"White People Are Tired" explores claims of systemic racial grievances, citing disputed stats like 60% of U.S. shooters being white (despite whites making up 60% of the population) and 25-30% of Black men arrested by age 25 for their 13% share. The host argues white generosity is exploited while downplaying Black-on-white crime, like a 14-time-arrested Black man accused of murdering Irina Zarutska, and criticizes DEI as reverse racism, comparing it to LBJ’s policies they claim fostered Black financial dependence. Frustration peaks with personal anecdotes—unpaid debts, verbal attacks, and safety threats—suggesting racial fatigue stems from perceived blame without reciprocity or institutional protections. [Automatically generated summary]
Welcome to another episode of Pearl Daily here on the Audacity Network.
If you guys want, feel free to sign up for our app.
We are on both app stores and you can support in case they kick me off again.
They do try to ruin my life.
They really do.
You see the bags under my eyes?
That's from two years of torture from women.
But I've seen it worse than a lot of the people I've interviewed.
So, anyways.
Before we get into today's topic, which is that white people are very tired, exhausted.
We are so freaking exhausted.
You know, black people, the nicest way possible, you guys have really exhausted all of white people's charity.
White people are very charitable.
We are the most charitable people on the planet.
And I don't say this with hate in my heart, but I don't know a single white person that has routinely helped black people on a regular basis that hasn't gotten burned from it or given black people opportunity.
I don't.
They always steal something or call you racist or, you know, and I mean this with love.
I don't mean this in a mean way, but white people are fatigued.
We're exhausted.
We are tired.
We are so tired.
And last show, oh, fuck it.
I'm just going to go.
I was going to do a couple stories before the story.
Maybe I'll do it at the end, but I think I'm too passionate about this topic.
White, yeah, borrow money.
They don't pay it back.
You know, white people have done a lot of good for society.
And I think that's very much overlooked because my entire life, you know, I would always hear about how evil white men were and how white men are just the root of all evil.
Right.
And the interesting thing is, white men have always been the most charitable to me.
They're like white men, they're, and especially if you, if you talk to a really smart white guy, they're like a different breed of human.
They can fix anything.
They can think through any problem.
They don't get angry.
I mean, why do you think women they go for like the Daquan's Tyrese, you know, the drug dealer black guy?
It's because, you know, it's too boring dating a white guy.
He's going to be so stable.
He's just going to get things done.
They're so positive.
Like they're just naturally positive people.
White men.
And I'm not saying white people don't have their problems.
You know, I could really talk, oh, I could talk about white people's issues.
You know, white men don't have the ability to tell their wife no, pretty much ever.
They will assist in their white wife's, you know, they will just, they're yes guys because they're too busy.
They're too busy working.
Why do you think the black women are like, we're going to try to swirl?
There's this new trend of black women dating white guys because white guys are so chill.
They're just, all they want to do is just work.
They want to work.
You know, you ask a white guy, like, what's his social life?
He'll say social life.
That's for, you know, and I don't mean this.
I think white guys could actually benefit from this because if they had more friends and have a social life, they could at least, you know, bring other women around to piss off their wife and maybe get her in line, you know, put some fear into her.
So I'm not, I'm not saying, I'm not, I'm not saying that I'm not saying white people are without sin.
We are, but we've acknowledged white people's sin.
We have, you know, we've acknowledged it.
Okay, don't, you know, you've told us, okay, don't get, don't forget it was a white man.
I know what race you are, dat, sorry.
Unalived your leader.
Dat, really?
Yeah, that, you know.
Here we go.
And I don't mean this in a mean way.
You know, I think at some point all these reaction channels are going to come at me.
I just can see Abben Preach nagging me.
I just see it in my future.
The ocean.
just see them coming back to nag me because they got nothing better to do um even if we go into school uh let's see because that's always they say what percent of mass shooters are white I'm actually, I'm groking this, so take it with a grain of salt.
50%.
They're share.
So we're actually less percentage of mass shooters.
Like we're 60% of the U.S. population, according to this.
And we're a lower percentage of mass shooters.
So we're actually below, you know, I'm not saying what percent.
Let's see.
What percent?
What is the demographics of mass shooters?
50 to 60 percent.
You know, black people, I'm sorry.
You guys still are double.
You guys are 20 to 25 percent.
You're 13 percent of the population.
For your size, you're still double.
You can't come out.
We're below what percent of the population we are.
You guys are still double.
Even, you know, it's crazy.
Even when you point out a white crime, you've still managed to outcrime us.
Like, it's so crazy.
It's the mass shooters are red herring because what they're trying what when they're trying to do gun control, they count gang shootings, which are overwhelmingly people of color and everyone's going to get mad at me.
Now, I've told this story before.
I'm going to tell it again because this was just such a canon event for me.
It really was.
When I was in England, I had like a probably at one point, I think at one point I went a 100% black staff.
And to be honest, guys, you know, I've said this before.
I have a lot of love for black people.
There are things that I love about black people that are just so much better than white people.
And I can, I could riff.
I could go back and forth about both races.
Like, I think black people are funny.
I think they're way funnier than white people.
You know, if I ever want to go to a party, black people are going to be the most fun.
Like, if I do street interviews, they're always more willing to do street interviews.
What are, you know, there's just an energy.
A lot of them are high energy and I'm high energy.
So that, you know, it's like a big ball of fun, but they can never stop at the fun.
They're saying, now they're saying sex offenders are disproportionately white.
Is it going to be over what percent we are of the population?
What percent?
It could be.
I'm going to find out today.
What are the demographic breakdowns of sex offenders?
We're going to find out.
okay i know it's gonna be male um sorry doug mpa You guys still are double for your 13% of the population.
You are 25 to 30% of the sex offenders.
We're about white.
White consistently shows 50 to 60% of sex offenders are white, which is about what we are of the population.
Hispanics, Hispanics are low.
I guess you guys are not sex offenders.
Good job, Hispanics.
good job it you know it's so crazy I can't even say, I can't even talk about black crime without having to talk about white crime.
It's like women.
We can't ever talk about women.
And then I'll like debunk it.
I'll go through and say, let's see, is it a higher percentage?
Now we're getting into serial killing.
Well, how common is serial killing?
Is that even like that's like the most rare crime of all the crime?
They're like white people dominate the very most rare crime.
Sorry, if you're in a white neighborhood, nobody's really afraid you're going to be sex offended or you're going to get serial killed.
That's just not a normal fear.
It's not.
You know, I'm not trying to be mean about it.
I'm not trying to be rude about it.
But, you know, at some point, we just have to be honest here.
We just have to be honest.
If I'm in a white neighborhood, I am not afraid I'm going to be serial killed.
I'm just not.
The black serial killers didn't get caught.
I don't know.
You know, I'm not a crime.
All I'm doing is chat GPTing.
So, you know, this could, this is just what's on chat GPT.
Oh, yeah, I guess the Hispanics, you know.
Criminals are a minority of all races.
What percent, you know, I'm just curious.
What percent of black men have committed a crime by the age of 25?
I have no idea.
Okay, let me keep going.
50.
Oh my God, that's so much worse than I thought it was going to be.
Now, 50% of black men have been arrested by age 23, including all types of crimes.
60% of black men have been arrested by age 25.
Holy shit.
