G-2LCWV30QZ8 Why Black & Hispanic Voters Backed Trump, and Now Face Musk’s Government Purge. - TonyTidbit: A Black Executive Perspective

Episode 222

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Published on:

14th Mar 2025

Why Black & Hispanic Voters Backed Trump, and Now Face Musk’s Government Purge.

Episode Title:

Episode Audio Link: https://podcast.ablackexec.com/episode/Why Black & Hispanic Voters Backed Trump, and Now Face Musk’s Government Purge

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In this episode of Pull Up, Speak Up, hosts Tony Tidbit and Chris P. Reed lead a spirited discussion with guests Dr. Nsenga Burton, Kevin Jenkins, and Louis Rivera. The discussion unpacks the rising Black and Hispanic voter support for Donald Trump in 2024, dissecting the political, social, and economic implications of this shift. The panel also tackles the strategic role of misinformation in shaping voter behavior and policy perceptions.

Adding to the debate, the guests analyze Elon Musk’s controversial tenure as head of the Department of Government Efficiency, exploring its impact on federal jobs and government operations. Amidst political turbulence and economic uncertainty, this episode challenges listeners to think critically, build community, and take informed action in the face of today’s pressing issues.


▶︎ In This Episode

00:00: Introduction and Political Debate

00:23: Welcome to Pull Up, Speak Up

01:14: Introducing the Round Table

02:23: Discussion on Black and Hispanic Voters

03:53: Ground Rules for the Discussion

06:11: Economic Priorities and Voter Concerns

08:15: Impact of Policies on Black Americans

11:31: Hispanic Voter Trends

16:00: Challenges Facing the Democratic Party

18:47: The Role of Communication in Politics

21:11: Evaluating Political Shifts

22:44: Debating the Impact of Trump’s Policies

31:02: Mass Delusion and Political Mobilization

35:04: Final Thoughts and Heated Exchange

41:43: Debating Polling Accuracy

42:08: Kevin's Perspective on Policy

43:29: Trump's Communication Tactics

45:21: Impact of Disinformation

49:31: Government Efficiency Debate

51:02: Musk's Influence on Government

01:09:01: Final Thoughts and Reflections


🔗 Resources

Links and resources mentioned in this episode:


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Transcript
Kevin Jenkins:

I, I still understand what you're saying.

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What am I, what is he lying about?

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That he killed his dog?

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No, no,

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Tony Tidbit: no, no, no.

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So, so Kev, you know,

Trump, so Trump doesn't lie.

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Kevin Jenkins: No, he doesn't.

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All of them lie.

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Biden lies.

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Obama lies.

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Everybody lies.

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I mean, come on, everybody embellishes.

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Come on, you've been in politics.

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Come on, put up with the bullshit.

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You've been in politics.

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Are you telling me I've been

in politics all my damn life?

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They lie.

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BEP Narrator: The award winning a

black executive perspective podcast

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presents pull up speak up more

meaningful conversations drive progress

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and every voice makes a difference.

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So what's on the table

for discussion today?

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Tony Tidbit: It's time to show

up, speak up and get real.

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Welcome to pull up, speak up a new series

by a black executive perspective podcast.

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You save space for raw unfiltered and

honest discussions on the tough issues.

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Many shy away from.

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I'm your host, Tony Tidbit,

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Chris P. Reed:

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and I'm your co host, Chris P.

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Reed.

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We'd like to start off by giving a

shout out to our partners at CODE

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M Magazine CODE M Magazine where

their mission is saving the black

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family by first saving the black man.

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That is CODE M Magazine, two M's dot com.

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Check them out.

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Tony Tidbit: Definitely check them out.

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And today our round table is going to

weigh on a surprising shift of black

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and Hispanic voters backing Donald

Trump in:

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now or feeling the heat, I should

say from Elon Musk's, department of

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government efficiency layoffs, did

these voters gamble on Trump's promises?

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Only to find themselves caught

up in Musk's government shake up

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while our round table is going to

provide their perspectives today.

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Chris P. Reed:

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Let me give a little bit of background

insight introduce our round table.

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So today we have some posthumous guests

with us First we'd like to start with

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the multi hyphenated award winning dr

Nsenga Burton near and dear to my heart

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and uh the renowned the renowned media

scholar journalist and cultural critic.

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Dr Burton Welcome to pull up speak up.

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Dr. Nsenga Burton:

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Thank you.

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Chris P. Reed:

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Next we have Louis Rivera,

author and publisher, and his

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latest book is After Dallas.

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Louis.

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Welcome to pull up speak up.

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Thank you.

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All right.

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And then rounding out the panel is Mr.

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Kevin Jenkins of counsel

at right turn strategies.

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Kevin, welcome to pull up speak up.

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Tony Tidbit: Well, listen, guys, I'm

excited to talk about these topics

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and obviously, you know, Dr Nsenga

Burton has been on before, but Kevin

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and Louis, this is your 1st time

you guys and look based on what

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you guys got going on in the world.

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You very busy.

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Oh, nine yards.

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I want to ask you guys a question.

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I'll start with you, Kevin first.

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And then same question to you, Louis, you

know, based on your busy schedule, why

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did you want to join the pull up speak up

round table to talk about these topics?

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Kevin Jenkins: Well, I've been having

conversations for the last several

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years with groups like this, and I've

seen a lot of great things happen.

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A lot of people come together.

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We have difference of opinion, but

we all feel that one thing that

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we need to do is get our group

together and move towards the future.

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So anytime I have an opportunity

to talk to great people like

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yourself, I'm in because I'm always

learning something as I'm speaking.

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I'm learning something from them too.

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So it's a great thing.

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Tony Tidbit: Awesome, my friend.

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Louis?

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Louis Riveria: I think like Kevin,

um, I've been discussing these

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issues for, for quite some time.

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Um, and I think now more than ever,

it's important to, um, to just dive in

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and get into these kinds of dialogues.

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One, to learn things, but also to

sort of check our own Uh, perspective,

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uh, out on, on what's happening and

things are, are, are disruptive.

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There's a lot of disinformation

out, uh, uh, in media and it's good

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to be able to, again, check, check

your perspective and perhaps learn

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some new things along the way.

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Tony Tidbit: Awesome, buddy.

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Thanks for that.

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Chris P. Reed:

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So we have an enlightened and passionate

group of folks here on the panel, and

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we'd like to remind these folks and the

audience of some of the ground rules that

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we have to create that type of dialogue.

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You guys just spoke up and

I'll go through the rules.

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1 through 10 here real quick for everyone.

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Number 1 respect all voices.

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Number two, listen actively number three.

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No personal attacks.

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We want to keep it civil

as much as possible.

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Number four, avoid number

four, avoid interrupting people

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cook when they get a chance.

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Number five.

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Stay open minded.

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Number six, speak from

your own experience.

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The worst thing we could do here is say

you heard a story from some third hand,

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fourth party individual that hasn't

been validated that you don't have any

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actual information on because like Louis

just said, a lot of misinformation is

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about Number, uh, seven, stay on topic.

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We got a short amount of time to

get a lot of things out there.

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So we got to make sure

that this flows tightly.

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Uh, number eight, follow the time

limits to reinforce number seven, number

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nine, challenge ideas and not people.

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We're not going to devolve this into

personal attacks and turn this into

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a, uh, joint chief of staffs meeting.

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Number 10, no, but whenever, whenever

you interject the button to something,

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someone just said, it tends to

devalue a bit of what they provided.

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So if we could help it, no butts.

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And if we follow those rules, we'll have

a very safe and pleasant conversation.

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Tony Tidbit: All right, guys.

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Can I get a thumbs up from everyone?

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All right, this is a safe space, so

pull up, speak up, let's dive into it.

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It's a group of voters

that was the focus of

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News Host: both presidential campaigns.

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Kevin Jenkins: I love the black population

of this country, I've done so much for

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the black population of this country.

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News Host: From visits to black

churches to specific policy proposals,

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President elect Donald Trump and Vice

President Kamala Harris repeatedly made

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direct appeals to African Americans.

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Across the country on Election Day,

Harris received almost the same

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amount of support from black voters

as President Biden did in:

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But NBC News exit polls show that

Trump made some inroads, gaining

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ground among black voters in North

Carolina and more than doubling his

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support from black voters in Wisconsin.

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Chris P. Reed:

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So To kick this off, I'm going to go to

you first, Kevin, with this question.

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And obviously one of the main focal points

of the campaign was economic priorities in

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the economy and things like that nature.

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But obviously we have some

actual tangible history with

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this, with Donald Trump, right?

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We we've been there before

we've seen this movie.

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So in the idea of what became more

prevalent in the mind of the voters.

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What do you believe outweigh the

concerns of his racist, racial rhetoric

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or racist behavior or however, uh,

you saw that in his first term, uh,

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to actually align with people who

were concerned about the economy?

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Kevin Jenkins: I believe people

were concerned about themselves.

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I mean.

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Supporting the democratic party

and or the Republican party.

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It was about them.

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It was not about the party agenda.

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It was not about their personal agenda.

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I think people are sick and

tired of being sick and tired and

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they're looking for alternatives.

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The democratic party has not been a

friend to black Americans since its

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inception, so we have to deal with that

reality and what Trump has been saying all

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along, listen, I can negotiate with you.

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We, you might get a better return

on your investment if you come over

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and talk to us, but we've given 98.

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9 percent of our power to a

group that's been anti us.

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And I think people are sick and tired of

it and they're looking for alternatives.

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And I think in the near future is

only going to get worse because

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people want to hear about what

you're going to do for them.

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So I think there's going to be

a seismic shift in the next year

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that like we've never seen before.

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So just look for

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Chris P. Reed:

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what would you go ahead, Tony?

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Go ahead.

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Go ahead.

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Chris.

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I was just gonna ask Dr Burton.

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What would you say to that?

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Because your eyebrow went up when

he's when he made that statement.

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And I want to, I want to, I

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Dr. Nsenga Burton:

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do agree with Kevin.

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I think that voters are getting younger.

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We're aging out and that

they are looking for.

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There are need to be spoken to directly

in a way that people who are in our

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generation and above our generation

are able to understand how policies

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impact more than just 1 group.

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I disagree with the statement that

Democrats haven't done anything

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for black since their inception.

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That is not.

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Uh, true.

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But what I do think Kevin is saying, and

I'm not trying to, uh, woman's blame you.

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But what I do think that he's

saying, um, what I do think that he's

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saying is that Democrats appeal to

lots of different types of groups.

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And when you are not the

central focus of the group.

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Um, and people aren't speaking to you

directly, then, then you may feel that,

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you know, something, you know, the

policies are not going to impact you.

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But if you have, uh, the majority of an

aging population has diabetes in your

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group, and it has been capped at 35,

that is, in fact, helping black people,

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if you have a policy that's going to

stop price gouging at grocery stores.

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And that is going to impact black people.

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It's going to help everyone, but

that will impact and help black

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people as well at the grocery store.

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So, um, I do agree with Kevin in the

sense that people want to be, you know,

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people are curating their own experiences.

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Now, we're just communicating differently.

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We're living differently.

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We're living and increasingly mediated.

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Uh, society, and I think that

people are more easily influenced

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by misinformation and disinformation

and that unless you say, listen,

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Kevin, I'm doing this for Kevin

Jenkins, a lot of people don't get it.

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They don't understand how policies

impact more than 1 group, and that

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you will be a beneficiary of it.

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Even if they don't call your name.

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Chris P. Reed:

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Let me ask this before

we move on from that.

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And this again, I want to stay with you.

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Um, it sounds like you believe that

the next generation or, or who's up

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now needs to be coddled and is politics

a place where people can be coddled.

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Dr. Nsenga Burton:

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Oh, no, I don't think

they should be coddled.

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I'm actually it's the opposite.

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I'm disgusted.

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Um, yeah, because I don't

think you need to be coddled.

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I think that you should be able to make

your own decisions and you should be

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able to make those deductions based

on critical thinking and information.

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But because we have been anti

intellectual for a long time.

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So I agree with Kevin.

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I hope Kevin agrees with me on that

for a long time, particularly as

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it relates to African Americans,

but being anti intellectual and

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we have done so much damage to the

public school public education.

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I'm here in the United States where

we're just no longer competitive and the

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Cuts that they keep talking about are

going to make us even less competitive.

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Um, I think it's really hard for

people to think critically and engage

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critically and to understand, uh,

what they need to understand, which

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is they may not call your name,

but if you understand the platform

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and the policy, you can see where.

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You fall in and where you will get

help and where you will get hurt.

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And that's why we have people right now,

um, who are like, Oh my God, I voted

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for Trump and I lost my job because they

don't think critically, they didn't pay

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attention, they didn't read the ink at

the bottom and they didn't think he was

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going to follow through and they didn't

follow what he was actually saying.

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And see what he was

actually doing in:

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So had they done that and read his

platform, then they would have known,

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but they didn't because they wanted to

believe their own curated experiences.

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And he's talking directly to me and he was

not even talking about them or Tuesday.

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Tony Tidbit: Yeah.

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You know, so both of you

guys, thank you for that.

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The one of the things though, it

wasn't just the black population.

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that Trump saw an increase in his numbers.

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Okay,

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News Host: while a majority of black

and Latino voters turned out for

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Vice President Kamala Harris in this

election, President elect Donald

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Trump made significant inroads with

both groups, especially Latinos,

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to help him secure the White House.

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Voter surveys from the Associated Press.

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Show that the president elect won 43

percent of the overall Latino vote.

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That's an 8 point increase from 2020.

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And this year, 48 percent of Latino

men voted for Minister Trump.

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Tony Tidbit: So, Louis, you know, one of

the things is, and, and, you know, it's

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kind of interesting, you know, when we're

just talking about black voters, when

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we look at the percentage, Trump really,

overall, nationwide, increased his, uh,

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uh, percentage from 2020 to 2024 by 1%.

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When it came to black voter.

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Okay.

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However, when it came to Hispanic

voter, it went up substantially 46

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percent where I believe in 2020 was 36%.

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Okay.

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And then even with Asians,

it went up substantially.

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So, let's hear from your point of view.

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Why do you think?

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That is increased.

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I believe if I looked at the numbers, it

was 13 percent that Hispanics increased

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voting for Trump in 2024 versus 2020.

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Louis Riveria: I have no idea.

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I'm just here to listen to you guys.

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Uh, I'm just kidding.

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A couple of things I'd say.

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First of all, when we're referring

to Hispanic voters, I think it's

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important to understand that

they're not a homogenous group.

