Candace Candace talks about the Menendez Brothers, the Diddy and Kim Kardashian conspiracy theories, and why we should all be worried about the power of propaganda. She also talks about Sigmund Freud and his connection to the Frankist cult, and how he may have been a part of the cult. Candace also discusses why it's important to learn about this cult, because it could have a lot to do with pedophilia and incest, which is what she believes happened to the victims of the Frankistic cult. And it's not just a cult, it could be part of something bigger than that! To find out more about The Frankist Cult, you can check out their website here. And if you don't know who Frankist is, you're in for a real treat, because she's going to give you all the details you need to know about the cult and how they may have played a part in the cover-up of what happened to these victims, and may have even played a role in covering up what really happened to them. Also, she's got an update on the Kamala Harris campaign and why she's running for president in the Democratic primary and why you should vote for her. And she's not the only black woman running for the Democratic nomination, but also why she should run for president. Thank you for listening to this episode of the podcast, Candace, Candice. . You're a good listen, and I hope you enjoy it, and tweet me what you think of it! Tweet me and let me know what you thought of it. or don't you think it's funny, right? or not funny, and what do you think about it? or what you're going to do about it?! Tweet Me! or do you have any thoughts on this episode? and what you would like to hear about it?? on Insta: or your thoughts on it or your favorite conspiracy theory or conspiracy theory? is it funny, or are you looking for more of this or not? ? or any other thing that's funny or weird or weird, or what's funny about it, or your opinion on this or what are you gonna do about this or your reaction to this or that or your take on it? ? tweet me or anything like that? :) is a tweet or something like that is funny?
00:00:00.000All right, happy Thursday, everybody. It looks like black people are still not behaving in the way the Democratic Party would like us to. I mean, look, they brought out Usher, Lil Jon, Eminem, Barack Obama. Barack Obama was rapping. And still, it looks like people are not voting for Kamala. We're not excited about Kamala. So they're now bringing out the big guns in the form of Beyonce. Yes, they've just announced that she'll be making an appearance on behalf of Kamala in Houston.
00:00:25.500But first, I want to talk about the Menendez brothers because I am just seeing the same system of propaganda over and over again that has become so effective in the past. You get a Netflix special, a Peacock special, and suddenly people are feeling emotional. And I'm just wondering if that's starting to obscure us, just starting to obscure our moral clarity. Don't worry, guys, we're going to cover Kamala still. We're still looking into Kamala. We're still investigating Kamala. And I still have an update for you, plus some explosive interview that I have booked for now.
00:00:55.500Next week, I'll tell you all about it. That's what we have coming up on Candace.
00:01:07.500You know, lots of people on Instagram are asking me to weigh in on the Menendez brothers. Everyone's kind of obsessed with
00:01:19.580this case and what's happening and sort of saying like, oh, have you looked into this? This is more. It's tied to the Diddy case. Yeah, now I've looked into it. And I can tell you just like from the very beginning, for me, when I see that the district attorney of L.A. County, George Gascon, Gascon is weighing in on something and saying that somebody should be released. And I see also that Kim Kardashian is getting behind something because she's got quite the track record with looking for cases where people are very clearly guilty and then trying to present to the public.
00:01:47.580They should feel bad for these people for certain reasons. Instinctively, I just knew maybe not to immediately get on board because I know that propaganda and celebrities are one hell of a drug.
00:02:00.180So today, what I want to do is talk about something very important. And by the way, guys, it's all related. The reason why I'm discussing this is because if you have been watching this series, you can see that I am really fascinated with the power of propaganda.
00:02:11.880I became particularly interested when I learned more about Sigmund Freud, something that got me into a ton of trouble this year. It continues to get me into trouble. I have been called every single name imaginable because I was shocked when I read this book that I've told you about several times. Please put it on your list.
00:02:29.700It is called The Assault on Truth. And it revealed to me that a person who was in in control of the Freud archives, the director of the Freud archives, who eventually lost his job for just trying to ring the alarm and tell the public, hey, Sigmund Freud, that guy we've been celebrating in the textbooks.
00:02:47.540And this guy, and this guy was a Harvard graduate, who he adored Sigmund Freud and believed in psychoanalysis and believed in psychology. Yeah, then he realized that Sigmund Freud had created the psychoanalytic movement to cover for pedophiles, which kind of adds up because everything he did was basically to develop these theories on children and sex.
