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June 5, 2024 100 mins

6.4.2024 #RolandMartinUnfiltered: Biden Border Plan, American Airlines Racial Discrimination Lawsuit, Merrick Garland Defends DOJ

President Joe Biden's executive order tightening security on the southern border after bipartisan negotiations failed gets met with criticism from both sides. I'll talk to an immigrant rights activist about what this means for the black and brown folks trying to cross the border. 

One of the attorneys for the three Black men suing American Airlines will be here to discuss the lawsuit, claiming they were victims of racial discrimination after employees ordered them and five other Black men off a plane in January.

Attorney General Merrick Garland took time during his testimony during the House Judiciary Committee hearing to counter the lies Republicans are spreading about the Justice Department. Merrick warned the committee he would not be intimidated. 

Revolt has new owners. 

Three Trump allies are charged in Wisconsin's fake elector scheme.

And I'll show you a recap of Tulsa's 4th Black Wall Street Legacy Festival. 

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
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Speaker 3 (00:34):
Oh. Black Start Network is.

Speaker 4 (00:38):
A real revolutionary right now.

Speaker 5 (00:41):
We're gonna work this.

Speaker 6 (00:42):
Man black media. He makes sure that our stories.

Speaker 7 (00:44):
Aren't hold I thank you for being the boys of
Black America rolling.

Speaker 3 (00:49):
A moment we have.

Speaker 2 (00:50):
Now we have to keep this going.

Speaker 8 (00:52):
The video looks phenomenal.

Speaker 3 (00:55):
Between Black Star Network and Black owned media and something
like seeing n.

Speaker 7 (01:00):
You can't be black on media and be skip.

Speaker 3 (01:03):
It's time to be smart. Bring your eyeballs home, you.

Speaker 9 (01:08):
Dig hm hm hm hm hm hm hm hmmm.

Speaker 10 (01:53):
Hey.

Speaker 7 (01:53):
From today is Tuesday, July fourth, June four, twenty twenty four.

Speaker 5 (01:59):
Coming up and roller, Martin Filcher.

Speaker 7 (02:00):
I'm here in Atlanta for the Steve Harvey Golf Tournament.

Speaker 5 (02:04):
Just landing here in Atlanta. A lot of them good stuff.
We want to talk about.

Speaker 7 (02:07):
President Biden announces a crackdown on folks crossing the border
in all across the country. But this is upsetting immigration activists.
We'll talk to one on the show. We'll talk to
the attorney of one of the three black men who
assuming American airlines. Also on today's show turned to americ
Garland goes to Capitol Hill and he has some words

(02:27):
for Republicans who keep trashing the Justice Department. Also a
look back at the Black Wall Street legacy. Principal intults
from this weekend. Bat Moore is time to bring the funk.
I'm Roland Martin, unfilch the BLACKSTI Network.

Speaker 4 (02:41):
Let's go Peacecott what the peace?

Speaker 2 (02:44):
It na? Please going?

Speaker 4 (02:53):
Best believe he's going than Boston, mister politics.

Speaker 11 (03:00):
Just the case he's sold.

Speaker 12 (03:05):
Out, it's stolen, He's post's real the question.

Speaker 2 (03:20):
No, he's.

Speaker 3 (03:36):
All right, folks.

Speaker 7 (03:37):
President Joe Biden has announced a new border of order.
We've had more than four thousand crossings on the border,
and so if it hits a certain level, they're going
to shut it down to keep folks from applying for asylum.

Speaker 5 (03:53):
President Biden made this announcement today.

Speaker 13 (03:56):
Come here today to do what the Republic's in Congress
refused to do. Take the necessary steps to secure our border.
Four months ago, after weeks of intense negotiation between my
staff and Democrats and Republicans, we came to a clear
bipartisan deal. It was the strongest border security agreement in decades.

(04:20):
But then Republicans in Congress not all but walked away
from it. Why because Donald Trump told them to. He
told the Republicans that has been published widely by many
of you, that he didn't want to fix the issue.
He wanted to use it to attack me. That's what
he wanted to do. Was a cynical and an extremely

(04:40):
cynical political move, and a complete disservice to the American
people who are looking for us to not to weaponize
the border, but to fix it. Today, I'm joined by
a bipartisan group of governors, members of Congress, mayor's law
enforcement officials, most of whom live in work along the
southern border. They know the border is not a political

(05:02):
issue to be weaponized. Responsibility we have to share to
do something about it. They don't have time for the
games played in Washington, and neither do the American people.
So today I'm moving past republic instruction and using the
executive authorities available to me as president to do what
I can on my own to address the border. Frankly,

(05:25):
I would have preferred to address this issue through bipartisan legislation,
because that's the only way to actually get the kind
of system we have now that's broken, fixed to hire
more border patrol agents, more asylum officers, more judges. But
Republicans have left me no choice. Today, I'm announcing actions
to bar migrants who cross our southern border unlawfully from

(05:48):
receiving asylum. Migrants will be restricted from receiving asylum at
our southern border unless they seek it after entering through
an established lawful process. Those who see come to the
United States legally, for example, by making an appointment and
coming to a port of entry, asylum will still be
available to them, still available. But if an individual chooses

(06:10):
not to use our legal pathways, if they choose to
come without permission and against the law, they'll be restricted
from receiving asylum and staying in the United States. This
action will help us gain control of our border, restore
order into the process. This ban will remain in place
until the number of people trying to enter illegally is

(06:31):
reduced to a level that our system can effectively manage.

Speaker 7 (06:38):
All right posts immigrants, Immigrant rights activated. Nate Joseph joins
us from Chicago. Janay, glad to have you here. First
of all, what do you make of this announcement. Obviously,
this is in response to pressure from Republicans.

Speaker 5 (06:52):
This is an election year and it's a huge contentious issue.

Speaker 14 (06:58):
Absolutely, thank you so much for having me roll in
first and foremost.

Speaker 4 (07:02):
You're right, this is a re election push.

Speaker 14 (07:05):
This is something that he's doing a few weeks ahead
of the first ever presidential debate that will take place
between him and Donald J.

Speaker 3 (07:12):
Trump.

Speaker 14 (07:14):
But I also want to be perfectly clear that this
is also one more reason as to which Joe Biden
will not be president come twenty twenty four. When you
do things like this and you propagate being morally inconsistent,
I want to be clear that this isn't the first
time that we've seen a president do this. The last

(07:34):
time that we saw a president in Act two one
two F, which is a section of the Immigration and
Nationality Act, was Donald J. Trump, And at the time
in which he used this presidential authority to act on
behalf of immigration, Joe Biden called his actions inhumane. The
Democratic Party denounced his actions and utilizing executive order to

(07:57):
be able to act to stop asylum seeker from being
able to come to the southern border.

Speaker 4 (08:02):
And said that it was inhumane. So if it walks
like a duck and qualks.

Speaker 14 (08:06):
Like a duck, then that means it's inhumane, right, And
so it doesn't make sense that you were able to criticize,
criticize the former twice impeach president of the United States
and now do the exact same thing and feel that
members of your base are going to continue to support you.

Speaker 4 (08:22):
It does not work like that. It is morally inconsistent.
And in my opinion, one more.

Speaker 14 (08:27):
Reason in addition to the conflict and the genocide happened
into the Palestinian people as to why Joe Biden will
not be re elected President of the United States.

Speaker 7 (08:36):
But explain to people why it's in humane, because this
is a major issue. It is a contentious issue we
are seeing as a result of Republican governors shipping people
to cities like Chicago, New York City. You have African
Americans who are pissed off because of what has happened here,
and so how is it in humane when you have

(09:00):
Republicans But you have a lot of Democrats who are saying,
we have a massive immigration problem and we cannot sustain
this number of crossings across the border.

Speaker 14 (09:11):
And so that's why you create a pathway to citizenship.
That's why you allow people to be pardoned. Right, There's
things that could have been done for the documented population.

Speaker 4 (09:21):
Of which I am one.

Speaker 14 (09:22):
The Different Action for Childhood Rivals program, which was an
executive order done under the Obama administration in which we're
coming up on its anniversary in the next week, was
meant to be a temporary solution to a long.

Speaker 4 (09:35):
Stand in problem.

Speaker 14 (09:36):
That long stand in problem being a lack of comprehensive
immigration reform. And at the time, it was said that
we were going to do DOCA now and then create
a pathway to citizenship.

Speaker 4 (09:46):
And what did we see.

Speaker 14 (09:47):
We see that there was a continual refusal from the
Obama administration at the time to be able to act
on behalf of Congress to make a pathway to citizenship.
He said that it would wait until the second term.
And what did we see first time in which we
had full control of Congress both houses, and then in
the second term in which he became a lame duck
where he couldn't really do anything on behalf of policy.

Speaker 1 (10:10):
Right.

Speaker 4 (10:10):
So it's this continual refusal.

Speaker 14 (10:13):
By members of the Democratic Party to really take bold
action to be able to support members of the immigrant community,
and I get it. People are rightfully upset. People are
feeling as though this is a major crisis, but it
isn't a new issue.

Speaker 15 (10:26):
Right.

Speaker 14 (10:26):
If we were to be able to place people on
a pathway to citizenship, then this would look entirely different.
As a member of the DOCTA community, we're expected to
pay X amount of dollars every two years that provides
us with temporary status to be able to work in
this country, and yet we continue to pay our tax
pair of dollars. I continue to pay for these application fees,

(10:48):
and yet I get nothing in return. Right, So there's
millions and billions of dollars that are being generated by
undocumented immigrants in this country, but yet we're continually told
that we're taking an extract in resources from local, state,
and federal government, when in fact that's not the truth.
Right as a documented person, as an undocumented person, there
is no social resource that I've had the privilege of

(11:12):
being able to get. So there's a lot of misinformation
that continues to be pushed. And so if we have
the Democratic Party saying that they stand in solidarity with
the immigrant community, then you need to remain consistent in
your stan and I get it that there's an election
to win. I am not oblivious to that fact. But

(11:32):
when you lose your base, then how can you start
to act on behalf of the middle ground if you've
lost those who are at the root of the communities
that you need to mobilize for. And so when people
are continually not happy with the actions that you're leading,
and not just are we not happy with his actions,
you are perpetuated the very same things that you called

(11:54):
the former twice and peach president of being inhumane for doing,
and you're doing the exact same thing, right, So trauma
by another name, done by another individual does not make
it right. And what we're seeing is him perpetuating the
same things that Donald Trump perpetuated to as president, and
it's not acceptable.