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And I think that that's

increasingly true of black voters.

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Also, um, people vote according

to their own experience as there's

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more upward mobility in all these

communities, their priorities change.

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So that's, yeah.

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That's 1 point that I think is

important to keep in mind when

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we're talking about hispanic voters.

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The other thing I wanted to address

is just strategically where the

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democratic party is they, um, if your

brand is to advocate for marginalized

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people, um, by definition, um,

you're going to be focusing on.

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Um, marginal, uh, issues or or smaller

segments of the population, uh, whether

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it's an LGBTQ, uh, rights issue, um,

whether it's extreme poverty, so those.

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Those issues are, are aimed at, or that

advocacy is aimed at a very specific

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segment of the population that not might

not translate across, uh, across a broader

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numbers, um, or might not resonate with,

with, with, with, with larger groups.

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The 1 thing that I'll say about the

Hispanic population is that, um,

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they are disproportionately, uh,

religious, uh, identify with, um.

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With that, uh, with that Christian

message and, and, and as a result,

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um, things like abortion, um, become

a very powerful, uh, wedge issue.

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On the West Coast, you have a

disproportionate number of, uh, uh,

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of Mexicans that are involved in

the oil, uh, industry in, in, um.

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Uh, in Texas, California, New Mexico.

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Um, so those issues that, you know, uh,

the, the, this information that, that

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branded Biden as someone who's going

to be anti oil industry and trying to

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put the oil industry out of business is

going to resonate with that particular

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pocket of voters and on the East Coast,

you have Venezuelans and Cubans, um,

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Nicaraguans, um, that have had, uh,

horrible experiences or relatives who

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have had Horrible experiences with, uh,

with, uh, leftist or communist movements,

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uh, in, in, uh, in their countries.

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Uh, so that labeling of Kamala

Harris as a communist is going to

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resonate with that particular group.

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So I don't think that there's

necessarily one, uh, uh, one answer.

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And by the way, those wedge

issues cut across all demographics

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and all, uh, all races.

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But, you know, and, and that's just,

I think one of many, um, Uh, ways

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that, that the Republicans have been,

uh, effective and the Democrats have

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had trouble getting, uh, traction

applying older, outdated formulas.

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Tony Tidbit: Yeah, so

here's the thing, though.

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I, number 1, Kevin, I hear you.

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Nsenga, I hear you.

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And, and, and Louie, thanks for

that, bro, because you just broke

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it down, because obviously, like

you just said, Hispanics is across

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many different type of ethnicities.

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My challenge, though, where I want

to come back to you on this, Kevin.

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So I hear that.

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Hey, you know, it's about me.

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Um, you know, Democrats

haven't done anything for me.

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And, you know, it's about us.

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Now we got to take this to the next level.

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And I hear about, uh, uh, Louis about,

hey, you know, out in the West Coast.

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Uh, they tried to paint Biden as,

uh, he wasn't, he wasn't about

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fracking and he was going to get rid

of drilling and on the East coast,

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you know, they painted, you know,

uh, Kamala as a socialist, right?

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So the Hispanics on that side

thought that, Hey, we, you know,

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we came from communist countries,

we don't want to have that.

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I get all that.

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I even get the economy part.

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Eggs prices are too high.

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All those things, all that makes

sense where my challenge is.

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Okay.

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Is they voted for Trump?

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Okay.

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You just got finished talking

about, uh, this, uh, Hispanics being

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religious and they voted for him.

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All right.

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Based on all his baggage based

on all his racial rhetoric.

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Okay.

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And and then I also think that there's

a lack of really history of where.

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Blacks and people of color have come

through and all the different type of,

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uh, um, you know, systemic issues that

they've dealt with for centuries, right?

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And then you have somebody that's out

in the open and then use the media.

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See, here's the thing

he said on that clip.

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I've been the best friend for

black people, but when he wants

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to be able to rile his base up.

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He then uses racial overtones, all

right, to tie into their emotions

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to get them to vote a certain way.

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So in other words, he'll use

race to divide people, but then

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he wants people to vote for him.

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So that's where I'm

struggling a little bit.

354

:

So Kevin.

355

:

Did they just submit all this?

356

:

All that doesn't matter now.

357

:

It's just about, you know, hey,

I want somebody to look after me.

358

:

And I'm not saying that the Democrats

were the, you know, they had their arms.

359

:

I mean, they were, you

know, God and waiting.

360

:

But when you have somebody that's so,

uh, um, what's the word I want to use?

361

:

That's, that's basically

you see what you got.

362

:

He's being who he is.

363

:

He really, in my opinion, Is very

racial, homophobic, uh, uh, uh,

364

:

uh, xenophobia, anything that

you can name, okay, to be fair.

365

:

And he's put these things out

himself, but that didn't sway

366

:

people of color for voting for him.

367

:

Let me hear your thoughts on that.

368

:

Kevin Jenkins: That's a lot to unpack,

but I gotta tell you, I gotta tell you

369

:

this, listen, guys, we, we're in, we're

in the middle of the 21st century and

370

:

people are not guided by the old forms

of why we elect someone as opposed to

371

:

being left or opposed to being right,

or are they more racist than the other?

372

:

Is one group more racist than the other?

373

:

I can unpack all of that

on the Democratic side.

374

:

I don't, I can unpack it

on the Republican side.

375

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382

:

Kevin Jenkins: What people

are looking for are results.

383

:

Right.

384

:

So if you have after 16 years, after 16

years, 12 of those years, we've had a

385

:

democratic president and none of those

things was addressed at all at the

386

:

racial level, at the social level, at the

cultural level, economic level at all.

387

:

No seismic discussion.

388

:

Just stay in place.

389

:

Everything will get better.

390

:

And you know, by the way.

391

:

When I leave, I hope and pray that

something successful happens because

392

:

the next guy after me is not going

to do anything for you either.

393

:

So for all those years, black Americans

have been giving their votes and

394

:

saying, Hey, listen, listen to us.

395

:

We need these things to get

better, to move forward.

396

:

Now, snapshot with Trump in 2016.

397

:

What did Trump do?

398

:

Trump didn't do anything

or pass any policies that

399

:

affected us in a negative way.

400

:

But if that was the case, Obama, if

that was a case Biden, if that was a

401

:

case, all of those other people prior

to him, we would have got, we would

402

:

have been able to get access to the

power and influence that we need.

403

:

So now we are in this time.

404

:

They're saying we're not going back.

405

:

We're not voting anymore for those guys.

406

:

We're not getting any

best bang for our buck.

407

:

That's where they are right now.

408

:

That's how they're looking at it.

409

:

That's their alternative.

410

:

Do we have an alternative for them?

411

:

No, we don't.

412

:

What's the alternative?

413

:

So here's the thing.

414

:

What's the alternative to go back

and get the same crumbs that we've

415

:

been getting for the last 50 years?

416

:

So I can evaluate that public

policy for days and it has not

417

:

been beneficial for us at all.

418

:

Tony Tidbit: So, so

here's the thing though.

419

:

So I hear you.

420

:

Okay.

421

:

And I'm not disagree.

422

:

Like I said, I didn't disagree with

what you were saying in the beginning.

423

:

Right?

424

:

My thing is, is that he voted for Trump.

425

:

Okay.

426

:

So let's be clear here.

427

:

I've been, uh, um, and it

really doesn't matter, but I've

428

:

been a Republican since 1990.

429

:

Okay.

430

:

So just to be clear here.

431

:

Okay.

432

:

I voted for Bush, the father.

433

:

Okay, I voted for Bush, the son.

434

:

Okay.

435

:

I didn't see none of this.

436

:

Oh, what about me?

437

:

Okay, where did that?

438

:

This is my point here.

439

:

I didn't see none of that then.

440

:

Okay.

441

:

So, so to be fair, and to you,

and you made up, you made a point.

442

:

I want to ask Dr.

443

:

Nsenga Burton on this point because

you said, hey, when he was here

444

:

in 2016, none of his policies

affected people of color, right?

445

:

Dr.

446

:

Burton, Go ahead.

447

:

Go ahead.

448

:

Let him finish.

449

:

I just want to make sure I got it right.

450

:

Go ahead, Kev.

451

:

Kevin Jenkins: I wanted to add one thing.

452

:

I've been a Republican just as long.

453

:

I didn't even vote for him in 2016.

454

:

I didn't even vote for him in 2016.

455

:

I really didn't, but to the point that

you were getting ready to make, I just

456

:

think that black Americans around the

country, around this country anyway, is

457

:

saying, let's have a bigger dialogue.

458

:

Let's not, you know, let's not

listen to that chat over here.

459

:

If we have a bigger dialogue, we

might come up with some principled

460

:

things that might benefit our group.

461

:

I think that's fair.

462

:

And I think they're saying

we're walking away from you.

463

:

You've walked away from us and

we're walking away from you.

464

:

And that's what I think is happening.

465

:

I think you're going to

see a lot more of that.

466

:

Tony Tidbit: Go ahead, Dr.

467

:

Burton.

468

:

Dr. Nsenga Burton:

469

:

So I was gonna say, I think we're,

um, you know, I said this to Tony, why

470

:

are we spending so much time talking

about such a small group of people?

471

:

Um, because so many other, and I'm talking

about African Americans, not Latino

472

:

or Asian, um, because so many people

did not vote Republican, but, um, uh,

473

:

there were some very harmful policies.

474

:

Um, you know, the first one I

thought of was stopping the daily

475

:

press briefings from the CDC.

476

:

Um, the.

477

:

In 2016, which, of course, contributed

to us not having enough information

478

:

about the spread of Covid and

why over a million people died.

479

:

And people now are living

with the consequences of that.

480

:

Of course, it also goes

with his unwillingness.

481

:

And this is 45 at the time, a willingness

to read for comprehension, the data

482

:

that was coming out of the and the

CDC, which he's already, in terms

483

:

of now, if we talk about DOGE, and I

know we're gonna talk about DOGE soon.

484

:

The same thing is primed to be

happening because we're not getting

485

:

the information that we need.

486

:

They're not getting the

resources that they need.

487

:

And all of these things are being done

to give a tax cut to billionaires.

488

:

So there was information in 2016.

489

:

Here's my problem, Tony, with why

people voted for 47 now and this year.

490

:

Because, you know, sometimes when

presidents come in, you don't have

491

:

any prior information about them.

492

:

They might have been a senator for a

couple of years or somewhere in the

493

:

Congress, or they might have been a local

politician or maybe even a governor.

494

:

But you don't know a lot about that state.

495

:

We had all the information about

this candidate and his tenure

496

:

from 2016 to 2020 was awful.

497

:

It was horrible.

498

:

We were literally trapped in our houses,

wiping our ass with dish rags because

499

:

this man would not adhere to health

and public health guidelines that

500

:

were being, uh, communicated by every

reputable health care agency in the world.

501

:

You know, COVID didn't start here.

502

:

It doesn't have to get here.

503

:

Um, and if we had done what needed

to be done, we could have prevented

504

:

it and we could have prevented all

of the people who lost their jobs.

505

:

We could have prevented all the

businesses, especially the small

506

:

businesses, Kevin, that went

out of business, uh,:

507

:

the COVID era, we could have.

508

:

Um, salvage a lot of things, including

our lives and lives of our family

509

:

members and so forth and so on.

510

:

Um, so, you know, we could go

on to the central park five.

511

:

We could go on, um, to him calling

Haiti, you know, a shithole or whatever.

512

:

Uh, we could go on to him, um, throwing

paper towels at people and making jokes

513

:

when they just lost their homes in

Puerto Rico, um, during a hurricane.

514

:

We, I mean, I could keep going.

515

:

I'm just going to stop because I don't

want to spend that much time talking about

516

:

him, but what I will say about the voters.

517

:

Um, is I think that when you are

very strategic and Republicans win

518

:

every time on communication, I'll

give you that Kevin and the Democrats

519

:

are horrible on communication.

520

:

I'll give you that too.

521

:

Horrible.

522

:

Horrible.

523

:

They are talking to 80 year old white men.

524

:

Every single time.

525

:

So I give it to you.

526

:

So if you are someone where

you like, listen, Hey, it's me.

527

:

I want you to talk to me and you're

not hearing your name called, or

528

:

you're not part of that, you know,

uh, jargon, which speaks to this very

529

:

specific group, then you are going to

be like, where am I, what am I getting?

530

:

Again, if you're not a critical thinker.

531

:

And again, I want to add to this

conversation that it wasn't only

532

:

because of these shifts, uh,

but it's also because sexism.

533

:

And misogyny and anti black racism

is pervasive throughout the world.

534

:

So all of these folks who are voting,

not all of them, of course, but many of

535

:

these folks who are voting, particularly

those who, um, have the right to vote

536

:

are not going to vote for a woman anyway,

they don't believe in women as leaders.

537

:

They don't believe in women,

especially the religious,

538

:

uh, right, as you say, Louis.

539

:

They don't believe that

women should be in charge.

540

:

And then you got a whole bunch of people

who are anti Black in this country.

541

:

In this country.

542

:

That's the foundation of this nation.

543

:

Um, and who are coming from other

countries, bringing that anti

544

:

Black racism with them and thinking

about that as they go to the polls.

545

:

That's the only reason that you could be,

uh, voting for someone who is telling you.

546

:

You know that there's a black job, you

know, they're taking your black jobs.

547

:

What jobs are those the service jobs?

548

:

Oh, okay.

549

:

So that's what we're supposed to be doing.

550

:

We're supposed to be digging Gravel

and and dirt and stuff like that.

551

:

Okay.

552

:

Got it.

553

:

We're supposed to be a

great agrarian still.

554

:

Okay We're not supposed

to be in the c suite.

555

:

We're not supposed to be

president of the United States.

556

:

We're not supposed to be we're Where many

people are or not enough, but enough, some

557

:

people are, you know, one black person.

558

:

If you look statistically at the data, one

black person in the C suite every 10 years

559

:

at your job is one black person too many.

560

:

Oh my God.

561

:

We got to get rid of diversity efforts.

562

:

Because I've seen two black

people in 20 years in my C suite.

563

:

Oh my God, they're going,

they're gaining too much.

564

:

All right, so that is my point.

565

:

Trump is not good for black people.

566

:

Trump is not good for anybody.

567

:

Let's keep that real.

568

:

I understand why you didn't vote

for him in:

569

:

knew anything about him prior to

that, you would not vote for Trump.

570

:

But to vote for him now,

knowing everything that we

571

:

knew in 2016, is Unacceptable.

