JustPearlyThings - March 21, 2023


How Many ABORTION is TOO MUCH?


Episode Stats

Length

1 hour

Words per Minute

187.52887

Word Count

11,367

Sentence Count

7

Misogynist Sentences

52

Hate Speech Sentences

50


Summary

In this episode, we discuss the controversial topic of whether or not you should have more than one partner in a long term relationship. Is it better to have 2 partners or 1? How many abortions should you have in a relationship? Is it worse to have 1 partner or 2 partners? Is there a mathematical equation you can use to answer these questions?


Transcript

00:00:00.000 coming up next when i know people that have had abortions i just think they're stupid
00:00:03.760 so if a man ejaculates inside a woman i won't get pregnant and we have this narrative that like
00:00:07.920 women are pressured and like into sex when a lot of times they just want to do it i do know
00:00:12.480 somebody who never enjoyed sex until they met the person that they married like the only reason
00:00:19.680 women know if they're sexually unsatisfied is because they've slept around but if you're killing
00:00:24.400 a fetus at 14 you're killing a human a fetus is a living thing pay attention your biology
00:00:29.520 lessons you would be surprised about how many idiots are in this world today how many abortions
00:00:39.360 is too many abortions wow i mean anyone anyone can start let me go around you start i feel like
00:00:50.240 i'm interested how many is too many you just you have a look on your face i'm like i just want to
00:00:55.680 see what you gotta say i suppose one is probably too many abortions okay yeah i think i think having
00:01:04.560 any is is too many to be honest i think there's a mathematical equation yeah it's a it's a i don't
00:01:15.440 think it's weird to say these things because it's like i don't think there's a number i can give you
00:01:19.600 but there's a lot of things i can take into account with these things like if you're in a long-term
00:01:23.680 relationship with a person and for whatever reason whatever things happen i can give you
00:01:27.760 one per long-term relationship huh huh so if you're in 20. if she's no obviously not 20 but if you're
00:01:35.040 like 40 and you've been in two 10 year long relationships and for whatever reason you had
00:01:38.800 to have an abortion what if you've been in 40 you should have kids with all due respect yeah of course
00:01:43.200 but i'm saying it's circumstance that's why i'm giving it like a mathematical equation for
00:01:47.600 relationship time kind of relationship all that kind of stuff because you never know what people's life
00:01:52.160 stories isn't it what is it worse to abort a kid when you're in a relationship because you know
00:01:57.680 that you know that person's stable so so why do they get a pass almost but you don't know that
00:02:03.520 person's stable sometimes that's why that's why it has to be a mathematical equation with a lot of a lot
00:02:09.360 of intake there's no number i can give you i have to give you what e equals mc squared okay so i just okay
00:02:15.920 so so i'm 25 how many abortions is too many abortions for a 25 year old anywhere more than one is crazy
00:02:22.160 okay so a 30 a 30 year old is it two 35 three if you're 40 four if you're 35 and been in two six
00:02:30.720 or more year relationship i can give you two but why have you based this on long term because you never
00:02:39.280 i've got a question for you then ask me ask away is your answer based on personal anecdote and i'm not
00:02:46.000 not saying you personally but someone that you have like hold close dear to you has been in a
00:02:51.120 situation yeah and therefore your rule is based on yes i am i agree with that 100 because because i've
00:02:58.160 seen some of the other side of like oh okay cool i had this preconceived conception of like abortions
00:03:04.800 and then when you see someone like literally have no other obviously i don't want to be like those
00:03:09.680 feminists who come in you know what about the girls it's not what i'm saying it's not what i'm
00:03:14.240 saying this is what i'm saying it's a case-by-case basis with bare equations and there's so many things
00:03:18.320 you have to take into account but if you're just an average person who's just living an average life
00:03:23.280 and you're 20 something years old you shouldn't really have more than one unless your situations
00:03:27.520 are dire as really when i when i know people that have had abortions i just think they're stupid
00:03:32.400 why is that why is that how did you get pregnant a lot of factors it's so it's so easy not to that's
00:03:41.360 one of the things you have very easy to not get pregnant it is yeah it's very easy to not to
00:03:45.920 we have too many options yeah yeah you bypassed all of them yeah every single one yeah so sometimes
00:03:53.360 you meet those people who literally are falling in because i don't want to air people's business out
00:03:57.520 but like you're in a you're in a abusive relationship with this guy you had to do it on the
00:04:02.000 down low because he didn't know you're pregnant because if he knows you're pregnant
00:04:05.840 then that's i'm add one on your on you because he's already abusive again i don't want to sound
00:04:10.160 like these was she was she was she hitting back no of course not you sure very sure most most most
00:04:16.240 abusive relationships again i agree with you 100 there but this the again this goes back to as i said
00:04:23.440 again like a million like a personal but yeah it goes back to probably with personal anecdotes i have
00:04:28.720 stories of situations where if i was to see that situation again i could at least give some sort of
00:04:35.680 day pass for but it has to be a day pass and it can't be a thing where this is like a regular occurrence
00:04:44.240 okay what about you um i think after one it's too many and even and even with that it's questionable
00:04:53.440 because if you're laying down unprotected you know there's a chance you can fall pregnant yeah
00:04:59.360 you know i mean so even that it's questionable but then again like you said with your whole
00:05:03.600 mathematical equation whatever i teach maths but i don't know where you got your mathematical equation
00:05:08.720 from i've got two aids in gcsc yeah i'm gonna say i got two one in math don't worry about that yeah but
00:05:18.000 but yeah um yeah i think after one let's say you have this out of a out of this world excuse and you
00:05:27.200 got pregnant you didn't know you got pregnant you're not ready okay that's fine now that's one second time
00:05:32.880 you're pushing it does abstinence ever sorry yeah absolutely yeah yeah i was just gonna say does
00:05:43.200 abstinence not ever fall into this equation because for me i i waited me and my husband we waited until
00:05:50.240 marriage i feel like if if you don't want to have children of course then you you need to ensure that
00:05:56.160 you waited you waited to have sex until marriage yes how long are you with him um we got together
00:06:04.160 we got married um last year so we were together for about nine months oh wow nine months yes so we
00:06:11.040 both waited until marriage okay and so i think when you look at it from that scenario you kind of have
00:06:16.960 to think okay how how how do you how do you want to see the outcome of your life ultimately if i don't
00:06:24.320 want to have children and i want to wait to ensure that i'm doing it in the safest space which is in
00:06:30.560 a family your religious unit i am religious yeah well i'm christian so yeah that's so cute you guys
00:06:37.280 waited that's so rare nowadays especially especially it's rare for guys i don't know like i think there's
00:06:43.680 a lot more women that may attempt to do that but guys i don't know maybe maybe maybe born again there
00:06:49.920 aren't a lot of virgin girls like statistically more men are virgins than women yeah one of the three
00:06:56.160 men under 30 are either virgins or haven't had sex in the past year yeah yeah that was like my husband
00:07:02.560 when i met him yeah but your husband was a virgin i swear no no no he was not he was not a virgin but
