Lex Fridman Podcast XX
[0] The following is a conversation with Yay, the legendary artist, producer, and designer, formerly known as Kanye West.
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[8] I hate those.
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[14] So since this conversation is with Yeh, the artist formerly known as Kanye West.
[15] I should mention that I got a chance to hang out with him all day and discuss many things, but one of the things we talked about is design, fashion design.
[16] I got a chance to try out some of the things he's working on, sort of early ideas, middle ideas, and it's cool to just explore the way he thinks about design, how detail -oriented he is, how you can spend, you know, minutes, if not hours, on a very specific detail.
[17] And even with people like me who are not deeply knowledgeable about fashion, at least like the behind -the -scenes of fashion, he's still able to make it clear to me and have a brainstorm with me and just talk.
[18] I mean, the creative fire is there.
[19] No matter what he's going on through his personal life, the creative fire is burning bright and that's really beautiful to see.
[20] Anyway, if the creative fire burns for you and you create something, you want to sell it, you Shopify.
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[24] This show is also brought to you by our longtime friends Inside Tracker, a service I used to track biological data, basically using signals that come from your body, and then take those signals and use machine learning algorithms to give you advice on diet and lifestyle changes.
[25] The amount of data that comes from your body is fascinating, and the fact that we're not capturing that data.
[26] We don't have devices or systems that while respecting the privacy are able to collect that data to give you, just you, not somebody else, just you, advice on all kinds of things, on what to read next, what to eat, to maximize your well -being, your productivity, your everything, long -term, happiness and growth and all that kind of stuff.
[27] It's just obvious to me that that's where the world is moving and should be moving.
[28] There's a lot of different trajectories that you can hurt people through doing that by being not transparent, being opaque about how the data is used, who it's sold to, all that kind of stuff.
[29] But as long as you respect the privacy and the value, the power of that data, I think you could do some magical things that help a lot of people, especially in health and medicine.
[30] I mean, it's obvious.
[31] And InsideTracker is one of the great companies that represents that.
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[33] This show is also brought to you by ExpressVPN.
[34] I use them to protect my privacy on the internet.
[35] I'm actually talking to the creator of Tor on the podcast soon, which is a fascinating technology.
[36] There's so many interesting technologies that explore the way which you achieve privacy and the levels of privacy you're comfortable with.
[37] I think the first line of defense that everybody should be using, you know, when privacy is needed, especially, is a VPN.
[38] And ExpressVPN has been the one I've used for many, many years.
[39] It's the one I love the most.
[40] I think it's the best.
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[42] Linux, yes, yes, the greatest operating system, Linux.
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[45] Super easy, super fun.
[46] Life is simple.
[47] You know, the best security is easy security.
[48] Like making sure you do the low -hanging fruit stuff.
[49] Also, make sure you're using password manager or don't use the same password every, whatever you do.
[50] Just stop using password 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6.
[51] That doesn't make it more secure if you keep adding numbers after the password.
[52] or does a little bit, but not much.
[53] Anyway, go to expressvpm .com slash Lexpot for an extra three months free.
[54] Last, but certainly now at least, the legend, the greatest sponsor of all time.
[55] This show is brought to you by Athletic Greens, and it's AG1 drink.
[56] I actually noticed that they sponsor a lot of podcasts, which in some weird way makes me feel like, it makes me feel both joyful that a lot of people are spreading the word but also it makes me feel like it's less of a secret that somehow I discovered you know it's like when you were a fan of Green Day before they were cool oh man you're like a Pearl Jam or whatever whatever the band when they were not as popular as they are today that you love them that's how I feel about Athletic Greens but probably I wasn't even the first wave of people that discovered and enjoyed Athletic Greens.
[57] I'm probably like the fifth wave, the 10th wave, and now it's like the 15th wave.
[58] And so, like, I'm incorrectly from a historical perspective, making myself feel like I'm the OG of Athletic Greens, the OG of AG, but probably not.
[59] Anyway, I love them, and it doesn't matter.
[60] It doesn't matter where I am in the waves.
[61] I hope you love them too.
[62] It's a great way to support your nutritional health.
[63] I drink one twice a day now.
[64] It's refreshing.
[65] Even when I'm traveling, their travel packs are great.
[66] They'll give you one month supply of fish oil, which I also take when you sign up at athletic greens .com slash Lex.
[67] This is a Lex Friedman podcast to support it.
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[69] And now, dear friends, here's yay.
[70] Based off of our connection and just you being a friend, I need to show you my two tech companies and get your perspective on it.
[71] Because now I have friends that can give a perspective.
[72] Like when I would work on albums, I had other friends that worked on albums and they would give me their perspectives on it.
[73] You want to do this?
[74] We are doing it.
[75] This is part of it.
[76] This is part of it?
[77] Absolutely.
[78] All right.
[79] Oh, well, I wanted to finish.
[80] The thing is, okay, you're going to ask me different questions.
[81] but I'm about growing and building and bringing the idea to life.
[82] So when I see you, I say, oh, this guy understands how to hire engineers.
[83] Where I'm coming from Hollywood, coming from press, coming from media, all of the guys, you know, that so many of the guys that have been like voices and faces and talking heads, whatever, have not understood how to engineer product.
[84] And that's the reason why I was able to jump past everyone in the entertainment field.
[85] and become, you know, whatever the net worth is, $11 billion.
[86] I'm going to stop putting the whole black thing on my worth.
[87] Like, let's just see where I am on the scale of life, because that's a cop -out for me to say, rich is black guy of all time, because that's feeding into the same, you know, trauma economy that Black Lives Matter feeds into.
[88] That's why I love and respect engineers.
[89] That's the only thing that we really need to teach in school is engineering.
[90] We don't need to teach history.
[91] We don't need to teach anything that is subjective.
[92] It needs to only be engineering taught in school.
[93] And everything else needs to be recess.
[94] Nothing at all, any force subjective information is just to weaken and indoctrinate our species.
[95] And that's what schools do now.
[96] As an engineer, I love hearing you say that.
[97] But to push back, history is not, the interpretation of history might be subject.
[98] but history has some facts and they're useful to give a grounding to the way you do engineering.
[99] I don't 100 % believe in anything, any concept of the future or any concept of history because history was just written by the victors.
[100] Yeah.
[101] So if I see stuff happen on the day that later that day is reported wrong.
[102] So how wrong is something reported a thousand years ago?
[103] And why will we argue about something that's not in the now?
[104] Because that's the only thing that everyone can agree upon is that it is now, right now.
[105] Yeah, well, you try not to make the mistakes of the past.
[106] That's the usefulness of history, the limited usefulness of history.
[107] The biggest mistake from the past that we keep making is looking at the past.
[108] Too much, giving too much value to the past.
[109] Too much value to the past.
[110] We are now.
[111] We are now.
[112] We are here.
[113] We are one species.
[114] We are one race.
[115] We're here.
[116] And it's time.
[117] The leadership is changing because you have Elon as a leader, yay as a leader, and we're the top leaders.
[118] We're more influential than the presidents.
[119] So you're a human being with engineering challenges before you, with stem player, with parlor, what's the hardest thing in front of you on the engineering front?
[120] That's the first sentence that any of our species needs to hear when they're born.
[121] you are a human being when engineering challenges and I consider challenges to be opportunities in front of you literally like let me see a piece period I need to write that down that's the beginning of our new species constitution I'm going to do the paper like this wide I'll put it in widescreen this for Ridley you are no let me like you are a being with engineering.
[122] Opportunities or challenges.
[123] I'm sorry, I don't spell as good as John Legend.
[124] Opportunities and before you.
[125] I like the before, because it can mean, actually can mean forward or before you.
[126] This right here, I've always said I'm the top five writer in human existence, but this is like, this right here is pushing me to like number four or number three.
[127] It's a good line.
[128] Because who would you say is the top, it's top writer in humor existence, we know who it is.
[129] That's subjective.
[130] Who's that?
[131] It's factual, though.
[132] It's like, okay, who's the top person in tech history?
[133] It's not subjective.
[134] there's a non -subjective answer to both of those both of those people have influence 30 % of our existence so the influence is the main metric of greatness okay one person yeah 30 % of our language was the English language was written by them the other person 30 % of the products we use was led by them so 30 % of our language is written oh Shakespeare and then the product Product, product, product.
[135] But.
[136] Steve Jobs.
[137] You put Steve above, like, Elon's of the world?
[138] Because Steve is a designer, not, he's a designer and engineer, but he's a design.
[139] He's a visionary in the design space.
[140] Well, I would lean to him because I'm not an engineer, right?
[141] So I'm more like...
[142] Then you're an engineer.
[143] If Steve's an engineer, you're an engineer, essentially.
[144] He's a cultural engineer.
[145] Like, the people who run the emotions of the world and run the world off of people's emotions right now are social engineers.
[146] And social engineering is so important, like city design.
[147] There's a fancier word for that.
[148] But I was in Oxnard last night to see Anthony Jesselnik.
[149] And I got to find out what his opening joke was because I'm doing interviews and I'm thinking I'm funny.
[150] And I like that he said, he just kept on saying 20 year anniversary, I've been doing this for 20 years.
[151] And his opening joke was so high level, I realized that I wasn't funny.
[152] I realized that this dude is a professional at what he does.
[153] And so many things are subjective.
[154] I always talk about this.
[155] It's like, you know, people are arguing like, is Emily Radikowski the hottest, you know, person?
[156] And I'm like, that's such a subjective thing.
[157] But, like, if you go and shoot three -pointers with Steph Curry, it's not subjective.
[158] right or if you go and compare bank accounts with Elon it's not subjective and another thing that's not subjective porn what about it dick size it's not subjective you can measure but porn is more about more than just dick size and greatness is more than the size of the bank account right so there's a subjectiveness is subjective though right right so you Do you care about the stuff that's objective or subjective more?
[159] Because greatness to me is what matters.
[160] The bank account comes and goes, the impact on our society, like you said, social engineering, the impact on the collective intelligence of our species, that what permeates throughout the rest of time.
[161] I like what you said.
[162] The impact, I'm taking notes.
[163] How did you say the impact?
[164] On the collective intelligence of our species.
[165] The impact on the collective.
[166] And when Ye is writing down the words that came out of my dumb mouth, I have made it in life.
[167] There's a lot of people that have kind of like sat through.
[168] I wanted to wear a different color hoodie because I was just tired of saying this hoodie in all the interviews.
[169] And there's a lot of kids that are with me. They see what I'm saying.
[170] And they had to sit through all of the muck of all the previous interviews to get to this.
[171] Every interview has been just an emotional, it's just like been an argument up to this point.
[172] This is the first of, this is the next frontier of where our, our species is going to head.
[173] It starts here.
[174] It starts at you, Lex.
[175] So this is the first time I heard you say the word engineering at least so many times, which I love hearing.
[176] So this is where you're at.
[177] You're like that newborn.
[178] You're a being with engineering opportunities.
[179] Yeah.
[180] And we're all a newborn, because in Christianity we say born again.
[181] We're all newborns.
[182] And everyone can, everyone shall, I don't like the word can.
[183] And Shell, my only thing about Shell, it's like, it kind of dictates and can kind of lets people off the hook.
[184] So I haven't found the perfect post -Shakespeare and post -Stefe Jobs and post -Elon and post -Jay and post -Drake way to communicate this.
[185] But we update and we do.
[186] And what the current media structure, no, it's not actually.
[187] nothing that's holding us.
[188] There's nothing actually holding us back because I'm still alive.
[189] I'm still alive.
[190] Like they could have killed me at, you know, George Wish, don't care about black people.
[191] They could have killed me at Beyonce had the best video, but we're here now.
[192] So we just keep on leaning and leaning and leaning.
[193] And there's these things where I just think about, you know, there'll be times when I'm at war.
[194] And every now and then when the, when the bomb stopped going off and all the headlines and the smearing and all that stop going off.
[195] I think about my family and I'll think about Kim and I'll think about how, you know, King Cooper has her in the castle right now and just on Mario Brothers.
[196] You know how it is.
[197] Just go for the princess and you get to this level and it's like, I sung the song wrong, right?
[198] And then they take the princess again.
[199] Which one are you, Mario?
[200] Yeah.
[201] What's your favorite thing, the thing you love the most about Kim, from a Mario perspective and the princess?
[202] Looking back, was there a moment?
[203] She's definitely my favorite of all time.
[204] Yeah.
[205] Was there a moment that, you know, like that catches you off guard and you say, I love this human being?
[206] Yeah.
[207] I mean, it's just, Just the DNA is like, she's a mix of Rob and Chris.
[208] Can you explain?
[209] I mean, that's like a really high pool right there.
[210] Those are like two geniuses.
[211] So, okay.
[212] So like the entire history of evolution of the human species created this DNA that created this being.
[213] there's a life there, there's a set of memories and the history that brought you together and you're like, damn.
[214] I like this DNA.
[215] Yeah.
[216] And certain people have just like high DNA.
[217] Ivanka Trump has high DNA.
[218] You know, it's like...
[219] How's your DNA?
[220] Pretty good?
[221] I think we've seen that.
[222] It's been proven.
[223] I mean, but look at my mom and look at my dad.
[224] You know, me and my dad have a water purification center in the DR.
[225] right now.
[226] My dad is the original Steve Jobs, and he was blocked by people around him and people were using him and taking advantage and not believing in his vision.
[227] My dad's the educated version of yay.
[228] What did you learn about life from your dad?
[229] And my dad got girls, too.
[230] But those are small details.
