This is the FCB podcast Network. Great when they drunk, yaw boots dot dog. We don't listen to y'alls the cow dog. We don't listen to y'alls to the outdoor. Make a scream out down like a sound dog because a rockets in the clown like a ball. Tune into the char from the outdoor. Tune into the char from the Outlaw. Welcome to the Outlaws. This is Darbo to Kingpnmorrow alongside Robin O'Malley and Dante Brian. Don't forget too Like us on Facebook and Facebook dot com, Slash the Outlaws Radio, follow us on Twitter and Instagram at the out Laws or Radio. You have a special guest that we're gonna get to in just a little bit. But first, miss O'Malley, how are you? I'm just dandy, DARBYO You're just but but but but what I wanted to stay is shout out to my mama. I do want to say that today today is my mama's birthday. So um, I ain't gonna put her age out there because she ain't beat me up, but we'll just say she's older and more knowledgeable. Soy birthday, Yeah, be birthday, Mama, be birthday mama, Mallie, that's right. I forgot about that. I forgot about that. Yeah, she called me this morning talking about She called me and normally my mama liked to sleep, and now she like a teenager. Now she'd be sleeping until afternoon. But she called me. She say, I was like, oh, it's somebody's birthday. And she was like, yeah, I was waiting on somebody to call me. And I'm said, but you don't see you was asleep. I thought you was asleep. But she is out at my other sisters, and my other sister has little little ones and so they're up bright and early, and so she was like no. We're like, so I'm gonna have to make it up to her and we're gonna do something. She comes back towards here. Okay, okay, um, you gotta even think of mine. I think I was thinking maybe dinner or something something simple because last year, I mean, I don't know if I could really top last year. Um, but last year I was like here, you got the major stripers, right yeah, yeah, no, no, you know life here I have. You know, it took my mama out, me and my sister. We have took her out, got her hair cut, her, got her pedicure, took her out to eat, get some drinks like she had the time of her life. Right over. That's what's up? What else? What's up? Shout out, that's mama mally A happy birthday. I hope it was a beautiful birthday. Uh. I tell you how you doing something good? I'm happy. It's Friday. It's time for the NBA playoffs. Happy birthday to Robin's mom. Um. But yeah, I'm good. It's been a it's been a non eventful, non stressful week, which is exactly how I like it. So, um, today's hot takes is uh gonna be very interesting. Huh Yeah. We got politicians pretending to be We got people all right, all right, don't get it away, don't give it away. Thanks, sure, y'all, y'all listen, listen to me. We have so many people in politics who are not serious individuals should have instead of being in politics, who should have joined the dog on circus. So, as y'all can tell, Dante is a little fired up. Regardless of the of the slow motion week he had, He's still a little fired up. Uh. So we'll get to that in a little bit. But we have a really really cool interview, Robin. You met you had a chance to meet her parents at an event. Uh, DJ Lily Jade, who I believe. I believe it's like nine or ten she was. I think she's she's my daughter's age, so I think she's around nine, yeah, like nine or ten something like that. And she's a freaking DJ like and and an incredible uh DJ like she's really talented, you know, just clearly a prodigy, right and h and she has some really cool stuff going on. And I'll let her tell you the story of how she became a DJ at such a young age. And so we're gonna go to that interview right now. All right, we have a very special guest with us here today. I'm very much looking forward to this. She is a DJ extraordinaire. I'm gonna let her tell you how old she is. But first, DJ Lily Jade, welcome to the show. How are you good? How are you? I'm good? I'm good. So first, UH tell everybody about what you're doing djaying, and let everybody know how old you are. First of all, it's from eight years old. Wow, how long have you been DJing? I've been djaying for three years. Wow. That's amazing. That's amazing. Um. Um, when did you know that you liked it at the very beginning? Yeah, at the very beginning when I started during the pandemic when I was five. Wow. So what's what's like some of your favorite music to DJ? Some of my favorite music to DJ would have to be like pop. Who's your favorite artist? That's a good question. I have to say either scissor Dojo, Cat or The Weekend. Okay, okay, So I know you have a you have a radio show. Also tell us about your show. So my show is about girl bosses. I like to bring him on the show, ask him what the career is and how they knew they wanted to start it. Awesome. So I see that you've had some some pretty big people on your show too. What's been some of your favorite interviews? I have a lot of favorite interviews. Um, let us say. One of my favorite interviews are gonna have to be with Maria Cribs. Really, yes, awesome? Why was that your favorite? It was my favorite because we both love to get each other hype. Really awesome, Awesome. So I also know that, uh, you guys made a little announcement the other day that there's something that's about to happen soon. Yes, what what has happened? What's what's happening soon? So what's happening? I'm doing a youth bash called DJ Lily Jade and Friends, and I'm having the kid Beyonce Nickelodeon star that girl Lele come to Cleveland and we're gonna have an event with her. Awesome awesome, that's I know. That has to be so exciting you're looking forward to it? Yes, awesome awesome. And I see that you've interviewed uh, that girl Ala before. Yes, yes, that's that's really cool. That's really cool. So um so when is when is that even gonna be? August twentieth? August twenty? That's awesome awesome, that's that's a big deal. So first of all, congratulations, And you