00:03:12.020Like if you really look at his life work, he has somewhat of an obsession with children and sex, also known as gaslighting children, who were coming to him and telling him that they were molested by their parents, accusing them of having been attracted to their parents. No, you weren't molested by your parents. You were just attracted to them.
00:03:30.260And then as I learned more about Sigmund Freud, I realized his relation to the Frankist cult. And that's what got me in trouble with the media. It doesn't make me feel good. It makes me feel like maybe this cult is still in power.
00:03:39.900But yes, there was a movement, a rather fringe, but very powerful movement of Frankists who believed in incest and pedophilia as a sacrament of their religion. It's a straight up cult. You can look into it. Not only should you look into it, you must look into this.
00:03:58.860It is very important to learn this because powerful people were part of this cult. Powerful families were a part of this cult.
00:04:06.360And when I began speaking about this, like I said, I was getting hit everywhere, but it was very funny.
00:04:10.960I want to show you this tweet. The Israel Advocacy Group or whatever they are, were trying to do this whole thread about my anti-Semitism because how dare you touch one of the untouchables, which is Sigmund Freud.
00:04:21.920And this is a real tweet from them as they're debunking everything I've said, the Israel Advocacy Movement.
00:04:27.380She also claims Freud was a part of a secret Frankist cabal and that psychoanalysis was based on Jewish mysticism.
00:04:34.240Both of these claims are false. Well, not entirely.
00:04:37.540Surprisingly, my research found that several members of Freud's inner circle were descendants of Frankists.
00:04:43.720While there's no direct connection to Freud himself, he was close to these Frankist descendants.
00:04:48.740This is one aspect of her theory, which incredibly is true.
00:04:53.020Oh, yeah. All my homies are down with pedophilia as a sacrament.
00:04:57.300But no, not Sigmund Freud. He's just interested in the theory of children and sex.
00:05:02.540Now, why am I telling you that? Because, well, he's considered the father of modern psychology and his family kept that power.
00:05:08.900Then came the father of modern propaganda, who was Edward Bernays, another person who you should learn about.
00:05:16.420Very terrifying. The way that he realized that you could modify human behavior through the power of the mainstream media.
00:05:24.100Like the media could be used as this tool to change the way people dress.
00:05:28.600He did this to change the way people eat, to change the way people act.
00:05:32.460Can you use propaganda to make women wear skirts?
00:05:36.480Can you use propaganda to make Americans eat eggs and bacon?
00:05:42.420He literally did this. He's like he is credited with changing the kind of breakfast that we ate in America.
00:06:14.140Yes, Mark Randolph is the co-founder of Netflix and his great grand uncle is Sigmund Freud and his great uncle is Edward Bernays.
00:06:23.380That is very important for you to know.
00:06:25.120Learning these facts completely transformed my relationship with the media, completely transformed the way that I view these documentaries.
00:06:32.940And then I kind of went back and examined cases like I was 100 percent in growing up on the Michael Jackson is a pedophile.
00:06:40.360And then I realized, why did I think that?
00:06:43.060Well, did you watch this Netflix documentary and did you watch this documentary leaving Neverland and all of this stuff?
00:06:48.980And then when I actually looked into the details of the case, I was shocked and alarmed.
00:06:53.320And I now, well, he was obviously deemed innocent in the end, but it was very clear that this was a man who was fighting very powerful executives.
00:07:00.560And then they used their propagandist media to turn to try to turn the entire world against him.
00:07:06.600And ultimately, I believe, which led to his death.
00:07:09.140There's no question in my mind that Michael Jackson was innocent and was a victim of the media.
00:07:13.160And so when I see these cases happening and I see the way that it doesn't matter who it is.
00:08:07.740We are being psychologically conditioned by people that I believe who are evil to accept evil if they can create a narrative that we believe in.
00:08:15.420If they can get someone to come out and speak and say something, which in the case of the Michael Jackson case,
00:08:19.660they were able to find people that had debts and people who were looking for a come up.
00:08:25.200And you just don't know what back channels they're looking for to just participate in the documentary.
00:08:29.680And then when their stories fell apart later, nobody cared because they had watched the documentary.
00:08:34.460And that is a part of this psychological conditioning that you believe that when you watch something, it must be real if you feel emotions.
