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You want the government less involved in your life. You don't want the government giving you no money for how many babies you have. You don't want the government feeding your family if you can't feed it. That's communism in almost a fashion. So we want the freedom to be able to pursue the American dream, life, liberty and pursuit of happiness. And also have the government tell you what, when, who and where.
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All right, guys, we're in Dallas, Charleston's hometown, baby. Yeah, yeah, yeah, hometown hero. Let's go, part three. What are you doing around here lately for the community? Nothing. Yeah, I'm hardly here. Yeah, yeah, I'm hardly here. So, uh...
I'm the go-to guy with the money now. So, yeah, yeah. You think money changed you up a little bit? Yeah, money changes everything. Yeah. I like the honesty, at least, because some people will admit that it doesn't. Yeah, you know, at first, I didn't wear, you know, Gucci shoes. I got a pair of Gucci's now, man. Yeah, you know, I used to make fun of the niggas that bought the Gucci's. But, no, man, nothing feels greater than to be able to...
take care of your family without any problems and any worries, and then still have some extra means to take care of your mom,
fulfill your kids' dreams and desires, you know, financially, put them in positions to be better individuals and people. So, yeah, that feel good. Absolutely. And it also changes your mindset. So certain things I don't do anymore, certain places you just don't go anymore. Yeah. Like what? Certain strip clubs. Yeah, certain strip clubs, certain environments. So the earlier part of this year, yeah,
You know, I kind of live downtown Bishop Arch District, so it's kind of a fine line of where gentrification and the hood is starting to divide one another. So I didn't want to put my quilts and my comforters in the washing machine, so I went to a laundromat in the area.
And some young guys tried to rob me for my jewelry. Yeah, for my jewelry. But in my mind, I'm thinking I could normally, you know, just walk into a laundromat and it not happen. But, yeah, somebody tried to rob me. You think they knew you or you think it was just... Yeah, they knew exactly who I was because one of the guys asked to take a picture with me. And so that's what made a red flag go up because he said, man, Charleston in the hood. Well, in my mind, the real estate people don't say this is the hood. This is, yeah, it's a new district. So...
So I left and came back. I went to the grocery store and came back. And when I came back, that's when they tried to rob me. But I didn't cooperate. I still got my jewelry.
You think that was a smart move? Because some people will kill you for that. It was a natural reaction. For one, I was in shock. Like, man, I can't believe this shit. Because in my mind, ain't nobody going to bother me. I'm from here. You know what I'm saying? And I'm a well-respected guy around here. So yeah, in my mind, ain't nobody going to do this. So when it happened, it was shocking. But yeah. You held your ground. It was just a natural reaction.
- Flight or flight? - Yeah, yeah, it was an attraction. - Damn, sorry to hear that, man. Is your Instagram still banned? What happened with that? - Yeah, it's still gone. - It's been like a month, right? - Yeah, this is the first time I've never been able to get it back. Can somebody help me? - I've been trying, man. Everyone wants money though, that's the thing. - Well, it depends on how much they want, because it does make a lot of money.
I mean, shit. I put you in touch with Zach, but maybe we'll figure it out. Okay, cool. Yeah, you need that shit back, man. It's not the same without you on there. That's what people say, you know. Well, a lot of my Kamala Harris posts was being flagged and reported, so I think that had a lot to do with it. Yeah. What were you saying about her? A lot. You know, just a lot about the election, you know, the Democratic Party, her questionable history, you know, with her part in it.
her promiscuous years in college. Yeah, I was going in pretty hard. So just attacking her character, basically. This episode is brought to you by State Farm.
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Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. Taylor Swift. All in the name of politics, though. Yeah. Don't let allergies keep you up at night. Sambrosa Night Syrup is your more homeopathic solution for a restful night. Blending the sweetness of a honey base with seven organic herbs and a small dose of antihistamine, Sambrosa provides effective relief from allergy symptoms while calming your body for a peaceful night's rest. It's over-the-counter, gentle, and made from the ingredients you trust. Wake up refreshed with Sambrosa Night Syrup. Visit Sambrosa.com today and rest easy tonight.
Having fun, you know, because I'm doing it from a joking comedian standpoint. And I always thought comedians kind of had a free pass in kind of being controversial in the things that they say in the name of telling jokes, but not in today's America. Yeah, Alex Stein is getting canceled right now for what he said at Tucker Carlson's rally yesterday. Yeah. Just for making jokes about Kamala. Yeah, yeah. So, so...