can find out more information how to get tickets and where it's at on my website, the Lily jhow dot com. Awesome awesome. Make sure that y'all go to uh, DJ Lily Jade's website and find out more information about tickets. So um, I'll just I love, I love what you're doing and everything that you that you have going on. You're really You're really incredible. You're really amazing and smart and talented as well. So what's like, what's something that you want to do in the future, Like, what's one of the biggest things that you haven't done yet that you want to do. I want to go on tour with the famous art with a famous artist. Do you have any artists in mine? Not yet, but I do know. I just want to awesome awesome, Yeah, I think that would be really cool, right, being able to be on stage and interacting with people and stuff like that. Real quick. Can I tell you how I got started DJ? Yes, please do so. It was during the pandemic when I was five. I remember I told you that part. But my dad was doing DJ mixes in the basement. So one day I went downstairs and TOLDO his music was tracked, which I regret telling me. I regret telling him, but he asked me if I could do better, so he took me down and taught me how to use the equipment. MM. But I do regret it to this day, just because it was old music and I love to play it even in my set. So I like, I like myself a little bit of earth Winding Fire or Jack a little bit of Bow. But yeah, I regret telling him that that day because I was five and I only knew about pop music and all that stuff, and I only knew about social media, so I didn't know about like all the stuff. Well, well, I'm glad that you've learned to it now that I listened to it now, it just sounds so good. It's pretty good, isn't it. M hmm? Well yeah, that's that's that's awesome. So um, so what that's been the pandemic? So you're talking three years, four years, four years, yeah, and and you've just you fell in love with it. Huh m hmm. I didn't. Actually awesome, that's that's awesome. That's incredible. Um I'm looking. I see you've interviewed h Crazy Bone from Bone I have. It was a fun interview. Actually good. Good. You interviewed Kevin Love? Oh, yes, I have? Yeah? How did you? How did you like talking to the cas I see you you've talked to other cash players too. How did you like talking to the cash players? I like it? But I had Kevin Love singing Hokuna Mattada, did you? Yes? I did? I had him saying Hokuna Mattada. Yeah, that was back then when I was a Cavs Kid Junior club reporter. Okay, wait, wait, wait a minute, we have to talk about that. So you were you were what now to say that again from a Cavs Kiddy junior club reporter, So what was that? You just you talked to the players and stuff like that. No, so be a cass Kid junior club reporter, it was sort of being like a reporter. But for me, I actually got to DJ for them sometimes too. Oh wow, wow? Did you did you enjoy that? I know that had to be real FM. Yeah, and I remember I got to talk to JB. Bickerstaff and I got to talk to a Mod Krump before. Oh wow, wow? What was that like? It was? But actually when I was talking to him Mod, he was very silly to talk to awesome. So I know as we as we get to wrap up here, I know that you said your show you bring on girl bosses and stuff like that. If there's somebody, yeah, there's some guys sometimes, so that's good. So if there's somebody m listening that wants to that wants to follow in your footsteps, what advice would you give them? The advice that I give them. Find something that you like to do. Don't just copy something that you want that you just see and you think that would be good. Find what you want to do. See if you're good at it, and if you are, keep on practicing. Talent comes first that you just want to keep on working hard until you get it. Awesome, awesome. One more time. Let everybody know your website so they can go to it and get more information about the Little j Show dot com. All right, make sure you guys go to the Lily Jashow dot com. Thank you so much. Go ahead, and you can also listen to previous shows there, get merch and my book from the booth. Awesome, awesome, Thank you so much. This has been a pleasure. We're gonna have to do this again. Thank you for coming on. I appreciate you. Welcome. All right, stay tuned. We'll be back with more of the Outlaws after this. 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, Kira Davis on just 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 Kira Davis and FCB radio podcasts on Apple, on Spotify, iHeart, or wherever you get your podcasts, Real talk, real conversations. We got the heat. Yeah, this is the Outlaws Radio Show. Welcome back, Welcome back, and listen to the Outlaws. Make sure that you subscribe to the show on Apple, podcast, Spotify, I Heard, wherever you get your podcast and if you listen to this show on Apple, please make sure you leave us a five star review and a comment. It's very important for the algorithm and for those of you who have already done so, thank you, oh so very much. And one more time, I want to send a special shout out and thank you to Literly Jade DJ Lily Jade for coming on the show. Really appreciate it. And now is the time of the show that we like to call Tea Time with Row, Turn it up, confetition, the latest celebrity news and gossips. It's Tea Time with Row on the Outlaws Radio Show. All Right, Chaws So today I'm tee time. Actually, um, actually a few things for you guys. So the first one is, let's talk about that whole AI thing that's going around so they are let me see. The first one was I want to make sure I have this correct before I go get to speaking on it. I do know where it is. Say, they're saying that Universal Music is asking streaming services to block the AI companies from accessing their songs. And there was multiples that they were doing. I mean, some of them have bad but what they were doing is they were putting different voices from other artists on other