00:08:42.900So for those of you that are not familiar, because I know I have a lot of people that watch the show all over the world with the Menendez Brothers case,
00:08:48.420I'm going to tell you a little bit about it right now.
00:08:50.260So the Menendez brothers are Joseph Lyle Menendez, who just goes as Lyle Menendez, and Eric Menendez.
00:08:56.220And they were our children of an RCA music executive.
00:09:02.140His name was Jose Menendez and his wife, Kitty Menendez.
00:09:15.240And then he became an RCA records music executive, and they moved out to Calabasas, a wealthy area.
00:09:22.860So in 1987, Lyle attended Princeton University, where he ended up being placed on academic probation for poor grades.
00:09:31.480And he was eventually suspended for plagiarism.
00:09:34.100There were other issues with him in his dormitory where he threw out all of his roommate's belongings because he said he didn't want to share a room.
00:09:41.180He left sinks overflowing, causing damage, and he repainted his room in violation of university rule.
00:09:47.880So he was just kind of a problem child that happened to be at Princeton.
00:09:51.920And eventually they said, you know what?
00:10:11.540Now let's get to what happened on August 18th, 1989.
00:10:16.080Eric and his brother purchased two shotguns.
00:10:19.140And then two days later, on August 20th at 10.30 p.m., they barged into their parents' Beverly Hills mansion.
00:10:26.400Now, to be clear, the reason that they barged into their mansion in Beverly Hills and not in Calabasas is because they had to move.
00:10:32.760Because the year prior, the brothers went on a burglary spree in the Calabasas neighborhood and stole like $100,000 from their neighbors, which included jewelry.
00:10:43.360And so the dad had to up and move them to Beverly Hills, okay?
00:10:46.160So you've got problems in Princeton, you've got problems in the Calabasas neighborhood with the law.
00:10:52.100And then once they lived in the Beverly Hills mansion, they had purchased these two shotguns.
00:10:57.220And at 10.30 p.m., they barged into the mansion and they blasted their parents with those shotguns as they were eating in the den watching television.
00:11:06.440Jose, the father, was shot six times, including a fatal shot to the back of his head.
00:11:10.640Kitty, the mother, was shot 10 times in total before she received that fatal shot to her face.
00:11:19.480She may have survived, but then Lyle ran to the car where Eric then handed him more ammunition to reload before firing that fatal shot to her cheek.
00:11:30.980They later told a therapist that they killed the father because they hated him and that they killed the mother out of mercy.
00:11:38.060Like they said, it was just a mercy killing.
00:11:40.640And, of course, they had run out of shells and then went back to the car before they had hit her again.
00:11:46.100Now, some things that are just important to know.
00:11:50.280I know people are all fired up because, like I said, once Peacock and Netflix creates a series, people are suddenly too emotional to listen.
00:11:56.720But these are the facts of the case, that these kids were wealthy kids, that they had, obviously, a lot of resources.
00:12:08.860Like I said, the burglaries were not inconsequential.
00:13:06.720The police officers and the forensic staff that had worked on that scene described it as one of the most brutal that they had ever encountered,
00:13:13.360noting the blood and the brain matter that had been splattered all throughout the room.
00:13:17.100And there was even a detective who stated, quote,
00:13:19.520I've seen a lot of homicides, but nothing quite that brutal.
00:13:22.680The blood, there was flesh, there were skulls.
00:13:35.480But regardless, they obviously, when they arrived at the scene, believed the boys because they were young.
00:13:41.980And one of the brothers even offered up a possibility that the reason this murder had taken place was because of something dealing with the mafia.
00:13:49.680You know, his father is involved with a record executive.
00:14:48.100And then the police started going, OK, that's interesting.
00:14:50.700Like, is this this is this is quite a way for two people to behave in any circumstance of their parents just being brutally murdered, sort of spending all of this money.
00:15:00.420Then what happened was Eric's high school friend, Craig, reported to the police that Eric had confessed the murder to him.
00:15:07.340And he also revealed that Eric had previously written that 66 page screenplay, like I told you earlier, entitled Friends, which depicted the son killing his wealthy parents for their inheritance.
00:15:18.260So the police are thinking, hmm, maybe maybe we have a motive here.
00:15:21.480Then Lyle's friend, Glenn Stevens, informed the police that just one week after the killings, Lyle actually made a sudden trip back home to Princeton to destroy something in the family computer.
