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@BeyondTimes1119 күн бұрын
Now, this is the message I like to hear. Criminal culture is not our culture. It is the culture of the rebellious ones amongst us. Great message, you got me on board now.
@sl877417 күн бұрын
Ill be honest, most poor places are crime ridden. I dont buy the fact that poverty does not breed crime. I agree with everything else though.
@Khaleguy16 күн бұрын
@@sl8774that’s true, the lowest income areas in California have the highest crime rates, this is true in basically every major city in the US. This is especially true for the last four years.
@sl877416 күн бұрын
@@Khaleguy This is true in most places in the world I would say.
@uwantmikehawk115 күн бұрын
@@sl8774 sure some crime ,but why does poverty mean ridiculous amounts of murder and gr@pe ? how does that help ? to top that off poverty might help facillitate some criminal activity , but the media does not have to reward and call ""heroes"" to blacks , whites , jews who commit criminal activity . nor do they have to allow artists that glorify violence , drug dealing etc to reach mass audiences . I am old enough to remember a time before gangsta rap , and believe it or not there wasn't black cliques standing on every corner in their hood shooting each other . its being done to us whites to now adays . It must be said as well the media could shine a lite on the BLACK MOTHERS who raise numerous kids and they go to university / college . Or the Black father who takes care of his father or any of the many others that deserve the good attention .
@blast4me75419 күн бұрын
I'm tired of seeing all the grown men in their late 20's, 30's, 40's and even 50's still in the streets living like high school street kids. Some cities they be in their 30's and 40's still neighborhood beefing over their mommas neighborhood.
@cowel873419 күн бұрын
Truth. Its crazy seeing even people 60 years old acting like dangerous bratty kids and shoplifting
@RandyBaker8718 күн бұрын
If a man is in their 40s and 50s doing the same BS thing over and over again. Then he wasted 20 to 30 years of his life on bull junk
@stevenrobinson985618 күн бұрын
Some brains never fully develope.
@vernonhampton586318 күн бұрын
@@RandyBaker87 Muhammad Ali fan, I see.
@HakeemTheDream61618 күн бұрын
Alot of the blk men that grew up in the 80's until now still stuck in their teenage ways it's embarass AF to see that's why I say it's time to separate.
@QuanPookie19 күн бұрын
Tell this to the black people who keeps telling everyone “you not like us” as if being like them is some sort of a prize.
@KristelleCelestin19 күн бұрын
Facts its literally laughable 😂😂😂 I rather try to follow the bible as close as possible than be like them 😂clowns 🤡
@cowel873419 күн бұрын
Exactly. That extreme pride and ego only destroys. Being selfish and lawless isn't something to brag about
@brandonatkins225819 күн бұрын
It's not!
@MuggleSmacker19 күн бұрын
It’s wild, “Not Like Us” is a compliment if you’re not the 13% doing the 60%.
@orangefacedbuddah177618 күн бұрын
Hahaha 😅 so true
@criticalthnking18 күн бұрын
One of my mentors said “When we have a society that puts empathy before justice you end up with neither.”
@jakesolo287218 күн бұрын
@@criticalthnking The tyranny of feelings
@criticalthnking18 күн бұрын
@ nicely put
@jakesolo287218 күн бұрын
@ When words and actions can’t be measured against common, objective knowledge and standards, because whatever you “feel” is right, that’s a fast highway to a relativistic hell of a society. And we’re on the road.
@criticalthnking18 күн бұрын
@ very well said and articulated. You are correct. Our society has the bias of things being corrected by correcting the collective instead of individuals who harm the collective. The term accountability is pushed in our society as a noun when it is truly a verb. It is a concept that should be acted upon. When we hold others to a standard they implode and improve. But since that standard has been lost the only thing left to implode is the society itself.
@jakesolo287217 күн бұрын
@@criticalthnking Correct. The ultimate outcome is the abandonment of concepts as right and wrong, good and bad, just and unjust. That's not an exaggeration. The modern notion of "my truth" is poisonous and actually destroys all truth.
@dylanhill164019 күн бұрын
The home is where it all begins. I recall my childhood when some friends and I avoided hooded sweatshirts because of their link to criminal stereotypes. My two teenage sons encounter similar cultural pressures, being asked by Black classmates why they wear belts and don't have dreads. They then challenge those classmates on their understanding of the prison origins of sagging pants. Many admit they are just following what they've seen from parents and the media, unaware of the deeper meaning.
@queenofnyc558417 күн бұрын
There’s no way they’re asking why they don’t have dreads. When I was growing up dreads was a Caribbean thing I see they doing all kind of crazy hairstyles now.
@moonman202217 күн бұрын
I used to date a white girl who had dreads for a long time, which she achieved by never washing her hair. She was hot either way, but it was a huge relief when she finally got the dreads out, so I could touch her hair without having to wash my hands, because those things get greasy.