artists songs. And I mean in a way, I mean, I guess you could say that's that's a form of disrespect if you may. You know, for all the hard work that you know, the producers, the artists and you know, et cetera, et cetera. Ghostwriters goes down the line, you know, it's kind of disrespectful. But at the same point, like some of them need to collab I'm not even gonna lie, Like some of them just sound good, but they need to collab with that. They need to collaborate because it just sound good. Um, like Rihanna, for example, like she her voice sounded pretty good. I think she had the Beyonce's um and there was another one she they had her under. If I'm not mistaken, they had her. They actually did a whole thread just for Rihanna. But now Drake was not feeling that though. Drake was one of the ones for the AI thing, and he said this is the final straw AI because they AI the people for the AI. They had him singing what what's her name? Wait? Ice Spices song for real, the Ice Spices song. And everybody was like, you know what, it don't sound bad because Drake's been a little zesty lately, and I'm just like, oh wow. So there's a lot going on with AI right now. I'll get to that in a little bit, but first just to just to piggyback on Robin's story. So this is from All Access via the Financial Times. The Financial Times is reporting that Universal Music Group has gone to music streaming services including Spotify and Apple, urging them to block artificial intelligence companies from using melodies or lyrics from UMG copyrighted music for training. The report says that UMG has told streaming services we will not hesitate to take steps to protect our rights in those of our artists. According to the Financial Times, UMG emails told the streaming services we have become aware that certain AI systems might have been trained on copyrighted content without obtaining the require consents from or paying compensation to the rights holders who own or produce the content. We have a moral and commercial responsibility to our artists to work to prevent the unauthorized use of their music and to stop platforms from ingesting content that violates the rights of artists and other creators. We expect our platform partners will want to prevent their services from being used in ways that harm artists. Okay, so two things there. One, I have been seeing like there are certain ais where you can be like, write me a song about heartbreak in the voice of break, and it gives you song lyrics. Like it's like like AI is writing whole songs and stuff. Not to mention the stuff that Robin's talking about, where they're like making songs that sound like these artists. Obviously, UMG Universal Music Group is most concerned about the fact that these people aren't paying I would be a little more concerned about the fact that they're doing it in the first place. That is terrifying. There's been a lot of conversation about what's been going on with AI all week and really in the last last couple of months, where there's actually even been people who are involved in the space, in the AI space saying, hey, telling the government, Hey, we need to slow this down because it's going too fast and it's going to end up. There was one person who said, this could destroy the entire world. That's terrifying. There was I was just watching a story about how AI is, how they're using how people are using AI to talk to their dead relatives, and you know, there are psyche psychologists that are like, it's not a good thing because it stops, it interrupts or could permanently uh interrupt the process of closure. And if that's if that technology gets placed in the wrong hands, you know, you could have someone in the voice of your dead loved one saying and doing awful, harmful things that your loved one would have never done. And your brain is gonna have a hard time processing that because you're seeing what looks and sounds and acts like your loved one doing horrific things. So there's so many things going on with this AI stuff that is terrifying. I mean the stuff with the music is just that's not even scratching the surface. This this stuff is it is really really creepy. M Dante. I know you and I we've we've kind of briefly talked a little bit about this before, I think offline your thoughts on all this. It's only gonna get worse, um, just for the simple fact that technology continues to get better because the people creating it continue to get smarter. So I mean this is only going to get and not only smarter, but they continue to get more creative. Right, so this is going to affect all walks of our lives for I mean, really the the until we're no longer here, right, it's just gonna keep getting better, Which this is I don't want to say terrifying, but it's it's almost like we're setting ourselves up for for movies like I Robot and all of the horrifying movies where I mean it's we're really doing this stuff, right. It's like, did you guys like not watch what happens when the robots are sick of being our robots and they decide not to like because I mean, these robots are incredibly smart. I mean, they had the police dog robot that was essentially an artificial intelligence robot, but it was a it was a dog, and it's like New York Police Department, right, I don't I mean, you know, I believe, I believe it was crazy, right, Like what happens if the dog makes a mistake? Like I just I don't know, man, it it's like, like I said, we're setting ourselves up for Yes, it's terrified of course. Yeah, you know, I don't know, man that I every single time I see something like this, I'm more and more speechless because I'm like, you guys are you're really continuing to go further and further with this. But we're more creative than we have ever been as a species, right, Like who would have ever thought twenty years ago that you'd be talking about a robotic dog? Yeah? Well, and here in the issue, and here is the issue. And I just have to forgive me for people who don't