January 07, 2026

01:04:41

Amxxr And Doggie Diamonds Expose The Elite’s 2026 Agenda

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Amxxr And Doggie Diamonds Expose The Elite’s 2026 Agenda
Doggie Diamonds No Filter
Amxxr And Doggie Diamonds Expose The Elite’s 2026 Agenda

Jan 07 2026 | 01:04:41

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Show Notes

In this exclusive taped phone conversation, Doggie Diamonds connects with Amxxr (the visionary artist linked with the legendary Pete Rock) to pull back the curtain on the hidden agendas currently shaping our world. This isn't your average industry talk—this is a deep dive into the state of society that the mainstream media refuses to cover. ️‍️ Amxxr and Doggie drop serious jewels on: The "Trinket" Trap: How the elite have conditioned us to value material objects over our own spiritual and cultural worth. The State of Society 2025: Why the current "chaos" in the streets and the industry is actually a coordinated effort to keep the masses distracted. Economic Manipulation: The hidden ways our communities are being drained of resources while we fight over "coded" internet beefs. The Knowledge of Self: Why reclaiming our history and our minds is the only way to truly "strap up" against the powers that be. This is a rare look at two intellectual giants of the culture having the kind of conversation they usually save for the "off-record" hours. If you want to understand what's really going on behind the headlines, you cannot afford to miss this. What part of the conversation resonated with you most? Let’s get active in the comments. SUBSCRIBE for the rawest, most essential unfiltered truth! ️

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Episode Transcript

[00:00:00] Speaker A: Subscribe to my YouTube. [00:00:05] Speaker B: What my thing is, what place on earth, what place on the Internet does any other culture come to black culture for permission to do what they're doing? I'll wait. It doesn't exist. [00:00:17] Speaker A: Right, right, Right. [00:00:18] Speaker B: We can't. We can't go to, let's say, an Asian community to ask them to tell them how to do their culture. [00:00:29] Speaker A: Right? Right. [00:00:29] Speaker B: We can't. We can't go to a Jewish community and tell them how to. They come. Or they come to us for permission to do their music. [00:00:37] Speaker A: Right, Right. [00:00:38] Speaker B: We're the only. We don't go to Latin America and tell them how to do Latin music. [00:00:45] Speaker A: Right, Right. [00:00:46] Speaker B: Like black people have become the whore of creativity across the entertainment spectrum. [00:00:53] Speaker A: Right? [00:00:54] Speaker B: Right. And. And our. And our greatest ally and enemy is the same thing is money. [00:01:02] Speaker A: Right. [00:01:02] Speaker B: Those who understand the weaponry of money versus the utility of it versus the psychological and emotional impact of a dollar. [00:01:14] Speaker A: And the frequency of it. Yeah. The frequency of the dollar. Yeah. [00:01:18] Speaker B: All of these things that have. All of these things that in motion or. Or are in play, as soon as we. As soon as they step on the stage or they step on the court or they step in front of a camera, right. We have become the whores of creativity, unbeknownst to most of us, because we kind of feel like, okay, as long as I'm making a dollar. He's straight people to say, but he got that money though. [00:01:42] Speaker A: Right? Right. And that's what. That's why so much things in the culture was able to slide for so long. Because justify the means. You understand what I'm saying to that, B. So I seen that. Yeah, I seen that. But he got to the bag. You see what. Because. Because us dealing with the people that we deal with. Right. For so long, you've been in it for a minute. We know who we know. Right. We don't have to name drop. Right. The conversations. We know the conversations. And a lot of things got omitted publicly because nobody wanted to be a hater or disgruntled or bitter. Right? [00:02:19] Speaker B: Right. [00:02:19] Speaker A: So would just keep quiet because the minute you say something, look at your bank account and say, well, you broke. If you listen to youthful. You know what I'm saying? We don't listen to broke. We don't listen to who ain't had a hit in a while. We don't listen to has beens and all that. A lot of people were telling the truth. [00:02:39] Speaker B: The first thing that we do, a lot. I'm not saying all of us. Right. But if you look at the culture as a whole, like the real poor culture. The first thing weapon of choice again in any argument in, in our neighborhoods and our world is to invalidate somebody. [00:02:56] Speaker A: Right, right, right. [00:02:57] Speaker B: With what you just said. [00:02:58] Speaker A: Right? [00:02:59] Speaker B: And listen to this broke ass. [00:03:00] Speaker A: Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. [00:03:02] Speaker B: Now, now let me ask this. When you look at. Now this may be a little bit far fetched for the average person, right? When you look at any religious doctrine, prophet never mattered to a prophet. [00:03:14] Speaker A: Right, right, right. [00:03:16] Speaker B: But this story lived on forever, right? Now how many, how many rich men the prophets come into contact with? We. Are we talking about the Richmond? Are we still talking about the people? [00:03:26] Speaker A: Right right. [00:03:27] Speaker B: Now, now these are. Everything has a cost, right? There's going to be checks and balances with all of these decisions that we make and they're not making. So just, just as cool as somebody may make an action, you know, actions and inactions speak the same language. [00:03:43] Speaker A: Right, right. [00:03:44] Speaker B: And I think that what I'm saying, what I'm saying across the board is that that's, that's a, that's a major pillar. But also we don't check credentials, right? [00:03:54] Speaker A: Because think about this, right, bro. A could be homeless, laying on the ground and could tell you how he lost the house, but you won't listen to him. You'll listen to a rich guy tell you how he gonna get a house, but he never one. [00:04:08] Speaker B: But he never had one. [00:04:09] Speaker A: One. See, I want to listen to the, that how you lost that. The person who's rich, you listen to the person how you lost it. Because obviously for him to be homeless, he once had. You understand what I'm saying? See, we don't listen to who took the losses. And that's what I wanted from the podcast game. That's what I wanted from some of these guys who's in the culture, who experienced the culture on a high level to be able to explain to people how they lost record deals, bad record deals, points residuals, losing a pub. They're not doing that. They're telling grab ass stories with one another. Like they're all still triumphant when we know that you're podcasting because you can't get no music money no more. That's just the truth. [00:04:55] Speaker B: That or they never evolve. [00:04:57] Speaker A: Right? That too. [00:05:00] Speaker B: Right, right. If you think about it, no matter of fact, I digress. They did evolve, but not at the rate that would benefit. That will benefit. Like, like OG said to me. And people have been seeing this floating around the Internet. When you're young, you look like your parents, when you're Older, you look like your decisions. Now, a lot of these artists. A lot of these artists are now looking like their decisions they made 10, 20 years ago. Now they're seeing the grim Reaper or the recoil. Not even the reaper. The recoil of their lack. Of their lack of evolution. They still evolved, but the lack of evolution is showing in their practices. [00:05:39] Speaker A: Right, right. [00:05:41] Speaker B: In their daily demonstration and execution. [00:05:43] Speaker A: Right. [00:05:44] Speaker B: But then you may have somebody who, once again, we'll measure about money. Are we going to measure about success or experience or knowledge? There's a huge knowledge gap between somebody who did it and somebody who didn't do it. [00:05:56] Speaker A: Right. [00:05:56] Speaker B: Like you had, like, the pandemic was to me was a spawning and breeding ground for predatorial content because people were selling packages for crypto. Next minute, they like coaches. [00:06:07] Speaker A: Right, Right. [00:06:08] Speaker B: Five minutes. These are selling life insurance or their real estate agents. [00:06:12] Speaker A: Right. [00:06:12] Speaker B: You know, everybody was an expert and had all of these credentials. [00:06:16] Speaker A: Yeah, yeah, yeah. [00:06:17] Speaker B: And nobody checked nothing and. [00:06:19] Speaker A: Right. [00:06:19] Speaker B: And if we really just to me, where we at now? A lot of this started during the pandemic. [00:06:26] Speaker A: The yo, bro, I say, I'm gonna tell you something. I feel like the frequency of the universe switched during COVID because that was so critical, critical times. And a lack of information of what it really was. It did more psychological damage than it did physical. Right. Because, you know, some people did pass away. Rest in peace to all the people who did pass away. But people didn't know. They didn't know how to treat these people. Because how you had all these people pass away, nobody was passing away. That means the first wave or two, they didn't understand how to do it. That happens with everything. Right? But see, now you have people living in the crib together and a cough, and you would look at somebody you love like, yo, don't be coughing over here, man. I ain't trying to die for you. So that made us question everybody that's not dressed like astronauts, right? A. They really told us, stay six feet away. They told us we wearing gloves, but then we touching everything with the glove. We. We felt. We. We rinsing off plastic bags. It bugged us out. So what it did also, though, bro, and this is very, very vital. It made us selfish. It made us say, yo, I'm not dying for this. I'm not dying for her, yo, I love her, but she gonna have to sit in that room and die by herself. I slip some under the door, but I'm not going in that room. And that changed how we viewed everybody. It made us more selfish and It's a bunch of money. So you gave a bunch of who don't care about each other a bunch of money. And it made selfish because now a just caught a little stimulus package. A got a PPP loan so that car he always wanted, he could bust out with that. Now it can't even go nowhere. [00:08:18] Speaker B: Dudes who've never been to Miami in their life, bro, flights was 30, 50, some crazy was risking their life to go to Miami to be on. [00:08:30] Speaker A: Right, right. [00:08:33] Speaker B: Over a flight. [00:08:35] Speaker A: Word chicks getting pbos. [00:08:39] Speaker B: Some air Force ones, some crispy Air Force ones on some some. And he was able to do them outside and during COVID Being outside was rebellious, right? [00:08:49] Speaker A: Right, Exactly. Yeah. Cause it's like it, we liked it. But then that's when the cliches and them slogans came out. [00:08:55] Speaker B: Right? [00:08:55] Speaker A: Life's a bit and you die yolo and all them shits. But what we never backed it is that things were going to go back to normal. Right. But it did so much psychological damage because the niggas who was able to buy this exotic reefer had to go back to selling they hot selling a jewelry. Now they can't get this zips all that no more. And it may have built up a lot of resentment. It was good for everybody. It was good for dudes like me. It was good for a lot of people because everybody had the money to spend. But then the money dried up when the money dries up. Now it's like we live in post apocalyptic now. [00:09:43] Speaker B: It opposed a coverly. [00:09:47] Speaker A: Right, right, right, right. So now. [00:09:52] Speaker B: Now, man. [00:09:53] Speaker A: Yeah. So now a gallon of gas is worth a lot because remember we was gassing the car. We was doing all types of. We didn't know, we thought gonna turn into zombies and we didn't know what was gonna happen. [00:10:06] Speaker B: People got rich over selling toilet paper, right? [00:10:09] Speaker A: Yeah, yep. Buying all the steaks and. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, right. [00:10:14] Speaker B: Over giving out bad advice. [00:10:16] Speaker A: Right. It's still doing that to this day. [00:10:19] Speaker B: Covid taught our. Our officials, our local government, our. Our so called, you know, leaders or whatever it taught. It gave them so much data on behavioral. If so much behavioral data was. [00:10:37] Speaker A: Was gained during COVID Right, right, right. [00:10:41] Speaker B: Nobody was talking about this. There's 5,000 data points. There's 5,000 data Points that everybody with a profile on the Internet, minimum. [00:10:50] Speaker A: You know why that's important too, bro? Because I think what a lot of people don't know about yourself is me as well. Not only are we analytical and our viewing our thinking, we're also analytical with the numbers Right. And we know about them fake numbers because people might not know that we will send numbers to each other. You see this? You see these specs right here? You see this? Not the fake numbers. We talking about that, that undercover, you know, based off of what you do for a living. Right? We don't have to indulge in that and what you do for a living. So we know these numbers are important. So that's what I'll be trying to tell people. Yo, y' all startups better stop believing them surface numbers because that's the, that got y' all going crazy. Remember I said to you one day, I said, yo, bro, what is this? Nft keep, everybody keep talking about. He was like, yo, none of these know what they talking about. He, yo, none of them know what they talking about is gonna die. [00:11:45] Speaker B: I said it. [00:11:46] Speaker A: You said it and you said it four years ago. [00:11:50] Speaker B: I said, yo, because it's not functional, it doesn't fix a problem. I said, any technology that has ever sustained the test of time in humanity always was a solution to a problem. Or it was. It was not even just functional, it was a functional application. And I'm going to continue to say this. Art has always stood on the back of technology. Technology don't need art to thrive. [00:12:18] Speaker A: Right? Right. [00:12:19] Speaker B: So what are we seeing now? [00:12:20] Speaker A: Right? [00:12:21] Speaker B: Art has now become submissive, right? Art, okay, what? Nobody talking about art has totally submitted to tech. [00:12:29] Speaker A: Technology. Right, right, right. [00:12:31] Speaker B: But what people fail to realize is always stood on the shoulders of technology from the jump. The first string on a guitar was a technical advancement. The first keys pressed on a piano in the cave, wherever it was made, was a technological advancement. [00:12:48] Speaker A: Right? The paintbrush. Yeah, the paintbrush was the paintbrush, the technological advancement. [00:12:54] Speaker B: So with each advancement, the people that don't want to adapt are the ones that that about it, Right? [00:13:01] Speaker A: Right. [00:13:02] Speaker B: Because I don't want to change, I don't want to learn something new. Right? Because I've gotten money this way during so long. [00:13:08] Speaker A: Right, right, right. [00:13:10] Speaker B: And once, once again, we don't, we don't really. It goes back. We didn't check the credentials, man. [00:13:17] Speaker A: Right, right. [00:13:18] Speaker B: We didn't, we didn't check the credentials along the way of what was really happening in these, in these arenas, man. Like so you had so many people that just said, Noah Effortless, I'm gonna be a self proclaimed expert and I pray they believe me. [00:13:32] Speaker A: Right? But, but, but, but see, now I'm gonna be a self proclaimed expert because when a person walk in with a white coat and a name tag you automatically in a stethoscope. You think he a doctor. [00:13:43] Speaker B: Right. It's a book about that too. [00:13:46] Speaker A: That's crazy. [00:13:48] Speaker B: It's a whole article. It's a whole book I read in college about that. [00:13:51] Speaker A: Right. [00:13:51] Speaker B: And it's called. The word for the original word is called trappings. With the ings. One person has the trappings, meaning that they have the look. It was like talking about when they sold commercials back in the days in the 70s, 60s. It was a doctor that put on a coat was never a doctor. [00:14:08] Speaker A: Right. [00:14:08] Speaker B: He put on a coat and told the American public this is a good meta. Whatever he. Whatever he was selling, and the public bought into it. [00:14:15] Speaker A: The good doctor, that surgeon general. Yeah. Surgeon general says, right? Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. The surgeon general. [00:14:22] Speaker B: Right. But they were never technically doctors. Doctors, but we bought into. If I came in a barbershop with an FBI jacket on, right? [00:14:32] Speaker A: You FBI? Yeah, yeah. Right. [00:14:37] Speaker B: You look the part. [00:14:38] Speaker A: You just look the part. Right, right. [00:14:40] Speaker B: So. [00:14:40] Speaker A: And that's what's the culture bouquet and that. But I. But see, I always say you have perception and then you got reality. Most people, reality is based off of what they perceive, not what they really know. [00:14:51] Speaker B: And that's what covet became a breeding ground for. See, but see, we see. We see the residual effect of that in motion and it's never going back. [00:15:02] Speaker A: But take it before COVID it's always been like that. Because as long as a look the part and dress up a certain way, you know, like. Like we finding out, like respectfully to him. We didn't know Dane Dash had fucking fake teeth. That is like something minute like that at all this time. He was a cake, a holic and getting to this bread and all. This ain't even have real teeth. [00:15:31] Speaker B: You would think. You would have thought, damn dad had a better dental plan. [00:15:34] Speaker A: This is the point exactly. Because he was able to dress it up. And what the reason why this is very, very critical is that we were taught to follow trends and perception. Right? So we saying, yo, I gotta change my sneakers two, three times a day. And now you going on the limb to change your sneakers. You're going on. Your going on a limb to stay fly and stay fresh. And you don't even know a teeth ain't even real. And he ain't even got no good dental plan. You understand what I'm saying? [00:16:02] Speaker B: Right, right, right. And think about this. You could have easily afforded it, but these things are not these things. [00:16:08] Speaker A: Priorities. Yeah, priorities. [00:16:11] Speaker B: Priority or importance. Because in the music business or entertainment alone, it don't come with music. Business is the only thing without a. Without a union. [00:16:19] Speaker A: Right. [00:16:20] Speaker B: So people will continue. Certain parts of entertainment won't have a union. So people can pirate it because it's so resourceful. [00:16:28] Speaker A: Right? [00:16:29] Speaker B: It can. This is the most exploited thing on the one. One of the most exploited things on the planet. And we allow it because as long as you get in the bag. [00:16:39] Speaker A: Right? But let me ask you something, because this is. This is critical to me because I was having this conversation and when did everything become content? Like, what's sacred anymore now? [00:16:52] Speaker B: Like, listen, once again, this is Post a cover liptick. [00:16:56] Speaker A: Right? Right, Right. [00:16:57] Speaker B: This is a Covid lipstick. This is what I put my personal theory on it. It became content when it was no longer called big data. Big data. [00:17:15] Speaker A: Break that down. [00:17:16] Speaker B: Nobody. Big Data. Okay? In 2016-15, these companies didn't even know what to do with all these big data pools they had. Okay, so me meaning that they had a ton of information about people and things, person places and things stored on these servers. And these. And, you know, let's say these. These data warehouses. Right, Right. All of this data. But they, they had. They was trying to find a way to monetize it. [00:17:42] Speaker A: Right. [00:17:43] Speaker B: So what better way to monetize it? Okay, cool. I can sell somebody's. If you swipe your card, I know what, what bank you're using. I know what hair products you're buying. [00:17:52] Speaker A: I know you can eat that. I know what. [00:17:55] Speaker B: Now this data, this is just an example. This particular data is now it's for sale to the highest bidder. [00:18:02] Speaker A: Right. [00:18:03] Speaker B: Your behavior. [00:18:04] Speaker A: So now in Facebook, when you hit, like when you hit emoji, when you. How you. Because when you go on Facebook, it says how you feeling? So they started. Because in the back end, when you type sad, that's a keyword. So now you start seeing these, these Paxel ads and these Lexapro ads and all this. Yeah, that's. Yeah. [00:18:21] Speaker B: So. So it. To even trickle down further, I now know what this average user. What about hair products or something? [00:18:30] Speaker A: Right, Right. [00:18:30] Speaker B: Grocery store. And what did that tell the grocery store? It tells that grocery store. When the grocery stores is buying the data or the person doing the, you know, the data. The true data. Analytics. [00:18:41] Speaker A: Not Right. [00:18:41] Speaker B: People use the word algorithm out of context so much, they even change what that means now. [00:18:45] Speaker A: Right. [00:18:46] Speaker B: So algorithm is a set of ISPs that you use every time to get set result. [00:18:52] Speaker A: Right? Right. [00:18:52] Speaker B: It's not. It doesn't change when you press a button or. Oh, the algorithm is switching on me it's not switching on you because you look, that's a whole nother conversation. [00:19:00] Speaker A: Right? [00:19:01] Speaker B: What I'm telling, what I'm trying to tell people is once they figured out who I can sell this to a credit card company, I could sell your behavior to the grocery store. I could sell it to ad places every. [00:19:14] Speaker A: Movies. Yeah, movies, yeah. Yep. [00:19:17] Speaker B: Every, Everywhere where you bought that product. I can now go back to that. I can go back to the distributor of that product and like, look, you got X amount of people in New York city in this five block radius that bought 20,000 bottles of, let's say cancel or, or Carol's daughter. [00:19:33] Speaker A: Right? Right. [00:19:34] Speaker B: You might want to put more product in this neighborhood. Well, how do you know that? Because I got, I got the data to support it. [00:19:41] Speaker A: Right. And that's how, that's how we know they know how to buy, send cases, a Siroc to this liquor store because it's selling out. [00:19:48] Speaker B: Right? So now they're looking at. But people think none of this stuff is trapped. And this goes all the way back to when Edward Snowden about. They were selling your, your Cell phone data 10, 12, whatever X amount of years ago, and they chased him out. He, He. He did this huge leak about our government. Right. And sought asylum in Russia. It can't even come back. But even when he did that, the people around the globe said it was an act of valor. It was, it was honorable. No, no, no. It was act of honor. It was, it was, it was, it was an act of valor. Right. So now he got nominated for a Nobel Peace Prize. So as he got nominated for a Nobel Peace Prize, in the same breath he got nominated for a Nobel Peace Prize, he now becomes like a freedom fighter for the things that he told people about 18 years ago. [00:20:46] Speaker A: Is this a WikiLeaks guy? [00:20:48] Speaker B: No. Yep. [00:20:49] Speaker A: Yeah. Okay. Yeah, yeah. [00:20:50] Speaker B: So now the thing that he talked about 10 years ago, beefing with the. Beefing with the government, telling and telling, telling people the telephone company is doing y' all dirty on the back end, right? Selling your. Selling what I mentioned earlier in the conversation, there's 5, 000 data points or better to each person that has an account or anything. If you have a profile on the Internet, there's 5, 000 data points to your name on average. [00:21:16] Speaker A: Right? Because that's why they want bio, locations, everything they want. [00:21:21] Speaker B: Right? So now I know, I know how you're moving people do. Oh, they think they hiding their phone from people, but you can't. [00:21:26] Speaker A: Right, Right. [00:21:27] Speaker B: You can get a privacy screen but every time you click a button, right. [00:21:32] Speaker A: You entry. Yeah. You made an entry. Yeah. You made an entry into a data. Data pool. Right. [00:21:36] Speaker B: Right. And that's on somebody's server. So and then. But we never read the fine print. [00:21:43] Speaker A: Right? Yeah. [00:21:44] Speaker B: We think we only. We think we own our IG page. We technically think we own our YouTube page. No, we don't borrow time. [00:21:50] Speaker A: I always. Yo, you know what? I've been telling people too. I've been telling people I do not own the platform. I just gotta outlet on the platform. It's not my platform. So I do what I gotta do within the TOS terms of service. So it's certain things that I can't say, won't say because it violates the terms of service of their platform. So when be like page get off. That is not yours, bro. [00:22:16] Speaker B: And when you think about it, as much as people don't like the Orange Man, I'm not a fan either. Right. If they will take the so called. [00:22:25] Speaker A: Leader of the free free world. Yeah. Yep. With the phase. [00:22:32] Speaker