@Vincetagram16 күн бұрын
@@queenofnyc5584 not gonna lie, my hair looks exactly like it does in my profile pic right now and while I've considered braids in the past(probably not gonna, and tbh might cut it), I've been asked several times when am I gonna do dreads like that's just the logical progression lol. It definitely seems to be the standard amongst that culture lol. That being said, I don't see anything inherently wrong with dreads. I think it's unfortunate that people with dreads who don't hold these hood values, make good money, and don't support that culture are still seen in a negative light because of their hairstyle. I don't prefer dreads, but I think some ppl look better with them and they can be styled in a clean, presentable, professional way. Even though these are rappers that uphold this negative culture, I think most of the ways rich the kid styles his dreads and how gunna puts his in a ponytail offer a clean look.
@Shannonbarnesdr115 күн бұрын
@@moonman2022 she didnt take care of them, because dreads when done right, you wash them,they are like sponges you shampoo, rinse, and ring em out, proper dreads are kept clean, but yeah some people will just let their hair get gross and it will dread up, sorta, but it doesnt look nice. same things for braids, some people think they dont have to wash or take care of them, and it adds to yet more stereotypes because they feed into it with their ignorant behavior and minds sets. im glad she finally wised up and decided to take care of herself better.
@BlendedBarbieDoll15 күн бұрын
They are still calling them dreads? Aren’t we referring to them as locs? Because our hair is not dreadful. Maybe this is only certain circles 🤷🏽♀️
@averagedusty19 күн бұрын
It's too much of the culture. Back in the 90s, i lived with my friend and his family, I'm white, and they were black. I was poor and they had money, his parents were teachers and he did good in school and sports, and whenever i would be out, other black people would come up and ask me " hey, where's your friend? Man, he the whitest black guy i know". And it used to make me so angry. Like, why? Because he doesn't talk in slang, gets good grades? Ain't out committing crimes? Just stupidity.
@princemarkanthony50018 күн бұрын
Right
@changthao487518 күн бұрын
Why bring up your race? It has nothing to do with your argument
@averagedusty18 күн бұрын
@@changthao4875Well, the whole video is about race and "black culture." And it's not an argument I'm making so much as an observation, and it was made as someone who lives outside the "black community". And it was mainly an observation to say that hey, even people outside of said community can see the shaming that goes on within.
@stevenrobinson985618 күн бұрын
@@changthao4875Why argue though? Especially over this medium? Race and religion is a gray area I try to avoid discussing with others.
@mookiedt18 күн бұрын
@@changthao4875 Imagine ignoring the entire post just to ask this question 🤡
@jakesolo287219 күн бұрын
I’m getting very tired of words like “community” and “culture” being used as barriers and threats, and to exclude. That’s a sure giveaway that the related movement or philosophy is a lie and is weak. What secure, sane person advertises themselves or their beliefs with “Keep Out”? “Social” and “society” come from the same root. A society that can’t talk isn’t a society. It’s a consumerist plantation.
@KidYale19 күн бұрын
Critical Rasiss Theory
@Blazer997019 күн бұрын
I couldnr agree more. Look no further rhan the bigges perpetuator of this the shade room. The comments there will DEFEND any atrocities commited by black people and making every excuse for them.
@rain73ful18 күн бұрын
Thug culture is a dead end street. Some make it out, but many don't.
@HakeemTheDream61618 күн бұрын
Most of the time we hear community is when it's something negative for the blk's
@merrickbryan8516 күн бұрын
@Blazer9970 the same way wyts justify being racist... like they have something to lose... wyt racism created this problem and never talk about fixing it.
@MrAwsomeness36015 күн бұрын
*_"You may think it's cool to be on the streets when you're 17, but when you're my age, it's a waste." ~ Phillip Banks, Fresh Prince of Bel Air_*
@garythecyclingnerd62192 күн бұрын
A lot of remarkable moments for a comedy show. We need another series like that.
@tryme224510 күн бұрын
My family tell me i need to stop judging, i keep telling them im never gonna stop shaming. It is needed in society. Everyone needs to feel ashamed about something.
@JonathanHatcher-z1t19 күн бұрын
Man I love listening to your channel man... Aquarius Waive, Black conservative perspective, officer Tatum and a bunch of other's as well... All you guys are starting a movement in this country, you guy's do reach alot of people, god bless....
@GingeRenee19 күн бұрын
I listen to the same channels. Excellent minds for sure. I appreciate what they do educating and fighting back against the woke mind virus that is destroying communities and our beautiful country. Aquarius Wave is a brilliant mind and I really enjoy his discussions.
@ylparker5018 күн бұрын
And Anton Daniels
@Argentina9418 күн бұрын
100% listen to all of those mentioned here and Aquarious Waive is my newest sub
@JasonVu-h7t18 күн бұрын
Wilfred Reilly teaches at a historical black college/university kzbin.info/www/bejne/j32Xl4WZrdWbiZo They’re Lying About Hate Crimes - Wilfred Reilly
@paulstrawbridge568718 күн бұрын
There are many...Amala being most prominent right now and then you got the Cartier family, davory darkins, coach Colin although he bites off Rogan almost always..LFP prod... No need to mention the Hodge Twins, we already know them..there's Anthony Brian Logan too but he's homophobic and I ain't even gay...there's others too but there should be a weekly podcast hosted by Stephen a Smith or Candace...hah, get em all riled up.
