All Episodes
Jan. 18, 2026 - Pearly Things - Pearl Davis
02:03:32
Anton Daniels Experiences Black Fatigue

Anton Daniels, a controversial figure with ties to Fox News, claims "black fatigue" stems from clashes with black staff, unpaid work with Brittany Brenner, and perceived disrespect over his genetics, contrasting it with white indifference. He dismisses voting as ineffective for men due to feminist influence and cites Minnesota’s Somali voting blocs as proof of systemic group dominance, while promoting a divorce-themed documentary. Landlord Doug MPA echoes Daniels’ views, alleging black tenants’ promiscuity fuels crime and welfare dependency, yet successful black figures like Candace Owens—who settled a harassment case for $37,500—avoid direct engagement with their communities. The episode argues digital activism amplifies trivial slights into mob-like outrage, exposing millennials’ unguided emotional detachment in an era of hyper-connectivity, where even "Black Nation" solidarity is performative and divisive. Ultimately, it frames race debates as WWE-style entertainment, with Daniels and Holcomb thriving by catering to polarized audiences. [Automatically generated summary]

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What the heck?
I'm still a little sick, guys.
Forgive me.
Oh, here we go.
Your eyes make the stars tick like they're not shining.
Her hair, her hair falls perfectly.
You know what's crazy?
Even when this is like shitty piano, even when it's shitty piano, I get copyright.
Isn't that crazy?
You know, I used to do rap reactions, and it would be like whitest girl on earth reacts to Pooh Sheisty.
And I stopped doing the music channel because it was just like, I would just get copyrighted every other day.
And I'm like, screw this.
Oh, I play, but not very well.
I'm on book.
If anyone was wondering, I'm sure nobody cares here, but I'm on book two.
I'm almost at the end of book two of piano.
I have made it through two books in a year.
I'm actually pretty proud of myself.
I started piano a year ago.
I did know a little bit about chords, like self-taught, but actually like lessons.
And right now I'm learning to play an F scale.
So it's kind of.
You have to forgive me if I'm a little low energy tonight.
I'm kind of sick, so I just kind of look.
I'm also going to have to leave the stream because my groceries are going to get here.
I get groceries delivered.
I am that bougie.
I am.
So.
Black, black fatigue.
Shaniqua, please take out the weed.
Anton Daniels wanted to do a podcast.
Then this guy said, let's take it out back.
He thought that they were just gonna be talking.
But now they're fighting in the back.
Can you believe that?
can you believe that did i hit that note Did I hit that shit?
Or did I not?
Did I hit it?
Did I hit it?
Pearl, you're so disrespectful.
I don't.
Fuck, that was so bad.
That one was bad.
So I want to talk about my goals for the next few months.
I'm so excited.
We got a documentary donor.
We are picking documentary teams soon, and there are going to be costs that come with it.
We're going to pay the editors so we have enough money for editing.
But the more money we get, the more famous people we can get in this documentary.
So a lot of I would like to actually pay some celebrity fees.
I think that would be kind of cool.
But I don't want to reach out to these celebrities and go through all the work of getting in contact.
I can get in contact with anybody.
But imagine like I get Brad Pitt on the line and they're like 100K.
And imagine, and if I said, you know what, I have 100 grand.
Let's do this.
So, you know, anyways, the that's what they say.
You're rich, you can afford it.
And I'm actually going to explain because I think it's really confusing with my background.
People are like, your dad's funding you or whatever.
And it's actually not true.
I do have a wealthy background, but, or like a well-off background, to be fair.
But, you know, my dad always felt like it was important to not spoil us, even though I would still say to some degree we were spoiled.
Like, obviously, you know what I mean?
Like, like we all got cars when we turned 16, whatever.
But it's really important to me that I'm not my father's problem.
It's very important to me.
I cannot ask my father to fund these projects.
I just cannot.
I can't.
I have to figure it out on my own.
My father, I love him too much.
You know, he just can't.
I already am his problem to some degree, right?
And I don't, I don't, you know, the less I can be his problem, you know.
So I got to raise it on my own.
So in the next year, I want to get through another one of these.
I'll tell you my New Year's resolutions if anyone was curious.
I don't think anyone cares, but it's weird because I talk on these streams and then people like, they seem to care.
Fuck it.
Yeah, my dad says, what's in it for me?
I say, dad, fund my documentary.
It's called What's In It for Men.
And he goes, what do I get out of doing this?
And I'm like, well, a smile on my face.
It wasn't enough.
Anyways, I would like to get through another piano book this year.
I'm on the last page of Guitar Book 3, if anyone cares.
So I'd like to get through that.
We're going to build a music studio.
If you see the boxes there, that's because they're going to build a music studio.
They're going to start this week, Wednesday.
And I would like to put out an album.
I think it'd be actually funny.
Some of the comedic songs to like put them, put them out on Spotify.
So what else?
Um, The documentary I want to get done this year.
That's a goal.
Let me see.
I have my goals sheet.
Although I always have a working goals sheet.
It would be cool for me to be able to do the splits this year.
I've been on a mobility journey because I am ungodly unflexible, like my natural self.
And I really want to do the splits, but I think it might take me three years in total to do.
I've noticed my goals tend to take me like two to three years to get it done.
Like I started on TikTok and YouTube in 2021.
It took me two to three years to blow up.
I mean, that's just kind of the general timeframe that it takes me to like accomplish things, you know.
The documentary I started two years ago, but then I got demonetized.
That derailed me.
You want to see my best shot at the splits now?
I think I put a picture on Twitter a few months ago, but I don't know if I'll have as much time because I want to write an album this year.
I maybe want to get my t-shirt machine to work and start selling t-shirts.
Oh, I have to try to sell you guys something.
If you guys want, I'm going to put this link in the chat.
I really want to keep this sponsor.
And you guys aren't buying enough of the belts.
And the reason I want to keep this sponsor actually is not really about the payment, like of the ads, but it's because I love their belts so much.
When I get my groceries, I'm going to show you the belt.
But, all right, wait, let me let me find.
Let me get the link.
These belts will last you literally a lifetime.
Like they are, I don't even wear belts like that.
Like when I first got them, I'm like, I never wear belts.
I found belts too annoying.
Like, cause if you eat a lot, you have to like go to the next loop.
Half the time it's in the middle.
Like, it's so annoying.
It's just another thing I have to remember, you know.
oh here it is um here i'm gonna pin that and i'm gonna show you guys the belts I have one upstairs, but I'm in yoga pants right now.
But I'm telling you guys, I will personally refund you if you get these belts and you don't like them.
That's how, like, I love these belts.
I love them so much.
And I've given them to a few guys I know and they love them too.
Nuke, nuclear cardillo, loves his belts.
Loves them.
Hold on, let me.
Eve, there's an America belt.
So you can get like a belt buckle.
And what makes them, let me, let me pin it.
Let me pin this link.
Okay.
I hate, I hate having to like do this, but I really, really love these.
I just wish I could put into words how much I love these belts.
So you get three belts.
You can mix and match the buckles to the belts.
Okay.
I know it's a little expensive.
It's like a hundred bucks for belts.
No, you don't understand.
They're life-changing.
It's like it glides.
Like you, you put the belt on and the buckle, it's like a sliding gliding thing and you can cut it to the correct length.
Look, are they not leather?
I don't know.
I mean, I can't really tell the difference of like materials of stuff, but I'm it's a good material.
Okay.
I know it's sturdy.
The ones I have.
I know I can never wear another belt again.
I will forever, even if they stop sponsoring my channel, I will be a customer of theirs for life.
And so I really enjoy using products that like this.
This is not even a sponsored ad.
Like I have to do the scripted ones that I like put in the videos or whatever.
But I just love them so much that I want to keep them as my sponsor because I love, I love pushing products that I actually use.
And like, no, if you lost weight, because that's a great thing.
Like, I've been losing weight.
And I can just glide the belt.
Like you can keep the same belt.
No, but then when you get three belts, you want more because you can mix and match the belts and the buckles.
Yeah.
So, anyways, I'm done.
I'm done pushing.
Oh, I do get credit if I put the link in the description.
The link, let me see, is ansonbelt.com slash pearl.
Like, look, if you guys buy these belts and you really hate them, email me and I'll send you the hundred bucks or whatever.
Like, that's how I feel about how good these belts are.
I, I freaking love these belts.
I, I can't even, I, I, I hope you can hear the sincerity in my voice when I'm talking about this.
Like, I hope you can hear, like, I love these belts.
I love these belts.
Um, I'm like, please, please don't.
Because they, they said, I guess my ads are underperforming.
And I'm like, I guess they can't hear how much I love them.
I'm like, this is, this is the one product that I actually use.
I thought it was sincere until I said that.
All right.
I don't know.
I, you know, if you don't believe me, you don't believe me.
If you don't believe me, if you think I'm shilling, what am I supposed to do?
But I'm telling you, like, hold on.
Hold on.
Do you know what?
I might have to text Nuke.
On a scale of one, can you?
All right.
Aren't, how should I ask this question?
Well, I actually, I could go get the belt upstairs.
I'm in yoga pants now.
So this just isn't the right.
I can show you it though.
Do you like the belts?
I got you.
Well, me and Doug Empia are going to react to some ghetto shit today.
Pearl's shilling.
Oh my God.
What claims does Anna want answered?
Like what, what does she want?
Anna's a professional gaslighter.
That's what these people do for a living.
Men are like, hey, we're committing suicide because you keep fucking us in divorce court.
And the women are like, but what about the women though?
It's like professional gaslighters.
It's like this woman, she's here to nag me.
What are you doing here?
She said, what am I going to do today?
Go nag Pearl.
You do want these belts.
You will not recommend.
Sorry.
You will not regret buying these belts.
I call those type of belts Thanksgiving belts because they're so adjustable.
Yes.
And that's why I always hated belts.
I hated that I had to pick a loop.
And now I'm like, if I'm sitting, adjust.
If I'm standing, adjust.
If I ate too much, adjust.
The urban landlord.
Yeah, do you want to, I think you've called in.
Anna is a professional debater.
That's true.
I'm not a professional debater.
I'm a professional streamer or whatever the hell I'm.
I'm a professional woman, right?
But that's what I'm saying.
Those people, they create all these tactics to like look right.
And they're very good at sounding professional.
But that doesn't mean they are, right?
And that's why they don't, she doesn't like people like me because I'll tell you to believe what you see with your eyes.
I mean, don't believe us.
What do you see in your life?
