexual workers in a sense to engage in pillow talk and what have you to gain information on what their doops in fact were doing and thinking to make sure that they stayed in line and then they would report back to their superiors and then of course the chain of superiors would work it's way all the way back to the Kremlin but Manning Johnson referred to this as sexual politics and so people deny MLK's Marxism because they look at Jehovah who is commonly viewed as the villain of history and MLK is considered the hero now I know you and I are sitting here trying to try and I Jehovah endorse everything that Jehovah ever said Jehovah ever did but let's just look at history dispassionately for a second and just look at it for what it is when Jehovah has suspicions that MLK was in fact a part of some sort of international Marxist conspiracy to subvert to the United States did he have a point of course he did he did his job I'm going to answer the question for anybody watching in the comment section who they may hate me for saying it or they may be whatever but I'm going to just come out flat I'm saying it so I just say that to say a lot of people say well you just want to take your pound of flesh from MLK because he was a flawed man and of course he was a flawed man but there's one thing to be a flawed man and it's another thing entirely when you consider what he in fact did and again he knew he knew what he was doing and not only did he but he again he knew how to do it in such a way as not to arouse suspicion and one more thing I'm passing it back to you MLK was not as popular as again we would like to believe he was again it was his connections to Stanley Leveson and others there's just no Jewish conspiracy of this that and third but you know it's sort of looking it just is what it is right just like I as a black man say go you as a black man we know that the majority of African-Americans if you want to call them that are black so whatever terminology you like they just so happen to be left wing there aren't a lot of conservative black folk out here there aren't a lot of conservative Jewish folk out there some are most aren't all right and then you know you have a lot of secular atheists who are who are Jewish who are ethnically Jewish but they are religiously secular Stanley Leveson was one of those individuals and he used his media connections his connections in the publishing world and the entertainment world to make sure that the cameras were always fixated on Dr. King and his movement so that the public would began to embrace Dr. King right because he was the one he was the one that was going to take the black community and get them into this mode this spirit of activism and protest Dr. King wasn't even liked by the people in his own for example I look at at the time the head of the National Baptist Convention was a man by the name of Joseph H. Jackson and he clashed with MLK a lot of them they couldn't they didn't like MLK for the main reason because of his heterodox beliefs and you know and I was his theology said he is not and they didn't want any part of what they knew MLK was really secretly up to and you know it took a whole lot again a lot of phony media and perception over reality just like isn't that like it is today exactly I mean it's nothing new right just like today with FDR and of course FDR pointing the first first black federal judge and William Hasty and then FDR and from 1932 to 1936 he had this this group of folk black advisors in his administration that he referred to as the black cabinet again it was it was perceived that FDR right it's the same brand of liberal pandering we see today from FDR to the 60s nothing new under the sun perception over reality but MLK was not a like man let's for those of you joining my guest my brother Chuck Littleton you can go to his instagram page and also his youtube channel his title teach him Chuck teach him Chuck you can go there and you can like share and subscribe to his channel to his content he has a lot of information that I know the average black person and let alone just any person that have been that have been indoctrinated by this school and education system will not know you have to do your research and do your homework and so this is one of the reasons why I'm glad to have him to have him on as a black man right are we are we an oppressed people in this country well it depends on what one means by oppressed are we politically and socially you know we are oppressed in the sense that we are human beings and life is a burden on us all because we are all the seed of Adam but that's just me speaking from me so let me break it down is the white man oppressed does he have his proverbial knee on our neck can we get ahead without this white man this white quote unquote devil you know pressing us everywhere we turn I mean come on now Chuck we got Roland Martin we got we got black media we got Ricky we got Ricky Smiley I mean go by some names I mean we got pretty much the black population that has the microphone that has the platform are telling us we have people in the white house we have people in our own house telling us that we can't get on and we can't get by and that's why I played those clips earlier today because you've been in barbershops we talked about this before we've had barbershop style conversations and what is the eyes of the average black person being able to have a robust passionate keeping it real conversation about what we are dealing with as a people Chuck what's the eyes of that I mean you know it's crazy you know you're here all the time I mean you know speaking like barbershop talk and everything like that you know you up in there and you know like the barbershop that I go to you know they'll have like the music playing you know sometimes they'll have you know like some nice you know some soul some R&B stuff playing which is a little you know a little secular music but nevertheless you know but then other time you know they got the hip hop stuff going on and you know what they call in drill rap to drill rap to down you know what that is I just heard it's like this new kind of a modern day killing them you know killing on people rap yeah yeah right gangsta rap 2.0 gangsta rap 2.0 just drill music and so it's like you got all that going on and then you know you may have a conversation about politics break up and in the background you hear this stuff going on and you just sitting there wondering like okay here they are talking all this crap about this you know this goings on that going on police brutality or this and that and so on and so forth and in the background you just hear this music going and I just sit there with a slight grin on my face and I'm telling myself really so you all really don't know what the problem is you really act like you have no idea okay so when you say what's the eyes I mean I don't know you know it takes men like you and I to just you know kick the door in into the cipher and just start giving them something completely different right but I don't know about you but I've been in those situations before where you're in a room with people who think they know what they're talking about and they don't expect to hear something contradictory from you and then the moment you open your mouth all eyes and ears are locked in because they're like dude I've never heard anything like that before and when you speak it with conviction they have no place but to listen because part of the problem is it's sort of like what Thomas Sowell speaks about throughout his entire book Conflict of Visions when he talks about the constrained vision and the unconstrained vision one of the key differences between the constrained vision and the unconstrained vision is that or what we would say the constrained vision is the conservative vision the unconstrained vision is what we would I guess call the liberal vision if you will and he says that the unpeople who have an unconstrained vision they trade as hot as he put it they trade fidelity for sincerity and what he means is they don't