Speaker 5 (12:14):
So in the absence of a.

Speaker 7 (12:19):
Congress by the United States Senate, as he said, there
was a deal Donald Trump to Republicans don't support it,
then what because something has to be done.

Speaker 5 (12:29):
When you look at polling data, it is a serious,
serious issue.

Speaker 7 (12:34):
And so if not this, then what in the absence
of Congress actually doing something.

Speaker 14 (12:42):
Well, I think that's where it comes that you need
to fortify protections for existing communities. Right, there's members of
the TPS community, right who are coming from countries like Haiti.
There's individuals who have deed. There's also members of the
documented community for to find existing protections for those who
have temporary status. And then also I want to be

(13:05):
clear that asylum is a fundamental human right, not just
within the United States but across the globe. So this
is a departure, right, This is something that is historically
stood that individuals can present themselves at the southern border
and be able to do so legally within their rights
to do so. So this is a departure from long

(13:26):
stand in policy. So it's not the first time that
we've seen an influx at the border, and I want
to be clear, it's not an influx. It's just that
the Republicans have done a darn good job of making
it seem as though it's a Biden problem versus something
that has long been in existence. But they've successfully utilized
their marketing strategy. What they need to do is push

(13:48):
back and say that this is just nothing new, it's
business as usual, and the reason that people are fleeing.
I want to be perfectly clear about that, because it's
not fair that immigrants, undocumented immigrants in particular, continue to
be used as pawns in this political game. Right, there
is real lives at stake. There's children, There's people who

(14:08):
are fleeing political violence, people who cannot safely remain in
their countries of origin. People aren't leaving because they simply
want to go on a vacation or they want to
be in the United States of America based upon the
movies that they've seen and the ways in which they've
seen it depicted. People are leaving because they're fleeing violence,
They're flee in political instability, they're flee in poverty. Right,

(14:34):
individuals who are impacted by these issues. The problem is
that politicians continue to push this issue down the road
versus actually acting on it and being able to create
long term solutions and in addition, fortifying protections for existing communities.

Speaker 4 (14:49):
Which is feasible.

Speaker 14 (14:51):
In the same way in which Biden is now making
an executive order saying that he's stopping the individuals who
are able to seek asylum at the southern border is
the same way in which he could act in a
way that Ronald Reagan did and give amnesty right.

Speaker 4 (15:06):
So the same things that you're saying impossible.

Speaker 14 (15:09):
You're clearly proven by way of two one two f
of the Immigration and Nationality Act that it is feasible
for the President of the United States to be able
to act broadly on behalf of immigration. So if Congress
is in acting and you're going to be able to
use your presidential powers by way of executive order, why
not utilize it for good instead of versus using it

(15:30):
for evil, which is prohibiting certain communities who are in
dire need from being able to seek asylum, which is
one of their fundamental human rights.

Speaker 5 (15:39):
Question from doctor Mustapa Santiago Ali.

Speaker 8 (15:42):
Yeah, well, thank you for all the work that you're doing.
This is an incredibly important issue.

Speaker 16 (15:48):
I think one of the most difficult things is many
folks who would get behind making sure that we have
a fair and just immigration system have often been fed
the misinformation that they're going to lose jobs and opportunities.
Can you educate folks on how that is a false
construct and that you know, folks for hundreds of years

(16:09):
have been trying to come to this country for.

Speaker 3 (16:10):
A better life.

Speaker 14 (16:12):
Absolutely, and thank you so much for that question. When
I think of the entrepreneurs, the immigrant entrepreneurs that we
work with. Immigrant entrepreneurs generate nearly eight hundred million dollars
in revenue per year of the documented population. The documented
population generates additional millions, if not billions, of dollars per year.

(16:33):
They pay into this nation social security infrastructure in which
we cannot get back right.

Speaker 4 (16:40):
So all of these.

Speaker 14 (16:41):
Social welfare programs that are being provided in this nation,
we are unable to benefit from I mentioned earlier as
a member of the documented community, which is deferred action
for childhood arrivals. We have to renew every two years,
and sometimes in fact it's actually every year. So we're
up and to pay four hundred and ninety five dollars

(17:03):
to be able to get temporary status in this country
so that we could work and pay taxes in which
we might never get back right. So, I think the
argument you're right about that that has been made, and
it has been made so often that unfortunately it is stuck,
and it is stuck with members of the black community.

(17:23):
It is stuck with members of the AAPI community who
are saying, why do we need these immigrants here when
they're still in our jobs. Let's be perfectly clear, A
lot of the industries in which we see immigrants supporting
our industries in which Americans.

Speaker 4 (17:37):
Will not fill those gaps of doing right.

Speaker 14 (17:40):
So I always tell people, if someone can come to
the United States of America without potentially a US degree,
without work authorization and steal your job, then we have
another problem.

Speaker 5 (17:52):
Right.

Speaker 4 (17:53):
So our problems should not be one another.

Speaker 14 (17:55):
Our problem should be the system that continues to perpetuate
inequity amongst us all. And if we simply were to
mobilize collectively, we would realize that our problem really isn't
with one another. It's breaking down these systems that prohibits
people from actually being able to thrive versus just survive
in this country that we call home.

Speaker 17 (18:16):
Joy Cheney, Hi, so thank you so much for the
work that you are doing, and you have really spoken
to the issues that the administration has faced, has tried
to deal with. This issue, and not just this administration
but other democratic administrations before them, is that there has
to be a Congress. This willing I worked in the

(18:38):
Senate when we were trying to get comprehensive immigration reform
done more than what almost fifteen years ago at this point,
and we just had a major failure here. What do
you say, as a practical matter about asylum seekers? What
is the answer if you've tried to do everything, and

(18:58):
you've also tried to have executive actions that have been
invalidated in the courts and thrown us into a lot
of confusion people here who are now having uncertain status.
Because I understand your anger and hurt, but I don't
know what the practical solution here is, especially if you're

(19:18):
suggesting that we should have a Donald Trump administration instead
of a Joe Biben administration.

Speaker 4 (19:25):
It's not going to get better under him.

Speaker 17 (19:27):
That's the first question. And the second one is a
lot of Americans disagree with you, and so what do
you say if you are Joe Biden, if you are
a Democrat, and you are listening to the vast majority
of your voters who are saying they have a problem,
they are concerned about undocumented immigration here, illegal immigration, what do.

Speaker 11 (19:49):
You say to them?

Speaker 4 (19:50):
And your point about DOCCA, how is that.

Speaker 17 (19:52):
Distinguished between those who were becoming here illegally through asylum.
I know that's a lot of questions, but I want
to make sure that we are challenging you on some
of the points because I think it's fair to do.

Speaker 4 (20:03):
So absolutely, and I want to be perfectly clear.

Speaker 1 (20:07):
I am not.

Speaker 14 (20:08):
Supporting a Trump administration over that of a Biden administration.
So thank you so much for raising that to allow
me to clarify. I am someone who is an immigrant
from Bleie, Central America. I immigrated to this country at
the age of seventy years old. I am an UNDOCU
Black woman, one of approximately six hundred and nineteen thousand

(20:30):
UNDOCU black people in the United States of America. I
am someone who has been the vice president of a
Democratic organization in the past. I am someone who has
championed on behalf of Democratic leaders and continue to do so.
What I'm doing is saying that I am an equal
opportunity protester, meaning that simply because I align with the

(20:52):
Democratic Party does not mean that I'm going to continue
to applaud when it's doing things that are destructive to
the community. And actually, you just said that the vast
majority of the American population is not in support of
a pathway to citizenship, and that's actually false. The vast
majority of the American population, more than ninety percent of

(21:13):
the American population, is in support of a pathway to citizenship.
In this country not just for members of the documented population,
but members of the eleven point five million undocumented people
that continue to call this country home. So, in regards
to the asylum issue, I want to be perfectly clear
about that. No one is saying that there needs to

(21:34):
be open doors in which people can come through. What
we're saying is allow people to be able to do
what they've been doing historically, which is presenting themselves in
order to get a potential asylum hearing in order to
get their stories vetted. I want to be very clear

(21:54):
because I think there's a misconception around what the process
of seeking asylum actually looks like. In order to seek asylum,
especially in the largest hegemonic power, which is the United
States of America.

Speaker 4 (22:08):
It is extremely difficult to do. So that is no
small feat.

Speaker 14 (22:13):
In order to get asylum in this country, one would
have to be able to prove the manners in which
they're being harmed, the ways in which they're being targeted politically, physically,
whatever their obstacles are, they would be able to have
to get vetted. The individuals in which they potentially be
stained with will also have to be vetted. Right, the

(22:35):
documentations in which they're presented to both customs and border
patrol will have to be vetted. So it's not an
easy process that people have to go through in order
to become asylum recipients in this country. What I am
saying is that it is realistic to still allow people
to continue with a fundamental human right of seeking asylum.

Speaker 4 (22:59):
This is not something that is new. This is something
that is.

Speaker 14 (23:03):
Continues throughout the dawn of time in which people can
present themselves not just at the southern border, but all
other parts of entries and see whether or not their
claims for asylum are actually based upon grounds that are
going to be recognized in this country. Right, So, what
we're saying is allow people to be able to continue

(23:24):
with the process for seeking asylum. They've already placed restrictions
on who could come and present themselves in order to
have their asylum cases heard, right, So there are certain
procedures that can be done without you providing a blanket
statement that says after twenty five hundred people per day

(23:45):
have presented themselves at ports of entries across the United States,
that no cases will be heard for the remainder of
that time, simply.

Speaker 4 (23:55):
Because of quota has been met.

Speaker 14 (23:57):
All I'm saying is to allow people to continue to
go through the due process of seeking asylum, do so
in a manner that they feel is equitable to the
vetting process, and then go from there in allowing.

Speaker 4 (24:10):
It to happen.

Speaker 14 (24:11):
That's all we're asking, right, What I'm calling out, of course,
who wouldn't rather that we have someone who is in
line with supporting the issues that are fundamental to the
immigrant community.