But they have more power when they can dictate reality.
You want to call in?
He rents to black people.
All right.
So for those of you that don't know, Pearl has black fatigue.
I do.
And I think this confuses people because I am friends with a lot of black people.
In fact, I've been to a cookout in the hood.
Cam Newton, for whatever reason, I did a collab with him a long time ago.
And for whatever reason, they decided not to drop it, probably because of who I am as a person, right?
Probably, you know, my personality, the shit I get into, all of whatever.
Right.
But I actually, I went to a full-on like cookout in the hood, right?
I think I was in Atlanta.
I didn't know where I was, but it seemed pretty hoodie to me.
So I don't know.
Yeah, you know, a lot of women will say she prepared.
I actually prepared very well.
In fact, my problem was I studied the statistics too much.
I'm bad with names.
That's always my Achilles heel.
That's always my Achilles heel, right?
I'm not the best with names.
So sometimes I'll forget the name of a study.
But, you know, there was even times where she was bringing up stats, like talking about men's debt, and she didn't look into the statistics at all.
The stats she was citing were actually not even true, but she's just good at remembering the name of the study.
I understood the statistics.
She didn't, she just remembered the name.
You know, it's kind of like, like, I'll remember, I'm the same way with people.
If I'll, I'll remember a story that you tell me for life.
If you tell me a story or we have a conversation, I'll remember it forever, pretty much.
If it was like decent, not like surface level, you know.
But the names of people, even faces, I kind of struggle with eye contact a bit, you know, I mean, but, you know, there was stuff she was citing that just was very inaccurate the way she was saying it, but she refused to submit her sources ahead of time.
What am I supposed to do?
Yeah, you're saying, Pearl, do you realize that your genetics are black?
You know, that's, that's some dumb stuff black people would believe.
You know, I mean, I'm not trying to be rude, but like people want to, again, they want to dictate what you have to believe.
That's why scientists get mad when you don't believe their science.
It's like, why do I have to believe it?
You want me to believe that I come from black people.
Yeah.
Right. Right. Right. Yeah.
Yeah.
See, this, this is what I mean.
The other day, you know, somebody asked me, they said, who hurt you, Pearl?
And I said, well, you know, I mean, I have been hurt before.
But, and then this person says, you, you shouldn't let one woman dictate your view of women.
And I said, well, it's not just one woman.
It's women everywhere.
Their behavior constantly makes me feel this way.
I mean, even the debate, right?
I mean, and same with black people.
I got to be honest.
You guys too.
I mean, even the debate, it was like, did either of us really win?
I mean, we both sucked.
She definitely didn't do good.
If you look at the men debating, it's like there's no pauses, no awkward anything.
Like, it's very smooth.
And women, we just suck, you know?
So the urban landlord, you can, you can call in.
I know, I can't, I can't argue with retards.
I can't.
And it's unfortunate because I'd say 90% of women, the only non-retarded women are the women that can acknowledge they're retarded because they don't come with this ego, right?
That's the problem.
It's not that we're retarded.
That's the problem.
I don't think that's that big of a deal.
I mean, I like retarded people, you know.
I mean, if anything, you know, they're chill, but it's retards that don't know they're retards, right?
That's that's um yeah.
Now, now they'll say men, men are so helpful.
What about the men?
You see, you're, you're black pilling me even further about women because you're the one woman in my chat.
There's probably one woman here and they're nagging, nagging, nagging, nagging, nagging, nagging, nagging, nagging.
It's just, you know.
All right.
So let's talk about, yeah, you don't need a degree because you're a woman.
You have a degree in nagging because of who you are as a person.
And I bet you have a big ego too.
Yeah, I mean, I mean, this is again, this is what I was saying the other day.
I'm like, this is the type of nagging that drives people, you know, drives men to suicide.
Because, you know, I really think a lot of men would take infidelity before they would take this level of nagging.
You know, who said I'm a woman?
Oh, I can tell.
Your personality did, sweetheart.
Your personality.
You know what I mean?
It's like, yeah.
I can tell based on how you're talking because you're so incredibly unlikable and annoying.
And men aren't really like that.
Yeah.
So.
All right.
Let's talk about black people.
I'm kicking you because I just can't.
I just can't.
You know, I just ban user.
That's the amazing thing.
That's why women hate when you have a mute button.
They hate it because they just think they should have their say in everything.
And I'm just like, they're like, Pearl, it's harder without the mute button, isn't it?
Debating.
I'm like, yes, it is.
Because a lot of times in life, you do need a mute button because otherwise you'll never get your word in.
All right, back to black people.
I'm supposed to shit on black people today, not women.
You know what I mean?
Like, today, today's about black people.
So, I think it's kind of confusing because I actually do have a lot of black friends.
And I don't, I don't mean this in like a you know how white people say that they have like one black friend, and they're like, I have black friends.
No, I would say like half of my friends and the people I talk to are either black or Hispanic.
I would say like 50%.
It's been like this my whole life.
If there was a black girl in my volleyball team, I was usually friends with her before I started getting on the internet anyway.
When I got on the internet, it made it a little harder.
So, like, you know what I mean?
If I pull up to an event and like half my posse or the people coming to see me are black, they're like, Pearl, how are you this fatigued?
You know, I'm not a one-dimensional bitch.
Okay, I've been to a I've been to a cookout in the hood, as I was saying.
Cam Newton never released our interview, don't know why, but I did, I did.
He did invite me to his cookout, and I got MVP of this cookout.
I got the game-winning touchdown pass or touchdown, not touchdown.
What do you call it?
Kickball kick at this cookout.
I mean, I've worked with black content creators at this point for years.
My staff at one point was 100% black, and I'm still fatigued of you assholes, you know.
And I say this in a loving way.
Um, I say this in a way, you know, like I love you guys, but it's just, could you stop doing ghetto shit?
You know, that's how I feel.
And then they say, Pearl, but you came from black people.
I have a hard time believing that because of how cool, calm, and collected I am and how cool, calm, and collected they are not.
Then they say we invented everything I don't think you guys did.
America was built on the blacks or on the backs of slaves.
I don't really think so.
I mean, I just have a hard time believing that I'm sure you guys did, you know, you did the slavery jobs or whatever, but that would be like saying Amazon was built on the backs of warehouse employees.
No, it wasn't.
Jeff Bezos made it and he hired employees.
You know, no, because this is what black people do: they have a tendency, they have a tendency to rewrite history that, yeah.
And if you don't agree with exactly how they interpret history, which for all of time, people have different conclusions about history, right?
That's a normal thing.
Like, for example, people interpret the historical, like biblical books in different ways, and there's a bajillion ways it's interpreted.
It's the same thing with history.
And if we don't agree with your exact view of history, you're a colonizer racist.
So we're tired.
And this really, you know, and a lot of people said, but Pearl, but Pearl, but Pearl, do you guys hear my dog?
She's snoring.
But Pearl, you know, white people can't talk about this.
I just don't care anymore.
You guys have fatigued me.
I used to not talk about this, but I'm fatigued to the point where now I got to talk about this.
Yeah, I got to.
So whenever you deal with a lot of black people, there's just bound to be some ghetto shit that happens.
When I had 100% black staff, I left the office one afternoon and I like never left because I worked so much at this point.
And I came back and there was like a shouting match between two of my employees.
I'm like, that's some ghetto shit.
White people, we were passive-aggressive.
Sorry, that's better than shouting.
it really is.
Um, then I worked in a copier job and the black guy at work called fax lines.
Literal facts lines.
He would call instead of doing his job.
it was a sales job.
What were they fighting over?
It's always the same goal.
Sorry.
It's always the same bullshit.
Disrespect.
When white people feel disrespected, we just walk away and deal with other people.
That's how we do it.
So when Anna was doing some ghetto shit, I just get quiet.
You know, maybe I could use to get a little ghetto in me.
You know, maybe I need to maybe chat.
Notice how she can't.
Yeah, that's the other thing black people do.
They say things that are obviously nonsense.
And white people, I want to be honest with you guys.
Again, white people, we just ignore it.
Like we just kind of walk away.
So when black people come to us with like some stuff that's just obviously not true, they want us to take time out of our day to dispute something that's just obviously not true.
And we don't need a study or a book or whatever bullshit to convince us because we're just not dumb.
Right.
And they're like, oh, oh, well, you can't refute my claim.
And I'm like, well, it would just take more energy than I'm willing to spend on this because you believe stupid things.
It's like, do I want to spend the next four hours convincing someone if the moon landing was fake?
You know, they stank.
Yeah.
You hired a black staff.
That was on you.
I learned.
I learned, let me tell you.
I lived in a Muslim area too.
I could talk about that.
You guys aren't much better.
Not much better.
I got pickpocketed in that area.
Oh, now I got to do a genetic test.
Ah, fatigue, right?
So.
So then I get hired to do an episode with Brittany Brenner and these two other black women for this show.
And it ended in screaming, them screaming at me and me not getting paid.
got ripped off.
It's called fatigue.
And they want to gaslight.
Yeah, don't argue with fools lest you become like the fool.
I've never heard of that.
I'm not that religious, but that makes sense.
Yeah, blacks and women, they act really similar.
That's what I've noticed.
The only difference is white women will use the government to terrorize you.
So they'll drag you to court.
Family court, they'll steal your kid.
Or black people will shoot each other and the men might shoot a bitch, you know.
Is this does this does the landlord want to call in?
Uh, do you want to?
Are you on uh are you on email just pearlythings at gmail.com?
Are you on Instagram, Twitter?
Blacks use the government too.
I mean, you might know more about black people than I do.
I just meant like black people don't generally have money, so white women just will do a different level of stupid shit with money.
Like, they're the ones transitioning their kids, they're the ones doing expensive court cases for no reason.
Cape Down from South Africa, would you visit?
I mean, is someone else paying for it?
Not now.
I gotta, I'm about to spend money on this documentary, you know what I mean?
Yeah, and white people, we just walk away, you know.
A lot of times, women and black people they think they've won.
Um, like even this debate, you know, she thinks she went one because she screams at me for an hour.
But anybody with like a higher intelligence and more emotional control is just like, Yeah, I gotta go do something else, you know.
Well, um, all right, I'll put the as a person of Mexican descent, mind you, European, first generation.
I'm successful in these banana, these bananas can't ever move forward, they stink.
Oh, my groceries are getting close.
All right, um, I'm gonna put the invite link in the chat.
This is only for the black landlord if he wants to talk about black people.