572

:

Let

573

:

Chris P. Reed:

574

:

me ask a question.

575

:

Let me ask a question

before we go too far.

576

:

I don't want to separate.

577

:

I want to separate the

message from the messenger.

578

:

And I want to ask you this question,

Louis, because I believe you brought

579

:

this up and it was a while ago

because we've had a lot of voices,

580

:

but the idea of the Democratic Party

being cast as the supporters or the.

581

:

Voice of the marginalized population.

582

:

Where's the Venn diagram

that shows marginalized?

583

:

Because I have a uncomfortable feeling

with terms that seem black and brown.

584

:

When, if you look at the base definition

of them, they're not just black and brown.

585

:

So who are the non marginalized?

586

:

Is that the Christian

heterosexual white male?

587

:

Is that the only person

that's non marginalized?

588

:

But when you say it's a

party for the marginalized,

589

:

explain that a little further.

590

:

Louis Riveria: Okay, so I did want

to address something Kevin said,

591

:

but, uh, respectfully, let me just

try and, uh, address your question.

592

:

Um, you know, the Democratic

Party is a big tent party.

593

:

Uh, so you have by definition, a

lot of special special interest.

594

:

And I use LGBTQ as an example, only

because as a percentage of the population,

595

:

it got a disproportionate amount of, of

energy and, and, and discussion, I believe

596

:

that the LGBT community deserves, um,

uh, to be protected and, and, um, and

597

:

their rights to be respected and every

individual should, should feel safe.

598

:

I think, I think.

599

:

Uh, the Democrats have a communication

problem in that they were unable

600

:

to address that issue, um, in a

way that resonated with everyone.

601

:

Um, so, so that's just one example.

602

:

But Kevin, I just have to

challenge on on on one thing.

603

:

You said, you know, for 16

years, the Democrats haven't done

604

:

anything for for black people.

605

:

They elected a black president.

606

:

Um, and imagine Um, and I, you don't

have to imagine this, but I'm putting my

607

:

myself in, uh, in, in, in the place of a

young black kid who gets to see, uh, the

608

:

president of the United States as a black

guy and realizing that I'm capable of, of,

609

:

of uh, Rising to that ultimate, uh, uh,

position, not that they haven't done other

610

:

things, but that in and of itself, that's

a generational, um, a generational impact.

611

:

And by the way, that guy also passed

a health care plan that lifted a

612

:

ton of people, uh, out of out of

poverty and, and, and, um, uh.

613

:

And save, you know, tens of thousands

of lives black and and white.

614

:

So, to say that that we haven't, um, the

Democratic Party has not done anything

615

:

for black people over, uh, over 16

years is, is, uh, is somewhat reductive.

616

:

The other thing I just

introduced this idea and I don't.

617

:

Um, I don't have science to

back it up, but I did ask

618

:

chat about mass mass delusion.

619

:

Um, and can you give me examples of

mass delusion that impacted, um, um,

620

:

uh, you know, entire societies and it's.

621

:

Spit out a list of, you

know, 10 different examples.

622

:

Um, you know, one of the ones

that comes comes to mind is

623

:

is during the Vietnam War.

624

:

There was this the domino theory.

625

:

Uh, the idea that if if 1 country

in Southeast Asia fell, you

626

:

know, the entire region would

become would become a communist.

627

:

And that costs 40, 000

American lives during the 50s.

628

:

You had McCarthyism and for a while

he wielded, uh, you know, Unbelievable

629

:

power over people's careers and, and,

um, livelihood of a ton of people.

630

:

And it turned out to be all nonsense.

631

:

None of it based on, uh, on evidence.

632

:

I think what's happening in this country.

633

:

There's no 1 answer, but there's a

good piece of of that, that, um, that

634

:

can be sort of fall into that bucket.

635

:

1 other point that I'd make, um,

there, um, there's a documentary on.

636

:

Amazon called a bad faith, and it

talks about the Christian nationalists

637

:

and how well organized they've been

over the course of 40 years, um, in

638

:

mobilizing, uh, a disproportionate

impact on our political process and how.

639

:

While abortion was a galvanizing force

for them, what, what they really wanted

640

:

to do, um, was bring back some of

the, um, antebellum, um, uh, You know,

641

:

basically white supremacy that it that

that there is a significant portion of

642

:

the, the Christian nationalists that

is a white supremacist, uh, movement.

643

:

Um, so a lot of different

factors, uh, come into play.

644

:

And by the way.

645

:

I'm just going back to Obama.

646

:

I think Obama helped galvanize

that, that, uh, that movement.

647

:

Imagine if you're, you know, you know,

and let's use a spectrum, you know, on

648

:

the one hand, you're a hardcore white

supremacist, you keep a sheet in your

649

:

closet and then, you know, you're, you

know, you're that, you know, that closet

650

:

racist, you know, uh, you know, people

call it, you know, your, your, your

651

:

racist uncle or grandfather, that entire

spectrum of people were, I'll Blow it

652

:

away by by Obama's, um, uh, election.

653

:

And I think that that that that

galvanize them and turned them

654

:

into a powerful political force.

655

:

Chris P. Reed:

656

:

Right?

657

:

Right.

658

:

I'd like to say this

before we move forward.

659

:

Tony.

660

:

I would like to discount what Louis

said as far as Obama being the

661

:

shining star or the epitome for the

young black male who seeing him as

662

:

the archetype of what could be done.

663

:

only because that would mean this

president is the same for the young racist

664

:

buffoon out there that's up and coming

and thinking he too without any, uh, coups

665

:

or any, um, style or any presence could

be the president of the United States.

666

:

So if we use one, we have

to use the other as example.

667

:

And I don't want that to be, uh,

empowering to, uh, the younger

668

:

generation in that regard.

669

:

Louis Riveria: Well, I think you look

at the House of Representatives, um,

670

:

Dr. Nsenga Burton:

671

:

as,

672

:

Louis Riveria: you know, as sort of your

exhibit, you know, your exhibit A, B, C,

673

:

D and E, you know, in what, in what normal

world with Marjorie Taylor Greene, you

674

:

know, be considered a, uh, uh, you know,

a legitimate Representative of anyone,

675

:

Dr. Nsenga Burton:

676

:

and I live in Georgia and people

know her and they are shocked.

677

:

My Republican friends know her and

like, where did this come from?

678

:

How did this happen?

679

:

Right?

680

:

Tony Tidbit: Right.

681

:

But here's the thing though.

682

:

I want my brother to get a chance to jump

in because obviously you had a thought you

683

:

wanted to jump in before we went to Louis.

684

:

But go ahead, my man.

685

:

Kevin Jenkins: Well, I'm not here

to litigate all of those things.

686

:

I mean, right, those in silos and

we can talk about them all day.

687

:

I mean, I have a different position when

it comes to, um, Corona, the Corona virus.

688

:

I understand it deeply.

689

:

I've traveled over 800 and some 1000

miles fighting exactly against that.

690

:

But not only that, though,

I've traveled this world.

691

:

I've worked in Africa.

692

:

I've worked in 10.

693

:

I've worked all over this planet.

694

:

And I'm telling you, there's a seismic

shift about what people are feeling.

695

:

Even in with all of those bad things

that are constructed to get people to

696

:

feel one way as opposed to another way.

697

:

People now are looking at themselves

completely differently because now we

698

:

are moving from our twenties to our

sixties and we're saying, okay, here's

699

:

what this investment has gotten us and

it's boiled is boiling down to that.

700

:

What do I need to survive?

701

:

What do I need to take

care of my Children?

702

:

How do I move my group

or my family forward?

703

:

Now I can go back and break down all

of the education stuff that says that

704

:

we're disqualifying ourselves the way

we've been educating our Children.

705

:

We can go and have that

discussion every day.

706

:

I could come in here and talk

about charter schools, choice.

707

:

I could do it all day, but

people are saying, what in the

708

:

hell is going to happen to us?

709

:

And I think when these last four

years have passed us by, people were

710

:

homes trapped in their, at home,

trapped in their houses saying,

711

:

this is what life could be for us

if we don't get our stuff together.

712

:

And I think young people, older

people are baselining it right there.

713

:

No more intellectual jab.

714

:

No more.

715

:

Um, I call maximum

sophisticated confusion.

716

:

Nobody wants to hear it.

717

:

Nobody wants to hear from the right.

718

:

Nobody wants to hear from the left.

719

:

And everybody's saying, what in

the hell is going to happen to us?

720

:

Tony Tidbit: So do you

721

:

Kevin Jenkins: see more of that in

the next year, two years, you're

722

:

going to see the more of that.

723

:

Tony Tidbit: So that was my next question.

724

:

Is that so you see this as being a

trend that is only going to grow bigger

725

:

and larger versus being an anomaly?

726

:

Um, you know, because to be fair, a

lot of people were talking about, they

727

:

voted this way because of the economy.

728

:

Kevin Jenkins: Well, the

economy is everything.

729

:

The economy is the economy is everything.

730

:

And what the Democrats culturally do is

keep us in these cultural wars, right?

731

:

Somebody asked me a question.

732

:

How did Donald Trump win?

733

:

I said, it's real simple.

734

:

They said, well, what do you mean?

735

:

He listened to his voters.

736

:

Now you say, who is voters?

737

:

77.

738

:

3 million people.

739

:

77.

740

:

3 million people.

741

:

That was not about black people,

white people, green people.

742

:

The whole country said, I'm against that.

743

:

Dr. Nsenga Burton:

744

:

That's not the whole country, Kevin.

745

:

Kevin Jenkins: But, but see,

746

:

Dr. Nsenga Burton:

747

:

but I'm saying your language.

748

:

See, that's what you all do.

749

:

That language where you,

because that's not factual.

750

:

That is not the whole

751

:

Tony Tidbit: country.

752

:

But Dr.

753

:

Burt, let him finish and

then I'll hear your thought.

754

:

Go ahead, buddy.

755

:

Kevin Jenkins: 77.

756

:

3, you can go and

qualify all you want, 77.

757

:

3 million people voted for him.

758

:

If you look at the map, right?

759

:

If you look at the whole

total map, they voted for him.

760

:

That's a mandate.

761

:

You can't manufacture that this way.

762

:

It's the truth.

763

:

So now, what does that say to you?

764

:

They're saying that it's not a split.

765

:

People are saying we're pushing

back against that narrative.

766

:

We don't want that narrative.

767

:

That doesn't represent our narrative.

768

:

We really want somebody

to take care of us.

769

:

We're gonna, you need to put us first.

770

:

Now that's what came out of that.

771

:

Tony Tidbit: So, so, well, Dr.

772

:

Burton, go ahead and respond

because I, I jumped in.

773

:

Dr. Nsenga Burton:

774

:

What I'm saying is, you can call

it culture wars or whatever you

775

:

want to call it, but the fact is

that we live in an increasingly

776

:

anti Black, Anti woman, misogynist.

777

:

But you keep saying that, though.

778

:

You keep saying that.

779

:

How is that

780

:

Kevin Jenkins: possible?

781

:

I live with a woman that's an

elected official for almost 20 years.

782

:

I don't even hear her talk like that.

783

:

When she walks in those boardrooms.

784

:

I'm not that woman, though.

785

:

That's what

786

:

Dr. Nsenga Burton:

787

:

I'm talking about.

788

:

You don't have time.

789

:

You don't have time to

790

:

Kevin Jenkins: do that when you're

trying to build something for your group.

791

:

So, Kev, Kev, Kev, let her

finish, let her finish.

792

:

I listened to this for almost a half, I

didn't say a word, I didn't say anything.

793

:

I listened to

794

:

Dr. Nsenga Burton:

795

:

you and it stopped.

796

:

You're cutting me off.

797

:

Kevin Jenkins: Because I'm trying to

798

:

Dr. Nsenga Burton:

799

:

listen to you, but you are not,

what you're doing is Listen, listen,

800

:

Kevin Jenkins: you, I, look, you, you,

you can't outsmart me on this one.

801

:

I know you have no value for education, I

802

:

Dr. Nsenga Burton:

803

:

know you have no value for education

or intellectualism, I know that.

804

:

I'm a PhD.

805

:

I have no value.

806

:

I know how communication works.

807

:

How do you write

808

:

Kevin Jenkins: policy

for a fucking education?

809

:

What are you talking about?

810

:

Dr. Nsenga Burton:

811

:

What are you talking, you

don't see, you don't even know.

812

:

I am an educator.

813

:

Kevin Jenkins: That is the problem.

814

:

That's what I'm talking about.

815

:

Dr. Nsenga Burton:

816

:

So let me talk to you, talk about

what he asked me to talk about.

817

:

No, no, you can't speak for me.

818

:

Which you are doing.

819

:

Kevin Jenkins: No, you need

to start speaking for me.

820

:

Absolutely not.

821

:

No, not never.

822

:

I'll do this

823

:

Dr. Nsenga Burton:

824

:

for another hour or whatever.

825

:

I'm never going to stop talking

because you told me to stop talking.

826

:

I am a feminist womanist and you are

not going to reduce me the way you

827

:

have reduced everything for people

who don't vote like you have done.

828

:

I

829

:

Kevin Jenkins: don't

830

:

Dr. Nsenga Burton:

831

:

care how you voted.

832

:

What you are saying is

dangerous because you're spewing

833

:

information that is incorrect.

834

:

And what I was saying is before you

reduced me to just being a woman, just

835

:

like the other woman you live with, who

would never be me, I am saying to you

836

:

that what you are saying is not correct

as it relates to certain populations.

837

:

Now you can pretend.

838

:

And laugh and give her all you want

to running me down because I don't

839

:

have anything else to speak the

other night, 70 percent of America

840

:

Kevin Jenkins: agree with them.

841

:

The only movement is a white

supremacist movement that's going to lap

842

:

Dr. Nsenga Burton:

843

:

your black ass up too.

844

:

Tony Tidbit: So here's the thing though.

845

:

Dr. Nsenga Burton:

846

:

job.

847

:

Hold on to your job.

848

:

Keep doing what you're doing.

849

:

Keep tap dancing.

850

:

That's what I'm saying.

851

:

Tony Tidbit: So here's the thing though.

852

:

Here's the thing.

853

:

So Kev, just going back to what you,

your last point you said 70% of the

854

:

pop, we can't say the population.

855

:

Yeah.

856

:

Wins the

857

:

Dr. Nsenga Burton:

858

:

popular vote by a significant margin.

859

:

Thank you.

860

:

Yeah.