Speaker 4 (24:25):
What I'm calling out is the moral.

Speaker 14 (24:27):
Inconsistency of this administration. You cannot proclaim to be a
champion right at the time, for instance, when he was
then candidate Biden, he continued to say that he's going
to continually support members of the undocumented community.

Speaker 4 (24:44):
But this is a slap in the face, right.

Speaker 14 (24:47):
What allows the Republican Party to be successful, Whether or
not you agree with that, in my political overview, that
is something that they've managed to do incredibly well well.
They do not care about whether or not members of
the Democratic Party support the policies that they're pushing or
that they're trying to reach actualization for they just do it.

(25:11):
The difference is members of the Democratic Party, historically, we're
always worried about what the Republican Party will have to
say if we exact broad sweeping things like utilizing the
presidential Executive order powers, why do we care about what
they have to say, so long as though it's making

(25:32):
sure that members of our communities are actually having what
they need to thrive and to be able to succeed
in a country that they.

Speaker 4 (25:39):
So greatly already contribute.

Speaker 7 (25:40):
To the one.

Speaker 5 (25:45):
I got to go, doctor Larry Walker.

Speaker 18 (25:46):
All right, right, yeah, so you know, thank you for
your analysis. I think it's really important that you said
this is this is a critical conversation, particularly doing an
election year. And I guess my question is you kind
of highlight, you know, roll and highlight. You mentioned it
my son of my colleagues mentioning it's an election year.
So I guess ultimately, how do you win the propaganda
war you talked about? And yeah, you're right, Over the

(26:08):
last several years, you see, you know, data shows that
Americans support some kind of pathway to citizenship for those
who are undocumented. But the question is, how do you
win the I use propaganda, how do you win the
message war? Whether it's the Democrats or Republicans, Like we said,
we already generally know how Republicans feel about this issue,
But how do you win the message war in an
election year on such an important issue.

Speaker 14 (26:31):
Thank you for that fantastic question, and having the public
policy background.

Speaker 1 (26:37):
That I do.

Speaker 14 (26:38):
The way that you win is by remaining consistent to
those in which you made promises too, right, because I
think the problem is if we already knew that that
was the stance that he was going to take. That's
one thing, But you can't in the same ways that
members of the black community, the African American community have been,
you know, upset at the lack of policy action that

(27:02):
fortifies support for our community as well.

Speaker 4 (27:04):
Here in the United States.

Speaker 14 (27:05):
Right, many communities are dissatisfied with the job at hand.

Speaker 4 (27:11):
And it's not just.

Speaker 14 (27:12):
Because we're upset about certain rhetoric that's being used or
the lack thereof. We're upset because there's a lack of
concrete policy.

Speaker 4 (27:22):
There's a lack of advocacy. I understand the dynamics of
our Congress.

Speaker 14 (27:28):
I am not oblivious to what's currently going on in
both houses of our Congress. Right that is something that
unfortunately is a member of the immigrant community that my
life is greatly impacted by On a day by day basis,
we live in fear of what the Supreme Court, what
the circuit courts could potentially do, and most importantly, what

(27:50):
Congress is failing to do right in the same way
that black indigenous people of color are also upset as
this administration for a lack of movement on so many
things in regards to poverty, in regards to ensuring that
we have a more equitable society, in regards to home ownership,
in regards to how the economy is performing. There are

(28:12):
so many things. But the way that you win is
by remaining true to your base. I think what this
administration is failing to do, and I kind of hit
on it a little bit earlier, is that.

Speaker 4 (28:26):
And I want to be perfectly clear.

Speaker 14 (28:28):
I don't want anyone to say that this girl supports
the former twice in peach president of the United States.

Speaker 4 (28:33):
I absolutely do not. I vehemently do not.

Speaker 14 (28:37):
However, what I am is a realist right and I
want to be clear about what they do and clearly
what they do well.

Speaker 4 (28:45):
When he was in power, what did he do?

Speaker 14 (28:48):
He utilized executive orders until he couldn't anymore. Right, he
did that, he acted almost entirely in his last year
based upon executive orders, and he could care less what
it was that the Supreme Court had to say about it,
because he was acting to make sure he did what

(29:08):
were some of the promises that he made to his base.
The differences, we are experiencing an administration that, in an
attempt to win, what they think they're going to do
is successfully.

Speaker 4 (29:20):
Win over those who are in the middle.

Speaker 14 (29:22):
How are you going to win those in the middle
when you're not even remaining true to the people in
which are a part of your base that you made
your original promises too, right, it's just a lot of inconsistency.
So I think the way that you win that so
called propaganda, which it is you're right about that they're
launching things around CRT, around abortion rights, around so many

(29:46):
other issues that they're saying the same things over and
over that they're starting to stick. However, if you focus
on your base and you make sure and I understand
you might not be able to act in regards to
policy on those things, but so long as we see
and feel your advocacy and your support, there is something

(30:08):
that does. Now when you're not acting politically, you're not
acting by executive order and you're also propagating the same
problematic language and a rhetoric that you deemed harmfuled by
the former twice impeach president.

Speaker 4 (30:24):
Now you're losing us across the board.

Speaker 7 (30:28):
All right, well, well, first of all, what we'll see
what polic looks like in the next few weeks in
the wake of this decision, Dan.

Speaker 5 (30:36):
And Jose, we certain appreciate it. Thanks a lot, Thank you, folks.

Speaker 7 (30:40):
We come back. We're going to talk about the case
of three black men who are suing American airlines for discrimination.
That more right here on rollandmart Don Filcher on the
of the Black Star Network Live from Atlanta.

Speaker 5 (30:55):
Back in a moment, so.

Speaker 19 (31:03):
People under school.

Speaker 1 (31:08):
When COVID happened, poor people were dying here at a
rate already of eight hundred people a day before COVID.

Speaker 2 (31:18):
If you went to a funeral.

Speaker 1 (31:19):
Every single day, it would take you six hundred years
to attend all the funerals of the people who will
die from the ravages of policies of poverty and low
wages in America in just one year. It would take
you two years and nineteen days to go to all
of the funerals of the people that will die today.
And oftentimes silence. Nobody talks about this political jenoside, but

(31:44):
we are determined today to remember their death and be
a resurrection of voting power and voice power like never before.

Speaker 20 (31:54):
Economic justice and saving this democracy are deeply connected. We
as a nation must listen to the demands of the poor,
who are pushing and will continue to push political candidates
and elected leaders to lift from the bottom so that

(32:15):
everybody can rise.

Speaker 7 (32:21):
We are the poor, the marginalized, and they're underpaid, and
we are taking one step forward to say that everybody
has a right to live.

Speaker 21 (32:30):
Poverty is not the fault of those who are impoverished.

Speaker 22 (32:34):
It is caused by those who make the policy.

Speaker 7 (32:37):
They are over one hundred and thirty five million poor
and low wage, low income people in this nation.

Speaker 20 (32:45):
The biggest block of potential voters by far is low income,
low wage voters.

Speaker 4 (32:51):
I can't afford medicine.

Speaker 23 (32:53):
Sometimes I have to skip because of the cost.

Speaker 14 (32:56):
The farm worker community is tired of the violence and
posts upon us by greed, exclusion, and denial of basic
human rights.

Speaker 1 (33:05):
Those folk that represented by that casket, poor and low
wage workers, who are the most moral people in this
country because they go to work every day, believing even
though going to work is hazardous to their Hell.

Speaker 24 (33:18):
I'm tired of working seventy to eighty hours a week
and still not have money for the necessity of bills.
I'm tired of getting sick and not being able to
go see the doctor, having to make a choice to
pay between rent or the light, buil or.

Speaker 3 (33:32):
Food or clothes.

Speaker 25 (33:33):
You cannot claim to care about families and a culture
of life and then do everything in your power to
rob people of equal access to resources and to force
them to live in poverty.

Speaker 1 (33:43):
Leadership of both parties that waged war on poor people
and low wage workers, and.

Speaker 7 (33:48):
This government has treated people experiencing poverty, including their military families,
with disdainful, deliberate, malicious neglect.

Speaker 4 (33:56):
So the truth is that my son died from poverty.

Speaker 18 (34:00):
We refuse to accept poverty as the fourth leading cause
of death, the.

Speaker 4 (34:04):
Fourth leading cause of death in this the richest country
in the world.

Speaker 5 (34:09):
We moors today for our children and the generations to come.

Speaker 17 (34:13):
Then we need to do it with the loudest voice
as possible, the biggest actions possible.

Speaker 4 (34:19):
We will bosh our demands and register our vote.

Speaker 1 (34:23):
When we stand up and when we stand together things change.

Speaker 12 (34:28):
There is the electorate that is, and then there is
the electorate that should be.

Speaker 1 (34:35):
Thirty four million elgebra poor voter did not vote in
twenty sixteen. If just twenty percent of those voters in
swing states were mobilized around an agenda, they could change
the political outcome of every election. So we'll launch it
the most massive voter mobilization and turn out campaign in
history of poor and low wage voter allies and religious leaders.

Speaker 23 (34:56):
People are dying, but we know it doesn't have to
be this way, and so we are calling on everyone
to join us in this Poor People's campaign, a national
call for more revival.

Speaker 1 (35:06):
We are here, we will be seen, we will be heard,
and our power we will be felt.

Speaker 2 (35:12):
We don't need to be an insurrection.

Speaker 1 (35:15):
We are a resurrection that will be felt across this country.

Speaker 15 (35:19):
Are you radi Rati, Radic Radic.

Speaker 6 (35:25):
We are a resurrection and we are ready and we want.

Speaker 3 (35:46):
Our Our executive producer a Proud Family.

Speaker 21 (35:49):
Bruce Smith, creator and executive producer of the Proud Family,
Louder and Prouder.

Speaker 3 (35:53):
You're watching Roland Martin.