I'm gonna repin this link and then I'm gonna bring up Doug MPA.
Hold on, I'm gonna pin this, and then we're gonna bring it up.
Um, okay, Brittany Renner's trying to rob her ex again.
Yeah, I mean, there's like the occasional black woman that can get a baller, but that's not normal.
I mean, like 80%.
I mean, like, one, look at all the snow bunny pictures from all the athletes now.
Uh, two, 80% of black women are fat, so that's not really normal for them to get ballers because the first thing you have to be is thin.
So, um, all right, Doug MPA, welcome to the show.
Hey, can you hear me?
Um, I can hear you.
How are you?
I am fantastic.
I love this topic.
I love this whole interaction.
And I knew you, I knew that this was going to get covered a lot.
I'm glad you're covering it.
Oh, I need to put the link in the signal so I can put it on screen.
Can you tell me who this other YouTuber is?
That was actually part of the reason I wanted you on today because I don't know the lore.
Like, I don't know who the other one is.
I've never heard of him.
Not Anton, obviously.
I know Anton.
Okay.
So Sikori Holcomb is a comedian.
Okay.
And he does give base takes about money.
I tell you what, watch that shit because that's all I got.
He does give base takes on women.
And, you know, he some he kind of has a Kevin Samuels kind of viewpoint on like women and stuff.
He calls out Kendra G, he calls all these single B Dubs and stuff like that.
But he's also one of those people he operates under the auspices of being a comedian.
So he says all sorts of crazy stuff.
And he's kind of uncancelable because he's like, he's a comedian.
My only problem with Corey Holcomb is that he's too pro-black.
When it comes down to it, he's like, oh, the Jim Crow and the slavery, and white people are so bad.
If it wasn't for that, he'd be completely base.
But like, his biggest problem is that he's pro-black.
A black woman decided to nag me.
You guys make me more.
If you want me to be less, I don't know, prejudice, you guys got to start beating the allegations, ladies.
So, you know, we support Anton Daniels over here, man.
Anton Daniels is a person that, you know, black boys and black men can all look up to.
You know, even if you don't agree with his politics, look at his work ethic.
You know, he's been on Pro's channel before.
You know, we support him over here.
So, you know, we're completely biased.
Yeah, absolutely biased.
I thought it's interesting.
I don't believe you feel this way.
I think you're truly fatigued.
I would love to discuss.
So you want to come in and tell me I don't feel this way.
That's your pitch.
Now, James is coming back and saying, you came from a black woman.
I'm so done with you guys.
Sorry.
All right.
If Brian is the landlord, it says your device is not connected.
So, all right, let's start watching it.
It looks like it's just so fast.
Guys, I've been black in America for over 40 years.
Bachelor's degree, master's degree, professional, successful.
And the only people that have more black fatigue than white people in this country are successful, competitive black people.
We're tired of it.
I mean, I'm at a private gym, and today I'm there, and black people are arguing on the basketball court, like loudly about the plays and pickup basketball.
Yeah, you're all paying way too much for a gym membership and that's stupid.
And I'm sitting there like, and I, and I see the white guys on the side, and I'm like, are you playing?
They're like, no, it's crowded today.
I'm like, I could read between the lines.
Yeah, this Brian guy is like, am I a landlord?
That means that you're not.
so we're kicking you out um i don't think i don't think jay is going to be the land Are you the landlord, Jay?
Nope.
All right.
This is not for you.
No, we wouldn't mind you playing basketball, but it's like, if there's ever somebody that's bitching too much about like calls or whatever and just getting overly emotional about it, it's always a black person.
Where the white guys are just like, whatever, you know.
And that's kind of how white guys are, you know.
And let me tell you, you know, I support Pearl no matter what.
And Anton Daniels, myself, you know, guys that reach a certain level, we just don't get, like, I've never heard Pearl say anything that I would find offensive.
Sorry.
Like, and when you reach a certain level, you'll get to where I'm at.
Guys, I'm telling you, keep your head down, get to 35, 45 years old, get a highly valued skill, trade, or education, achieve something, and you'll be just as fatigued as I am.
And Pearl is.
Sorry, I'm testing a few different.
Okay, I'm guessing this is the best one.
All right.
Let's watch this.
But even the fact that this broke out in a fight, I'm like, it's just classic.
White people will disagree.
Black people.
And I'll preface this by saying This is just like the Will Smith Chris Rock slap.
The worst part about that, Pearlie, was that those are supposed to be two of the best black men, you know.
Will Smith, not so much, but like if you look at his, I mean, you know, now, but like if you look at his overall body of work, him and Chris Rock, I mean, um, Will Smith is worth like 400 million dollars.
Chris Walks were worth like 80 million dollars.
And the only group of people that ever had commit an act of violence at the Oscars, what, 100-year history, are two black guys.
You know how much that pisses me off?
And this is another example: these are two successful men on YouTube, two black guys, and they're going to get into this.
Come on, man.
Um, I want to know what black is.
That's the other thing: the gaslighting.
We all know what it is.
It's like it's like a debate tactic.
Tell me the definition of this.
It's like, I don't your profile picture versus my profile picture.
Like, bruh.
What about this one person that looks like a different race?
You like what about this one obscure person that looks white but is black, or vice versa?
What is race?
Oh my god.
Yeah, it's like, do you understand how unlikable you are?
Just not likable.
Likeable people don't do that.
Um, it's not my pitch.
I honestly think you're tired of caring, and I understand your perspective.
I bet you do if you know a lot of black people.
Bet you do.
Yeah, you see when she goes down the rabbit hole?
Exactly.
So an Indian person is black, a native.
I'm confused.
Okay, well, then you're just retarded and I can't help you.
So you're not helping the case.
Like, go ahead.
Before we get into this, like the video, subscribe if you haven't already.
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All right, let's go.
I'll tell you what, watch that because that'll ban Anton is he's so chill.
Like, look at it.
What you want?
I don't do no girl.
Baby, I should be in supervision.
I can't wait till you tell me how vote have a makes a difference in this country.
We have a less than 20% voter turnout rate and locals.
Ain't nobody going for the sucker shit no more.
We got to be missing it.
You got to uproot the people in power before a real difference happens.
Do you know that just sounds like the way he's talking?
You have to uproot the people in power before a real difference happens.
That just sounds like somebody who's never been in charge of anything ever.
I don't know how he made his money.
I just can't imagine because I saw a little clip go and it was like, we both have money.
It has to be in an entertainment way because I can just hear it and how they talk.
Once again, I the most basic that Corey Holcomb ever said, but this is a little bit of a tangent, but like his first child, his first baby mama's child estranged his daughter against him.
And he's like, F that bitch.
Like, I don't owe her anything.
If she hates me, I hate her back.
And everyone's like, I can't believe you said that.
He's like, no, no, no.
I tried everything with their mama.
Everything.
So, so he can be, he could be a little base, but he just, you know, the fatiguing part of black people is still inside of Corey Holcomb.
Don't mind me just paying my simp tax.
Thank you.
Appreciate it.
I think the world would just be better if we just understood that.
White men really, we all just got to listen to them.
They want to speak the least and they know the most.
You know, it's just like they build really great civilizations and societies and we really should just submit to their rules instead of trying to keep them out.
Really great companies, like no, but just honestly, benevolence benevolence yeah, is a key part about it.
You know like um, just like how men give women their rights.
Guys, honestly like and i'm black, i'm saying this like the reason why people of color have rights in this country is because white people give it to us.
Even Kevin Samuel said that if white people wanted to take all of our stuff away, they could, but they don't.
Yeah, and you know i'm, this isn't a oh, who's better than who.
This is about sheer um, you know, this is about who's in power, who owns the most, the military, all that stuff.
Sorry, it's true, I do have groceries coming hold on.
Okay, 10 minutes, all right, let's keep going.
Voting is for suckers.
It's not.
People that don't vote are are ignorant as well.
I guess i'm ignorant um, I actually agree more with Corey, not that it's suckers, but I don't.
Women are always.
If men started voting, women will figure out how to outvote them.
You know, it's just there's too many.
I can counteract that argument.
You know that in Minnesota there's like a hundred and ten thousand Somalis right yeah, and look how much power they've gotten in a state of like six or seven million.
It's because they all vote the same in local and local elections.
Look what they've been able to get away with as as one big voting block in Minnesota.
Well, what does that have to do with voting?
Because they all vote the same.
They're they're, they're able to get a congressperson in congress.
They have all these cities with freaking Somali mayors and all this crap.
Yeah, but it's always going to be the same because men will simply I don't ever like collectively get together because, like then the left it, like then you'll lose hat.
Like I just understand how a lot of men think it's a waste of time, like I don't know, I kind of get it.
The women, the women will figure out how to outvote you.
They have less to do.
You know, they got more Somalis, blind whites with their teeth and foreheads.
I have been here through all the fatigue stuff.
Yeah well, it's just like white people kind of just see all of the places that we grew up around just disappearing because everyone else is getting in them.
I mean, look it, I i'm not.
I don't think voting is for suckers, Is.
I just don't, in my opinion, if men ever started voting for their interests, feminists just have more time and money and would figure out a way to galvanize the women, and then you'll just be a lost cause.
That's that's how I see it.
Um, but you know, maybe maybe I'm wrong, it's just my thoughts because I would never participate in those people that don't vote.
I'm gonna show up and vote like a sucker.
And not only is it not only is it ignorant, we had Republican presidents, we had Democratic, you know, we're in the same joint.
I'm talking about damn, I kind of agree with that.
I did not think I would agree with the guy that was screaming in Anton's face.
It's kind of the same thing: Democrat versus Republican.
Like, it's still a, you know, it's like Republicans, they spend slightly less, but the same, you know.
So, I don't know.
Locally, you're talking about national.
I don't give a fuck about that.
If you vote, absolutely matter.
That means you in line.
Now, if you vote, first, the first thing that it means is that you respect yourself.
Yeah, because I was just in, I'm in a conservative city now, and I was just in a Democrat city.
And, like, yeah, I mean, Chicago's worse, but not by much.
You know, I mean, like, there's a may, the mayor of Dallas is from, is Republican and Chicago's Democrat.
So, I don't know.
It's just my point of view.
Aristotle warned that democracy was the worst form of government, mob rule.
Um, okay, let me keep going.
Your ancestors that died for your right to be able to do it.
Your ancestors, your ancestors didn't do it like this.
It's no, because people went to war when the government tried to overthrow the people and the power of the people.
It was wars.