00:07:08.480 he was a born again he was a born again virgin were you a born again virgin virgin now yeah when you
00:07:15.520 met him were you a born again virgin you said never happened guys speak one at a time please
00:07:21.840 were you a born again virgin too what when i met him yeah okay i'll celebrate for like six months
00:07:28.000 a long time so you were more sexually active than he was according to him yeah according to him but i
00:07:39.920 don't know you know that's what he was saying that he was yeah but you know i wasn't there what do you
00:07:45.760 think how many abortions is too many abortions i would probably say three three three three yeah you
00:07:53.920 don't think two is too many no because you know what certain things can happen in it your womb is
00:07:58.800 just a graveyard at that point yeah but yeah yeah as we say sometimes when bringing up children is
00:08:04.480 not the easiest so they might have to make certain decisions yeah but what type of what type of things
00:08:10.160 can happen use a condom condom you might not wear the condom condom might break um i've heard a
00:08:17.440 the situation of a girl not really they might not be taking their their pill one time like there's a
00:08:22.640 lot of there's a lot of things i think can happen to be sure why don't they just deal with the
00:08:27.200 consequence consequences raising a child for 18 years yeah i mean most people throughout all of human
00:08:33.200 history were poor like like we're richer today than we ever were i don't even mean like financially
00:08:38.400 yeah but i'm saying like yeah but like i feel like if you make your bed you should lie in it yeah i don't
00:08:44.080 know but if you have the options you're saying like people can't take the pill and stuff like
00:08:48.560 that or they forget to take the pill yeah but um if you forget to take the pill you've now got a
00:08:54.880 decision to make right and that decision is you're going to have to kill a kill your child yeah or raise
00:08:59.920 a child for the rest of your life and if you know those are the options wouldn't you remember to take
00:09:05.200 the pill or take the morning yeah because those two consequences are too dire for me not to take
00:09:13.360 my medication yeah or whatever the pill or whatever it is i just i don't know i don't get it
00:09:17.600 i think we also can't separate like when you have sex you are there is the potential of having a child
00:09:23.760 but also if you look at planning like um you can literally you can plan when to get pregnant they have
00:09:30.000 calendars to ensure that you're able to plan when you're going to get pregnant and in fact when you
00:09:35.920 look at it it's actually a really small window so i think ultimately we have to be responsible for
00:09:41.920 the decisions that we make and if we are going to you know lie with somebody of course that comes with
00:09:47.760 multiple other consequences as well then we have to make sure that we're gonna we're gonna take those
00:09:52.800 consequences on as well if we end up having a child i think the art the argument that that it just
00:09:58.320 happened is a really kind of when someone says that i always look like it's really disingenuous to say
00:10:05.360 it just happened because we're all fully functioning sentient beings do you know i mean we know what's
00:10:12.080 happening do you know i mean we know that from since we were in school if you lay down it creates babies
00:10:20.320 do you know i mean that's what happens we can't there's there's so many different ways that you can
00:10:25.360 that you can not as you said there's so many different ways that you can just not it's really
00:10:30.560 easy not to get pregnant it's true you know i mean in 2022 it's very easy so it's it does nothing just
00:10:38.160 happens so i have a question for the room how many people um raise your hand if you know someone
00:10:43.520 personally that's had an abortion okay so i've just anecdotally was that were they being careful
00:10:52.160 or were they being reckless reckless reckless careful reckless reckless for one of them careful
00:10:58.480 for one of them hey i suppose it would be it would be reckless but i think it's also because they were
00:11:03.920 young and didn't have the understanding because every every person i know that's had an abortion they
00:11:09.600 weren't using anything like not not a single form of birth control they're just shooting up that's crazy
00:11:14.560 yeah and that's what that's why most of most abortions happen just based off of you know
00:11:20.560 decisions that you could have made just if you're a little bit smarter at the time you know people um
00:11:26.080 listen everybody likes sex men and women they like sex but there's just for me there's just a way in
00:11:32.960 which to have it so you know that you don't get the worst outcome of having sex and i think as adults even
00:11:39.360 growing up in the uk we have sex education in schools we know what happens do you know what
00:11:44.000 i mean and it's just like i think the excuses become too much after a while i think that i think
00:11:50.640 some people also have the mindset that it will never happen to them yeah that too how so what do you
00:11:56.960 like oh i won't get pregnant kind of thing so if a man ejaculates inside a woman i won't get pregnant
00:12:02.960 yeah i don't think i don't think women really think like that unless they've been told that
00:12:08.800 they can't get pregnant i think women know that there's a chance all the time that i could be
00:12:13.760 pregnant you know that you've been it's been ingrained but also it's not just women remember
00:12:17.520 you got people that are having sex from young young that don't always have the knowledge
00:12:22.880 are you stupid you're young you're not stupid some people don't always know
00:12:26.640 no no i mean i'm sorry i'm sorry like my sister's 13 and she knows she's like they they know they
00:12:34.160 know even younger nowadays with the internet they do like but then you also have sometimes women or
00:12:40.640 not even women sometimes people can be not peer pressured but they might feel like they have to do
00:12:45.440 that for the guy to make them feel like okay this is what i'm doing even so i'm curious from the men here
00:12:52.400 if you've anecdotally you could either say this for you personally or friends of yours you know
00:12:58.320 you don't have to name names if you haven't worn a condom has it been because of you or because of the
00:13:02.960 girl because of the girl i swear to god i swear the thing is the thing is the thing is i'm happy i'm
00:13:12.960 very happy you brought that question up because that's a question that doesn't really get bored how many
00:13:17.040 times is it actually her but there's oh he took the condom off bitch please have any of you ever
00:13:23.280 because this has happened to me i've only ever been having sex with a condom with a girl and she's
00:13:27.680 asked you to take it off yes yeah yeah yes yes she's trying to try yes right i didn't by the way
00:13:35.200 but i'm just saying like it's happened and i'm just like you want me to do what and she was like oh
00:13:39.920 but it would feel better and i'm just like ah that's not happening that's just not happening
00:13:46.400 yeah because what would that what would have happened after let's say she does get pregnant
00:13:50.320 and now she's saying to the world oh he took her off without me knowing blah blah or you yeah then the
00:13:55.680 guys always get the blame right yeah that's the thing there's always even with our language like we
00:14:00.160 always coddle women with like even with that you're saying oh she was pressured but no she's horny too
00:14:05.440 yeah and we have this narrative that like women are pressured and like into sex when a lot of times
00:14:11.200 they just want to do it yeah yeah and a lot of times they don't as well what do you mean no a lot
00:14:16.480 of times like yes a woman can be pressured into having sex like maybe trying to please her man or
00:14:22.080 whatever but they do sorry like the fact of a baby like growing obviously it's growing in our bodies