Speaker 7 (36:02):
All right, folks, Three black men are suing American airlines
for being wrongly removed from a flight with five other
black men. This took place in January. Alvin Jackson, Emanuel Jean,
Joseph Exavier, and Neil were on a flight from Phoenix
to New York City. They claimed that they, alone with
five other black men, were removed from the flight without

(36:23):
any valid reason, based solely on their race. The eight
black men were told to leave the plane and return
to the gate to be rebooked for another flight. Upon
exiting the plane and returning to the gate, the men
learned that someone on the flight complained of body odor.
Jackson Josephinville said they were never told they had body

(36:43):
older law who says it appears to plaintiffs that American
had ordered all of the black male passengers off the plane.
None of the men knew each other, nor were they
seated together. Lauren Bateman is one of the plane's attorneys.
She joins US now from DC. So this is quite
strange here, to order eight black men off the plane

(37:07):
because somebody complained about body odor when the eight weren't
even together.

Speaker 4 (37:14):
What the hell, that's right.

Speaker 26 (37:17):
It's completely inexcusable, and we know that this is a
clear case of race discrimination for precisely the reason that
you say that a flight attendant was going not to
a specific area theoretically targeting where an odor might be
coming from, but rather systematically selecting every single black man
aboard the flight and removing them from the flight. And

(37:39):
what's more, we have on video two American Airlines representatives
agreeing with our clients that this act was discriminatory and
that they were targeted based on the color of their skin.

Speaker 5 (37:52):
So what has been the response thus far of American Airlines.

Speaker 26 (37:56):
American Airlines has issued a sort of canned pr response,
but we haven't heard anything further from them, and so
our clients are really eager to hear what the airline
has to say for themselves.

Speaker 7 (38:09):
Now, look, America Airlines had issues in the past with
complaints of discrimination, and so you would think they would
be a hell of a lot more aggressive in responding
to this.

Speaker 5 (38:22):
But going back to this here, so they removed eight
black men.

Speaker 7 (38:27):
I mean, what other rationale is that where they weren't
even together.

Speaker 26 (38:34):
Yeah, we can't think of one. It's clearly that these
individuals were targeted on the basis of their race, and
they removed what appeared to be every single black man
aboard the flight. It's really impossible to imagine how humiliating
and degrading that is for our clients who experienced this treatment.

Speaker 5 (38:59):
So where does the stand in the lawsuit?

Speaker 26 (39:03):
Well, the complaint was filed and will await American Airlines response.

Speaker 7 (39:12):
Have you heard from any other passengers on this flight
who were shocked and appalled by this decision?

Speaker 26 (39:20):
We have, And I think that brings to mind an
important point, which is that when the mostly white passengers
remained on board while while our clients were trying to
figure out what was going on, the pilot announced to
the people remaining on board that the men were removed
because of a body odor issue. So clearly this compounds

(39:43):
the humiliation, the degradation, the trauma. I mean imagining our
clients going back on the plane with a sea of
white faces looking at them with undue suspicion. It's really
heartbreaking to think about.

Speaker 7 (40:00):
And the pilot and Maype comment and it lends the
impression that they were saying, all eight at body.

Speaker 4 (40:08):
Order, that's exactly right.

Speaker 1 (40:13):
All right?

Speaker 7 (40:14):
Uh well, Lauren, well we certainly appreciate it. We'll see
what happens next.

Speaker 3 (40:18):
In this case.

Speaker 4 (40:19):
Thank you, I appreciate your time all right, thank.

Speaker 1 (40:22):
You so very much.

Speaker 7 (40:23):
All Right, folks gotta go to the break. We'll be
right back, rollingd Martin unfiltered in the Black Study Network.

Speaker 5 (40:27):
We should have support us in what we do.

Speaker 7 (40:28):
Folks joined, I bring a funk fan club. The goals
to get twenty thousand on our fans contributing on average
fifteen bucks each has foot all the nineteen cents a month,
thirteen cents to day. You can send your chicking money
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(40:49):
is r M unfiltered, Zel rolling at Rolling Smartin dot com, rolling.

Speaker 5 (40:54):
That Rolling Martin unfiltered dot com.

Speaker 7 (40:55):
We should have downloaded the Black Shuting Network app Apple Phone,
Android Phone, Apple TV and for a TV Roku, Amazon
Fire TV, Xbox one, Samsung Smart Tv.

Speaker 5 (41:04):
Also, folks, be sure.

Speaker 7 (41:05):
To get a copy in my book White Fear, How
the Drowning of America is making White Folks Lose their minds,
available at bookstores nationwide.

Speaker 5 (41:11):
If the audio version on audible and I've got less.

Speaker 7 (41:15):
Than two hundred copies of my book from two thousand
and nine called The First President Barack Obama's Rolled to
the White House.

Speaker 5 (41:23):
If you want a personally autographed book, folks.

Speaker 7 (41:26):
Go to Rollandesmartin dot com for Slash the First. I've
cut the price to ten bucks plus seven nine to
nine ship in the handley, and so again I'm personally
autographing each one of the copies.

Speaker 5 (41:37):
And again I bear once they're gone, they're gone. There
will be no reprinting, there'll be no reissuing.

Speaker 7 (41:43):
And so if you want me to personally autograph one
to you, you can get your order in now Rollandesmartin
dot com.

Speaker 5 (41:50):
Ford Slash the First. I'll be right back.

Speaker 7 (41:58):
A lot of y'all have been asked me about the
pocket squares that were available on our website. She'd be
rocking and shaboy pocket square right here. It's all about
looking different now. Look, summertime is coming up, y'all know.
I keep trying to tell fellas change your look.

Speaker 3 (42:13):
Please. You can't wear athletic.

Speaker 22 (42:15):
Shoes every damn wear.

Speaker 7 (42:17):
So if you're putting on linen suits, if you're putting
on some summer suits, have a whole different look. The
reason I like this particular pocket square these shaboors because
it's sort of like a flower and looks pretty cool
here versus the traditional boring silk pocket squares. But also
I like being a little different as well. So this

(42:38):
is why we have these custom made feather pocket squares
on the website as well. My sister actually designed these
after a few years ago, I was in his battle
with Steve Harvey and essence and I saw this at
a Saint Jude fundraiser. I saw this feather pocket square
and I said, well, I got some ideas, so I
hit her and she sent me about thirty different ones.
And so this completely changes your looks now, some of

(43:00):
you men out there, I had some dudes say, oh man,
I can't wear that. Well, if you ain't got swagging,
that's not my problem.

Speaker 3 (43:08):
But if you're looking for.

Speaker 7 (43:10):
Something different to spruce up your look, fellas ladies, if
y'all looking to get your man a good gift, I've
had I've run into brothers all across the country with
the feather pocket squares saying see check mine out, and
so it's always good to see them.

Speaker 4 (43:25):
And so this is what you do.

Speaker 7 (43:26):
Go to Rollings Martin dot com Forward Slash pocket Squares.
You could order Shabory pocket squares or the custom made
pocket squares. Now for the Chaborious, we're out of a
lot of the different colors, and I think we're down
to about two or three hundred. So you want to
get your order in as soon as you can, because
here's what happened. I got these several years ago, and
they the Japanese company, sided to deal with another company,

(43:49):
and I bought them before they signed that deal, and
so I can't get access to any more from the
company in Japan than makes them, and so get yours now.
So come summertime, when I see all of essence, y'all
could be looking fly with the Shaboy pakast square or
the custom made pocket square again rolling this Martin dot
Com Sports Last pocket Squares go there now.

Speaker 5 (44:14):
Hello.

Speaker 27 (44:14):
I'm Paula J.

Speaker 17 (44:15):
Parker Judy pro on the Proud Family, Louder and Prouder
on Disney Plunk, and you're watching Roland Martin.

Speaker 28 (44:22):
I I was in Michigan, all right, folks, welcome back
and rolland Martin.

Speaker 5 (44:40):
I'm filtered here on the Black Start Network.

Speaker 7 (44:43):
I am here in Atlanta, of course, participating in Steve
Harvey golf tournaments. I look forward to doing that today. Uh, folks,
let's talk about Merrick Garland, the Attorney General.

Speaker 4 (44:55):
Uh.

Speaker 5 (44:56):
He went before the crazies in the House.

Speaker 7 (44:58):
Of course, they had another one of those case committee hearings,
and they have been accusing the Department of Justice of
all kind of wrongdoing because all they're doing is sucking
up to Donald Trump.

Speaker 5 (45:11):
And so here's some of the.

Speaker 1 (45:13):
Stuff that A. G.

Speaker 5 (45:14):
Garland had to say.

Speaker 29 (45:16):
Let me be clear, if anyone threatens public servants with violence,
we will hold them accountable, and we will continue to
protect our democratic institutions like this one and to bring
to justice all those criminally responsible for the January sixteenth
attack on our democracy. As Attorney General, I will continue

(45:41):
to forcefully defend the independence of the Justice Department from
improper influence or interference of any kind, and I will
continue to fiercely protect the integrity of our criminal investigations.
Nothing will deter me from fulfilling my obligation to uphold

(46:01):
the rule of law fulfilling that obligation includes ensuring that
the Justice Department respects Congress's important role in our democracy.
That is why we have gone to extraordinary links to
ensure that the Committee gets responses to its legitimate requests
for information. That is why I have provided the Committee

(46:23):
with Special counsel Hers report, why the Special Council testified
for more than five hours, and why we have gone
beyond precedent to provide the Committee with the transcripts of
the Special Council's interview with the President. But we have
made clear that we will not provide audio recordings from
which the transcripts that.

Speaker 22 (46:43):
You already have were created.

Speaker 29 (46:46):
Releasing the audio would shill cooperation with the Department in
future investigations, and it could influence witnesses answers if they
thought the audio of their law enforcement interviews would be
broadcast to Congress and the public. Now, in response, certain
members of this Committee and the Oversight Committee are seeking

(47:06):
contempt as a means of obtaining, for no legitimate purpose,
sensitive law enforcement information that could harm the integrity of
future investigations. This effort is only the most recent in
a long line of attacks.

Speaker 3 (47:23):
On the Justice Department's work.

Speaker 29 (47:26):
It comes alongside threats to the fund particular Department investigations,
most recently the Special Council's prosecution of the former President.
It comes alongside false claims that a jury verdict in
a state trial by it brought by a local district
attorney was somehow controlled by the Justice Department. That conspiracy

(47:50):
theory is an attack on the judicial process itself. It
comes as individual career agents and prosecutors have been singled
out just for doing their jobs. It comes as baseless
and extremely dangerous falsehoods are being spread about the FBI's
law enforcement operations, and it comes at a time when

(48:14):
we are seeing heinous threats of violence being directed at
the Justice Department's career civil servants. These repeated attacks on
the Justice Department are unprecedented and they are unfounded. These
attacks have not and they will not influence our decision making.