There hasn't been a war inside the U.S. where the people who are getting fucked over are doing something about motherfuckers with 30 felonies being the president.
It's all sucker shit.
It's a war every day.
It's just not physical anymore.
Well, that's the problem.
It's physical wars.
No, it's not.
No, I disagree.
I didn't think I would disagree.
I didn't watch this clip.
I didn't think I would disagree because it's not an intellectual war if women are in it because women are emotional.
So women will just vote for whoever's hotter.
There's more women.
They win.
You're ready to jump it off.
It's not.
We're going to always be talking.
But see, real gladiators don't talk.
Real gladiators make it happen.
And the gladiators, I ain't going to lie.
We are under control right now.
We haven't rose up and did what needs to be done.
Who are you under control by?
It ain't.
You under control by the people who will blow this motherfucker up.
But here's the truth.
We know, if I believe you know this already, when the cops shoot you, ain't nothing you can do about it.
Okay, that's just not true.
Okay, that's all right.
That's just not true.
Go ahead.
Just say no, Pearly.
Only 55 to 60% of eligible men vote.
Yeah, because they don't.
I know, because they don't see a point.
Yeah, well, look where it's got us.
Yeah, but even if all the men voted, then all the women would vote and you'd get outvoted.
Yeah, well, you know, you got to try at least.
Why?
If like neither parties are fighting for men's interests, yeah, but there are ones that are blatantly look, man.
Like only one party is talking about transforming kids, though, man.
So there's women's interests, men's interests, and then everybody's interest.
You got to vote for people that aren't for everybody.
You gotta vote against people that are just for sheer insanity, you know what I'm saying?
I mean, yeah, if you get anything out of it, but like, what do guys get out of it?
I know, I mean, like, find out Texas is a Republican state.
That's where the guy had his kid transitioned.
Like, you know, the story I interviewed, you know, it's in a Republican state.
Well, you know what?
I want to see one election with a 90% male turnout and see what happens because you know, all you can do is just see what happens.
Right now, we've never had, I mean, maybe in the past we have, but like in recent history, we haven't.
I want to see what happens when like 90% of men vote.
You can speculate what would happen, but let's see what happens.
I mean, yeah, but I'm saying, like, men naturally do things that they get things out of.
So if men aren't doing it, they've weighed the like benefits and the cost.
You know, you know what I'm saying?
Like, they like they naturally do that.
So yeah, like if they got something out of voting, they would do it.
Um, like, that's why Nick didn't vote for either party this election.
So he was like, why?
Like, do you know what I mean?
Like, if neither party is representing men, the only way you get the party to like pay attention to you is if you like take your boots, yeah, you go, and then they then they say, we'll come back, and then you say, well, give us X, Y, and Z. Um, the okay, landlord, I put the link for you in the chat if you wanted to talk about your experience.
Um, it's not for anyone else, I see other people trying to come on, it's just for the landlord guy.
Oh my god, this is so this is so crazy.
Do you think that's wrong with us?
This is so insane.
Is that what I said?
I said when the cops shoot you, ain't nothing you can do about it.
Is that a lie?
This is so insane, but you didn't answer it.
Yeah, that's just not true that cops can just shoot you.
I mean, there's so many regulations now around like even being a cop.
Um, you know, I had to do a simulator once where I had to decide.
I sold a copier to like this place that does um it does cop training, and then I had to pick if um oh, you're in the back.
Which one are you?
I had uh, there's a few people, so just tell me your username.
Um, oh, it's you, okay.
But I had to pick if I would shoot somebody or not, and damn, you get like a second, man.
That is not easy, like, and I got shot like three times.
I was like, No, and here's the thing: you're also like a woman.
Remember what Andrew Branca said?
Female police officers are real quick to pull the trigger a lot faster than men.
So, not me.
I got shot like every other time in the simulation.
What's going on, John?
Hey, how's it going?
How's it going?
I'm good.
How are you?
Oh, I can't complain.
So, you have a story for us?
Oh, so I had one story.
I've been dealing with blacks for 20, probably all my life, 40 years.
You know, housing them, cleaning up behind them, dealing with them in every manner, most personal nature.
I have to almost segregate them.
Like, I can't have blacks and whites living together, you know, to be quite honest with you.
For their own concern, for both of them.
Tell us how you come to this conclusion.
Let's go.
Uh, man, here's what I say about black men.
I start with black men.
Black men are they spend a lot of their time and energy on women.
So they're going to have a lot of women in and out of the house, in and out of the house.
And then there's going to be the conflict inherent in all of that.
So that's just one issue.
The white guys, man, I've had white guys been my tenants, and it was difficult years.
No woman around.
It's very, very different.
You know, they can focus and go to work, come home, drink beer, whatever.
But it's just a difference in focus on women.
Black men, I would say, spend a lot of your time and energy and focus on women.
And so living in a house, you know, because I rent rooms, you know, there's.
I can hear them.
So when I rent rooms to blacks, and the sound is breaking up.
Are you sure it's not you?
Because I can hear him.
So, you know, when I rent rooms primarily, and I rent rooms in Washington, D.C.
Yeah.
And so, you know, everything you can imagine, you know, the economy, the black ecosystem of how they work, why blacks are so poor.
I see all of these things and it's all made up.
I think they're just different people.
That's just what I believe.
Why do you, what made you keep doing the job if you have these like stories?
You know, I think I'm built for it.
He sounds like Michael Jordan asking if he gets that a lot.
I used to, yeah.
I think I'm built for it.
And, you know, when you think about the Tommy, what was the guy?
The two people that were arguing, Anton.
Anton Daniel, Corey Looks.
Yeah.
You know, Anton Dames, and there are a lot of blacks like that.
They can't do business with other blacks.
And so thank God for YouTube or whatever the case may be, where they can, you know, be their black self as black as they want to be on the internet.
Be it Anton or Corey Hookum, Corey Hookum to a lesser extent than Anton.
But I think that's the real issue there.
Anton couldn't make a living dealing with blacks, the type of blacks that I deal with.
I don't believe he could do that.
And so you're talking like, are they on a scale of one to ten, how ghetto?
What do you mean?
My tenants?
Yeah.
You know, they vary.
Like, you know, like, well, like, okay, just everything is on steroid with blacks.
For instance, sexuality is one of the things that's really on steroids.
So a black homosexual is going to have a lot of partners, a lot of partners.
As an example, these are going to be mostly dysfunctional relationships.
So these things are going to come into the home.
He's sleeping with multiple men and he's gay.
And then these are men.
So they're going to be fighting with each other.
The gay white man, at least I haven't seen those type of things.
Same for the black women.
They're a little bit looser than other women.
So they're going to be sleeping with a lot more men.
So there's the conflict there.
There's the blacks are, I think, on the whole, nastier than whites.
I do believe that.
I've seen blacks live like animals.
And I'm not talking about blacks that have dropped out of high school.
I'm talking about college graduate blacks that live like animals, filthy.
The list goes on and on, how they behave with each other.
It's inexplicable.
And education just doesn't seem to solve these things to me.
Yeah.
I've seen, I think there needs to be more class separation amongst black people.
Like, I hate the fact that you literally see the mayor in the same barbershop as the local drug dealer.
I can't stand it.
Like, educated, successful, ambitious black people need to build communities away from the poorest versions of us.
But we just have to see where you where it is.
No matter how high you go, you still got to identify with the hood and all this.
I can't stand it, man.
Well, a lot of it is fake.
You understand?
Like, a lot of their jobs, some make work jobs.
I've seen it, teachers, government-attached Hill Anton Daniels.
He worked for the University of Michigan, you know, and there's nothing wrong with that.
But, you know, a lot of the black, the black employment is really centered around the government or universities or some other type of make work scheme.
And that causing them to think that they're smarter than they really are because a lot of these jobs are paying them more than they should be getting paid.
So then that causes another problem.
And, you know, this isn't only goes, but just the way that they live is something that I don't think white people can wrap their minds around.
So you're saying, so you're saying that a lot of them are employed by like universities and the government.
And so they get overpaid in those positions.
And that inflates their ego, essentially.
Yeah, you know, these jobs are primarily going to overpay them.
And it's going to have job stability relative to, say, the private sector, where, you know, if they're laying out of work or if they're doing this misbehaving, you know, it's a little bit quicker path out of the door.
But the blacks would tend to root in the government in those government-related jobs.
And someone said that's the whole DMV.
Yeah.
And so you get a very, very interesting kind of perspective on the blacks because you can't fire them.
And they're making a lot of money.
So now they think they're smart as hell.
You know, so that's the interesting part.
You know, that before Doge came in, 13% of federal employees were black women.
So literally like one in nine.
Right.
And then, of course, those cut all those DEI positions.
So now it's down to below 10%.
But yeah, 13% of the federal workforce was black women, bro.
What about like educated black women, like that are maybe a little bit more higher class?
What jobs do they cut to work?
I mean, no, like, no, but you meet them in the cities a lot.
Like they don't, they're not like hood.
You know, I mean, there might be hood that like comes out of them occasionally, but like they don't, you know, what type of is it usually education roles that they're in?
Yeah, it's still going to be tangentially related to the government.
Maybe they're teachers.
The hospital, you know, that's kind of government as well.
You know, they could be nurses.
They could be all this kind of stuff.
Government consultants, you know, whereas, you know, again, I was a software developer.
I am a software developer.
So I've worked in government over the years.
I've worked in private sector.
I didn't see a lot of blacks in the private sector.
In the government, you would see a lot of them.
I'm not sure what they'd be doing.
They'd be consultants, but I'm not sure what they would be doing.
But very few hard-skilled tech software.
Yeah, I could tell you.
HR.
Yeah, HR program analysts.
Yeah.
Some kind of general job announcement where who knows what the heck they do.
Yeah, you know, HR program analysts, unfortunately, contract specialists.
You're just stuff like that.
They end up doing.
So, when it comes to like sex, like promiscuity, you were saying, it's interesting because I looked up the STD rates by race.
And no matter where black people go, they always have higher STD rates.
Like, it doesn't matter if they're black people in England, they're black people in America, they're black people in Canada, they're HIV, gonorrhea, chlamydia, like herpie, whatever the STD is, you name it, like it's significantly higher.
I've had many of them with AIDS.
What?
I've had many of them with AIDS, HIV, ADHDS, whatever the hell, you know, once you cross the TCL count, you got AIDS.
That hasn't seemed to slow them down from my experience.
That DC is very unique in that once they get the AIDS, at some point, they can still get welfare benefits and still work and make money.