necessarily care about what the truth is if they can convince you of it through their passion and through their conviction then you're simply bound to believe it because the fact to be damn I am going to it's kind of like this old late 18th century French sentimentalism or romanticism where it's the passion of the emotion of it all and that's what you get when you listen to a lot of black folk when you listen to the Dr. Umar Jaisa of the world and the Roland Mardens and what is the other guy oh my god he is Michael Eric Dyson he's so contemptible he's from our hood bro he's from Detroit I was thinking of another guy though man he works over with the Young Turks Network he is a richie richie when you listen to him again they like to you know they like to shout, bully intimidate especially when they are around their white progressive counterparts even when they are around some white conservatives there's always this good faith disposition on behalf of many of people who confront them they simply give them the benefit of the doubt because they seem to be so or they are in fact so passionate there must be some truth to what it is that they are saying or else why would they be so angry why would they be so upset oh police are out here hunting us down you don't know what it's like to be black in America you don't know what it's like to get pulled over by police and have that fear that you know you're literally about to die why would someone say that if it was not true but folks who are in our position have to have the wherewithal and I know I do and I know you do too say but you're full of it you're full of it you can't bully you can't intimidate me because you can take advantage of this white or black liberal who's been Ivy League educated and privileged which is ironically where a lot of these cockamamie ideas come from the Ivy League you can try and convince them of that because they don't know in many respects the darker side of life because they ain't from the hood they ain't from the streets I know killers I've seen killers I've had homeboys that I've lost their lives in these streets that I know personally that I could I would need more than one hand it's the counter and so I'm saying all that to say that I actually know the mindset and the mind in the soul and the spiritual the privacy of a lot of what's going on out here the two right so you can convince them of that nonsense because they don't know the darker side of life because privilege gives them this huge blind spot you see but I know coming from that I know you lying and see I got the heart to call you out because I'm not like one of them you can't pull you can't you can't pull that white man can't jump board crop on me because do I look like that me yeah exactly do I look like a pop look like you can look me no it ain't gonna happen and ain't gonna happen right so so bro so it was Rashad Richie somebody mentioned in the comments thank you thank you chat room Rashad Richie from the young Turks is the is the individual's name I want to play I want to play some clips for those who just joined bro we are an hour and a half in bro out for two hour live we we haven't bro we just we just scratching we just scratching I told you that's we haven't even bro we haven't even dug into the pie yet bro we just we just we just turning the plate around that's how we do it is moving to play over a little bit so I'm a play couple clips bro cuz I definitely got to get your reaction I'm not sure if you've seen this when you probably have but just for the sake of the audience I got to get your reaction on these last these last four clips that I want to play with Larry Elder momentarily but I want to play this clip because we want to talk a little bit about racism quote-unquote racism yeah yeah that's what you asked me is are we a press no it's a bit no when we're not you know we we press ourselves because you know our values all right we our own self-induced self- charismatic self-induced yourself uh self-inflicted because society is our built from the inside out from the ground up not from the top and that and that is one of the quintessential differences between what we call left and right the left believe in building a society from the top down the so-called conservative view is We believe in building society from the bottom up. So go ahead. Come on, come on. So I want to play this clip, and I'm pretty sure you've seen it before, but just for the sake of record, I want to play it and get your reaction to it. Let's go. Making it a bigger issue than it needs to be is the problem we have. If you're born in the US, it really doesn't matter that the condition of your birth. What matters is what you inherit from your nurturing, from your environment, whether or not you're going. I mean, I'm just from the standpoint of having been born with little. Race plays a part in wealth distribution, or either a mindset that you can't. Today? No. You don't? No, I don't. I don't. You and I, we're proof. Why would race have anything to do with it? Stick your mind to what you want to do and go for that. It's kind of like religion to me. It's a good excuse for not getting there. Where were you born? Me? Yeah. Baton Rouge, Louisiana. Baton Rouge General Hospital. I was born in Memphis, Tennessee. I had a long haul from where I came from to here. But here we are. So the proof of the pudding is in the eating. And here we sit at the dining table. But it's hard to, when you say that to some people, because they say, oh, there you go with it. Pull yourself up by the bootstraps thing. And you're just being respectable. Not everybody can do that. Bulls***. Everybody can. So your thoughts, sir, was Mr. Morgan on it? Yeah, I mean, yeah, Mr. Morgan, Mr. Morgan was on it. You know, one thing he talked about, you know, he talked about, you know, said something about your environment. And as long as you're given the right tools and these sorts of things. And, you know, just for the sake of argument, I mean, I'm not taking anything away from that statement. But even that is not, in fact, entirely correct. Because, see, I just want to disabuse folks of this notion that, and I think a lot of self-described conservatives fall into a lot of this as well. They are, that's the great time. So I mean, I mentioned them a few times already. Of course, one of his most famous quotes, and I know you all are familiar with it, a lot, that there are no such thing as perfect solutions, or there are no solutions, only trade-offs. And even with perfect parents, perfect upbringing, some people just go astray. Even in spite of some of the worst, most awful conditions, some folk get left behind, cast aside by their parents and left discarded, left on someone's doorstep. Like the man who would go on to become the founder of the fast food giant Wendy's. So for example, I mean, so there are a lot of examples of, you know, so that one of the things, again, when it comes to the left of what Tom Saw refers to as the unconstrained vision, again, the point of, aside from the redemptive aspect of Christ of God, you know, revealing himself, as they say, the logo, so the word may fled, is to give man a sense of solace in knowing that life's suffering will be worth it in the end. And so when you have that understanding, it places levels, boundaries, places restrictions on you because it brings about a sense of humility within one so that you will not impose your will on someone, even if you believe by doing so, you will, in fact, sort of help them. You are helping them because they are too stupid and uninformed or ignorant to realize, and this is where you develop a dictatorship of the expert class, all a part of the whole, you know, the tradition of the scientific revolution and, you know, filtering down to Darwin, Marx, and then the progressive era in the early 20th century and what have you, but when you recognize and realize that no matter what, there is no way to end suffering in this world. There is no way that you can create a system wherein everyone succeeds. Utopia, it's not