@Ratgodx16 күн бұрын
They be grown ass men and women out here, 35+ still “crashing out” over trivial shit. And we wonder why we can’t get ahead…
@lordship154312 күн бұрын
There's a saying in retail and sales "When dealing with the general public you aren't dealing with one person you're dealing with everyone they talked to all day."
@dinerofromdar111312 күн бұрын
@@lordship1543💯
@cafelatte112411 күн бұрын
It's always everyone else's fault. No accountability.
@thehouseofnaztrodamus292816 күн бұрын
It is refreshing to hear that there are young folks that know how to call it as it is.
@TheDivayenta18 күн бұрын
Remember “ You don’t understand, it’s a Black thing”? I’m thrilled for people like you because you’re part of the effort to bring people together again. Like Bill Burr said, “ Every group has a blind spot” , so we need each other to share the information!
@chrs.dfromthe8th51015 күн бұрын
I love bill burr I fall asleep to his rants😂
@TheJmsJose972 күн бұрын
@@chrs.dfromthe8th510dude his podcasts are fucking amazing to sleep to
@DeniseWhetstone19 күн бұрын
What one generation allows, the next will embrace. -John Wesley I have been watching this quote play out over the last three generations. We definitely need to decide exactly what we want our children championing and explain the reasons.
@ATLAS-su9wf16 күн бұрын
Exactly. I'm not trying to start a debate or make people mad but the 90s rap culture was part of the start of a downward spiral for us. No one wants to admit it but thug culture was at a all time high back in the 90s.
@davemccage791815 күн бұрын
“My pu$$y is pink, my booty hole brown” -Sexy Red c.2024 Such an inspiring, poetic quote from an amazing artist…. 😒
@KakashiHatake-sv1vb9 күн бұрын
@@ATLAS-su9wfby fake thugs too…
@dwightplock116218 күн бұрын
Great point on a criminal being let out of prison now is a bigger deal than a young person graduating from college.
@nate_shaw16 күн бұрын
I noticed that too
@lordship154312 күн бұрын
It's why we should prortize rehabilitation and mental healthcare. Rather than the "lock them up longer" model that doesn't work.
@carlpitlick510417 күн бұрын
“Coddling is not going to lead to correction.” Yes!! Brilliant and relevant words.
@2amichaelj19 күн бұрын
Neither black or white here but it's nice to see black KZbinrs speaking out about these issues. I can't speak for everyone but everyone I know doesn't want the current "black culture" to be what it is. No one wants to see any community struggle.
@vernonhampton586318 күн бұрын
That's the thing, it's street culture, not black culture.
@alsoniagaming17 күн бұрын
Exactly, I see Black people engaging in and celebrating the exact same culture that has caused rural Appalachia to be a run down drug infested shit hole. And as someone who lives IN Appalachia it annoys me to no end to have living proof of what this behavior leads to and still committing to it.
@tias.66752 күн бұрын
There's a lot of people who are opposed to THEM and their culture. Many stay silent due to possible doxxing, backlash, or assault. We're also a minority.
@govie10019 күн бұрын
Your message needs to be heard by everyone
@aracystic2814 күн бұрын
Instant subscribe. You hit every point I’ve been complaining about since I was 13. It is so hard to have these conversations when most people prefer to perpetuate this nonsense.
@marknielsbeats19 күн бұрын
It's never been a thing. People can bicker and argue about it all they want, but rap music has created a stigma amongst the black demographic. That crime, violent, "pull up on the opps" mentality has poisoned the minds of generations. I don't understand how hard is it to carry morality, character, and wit.
@lindar632617 күн бұрын
I DON'T KNOW ANY BLACK PEOPLE WITH THAT MENTALLITY, WHERE DO YOU LIVE ? 😂HAHAHA 😂HAHAHA
@megsley17 күн бұрын
referring to other people as "opps" is incredibly dehumanizing. they can't complain about white folks when literally refusing to see their fellow black people as human.
@isiahjean-baptiste43416 күн бұрын
it's called parenting
@ShigKnightTV16 күн бұрын
@@megsley Opp short for Opposition: a group of adversaries or competitors, “especially” a rival political party or athletic team. Nothing dehumanizing about using a definition correctly, we can argue the other culture stuff but you’re just plain wrong about this. People have adversaries all the time and that doesn’t mean they don’t see them as humans it just means they see them as enemies.
@ATLAS-su9wf16 күн бұрын
People don't want to admit it but that crap started in the 90s rap. Thug life was at a all time high because some guy named Tupac said thug life was a good thing. Black people love to talk bad about today and praise the 90s rap but they were promoting degeneracy hard in that time.
@mosethegreat741515 күн бұрын
Thank you, me and my brother had this same conversation they celebrated when young thug came home but won’t celebrate when black men graduate college.