(48:38):
I view contempt as a serious matter, but I will
not jeopardize the ability of our prosecutors and agents to
do their jobs effectively in future investigations. I will not
be intimidated, and the Justice Department will not be intimidated.
We will continue to do our jobs free from political influence,

(49:02):
and we will not back down from.

Speaker 7 (49:04):
Defending Congressman Eric Swallwall was sick and tired of the
sheer hypocrisy of the so he let it.

Speaker 30 (49:13):
Rip states rights except when a jury in that state
convicts your nominee for president. You might be in a
cult if you can't. If you claim you back the
blue but want to defund the police when the police
go to your nominee's house to retrieve national security secrets,
you might be in a cult. If you're supporting a
guy who's felony convictions prevent him from getting a security clearance,

(49:35):
you might be in a cult. And if the guy
you're supporting him for president has felony convictions that prevent
him from going to Cambodia, Canada, Chile, China, Cuba, Dominican Republic, Egypt,
eat the open motion takes president Iran, Israel, Japan, Macau, Malaysia, Mexico, Morocco, Nepal,

(50:01):
is out of New Zealand, Philippines, Singapore, South Africa, South Korea, Taiwan, Tanzania, Tunisia, Ukraine, United.

Speaker 5 (50:14):
Is recognized for five minutes. I'm asking that the gentleman
is considered.

Speaker 7 (50:23):
I mean, I mean, look, Larry, you sort of get
tired of having to deal with these pathetic people. So look,
and I keep saying this, you know, Michelle Obama said,
Whenego low, we go high.

Speaker 3 (50:39):
Now you gotta knock ask this out.

Speaker 18 (50:43):
No, I do respect them, Miche Obama. I don't believe
in it. I don't believe in that. You know, I'm
from Philadelphia, old school union, blue collar union town. And
also you know, trained by an old school CBC member,
and you got to give it to him when it's
time to give it to him.

Speaker 5 (50:59):
And listen.

Speaker 18 (51:00):
You know, I think some Democrats, and not only this committee, others,
have done a really good job and challenging some of
the nonsense and highlighting the hypocrisy. And so, you know, Roland,
we're in a really interesting time in this country. Obviously
talk about election coming up, but it's really important that
Democrats continue to highlight the insanity and the daily contradictions

(51:24):
you get from from you know, from Republicans and like
as he mentioned, you know, if you're you're all about
supporting law enforcement, but also highlight not only in terms
of defund the police, but in January sixth and you know,
and laws, look what happened last week. You know, you
heard Republicans repeatedly talk about how the president and former
president of the United States has been sandbag. But the

(51:44):
reality is stop committing crimes and differents dictions, and you
won't find yourself in a situation. But the Democrats have
to continue to do this, and I also encourage President
Biden himself to make sure publicly he highlights a lot
of these pocracy obviously to some of that today, but
I think he's got to do that more forcefully, and
he just can't leave it up to members of the

(52:05):
House and Senate if he wants to, you know, when
he wants to, you know, be re elected, he's going
to have to be more forceful and highlight some of
the contradictions that you know, you hear from you know,
Republicans in House and Senate, and then you know what,
you know what actually policies they support, and then obviously
the policies that American citizens care about.

Speaker 7 (52:23):
Joey, what we have here are Republicans who don't want
to do any work.

Speaker 3 (52:30):
What they think is work.

Speaker 7 (52:32):
Are these useless hearings, I mean, all that whole garland
and contempt. Uh, lets impeach Biden. They've got nothing to do.
They impeach May August, the hit of homeless security that
would nowhere in the Senate, I mean, all of this
is all show no policy no bills. Just here is

(52:56):
listen too, crank, crazy ass Jim Jordan and Mardreie Taylor Green,
Jim Comber and the rest of these idiots.

Speaker 17 (53:05):
I mean, I want to apologize to previous congresses, which
we used to call the do nothing Congress.

Speaker 4 (53:11):
This Congress really truly does win the battle for.

Speaker 17 (53:17):
Who can do the least and waste the most of
the American people's money. You know, I've just been no
child who's watching this should think this is the way
our government should actually work. These folks have nothing to
show for it. And on a previous show you had
several months ago, we highlighted a Republican member who said

(53:37):
the same. They have done absolutely nothing.

Speaker 11 (53:42):
Make no mistake.

Speaker 17 (53:43):
We could actually do things in this Congress. There are
things that are bipartisan that we can actually have wins on.

Speaker 4 (53:51):
We just talked about one of them. Immigration.

Speaker 17 (53:54):
We had a bipartisan deal and we couldn't get it
done because they walked away from the table. And be clear,
Republicans walked away from the table. People who are in
the majority in the House walked away.

Speaker 4 (54:06):
From the table.

Speaker 17 (54:08):
People who are in the minority in the Senate walked
away from the table. So we have a problem here.
If you want to have any of the things that
you care about, if you want to have George Floyd
Justice and Policing Acts, if you want to have comprehensive
immigration reform, if you want to have reproductive health, you've
got to vote these clowns out because at some point

(54:32):
it's not about them, it's about us. We are choosing
these people, and not the folks on this call, but
the people who are voting for them in their district,
and more importantly, the people who are not voting for
good alternatives to them in their district. This is what

(54:52):
mad We can't just have someone in the White House.
We have to have partners in Congress because these.

Speaker 7 (54:58):
Clowns they in it and what it is at the
Clowns Show, and whenever they have them it is in town,
and you can't take them seriously. And again when you
have their own members saying they ain't done Jack, Okay,
believe them.

Speaker 16 (55:17):
Yeah, you know, it's interesting we've labeled these folks as clients.
I'm very strategic, but also I think most people in
America would love to be able to not do any
work and get paid over one hundred and eighty seven
thousand dollars a year to just show up and to
pontificate and not to actually do any significant work.

Speaker 3 (55:36):
Where most people have to go rian work.

Speaker 4 (55:39):
Two three jobs.

Speaker 16 (55:40):
Lucky if they can make eighty ninety thousand dollars working
three jobs and not have these same types of dynamics,
you know, this is all strategy. These folks understand that
if they can create chaotic situations, if they can pull
the attention away from what's currently going on with Donald

(56:00):
Trump and all of the egregious things that he's done,
then maybe they'll have a shot.

Speaker 8 (56:06):
So instead of actually creating.

Speaker 16 (56:08):
Policy like both Larry and Joy talk and actually doing
some work, they're busy with these smoke screens. They know
there's nothing there, but they want to continue. Now, the
other part of it is that we actually take an oath.
I took the oath a number of other people to
make sure that we were protecting entry from enemies, both
foreign and domestic. So when they do these types of things,

(56:29):
they take and put sensitive issues on the table, and
they put individuals in harm's way. So I would surmise
that they are also helping to strengthen the folks who
would like to do damage inside of our country.

Speaker 8 (56:46):
So we need to pay attention.

Speaker 3 (56:48):
And as Joey said, you got to vote.

Speaker 8 (56:50):
If you're tired of this clown show, if you're tired
of the ineffectiveness of the individuals who are making over
one hundred andy seven thousand dollars a year, then give
them something else to do by replacing them on Capitol
Hill with individuals who actually want to do the work.

Speaker 7 (57:07):
Yep, because they don't want to actually do any of
the work. And you got just the crazies there. I mean,
I mean, I swear I just want to gag every
time Marjorie Taylor Green opens her mouth or appears on
the screen, because she really is truly despicable individual.

Speaker 3 (57:29):
So it's just like, oh, I can't even do it,
all right, y'all, hod Tax one second, we come back.

Speaker 7 (57:35):
These fake electors, these fake Trump electors, three of them
have been charged in Wisconsin.

Speaker 3 (57:40):
It will give you those details. Also, the Black Wall Street.

Speaker 7 (57:44):
Legacy Festival took place over the weekend in Tulsa. Anthony
Hamilton performed I'm going to show you some sights and
sounds from that. You're watching Robert Martin Unfiltered right here
on the Black Sid Network to the White House. We
got about five hundred copies of the book of VMAB.

(58:05):
So this actually is all of the coverage of the
two thousand and eight election. But the other thing is
this here I talked to folks like Malik Yoga, Hill, Harper, Erica,
Alexandra Kevin Lyle, Spike Lee, Tatiyana Ali.

Speaker 5 (58:17):
But there's a lot of.

Speaker 7 (58:18):
Behind the scenes stuff in here as well, where I
talked about some of the stuff that went down at CNN. Also,
when you go through here, a lot of the photos
that you see in here photos that I actually shot,
photos that were my time at CNN. And So what
I decided to do because one I published the book
and I owned it myself, is that so I said,

(58:39):
you know what, I'm going to slash the price of
ten bucks. I'm not reprinting the book. So once we
are sold out of these five hundred, that's it.

Speaker 5 (58:46):
They're gone.

Speaker 7 (58:46):
So you can go to Rollinessmartin dot com forward slash
the first to get a copy of this book. Everybody
who orders this book through the website, not on Amazon,
only through Rollinesstmartin dot com. I will personally autograph and
mail you a copy of this book it's all of
the covers, the actually interviews that I did with him,
and just to show you, of course when it came out,

(59:08):
there's actually even in here the interviews that I did
with him and Michelle Obama which won TV one Cable Networks,
his first two NAACP Image Awards, and so all of
that for ten bucks. Go to Roland asmartin dot com
the first and order your copy today.

Speaker 15 (59:27):
Fan Base is pioneering a new air of social media
for the creator economy. This next generation social media app,
with over six hundred thousand users, is raising seventeen million
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on how to invest, is it start engine, dot com,
slash fan Base or stam the QR code Wow. Another way,

(59:51):
we're giving you the freedom to be you without limits.

Speaker 16 (59:56):
Hi, I'm Joe Marie Payton, boys of Sugar Mama on
Disney's Louder and Prouder Disney Plus, and I'm with Roald
Martin on Unfiltered.

Speaker 7 (01:00:11):
All right, everybody keeps focused on, of course the shodd
against Donald Trump, But what about those fake electors that
he was supported will as Wisconsin.