who don't believe, like I gotta do. But I just have to take it to church for a second. The problem to me is not necessarily the technology per se. It is who programs it, who controls it, and who will eventually have control over it. Right. The issue is, first of all, when you are dealing with technology, when you're dealing with AI, when you're dealing with robots, you know, people think that those things are going to be less biased than humans. It's actually worse because the bias is in the humans who created the product, correct, and it makes it damn near impossible to reverse that without deconstructing the product and starting over. And here's the other thing. All humans have biases. We all have biases, so there's no way to get rid of that. Right. The other thing is and I'm sorry if I offend anybody, but the other thing is this, I don't want anybody godless controlling this type of technology because there's no cap you're not even thinking about how these things could go horribly wrong. There is one of the stories I was I was just watching today, there's a form of AI that basically is like they're trying to make it godlike. That's terrifying to me, partially because one that there's a reason why we're not God because we have biases, we have ignorant we we have we're ignorant about things, we have attitudes and tempers and all these sorts of flaws that would make having the power of life and death in that manner. When it comes to technology, where you can just program and it can just go off and just go kill somebody, is probably not the best idea technology. Anything that is technological can be hacked. And if we look throughout the course of human history, anytime that we've tried to be that we've tried to get the power of God, it usually doesn't go very well. It never ends well. It's always a bad idea. So where you have whether whether you have and you have all of these other issues, whether you have like Robin's story, you have copyright issues and an intellectual problem. Like people may think, oh, that just but no, it means something that's your work, that's your life's work, that's your creation, that's your intellectual property rights. Well, what happens to intellectual property rights when you're talking about robots intellectual property rights? Like do they have intellectual property rights? Does the actual machine, the robot, the AI do they have actual intellectual property rights. The reason why we have intellectual property rights is because we have intellectual property. This content that comes from our mind, that comes from our brains the brains of living breathing humans or humans who are living and breathing at one time, right, So what happens with that? That's an issue what Dante brought up about police departments. If you think there is a problem with implicit bias in police departments, now, what the hell happens when robo cop is walking down the street. Do you think that makes that better or do you think that makes that worse? Just terrifying, it's terrifying. So I'm in agreement with the scientists and the people that are like, hey, pump the brakes on this, because we don't even have any laws governing what you can and cannot do with this stuff. It's just a free for all right now, and eventually you're gonna end up. Eventually you end up to the point where the police department has like drone and they just drone in your ass. Does anybody think that that's a good idea, because guess what, sometimes they make mistakes. It's terrifying. It's terrifying, Like people aren't aren't even really having this conversation yet on a mainstream level about all of the things that could go wrong with AI. So I'm actually glad about this story. Robin and I'm going back to you. I'm glad about this story because at least it gets people talking about the subject, because this bleep is terrify. Yeah, I agree, I definitely agree. Um, I mean it's cool to a sense. You know, it's cool to see, you know, and just like how intelligent people are to be able to create these things. That's awesome. But it's just like you're right, like anything can happen. And as you said, there's hackers, you know. I mean, aren't they just talking about recently, like not plugging your phone into outlets at specific places like airports and stuff like that. So if your phone can get hacked from plugging your phone in at an airport or in public places, I can only imagine ais or robot you know, police robots, et cetera, et cetera. You know, like I can only imagine that. It's yeah, like, look, I mean I've watched too many movies and not believe it, So like I'm cool on that. I mean, that is definitely terrifying. Although you know, having a and a second me would be kind of pretty cool. That would be pretty cool. Having a second you would be cool. Yeah, that would be pretty cool. That they start arguing. I mean, I don't you know where I don't want to be around it because I already have a little me. I don't want to I already have one of those, just so I could, you know, have a double life type thing. This technology is like it's like fire. It can cook your food or it can burn your house down, depending on how you don't want none of that. Yeah, yeah, like it's that's what it is. Because on the one hand, there are some really good things that could come from it, Like in the healthcare space. You know, they're talking about being able to use this technology to predict like who could possibly be who could be at risk for cancer before they even get it, and get rid of it before they get it, right, Like, that would be that would is essentially cure cancer. Right, that's incredible if look Ian, I'm just gonna put my opinion on that one. I mean, that would be great. That would be if because you know how they like to pick and choose, you know who who can't afford it and yeah, see where we go though, that's another that's another issue with this stuff, right, Like, that's another problem. That's another problem. I