[231] That's a big detail, being that I found my dad's Playboy when I was five years old, it had greatly affected my motivation.
[232] Yeah.
[233] Oh, so that's part of the engine that drives, yay.
[234] Absolutely.
[235] I remember when Farrell was first in all the videos, and my girl was like, girls like Farrell, and I was like, I want girls to like me, too.
[236] Funny that that's behind all the ambition, all the drive.
[237] What's how we make people?
[238] It's how people are made.
[239] It's the desire to be loved.
[240] Is that at the individual level just being noticed and also at the societal level of scale?
[241] Well, now I've gone past.
[242] I'm like at that place where Nikolai Tesla was later into his career where it wasn't about being loved.
[243] It wasn't about sitting at the dinner parties next to Anna Winter and stuff.
[244] It was about getting the idea across.
[245] So I have these cells that are very, and I just keep on saying, Ridley Scott, but Ridley Scott has a special anointing.
[246] It isn't just sci -fi what he's doing.
[247] There's something in there, just like George Lucas.
[248] There's something different that's there.
[249] So what are you drawing?
[250] I'm drawing these new living cells that we will exist in.
[251] and this is over okay let's do like I don't like talking about money because like man made money up anyway as like four quadrillion respected dollars and then you have other forms of currency of course social currency is super important right now but this is a drawing and it's at a pretty good place now this would be 40 ,000 square feet I want to start just talking in meters.
[252] I just think we should go to anything to restore the Tower of Basel.
[253] Like they said when the...
[254] I'm just to draw a person here for scale.
[255] Yeah, that would help.
[256] Okay.
[257] What do you think of that?
[258] Look at my person, see the scale in this room?
[259] All right.
[260] So...
[261] Wait, the dot is the person?
[262] Yeah.
[263] I'm saying it's 40 ,000 square feet.
[264] but that would be like what are the other parts of the cell okay so what it's a screen it doesn't go all the way to the top and it's one hole for light but the water and the light and air all come in from the top so that's like like the mouth and then this is the belly button we're God's iPhone we're his greatest creation so this is all connected these are all connected yeah so I'm drawing how these other cells go next to each other What's the vision here?
[265] Happiness.
[266] Then we talk about, like, what's the motivation?
[267] Like, yeah, there's a motivation somewhere in the back of my mind of my family.
[268] And if it's like where Moses smithed the rock and God didn't allow him to get to the promised land, because the promised land is family.
[269] That is the problem.
[270] That is earth.
[271] I mean, that is heaven or earth is family.
[272] Family is heaven.
[273] That's the promise land.
[274] And for your family to be together.
[275] So say I smite the rock and God doesn't let me have my family back.
[276] My mission and life is still to promote families at all cost and make families' existence easier.
[277] So you take this thing, you put a localized farm, say if it's in a community, that we do localized growing.
[278] and then we partner with Big Pharma and say, hey, you're actually going to make more money by making better food.
[279] Because at the end of day, you want money right now.
[280] It's like everyone knows that between the pesticides and between the medical industry and especially America, that we're keeping people sick.
[281] And we know that McDonald's makes food that kills people and, you know, Coca -Cola selling, you know, sugar water and all this.
[282] Like, just in case I haven't pissed off enough people in power.
[283] yeah okay so you're gonna piss off the sugar anybody that's powered on sugar sugar sugar well sugar what's the health was actually a document documentary on sugar it wasn't about how bad meat was it was like a reverse documentary on sugar a refer i don't know if you call it a reverse like a sub but if you watch it again when they show sugar and it's just the sugar looks super clean yeah So as I state these things, I know that, I know I have protection.
[284] If I have God's protection, that's why I'm here to this date, right?
[285] So it, it's for me to have this platform and express exactly what I feel because it's kids out there, right, that it's kids that are going to save the world through engineering and through facts.
[286] and I've got to get download as much of the information and as much of the don't be afraid to state your facts is the biggest thing because the world is being ran by fear and that is no actually God runs the world but there's just like little cloud this patina of our ego that deals with the money and the car and the girl we're dating and all this in the clothes you wear and spending too much on clothes and a lot of stuff that I've been involved with promoting.
[287] moaning.
[288] So now what I'm promoting is you have the idea, you say it out loud.
[289] Like if you had Tourette's, say your truth out loud.
[290] If you hate, yay, you hate me, say that out loud.
[291] Say whatever you feel out loud.
[292] Like you say it nonviolently, you know, nonviolent.
[293] I have to say that like as, you know, as a shout out to Alex Jones, you know, and Trump where they try to say that when they say their truths out loud, that it's inciting violence.
[294] So let's be like, really clear.
[295] I'm saying that they have criminalized free thought.
[296] I hate when people use day.
[297] Like, they gets the blame for everything, right?
[298] It's always they.
[299] Yeah.
[300] Who the fuck is they?
[301] Exactly.
[302] The problem is they is us.
[303] Yeah.
[304] Well, I love that.
[305] What we need to do is turn I to we.
[306] So we take the responsibility and turn they to us.
[307] So we take accountability to us.
[308] they to we and they to us and that relates it's a language at the same time you're seeing the language of our surroundings you're seeing the language of one of one of things okay let's go back to the cell explanation because I'm also doing it what's that thing when Elon just put all the information in the open and people could figure out if they could figure it out and open source yeah open source so I'm open sourcing this idea right now so that you know engineers and anointed people, uh, beings, anointed beings can collectively contribute to this to push our species forward.
[309] Um, so where I've got to with my research is that there will be a hole at the top that allows natural light, natural air, and there's a constant water system.
[310] So it becomes like a water city where it's a constant.
[311] constant flow that's not, it's regenerative, it's not wasting the water, and it's just a constant flow.
[312] So I put the toilet really close to where this, this, I don't want to call it a wave pool, but in the pool, the water is not still.
[313] So that exists in water.
[314] It's around about water.
[315] Well, the living room is, you have two rooms, you have the dry room, which people would call the living room before, and then you have the wet room.
[316] How is that a source of happiness?
[317] What is broken about our world today that that gives you in terms of the pursuit of happiness, which is one of the things in the previous declaration of independence?
[318] All of our buildings are based on just the industry and the economy.
[319] And then people lean into what people are used to seeing.
[320] Like what we think is attractive because then you go back to the, you know, women who give life.
[321] So everyone wants to be attractive to the attractive.
[322] And that's the reason why the media goes and gets, you know, Bella Hadid, Kim Kardashian, Emily Radikowsky, those are the only ones I'm going to...
[323] There's more?
[324] There's more, but I'm thinking of the ones that I think are attractive.
[325] Yeah, it is subjective.
[326] Yeah, because it's subjective.
[327] So to my subjective, which I think the only guys that could argue with me on my opinion on girls would be Brad and Leo.
[328] Because we're the only ones with the track record, you know, everything else.
[329] So for everybody else is subjective, we've got history.
[330] Are you happy?
[331] Absolutely.
[332] I'm just here.
[333] It's actually, it's difficult to make me unhappy.
[334] Now, I could deal with frustrations.
[335] But when those frustrations are, it's like when you've allowed people to be in your life that shouldn't be there and then they do the thing you knew they were going to do and you're screaming at them, but you really need to scream at yourself.
[336] Yeah, so you realize anything that's like anger or frustration.
[337] and that's something that's wrong with you that needs to be dealt with.
[338] Yes.
[339] Like right now, okay, say I got this pattern cutter that I wanted to remove because I felt like she was copying our patterns into the computer.
[340] And I didn't know why she wanted to do that and I just wanted to do the patterns by hand.
[341] And then, you know.
[342] You mean like automating the patterns?
[343] Is that what I mean?
[344] And my head of it, because they just, that's the whole thing.
[345] It's like, it's a war of it's a war of human beings and robots yeah but that makes it more efficient right you don't like the efficiency you like the creativity of the singular nature of the pattern I believe that the human beings and I'm saying this to you as a person who makes robots and a person who's friends with Elon I'm deeply offended right now yeah but I'll let it go okay so yeah I believe that the yeah hates robots I'm not gonna put that out of it's a joke robots have feelings too Yeah, yeah, that's right.
[346] That was also a joke.
[347] We need to clarify that for future robots.
[348] But the pattern cutter, the pattern cutter, you don't like that.
[349] That had to be that, you can't have that part of your life.
[350] That's not what I'm, my, everything that I'm doing is for the sake of the human race.
[351] There's things in capitalism, there's things.
[352] and technology.
[353] Well, technology and original human species can exist in a peaceful way, as long as the people that know how to make robots aren't using their robots to control the humans.
[354] Lex.
[355] Definitely something you have to be concerned about as we become more technologically savvy.
[356] That, my friend, is why engineering isn't everything, that you have to desperately.
[357] study the lessons of history.
[358] In Nazi Germany, science was used to create atrocities.
[359] Engineering the same.
[360] Engineering could be a tool of war.
[361] We are still in the Holocaust.
[362] A Jewish friend of mine said, come go visit the Holocaust Museum.
[363] And my response was, let's visit our Holocaust Museum, Planned Parenthood.
[364] all due respect, I grew up in the Soviet Union.
[365] I'm Jewish.
[366] Parts of my family perished in the Holocaust of Nazi Germany, I have to push back that there is a difference of the atrocities at that scale, at that time, on an entire people.
[367] I was going to say the number.
[368] That's the difference.
[369] It's not the number.
[370] Because six million will also, after African Americans are actually Jew also, the lost tribe of Israel.
[371] I can push back on that too.
[372] Okay, so, well, everyone came from Africa.
[373] I am African.
[374] I'm basically African American.
[375] We're brothers.
[376] And we're both Jew, and we're brothers.
[377] So.
[378] We're human.
[379] Six million people died in the Holocaust.
[380] Over 20 million have died by the hands of abortion.
[381] And the media promotes my body, my choice, which is actually still a promotion for Planned Parenthood.
[382] 50 % of black deaths a year is actually abortion.
[383] It's not the cop with the knee.
[384] It's not black on black violence and gang violence.
[385] It's not heart attacks.
[386] It's actually abortion.
[387] The most dangerous place for a black person in America is in their mother's stomach.
[388] There's 900 to a million abortions in the United States a year.
[389] I hear you.
[390] But there's something about the rape, the torture.
[391] the murder of children, women, men, the complete humiliation, and just the suffering that was endured during World War II.
[392] That's what we deal with on our TVs.
[393] Right now with black people, Soros would use black trauma economy to win an election.
[394] What I love is having a healthy conversation.
[395] And as opposed to, there's certain things, you know, boom, this drops people going to have pussy hats on boom this drops it's going to be you know black people and white people with signs boom this drops so hey china hey left agenda hey what we're going to do is say that our species can have a healthy conversation do you it's can i just linger on this because when you say jewish media it there's a echo of a pain that people feel that reminds you're saying it's redundant right no I'm not saying it's redundant I'm saying it's redundant you're saying it's redundant it's a redundant I'm saying it's something that Joe I'm saying that it's something that Joseph Goebbels the propaganda minister of Nazi Germany said I'm saying it's been said so many times in order to murder and torture Jewish people that I would just rings wrong and that's just like the end word when spoken by people that have the same skin color as me, it reminds people of a very dark time.
[396] I know.
[397] If Jewish people would accept that I'm Jew, then they would see what I'm saying in a different way.
[398] They would hear it in a different way.
[399] But see, the people, you saying you're Jewish, that...
[400] No, I'm Jew, not Jew -ish.
[401] Jew -ish means like that of a Jew.
[402] I'm saying I'm Jew.
[403] You're Jew.
[404] Blood of Christ.
[405] That comes from...
[406] Right.
[407] But that, are you a fault, follower the philosophy of the black Hebrew Israelites.
[408] Because that's where the idea comes from.
[409] Not all of those folks are extremists, but some are extremists.
[410] I'm a follower of the idea.
[411] I have a vague idea that all people came from Africa.
[412] But what I wanted to do, okay, now I could Andy Kaufman this, about seven more minutes, and then tell you what it is, what the hope one is?
[413] Let's count, seven minutes.
[414] No, I did this to do a spoiler alert.
[415] Sure, spoiler.
[416] What's the first thing I said at the beginning?
[417] We're talking about engineering and humans.
[418] And I said, and then what did I say we shouldn't focus on?
[419] Race.
[420] Not just that.
[421] I said they shouldn't teach this in school.
[422] History.
[423] The history because what they do, what schools are doing is exactly what the CIA does with Pixar films and Disney films.
[424] They make Bambi's mom die in the beginning, right?
[425] And off that pain comes a purchase of ice cream.
[426] Off that pain comes, I need some more toys.
[427] Off that pain comes, I need a bigger house.
[428] Off that pain comes, I need more girls than my wife.
[429] off that pain comes so they put that pain in to make us uh now we're the orphans of capitalism to make us be consumers and we need to be a community not just consumers so i could have went another seven minutes by being a person who presents himself in a way that says well i don't have to feel your pain because i also have pain too that's not being recognized and in every interview when i say well, why did I get to the point of putting up the tweet?
[430] No one wants to understand why I got to that point, right?
[431] You had pain.
[432] Yeah, but no one.
[433] Pain your heart.
[434] But let's say this.
[435] Undoubtedly, Jewish people have a lot of movies about that pain, and black people have a lot of movies about the pain of slavery, right?
[436] It's almost impossible to find a movie about Mansa Moon.
[437] When you go to the African History Museum in Washington, D .C., it doesn't start with the idea of Africans being kings.
[438] It starts with the idea of Africans being slaves.