B: I told. I told this dude map offer the same thing when I sat up there like bro, you talk about these numbers and all this other like and poking your chest out as if that means something. Right. You don't own anything. It's not yours. Right. [00:22:46] Speaker A: Right. [00:22:46] Speaker B: You don't borrowed land. You are an indentured servant, brother. Like I get you. I get you. You got to the bad and you did xyz. But understand at his granular level you don't. They can hit a button and this. [00:22:58] Speaker A: Is going to wipe it out because they do it. They did it. I mean it's been data breaches. It's been date again data. It's been data breaches. So when you wondering how this loan people is calling you saying you need loan or they looking at all your. They done seen that you popped right now. Yo, you need some money. [00:23:17] Speaker B: Somebody has sold your data on the back end. Something about your behavior, your behavioral data. Behavioral data. Behavioral data became more valuable on the planet earth than natural resources. [00:23:31] Speaker A: Wow. [00:23:31] Speaker B: It's so it's sold at a price higher than the way you behave is more valuable to a corporate company than a natural resource. [00:23:44] Speaker A: That became a new natural resource. [00:23:46] Speaker B: It became Right. So that's when you know. I know I'm. I'm talking a lot about. But this. That's what people need to look up. [00:23:52] Speaker A: Nah, they know they. They say it again. They need a what? [00:23:56] Speaker B: Cambridge Analytica. Okay, Bridge Analytica is what was what Orange man used to win the first election he teamed up with these people, and all they did, they weaponized Facebook. They was talking what they call honey pot. Honey pots spot information on the Internet where they put things that are not true. But it sounds sweet to certain people. People right now, like. [00:24:21] Speaker A: Like they do now. You got a lot of clickbait. You got a lot of fake titles. And I'm like, yo, y' all don't see that this is fake. I see dudes lesson over. AI women. Now this. You can't see that this is. This is a fake woman. And I see dudes in the comments like, oh, I love you. Oh, I wish I could kiss your feet. And I'm like, yo, that's not a real person knowing the fantasy. [00:24:42] Speaker B: But this goes back to. This goes back to, you know, go back to media. [00:24:48] Speaker A: Go back to Demolition Man. [00:24:51] Speaker B: Truthfully, Demolition man, well, everybody's like Dr. Strange in the multiverse. [00:24:56] Speaker A: Yep. Remember Simon Phoenix, right? Demolition Man. They had on the Oculus back then, right? [00:25:04] Speaker B: Right. [00:25:06] Speaker A: They was already in the multiverse. Right. [00:25:08] Speaker B: And they got to give you the glasses. When you stare at the screen, the glasses down, looking at the glass, you're looking into the glasses. You gotta wear the glass. [00:25:15] Speaker A: Yeah, yeah, yeah. [00:25:17] Speaker B: That's even more dangerous. You don't even have to physically put the glasses on, because once you look at your phone, you're staring at the glass yourself. [00:25:24] Speaker A: And you're addicted to that phone, and you're addicted. [00:25:27] Speaker B: The dopamine that you get from scrolling, yo. [00:25:29] Speaker A: Yup, yup, yup. You start doing scrolling, look and even jumping from after app. So I know this. For owning a website, you got something called page views, right? So right now, on average, a person might be on Facebook and gave Facebook about 10 to 20,000 page views a day. One individual. Because you're looking at this page, and you're looking at this page, and you scrolling here, you scroll here. All of that is an analytic. Every word you type is an analytic. That's how you get trending topics. That's how you get trends. This is what's trending right now. Then they got things that they create that's trending, and you believe it's trending. So you partake in what they put is trending. You partake. [00:26:09] Speaker B: And even, even, even to add to that, you look at your iPhone, it'll tell you the usage, screen time. [00:26:15] Speaker A: Right. [00:26:16] Speaker B: Etc. That still is sold to the highest bidder. [00:26:19] Speaker A: It's not private. Right. [00:26:21] Speaker B: Apple is going to share that data with somebody. They're not just collecting how long you want to screen to show you. If they showing you what make you think they showed it to you for free? [00:26:32] Speaker A: Right, right, right. [00:26:33] Speaker B: So you're not thinking they gonna share it to somebody else for a price. [00:26:38] Speaker A: They gotta pay for it. [00:26:39] Speaker B: They gotta pay for it. [00:26:40] Speaker A: They gotta pay the storage stories. The money's in the storage. [00:26:43] Speaker B: So this person was on IG for five hours today. Ig, look, we're gonna sell this to them. This is what you need to know is what they was on IG then collects that looks at what they're going to show you. And people think it's an algorithm when it's algorithmic, but it's not algorithms switching mid every time you hit your thumb touches, presses a screen or button. [00:27:06] Speaker A: Right? [00:27:06] Speaker B: So I think that, you know, in these conversations there's a lot of like moving pieces. But ultimately what we think our privacy. [00:27:16] Speaker A: There is no privacy business. Privacy. Our privacy has been compromised a long time ago. [00:27:22] Speaker B: Compromise. But we happy with. We happy with giving away the privacy. [00:27:25] Speaker A: Right? That's. Well, see, that's how there was the above question. When did everything become content? Because the data now. And because of the exposure and because of the clout and because of, hey, look at me. I'm an over here. I'm an over here. I'm trying to out everybody. I'm trying to. You know, and I remember it was a particular point where we used to not want to embarrass our friends, family, loved ones, children, elders. But now, yeah, you, it's content now. [00:27:54] Speaker B: Why? Why? Because of what you said. Great, great analogy, bro. [00:27:57] Speaker A: Think about it. [00:27:58] Speaker B: Let's connect that. We could connect that right here, right now. [00:28:00] Speaker A: Go ahead. What. [00:28:02] Speaker B: What was once privacy? Right or private is what you just said. [00:28:06] Speaker A: It is now. [00:28:07] Speaker B: That was, that was the switch, right? Things that will be done in the privacy of your own home. Never recorded recording a girl in underwear. [00:28:15] Speaker A: Right, right, right. Yeah. Girl got a fat. Yep. Yeah, he's slapping your son in the face. You willing to abuse your kids for content people, right? [00:28:24] Speaker B: They're discipline. They kid on camera, put your dog. [00:28:26] Speaker A: In the ass for content. Yeah. [00:28:28] Speaker B: I'm gonna feel myself feeding the homeless for content. [00:28:31] Speaker A: Right? And then look, bro, and then tell people they need the money. [00:28:38] Speaker B: What I'll do, what I'll do. I'm gonna go do something nice for somebody. But I'm film it, right? To put it on my page so people know that I'm a nice guy. [00:28:46] Speaker A: Right? [00:28:47] Speaker B: Today it's kind of right Today, right this moment, I'm gonna go give out turkeys. Make sure you bring the camera man, this content let people know, you know, things that I don't normally do. It should be private. Because when the word is altruism, A L T R U I S M. Altruism. Altruism is the act that when you do that act, you don't want anything back from it. There is no. It's the most purest form of giving. [00:29:13] Speaker A: Right. You know, one time I'll cut your wisdom real quick. Right? One time I was on live, I was walking down Atlantic Avenue, I was on live, and the dude got out the train and said, brother, could you buy me something to eat? I'm diabetic. And I could have filmed the whole thing. I said, let me get off alive. Because for him to humble himself and say that he's hungry, that's embarrassing to me because I don't know if I could do it right. So I said, let me get off live. I'll take you to get something to eat. You know what I'm saying? And then I took him to get something. He was trying to get a soda and I'm like, nah, man, you diabetic? Can't get no soda. But I've never filmed an act of kindness because I believe in paying it forward, see? Like even myself in this culture. Right. You watch me. I've known you for at least 15 years. Right. I've known you for a minute. Right. Each other in the flesh. Because that's