don't even think about that until you just said that that's another problem. So it's like, okay, they if you use the technology to be able to cure cancer, Okay, well who gets it? Who can who gets access to it? Does this become another thing that if you're not rich, you can't get Listen, if you want social security or any of that, you probably I'm just gonna tell you that. That's but that's a great that's a great point. Like there's there's so many issues. There's no and there's no laws on this stuff. There's no rules of the role yet. And and the average the average member of Congress is like one hundred and fifty seven years old. They barely know how social media works, let alone AI. Right, they have AU They have a h an Ai Caucus in Congress, and a couple of years ago there was only one person in it. So so you have all of this stuff going on, you have all of this technology that could literally destroy the world. What happens, Dante, what happens when this stuff starts wiping out not just not just certain jobs here there, what happens when this stuff just started wiping out whole industries? Then what do you do? It's common, I mean, you know, for for a long time, people were saying, well, this is going to take out low scale workers. You go into a fast food restaurant and you know all they have people waiting just to serve you, right, just to say, oh, you got your ticket because you already placed your order, you're already paid, and now you just have to show someone your ticket and they just call your number and bring you out your food. Right. So I think I saw something where they had a McDonald's restaurant and forget what state it is, but it was supposedly just a McDonald's restaurant with the entire it was essentially cashless and they only needed somebody, only two people to work there just to make sure that the machines did well. So that's a that's an entire fast food restaurant that can run with just two employees. I mean, we're that's that's where we're going. So like, if you don't work with one of these robots, or you don't program one, you could potentially be out of out of the marketplace. So yeah, it's not a it's just something that I think we should we should hold off on until we know more. But but we're not going to do that, right because that's not how that's not how technology works. Right. We're in this sphere, it's going a thousand miles a minute, so you know, there is no you You don't put this toothpaste back in the tooth, you know, back in the two because it's too late. Well, and that's the and that's the thing. And partially again because most of our most of our elected leaders are one hundred and fifty seven years old, they have no idea. They don't even know this conversation that we're having right now, right like, they have no idea what we're talking about, and they won't know for real until until, like you said, it's too late. Um. But I saw it was a piece about this, and it was one of the one of the the scientists or the people involved in this that we're basically saying, like once AI kind of reeks havoc through the economy as far as jobs go. First of all, it's gonna change the nature of work, right, which changes the nature of society. And then on top of that and in ways that are not always good. But then on top of that, it was like, you know, pretty much the only jobs that are going to be left is in the stem field, right, because like you said, Dante, somebody has to know how to maintain and work on the robots and in arts and entertainment because we're always gonna want to be entertained. That's pretty much it. Yeah, that's that's pretty much gonna be it. So so, I mean, so we're positioned well for the future, but I don't know if I want to live in a world that lives like that, like that could be a total dystopia, yo. Like like you said, I forget which one of it was, either Robin or Dante. I forget which one of y'all said. It's like, I robot, what's living? I robot? Exactly exactly. Listen, we either leaning towards this is we either leaning towards zombie or robot. It's gonna go already, Oven. This is a this is a little too. This is a little too book of revelation for me. Man, I ain't I ain't feeling this, yo, I'm not feeling this at all. Robin, now that you got me riled up, you got anything else or you do? You know what, y'all, I do got a topic for you, guys, But I feel like I'm gonna end up cussing y'all out after the show. All right, well, come on with it, let's do it. I already know, I already know where this is gonna go, but I'll do it. I guess so. Um So recently estranged wife of Moroccan soccer player, UM I don't want to say his name wrong, arcarof Hakimi, Am I saying you're right? Okay? Maybe so Anyway, reportedly that learns his assets are registered to his mother after asking for half of his earnings in divorce. Now let me finish before y'all go on. So allegedly she had found out that he was he raped another woman. Now I don't know if there's proof or not, and so that's why she filed for divorce from him. But when she filed for divorce to go for half of the things, that's when she found out years ago, prior when they first got married. She thought this whole time that things were she was able to touch these things, these things were going to be hers if anything happened. But then she come to find out in the process of filing for divorce all that time from day one, he had everything everything, houses, cars, bank accounts, everything under his mom's name. Don tam will let you had that one first. That's an interesting strategy. That's a very interesting strategy. I would want to know if he's always done it, if he's always done his business like that, or if this is something that that he just decided to do, you know, since he's been since he's potentially about to get divorced, right, because I mean, that's something that would take time. So my guess is that he's always done his business like this, probably as a precaution, right, somebody who has