00:14:31.600 yeah do you know what i mean and we and we can stop that from happening let's say um you have sex
00:14:37.680 raw and um he claims he's pulled out and that's one because anecdotally that's happening let's see yeah
00:14:47.280 i see i just don't buy that the first part when you're saying like they don't want to have sex
00:14:51.760 because here's the thing like if a girl's not attracted to a guy she's not letting him touch her
00:14:56.880 she's just running yeah and i just don't see it that women are pressured that much into having sex
00:15:03.200 i think girls are just as horny as guys especially nowadays yeah it depends why do you know somebody
00:15:09.760 who never enjoyed sex until they met the person that they married but they will just have it because
00:15:17.600 obviously they're in a relationship they want to be submissive they want to do right by their man
00:15:22.000 would you say that's the exception or the rule um now it depends on which side of the world you
00:15:28.800 um which culture we're talking about i don't know but for my culture i don't think that's the exception
00:15:35.280 what's it where are you from well my parents are gone name okay and and actually it's there's
00:15:40.720 somewhere on google that actually gone here women are the least sexually um liberated and satisfied
00:15:47.120 and satisfied in the world unsatisfied yeah the least unsatisfied do you guys think a woman's orgasm
00:15:53.840 matters of course no it depends it depends on matters to to what matters matters matters to
00:16:05.840 um what are you not trying to say i think i think it's nice to it's nice to have it's nice it's a nice
00:16:12.000 to experience because it makes you as a guy it makes you feel like yeah i did that do you know
00:16:17.120 what i mean i did that so in in that way it matters but i think any other way no not really
00:16:24.240 you only need one to create life true so i think throughout history i don't think women were really
00:16:30.480 sexually like they didn't know anything different like the only reason women know if they're sexually
00:16:35.440 unsatisfied is because they've slept around uh no if you're having sex then it hurts you know you're
00:16:40.560 honestly like what are you what are you going to compare it to okay you said if it hurts fine yeah
00:16:45.200 however however the clitoris is solely for stimulation so there's no other there's no not there's no
00:16:52.800 other reason for the clitoris and for somebody so it's there for a reason so would you say women that
00:16:59.680 perhaps like they don't feel anything like in their clitoris like that thing is useless would you say that
00:17:04.880 whoa whoa what what do you mean what do you mean usually okay all right let me talk about abortion
00:17:10.480 anyway i i have a kind of crazy stat um did you know that 40 of women that have had abortions have
00:17:18.640 already had two or more that's in the us and the uk that's a very crazy stuff so what's that three
00:17:25.920 altogether two or more yeah two or more and above and so and they don't track and they don't track the
00:17:31.680 60 percent like how would they know what 60 percent have we're going to have them in the future
00:17:36.560 so it's probably higher yeah i've had this conversation with with family i've had this
00:17:42.480 conversation with friends i think that getting for for a woman getting pregnant is a choice and sometimes
00:17:50.560 they'll uh you know society will have you think that it's an accident or it can happen by accident not
00:17:55.760 in 2022 maybe you know maybe a hundred years ago it could you know you it might happen by accident you
00:18:03.680 know i mean you never know but in 2022 it's a choice it's a choice that you make it's a conscious choice
00:18:09.360 so do you guys think abortion is murder in some cases yeah yeah oh you you're looking at i don't know
00:18:16.720 so he's the one that's talking about two is fine how far how far are we talking i said i have an
00:18:20.800 equation like say like the morning after pill no abortion abortion abortion like do you think
00:18:27.680 abortion is murder yeah oh you do okay yeah and also may i just quickly um state something abortion
00:18:36.400 after 12 weeks especially i think is murder 100 because that baby is formed now
00:18:43.360 and in some cases you can actually tell the gender at 12 14 weeks my son i had a scan
00:18:50.000 he was 14 weeks so we could actually tell he was a boy so if you're killing a fetus at 14 you're
00:18:56.000 killing a human but i think i think the difficult thing here is there was a point in time where we
00:19:01.680 didn't have scans right so we're at the point right now where a scan can detect a heartbeat at around
00:19:09.680 six weeks and so forth you know who's to say that you know in a couple years time that that the the
00:19:15.120 scan's not going to be even more advanced and you're not going to be able to detect life even even
00:19:20.160 before that um and i think even if you look at it like the dna code is it's pretty it happens almost
00:19:27.040 immediately it does um and so i definitely i definitely side with it being a murder to be honest what
00:19:33.520 you think of people who say that it's not murder and it's just a a collection of cells and it's a
00:19:40.240 fetus and it doesn't deserve to live so are they pleading manslaughter then is that what they're
00:19:45.360 pleading i don't know i've heard like pro like pro choices say it's not a you know it's not a life at
00:19:51.040 this moment in time no it's a life it's a collection of cells it's a fetus they've used everything else to
00:19:56.640 kind of like dehumanize what is within a fetus is a living thing pay attention your biology lessons
00:20:04.080 95 of about 95 of biologists say that life begins at conception thank you so even the science they say
00:20:11.760 believe the science until it doesn't support their argument yeah i mean even if we wasn't going with
00:20:17.680 that right even if we was defining life at a heartbeat you can detect that six weeks so if we're
00:20:24.640 defining our week six even if and if it wasn't at conception then most women find out around that
00:20:31.360 time or maybe even later so you know we still have to to to call it what it is which is the truth is
00:20:38.080 that it is considered a murder so i have a question would you guys support a law that banned abortion
00:20:44.080 completely just yes or no going around i'd no no no no uh no okay no
00:20:58.800 yes i know yes i know you have to give one mate yeah i have to choose one you have to choose one then
00:21:10.240 yeah i'll skip i'll skip that question it's not the other i'm popping out it's difficult okay go no no
00:21:19.760 why finding ectopic pregnancies as abortion okay sorry with me with the exception sorry with the exception of
00:21:26.480 in the in the life of the mother right if the mother's gonna die yeah would you guys anyone
00:21:36.160 would anyone change their answer after i said that no this is so complicated sorry so so hold on let me
00:21:42.400 just so you're saying not to not factor in that i'm saying if the mother's life's and it is in danger
00:21:51.920 she can get an abortion outside of that no yeah i think i think that's the only reason the only
00:21:57.120 that's the only reason i said no personally is because there is those exceptions so i would say
00:22:03.040 it has to be heavily regulated i'm talking about heavily regulated is fine because we heavily regulate
00:22:08.400 a lot of things uh when it comes to the medical um sector so heavily regulate it but i wouldn't say
00:22:15.840 get rid of it completely because in those situations it does you know wouldn't it force people to make
00:22:21.200 better decisions yeah do you know what i mean like so if there was a law it would actually force people
00:22:27.200 to make better sexual decisions and after one especially if after you have an abortion do you
00:22:32.320 know what i mean what why are you going on having two three four so question how how do you guys think
00:22:40.720 that it's a life and not support it being banned i suppose sorry sorry one more thing because if you