different. We don't have an Internet relationship. We have a physical, around each other, presence relationship. Right? [00:30:04] Speaker B: Right. [00:30:05] Speaker A: I look at sometimes, like what I was doing then, didn't foresee what's happening now, but I foresaw it then. I knew that. [00:30:16] Speaker B: And yeah, I'm going to, I'm going to concur that statement. Because even then you call me a. [00:30:23] Speaker A: Digital boss back then. Yeah. [00:30:27] Speaker B: Like a digital kingpin. Yep, that's what I said. [00:30:30] Speaker A: Because. [00:30:32] Speaker B: And digital kingpin, Digital boss. Because a lot of dudes didn't have the foresight. And guess what they didn't have, bro. They didn't have the courage. [00:30:40] Speaker A: Right? Right. [00:30:41] Speaker B: They didn't have the courage to stand alone on a digital landscape as a person of color competing with so many others that. And it wasn't even about being technical or digital. Right. [00:30:57] Speaker A: Person. [00:30:58] Speaker B: It was about just seeing the evolution of what. Where this was going. You said that years ago. [00:31:03] Speaker A: Right, Right, Right. Because that's what took me off the DVDs. And I was digital. That's why I took. That's why I left the DVDs. And when we did Forbes DVD. The DVD did not stand for physical DVD. It stood for digital video on demand. You understand what I'm saying? That's what we had the foresight to see. And then I knew the game was going to go to interviews, long form interviews. Just I knew the story, I said it. I knew the story was going to shape the culture and was laughing at me and like. [00:31:33] Speaker B: And the same dudes that laughed at you and didn't want to do an interview with you. And now doing what I do and doing what you do. [00:31:40] Speaker A: Yo, do you know the let's Rap about it podcast? I interviewed every last one of them. Jim Jones may know, Fab and Davies, you know what I'm saying? But the point that I'm making with that is that you know, when we looking at the culture where it's at right now, the one thing that I did that a lot of people are afraid to do is I put up money that I didn't have and I sacrificed to sit where I sit today, right? I never got that bag from somebody because once you take that bag now they're in control of your Cummings goings and your singings. So let's say realistically, because it could be Cap and it could be. But look at how the so called landlord says I gave Jim Jones this building for 50 of his. Now when if his becomes worth 50 million, you mean to tell me this dude get 25 million, you got to split 25 with four other dudes that mean he got more of y' all than you got. You understand what I'm saying? But this is what this so called landlord said to 50 Cent. I got 50 of his and he owed me like a hundred and eighty 000 in rent and all this. You understand what I'm saying? Now I never, I never experienced none of that. Of course I didn't get the views and like. But I don't have platinum records on my resume. I don't have a thousands of, of, of of fans and all. I don't have all of that. But one thing I have is my independence and I put my own money up and my name is my name. And I made my name from me, I didn't make my name from other people. And I'm saying all that to say to anybody out there that can hear my voice. Don't be afraid to gamble on yourself. [00:33:25] Speaker B: Never. [00:33:26] Speaker A: Don't be afraid to invest in yourself and you your biggest project and you could always retool you like Lego time. You could take a piece off and put a piece over there, it's a whole different house. Now, some of these guys that you follow and you influenced by, they already finished. They're already finished. Because you always going to look at them like this. Regardless of what they do, they cannot rebrand theyself. They can't. If you hated them for something, you always going to look at what you hate them for. You know what I'm saying? If you love them for something, I don't give a. Because respectfully, to like, a person, no matter what he does, he's Iced Tea in every movie. We don't even know the real name. Think about that. He's. He's Iced Tea. And then we might be like Detective Tutuola. He might be in the whole Love romance movie and be like, yo, his. [00:34:23] Speaker B: Government name could be Jerome Falls. We know. [00:34:25] Speaker A: We don't even know that. [00:34:27] Speaker B: And guess what? And we don't even care. [00:34:29] Speaker A: We don't even care, yo. [00:34:30] Speaker B: Because what we've been taught, the conditioning of the human mind. [00:34:34] Speaker A: Right? Right. [00:34:35] Speaker B: Is. Is. Is the most. Bro. It's the most sophisticated form of the way they did people out here, bro. It's been the most sophisticated form of racism that has ever happened in the existence in this anatomical version of a human being. [00:34:53] Speaker A: Let me give you some deep. And let me give you some deep about racism. Right? [00:34:58] Speaker B: You know, it's crazy. [00:34:59] Speaker A: Black men as ourselves got the nerve to get into classism. Got the nerve to be thinking we elitists because we got a zero or two extra on our bank account. That's some. We have the nerve to. To think we could be classes with other people from our same background and background and culture because we did a little bit more. We got the nerve to look down at that is amazing to me. [00:35:32] Speaker B: This is the point we don't want to because that's all we've been taught. Every time we looked up. When black people look up, they praying to God. When we look down, we was taught to look down on who? The same nobody I'm gonna keep. I said I don't care, bro. Nobody like doing slave black people like black people. [00:35:52] Speaker A: Right? Right. You're absolutely right. [00:35:54] Speaker B: But the way we do it is not bondage with chains and whips. It's control. [00:35:59] Speaker A: Right? [00:36:00] Speaker B: I can control you because I got more than you. Or right? Or I'm assuming I got more followers than you. [00:36:06] Speaker A: I could control. [00:36:07] Speaker B: I got more money than you. I could control you. I got more. [00:36:10] Speaker A: What I'm not gonna do for you, potentially, you better stay in line because potentially, I might not do this. For you. So I can't say this said album is whack because I wanna eventually beat from this famous producer. Or I'm not gonna say this album is whack because I. I might want one of them legacy albums. So I'm not going to be truthful. And that's what I was trying to tell people about myself. I am free. I'm free to speak freely. And now I know you're jealous of my freedom. [00:36:44] Speaker B: Because why? Because if they say something, they risk losing a relationship that they don't even. [00:36:50] Speaker A: That they. And some. The bro was scariest. But let me give you something that's scarier, is scared to lose a relationship that they don't even got. And the people they know, they treat like the people who was there for them, the people they know they could depend on. Right now you got somebody that you could call right now and say, yo, bro, assist, blah, blah, blah, blah. And they're going to say anything for you. And a person will say that person for the potential of another person that they look up to. Because we made people our God. We made money our God, we made potential and promises our God. That's why no could tell me what he gonna do for me. I know how to do that myself. You could only assist me on my journey. You can't do nothing for me. Right. You can only sign me right now. You can only partner with me. [00:37:49] Speaker B: You said it. And guess what? When we got the Sean Palms of the world, right? Sean Combs. Because he ain't the only one like that. [00:37:55] Speaker A: Right? Right, right. He's the one who got exposed. But it's about. It's about 20 of them, right? That's right. [00:38:01] Speaker B: It's a bunch of them running around so out of fear that he could be the sacrificial land that, you know, he became intoxicated with that set silver. But what we're talking about as far as like that land of promise, that land of right, milk and honey that I'm gonna give you if you do this for me. I'm do that for you and never get it. But as long as I keep showing you that I have it. You see, it's over here behind me. [00:38:22] Speaker A: Right, right, right, right, right, right, right. Yeah. [00:38:25] Speaker B: You keep listening. I'm gonna let you over here now. Come on, let's go do. Let's walk. Let's walk west. Even though you need to go south to get to the land