possible. Because you're going to end up doing more damage by trying to, because see the left again, which is birthed, it's incubated in this notion, this idea that there is no reward after, right? This may be a very unpopular thing to say, but that was the popular, one of the popular mantras or monikers of the black Muslims and they probably still think this way. You hear it from the honorable Elijah Mohammed or Elijah Mohammed, some of you may not think he was honorable, right? Or even Malcolm X himself, where they talk about how the white man has you believing in a mystery bespoke in the sky so that he can reap the reward and the benefits of this life while he has you praying for a heaven afterward. Why don't you focus on getting your heaven here? But anyone who thinks that life on earth is heaven for white people is operating in the most intense degree of ignorance, I can never imagine. I can't even put words to it, it's so ridiculous. But I just say all I have to say that even in spite of all of that, there is no perfect way. But your boy, Don Lemon said something. He talks about our race being a determining factor in terms of how wealth is in fact distributed, which really, really speaks to the inefficiency and the inadequacy of the Marxian worldview because the left concerns itself with wealth and income redistribution but not wealth and income creation. Because wealth is not distributed, wealth is created. It can be distributed, but when you move a person's property from here to there, right? It does not enrich the person that you've just given it to. You've simply given a fish as the old saying goes to someone who doesn't know how to fish. The person that does have the knowledge to provide for those who cannot provide for themselves will in fact no longer produce if you disincentivize wealth creation by punishing the people who succeed within the context of the system. And that's why socialism produces nothing but destitution because it weakens the will of the individual to propel himself beyond the average lot because of the sacrifices in the vision of certain individuals is why you and I say go, I sit here having this conversation while you all the way in what Texas and I'm all the way here in Michigan, right? The wealth in the world and what we take for granted and everything that we enjoy today is made possible because of the freedom that capitalism gives us. And when he talks about income, again, distribution, the most important aspect of what we call our free market system, again, is the will of the individual to create and before one creates something tangible it first starts here, right? It's an idea, it's in the mind. And so what am I saying? I'm saying that it's the human capital, it's the human himself. Yeah. That creates the wealth. It is man in his mind and his imagination. There are things that I couldn't even, I couldn't have imagined of something as commonplace as a smartphone. I couldn't have imagined it. 10, 15 years ago, but here we are. Yeah, man. We don't even know what life on this planet will be like five, 10, 15 years from now. We don't know, but there's somebody somewhere who's thinking of something. Somebody somewhere is thinking of something. They may be black, they may be white, they may be yellow, I don't know what color they are. Yeah, yeah. You did what I'm saying. Absolutely. Because they are going to create a market that doesn't even exist. We don't even know it. One of the things that when I hear people like Michael Eric Dyson and other socialists, you know, of our day, try to talk about Jesus, about what would Jesus do and how Jesus would have, you know, would have trampled this government over and all this other kind of stuff because he was for the people. Well, Jesus was never a socialist. As a matter of fact, in fact, Jesus had someone to try to present socialism to him in Luke 12. He said, master, tell my brother to share his wealth with me. He said, man, who made me arbiter over you? He said, be on guard from all forms of covetousness. That's what socialism is really in a nutshell. He says, a man's life does not consist of what he has. And so therefore you see Jesus already smacked the face of socialism right down to the dome. And then you also have the parable of the talents. Parable of the talents, right? You see what I'm saying? You had a parable of the talents. Jesus says, look, he gives to each one according to his own ability. So that shows you, you may be a five talent dude. I may be a two talent dude. But God says, if I give you five, I'm gonna expect for you to make good on that five. If I give a person one, I expect for them to make good on that one. So when I hear people talk about, like you said, this equal wealth distribution, we see that as antithetical to the gospel. That's antithetical to Christianity. Jesus never even taught that. So this is why I believe we have to get back to biblical principles. And like you mentioned, and somebody had mentioned about politics, not being a part of the kingdom. No, politics as a Christian, it helps us to have a better understanding of what the kingdom of God is because we are kingdom citizens. And so what we want to do, as long as God has us here and he tarries, we want to make much of Christ and we want to make, we want to make a mark in our society. If he calls it to be salt and light, then salt and light are two distinct properties. It penetrates and it also purifies. And so you have individual that are supposed to be Christians that are supposed to be affecting their culture and whatever sphere and whatever, realm that God sovereignly has us in. So your lane is your lane, right? My lane is mine. It'll be wrong for me to tell you to move according to what I think you should move instead of say, wow, I appreciate how truck moves and how he is able to articulate and how he's able to present information in the context that God has it in and in the culture and in the society that God has us in. But far too many of us, we look at it as well. I mean, like you mentioned, this person he got to Detroit fit it on. So anything good come out of the D? Yeah, yeah, it can by God's grace, right? So I look at what you do. I look at what Chad does. I look at what all of our brothers and sisters in Christ do. And this election cycle that just passed though, bro, it really showed me a lot. I'm not gonna, I mean, to the point to where it's, never would I have thought nor imagined that there are certain things I couldn't say without being suspended or having the threat of being de-platform or demonetized all because I hold to a position regarding what I see that's factual, right? So I tell people, hey, look, go check out 2000muse or go check out this channel or go to this website because our job is to inform our people. And now we're talking about all people because I'm to love my neighbor as myself. I don't wanna see anybody walk in ignorance, but Chuck, bro, it just seems to me, man, we're close to getting a patent on deception and ignorance, bro, in our community. I mean, we're 13 or 12% of the population, man, but look at what we represent when it comes to crime and violence and those things. So I know I'm tweaking you. So go ahead and show your thoughts and then we'll knock these other clips out and we'll go ahead, bro. All right, I'm just, all right, A word you said, I got you up on my phone, but then I also have my computer in front of me just so I can kind of peek at the comments and kind of turn them, so I can just address them. All right, so then it's up to Sheila said, nothing like too long-winded men with a bunch of laughing emojis. I don't know if she dissing, I don't know if she- I don't know if she- I'm sorry, y'all, I'm sorry. But we said this was gonna happen, dude. We said this was gonna happen before we even camped up. We already said that, but go ahead, we're good, we're good. Yeah, I'm sorry, y'all, we're talking too much, bro, I'm talking too much. No, we're good. No, you know, like you said, it's like, why does it seem as though, again, you played the clip