This is the FCB podcast network. Great when they try to jar bootcha dot dog, we don't listen to y'all to the count. We don't listen to y'all to the outdoor. Make a scream out down like a sound ug because a rockets in the clown like a Tune into the chart from the Outdoor. Tune into the char from the Outlaw. Welcome to the Outlaws. This is Darvo to Kingpinmorrow alongside Robin O'Malley and Dante Bright. Don't forget too Like us on Facebook and Facebook, dot com slash the Outlaws Radio, follow us on Twitter and Instagram at the Outlaws or Radio. We hope that everybody is enjoying, uh, your Eastern weekend. Um, this is a time to gather. It's a solemn occasion, but it's also positive Occasian for those of you who are believers as well. Um, so I hope that all of you are enjoying your Easter weekend. Uh, Miss O'Malley, how are you? Oh good? Darvill? Actually I have plans to do with the kids, so I'm actually pretty excited about that with like arts and crafts for the whole Eastern thing. Um, you know, just thinking about like just getting some easels and throwing some paint at them and having fun with that. So I'm pretty excited to do all that, So Dante, when she stirst started talking the vision that I had in my head, what's them doing one of those Easter egg rolls and Robin just like elbowing little kids out there. I sometimes I'm just playing. You know how competitive Robin is. Robin's very competitive For people who don't know her, Robin is very competitive. So yeah, I guess so. I mean, but I'm not aggressive. I'm not aggressive with it, not openly. I'm gonna win the day. I'm good. It's a it's a very important weekend if you believe the way Um I believe, and I know you believe, So this is a very it's a it's a good weekend. Um, I wouldn't you know. It's one of those weekends where it's like, ain't nothing about to get in the way of what I'm. What's what I'm what this weekend is? It means so you know, I'm this is how I don't know how many times I can keep saying, but this is important, Like this is really the most important. If you are a believer. You are a Christian person. Um, this is the most important weekend of the year technically, right, this is the foundation of your faith without a doubt. Did you, Um, when you were a kid, did y'all do the white suit thing for Easter? No? No, we never did. We never went to a church like that. Um, but it was still like it was still important, but we didn't. I didn't have to put the white suit on, think God. So I went to church. I went to church, but I never did the white suit thing. I mean we just always dressed up. Yeah, pretty little flower dresses and yeah, that's right. Yeah that's what the girls do. So said you didn't. So I'm assuming then you didn't go to a more traditional church. Um. When I was young, we did. But then as I got older, trying to think that the next two No, they weren't. They weren't traditional. They were more new were in a way, and so on Easter you still have sort of that vibe because that you know, everybody come to church on Easter, so you bound to see it. Um, But I never it was more of it was more of a come as you are type for a church where I was going. Yeah, so I'm for people who don't know, I'm what you what they call nondenominational Christian. Now that just means like I'm not like, you know, a Baptist or a Catholic or a Lutheran or whatever. Like you know, I'm a nondenominational Christian today. But I was baptized as a Baptist, right, so I went to a black as a child. I went to a Black Baptist church. So you know, I was all suiting now with the with the Eastern suit from head to toe. You know what I'm saying. Are we talking about the white suit or yeah, yeah, they put me in the white suit. They put time. That's why you asked that question, because you had because it's a traditional if you if you went to a traditional Black church, like most of them still do that. Correct of them still do that? You know what I gotta admit, I actually I did not go to a traditional Black church until probably a solid maybe five four or five years ago, probably about five years ago really, and yeah it's definitely very different. True. You know the church that I grew up and I'm like, where has this been on my life? Like, oh yeah it was I and I love that that was your reaction, and this is what the fact that a Dante, I'm sure you'll you'll attest, you'll agree with me on this. The fact that that was her reaction is one of the many reasons why she's on this show. Facts, Facts. Every time you open your mouth, you show again and again, Robin, why show that's right with love? All right, So we have a special interview that we're gonna go to right now. We have a very special guest on the show today. She is the communications and external relations director for the Capitol Research Center. She's been on this show before. My good friend, Sarahly. Welcome back. How are you doing, my love? I'm good? How are you? I am good? I am good. So um, we have talked about this on the show before we actually um, as we were going into the new year, we released the full interview that we did on BLM Aftermath Cleveland with former mayor and the former chief of police. We released that as a podcast here, but there is another edition of the documents on MF to Math that has just been released from Houston. Talk a little bit about it. Okay, Well, I'm actually going to flip the script in a second, because since you made it, I mean, I've watched it. Thank you very much for having me on again. By the way, I always forget to say that, So thank you very much. And of course it's a pleasure to be on with you. Darby. Oh you are right. We are good friends, so it's nice to talk. So yeah, I'm going to flip the script a little bit because you know, we at Capital Research Center, as you know, we've been working with you to to create this document series. And you know, we had Cleveland, we had the original one in Minneapolis, we had Cleveland, we had Atlanta, and then this one in Houston. And so what was interesting about Houston, as you know, is that when we started to look at Houston, there is there there are some interesting things going on in Houston right now from the sort of um, there's a prosecutor down there who was funded by George Soros and so