Speaker 3 (01:00:20):
The attorney general there Josh.

Speaker 7 (01:00:22):
Called filed felony forgery charges against two attorneys and an
aid who helped submit paperwork falsely saying that Donald Trump
had won the Battlegunde state. In twenty twenty, Kenneth Chessbrow,
Jim Troopers, and former Trump aid Mike Roman allegedly delivered
Wisconsin's fake electoral paperwork to a Pennsylvania congresceman Stafford to

(01:00:45):
get them to then Vice President Mike Pence on January sixth,
twenty twenty one. All three are doing Dane County Circuit
Court on September nineteen. Chessbro pled guilty in October to
one count of conspiracy to commit filing false documents in
the Georgia case.

Speaker 3 (01:01:02):
See join. The thing that I think people need to remember.

Speaker 7 (01:01:06):
Is that these people had a very clear and concise
and orchestrated plan to steal this election. You had people
like Wisconsin sin l Ron Johnson was involved. You see
this here They were talking about the Pennsylvania congressman I
think his name was escaping me. But and so what

(01:01:27):
you have these individuals, I mean, they were absolutely going
to try to steal this election.

Speaker 3 (01:01:33):
That was their goal.

Speaker 7 (01:01:35):
And chess Bro, he's already of course indicted he played
guilty in Georgia.

Speaker 3 (01:01:39):
Now he's facing this in Wisconsin.

Speaker 7 (01:01:42):
All of these idiots are going to realize that Dave
screwed their lives up for sucking up to Donald Trump.

Speaker 17 (01:01:50):
I mean, that's almost why I believe there has to
be some cult moment here, because there's no reason why
a same person would trade in their livelihood, their freedom
in of these cases, their bar license, their self respect
for someone who, you know, maybe they've never even meant,

(01:02:13):
certainly someone who doesn't even care for them, and you know,
certainly someone that wouldn't even pay for their legal fees.
There's to be something mental happening with these people, or
there are just some bad people out there. And I
think our greatest challenge is that sometimes we don't believe

(01:02:35):
that there are folks out there like this who don't
want to play fair, who will simply take the election,
who just simply take it, and they are the same
people who will do so again, and that is why
it's so critical. If any critique I would say of
the Justice Department is that I wish they had been
more aggressive even sooner. I'm thankful for what has been

(01:02:58):
done by federal and state prosecutors but I wish that
we could have been faster and even more aggressive so
that we can have a true deterrent effect.

Speaker 4 (01:03:08):
For people going forward.

Speaker 17 (01:03:10):
Donald Trump will get you incarcerated, have you lose everything
that you have amassed, because we have to get their
family members to put pressure on them as well to
not engage in schemes that not only defraud the American
people and try to undermine our constitution, but also might
land them in legal hot water and in some cases jail.

(01:03:34):
We have got to create that deterrent effect. I think
we're doing it now, but I think we could have
been even stronger about it.

Speaker 5 (01:03:41):
Well.

Speaker 3 (01:03:42):
I think Joy makes a great point here at Mustafa.

Speaker 7 (01:03:46):
Unfortunately, you know, look, I think that if Biden had
chosen Doug Jones versus Merrit Garland, you would be a
lot more aggressive on a federal level. But these are
state investigations we're seeing. This is Wisconsin, obviously, was happening
in Georgia. You also have a state attorney general in
Arizona as being very aggressive as well. And this again

(01:04:07):
for all the people out there who don't keep ignoring
the reality of these elections. If you don't have Letitia
James as attorney general in New York State. If you
don't have this attorney general in Wisconsin, if you don't
and the attorney general in Arizona was barely elected, you

(01:04:28):
don't have these actions.

Speaker 3 (01:04:29):
That's why those races matter to Yeah.

Speaker 16 (01:04:32):
Well, first of all, snatched everything that Joy just laid
down because I agree with the commentary was shared.

Speaker 8 (01:04:40):
The other part is you gotta vote.

Speaker 16 (01:04:43):
You know, everybody keeps talking about Biden and Trump, and yes,
that's an important focus of an election, but it is
about what's happening in your state and on your county
level and on the local level. So if you want
to have these individuals who are willing to stand up
for justice inside of your respective states, then you.

Speaker 3 (01:04:59):
Got to vote for They need your help.

Speaker 16 (01:05:01):
I mean, you do your own Lets you say, is
this the type of person who believes in the things
that I believe in and I know that they will
also follow the letter of the law. Why do we
need people who follow the letter of the law. Well,
currently we're living in a country where Trump has poisoned
all to be quite honest, with your judicial system, a

(01:05:21):
number of the other systems that we have, So.

Speaker 3 (01:05:24):
We've got to have checks and balances.

Speaker 8 (01:05:25):
The States is one of the places that you can
have those checks and balances.

Speaker 16 (01:05:28):
But you've got to get engaged and you've got to
vote the only way that you can begin to extract.
Some people say that you know that you actually need
an exorcism to get all of this negativity and evil
sets of actions.

Speaker 8 (01:05:44):
That have been going on.

Speaker 3 (01:05:45):
If you don't believe spirit on the.

Speaker 16 (01:05:47):
Side of the of the equation, then just make sure
that you're voting to make sure that we have the
individuals that are necessary to uphold the letter of the law.

Speaker 5 (01:05:57):
Larry Well, you know.

Speaker 18 (01:06:00):
Roland, you know I believe in law and order, and
you know if you're not following the law, you should
go to jail. Is that how the Republicans do it?
Because this is a criminal enterprise we've been dealing with
the last couple of years. Let's just call it what
it is. And you're right there for us to overthrow
the government. And so a few years ago the last
election cycle, we had insurrection attempt one point zero and

(01:06:22):
without a doubt what you hear and not just the
Project twenty five stuff in terms of Trump wins the election.
But while we think what these folks will be deterred.
You can be assured that we will be some kind
of attempt two point zero variation if Donald Trump doesn't
win the election. Without a doubt, we're going to see it.
We can see all the rhetoric we see from some

(01:06:44):
of a lot of these right wing governor's attorney generals, etc.
So there's going to be some kind of attempt to
circumvent the election that Biden wins. But you have to
hold these folks accountable because for years all I heard
is in terms of black community and racial racist stereotypes
for years now. So if youn't want to fall the law,
you should go to jail, and you should suffer the consequences,
including losing your law license and any anything else that

(01:07:06):
goes at any jobs you may have, offers, opportunities you.

Speaker 3 (01:07:08):
Have should be gone.

Speaker 18 (01:07:10):
Because once again, if you believe in law and order,
then that should be consistent including upholding our democracy. So
I look forward to, you know, continue to follow these
cases like you said, this one, the one in Arizona,
among others, and those individuals you know, facing the consequences
for their own actions.

Speaker 7 (01:07:28):
Yeah, absolutely, and so that is exactly what needs to happen,
all right, folks, black and missing. Jenne Gilmore has been

(01:07:53):
missing from her Philadelphia.

Speaker 3 (01:07:55):
Home since April twenty third.

Speaker 7 (01:07:57):
The fifteen year old is five ft five It just
always one hundred and fifty with brown hair and brown eyes.
Anyone with information about Jennet Gilmore should call the Philadelphia
Police Department at two one five six eight six three
two two zero two one five sixty six three two
to zero.

Speaker 3 (01:08:16):
Folks.

Speaker 7 (01:08:17):
Sean Diddy Coombs has sold his majority stake in his
cable network Revote and the equity has been bought out
by employees.

Speaker 3 (01:08:26):
The announcement was managed today.

Speaker 7 (01:08:27):
Of course, Sean Comb's launcher Vote in twenty thirteen is
owned for the last eleven years.

Speaker 10 (01:08:34):
UH.

Speaker 7 (01:08:34):
He stepped down as chairman in November after a series
of sexual misconduct lawsuits and allegations beginning with his ex
Cassie Ventura. Revote Yo Tatavio Sedmonds said having the employees
as shareholders was one of their goals again. The majority
of Revolts employees about eighty percent for when people of
color are now the company's largest shareholder group.

Speaker 3 (01:08:54):
The initiative value of.

Speaker 7 (01:08:55):
Diddy's share in the company is reportedly unclear.

Speaker 3 (01:09:00):
But Y'ah no, I got good sources. It's about fifty
million dollars.

Speaker 7 (01:09:04):
Uh so uh and sow so see now what happens
with revote coming soon? All right, Joey, Larry mustaffa.

Speaker 3 (01:09:13):
That is it for the panel.

Speaker 7 (01:09:15):
I stually appreciate y'all being on today's show. Thank you
so very much. Look forward to having y'all back on
the show. Gonna got to go to a break. We
come back. Black Wall Street Legacy Fests took place on
Sarday in Tulsa.

Speaker 3 (01:09:29):
Show you what took place.

Speaker 7 (01:09:30):
So we come back, rollingd Martin unfiltered on the Blackstar Network.
Supporters and what we do, join a Brina Funk Fat Club.
So you're taking money over to the peel box five
seven one nine six Washington, DC to zero zero three
seven as zero one nine six cash Cat Dallas sign
our m n filtered, paypalt R Martin unfiltered, venmo is
R m on filtered Zeil, rolling at Roland s Martin

(01:09:51):
dot com, Rolling at Roland Martin unfiltered dot com.

Speaker 3 (01:09:54):
We'll be right back now streaming on the Blackstar Now
at work.

Speaker 7 (01:10:00):
If you look at all the best mass the movies,
and then of course see what I'm thinking.

Speaker 22 (01:10:06):
Why do you think it resonated so well? Well, I
think it's a reflection of us, you know.

Speaker 7 (01:10:14):
I think it's a reflection of authentic Black people the
way they see themselves and in some instances aspirationally.

Speaker 31 (01:10:23):
So on a next Balanced Life with Me, Doctor Jackie,
being of service to others is one of the greatest

(01:10:43):
callingues in life, but being there for someone else in
their time of crisis is a whole new level and
you have to bring courage, commitment, and strength. On our
next show, we meet two real life angels who are
thrust in the midst of caregiving and without warning, and he.

Speaker 4 (01:11:03):
Was looking strange and.