So typically, I have some friends in the entertainment industry.
Shout out Hollywood Unlocked, Jason Lee, who I made a call, who once got my Instagram back for me on my birthday. So when I lost it, I reached out to him. But I know he's him and Kamala are good friends. Oh, he's friends with Kamala? He's a very good friend with Kamala. I didn't know that. And so, yeah, I haven't heard back from him. Wow. Yeah, what's up, Jason? Damn, I love you.
I didn't know he was with Kamala like that. Yeah, they good friends. Oh, crap. Yeah, they good friends. She's got some powerful endorsements recently. Taylor Swift, IRS, a few other big celebrities. Yeah, a lot of big ones, man. She got hip-hop artists. Everybody across the board. Yeah, well, hip-hop, that's been a known thing that the Democrats have a lot of pull in that space. Yeah, but they normally don't get guys like Plyce. Hmm.
You know, that's, you know, Plyos was a, that's a gangster gangster. You know, normally they don't reach that low. That's true, yeah. Yeah, man, they don't reach low. Yeah, you know, to try to inform the uninformed with this presidential vote, so. They must have offered him a bag, man. Yeah, because he's adamant about it. Oh, yeah, he's pushing it hard? Yeah, he's pushing it hard. Damn. What do you think about Jaguar Wright right now, going after some people? Have you seen her videos? I've seen a lot of her videos. I don't watch them in length, but.
She's like a pot of gumbo. Truth, facts, bullshit, lies, exaggeration are all made into one. And it's you to try to figure out if you listen long enough or if you're interested to see if she's being honest or if what she's saying is the truth. Some of the stuff she's saying is happening. 60% of what she's saying is. Yeah, it's pretty interesting. This Diddy stuff is crazy. A lot of people are going to be falling off from this. Yeah.
I think more people were participating than they... I think more people participated and played with it than what we think. So many. You see CEOs resigning of music labels. Not only that, no one have ever shamed him for it. No one have...
When you watch the Jeffrey Epstein's documentary on Netflix, at some point, the other elite people were saying, who is that guy? What do we actually do? Well, where did he get his money from? So when things would be said about him, there were people who would shy away from him. They wouldn't take pictures with him no more. They wouldn't be seen with him anymore. Nobody ever did that to Sean Combs. Mm hmm.
Nobody. So even now, nobody from no no major black platform have came out and publicly shamed him. Even when Cassie came with the lawsuit, it's always been whispers. Right. None of his friends are speaking out. LeBron hasn't said anything. And they seem pretty sympathetic to what he's going through. I haven't heard no one come out and say, lock him up and throw away the key like they've done R. Kelly.
Because most people have been to his parties knowing what goes on at the after parties of his parties. Whether they participated, whether they spectated, whether they was there or not.
Everyone had knowledge that this went on at these parties because it's always been speculation or it's always been a dark cloud that's kind of been held over his head with rumors in the industry. Right. But why do you think now was the time they chose to attack him? Because it seems really planned out, right? Two things I believe that happened.
that I believe this is happening. One, when he spoke out and tried to boycott, was it the Oscars or the Grammys? I don't remember which one. So a few years ago, they wanted to boycott. And so he spoke to a room full of Hollywood executives, movie producers and executives, music executives,
And he spoke to them as if he could tell them what to do, as if they was wrong for not adding more black people. So and he spoke with a boldness and a conviction as if he was above them. I said, man, he in trouble. The second was the liquor company that he's in the lawsuit dispute with. He's pushing back the other Ciroc company. He's been pushing. Listen in Starbucks. It's a great day for coffee.
Act toward them. So I think... I didn't even know about that lawsuit. Yeah, I think that was his downfall. Damn. Yeah, I mean, we'll see what happens. What are your predictions? Do you think he'll find a way out of this one? The feds got a 98, almost 100% conviction rate. So it's hard to beat the feds. They don't want your money. They want your ass. Mm-hmm.
Yeah, the feds, when they get you, they don't want your money. Bernie Madoff, they don't want the money. They want your ass. They want you locked up. Yeah, the only thing that could get you out of the feds is information. What can you tell us to get us somebody else? Right. So you give us the right information. They let Sammy the Bull go. He had over two dozen murders, but he gave the right information to go be free again. So, yeah, you can tell to get out. Where do you rank Diddy on this totem pole? Like, you think he's able to provide information and there's higher-ups that he could tell on, or...?