means and wealth and could be sued for anything. Maybe now he knows he's married to That's a very interesting strategy. That is a very very interesting strategy. I'm surprised we don't hear about more men doing this. I wonder I saw this story too. I wonder if this is more of an international thing and if you're not allowed to do this in the States, or if there's ways around us in the States. But that's an interesting that's that's actually very very interesting, and I'm I want to know how this plays out. Yeah, I can tell you that. Um So basically what they're saying is that he scored that win in that divorce U. So, yeah, that's how that went, but so she was hit with that. Now during that so it was reported revealed that about eighty percent of his wealth and salary, like I said, has been allocated to his mother, who listed who is listed as his sole beneficiary. She has also been reportedly been receiving his salary more than two hundred and fifteen thousand per week in her bank account. She's not getting anything. That's amazing. I mean, it's it's smart. But at the same point, like, let's I don't want to skip over the part where he allegedly raped somebody. And that's why his wife is like you know what I mean, Like, it's not like she was some gold digger that like that story, because it's like if it came, if it comes true that he did, that's foul. Yeah, And so here's the thing. It's a couple of things. It's almost like we gotta it's almost like we gotta tackle the story in parts, right because on the on the one hand, which you just said is absolutely right, and that was the first thing I was thinking about, like if if that's accurate, because again it's allegedly at this point, but if that's accurate, that's a horrifying allegation, and she's well within her rights in my opinion, Ticket to divorce. Um. But a couple of different thoughts after that, UM one. And ladies and men too, because there's some rich women too. Wealthy people are always going to find a way to protect their assets. They're always going to find a way to protect their income, whether that means they put everything in their mom's name because they know, whether that means they put everything in a C corp or an LLC, whether that means they put everything into a trust. They are always going to do things to protect their assets. And I mean it's smart business because there are and not necessarily in this situation, because I don't know that, and like I said, the allegation is horrible, but there are gold diggers, and you know, people are always going to find a way to protect their assets. The third thing, now, Robin, what this wasn't in America? Correct? This was in a different country, right, yes, Okay, So here's the other thing. I'm not one hundred percent sure if you could do exactly what he did here, and while put it like this, you can do what he did there in America, But in some jurisdictions, especially because of an allegation like that, they would still go after the assets no matter whose name they were in right, they would still go after the income no matter what. And there is I'm sure there are plenty of lawyers in America who will find a way to get that money. But you're talking about another country and their rules are very different. You know, when you have all these people who bash America and talk about how regressive America is and all the issues that we have here and so on and so forth, you really learn and we're not perfect, no country is. We do have our issues, but you really learn how good America is when you have to deal with a court system overseas, because boy, oh boy, it is totally different, and a lot of the rights that we have in general, they don't have over there. A lot of the rights that women have in America in general through the court system, they don't have in other countries, even even countries who are supposed to be like us. It's not the same. So that's kind of like my third thought, like God bless America because I don't I don't think. I don't think in that same situation with that same allegation and that allegation being used as the reason for a divorce. I do not believe that she would end up with nothing. I believe that she would end up with something, even if it's alum even if it's just alimony, she would end up with something. I believe. So, um, yeah, things are a little different over here. That's all I got. But I'll tell you what though, Now you just gave all the ladies the four one one for free, Like, on the love of you, didn't you just put it out there? Still shout off to Darfiel's free game. Free game. People are always going to find a way to protect their assets, so keep that in mind. And and I'm talking about her like, this is what happens like when you date businessmen and and and people that that have money legitimately. Dope, boys don't care about their assets. Right. When you're dealing with people who have money legitimately, whether it's businessmen or athletes or something like that, remember rich people, because like I said, it's not just men, because women do this too. Rich people are always going to find a way to protect their assets. Just keep that in mind. All right. On that note, we have Dante's Hute's coming up next. Stay tuned, Welcome back, welcome back and listen to the Outlaws. Make sure that you follow us on I blinked, follow us on social media. Make sure you like as a Facebook and Facebook dot com, slash the Outlaws Radio, follow us on Twitter and Instagram at the Outlaws or radio. And now was the time of the show that we like to call Dante's Telling the Truth. Whether you like it or not, it's Dante's Hot takes on the Lawns Radio show. Okay, So the Tennessee House of Representatives. Boy, this is some stuff here. So just to recap what got us to where we are. So following the Covenant school shooting, as I'm sure everybody knows, a trans person walked into a school and we had another school shooting. There were three Tennessee members of the House