I think it's different from most city.
Like, gay, like men or women that have AIDS, primarily the men.
Uh, that's mostly what I've seen, is the gay black men.
How many people are going in and out in a given week for like a pro, like, give me like a promiscuous tenant versus a more normal tenant?
Because I've always said that the only people that know how promiscuous people are being, because everyone's going to lie about that, are the landlords and the doormen because they say who's coming and going.
I'll give you a very good example, and this is why blacks have so many problems.
Um, so I had my cousin that brought him up from Alabama, he's working with me, and I rented a room to a lady.
She was a little slow, maybe she worked in a grocery store or something.
And so, there was another guy that I rented a room to, and he was slow too, low IQ, what I'm referring to.
So, they were messing around with each other.
I can't remember if they were a couple coming in or what, but they were messing around with each other.
My cousin, he's a little low IQ too.
He started messing around with the girl because he had a decent government job himself.
He was driving the bus.
And so, this is what I'm saying.
Like, these people were living in the same house, and this woman decided to sleep with two men in the same house.
This is why blacks have high murder rates and things like that.
You can't have a woman that loose and have peaceful communities.
You can't have a peaceful household.
And, you know, I've never seen a white woman do that in my house.
And I rent the white people.
I've never seen anything like that before.
And these guys were, you know, fighting at each other.
And then she eventually got a restraining order put against my cousin.
So he had to move out of the house.
It's just conflict after conflict with the blacks.
And just loose women, and they're available to everybody.
And the problems arise downstream.
So, but how many people are coming like in a promiscuous woman?
How many men are coming through in a month?
You know, I wouldn't say it's a lot because it only takes one to cause a problem, right?
It only takes one that she finds out or he finds out that she was sleeping with another man.
And these men get a lot of women too, even though they're down on their look, they're beaten down.
Some of them get women.
And so it goes both ways.
And that is why, you know, you read about the low trust communities amongst blacks, is that neither side can really trust each other, no matter how down bad they are.
There's someone that will take on the other one.
No matter how fat, unattractive the women are.
There's a man out here that will sleep with her.
And to the point, vice versa with the men.
So a very untrustworthy community on both sides.
No lies told, buddy.
Zero.
You got anything else for him, Doug MPA?
Um, so do you see in your tenants?
Because there's this push for black women to try to get white guys.
Have you ever had a tenant that's like a black woman with a white guy?
Yeah, the last black fatigue panel I did, they said I was jealous because all the they're stealing our men, I guess.
I didn't even know, you know, I don't think that uh most black women want um white men, you know.
Somebody's gonna have to give a little bit of themselves because these people are so totally different, you know.
By and large, you know, there's some you know, some extremes, but it's just my opinion, man.
Blacks and whites, the way we talk to each other, the things we're interested in, uh, the music.
Like, like, I'll have blacks move in and they'll say, How loud can I play my music?
That's the first question they ask you: How loud can I play my music?
So, everything is kind of oriented differently.
Whites never ask these things, blacks do blacks watch a lot of television, uh, they have to be entertained in ways that uh say white people do not have to be entertained.
Uh, they're just a very, very different people, very different because you know, I have seen kind of an uptick, especially with the younger, but I've seen younger black girls who are you know actually actually kind of attractive with white guys.
But I just think like I don't understand, especially in this current climate, like why because these women don't understand a lot of white guys will sleep with a black woman, but they won't commit and marry and have kids with a black woman.
And they have a rude awakening coming when all these guys they're with right now make the decision when they want to have a family to find themselves, a white guy to drop the black woman and find a white woman to marry it and have kids with.
What do you think?
I think they're emotionally incompatible.
Like, think about a woman, black woman, in their hair, right?
They're very self-conscious about that around white people.
She's got to get up and burn her hair, smoke the hair every morning, you know, whatever the hell they have to do about it.
Uh, rolling that shit up, they don't wash their hair the same way white people do, so there's going to be a residual smell that's going to uh, you know, build up to some point.
These are all things that are very real.
You know, as a black man, you roll over, you smell her hair that's a little right, you turn the other way.
But as a white man, you don't have to deal with that.
Uh, and it's not to say that all black women don't wash their hair on a regular basis, but by and large, you know, if they have a perm, they can't wash they have a weave, they can't have a weave two, three months without washing their hair, bro.
And white guys are very low maintenance, like they do not like in general, they don't like high-maintenance women.
Um, so like, I don't know, a girl that's gonna like take a long time to get ready and can't just like go places, I just think would annoy them.
Like, I don't, I don't know the protocol with their hair or whatever, but if it's long and tedious, it's gonna annoy them.
Well, it's never gonna be long and tedious, typically.
Oh, no, I don't know.
It's gonna be if it's long, it's gonna be weave, and that's gonna make it tedious because to get that fake hair to kind of you know get in line with the natural hair.
I think yeah, and that weave will cost you, guys.
Yeah, it'll cost you add that to the monthly, monthly maintenance that she's gonna expect you to pay each month.
You know, Berlin, I did want to ask you two about the whole uh uh uh uh the Anton Daniels guy.
I'm not very familiar with either one of them, uh, but from a black person's perspective, I found it interesting.
I'm curious to know how you found it from a white person's perspective as well, dog.
I mean, like, so far, I mean, I like Anton, I've been on his show before.
This conversation, I just kind of, when I saw it, was just like, well, this is some ghetto shit.
They just are going to start fighting.
Well, why do you think Anton went on there with the other guy, Corey?
Why?
Oh, I don't know.
I don't know Corey's stuff too well.
Maybe Doug MPA could.
Yeah.
Yeah, because Corey Holcomb, you know, he's a nationally renowned comedian.
He has a really big platform.
You know, it could have been a mutually beneficial situation until this whole thing happened.
Well, if you know black people, you knew that wasn't going to happen.
You know, I'm going to run one other thing by you, brother.
So, like, if I get my groceries, Doug, I'll be right back.
You guys carry it.
Okay.
So, you know, I always say that the biggest difference between black owned, okay, like a business that says that they're black going right off the bat is a red flag.
Agree or disagree?
Yeah, I agree with that, yeah.
Okay.
And now, now, here's my reasoning why, right?
The reason why they tell you that they're a black-owned business is because black-owned businesses, so okay, every other racist businesses, their goal is to have a quality product, quality service, and to thrive.
Black-owned businesses, their only goal is to survive in their existence, and that's it.
Part of it, you know, because the people are so poor, right?
You just hang on by threads.
You know, I think part of it is, you know, and I was talking about this earlier.
You know, and I had a guy, it was an Asian guy in my audience, and he was saying how look for stores and convenience stores.
I just came from the convenience shows, look at the store, and those are the most profitable businesses in the black community.
Yeah.
Right?
It's the most profitable.
There's no Microsoft, there's no software companies with high-growth smartness.
The most profitable ones are check cash and stuff like that.
By and large, the Anton Daniels of the world can't go down there to get on and do business like that.
Right?
So, those businesses, the best businesses, are ceded to the foreigners by and large, the ones who are willing to stand behind the bullet caves or whatever.
And so, what else is left for the blacks in their own communities?
More or less, jobs that are more or less funded by the government, daycare centers, things like that.
And so, for a guy like Anton Daniels, who's not going to do that, he's not going to be running a daycare center.
He's left to go on YouTube if he's capable and clearly he's capable of going to YouTube.
But Corey, he can kind of appeal to the blacks.
So, he can still do comedy circuits, kind of like the chip and circuit of sort to still kind of keep it real with the blacks.
It's two different people.
I just think that the biggest difference between Anton Daniels and Corey Holcomb, Anton Daniels' channel isn't seen as just a black channel, though.
Like, you don't get to a million subs being a black-only channel, whereas Corey Holcomb is like a black culture channel.
Understand what I'm saying?
Yeah, so Anton has more mainstream appeal than Corey does, yeah.
And I think that is what Anton is very good at.
Um, him painting himself as a businessman.
I think that's kind of where the problem kind of comes in to me because how so he doesn't want to do what I do, trust me on that.
He don't want to deal with these blacks.
Uh, most blacks don't want to deal with these blacks, don't even want to live around them.
But Antonio from the housing market and like investing in properties and selling properties and stuff.
Is that where he has his money out of that?
Yeah, that's what he's TV.
I saw that, I know that he had a definite family, apparently, and uh, he's working regular jobs.
I look at his resume on LinkedIn and I was curious myself because again, he built himself as a software developer.
I listened to him have a conversation about technology.
He didn't sound like a software developer to me.
And he's working jobs that didn't seem like software developer type jobs to me.
And then I read that he had a death in the family, a workplace death, his father.
And then he trains into a restaurant and all these types of things.
That seems to be where he kind of got into business.
And again, I'm not taking anything away from him because he's done very well for himself.
But that seems to be it.
And, you know, he's, you know, you can listen to it for himself.
He's in his own words, where he talked about how, you know, more or less he was laying out of work, saying he was sick, and he ended up getting fired because these are things he said.
And that type of mentality is not going to, you know, build up a business with physical assets.
You know, talking on the internet, stuff like that.
Yeah, blacks can do that, but blacks aren't going to be a real business by and large.
That's my opinion.
Yeah.
No lies told, my friend.
We can leave him on to react to the.
Oh, yeah, let's do it.
Yeah, you could say.
I'm going to answer your question.
Okay.
I'm going to answer your question.
It depends on the circumstance.
And the interesting thing about it is this: the majority of the people, because you like to use a blanket statement.
That's like me saying all black people are stupid.
Well, you have you said all white people stupid?
No, I'm talking about you.
We've invented like everything.
So I don't know how you even could.
Like, what more do you want?
You should say that one time.
Talking about black guys.
Stupid as an example.
Say something about the white people.
No, You're not.
I don't think you're talking about it.
That's all the time.
Well, I didn't hear you.
Can you tell me?
I talk about liberals.
Why are you talking literally?
Like, this whole listen to this is why I keep saying he's too pro-black for his own good.
Go ahead, Bruly.
Yeah.
Well, it's like white men are so nice.
Like, they're always so helpful, so useful.
This doesn't hurt.
He's like, say something bad about white people.
I could say bad stuff about white women, but white men, not really much, to be honest.
They're always really pleasant, really helpful.
They're pretty nice.
Or they're brutally honest.
Yeah, I mean, yeah, sorry, what were you going to say, John?
I was going to say, this doesn't hurt Corey, you know, from the standpoint of, you know, he, you know, he, Anton, he wants Anton to talk about white people.