Yeah. Yeah. Do you think he's at the top? I believe he's the top or the bottom. Yeah, he's at the top of us, but he's the bottom of them. So he's not a part of the 1% of people who control the world. He's not a part of that 1%. I believe he was a pawn. Wow. Yeah, I believe he was a pawn.
That's crazy because he was in a lot of A-list celebrities' lives in one way or another, right? He was connected to them. Man, we can go back to the Obamas, to the Clintons. Man, the who's who of America. Yeah, and he walked with that confidence. He acted like he was pretty much untouchable in all the videos I've seen. Yeah, so, you know, he was with the elite in the who's who of America. And so he was flying Cassie all around the world. You know, yeah.
You ever have any dealings with him or running into him? No, I just made it to this level of success. Man, yeah, no. Man, I was a pole nigga when he was doing all this. No, I just made it to this level of success. When they were having all the parties, I wasn't nowhere near this financial success. Yeah, hell no. Now you're getting invited, though. Yeah, yeah, yeah. I done peaked in a few rooms before. You're going to be at the White Owl party next year. I hope I do. Yeah, yeah, I hope I do. I got your perfect outfit. I can see you there, man. Yeah.
No, you're really blowing up, but you're also maintaining it. Like a lot of people blow up and fall off, you know? Yeah. Growth and development. And I have an intention to evolve.
I don't want to stay the same doing this, hollering on the internet, cussing out street guys and fuck you, motherfucker, fuck you. I believe I got some talent. I believe I can act. So I took in a few movies. I believe I'm good in doing stand-up comedy. So I try to practice on being a better stand-up comedian. And then so I come to the internet to use things to see what make people laugh on the internet. And then, OK, I'm going to come back and put that on stage with you.
So I use the internet like for a training ground now. Right. Yeah, I go train for my new material. If I come up with a new character, the concept to see if it's, you know, will it turn people away? Will they accept it? You know, so I just come try the new ideas on the internet now. That's smart. Yeah. Using it like a funnel. So you get all the attention. Yeah. And then from there, you're figuring out how to monetize it. Yeah.
- That's smart dude, yeah. People just see you as this wild guy, but there's a lot of levels to you. - Yeah, because most of us are stuck on the internet. It used to be, we were stuck on television. We were literally run home to go watch television shows. And most of us believe the people that we grew up watching
or who they were on television because we never seen them outside of that character and so that's that's what had happened to me so uh i say some of the most wildest shit like yeah i say some of the most wildest shit uh and people have attached me to what i say rather than what i've done or what i do yeah how have you been able to navigate cancel culture people coming at you
saying fuck the council culture how you go counsel me when you didn't create me and so what the council culture uh does uh it has ways of silencing you so this is actually my since the pandemic started uh this is my this is almost what 18 19 instagram pages accounts that have been deleted damn so that's part of the council culture uh i'm shadow banned uh
There are fake pages that's literally scamming people in my name. And I'm reporting these pages to social media platforms and there's nothing being done about it. But I have a real fan base. I have a real audience. So I focus on my audience. I focus on my demographics because I have a target demographic. Kind of like a politician does with their constituents. I focus strictly on my constituents.
and fuck the rest. I feel that. Yeah. And you've gone pretty political lately, right? You're pretty outspoken on that. Yeah. Yeah. Uh, Aiden Ross had reached out to me when he sat down with, uh, Donald Trump. So, but two, three days before he sat down with Donald Trump, um, he invited me to come sit down, uh, with him and Trump.
But of course, I got a little legal situation I'm trying to take care of that prevents me from getting past Secret Service clearance. Damn, that sucks. You got invited to the White House by Aiden? Yeah, well, he actually came to Miami and I think they did it in Miami. They did in Mar-a-Lago. Yeah, Mar-a-Lago. Yeah. Wow. I didn't know you needed clearance. That makes sense because assassination attempts. Yeah. They're probably being super protective.
Man, they're coming at him. They just found out five different groups are trying to kill him. Did you see that? Yeah, that's scary. Super scary. Especially for the other party to seem like they're okay with it. They're not saying anything about it. They're not saying anything, man. No one's coming out and even giving him any... There's no empathy for him.
let alone sympathy. No one seemed to feel sorry that it's happening to him. So that's what's scary. I've seen people promoting it. Yeah. Oh, man, I wish I got him. Yeah, that's scary, especially for us in this country. Dude, if he goes down, it's going to be crazy. You know, I'm scared. They're not stopping, clearly. I mean, the first one was like a big deal, and then the second one happened a week later, and people don't even care, it seems like. Well, from...