861

:

Tony Tidbit: So 70% of the people who,

yeah, so, so 70% of the people that saw

862

:

the State of the Union, Kev, you say agree

with the president that, is that correct?

863

:

Kevin Jenkins: Yes.

864

:

Tony Tidbit: Okay.

865

:

Kevin Jenkins: And then you agree with

the 70 percent agree with the president.

866

:

Tony Tidbit: Okay.

867

:

Now, but we know that's not

70 percent of the population.

868

:

That's 70 percent of people watch

869

:

Kevin Jenkins: 70%.

870

:

If you know anything about polling, they

have a universe that they poll, right?

871

:

70 percent of Americans agree

with what he was saying, guys.

872

:

You got, this is from CBS.

873

:

That is not true.

874

:

This is from your

875

:

Chris P. Reed:

876

:

station.

877

:

It's not factual.

878

:

It's not factual.

879

:

It's

880

:

Kevin Jenkins: not true.

881

:

It's absolutely not.

882

:

I'm telling you.

883

:

Listen.

884

:

You saw it on CBS.

885

:

I saw it too.

886

:

You don't understand how polling works.

887

:

I'll send it to you.

888

:

No, no, no, no.

889

:

Can

890

:

Louis Riveria: I help Kevin

out here for a second?

891

:

Go ahead, Louis.

892

:

Go ahead.

893

:

Let Louis jump in.

894

:

Go ahead.

895

:

So, Kevin, I get that

you're, uh, quoting numbers.

896

:

Oh, my

897

:

Kevin Jenkins: God.

898

:

No, no, let

899

:

Louis Riveria: me just help you out here.

900

:

Kevin Jenkins: Oh,

901

:

Louis Riveria: what?

902

:

I guess it was in relation.

903

:

Hold on.

904

:

Lou.

905

:

Hang on.

906

:

Real relation.

907

:

Tony Tidbit: He, he, he, well, one thing

he is right, because I watched CBS,

908

:

they did say, yes, so, so, so when you

909

:

Louis Riveria: speak in

absolutes, it's easy to challenge.

910

:

It's 70 percent of the people surveyed

who watched the, who watched the, uh,

911

:

Kevin Jenkins: it's the

same guys, you know, because

912

:

Chris P. Reed:

913

:

some people opted out.

914

:

because of indignation.

915

:

There was Republicans, Democrats

that didn't even exactly.

916

:

I'm a political junkie.

917

:

Louis Riveria: I didn't watch and

people in my circles made it a point of

918

:

boycotting the speech, but that's okay.

919

:

It didn't make anything that he said

any, any closer to the truth, but

920

:

here's the thing because 70% Of people

like that didn't really make it.

921

:

So here's the thing.

922

:

Tony Tidbit: What Kevin is saying, no

regard, forget the numbers, forget,

923

:

forget, forget what he's saying is that

the country is moving in this direction.

924

:

This is not an anomaly.

925

:

Okay, that this is a trend that's

going to continue to go on.

926

:

Is that forget the numbers on air?

927

:

Is that what you're saying?

928

:

Kevin Jenkins: And that's

exactly what I'm saying.

929

:

Tony Tidbit: Okay.

930

:

Okay.

931

:

Kevin Jenkins: Exactly.

932

:

I, I think he's saying, I, I, I agree

933

:

Louis Riveria: with, with Kevin, by the

way, and I, I guess the, the, the things

934

:

that, that we might differ on is why I, I

think the disinformation machine, um, yes.

935

:

Has, has, uh, is penetrated, uh,

our society in a way that has made.

936

:

Uh, factual information,

almost irrelevant.

937

:

And no one delivers a hawk

or a line like like Trump.

938

:

He is an effective communicator

and repeating lies.

939

:

He does not back down.

940

:

And that absolutely has an

impact on the electorate.

941

:

Tony Tidbit: So hold on 1 2nd,

Louis, because I got to jump in

942

:

because you said something right.

943

:

And I got it.

944

:

I got to throw this in here.

945

:

So, Kev, just real quick.

946

:

News Host: Yeah,

947

:

Tony Tidbit: that we know is that factual

what Louis just said about Trump about

948

:

him lying and just repeating stuff.

949

:

That's no, that's not true.

950

:

Pushing stuff out there.

951

:

Continue being part of the disinformation

and this is do you agree with that?

952

:

Kevin Jenkins: Well, listen, I'm not here.

953

:

I don't follow every word that he says.

954

:

Chris P. Reed:

955

:

Okay.

956

:

Kevin Jenkins: But from a policy

perspective, the things that I'm

957

:

interested in for my group, my people,

he's going to do a great, great job.

958

:

And he's been doing, can you give me

an example of any of those things?

959

:

Has he lied about any of those things to

you and your, I mean, your perspective.

960

:

Tony Tidbit: But,

961

:

Kevin Jenkins: but Kev,

what if they're an example?

962

:

You actually, listen, yeah.

963

:

Louis Riveria: Two, two

policy, two policy initiatives.

964

:

Kevin Jenkins: You asked a question about

what did I think about what he was doing.

965

:

I said, listen, I can't speak to

everything he talks about all the time,

966

:

but on his tax policies, no taxes on

tips, no taxes on social security.

967

:

Those kinds of policies are

going to be great for Americans.

968

:

When we move forward, his tax policy,

listen, it was his tax policies that he

969

:

signed that was going to Phoenix out.

970

:

And if it would have, we'd have

been even in worse condition.

971

:

No, no, no, no, no.

972

:

Tony Tidbit: I get that part.

973

:

I get that.

974

:

No, I was asking about him lying though.

975

:

That my question was about him lying.

976

:

BEP Narrator: If you like what you hear

and want to join us on this journey

977

:

of making uncomfortable conversations

comfortable, please subscribe

978

:

to a black executive perspective

podcast on YouTube, Apple podcasts,

979

:

Spotify, or every year podcasts.

980

:

Hit subscribe now to stay connected

for more episodes that challenge,

981

:

inspire, and lead the change.

982

:

Kevin Jenkins: Lying about what?

983

:

I, I still understand what you're saying.

984

:

Like, what am I, what

is he lying about that?

985

:

He killed his dog or what?

986

:

No, no,

987

:

Tony Tidbit: no, no, no.

988

:

So, so Kev, you know,

Trump, so Trump doesn't lie.

989

:

Kevin Jenkins: No, he doesn't.

990

:

All

991

:

Tony Tidbit: of them

992

:

Kevin Jenkins: lie.

993

:

Biden lies, Obama lies, everybody lies.

994

:

I mean, come on, everybody embellishes.

995

:

Come on.

996

:

Have you been in politics?

997

:

Come on, put up with the bullshit.

998

:

Have you been in politics?

999

:

Are you telling me I've been

in politics all my damn life?

:

00:46:02,870 --> 00:46:03,270

They lie.

:

00:46:05,050 --> 00:46:09,615

You, Kevin, you never

worked in government before.

:

00:46:10,725 --> 00:46:13,095

Tony Tidbit: I worked in

government, so they lied.

:

00:46:13,170 --> 00:46:13,935

We we know.

:

00:46:13,935 --> 00:46:14,745

So listen buddy.

:

00:46:14,745 --> 00:46:17,655

So guys kidding me, your hat on that?

:

00:46:17,805 --> 00:46:18,165

No.

:

00:46:18,165 --> 00:46:21,910

So I mean, so I'm you right, y'all,

:

00:46:22,515 --> 00:46:24,285

Kevin Jenkins: y'all really,

if y'all believe that y'all

:

00:46:24,285 --> 00:46:25,150

do have a brain process,

:

00:46:25,730 --> 00:46:26,710

Tony Tidbit: KEF, kef, kef.

:

00:46:27,135 --> 00:46:28,875

So just to be fair though, right?

:

00:46:29,230 --> 00:46:31,730

So every person lies, we know that, right?

:

00:46:31,790 --> 00:46:33,230

But let me, let me give you an example.

:

00:46:33,390 --> 00:46:36,760

Okay, let me give you one example,

specifically when he was saying that the,

:

00:46:37,040 --> 00:46:44,050

that the, uh, the Haitians were eating

the dogs in, in Ohio, which was not true.

:

00:46:44,460 --> 00:46:44,990

Okay.

:

00:46:45,010 --> 00:46:46,540

Which was not true, right?

:

00:46:46,540 --> 00:46:47,170

Flat out.

:

00:46:47,230 --> 00:46:51,000

Even the city commissioner,

the chief of police, the mayor

:

00:46:51,000 --> 00:46:52,650

was like, that's not true.

:

00:46:52,880 --> 00:46:53,390

Right.

:

00:46:53,700 --> 00:46:55,520

Those are the things

that we're talking about.

:

00:46:56,255 --> 00:46:57,845

Louis Riveria: Endangered that community.

:

00:46:57,915 --> 00:47:02,395

It's not just that that it was a

lie or hyperbole is that Haitians

:

00:47:02,455 --> 00:47:06,655

in that community began not

being able to show up for work.

:

00:47:06,655 --> 00:47:09,565

I mean, they were fearful for

for their for their lives.

:

00:47:09,625 --> 00:47:13,725

Uh, and by the way, that

that city welcomed Haitians.

:

00:47:13,735 --> 00:47:14,754

They actually.

:

00:47:15,155 --> 00:47:18,905

Um, it was an initiative, a

city sponsored, uh, initiative.

:

00:47:18,935 --> 00:47:23,645

That's just 1 of, uh, and these

have been thoroughly documented.

:

00:47:24,115 --> 00:47:27,075

If you choose to ignore it, there's

nothing that I'm going to say.

:

00:47:27,325 --> 00:47:32,985

It's all these things are provably false

available, uh, for anyone to to, uh.

:

00:47:33,135 --> 00:47:38,955

To, to evaluate and discern and the damage

that, that these things do that his lies,

:

00:47:39,195 --> 00:47:44,565

uh, have done and, and to individuals and,

and, and to the country is immeasurable.

:

00:47:44,805 --> 00:47:47,835

But you could choose to ignore

that, but, but it doesn't change it.

:

00:47:48,270 --> 00:47:48,271

Dr. Nsenga Burton:

:

00:47:48,271 --> 00:47:49,850

And the Washington worker,

the Washington Post, go ahead.

:

00:47:49,850 --> 00:47:50,050

Go ahead.

:

00:47:50,190 --> 00:47:51,530

The Washington Post some data.

:

00:47:52,375 --> 00:47:57,385

The Washington Post, um, had an article

today, um, and that is his boy Jeff

:

00:47:57,385 --> 00:48:02,125

Bezos publication, the Washington

Post, um, stated that he lied.

:

00:48:02,335 --> 00:48:07,695

26 times about 26 different policies

in his State of the Union speech,

:

00:48:07,925 --> 00:48:12,175

and they outlined it what he

said versus what the reality was.

:

00:48:12,185 --> 00:48:17,855

So I would encourage people to go

and check that out so that they can

:

00:48:17,865 --> 00:48:19,365

make that determination as well.

:

00:48:19,760 --> 00:48:20,800

Tony Tidbit: Well,

here's the thing, though.

:

00:48:21,030 --> 00:48:21,890

I agree with Kevin on

:

00:48:21,890 --> 00:48:22,450

Louis Riveria: one more thing.

:

00:48:23,460 --> 00:48:24,120

Hurry up, buddy.

:

00:48:25,150 --> 00:48:30,730

The Social Security, uh, um, uh, tax

forgiveness, um, or eliminating that

:

00:48:30,730 --> 00:48:32,930

tax was a brilliant, uh, brilliant move.

:

00:48:32,930 --> 00:48:35,890

It was Reagan who actually,

uh, put that tax in.

:

00:48:35,890 --> 00:48:39,100

But, uh, I'm surprised that

the Democrats didn't, uh, come

:

00:48:39,100 --> 00:48:40,210

up with something comparable.

:

00:48:40,360 --> 00:48:43,190

I don't think it's going to make

it into the final, uh, budget bill.

:

00:48:43,870 --> 00:48:45,490

Tony Tidbit: So, but here's

the thing, though, right?

:

00:48:45,490 --> 00:48:48,265

Right now What we're

having in the government.

:

00:48:48,295 --> 00:48:49,985

So look, at the end of the day, Trump won.

:

00:48:50,195 --> 00:48:52,585

He's the president on nine yards.

:

00:48:52,835 --> 00:48:59,355

Um, but a lot of people didn't expect that

doge would be doing what it was doing.

:

00:48:59,355 --> 00:49:02,915

Even the people that voted for him

to be fair now that even the people

:

00:49:02,915 --> 00:49:07,725

that voted for him, they didn't

have an idea or a sense that this

:

00:49:07,745 --> 00:49:09,965

would cut so deep and so hard.

:

00:49:10,045 --> 00:49:13,255

News Host: We've covered musk and we've

covered the tech industry for a long time.

:

00:49:13,255 --> 00:49:14,215

We've covered startups.

:

00:49:14,235 --> 00:49:15,245

We understand.

:

00:49:15,555 --> 00:49:19,535

The Musk playbook when he goes into

a company, what he does, what we know

:

00:49:19,535 --> 00:49:23,135

about startups and what we know about

the tech industry is that this move

:

00:49:23,145 --> 00:49:27,285

fast, break things model that is often

applied in that industry and often

:

00:49:27,285 --> 00:49:30,305

applied by Musk often does break things.

:

00:49:31,405 --> 00:49:34,145

The United States

government is not a startup.

:

00:49:34,465 --> 00:49:37,945

If we treat it like a startup, there

is a high probability and a high

:

00:49:37,945 --> 00:49:40,355

risk in our view that it will break.

:

00:49:40,760 --> 00:49:43,570

Are there changes, are there

efficiencies within the federal

:

00:49:43,570 --> 00:49:45,750

bureaucracy that we could find, right?

:

00:49:45,750 --> 00:49:47,120

Is there cost to cut there?

:

00:49:47,580 --> 00:49:48,330

I have no doubt.

:

00:49:48,340 --> 00:49:49,420

I'm sure there is, right?

:

00:49:49,420 --> 00:49:50,890

It's a very large bureaucracy.

:

00:49:51,330 --> 00:49:52,400

It is not a startup.

:

00:49:52,710 --> 00:49:53,910

It is not a tech company.

:

00:49:54,150 --> 00:49:55,260

It's the federal government.

:

00:49:55,670 --> 00:49:58,660

Tony Tidbit: So Kev, just based on

what's going on right now, right?

:

00:49:59,000 --> 00:50:01,060

Um, obviously, let's be fair here, right?