of milk and honey, he's gonna say, let's go east. We can come back over. We can Come back over here and we handle this. Yeah, this is. But this is how you know this. That's why like I said, entertainment can't have a union because now those bad practices will be held. Somebody got to be held accountable for that practice. [00:38:51] Speaker A: Right? Somebody be going to HR with this. [00:38:54] Speaker B: Right? [00:38:54] Speaker A: But now who's qualified to be the hr? Now see, that's the thing. Who's qualified to be the union who did not take place and indulge with thousand playing the game? Right? Right. Because we didn't know, bro. We didn't know that. We didn't know that them late night studio sessions, when is in there and bring chicks in there and four or five on two girls didn't know that wasn't the right thing to do because that was industry, industry standard in practice. You understand what I'm saying? This is what they learned it. Would you learn to go to groupies and every state and leave kids or. But you didn't learn that that wasn't the right thing to do. You understand what I'm saying? You didn't learn that. I was just having this conversation today that you didn't learn that in the 90s when everybody was smoking weed and promoting weed and liquor and beer and all that insane eyes and all that. You didn't learn that when you was 15 and you started drinking and now you 50 years old, you didn't know that you was going to need a kidney and a heart and your lung was going to be bad and your liver was going to be up because you've been drinking for 35 years. Nobody. Yeah, for 35 years, literally nobody told you you can't do this for the next 35 years. Nobody told you that. And then you graduated. [00:40:10] Speaker B: And if you told them, they won't believe you. [00:40:13] Speaker A: Right? Because you. Because you ain't got on the white coat. Because you ain't got on the white coat. [00:40:18] Speaker B: And it goes back to what we talked about earlier, bro. Because we went to other people to tell us how to do our culture. And that's what they like, that's what they was paying us, right, for entertainment. Our destruction. [00:40:31] Speaker A: Dysfunction. [00:40:33] Speaker B: Dysfunction. Our dysfunction and our own. And this structure was sold to us as a form of entertainment and the rest of the world. And we kept perpetuating the. [00:40:42] Speaker A: And we bought it. And we buy it from them. Yo, how could I could. How could I help you destroy me? How could you sell me my destruction. [00:40:52] Speaker B: Back to my people? [00:40:55] Speaker A: Because I'm the sacrificial lamb of it. All right? So I'm gonna Show them via me how much Buddha I smoke, how much liquor I could drink. Right. How much chicks I could. And then you know, you got a lot of dudes out here secretly that got the monster or got herpes or got STDs. That's incurable. And we don't even know and won't say a word. It won't say. Just passing that around. [00:41:18] Speaker B: Be super active on them and they gonna keep rocking. [00:41:21] Speaker A: Yup. And we like damn, that got skinny Ozempic. No, that got that Batman Forever. You understand what I'm saying? Even, even, even a health nut like myself in the physical realm of exercise and eating a certain way. I was seeing people lose weight and I was like damn, how the that that look good? I didn't know was just cheating. Not even diabetic. And he just taking Ozempic to cheat. I got pissed off with that. Just like every woman should get pissed off when she know that she went in there and started eating a certain way and bust her ass in the gym. And this chick went and got a bbl and then after she wore the faja and all that she needed to wear was acting like she was a gym instructor. You should be offended by that because you did it the right way. And that's where that influencer comes into play. Because they influence you to do what. [00:42:10] Speaker B: A bunch of nothing. And we'll and know who said it. And people thought he was crazy. Ray J said it, right? I forgot why I seen it. This said, yo, my positive channel gets no views. But long as I'm doing something belligerent or something crazy or talking stupid, that is going to get me paid. He said. He said anytime. He said they won't suppress that. [00:42:32] Speaker A: Right, right. [00:42:32] Speaker B: Right on the platform, right. They'll let that rock. Ray J spazzing out Ray J drunk. Ray J said he took it, he did something to somebody. But anything wild and extreme, right. They're gonna let that fly. If you haven't noticed with us, right, Is. Is there. Is there a form of let's say digital intrinsic bias happening? Because hell yeah. It seems like when we doing buffoonery, we get rewarded with people seeing us. [00:43:00] Speaker A: Right? And sometimes it's not even monetary. Sometimes it might not even be monetized. But we get the money. No, the money is exposure. [00:43:09] Speaker B: Now the virality of it. Yeah, yeah, right. [00:43:12] Speaker A: When I could go outside the say yo, you crazy. Because again, I come from a place you can say yo, you crazy. Yeah, because. Because being. Listen, you know, it was a point in time, bro, where the Was crazy. They come get you, take you to Bellevue. We from the town to come go out here wilding. Then it became a time. Yeah. Now they're gonna throw you in front of a camera. Now you content. See, it used to be a point out here bugging. Everybody was scared of the crazy person or the crazy man. Live on the 14th floor, he Sleep in the hallway. Everybody know about the crazy man. You understand what I'm saying? Now the crazy man is on camera. [00:43:50] Speaker B: And it even became a prisoner for artists that have something of value to say, right? I've even been in that personal conundrum, right? I said, yo, let me go do an interview on this platform because I feel like I could speak to certain topics, right? [00:44:03] Speaker A: Nobody want to hear that. You dislike who beats. Is what. What you got. Come on, man. Come on. You're gonna have to give us something to sell, right? We can't sell. We can't sell vital information. Nobody wants to kill a. I want to know how you caught that age my. [00:44:31] Speaker B: But I figured out. I figured out. I figured out how to introduce it now. And I'm gonna tell you a lot, and I'm. One way to do it is to be dynamic and be rebellious and be unapologetic about it. I'm gonna leave those words, but people can figure out what they want to figure out. [00:44:46] Speaker A: But. [00:44:47] Speaker B: Right, you gotta have. You gotta. You gotta have the courage to. You got to be able to. You got to be courageous enough to speak truth to power. [00:44:54] Speaker A: That's why what you just did, what you just did, you just defined me. That's why it's called Doggy Diamonds. No filter within the tos. I'm going to say what I can, but I really don't give a About how people feel because pop culture does not dictate. My everyday has nothing to do with me. Doing my laundry has nothing to do with anything. And I know how destructive things are. And I'm just like, yo, hold on. And I said this when I was on Drink Champ. I'm not walking into a room with a elephant. And I'm gonna act like it ain't no elephant in there. [00:45:30] Speaker B: I'm saying something. I don't see this. [00:45:33] Speaker A: Yeah, y' all don't see this elephant. The elephant just stinks in here. But we've been taught. Don't say nothing. [00:45:43] Speaker B: You up the money. [00:45:44] Speaker A: You up the money. And when you prove that, you'll up the illusion. You can't come. You can't come now. You're not invited. Because what people don't Know is it? Go ahead, go ahead. What's he gonna say? [00:45:58] Speaker B: No, no, but. But the question is this. I always go to one of my favorite artists and human beings that I never met is Bob Marley, right. I look at his decisions he made outside of the bedroom. Okay, okay, that was. That was one of his demons. And everybody we know, that was one of his demons that got, you know, he. He loved him. He loved the chicks, right? [00:46:20] Speaker A: Yeah. Got exploited. [00:46:22] Speaker B: But the courage he had, right? The poise, the fearlessness to speak about things in the manner and the way he would package it. He was talking crazy to these dudes on camera. But because of his, his verbal posture, right? They said they took it as if he was being smooth, but he really didn't care what they was talking about. Like, what is riches, right? [00:46:44] Speaker A: What is that? You could. What is money? What is rich is. Right? Yeah. What is rich? Yeah. Let