From the sitting president, they tiptoe around saying, condemning it. They're not condemning it. Kamala Harris and her campaign, they're not condemning it. The media, surely, they're not condemning it. Definitely not. So I almost feel sorry for them, and I don't feel sorry for many people. Yeah. But I...
Well, I empathize, right? Feeling sorry does nothing. So I try to empathize. Empathy is having the ability to put yourself in someone else's shoes or just having a thought to even imagine what it would be like. So just even to conjure that thought, that's how you happen to have an empathy for other humans. So I try to empathize rather than feeling sorry. Feeling sorry is having pity. It's useless, right? Yeah. But man...
This guy is swimming up an upstream battle, let alone fighting 32 convictions to have him appeal. They're attacking him from every angle, man. Every angle in the tenacity, in the resiliency that he's still able to maintain in the face of the world. Yeah. The average man will break.
So I salute him for it, man. I got a lot of respect for him. So the respect and admiration stops me from feeling sorry. So I find ways to empathize. Right. Yeah. Have you rocked with him since since 16 or did you join on later? No, no, no. I mean, I've been with him since a kid. Oh, yeah. Yeah. I've been I've been I've been having admiration and respect and adoring Donald Trump since we was a kid.
I was born in the 70s, homie. I grew up in the 80s. All the black entertainers loved him during the 80s. From the Jet magazines to Ebony magazines, he'd been in all of them.
In the 90s, late 80s and the 90s, every major hip hop rapper that you can think of from LL Cool J to Young Jeezy to Snoop Dogg to Nelly have made reference. Donald Trump, Bill Gates, let me in now. So Donald Trump name has been mentioned in over 50.
I think in almost over 300 rap songs within the hip hop community. And that was just during the 80s and the 90s. So when you think about in the 2000s, when I seen him with 50 Cent, I seen him with G-Unit, man, I've seen him with NBA players. So then all of a sudden, when he came out with the television show, The Apprentice,
So The Apprentice was on television for a long time. I never heard nobody say he was a racist when he had some of the most major black stars and celebrities that was on The Apprentice, from Little John, Omarosa. You can go a list of people that even Claudia Jordan was on there, somebody who bashes him all the time. So he had a whole...
Man, a whole resume. He got an award in the 80s with Rosa Parks, Muhammad Ali. So I'm knowledgeable of this as a black person. So it wasn't until...
He decided to run as a Republican that you all of a sudden heard the media and media outlets and other people. Well, he's a racist. He was, man, I ain't never heard that before. So they can't trick me when they trick me as a kid to believe otherwise. Right. So how effective was that on the black community? Did that change their votes, you think? Yeah, it was very effective because most people, most black people don't have the knowledge. Not that I have, but most black people are
Most Americans, let me just say this, but most black people are uninformed voters because you don't know anything about the candidates until they begin to get down to the primaries. You really don't start paying attention until they're down to the last two. Right. So...
I learned in college, homie, you know, studying politics and political science, that majority of our politicians, majority of these companies, that's why they put fine print in fine print. They rely on us being uninformed.
That's what keep them in power. That's what keep them in their position, us really not knowing. So that's why you never hear politicians answer direct questions. They talk around. So the uninformed voter typically comes out of my community. Not only that, once they turn us against you, we're uninformed, so we're not going to vote properly. Then we're going to have the lowest voter turnout. So we lose in two categories.
We're going to have the lowest voter turnout. So I used to be a precinct chair. I used to be an election judge around here for the Tarrant County GOP Republican Party. So I would set up the elections, taking all the votes. And, man, some of the precincts in the district that I was in, out of five precincts, three of them would have no voters to show up. Wow. So that's part of why most people stay in power for so long.
It's the low voter turnout in the uninformed voter Wow, so so once they tell us that he's racist and we buy into the racist narrative. Oh Man, we lose they ran with that narrative man. They got me. I almost got me with it to be honest Oh till I did some research but the average person is just gonna see that headline and be like, yeah, I agree When you understand racism capitalism and socialism You can't balance both
At one point in time, this country was driven by racism. It was built on racism. Capitalism took over at one point in time, right? Nothing seems to be beating capitalism, not even racism. Nothing seems to be beating capitalism right now. Right. Because why would it matter what race you are if you're making money? Yeah.