Speaker 32 (01:11:06):
Couldn't cut his meat and it was very odd, and
I said, well, what's wrong, And he says, I think
I've had a stroke, And so of course it scared
me and we literally got in the car and he
walked into the hospital on a Thursday, and by Saturday
of that same week he lost all control of his
left side.

Speaker 31 (01:11:24):
The blessings, the challenges, and the way they maintained their
balance all next on A Balance Life on Blackstar Network.

Speaker 11 (01:11:35):
Hello, I'm Jamia Peugh. I am from Coastville, Pennsylvania. Just
An hour right outside of Philadelphia.

Speaker 17 (01:11:41):
My name is Jasmine Pugh.

Speaker 5 (01:11:42):
I'm also from Coastvial, Pennsylvania.

Speaker 7 (01:11:44):
You are watching Roland Martin unfiltered.

Speaker 3 (01:11:47):
Stay right here, hard, folks.

Speaker 7 (01:11:54):
Over the weekend, I was in Tulsa on Saturday for
the Black Wall Street Legacy Festival. It is a celebration
that commemorates also the Total Race Master that took place
one hundred and three years ago. There were all day
events going on, concerts there across from the Greenwood Center,

(01:12:19):
and you it was a great time had by all.
Anthony Hamilton was the headliner, and so I got an
opportunity to MC the whole event.

Speaker 3 (01:12:25):
Shout out to doctor Tiffany Krutcher as.

Speaker 7 (01:12:27):
Well as the Crutcher Foundation of course, which is a
sponsor of the event. A lot of things they're trying
to do raising money for National Manua'm going to have
her on the show.

Speaker 3 (01:12:37):
I'm talking about that as well.

Speaker 7 (01:12:39):
So, but I have a camera there, and of course
I decided to stroll through the crowd, chatting and joking
with people, and also y'all get to, you know, experience
Anthony Hamilton some of this as well.

Speaker 3 (01:12:51):
And so I hope y'all enjoy.

Speaker 27 (01:13:00):
What he Hey, what's happened? Hey, what's up? What's happening?

Speaker 22 (01:13:34):
Cut out the phone, cut out the down. What's happening, y'all?

Speaker 27 (01:13:44):
Good?

Speaker 22 (01:13:45):
All right?

Speaker 3 (01:13:47):
What's up?

Speaker 27 (01:13:48):
Done you baby?

Speaker 2 (01:13:49):
Y'all good?

Speaker 27 (01:13:50):
All right?

Speaker 2 (01:13:53):
You eating that fish?

Speaker 3 (01:13:59):
What's going on?

Speaker 19 (01:14:00):
Out?

Speaker 27 (01:14:02):
Got just chilling?

Speaker 11 (01:14:03):
Yeah, but just telling mine legacy fast, This is no plea.

Speaker 27 (01:14:17):
What's going out?

Speaker 3 (01:14:21):
Brother?

Speaker 19 (01:14:21):
Doctor?

Speaker 22 (01:14:22):
Tell you what's happening?

Speaker 27 (01:14:25):
What's going on?

Speaker 7 (01:14:28):
What's going on?

Speaker 27 (01:14:30):
What's happening?

Speaker 2 (01:14:32):
You got you got, you got the fish?

Speaker 3 (01:14:34):
Got you got enough to the sauce.

Speaker 19 (01:14:41):
I like it now.

Speaker 27 (01:14:42):
I'm just telling you know.

Speaker 33 (01:14:43):
Getting out at levenough, represent it ain't gonna hot. You
need that umbrellas? She didn't you round up?

Speaker 11 (01:14:57):
Man, My wife had decided to take you from my
white babbies.

Speaker 27 (01:15:01):
All have to get it all right, right, right, all right, right,
she had it. Are you doing?

Speaker 2 (01:15:07):
You're good?

Speaker 6 (01:15:08):
Just chilling? All right?

Speaker 7 (01:15:15):
So you gonna bring your own shade, huh, gonna bring
your own shade. See look at you got your ownless shave.

Speaker 3 (01:15:32):
What's up, y'all?

Speaker 2 (01:15:33):
What's happening?

Speaker 27 (01:15:35):
Good?

Speaker 34 (01:15:35):
Chilling?

Speaker 27 (01:15:36):
What's happening? What's avenue? Are you doing? What's going out

(01:16:00):
what's going on, what's.

Speaker 22 (01:16:01):
Happening, what's happening, what's happening, what's happening?

Speaker 27 (01:16:05):
What's going on?

Speaker 1 (01:16:06):
Y'all?

Speaker 6 (01:16:07):
Chilling?

Speaker 27 (01:16:08):
You're hanging out? Listen to you talk to give him
the hell every day?

Speaker 2 (01:16:15):
H thank you.

Speaker 6 (01:16:17):
I'm not gonna do it, so I gotta do it.

Speaker 5 (01:16:21):
What mean.

Speaker 27 (01:16:23):
You know it all?

Speaker 19 (01:16:25):
Y'all?

Speaker 27 (01:16:25):
Well, what's happening? What's happening? What's going on?

Speaker 7 (01:16:33):
You?

Speaker 6 (01:16:34):
How you pat me happy?

Speaker 2 (01:16:36):
You were talking?

Speaker 27 (01:16:36):
Pound me up there?

Speaker 7 (01:16:37):
I'll talk.

Speaker 11 (01:16:39):
You say, I think you aren't pracing your show?

Speaker 4 (01:16:43):
Why are you saying that?

Speaker 6 (01:16:43):
I was out there getting it.

Speaker 11 (01:16:45):
You're gonna be my friends, You're gonna have my back me.

Speaker 22 (01:16:49):
I speak truth.

Speaker 27 (01:16:51):
It wasn't mean you was watching this. When I see it,
I'm gonna say it. It wasn't mean you was lacking me.

Speaker 2 (01:16:57):
I see it.

Speaker 6 (01:16:58):
I'm gonna say it.

Speaker 27 (01:17:00):
Hey, what's that brom Hey you guys go with Johns?

Speaker 2 (01:17:05):
What's that?

Speaker 6 (01:17:08):
What the ticks here and there?

Speaker 29 (01:17:09):
Like?

Speaker 3 (01:17:09):
Yep, my pet, you're going down here? Okay?

Speaker 5 (01:17:13):
All right?

Speaker 27 (01:17:15):
Hopefully they play a lot better than this year.

Speaker 3 (01:17:18):
I hope South.

Speaker 27 (01:17:20):
What's happening, what's happening, what's going on? Glad to be here,
glad to be here. What's what's happening?

Speaker 2 (01:17:28):
You're good?

Speaker 27 (01:17:29):
All right, that's fine.

Speaker 22 (01:17:40):
Get up, I got a baby, say my first round?

Speaker 11 (01:17:49):
Here?

Speaker 27 (01:17:51):
Hold on init no video, y'all? Good? What's happening?

Speaker 3 (01:17:57):
If you kick?

Speaker 6 (01:17:58):
You kick somebody.

Speaker 22 (01:18:02):
Trying to play basketball?

Speaker 27 (01:18:05):
What a dragon?

Speaker 23 (01:18:06):
See you see?

Speaker 22 (01:18:07):
You should have retired while.

Speaker 27 (01:18:08):
You trying to run track at.

Speaker 22 (01:18:09):
Your age, y'all Black people tripping out.

Speaker 7 (01:18:12):
That's why you're that damn boot right now trying to
run with them young kids. That's what happened, how ye
see see see And for the next nine months you
that damn boot.

Speaker 22 (01:18:25):
A pigture. You ain't running track after this hog?

Speaker 1 (01:18:28):
Yeah?

Speaker 2 (01:18:28):
I thought?

Speaker 5 (01:18:28):
So?

Speaker 27 (01:18:29):
Uh uh, what's happening?

Speaker 3 (01:18:31):
What's happening?

Speaker 1 (01:18:38):
What?

Speaker 5 (01:18:38):
What?

Speaker 2 (01:18:39):
What up?

Speaker 4 (01:18:41):
How do you at?

Speaker 1 (01:18:42):
N A b J?

Speaker 4 (01:18:43):
I mean that abs affiliate here?

Speaker 27 (01:18:46):
All right, I'll take a picture of joker?

Speaker 10 (01:18:57):
What what can you be?

Speaker 19 (01:19:00):
Nice?

Speaker 5 (01:19:01):
No?

Speaker 6 (01:19:02):
That's boring.

Speaker 2 (01:19:04):
That's boring. Why am I gonna do nice? That's boring
to do?

Speaker 27 (01:19:12):
No, I'm gonna give everybody hell. If you can't come me.

Speaker 22 (01:19:23):
Get off the phone. That's get off the phone, brittany.

Speaker 3 (01:19:34):
Where your ass at Brittany.

Speaker 7 (01:19:39):
I'm about six yards all you Whitney.

Speaker 6 (01:19:44):
Where you're at?

Speaker 2 (01:19:45):
At you?

Speaker 27 (01:19:47):
You los Britney, Brittany behind the hell you lost?

Speaker 22 (01:19:50):
Brittany, Brittany?

Speaker 4 (01:19:55):
Are you not from here?

Speaker 6 (01:19:57):
Yes, Brittain, hone, hell you from here?

Speaker 22 (01:20:06):
But you don't know where you're going. Brittany, do you
know who you're talking to me? No, Brittany, this is
Rolling Martin.

Speaker 3 (01:20:18):
This is Rolling Martin.

Speaker 7 (01:20:22):
Her ask said who twice, Brittain, this is Roling Martin.

Speaker 22 (01:20:25):
See, y'alls the Rolling Martin.

Speaker 7 (01:20:27):
Unfiltered since then, Rolling Martin, I'm the stage, m see and.

Speaker 3 (01:20:35):
You don't know who Rolling Martin is.

Speaker 7 (01:20:38):
But Brittany, everybody gonna know who you are because I
got four million followers and I'm videotaping this right now.
And Brittain, when you get when you finally get your
ass here, I'm gonna call you out from the stage.

Speaker 5 (01:20:52):
Okay.

Speaker 27 (01:20:53):
So all, hey all, y'all who.

Speaker 2 (01:20:55):
Watching the video?

Speaker 5 (01:20:57):
That's the photo of Brittany.

Speaker 27 (01:20:58):
Y'all see Brittany right.

Speaker 22 (01:20:59):
Now, Brittany, you need to go down Instagram.