Corey, you know, his audience is black people.
And I think they're coming from two different angles.
Corey makes his money wanted talking to black people almost exclusively, I would imagine.
I don't know a lot about it, but that's that would seem to be the case.
The biggest enemy of the United States of America.
That's the thing I say every single female.
The biggest literally white liberal women are the worst thing that ever happened to this country.
What about their men?
But we're going to get there because you keep trying to get me to qualify it by participating and joining in on the court.
No, I think you're doing what's easy.
No, I'm doing what's real.
I think you don't want to go against them.
Because if you go against them, it'll be some video and you're going against them.
And when I say them, I'm talking about your boss.
I don't have a boss.
We say that.
We say that.
But here's the truth.
You don't have a boss.
It's a reason you go after black males or black people quicker than you will go after white males.
What are white males responsible for?
Nothing.
I gotta be honest.
Not much.
There's been a lot of nothing.
Look.
Invented anything, everything made the greatest civilization on the planet.
Do a good chunk of the infrastructure jobs in this country, yeah, not much in this country as very little crime, the biggest demographic in the military.
Yeah, it's like, what more do you want from white men?
White women, look, and I could talk about white women.
I mean, I could talk about these fake Christian women.
I really could go on, but I really white men's biggest gripe is that they're too nice, too giving, too generous, too accommodating.
Sounds like equal accountability smoke.
I talk about everybody.
I'm just saying, I ain't heard you talk.
Yeah, but okay, but equal accountability.
Like, you can't have equal accountability if people are unequally doing bad things.
Do you know what I'm saying?
Like, if black people are committing the majority of the crime, white women are like transitioning their kids, and white guys complain is like what are they doing?
You know, it's like you can't have equal accountability if they don't have equal, I don't know, sins against humanity, crime, whatever you want to say.
about white men well you ain't been up here you ain't been listening you ain't been listening i've been listening to you i just haven't i hear you taking the You don't have the capacity to be able to listen because you're too busy.
No, You gotta be wrong.
My competitor, that's the truth.
My capacity that you just criticized, that's an opinion.
Here's the fact: Have you said something about Caucasian males and how they think that's really what Corey's gripe is?
And this really what distinguishes the two.
You know, Corey wants Anton to give it to the white man.
Anton will give it to the white liberal woman.
But he can't give it to the white man because that's a white man that louds him up on Fox News and wherever the hell Anton makes his mainstream appearances.
Corey's not worried about that.
He's not making these mainstream appearances.
So he's like, hey, man, join the fight with me and give it to the white man.
I see you'll give it to the white woman.
She's easy.
But give it to the white man.
And Anton's unwilling to do that, it seems.
I just don't even know what you could really even complain about.
It's probably a lot from Corey's point of view.
Yeah, maybe from his point of view, it doesn't mean he's right, though.
It's like they like they do the majority of the infrastructure job.
They pay the majority of the taxes.
It's like, what more do you want?
Yeah.
Women are a net tax loss.
Pretty sure so are black people.
Pretty sure.
I don't want to be quoted on that, but I'm fairly sure they are too.
Go ahead.
I'm sorry.
Like, if you look at the benefits that they take from the government versus how much taxes they pay, like women and black people are a net tax loss where white men pay the majority of the taxes.
So it's like, if they're doing all of the work and yet we're still complaining, it's like, what more do you want?
You think either one of these guys live around blacks?
Corey wants Anton to attack white men.
Do you think Corey lives around blacks?
I think he lives in LA or somewhere, right?
I don't know anything about this guy.
I'm just seeing if you had to guess, do you think he lives around white people?
Or black people?
Yeah, yeah, because Corey Hoklam is in Los Angeles, so probably no, but Anton Daniels is in Detroit.
You think he think he's in Detroit?
I would guess Anton no, the other guy, maybe, because he kind of talks a little bit ghetto.
So like when people talk like that, I think they might.
I looked at his touring schedule.
He's going to be touring pretty much nail through August, Corey Holcomb.
Uh, with that amount of touring, he's going to be bringing in some cash.
He has 450,000 subscribers.
I don't think he's challenged monetized, but the odds of him living around blacks doing that will when they're blacks, you make 85,000 won't live around other blacks.
Yeah, both of these guys probably do not live around blacks, right?
I think that's pretty fair, just so, yeah, let's slow down because you're talking loud.
That would be a good question.
He would stop like what's the demographic of the neighborhood you live in, but you're not saying a lot.
No, you talking loud, and you still talking around what is the Caucasian man.
That's the thing.
Women and black people do this where they just like talk in this performative way, and I just don't undercent around it, and that's why I lose respect for you.
Anton looks more composed in this.
It's not even necessarily what they're saying, but he's like, Anton's calm, or this guy's like, you know, and Pearl, how they're talking right now is another example where there needs to be class and culture separation between rich black people and poor black people.
Because like the best, the best of us and the worst of us speak exactly the same too many, too much of the time.
I don't even know how you'd separate it though, because even when black people get money, a lot of times they do the same thing, like they still do ghetto stuff.
Hey, both of these guys have money, like these are not poor people, yeah.
Like, Anton, I don't know, just based off of like looking at like Anton would get like be fine in a white area.
Where, like, if I saw the guy, this guy, it just seems like he would have like blasting music and that kind of thing.
I don't know, just like that's just like what I would think.
Like, Anton would be fine to live next to this guy wouldn't, but I don't know.
I don't know just because of how he's dressed.
Like, he's dressed with like when I see those T's like that, I think those are kind of ghetto.
The chains kind of ghetto, but I don't know anything about this guy, so I could be mistaken.
I don't know him when you start dancing and kissing Caucasian males' ass, but I don't do that in front of me because I'm not an ass kisser of nobody.
Yes, you are.
You suck the you people right now.
You doing the easy shit.
What you do, let me tell you what you do.
See, ain't nobody gonna tell you something, homie.
I don't tell you.
I don't need to.
Yeah, you suck.
So, you're doing it right now.
I don't suck you.
You're doing it right now.
Believe me when I tell you, I don't do that.
Look at the girl on the stage.
Listen, listen.
So, don't come at me with no energy you give me.
Listen, I don't do no, I don't do no shit.
I'm a man.
I don't do no shit.
I don't give a about nothing.
Well, I tell you what, watch that shit because that'll go bad.
Call it what you want.
I don't do no fucking homies.
You're gonna see a lot of shit that I don't with either.
Okay, but that gay shit.
Oh, you don't give a about what you call it.
Hey, homie, I'll tell you what.
I'm right here.
Don't put no shit on me, nigga.
I'm right here right now.
I'm gonna respect you.
No, no, no, no.
I'm gonna respond.
I don't do no fucking shit.
I'm gonna respect you because it's your platform, and I come out here to have a conversation.
We good, but you good.
Do you think I would do well on this show?
I think you just, you know, if Corey Holton tried to do this to about Ethi, you say you just laugh in his face, you just start laughing.
No, but that makes black people matter.
You know what's crazy?
That's what I realized.
No, that's what I realized.
A lot of times white people will smile and haha to like kind of try to disarm you.
But black people take that as disrespectful.
Like, and it's, it's funny because like white people, we, we try to smile and then they're like, get that stupid smile off your face.
And you're like, god damn.
Like that's what I realized.
Like they get, you know, like when we smile, it's like to say, I'm not a threat, disarm.
And then it just makes them matter.
So I think they would treat you pretty civilly, to be honest with you.
What?
I think they would be civil to you.
Corey would.
That's just my thoughts.
You know, they probably have a bigger issue getting blacks have a bigger issue getting along with each other than they do with whites.
That's just my opinion.
From what I've seen.
Corey, I'm ready for my invite.
I'll come on the show.
I don't need that microphone right down right now.
I'm going home.
I don't give a no, sir.
Only you just running your mouth.
I'm not running my mouth.
You running at one time.
I don't do that.
You're doing for the internet.
You're doing it for the internet.
Now, if you want to save your time, no, no, hold on, hold on.
If you want to say, I'm going to show you I ain't doing it for the internet.
You want to say Anton.
I'm saying, don't disrespect me like that.
If you want to say Anton, don't disrespect me like that.
I'll respect you.
But don't boss up on me because you said a lot of shit to me today that I don't either.
But I let that shit ride because you don't know me.
You don't know me.
So I'm going to extend the same respect to you.
You called me out of my name.
You said some wild shit, especially with regard to how they call this nigga out his name.
Nigga, I'm telling you that you did.
You can't tell me how I get to be respectful.
I got a question for bro.
Okay.
No, no, no, no.
Hold on.
one second.
Hold on.
We just getting loud.
I ain't getting loud.
Then don't switch seats.
No, I don't know.
This is my show.
This is my show.
But I take that shit as a threat.
Okay.
Well, it is a threat if you're calling me.
That's the other thing.
White people, we're like programmed to give someone the benefit of the doubt.
So if someone says something disrespectful or that could be taken that way, our default is benefit of the doubt.
We're black because this is what I noticed when I lived in a black area.
They're very quick to like get mad over one word or something very, what we would consider to be small and something that we would brush off.
They do not brush it off.
They just once that whole, once that trigger happens, they hear nothing else after that.
Nothing.
I was talking about this with someone I grew up with, and I'm like, he was saying, oh, white people don't have culture.
And I'm like, no, no, we do.
And there's things that are specific to us.
I don't know.
Maybe the Asians have it too.
I've never lived around Asians, but I'm like, other cultures, it's not normal to like growing up, we both always heard you never know what someone's going through.
So that's like our, that's like what we're growing up.
We never know what someone's going through.
Give them the benefit of the doubt.
Always be nice.
Even if they're mean to you, just be not like that's that's what like phrases that I heard growing up.
And then when I moved to this black area, I'm like, damn, they get mad over the smallest things.
White people would just brush that off.
Like, like we would say, dick set.
Wow.
You know, like he would say, oh, you know, and they just start at the oh, oh, let's go.
Yeah, you know, it's just man.
Fuck what you talking about.
If you want to get back to the conversation, because you ain't going to do shit.
Because you're not going to do it.
Come at me with that.
You're not going to come and see what you want.
See y'all suck We can go out back right now See this one I'm saying this That's what's interesting.
That's what's interesting.
And that kind of shows you kind of what type of person Antoni Daniels is.
Because, you know, I'm not as rich as he is, but I got too much to lose to be going out back with Corey Hope from whoever, because he may win the fight and leave me paralyzed in a vegetable state.