of Representatives, Gloria Johnson, Justin Jones, and Justin J. Pearson, who I'm gonna get to in a minute. We're accused by House Republicans of breaking the houses rules on decorum. They were alleged to provide to demonstrate personal protests, and apparently the Republican wing of the House do not want to go for that, so they voted to expel two of the three members, and in play in as Republicans tend to do, playing right into the hands of Democrats. They expelled the two black ones and white lady got to keep her spot right, so like Republicans could not have handled this any worse than they did. And so naturally that becomes a rallying cry for Democrats because they get to say, well, you're not serious about gun reform and you have a problem with race. And so Kamala Harris, the Vice President, showed up, and Joe Biden has talked about it, and of course our former president Donald Trump can't keep his mill jut about it. So now we basically just have a left versus right battle, and the gun control issue is now minute because we are back to what we always are, back to Republicans and Democrats going at each other's throat, not over solutions, but just because they're mortal enemies. So less fast forward and talk about Justin Jay Pearson, because he is the topic of this conversation. This guy who was born in nineteen ninety five, so he's younger than me, he's not even twenty eight years old, decides that he is going to cosplay a black preacher slash civil rights activists. This guy's been seen on social media sounded like an old school Baptist minister, dancing and shouting in essentially just doing anything possible for attention. And it does not sit right with me at all, because far too often we have people who simply look to the past and have no sort of creativity, no sort of ideas of their own. Just let me pretend to be what my ancestors were in the fifties and sixties. That'll be how I can draw attention to myself and potentially get something done. Instead of, like I said, doing I don't know, something serious so that maybe people could take it serious. No, let me just jump and shout and hoot and holler, because that's how I'll get everybody's attention. Did the guy's been on CNE Then it's at the beginning I thought, h maybe maybe he really is just this passionate and then you continue to looking at this guy's background and it's like, wow, So this guy wasn't even anything like this two years ago. Right, he was clean cut, shaving. Now he's you know, got the black panther, got the black panther afro, he's a he's a preacher, right, He really reminds me of a Colin Kaepernick that he saw an opportunity and he decided to use it to his advantage for all of the attention, and now he's just milking it dry, right, and Republicans can't do anything about it because you created this monster. They every single time that it seems like Democrats have created a window to shift the narrative. You usually you can look back and say, well, where did Republicans give them the foothold? Well, what exactly did they do that gave them this opportunity? And here you can look back and they once again Republicans played themselves and Democrats are going to run with it and make an absolute fool out of themselves in the process. Boy oh boyo boot boy. There are so many things to say on this. I completely concur First of all, the Republicans and the Tennessee House of Representatives have to be some of the dumbest some of the dumbest people intellected all office, which is saying quite a bit, because there's a lot of dumb people in office. If there was a blueprint on how to mangle this situation, they would have done everything in that the Tennessee House did. Let's let's start there. First of all, if you're going to expel them at all, which is questionable to begin with, you expel all three. You don't just expel the two black people and not the white woman. In Tennessee, it's Tennessee. It's the South. And look, this pains me to say this because I love me some Tennessee. My mother's side of the family originally is from Tennessee. It's where my roots are, and my great grandfather died in the nineties. I'm old enough to remember him. I have. Tennessee means a lot to me personal, But I also understand that it's a former Jim Crow's state, it's a former Confederate state. And this does not to place judgment on anybody that's there. Now, That's not what I'm doing doing. That's not the reason why I'm pointing that out. The reason why I'm pointing that out is that you have to be aware of the optics of what it looks like for the Tennessee House of Representatives when you have three people involved in this situation for them to expel the two black people and not the white person. If you're gonna do it at all, expel all three. It's questionable whether you should have even done it in the first ones. But if you're gonna do it at all, expel all three. You want to know how to make a martyr out of somebody that wants to be made a martyr. Out of that wants to be made a martyr, you kill them publicly. Don't do stuff like this. It's stupid, but it's like, if you're gonna do it right, if you're gonna do it, expel all three. Don't expel to two black people and lead a white person in a former Jim Crow, former Confederate state. Don't do that. You have to realize how bad that looks. It looks awful. And you allowed yourself, you put yourself in a position, like Dante just said, to make martyrs out of these out of these two. That's that's the first thing. Then you went through all of this hell after making a dumb decision just to allow them to come back. What the hell was the point? What was the point? Now you've made these people superstars right for because you made a dumb decision and then you made another. The execution of it was dumb. The decision itself was dumb. The execution was dumb, and then you made another dumb decision to fix the last dumb decision you made, So just dumb, stupid on top of stupid on top of stupid. So