@j.e333614 күн бұрын
Young thug is a celebrity so thats why they care. Im black and ive been to plenty of Graduation parties. Should TMZ talk about me then......no cus im a regular guy
@Teehood42233 күн бұрын
Where I’m from we celebrate both. Most the older guys I know that got out realize they wasted they life and try to change and do better. We don’t respect the 35+ nigga still out there thuggin. And our youth get celebrated all the time. I know it’s not a reflection of all of us but all of us are not on that bs. Streets or not. I consider myself a street dude and when you get to a certain age you stop doing certain things. It’s called growing up. And I teach my younger people the things I wish somebody told me.
@PrideSage9918 күн бұрын
I thought as a "non-black" (not 100%) that I was crazy for noticing this. When I think Black American culture, I think of things like AMAZING cookouts, friendly and personable strangers who will chat you up while in a waiting room, RnB music that gets your inner groove moving, and folks that value independence. Of course, I grew up in the countryside, and that's just what I saw from the few families we had around here - I've always seen "ghetto culture" as more a matter of circumstance and not indicative of the broader community, but, I never lived in a big city longer than a couple years. Thank you, you gave me some more valuable insight into this issue that I hadn't considered before.
@kathleenking4718 күн бұрын
It started going downhill in the 90s, with everything else..
@gfys75617 күн бұрын
This is such a whyte girl comment 😂🤦🏿♂️
@MikeJones-m6r17 күн бұрын
Cookouts and rhythmic music are European creations.
@ijiahpeavy242917 күн бұрын
@@MikeJones-m6r😂😂
@ijiahpeavy242917 күн бұрын
@@MikeJones-m6rRhythmic music was created by Europeans? Where did you get that from?
@vincentharalson641617 күн бұрын
I think you explained this topic exquisitely. No politics. Just pure common sense and wisdom.
@davew493018 күн бұрын
When you glorify so called entertainers with names like Pimp, Gotti, Murdah, Thug this and Thug that, Deathrow, Bad Boy then you will be relegated to the bottom of the food chain without any respectibility.
@msmichelle219617 күн бұрын
Lol funny how all those names dictated their reality
@megsley17 күн бұрын
names hold power - be smart about how you refer to yourself!
@queenofnyc558417 күн бұрын
They didn’t take the Cosby route back in the 70s & 80s when people believed everything they seen on Tv. Everything was about struggle and violence they had no balance.
@davew493017 күн бұрын
@megsley Yes indeed ask any HR hiring manager.
@Annoitedpastorlewiswalkin16 күн бұрын
Amen truth they are destroying us but Yah will restore us. Satan came in our community and destroy us from the inside. Don’t worry YAH will restore us because we are his children the original children of Israel n he will pull us out of this in Yahuah name amen
@drizzo466917 күн бұрын
This is the 2nd video I've seen today that acknowledges we need to remove certain parts of what we call "our culture " from our community. I'm glad we are at least having the conversation because thats the only way problems get solved. Its a good sign that we are moving in the right direction and things will get better in the future.
@minismalls309612 күн бұрын
listen to "the heart part 5" by kendrick lamar he breaks this down really well, powerful song. matter of fact all his albums are phenomenal and thought provoking
@TheStackBoy24sev17 күн бұрын
The store that marked everything up over $1000 dollars and then gave the 99% discount at checkout had the right idea
@Samuel-cs2xl9 сағат бұрын
Shop keeper must have a law degree in their home country😂
@fortunatomartino854918 күн бұрын
Please bring back 60's 70's and 80's black culture
@lowlyfesocks18 күн бұрын
80's and early 90's was such an era
@Tama-zephyrwindlass18 күн бұрын
These hoodlums will kill it again
@toffeenut133618 күн бұрын
Please bring back the 50s…
@newyorktechworld649217 күн бұрын
You might want to go back much further than the 60's, 70's and definitely the 80's.
@misspiscesdreamz17 күн бұрын
Pre-crack epidemic
@deleteduser345516 күн бұрын
0:53 so you can't carry a gun for self defense but you can steal. Classic California
@sheenamackewn88818 күн бұрын
I saw this begin to happen in the mid 90's when prison clothes became fashionable
@alexandrasilveira938019 күн бұрын
Such common sense, as a Latina I said the same thing when you decriminalize based on race you are saying we are more capable of committing crime it offends the group rather than raise it. It becomes low expectations of the groups. We need high expectations of all groups.
@bobvylan721517 күн бұрын
Great point. Slow drip bigotry, long term destruction of a people.
@mr.funnyman976515 күн бұрын
The crab bucket mentality is very dangerous, because even the brightest end up being pulled down at least a little
@DioTheGreatOne13 күн бұрын
And this happens in almost all minority communities, I'm homossexual, I'm conservative and very against the degenerate sex-and-drug addicted culture that "my group" has, yet I am relentlessly attacked by them for not taking part in that self destructive way of life and instead wanting to integrate and contribute to our society. I see the same thing happening in black and immigrant communities, where the ones that want to integrate into society and be successful on their own are shamed and pulled down by their own brothers and sisters that would rather segregate themselves out of society and beg the government to help them with everything. Tons of people think that just because their groups were victimized in the past, it automatically means that everything they do in the present is good and there isn't anything to improve at all.
@mstr29313 күн бұрын
Crab bucket mentality? Are you Filipino?