[439] But here's another interesting point about this.
[440] This was said to me one time, and it stuck with me as a family member of mine.
[441] With Africans, how many times you've heard like a rapper or, you know, talk about we were kings?
[442] That's incorrect if we're Jew.
[443] If we're Jew, and since we are, we weren't the kings.
[444] We were the slaves that Moses freed.
[445] Africans have always said, we've heard, you've listened to rap music and hear black people say, we kings, we blood of the pharaohs.
[446] And if we are Jew, then we weren't.
[447] We were the people that Moses freed.
[448] And when we talk about, have you heard black people talk about 400 years of slavery?
[449] All right.
[450] That is in rep. And we're having this history lesson, right?
[451] I thought history doesn't matter.
[452] You're exploring ancient history and drawing deep wisdom from it.
[453] And at the same time, saying we need to forget all of it.
[454] We need to put that behind us.
[455] Absolutely.
[456] We need to forget it and we need to move forward.
[457] There is so much wisdom to draw from history.
[458] history, even the 20th century.
[459] Look at this.
[460] Communism.
[461] Without the lessons of history of the 20th century, communism sounds like a great idea, except that some of the worst atrocities conducted by Stalin and Mao that killed 50, 100 plus million people, not just killed, tortured, starvation, where people, cannibalism, they ate each other, they ate their children.
[462] There's There's just dark.
[463] People should read some books on this on the Hollenormor in 1930s.
[464] But I disagree.
[465] With that lesson, we would, and now it's becoming more popular.
[466] Marxism and communism.
[467] I'm not disagreeing that that happened.
[468] I'm disagreeing that we need to harp on the things that happened because the truth is I'm given a fact, 50 % today of, let's say, you don't call black people.
[469] you, right?
[470] Black people's deaths today is abortion today right now.
[471] Like that, it's not racism.
[472] That's too wide of a term.
[473] It's genocide and population control that black people are in today in America that is promoted by the music and the media that black people make that Jewish record labels get paid off of, or media companies.
[474] Record label's a media company also, so let's give it a wider.
[475] You know, I agree with Martin Luther King.
[476] I have a dream, too.
[477] That one day, you would not be judged by the color of your skin or your race, black or Jew, but by the content of your character.
[478] All the assholes that fucked you over in the music industry, fuck artists over in the music industry, are individuals.
[479] They're not Jews.
[480] Can you say, they are, they are Jewish.
[481] It doesn't, they're human with opportunities, and they took those opportunities.
[482] I don't care if they're Jewish.
[483] Do you feel like I should release that pain and separate it?
[484] Yes.
[485] Okay, so if that, okay, so if you're saying I should release that pain and separate it, then I'm telling you, you should release your pain and separate it, and we could get to this, the list of how you are.
[486] our being with engineering opportunities.
[487] That's 100%.
[488] I see what you're doing.
[489] That's exactly what you're doing.
[490] The pain, I'm going to let it go.
[491] Engineering challenges.
[492] I get it.
[493] One of the problems you highlight is people get fucked over in the music industry and get fucked over in the media.
[494] Get fucked over all over the place.
[495] They create it.
[496] There was a Jewish trainer that brought me to the hospital and put in press that I went to the hospital.
[497] I know friends that off of exhaustion, a Jewish doctor that diagnosed me. Because they were, right?
[498] Diagnose me with bipolar disorder and shot me with medication and put me on medication, then put it in the press.
[499] And every time, even if I wore the wrong color hat that a nigger is not supposed to wear, right, then they immediately say he's off of his shit, he's off his meds, he's off his rocker.
[500] and it's literally used as a scarlet letter control mechanism for the people understand the kids, the colleges, the high schools, what do you think they put me right now?
[501] They put me as the profit, not the leader.
[502] It doesn't have to be the leader, right?
[503] Because we need a more intelligent person to be the leader.
[504] But at least, right, they put me as the profit.
[505] They put me as the only person that would say this.
[506] And I'm just saying that was four Jewish members that controlled my voice because for the fact that 90 % of black people in entertainment from sports to music to acting are in some way tied into Jewish business people, meaning that in some way just like if Rom is sitting next to Obama or Jared's sitting next to Trump, there's a Jewish person right there controlling.
[507] the country, the Jewish controlling that who gets the best video or not, controlling what the media says about me. There's a person, not Jewish.
[508] Let me just say what they are, though.
[509] That's the only thing.
[510] It just so happens that they are.
[511] It just happens that they are.
[512] That doesn't mean that I hate them.
[513] That just means that they are.
[514] But it's a dog whistle, too.
[515] Let me just say, as I would love to add more love to the world, I would love you, to do that as a person with a big voice, with a big, powerful voice that a lot of people look up to.
[516] And when you say Jewish media, it's funny how this world works that way.
[517] When you say Jewish media, or Jews are controlling the voice of black artists, black people, black artists, when you say that...
[518] Am I not allowed to say it out loud?
[519] You can say it.
[520] There's a large number of people that are hurting and have anger and even have hate in their heart when they heat, When they hear Jewish media, that hate starts being directed towards the Jewish people.
[521] Do you acknowledge that, that's, do you understand, can you feel the hate in the world that's when, that, that comes to the surface when you say stuff like that?
[522] Okay.
[523] I feel that when we go into therapy, my dad was a therapist.
[524] And obviously I've got some therapy skills myself.
[525] A lot of people, my music is healing, these type of spa -like existences are healing.
[526] The color palettes I use are healing.
[527] And we can use healing words, right?
[528] What I really feel there, I feel that there's no accountability and no responsibility on Jewish people in media to at least start with owning up with the facts of what's dealt with and tell me if I say the facts out loud, to the point of Ari Emanuel writing a letter in the financial times trying to take food out of my children's mouth, telling people that they're not allowed to work with me. Even Chris Como or Pierce Morgan getting me to apologize and separate Jewish business people from the families of the Jewish business people, which I did.
[529] update i did that that already happened and that was a shitty apology that wasn't really an apology but shout out for that conversation i need to get on my knees and kiss the dick of howard stern and you don't need to kiss anyone's dick i don't but that's what you guys are acting like you guys look at that because you're talking about it's a shitty opinion uh apology but where's our fucking apology watch this sorry we don't get thank you now let's move on sorry Oh, do I need to get on my knees or no?
[530] And kiss my dick.
[531] Oh, shit.
[532] Just escalated quickly.
[533] So that's escalated quickly.
[534] So the, no, I'm saying, where's our apology?
[535] But right, we can't get to apology because you're telling me there's no right way for me to word it.
[536] So tell me, for me, a person who's been fucked on my deals.
[537] a person that has friends that never figured out how to make shoes with a German company that couldn't tell me to wear a BLM shirt and take off my red hat, like, what would have happened if I was at Nike, right?
[538] Tell me exactly how to engineer the situation I'm in.
[539] I'll tell you exactly how.
[540] You got a big voice.
[541] Have the balls as a man to call out the individuals.
[542] Don't call them Jews, call them by their name, and start a war against those individuals.
[543] They're not Jewish.
[544] But if that's the case, will you help me with that?
[545] Sure.
[546] 100%.
[547] Well, let me flip that too.
[548] I don't understand the industry well.
[549] I see that people are fucking people over for sure.
[550] But how do you solve that?
[551] If you run, if you right now run the world's, you're doing a million things, but say you ran also a record label.
[552] I have ran a record label.
[553] Well, I've been ran by a record label where I was the face of a record label and Big Sean and different people complaining to me, and I knew fuck about running a record label.
[554] I was simply just a talented producer and an influencer that then started good music, but I wasn't the one running good music.
[555] How would you do it differently?
[556] This is something I propose.
[557] I would look at the top 10 execs in three fields, in sports, film, and music.
[558] And I would look at the top 10 clients, participants, talent.
[559] I would look at the top talent in each of those fields, the top 10 of them.
[560] And some of them are going to be Tom Brady.
[561] Some of them are going to be Taylor Swift.
[562] Some of them, they're not all going to be black, right?
[563] So some of them would be Adele, right?
[564] And we'll look at all their contracts, transparently and we'll compare the notes and re -engineer like it's a new constitution.
[565] Because when I told my dad when I was 19 that I was going to get into the music industry, he begged me not to.
[566] He said, I heard it's treacherous.
[567] Now I'm in a position where I've been through it.
[568] I saw it.
[569] I went out, made some money somewhere else.
[570] I saw my name get smeared.
[571] I saw my family get destroyed.
[572] I saw my reputation get destroyed.
[573] And I'm back here to have this kind of, I'm back here as a being with engineering opportunities.
[574] So, I would say if you say as a shitty apology, what is the version of the apology short of kissing Howard Stern's dick?
[575] I don't think anyone wants to kiss Howard Stern's dick.
[576] That's the whole point, Howard Stern.
[577] Nobody wants to kiss your dick, so shut the fuck up.
[578] I said, by the way, I'm antagonized you, Howard Stern.
[579] I used to be a fan of you.
[580] Yeah, me too.
[581] Yeah.
[582] I'm still a fan sometimes.
[583] Now, now you're just doing clickbait like everybody else.
[584] Now you're just a sad old man, Howard.
[585] All right.
[586] Now Howard Stern, this is the first time anyone's said your name in years.
[587] Your own family doesn't say your name unless they're calling to get their bills paid.
[588] You're going hard.
[589] See, that's beautiful right there.
[590] That's much better than calling Jewish media.
[591] Go after individuals.
[592] Go after individual.
[593] If you don't talk shit about me, talk shit about me. This is great.
[594] And you know what that is?
[595] Yeah, what's that?
[596] Engineering.
[597] That's an engineers approach.
[598] Yeah, engineers.
[599] Yeah, yeah.
[600] You should learn some of that.
[601] We all can use our pain against each other.
[602] Or we can say we're being with engineering opportunities.
[603] And we can know about history.
[604] So let me change something.
[605] We can have a, just to be judgmental, people say thou should not judge.
[606] I was talking to Camille Vasquez.
[607] She says, I'm very judgmental.
[608] That's what we're doing.
[609] I believe, now you could go to Bible, and one thing's going to say one thing, another thing may be contradicted in a way, and then the pastor has to unpack it.
[610] I believe that we are to judge.
[611] If you look at some food and it's got a fly coming out of it, you can then judge at that point.
[612] You're supposed to use your better judgment.
[613] But whenever someone doesn't want to change something they're doing, they'll say, don't judge me, right?
[614] But as a species, you call it for me, you got the breakthrough.
[615] And by the way, it's only an engineer that I would respect to tell me of how to update how I'm communicating.
[616] Because this started off, right?
[617] I've been through all these interviews.
[618] Let me go to this.
[619] You said this was a sorry apology.
[620] I was very specific, I said, the Jewish, because, by the way, it's a barrage, right?
[621] It's a thing where I don't even remember the names at a certain point, right?
[622] It's like if a girl was getting raped by men, if that person is not 18, right?
[623] And she was getting raped since 14, right?
[624] And she still got this face, this super, like, Irene Shake level face, right?
[625] she might say I hate men that woman may say I hate men she might get to that point because she was raped on my contracts and no one can say this is ramped up no one Howard Stern can't say this is ramped up our Emmanuel can't say this is ramped up George Soros knows damn well that I'm not ramped up George Soros knows like wow this guy's like a younger guy that's looking at what I did and looking at how I control the world silently and he's calling it out and he's not using any of the fear tactics.
[626] I can't send his homeboys around him.
[627] I can't send his wife to him.
[628] This guy, that's what George Sorrell sees, right?
[629] When he's dealing with me, right?
[630] So what you guys are actually asking me to do, I'm comparing myself to that 18 -year -old, beautiful woman that had been mistreated by men for four years of her life, right?
[631] And you're saying, you know, as a man, you can't blame all men.
[632] And I'm saying as a responsible forward philosopher leader, okay, I'll drop the pain and I will specify because I'm up here, I lost my fucking family, I lost my kids, I lost my best friend in fashion, I lost, I lost the black community, I lost, you know, people said I lost my mind, all of these things, lost my reputation.
[633] And I'm up here just like, I just want my family, but I don't want my family to have to say what the left wants us to say.
[634] To have to say what China wants to say.
[635] I want to be an American and protect my kids and protect my wife and raise my kids as Christians and have my wife be a Christian and innovate.
[636] And America make rock and roll.
[637] I want to innovate as a creative person and be a successful American, but all of that have been taken away from me. So I'm coming back and I'm removing the PSTD right now, right?
[638] I'm standing up and saying the only way that we're going to be able to get past this and the way God is going to use me right now is for me to stop talking about the pain, stop talking about what happened, and do something about it.
[639] And that's where I'm at right now in this moment.
[640] Like, yeah, people agree.
[641] At least there was something where you could say he has a reason of why he got to that tweet.
[642] And what you're doing for me today is saying, yo, that was a sorry apology, and let's specify.
[643] I'm not asking for anyone out here to empathize or sympathize for a, you know, a dude worth $11 billion that can make money disappear, I mean, appear at a thin air in five different industries.
[644] You know, I'm not asking for the, I'm not asking for anybody to sympathize with someone who's married to Kim Kardashian, dated, Irene's shake, blah, blah, blah, blah.
[645] Like, I feel like I'm just not going to get the sympathy vote in this situation, right?
[646] So.
[647] I feel your pain.
[648] I feel your pain.
[649] Yeah, I feel like no one's going to feel my pain.
[650] Only Brad and Leo can feel my pain, right?
[651] So the, so.
[652] But still.