the you know, reform stuff that's happening to fund the police, that kind of stuff is happening down there, which kind of plays into the Black Lives Matter movement or kind of what it became, I guess after twenty twenty, because I think it did get pretty seriously corrupted, as we've seen some from some of these videos, and we can get into why that is. But when we started the Houston video, and I'm gonna let you talk about this since you conducted the interviews and I'm interested to hear your thoughts on it, is, we found out that Houston kind of had an interesting story because they had the memorial services for George Floyd because he was born there. But they actually resisted the resistance, didn't they. Yeah, you know, Houston was very unique in that regard, and you know, I started to see that as we were conducting the interviews and people started to kind of talk about the culture of Houston because Houston is so diverse with black people and white people and Hispanics and you know, it's it's a very diverse city. It's a very you know, obviously they had their issues, just like all cities do. But um, it's more of a melting pot, if you will. Um, not to be cliche, but it's more of a melting pot. So as a result, the culture was different. So there wasn't I think the level of uh segregation, if you will. Cultural segregation that can kind of feed into the tinder box when these issues happen and kind of make things explode if you will. You know, I know Minneapolis has had issues um with you know, being segregated. I know Cleveland, you know is for several years. I'm not sure if it's still there, but for several years, you know, it was on you know, at the top or close to the top of one of the most segregated cities in America. So, you know, there were issues at play, visions at play in some of these cities that wasn't necessarily there in Houston. And again not to say that everything was perfect, but it was a little different because of the fact that the culture of the city is so diverse and more integrated and they are used to interacting with one another. Yeah, and you know when I got your video, and I have to say that when we started this project of Black Lives Matter looking at what the really stemming from twenty twenty, there were like something like six hundred riots or something following George Floyd's murder, and so we started look and we knew about Black Lives Matter because we'd been studying sort of the Marxist routes, which those are now well known and well documented, and so we were kind of trying to figure out how cities, like if people were getting wise to that, if the cities were struggling with some of that. We've certainly seen some of the police the policing problems in some of these cities, because once the bad stuff began to happen, there was a lot of there were a lot of reform prosecutors das that were actually at the same time going, yeah, you know, defund the police, and so some of the crime has gone up in places like I think Houston actually has that problem right now too. Although but I was going to say, I got your video and for the first time, I was like, gosh, see there's hope here because a place like Houston in that region of the country has always been really really integrated because of its proximity to Mexico. So it was really really I just felt so good watching that video, like you still understand that there is struggle there, but you have a diverse group of people in your video talking about, Hey, you know what, no, we're not doing this, This isn't for us. We already know how to manage what we're doing down here. We're not going to let you divide us. And it made me feel really really good. Yeah, and you know. I also think it in a way, it kinda serves as a blueprint on how to move forward. You know, the thing about Houston is everybody is integrated into the system, if you will. Everybody has the opportunity. And like I said, I know things aren't perfect. I know they have their issues as well, but everybody, most people feel like they have equal access to opportunity that you know, there is more of an integration there. There are more people who are able to participate in the system. And when you have that, it's hard to whip people in a frenzy in environments like that. And so I think the Houston video could also serve as a blueprint on how to move forward, to make sure that if you don't want bad actors to take tragic events and use it for their own benefit and wreak havoc in the process, that it may be a good idea to have a situation like Houston where everyone has a seat at the tape. Yeah, and I and then that comes through in the video. And I'm very I'm very proud of this one. I'm proud of that we worked with you on this one because I think you're right. I think it does serve as a blueprint and you know, on the Black Lives Matter, you know Global found Global Network, the big wig that oversees all of this. It's it's incredibly sad that there are actually problems that Black Lives Matter at the movement, not the concept, but the movement could have solved. And instead, as we know, they did exactly what you're suggesting. They politicize something that people could have used to you know, talk about real I mean, I hate to sound Pollyanna, but talk about real healing, real justice. And all they did was raised ninety million dollars and not give it to the local chapters, you know, tell people that they should be angry, tell people that there's no way that people are going to understand them, and so and it is borne out of some pretty toxic political theory Marxism. So so this video was really just it kind of inspired me a little bit. I was like, this is good, this is really good to see. And you know, to your point, you know, Para Davis and I have this conversation quite a bit like it's it's frustrating because I've never seen a moment in time like right after the George Floyd murder I've never seen a moment in time where there were so many white folks who were like, how can we fix this? What can we do? How can we be together? How can we help? When you watch the video, it was hard not to be like, good lord, that was extreme, right, right, And we had a moment, we had a moment in time where we really could have worked together to fix