These are arrest rates, not convictions or actual criminal behavior.
Okay, I'm just curious.
What percent?
Okay, I'm getting too much into the weeds here.
Now, again, you know, and I'm not trying to be this is, I'm not trying to be rude here.
Do you know what I mean?
I'm not trying to, white people, we have our problems too.
But just my entire life, I just have witnessed black people take advantage of people's kindness.
You know, I think we have had one too many BLM riots as a people.
We are done.
White people, white people have funded so many of these causes, right?
White people have watched black people, you know, burn down cities in the name of Black Lives Matter just for the money to be given to some fat lesbians.
Um, actually blacks are more likely to be serial killers as well.
Look at the database compiled by Florida Gulf Coast University.
If I'm being honest, it would kind of make more sense to me.
I don't know what, like, they're leading in violent crime.
I don't know why it would stop at serial killing.
Okay, so, I mean, I could be wrong.
But when I hear that, it's just sometimes, look, and I hate it because for my job, I have to use stats.
But I know how manipulative people that use stats are.
Like, I'll give you an example.
One stat that I always use that, you know, pro-marriage pushers use is that single men die sooner than married men, right?
That married men live longer.
But they include like drug-addicted alcoholics that aren't, like, they're not marrying anybody, you know.
Of course, so it's very dishonest using that.
Like, stats can be manipulated.
So when I hear, you know, white people are the majority of serial killers, maybe that's what they say.
But even I, I am a bit skeptical, even in that.
If I'm really, if I'm really being honest here, I'm skeptical.
I don't know what, like, if they're leading the way in every other violent crime, I just don't know why it would stop there.
Yeah, you have to read the entire study.
Yeah.
And you can, but they'll still find ways, you know, they'll still find ways to manipulate it.
So I just have to go, you know.
check with Serial Killers Anonymous.
I don't know.
Look at.
All I know is that, you know, people, and, you know, I was debating with Andrew Wilson, I think.
Like, I'll see Andrew Wilson debate, and he's like a king of stats.
You know, he's like, stat, And I think, like, if I was debating with him, we agree on most things, but if we were going to debate on something we disagreed on, you know, I just know he would find a way to be right, right?
And Destiny does it too.
They're very good at like debating.
But for me, it's like everything has to come with my, I have to see it with my eyes first.
And I don't really, I don't know how big of a, okay, what?
How many, how many serial killers are active in the U.S. right now?
I'm just curious.
I heard this, I heard there's one in Austin, Texas.
Hopefully they stay in Austin.
Oh, the FBI defines a serial killer as someone who's committed at least three murders with a cooling off period between each murder that can range for weeks or for years.
Serial killers are often distinguished from spree killings, which happened, happens in a short, continuous period, or mass killings where multiple people are killed in one event in a very short period.
Okay, so white people are 80% of the 25 and 50 active serial killers that they're guessing.
Like, it's such, do you know what I mean?
It's like, you can't ever talk about black crime without bringing up white crime.
It's just, and even I'm skeptical of that, but it's 25 to 50 people.
Do you know what I like?
Yeah, so if you kill 10 people at once, you're not a serial killer.
Oh my gosh.
But, and at one point, I got to be honest, black people kind of scared me.
But even I have lost, I have lost all fear.
Now, I've told this story before.
I think I got off track.
Obviously, this show is for people that aren't idiots.
Okay, this show, it's meant for people that are not retarded.
Okay.
You could be a little retarded, but not too retarded.
You know what I mean?
You could be a little bit, but not too much.
And if you are not smart enough to understand that a generalization does not mean every single person, obviously, Doug MPA works for the channel.
He's not a criminal.
He's not, you know, it's like, obviously, this is not every single black person.
And this is not every single white person.
But if I have to say not, like, if you're not smart enough to put two and two together, please watch someone else.
So now, now what they're going to say is, you know, I was in a public relationship with a black guy, obviously, and they bring this up a lot.
And, you know, I really don't have any complaints about that.
I really, I got nothing.
So, you know, a lot of them, a lot of people are saying that this newfound rhetoric is like, who hurt you, whatever.
And that's really not, this isn't like a dating experience.
What this was, this was a co-host experience as well as a collaboration.
This is a fucking YouTuber experience.
this is a youtuber experience and what happened was when i was in england i had like an 80 percent black staff And out of the staff, a lot of them were really good to me.
They're awesome.
You know, I have we all loved Blessing when he was on the channel.
You know, King was on the channel for a while.
There are some awesome people that I worked with, even Denalva.
But it just took one or two YouTubers to denounce me and insinuate that I was somehow racist.
And congratulations.
Because before then, I really didn't see color.
But you assholes, I do now.
Fuck you guys.
Yeah, I do now.
I do now.
And I know that sounds kind of gay when white people say that, but I think that's really how we're raised.
You know, I would say in the suburbs, it's just not something we think about.
It's not something that we really think about, right?
But it's black people that make it a big deal.
Like, especially when you get into high, high net worth white people, they are so desperate for somebody that's not an idiot.
They'll take anyone.
They're like white, black, yellow, brown.
I don't care.
Just give me someone that's not stupid.
Because the men that are like super high IQ, they just want smart people.
They don't care about race, gender, anything.
Your top three relationship advice for men to turn this around.
Turn what around?
Thank you for the super chat.
What are we turning around?
But anyway, so I worked with this guy for like two years.
He was a co-host of mine.
And in this period, we doubled his subscriber base.
Now, if you ask him, it was obviously all him.
That's why his career stagnated before and after the show.
But he was just, so what happens is this guy, he asks me for a raise, right?
Long story.
He says, we were renegotiating, I don't know, the super chat deal, whatever it was.
And we were in talks of me managing like his whole channel.
And this was very expensive for me to do.
This actually made me go broke by doing this for a few YouTubers.
Because each channel, it costs roughly $10,000 a month if you factor in rent, production.
Because this was high production stuff.
This was not cheap.
Okay.
This was not cheap.
So like this was going to be a full-on show.
And then he's like, oh, I want you to produce for free.
I want the majority of the revenue if we make any.
And I want you to pay me a salary on top of it.
And I said, look, I can't do that.
And this man, I said, I can't.
I'm going bro.
Like, I don't think I'm making as much money.
I think because we did this show together, he felt like he was very, you know, like credited.
So then he wanted like a higher payment every show.
And then I did the, I ran the numbers for how much money do we make on a show with him and without him.
And guys, it was the same.
So I'm like, why would I pay more money?
Why would I pay more money?
And he's probably going to react.
He'll probably make, I don't even say his name, but and then he turns this around and then he accuses me of holding footage, like trying to get it was like the weirdest thing.
It was so weird.
He accused me of like trying to get footage to hold over black people's head.
I'm like, what?
And then he, you know, the crazy thing was, he had footage that he put out, which wasn't doing anything like bad.
It was, I threw a birthday party and I said, you can come in.
And I thought it would be so fun.
You can do a presentation on anything.
You can come in and just here's a presentation.
And, you know, one guy did something kind of raunchy.
He was like, he was talking about how women always say small dick energy, small dick energy.
And he's like, are you small?
Or am I small?
Or you loose.
And it was just, you know, it was just, it was just funny.
You know, it was just funny.
And I thought we were having a good time.
No, that's the crazy thing.
I wasn't even drinking.