[653] But here today, when you said it's a sorry.
[654] apology.
[655] What's the what's the apology that you're looking for as a as a Jewish engineer?
[656] I'm not, say, as Lex, let's not talk about you being Jewish as Lex.
[657] What's the apology that you want me to say to, am I allowed to say Jewish?
[658] Tell me, is it anti -Semitic for yay to say Jewish out loud?
[659] No, there's, I don't like the allowed that presumes censorship.
[660] I think you choose, you have a powerful voice.
[661] Did I prove that there was censorship over the past two weeks?
[662] Who censored you?
[663] Oh, drink champs?
[664] Oh, my Lord.
[665] Oh, like Twitter and so on?
[666] Twitter.
[667] That has less to do.
[668] Drink champs.
[669] That hurt you that drink champs that nor took it down, took down your conversation.
[670] No. It didn't hurt you.
[671] Man, you got to be honest about the pain.
[672] With still the kids we used to be I put my hand on the stove To see if I still bleed And nothing hurts anymore I feel kind free No Do you think You know I went to Japan for two to three months Right The day I had Sunday service My kids are supposed to be there and my kids would know where to be found and I text Kim and say where are my kids we get into an argument and then I get a text from a number I don't know and it's Pete Davidson bragging about being in bed with my wife then just fucking with you well at that point it's like they're trying to put me in jail or put a friend of mine in jail because then I'm going to go surround the hotel and do all, you know, do something which would have me not be able to be here.
[673] And instead, I walked away from that situation.
[674] I went to Japan, like the samurai that I am, and went to the top of the mountain.
[675] And because I knew that, I mean, I knew there was no way she could love this dude, not just because he's ugly.
[676] He's not black.
[677] she likes black guys every guy that she you know is wit looks exactly same ray jay uh reggie bush at that time Kanye west she has a type just like how i have a type like a lot of my girls look kind of similar to her because in a video game character people have people have their type right so i knew that this was like the the princess has a type and she likes Mario right there you go as somebody cares for you and hopefully can be a friend yay i got to say these are these words and the words about Jews is not the words of a samurai of a great man. I would say, you know, you said something that inspired that resonated with a lot of people when you said George Bush doesn't care about black people.
[678] I have to say, as somebody who cares for you, that, yay, the artist formerly known as Kanye West, doesn't care about Jewish people in the same way you spoke about George Bush being a politician and not giving a fuck about the poor people that suffered after Katrina.
[679] You're not giving a fuck about the suffering of the Jewish people across the world.
[680] Why am I not?
[681] Because you're feeding, you're giving strength, motivation to hate groups.
[682] But we already updated.
[683] I gave it apology.
[684] You said it wasn't good enough.
[685] Yeah, that's right.
[686] And now you're telling me, no, I'm not going to.
[687] You don't need to kiss anyone's dick.
[688] What you have to do, you have to say it was wrong to say, there's no Jewish media, there's no Jewish, uh, there isn't.
[689] There's no control of the media by Jewish people.
[690] You're an engineer, brother.
[691] If you're an engineer and you're not holding to the truth, that's not engineering.
[692] Engineering is not, that's not, that doesn't, that's hate.
[693] That's not engineering.
[694] Engineering says, I'm going to build a better record label.
[695] It's called stereotypes.
[696] And I'm going to respect our stereotypes exist for a reason.
[697] Engineers don't do stereotypes.
[698] Stereotypes are dumb.
[699] They allow you to channel hate towards the other.
[700] You know what the biggest thing is?
[701] Yeah.
[702] With something a veteran that was sitting next to me at Cheesecake Factory last night, he said, you know, the general justice, he serves for whoever is the president, right?
[703] And he said, what's happening in politics is we're forgetting we're on the same side.
[704] we're forgetting we're on this.
[705] This is someone is practically, now he's a nurse.
[706] So he's still, you know, fighting for humanity in a way.
[707] He went from holding, you know, guns in battle to being a nurse and when people are battling for their lives.
[708] And he said, we're forgetting we're on the same side.
[709] This is a person that no matter who becomes president, he can still be told.
[710] to go to war.
[711] And the chaos that's created by the media has split the country in half.
[712] And what us as beings, what an engineer opportunity need to do right now is find the blue water.
[713] Where do we, where are places that we agree on?
[714] And I want you to finish everything.
[715] Hey, I'm going to let you finish.
[716] everything that you want to express to me. Get off all, I'm your scarecrow today.
[717] I'm your punching bag today for everything I did.
[718] And I want you to stand up for all of the hate that I'm your Al Gore when he lost the election.
[719] Remember, he almost became a punching bag for the lady that had voted on him.
[720] And she just said all this stuff.
[721] And he's like, I know, I agree with you, right?
[722] But there's nothing, you know, that he could do about it.
[723] it.
[724] With this, it's like things that you're saying, I agree with you.
[725] You know, it's like if you sit some kids in the principal's office and I punched somebody, right?
[726] I took my hand, right, as what it really means.
[727] Even Ari Emanuel had to say, this is a pop icon, right?
[728] And I went and just punched an entire people at one time or said that I was about to.
[729] I went, like this, right?
[730] And I got blacked out, black mirrored, done, right?
[731] And it's like, what were you even going to do?
[732] And why did you go like this?
[733] I went like this because I can't even do.
[734] I would look insane to physically show you a metaphor, a physical representation of my last 20 years of what I've been through as a musician, as a father, and as a black person with a political opinion.
[735] A great man still through the pain does the right thing.
[736] And I think the right thing is to not say that there's Jewish control of the media.
[737] That's incorrect, though.
[738] That's a fucking lie.
[739] There is.
[740] And they did come and bully me. It proved the point.
[741] No, the reason you don't say it is because the world is much bigger than the, forgive me the narrow little world you exist in your impact stretches way past those little boardroom meetings over contracts so what should i have done what should i have done not say that you should be a strong man that doesn't mention that doesn't mention religion of people and then fight do you want to win this fight how i win how do we win call out individual people built that's one way because they have a big voice the other voice that i prefer is to build another uh uh label i feel I feel like you're controlling my creative narrative and my, because just like how you're telling me I shouldn't have said that, do you think there are people telling me I shouldn't have wore a red hat?
[742] No, because you ask me, what should I have done?
[743] You're supposed to be a scarecrow, so I thought I'm going to beat the shit out of the scarecrow with my words, right?
[744] You let me. It was consensual.
[745] The punching bag is a bad because scarecrow actually has a different real meaning.
[746] So let's say a punching bag.
[747] I shouldn't say a scarecrow.
[748] Yeah.
[749] But every single person that I've sat with from the point when I wore the red hat till now has done the same thing.
[750] Sit in the principal's office and don't do what you're doing.
[751] We're in the generous closet right now together.
[752] And I'm not, the red hat is very different.
[753] The red hat is, you have a set of beliefs.
[754] You represent half the country that has a hope, a vision for the future of America that's very different than without any.
[755] any purpose whatsoever saying Jewish media, Jewish control of the media.
[756] You said there's no purpose, so you're taking away my history and my reason of what my purpose was.
[757] I'm saying it was dumb.
[758] Also, also, I'm speaking my voice, vocalizing it.
[759] Also, it's God's plan.
[760] There's a lot of things that open up.
[761] Let me tell you something that open up.
[762] There's a guy, like I told you, that was running STEM player, who I've had issues with, we hadn't got paid on time certain things right and he took his his IQ his know -how his engineering know -how to he basically was trying to adidas me with even though i was the bigger money in the situation that was fun and we funded together and he hired these engineers and he said well because of your comments we're not going to be able to hire anybody else and i was like well how many jewish people do we have in our company said i don't know he didn't say exactly right i said do we have black people?
[763] We said, yes, and how many?
[764] He said two.
[765] So we have like 60 full -time employees, like 40, half -time and part -time.
[766] And I took as a responsibility, let's take a step back from us being one species and say, hey, you're Jewish, I'm black.
[767] Why step back?
[768] For this example, for the sake of this example.
[769] And I said, wow, I'm sure I can hire more than.
[770] to black engineers.
[771] And what happens is because there are so many businessmen that just so happen to be Jewish that it's good business, right?
[772] Just to monopolize.
[773] That's the people to look in.
[774] Everybody wants to be Elon, right?
[775] So the...
[776] I disagree with that.
[777] Okay, but let me finish this point.
[778] I'm going to let you finish.
[779] I'm going to let you finish.
[780] A lot of businessmen want to be as successful as Elon and as popular as Elon, a lot.
[781] Like, just worded like that, which I hate the term a lot, actually.
[782] I want to be more specific, but I haven't done the math on it.
[783] Let's say some.
[784] Factually, for sure, there are some business people of all different walks and backgrounds that would like to be as rich and as popular as Elon Musk.
[785] So let me just take a step back from the We're One species into the, we're separated by race, gender, socio -economic class conversation and say, as a black owner of two tech platforms, hardware and software, I need to take action.
[786] Let's not call it affirmative.
[787] Let's just say, I need to take action and I need to take accountability and ensuring that black engineers are hired and guess what, hired together.
[788] Because when the black people that are brilliant, are separated from our culture, we forget who we are.
[789] And we'll get to a point where, you know, OJSA, I'm not black, I'm OJ.
[790] Because just to be on the golf course, we put on the golf shirt.
[791] But the golf shirt might not be something that our culture would have done.
[792] And now our culture in poorer communities is, oh, everybody's got Draco on them.
[793] Everybody's got a gun, on them.
[794] Oh, if you run up on me on a gas station, I'm a kill you.
[795] Hey, you ain't got to talk to me like a man if I haven't killed at least five people.
[796] But you know what happens is we can kill five people.
[797] We could kill 10 people and still be in the media as long as we play by the rules, right?
[798] Because what would happen is any of these guys that have talked about killing people in different things, unless Trump had pardoned them, right?
[799] But let's say even if Trump had pardoned them, They could still go to someone like a little boozy or Meek Mills or Puff Daddy, anybody, and say, hey, we need you to talk shit about Yay right now.
[800] And also, you're not allowed.
[801] If you do want to vote for Trump or vote outside of what this arrangement is, then we're going to put you in jail.
[802] It ain't, we're not going to bring you down.
[803] We have this on you.
[804] You get I'm saying?
[805] If I had ever killed someone, if I wasn't, the bitch with the pink polo on, I wouldn't be able to be the vocal man that I am today.
[806] You understand what I'm saying?
[807] This is the reason why I'm happy that my gangster disciple brothers kept me from the initiations, which made me feel like a pussy my whole life, right?
[808] But now I am someone who legally can say this.
[809] Other people in my position, they legally cannot speak.
[810] speak.
[811] They legally cannot speak or they will go to prison.
[812] I am in a bit of a glass prison because I don't have say -so of where my children go to school, but I'm in a freedom place where I can have this conversation with you right now.
[813] And that is, I don't like the word breakthrough.
[814] You know, that's God's hand on this situation.
[815] But you get what I'm saying about if I hadn't said the tweet, I wouldn't have had to take the accountability myself to hire black engineers into my two tech platforms.
[816] Yeah.
[817] And do you get what I'm saying?
[818] That's a beautiful personal journey you're on.
[819] But do you get what I'm saying that that personal is for my people as a whole.
[820] As a tribal person.
[821] It's a small company.
[822] It's a small company.
[823] As a tribal person, I believe that I am my people.
[824] Yeah.
[825] And the thing that that businessman have done to my people have pulled the brightest out of our tribes and siloed them and made us lose our culture and lose who they were.
[826] All the only thing I wanted to say at Virgil's funeral, which I wasn't allowed to, right?
[827] It was a white pastor that talked the majority of the funeral.
[828] Half the funeral was pissed, pissed, right?
[829] And this pastor actually married me and Kim, right?
[830] It looks like Justin Timberlake a little bit, and he talked half the funeral.
[831] He knew Virgil's passing, did a collaboration with him before he passed, by the way, right?
[832] A clothing collaboration.
[833] I didn't know Virgil was passing, but the thing I wanted to see, I saw Asap Rocky and I saw some other members of his gang, you know, in the audience at the funeral.
[834] And all I wanted to tell them is don't let them split the gang up.
[835] Don't let them split the gang up.
[836] When I did the first easy, because I did Kanye West two fashion shows before as a high -end luxury, all -leather kind of design, not all -leather, but, you know, high -end materials, mink, this kind of thing.
[837] And then I came back with Yeezy, with Adidas.
[838] And this fashion show was so popular that Justin Bieber had to sit in the second row, right?
[839] This thing had every name you could think of.
[840] It had Kim Kardashian, Chris Jenner, Kendall Jenner.
[841] It was Kylie's first fashion show.
[842] She'd been in, and in the second fashion show, I put Kylie and Bella Hadid next to each other in the fashion show.
[843] You had Puff Daddy.
[844] At that time, Puff Daddy had beef with Drake.
[845] Drake still came to the show and Jay -Z had to break up the fight backstage.
[846] The designers, you had Jerry Lorenzo that's head of Fear of God.
[847] You had Kim Schrobb, head of skims.
[848] You had Virgil Ablo, head of Louis Vuitton.
[849] You had Dimna, head of Balenciaga, all working for, yay, for the leader, for the philosopher, right?
[850] for the person that put, who put this together, me, that's who?
[851] Right.
[852] You had these people working for the king in New York, basically, the boss, yay, right?
[853] You had, you had Jay Z in the audience, Rihanna in the audience, Beyonce in the audience, sitting next to Anna Winter in this audience.