stuff. And you know, Black Lives Matter, the organization, I think, ruined the moment. They ruined the moment, and now it's it's almost like in some ways, and you know, some of the poland kind of backs this up in terms of like black people's view of race relations and black people's view of race relations. Now it's like we're going backwards, I know. And that's sad. Don't that stink. I think it's salvageable, though, I really do, because and actually, if anybody wants to watch the Houston video, you'll see why I feel that way, particularly the woman that you interviewed. She was the one saying, you know, I was ready to go out in March, and then I saw what was happening in the street, and I was like, I don't want to be like I don't want to be a part of that. Like, I didn't like the way it was going, and so to me, that's why I'm like, see what this is salvageable. The people in this country do not want to overhaul things that are working, and you know, it became very clear from your video that there are certain things that are working pretty well for them, and they're like, Okay, yes we have some crime problems, most major cities do, but some of our you know, situation down here is actually good and it works. And the whole idea behind this sort of um, you know, Grahamsey and Mark Hughes, who are the you know, uh Marxist theorists that the founders of Black Lives Matter. Black Lives Matter actually followed. Their whole thing was, you know, it's to up end the system. That's the goal. So this idea that it's about justice or you know, justice for George Floyd or justice for his family or fixing a system, it's not. It's about breaking a system. And if the system is working for people in Houston, they were like, oh, we don't want it broken. And you know, one of the things that I love about the series, And while I was really glad to become a participant of it is that, you know, the series really it takes a look at these individual cities through the lens of the people who are most impacted by it. And I think that's really important. It's not like you know, some organization from on high, you know, dictating the message to the people who are trying to create a narrative. It's really speaking to the people who are in those cities who are impacted by those things and seeing the results from it. So talk a little bit about just kind of the things that you've seen, you know, through the series, from Minneapolis to now Houston. Okay, Well, so the Minneapolis one was the one that we had a different videographer on that one. That one's very powerful. Our videographer went to the city of Minneapolis where the actual murder happened. It was his neighborhood, George Floyd's neighborhood. Um, and so it had just been basically burned to the ground. And um, the people in that neighborhood were right, you know, rightly pretty ticked off. Man. They were just kind of like, what the hell happened to our city? What the hell happened to our neighborhood? Right, So that one was powerful in that regard, but you could see in that first video this sort of almost like an inkling of wait a minute, that's not what like, this isn't what we signed up for, right? Um? And then with Cleveland, um, you really got into the policing issue there, and you you know, you interviewed a former police chief I believe, isn't that right, that's right, that's right, former chief Calvin Williams, former mayor friend Jackson, right, And so they were you know, one of the things that really stuck out to me about that video was the mayor who looked like he may have been mixed race. He may have been half white, half black, something like yeah he's black in Italian, okay black and it's and so he and he was, you know, fairly light skinned, and he was like saying that he was being told, you know, like you don't know the struggle, and he was like, wait a minute, you know, I'm black, right. So that was another thing that that kind of made I think people go, wait a minute, this isn't really about what they're saying it's about. Right. Then Atlanta, which is my hometown and where I currently live, and I love it dearly. We are also pretty well integrated down here. So it broke our hearts to see, you know, I think Houston handled it better than we did. It broke our hearts to see that these kind of outsiders descended on the city and burned cop cars and things like that. And you can see now in the aftermath of all of that what happened down at the police training center where Antifa came in and you know, they were taking over this this wooded area where they were planning a training facility. It wasn't locals. Those people weren't local, right, Those are some of the same bad actors. So you have a differentiation in Atlanta of people actually peacefully protesting and then really bad people coming and stirring things up to a level that we were like what. So then to see Houston, they actually just said, you know, and again to your point, these are all local people. These are people who are just there, you know, living in their lives in these cities, saying no, no, no, we're not doing this like this is I think a lot of that may have been too, not only because Houston has already got that sort of spirit of cooperation, but Black Lives Matter has not done very good things. Since twenty twenty, they've bought a bunch of property and then pieced out and haven't actually turned over any of that money to the local chapters who are down in the mix trying to just get some things done. So they haven't lent themselves to a lot of good faith. I don't think that the national organization and the international organization hasn't. So I agree with you the man on the street kind of style. I think it's been really revealing. Um and we at Capital Research and ER that's what we wanted. We did not want to say, Okay, here's what we think, and we want that point of view. That's why from the beginning with you, I've just been like, go and talk to people, see what they say, even if it runs counter to, you know, the sort of preferred, sort of conservative view on things, that's okay. We just want to hear what the deal is absolutely and that's you know, that's one of the things I like the most about the series. And you know why why, I'm proud to you