00:15:34.360Stevens said that Lyle told him that a family member had located a new will and he had gone back there to erase that will.
00:15:42.100Then a computer expert came forward and confirmed that he was hired by Lyle to ensure that the new will had been properly deleted off of the computer.
00:15:51.840So these are the facts of the case that you're not hearing people discuss as they talk about the sexual abuse that the boys said they endured during the trial.
00:16:02.220And by the way, I'm not I'm not here to question that narrative.
00:16:20.420So initially they had not said that to investigators.
00:16:23.940But then during the trial, once seven months later, after they had spent seven hundred thousand dollars and then police arrested them and they got a lawyer.
00:16:33.500Suddenly they said that actually this is a story about abuse and that they had been tortured and that they had been abused by their parents.
00:16:41.360Eric alleged that Jose had told him that he was written out of the will.
00:18:17.340And but then on the other side, you had a cousin of his, Diane Vander Molen, who said that she spent summers living with the Menendez family and testified that, yes, she had no doubt that there was sexual abuse.
00:18:31.760Because when Lyle was eight years old and he came to her and she was 17 at the time, she said one night that she was in her room changing the sheets in her bed.
00:18:41.200And Lyle came in and asked if he could sleep in the bed that was next to hers because he was afraid to sleep in his own bed because his father had been touching him.
00:18:49.760So you have proof, again, the parents not alive to dispute that narrative, but you can see why people are up in arms and saying that it is it is a plausibility that maybe the dad really did abuse him.
00:19:00.460And that is the reason that they were acting out.
00:19:03.360Then, because you have these things that then get on earth years later, and then suddenly there's like a paramount and everyone's starting to make films about it and documentaries.
00:19:11.060What ended up happening was a Menudo brother, a band brother, like the Menudo of the band, one of the members, Roy Rosello, came forward in 2023 to Peacock.
00:19:24.580In 2023, he decided to speak out in a Peacock documentary about the Menendez brothers.
00:19:28.800And he said that he, too, was raped by the Menendez father and that he endured all of this sexual assault while he was coming up in the music industry.
00:19:35.440By the way, like I said, do not discount any of that narrative.
00:19:38.380Just think that this stuff should maybe go through on a trial and that trial should not be Peacock or on Netflix.
00:19:45.540OK, I don't believe that this is how people should be responding where you watch something on TV, you hear somebody tell you something and you just simply believe it because you're feeling emotional.
00:19:55.660That's kind of the point that we're at right now.
00:20:02.720Let's actually say that we believe fully.
00:20:06.060Let's just take that scenario fully that the Menendez brothers were molested by their father when they were kids.
00:20:12.660Like I said, we can just let's accept that narrative fully and say we can verify it 100 percent.
00:20:17.180Do you believe that that would then give them the right to murder their father?
00:20:26.540OK, then to murder murder their mother as a mercy killing, as they described it thereafter, then to go on a shopping spree, hoping that you're maybe going to get away with it, buying kind of preparing for your new life.
00:20:40.520Does that not just in your head flag you as, wait, that's not right.
00:20:45.360For some reason in our head, there's like this either or and people are like, well, if the guy sexually assaulted them, then no matter what, what they did is OK.
00:20:56.600Two things can be true at the exact same time.
00:20:59.080If the sexual abuse allegations are true, then truly, truly, I hope that their father is burning in hell.
00:21:06.860I really do hope their father is burning in hell.
00:21:09.240But it would also be true that them executing their mother and their father and all the things that they did thereafter, trying to edit the testimony of their girlfriends and their fiancés is also wrong.
00:21:20.740And I would not want someone who had exhibited the anger that they exhibited before they killed their parents.
00:21:26.160I'm talking about what they did at their time, what one of the brothers did at their time at Princeton, exhibiting anger behavior, also burglaries leading up to this.
00:21:45.320But there's a pattern here that had been established leading up to this.
00:21:48.360And I don't think that shooting your mom, if you did do that, okay, and feeling so okay with it that you just go on shopping sprees and don't have any remorse, like if they had told on themselves and said, we did this because instantly, trying to get away with it in the way that they did makes me really uncomfortable.
00:22:08.100So I offer this only to constantly keep us thinking about whether or not we are being emotionally manipulated by the media, right?