me tell you something. But my anal, my analytical thing about Molly was this. That bro and I'm not as great as he is and I haven't accomplished what he has, right? So I would never try to put myself on his pedestal. That courage and that bravery, the trade off was the woman. You know why? Because that is lonely being the truth of bro is lonely because even the people love you. That love you sometimes say. I don't think you should have said that. Right? It's the truth. Like my. Like, because we have, right. We can have time. We got a coop with it, right? But sometimes, yo, man, I'd rather have that ugly truth than that beautiful lie. I don't want to be lied to. Go ahead. [00:47:42] Speaker B: And that's. And that's why I feel like I haven't. I'm not gonna say I've been suppressed yet, but this, you know, I'm speaking life into a lot of things that I may be happening in the near future. Remember I'm telling you this, right? [00:47:52] Speaker A: Right. [00:47:53] Speaker B: I'm speaking. I'm speaking truth to a doggy. I'm just letting you know you're gonna chuckle and be like this told me what he was gonna do. And right when I package it. I've been studying the packaging of it. Okay? [00:48:04] Speaker A: Right, right there. [00:48:07] Speaker B: Oh, did he just say that? Yeah, he just said it. But he didn't curse. He didn't do this. But he packaged it in a way and took a stance and dare them to say something like, right? [00:48:16] Speaker A: Like. [00:48:16] Speaker B: Yeah, I said that. And what now? Because I said it. You gotta. Now you gotta show. Improve that. What I'm saying is not. Is non refutable. If it's refutable, I challenge you to refute it. [00:48:33] Speaker A: Right, right. [00:48:34] Speaker B: But if it's a non refutable fact, what is the problem? How would you try to cancel coach or somebody who gave you a non refutable fact? Culture, right? But why you ain't keeping it real with your people? Why are you keeping it real with your homegirl when she out here? [00:48:46] Speaker A: Horror. [00:48:47] Speaker B: Why you ain't keeping it real? But see, this is the thing. This is where as long as the. [00:48:50] Speaker A: Dollar, Right, right, right, right. The truth gets omitted when the truth. When the lies rewarded, right? [00:48:59] Speaker B: Between a dollar and a filter, right? Because before it was just dollars, now it's a filter, Right? Right. It's a filter on top of the dollar, right? So now I got, you know, I got the money and all. I'm gonna throw a filter on myself too. No fun. You don't have no filter, right. It's not right here. [00:49:18] Speaker A: Within the terms of service. Within the terms of service. You know what I'm saying? Within the terms of service. [00:49:23] Speaker B: Yo, so what I'm seeing around here, man, is, is coward culture. And girls can be cowards too. [00:49:30] Speaker A: Definitely. I think, I think, I think, you know, it was a particular point where we had. Because, you know, most black women were saying, I'm say this respectfully because I'm not really a red pillow or a woman hater in no way, right? But it was a particular time where black women, most of them think they are witches, right? With the tarot cards and the crystals and the zodiacs and all that, that's the average black woman, right? It was a magic that black women did have that they lost and that they gave up and they relinquished because it wasn't being rewarded. They didn't stay the course, right? And it's almost like how, you know, sometimes with us, like, yo, man, this positive, I'm punch that in his face. Because when you get sick and tired of and then you watch other people getting rewarded so you could be a good cleaning, good, clean and wholesome women, take care of your children, whether you a single mother dating or you in a healthy relationship, your children, your family and everything. But then you watch said woman show her toes and she told you, not that you saw it, not that you saw account balance. She told you she made a million dollars in a day, you start to say, damn, I'm struggling, right? I got nice toes or I show a little titty, you know what I'm saying? Nobody could touch me. It's not a big deal. See what they did because of the Dollar. Living from check to check, being impoverished, we started questioning our morals for the money, right? [00:51:04] Speaker B: Only fans. [00:51:05] Speaker A: Only fans. So now. So now. So now they created outlets to say yo, so they don't get to touch them. Yeah, here goes it. So the tit. So fans became the women's only Fans became the Women Mixtape. Became the Women Mixtape. [00:51:22] Speaker B: And when did it pop? During the. [00:51:24] Speaker A: What? During the end? Yeah. Yeah, right? Yeah. Yeah. Because everybody was secluded in the crib and couldn't go out and earn. So now we were all forced to watch each other. That's what made some of these podcasts pop off. That's what what D. Nice took off. That's when versus that's when Joker came. That's when all of this happened. Because everybody was confined to watching, right? And then. And then we didn't know what to give the viewers to view. So now you was just waking up to the unexpected. You got CNAs with fat asses and BBls and. And she work in a doctor's office, so she's a dental assistant. And she got a big ass and she want to take pictures in the scrubs now. So she makes so much money that she say, my education, my debt, all that. I'll be able to pay all this back. And I could push a G wagon because I could just show dudes my ass. And then we're so deviant in these times, right, that we're buying into fantasy. Like I said, dudes is buying into AI women. And. And this is that I'm gonna say that people might think I'm lying, but the proof gonna come out. A lot of these women you've been lusting over for the past few years are not even real people. This only fan, it's AI women on only fans now. They're not even real people. And they move, they talk, they do all these things. More people have been advanced, like. So when they come out, say, like a sora and you on there making yourself a superhero and all this, you don't think it was. People that know through the data that you're a deviant. You don't think that they know through your IP, because nobody's using VPNs or anything like that, right? They got your IP. They know that you hit the porn site about 10 times a day. You know, they know you want only fans. So they sell the data and say, yo, this is what y' all need to create. So they have think tapes, think tanks. They have coaching groups. They have all this on how to get y' all for y' all money. And they know that you deviant. They know that. They know that said woman got 17 surgeries. But you eat with your eyes, right? We, we do eat with eyes. We eat with our eyes detect smell. We don't detect tone. We don't detect none. We just eat with our eyes. You know what I'm saying? And one of the senses of food is smell. Because if you could look at something but if it smell like you're not gonna eat it, it could look good all it want to. You could say it looked good, but it stink like limburger cheese or some like even with me with like sardines. And I just ain't eating that because it stink to me. You understand what I'm saying? But now they was able to trick our senses and now we only always want this sense sense of sight. So if all they do is package it and put it in front of you, when it looked good, you consume it. It was a particular point where people with the mental capacity that were old, that had the mental capacity of children will call consumers. Look it up. People don't know that. Yes, they were called consumers. Right. So what do they call us? We're consumers. We consume everything. We, we take like if there is nothing off limits us now we even consuming that is no good for us, whether it's food. Because food is not always a physical thing that you could put on a plate or eat or bite. Food is also what you put into your brain. Exactly. [00:54:53] Speaker B: Right. Right. [00:54:53] Speaker A: You know what I'm saying? [00:54:54] Speaker B: Which is absolutely probably more dangerous. [00:54:58] Speaker A: Dangerous because now we deal with psychological. Because now we look at that's detrimental. We make burner pages to look at by example. You understand what I'm saying? We do. That's going to psychologically with you. But you need that dopamine. You need something to justify your anxiety and your depression so you will look at your own demise. Me. That's why I block people. Not that you, you. You did something to me that I don't like a. Or broad. I don't even want to see you. I don't