Speaker 7 (01:21:03):
And you need to follow me at rollings Martin and Twitter,
and you need to go my YouTube channel.

Speaker 27 (01:21:08):
And can you walking around here not knowing who the hell,
I am Brittany.

Speaker 22 (01:21:13):
No not rolling rolling.

Speaker 27 (01:21:17):
My my Instagram.

Speaker 7 (01:21:18):
Huntle is rolling as martin Britney, Yeah, Britney. All right,
get I'm gonna give your sister the phone back because
you can figure out how the hell to get here
because you're late, all right.

Speaker 35 (01:21:33):
Hold on, yes, sir, cont Chelsea past guitar. Y'all clock
your hands if you will.

Speaker 3 (01:21:52):
And this is the Youngster of ok right here. I
always messed with him like this. I've been watching him
on you you too, since he was like three four
or five drum set figure than him symbol from sticks.

Speaker 5 (01:22:08):
Anth you here of course.

Speaker 22 (01:22:09):
One hundred and third anniversary of Tolsa Raised Massacre.

Speaker 3 (01:22:12):
Black Wall Street Legacy Festival, Tifferity Crutch. They put in
just your.

Speaker 22 (01:22:16):
Thoughts just about being here in Tulsa, well.

Speaker 7 (01:22:18):
You know, being here and on sail, well, so much
happened where we had built up such an amazing.

Speaker 22 (01:22:26):
City and.

Speaker 27 (01:22:30):
Wealth for ourselves to be here now that it's gone.

Speaker 18 (01:22:33):
Man, to celebrate what we lost and to celebrate the
spirit of the people, always something.

Speaker 7 (01:22:38):
I want to be a part of.

Speaker 22 (01:22:40):
Tiffany.

Speaker 7 (01:22:41):
Of course, y'all have really kind of getting folks focused
on what this is all about Yeah.

Speaker 36 (01:22:47):
Absolutely, Black Wall Street Legacy has a sub fourth year.

Speaker 4 (01:22:50):
We've birthed it during the centennial, over one hundred year
and it's really just not about concerts.

Speaker 36 (01:22:56):
It is about this is our rally crime. This is
our rally crime. We we you know, we're fighting for
the living survivors. Mother random, Mother Fletcher, who's.

Speaker 27 (01:23:06):
Ten one hundred and nine, was tight for my family.

Speaker 36 (01:23:09):
I'm a descendant of Blackwall Street and this city has
not done right by us, and so this is really a.

Speaker 5 (01:23:15):
Platform for us to continue our fight for.

Speaker 36 (01:23:18):
Justice and reparations here in the black mecca, Blackwall Street.

Speaker 37 (01:23:22):
Yeh know, Tomorrio, and no question, we're just excited to
have our brother Anthony Hamilson here, cut spread and where
have you heard roles? Because this is the day of remembrance.
This is a crime scene while we were standing right here.
But thousands of our people lost their homes, they lost
their businesses, and me lost their lives. But we're still here.
We're still fighting at life. The odds off to an
office and it's typically said we're looking for justice and reparations,

(01:23:44):
not just because people were in dulph and off the barbary.

Speaker 3 (01:23:47):
And to sit this like Tiffany, but for all of Black.

Speaker 37 (01:23:49):
America because once we get what we need back here
in dulsh here was springboard across the nation for our
reparations movement nationwide.

Speaker 36 (01:23:55):
And can I take shout out to Tamika Balory my sister,
my sister, but for making this happen.

Speaker 4 (01:24:01):
She made a call in Antony Kane, so I love her.

Speaker 11 (01:24:05):
Shout out to the Terrans Cruncher Foundation.

Speaker 4 (01:24:07):
We're still fighting for justice with my twin brother.

Speaker 36 (01:24:10):
Was hell my police officer here hands in the air
with the Mario and Ben Crompton and.

Speaker 4 (01:24:15):
Just shout out to the black community. We love you all.
And Roland, thank you, Hugh, but always answer the comb
and toks the.

Speaker 37 (01:24:22):
Calls so much we left shout out to Arne Tippy
Fruction making this average making.

Speaker 4 (01:24:27):
Pain purpose through her pain.

Speaker 8 (01:24:29):
Other than a twin brother, we'rest of fighting that game.

Speaker 3 (01:24:32):
We're fighting for reparation. We're fighting for black silvim.

Speaker 2 (01:24:34):
It's Creek citizenship, and.

Speaker 4 (01:24:35):
We don't continue to fighting for tonight.

Speaker 2 (01:24:37):
We have the fathers and twelve.

Speaker 7 (01:24:38):
Father Anthony, him and Anthony and Anthony. Last morning you
ain't got banded territory.

Speaker 4 (01:24:46):
Well you know I'm a big fan of the god man.

Speaker 1 (01:24:48):
You know.

Speaker 27 (01:24:48):
Charlie's a good friend of mine. Man, and the rest
of the guys are amazing, man.

Speaker 7 (01:24:51):
And every time I can be a part of anything
they got going on, it's always a good thing, all right,
my brother.

Speaker 22 (01:24:57):
Always good to see you, always good to you.

Speaker 1 (01:24:58):
You man.

Speaker 38 (01:25:05):
Just take it back to two thousand three, two thound
thy pounds?

Speaker 19 (01:25:09):
Okay one time, n me.

Speaker 34 (01:26:04):
You want to go, and I'm.

Speaker 19 (01:26:09):
Start and ride, thank you, sister.

Speaker 10 (01:26:12):
Start No time can't mean.

Speaker 2 (01:26:16):
Mean shi.

Speaker 10 (01:26:25):
Wait and tell him to be.

Speaker 19 (01:26:28):
Cab.

Speaker 1 (01:26:32):
And I.

Speaker 6 (01:26:38):
Loves a beauty.

Speaker 10 (01:26:46):
Like you don't have putting up. It's so bus became
since time job, it's been fiday.

Speaker 6 (01:26:58):
I can't say that remembering.

Speaker 10 (01:27:03):
The time of the fat but I've got out girls.
Damn the money and time and when about the ardas
you ca the SI fan.

Speaker 34 (01:27:22):
Said, I promise, I.

Speaker 6 (01:27:37):
Don't know.

Speaker 10 (01:27:41):
M me stack and.

Speaker 34 (01:27:55):
Who I don't know that he?

Speaker 6 (01:27:59):
Oh see he had been a hurt from that.

Speaker 10 (01:28:04):
If you follow over your show.

Speaker 34 (01:28:13):
You oh my dear, I.

Speaker 6 (01:28:22):
See you playing see now tell me all you.

Speaker 34 (01:28:40):
See.

Speaker 2 (01:28:40):
I live.

Speaker 19 (01:28:55):
Sometime sea, so I'm.

Speaker 34 (01:29:05):
I don't know may what my com.

Speaker 6 (01:29:40):
Your bamy maion, why you may be about me bea.

Speaker 19 (01:29:48):
You hell be yoursing long begin school.

Speaker 6 (01:29:53):
That you hear all about miser. I haven't time or
I'll be a bad How are you using it?

Speaker 2 (01:30:02):
Something very.

Speaker 19 (01:30:06):
Man? I loved you then, but.

Speaker 6 (01:30:09):
I wanted you to lie.

Speaker 1 (01:30:11):
I look for that.

Speaker 39 (01:30:16):
I got the same old he pass the bag. I
got the same old as the brad.

Speaker 34 (01:30:29):
I can you find me out that.

Speaker 19 (01:30:32):
I got the same self phone? Do you know where
my mama?

Speaker 2 (01:30:37):
I'm a good.

Speaker 6 (01:30:41):
Hour was good lad.

Speaker 19 (01:30:44):
Well this day after reading I was woke up that
morning after.

Speaker 10 (01:30:52):
The lig and you about you see this guy?

Speaker 19 (01:30:56):
And I was always gone.

Speaker 6 (01:30:58):
Ban not loud you some money, not that you get
hold to me?

Speaker 38 (01:31:13):
Somebody you and poy you always saying about it.

Speaker 14 (01:31:27):
That we ain't got.

Speaker 34 (01:31:29):
Any thank you get ing that?

Speaker 10 (01:31:33):
What have you seen?

Speaker 23 (01:31:34):
The lady.

Speaker 6 (01:31:36):
Up counting bad. Ain't got no money, ain't got no job, ain't.

Speaker 2 (01:31:51):
Got no money.

Speaker 6 (01:31:52):
Can't even guy.

Speaker 19 (01:31:55):
Like a lou.

Speaker 10 (01:31:59):
If you go show you that.

Speaker 6 (01:32:05):
You can't do they shuty so.

Speaker 19 (01:32:23):
Not just money gave him. Remember never does not work.

Speaker 34 (01:32:28):
Say to.

Speaker 10 (01:32:32):
Look up.

Speaker 19 (01:35:09):
Think yah.

Speaker 7 (01:38:28):
We talk about blackness and what happens in black culture.
You're about covering these things that matter to us, us
speaking to our issues and concerns.

Speaker 15 (01:38:38):
This is a genuine people power movement and a lot
of stuff that we're not getting.

Speaker 6 (01:38:42):
You get it when you spread the words.

Speaker 21 (01:38:44):
We wish to plead our own cause to long have
others spoken for us. We cannot tell our own story
if we can't pay for it.

Speaker 1 (01:38:54):
This is about covering us.

Speaker 7 (01:38:56):
Invest in black on media. Your dollars matter. We don't
have to keep asking them to cover ourself.

Speaker 3 (01:39:02):
Please support us in what we do, folks.

Speaker 21 (01:39:04):
We want to hit two thousand people fifty dollars this month.

Speaker 5 (01:39:07):
Waits one hundred thousand dollars.

Speaker 7 (01:39:08):
We're behind one hundred thousand, so we want to hit that.

Speaker 3 (01:39:11):
Y'all.

Speaker 5 (01:39:11):
Money makes this possible.

Speaker 7 (01:39:12):
Check some money orders go to fuel box files to
the one ninety six Washington d C two zero zero
three seven dash zero one nine six cash apples dollars signed,
r M unfiltered. Paypalers are Martin unfiltered, venmo is r
M unfiltered, Zilla is rolling at Rowandesmartin dot com
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