[854] And guess who heard wind of this?
[855] One of the richest men in the world, Bernard Arnaud, caught wind of this.
[856] What's going on?
[857] They're building up.
[858] something and we need to stop it.
[859] So then he met with me and politely offered me backing for my clothing line.
[860] It would be Kanye West.
[861] They would get 49 %, 51 % I would get 49%.
[862] They'd have control and they were going to give me all of the support from Louis Vuitton.
[863] So I had to go to Adidas and I told Adidas, hey, let's ademify the apparel.
[864] So Adidas, you're not going to do the apparel anymore.
[865] Or, hey, we had a good time, but we're going to run off with Giselle now, right?
[866] So that's like you told your girl that.
[867] And you're like, oh, no, we're supposed to, we had the proudest moment of our career.
[868] And so, so then he offers me to deal in Alexander Arnaud, who's went to gone on and rape and pillage from all of the talent that I had afterwards, said, I say, before I tell Adidas to indemnify the apparel, can I get a written contract from your dad, Bernard Arnaud?
[869] and he says, my dad will never go back on his word.
[870] So you already know what this thing is going, right?
[871] You can, spoiler alert, right?
[872] He went back on his word.
[873] So three months into the deal, I get Anna Winter, I say, who should I use for my lawyer?
[874] She picks my lawyer for me, right?
[875] I just found out even a couple of days that the lawyer demanded an airplane during negotiations.
[876] Had nothing to do with me, right?
[877] They said the Bernard I know got freaked out, And then Alexander Nau calls me and says, the deal got dropped at the board.
[878] I went back and told my high -maintenance wife, I was supposed to become this designer at Louis Vuitton or the Louis Vuitton group was going to back the Kanye Westline because that's how good I've done in fashion, babe.
[879] And now the deal is dropped.
[880] Now the deal is dropped.
[881] So then I did a second collection and we didn't have any support to be able to build the collection.
[882] Then I went and found And third collection, we did it We took over MSG Fourth collection went And the show started an hour late Then a week later Kim got robbed Then I told Scooter Braun My manager at that time I say I'm looking You know, I need to go to Japan I'm tired I'm tired He says no you need to make more money I Do four more shows On a second leg of the tour and I suffer from exhaustion and go to the hospital and then get diagnosed with the disorder.
[883] This is the first time I ever suffered from exhaustion.
[884] By the way, I haven't been to the hospital since.
[885] I haven't been to the hospital since and haven't taken, you know, medication in two years.
[886] And I'm sure there will be people in the media we won't say, where phone will say, well, that's obvious, right?
[887] So right now, I'm talking to you, right?
[888] I'm not on medication.
[889] I just go to sleep, right?
[890] I have sleep.
[891] Have you been able to sleep?
[892] This, that's, that's, that's, that's, that's too low -hanging fruit for you.
[893] You're more, you're, I expect more.
[894] I agree, I expect more.
[895] I agree.
[896] I agree.
[897] That's like, that's like Pierce Morgan trying to grab ratings.
[898] You got a whole life ahead of you.
[899] You got a whole life ahead of you.
[900] These guys are at the end of their life.
[901] Oh, good.
[902] So this story is...
[903] Call me out of my shit.
[904] I love it.
[905] But then, amidst that, the same guy that dropped my deal, Bernard Arnaud, goes and hires my best friend.
[906] Goes and hires my main engineer, right?
[907] It would have been, like, them hiring, you know, Elon from Peter before they figured out Paul, before they figured out PayPal.
[908] But Paul, I mean, so I was like, it all, Powell sounds like Paul.
[909] I just say, because I'm a Christian, I thought it was cool.
[910] But it would have been like, what if someone could have went in and took Elon away from Peter before they pay Paul?
[911] Before they, I just, because they pay Paul.
[912] Yeah, before they paid Paul.
[913] It's just too close.
[914] Yeah, too close.
[915] It just sounds so fresh, the fact that it's so close, right?
[916] And that's what happened, right?
[917] They broke the gang up.
[918] And I'm telling you right now, that hadn't happened, Virgil's alive, I'm still married.
[919] You know what I'm saying?
[920] The power structure was broken then, right?
[921] Because we were building some, Kylie wasn't a billionaire.
[922] You know what I mean?
[923] We were building something together that a French colonizer came in and caught it early and tried to destroy it.
[924] But the only thing is God is alive and I'm anointed.
[925] And even with those drawbacks, losing my wife, losing my friend, exhaustion, all of these late -night tweets that piss off an entire group.
[926] You know, like this, the frustration still, they're, we work, I work for God and God runs the world and we'll see what happens.
[927] But in those words, don't you feel that being split up, don't you feel you're doing the thing that you stand against, which is playing victim?
[928] aren't you playing victim to the forces in the world?
[929] I didn't play victim.
[930] I didn't even get a chance to play.
[931] I just said I was about to.
[932] I said like this.
[933] No, you played pretty damn well.
[934] What do you mean?
[935] What do you mean about to?
[936] You're like one of the greatest designers in history, fashion designers.
[937] You were playing.
[938] You are playing.
[939] What does that even mean?
[940] I thought you're referring to the tweet.
[941] All of them.
[942] There's a full set of things.
[943] that you're under attack for the tweet and everything beyond that but like you're you're blaming not blaming but you're saying that the jewish media the jewish record labels the jewish people forget jewish or not it doesn't matter it's playing victim right ultimately i am fighting a battle in the spiritual form and anyone that believes in god and is looking at this interview would agree with that.
[944] And I just so happened to be a bright part of God's army.
[945] I'm fighting for us to live.
[946] The greatest gift is life itself.
[947] I am pro -life.
[948] I am pro -God.
[949] I believe that Jesus Christ is our Lord and Savior and died for our sins.
[950] What do you feel about another attack?
[951] Another painful thing.
[952] I imagine it's super painful, it's Balenciaga, pulling, you had a really close relationship and friendship with their creative director.
[953] Like, how do you feel about all of it?
[954] I told you, I sang the song.
[955] I sing another song from one of my mentors' future.
[956] I never feel pain.
[957] I'd have felt too much pain.
[958] Like, there was a day where I was headed to Nashville to meet with George Farmer, who is the CEO of Parla, the day when we made the announcement.
[959] At that same day, Balenciaga was taking my imagery off of their site, and the drink champs was being taken down.
[960] And I said, this is the happiest day of my life.
[961] I love cutting the grass low.
[962] People wasn't really with you.
[963] They was part -time.
[964] People switch up when it's one.
[965] war time.
[966] I'd rather have people who are really with me and that people who are just trying to use me. Listen, as a friend, as somebody cares for you, you have to be really careful by the people, by all people, always.
[967] The people that are going to be, try to be close to you now, you don't know if you can trust them.
[968] Even more.
[969] What the Blenciaga, I have more to say about it, though.
[970] Yeah.
[971] Let's do this.
[972] Dimna will still work.
[973] for yay someday.
[974] And this is just speeding the process up.
[975] Have you talked?
[976] Can you share if you've talked?
[977] Yes, I talk to Dimna.
[978] This is like, we're Kendrick Spirits.
[979] None of this can keep us away from each other.
[980] I brought Dimna to Gap to be able to bring the best product in the world.
[981] At that time, I wanted to go under $100.
[982] Now I'm like, okay, we're going to go $20 a product.
[983] I brought Demna in to engineer that's why I said engineered by Balenciaga YeeGab engineer by Balenciaga to engineer the best product for the people the people that that they say are at the bottom of the Maslaw hierarchy and need chart or they're at the bottom of the pyramid right so Gap didn't want that.
[984] Balenciaga didn't want that.
[985] Our agendas were not aligned.
[986] I was brought in to the gap for political reasons and influence, like a Virgil, like a George Floyd.
[987] When popular celebrities are brought into Fortune 500 companies, it's not to raise the stock.
[988] It's to strengthen the position and influence.
[989] And it's definitely not to be out here letting a nigger think he's steed jobs.
[990] Yeah, there's people like that.
[991] But you as a great man and visionary, your job is to understand that game and be one step ahead.
[992] Well, that's why I'm telling them.
[993] That relationship, you know, some relationships only last for a summer.
[994] Yeah.
[995] You know, some last for a year.
[996] The relationship ran its course.
[997] You know, in that relationship, I invested a lot of my social capital and actual capital.
[998] I spent somewhere between $5 to $10 million personally on Balenciaga.
[999] How much money do you think Belenziaga had paid me in the past two years?
[1000] Just take a really wild guess, a really wild.
[1001] Less than that?
[1002] Just take a super wild one.
[1003] Just go to you, the furthest extent of your imagination.
[1004] nation.
[1005] 1 .2 million.
[1006] Lower.
[1007] 500 ,000.
[1008] Zero.
[1009] All right.
[1010] And actually, two weeks ago, I paid at a Saints account, $862 ,000, not in clothes for me, from Balenciaga, from the store, in royalties to Balenciaga, where the deal had been engineered where I was coming out of my pocket.
[1011] So I paid, last year I paid Demna $3 million to design the collection, right?
[1012] And we got it out of the Gap Marketing Fund.
[1013] And he was going to deliver 160 skews or 120 skews.
[1014] 100 skews are separate items of clothing, so styles of clothing.
[1015] So he ended up delivering about 60 I felt like we're on the people's court because we actually are right We're in the court of public opinion So he delivered about 60 There were all kinds of people that were working Part of the reason why I had to get Demna I didn't want to have to get I wanted to compete with him I didn't want to have to like get him You know when I made stronger I did it to compete with Timberlin and Justin Timberlake because my fiancé at that time, like Justin Timberlake, just a little bit too much.
[1016] So I made it to compete.
[1017] And then we had the song out.
[1018] It's number one on Apple.
[1019] It's blowing up.
[1020] I play it in a club, and it sounds muddy.
[1021] It doesn't sound the way sexy back sounded in the club.
[1022] So I go to Farrell Williams to do the drums, and it sounds like a different record.
[1023] And so it can't be a different record because I'm like, I'm going to swap it out on radio, right?
[1024] Then I go to Swiss beats.
[1025] It sounds like a different record.
[1026] I go to Timberland, the person who did Sexy Back.
[1027] And he did it in five minutes and then spent the rest of the hour talking about how nobody could have done it except for him running around the studio.
[1028] I'm the best.
[1029] No one could have to go to me. He had to go to the king.
[1030] Well, he had a point, right?
[1031] He had a point, right?
[1032] So what makes us some muddies of the beat?
[1033] It was in the drums.
[1034] It was something that Timberland had in those drums.
[1035] Like, now, watch this.
[1036] I said I'm going DefCon 3, right?
[1037] And the actual, I spelled it wrong.
[1038] I have a tendency to do that.
[1039] I'm not quite John Legend, tight sweater level, spelling B level.
[1040] So I feel a parallel to me going to Timberlin to when I said, hey, you as an engineer, I need to work with you as an engineer that is Jewish to look at these contracts and what my people, not just black people, let's say artists, are dealing with in our contracts.
[1041] These contracts need to be fixed.
[1042] Everyone could be so mad at the messenger, right?
[1043] Yay, you said it the wrong way.
[1044] You're offensive.
[1045] You're like Hitler now because you said it you said this out loud but it does not you're you weren't getting enough sleep all this shit does not negate the fact that we do have Houston we have a problem yeah but we is just the music industry like there's a lot of hate that was created by just saying that you know but you're saying what is just is everything to me right yeah one one one person they mean everything to me right?
[1046] And for George Bush, winning an election was everything.
[1047] And then when you said George Bush doesn't care about black people, that you woke him up.
[1048] You woke the people up to the fact that he was narrowly being selfish.
[1049] You are, there's a sense to which you're being corrupted by your own greatness, that you're focusing too much on the industry that you've made great, that you've rose to the very top.
[1050] One of the richest artists in history, one of the greatest Designers.
[1051] I'm not, I am the richest artist in history.
[1052] Probably the richest artist in history.
[1053] Yeah, I don't, I don't, they say, the funny thing is they're like, oh, rich's black person, like, oh, also, rich is actor, rich's musician, rich's fashion designer, like, it's a bunch of riches in that one.
[1054] You know what I'm saying?
[1055] It's like, richer than Ralph Lauren.
[1056] Like, like, Richard than Amani, like, richest, like, of that.
[1057] But still, low, like, because where do you put that, you know, like, on the, Totem, because I don't even want to...
[1058] Man's bank account isn't everything.
[1059] I would say you and I are equal in a certain deep sense.
[1060] No matter what the bank account says.
[1061] Vum, boom, boom, boom.
[1062] So I wanted to give you some theme music for your moments.
[1063] It's not a little muddy.
[1064] Let me give you the Timberland version.
[1065] Thank you.
[1066] Play that at the club.
[1067] other thing about, like say like Balenciaga is Demina will work with Yay someday.
[1068] And for Cedric and for Francois Pino and Salma is a beautiful human being, five years from now, you'll hear and know the name Yay and know things that we did.
[1069] And Belenziaga is not going to make it on to your questions.
[1070] Would you, would you, as a gambling man, would you bet on that?
[1071] I would bet on that.
[1072] I can see it in your eyes.
[1073] So it was sad, it was actually a sad day for me, not for me, but more for Balenciaga.
[1074] I just, when I heard that, I was just like, oh, shame.
[1075] Let me ask you a silly question.
[1076] Just about Demna, I read something that you two talked about like buttons for a few hours.
[1077] They're my gumdrop buttons.
[1078] Just in that accent.
[1079] Me and Dimloly speaking, Shrek.