@animachainzvideoz592114 күн бұрын
I stumbled onto this, great stuff Aquarius, subbed.
@johncarr719819 күн бұрын
Been watching for over a week and I have to say YOU have talent Keep it up. Pull up some event that happens during the week and showcase it in context to you message
@paulstrawbridge568718 күн бұрын
Dude, I've got so much to say but... He's already said most of it...another great commentary, thank you!
@TheDebrom918 күн бұрын
Bro; you preaching! This is the type of message that a lot of people don't want to hear. Nothing is more infuriating or disappointing than seeing men who are clearly older that 25 acting thuggish.
@Arnoldman-ep9gw19 күн бұрын
Crime went up after George Floyd
@BigReddSouthernGal2519 күн бұрын
That's what happens when you canonize a criminal.
@noobie189017 күн бұрын
Went up way before that buddy….
@BonesDMS4life15 күн бұрын
Crime has always been up ironically
@Arnoldman-ep9gw15 күн бұрын
@BonesDMS4life They use any excuse to loot, smash and grab. I didn't know what stealing Nikes, and TVs were supposed to do. They just want free stuff, black lives matter is a money scam
@tias.66752 күн бұрын
It was an issue over 100 years ago. The types spoken about in this video are the reason for many things..like segregation.
@MrAwesomeSaucem12 күн бұрын
Never heard anyone point out the problem with sympathizing / empathizing with criminality. You hit the nail on the head.
@toonrex280614 күн бұрын
This reminds me of what Jericho Green said about what his father told him about people from the ghetto: “They may be your skin color, but they ain't your kind.”
@AllucardA1012 күн бұрын
South African here. You're speaking a LOT of sense, brother. If you haven't read it yet, I recommend Thomas Sowell's "The Vision of the Anointed". Keep going
@the1magageneral32319 күн бұрын
Thomas Sowell explains it best, also Vince Everett Ellison explains it best and how the Civil rights movement has done more harm than good and how MARXIST it was.
@RodrigoCen745618 күн бұрын
No, don't even try to spin it. Jim Crow needed to go and the southern states weren't going to repeal it themselves
@alexalexander177218 күн бұрын
I got that Sowell was saying the act not the movement is where it broke down. The movement was about addressing the means to get to the ends where the act only looks at the ends and works backwards. Going backwards always bypasses personal responsibility.
@the1magageneral32318 күн бұрын
@@RodrigoCen7456 Listen to Vince Everett Ellison with Tucker about MLK and see if that changes your mind.
@T.H.E.O.R.Y.17 күн бұрын
This, this is basically the issue with BLM. Not the movement but the people running it.@@alexalexander1772
@MikeJones-m6r17 күн бұрын
@RodrigoCen7456 Yeah look how well it's turned out lol.
@ShadowBob-m5s4 күн бұрын
Man, I love your voice of reason and common sense. I go back to the mindset of we win as a team and lose as a team. Keep up the good work!
@ProffesorChaosesFile15 күн бұрын
It used to be 1 in 4 black children grew up without a father, now Sexyy Redd has 30m monthly listeners.
@aquariuswaive15 күн бұрын
@@ProffesorChaosesFile sheeesh!!!
@j.e333614 күн бұрын
Yea "sexxy redd" is why we have single parent homes, that makes sense
@maddfinn1114 күн бұрын
Very stupid point she simply makes fun music that doesn't equate to how many parents you have😂. Try again
@SomerandomShmuck13 күн бұрын
@@maddfinn11”fun” music. Ahh yes, “SHAKE THAT ASS FOR DRAKE, NOW SHAKE THAT ASS FOR ME”
@extrakt155912 күн бұрын
@@maddfinn11she make degenerate music just like most rappers nowadays
@JulianaAndersson14 күн бұрын
Dude…. Your logical navigation thru topics is…. Absolute, beautiful logical truth! I love listening to your content.
@GrandPitoVic18 күн бұрын
The biggest problem is that no one is being taught to work hard for what they want. Entitlement is a big issue. People are being taught they are owed. Something for nothing. Anyone out there can work hard for what they want. Everyone wants the easy road now days. Nothing comes to you for free except taxes and death. Everything else we have to work towards or for.
@h0neym00nl0ve016 күн бұрын
💯
@batmansmith742215 күн бұрын
To some extent, that is true. But it’s also true of older generations who dealt with less global competition. Our culture is still somewhat geared towards the Boomers, and they’re half dead. I think it’s survivorship bias to call modern people as a whole lazy. We’re just interacting with more of them, and less has been weeded out by the inexorable passage of time.
@babylon684712 күн бұрын
Hard work for what? Vague advices don't work. Economic and Financial literacy is far more important. Just say handwork is a tool to attain goals.
@paolosolcruzКүн бұрын
Thank you for calling it out as the rest of the world perceived this problem. Definitely not a racial issue, but a cultural and coddled culture. More people should see this video.
@steveyj300218 күн бұрын
The social media and anti-moral culture and no one should support such language and behavior regardless of color or background
@IanConnel14 күн бұрын
Subscribed! I think what you said is profoundly true and it is also a hopeful sign that our culture will shift toward responsibility. Thank you keep it up. You are awesome.