know, participate it in it and be a part of it. And you've done a fantastic job, by the way. I appreciate that. I appreciate that. Thank you so much. You know, it's it's authentic. You know, that was the first thing even when I saw the first video, even before I got involved with the project. You when I saw the first video, that was the thing that I was kind of like. And you know I talked to you about this even before we did this on the air, Like you know, I was really impressed by the authenticity. You know, I think so often immediate today you know, it's all about narrative pushing and BLM Aftermath doesn't do that. BLM Aftermath is authentic, and you know, I think that that authenticity gives gives the lends the credibility to to the project and lends the credibility to what the people in the project are saying. So you know, I think that was a good thing. And thank you guys for allowing it to be authentic. Yeah sure, I mean that's you know me, I mean, you know who I am just as a person. So you know, I wouldn't have had it any other way. I would have fought tooth and nail. But the last one is going to be a little more difficult in that regard because it's going to be in DC as you know, so authentic in DC is a more difficult situation. It's gonna be it's gonna be fun. I can't wait. I can't wait. I'm up to the challenge. Yeah, we're gonna try to get We're gonna try to get some legislators to talk to us, and of course we still want man on the street. Well, absolutely, that doesn't go away. Yes, absolutely, And I can't wait. And I do think their perspectives is important too. I mean, just like going back to the Cleveland episode, the fact that we were able to sit in the room with people who were in power at the time and say, hey, we tried to talk to these guys and say, well, what do you want right, how can we help fix this? And they and to hear it from the people who were in power to say we tried to talk to these guys and offer solutions and they weren't interested. I think that told us a lot. Yeah, that comes that comes from where the ideology comes from. There's no there is no goal for um, did they dialogue any of that. It's actually just about busting the current system. So and yeah, and I think that the Cleveland video pretty much that was a huge part of that, where they were like, there's no talking to them right, right exactly, because you know, reconciliation was not part of the agenda, right some of these folks. Yeah, we just had a podcast. Not to go off too far, and I know we're trying to keep this short, but we just did a podcast at CRC on the National Lawyer's Guild who were down in Atlanta got arrested with the antique. One guy got arrested with the Antifa people. They were some of the agitators at Stanford Law recently and if you don't know that story, and they are also you know, pretty for a very long time, pretty dialed into sort of this philosophy of Marxism. And I was interviewing my colleague Robert Stilson, who's written a lot about them, and you know, I was kind of like, how do you create log with people that you know this is kind of their tactic of discussion. He was like, they don't. They don't want the same things that you want. They're not looking for affix here, They're they're not there's no way to do it basically, which for an optimist like myself, that's really hard to hear. But I but I think he might be right, And I think your video series kind of proved that. Yeah, and I think and you know, we'll close here, but I think the importance of a series like that shows that maybe the way that you actually get solutions is you have to kind of go around those people and get all the serious people in the room right, right, because when you have people who are not interested. Because I'm a solutions oriented person, you know that I don't really have a ton of patience for the flynn flam. Like, if there's a problem, let's talk about solutions. And if you have people who are not interested in solving the problem that they're complaining about, then why are we talking to the right? I mean, no, that's an excellent, very smart point, Like, you know, if there is no dialogue to be had, then then let's just end it there, right, Let's talk to this, Let's talk to the smart people, the serious people who actually see the issues and actually want to address it and actually want to have some sort of reconciliation instead of just being at a constant war with each other. So, um, this is obviously a great conversation we can add as conversation forever. Um, let everybody know where they can go to watch the new episode of b on that fromat. Okay, well, you can always go to Capital Research dot org. That is our website. I think it's actually at the top of the page right now the new episode is. We also have a microsite m b LM aftermath dot com. I believe it's the is the address there. You can also, of course check us out on Twitter at I think it's Ashwood is our handle. I can't remember, but if you go to Twitter and search Capital Research ter um, you'll find our Twitter handle, so you can you can just find that one might be penned to the top of Twitter. It might not yet because we just started pushing it out to influencers, so um, we'll get that up penned on our page. We usually do that with the newest videos. So any of those places you can always reach out to me at Capital Research Center. I'm in the book, as they say, so any one of those ways you can find our stuff your awesome. Awesome. I appreciate that. And before I let you go plug plug your podcast, ma'am oh yes, so I am Sarah Lee Marble Halls and Silver Screens with Sarah Lee. I'm on the network that Darvo actually owns and operates. So, um, first Class Broadcasting do you call it that? Or do you call it fcb um? The you know, I like when when the rapper gives their name and then they say what their government name is, Like, the government name of the company is First Class Broadcast, okay, referred to as FCD. So yeah, so I'm out there. You can always go and listen to me there. That's kind of my I just like to rant about politics, place and movies, right right. It's a very good it's a very good and interesting podcast, and the way that you tie things together is really good. So make sure that y'all subscribe