[1080] What's your philosophy with which you approach design?
[1081] You are one of the great fashion designers of our time.
[1082] How do you think about it?
[1083] Do you have a philosophy?
[1084] You know what I like about the zipper is the zipper hoodie replaces the dress shirt because you could get on your douchebag shit and like unzipped.
[1085] in and give a little bit of, you know, that type of look.
[1086] Which is the douchebag?
[1087] You know, like when the, you know, the douchebags that go to Vegas and unbutton their dress shirt.
[1088] Yeah, yeah, yeah.
[1089] And the problem with the pullover hoodie is you can't do the douchebag thing when you unbuttoning.
[1090] But then still get the, like, the stomach.
[1091] Because the thing is, the ultimate look would be like, you know, military tank, pull over hoodie.
[1092] And if you get a little hot, you take it.
[1093] off the hoodie, but you're like crazy in shape.
[1094] So it gives you that flexibility.
[1095] Yeah, the zipper's given some flexibility, and it's like maybe you want to keep your jacket on, like it's considered like a hoodie to be like a jacket.
[1096] If you want to keep your jacket on, then you might want to do this as opposed to pulling it all the way off.
[1097] Yeah.
[1098] You know, so, and it's just comfort, but then you get, okay, can I do a job?
[1099] pant on this with elasticity.
[1100] Now, people argue about climate, where we are with the climate, I take a responsibility as being the most influential designer of all time to say we're going to use biodegradable clothing.
[1101] Now, the issue there is the elastic, is not biodegradable.
[1102] So that means it's actually better to use genes and a belt than to have an elastic waistband because elastic waistband is not biodegradable.
[1103] So I use the planet as a big, the future of the planet is a big piece of the way I engineer and the way we talk about where designs are going.
[1104] The constraints on your design and engineering is given by the planet, by the future of the planet.
[1105] Yes.
[1106] That could almost make Jewish people like me again.
[1107] Every time you say Jewish people, I think, I've been maybe reading a little too much about World War II, but, man, I'd recommend you listen to some audiobooks or read some books on the Holocaust because, like, it's a lot.
[1108] heavy it's heavy it will put into context would you impact of your words uh would you read books on the current holocaust that black people are in don't i mean i read uh what have you read about abortion i've read um a lot of short form writing and i've listened to a lot of debates because it's really humbling that the the question of when does life begin is a really difficult question.
[1109] For me, as an engineer and scientist.
[1110] It's a philosophical question.
[1111] I mean, we could just go on population control.
[1112] Not like if abortion is right or wrong.
[1113] We could say factually, the clinics were made by eugenics for population control and it is controlling the population, as is the never being given of 40 acres in a mule so you don't have the opportunity.
[1114] And when the people that do have the opportunity are separated from our people, our tribe, and placed in suburban communities next to, as Chris Rock will put it, the dentist, and, you know, whitewashed and made to shut the fuck up and, you know, vote left or whatever, you know, niggers are supposed to do when we make it, as opposed to saying, okay, we're building schools, we're building up choirs, we're building up our own leagues, basketball teams, our own.
[1115] factories.
[1116] We started the first sportswear factory in America since World War II was actually this factory I put in Cody.
[1117] So I'm 45 years old.
[1118] We're on this journey right now.
[1119] It's the other thing about this.
[1120] It's like people, just in general, they love me so much.
[1121] I'm like actually a hard guy to really hate for a long period of time.
[1122] Just because like, because of like, like my huge cock.
[1123] And that's what I noticed.
[1124] I didn't understand why you showed it to me when we first met, but now I understand.
[1125] Yeah.
[1126] It's very nice.
[1127] Congratulations.
[1128] I know you don't talk about it, but your hat does say 24.
[1129] Yeah.
[1130] If you run for president, what kind of ideas would you represent?
[1131] That were beings with engineering opportunities.
[1132] I would represent, just as you served a platform here, there's something that has.
[1133] on my last run that I thought, I feel I know was brilliant.
[1134] It was noisy, but it was brilliant.
[1135] I had one rally, and in the rally, I just let people come up and I gave them a platform.
[1136] It's our responsibility to listen to the pain and hear the pain and understand, we're the ones that cause the pain, like with my tweet.
[1137] It's my responsibility to hear you and understand why you feel like that, but it's our responsibility as a people to understand each other to give people a voice.
[1138] People need the voice, and even right now, what I'm doing or how God is using me, I'm showing where our voices are being muted.
[1139] There's, professors that are actually intelligent, actually have multiple degrees that have been canceled from their schools.
[1140] And they don't have a music industry or a fan base or a shoe design or a smoking hot ex -wife to complain about.
[1141] They've just got the truth of what they saw and what they dedicated to this country and to education that has been muted by schools that have been and taken over with an agenda.
[1142] And so you want the brightest minds to be these professors and then you mute them and they have nowhere to go and you might get a guy now that went from being someone's favorite professor to he's working at Starbucks like he was back at school or like he was back in high school.
[1143] So even if that voice is about anger and hate it still deserves to be heard.
[1144] Yeah, it deserves to be heard.
[1145] And we deserve to ask why.
[1146] You know, like, you have to ask why.
[1147] I just feel like that's what's, I feel like that is sympathizing Mr. Hugecock.
[1148] I'm just saying that it just needs to be.
[1149] You should change that to your name on Twitter while you're still allowed on there.
[1150] Yeah.
[1151] Do you think that would get censored?
[1152] I feel like they, you know, they definitely cut it down some inches.
[1153] the I'm pointing out this I'm pointing out this truth now I'm saying this is not a Christian thing right and you know I wonder right there when I say these jokes is it something that I because I do feel like laughter is the key engineering and laughter right is the key to peace like when I go get my teeth clean and I have the nitrous there's there's something that I want to go and hug Christianer I want to go and hug Cory Gamble I want to go and hug you know Howard Stern no one wants to hug Howard Stern I mean but you know just if one no no no let's I think I would love to see you two hug it out and make up even though all the shit talking back and forth what about talking it out or is he going to be screaming at me yeah judgmental that kind of stuff.
[1154] No, I hope there's love there.
[1155] You know, the thing is, I think Howard's just jealous.
[1156] You know, not just, not just jealous of my cock.
[1157] He's also, he's jealous that I started my campaign earlier than him.
[1158] You got to let go of that jealousy.
[1159] You got to let go of that jealousy, Howard.
[1160] Howard and everybody else.
[1161] Jealous is a natural human thing, man. I wonder just as a Christian, right, when I joke and say this stuff, it's like, hmm, am I being disobedient to God?
[1162] Because as a boss, right, I'll talk to an employee.
[1163] And I'll be like, why didn't you just listen?
[1164] Because I've got the bigger plan, right?
[1165] So it's like me talking to God, were the things that I did in this interview that were disobedient?
[1166] to God, and for those things, I pray and I repent for anything that I've said that was disobedient to God.
[1167] But humor is not one of them.
[1168] Joking is, I feel like humor is the way we avoid so much suffering in the world.
[1169] It's the way to, it's like a catalyst for love.
[1170] Like, it's a way to, people that have gone to some of the darkest trauma that I've ever met through war, I just came back from Ukraine, they're laughing.
[1171] They're making jokes.
[1172] That's the best way to deal with dark times.
[1173] I don't know what it is about, like, humans.
[1174] I feel like humor, that's the best way to social engineer a good future, I think, is humor.
[1175] Not taking shit too seriously.
[1176] That's the problem with censorship.
[1177] One of the things that really suffer is humor.
[1178] Jokes.
[1179] Maybe going too far in the jokes.
[1180] You mentioned Anthony Jesselnyk.
[1181] That guy goes hard.
[1182] That guy goes really hard, and it's great.
[1183] He crosses all kinds.
[1184] He crosses all the lines, and that's why he's a genius.
[1185] And that's what people feel is refreshing when he does it.
[1186] I don't know what it is.
[1187] But then it's, like, hurtful when I do it.
[1188] But I'll tell you something that was interesting.
[1189] I'm pretty sure Anthony doesn't like, sorry for the assumption, but just most comedians I know didn't vote for Trump.
[1190] That's interesting.
[1191] Not saying there aren't comedians that did, but just the ones I know because I live in California, right?
[1192] But they have an appreciation for Trump because of the sense of humor.
[1193] Yeah.
[1194] I got to ask you about parlor and engineering, because I'm interested about that.
[1195] Doom, doong, doong, do.
[1196] Hey, man, I'm actually trying to hold it together.
[1197] You're pretty offensive towards a lot.
[1198] I'm not looking to be offensive.
[1199] I really want to bring people together and get these sales done.
[1200] I know, but 100 % I see your vision.
[1201] How do we do that?
[1202] But somebody care, well, don't say Jewish media and Jewish control.
[1203] old media.
[1204] J .M. Like, man, you sound like, it sounds too much like 1930s Nazi Germany that was leading up to the atrocities.
[1205] Oh, he would say J .M?
[1206] Yeah, he was branded J .M., that's right.
[1207] No, it's just the implied, like this memified prejudice towards a group.
[1208] in a way that's going to lead to hate.
[1209] And I know you don't mean that.
[1210] I know you have love in your heart.
[1211] You know what was the prejudice towards a group that led to hate?
[1212] BLM.
[1213] BLM took a black person, showed his death on camera.
[1214] Because, okay, there are examples of us being killed and being killed on camera.
[1215] But if it was spread on camera, it was done on purpose by the media because 14, 20 kids get killed in Chicago every week and it's not spread that much.
[1216] They, like you said, singled out a person, directed everything on that person, right, as the martyr and raised the people that hadn't had any.
[1217] We didn't have our 40 acres of a mule.
[1218] We didn't have, you know, like a lot of things, right, like that black people have not ever been given.
[1219] So once we're given just a little bit, like, your life matters, right?
[1220] Then we literally like, oh, okay, now we're being hurt, right?
[1221] But actually, the death toll is up.
[1222] The city where this happened has completely been turned to a war zone.
[1223] They actually, it's actually something like Candace Owens can.
[1224] actually specify this better.
[1225] But it's like its own city or something.
[1226] Like they made it not be a part of the actual state or something.
[1227] It's like DC and stuff.
[1228] It's like Washington, D .C. now and stuff.
[1229] Like, and that has to be from a government, you know, that's got higher level agenda written all over it.
[1230] Yeah, they're using the death of an individual.
[1231] Yeah.
[1232] Sure.
[1233] the media are, not the Jewish media, the media.
[1234] The media is fucked up.
[1235] That machine takes whatever tragedy and pushes it towards whatever narrative that gets more clicks and views and so on.
[1236] Sure, and then politicians do the same.
[1237] They use the media, they influence the media to tell a story.
[1238] And this is a simple thing I put.
[1239] I believe that the idea of anti -Semitism, and the closeness of the Holocaust is used by certain individuals in media to not take accountability for the bad things that are happening.
[1240] And what's happening is there's a new frontier, right?
[1241] Meaning, like, it used to be okay for somebody to be a billionaire.
[1242] We thought about a billionaire, right?
[1243] A lot of times you think I'm actually kind of being out of shape and, you know, 20 years ago, 30 years ago, like Onassis or something.
[1244] Like, you thought about a different way.
[1245] Now you think about a billion, you think about Elon, you think Kim, think yay, you think it's a new kind of billionaire.
[1246] It's not just Soros, this is a billionaire.
[1247] It's a new form of billionaire.
[1248] Well, right now what I'm calling for the industry is I'm calling the industry out and saying like, hey, it just so happens that there's been times where I had my lawyer was Jewish, my regular label was Jewish, but like eight people that basically would collude and talk without me were in groups saying, okay, this is what the tour is going to be, this is this next house, and they were making all these decisions, and they're making all this money.
[1249] and at the end, I was like, I ended my tour and I don't have the money.
[1250] And it just so happens that that's the case that what they were.
[1251] But what I'm saying is, if everyone can say, hey, you can't point out this fact or we're going to say you're anti -Semitic and we're going to call you Hitler, I feel that there has to be at least 1 % of safeguarding the ability to screw the artist based on saying it's anti -Semitic by pointing out that they just so happen to all be Jewish.
[1252] And I don't think that's anti -Semitism.
[1253] I just think that's, hey, this is another thing.
[1254] Like, okay, the Kardashians, when you hear that, do you think male or do you think female?
[1255] You think female?
[1256] You get what I'm saying?
[1257] You think this is the realities.
[1258] This is why rap works, right?
[1259] They're going to make an anti -women thing in a second, right?
[1260] And it's going to say, well, if you point out, that these five women, six women, are having a meeting on where the Christmas party is and none of the ballplayers or rappers that they have babies with have any say so so that Christmas happened at Courtney's house all eight years when I was there.
[1261] And it never happened at anyone else's black family house, right?
[1262] If I'm the one that pointed it out, they just don't have, they don't have their, oh, your anti -Semitic word to say, shut the fuck up.
[1263] Yeah, but.
[1264] Because this is the way it runs and this is the way we want to do it.
[1265] If you say that though that women are silencing the black voice, yes, you're going to get the same response, but especially if it historically resonates.
[1266] But what about the fact that it's true?
[1267] When you talk in groups, that breeds hate.
[1268] When you talk about individuals, it solves problems.
[1269] You're an engineering.
[1270] Okay, but this is something I pointed out on Pierce.
[1271] I said, if a black person gets pulled over with a car and it's three other people in the car, they're also going to jail.
[1272] They're not going to single them out.
[1273] They're going to say, you guys, they're all in collusion.