@dbdb344719 күн бұрын
Most trailer parks are safe. And they are called trailer trash, just because they usually don't have a lot of money yet they're good people for the most part
@cowel873419 күн бұрын
Truth. They do have some low class ppl, but I've never felt unsafe
@changthao487518 күн бұрын
The term "white trash" and "trailer trash trash" was made by white men to demote white to a minority status
@TheWarriorScholarTWS15 күн бұрын
I had a coworker who lived in trailers who’s white parents gave him meth at age 12 he lost all his teeth by 20 and had scars from stab wounds in the trailer parks he lived at. Trailer parks ain’t any better than ghetto hoods. Same exact thing just different setting.
@scootergirl366211 күн бұрын
Depends on the trailer park. There are some really nasty ones with some shitty people that are basically a white version of the hood.
@KakashiHatake-sv1vb9 күн бұрын
We got meth where I live so it probably wouldn’t be safe for me.
@zacarivelasco27528 күн бұрын
13:50 I appreciate you for bringing the world to me in such way as explaining the seperation of culture and the contrived race
@synexthebarbarian800618 күн бұрын
Culture of Scammers an Hypocrites
@eeddieedwards38908 күн бұрын
From "I have a dream" to "I have a grift".
@Travar141019 күн бұрын
I am a 46 year old white man. Grew up in the 90's. Love rap and hip-hop more than anything. Wu Tang was my group back then. I know some of their real first names. I was called a "whigger"..... (I'll not spell out the words. You can figure it out) But i knew not to do what they rapped about.. weird...
@vernonhampton586319 күн бұрын
I'm that Wu-Tang generation as well. I loved listening to the music, but I didn't do any of it. I didn't live the lifestyle. On top of that, most of my friends didn't either.
@orcaunoo19 күн бұрын
unfortunately most people are easily influenced and not that smart. especially today. i’m a millennial.
@sandski517419 күн бұрын
Wu-Tang is forever!
@vernonhampton586319 күн бұрын
@@orcaunoo I would love to refute this.. but... damn, I'm a late GenX and I don't understand what people did to their kids to make them like this. My mother thinks it's crack.
@cowel873419 күн бұрын
Hip hop was better when it was just entertainment. Once people wanted to be criminals and gangsters to rap about crime, it became evil. The ego/prideful attitudes will rot any group
@NWTMasterWolf18 күн бұрын
"Anti racism" is just another form of "racism" so I say. Don't start nothin, won't be nothin. As we used to say back in the day when I grew up in the hood.
@SirFailsalot9116 күн бұрын
It's always interesting that the people who label themselves "anti-racist" proudly are the ones that end up buying into racist stereotypes and beliefs compared to everyone who just isn't racist, but that'd mean they'd need to get off their high horses and they don't like having to give up being able to look down their noses at everyone else.
@TrevorHamberger15 күн бұрын
Black culture actually comes from White rednecks from the south. Look up Tom sowell black rednecks
@DioTheGreatOne13 күн бұрын
Anti racism nowadays is basically revenge-racism
@lordship154312 күн бұрын
That's crazy. So if someone says they're anti abortion they're actually pro choice?
@NWTMasterWolf12 күн бұрын
@@lordship1543 Pushing to hard without balance makes the push as bad as what it pushes on. "Anti Racists" in this country use more "racism" to make their point than anyone does. In effect becoming as biased as the bias they supposedly appose. Demonstrating that it's not actually the discrimination they detest but being on the recieving end as apposed to delivering it.
@RichardDupre17 күн бұрын
This is great information! You tell the truth, say what everyone else is afraid to say in public! The gangster hoodlum attitude is rampant in some areas & the young people gravitate to it! The rap music praises it, shit even some mommas praise little Tryquan for being a gangster until he gets shot. Then she breaks out his kindergarten pictures and cries they shot my baby
@osofresh50311 күн бұрын
I just subscribed! Keep sharing your insights and speaking the truth.
@princemarkanthony50018 күн бұрын
Bro on a roll
@arlenedixon254718 күн бұрын
Thanks for talking about this ...i really appreciate this God bless you
@Jojo.2559 күн бұрын
Subscribed in the first 3 minutes. You speak truth bro.
@HaiiroCorv18 күн бұрын
Tbf some of those countries where most are upstanding and won’t steal is because the punishment is often severe. If our laws were up-kept with “extreme” punishment, behavior might be different
@megsley17 күн бұрын
looking at you, Singapore ❤
@vlc-cosplayer12 күн бұрын
Do you really think a criminal, who faces death on the daily, would be dissuaded by a long prison sentence (street cred) or capital punishment?
@wx842 күн бұрын
@@vlc-cosplayerYes
@ignitionSoldier16 күн бұрын
Thanks for telling it like it is young brother. You gave me some hope for our young men.
@KidYale19 күн бұрын
KZbin deleted my comment when I mentioned the source - 'See 'R Tee' -
@Individualati19 күн бұрын
#effYutubeCensorship
@megsley17 күн бұрын
they're scared of the truth!