:

00:50:01,060 --> 00:50:03,610

There is a lot of waste and

stuff in the government.

:

00:50:03,610 --> 00:50:07,200

This is nothing new, and it

makes sense to be able to cut.

:

00:50:07,525 --> 00:50:11,625

And, and trim and, and, and find

fraud in the whole nine yards.

:

00:50:11,625 --> 00:50:12,005

Right.

:

00:50:12,215 --> 00:50:15,995

However, the way that Musk is going

about it and look, we're not even 60

:

00:50:15,995 --> 00:50:18,985

days based on president Trump taken over.

:

00:50:19,275 --> 00:50:21,615

And I believe, what did

the numbers say so far?

:

00:50:21,615 --> 00:50:29,045

It's been 63, 000 people that have been

laid off of fired by the U S government.

:

00:50:29,435 --> 00:50:32,665

By Musk, I should say over

17 different agencies.

:

00:50:32,665 --> 00:50:33,085

Right?

:

00:50:33,665 --> 00:50:35,885

And so let me your point of view.

:

00:50:35,885 --> 00:50:37,325

Is he doing the right thing?

:

00:50:37,325 --> 00:50:39,195

Is this something that he should do?

:

00:50:39,415 --> 00:50:43,705

Not just should he do it in terms

of trying to create efficiencies

:

00:50:43,775 --> 00:50:48,325

in the government, but his tactics

in terms of going out and the way

:

00:50:48,325 --> 00:50:50,345

that he's currently executing.

:

00:50:50,355 --> 00:50:51,385

I'd love to hear your thoughts.

:

00:50:51,815 --> 00:50:53,785

Kevin Jenkins: Well, Bill

Clinton did the same thing.

:

00:50:54,045 --> 00:50:54,455

He did.

:

00:50:54,615 --> 00:50:59,735

377, 000 people lost their jobs, didn't

lose their jobs, but were relieved of

:

00:50:59,735 --> 00:51:01,545

their jobs, however you want to put it.

:

00:51:02,015 --> 00:51:06,295

Um, Obama did the same thing, exactly

the same thing, and actually created

:

00:51:06,295 --> 00:51:11,790

a division that DOJ is sitting in now

to do exactly What Elon Musk is doing

:

00:51:11,910 --> 00:51:14,860

at this present moment, and I think

all of us should be happy about that.

:

00:51:15,280 --> 00:51:18,080

So it's been talked about

through all of these presidents,

:

00:51:18,080 --> 00:51:19,400

and he's actually doing it.

:

00:51:19,420 --> 00:51:21,800

So, um, and look what he's finding.

:

00:51:21,810 --> 00:51:23,630

So everybody should be happy about that.

:

00:51:23,640 --> 00:51:28,160

Those NGOs are nothing but,

uh, I think PSY operations to

:

00:51:28,160 --> 00:51:29,610

pull coups around the country.

:

00:51:29,610 --> 00:51:31,980

I think the money that they've

been spending, that's how

:

00:51:31,980 --> 00:51:32,960

they're building their wealth.

:

00:51:33,675 --> 00:51:36,785

They're building their wealth on the

government, you know, so at the end of the

:

00:51:36,785 --> 00:51:38,095

day, I think he's doing the right thing.

:

00:51:38,095 --> 00:51:39,715

And I think everybody

should be happy about it.

:

00:51:39,795 --> 00:51:39,796

Chris P. Reed:

:

00:51:39,796 --> 00:51:42,645

Let me ask you this, Kevin, I'm gonna

stick with you just for a moment.

:

00:51:42,735 --> 00:51:47,355

Is there any danger in running a

government, uh, that is, that is

:

00:51:47,465 --> 00:51:51,755

comprised of a society of individuals,

like you would a corporation or a

:

00:51:51,755 --> 00:51:57,295

company that has barriers of interest

or a startup because any employment has

:

00:51:57,305 --> 00:52:01,745

backgrounds and education criteria and

prerequisites and things of that nature?

:

00:52:01,845 --> 00:52:02,675

A society does not.

:

00:52:03,325 --> 00:52:08,495

And so to treat it like it's a

company may not be as advantageous

:

00:52:08,505 --> 00:52:11,495

for those who didn't sign up for this.

:

00:52:12,385 --> 00:52:17,175

Kevin Jenkins: Well, listen, running it

like a company or not running it like

:

00:52:17,175 --> 00:52:19,015

a company, it doesn't really matter.

:

00:52:19,035 --> 00:52:20,235

It's he's the executive.

:

00:52:20,455 --> 00:52:22,465

He's the executive leader of the country.

:

00:52:22,635 --> 00:52:24,775

He's saying this is what my process is.

:

00:52:25,055 --> 00:52:27,995

This is who I'm choosing because

I have the right to do that,

:

00:52:28,265 --> 00:52:31,515

to go and seek out all of this

waste and report it back to me.

:

00:52:31,955 --> 00:52:33,805

I can do that as a CEO.

:

00:52:33,835 --> 00:52:36,105

I can do it as a executive director.

:

00:52:36,105 --> 00:52:38,415

I could do it as a president of

the United States of America.

:

00:52:38,615 --> 00:52:39,785

He has that authority.

:

00:52:40,045 --> 00:52:43,045

Like the Senate has the authority

it has and the Congress has

:

00:52:43,045 --> 00:52:44,125

the authority that it has.

:

00:52:44,195 --> 00:52:45,425

But do you like the haphazard

:

00:52:45,425 --> 00:52:45,426

Chris P. Reed:

:

00:52:45,426 --> 00:52:47,055

way in which is being conducted?

:

00:52:47,055 --> 00:52:47,785

I guess is my question.

:

00:52:47,785 --> 00:52:49,035

Do you believe it to be?

:

00:52:49,355 --> 00:52:51,565

Efficient in the way

it's being gone about.

:

00:52:52,585 --> 00:52:53,615

Kevin Jenkins: We can't define that.

:

00:52:53,635 --> 00:52:57,785

If he's saying here's the outcomes

to all of that, that, that works.

:

00:52:58,125 --> 00:52:58,126

Chris P. Reed:

:

00:52:58,126 --> 00:53:00,075

Do you believe that's dynamite fishing?

:

00:53:00,085 --> 00:53:00,335

Well,

:

00:53:01,795 --> 00:53:04,325

Kevin Jenkins: it's been

done over and over again.

:

00:53:04,685 --> 00:53:06,085

Tony Tidbit: So it was done.

:

00:53:06,155 --> 00:53:08,985

Clinton reduced the

government by 12%, right?

:

00:53:08,985 --> 00:53:10,835

But he didn't his, the way he did it.

:

00:53:10,845 --> 00:53:12,155

Wasn't this way.

:

00:53:12,375 --> 00:53:12,735

Okay.

:

00:53:12,855 --> 00:53:13,795

To be fair, right?

:

00:53:13,975 --> 00:53:14,755

Now, Dr.

:

00:53:14,755 --> 00:53:16,045

Burton, let me ask you this question.

:

00:53:16,835 --> 00:53:21,945

A lot of people believe that he's doing

this is to be able to find money, um,

:

00:53:22,215 --> 00:53:25,035

to be able to extend his tax cuts.

:

00:53:25,415 --> 00:53:26,105

Okay.

:

00:53:26,365 --> 00:53:31,960

So basically, they're out trying

to Cut and we totally get it.

:

00:53:31,960 --> 00:53:32,340

Right.

:

00:53:32,560 --> 00:53:36,410

But at the end of the day, they're

never going to be able to cut enough.

:

00:53:36,590 --> 00:53:41,590

I believe it's a trillion dollars that

they need to get to so that he can be

:

00:53:41,590 --> 00:53:46,860

able to extend his tax cuts and the

only there's 2 pieces, big pieces.

:

00:53:46,860 --> 00:53:52,010

So no matter how, how much he goes through

Elon Musk, the numbers ain't gonna add up.

:

00:53:52,175 --> 00:53:55,635

Unless he attacks Medicaid

or social security.

:

00:53:55,925 --> 00:53:56,605

Okay.

:

00:53:56,745 --> 00:54:02,345

So do you believe based on, um,

well, every, based on this is just

:

00:54:02,345 --> 00:54:06,845

the right thing to do in terms of

being able to find waste and save

:

00:54:06,845 --> 00:54:08,895

the tax day, uh, taxpayers money.

:

00:54:09,025 --> 00:54:12,885

Or do you believe there's a bigger

issue to this more about the tax

:

00:54:12,885 --> 00:54:15,175

cuts versus finding efficiencies?

:

00:54:16,725 --> 00:54:16,726

Dr. Nsenga Burton:

:

00:54:16,726 --> 00:54:22,525

I think the smash and grab approach,

um, to downsizing your government.

:

00:54:22,900 --> 00:54:25,120

Is not appropriate.

:

00:54:25,450 --> 00:54:26,520

Um, you are correct.

:

00:54:26,540 --> 00:54:29,640

Other presidents have downsized the

government, but they had a different

:

00:54:29,640 --> 00:54:31,090

approach and his approach is not.

:

00:54:31,370 --> 00:54:36,180

I think that he's motivated by getting

rid of regulatory agencies that

:

00:54:36,200 --> 00:54:38,640

will have some type of oversight.

:

00:54:39,245 --> 00:54:42,775

Um, you know, whether it's on my

and I'm talking about he, um, Musk

:

00:54:42,955 --> 00:54:47,895

when I say he, um, on musks, um,

and he has billions of dollars of

:

00:54:47,895 --> 00:54:49,365

contracts with the federal government.

:

00:54:49,595 --> 00:54:51,355

I mean, you can stop funding yourself.

:

00:54:51,415 --> 00:54:54,165

If that's what, if that's the case,

you want to find money for the

:

00:54:54,165 --> 00:54:56,325

tax cuts, but he's not doing that.

:

00:54:56,325 --> 00:54:59,535

He's getting the people out

of the way, um, who regulate.

:

00:54:59,655 --> 00:55:01,825

Not only SpaceX, but also Tesla.

:

00:55:02,185 --> 00:55:05,725

Um, and then he's actually, you know,

you're firing people, but then you enter

:

00:55:05,725 --> 00:55:10,855

in a new multi billion dollar contract

to have your cyber trucks, uh, bought

:

00:55:10,885 --> 00:55:12,805

or purchased by the U S government.

:

00:55:12,815 --> 00:55:15,925

So you can't, you know, talk

out of both sides of your neck.

:

00:55:16,115 --> 00:55:19,195

You got to decide, um, what

you're, what you're doing.

:

00:55:19,475 --> 00:55:21,945

And I think that they don't

care about the American people.

:

00:55:22,525 --> 00:55:26,305

Um, I think that they don't care how many

people or how fast they can fire them as

:

00:55:26,305 --> 00:55:31,635

long as they're able to say, hey, we were

able to take, uh, give you a tax cut.

:

00:55:31,945 --> 00:55:36,415

Uh, see, see here, they want us to

remember that little bit of money that

:

00:55:36,415 --> 00:55:39,295

we get just like people, you know,

we're like, well, I'm going to vote

:

00:55:39,295 --> 00:55:42,135

for him because you say he's going to

give me:

:

00:55:42,135 --> 00:55:45,825

was, um, that he said that he was going

to give and then buskers turn around

:

00:55:45,825 --> 00:55:48,975

talking about, oh, we can maybe we can

give them:

:

00:55:48,995 --> 00:55:51,379

numbers when we know that that would.

:

00:55:51,510 --> 00:55:55,540

You know, the not would not be great for

the government or for the American people.

:

00:55:55,760 --> 00:56:00,400

So, uh, the point I'm raising is, I think

it's beyond even what you're saying it is.

:

00:56:00,590 --> 00:56:02,020

It's not about the economy.

:

00:56:02,280 --> 00:56:04,820

It's about, um, protecting himself.

:

00:56:04,820 --> 00:56:06,189

That would be Elon Musk.

:

00:56:06,190 --> 00:56:08,880

It's about having power that he

normally would not have, and damn

:

00:56:08,880 --> 00:56:11,980

sure would not have in South Africa,

even from the Nationalist Party.

:

00:56:12,450 --> 00:56:17,590

Um, and it's about being able to position

himself and his company, um, which are

:

00:56:17,590 --> 00:56:22,250

failing by the way, um, in ways that

will help that would help save them.

:

00:56:22,250 --> 00:56:26,440

And he is not above, uh, firing people

because there's no consequences for him.

:

00:56:27,360 --> 00:56:28,100

There's no consequence.

:

00:56:28,100 --> 00:56:29,400

The consequences are

going to be for Trump.

:

00:56:29,410 --> 00:56:30,890

They're not going to be looking for Elon.

:

00:56:30,890 --> 00:56:31,870

They're going to be looking for Trump.

:

00:56:31,870 --> 00:56:33,029

So

:

00:56:33,110 --> 00:56:33,111

Chris P. Reed:

:

00:56:33,111 --> 00:56:37,150

the issue I have here is you guys

collectively have cast the, uh,

:

00:56:37,190 --> 00:56:40,870

American citizen as only concerned

with their own self interest.

:

00:56:41,690 --> 00:56:47,560

And in a society, in a society, we can't

operate in that way and we need some type

:

00:56:47,560 --> 00:56:49,610

of governance and government oversight.

:

00:56:49,810 --> 00:56:53,130

And so my question to you, Louis is,

are we selling the United States?

:

00:56:53,190 --> 00:56:53,630

Oh, go ahead.

:

00:56:53,670 --> 00:56:53,870

Go ahead.

:

00:56:54,150 --> 00:56:54,600

Just real quick.

:

00:56:54,620 --> 00:56:55,150

I was saying

:

00:56:55,150 --> 00:56:55,151

Dr. Nsenga Burton:

:

00:56:55,151 --> 00:56:57,960

we were talking about

why people voted for.

:

00:56:58,525 --> 00:56:59,025

Trump,

:

00:56:59,225 --> 00:56:59,226

Chris P. Reed:

:

00:56:59,226 --> 00:56:59,565

right?

:

00:56:59,575 --> 00:56:59,785

That's

:

00:56:59,815 --> 00:56:59,816

Dr. Nsenga Burton:

:

00:56:59,816 --> 00:57:00,845

what the response was.

:

00:57:00,875 --> 00:57:03,855

I don't think at least for me, I

wasn't talking about everybody.

:

00:57:03,875 --> 00:57:05,625

I was talking about the

people who voted for Trump.

:

00:57:05,635 --> 00:57:06,935

I'm not talking about everybody.