And then because like my one other guy that I worked with was white and he was at this party and he like had his phone out.
He was like, he took video of us on our phone.
And so we were trying to.
No, I haven't been drinking, but do you know what?
I wanted to defend myself during this period because this was a canon event for me.
You don't understand.
I wasn't even drinking.
This was a canon event because I thought I was friends with him.
And he's like, oh, we weren't friends.
I'm like, I thought we were, I know we did a show together, but I thought we were friends.
I'm not drinking, but I can start.
Do you know what I mean?
I can start drinking.
I'm like, I thought we were pals.
I thought, I thought, and so he had a video and it was labeled like the truth about Pearl.
I thought he was going to defend me because he was mad.
He was mad that I had Nick F on.
I thought Nick F was a cool guy.
I know business is business.
Then this other YouTuber, this other YouTuber, he said, he basically tells me he has to denounce me because of YouTube.
He's like, oh, I have to stop the bleeding.
And then for months, he takes me out of context to try me to, he accused me of making fun of him having cancer.
I did no such thing.
I did no such thing.
I, someone, oh my God, I did no such thing.
And he made it look like I did it because of the way he edited the video.
And it was the most bullshit.
I'm like, really?
Oh, my God.
Oh, my God.
And for months, he would just make, and I was hurt.
I was so hurt.
You don't even understand.
I was so hurt.
Both of these people I had on my studio.
I took them out to dinner.
Like, do you know what that's like to be cool with someone and then they just make a video about me?
I'm like, I'm going to kill myself.
And I was, you know what I mean?
This was the first time this ever happened to me.
And I think I was a little naive.
I thought, I thought people, but you know, this is a white person.
I extended my kindness.
And these were accomplished people.
Like, they had decent followings.
And they just had to do some ghetto shit.
They just had to do, they had to do it.
The way they switched up on me was crazy.
I know.
I know.
And so, do you know what?
White people are tired.
We are exhausted.
We're exhausted because, you know what?
And from my point of view, and they could say their point of view, I was overly kind to them.
People don't know.
While they were accusing me of being a fucking colonizer, I was going broke trying to make these people YouTubers.
None of the YouTubers I signed made me money.
I lost money on all of them.
It was a bad investment.
It was such a bad investment.
And they're like, it's like a white person, in this case, me, was trying to give them an opportunity, an opportunity of a lifetime, actually.
And they decided to call me a racist colonizer.
Then I had Nick on and they were mad.
You know, it was so crazy because I had this, it was me, this other girl, and Nick, Nick F.
And people felt the way they felt about me having Nick on.
Fuck you.
I don't care.
I don't care.
And so then this YouTuber said I was a bad person because this girl and him were having a back and forth, but and nothing against the girl, but I told her who he was.
So I said, hey, this is a crazy guy.
He believes this.
If you want to come on, come on.
So now I'm responsible for what the guests who says they want to come on and have the back and forth.
I just, do you know what?
And if, and if this, if this makes me lose followers talking about this stuff, because for a while, I just, I didn't want to fight.
Do you know what I mean?
I don't want to fight with you people.
If you think I'm racist or a colonizer or whatever bullshit, can you just go somewhere else?
Oh my God.
Can you just go like if you think that get the piano?
Yeah, you know, can I rap on stream?
Maybe I'll do a rap.
Because do you know what?
There's stuff about black people I really do like.
They're way more fun.
You know, I played sports with them.
They always have good energy.
I like their music.
I like, I like rap music to some extent.
I like it with like a country flair, if I'm being honest.
Let me see.
But do you know what?
After that, after that, that whole experience, congratulations.
I officially see color.
Congratulations.
Congratulations.
I officially see it.
didn't, but I officially see it now.
Are you aware of the journalist Colin Flaherty?
He opened his eyes to mainstream media, tries to minimize the prevalence of black crime levels.
I mean, look, I don't need a study.
I don't need a study to tell me.
I mean, I just have eyes.
Like, it's so crazy.
You know, it's, I will never forget that.
I have a shit list forever.
Those, those, those two YouTubers are on my shit list forever.
Forever, you will be on my shit list.
And you know how much of a pussy this guy was?
I tried to talk to him offline, the, the YouTuber who made a long-ass hit piece about me.
And I, I, you know, and this guy is too pussy to talk to me in person.
What you're afraid of a little white girl?
Do you know what I mean?
It's just like, oh my God.
Oh, my God.
Black fatigue, black fatigue.
Dear God, stop bothering me.
Black fatigue, black fatigue.
And by the way, we could never say this like five years ago.
But now the overt, white people have gotten so tired.
And I would say one of the number one things about white people is we're very polite.
It's why white women are the worst in divorce court because you don't see it coming.
White women are very nice to your face, but we'll be cunning behind your back.
So I'm not even trying to take smoke.
At least black women show their aggression up front.
You know, they might fight you, but at least you know what you're getting.
White women will do it in divorce court.
So I'm really, I'm not trying to, I'm not trying to paint white people as angels.
We're not.
But I would say the number one thing about white people is we are very polite.
And now we're to the point that mainstream conservatives are talking openly about black fatigue.
And do you know how tired we have to talk openly about this?
Because none of us want the smoke.
Pearl, since you're new, now in the area, you have to go and crowd her and sit in a third chair.
Maybe do a sit-down on both of your channels.
And perhaps Alex Jones, too, because he's down there.
Yeah, I mean, you know, I didn't talk about this for a while.
I had a groveling apology at the time.
It was the most embarrassing moment in my career.
And then I took it back and it was just such a shit show.
Oh my God.
But you don't understand the pressure I had on me at the time.
You know, I had all these people that worked for me that were telling me I had to do that.
Like, I had girls on my volleyball team bullying me about this stuff.
I had these YouTubers I thought were my friends.
And yeah, so yeah, I used to not cover this topic because, in all honesty, yeah, I know, never apologize.
That was the dumbest thing I ever did in my life.
It was so stupid.
And you know what?
The original, the original thing that I said that got me in trouble was I was talking about the historical discrepancies of slavery and how the stuff we see on TV is not historically accurate.
And then black people said, ah, ah.
They said, oh no, it's exactly like roots.
And I'm like, I don't think it is.
I don't think it is.
They're like, oh, yeah, it is.
Well, you know what?
I was literally, I had all these other things.
So I think I'm just going to go right to it.
And I don't ever want to be that famous again.
I can't have that many people tripping over everything I say.
I hope to get less.
I hope to stay this level of fame.
I enjoy this level of fame.
This level of fame is perfect because these people can just leave me alone.
Let me do my show.
Hold on.
Your browser has blocked my screen.
Wait, hold on.
Let me try again.
Hold on.
Let me remove this.
Oh, there we go.
Wait, not this window.
What the?
Why is it doing this?
Oh, that's so annoying.
No, because at this level of fame, there's not as many eyes on me.
I am fatigued.
I am so tired.
I wonder why it's doing this this time.
Well, okay, I guess we're going to share the whole window.
Okay, so I'm going to go like this and I'm going to put the I'm going to put this over here so I can see the chat.
Okay.
So I can make sure that the view is okay.
We are fatigued.
We are tired.
We are done.
And that's the thing because I think white people just have been too polite about this stuff for too long.
White people have done awesome things for civilization.
We build great communities.