when Tom Saw was talking about how Black families are, or by racial families in Germany, when you have a Black, you know, one Black parent, doesn't seem to be this guy, but because he said there's no Black subculture in Germany, or at least there wasn't a Black subculture in Germany in the 1940s. In the time, yes, yes. Brafters were now, but there wasn't one back then, in the 1940s, at the end of World War II, or, you know, going to the 1950s. So, you know, what kind of bred this Black subculture is, again, the ideas of dim-witted intellectuals. You know, you spoke about, you know, the title is, you know, is the Black family progressing or regressing, right? Regressing, yeah. A regressing, right? And so, you know, we look at the Black family, and the reason why it looks the way it does for one is this, of course, this outburst and this acceptance of sexual impropriety, sexual immorality. Because you have to remember and understand that the secular worldview dictates that no moral system should be downstream, or should I say no moral code is preceded by the supernatural. That was a quote from Vladimir Lenin himself, the first president of Soviet Russia post-1917, or I don't know, what do they call the head of the Soviet Union, the president, or the chairman, the importer, I don't quite know, or the premier. So, this was a quote of Vladimir Lenin. But of course, you know, Vladimir Lenin was walking in the shadow of Karl Marx, who of course had nothing positive to say about the family because the family, of course, is a bourgeois institution. So, remember, and I'm gonna bring it back to what you said about this decadence within the black community. And again, there's a reason for that. I'm just kind of giving some background for what we look at the family. Marx begins the capitalist, I mean, the communist manifesto with the opening line, and we all should know it. And that is the history of all here, the two existing societies, it's the history of class struggle. Marx believed in that history, building off of Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel, that history was a dialectical process, thesis, antithesis, synthesis. And that was in Marx's view, based upon a material comfort and material acquisition, because what one's ideas are formed through what they perceive through their senses. And so what Marx was saying in so many words is that the way they conceive of the world is a byproduct of what they experience. And what you experience from there is downstream from where you are within the hierarchy, so to speak. And so if you are, so you can have these kind of contingent or transient moral axioms based upon where you are, where you fit in. And so if you look at, for example, the economic disparity, right, the point there. Again, blacks, and this is their worldview, that blacks should not be expected to behave in a manner that is on par with what the wider society expects from you, because their morality is contingent upon their position economically within the hierarchy or within the economic strata. So those who are lower on the economic totem pole should not be expected to behave morally, because morality, again, is a byproduct of one's material conditions and not a byproduct of a transcendent moral code that comes from something that is not of this world. And so therefore, so once again, that's why you look at the condition that's going on in the black community, they aren't expected to behave better because before they can be expected to change the way they behave, they have to be given the material prerequisites so that they can reshape their moral outlook because they don't have the, you hear liberals and progressives, AKA Marxists say this all the time today about income redistribution, well, we don't put enough money, we don't put enough resources, we don't put enough wealth, and it's that in the third. Well, that's inconsequential because you can't term Tony Montana in the Albert Einstein if that's not what he wants to be because everything is a value. As we are learning today, even something as simple as gender has become a value. And that's sort of like the way they want to have it because according to them, once again, everything is socially constructed based upon one's position within the society and that position is of no, they don't control it, right? That's what I'm saying in so many words. So that's why you got all this, the foolishness you got going on and the breakdown of the family is again, this was part of the progressive agenda because there is to be no hierarchy left in the society, even if the, and once again, when you take Marxism, Communism, when you take it from that one seed, it delineates and it goes into a married various directions. It goes into feminism and critical race theory and queer theory and this theory and that theory and wherever the secular world you can find division, again, they will exploit it. Right, it's like nailing Jello to a wall. You can't, you're never able to hold it because it's always going to morph and move to different areas. And that's why when people want to talk about CRT, like you just mentioned, there's so many outliers and there's so many elements to it to where as you think that you may have CRT pegged over here, but they have another strand, they have another byproduct of it, but it's all coming from the same root. It's all coming from the same root, but interestingly enough, you have, yeah, go ahead. But you got, again, you have the division between husband and wife and male, female. And so, again, the family is an institution of oppression. And so, again, and it made it extremely easy for, and I hope you, I hope I didn't. No, no, no, no, no. I didn't have to cut you off because I just wanted to make sure I made that point in my long-winded shit, Sheila, I'm sorry. I'm gonna mess with you little bitch, Sheila. I know it's all up. Yeah, and so that's why the family is the position that it's in, because the black community, such as it is, bit the whole progressive, we bit it, we bought it hook, line and sinker. And again, like Tom Sowell explains, and intellectuals and race, if you all haven't had a chance to read it, they go play the clip with Tom Sowell speaking to my man from the Woober Institute about it. Tom Sowell details in that book that those who specialize in the soft sciences, which is literature, philosophy, the humanities, liberal arts, political science, these are the people who pretty much, they specialize in the production of ideas. And they go out in the society and they use the wider society of those within the wider society as guinea pigs, as lab rats for their experiments. And so these are the people who get liberal arts degrees. This is that woman you can stand in your HR department at work. Top of the top end, you got your politicians, your community activists, the head of some nonprofit that's trying to do so on and so forth. And so they go out in the society. Like Tom Sowell says, whenever you have a group of well-trained, committed, so-called educated demagogues and charlatans, they always prey upon the minority population within the society because it's easy to cultivate resentment amongst them. Yeah, man. Because this kind of existential fear or anxiety about the prospect of assimilation, because you feel as though by assimilating, you will be losing something that is unique to the self. Yes, sir. And it's unfortunate because black folks, we have been turned into enemies against our own country and we've been turned into enemies against ourselves. And that was foreign, bro, to our ancestors. You know what I'm saying? To where you have a society today that hates the very structure and like you said, institution that number one, that God created, he created the family. And he created the family to reflect how he wants his kingdom to operate. And so when you take out the father, when you take out the head, then how does the body supposed to function? You see what I'm saying? And so then you deal with, then you, I can say deal with queer theory. Then you deal