:

00:57:07,145 --> 00:57:07,146

Chris P. Reed:

:

00:57:07,146 --> 00:57:07,625

Got you.

:

00:57:07,675 --> 00:57:07,975

Okay.

:

00:57:07,985 --> 00:57:08,255

Okay.

:

00:57:08,275 --> 00:57:11,135

But when you talk about the

5, 000 and I got you, that's

:

00:57:11,135 --> 00:57:12,075

what, okay, I'm getting you.

:

00:57:12,515 --> 00:57:16,575

But in the idea of a foreign national

in the white house, making business

:

00:57:16,575 --> 00:57:20,305

decisions on behalf of the American

public or that are, that is at

:

00:57:20,305 --> 00:57:21,805

least impacting the American public.

:

00:57:21,895 --> 00:57:26,295

Are we selling and we're talking about

selling citizenship or whatever the

:

00:57:26,295 --> 00:57:27,715

cards or whatever the case may be.

:

00:57:27,995 --> 00:57:30,525

Are we selling away the

country in your perspective,

:

00:57:30,605 --> 00:57:34,375

Louis Riveria: uh, Louis, can

you clarify that question?

:

00:57:34,385 --> 00:57:39,665

Do I think that, that, uh, Trump is

looking to profit from, from his position

:

00:57:39,725 --> 00:57:42,065

or when you say we, that's a misnomer.

:

00:57:42,375 --> 00:57:42,376

Chris P. Reed:

:

00:57:42,376 --> 00:57:48,145

Uh, no, I mean, are we, are we putting

the United States up for sale, citizenship

:

00:57:48,145 --> 00:57:54,225

access, access to government, you know,

access to government offices and, and

:

00:57:54,225 --> 00:57:58,515

secrets and data and all that seems to be

up for grabs based on the highest bidder.

:

00:57:59,000 --> 00:58:01,190

Louis Riveria: Yeah, allow me to

touch on the, on the data piece.

:

00:58:01,190 --> 00:58:03,430

The other stuff is, is not

a question of my opinion.

:

00:58:03,430 --> 00:58:07,990

He's already said, you know, you could pay

5M dollars to meet with him in Mar a Lago.

:

00:58:07,990 --> 00:58:10,100

But let me just touch on the data piece.

:

00:58:10,160 --> 00:58:12,010

Um, I don't believe it.

:

00:58:12,050 --> 00:58:13,740

This has anything to do with efficiency.

:

00:58:14,560 --> 00:58:18,490

And I think it would be kind to

say that it only has to do with

:

00:58:18,740 --> 00:58:21,690

a public relations, uh, stunt.

:

00:58:21,750 --> 00:58:22,230

If you.

:

00:58:22,230 --> 00:58:29,375

Um, If you wanted to audit an organization

for efficiency, you would have forensic

:

00:58:29,495 --> 00:58:36,135

accountants going in there who specialize

in in government, um, contracts to be able

:

00:58:36,135 --> 00:58:38,765

to really sort out what what's going on.

:

00:58:38,775 --> 00:58:41,855

He went in there with

coders, accountants audit.

:

00:58:42,470 --> 00:58:43,370

Coder's hack.

:

00:58:43,800 --> 00:58:49,590

Um, they now have data on, uh,

millions and millions of americans.

:

00:58:49,760 --> 00:58:54,840

One thing that I was really surprised that

didn't get a lot of attention other than

:

00:58:54,840 --> 00:59:00,240

the ridiculousness of the of the message

was that he gave himself the ability to

:

00:59:00,270 --> 00:59:09,470

email every single federal worker on on

on the payroll that speaks to, um, uh, a

:

00:59:09,470 --> 00:59:15,330

level of access that, uh, you know, That

there's all sorts of laws and regulations

:

00:59:15,330 --> 00:59:20,680

that that, um, that regulate how any

employee, including the federal government

:

00:59:20,830 --> 00:59:23,000

would have access to that information.

:

00:59:23,260 --> 00:59:25,780

And 1 thing that make a nice

bridge between the disinformation

:

00:59:25,790 --> 00:59:29,100

conversation and doge, uh, today, um.

:

00:59:29,540 --> 00:59:35,480

Uh, Breitbart ran a headline saying

Doge announces the cancellation of NIH

:

00:59:35,500 --> 00:59:42,770

grants for transgender experiments on

animals, which, of course, Trump said

:

00:59:43,280 --> 00:59:54,100

they found a line item that the NIH

was sponsoring Um, transgender surgery

:

00:59:54,180 --> 01:00:01,480

on, on, uh, on animals, uh, a statement

that is so ridiculous that on the face

:

01:00:01,480 --> 01:00:06,380

of it should be dismissed, but Doge

has now doubled down and said, Oh, we

:

01:00:06,380 --> 01:00:13,230

found that line item and what that is,

it's not transgender, uh, uh, animals.

:

01:00:14,890 --> 01:00:16,840

Surgery on, on, on animals.

:

01:00:17,170 --> 01:00:23,580

Um, it's transgenetic research and

I'm, this is right off the NIH website.

:

01:00:23,820 --> 01:00:28,290

Transgenetic research is considered a

major technical advancement in the fields

:

01:00:28,290 --> 01:00:30,780

of developmental biology and genetics.

:

01:00:30,930 --> 01:00:35,220

The technology now referred to

as Transgenetic Mouse technology

:

01:00:35,370 --> 01:00:39,810

has revolution revolutionized

virtually all fields of biology and

:

01:00:39,810 --> 01:00:41,760

provided new genetic approaches.

:

01:00:42,660 --> 01:00:44,480

to model human diseases.

:

01:00:44,760 --> 01:00:47,655

So not only did they Get that wrong.

:

01:00:47,715 --> 01:00:51,775

Try to turn it into a wedge issue, but

they've actually cancelled research.

:

01:00:51,815 --> 01:00:53,685

That's helping save lives.

:

01:00:53,915 --> 01:00:56,455

So this has nothing to do with efficiency

:

01:00:56,965 --> 01:00:56,966

Chris P. Reed:

:

01:00:56,966 --> 01:00:57,565

to their credit.

:

01:00:57,565 --> 01:01:00,995

They've often say, oops, my bad a lot.

:

01:01:01,035 --> 01:01:01,365

I bet.

:

01:01:01,435 --> 01:01:01,815

Yeah.

:

01:01:02,675 --> 01:01:03,315

Oops, my bad.

:

01:01:03,375 --> 01:01:04,065

So, well,

:

01:01:04,545 --> 01:01:05,395

Tony Tidbit: here's the thing though.

:

01:01:05,465 --> 01:01:08,135

So right right now we're, we're in it.

:

01:01:08,185 --> 01:01:08,595

Right?

:

01:01:08,605 --> 01:01:11,635

So my final question and

then I got a bigger question.

:

01:01:11,635 --> 01:01:14,635

I want to ask everybody, but my final

question, Kevin, I'm gonna come to you.

:

01:01:14,635 --> 01:01:14,815

Okay.

:

01:01:15,155 --> 01:01:19,365

Is that at the end of the

day, um, the, the tax cuts.

:

01:01:19,575 --> 01:01:19,975

Okay.

:

01:01:19,975 --> 01:01:21,215

So, uh, Dr.

:

01:01:21,215 --> 01:01:24,415

Burton was saying, and, you know,

somebody's gonna get:

:

01:01:24,415 --> 01:01:28,215

I was gonna get a:

really the tax cuts is for the 1%.

:

01:01:29,455 --> 01:01:29,675

Okay.

:

01:01:29,675 --> 01:01:30,085

To be fair.

:

01:01:30,575 --> 01:01:32,985

All right, for the corporations

is for the billionaires.

:

01:01:32,995 --> 01:01:37,495

They're the ones is going to benefit

the most out of these tax cuts.

:

01:01:37,775 --> 01:01:43,055

And while to Louie and Chris's

point in terms of the efficient,

:

01:01:43,095 --> 01:01:44,615

this is not being efficient.

:

01:01:44,825 --> 01:01:48,455

This is tearing down organizations.

:

01:01:48,800 --> 01:01:49,170

Right.

:

01:01:49,250 --> 01:01:50,870

It's not going through with a scalpel.

:

01:01:50,910 --> 01:01:57,190

It's not using as Louis said, um, uh,

forensic, uh, government individuals that

:

01:01:57,190 --> 01:01:59,230

would know exactly where to go and look.

:

01:01:59,500 --> 01:02:02,310

This is really just coming in with

a sledgehammer and tearing it down.

:

01:02:02,630 --> 01:02:05,370

Do you see this moving forward?

:

01:02:05,690 --> 01:02:08,070

Do you see the federal

government breaking?

:

01:02:08,915 --> 01:02:10,275

Because it's not a startup.

:

01:02:10,725 --> 01:02:15,415

Do you see this being a situation where

it's going to cause more harm that

:

01:02:15,415 --> 01:02:17,105

we don't even know about right now?

:

01:02:17,225 --> 01:02:20,735

Or do you just see this as, hey,

he's doing what he's supposed to do,

:

01:02:20,895 --> 01:02:22,405

and this is going to save us money.

:

01:02:22,585 --> 01:02:24,585

And more importantly, it's going

to make the country better.

:

01:02:25,695 --> 01:02:29,275

Kevin Jenkins: Well, you asked

a lot of questions right there.

:

01:02:29,515 --> 01:02:29,775

Excellent.

:

01:02:29,845 --> 01:02:30,805

That was a lot.

:

01:02:32,705 --> 01:02:33,665

So pick one.

:

01:02:36,275 --> 01:02:38,735

Let's talk about the tax policies, right?

:

01:02:38,735 --> 01:02:39,065

Yep.

:

01:02:39,265 --> 01:02:42,555

The tax policies are

no tax on tips, right?

:

01:02:42,995 --> 01:02:44,975

No tax on social security.

:

01:02:44,985 --> 01:02:47,965

And what was the other one on

my brain did at this moment.

:

01:02:48,235 --> 01:02:50,695

So his tax policies is

right in front of you.

:

01:02:50,695 --> 01:02:54,655

He's trying to alleviate all of the

taxes and all of the things that hinder

:

01:02:54,655 --> 01:02:59,455

us from, I believe of creating small

businesses or getting access to capital.

:

01:02:59,635 --> 01:03:01,785

I mean, we have a lot of

barriers in front of us.

:

01:03:01,795 --> 01:03:05,205

And I think a lot of those tax

policies are going to be very, very

:

01:03:05,205 --> 01:03:08,355

helpful to the middle class and the

people that work hard every day.

:

01:03:08,645 --> 01:03:09,305

I believe that.

:

01:03:09,475 --> 01:03:10,375

That is proven.

:

01:03:10,525 --> 01:03:13,735

When you do that, when you turn

on that faucet, that is proven.

:

01:03:13,995 --> 01:03:18,085

Now, all the other policies, I'm not here

trying to figure out all of those other

:

01:03:18,085 --> 01:03:22,585

things, but I'm suggesting that the more,

the less wars that we're in and the less

:

01:03:22,585 --> 01:03:26,685

money that we spend all over the world

trying to dictate what other countries do

:

01:03:26,885 --> 01:03:29,135

can bring more value to our bottom line.

:

01:03:29,375 --> 01:03:32,165

If it's social services, whatever

that looks like in the future,

:

01:03:32,455 --> 01:03:34,955

if it's education, whatever

that looks like in the future.

:

01:03:35,185 --> 01:03:39,275

Or if it's something that will drive

economics and those local communities.

:

01:03:39,295 --> 01:03:43,435

If that's in our future, I think that

opens up a big discussion for us to have.

:

01:03:43,745 --> 01:03:47,745

So looking back and saying these,

these, um, um, prescriptions of

:

01:03:47,755 --> 01:03:51,455

policy prescriptions were not were

helpful, but let's say which ones

:

01:03:51,455 --> 01:03:52,675

are going to be better in the future.

:

01:03:53,165 --> 01:03:54,685

What, why aren't we doing that?

:

01:03:54,885 --> 01:03:58,215

All I hear from everybody is like Trump,

Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump.

:

01:03:58,215 --> 01:03:59,165

And I'm like, well, wait a minute.

:

01:03:59,365 --> 01:04:01,145

How did we find ourselves

here in the first place?

:

01:04:01,965 --> 01:04:05,505

So here's an opportunity to move and

have a different kind of conversation.

:

01:04:05,655 --> 01:04:06,935

So what's the problem with that?

:

01:04:07,395 --> 01:04:10,105

Everything that elected officials

do is not going to be perfect.

:

01:04:10,305 --> 01:04:13,655

Because I can go back verse and

chapter and verse and deal with that.

:

01:04:13,835 --> 01:04:15,735

But what do we do about

moving in the future?

:

01:04:16,185 --> 01:04:16,695

What about it?

:

01:04:17,220 --> 01:04:17,221

Chris P. Reed:

:

01:04:17,221 --> 01:04:21,070

So, so you would be against us

taking over Panama Canal, taking

:

01:04:21,070 --> 01:04:24,150

over Greenland and annexing Canada

based on what you just said, correct?

:

01:04:24,779 --> 01:04:25,630

Kevin Jenkins: I would be against

:

01:04:25,630 --> 01:04:25,631

Chris P. Reed:

:

01:04:25,631 --> 01:04:25,810

it.

:

01:04:25,890 --> 01:04:28,180

Yes, because you just said

we're not trying to wage.

:

01:04:28,620 --> 01:04:30,490

Kevin Jenkins: If it's an

economic opportunity for this

:

01:04:30,520 --> 01:04:31,550

country, I would be for it.

:

01:04:31,550 --> 01:04:32,650

Why would I not be for it?

:

01:04:32,670 --> 01:04:33,620

Because you just said,

:

01:04:33,630 --> 01:04:33,631

Chris P. Reed:

:

01:04:33,631 --> 01:04:34,250

you just said.

:

01:04:34,260 --> 01:04:34,529

No.

:

01:04:34,760 --> 01:04:35,540

Louis Riveria: Colonialism.

:

01:04:36,560 --> 01:04:38,230

Kevin Jenkins: No, I'm saying, no, no, no.

:

01:04:38,490 --> 01:04:42,800

No, I'm saying, I'm not, some of his

prescriptions, the former, whoever you

:

01:04:42,800 --> 01:04:46,480

like, just think, if you say for 20

years, 30 years, we supported this group.

:

01:04:46,904 --> 01:04:49,885

They're policy prescriptions have not

really helped us in a big way at all

:

01:04:50,045 --> 01:04:53,515

from an economic development perspective

or a community development perspective.