Yeah, this is a capitalist country. This is not a racist country. You still have racist people in this country who's in positions and power to make choices and decisions. But this country is spinning on capitalism. And I like that. I mean, there's companies that I think ethically or morally wrong, but overall capitalism is pretty good. Yeah. It's better than socialism. Yeah. It's better than socialism. Democrats...
For the most part, prefer socialism. Government entitlement. The government can fix everything. Yeah, nah. So what do you think about the programs of paying people back, like food stamps, Social Security, all that? Marxism. Yeah, some Marxists. Yeah, nah, man. You want the government less involved in your life. You don't want the government giving you no money for however many babies you had. Hmm.
You don't want the government feeding your family if you can't feed it. Because then that's communism in almost a fashion. So we want the freedom to be able to pursue the American dream, life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness, and also have the government tell you what, when, who, and where. At some point, they'll say, okay, we didn't give you enough money for kids. You can't have any more children. So...
Man, this country was built off Americans helping one another, not the government. I feel that. Yeah, there's been a few people watching this in Section 8 pissed off, but I think, yeah, when you become too reliant, it's not a good thing. Hey, neighbor, got some sugar I can borrow. Hey, you know, it was barter. Man, not the government. Coming in and seeing every month you get $700 worth of food stamps, but I'm going to check and make sure who lives here.
You can't get married. Men, when you apply for government assistance, you open your life up to them. Man, they got some questions for your ass. Wait, you can't get married on food stamps? You might not get food stamps if you're married. Wow. As a black couple. Because of the household income. There you go. Yeah.
Damn. And then people purposely make less so they could still stay on it. So they're never going to advance, right? Yeah. That's the one thing. Like, why would you want to just stay at the same level? It's a level of security. It's a safety net. I could lose my job one day because I know I may show up late. I really don't have a work ethic. I'm unmotivated sometimes. So why would I give up this for that? I can rely on this.
I can't rely on that enough because that involves me relying completely upon me working every day, going to work every day. So I don't have to keep getting this government assistance. Well, the days I don't feel like going to work, uh, what supplements that the government assistance. Right. So, uh, I've had that mindset before. Yeah. I've had that mindset before. Uh, man, I don't want to lose my disability, uh, because it was a safety net. Uh,
And in the mentality that I had at the time was an irresponsible mentality. Right. Because I know the disability, the disability and the food stamp go pay the rent. It covers what I live. I kind of hustle to come up with the rest. I wanted to be responsible at times. I wanted to be responsible at times.
And so I wasn't willing to give up my safety net. And so I understand that mindset. It's an irresponsible, poor mindset. So what was that moment that got you out of that? Because it was recently, right? Yeah. I had a conversation with my son's principal. And he could hear outside of the door, but I didn't know he could hear. And I was telling his principal how I'm a poor, struggling single father. And that I was driving my son through three cities to make sure they get to school so he can get the proper education.
So when I came out that office, we got in the car. My son had tears in his eyes when he looked at me. He said, Dad, are we really poor? That question, man, it body rocked my soul. Because you really don't know if children have a concept of what poor is. But he was saddened by that, that he heard me say that. And I had to be honest, because we were staying in a one-bedroom apartment. I was getting disability, food stamps. Yeah, we were poor.
I said, "Yeah, mijo, we're poor." And he looked at me and he said, "Was there anything you can do about it, Dad?" Man, I almost broke down crying. The man in me replied without even thinking. I said, "Yes, every day I'm trying to do something about it." But I wasn't. I was content with where we were. It was too difficult. At that time,
I couldn't fathom what could I do to get out of this situation financially. I couldn't think of nothing. I couldn't think of nothing that I could do financially to change these conditions other than going back to school. And that's how I ended up back in school trying to pursue a law degree. Yeah, that's how I ended up back in school to try to do something about the old condition.