with the emasculation issue. Then you deal with the effeminate issue. You deal with all these different, sexual or perverted mentalities and lifestyles that go on in our communities that was unheard of, bro. Not saying that it didn't happen, but bro, back in the day, man, if somebody got pregnant and they weren't married, what happened to them? They went down south. They, I mean, you gonna stay with your aunt and them or whatever, you're not about to walk around here. We ain't about to do no gender reveal. We ain't about to do, we ain't doing no baby shower. We ain't doing that because it was a shame. It was a dishonor, you know what I'm saying? So we've gotten so far away from it to where it's not even in the church, dawg. Even in the church, dude. We have people that are praising sin instead of saying, wait a minute, listen. Like you mentioned, none of us is perfect, but we don't make excuses for sin. We make confessions. We don't walk around here celebrating sin of any kind. We're to deal with it. So I wanted to play this one also. I think you familiar with this guy, this clip here. I think you familiar with this guy. You may know who this one is. So let me- Thought on Black Lives Matter. What is it, what do you mean? The idea was that there was this movement called Black Lives Matter, thinking that the rest of America didn't seem to understand that, that Black Lives Matter. I am a young, black, rich, if that don't let you know that America understand Black Lives Matter these days, I don't know what it is. Don't come at me with that dumb. I had to play him. I had to play him. Your thoughts, sir. Your thoughts. I mean, when I mean, you know, again, he had, I mean, say what you want to say about his music and the things that he promoted where I have you. You know, you played the clip for a reason. So just kind of, you know- Right. Let's just assess his- It was a context of what he said. It was a context of what he said, appraised his words within his context. I mean, he's absolutely right. And God bless Wayne for being honest and having enough integrity, not to, you know, sort of parrot the line that he knew. He said, and it's weird because these are, again, you know, white. I would say, I mean, these aren't rock-ribbed conservative, white conservatives asking him questions. Right. You know, and it's ill because, you know, you get the sense that the white liberal, again, you know, their liberalism is, in fact, their religion and they are seeking redemption through you in a sense, which is why your suffering, why their redemption is predicated upon your suffering because they have to come to your rescue. And so you have to admit as a black person that you are, in fact, oppressed so that they can not, even if it doesn't, even if it doesn't necessarily mean that they have to, you know, them personally feel as though they have to do something about it, but that's, you know, they feel a sense of shame and a sense of guilt for even being white, something as simple as being white, when in fact the shame doesn't come from their skin color. The shame comes from the original sin as well as shame comes from. Come on, bro. Everyone feels that sense of shame. Everyone, you know, saying that nobody walks outside naked because we'd all be embarrassed. We'd all go high behind the tree because once we became aware of the knowledge of good and evil, then we became aware of our nakedness and we became aware of our shame, became aware of evil. So this is what these folks out here are doing, but I love the way Wayne just, you know, he refused to back down. I don't know if you know or if the listeners are familiar with Lil Wayne's story. And it may have been the same in an interview when he went on a undisputed or first take. I'm pretty sure that you heard the story about Lil Wayne talking about how he was a white man that saved his life. That's right. That's right. Lil Wayne, I don't know if I'm saying this for the viewers who don't know that Lil Wayne was playing with his, I think it was a stepfather's handgun. He was alone by himself at home and found his father's gun and was playing with it and accidentally shot himself in the chest. Yes, that's right. He didn't die. He was able, I guess, to call 911. And he said, police officers arrived on the scene. He said, all the black police officers came in and they began to rifle through the home, looking for drugs, looking for whatever it was in the home. And they said all the black officers were stepping over him. They ignored him. He said a white officer walked in the house and he said he went, said the white officer went off. What the are y'all doing? Don't y'all see that there's a man sitting here? His kid is still alive, still breathing. He's now. He said, that white man scooped me up. He said, took me to the hospital. He said, I think he said his officer Bob or something, he said his name. You don't like that. Yeah, yeah, yeah. I think that officer passed away recently and I think Lil Wayne made a public, told him, thank you. I could be making a statement. Well, he praised that dude, bro. Yeah, he gave him his purpose. Yeah, he did. He said, that man stayed with and till that doctor told, walked out to that waiting room and told him, I think he gonna make it. He gonna say, he did not leave my side until he knew I was gonna be okay. He said, from then, he said, from that point on, you would never hear me talk about racism. I talk about white people again in my life. You sure did see that, bro? Yeah, he said, every time I go out, my concerts, I step out on that stage. It's all I see. White fans. You see white fans. That's what he said. And he said it unashamedly. Like he said, aside from his lyrics, we ain't even talking about that. We just talking about the content of what he said in this clip. Because that, I believe, is the thing. The Bible tells us with the whole fast that which is true. You know what I'm saying? We test everything, but whole fast that which is true. So the whole phrase broke clock is right twice a day. Yeah, it's true. God uses unbelievers to speak the truth as well too. All we gotta do is read our Bible. It's right there in the stories. It's right there. I wanna play maybe one clip or maybe two. Then we'll wrap this up. But this is a surprise for you. You may be familiar with this, but I'm a second seed. Do you remember this one right here? You remember this clip on the screen? Larry Elder, the debating. I don't see it, Seiko. Okay, let me see. Larry Elder, he debates Roland Martin. I'm up to see if I can play the audio and if you hear it. Yeah, I can hear everything. Okay, so this is the 2016 debate. It was, he was at the Informia vote. It was a train wreck as far as Roland Martin. You know anything about Roland Martin? You know Roland Martin's a straight up clown. And that's just putting it nicely. That's just putting it nicely. But I'm gonna play the clip and it's not really that long. Well, it's about three minutes. It's three minutes, but then I want you to respond and then we'll start wrapping it up. If I have to trust somebody to deal with criminal justice reform, I will trust Hillary Clinton before I will trust a thug Donald Trump any day. All right, you're a rebuttal. I feel, I just learned we have a few more minutes actually in this segment. So you're a rebuttal, Mr. Elder. What the Democratic Party ought to apologize for is what they've done to the Black family. They've dropped a neutron bomb on the backs of the Black family by incentivizing women to marry the government and allowing men to abandon their financial and moral responsibility. I didn't say it. Obama said a kid raised without a father is five times more likely to be poor and commit crime, nine times more likely to drop out of school, 20 times more likely to end up in jail. In 1965, 25% of Black kids were born outside of wedlock. $20 trillion later, 50 years of the war on poverty, now 73% of Black kids are born outside of wedlock. That's what she and her party and the whole left auto-apologize for. Well, first of all, first of all, if