@christianguthrie243017 күн бұрын
Wow! Congrats on your growth bro! I subscribed a month ago and you have exploded. Keep doing your thing you deserve it 🫡
@aeronwolfe707218 күн бұрын
I am not black. But I love black people and I know one thing, great leaders of American black history would be ASHAMED of the current black culture. I want better for black people.
@anamarisa280017 күн бұрын
All blk leaders were zio puppets used to force multiculturalism against the west
@JAC3DG33K12 күн бұрын
Great content and just subscribed. Agree with everything you said in this video. I’m not perfect but sick and tired of the worst or the worst being celebrated in “so-called” black culture.
@ShonnMorris18 күн бұрын
Loving this channel more and more. Just because we share a skin color doesn't mean we're the same people. Culture trumps skin color any day. People all over the world understand this except many Americans. If we don't share the same values, beliefs, and way of doing things, we are not the same people.
@MsElfMannequin17 күн бұрын
I’ve been saying this for a while now. Just sharing the same pedigree isn’t enough 🤷🏾♀️.
@problematic325515 күн бұрын
"You deserve what you tolerate" -Synthetic Man
@aquariuswaive15 күн бұрын
@@problematic3255 thank very much fam🙏🏾🙏🏾🙏🏾
@problematic325515 күн бұрын
@@aquariuswaive no problem, taking a stand against degeneracy and moral backsliding into a "new normal" and "everything is everything, there is no black and white it's all grey" is commendable
@CH3353N1NJ4513 күн бұрын
Hey, Shoutout from a fellow Aussie.
@hackshawnorris14 күн бұрын
It's easy to tell an American who has lived outside America for more than a month.
@blixx6613 күн бұрын
God bless you. I genuinely hope your words lead to change for good. Humanity needs to become better now more than ever.
@nelsonmcgee354518 күн бұрын
Good is bad and bad is good.
@msmichelle219617 күн бұрын
Biblical
@rdpill17 күн бұрын
I don't care what no ninja says.....i separated and moved away....best decision i made
@Chud_Bud_Supreme16 күн бұрын
Sometimes you have to.
@tyreerockets16 күн бұрын
That’s the way, our community is broken asl by design; all you can really do is save your damn self these days..
@josiahfife183618 күн бұрын
That outro song is really starting to stick nice work man
@Willitbeover19 күн бұрын
Imagine ebt being a whole culture 😂
@valchan225812 күн бұрын
Im so glad to hear somebody say what I’ve been thinking in my head for so long. Alot of issues in society dont stem from skin color or some other crap like that, its from culture. Im as white as can be, but I moved here from the Eastern Bloc when i was little. Alot of stuff white folk here were doing, was not stuff that aligned with our culture back home. Its all a matter of perspective with these things, and alot of people simply refuse to move themselves to a better vantage point to see better
@Plum_bird18 күн бұрын
SAY IT LOUD!!!!!!!
@ijiahpeavy242917 күн бұрын
First video of yours I’ve watched. Love the content so far she I’m definitely gonna stay in tuned. Song at the end sounds good as well 🙏🏾
@zeket-o6z6 күн бұрын
i think the foundational issue is the lack of father-figures in the home. once that's solved all the other issues will fix themselves
@SatchPatch25Күн бұрын
As a Puerto Rican that grew up in the projects i can relate on many levels. We need to rewire our mentality. We need to stop acting like fools and relearn common sense. When we choose to do wrong then wrong things are going to happen. The "system" isn't against us, we are trying to go against the system is the completely wrong way. Start doing right and watch your world come to light.
@canadagoof19 күн бұрын
An important difference between "black" criminal culture and italian criminal culture is that the Italians imported theirs; the mafia cancer was already metastasized in Italian society for centuries. So, basically, there's still a lot of hope for Black society.
@toffeenut133618 күн бұрын
Yeah, where?
@queenofnyc558417 күн бұрын
Theres no hope lol..
@TheWarriorScholarTWS15 күн бұрын
@@queenofnyc5584there is definitely hope
@CH3353N1NJ4513 күн бұрын
Synthetic Man once said "You deserve what you tolerate" Easiest way to deal with it is to take a zero tolerance policy. For example:- Outright Boycott artists like Sexy Red/Ice Spice/etc. I mean openly protest it. You see a couple of hustlers/thugs hanging about, best them within a millimetre of there lives and keep on doing it until they quit. Someone shoplifting, crashtackle them drag them back to the store by the ear and force an apology. After that, refer to thugs and hustlers. All of this needs to come from the Black Community as a whole. Also do some research into who is funding your elected officials. Follow the money. If there shonky, vote'em out.
@CloroxBleach-fx2iyКүн бұрын
This young man is so articulate mashAllah, may God almighty make him a source of improvement for the black folks of the US.