to that wherever you get your podcasts. But thank you so much, Sarah for coming on the show. It's always a pleasure. I really appreciate You're welcome and thanks for having me. We'll talk soon. Absolutely, stay tuned. We have more to come. We'll be right back here on the Outlaws. These days, it seems like everybody's talking, but no one is actually listening to the things they're saying. Critical thinking isn't dead, but it's definitely low on oxygen. Join me, Kia Davis on Jeff, listen to yourself every week as we reason through issues big and small, critique our own ideas, and learn to draw our talking points all the way out to their logical conclusions. Subscribe to Just Listen to Yourself with Kia Davis and FCB Radio podcast on Apple, on Spotify, iHeart, or wherever you get your podcasts, Real talk, real conversations. We got the This is the Outlaws Radio show. Welcome Back, Welcome back. You're listening to the Outlaws, and make sure you subscribe to the show on Apple, Podcast, Spotify, iHeart, or wherever you get your podcast And if you listen to the show on Apple, make sure you leave us a five star review in a comment. It's very important for the algorithm and for those of you who've already done so, thank you, oh so very much. Now, Robin had a very interesting um story that she came across that I wanted to take a couple of minutes to talk about. Go ahead, Robin, Oh okay, we're going there, all right. Oh so this is actually pretty funny because if this would have been me, like years ago, my younger days, I'd be screwed right now and all the time what you guys said that I would be the one to get arrested. Definitely would have happened. Um, thank god I'm healed and not toxic like this. So this Maryland man, is this the one that you wanted me to go to that? Okay? This Maryland man he has been charged after calling his ex girlfriend over eight hundred times in two days. And you know what they had that been me, like back in my younger days, because that was definitely me. The call was the one caller I was definitely that was me. Oh lord, now no, no, I'm like, yeah, so I want to talk about this bad like this is this is an amazing stock. I couldn't be this Like I'm one of those people like I started to even get skitness if I got to text you first all the time. Oh now yes, I'm like, I'm like like, like I don't want to be the one that texts you first all the time, Like I'm not. At some point I'm just gonna stop texting. But to call eight would you say eight hundred times? Eight hundred talk about not being able to read the room, like, bro, you can't but hear this out, I mean hearing this out. You got to hear this out right, I mean that's what you call a pime pressure. I'm I'm totally joking, but like did he think like did he think like, well, maybe at call seven seven she'll change her mind. I don't know what he was. He clearly ain't thinking nothing, because you know, and I know, as a guy, you should be able to just read a vibe. Yep. So if you text her wants no response, that's probably it for me, basically depending on the relationship, right, yeah, right, because if that's your if that's your girl and you text her once and she'n't text you back for a couple hours, then you start to think like, Okay, she's not ignoring me, but maybe she just got something going on. So it's okay that especially if it ain't nothing serious, fine, you may call her later that day whatever. But if you text somebody twice three times, or you call once nothing, you sent a text nothing that's about you all, you're gonna get out of me. Man, I don't really got I mean, what else do I'm not about to talk to myself in some other girls messages that crazy you got dudes talking? Hey, what's up beautiful? I'll respond to a story on Instagram? Nothing, what's up? What you got? Doing on today? Can I possibly take you on ads? Like, bro, you you don't get it by now. No, listen, I swear because you know what dantay I actually have. There's messages I'll receive, like the person will write me, man will write me in like a year or two years later, write me again, and like it's like you ain't have a chance a year ago. Why well, maybe maybe I don't know either, Robbie, Like maybe they figure like the dude y'all messing with probably messed up real bad. Maybe her self esteem a little bit lower this year. I don't know my thinking to a whole level thing like why is you dudes really talking? I'm talking to myself and this and this girl's DMS like I'm not doing it. I understand, man, Like she could be cold, like you could really think, man, she is fine, but have some dignity, especially in the era of screenshots telling all our home girls, damn my DM, I'm not responding. He having a whole ass conversation with his self like no, they you know they may be laughing. Girls will always laugh at you. Man. It's more so I know he didn't really think he had a shot. Do you look at him and look at me like I or if it's the X like per this story, like dude, that ship done sailed, it went down with the Titanic. It is gone. Like so did they say like and I don't remember, you might have said this, like eight hundred calls during like what was the period of time? It's just saying two days in two days? Two days? Oh my god, I don't think. I don't think that I've ever achieved that. But I don't know if I've ever achieved that in a year eight hundred? Like can you think can y'all think of anybody that y'all called eight hundred times in a year? No? No, no, I mean because yeah, so I don't really talk to people like that. Now, how was that? Like? How was that? No? How was that possible? Like even if I, like even if I if I was in a relationship and I talked to my girl every day, like there's three hundred and sixty five times, not no, eight hundred. I'm an only child, man, I don't have I don't like anyone that much eight eight hundred times in two days? So what was he like did he have like a robo call or something? Like? If I kept it hang out, re dial hang out, re dialed. That mean, like that's what it would have had to do it all day. I mean he had time a time those those two days. Apparently he had work off or something. That's absurd. That's like I mean, and really it's giving serial killer vibe. Let's see, now, fellas, I hope