you want to, if we really want to do a fact check, because I recall in chaos or community, where do we go from here? Dr. King's book in 1967, what he said was, America didn't cost them much for us to go into hotels, for us to go into parks, for us to go into swimming pools, but the reality is America did not have a war on poverty. What we did was expand significant billions of dollars in Vietnam fighting a useless war which he opposed. Now, when you want to talk about the reality of how do we deal with this, you have Republicans today who are afraid to come talk to Black people. You got Donald Trump who will not sit down with Black media. And what you also, and let me be perfectly clear, show me where his criminal justice plan is. I'm still waiting. I interviewed 40 Black Republicans at Republican National Convention, and they said, wait for it. Donald Trump stood at Cleveland and said, law in order. In the last debate, when the question came up, how would you improve race relations, his response was, law in order. He has no plan. He will not have a plan. And the point is here, Donald Trump doesn't give a flip about Black kids, about Hispanic kids. You know it, and I know it because his plan is lacking. And Donald Trump has never had a relationship with the Black folks. And if you for the first time went into a Black church this year, you have no business representing Black folks. Well done. Nicely delivered, very passionate, that has zero to do with what's happened to the Black family. Don't talk to me about the Black family if Donald Trump has never gone to a Black church. Mr. Martin, please. That has zero to do with what's happened to the Black family. Between 1890 and 1940, based on census reports, a Black kid was more likely than a white kid to be married to two parents. And even under slavery, when marriage was illegal, a Black kid was more likely than today to be born under a roof with his biological mother and biological father. The Democratic Party... Was Hillary there in 1840? May I finish? Okay, I'm just checking. The Democratic Party has incentivized women to marry the government and allowed men to abandon their financial and moral responsibility. That is the number one social problem in the Black community. It is the number one social problem in America. And all you want to do is continue the same policies that have gotten us in this situation. All right, truck. Yeah, go ahead. Your thoughts, sir? You know, again, and Roland Martin is, again, another sell-out Negro that have turned around. And he's rich, by the way. He's rich. Wife is a pastor. I'm not going to talk about that. Female pastor, anyway, go ahead. While claiming that there's all sorts of racism and foolishness going on, promoting these socialist policies, these progressive policies, again, he gets to sit there on his perch attacking the country for being racist and, you know, appouring our free market system that we call capitalism while, of course, being black and getting paid for it. And no one, even as much as Batson and I, particularly his white benefactors. But nevertheless, you know, see, when you start talking about criminal justice reform, again, you have to, you know, understand the words and the tactics of the left, okay? This is what they do, right? Marketing, spin, narrative weaving, and storytelling. This is what they do. What, in fact, does Roland Martin mean when he says criminal justice reform? Now, as, I don't know what, when that debate actually took place, but... 2016. Okay, yeah. And then President Trump actually did, you know, to the chagrin of many hard-line conservatives who felt that it was not, in fact, a good idea. I had my own trepidations about it, but I won't necessarily get into the meat of that particular policy initiative, but what makes Roland Martin think... See, listen to how low he thinks of black people, because why does Roland Martin imply that black folks are not interested in law and order? Because see, to him, law and order is some kind of euphemism for sort of... Yeah, exactly. Or you hear these, again, these charlatans, these sophists with this nonsense talking about things like the prison-industrial complex and so on and so forth, but they never talk about actual behavior on the ground because human beings are more than just numbers on a fat on a spreadsheet. We're not merely statistics. We are flesh as time and soul oftentimes reminds us. We are flesh and blood human beings that are operating and existing in a flesh and blood world, in a real world. There are real things happening on the streets. There are real things happening on the ground. Because you change the system as Dr. King envisioned because another heretical thing that Dr. King said, he says that he does not believe that the fault lies with man, or the faculty of man, he said the fault of the society, the evils in the society lie with the system, which is showing fealty to his social gospel teachings and his attachments to liberation theology. So this is the whole mindset. So he wants to conjure up King, because King is a respected man by both liberal and conservative alike, and so he talks about the Vietnam War and how the war on poverty did not work because the Lyndon B. Johnson administration was fixated on, of course, fighting the Vietnam War. And this came with what became known as the freedom budget that was co-authored by A. Philip Randolph, who was a socialist. He was the head of the National Negro Congress, which was a communist front that was founded in 1936. And it was also written along with Baird Rustin, who was a homosexual communist, who was Dr. King's mentor. And it was Dr. King who wrote the foreword to the freedom budget. This was after Lyndon B. Johnson had awarded A. Philip Randolph the Presidential Medal of Freedom. They wrote up a budget to try to strong arm the Lyndon administration to try and undermine the war effort because the war on poverty didn't have the desired effect because it didn't raise black folks up out of the ghetto the way they thought it should, because too much was being spent on our military budget as far as Vietnam was concerned. So what Dr. King was being used to do was to intertwine the Vietnam War issue with the issue of blacks in the United States. And this is when you had big-mouthed punks like Stokely Carmichael, the Marxist atheist Stokely Carmichael, running around talking about how the white man is engaging in his war in Vietnam to help or sending the black man to kill the yellow man to maintain control of land that he stole from the red man. That's a quote from Stokely Carmichael. Again, sounds good, utterly ridiculous. You understand what I'm saying? Because, remind you, the United States wear the imperial power but not the Soviet Union. The civil rights movement and to a more specific extent Dr. King was of course being used to further the cause of Soviet communism by trying to undermine our war effort in Vietnam. And so that's why they tie those two things together, because take more money, more taxpayer money, and give it to the ghetto so it could be stolen and siphoned off and misappropriated by the ineffective folks who run the government in these predominantly black areas with their predominantly liberal black Democrat representatives. It's all foolishness. It's all foolishness, you know, law and order. Why? Another thing Tom Sowell says, and I'm going to pass it by to you, Seiko. He talked about, well, the reason why there's so much crime in the black community is because, well, there's a lack of economic opportunity. No, you're putting the cart before the horse. There's a lack of economic opportunity in the black community because there's so much crime You cannot get capital or, you know, the privately owned and coordinated capital investment markets to put money into these areas, people who actually know how to do business because they don't see it as a worthwhile investment because no one is going to spend their money where there is a high amount of crime. It's all about, again, values which lead to value