@vancodling42233 күн бұрын
Your experience in Africa was my experience in Europe - all these people that Americans see as the same "race", but theyre culturally miles apart and are all racist towards each other. The primacy of race in the American identity isnt surprising, since we're all descendents of foreign lands. Still, the idea that im supposed to look at a guy whose whole lineage is from american slavery, and a guy who moved here from Senegal last year, as the same because they share a "race", is goofy as hell. Its an obstacle to solving actual problems and addressing the actual consequences of history ✌️
@malleuscalgaryКүн бұрын
There is a great and beautiful diversity in the white race but most people are not willing to have that conversation
@debolada66507 күн бұрын
A dash of sanity! Interesting channel. Cultures in transition. Hechale ganas, compa!
@Fentmaxxerfinalboss13 күн бұрын
The sad thing is that most people won't hear the actual content of this message. They will instantly label whoever tries to voice this point of view as a uncle tom or a traitor to their people.
@omoowobhd15 күн бұрын
Great commentary. Thomas Sowell expounded on this subject brilliantly. Seemingly, people don't research or read much even though knowledge abounds and is more readily available than ever before...
@RMMusic6929 күн бұрын
i think we need to bring back calling out shameful behavior. aside from all racial aspects...we often do dumb stuff and we need to be held accountable. otherwise we aint social anymore. we gotta take care of each other
@stevenkoehler601814 күн бұрын
You are a great commentator on our times and culture
@wadejones122718 күн бұрын
STRAIGHT FACTS!!!
@rainangelx731818 күн бұрын
Love your channel!
@ervinhodge261318 күн бұрын
It's sad, how we are comfortable with doing wrong. But don't congratulate positive acts. Call them needs. The media plays a big part of our actions because we emulate movies, and they always portray us as drug dealers, addicts and killers.
@ervinhodge261317 күн бұрын
Thanks
@CH3353N1NJ4513 күн бұрын
Who controls the media ???
@QenaitheCustodianGuard6 күн бұрын
Love what you're saying here, from what I see on social media I can tell you that every person (mostly in America) needs to see this video. Stay real!
@DR-bu1sr19 күн бұрын
Everybody knows this don't worry about that
@harleywilson882916 күн бұрын
Such a great message 👏
@randidennis779019 күн бұрын
Then again, starting in the mid 70's , if one were to say what you said [and I did then], one would get ostracized and practically persona non grata. Now the criminal and lower case culture is celebrated, not just here, but in Europe and Asia. This is what happens when a part of the society throws out values and substitutes them with 'street cred', as in being a thug.
@TitB119918 күн бұрын
I think you mean there and in South America and Africa.
@randidennis779018 күн бұрын
@@TitB1199 I wish that were the case, but yeah...Europe and Asia [meaning Japan and S. Korea] have bought into this as well.
@h0neym00nl0ve016 күн бұрын
@@randidennis7790you mean through the rap becoming mainstream there and that rappers there are copying black rap culture?
@randidennis779016 күн бұрын
@h0neym00nl0ve0 That, as well as what is associated with rap. As in the attitude.
@IllMatic9715 күн бұрын
@@randidennis7790 ah yes, the mid 70s. One of the most violent eras in American history.
@xvingar63185 күн бұрын
It's like what kendrick said on Part 5, our foundation was trained to accept whatever follows. Until we break the low bar standards we have for ourselves, we will never see what we could have, it will always be what I don't have. Thinking lower of yourself only makes you give up on yourself and focus on the trivial to fill the void. It's sad but it's all we got, we must work with it and do our best to change.
@Grav3s0715 күн бұрын
Very well spoken brother, it's too bad that there's a lot of bad apples in the black culture community 😕
@markcreamer617918 күн бұрын
Sooooo much wisdom! But how many will listen?
@CristyanBernardes7 күн бұрын
I agree with you , my gen z black people are lost into that street culture... But i wont lose hope cause there's alot gen z black people that don't fuck with this culture anymore we kinda changing 🙏🏽
@Mr55556d10 күн бұрын
Ken in Beverly Hills definitely don’t mess with Bill Bob from Alabama it’s about time the Calvin’s separate themselves from the Tyrones
@AvirekzFrostif5 күн бұрын
My favorite man to listen to while I wash the dishes
@D4rkStarGaming15 күн бұрын
Finally glad to see brothers like you elevating and breaking out of the programming, realizing we can be more
@ZHXNEL12 күн бұрын
He’s from Africa, he didn’t break out of programming.
@garythecyclingnerd62192 күн бұрын
The issue with the old petty theft laws was that many punishments were hyper-punitive and put lots of kids on a school to prison pipeline. The goal of reducing petty theft penalties was to allow you to redeem yourself. The problem is that it went too far the other way and effectively legalized petty theft. This was compounded by SFPD just not doing their job *and* retail associations straight up lying about how much shrinkage was occurring. We need a reasonable adjustment to the system that allows, particularly young men, to redeem themselves from mistakes.
@civildiscourse762618 күн бұрын
Even in hip hop/rap culture there are sub-genres and cultures. Gangster rap/drill/trap etc is not the only kind but it came the most popular after the early 90s…
@minismalls309612 күн бұрын
I personally think it was deliberate. it used to be that it didn't even get radio play but now it's the face of hiphop. it allows for the demonization of the genre and isn't a good representation imo