We make great schools.
We do a lot of awesome stuff.
White people, white people have the best kind of fun.
Like, I mean, black people having fun.
I mean, there's cookouts, there's dinner, they might play a sport.
White people like climb Mount Everest.
And you might say that's white people shit, but it's kind of cool, right?
It's kind of cool to ski down a mountain or like climb.
When I was a kid, we climbed up Devil's Tower in the middle of the desert.
That's pretty cool.
Now, I'm not even that outdoorsy as a person, so I'm not even saying everyone should do it.
Okay, here we go.
Let me see if this is working.
Can you guys see this?
It's a blur.
Oh my gosh.
Why is it doing this?
This does not make any sense.
I think it's, I'm wondering if it's the...
i don't know why this isn't working i'm wondering if it's the type of let me see if it's a different browser Let me see if Firefox works better, maybe.
No, that one's not even downloaded.
Can I leave and come back?
Give me a second, guys.
All right, let me see if that works.
Can you guys see it?
Ten years of putting up with the boy who cried racism has come to an end.
All right like, can you guys see this or no, you can't
reason with them.
I mean, it's just so much work to reason with liberal black people.
It's so much work.
It's blurred again.
I'm gonna kill myself.
Why is this happening?
Um, I was told I need to stop saying that.
um d1 no it didn't work um it's just it's the programming is so deep that it's so much work to change their minds No, I'm not gonna do middle small screen.
That's gonna look worse.
Um, I think.
Let me see.
Let's see if we're gonna fix this.
All right, production guys.
You guys got the answers?
Because I don't know.
I don't know what's going on.
Yeah, I know, but then it's gonna be like half the screen in the reaction.
Let me try something.
Okay, well.
Oh, that's weird.
I don't know.
I think a setting because I think you switched to setting today because this didn't happen before.
Hold on, let me see.
I'm afraid.
Okay, that did not help.
Let me see.
Okay, I'm gonna try this.
Pearl, how to fight against crybabies who manipulate and victimize themselves over nothing and ruin people's lives.
Well, hold on.
I'm trying to hit play.
is that better um okay let's see how this goes
And this is the problem: white men are just too busy working.
So, black people and women can just get so delusional in the time because white men are like busy inventing things, building society, like doing all this cool, you know, all the no audio.
Well, I don't know.
I'm telling you, the settings like I haven't had issues before this was switched today, so I don't know why, but so but stop screen.
Okay, this is weird.
What the hell?
We can hear you, but not Crowder.
That's just weird.
Yeah, because I'm telling you, this was fine the other day.
Can you guys hear it now or no?
Can you guys hear it at least, or no, it's blurred again?
Okay, I'm not doing a reaction where it's this small unless we can audio is very quiet.
I don't know.
I mean, I thought it was the same user it was in before, but I'm telling you, like, I've used the station so many times, and this is the only time that so it just seems like it seems like that would like something had to have been changed.
Okay, well, if you guys want to leave, then leave.
It's I'm trying to fix it.
Um, okay,
tell me if you hear this in the chat you guys can't hear it?
hmm
can.
I can't hear it, but I already had fatigue based on clips.
Um the audio should be shared.
I'm doing the same thing I did last time, but something is different this time.
The Erin Clary interview is awesome.
I can try.
Um automatically adjust recording.
Now I've done that, but I shared the screen.
It still did the same thing.
I can do it again, but still
no sound.
Well, I guess, well, I was going to cook tonight, but I guess they're going to have to fix it tomorrow.
I mean, I've tried both, guys.
I tried, I literally tried both.
Share screen.
Allow to share window.
Like, I've done both, so I don't, if there's a solution, it's not one of those two.
Turn on the audio to play that tab.
Doug, I've been alternating between the window and the whole screen.
So, like, I've done both.
Okay.
Click the button at the bottom.
It's the same user I checked.
Thank you for the $5 super chat.
I can try to download Chrome and see if that helps.
But I'm telling you, this is the, I'm doing the same exact thing I did the other days.
Okay, let me try this one and see if it helps.
Okay, this might fix it actually.
Let's see, okay.
Let's try this.
Black fatigue.
You guys know what that means?
Yeah, I think this is working.
okay let's see since since the last time you came that's become a thing Yeah, I was like, that's just become a recent thing.
Do you know what it means?
I'm not sure what it is.
White people are 12 times as likely to be killed by a black person any other way around.
I'm just going to shoot you straight.
It's not even close.
Across the country.
Ain't nobody coming after you.
It's not close.
And this is, you know, Doug MP, I didn't mean to push back at you and you're giving me the white people crime stats.
I don't even have to look at them.
I know black people are going to be overrepresented in every violent crime.
I just know it.
Because I have eyes, you know, even the serial killer thing, I'm still kind of skeptical.
They'll find some workaround to make us look worse because they always do.
We're just not violent people.
It's just not our nature.
Black people, they just tend to be.
I don't know if it's genetic or cultural.
To me, genetic kind of makes sense, but people get kind of mad when you say that.
But it's only because I had a brother that grew up with a different family and he was really similar to us, even though he didn't grow up with us.
So, like, could there be a genetic component to violence?
I could see it.
I don't know.
You know what I'm saying?
Like, nobody's tripping on you, but these people in just as scared as the mother folks.
They are if they get on a bus, not necessarily.
That lady, that lady wasn't in danger because that man was black.
That lady was in danger because that man was crazy.
Nope.
Whenever we want to ask for you.
Equality and fairness, it's a problem.
So white American.
So it spends several trillion dollars.
When is it enough?
Win the bird.
No.
Not in the bird.
I'm not fucking white.
That's what they're like to burn.
Just burn down $4 billion worth of cities and $60,000.
There's three times to four times as much homework than the black kid.
And the white kid does addition to three.
Why?
Because it's cultural.
Now, one thing I do like about black people is they do check each other for subtle disrespect.
And I think that's cool.
I think white people, especially white guys, could do more of that.
But it's never just to check.
Like they have to be like violent.
You know, why can't it just stop with the like checking?
Why is it better parenting for Asian than white?
Why?
We're always having real talk.
Why do black, why do young black men fight in packs?
So a couple of years ago, when I started black and white on the gray issues, I sensed some growing discontent or more of a racial divide in America than I'd experienced in my lifetime.
And it seemed to be egged on by legacy media.
It's sad to see a lot of people going along with it.
The American people have felt safe in their homes.
The people who had absolutely no chance of victory, hate and racism towards black and brown people.
And as that evolved, and for the first time, I walked into Stevie J's barbershop.
I really was looking to sit down and talk with, but mainly listen to real black Americans living the real American black experience to see whether they shared the viewpoints of a lot of the public representatives, the now networkless Joy Reeds of the world, or back then the Don Lemons, what they wanted me to believe.
I realized that CNN and MSNBC were fully seen.
And overall, it was a largely warm, productive conversation.
I think it served its purpose.
You can go check out that video to see what it was like.
Fast forward to now, and not only have things not really improved.
We're fatigued.
We're tired.
And they'll gaslight you.
They'll say, well, this is just on social media.
I'm like, is it really?
Because the one woman that was a complete bitch to me on my team in England was black.
She refused to talk to me, acknowledge me for months.
Because I had Nick F on my show, really?
Really?
Black barbershops are not real life.