00:22:49.120 really think it's a kid then that's a kid like if you if you genuinely believe that then that's murder
00:22:54.320 so how like because to me that like it would be a no-brainer we're trying to be politically correct
00:22:59.760 i mean i would probably i would probably change my answer to have it banned in all circles in all
00:23:04.960 terms apart from the exceptions that you mentioned however i think what's what is complicated about
00:23:10.720 the discussion is that abortion it is not an for lack of better words it's not an isolated incident
00:23:18.640 so for example um education needs to be improved um maybe in some place of the world access to health
00:23:25.280 care um in the uk we're very privileged to be able to have access to free health care that's not the case
00:23:31.360 for every everywhere else and so i think yes i do think that it should be however i think it can't just
00:23:38.960 be yes we ban it and then that's the end we have to kind of there has to be a rollout of education
00:23:44.240 and understanding and making health care more accessible to certain people that can't access
00:23:49.040 it as well so do you do you genuinely believe that the people getting abortions aren't educated
00:23:54.960 i was just going to ask that i think some i think some of them are 20 22. as you mentioned
00:24:00.480 that the thing is let me interject do you know how many stupid people who don't in this world today
00:24:07.680 how many stupid people they are i think you are clever enough to lay down with a man yeah but i think
00:24:14.240 you would be you would be surprised about how many idiots are in this world today but they know that having
00:24:23.200 sex know what abortion is an idiot they know what it is yeah so they know how it creates a baby so i'm
00:24:30.320 going to give you a stat that might change your perspective a little bit only eight percent of of
00:24:35.680 of children of pregnancies below the poverty line are aborted were one out of three women that make over
00:24:42.000 forty seven thousand dollars per year aborting their pregnancy i'm not even saying poverty so so i'm
00:24:46.640 saying you don't think that like in some way education is linked to to abortion but how many people have
00:24:52.400 seen an abortion like actually seen a video like that that completely right but i'm saying how does
00:24:58.560 it change it when if they know what it is well i think sometimes seeing something and seeing the
00:25:04.960 actual process i think sometimes we can be so far removed from the reality of what it actually is
00:25:09.920 it's it's um i suppose it's labeled as some sort of it it's health care it's a right it's a privilege
00:25:15.680 but when you actually look at the the video of an abortion it is literally the child's feet
00:25:21.520 are being ripped from its limbs and it's being suctioned away and then they crush the skull
00:25:28.640 i don't think women care yeah i genuinely don't think women care i think they could watch that
00:25:33.040 and they don't care i talk to women all the time on this like they don't care so then do you think
00:25:37.280 do you think it is sorry and so my next question would be if we banned it would you guys support
00:25:42.000 prosecuting women i'm down to prosecute women it depends on murder so murder yes but again once
00:25:50.080 again it does depend on the on the circumstance i actually you know based on our discussion yeah
00:25:56.000 perhaps we should we should make a bit more means tested it shouldn't be that easy to get an abortion
00:26:01.920 but so let's say i got pregnant yeah and it's it's banned it's bad yeah like abortion's illegal and
00:26:08.640 and i go and i go get an abortion should i go to jail for life no not not life but you should be trying
00:26:16.960 maybe a year or two you might get you should be trying no at the same rate of like if i killed a
00:26:21.120 person so i don't know what they sentence you to here 25 25 years okay 25 yeah 20 years 25 25 i think
00:26:28.960 that's a bit if you killed a person no yeah extreme odds i know but maybe it was maybe manslaughter maybe
00:26:35.760 no but again like i said you should be tried now let a jury 25 to life is a bit wild but you should be
00:26:44.560 you should be tried you should be trying in that circumstance in that situation yeah how old are you
00:26:49.920 why did you do it was it was um the sex um consensual oh so you knew exactly what you yeah
00:26:56.400 because think about it you think about it think about in this terms you can have two murder cases
00:27:00.640 that they both murdered someone but they both get different time sentences time of resistance yeah so
00:27:04.640 this is what i mean by like you have to kind of of course but i'm not saying it and i'll cop out oh look
00:27:10.160 look at the expectation look at the exceptions kind of rule it's just like a in life right not everything
00:27:15.040 is exactly the same as the next thing and sometimes you have to look at things in slightly
00:27:19.760 different you have to get all the information and make a decision after you get all the information
00:27:24.480 and some might be more lenient than others because of that do you think do you think in the eyes of
00:27:29.280 the law they should take individual circumstances into account or do you think it should just be did
00:27:34.000 you break the law individual circumstances 100 so then 100 or then doesn't that now make the law
00:27:40.640 subjective yeah it already is it already is we live in a world where it already is the law is subjective
00:27:47.360 so it's not objective you don't think the law is objective no way no hell no no because i'm sorry half the
00:27:51.680 people at the top would have been in prison by now boris johnson would have been oh sorry let me shush
00:27:57.360 on youtube i think i think thinking thinking the law is objective is is a privilege no to some extent
00:28:06.400 because when you hit the law and the law hits you in a way that you didn't expect it to hit you
00:28:11.440 then you're gonna realize oh wait hold on the law isn't for everyone the law isn't the same everyone
00:28:16.480 gets treated differently differently if you're really deep everybody gets treated differently yeah some what
00:28:23.520 what is but one person might think something is was fair and another person goes through the same
00:28:28.880 thing and sees it as unfair do you know what i mean it's it's everything everyone gets treated
00:28:32.800 differently you know it's interesting though even in this conversation we're treating men and women
00:28:36.720 differently because it's we all agreed that it was life and they're committing the same crime but women
00:28:40.880 get out of it yes as per usual yeah and so it's interesting because we have such a gynocentric social
00:28:47.440 order that even if we agree it's life we can't really agree that we send the women to jail do you guys
00:28:52.880 think that the women have become more anti-life this generation yes yeah one out of four women will
00:29:00.560 have an abortion in their lifetime can i ask a question to you paul yeah go ahead do you think
00:29:05.280 in your in your world that you create with abortions being illegal do you think a crimp and a woman who
00:29:09.920 gave an abortion should get the same license oh oh what a fucking car
00:29:13.680 rip
00:29:20.080 do you think he should get the same the same sentence as she gets for abortion
00:29:23.520 well did did he shoot up one person hey yeah they both killed one person
00:29:28.000 yeah if you killed a child i almost think that's worse i'd give her i'd give her the longer sentence
00:29:32.240 honestly because if he yeah but honestly because if he's he's shooting other like gang members i'm
00:29:38.240 assuming right yeah so in in essence you could say they both kind of they chose that life but
00:29:43.280 they cared what they do so it depends on the innocence of the victim of the victim okay it's
00:29:48.000 like you might go back to your point of of it not being completely objective but it is subjective so
00:29:53.680 so when you say a carib like we're just saying you say or a gang member like like pearl was saying