Wow, that's incredible. I didn't know you went through that, man. Thanks for sharing that. That's really deep. Yeah, so I was a non-traditional. I went back to community college like in my mid-30s, early 30s, all the way up until I was 40. So I did almost five years from community college to the university level. But I found a way to...
uh, subsidize, uh, the, the financial aid, the, the student loans, kind of like you would with welfare. So I figured out how to use the, the, the, uh, just your, your subsidized loan money, your grant money and scholarship money and use that to live off of,
Smart. Yeah. Nice. Yeah, because the loans are like, their interest rate's really high, right? Yeah. But if you do right with it, just pay it back later. Right. But right now, I'm getting ahead. I'm changing, yeah. So, and just, so you figure, man, every August, the start of a fall semester, you're getting $6,000, $7,000 in financial aid money. Well, you're
Normally books go cost you about three or four. Well, I'm smart enough to know I'm gonna go rent the books. I'm gonna go pay rent up for three or four or five months so it take the financial pressure off me, of me and the kids. Now I can think, think a little bit. So now I can go study, I can move a little bit more, do some little odds and ends jobs until the next check come.
Yeah, so that's what I did to subsidize my life so I could have some financial, some breathing room, right? Some breathing room so I can think clearer and better. Wow. Yeah. So university really helped you then? Yeah, community college did. That was just the community college, then the university. So yeah, because...
I don't want to make it seem like, you know, you go just to get the money. But on a university level, those checks go from being $6,000 to closer to $10,000. And the longer you're in school, the more they was giving at the time. So between the subsidized and unsubstitized student loans, that was down to, what, $15,000. You get another...
what, 5,600, 5,700 in Pell Grant. You get another, what, almost 3,600 in your state grants. And then I was doing this. I was writing papers for scholarships. So I was winning scholarships, getting another $5,000, $10,000. All that was being put in my pocket. It was just broken down by way of semesters. Wow, so you were a good writer, too. Yeah, yeah, yeah. So now, homie, so that...
That became my outlet, that became my avenue to transition from being associated with the street elements, right? The criminal elements of society to find a way to disassociate it. I found another avenue out. So you used academics to get out of that. Yeah. It's interesting. Yeah, because I have a different take on college. I don't think it's pretty useful for most people, but I can't even deny what you did. It worked. Yeah, it's not for everybody.
You have to know what you want. I just happened to go late in life and knew what I wanted, right? Man, you have to be groomed for college. You can't graduate and say, oh, this is what I think I want to do. You have to have a plan.
because it's so many barriers and obstacles from the time you try to go enroll, do the financial aid that can hinder you, right? So you have to know, and this is what you really want to do. Other than that, you got to go find a trade. Some people need a job. Some people need to go to prison. Some guys need the military. But only you and the people who...
who know you best knows what you need. Whether that's a teacher, a mentor, a coach, they know you and they know you best, right? So what I mean by they know you best, they don't see the bad in you. They see the potential. The people who know you best always highlight the potential that you have. And they try to direct you towards your potential. The other people highlight the bad.
And that keeps you torn down. So I tell young people, man, some niggas need prison. Some of y'all need to go to prison.
Man, I know some niggas need prison because I know what prison offers. I know what it does. And for the most part, I've seen most people come back from prison better men than worse. Oh, I thought it was the opposite. Well, they come back better. They just come back to worse conditions. And so they revert back to their old ways. Right, because the reversion rate is pretty high. Yeah. It's like 80%, right? Yeah, the recidivism rate is very high. What is it? 80% are back within five years. Yeah.
Yeah, 80% are back within five years. I think it's 70% are back rearrested within one year. But you're saying they're better, though. They are better. Most guys who go to prison who couldn't read can read when they come home. Most guys who... Most people don't come back and commit the same crimes. They reoffend by way of violation of parole or maybe probation stipulations. So...
I went to the boys' home when I was 14, came out at 21. So I grew up from 91 to 98 in the boys' home. I watched many young men transfer from the boys' home to prison. I got out in 98. I started seeing guys come home who had been locked up from 89, 90, 91, 92, 93, 94. They're starting to come home, and now we're close to 40. We're down to 2000. So they haven't done 28 years, 29 years.
Most came home better men. Most people reoffend because it's not that they come home better criminals. I mean, most people come home with the intention of trying to do right. But they're going back home to either the same community or they're going back to the same people, but worse conditions.
My mother's trying to do right when they come home for the most part. They don't want to go back there. But because of the conditions and the circumstances that they find themselves in, they end up falling back and going to what they know to work that once used to work. You go back to what you know. I'm trying to do right, but I don't know how to do right consistently for it to work. I know how to do wrong. I'm going to go back to what I know. So...