you're listening to what Robin just said. This is how women think. So when you do stuff like that, they're gonna think you're a serial killer. Don't like, there's certain things you just can't do, because yes, we will look at you like, m you no, don't don't be don't be too don't do too much. Don't you just I mean, just don't do don't ye, don't don't do that. Listen. But if it's my phone, I promise you I'm a block your number and you're gonna wonder, like why I'm not responding or whatever the case. Chances are your numbers just blocked or back. Why didn't you Why didn't she block him? That's a good question because some people don't think like me. I guess, I mean, you would think after like the one hundredth call, like that's worse than a bill collector. Never lied. You can owe somebody money. It wouldn't get a hundred calls. A hundred calls in two days, brod ain't no way I like somebody that much. So what did they charge? I'm assuming they're charging him with harassment? Right, let's see. So facing years behind bars after he was charged with cyberstalking his ex girlfriend bombarding her with the eight hundred calls, he was charged with one count of cyber stalking um through text messages, phone calls, and via Facebook. Uh damn he hit her up on Facebook too. Oh wait, wait, he has reportedly sent her thousands of text messages over several months and used her and use social media posts to embarrass her and interfere with her livelihood. Oh like his own one. Listen, he must have been a scorpio now see spion listening? Wait a minute now, because my rising sign is scorpio. Don't try me. It's don't comfort me like that, Lord have mercy. Wow that's a lot. Yeah, fellas, don't do that. It doesn't take eight hundred calls to know that she's just not into you like that. Don't don't do that. And Andrew calls, text messages, Facebook like she's not into you, bro, that's crazy, Like did they like? It? Just makes me want to like did they have kids together? Because ain't no way you love her that much? Ain't ain't no way. Like if I've seen a comment in there where one dude had said, if your cat is good and it makes me do this, I don't want it. I don't want it. I don't want it. If you shooting out fireworks or someone you're doing I'm a salt tanger ceiling fans. No, no, I don't. I'm scared. I'm scaring that chick boy by she gonna turn you out like that about to have me sitting at the corner all strung out. All right, on that note, tetil with rolls coming up next here on the oaves. This is the Outlaws Radio show. Welcome back. You're listening to the Outlaws. I wish y'all could hear some of the stuff we talk about. The phrase but y'all cain't here because we would get canceled. Just use use your imaginations, ladies and gentlemen, use your imaginations. And now is the time. But the show that we like to call detail with Rowe turn it up. The latest celebrity news and gossip. It's tea time with Row on the Outlaws radio show. All right, so this actually is quite intriguing. It's very interesting because a lot of the times, what we'd like to call this is catfishing. And men don't take this too kindly. Uh so a woman in France, I'm sorry, they said. In France, a bill has been proposed that would make it mandatory for influencers to tell their followers if they have used of filter on their ig photos. Now, the punishment for that could result up to two years of jail and thirty two thousand and five hundred and fifteen dollars in fines if you do not tell them that you are using a filter. And I mean, I don't see nothing wrong with that, Like I mean, truthfully, how could you not tell it's a filter? Because nobody's that perfect, you know what I mean? Right, Like, yeah, people will have beautiful skin, things of the sort, but it's just like these filters. Even when i'm setting, they're playing around on Instagram, you know, I'm messing with the filters and stuff. It's like that's too much. It's too much. Sometimes it just be too much and I'll just be like, clearly, that's not believable. And even if you're not trying to make it believable, it still looks ridiculous. And it's just I mean, like I said, play with the filters is okay as long as somebody can see it. Like at the top of the screen, it'll say if you used the filter, you know, whether you swiped or you used to filter, etc. Etc. But if these girls are really setting here, and that really goes with you know what I was talking with, you know last was it last week? How girls are trying to change their parents or they don't appreciate theirselfs as much. And you know what, really I actually seen over time, I've seen comments of women saying or I think it might have been women, It might have been none, probably none, But no, it's where a lot of women use filters so much. It's when they take actual pictures of themselves and see themselves in these pictures compared to the filter, they don't feel beautiful. They don't like see the beauty in themselves no longer. Now they're like, oh, I don't look right, you know, because they're so accustomed to using filters, these perfection filters, and it's like, so chill out on that. Chill out on that. I mean, it's okay to player on the filters, but also remember to embrace the beauty that you have. But that's I don't know, I don't think anything's wrong with that, truthfully, So um Dante, something Robin just said kind of gave me let me further know that my working theory is probably accurate, although there are a lot of positive things that can come from from it. In general, social media is a child of bells above your thoughts, Dante. Yeah, fellas, be careful, ladies too, be careful, because I mean, it's just so much when it comes to like dating and looking for quote, looking for love or looking for somebody who you attracted to, like, it's just so much that really has to go into this. I mean, you know, you know, we talked about certain things earlier and you know, offline, but you just gotta really really focus and really really make sure that you're getting exactly what you signed up for. Because yeah, and I'm really trying to be careful, but you just gotta you just gotta be careful, Like, if you like this, make sure you really like it and make sure you're okay with it if it's a little bit