00:30:00.480 those are those are two people who know who chose a road yeah okay they chose a certain road and
00:30:05.680 normally you know that road ends up a certain place yeah a child hasn't chosen anything well
00:30:09.920 i just i think kids are treated differently in the law like i i think if you if you grape a child
00:30:15.760 versus an adult you get different yeah and so that's that's why that's why i said it would be
00:30:20.800 longer is because that's a child and that's a that's a baby yeah i was just asking that question to
00:30:25.760 try and find the the point just trying to find a zero ground yeah all right so if this is a thing
00:30:30.880 yeah no i'm just clarifying that's why it's because it's a kid one thing i i did want to ask
00:30:35.600 you know this whole legalization of abortions and looking at the curve of when it was introduced and
00:30:42.240 roe versus wade could one argue that was that is a form of population control yeah um let's get
00:30:49.760 our conspiracy hats off no it's not even a conspiracy hat i mean i mean it's not even if we know how it
00:30:55.920 started yeah so margaret yeah margaret sanger started planned parenthood she was yeah she was
00:31:01.200 a eugenicist she she called black people weeds and so every black neighborhood in america has an
00:31:08.320 abortion claim 80 80 yeah 80 are within walking distance of minority communities i'm actually
00:31:13.600 going to read from the usa today thank you yeah 23rd of july 2020 right planned parenthood was founded
00:31:20.560 by a racist white woman margaret singer that was part of the history that could not be changed
00:31:25.360 they observed the writing that the pattern of systemic racism pay in inequity and lack of upward
00:31:31.040 mobility for black staff continues sanger's planned parenthood mission in in ninth in a 1939 letter
00:31:39.200 to dr c j gamble sanger urged him to get over his reluctance to hire a full-time negro physician as
00:31:47.200 colored negroes can get closer to their own members and more or less they can lay their cars on the table
00:31:52.240 which means their ignorance superstitions and doubt like the abortion lobby today sanger urged dr gamble
00:31:58.400 to enlist the help of spiritual leaders to justify their deadly work writing we do not want the word
00:32:03.840 to go out that we want to exterminate the negro population and the minister is the man who can
00:32:09.040 straighten out the idea if that ever occurs to any of the more rebellious members for those identifying
00:32:14.240 historical figures with racist roots who should be removed from public view because of their evil
00:32:19.200 histories planned parenthood's founder margaret singer must join that list yeah and you know
00:32:26.240 that's from the usa today so we should just be sad when we see you know the roe versus wade and
00:32:31.600 you know i like when i watch the video it's always a black woman yeah you're taking away my rights have
00:32:37.200 you have you seen have has anyone been onto the instagram of planned parenthood if you go on instagram of
00:32:43.280 planned parenthood yeah what i notice is that it is marketed towards black women specific if you scroll
00:32:50.080 across all you see is black oh my gosh i'm looking at it do you know you want to pull it up on the
00:32:55.520 screen ish all you see is black women when you scroll you're just scrolling thinking and and it's just
00:33:00.400 black women doing doing you know marketing as per usual that's scary as hell no for real so when
00:33:06.400 we talk about abortion no it wasn't for with all due respect youtube please don't delete what i'm what
00:33:12.160 i'm about to say it's not for the white woman but unfortunately they too they're going down that
00:33:17.840 it's for the black woman because a black woman one black woman could have seven eight kids back then
00:33:22.640 pre-70s do you know i mean it's too much and also another another um there was this um this figure
00:33:32.880 i think is it like black american women they only make about five percent or seven percent of the
00:33:38.400 population but they make up feet over 50 percent of abortions as a matter of fact this is extermination
00:33:45.520 that actually segues us into the video that we had um ish do you have the video that i sent you that we
00:33:52.240 can that we can actually um play yeah i do indeed have your babies guys um pearl do you have it yeah
00:33:59.680 yeah you create the baby push it out i have two kids it's amazing it really is the video that i sent
00:34:05.680 you all right of roe versus wade um yes yeah you got it oh wait the are you talking are we doing
00:34:12.800 nice oh that you said yeah the one you got that one is that in the dms okay all right um
00:34:30.800 what would you say is now the number one cause of death in the african-american community heart
00:34:46.800 disease oh hiv aids diabetes cancer uh aids i'll say heart disease
00:34:57.360 you understand from what i heard it's probably aids you know probably heart disease um i think heart
00:35:08.240 disease oh uh hiv
00:35:18.080 gang violence what if i told you the real answer was abortion
00:35:27.360 um since 1973 legal abortion has killed more african americans than aids cancer diabetes heart
00:35:40.560 disease and violent crime combined every week more blacks die in american abortion clinics than were
00:35:47.680 killed in the entire vietnam war and the largest chain of abortion clinics in the united states
00:35:53.760 is operated by planned parenthood
00:36:01.440 hang on white women have the most abortions of any race and ethnic group but black women are
00:36:07.680 over represented making up 27.6 of all abortions while only compromising 14.9 of all women in the
00:36:16.640 nation giving them the highest abortion rate in the united states doing don't take it down yet
00:36:24.400 i want everybody who is watching the stream to just screen save that yeah yeah let's read on but let's go
00:36:33.760 on yeah african american women are also over represented in four of the major factors that lead to abortions
00:36:41.840 unintended pregnancies relationships lack of contraception use and poverty
00:36:49.440 do you think and a doink let's read the first slide please okay so remove statues of margaret sanger
00:36:57.920 planned parenthood founder ties found a tie to eugenics and racism how a woman who advocated for the
00:37:06.720 selective breeding of her fellow citizens came to be mortalized yeah memorialized sorry with those who
00:37:17.200 built a country is hard to understand would you say it's hard to understand adoin thanks for that would
00:37:23.440 you say it's hard to understand that the founder of planned parenthood was a racist and a eugenicist
00:37:31.360 no what statute did they just take down in black lives matter and where is it
00:37:36.160 are we back ish okay yeah yeah so so it's 1973 as you saw um more black babies have died through
00:37:52.800 and then cancer hiv diabetes heart disease combined yeah abortion abortion abortion through abortion
00:38:00.160 no but why is it specifically like blacks so right because essentially um planned parenthood or abortions
00:38:07.520 were marketed to the black community they were marketed to black women because the founder margaret
00:38:12.160 sanger wanted to kill black children that was her that was she was a racist and right supremacist she
00:38:18.480 wanted to get rid of the black population so they so her plan was if we can get them before they even
00:38:24.080 come out of the womb right then we can get them and so abortions were actually marketed to the black
00:38:30.080 community specifically in america and this is the result now black women are getting rid of their
00:38:36.400 children at sometimes four times the rate of any other person per capita yeah but i think it just so
00:38:42.480 happens that in in a lot of ways it kind of backfired a little bit because even the roe v wade now i think
00:38:51.040 the the structures in again america and places like that these are white structures these are white
00:38:57.840 supremacy structures do you know what i mean so those structures know that know that abortions are