I cannot believe that 60% of black men have been arrested by the age of 25.
That's a crazy stat.
That's insane.
Oh my God.
It's like when you find out 50% of black women have herpes.
That's crazy too.
And according to many Americans, they're markedly worse.
And if listening is important, I noticed that a lot of white Americans felt pushed to a point that they weren't even fully comfortable expressing.
But for the most part, when they did, their communication was pretty restrained.
And then it was dialed up to near boiling point with the recent cold-blooded murder of Irina Zarutska.
The unthinkable happens.
You see, Brown pull out what officials say was a pocket knife.
He unfolds it, then stands up behind Zarutska.
What we aren't showing you is the moment where Brown then stabs Zarutska several times and walks away.
And that murder taking place at the hands of a black man who was arrested at least 14 times and released largely in the name of racial justice spurred a reaction from white Americans that frankly is unsurprising.
And truth be told, for young white Americans is understandable.
And it would be doing America no favors to completely ignore the discontent of young white Americans who, if you listen to them, definitely will make the case that they have been vilified and asked to foot the bill for original sin or crimes that they've never committed.
They owe each of us 300K.
So I don't care if we hide anything.
That's not my problem.
I just want my money.
A debt is owed.
I remember I had a conversation with a black person once and I told them that less than 1% of white people even owned slaves.
And this black person fought me.
They fought me so hard.
They're like, no, that's not true.
And I'm like, oh, it's true.
Google it.
And I watched him.
I watched him Google it.
I'm like, we're tired.
You know, knew some guys in college.
They had an apartment in downtown Chicago.
Bunch of black guys broke into and stole all their stuff.
It's like now, you know, that kid stabbed another guy on the field at a track meet.
And I, so basically, and if you guys don't know the story, there was a white kid who was a twin and he was a track athlete.
And there's a black kid at the track meet and they got into a fight.
Now, the black kid, he's saying, oh, well, the white kid provoked it.
And I'm like, why do you have a knife at a track meet?
Like, white culture, we don't bring guns to school, at least not to use on each other.
We might, you know, they might be hunters, but that's not normal.
And this kid stabs this kid in front of his brother.
He dies in cold blood on the field.
They haven't released the footage.
They raised a ton of money for this kid's legal defense.
And it's just insane.
He's applying to college right now.
We're tired.
We're exhausted.
They would never let a white person do that ever.
And if you marginalize that entire segment, that voice of the country, that will lead to quote-unquote radicalization.
And if this country wants to avoid that, or at the very least, as we've done in the past, understand that there needs to be a major course correction in the approach to communication.
That needs to go both ways.
And that's why this time, I didn't visit the barbershop merely to listen, but to communicate a very real set of grievances that could bubble into massive consequences.
This one goes a little bit of a different direction compared to last time.
This is Black and White on The Gray Issue.
And that's Stevie right there.
Blue shirt.
Blue shirt.
Oh, Steven?
I met Cedric.
I think I scared him.
I think he was.
How you doing, buddy?
Yeah, man.
How you doing?
Good to see you.
You guys all have your beards nice and right.
I just, I've never learned how to do this shit.
It's because people come to your home once I'm like, yeah, this is full of swole.
Oh, I see what it is.
It's a power move.
You have me sitting lower.
Yeah, so we can all look down on you.
No, thanks.
They said you guys got some people coming in here after the last one.
Yeah, a couple people came.
I think this is a place where white and black people have conversations.
So it was funny, the first person that came, the first person that came last time was from, and he said it out in Alma.
He's like, I'm Indian, but he had on a MAGA hat.
And he walked in and was like, hey, I saw you guys on a crowd.
Can I get a cut here?
Yeah, I guess so, man.
Come on.
And then you have your hand on your piece.
You're like, I don't know.
No, because he didn't come like that.
He didn't have the backpack and the ski mask on.
Yeah, he didn't have that on.
Was he nice?
Was he good?
He's cool.
What do you guys think when you see someone with a MAGA hat?
Because I know we were kind of talking about that last time.
Depends on how they present themselves.
Why is your optimal?
Absolutely.
Yeah, for me.
Well, okay, so what would present themselves in a way that would be like decent versus piece of shit?
Yeah, you know how some people carry that air of superiority.
Yeah.
And if you present that to me, I'm very conscious of that.
If you present that to me, I'm going to respond appropriately.
Yeah.
That's just me, personally.
What would be like an air of superiority?
Just like certain things you say in conversation, and you know, and like you said, just in the physical nature of these chairs, well, in conversation, you can physically go up and down and put yourself above or beneath.
So when people do that kind of stuff.
Yeah.
You know, it's funny that you mentioned that because I actually, when I do the change of minds and sit with people, I actually kind of slump my shoulders and deliberately kind of make myself smaller just to not.
It's like, you know, what is it?
The crab that has the red under its claws that's showing danger.
So I don't wear red because apparently that signifies poison.
But yeah, no, there's all these body language experts now.
You watching TV and I'm like, this seems like horse shit.
Like he looks to the left so you can tell he's lying.
Yeah, some of it is horse.
I saw him on camera.
He killed his girlfriend with a butter dish.
I don't give a shit what he says.
He took too long to say that answer.
He had to think about it.
No, he thinks about thinking about what he wants to say.
Yeah.
You know, just spit sh ⁇ out.
He wants to say that.
Last time we talked, we were kind of just, and the reason was just like, you know, often you see in news, people just kind of siphon themselves off right into an echo chamber.
And I thought it was good.
We were just kind of able to see other perspectives.
Where do you think the country is now?
Like, what's that?
Like, is that an open question?
Yeah, race relations between, because last time I wanted to get your perspective.
And there's a perspective now in the white community.
None of us are an ambassador for the entire community, but things have changed quite a bit the last year and a half.
Temperatures have gone up.
But what do you guys think?
What do you think we are in the community?
You know, I'd like to chime in on that.
I'm going to ask you ask that question.
There are a lot of social and economic dynamics at play that have certainly gone, in my opinion, in the wrong direction.
I don't think that people really understand the gravity of where we're headed.
We are vastly sliding into an autocratic regime here.
And I'll give you absolutely, I'll give you several reasons.
See, in order to have, you can't have a one-dimensional approach when you're wanting to continue to lead from a global perspective.
All right.
What you see here today is an isolationism approach, which has never worked in the past because we don't have an understanding of geography and history.
All right.
And I'll just simply close by saying you've got to understand something.
The rest of the world is grossly infuriated with the way America has taken shape.
And not only that, we're ceding all our best opportunities to China, right?
Look around you and the relationship they're fostering with everybody else, which includes Canada, Mexico, and they've even gone as far down into the Latin American corridor, fortifying their bases while we're still holling that we're the greatest.
You're talking about China, like in the Panama Canal?
Not just the Panama Canal.
Let's pivot from the Panama Canal and let's look at the long-term strategy they have now, where they just signed an agreement with Mexico to build another canal bypassing the Panama Canal.
And when you look at the whole transatlantic corridor, where you've got now Brazil and Canada, as well as Mexico, trading and they're stopping in Peru, where China has a huge presence at, circumventing completely the navigation, the use that comes with having to use Panama Canal.
So we'll avoid conflict with America and just simply go around America is what's happening here.
Talking about China?
Absolutely.
Yeah.
