Uncensored America is a new podcast hosted by Myron Eddings and Myles Kennedy. In this episode, Myron talks about his experience at Uncensored America's first event and the fear that many people have when confronted with conservative ideas.
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00:42:46.760Where is the – where is the conversation about –
00:42:48.560If you buy a gun and the gun shop sells the gun to you and you use gun to kill someone, is it the gun shop's fault for selling you the gun?
00:43:15.300And you just admitted and you agree with the fact that they put drugs in our mother-loving neighborhoods.
00:43:19.380But the government, these organizations, they have no responsibility.
00:43:22.480It's all in the communities that they affected, that they victimized, that they destroyed for years and years with legislation, with money.
00:44:20.900So these communities that have been racially profiled by our government now is in control of another government agency that is profiling people of color, coming into neighborhoods, busting open the doors of American citizens who may or may not be hiding anyone.
00:44:59.220Todd, there's a photo of a toddler in zip ties.
00:45:00.900That's how they got a gun in the diaper?
00:45:01.900Law enforcement, when they go into these houses, right?
00:45:04.560Again, this is the problem when I talk with, like, people that aren't trained tactically.
00:45:08.780That's a great way to subjugate my argument, by the way.
00:45:11.040Yeah, no, because the problem here is that you don't like the methodology of how they're conducting things.
00:45:16.240But what I'm trying to explain to you is there's certain tactical procedures that you put into place where you know you're not going to hurt those individuals if they're all restrained and detained to a degree.
00:45:25.740And you're going to go ahead and detain everybody until you figure out what's going on and what you got.
00:46:33.560So, like, my question is, is if you're, like, truly, like, for America, how do you feel about the idea of socialism being implemented into the U.S.?
00:46:55.640One of the negatives is when it comes to, for example, health care, right, capitalism and health care kind of sucks because when you have a for-profit industry that is supposed to be taking care of people, what ends up happening is the pharmaceutical companies are more concerned with keeping you on the drugs versus actually helping you because they make more money by doing so.
00:47:13.560So, I do think that there's a conflict of interest there when you incentivize pharmaceutical companies to keep people sick.
00:47:23.000But at the same time, when it comes to capitalism, capitalism also allows for innovation.
00:47:28.840It allows for people to come up with new methodology to deal with illnesses, et cetera.
00:47:34.000And we need to find some middle ground where these companies are still incentivized to come out with breakthrough technology to help people live better quality lives and help them live longer and improve their health while simultaneously staving off the inherent greed in the health care industry, right?
00:47:51.460Because I know we all probably have people that we love that, you know, need their insulin, that are getting older, and we want them to live as long as possible.
00:47:57.360We don't want predatory pharmaceutical companies and medical industry doing anything.
00:48:01.780But I would say when it comes to making things more affordable, when it comes to the older people and the children and everything else like that, I see a perspective.
00:48:10.780But socialism in other ways, I think, can create inherent problems.
00:48:14.820But I do think that we need to take care of our elderly and our young and, you know, vulnerable when it comes to health care and not try to profiteer off of them.
00:48:23.820I think just the issue is, like, do you think we live in kind of a society of, like, our culture is, like, U.S. culture is more greedy than other states or countries?
00:48:32.140I mean, you know, the reality is the reason why this country is so great is because of our capitalism, which is why so many people come here, even from other first world countries, because they simply don't have the financial opportunities that they have in those countries due to this socialist problem that we're discussing.
00:48:44.360So it's kind of one of the things that sucks where you want to be able to be capitalistic and be able to make as much money as possible, but at the same time, you do have a moral obligation to take care of your old and your young and your vulnerable.
00:49:00.240So we have to find a middle ground where we can still push innovation while simultaneously taking care of people in the United States.
00:49:06.020And I don't think anybody should ever be dying when we have medicine and technology to save people.
00:55:32.280But all the people of the book, you know, kind of understand that, you know, men are supposed to be the patriarchs, the leaders, the head of the households, whether it's Christianity, Judaism, Islam, you know, they all got it right.
00:55:43.140But couldn't we agree that there's, like, a shift in society that, like, most people are equal?
00:55:47.080Like, I don't think that we should say women are less than us and that, like, they can't take care of themselves.
00:55:51.500Well, that's precisely the problem, is egalitarianism doesn't adhere to reality.
00:56:03.160The only reason they're able to take care of themselves is because we've civilized the world so much where these same toxically masculine men that they criticize all the time, these are the guys that have civilized the world for them.
00:56:13.420So, since we have, you know, all this safety and technology and everything else like that, they're able to operate on their own now.
00:56:18.420But the reality is, and this is why it's so important for you young guys to understand this, though we live in an egalitarian society and women sit there and say, I want to be equal to a man, the reality is they're not attracted to that.
00:56:27.280And all of you young guys here need to understand that what women say versus what they're aroused by and what they're attracted to are two different things.
00:56:33.920So, girls will sit there and say, oh, I want to be equal to you.
00:56:37.420But the easiest way to tell that's bullshit is when the bill comes, what are they doing?
00:57:14.020I would say if I lined up 100 women, 90 of them are going to expect for you to pay for the first date and adhere to your masculine-burned performance to some degree.
00:57:25.660Yeah, I'm probably going to have to pay for it, blah, blah, blah.
00:57:27.420Like, you inherently understand your roles as a guy, even though I can tell here that you're a bit more central slash maybe left because you believe that women are equal to men.
00:57:35.220And even you as a guy that's centered or maybe left this a little bit, you even understand that there's a burning performance on you to pay for the date.
00:57:42.840Women don't feel like they have to do anything for your affection.