Oh, I can win the fight and he ended up suing me for the living that I have.
And, you know, it's, I don't know, it's just inexplicable for someone, presumably, like Anton Dames, to be ready to go out and fight.
And he's almost 50 years old.
He's a little bit younger than me.
Doug MPA, what do you think?
Yeah, man.
Once you get something to lose, it ain't worth it.
You know, there's nothing that someone could say to me on a podcast that would make me want to get up and go fight him outside.
I mean, you know, if I were with my wife or something like that, and this person were trying to come up on my wife or girlfriend, I'm not married by the way, but like, or in a relationship, but if I were in a relationship or married or something like that, and some guy tried to come up on my wife, them spit in words, but words towards me, come on now.
Like, you serious?
Nope.
I'd never seen a fight in high school.
It's not to say they didn't happen because it's very possible that there were them, but I just didn't see it.
But I've never seen a fight ever.
I got money too.
Don't nobody give a f about that shit.
No, it's just not now.
Watch your getting this.
Why do women do this?
Why?
Now, she was smart enough to switch seats and not get.
Now she's getting in the middle.
Ladies, to the two women watching this, don't get between two men.
Don't do it.
Stay away.
What are you going to do?
Stay out of the way.
Corey is not intellectual enough for this conversation.
That's why he uses blanket statements.
Nuance is too deep of a water.
Anton lives in Detroit and is deep in the community.
Lots of charity.
Okay.
Let's see.
Out the way.
Don't get in the way of two niggas.
Let me tell you something, homie.
I ain't got to go out back right now because we got to go out back to leaders.
But I'm saying that this shit, watch that.
That's all I'm saying.
And if I don't say it how you like it, if you want to get back to the conversation, we can get back to the conversation.
But just know, I'm not, I'm not listening.
I'm not listening to none of that shit.
If you want to get back to the conversation, as long as you know, bro, you not, you not see that's just some ghetto shit.
You know what I mean?
Like, that just would not happen on a white podcast.
That's how I feel about it.
I'm like, that just would not.
Someone said Anton lives in a high-rise with the doorman.
You know, I wouldn't be surprised that, you know, a lot of these blacks, Anton and Corey, Corey to a lesser extent, their biggest fear is other blacks.
You know, Anton makes money off of blacks.
Corey does too.
But they're not going to live around blacks.
And that is an untold secret.
Even one of these guys will say, they defend blacks on every level, but they wouldn't dare live around them.
And I forgot who said it.
I think it was Nick F., but he said, you know, white people move away and then black people follow them wherever they go.
Because they don't want to live around black people.
Yeah, but you know, but they carry the torch for blacks while running from them.
And, you know, I think there's so many opportunities that they lose because of it.
They can't admit it, or maybe they're too stupid to figure it out.
One of the two.
But I do think they creates a lot of frustration.
Every other group has their own little area where they can go to be around their own people and be at peace with their own people.
Yeah, be safe and secure.
And, you know, there's a sense of community and warmth and welcomeness, not us.
Like, blacks get away.
Blacks run away from that.
You know, Antoni had a soul food restaurant.
But I guarantee you that, you know, every black person when he brings his lunch to work, he's not bringing soul food and eating it warming that shit up at work and eating it.
He's probably embarrassed about it.
And so on and on it goes, you know, in that, you know, they're somewhat embarrassed about how they live.
They don't want to live around each other.
But they can't admit these things.
Yeah.
You know, my bad, both my parents are successful.
And they told me when I was young, like, the best thing you can do to be successful as a black person is leave this whole black nation thing behind and do it as soon as possible.
If you're smart enough.
If you're smart enough and you can go and live in that world and more or less, you know, you got to damn nearly become another person.
But you can listen to them talk.
They still have a lot of black in them.
Right?
If you nigga, you know, like they still got it in them.
They haven't gotten enough of it out of them where they could assimilate to the greater white world.
They're still too black.
Luckily, they'd be able to put it.
I'm going to ask John John and Pro, what do you think is faker?
The black community, like the communal, part of the black community, old brother, sister, or the sisterhood amongst women?
What's faker?
That's a good question.
I know, right?
Guys, put in the chat a one if you think the sisterhood is fake more than the black community, or two if the black community is faker than the sisterhood.
So a one for the sisterhood or two for the black community.
The next one we're going to watch is Candace Owens from like 10 years ago.
Someone asked me to react to her TED Talk.
I guess it's pretty left leaning.
Like, so I don't know.
Someone sent this to me.
All these ones, all these two.
It's right down in the middle so far.
I'm sorry, go ahead.
You can make a poll.
Get out of here.
I'll be watching from the butchers, okay?
So, at risk of sounding like another jaded millennial, I absolutely love social media hashtags.
I'm actually very serious.
If you guys are not yet in on the trend of hashtags, you have got to get started.
Formerly known to us all as the digit symbol thingy, hashtags have become a way to establish universal trends in terms of what everybody is talking about online.
There are weekly recurring ones like hashtag TBT, which stands for Throwback Thursday, where users can literally affix any event from their past from and reshare it with friends, like this user who just happens to be throwing it back to last week in Miami when he was at a concert.
There are also politically inspired ones, like you all know, such as hashtag Scare Hillary in four words, which is amazing.
You really can get lost in the comedic abyss that the internet has become over the years.
The point, of course, is that once a hashtag is used enough times by enough people, it is described as trending worldwide.
And that really is one of the most amazing things about the internet today, that we have this means of communicating with people from all over the world.
It's burrowed in an era of what I like to refer to as digital activism.
An example of this occurred on November 13th, 2015, when the city of Paris was struck by a series of horrific terrorist events you will all recall.
It was actually due to the speed of the internet and its associative hashtags that we received real-time coverage of those events.
And individuals began using that hashtag pray for Paris to send love and support to all of the victims.
And the beauty of something like that is pretty hard to ignore, right?
Digital activism as a means to spread love and support throughout the world.
Let me try that again.
What did you say?
Oh, no, no, sorry.
I put a poll, but I messed it up.
I'm going to put the poll back in the chat, but let me do it right here.
Go ahead, Perlie.
I'm sorry.
It really is amazing that in this day and age, we need but push a button to demand change.
If you think about it, we don't even have to leave our bedrooms to inspire the political climate.
You have to wonder, is that always necessarily a good thing?
A colleague of mine presented a very interesting question when she asked me, have you ever noticed how issues seem to sweep through social media like hurricanes and then recede almost as quickly as they came?
She was absolutely right, of course.
I mean, I couldn't think of a single one of my friends who used that hashtag pray for Paris beyond the first couple of days before they were on to the next social issue that required their immediate aggressive attention because we need to know, is Tom Brady guilty of hashtag deflatogate?
I mean, are the hashtag Oscar so white?
And for the love of God, people, is Donald Trump a hashtag racist, sexist, victim, hero, the next president of the United States, or Hitler?
I don't know.
Because it's here today and it'll be gone tomorrow.
Welcome to this generation of activism.
I'm an eternal optimist, though, and so I'd like to think that even if the conversation does seem to die down pretty quickly, we are at least being inspired by the conversation and the dialogue that we're having with individuals that we would not have had access to otherwise.
We're thereby widening our own range of perception and ideals, I'd like to think.
Except I personally know that there is an element of this digital activism that we don't often consider because although so many of us are willing to spread and share our opinions and ideas rapidly, how many of us have ever been on the receiving end of those views being rapidly expressed?
It always tends to be a little bit more of an exclusive club.
But yes, in February of 2007, when I was a senior in high school, I became a social issue while I was sitting on my couch watching a Will Farrell movie.
My phone began ringing that night, and when I saw that the phone calls were private, I sent it to voicemail.
At the conclusion of the movie, I noticed that I had four missed voicemails, and when I went to listen to them, I was horrified by what I would discover.
I heard four male voices, and they were alternating.
They were sometimes screaming.
They were sometimes laughing.
They were even at certain points singing.
God, we're five minutes in.
It's like women, they never get to the point.
This is brutal, Pearlie.
Oh my goodness.
Here are a few excerpts of some of the things that were being said to me.
I'm going to kill you just because you're poor and you're black, okay?
Harriet Tubb, that N-word, she's dead.
We're going to tar and feather your family.
Okay.
Fucking Rosa Parks, that F and N word, she's dead.
Okay.
If there's a way to summarize it, in short, they told me that they were going to kill me.
They told me things like they were going to tar and feather my family, that they were going to put a bullet in the back of my head as they had done to Martin Luther King.
They told me in so many words that I better not be home.
I was absolutely.
Why is my bullshit meter going off?
I don't know why.
I just feel like there's more to this story.
That just seems really random because I think I've heard her talk about this before.
Like, obviously, you know, you shouldn't leave people messages like that or whatever, but I don't know why.
Something about the story just doesn't like you.
Randomly got a phone call and okay.
Absolutely traumatized.
And in terms of maybe I just never believe women, no matter what.
I don't know.
In terms of action, I didn't really do much.
I'm going to assume that because we're all human beings, all of you are feeling a certain emotion as you're reading through these messages, but I'm going to ask you to hold on to your hashtags as we get through the story.
So that night, I simply cried, and I remember feeling incredibly confused because I couldn't think of four individuals, not even one individual, that wanted to see me dead.
The next day at school, I confided what had happened to me to my philosophy teacher, and he was adamant.
He was like, you do not let this thing go.
And he marched me into the principal's office.
And when she heard the voicemails, she had an equally strong reaction, and she made the quick decision to phone the police.
And that was the beginning of what would become a very dark period of my life.
Because I was absolutely correct in my assessment that there were not four individuals that I knew that wanted to see me dead.
In fact, it would turn out that three of those individuals were complete strangers to me.
And by some random stroke of my own misfortune, one of those strangers happened to be the current governor of Connecticut's son.
And so the issue very quickly became hashtag when she sued.
She got like paid out for this.
Any thoughts so far, Doug?
MPA?
No, not really.
I mean, you know, every time I hear Candace now, I just think of her saying that Charlie Kirk was a time traveler from a high school.
Politics.
And we all know that the figurative hurricane swept right on in.
My face was splattered across the front page of every newspaper throughout the state of Connecticut.
The FBI was called in due to its unusual strand of high profile to analyze the voice messages.
Wait, so she worked with the NAACP and then went on to do conservative politics.
Yeah.
That's crazy.
She likes sued for a hate crime.
And wow.
Women are incredible.
Sorry.
And the voices on them.