want to see you. I don't want you to pop up on my algorithm in no way. I don't want you to pop up on my feed my timeline. Once me and you are done, that's it. Don't be like he blood. Yeah, I blocked you because I don't want to see you. And I also don't want you to see me happy. I don't want you to see me flourishing. Because that same evil spirit that you kept trying to put on me, that I succumbed to from time. I broke free from that, that. So I don't even want you looking at my picture. You might have an altar in your crib paying to your evil gods, hoping that, you know, because I fail. Because everything good is God, everything bad is the devil. So if a wishing bad for you, you think he praying to God, I hope you kill him. No, that talking to the devil. You understand what I'm saying? And I don't talk to the devil. When I want something bad to happen to somebody, I do that myself. That's why when be happening bad to I don't be like, I, you know, it's unfortunate I wanted to kill him. I'm glad, you know, I'm glad that I didn't because I was gonna go to jail. But it's kind of up that the got into accident because I. I didn't even get to punch him in the face. I'm mad. You understand what I'm saying? So that's why I wouldn't be saying to people. I'd be like, yo, I don't wish the bad, I don't wish the well. I don't wish for that. That don't exist to me. Go ahead though. [00:56:53] Speaker B: Yeah, but in conjunction with that, man, like that has become such a norm. Like we, when we function in that. And I don't think it's gonna stop because I think, no, it's gonna get worse. It's get worse. [00:57:09] Speaker A: We got too much access, we got too many snooping tools. We got things to really spy on somebody that, you know, it was so crazy, right? And this is just such a psychological thing, bro, you know what? You know, you could see everything that you needed to see. You could have confirmation and it just ain't good enough for you. Because when you take it out of the virtual realm and then you ask in the physical realm, the physical will lie to you and tell you you just didn't see what you just saw. And you so psychologically up. This is what this does to us. We will believe that we didn't just see what we just saw. Because that's what society is. Society is that you see something and you got confirmation and be like, yo, you didn't see that? [00:58:02] Speaker B: And guess and guess and guess what happened. They put, they put a person in office who displays that same behavior. You just said, he, he know that we see what happened. Get on camera and tell you it's the greatest thing that ever happened. And you're like, bro, that's not the greatest thing, right? Yo to God and country, right? And we'll sell it to you, sell it back to you. [00:58:26] Speaker A: We watch Rick Ross go to Canada and the swing on him and he said that did not swing on. That's the. He did what you think we didn't, you know, so. But that's why you have things like AI. So now people are seeing that's real and saying it's AI. Yo bro, I could tell the difference between AI and reality. I can tell the difference between the two, right? But what did my man Curtis Scoon said? I gotta get the quote because he said white privilege is giving white people the benefit of the doubt and giving black people nothing but doubt. I'm it up school you my bro, but I'm up. But he said that it's something like that that white privilege is just given. But it goes back to credential. It goes back to as I'm tying it back into our above conversation that we was having before I started hitting record. If said person says this is how you do this. If it's a black person, did you be just not gonna listen? If this person says this in a culture that they know nothing about, they don't have no studies, they don't have nothing. They're not even experts. They will get to listen in the nod before one of us do because they're supposed to know. Because we're just taught not to trust each other, right? And we're taught that don't know what the they talking about right? Now think about this, right? If a dude with a briefcase in the suit walk past your car, you gonna chill. But if you see four dudes with shiesties walk past your car, you're gonna lock your door. Why are you taught because you've been brainwashed to think the four dudes the shises are up to no good. But the dude with the briefcase in the suit is on his way to bank to deny you for that loan later. You don't even know that he had to sign off on some. Yeah, he had to sign off some and was like, nah, you don't get no loan. I don't like his credit score. You understand what I'm saying? And, and this is what. But again, it's still all in the package. It's still all in the perception. And it's all of what we think we see and we've been brainwashed into what we see and not what we know, right? And even what we know, they'll tell you you don't know what you know and you didn't see what you just saw. And that's the greatest trick that is doing right now. And they're using digital, they're using social media, and they're using people who are becoming professional liars. Because now the lies in the. This is a person in the lie now, bro. [01:01:11] Speaker B: Think about it. People have lied to themselves about being yo life coaches had to be one of the number one scams ran last. They like being shambles, but they don't quote your life. You know why? Because they know if I didn't show it to you, you, you ain't got nothing on me, right? You're not gonna see nothing. Yeah, what I noticed in this whole debacle, man, was like what you just said, like the lie became so prevalent and so believable and people didn't care if the truth was ever, ever revealed. Because I sold you the lie at a higher price. [01:01:48] Speaker A: Yo, let me give you something before we go, right? Because you know, me and you, we'll be on here to like three in the morning. It was a particular point where Quavo bought the sweetie chick a Lamborghini truck. Doggy diamonds. Somebody who think people think it's always angry, bitter, mad. You know me personally. So you know that's not the truth, right? But the fact that I'm always debunking, I just look like I'm never happy, right? So when he bought her that, I said no, the got her some three month leash. And people was like, nah, he yo, he bought a Lamborghini truck. You know, the women, oh, that's it. I want a soft life. You know, that wasn't determined at Thomas. Probably something else, you know, now they got this soft life, right? Yeah, soft life, right. And later that took that back from her and took it back to the dealer and I was like, I told y' all that was a three month lease. You understand what I'm saying? Because some of us know what we know. But because I don't show what type of whip I got, right? Cause don't know what I got or I don't have. I'm just not a shower, you know what I'm saying? Like, I'm still into privacy, I'm still into having things for myself. Because if I give you everything that I possess, what do I have for me, you know what I'm saying? Once this is not the Truman show and people's lives have become the Truman Show. So more people know about you, the more they can weaponize you against you. Be nice you against yourself. Because what is it is that was like you had said, or what about when you. And it's like people will start knowing more about your life than you think you know about your life, right? And I always tell people. You know what I always tell people, yo, you know you don't know me, right? I always got to remind people every day, yo, you know you don't know me. But, bro, you know, we talk to, like, tomorrow and yes, sir, we gonna do this often. [01:03:54] Speaker B: I'm with you. [01:03:55] Speaker A: Album coming, album out now, right? Album out now. [01:03:58] Speaker B: Yeah. It's an album now that no Soul Left Behind. My brother Arsonist, you know, and the Heat Makers. [01:04:03] Speaker A: Okay. [01:04:04] Speaker B: And you already know we got that. [01:04:06] Speaker A: Other something coming soon, so when that come out. But we. We gonna do this often for people because people need to hear different information from a different point of view. And, you know, we. I. I think we both articulate enough to make it palatable for people, for the. For the ignorant, for the intelligent. You know what I'm saying? Add a. So the ignorant hear us and, you know, we able to speak to everybody. And I think that's important, too. And let me. Oh, oh, the last. Oh, I'm gonna stop recording because I did want to ask you one thing. Let me stop.

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