[1274] I just described collusion five times in this interview, and you keep on going back to this is like 1930, this is like this, this is like that.
[1275] What I'm saying is, look, I want to work with you as a judge.
[1276] engineer to free my people.
[1277] Can we start as a being with engineer opportunities right here?
[1278] I am sorry to the people who had to be hurt and affected by that.
[1279] Now we are here and I'm looking to solve it.
[1280] But what happens is every time, if I talk to any of these business people one by one, because mind you, I didn't get to the tweet by not having a conversation.
[1281] I the conversations beforehand, before I got to the tweet.
[1282] Now we're going to take it to the stage.
[1283] Now we're on the world stage, right?
[1284] And you saw Ari Emanuel do exactly the kind of thing that I was saying had been done behind closed doors.
[1285] Now, he's doing it and open doors.
[1286] They told Candace Owens, I couldn't be on the daily wire.
[1287] Like, you can't even explain yourself.
[1288] And we don't care how you got to that point either.
[1289] And that's fuck.
[1290] up.
[1291] They told Candace you can't be on daily.
[1292] Is that even about, yes, she did.
[1293] That's what they said.
[1294] And you know what?
[1295] And you can have my voice raised or lower.
[1296] I'm going to do it lower, right?
[1297] Because what's happening to me by, I put in your words, the media is saying, not only can you not explain yourself, we don't care how you got to that point.
[1298] You need to apologize and you can't explain.
[1299] And that's the end of the story.
[1300] So just apologize so we can have Mel Gibson.
[1301] and do some more films.
[1302] It's exactly what Ari Emanuel was saying.
[1303] No one is looking to change the problem that led so many people to that same level of frustration.
[1304] And I just so happen to be the one that's not going to back up on it.
[1305] Until this changes.
[1306] Because you know what?
[1307] I'm sorry I had a sleepy text.
[1308] I'm sorry I wrote.
[1309] I'm sorry for everything.
[1310] I'm sorry that I put that I was 512 or 511 on, Tinder, okay?
[1311] My cock is not 14 inches.
[1312] I lied, okay?
[1313] It's only 13.
[1314] So I'm sorry, right?
[1315] So the...
[1316] Why, he's dropping so many facts today.
[1317] So what I'm saying is, but where do we get to this?
[1318] Because even you, as engineering, as intelligent as you are, you, just like everyone else that I saying was colluding, won't let us get to the point of fixing it.
[1319] Yeah, but I'm not, I think you're more powerful than the media.
[1320] I'm not saying you need to apologize because the media.
[1321] I'm saying everything we've been talking about just because I care for you and I want you to be the best possible man you can be.
[1322] To me, a definition of a great man, I'm with Martin Luther King on this.
[1323] You don't talk about Jews or black people.
[1324] You talk about engineering.
[1325] You talk about humanity.
[1326] You solve problems.
[1327] You identify the problems in the world and you don't come from a place of resentment.
[1328] This group did this, this.
[1329] Fuck all that.
[1330] That is in the past.
[1331] You just build solutions.
[1332] I'm going to create a new record label.
[1333] I'm going to create a new design firm.
[1334] I'm going to create a new social network.
[1335] I'm going to do it better.
[1336] I'm going to do it right.
[1337] I'm going to do it right by the people that I know don't have a voice.
[1338] I'm going to give them a voice and talk about that.
[1339] Is it okay to call out collusion?
[1340] Do people collude in your business under you?
[1341] Like the engineers, they come together and, like, say, they collude against the bosses, right?
[1342] You know why Bernard and No offered the deal and took away from me?
[1343] Collusion.
[1344] Because I was too powerful with the collector.
[1345] that I had right there.
[1346] He had to stop that at all costs.
[1347] They said, for whatever reason, this kid, yay, it has the ability to have all of the Kardashians, Jayze and Beyonce, Justin Bieber, Demna, Virgil, all these people in the same room working towards a same goal.
[1348] I've been that person since preschool.
[1349] That's called a leader, right?
[1350] And right now, what I'm saying is, hey, for the people in business, whatever their background is, whether they turn their, whether they turn their cell phones off on Friday or not, there's been some bad business done, there's some bad business practices, and we have to change that because this game is like boxing, more people end up retarded than rich.
[1351] And I'm saying, like, beat to a pope, driven crazy, beat by the media to a pope.
[1352] Right now, the media has done everything they could to make me apologize and to make me look crazy.
[1353] and that one person has done anything to find out why I was frustrated enough to do that tweet.
[1354] And that's facts.
[1355] And that's fucked up.
[1356] Well, I was hoping to.
[1357] I am finding out.
[1358] We found out.
[1359] I mean, but like I want solutions.
[1360] Like, see, there's something about human nature where if you focus too much on resentment.
[1361] We're not focusing on anymore.
[1362] Fuck the resentment.
[1363] We're moving forward.
[1364] Right.
[1365] So there's two things I think that are required for, I mean, this is how I've lived my life for great engineering.
[1366] surround yourself in your personal life by people you trust and then in your professional life from the engineering perspective with a team with an incredible team and everything else doesn't matter that allows you not to focus on other groups how they're fucking you over how they're like trying to manipulate or collude and all that kind of stuff you focus on solutions and you find a way around all the difficult shit that's it if you have people in your life you can trust like lifelong you said like some people you're with for the summer for a year find people you can be with for your whole life do you have people in your life that you trust like really trust no i trust god at any point a human being can you like i could like if i like go and like really you know treat this guy like a piece of shit or do this da da da am i supposed to you know trust them to be loyal and stay in the situation.
[1367] No, I trust people to be people, and people are flawed.
[1368] And people can have the right intentions, but it only makes sense for us to work together when our agendas align.
[1369] When Kim was pulled really far to the left, our agenda is no longer, you know, aligned so that made the marriage impossible.
[1370] It aligned where it's like, oh, I could wear a red hat.
[1371] that can help her to get Alice Johnson out of jail because Trump's willing to do that for my wife because I was the only person in my position that stood up and said, wait a sick, I like you.
[1372] But isn't there a deeper agenda, the human agenda of just being in love?
[1373] Like, that's just politics.
[1374] What you're talking about, red hat is just politics, right?
[1375] I mean, the world is becoming more and more transactional every day.
[1376] And actually, marriages were actually originally based on transactions.
[1377] You know, and that's why they're less needed, the more.
[1378] autonomous as we come, or the world makes it less needed.
[1379] I feel like we do need each other.
[1380] I feel like we do need someone we can always, you know, count on.
[1381] It's like I'm yay, pulled away by King Cooper, which is the media, the politics, the promise, oh, we're going to keep you safe.
[1382] So the thing, the reason why I get, you know, really frustrated with Chris Jenner is she says losing Rob Kardashian was the greatest mistake of her life, but she never gave Kim's hands.
[1383] over in marriage because this is the bottom line.
[1384] When me and Kim met, we were millionaires or whatever, right?
[1385] You're telling me you just hand her hand over in marriage that your daughter's not successful, handing your hand over in marriage too.
[1386] But no, she had to still be the husband to all of her daughters.
[1387] And we see what the results are consistently.
[1388] So that's where I get, you know, frustrated.
[1389] It's like let that go.
[1390] Let this person do what you made mistakes on.
[1391] Don't make this person relive those same mistakes and then put that agenda into my daughters too.
[1392] Is there somebody in your life close to you that, that you trust enough to call you out in your bullshit?
[1393] We're all full of shit sometimes.
[1394] What's my bullshit?
[1395] Well, some of it I pointed out today, but I don't know you deeply enough.
[1396] What was the bullshit?
[1397] What was the bullshit?
[1398] Jewish media, Jewish.
[1399] That's not bullshit.
[1400] The bullshit is that the Jewish people won't admit.
[1401] Your dad was right.
[1402] Your dad was right.
[1403] The words you used, the, you weren't.
[1404] And I said it.
[1405] You're not going to make me say it 800 more times.
[1406] I don't know if it resonated because you keep saying like the words.
[1407] Did it resonate to y 'all that y 'all ain't do nothing about it?
[1408] And that all y 'all want to do is have somebody apologize and sweep under the rug.
[1409] Your bullshit that you've been doing the whole time.
[1410] You own the same bullshit as the other people So you're doing the same thing That the other, let's say media Because I'm not allowed to say has done So until somebody stands up Which is what man Is this what?
[1411] Is, I'm trying to call you out in your bullshit Because I hope I'm somebody you can trust I don't fucking trust you Well, you should find people in your life You can trust.
[1412] Don't tell me what I should do I'm not one of your BLM marchers Listen, I'm with you on the BLM a lot of organizations use tragedy and I watched the Candace Owens's documentary and what was your take on it I think it's important to question the mainstream narratives but I don't agree with it I still believe that George Floyd died from the knee of the cop not from fentanyl and and even if that was the case there's still 50 % of black deaths is actually abortion.
[1413] So let's get into engineering.
[1414] Let's just go.
[1415] How do you fix that?
[1416] Population control is social engineering.
[1417] And it's most literal form.
[1418] The blacks are under population control.
[1419] That's something that, I mean, that's just what it is.
[1420] African Americans are not choosing to get at the abortion.
[1421] I mean, it's a choice.
[1422] It's an individual choice.
[1423] But we're being influenced to.
[1424] Well, then speak to the community and help.
[1425] I mean, I don't know what the engineering solutions there are.
[1426] It could be you are doing that in part by speaking to the value and the power of family.
[1427] Well, watch this.
[1428] I was building shelters.
[1429] I bought land in Calabasas.
[1430] I bought two ranches in Wyoming.
[1431] 300 acres in Calabasas, 12 ,000 acres in total in Wyoming.
[1432] And I started building ideas for shelters.
[1433] And God set it on my heart to make monasteries, which would be modern day facilities that don't turn people down, that have farms, that have shelter, clothing, but first of all, water, first of all, knowledge, because knowledge is the most important resource to our species above water, knowledge itself, because then you can go get water.
[1434] I mean, you could argue, like if you're a baby, how do you work?
[1435] But the baby doesn't have it.
[1436] You know, so someone with the knowledge then feeds the baby, the water.
[1437] But it's important that those with the knowledge teach the baby how to find the water themselves.
[1438] And the business people that I've been dealing with have been keeping the baby sick by not sharing the information and the knowledge within side of those contracts.
[1439] My people are sick.
[1440] If I load up Apple music right now and I play the top songs in the rap chart, I will tell you my people are sick.
[1441] If I go to the restaurants in opportunity zones and we look at the calorie rating and the cholesterol, I will tell you that my people are sick If we look at the obesity rate, if you go to just a restaurant somewhere in middle America, Denny's or something, I went to Denny's the other day, you would see that my people are sick, and my people meaning all people, right, but black people are very influential to all people.
[1442] So, right, if so, if the media picks an overweight black woman, it says this is body goals, then the media are influencing my people to stay safe.
[1443] And it just so happens that that night, I was so frustrated after 20 years that I had to call it out in one tweet that now, even if I say, hey, okay, I was frustrated for these reasons.
[1444] Now it's not good enough.
[1445] You've literally tried to make me re -apologized 10 times in this meeting, re -say this, re -say that, but it doesn't change the fact that.
[1446] My people are sick, and I'm the only person in my position that will say that my people are sick.
[1447] Today, not 30 years ago, not 60 years.
[1448] My people are sick today.
[1449] 50 % of my peoples of deaths are abortion today.
[1450] My people don't have the opportunities today, even to the point that because if J .P. Morgan have been nice to me, and if Alex Klein and STEM player had been fair to me, different things, then I wouldn't even point it out that we don't have any black.
[1451] We have two black engineers.
[1452] So I have to have a responsibility, obviously to all people, but specifically to my tribe, because tribes, tribes move.
[1453] You know, tribalism is real with black people to separate the brightest from the tribe or to separate the leaders.
[1454] It is factual that the CIA removed the leaders from the black community, put crack in the communities, put guns in the communities, and locked up all the leaders and called them gang lead, right?
[1455] Locked up all the leaders, locked up all the leaders, locked up.
[1456] of all the fathers, now 72 % of black mothers are raising children by themselves.
[1457] This is agenda like a Tuskegee experiment set on my people, right?
[1458] And what I'm calling out for the black people in entertainment is, what are we doing?
[1459] We have to collude.
[1460] And if we don't collude, because even if I said, hey, I'd like to make a company that's all black, right?
[1461] Is that okay for me to say?
[1462] Is that okay for me to say?
[1463] Or is that anti -Semitic?
[1464] See, if I hadn't crossed the line so far, then that would have sounded anti -Semitic.
[1465] Now I've stretched a bit, so now we can go to, okay, let's make an all -black company.
[1466] But that would have been anti -Semitic, just that concept, because you could word that in a different way that would sound anti -Semitic.
[1467] I don't know, man. I have to be...
[1468] No, no, listen.
[1469] If you were, if I said I didn't want to have the Jewish people in the company, Would that be anti -Semitic?
[1470] It would sound like it, right?
[1471] You'd say I'm from 1930s, right?
[1472] Yeah.
[1473] But for me as a tribe to say, no, I want an all -black company, right?
[1474] I'm generally against that kind of thing, but first of all, you have the right to do whatever the hell you want.
[1475] Well, what I'm saying is that's what I feel may need to happen for my people to have power again, because when my people have been left under the media's control, we've been made sick.
[1476] We've been allowed to be sick.
[1477] and we're promoting sickness.
[1478] I think, at least in the engineering realm, I haven't met an engineer who happens to be black who would like to be called a black engineer.