:

01:04:53,515 --> 01:04:56,265

So I'm saying to you,

here's another alternative.

:

01:04:56,295 --> 01:04:59,895

People are looking for that, even if

it's him or someone, someone else or

:

01:04:59,895 --> 01:05:03,835

some other group, they're not buying it

anymore, which is selling and not buying

:

01:05:04,175 --> 01:05:04,404

Tony Tidbit: right.

:

01:05:04,415 --> 01:05:06,395

So, Kev,

:

01:05:06,395 --> 01:05:09,705

Kevin Jenkins: there's going to be some

improvement on the tax side on the inside.

:

01:05:09,715 --> 01:05:12,305

He's saying, listen, administrative

state, you've been running

:

01:05:12,305 --> 01:05:13,465

this country into a hole.

:

01:05:13,615 --> 01:05:16,045

It's his prerogative to get rid of them.

:

01:05:16,535 --> 01:05:17,635

That's just prerogative.

:

01:05:17,745 --> 01:05:18,355

It's business.

:

01:05:18,355 --> 01:05:19,325

Get, he got rid of him.

:

01:05:19,895 --> 01:05:20,815

Tony Tidbit: Here's the thing though.

:

01:05:21,335 --> 01:05:25,175

And, and, and look, two things can

be right at the same time, right?

:

01:05:25,995 --> 01:05:26,965

Where I, and Dr.

:

01:05:26,965 --> 01:05:29,625

Burden, I want to give you the

final thought on this, but where

:

01:05:29,625 --> 01:05:33,425

I struggle is that, and I'm just

listening to what you're saying and

:

01:05:33,425 --> 01:05:34,935

I'm really trying to comprehend it.

:

01:05:36,125 --> 01:05:39,915

The thing is, is this, it's

like for, until Trump showed

:

01:05:39,915 --> 01:05:41,765

up, everything was horrible.

:

01:05:43,065 --> 01:05:43,585

Okay.

:

01:05:43,654 --> 01:05:44,865

The government was horrible.

:

01:05:45,035 --> 01:05:46,015

We didn't grow.

:

01:05:46,035 --> 01:05:47,835

We've been going backwards ever since.

:

01:05:47,865 --> 01:05:49,055

And that's just not true.

:

01:05:49,605 --> 01:05:49,895

Okay.

:

01:05:49,955 --> 01:05:51,915

When Bill Clinton was

president Obama sold hope.

:

01:05:51,915 --> 01:05:52,145

Obama sold hope.

:

01:05:52,145 --> 01:05:52,510

Hold on.

:

01:05:52,510 --> 01:05:52,855

Hold on.

:

01:05:52,895 --> 01:05:53,695

No, no, no.

:

01:05:54,279 --> 01:05:54,500

Kevin Jenkins: Kev.

:

01:05:55,040 --> 01:05:55,260

Kev.

:

01:05:55,585 --> 01:05:56,005

Kev.

:

01:05:56,050 --> 01:05:59,500

Hold on, Kev, hold on, hold on, hold on.

:

01:05:59,920 --> 01:06:01,220

Change whatever Clinton was.

:

01:06:01,330 --> 01:06:01,820

Bill Clinton.

:

01:06:01,825 --> 01:06:02,215

Clinton

:

01:06:02,215 --> 01:06:03,385

Tony Tidbit: said You

wanna change tomorrow?

:

01:06:03,385 --> 01:06:05,455

Wait a minute, when

Clinton gotta know that.

:

01:06:05,545 --> 01:06:07,045

But here's, here's,

here's the thing though.

:

01:06:07,045 --> 01:06:07,495

Kev on now.

:

01:06:07,555 --> 01:06:09,265

When Clinton was president, come on.

:

01:06:09,265 --> 01:06:09,595

Okay.

:

01:06:09,595 --> 01:06:10,404

Let's be fair.

:

01:06:10,495 --> 01:06:12,625

The economy grew like this.

:

01:06:12,715 --> 01:06:13,195

Why?

:

01:06:13,225 --> 01:06:14,995

Okay, why so?

:

01:06:14,995 --> 01:06:15,775

Hold on one sec.

:

01:06:15,805 --> 01:06:18,385

You just got a minute, minute.

:

01:06:19,470 --> 01:06:22,220

My point is people forget that today.

:

01:06:22,630 --> 01:06:23,000

Okay.

:

01:06:23,000 --> 01:06:27,510

Now it's like for the last 20 years

or last 30 years, it's been horrible.

:

01:06:27,510 --> 01:06:28,700

And this is not true.

:

01:06:29,130 --> 01:06:30,540

That's my point here, right?

:

01:06:31,470 --> 01:06:35,050

Kevin Jenkins: When I'm not suggesting

that the economy was bad for 50

:

01:06:35,060 --> 01:06:39,220

years, I'm saying you had, you

asked a conversation for the last

:

01:06:39,220 --> 01:06:41,400

16 years of those 12 years, right?

:

01:06:41,630 --> 01:06:45,370

There's been no real growth in

my community whatsoever from

:

01:06:45,370 --> 01:06:46,810

economic development perspective.

:

01:06:47,040 --> 01:06:50,510

I'm looking at tax policy, so

the question was tax policies.

:

01:06:50,779 --> 01:06:54,580

All of his tax policies freed up

capital to be dispersed into those

:

01:06:54,590 --> 01:06:57,690

markets where people were spending

their money, stimulating the economy.

:

01:06:57,900 --> 01:07:01,210

So I'm not, all of that emotional

stuff I'm not even interested in.

:

01:07:01,420 --> 01:07:05,070

I'm saying here are some things that

he's doing and I can go on and on and

:

01:07:05,130 --> 01:07:09,160

on and on without all of the other

color to it and say it's beneficial.

:

01:07:09,360 --> 01:07:10,510

You just got to know why.

:

01:07:11,335 --> 01:07:11,695

Right.

:

01:07:11,995 --> 01:07:12,545

Okay.

:

01:07:12,605 --> 01:07:13,385

That's all I'm saying.

:

01:07:13,945 --> 01:07:14,225

Tony Tidbit: Dr.

:

01:07:14,225 --> 01:07:14,495

Burton.

:

01:07:14,495 --> 01:07:15,495

Last, last point.

:

01:07:15,545 --> 01:07:16,515

Last thought on this.

:

01:07:17,535 --> 01:07:17,536

Dr. Nsenga Burton:

:

01:07:17,536 --> 01:07:22,745

I think that, um, a lot of people are

duplicitous and they say one thing

:

01:07:22,745 --> 01:07:23,855

and they do something different.

:

01:07:23,895 --> 01:07:28,175

I think Trump is a lot of people and

I think Elon Musk is a lot of people.

:

01:07:28,955 --> 01:07:32,805

Um, and I do think that they are

not interested in efficiency.

:

01:07:32,805 --> 01:07:38,085

They are interested in anarchy and

chaos and confusion, which is why

:

01:07:38,095 --> 01:07:39,945

he makes these grand proclamations.

:

01:07:40,005 --> 01:07:41,345

I mean, there are 101 lawsuits.

:

01:07:41,375 --> 01:07:41,595

Now.

:

01:07:41,595 --> 01:07:44,335

I think we're up to 101

lawsuits against things.

:

01:07:44,335 --> 01:07:45,175

He said he's going to do.

:

01:07:45,175 --> 01:07:45,835

He's done them.

:

01:07:45,955 --> 01:07:47,625

He's not legally able to do them.

:

01:07:47,825 --> 01:07:50,535

So now we got to go back and

figure out how to fix it.

:

01:07:50,875 --> 01:07:53,705

You know, if they, if they

want to fix it, he's, he's, uh,

:

01:07:53,715 --> 01:07:55,185

doubling down on some things too.

:

01:07:55,185 --> 01:07:55,505

Right?

:

01:07:55,935 --> 01:07:57,745

So I think that.

:

01:07:57,745 --> 01:07:57,795

Okay.

:

01:07:58,355 --> 01:07:59,515

We are in trouble.

:

01:07:59,775 --> 01:08:03,375

I think that our government is

going to be broken even more so

:

01:08:03,375 --> 01:08:05,695

than it already was challenged.

:

01:08:05,705 --> 01:08:07,165

I won't say it was broken necessarily.

:

01:08:07,375 --> 01:08:08,985

But yes, it needed to be more efficient.

:

01:08:08,985 --> 01:08:09,775

I agree with that.

:

01:08:10,355 --> 01:08:13,855

Does it need to be more efficient

by, um, telling people that they're

:

01:08:13,855 --> 01:08:15,915

firing them for 4 performances?

:

01:08:16,205 --> 01:08:20,325

And they're actually able to document

and to produce, uh, evidence that

:

01:08:20,325 --> 01:08:21,845

they did not have poor performances.

:

01:08:21,845 --> 01:08:25,245

They have been overperforming,

uh, for the last 10 years

:

01:08:25,245 --> 01:08:26,215

that they've been in the role.

:

01:08:26,585 --> 01:08:30,325

Um, and so I think that you have to

be more thoughtful and intentional.

:

01:08:30,564 --> 01:08:34,734

I think that Louis was hit that was right

on target with the forensics accounting,

:

01:08:34,925 --> 01:08:36,984

which typically happens and should happen.

:

01:08:37,395 --> 01:08:40,604

Um, but no, I think our

anarchy is the order of the

:

01:08:40,604 --> 01:08:43,245

day and it's an abuse of power.

:

01:08:43,725 --> 01:08:47,705

Um, Elon Musk having access to

all of our private information,

:

01:08:48,205 --> 01:08:49,765

uh, is an abuse of power.

:

01:08:50,165 --> 01:08:51,675

We did not elect him, by the way.

:

01:08:52,335 --> 01:08:56,205

Um, and so no, I don't

think that is sufficiency.

:

01:08:56,265 --> 01:08:59,635

I think we are in trouble and

no one is coming to save us.

:

01:09:00,865 --> 01:09:01,444

Tony Tidbit: All right.

:

01:09:01,665 --> 01:09:04,274

Well, listen, let's get final thoughts.

:

01:09:04,335 --> 01:09:04,975

Okay.

:

01:09:05,125 --> 01:09:07,524

Appreciate the last, uh, the last segment.

:

01:09:08,200 --> 01:09:09,279

Louis, kick us off, buddy.

:

01:09:09,279 --> 01:09:10,490

Where do you want to leave the audience?

:

01:09:11,740 --> 01:09:13,760

Louis Riveria: I think we're

at a unique moment in time.

:

01:09:14,160 --> 01:09:15,319

We're at a crossroads.

:

01:09:15,399 --> 01:09:21,920

Um, I think many of us, I think

the country in general has trouble

:

01:09:21,920 --> 01:09:26,649

wrapping their head around what's

actually occurring because we

:

01:09:26,649 --> 01:09:28,229

believe it can't happen here.

:

01:09:28,729 --> 01:09:30,580

And it is happening here.

:

01:09:30,890 --> 01:09:33,069

Uh, and the reasons for it.

:

01:09:34,100 --> 01:09:35,500

Um, are complex.

:

01:09:35,520 --> 01:09:39,050

I don't think there's a,

a single answer to that.

:

01:09:39,050 --> 01:09:42,660

I think that's something that historians

might look back on on this period in time.

:

01:09:42,660 --> 01:09:48,295

And, um, uh, And help explain what

it is that we're undergoing the

:

01:09:48,295 --> 01:09:53,665

Weimar Republic just before, um, uh,

Hitler sees power was 1 of the most

:

01:09:53,665 --> 01:09:56,025

sophisticated societies on on the planet.

:

01:09:56,425 --> 01:10:01,105

Um, so I think we're living

through challenging times.

:

01:10:01,105 --> 01:10:04,895

I think it's important for us to continue

discussing the issues in an open way in an

:

01:10:04,905 --> 01:10:08,155

honest way, being intellectually honest.

:

01:10:08,455 --> 01:10:10,535

It's important to discern

fact from fiction.

:

01:10:10,715 --> 01:10:16,485

Hyperbole and most importantly, and this

is what I've shared with my daughters

:

01:10:16,725 --> 01:10:20,965

is that it's important for us to build

the communities that we want to live in.

:

01:10:21,205 --> 01:10:25,635

The government might not reflect our

values, but we do retain the ability to

:

01:10:25,645 --> 01:10:32,184

build the sort of communities and lives

that that we want to live in and that.

:

01:10:32,555 --> 01:10:35,105

For the moment is still

within our purview.

:

01:10:35,455 --> 01:10:39,535

So, uh, I look forward to continuing

these types of conversations because

:

01:10:39,535 --> 01:10:40,895

I think it's healthy to discuss it.

:

01:10:41,345 --> 01:10:45,105

Um, and I, I try and stay

optimistic about the future.

:

01:10:45,745 --> 01:10:46,265

Tony Tidbit: Awesome.

:

01:10:46,495 --> 01:10:46,995

Gav,

:

01:10:47,585 --> 01:10:49,105

Kevin Jenkins: well,

thank you for inviting me.

:

01:10:49,135 --> 01:10:50,565

I love these conversations.

:

01:10:50,605 --> 01:10:52,985

I mean, they're really

heartfelt conversations.

:

01:10:52,985 --> 01:10:54,265

I think we should be open to it.

:

01:10:54,315 --> 01:10:57,095

And, um, I think this is a

great time for the country.

:

01:10:57,525 --> 01:11:01,425

I think this is a great time for my

group to do some real reassessment of

:

01:11:01,425 --> 01:11:03,085

where we see ourselves in the future.

:

01:11:03,500 --> 01:11:06,680

And everybody's, you know, thoughts

are very, very helpful as long as

:

01:11:06,680 --> 01:11:08,640

they are built on with context.

:

01:11:08,640 --> 01:11:09,930

And I really appreciate that.

:

01:11:09,950 --> 01:11:11,350

And, um, thank you.

:

01:11:11,380 --> 01:11:13,100

Anytime you want me to

come on, I'll come on.

:

01:11:13,130 --> 01:11:14,200

It was a great conversation.

:

01:11:14,200 --> 01:11:14,895

I appreciate it.

:

01:11:15,325 --> 01:11:16,184

Tony Tidbit: Thank you, my brother.

:

01:11:16,434 --> 01:11:17,184

Dr Burton.

:

01:11:18,295 --> 01:11:18,296

Dr. Nsenga Burton:

:

01:11:18,296 --> 01:11:19,705

Uh, thank you for having me.