00:39:04.080 happening more and more with their populations so they're trying to you know retain uh numbers in their
00:39:12.000 own populations that's why they would i think that's the reason why they would um sort of say
00:39:18.080 no to abortions in terms of a federal level because they're trying to i think it's more you know scared
00:39:24.240 of just being um phased out in in in a in you know in the white supremacy white supremacy head is is the
00:39:33.360 way of being phased out you know what i mean yeah that was an unwanted casualty of war that was not you
00:39:38.880 you know what i mean yeah yeah exactly exactly because that mindset is a real mindset it's even
00:39:43.680 in the uk have you heard like any people i don't know how much you've heard of any like bmp or ukip
00:39:48.640 guys talk about the population issue yeah of ethnic minorities yeah there's like there's like a ratio
00:39:56.720 that they keep bringing up that white mothers and parents are having kids that are slower rate than
00:40:02.960 than coloreds and blacks so they their their fear whenever you if you were able to go ask one of
00:40:08.480 them is that at some point they will become the minority because there'll be so many
00:40:14.960 bmp and ukip and like um it's bmp the british british british national party basically tiki torches but in
00:40:24.800 england but i think it's already been predicted though yeah yeah and that's the like the american
00:40:31.840 population by a certain point is going to wipe the white population yeah i think it's like 2060 or
00:40:38.720 something it's going to be the minority for a lot of white people that's scary yeah very scary that's
00:40:43.440 scary to know okay you know they they've got to retain some numbers i get it i understand it in that
00:40:49.280 i don't know a lot of white people that care and a lot of white people that don't care at all they're
00:40:53.360 like i don't know anyone's white people let's all let's all mix up you know what i mean guys guys one
00:40:58.640 at a time sorry one at a time sorry go keep going you've gone yeah sorry um yeah pearl you're saying
00:41:05.040 that you um you don't know of many people caring but obviously for some of the white conservatives and
00:41:12.560 liberals it is something do you know what i mean especially history especially based on history
00:41:19.040 because now if these not become the majority what does that make of us go ahead say that in your
00:41:24.240 mic sorry like if if these people that we called negroes and whatnot like in some cases and history
00:41:33.040 of slavery and whatnot if they become the majority now what happens to us and it's okay everyone's
00:41:39.040 fighting for their survival that's no problem i just genuinely don't know anyone in 2022 that cares
00:41:44.720 like no that's no this is our no obviously it's our parents yeah and our grandparents that
00:41:50.160 really well you say you say that you know whatever you're around you say that but the other day in
00:41:56.400 america when the guy shot up all those black people in buffalo oh yeah um his manifesto did state that he
00:42:02.800 was actually you know upset about the population of certain types of people so that yeah there definitely are
00:42:10.720 people around i think i think white liberals are the most racist actually yeah they're the ones
00:42:15.920 supporting these policies yeah yeah white liberals followed by black yeah i think it was
00:42:23.200 they also support like things like quotas yeah yeah which i i think is offensive yeah whenever i hear
00:42:30.080 the phrase black people can't be racist it irks me so much black people can't be racist it really burns my
00:42:35.360 whole heart because it's like then define what racism is because when when that white person called
00:42:40.880 you a derogatory phrase you've claimed racism you didn't claim prejudice you know i think i think
00:42:46.160 i think there's a difference between racism and race prejudice what do you mean i i think i think race
00:42:52.160 prejudice i think everyone can be race prejudice everyone black white whoever thank you i think systematic
00:43:00.000 racism is different of course race prejudice yeah of course and i think and i think that's what people
00:43:04.880 get confused i think they get systematic or systematic oppression they get confused with race prejudice
00:43:12.000 anyone can be race prejudice a chinese man can wake up tomorrow and say i don't like white people and
00:43:16.400 do you know what i mean anyone can do that do you know what i mean i just think system systems
00:43:22.080 are different and that is the real racism because as black people let's be honest
00:43:26.880 as black people we don't have the institution the wealth the money or the power in the west
00:43:35.280 in the west no even even in our continent with all due respect ghana ghana ain't owned by the ghanaans
00:43:41.680 the ghanaan empire is owned by a turkish billionaire you know what i mean so we do not have the power
00:43:48.880 to be racist you may say make a little joke about a white person when you see when you said that yeah
00:43:55.200 you're saying you don't have the power to enforce to enforce no to enforce racism what do you mean
00:44:01.600 by systematic racism like so not just systematic like i'm just curious like what institutions so
00:44:07.280 okay so institutions like the police force right the police force people say are institutionally racist
00:44:11.600 over here in i think was 2007 there we had a a guy called bernard bernard hogan howe he was like the
00:44:18.480 head of the metropolitan police and he was the head of the it's like being the head of the police in america
00:44:24.400 right and he said oh you know well if people say you know our institution our institution is
00:44:29.280 institutionally racist there's something we're gonna have to take on the chin right that's what
00:44:32.800 he said as as the head of the police so he knew to some degree that his institution was racist so
00:44:41.280 institution so institutional racism i believe actually exists but individual like race prejudice also
00:44:48.960 exists and i think sometimes people get the two misconstrued and you can go as far as
00:44:52.000 saying one is more real as well thank you have been historically racist like redlining like redlining
00:44:58.560 in america like that was an institutionally racist thing yeah do you know what i mean like there is
00:45:03.280 institutional racism and i think people get say oh that's racist it's like well
00:45:10.160 i i say the way to attack attack racism would be institutionally what are the institutions that
00:45:16.000 enforce like schools or i don't know education yes where they're teaching i don't know a racist
00:45:21.600 i don't know doctrine in school or something something like that i think though for those
00:45:25.760 of us that don't know what redlining is could you just explain that okay so redlining was where um
00:45:31.840 if you wanted to buy a house right in america um certain banks would not give loans to black people
00:45:38.400 right they would only give them to white people so that as the banking as an institution became a racist
00:45:43.440 institution because it was not giving loans to black businesses and to black people for them to become
00:45:49.280 wealthy yeah to go to go into a bit more and when did that like stop it stopped i don't think it
00:45:54.800 stopped it is it is no no but technically it has that it has it has that's that's that's one of the
00:46:00.720 things where even even i get looked at a bit wildly like institutional racism does exist in certain
00:46:07.120 areas but i think certain things are just they need to find any because redlining doesn't happen anymore
00:46:13.520 it doesn't exist on paper yeah on paper that's what i'm saying so on paper so institutionally even that
00:46:21.280 it has to we have to find a new like covert institution because i have a cousin who lives in
00:46:25.840 america so south africa was an institutionally racist state yeah do you know what i mean so
00:46:29.920 institutional racism exists people need to differentiate between what is institutional racism