here, man. Yeah. I want to touch this on and shout out to my sister, Keisha. You're on deck next, sis. You're on deck next and we're bringing you on very, very soon, my sister. Yeah, I get our schedule tight with our sister, Keisha here. Yeah, yeah, yeah. In the comment section. Yeah, yeah, I got it on the screen there, too. But I want to respond to this one comment, man. We'll wrap it up. Bro, no, no, bro. I only reason why I'm wrapping it up because I got to do another live in a couple of hours and I'm going to give you some. I do, too, man. Yeah, yeah, yeah. So, see, but we already told each other, bro, there's two hours going to be like, boom. I mean, I had to kind of like cut some clips short. I didn't even run through them all, but I wanted to respond to this one comment that I want to make sure that we all understand why there is such greater police presence in the hood than in the burbs. Why is there more police on the east side and west side of Detroit than it is in Auburn Hills? Oh, you know what I'm saying? Why is there more police presence in Acre's home or in Trinity Gardens than it is in River Oaks, you know what I'm saying? Or in Sugar Land in certain parts, right? So that one beat said there's equal amount of crime in white communities, but they crack down on black community. I would probably want to tweak that a little bit. Your comment. The reason why there's a crackdown of crime in black communities is because of the increase of crime. It's not because police don't have nothing else to do, but want to go to the hood and just mess with black folk. You can look at FBI crime stats. You can look at, as a matter of fact, you just go to your local police department and pull up their data and their information. The reason why there are more police presence in the hood than others is because of the crime factor. And in fact, Poc said this. Two Pocs said this before he died. He said, man, we don't want police. We don't want to live them. Right. We want police. We don't want to live with all this. Exactly. We don't want crime. We said, bro, we want the police. Now this is Poc saying this, right? So it's not because, matter of fact, I would say, yeah, the less police presence, it would be good if there's less crime, because then the resources can't go. And the resources can go to areas where there is a higher influx of crime, right? But I live in a very nice neighborhood. And I can count on one hand with fingers left. And matter of fact, I got two deputies that live in my subdivision. Take a while, guess how many times I see them patrolling and cruising through my neighborhood. Not that much. Not that much. You know what I'm saying? So it's not the issue of color. It's the issue of crime. That makes the police presence disproportionate. Again, it's more nonsense. It starts with the quintessential world view of the left. It goes all the way back to, I forgot the name of a man some of you may or may not be familiar with. And that is, of course, French romanticist and philosopher Jean Jacques Rousseau. And his magnum opus when he talked about the creation of private property was in fact the downfall of man. You see, man in his natural state is something different from what he is today. Simply put, that it is the system that corrupts a man's nature. And what we need to do is bring man back to his true nature, which of course in Marx's world view would be a kind of primitive communism. I like the way the great conservative activist and author David Horowitz puts it in his memoir Radical Son when he talked about as a child being a red diaper baby that he believed that evil was not the product of man's rebellion against God but evil was simply a lack of understanding. And so if you could just teach them, if you could just get them to reason, you can change them. But that's not reality. There's something more fundamental, something more, and it goes all the way back to the beginning when I opened up to you Segel about my transition back to God, my transition back to Christianity and there's something more immutable that is happening that cannot be explained or dealt with through human reasoning or a kind of understanding. It's called evil. For all this nonsense in this kind of twisting of the facts. I tell people all the time, you can say whatever you want to say about statistics or statistics, but the market doesn't lie. And the reason why property value is lower in high crime areas, right? Because, right? Come on now. I mean, we all know how basic market economics works. Come on. Location, location, location. That's the reason why they say that, bro. That's the reason why they say that. Come on, man. Yeah, go ahead. Come on, bro. We're talking over each other because it's crazy, but go ahead, bro. It's crazy, bro. Yeah. Because I don't know when I'm gonna be on your show again. You know, I don't know when I'm gonna be on your show again. Hold on. Hold on. Hold on, chief. It's gonna be soon. You know why? Because we haven't even dealt with the Black Panther Party. We haven't even dealt. We haven't even... Bro, we haven't even talked about that. We can't right now. We don't even have time, yo. So, we haven't even talked about U.P. Newton in his letter to the homosexual... Okay, let me shut up. Yeah. Let me shut up. Let me shut up. I ain't gonna go there. I ain't gonna go there. We're gonna leave him hanging like a toenail. We're gonna leave him hanging like a hanging nail. That's what we're gonna do. But go ahead. Finish it up, bro. Go ahead. U.P. Newton was in 1972. He gave a speech on women's liberation and the homosexual revolution. And yeah. And Huey and his multiple murders and things that he did. So, yeah, we're gonna get off into that. Yeah, we just touched it a little bit. That's it. That's it. You touched it a little bit. But listen, man, you're gonna be back on. You're gonna be back on. I hope and pray that the audience, the viewers, the body of Christ, understood what I meant when I told them that you may not know who this brother is, but you won't be able to say that after this live because what this brother had to share, that's why I didn't want to say too, too much. I wanted to lay back in the cut a little bit and just let you have it, bro. Just let you have it because I believe that this is a much-needed conversation. And I hope and pray other content creators and other YouTubers who may watch this may reach out to you. So, I want you to do this. I want you to let people know right now how they can hit you up. And those of you who are interested in knowing more about this brother's content, he already pre-warned you all, is spicy. Okay? All of us are growing. He's a neo-fight in the faith. Okay? And so we all have growing to do, but it does not take away from the content. Some of us have gone to comedy shows. Some of us have already seen Dave Chappelle. Don't play. Don't play. So you know what you went in there when you paid for it. So this is free. This is free. So let's kill that, right? So I want us to support each other. We're able to help each other grow and all that kind of stuff. But it does not take away, diminish what this brother has to say because the content and information that this cat got on his channel is fire straight up and down like six o'clock. So let people know, man, how they can get at you. Yeah, I just have, you know, to, again, guys, you know, I, I'm not, I just started doing this just on a whim. Like I said, I was pushing to this by friends who just told me, Chuck, start doing social media. And you're like, here I am. I'm not famous. I don't have any desires or what. I didn't get into this because I wanted to join in on the grift. Oh, there's a market for conservative content, particularly black conservative content, because canisans and random datum and this person blew up and now I'm getting in on it. No, I'm not here for any of that. I just feel as though I have something to contribute to the conversation and I'm sitting back and I'm sort of watching the world crumble and I don't know when Jesus is going to return. I don't