:

01:11:19,745 --> 01:11:25,635

I think that we need to, um, be very clear

about how we communicate, uh, particularly

:

01:11:25,635 --> 01:11:29,825

when it comes to these disinformation

and misinformation campaigns, uh,

:

01:11:29,835 --> 01:11:33,535

that influence people to do things

that are against their own interests.

:

01:11:33,955 --> 01:11:37,475

Um, I think that people need to

think for themselves and think

:

01:11:37,535 --> 01:11:41,455

critically of all involved, whether

it's your party or another party.

:

01:11:42,115 --> 01:11:47,795

Um, and I think that people have to

stand up to what is happening, um,

:

01:11:47,815 --> 01:11:49,245

or else we're going to get run over.

:

01:11:49,315 --> 01:11:50,695

I mean, we're being run over now.

:

01:11:51,215 --> 01:11:56,005

Um, and so it's important to understand

the policies that are in place is

:

01:11:56,005 --> 01:11:59,285

important to understand where they

come from, and the history behind them.

:

01:11:59,725 --> 01:12:02,240

It's important to see who has done what.

:

01:12:02,730 --> 01:12:06,500

It is important to understand that there

was a lot of rebuilding that had to be

:

01:12:06,500 --> 01:12:11,790

done in this last administration based on

the devastation of the 45 administration.

:

01:12:12,420 --> 01:12:15,080

Um, and so some of the things you

may have thought you were going

:

01:12:15,080 --> 01:12:18,600

to see, and you weren't able to

see, uh, were because of that.

:

01:12:19,170 --> 01:12:22,309

But I think, ultimately, what we need to

do, and I think Louis hit the nail on the

:

01:12:22,309 --> 01:12:26,820

head in that way is to learn how to live

together and how we're going to do that.

:

01:12:27,010 --> 01:12:28,490

And what does that look like?

:

01:12:28,850 --> 01:12:32,910

And how we're going to be accountable

to and for each other because we're

:

01:12:32,910 --> 01:12:34,660

not, you know, we're not going anywhere.

:

01:12:34,660 --> 01:12:35,809

People are saying, oh,

I'm going to go here.

:

01:12:35,809 --> 01:12:36,410

I'm going to go there.

:

01:12:36,590 --> 01:12:38,320

Some people are going to

become expats for sure.

:

01:12:38,470 --> 01:12:39,740

Some people became experts last.

:

01:12:40,090 --> 01:12:43,850

Uh, administration, some people became

expats and with 45 administration,

:

01:12:44,180 --> 01:12:47,450

um, but, you know, ultimately we

are all here and we all have to live

:

01:12:47,450 --> 01:12:51,130

together in the same neighborhoods,

go to the same schools, um, different

:

01:12:51,130 --> 01:12:52,360

churches because it's America.

:

01:12:53,210 --> 01:12:57,900

But ultimately, we want to figure out

how to live together in a way that is

:

01:12:57,900 --> 01:13:03,320

meaningful and to have a government that

works for the needs of all, not just some.

:

01:13:04,195 --> 01:13:04,715

Tony Tidbit: I love it.

:

01:13:04,805 --> 01:13:05,415

I love it.

:

01:13:05,415 --> 01:13:09,045

I really, so number one, we want

to thank you guys for coming on,

:

01:13:09,055 --> 01:13:11,075

having a very spirited conversation.

:

01:13:11,545 --> 01:13:13,975

These are conversations

that we have to have.

:

01:13:14,445 --> 01:13:15,085

Okay.

:

01:13:15,325 --> 01:13:19,915

Uh, to be honest, I sat here today and

I learned, I learned a couple of things,

:

01:13:20,295 --> 01:13:21,725

which was great that I didn't know.

:

01:13:21,735 --> 01:13:26,195

So I want to thank the guests for coming

on and sitting down around the round

:

01:13:26,195 --> 01:13:27,625

table and sharing their perspective.

:

01:13:27,785 --> 01:13:31,245

So now I think it's

time for Tony's Tidbit.

:

01:13:31,575 --> 01:13:38,005

So, the Tidbit today, economic storms

and political shifts may shift the table,

:

01:13:38,015 --> 01:13:43,325

may shake the table, but the same hands

that cast the vote have the power to

:

01:13:43,515 --> 01:13:47,115

rebuild when the systems try to break us.

:

01:13:47,555 --> 01:13:50,375

Our communities are

built to weather it all.

:

01:13:51,115 --> 01:13:54,434

And you heard a lot about

community and stuff today on

:

01:13:54,434 --> 01:13:56,155

this episode of pull up speak up,

:

01:13:57,235 --> 01:13:57,236

Chris P. Reed:

:

01:13:57,236 --> 01:14:00,175

and this is a time in our program

where we want to make sure that

:

01:14:00,175 --> 01:14:04,835

you tune in to our segment need to

know when the singer tune in to Dr.

:

01:14:04,835 --> 01:14:09,715

Burton segment need to know, uh, black as

you get a perspective podcast is where Dr.

:

01:14:09,715 --> 01:14:12,755

Burton dives into timely and

cultural topics that shape

:

01:14:12,755 --> 01:14:14,415

our community and our world.

:

01:14:14,635 --> 01:14:15,895

And you just got a slice.

:

01:14:16,225 --> 01:14:21,165

A piece of what that could, that

could entail each and every week.

:

01:14:21,165 --> 01:14:22,684

So make sure you don't want to miss it.

:

01:14:23,205 --> 01:14:24,305

Tony Tidbit: You don't want to miss it.

:

01:14:24,305 --> 01:14:26,655

And you don't want to miss the

next episode of the black executive

:

01:14:26,655 --> 01:14:30,495

perspective podcast, where we bring

those hardcore conversations, powerful

:

01:14:30,505 --> 01:14:32,775

insights on the issues that matter most.

:

01:14:33,270 --> 01:14:36,090

It's not just a discussion, it's

a movement, so don't miss the

:

01:14:36,100 --> 01:14:39,840

next chance to tune in to be

inspired and join the conversation.

:

01:14:40,730 --> 01:14:40,731

Chris P. Reed:

:

01:14:40,731 --> 01:14:42,740

We also like to impart our call to action.

:

01:14:42,740 --> 01:14:46,510

We always want you to remember

incorporating less, L E S S.

:

01:14:46,620 --> 01:14:50,520

Our goal here is to eliminate all forms

of discrimination, and to achieve this,

:

01:14:50,520 --> 01:14:53,635

we're asking everyone to embrace L E S S.

:

01:14:54,075 --> 01:15:00,465

So the L stands for learn, educate

yourself on racial and cultural nuances.

:

01:15:00,934 --> 01:15:04,645

I love the fact that we today didn't get

a chance to hear ourselves in an echo

:

01:15:04,645 --> 01:15:08,515

chamber and we had different perspectives

of thought, experience, education,

:

01:15:08,515 --> 01:15:13,135

location, and things of that nature

were passionate, enlightened individuals

:

01:15:13,135 --> 01:15:14,445

were able to speak their piece.

:

01:15:14,745 --> 01:15:17,085

And we went away with something

that we didn't have when we

:

01:15:17,085 --> 01:15:18,015

got into this conversation.

:

01:15:18,705 --> 01:15:19,635

Tony Tidbit: Absolutely.

:

01:15:19,635 --> 01:15:24,045

And then after you learn, you have E,

which stands for empathy, to be open

:

01:15:24,045 --> 01:15:28,215

to understanding diverse views, so

you can put yourself in their shoes.

:

01:15:28,395 --> 01:15:29,865

And we did a lot of that today.

:

01:15:29,865 --> 01:15:31,245

We had a lot of diverse views.

:

01:15:31,845 --> 01:15:34,155

Views here, which enlightened us all.

:

01:15:34,965 --> 01:15:34,966

Chris P. Reed:

:

01:15:34,966 --> 01:15:37,555

And the first S stands for share.

:

01:15:38,245 --> 01:15:41,635

You want to share your insights and

enlighten others wherever you can.

:

01:15:41,635 --> 01:15:42,630

Don't hide it, divide it.

:

01:15:43,320 --> 01:15:47,440

And make sure that you can dismantle

misinformation where it comes before you.

:

01:15:48,260 --> 01:15:49,890

Tony Tidbit: And the final S is for stop.

:

01:15:49,930 --> 01:15:53,620

We want to actively stop

discrimination as it walks in our path.

:

01:15:53,980 --> 01:15:58,100

So if Aunt Jenny or Uncle Joe say

something at the Sunday dinner table

:

01:15:58,410 --> 01:16:03,890

that's inappropriate, you say, Aunt Jenny,

Uncle Joe, we don't believe that, we don't

:

01:16:03,900 --> 01:16:06,490

say that, and you stop it right there.

:

01:16:06,630 --> 01:16:11,090

So if everyone can

incorporate less, L E S S.

:

01:16:11,320 --> 01:16:15,120

We'll build a more fair, more

understanding world, and we'll be

:

01:16:15,120 --> 01:16:20,050

able to see the change that we want

to see because less will become more.

:

01:16:21,130 --> 01:16:21,131

Chris P. Reed:

:

01:16:21,131 --> 01:16:25,140

We'd like to encourage you to tune in

to future episodes that we have of all

:

01:16:25,140 --> 01:16:28,390

of our different shows that we provide

here on A Black Is In The Perspective.

:

01:16:28,750 --> 01:16:32,350

Go back and look at some of the previous

episodes of Pull Up, Speak Up, and other

:

01:16:32,350 --> 01:16:33,550

things that we've done in the past.

:

01:16:33,550 --> 01:16:34,950

You'll be thoroughly entertained.

:

01:16:35,340 --> 01:16:37,920

Make sure you go to the website,

sign up for the newsletter,

:

01:16:38,160 --> 01:16:39,780

leave us a review, subscribe.

:

01:16:40,050 --> 01:16:41,220

Listen on your podcast.

:

01:16:41,370 --> 01:16:42,120

Where can they find us?

:

01:16:42,120 --> 01:16:42,300

Tony

:

01:16:42,809 --> 01:16:43,170

Tony Tidbit: Buddy.

:

01:16:43,170 --> 01:16:46,890

They can find a Black Executive

Perspective podcast on YouTube, apple,

:

01:16:46,890 --> 01:16:49,890

Spotify, or wherever you get your podcast.

:

01:16:50,070 --> 01:16:56,340

And you can follow us on our socials of X,

YouTube, TikTok, LinkedIn, Instagram at a

:

01:16:56,340 --> 01:16:59,610

black exec for our fabulous round table.

:

01:16:59,610 --> 01:17:00,630

Louis Rivera.

:

01:17:01,040 --> 01:17:01,740

Kevin D.

:

01:17:01,740 --> 01:17:03,180

Jenkins, Dr.

:

01:17:03,180 --> 01:17:08,400

Nsenga Burton, for the co host with the

most, my boy down in Dallas, Chris P.

:

01:17:08,400 --> 01:17:08,780

Reed.

:

01:17:08,800 --> 01:17:10,020

I'm Tony Tidbit.

:

01:17:10,280 --> 01:17:11,550

We talked about it.

:

01:17:11,809 --> 01:17:13,170

We laughed about it.

:

01:17:13,370 --> 01:17:14,809

We screamed about it.

:

01:17:15,090 --> 01:17:16,740

We had a good time about it.

:

01:17:17,250 --> 01:17:18,180

We love you.

:

01:17:18,309 --> 01:17:19,120

And guess what?

:

01:17:19,240 --> 01:17:19,650

We're out.

:

01:17:24,040 --> 01:17:24,690

A Black

:

01:17:25,230 --> 01:17:26,570

Kevin Jenkins: Executive Perspective.

Show artwork for TonyTidbit: A Black Executive Perspective

About the Podcast

TonyTidbit: A Black Executive Perspective
Reshaping Leadership & Diversity in Corporate America
About the Podcast: "TonyTidbit: A Black Executive Perspective" offers a deep dive into the corporate world through the lens of diversity, equity, and inclusion. Hosted by Tony Franklin, aka Tony Tidbit, this podcast shines a light on vital conversations around race, leadership, and diversity, fostering understanding and change.

https://ablackexec.com

Meet Your Host: Tony Franklin has over three decades of corporate experience and provides transformative insights into diversity and inclusion, making each episode a journey of learning and empowerment.

Why You Should Listen:
- Diverse Perspectives: Insights from a variety of voices on challenges and triumphs in the corporate sphere.
-Action-Oriented: Practical advice for advocating equity and allyship in the workplace.
- Educational & Empathetic: A focus on empathy and education to drive impactful change.

What to Expect: #BEPpodcast brings powerful transformations, empowering voices, addressing barriers, and delving into topics reshaping Corporate America. It's a platform uniting diverse voices and making a significant impact.

Stay Connected:
Follow @ablackexec on social media for insights and visit ablackexec.com for updates and additional content.

Listen & Subscribe:
"TonyTidbit: A Black Executive Perspective" is available on:
Apple Podcasts: https://ablackexec.com/apple
Spotify: https://ablackexec.com/spotify
YouTube Podcasts: https://ablackexec.com/youtube
Other Platforms: https://ablackexec.com/listen

Join us in transforming the narrative on race, leadership, and diversity in Corporate America. Your participation matters!

#BEPpodcast #TonyTidbit #CorporateDiversity #Inclusion #Leadership #RaceInCorporate #DiversityMatters #DEI

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About your host

Profile picture for Tony Franklin

Tony Franklin

Tony Franklin, the esteemed host of "TonyTidbit: A Black Executive Perspective," is a dynamic and insightful leader with over 30 years of experience navigating the complexities of corporate America. With a career marked by leadership roles across various industries, Tony brings a wealth of knowledge and a unique perspective to the podcast. His journey is one of resilience, determination, and an unwavering commitment to driving diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) in the workplace.

A passionate advocate for change, Tony initiated the groundbreaking "Conversations about Race" series in his workplace following the social unrest of 2020. This series laid the foundation for the podcast, offering a platform for open, honest discussions about race and the Black executive experience in corporate America. Through his engaging conversations with guests, Tony explores themes of adversity, exclusion, and implicit bias, while also highlighting the strategies that have helped break down racial barriers.

Tony's approachable style and depth of experience make him an influential voice in the DEI space. His dedication to fostering an inclusive environment is evident in each episode, where he provides actionable guidance for being a better advocate and ally. "TonyTidbit: A Black Executive Perspective" is not just a podcast; it's a movement towards a more equitable corporate landscape, led by Tony's visionary leadership and empathetic voice.