different in a couple of months, right right, And you know, people don't understand, if you like, because it annoys me sometimes when I talk to people who are not out here right now. If you were not dating, if you didn't have to date in this era, you have no idea what it's like out here. Facts, you have no idea. I don't care. You can give the best advice. You can give the best advice and it makes the most sense, and you can tell me how things are supposed to go like you can be absolutely right in the abstract, But if you are not out here in this world right now, you have no freaking idea how bad it is. It's awful out here. It's terrible. People have no idea, And it's only gotten like and really it's only gotten worse as I've gotten older, because the world has gotten worse as I've gotten older. These a lot of the the principles and the values and the things that we that we understand to be the right things. A lot of people out here are on the exact opposite. They have no value, they don't play any value on what the right things are. So it's like living in bizarro world. That's what this is. So if you never had to date out here in this mess, I want to hear your advice, because your advice don't work. It's terrible out here right now. But now I got that off my chest. Uh happen. Um. I don't know should they go to jail though, I mean I get the principle. I get the principle. I get the idea. Should they go to jail though I wouldn't say jail is really right, but I feel like they should get they should have to pay like a fine or something, because like fast of all, I think of it as a business type of thing, right, a business deal, and you buy a product offline and it's like they post it as one way, but then when you get it, like let's say, when you are off a wish okay, right, and it comes to you and it's something completely different, So that don't never look like you are. That is false advertisement. So I think that that is that falls in the lines of lawsuits. I think you're actually right on that. And you know what for me, I I you know, and that is why you know. I've grown to make sure like if you if I post pictures and filters or I post like oh, looking real beautiful online, et cetera, et cetera. And if it's somebody that I'm dealing with, like, oh, sweetheart, you're gonna see me when i don't have makeup on, my hair done, and I'm probably in sweats and just like a hoodie or something, You're gonna see that. You're gonna see what it looked like. I mean, I still look good, but like you're gonna see that I'm not always that perfection. You know, I'm not perfection. You know I have flaws. We all have flaws. Nobody's perbsolutely absolutely, we all have flaws. And I and to me, you know, and I think there's a there's a lot of men who agree with me because we live in this fake, plastic world. There is beauty in the flaws. You can find beauty in your flaws. You can find perfection in your imperfections because it's what makes you human. And and let's let's also top that off with the cherry. Okay, so I'm just gonna be the one to say it. I'm probably probably going to get you know, pick me vibes. But first let's start with you're not always going to be that beautiful, okay, and those filters are not always going to be there, right, Um, So guess what you have to have girls, a personality? So you know, that's what men love is your personality, not looks. That's real. That's real and they can call it pick me all they all they want, which I picked me? And please okay, listen, which I think is I think when when I think, when when women do that to other women, when they talk that pick me stuff, that's because that woman just said something about you that you don't like, so you look for a way to dismiss it. Because what you said is absolutely right. You do have to have a person. Personality matters to us, two ladies, because listen, when I'm eighty years old, I'm not gonna be That's fine. I mean, I might be a cute little granny, but the personality, okay, exactly exactly, I'll probably be up in their filters still though I ain't even gonna lie. Don't you got anything to add to this? Man? We have take of next stay too, We'll be right back. Welcome back, Welcome back, and listening to the Outlaws. Make sure that you liked the show at Facebook and Facebook dot Com, Slash The Outlaws Radio, follow us on Twitter and Instagram at the Outlaws or Radio. And now's the time of the show that we liked to call Dante's how To Telling the Truth. What did you like it or not? It's Dante's Hot takes on The Laws Radio Show. I promised you guys something a while back, and I'm here to fulfill that promise. So recently, we have seen a lot of black people decide to start businesses for themselves, decide to buy land or pooling re sources together to to pull ourselves up by our bootstraps. As some would say, right, We've we've been told for years that you know, you guys rely on affirmative action, You guys should pull yourselves up by your bootstraps. And slavery was so long ago, and don't worry about that. America's the land of opportunity. So what I'm proud of is I'm seeing a lot of a lot of black people decide I'm gonna do that. Right. We have a story that nineteen black families from Metro Atlanta, um decided to purchase more than five hundred acres of land in a rural part of Georgia, located about two and a half hours outside of Atlanta, with a goal of creating a city or a small town for you know, for I don't want to say four black people, but I mean these are black people that will be self sustaining and energy efficient. Um. Right, as we move to a time through a time that is really unstable. Right, and then you know we have, um, just more stories like this over and over that that we're continuing to see. Um. Another one is three women laying down the foundation the uh. This is also in Atlanta. It says, meet the three women laying the foundation for a new pro black city in central Georgia. Right. Um, the free the vision from from for Freedom Georgia. Right. I think this is wonderful. People have finally decided and I well, I'm not even gonna say finally because that makes it sound like we haven't before. But people are gaining notoriety for doing something that we've always been told to do. Right. And