00:57:47.020Most women feel as though I'm equal to you, but I still want to be treated like a lady.
00:57:51.660So, in other words, they can pick and choose when they want to be a lady when it's advantageous to them.
00:57:55.580And this is where a lot of guys fuck up because you guys sit there, take her on the fucking date, pay for the date, treat her like a lady, but she's a fucking slut.
00:59:17.740So, and this is, the reality is, you know, I'm probably, a lot of you guys are probably nodding along or in your head or like, oh yeah, that's true.
00:59:25.220Obviously, you don't want to come off as a misogynist, right, on a college campus.
01:00:28.220Yeah, so when it comes to redlining, right, and just so the audience understands, basically it's like, you know, it's a real estate situation where it fucks with the prices of homes, et cetera.
01:00:40.660Listen, when blacks move into your neighborhood, it's not a good sign, right?
01:00:45.560If Jews move into your neighborhood, that's a very good sign because, and I'm speaking from a real estate investor perspective, like, your property is going to go up through gentrification, but it's not going to grow up from, it's not going to go up from niggerfication.
01:00:57.580And when blacks move into your neighborhood, property just goes down, and the reason why is because they tend to commit a lot of crimes.
01:01:04.040Now, I don't expect any of you guys to admit this, but none of us want to live in a majority black neighborhood.
01:01:08.880We're not trying to get fucking robbed.
01:01:13.140And a lot of us might not want to listen to loud hip-hop at 3 o'clock in the morning.
01:01:16.380So when I say systemic racism is a scam, I'm not denying the fact that there was racism in the United States before that created problems.
01:01:24.540But what I am saying is there's nothing holding black people from success now.
01:01:29.180And anyone that still, you know, holds on to, oh, my slavery, oh, my systemic racism, oh, my reparations, like, you're just a retarded monkey.
01:01:39.600So I think guys need to, like, get out the victim complex and, you know.
01:01:43.040Well, what, like, what educates someone?
01:02:10.780So they're going to, it's, they're not, the schools aren't going to get funded as well.
01:02:14.160Therefore, the education is going to be lowered.
01:02:15.760So I don't, like, I think it's, like, kind of a.
01:02:18.300But the thing is, is that we've created so many different, you know, affirmative action DEI programs that allow inner city kids to get out of those schools or have the opportunity to, you know, apply to colleges with lesser grades or whatever.
01:02:30.300Like, what I'm trying to say is, we've done a good amount to allow and facilitate people that come from poor circumstances to go to college, get an education, get an opportunity, right?
01:02:41.400This has all been done through different, you know, programs that are not available to white people, by the way.
01:02:46.360So my thing is, I don't think systemic racism is no longer an excuse to complain as to why you're not successful.
01:02:56.080I'm a guy that came from a poor household, right?
01:02:57.960My parents are black, despite people trying to say I'm not.
01:03:02.820And there's many people that make it out the hood.
01:03:04.540And what it really comes down to is, like, survival of the fittest.
01:03:06.940And I know that's a very sucky way to look at things, but everyone's simply not going to make it.
01:03:10.860And if you're dumb enough to sell drugs, you know, or commit crimes or do all this other dumb stuff, well, then you're going to go to jail.
01:03:18.340And honestly, society's better off without you.
01:03:20.100Well, but I mean, if you're built on, like, a community and culture of, honestly, racism, I mean, like, white people kind of, like, looking down towards black people or, like, using the terms.
01:03:29.460I would argue most white people don't look at, if anything, most white people love black people nowadays.
01:04:04.440However, we've seen via stats and looking around or personal experiences that a lot of the times when people have experiences with black people, it's not favorable.
01:04:29.140People look at me crazy sometimes when I'm in a white neighborhood.
01:04:31.160So when I was walking around campus, people look at me.
01:04:32.860But once I open up my mouth, speak, convey that I'm not a fucking retard, and be able to articulate myself, people are like, okay, this guy isn't a fucking moron.
01:10:02.440What I'm saying is though the things happened in the past, nothing is stopping you from working in the present to change your future.
01:10:07.640But you're like saying like say there's two people running a race, you just had all these obstacles in front of one while no obstacles in front of the other.
01:10:13.140And now you're saying, well, we're not going to have halfway through the race, no more obstacles.
01:10:23.200Why is that Nigerians or people from Africa or they come from the Caribbean, they come here and they make something to themselves as first generation immigrants?
01:11:02.860I mean, this is this is stuff that actually happened when we did build economic.
01:11:05.560Like when we did build economic, when we did build economic systems, when we did build communities, when we had money, when we did build those things, they were what?
01:11:14.320Systematically, either by racist organizations or by legislation.
01:11:16.980That's something that actually happened.
01:11:18.540So what happens when you when you give a bunch of people who are one race, right, access to housing, access to loans, and you don't do that to another people?
01:11:25.680What do you think the generations after that would have happened?
01:11:27.900If that racism is so bad, why is it that black people actually did better during the Jim Crow era?
01:11:38.600So when black people were the most oppressed and had the least rights and the least civil liberties, they actually did better than they do now.
01:12:26.100What responsibilities does the government have?
01:12:27.640What I'm saying is in the 60s when they were actually successful, right, they were oppressed to the highest degree and they were still successful.
01:12:34.400So there's no excuse with racism being reeled back to not be successful.
01:12:48.960Maybe we should have those conversations.
01:12:50.520Because if we don't take care of what happened and how people were left, like, taken away from their access to wealth, right, if we don't deal with those things, how the fuck are we going to move forward?
01:13:00.620Again, you can move forward because blacks have more opportunities than their white counterparts who are oppressing them for so long.
01:13:08.140Who gets the majority of scholarships?