No, I mean, I want to agree with the first part, autocratic.
I think China needs to be dealt with.
And this is the first time we are.
What was raised in Canada?
Canada sucks.
Canada is a dog shit country.
Canada, the kind of shit we're doing, you can't do this in Canada.
If you say something too offensive or I say something too offensive, you will be jailed in Canada.
That's the thing.
So I'm fine with the U.S. being the best country.
I came here from Canada because, I mean, I had friends who were arrested.
I had a friend, Stand-Up Comic, was fined for telling a joke.
I don't think people realize how good we have it here in this country compared to other countries.
But that's the painstaking part about it all is the fact that, you know, I've always been one to say, and I believe this firmly, freedom is not a right.
It's a privilege until you wake up the next morning and find out you don't have it anymore.
Yeah.
It also comes with duties.
That's what I was about to say.
It also comes with responsibilities because while we're free to speak and say what we want, and I went to Montreal a few months ago, so I know exactly what you're talking about.
Bet you saw a lot of tips on signs.
That's all it is.
No, I didn't.
It's just strip clubs.
Our Times Square is a giant strip club.
It was a couple of them.
Yeah.
But no, like there is responsibility.
And like everybody's from different places, different backgrounds.
Some of us from certain backgrounds know like running your mouth too much in a certain space can get your ass whooped.
Yeah.
Like you free to say what you want.
You're just not free from the consequences.
Like the consequences that come with you saying the wrong thing at the wrong time to the wrong person.
I hate it when people say that because white people, okay, yeah, they might, you might get into a fight, sure, but we just have such, it's like our offended meter is so much higher than black people's.
And it's very exhausting because like we get offended like we're up here and they get offended here.
And so they're like, oh, well, you know, you guys, you think there's no consequences to saying what you're going to say.
And we're like, well, we don't get offended like you do.
You guys are cry babies.
Not all, not all, obviously, but it's like when you get offended, like I heard a black woman got shot because someone didn't open the door or say thank you when she opened the door for someone or something like that.
And this led to her getting shot, you know.
But this, if this was white people, do you know how it would go?
Oh, she didn't say thank you.
I guess she probably wasn't paying attention.
I'll just let it go.
You know, we kind of are trained.
We give people the benefit of the doubt.
Black people, it's like women.
It's like women.
Women could say the same thing.
But it's again, the male-offended meter is so much higher than the female-offended meter.
And that's where we all have responsibilities in what we say and when we say it.
Yeah.
The problem, though, and that's, I was kind of talking more domestically.
The problem with that idea is a lot of people are offended by different things.
And so people get their ass whooped for something they didn't say, right?
That's the real thing.
I don't know if you guys were following the stabbing there on that train in Charlotte, Arena Zarutska.
Last time I was asking where you guys thought we were, you know, as far as in the country relationship.
Have you guys heard the term black fatigue?
Yeah.
You guys know what that means?
Since the last time you came, that's become a thing.
Yeah, I was about to say that's just become a recent thing.
And do you know what it means?
I'm not sure.
It's a term that's being used by people in the white community, by and large, again, saying they feel like they've been victimized and they're tired of taking that.
You know, that was a girl who was dying alone in public.
And that was a guy who was let out 14 times.
14 times, including violent crimes, in the name of racial justice, right?
He didn't have to post bail.
He didn't have to appear back in court.
This is not the first time he's assaulted someone.
We know that was in the interest of racial justice as opposed to just being a fucked up attempt at justice, period.
Like the legal system has its flaws.
Yeah.
And people have been making complaints about that for decades, right?
But that's just, to me, that's a mental health thing more than it's a black and white thing.
Well, I'll tell you why, because white people are saying it now.
Right.
White people are saying, hey, we're in this.
Well, because, you know, I'm white people are 12 times as likely to be killed by a black person any other way around.
I'm just going to shoot you straight.
It's not even close.
Where?
Across the country.
Where?
The United States.
I mean, we're not talking about Ghana.
And like, yeah.
What I'm saying is in white communities or in quote-unquote so-called white communities?
Across the country, the rate is a black man or person, because most murders men, there are very few female murders, 12 times more likely to kill a white person the other way around.
And then you look at the average amount of times that someone in this country is arrested before they're brought in for killing, charged with murder.
Do you know how many times they're arrested on average before they murder?
11 times.
Once again, the justice system's got its flaws and people have been complaining about that for years.
We spend more time trying to fix that than that's like gaslighting.
Gaslighting.
We're like, hey, this is a problem.
Can you guys stop killing us?
And they're like, oh, no, not a problem.
Trying to complain about the white versus black of it all.
Well, I think.
That's what they do.
And women do the same tactic.
They say, oh, white people or men will say they have a problem.
And then they'll say, well, not all black people or not all white people are like that.
It's like, are you too dumb to have a conversation, really?
Just like I was trying to listen to all communities last time, I think this is something that's unavoidable.
If this community, if enough white people get pissed off, look, we're living in New York now, we're getting killed in record numbers or Detroit, at 12 times the rate.
And our system, three strikes in California, right?
That was a three-strike policy.
The reason that was changed is that it was racist.
Crime went down in black communities 30%.
But now people are looking at their cities going, this is a hellscape.
And the murder is skyrocketed because people said in the name of racial justice, like three felonies, you're up.
Because crime is crime, right?
But crime is usually going to be higher concentrated in areas where there's high poverty.
So, typically, the areas that's high poverty in this country are areas where people with this color skin.
So, that's why you're going to have that.
That's why I said those numbers could be skewed and made to manipulate to look like, oh, yeah, that's why I said in 912 times the rate in suburban neighborhoods, white people are not in danger.
And that's what this kind of fear-mongering tells them: you're in danger because you're 12 times more likely to get killed by a black person.
You live in ain't nobody coming after you.
You know what I'm saying?
Like, nobody tripping on you, but that, but these people are just as scared as the mother folks because they are figured on a bus.
Not necessarily.
That lady wasn't in danger because that man was black.
That lady was in danger because that man was crazy.
Nope.
It's such gaslighting.
Such gaslighting.
That man was mentally insane.
But why was he back on?
He had his own family members call the hospital to try to get him committed.
He told his sister he killed that woman because he thought she was trying to read his mind.
Yep.
Why was he let out?
And I'm not saying it's because he's black.
I'm saying people looking up, though.
The judge said he's insane, right?
We agree.
That's not a black and white issue.
He was deemed not fit to stand trial, right?
Right.
Now, the I institutionalized.
Right.
The IOU policy, meaning you don't have to pay bail.
You don't even have to stay here until you're actually convicted.
You just say you'll come back.
Right.
Which is messed up.
Yeah.
This judge, Teresa Stokes, black woman, said, Well, this is about racial justice.
We need to be softer on crime.
So that's her reasoning.
That's why he was out.
And you can find dozens of examples.
That's her misguided reasoning.
And that's policy.
Oh, my gosh.
People, I didn't have a change of, I guess, view on race, the race topic.
I had to have a Canon event.
And that Canon event was these fucking YouTubers.
You guys are all dead to be.
That was the Canon event.
But that's historically, right?
That's not representative of a whole.
It's not.
It's not.
No, and look, we always have to say, not all, not all, not all.
Like, not all white people wear MAGA hats and are dumbass pieces of racist.