Man, most people are going back for using drugs or maybe selling drugs or trying to eat because they got child support. They don't have no license, can't find no job. So it's like when I came home. All my childhood issues had been healed. All my childhood issues had been resolved. So I went in at 14, came out at 21. Man, I was a completely new person. But when I came home...
I came home to a community. I had a great home life. I had a great support system. But, man, everything around me was criminally impacted by selling drugs. I wanted to go to college. But, man, I also wanted to sell drugs, too, because it would seem like cool to sell drugs in college. Beat a weed, man, on a college campus. I got caught with 10 pounds of weed. Damn. But, man, I ain't really know nothing about selling weed.
But culturally, that's what was out here. If you wanted to get a girl, you wanted to be the man during that time, he had to have a doughboy image. A man that got up and go to work every day during my era, they laughed at him. It was the doughboy. The nigga with the beeper, the phone, the car, just the doughboy nigga. So you competing as a, so that was our competition as wanting to do right.
So even the guys who did right look like the guys who did wrong. Whether it was the NBA players or the NFL players just acting and looking like the street niggas. Gilbert Arenas bringing all the guns to the stadium. Pac-Man Jones throwing all the money up in there at the strip club and having to shoot out to the strip. So these are the guys we looking to do right, but they acting like the guys that's doing wrong. You see what I'm saying? Yeah. We have more...
access to the guys that's doing wrong than the guys that's doing right. I've never seen a man get up and go to work every day. I only seen my mom and them get up and go to work. Only for me to wake up and whatever man I was exposed to, they were earning their clothes to go get clean, to go outside and hang on the street corner to sell drugs, pimp hoes. So I had access to see them.
When I cut on my television, the guys who supposed to be doing right look like the guys that's doing wrong. So as a kid and my young and impressionable mind, I can't separate the two. I can't separate the guy on television from the guy in my community. And I don't see nothing in life that's a flip side to what I'm seeing. I don't see the guy. I don't see a banker in real life. And I don't see a bank on television.
Bill Cosby, Dr. Cliff Huxtable was a doctor. Every doctor I went to were white. So I couldn't, I didn't, I was looking for black doctors because I lost my eye as a kid. So everywhere I went, I'd be looking for a Dr. Cliff Huxtable. I didn't see that. I don't know how many kids I knew like Jasmine Guy and Dwayne Wayne on A Different World who was in college. That was only on television. I'm
My cousin Tasha graduated from high school, but man, she wasn't giving no party. The prison party was way more electrifying. So there was nothing appealing other than this hour television. So it was hard to decipher as a kid what to be.
when you don't know what to be, what to identify with. Yeah, I think that's the importance of having that father figure too, right? I was in a divorced household. I didn't really have a father growing up too. Yeah. I felt pretty lost, honestly. Yeah, because how do you identify? Your mother is giving you, she's telling you right from wrong. She's giving you the right instructions, but it doesn't give you an identity to identify.
Avoid peer pressure to be confident enough to say no. I'm not doing it. Uh Dad is what gives you that 100% I was falling for all the peer pressure man. You and me both Yeah, man, just trying to fit in smoking weed drinking. I was falling for it all Yeah, and whatever and and and just a little thing that mom was telling you to do it don't work amongst boys. I
The diplomacy that mom is trying to get you to institute among boys, they'll think you're a pussy. Excuse my language, but yeah, man, mom could run over you, man. That's a pussy. So you need dad chromosomes, man, at some point. You need his words. You need his instructions. You just need mom to nurture. Yeah. Yeah. So that was my problem. I just wanted to be accepted.
I just wanted to be a part of something that had a male presence in it. Yeah. You see that with a lot of divorced households or people that don't grow up with a certain parent, right? Yeah. They just want that acceptance. Yep. Yeah, and then they join a gang or whatever. Like, they go down a path. Extreme shit. Yeah, yeah, extreme shit to try to counter those inner feelings. Yeah, because for the most part...