00:22:17.020To not reach sensibly, logically sound, morally sound conclusions that cold-blooded murder is wrong.
00:22:24.900I've seen this happen with George Floyd case.
00:22:27.020I've seen this happen when, you know, suddenly people don't care about the things that George Floyd did in his past.
00:22:32.180It all becomes down to what they watched.
00:22:33.860It all comes down to a documentary and the facts and what somebody said they saw versus what actually happened that day.
00:22:41.180It just seems to be happening more quickly these days.
00:22:45.260The faster person, like the more quickly that we churn out these documentaries, the more quickly it seems that any person in the entire world can be rehabilitated.
00:22:53.840And I'm not really comfortable with that conclusion.
00:22:56.060That's the only thing that I want to say about that.
00:22:57.820Again, this is not a way to assert that what happened to them, if it happened to them, was right.
00:23:02.260But I do think that the public response to this has been very wrong.
00:23:07.300And that's all I'm going to say about that topic.
00:23:09.560All right, guys, do you want to have a deeper prayer life, but you don't know where to start?
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00:24:03.360And it makes sense because what Judge Joe Brown, I'm so happy that, by the way, over a million of you guys have watched that episode, when he just describes the fact that she's kind of just, she's got nothing going on.
00:24:11.320Things have always been handed to her.
00:24:48.320Is there something you can point to in your life, political life or in your life in the last four years, that you think is a mistake that you have learned from?
00:26:48.000And I'm going to work across the aisle to pass a comprehensive bill that deals with a broken immigration system.
00:26:57.400I think Jackson's question part of it was to acknowledge that America has always had migration, but there needs to be a legal process for it.
00:27:10.300And that's the point that I think is the most important point that can be made, which is we need a president who is grounded in common sense and practical outcomes.
00:28:09.820Like I but how I'm going to do it, I don't want to answer because I was so anti the wall.
00:28:13.820But actually what I'm doing now is saying that I'm going to pass legislation, which is going to build the wall, which I feel like a couple of years ago I was saying was extremely racist.
00:28:21.740And so now I just kind of have to pretend that I didn't say that by not saying anything other than let's just fix it.
00:28:51.380There's a lot of work that needs to happen.
00:28:53.060But let's let's I think that may be part of this point that how I think about it is we've got to get past this era of politics and partisan politics, slowing down what we need to do in terms of progress in our country.
00:29:09.160And that means working across the aisle.
00:29:13.120We did it around whether it be what we were able to accomplish with the bipartisan infrastructure deal or some of the work that we have done in terms of dealing with gun safety.
00:29:22.660But we've got to work across the aisle.
00:29:25.220And it is my commitment to work with Democrats, with Republicans, with independents to deal with a number of issues, whether it be what we need to do in terms of housing.
00:29:35.320And creating legislation that creates incentives for that, what we need to do to reinstate the freedom of a woman to make decisions about her own body and not have her government tell her what to do, whether it be what we need to do to actually invest in a substantial way in the industries of the future, in American based manufacturing, in American based industries where American workers and union workers have those jobs.
00:30:03.320In a way that is good paying jobs that gives people the dignity they deserve.
00:30:08.080All of those areas I plan on working across the aisle and with Congress, including the issue of immigration, which we've got to fix.
00:30:18.560Once again, you just keep seeing this where one policy, she doesn't have one.
00:30:22.960She's never thought about this because Kamala is an empty vessel and she will do as she is instructed by her handlers.
00:30:28.180So the question is, who are Kamala Harris's handlers?
00:30:31.100And so I want to tell you guys the reason why we want to take a pause on going through her genealogy is that we're just getting very intricate on certain things and we don't want to say something and get it wrong because we know the media is waiting for that.
00:30:41.980They can pretend that the entire series has been incorrect right now.
00:30:45.040They know that we are on to them and they're staying mom and they're telling her it's two more weeks.
00:30:50.280But the more and more that we look into her family history, for me, it looks quite incestuous.
00:30:57.280And what I mean by that is that on various documents, as we start to pick apart the Browns and the Harris's and the Allen's, there doesn't really seem to be a difference.
00:31:08.600It seems to be that they just keep marrying into each other.
00:31:11.960And there is no question that on both sides of her family, she descends from very powerful slave owners, very powerful people who were running the sugar plantations.