00:46:35.840 and what is individual race prejudice so i'm just curious with the redlining thing like
00:46:40.240 what what happened so they found that like they were lending at different rates so basically to go
00:46:45.840 into more a little bit more information so so to put it in a in the context of this room what they
00:46:50.960 would do is they would say i'm gonna the good banks would say i'm gonna give a loan but only to people
00:46:57.040 who live draw a line right through us yeah over on that side right knowing full well that they put all
00:47:03.520 the black people post slavery in a certain area and then cutting off the line of where they would give loans to
00:47:09.680 right if you lived in the hood you couldn't get alone because you lived in the hood right but the
00:47:14.880 thing is it was like a chicken meat egg situation because it's like you put them there forcefully
00:47:20.800 post whatever and then after you put them there with no actual other way to go they can get loans to
00:47:26.400 go live in the middle class areas or the high class areas i thought this was in like the 60s yeah
00:47:31.280 so that was like a long time after slavery so they could have moved no i mean yeah but like but you have
00:47:37.600 to also no i mean like because there was mass migrate i don't know like i there's mass migrations
00:47:42.320 in the u.s from the south to the north yes and so you can't say no because a lot of a lot of them did
00:47:48.400 but it became it was more of a thing where it was um it was uh if i was to think politically it was
00:47:55.600 attack the mindset type of thing where if you know how some people like once they're in the hood that's
00:48:02.560 just their mindset right and without some people eat sleep breathe the hood it doesn't matter and
00:48:07.760 they want to live there for the rest of their they've grown comfortable that's where they feel
00:48:11.120 safe now because because in my head like why why would you lend to people that live in the hood
00:48:16.160 white more yeah like i'm not i know because usually like i'd imagine like in poor communities
00:48:21.680 they're not as good at paying back money yeah but imagine imagine imagine more of creating a hood
00:48:27.200 to then say why would i give people in the hood money you know you know tulsa you know that um
00:48:33.440 neighborhood tulsa oklahoma tulsa black wall street yes yeah black wall street i'm sure pearl you've
00:48:39.440 heard about it obviously black hall street no i don't know what that is okay so black black wall street
00:48:46.480 was a place in america after slavery where black millionaires existed there were loads of black
00:48:52.160 millionaires they were you know business owners it was a they had their own like black economy where was that
00:48:57.120 it was in tulsa oklahoma okay so in tulsa oklahoma there was this huge town like black people own
00:49:04.480 their own planes they had their own businesses they were like multi-millionaires and food stock market
00:49:08.320 all this kind of stuff and then what happened was the kkk and like other groups literally burnt the
00:49:14.720 town to the ground bombed it from the the the the army bombed it from the sky just totally got rid of
00:49:19.840 that town like killed everybody in the town and i don't even see mississippi burning that film called
00:49:24.720 mississippi burning um yes similar to that so is this something to do with redlining no i don't know
00:49:35.280 because the redlining came shortly after that if you actually look at the it did it came after that
00:49:40.880 after they've burned down this black um economy redlining came in where was the redlining at like what
00:49:46.560 cities worldwide oh it was like a 50 state thing where we have gone off topic but we have no i just
00:49:54.720 genuinely i don't know a lot about it but yeah essentially it was it was it was a thing where
00:49:58.880 state by state it was it was statewide so it was a thing where at the time it just seemed like oh it
00:50:05.040 was just the right thing to do but when we like when we look at it like that's up and the
00:50:09.280 the reason like a lot of the hoods that exist today exist today where they are is because
00:50:16.480 all those poor people who had no money and no funds to get out of there so their families have
00:50:21.440 lived there for generations after generations right but that was like my dad was from the hood and he
00:50:26.240 just like left yeah so i'm like what's stopping you from leaving the big thing the big thing about
00:50:31.360 what i'm saying if you make if you make like good choices and work hard you can move out and it's
00:50:39.200 not no and that's what my dad's one of 13 kids he like grew up on the south side of chicago in like
00:50:43.760 a really bad area you can in 2022 you can i don't disagree with you yeah so i just i just i know i'm
00:50:51.120 just confused it's easier said than done but you can do it if you've got that mindset if you've got that
00:50:55.360 mindset you can do it but you also have to know it's just when you're when you were talking you were like
00:50:59.600 it just sounded like you're saying they're like put there and i'm like but anyone can move
00:51:04.000 and even like throughout history there's always been like mass migrations of like groups of people
00:51:07.920 like for example like if you go into certain communities in new york like maybe at one point
00:51:11.600 they were very jewish dominated or irish dominated and you look over the course of history they're not
00:51:16.720 anymore because people move and like different yeah so like now if there's nothing stopping you from
00:51:21.280 moving like i don't yeah you don't see the reason but they're but like there are some things
00:51:26.400 anyway it's a gen it's a generational mindset thing which is why now now we live in a time
00:51:31.360 where more and more we since about like what i think it's like individual choices yeah yeah yeah
00:51:36.480 yeah but which is which is why we're seeing a lot of people like coming out of the hood and there's
00:51:40.480 all these movies coming out of the hood blah blah blah but like back in like whenever when redlining
00:51:44.240 was a real thing there was literally you can't you can't move anywhere because you don't have the
00:51:47.840 money for transport oh no i just meant today because i thought you were talking about yeah that's what i don't i
00:51:52.320 don't know i'm not pretending to know about i'm just trying to understand yeah yeah that's that's
00:51:58.720 where i i'm i'm on your i'm on your side here because that's why i'm not on the side i'm just
00:52:03.280 trying to understand in terms of like like i don't when you were talking when you're talking about um
00:52:09.280 institutional racism and i said you have to also call it like one section covert and one third section
00:52:14.240 over redlining doesn't exist on paper it exists in theory so it is it's a battle of the mind to get
00:52:20.080 yourself out of there because like poe said we live in a time where you can do whatever you want
00:52:24.240 so it doesn't exist now it doesn't exist have you seen that have you seen that um that thing where
00:52:29.360 where you've got like the little spider yeah and then they draw the line around the spider and it
00:52:33.360 won't go out it won't go out so can i just i'm just curious why is the comments all saying it says the
00:52:37.920 redlining was based they don't give loans to poor people yeah that's what that's that's what
00:52:43.040 it depends on the subset because like if you look in the us like different subs subsets of um
00:52:52.080 of like there's a slave i think it was the caribbean they outperformed white people in a lot of cases
00:52:57.040 so like there's certain subsets of black people that outperform white people like nigerian
00:53:03.280 even indian americans they outperform everybody so when you say like oh like who's who's poor it could
00:53:09.280 be like irish irish had a lower gdp per capita i actually think poor yeah being poor is a mindset
00:53:15.360 yeah your surroundings i think that a lot of a lot of people now have been so used to being poor