again, I we do need to highlight the fact that black people have been inventing and building really ever since reconstruction. Oftentimes things that we have built have either been knocked down or we sort of put that aside after integration, but black people reconstruction. But what I noticed on social media is people have been triggered by some of these achievements and accomplishments. I want to just let everybody know, don't be triggered by the word black owned, or by black businesses or black city. Right, don't don't be threatened or angered when you see black people pulling their resources. This is something that you told us to do. Stop complaining, waiting on the government, stop voting for Democrats, do for yourself. Right, America's the land of opportunity. Why are you complaining and crying? Well, that's what they're doing, and you're mad about that, right. I saw I saw one guy, he's a quote prominent conservative, say something along the lines of this is going to take us back towards segregation. Why are they trying to segregate? Well, this is what you say, America is it's the land of opportunity. When the Irish came over here, they put their bucket down and they made something for themselves. We have Chinatowns and little careers and little Italy's all over this country. It's that's the beauty of this country. So it just frustrates me when I see people get upset when black people do it, because the only reason why I could see you being triggered is by the word black. And again, as he talked about on this show, don't be that person. Don't be that person. And that's it, in Darvon, That's as nice as I can put that. Just don't be that person who gets triggered when you see blackness or black owned. Don't don't. I mean, for goodness sakes, you're listening to a black owned media station right now. That was actually the point I was gonna bring up too, like what people have to understand. And you know, I I love our audience. We have an amazing audience. So I'm sure that most of you already understand this. Black owned does not mean necessarily black only. And I think you know when people talked about this being segregation, now it doesn't have to be. If you if if you want to integrate it, go over there and by like you can you can live there too, right And you know, the people who listen to this network, we have a very diverse audience. You're listening, like Dante said, you're listening to a black owned network right now, right now. When you listen to the Outlaws, when you listen to Just Listen to Yourself with Kia Davis, when you listen to Growing Patriots, when you listen to a Very Married Podcast, when you listen to Pillow Talk with Ali Michelle, when you listen to The Jeff Brown Show, when you listen to any of these shows on this network, you're listening to a black owned network. That doesn't mean that every host on the show, every host on the network is black. A majority of the host are black, but not all of the hosts are black. We have as we know right now, you know we got our light skin system on the show as well, right now, right our goals, so madam, So we're proof this this this family, this family that we have, the family of the hosts and the audience, the family, the relationship that we have with you is proof that this can work. That black owned doesn't necessarily mean black, only that you can too. You can also participate as well. We have a diverse audience. This network has a diverse audience. We are proof if you're listening to this show, this is not I'm sure it's not shocking to you that two of the three hosts on this show are black should You probably already know that if you've listen to this show for any amount of time. When those of you who listen to just listen to yourself with Kara Davis, it's probably not shocking to you that she's black. You probably already know that. So I think sometimes and we're having a conversation about representation, sometimes people misconstrue that and think that it's it's a conversation about segregation, and it's not. It doesn't have to be that way. This is a black owned network. But every white person who listens to any show on this network, you come here every day, every week, whatever shows you listen to, and you enjoy it because when you come here, and this is why representation, this is part of the reason why representation is so important, because when you come here and you get exposure to these voices that you may not have been aware of before you got here, you start to realize, oh wow, we have a lot in comment right, you know, it's this is how we have to be able to bring things together, To be able to bring people together. Folks can't be intimidated by the word black. And if you want to participate, like we're not talking and I said this on Twitter when this thing first broke. I'm not talking about the stupid people who complain on social media about everything white people do. I'm not talking about those people. I'm not talking about the ones who say that any white participation in any black space is cultural appropriation. I'm not talking about those people. Those are not serious people. Put those people to the side for a second. I'm not talking about them because most of us in the real world don't mind if you come and participate, don't mind if you enjoy our product, especially if you're black business. You want everybody to enjoy your product. You're not a good business person if you don't. So don't don't let black owned mean black only. It doesn't have to. And this audience and the host on this network are living proof of that that you can have something that's both black owned but welcoming to everybody. Dante, let me know how to follow you, sir. Follow me on Instagram and Twitter at Tabe a b Rye and O'Malley. You can follow me on Instagram at Real Robin O'Malley. You can follow me on Facebook at Robin O'Malley, and you can follow me on TikTok at Real Robin O'Malley and you can follow me at dd kingpinn Arey Ware as dte k i n G p I N One more time, thank you to Sarah Lee for coming on the show. Really appreciate it. We are out of here, see you next time. Peace. This has been a presentation of the FCB podcast Network where real talk lifts. Visit us online at FCP podcasts dot com.