00:31:24.160And so we wanted to put together a chart to give you the races that we know, like to say, like, this is her great uncle and he's this race and this is her great grandfather and grandfather.
00:31:34.140And these are the races that we can just give you like a very clear depiction of what that is.
00:31:38.460You know, yesterday we were looking in to Iris, the picture of the black woman that we see and that one photo of her on the lap.
00:31:44.900And we have spent so much time over the last 24 hours really looking into Iris Finnegan.
00:31:49.360And there are just a lot of strange things that are popping up.
00:31:52.660You know, Iris, her, like I said, her real last name is Iris Allen in terms of searching for her.
00:32:32.020But you can see that her mother is listed on this birth certificate as Joanna Moses.
00:32:38.760And what is also of interest is that it says that Joanna Moses is a servant maid.
00:32:44.840And that cannot be true because her father, Peter Moses, as we have discovered, owned so much land, was one of the people that owned virtually everything in St. Anne.
00:32:55.720And so there's something not right about this.
00:32:57.320And what's also not right about it is that you see that blank space for her father next to Joanna Moses.
00:33:03.320It says, you know, what is the rank or the profession of the father?
00:34:43.960We were able to have a conversation and to book a date to interview him.
00:34:47.520So you have that to look forward to on Monday.
00:34:50.540I can tell you just based off of our conversations, this guy is the real deal.
00:34:54.120He also spent tons of time in Hong Kong.
00:34:57.020And he is telling me that Tim Waltz is completely lying about his time spent there.
00:35:00.980And that he likely had very serious involvement with the government because he, Yoichi, should have known Tim Waltz, should have come across Tim Waltz.
00:35:11.380And he's called around and asked colleagues and the Tim Waltz that is being presented to us that there's something very wrong there.
00:35:21.420And he believes that the United States military is involved.
00:35:39.820I'm like, you know, you could just tell he's old-fashioned.
00:35:42.060And I'm like, no, we need to get you on a podcast and we need to get you speaking to the public and we need to make sure that we get it to go viral.
00:35:47.180We are also going to get Judge Joe Brown back because I know two hours was not enough.
00:35:51.120And there are so many other topics that he covered with me off record that I want to make sure that we get out there.
00:35:55.500So we are not going to let go of the Kamala bone.
00:35:58.820We just wanted to make sure that we don't make any mistakes because any mistakes made at this moment could be critical.
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00:38:38.100Like, I can't believe that with everything going on, that for Beyonce, this is a priority.
00:38:43.800Like, I don't buy the Beyonce's here to save the world rhetoric.
00:38:47.940I personally believe that her and Jay-Z, for whatever reason, are basically told when they have to get out and support something.
00:38:55.460That's why they were one of the earliest supporters.
00:38:58.380Remember, I just vaguely or vividly rather recall them marching in the street over Trayvon Martin.
00:39:03.760Like, they co-signed BLM, and it feels like it became a thing overnight.
00:39:07.340And they have been sort of minted like the king and queen of hip-hop.
00:39:12.140So seeing that she has now agreed to appear at a Friday rally in Houston with Kamala Harris just smells very funny to me.
00:39:18.780She will be with her mother, Tina Knowles, and the country music icon, Willie Nelson, according to people that are familiar with the planning.
00:39:26.560And so that is supposed to be announced imminently.
00:39:29.380And as we know, Kamala, who is definitively not Black at all, not even kinda, okay, she's a Jewish, Hindu, Irish woman, for being honest here, and a descendant of slave owners and sugar plantation supervisors.
00:39:47.540And one of them, who was incredibly abusive, by the way, Hamilton Brown, was known to be very abusive to his slaves, and she is a descendant of that Hamilton Brown.
00:39:55.420But anyways, we know that in order to convince her that she's Black, she chose to walk out to Beyonce's song Freedom.
00:40:01.180That has been her theme music throughout all of her rallies, even though I feel certain that Kamala Harris can not name even two Beyonce albums.
00:40:10.700But they are obviously ginning this up to the public, and it's supposed to make Black people do a 180.
00:40:15.820And I just find this all to be so routinely insulting.
00:40:38.220And I do not plan on letting this go, because I just find this to be so fundamentally racist.
00:40:43.460Everything that she has done has been so fundamentally racist.
00:40:45.700And that includes trotting out all these Black artists from Little John to Usher and now to Beyonce as a way to tell Black people to behave.
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