You don't know how to express those insecurities, that inferiority that you feel by not having... So it's hard to even identify it in such a way that you can't even feel confident about expressing how you feel. Right, you don't want to be seen as weak, right? Yeah, yeah. So I'm 47 now and I'm articulating. I couldn't articulate this at 18, 17. So I would display it in...
inappropriate adolescent behavior where that was through violence cursing fussing uh committing a crime uh it was just it it was the release of being impulsive man yeah were you pretty hot-headed back then pretty angry yeah yeah yeah yeah yeah i was a hothead yeah i was because i was a spoiled kid uh i was a spoiled kid uh who couldn't handle rejection uh
I didn't know how to accept no. You know, mom didn't say no. We was, you know, we was some spoiled kids. Uh...
but not financially just spoiled emotionally. Oh, no, we spoiled financially. My mom worked at General Motors. Oh, so she, she was very financially stable. So she was, she tried to make up financially for, for, for her working so much. So it's the lack of parental supervision. When we was getting out of school, mom was going to work. So we had a lot of free time on our hand. So mom is trying to financially give us the things, uh,
that she think we should have and we wanted to try to compensate for not being there. Right, but that doesn't work on certain people, right? Nah, uh-uh. You need the presence. Yeah, because not everyone's love language is physical gifts. Yeah, so when she had my sister...
Me and my brother got in trouble. She took her early retirement from General Motors so she can be more involved. It's to involve parent. The finances are great, homie, but man, that involved parent is everything. Right. And that's the problem with a lot of super rich families right now. They try to buy these gifts for their kids and iPads. Well, that's what happened with the young kid here, Ethan Couch. They got the 10 years probation for killing the four people in a DWI accident. Yeah.
His lawyers used a defense called Affluenza. And the Affluenza defense was saying that he was too rich to understand right from wrong. Whoa. Yeah, and he won with that defense. What? Yeah. He killed four people? Got 10 years probation. What? It's called the Affluenza defense. Yeah. They call them trust fund babies. Yeah, yeah. But he was a kid who was left at home with just the money.
Yeah. You can't do that. You got to be there, man. Man, that presence is everything. Yeah, that presence is everything. And not only just the presence, to be actively involved is everything. Absolutely. A lot of parents don't realize that, though. They think just making money for the family is enough. Yeah. You got to be there, though. Well, that's why I'm having so much fun now. I was there getting them through. So I was there at the first part, the poor struggling dad in the middle.
Started having a little financial success and toward the end I started having a lot of success. So they got to watch daddy evolve. I love that. Yeah, they got to watch daddy evolve. Yeah, that's such a good influence on them this journey, right? Yeah. They got to see all ends of the spectrum. Yeah. So they could determine now where they want to be all night. Yeah. Awesome, man. How many kids you got? Two. I got my son to be 21 on the 23rd of this month, October.
And my daughter just turned 16. Wow, so you had them pretty young. No, I'm in my mid-20s.
47 to mid-20s? Yeah. My daughter graduated. My son graduated. My daughter graduated high school at 15. Get ready to go to beauty school. She graduated at 15? At 15, yeah. That's freshman year usually. Yeah. Wow. So she skipped three grades. Yeah. Yeah. Damn, man. You got some smart kids. Oh, I'm a smart guy. So if nothing else, we got some academic talent. I love it, dude. Yeah. You still doing the comedy stuff? Yeah, yeah, yeah. I'm actually Miami Improv in a few weeks. That's my next stop. We're getting ready to...
We're getting ready to go back and re-sign with Wise Guys Comedy Club and redo that again. So, yeah, man, that's where I'm going to end it, man. That's your end goal, comedy? Comedy and then kind of doing what you're doing. But I want to take it to a radio personality. So kind of like I want to be the black Joe Rogan. You could do it, man. Yeah. Ultimately, you know, rather than saying the black Joe Rogan, I want to be the modern day Petey Green.
so you know radio host personality disc jockey uh you know talking my uh yeah and still you know impacting the culture in in a specific way yeah we'll talk after this i'll put the right pieces around you okay yeah we'll get you borrow man well uh where can people find you and keep up with you man uh until they get my instagram back uh charleston underscore white manager
You can find me on Charleston White Facebook fan page, which is a private page. Don't go to the public page. It's scamming people, so be aware of scams. I do not ask for cash out money. I do not post my cash out, and I do not ask for people to send money without doing a contract or actually speaking to me. So if you send money to somebody and you haven't heard my voice or received a contract, you've been scammed.
We'll link it below. Closing messages for Adam 22 before we wrap up. Adam 22, he needs at least $50,000 for me to do an interview with. 50K, Adam, you heard it here. 50K, you can get an interview, Adam. And it got to be done in Dallas with this guy here as a mediator. That way, I know there's no bullshit. I appreciate that, man. Yeah, that way I know there's no bullshit. We'll make it happen. All right, guys. Thanks for watching. Check out the links below. Peace. We out.