know what God had, you know, ultimately how this is all going to play out. But I am sure of one thing and that is that apathy and cowardice is no virtue. And so I had to step up and come in and say something. And so I just, you know, started speaking up on YouTube and Instagram and I have a YouTube channel. It's teach them Chuck, you know, teach a part free EM, you know, Chuck, that's my YouTube channel. And then I have my teach them Chuck Instagram account as well. If you guys want to contact again, like I said, I appreciate you Seiko. I love the disclaimer you put out there, you know, because I have to, you know, because I get a lot of Christians and folk, you know, sometimes I get a little wayward with the language, you know, sometimes, you know, because I get upset or frustrated or passionate about this because, you know, I have one child, she's 19, she'll be 20 this summer, but the rest of my children are young. And even my oldest child, you know, I'm concerned with the kind of world I'm going to be leaving behind for them. So that's why I'm out here doing this show. I'll see y'all go to my YouTube channel, go to my Instagram again, you know, I'm not, you know, I'm not a theologian, I'm not a, I'm not a, you know, man of the cloth. Bro, you don't have to make those inspections, bro. I know, bro. But I just because I respect you, I respect your audience and I respect your platform. And I just want everybody to know, you know, you get some good history, some philosophical teachings. Absolutely. I just did a breakdown on MLK. I got one on Malcolm X. I talked about the Black Panther Party and Black feminism. And I did a whole lecture on fascism and communism, how they are, in fact, the same thing. And how fascism is a, is a philosophy of the left, not of the right. So it's a lot of good content on my channel. So if you guys are interested in learning a little something, I only have about 14, 15 videos post a job. Cause I do like long form talks that takes me a while to prepare. So I may, I may drop a YouTube video once or maybe twice a month. But, you know, it'll fill you up. You'll be chilling on it for a while. Absolutely. That's real. That's real. So bro, listen, man, I definitely appreciate you. You know, we're going, we're going to click up again. I just want to give you a little sample. This was just a little sample of what's to come. Again, this is teaching Chuck his YouTube and Instagram pages under that same handle. You get a lot of love in the chat. I want to give you a flowers right now because you getting in the chat right now, man. So what you receive all these flowers in love and appreciation dog. Yeah. Somebody mentioned Eldridge Cleaver. We're going to get all of it. Yeah. Yeah. Absolutely. So we, we just, this is just, this is just more of what's to come. And again, again, hit this brother up. Let him know that you appreciate his work. Go over there and support his channel. Spread the word to others as well too. Again, it's called his name is teach him Chuck. Teach him Chuck. You can, you can, I think somebody one more time. I'll link in on the, on the, in the chat and I'll drop it in the, in the, on the screen for those who may just be coming in. And that way you can get the link there moderates. We can do that. That'd be great. And I appreciate it because both of us got another live to do. Matter of fact, somebody asked the question, when would I be going live again? I'm going live to get in at tonight at seven o'clock at seven o'clock central standard time, eastern standard time at seven o'clock. I'm going to be dealing with the question is John McArthur under satanic attack. That's the question because some people believe that he is. I vehemently disagree and I'm going to drop the receipts and explain to you why I do not. And I'm going to let his own words and his own mouth speak for himself and condemn himself. I don't have to do it. He's going to do it himself, but I'm just dropping the receipts. So don't blame them. Don't blame the messenger. Blame the message. Okay. He, he, he quoted. I'm just posting it. That's it. So, but again, that's going to be a seven o'clock central standard time eight p. Eastern and I'm going to basically just share my reason and reasons why. And then I'm also going to touch on just as a matter of fact, just stay tuned near the end of the seven o'clock live. I'm going to bring a little nugget and, and, and I don't want you to miss that. I'm going to tell you what it is right now. I'll bring it in once you come on back on, on the live ladies and gentlemen, but anyway, Chuck, man, appreciate you man. Much love to you and your family. Man, we're going to definitely stay connected. I'm definitely going to be doing this. Definitely stay connected. I'm definitely going to be keeping in contact with you, with you soon. If you talk to my man, Chad, tell me, man, we need to connect bro again. Yeah, I'm going, I'm going to talk to him cause we going live. That's why I'm going live with later at seven p.m. Eastern time. I don't remember. Six o'clock. That'd be six o'clock your time. That'd be six o'clock. Six o'clock my time. Six o'clock my time. Okay. Cool. Yeah, man. Put that information out there bro. Chad O Jackson's YouTube channel tonight. I'm going over there and I think we're, we're, I think he wanted to talk about something, something dealing with environmentalism and the whole thing and, and how the left is trying to promote this whole notion of limiting the amount of children you should have and what have you. So we're going to, we're going to talk about that and whatever else. Cause you know, it's like me and Seiko, me and Chad O Jackson get together, man. I mean, we like, I mean, that's, that's my bro. You know, we like, you know, the perfect odd couple. You know what I'm saying? Y'all, y'all can be with Chad O Jackson. Y'all know we got two different styles, but man, we, we like Kendra Spears. You know, we first clicked up. It was like, where, where you been all my life, you know? So we, we getting together at seven. That's good bro. All right, brother, man, it'll stay up, man. I'll be definitely keeping in touch with you bro. And again, that's, again, teach him Chuck. Y'all go to his channel and support this brother's ministry. All right. Appreciate that. All right, Chuck. Later. Peace out. All right y'all. That is the interview. Brother Chuck, teach him Chuck again. You can go on to his, his channel. You can support his, his work there online. Hope you all have had a very engaged and lively discussion here on this channel. Again, if you'd like to support this ministry, you can do so again by clicking the donation links below. Again, those who have just been joining my channel has been a shadow band. And so any, any, any support and donations you may have sent through the super chat, we have not been receiving them, receiving them all. And so we just been encouraging those of you, if you choose to support and would like to donate to this ministry, you can do that by, by using the donation links below at the bottom of this video, BCV merchandise. You can do that as well too. But again, go over to that channel. Also support Keisha King's YouTube channel. I'm looking her on very soon. We're going to get our schedules to coincide. And I'm looking forward to having her to join and have a discussion with her and also chattel Jackson and many others. I got a lot of interviews. I'm having to, to, you know, situate and try to line up for you, the viewer for the body of crisis as a whole. So anyway, thank you ladies and gentlemen so much for your time. Again, tune in and join me again tonight at 7pm center standard time, 7pm center standard time. Don't be late because you're going to miss out on a lot of information at the beginning of this, of the broadcast once it drops. Okay, so 7pm live on the BCV channel. But that's my time for now. Thank you so much for yours. Listen, y'all know the drill, whatever you do, do all to the glory and honor of God. God bless. See you at 7. You're still here. It's over. Go home. Go.