there's that. Now you got this young man cos playing as a black civil rights activist, and this drives me insane because it makes it look like we're stuck in the sixties. Now. Everything is not perfect. When people act like racism doesn't exist anymore and that all the playing fields are level for black people, that's that's that's a lie. That's not true. It's not true. But if we sit here and pretend like nothing has changed that in twenty twenty three America, that twenty twenty three America is like nineteen sixty three or nineteen fifty three America, that's a lie too, And to get up here and carry on. And he was sitting there like, I see black focal in white folka and in transfoca and straight folka and queer folk really really, really, dude, And I was glad to see that there was a lot of black folks on social media criticizing that behavior very because it's a stunt, and we know it's a stunt. And now people don't take you seriously because it's a stunt, and it was embarrassing. It was embarrassing. The embarrassing thing about it the most embarrassing thing about it to me. And again, my family's from the South. My mother's family is from Tennessee, my father's family is from Alabama. I've been blessed to being a family of people who live, who tend to live a long time, so I've known many of my family members who grew up in that time. I have some family members still alive today who grew up in that time. My paternal grandmother is ninety one years old. I still have some of my grandmother on my mother's side, grandmother's relatives who are still alive today. I'm very sensitive about the Jim Crow stuff because I'm very aware on a different level of what it was like for black people during that time. The Jim Crow South was awful. The Jim Crow South saw the domestic terrorists organization that was the klu Klux Klan, burning churches, killing children, shooting black and white activists who were trying to register black people to vote, shooting them in the head. You saw lynchings where they would catch black men, particularly, they would lynch men and women, but particularly they would catch black men. They would lynch them. They would cut their penis off and put the penis in the mouth of the dead body that they just lynched. That's the gem crow sout. And so to stand up there would your young ass and pretend that you are in any way, shape or form in the same stratosphere as the black leaders who had to stand up at a time where they were getting shot, when fire hoses were being turned on them, when dogs were being sicked on them, when they were being beat in the street, is an insult. We play with this stuff like gets a joke. And part of the problem is you have people like that who are so removed from that era that they have to pretend like they're still in it in order to have a legitimate connection to it. That's the problem. That's why that was so insulting. Some people are like, oh, well, he's young and he's finding his voice. How can you be mad at that he's being a leader. I'm mad at that because he's turning a traumatic period of time in the lives of black people, some of whom are still alive today. I have relatives who still remember the Jim Crow, So my parents are old enough to remember the tail end of segregation. That ain't nothing to play with. That's nothing to try to reenact. So that because it makes you feel blacker, that ain't what that is. That was traumatizing, that was traumatic. You don't play with that. And what he did was put on a show. And the people who cheered that crap one. You're aiding and abetting this nonsense. You're making it harder for black people to be taken seriously when we talk about the issues that are still plaguing us to this day. And many of those issues are the residue, are the residue of the decisions that were made against us during the gym throw era. So you get up there and you put on a show for the cameras, and I'm sure you'll go on to sell books, MAGA podcast, run for run for higher office in Tennessee that you know you're gonna lose because it's Tennessee. And then turn that into a I don't know, a commentary job or something, or an appointment in a democratic administration in the White House. But what did you get for black people? How did black people benefit off of what you just did. Now. Granted again, I'm not taking any responsibility of culpability away from the Tennessee House of Representatives because what they did was stupid. They shouldn't have expelled them, and if they were going to expel them, they should have expelled all through. They should have known how bad I was gonna look, and they didn't, and that was stupid. But then to get out up there and essentially make a mockery in my opinion, I know some people won't like that, but in my opinion, to get up there and make a mockery out of real black leaders who stood up during the Jim Crow South when there was literally life and livelihoods on the line, it's embarrassing. It's an embarrassment, and in my opinion, it's offensive. Dante any last thoughts and then let him know how folly This guy went to the same college as another cost player. He went to Boding College. M de Ray McKesson went to Boding College. Coincidence probably, but you know who knows. I mean some I don't know where they're finding these this new generation of black leaders. But sending these guys back to wherever they came from, let me send them all back to Bolton College. I don't know all right. Follow me on Instagram and Twitter at TA Brian t A E B R y E O'Malley. You can follow me on Instagram at Real Robin O'Malley, can follow me on Facebook at Robin O'Malley, and you can follow me at D the Kingpin everywhere. That's d H E K I N G p I N One more time. Shout out to the amazing DJ Lui J for covering on the show. Really appreciated. We are out of here. We'll see you next time. Peace. This has been a presentation of the FCB podcast Network, where real talk lifts. Visit us online at FCB podcasts dot com.