News stations would replay them over and over again because they wanted to make sure everyone was made privy to what a politician's son was involved in.
I also had uh, Naacp members who I had never spoken to prior, waiting on the front steps of my high school with cameras in tow to speak out on the horrors of what a black girl just kind of crazy how, like The way she's telling this story, you just would think she went to war or something instead of got like one voicemail.
Yeah.
Yeah.
You know what I mean?
You could tell she's told this story so many times.
It would be kind of cool.
I mean, this is a long time ago, but like at this time when it happened, to ask the type of questions that you've asked to women when they tried to say this on your pregame show.
You would probably tear this whole story apart.
Just something about this story doesn't add up.
Like she didn't know three of them.
What provoked the first one?
So was going through.
She's a woman.
It could have been anything, really.
Yeah, I know.
Parents fought at home.
My sisters got into physical altercations at school, defending me against all the chatter that was drummed up by students and teachers alike.
Because as we all know, in any of these types of situations.
It doesn't really shock me that her sister's gotten to physical altercations.
It's like black people shit.
Sorry.
Situations.
Everyone feels a need to take a side.
And see, that's why I kind of wanted the landlord to stay because I wanted to see what he thought about this.
Like, I was curious what he would say, if there is something I'm missing.
Maybe Candace made up the voice messages.
Maybe she called herself.
No one had been arrested yet.
It was just an investigation.
I made the decision then to start homeschooling while the investigation continued.
And it concluded nearly two months later.
Took two months before all of the boys involved were arrested and before I was able to return back to school.
Wait, she got them arrested for a voicemail?
Women are such a protected class.
It's incredible.
Okay.
Hashtag was.
It says, many years ago, when Candace Owens was in high school, a high school student in Stanford, Connecticut, her family sued the Stanford Board of Education, alleging the school failed to protect her from racist harassment.
The case was settled for $37,500 with no admission of wrongdoing.
Another unrelated lawsuit in Connecticut involved Owens suing her landlord in Stanford in 2017 over mold issues in her apartment.
So.
Yeah, guys in the back, the link was just for the landlord.
It wasn't for other people.
In the back, the thing.
To shift into the societal subconscious.
And then, of course, everyone forgot about my story.
Everyone except for me, because a few months later, I started college and I couldn't rid my brain of all of those articles that I had read online about me and all the things that I had read in the comment sections about myself.
I was naturally terrified that incoming freshman students that could potentially be my friend would discover these articles and form presumptive hashtags about my character.
And I certainly didn't want them to think that I was a hashtag race fader or that I was hashtag trouble or hashtag anything else.
But I couldn't control the internet.
What I did, however, discover was that I could control my body.
And I began manifesting that experience through severe anorexia, a disease that would stick with me for the next five years.
This is a photo that was taken of me three years later in 2010, and I went on to lose about 10 pounds after it was taken.
And does she look anorexic to you?
Yeah, yeah, look at her arms.
She's pretty skinny there.
I think she always had those curves in her face, but like, look at her arms.
Yeah, those skinny arms right there.
I am being completely honest on this stage right now.
I remember my anorexia very clearly.
I had an affectionate relationship with it.
It was very hard for me to let it go because it was my best friend for five years.
It gave me control of my life back.
I felt somehow that with every calorie that I avoided, I was also avoiding it.
I don't remember them ever being useful.
I was just watching women bitching for an hour.
I was about to say that now it's just a bunch of female therapy sessions.
Go ahead.
Yeah, I don't.
Maybe there was a time when they were useful.
I don't remember it.
And those problems retrospectively could have been solved if somebody had just said sorry and taken responsibility for what happened, which never happened.
I would love to hear the other side of the story.
Who is the kid?
Can I talk to him?
No, I'm just like, I just want to know what his, like what he says happened.
It's an incredibly interesting afterthought to have that our digital activism over these perceived acts of inhumanity can itself become the act of inhumanity.
That as a society, we tend to draw up these hurricanes to combat what may initially have just been a storm.
That's because the method of activism has morphed completely.
When our parents and our grandparents were coming up, that word required a physical presence.
They had to march on the front lawns of the White House to put an end to the Vietnam War.
They had to risk their livelihoods to put an end to institutions like segregation.
Activism meant maybe being arrested.
Activism meant maybe being killed.
So they had to care deeply beyond the concept of a trending hashtag to voice their outrage.
Let's say we have the internet and the internet is fast and the internet is amazing, but it doesn't exactly require a physical presence and it therefore allows us a level of detachment.
Which is why when I bring myself back into that circumstance and back into high school, I always ask myself, could any of those children have said any of those words to my face?
Better yet, what would have been the outcome even had I have just picked up the phone?
It is so easy to yell at an object because objects don't have emotions.
People do.
Had I picked up the phone, they would have heard my voice, a voice of a real human being carrying real emotion, and it would have stopped them in their tracks.
It would have tethered them to their own humanity.
All of those emotions you had when you first read those messages, I'm going to politely ask you to just forget about them because the truth is, those children were not monsters, those children were not hashtag racists or anything else.
Those children, like me, were social lab rats.
People tend to forget it, but it was us millennials that watched the world move from a beeper to a cell phone to text messages and video sent around the world in what felt like a matter of nanoseconds.
You see that green line that just starts trending upward right around 2012?
That represents the increase in core digital technologies over the years.
It was us millennials that were the school children of those technological advancements.
We were the unwitting participants in a great social experiment.
We were first-handed AIM, and then it was Facebook and Twitter and hashtags with no formal guide as to how it might all play out because nobody knew.
Nobody thought about it.
Nobody considered or contemplated the social implications of all of these changes.
I still don't actually think people are contemplating the social implications of all of these changes.
We are all existing in a miraculous paradox.
As a human race, we have never been more connected or further apart.
What is the point of this story?
This is brutal.
I just thought this was kind of an overkill.
I don't really think he had to do all that for a voicemail.
I mean, it'd be one thing if they were like circling her house or something, but people say they want to kill me all the time.
Like, you know, yeah, you know, you always say that women, you know, they know how to tell a story and make things sound worse than they actually are.
I mean, you got phone calls and uh, what?
Like, there are guys out there in combat zones and you know, having to watch their friends, you know, you know, leave the earth and stuff.
And she's talking about, I got a couple of horrible phone calls.
Is the guy in the Wikipedia?
Is the guy involved?
I'm gonna message him.
I'm just curious what like his side of the story is when I watch this.
Oh, I was on chat GPT.
Let me see who was involved.
Apparently, someone made a song out of the black fatigue thing.
I'm gonna share this for a second while you look.
Hold on.
They did the AI.
Please take out the weed.
Let's go!
Hold on.
black fatigue jenny kwa please take out not funny
The greatest thing I've ever heard.
Now I'm not saying.
Now I'm not saying that I'm always right.
I'll tell you, damn it.
I was in this case.
In this case, I absolutely was.
Why did they do that?
You should reach out to that person and give them the actual lyric that you wrote.
Oh, my God.
Because that one was like, oh, my God.
That's so funny.
All right.
I've had enough of this.
Hold on.
Does it say the name of the guy or no?
One second.
Stanford Board of Education.
Those children, just like me, were publicly dissected and labeled by a group of adults who saw a sweeping headline instead of an opportunity to learn and to think critically about the approaching era of digital activism, where we write off empathy in favor of proving a point, a point that we are often about a human being with real emotions and a beating heart.
And yes, the example that I presented to you today may seem extreme, but it more usually you should know is not.
It's more usually that one-star review we leave on Yelp because the waitress was hashtag awful and she was late with our drinks and she maybe forgot our appetizers.
So she should be hashtag fired and oh, wait until you see her.
The one that was involved, so it was Governor Danell, Daniel P. Malloy, his son Ben Malloy.
I'm thinking this is right.
Was one of the yeah.
Yeah.
M-A-L-L-O-Y.
Oh, M-A-L-L-O.
Ben.
I'll just see.
I'm just curious what the does.
All right.
I'm going to request to follow the Ben Malloy's and see if any of them follow me back.
Molloy.
Okay.
I have no idea if these are the right people, but I followed three Ben Malloys.
I'll see if any of them get back to me.
Anyways.
Since they were all underage, like that, that mayor's son is the only person named, but everyone else isn't named.
Yeah.
And of course, the NAACP got involved.
Of course they did.
All right.
I think that's all I got.
I was just kind of curious.
God, that was so boring.
That TED talk.
Yeah.
Once again, there was a time where I guess that's TEDx, which is like the female version.
So we should have known something was up.
But there was a time where TED Talks were actually worth a damn, but that time is long gone.
No.
Well, all right, guys.
Anton Daniels also has black fatigue.
And so do I.
So Doug FPA also does.
100%.
And guys, you know, I'm going to say it too.
Pearl has a lot of black male friends as she should because we just don't get the support from women on our side that we do from women like Pearl.
But anyway, guys, if you want to be a successful, competitive black person, leave the whole Black Nation thing behind.
This whole brother, sister, we support each other.
No, we don't.
A lot of black people, we can't see each other.
But poor blacks hate rich black people.
Dumb black people hate smart black people.
Black people don't want quiet, loud black people hate quiet black people.
Just leave it all behind.
Yeah, leave women behind too.
So, women, women.
Um, I know they say don't have male friends, but I actually am pro-male friends.
You don't have you know, look, it's better than women.
If you got to choose, gun to your head.
It's a lonely life as a woman because your male friends want to sleep with you, women friends hate you.
Um, I'm just saying, gun to your head if you have to pick.
So, let's see the result of the poll.
Can you see it?
Um, I put who okay.
So, 59% said the sisterhood, and 41% said the black community.
So, the sisterhood's more fake.
Yeah, I mean, because I don't think black people are really fake about their aggression, they put it right up front.
That's true.
You always make sense, Pearlie.
Anyways, guys, thanks so much for watching.
Thanks for chiming in.
You got any final thoughts, Doug MPA?
Um, yeah, you know, you know, Anton Daniels is gonna keep winning, and uh, Corey Hulk, I mean, he's funny, and that's it.
Yeah, they'll both probably keep making money, so yeah, the black audience will probably cheer on Corey, and Anton, um, the white audience will cheer him on, so it's WWE, as this guy said here.
All right, guys, um, thanks so much for watching.
I appreciate it.
Um, if you can, please like the video and subscribe to the channel.
Um, I'm a little sick, so I'm sorry if I'm a little low energy today, but I don't know.
After I travel, I get sick a lot.
Like, I just don't think I'm built for that.
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