But we have all been accused of racism, sexism, misogyny, homophobia.
What I'm saying is.
Congratulations.
You guys have accused us enough of it that we become it.
And white people are tired.
We are exhausted.
Black people were so mean to me after I had Nick F on.
And they said the most racist, messed up stuff to me after that whole thing happened.
Because I interviewed a guy they disagreed with.
Grow up.
Who cares?
Canon event.
That was my Canon event.
I never saw color before.
Congrats.
I see it now.
Black fatigue is white people going, you know what?
I know I'm not racist.
And I know that we're dealing with record crime and I know that I'm more at risk.
And they have negative interactions.
And they're constantly told that they're not allowed to voice their opinion because they're white.
And if those people get pissed off, like that's where we actually could end up with some kind of, I'm telling you, I see this growing.
I see people who were milquetoast white suburbs.
You're around the wrong black people, Pearl.
Really?
Because when I was in England, I was around black people from Africa, the UK, and America.
And I could give instances from everybody from but Africa.
Africans don't play with that racism stuff.
Africans are like, I don't know what they're talking about.
Africans always, the guys from actual Africa.
It's so funny.
The guys from actual colonization don't play with that racism stuff.
You know, it's funny.
I, um, one of my one of my employees, because he, he, again, he accused me of colonizing these guys, these adult men who worked for me, who worked at like places that were not great before.
Like, we were at a penthouse in London.
This was a nice place to work.
This was a very fun job.
And this dude, and one of the guys that worked for me said that his grandma grew up under colonization and that she said she wished they would come back.
But they're like, you know, we're actually from real or I guess more real racism.
They don't know what they're talking about.
Who are becoming actually racist?
Now, not all of them, but I've seen people actually become racist because they get mugged, their store gets looted, and nothing gets done.
They're going, and if I say something, it's turned into a racing.
I'm telling you what, that's where it's coming from.
At what point do we have a talk and go like, okay, let's reform justice, but we have to be honest as to why it was reformed in the first place.
This guy, it's not even the only one.
It's every three days someone's being offed.
Yeah, but at the same time, let's transfer that over to, you know, I mean, there's a lot of unsafe things in this world.
Like getting mugged by a black person is not the paramount unsafe thing.
Yeah, but getting killed by one is there's school shootings.
There is sure rope.
Yeah, and you know, it's crazy.
I just looked up the stats.
All of the violent crimes, even if you do school shootings or murderers, it's the exact, we do not disproportionately make up any of it.
And if anything, there is reason to believe in incentives in institutions to to believe it could be downplayed.
Right.
Raised all of that shit.
And the primary, the primary people that commit a lot of those are people who don't have this skin.
No.
So if switch it over, if black people say, well, we're getting fed up and we're tired of all these school shootings and all of these road raids and all this, who do we say something to?
Who hears our voice?
And when does the white fatigue?
When does the white fatigue kick in?
We've been hearing about white.
That's a plan, right?
We've been hearing about.
Look, white fatigue is not, I'm not going to say anything violent.
If I had white fatigue, it would be like these single mothers getting IVF.
Like white fatigue are crimes that generally have to do with money.
So I mean, I would say, not even crimes, but like abortion.
Although black women are beating white women.
Yeah, I mean, even black mothers are beating white mothers and murdering their babies, you know.
But I would say like white fatigue is going to be the IVF, the human resources, tone police and the Christian women that pretend to be trad, but they're like, like white fatigue is just going to be a different set of problems.
But in general, we're not violent.
We can be socially in reputation destruction is big, but we're just not violent people.
And all our lives about white fatigue, about systemic discrimination.
That's the problem.
That's why we've done systemic justice reform that has led to more crime, right?
That's the reason for no three-strike policy.
That's the reason for cashless bail.
That's the reason for catch and release.
The reason for it, in the wake of Black Lives Matter, George Floyd Wright, Summer of Love was, we're going to reform crime.
We're going to reform the justice system.
And it's gotten worse everywhere it's been.
And then when white people leave those neighborhoods, well, now it's white flight.
If they come in, it's gentrification.
And I'm telling you, there are a lot of people who are pissed off and they're not going to sit down and have this conversation and be real about it.
And they're going, well, what happens when someone has to keep their mouth shut about everything?
Nobody tells you that.
That's how they feel.
Is this the new Ice Cube movie, Barbershop, The Next Cut After the Next, Man?
Same story, same chairs, same broke clippers, just new people complaining.
I don't believe white people have to keep their mouths shut.
I think white people don't speak up about a lot of the things that they do and they perpetuate that affects us.
What do we do?
We're just like, leave us alone.
They're like, no.
When black people get money, the first thing they do is they move into white neighborhoods.
Negatively.
That's the stuff that nobody wants to, the issues aren't made about those things.
You know, I really respect the platform that you have because you do have open and honest conversations.
And I have to say, I don't believe that those numbers about the black people murdering white people are correct.
I don't believe those numbers are correct.
They are.
What if I'm not lying to you?
If you're not, then I've been misled and I've been isolated from realistic numbers.
But I know in this country, from the time that we got here until now, there's never been hordes of black people that just go out and maraude and it's white people.
Now, interactions happen and things do occur.
I'm not saying that they don't, but not by enlarging number.
We can't be this small a percentage of the overall population and still have the numbers that people try to perpetuate onto us.
See, black people do more harm to other black people than we do to other white people.
Well, that's true.
That's true.
Because people who are close to the country also have historical evidence of groups of white people attacking and chasing black people.
So it's coming after.
So when people say that's not happening now.
So I'm just saying.
And that's the point at a precipice right now.
That's a part of the historical condition.
Sure, but someone today, someone today.
Hold on, hold on, hold on.
I wasn't finished making my point.
You know, when the, like I said, black fatigue, that's the newest mantra that's been put out into society to make people think that, okay, they tired of black people.
They tired of what you said, that we can't say anything about black people.
We can't do.
Well, when you hold all the power, when you hold all the economic rights, when you hold all the things that make this country move, when you're in charge of those things, you know what I'm saying?
Well, you know what?
I put it like this.
White people got the firecrackers.
We got the stem.
That's it.
Y'all got the power.
The power is placed outside of the black community.
We're charged with all the negative things.
Those are the things that are.
Well, what it's you might say, okay, well, we do these other things.
And we're like, can you stop committing crimes?
They're like, no.
Like, well, we do all these other things, you know, it's like a really generally coincide with how people relate to us.
The bad stuff that go wrong with this world is the black people's fault.
We the smallest part of this country.
Remember that.
And you would be shocked how much damage they can do.
You know what I'm saying?
Beside the immigrants that come here.
We have been tasked with the negative, the criminal, the immoral.
That's us.
And that's what we consider.
That's white fatigue.
But you know what we do?
We just say, that's just how it's always been.
So we don't make up words for it or terms for it.
So now you have a frustrated group of white constituents that feel like, oh, we can't say anything.
We have to do this.
We have to do that.
So you don't be deemed.
Well, if you weren't that in the beginning to start with, there would be no need for the reform or the feelings that you have.
You can't say anything about because you treated us like for so long and people finally stood up and said, Hey, you got to stop treating us like now that you want, we're tired.
I feel like, you know, things aren't going in the manner that's now we want the right to keep saying those things.