00:53:22.400 that they get now growing up black right and growing up poor because i grew up poor um you get
00:53:30.160 told certain things when you're black and poor right you get fed a certain narrative when you're black and
00:53:34.720 poor and a lot of the time you believe it and so your mind stays being black and poor oh my god i
00:53:40.640 can't do much i'm not gonna be able to do anything this is going to be um who i am for the rest of my
00:53:45.520 life and if you stay in that mindset you actually will be 100 that is true to answer your question
00:53:52.640 earlier with the with the chat saying you can't maybe you have to also take into account the fact that
00:53:58.560 businesses would also use redlining for hiring so you can't even go to the job and say i want a job
00:54:05.840 here because i'll ask where you live and then because if you're if your house is past the red
00:54:10.720 lining yeah they won't give you the job give it a job you can get the job to move out you can get
00:54:14.960 the place to you wanted to work in order to even save the money to move out because redlining was a
00:54:20.160 thing that was entrenched in all levels of government right at the time right from from all the way down
00:54:26.080 to the shopkeeper on a day-to-day basis to the senator at the top you can it will so the reason
00:54:31.440 i'm just asking because i think she said like institutional racism right and so i was just
00:54:36.000 curious because um i'm irish and so a lot like they had a lot of similar like they would say like
00:54:41.840 irish need not apply when they first came and they would live in a lot of the same community no
00:54:45.600 blacks no irish no don't yeah and so and so so i was just curious what i don't really understand
00:54:51.920 or that like because irish irish had it were indentured servants and they actually had lower
00:54:57.120 life expectancies than slaves because they were cheaper so they would have to do a lot of the
00:55:00.480 harder jobs and they would like die quicker and in the uk it's also because of the
00:55:04.800 between northern island and republic of island and and the rest of england so that is one of the reasons
00:55:10.080 so you know when the the england was invading and you know colonizing and they had like uh i think
00:55:17.920 it's republic northern or republic one of the two um yeah there was a whole schism there so they were
00:55:22.640 like all right no irish so it was part of that too so yeah it has like a long because i was thinking
00:55:26.960 that the no irish part was from the history no yeah that's what i was thinking but the no blacks
00:55:32.320 it's like these people are different they're dirty do you know what i mean so it's kind of different
00:55:37.600 but i was just wondering because you said institutional racism and so i was wondering like
00:55:42.160 if it would be the same for people that were irish and lived in those communities i don't know
00:55:46.080 well there wasn't there wasn't an irish equivalent of redlining yeah okay probably i know of there
00:55:51.280 might be from my history of research there wasn't an irish equivalent of redlining the one thing i
00:55:57.600 will add with that is when it came to redlining when blacks did try to move into the neighborhoods
00:56:04.000 what they would do is they try and get a lawyer that was white to sign off yes on the deals yeah and
00:56:09.520 then when they moved over and they saw like for the final days worth of paperwork the real estate
00:56:17.520 agent or whoever was selling the place would beg them not to move and give them every excuse in the
00:56:23.040 book to ensure that they didn't move on the basis that if that black person had moved into the
00:56:27.680 neighborhood the price price of the houses would go down in that area so it was all like a business
00:56:33.360 spot to say like if we allow a black person in the neighborhood um it was from top down it was
00:56:40.320 it was one of those things where in in every area and sector it affected so it's one of those things
00:56:46.000 where obviously 100 the effects of it still live on today well no it's it's it's interesting sorry go
00:56:52.400 ahead finish yeah but to the point that we were making before i i kind of i don't believe in the victim
00:56:59.360 mindset in a general sense so i i always get i always get called uh insensitive and don't care
00:57:04.880 about people's feelings when i say is that you're only a victim because you made yourself a victim
00:57:08.560 well because i want to the reason the reason i'm asking is because i learned a lot i don't know if
00:57:14.240 you've ever heard of um thomas sowell he talks about on his book like the most discriminated group
00:57:19.600 is like people that come from um it's like called redneck culture and basically like white and black
00:57:25.520 people that both derived from that culture had similar economic outcomes and so like when you
00:57:30.160 see race relations get really bad and the reason um like irish get grouped like in with like the same
00:57:36.400 sort of things with like like no no blacks no irish it's because they're both from that culture and so
00:57:41.040 when you saw mass migrations to the north that's when you would see like things like and i think i
00:57:45.920 remember in his book them talking about redlining because before like in the 20s 30s 40s
00:57:50.880 the the black people that were in the north actually were like coexisting fine it wasn't
00:57:56.560 until the mass migration came and then even the people that were like from the north would
00:58:00.960 discriminate against the people from the south they were like the same skin color because it was
00:58:04.240 about the culture that was coming in yeah and so and so it's interesting because you you'll see um
00:58:12.160 i'm like my heart's pounding i don't want to say the wrong thing
00:58:14.160 no i'm not uncomfortable these conversations are great they need to be had no it's because it's
00:58:25.200 like um and the reason like there was such a disparity was because nine out of every ten black
00:58:30.800 people in the u.s derived from that culture only one out of every three white people did and the
00:58:34.800 culture is actually from england and it's like a lot of um like when you hear your black pride it used
00:58:39.680 to be called cracker pride before yeah when they say in the us that's a common phrase they say black
00:58:44.880 pride yeah and when you say it like and i don't even like to like say it like when you hear certain
00:58:50.880 like dialects like it came like from england yeah so the thing is right this conversation and
00:58:57.280 conversations like this even though we've gone like way off topic right like i think it's great
00:59:01.280 because i think i think in america this couldn't happen nowhere i think this conversation yeah i think
00:59:07.200 people would be so emotional like yeah shouting at each other like going crazy like what the
00:59:12.480 you mean yeah and i just think i don't know i think we have a different temperament over here
00:59:18.320 do you know when it comes to you know who gets it the worst and this might be i don't know if
00:59:22.320 anyone notices it but ginger people get it get like ginger people ginger lives matter ginger people get
00:59:30.080 persecuted i swear like the the stuff that people say yeah like openly just to this ginger people
00:59:38.160 i don't i i think sometimes i'm like whoa what was that i think it's ginger guys to be honest yeah
00:59:46.560 no no you're right you're right women are actually like desired and stuff ginger men no one
00:59:50.000 no ginger man is like they did i don't think they i don't think people mean that like mean too much
00:59:54.800 bad but i oh man on a daily basis i i wish ginger people get yeah but did you say i've seen the
01:00:00.880 south park episode about they say they say jokingly but have you seen it have you not seen it go watch
01:00:05.440 the episode this is why it's called the gray area because we are going into the gray areas
01:00:12.960 as many of you know i was just banned on tick tock and we are demonetized on a daily basis on this
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