What if your premise is completely flawed?
And what I mean by that is if we're trying to understand it, you said you have power in all those institutions.
What if, for example, you have an entire generation of people, young white men, women, who if they apply to a college or apply to a job, they don't have a grant.
There's no Pell Grant.
There's no type of subsidy.
There's no DEI initiative.
As a matter of fact, they're likely to be passed over.
They hold no institutional power.
And when you say black people haven't done anything, think of this white person, a young white person, because I'm seeing some people become radicalized and it can become a problem.
And then they see billions of dollars and riots and damages all summer long.
And then they go, why is this happening?
I see so many similarities in the way black people process information and argue.
It's very similar to how women do.
Like I see a lot of the same tactics.
And obviously, it's not all.
Very obviously.
But again, too many white people, the challenge you're going to get is too many white people have had an experience where they've helped out a black person and the hand that they fed bit them.
And you get enough white people with experiences like that or like getting robbed or, you know, we're going to we're going to start to notice a pattern.
And it's not to be mean.
It's not to be hateful.
It's not, you know, but, you know, the reason I started talking about this was just like, honestly, it just hit me in the face.
Again, it wasn't, it wasn't even something I wanted to notice, but they, you can only be called racist, you know, the things that black people said to me were so mean.
They're genuinely just mean.
And they go lower than I'm willing to go.
Every time I haven't been paid by a company, it's been a black-owned company.
I've never been ripped off by a white person.
I got ripped off on five grand that I was supposed to be paid for a week of shows and they didn't pay me.
Only time I've been like screamed at on a podcast was by a black woman.
You know, it's just and the thing is, we're not, white people aren't, they're just going to walk away.
They're just going to stop dealing with black people.
It's not, it's not going to, white people aren't going to riot.
They're not going to do like white people aren't going to do anything crazy.
They're just going to bring, move their time and attention elsewhere.
So.
Black Lives Matter, right?
So they're going to make that connection.
Now, they have no institutional power, but if they go into a neighborhood that's largely black, they're going to get the shit kicked out of them.
And they're being blamed for something that supposedly their racist forefather did that they have nothing to do with.
You think we're ever going to have unity?
This is the problem.
Unity, if let's say your dad's a or your grandfather's a and you walk up and you slap his teenager, you now have made that person hate you for life.
And that's what I'm seeing with young, not even my generation, younger people are going, I had nothing to do with this.
They came up.
Oh, this is because one individual didn't pay me.
No.
I mean, it's because I had two YouTubers insinuate, call me a colonizer.
Okay.
Black-owned company didn't pay me.
Black girl screamed at me on a podcast, insulted, you know.
I have so many instances that I could say over the years that have happened that this hit me in the face, if I'm being honest.
Some of them I don't even talk about publicly because I, but you know, I was robbed by one, like someone stole a camera, had one basically try to learn my secret, like figure out what secrets I have, personal information, held it over my head for years.
You know, it's just, yeah, I mean, it's just so many instances.
Yeah.
Although that's more of a woman thing, to be honest, that's just the holding information.
They just get whatever dirt.
I met someone the other day in Texas, had six black guys break into his apartment and they tried to kill him.
And they're still out there.
Please stop noticing.
Look at Hunter.
Aren't you a man?
If you're this soft where you're offended because I noticed that black people commit more crimes, I mean, please go somewhere else.
I don't need you here.
Dear God, please.
Like, we got to be an adult.
At some point, we got to have an adult conversation about this.
Like, if you can't take it, then please go somewhere else.
Go nag someone else, not me today.
Like, at some point, we have to be adults about this.
You know, during the riots, they've come up under DEI and they're seeing a 12-time murder rate skyrocketing crime and any proposals they make, not holding institutional power, shut down his race.
Now, why was DEI even instituted?
And we get criticized for winning.
It's like, if we get a good job or a good position or get into a good school, it's because we're white.
It's not because we're smart or we're talented.
It's always because you're, you know, I've heard this for years.
Any accomplishment I've ever had is because you're a rich white girl.
And to be fair, you know, I'm not saying that's not an advantage, but would Candace Owens be anywhere if she wasn't black?
No.
I mean, there's plenty of black women that are in positions of power just because they're black women.
White women, you know, but it's whenever white women have any power, it's always, it's always because of our skin color.
In the first place, because for the majority of time that black people have been in this country and being free, we've been denied so much.
Somebody somewhere had to put some things in place to provide access of some kind.
If you believe that, that's fine, but you can't tell that young white kid had nothing to do with it, that he should just sit down and take it, especially when they're getting killed.
That's what America's been telling us for the longest.
The young white man.
Now they're saying no one would want to interact with coloreds if they didn't have to.
Someone in the chat said, I don't think so.
Sorry, I disagree.
Would I like overall?
I think black people are fun, they're cool, you know, they're chill.
But I just, you know, the crime that comes with it, it's like you're way in fun.
At some point, you just think, you know, I want to be safe.
I want to be safe.
Yeah.
Person of this generation that you said that heck, I couldn't afford the white area where I live.
I had to pick between black people and gay people.
I was like, I'm picking the gays.
I'm going to the gays, the gay neighborhood, at least.
They probably won't break into my house, probably.
They usually pay their taxes.
And I know they're going to come back at me and say it's my numbers getting low.
So they're saying, they're saying to cover this topic, your numbers must be low.
Guys, I, this, no, there's some times where something gets on my heart and I just have to say, I have to, I have to.
And I've just had this on my mind.
That feels they're misled by the D being mistreated by the DEI.
I mean, she has an example.
They don't hold any institutional power.
Young white people don't.
They don't have an advance.
Not yet, because they're young white people.
They haven't advanced to where they're middle-aged white people, where the power comes.
See, what black people, once again, when you got colleges that did denied access to black people, you can't come here.
Something had to be put in place.
Well, look, y'all got to let some black people come in.
Y'all can't just happen long before.
Oh, my God.
They just round about.
Long before black people were admitted into college.
Hold on, man.
What I'm trying to say.
My bad.
My bad.
I'm trying to make it clear.
He's trying to do a senior Wincess and talk through you.
PEI is just a new way of rapping affirmative action.
Yeah, affirmative action had to be put in place because there was the access being denied.
So somewhere, somebody, the legislation had to be put in place.
Well, look, we can't just exclude all of them.
So somewhere along the line, they have to be allowed some access.
Okay, that was put in place.
Now, fast forward.
Okay, I can't watch this rationalization any longer.
$500 super chat.
I'll react to the rest.
Otherwise, I'm going to bed.
Sorry.
Sorry.
I've got $500 in super chats.
I'll react to the rest.
It's okay if you don't want to do it.
I'm not, I won't hold it against you.
I really won't.
But I just, the rationalization is just too much.
Gays won't rob you.
No, look, they're saying gays won't rob you.
Blacks will rob and stab you.
LBJ ruined this country and gave blacks what they wanted.
Now they buy lobster on food stamps.
They're so bad with money.
I mean, I have stories.
And you have to understand, I lived in a very black area.
Like, I was around probably 70% black people for years, like two years.
And it's not, it so, you know, I have observations that I had so bad with money.
Okay, alright, I'm gonna go to bed.
I thought I'd say, you know what, if you guys want me to go further, you can give me a super chat, but oh my god, I can't, I cannot.