[1479] And when you have a company of all black people that are engineers, I don't know the creative arts, I apologize, but engineering, they really try to look at each other as humans and look at the problem.
[1480] And you want to know, you want to have the confidence that everybody on the team, is the best possible person for the job.
[1481] What I can say is the world is sick and I have slight images of utopia, slight images of happiness, slight images as a visionary and a creator.
[1482] And I know for fact the way that business deals have been done for me are keeping the world sick.
[1483] Fix them.
[1484] I see that's what you're trying to do.
[1485] And you probably, listen, people should not doubt, yay.
[1486] But I got to tell you, I have to be honest, this is silly because you don't know me. But it hurt when you say you don't trust me. You kind of lost me. I don't think anyone's ever said that to me. I don't know, man. Fuck that.
[1487] I don't care about views or clickbait or any of that bullshit.
[1488] I just thought you were one of the greatest artists ever.
[1489] It'd be cool to talk to you.
[1490] And I just, I feel like you got pain you're working through.
[1491] And never had anyone say that to me. Maybe I'm just being a mess about it, I guess.
[1492] That's fucked up, though.
[1493] But maybe it's not.
[1494] Maybe you shouldn't trust it.
[1495] But I just haven't had that experience.
[1496] Yeah.
[1497] Do you think I would trust anybody at this point in my life?
[1498] Yeah, it's tough.
[1499] It's tough.
[1500] It's tough.
[1501] I hear you.
[1502] And it's also kind of, good to see how much strength you got.
[1503] You're not broken by any of this.
[1504] You're under a lot of attack, a lot of attack by a lot of people.
[1505] You have a vision and you're trying to feel your way through it.
[1506] And you might get destroyed for it.
[1507] That's the human, that's the risk you take.
[1508] It's a wonderful life, though.
[1509] What do you hope your legacy is?
[1510] To be forgotten.
[1511] Do you think you'd be forgotten?
[1512] Because the memory, There's ego and memory in the memories.
[1513] Who designed the sidewalk?
[1514] Who designed the water fountain?
[1515] Who designed the stop sign?
[1516] Who designed the stoplight?
[1517] These things are so ubiquitous that the person that designed them is forgotten.
[1518] If it's a good idea, it's a God idea.
[1519] And no VCs can own it.
[1520] So you want your design.
[1521] in all realms of life to be so simple that they permeate everything, they take over, and you're forgotten.
[1522] That's a successful design, is you're forgotten?
[1523] Yes.
[1524] Do you have advice for people?
[1525] A lot, a lot, a lot of young people look up to you.
[1526] You have advice for young people of how to live a life they can be proud of.
[1527] Don't tweet while you're sleepy.
[1528] Take a nap?
[1529] Clearly, there's other things.
[1530] I love the humor.
[1531] Don't take it seriously, I suppose, is what that means.
[1532] Don't send sleepy tweets.
[1533] Unless you buy your own social platform the very next week, call a parlor.
[1534] But other than that, if you're not going to buy your own social platform, then don't.
[1535] Is that why you bought parlors so you could be sleepy and send messages out into the wild?
[1536] I actually am really interested in the engineering aspects of parlor.
[1537] Is there a vision there?
[1538] Because I'm also super interested in Elon buying Twitter.
[1539] I like Instagram better than Twitter.
[1540] And I'm sure Mark Zuckerberg liked Instagram better than Facebook or saw how, you know, how valuable that was and he bought it.
[1541] So you'd like to take parlor or something.
[1542] Whatever is the magic that makes Instagram work, you'll want to push it there.
[1543] Well, I thought it was interesting how it felt like Snapchat made the Kardashians bully Instagram.
[1544] What's the point of Snapchat going to war on Instagram?
[1545] Yeah, I mean, just everyone wants to say, well, this is our value, Snapchat.
[1546] You know, no one wants to lose their value to someone else's value, whatever.
[1547] It's like, and everything is just, what's the difference between permanent and temporary?
[1548] You know, is just a permanent structure?
[1549] And until God says it's not, you know, it's like nothing's permanent.
[1550] Our life is not permanent.
[1551] So how do we just let go those things?
[1552] Even like going from the name Kanye Westier was the beginning of just letting go of some things, of these titles.
[1553] Like we need to remove the titles like, hey, if I have to leave Adidas and I have to go next computers, that may take me out of the billionaire standing altogether.
[1554] And I got to get low for however long God says I have to get low and refocus.
[1555] I've been reshaping, refocusing my staff.
[1556] I had some people that were good and I had some people that weren't.
[1557] I had too many people and I've got a vision inside of me and I'm like, this is how I make this vision.
[1558] I have to bring this vision to life.
[1559] I have to bring these houses to life.
[1560] I was talking to one of our architects on, you know, we're actually getting close on it.
[1561] I've like built it a few times.
[1562] I had like the domes you probably saw and how he transformed Kim's house and, you know, we're getting there.
[1563] So you don't get into architecture.
[1564] Like you really want this to become physical reality.
[1565] Yes.
[1566] And I've got close.
[1567] Rome wasn't built to the day.
[1568] Yeah, but Rome had to start somewhere.
[1569] Yeah.
[1570] I got to call you out on the advice.
[1571] There really is a lot of people that look up to you.
[1572] And you've lived a really difficult life.
[1573] And you made it through all of it.
[1574] what do you advise them to do?
[1575] Do everything that you feel.
[1576] Even if you are told that it's the wrong thing.
[1577] No, no, no, no, no. But not anything violent.
[1578] Do what you feel, say what you feel.
[1579] Like trust your heart.
[1580] Yeah, trust your gut.
[1581] Trust your instincts because that instinct is who God made you to be.
[1582] Not, you know, what lines up what you're like, frat brothers or what lines.
[1583] up with what your dad wanted or what lines up with your classmates or, you know, it's just God has something inside in you.
[1584] And when you walk down the street, you're thinking about it and then you just see it in the window.
[1585] And you go down another street, you see the same thing.
[1586] Or you're thinking about a number and that number pops up or you see it on a license plate.
[1587] And that's just, you know, something is trying to say be the maximum.
[1588] Yay.
[1589] you know, be the maximum you.
[1590] And God won't give you anything that you can't handle.
[1591] So for me, everything is a yes.
[1592] I think they say be like water.
[1593] I know Bruce Lee said that.
[1594] Or matter of fact, just be.
[1595] Because we are beings with engineering opportunities.
[1596] Beautifully put.
[1597] Yay.
[1598] I have hope.
[1599] that however this turns out that you have the skill and the capacity to really add love to the world and I hope you do that.
[1600] I really, really hope you do that.
[1601] And we talked about the tension of that, the challenges and the opportunities of that.
[1602] I mean, I see how we could be of use to each other.
[1603] You actually have a particular thing for me as I eject from media.
[1604] Because even also, So you know, I'm really big of, like, you know, burning the Phoenix, too.
[1605] All you know is an engineer that your cells completely regenerate every seven years, I think I rushed the process a little bit, so I run around looking like a burn victim sometimes.
[1606] Yeah.
[1607] But I got to tell you, anyone I am close with, I work with, there has to be trust, there has to be love.
[1608] And I think you've been burned quite a bit in your life.
[1609] Sometimes I did it myself.
[1610] I put my hand on the stove.
[1611] So how do we get to engineering?
[1612] There's a deal to be done here.
[1613] Not saying you're making this money off of that.
[1614] I'm making that money off.
[1615] I don't care about money, by the way.
[1616] Same, twins.
[1617] So there's dealings here.
[1618] You got pain.
[1619] I got pain.
[1620] But we're beings with engineering opportunities.
[1621] For a long time, I thought somebody should create a new social network.
[1622] And it looks like great engineering can do that.
[1623] You got two at one time from two of your homeboys at one time.
[1624] Yeah.
[1625] And that's a great way to, I mean, every, you know, it can be done from scratch or it can be done a new with an already established platform.
[1626] Yeah.
[1627] I'm very excited by that possibility.
[1628] A parlor is smaller.
[1629] Twitter is larger.
[1630] I wonder whether you can do any kind of revolutionary engineering with a large company.
[1631] If anyone can, I would say it's Elon.
[1632] Well, Elon can look at what we do over here.
[1633] That's why I like, God does this a lot of times.
[1634] He, He creates doppelgangers.
[1635] There's a lot of examples where theory happened, two places at one time.
[1636] A really similar type of personality happens at one time.
[1637] It's weird.
[1638] It's beautiful.
[1639] It's hilarious, actually.
[1640] It's kind of humorous.
[1641] So we should just share every piece of information together as I go Bill Parlor and as he builds up Twitter and see how to make both those better.
[1642] But I'll be like, hey, I'm not going to let Snapchat bully me out of, you know, adding something to it that's best.
[1643] It should just be the best platform possible.
[1644] That means that, you know, that means TikTok has amazing features.
[1645] Twitter has amazing things about it.
[1646] I know this girl that's like I like Instagram better than Twitter is just, she likes it, Twitter has porn.
[1647] But other than that, Instagram.
[1648] But I was like, well, Instagram is porn also.
[1649] It's like soft.
[1650] It's more subtle.
[1651] It's not telling you.
[1652] It's not conservative by any means.
[1653] You know, and...
[1654] I mean, that's the thing.
[1655] You have to please a lot of people with these platforms.
[1656] And I think the goal of a platform should be to help individuals maximize their long -term happiness and growth, like intellectually, spiritually, all of that.
[1657] And it's a tricky thing to figure out how to do that.
[1658] Of course, you could just have a platform which is just strictly for fun.
[1659] I think that's where TikTok leans.
[1660] But I think there's a balance to strike.
[1661] Like Twitter, there's a lot of intellectual philosophical stuff going on on Twitter, but it somehow currently makes it too easy to be divisive and hateful towards each other and cancel and all that kind of stuff.
[1662] I think we need to have these healthy conversations.
[1663] That's what it is.
[1664] healthy conversations, healthy dialogues.
[1665] That's the biggest thing like when I first wore the red hat, the conversation is less healthy than it is today.
[1666] The conversation about George Floyd, you know, it's like, did I send the tweet the right way?
[1667] Did, is Candace Owens documentary perfect?
[1668] Is it what Michael Moore, is that documentary is perfect, a century self?
[1669] Is it fully accurate?
[1670] it.
[1671] You know, it's two to three hours of a transmit of information through a particularly, usually one person's view.
[1672] And anything you want to research, if you're interested in it, you got to look at 10 versions of it, 20 versions of it.
[1673] George Floyd, we've looked at one version of that.
[1674] Now we have a second.
[1675] Well, by the time we get to the, you know, I know, I know this.
[1676] This is like, it's not my last hoodie, but it's definitely not my first hoodie that I put on.
[1677] You know, it's like, that's how we got to.
[1678] Like, even this particular size of zipper or the fact that, you know, for people who know, they know that it's like Carhart, even though the Carhart tag isn't there anymore, you just know by the shape of it, you fill it.
[1679] So it abstracts.
[1680] It takes into like this cubist place like Picasso or Matisse or African.
[1681] cubism or dire straits money for nothing and your chicks for free look at it i wouldn't think you could reference uh dire straits look at you that video yeah i know it's a great video that your your encyclopedic knowledge of music is great i think that you know porn is not just sexual that term actually relates to torture like you have i'm saying like watching people beat each other up on on world star or something you know it's like that's called torture There's also food porn.
[1682] How do you explain that?
[1683] What's food porn?
[1684] Food porn is like looking at really delicious cakes and cookies and steak and so on and you're like, holy shit.
[1685] Exactly.
[1686] Architecture.
[1687] Like there's people who love architecture.
[1688] When they see architecture, I know, I got friends, they'll be like, oh, that's porn.
[1689] Yeah.
[1690] Architecture.
[1691] Yeah.
[1692] Yeah.
[1693] It's like, uh, that's like love, like dopamine -fueled love for a thing.
[1694] Yeah, we need, that's beautiful.
[1695] I think that's beautiful.
[1696] I think as long as nobody's getting hurt.
[1697] The intoxication that people have, you know, the worst part is like when one person's in love and the other person's in like.
[1698] That's us right now.
[1699] Well, who's in like?
[1700] No, because you said you love Bill Maher and you like me. And I love you.
[1701] So that was.
[1702] No, I actually love you both.
[1703] All right.
[1704] All right.
[1705] And the funny thing is like, um, as a. a, as a visionary.
[1706] Visionaries are more extreme than business people.
[1707] Because a visionary would do bad business for their vision.
[1708] A business person will never do bad business.
[1709] It's well put.
[1710] Yeah.
[1711] It's really well put.
[1712] So when you say, I don't care about money, it's like, yeah, I feel you.
[1713] Like, I feel that I care in a way that I need that.
[1714] But...
[1715] I care about the vision that I have to a Steve Jobs level to the point of putting that above my regular human existence, meaning having to go and take all the arrows, that I become a soldier of division because someone could say, a wife could say, say to, like say like in the 60s, their husband's about to go to war.
[1716] The wife may not want their husband to go to war because of their children, but he's going to war because of their children.
[1717] Definitely.
[1718] Do you regret any aspect of just giving everything to your vision?
[1719] I mean, you've spoken about that, saying, like, I got fucked over in the business side.
[1720] I promise that I had to stop envying cool people at their current cool time.
[1721] If anything, if someone's cool and I say their name a lot, I'm going to flash the light on them so much that it ages their coolness.
[1722] It's actually a war technique, showered in compliments.
[1723] Yeah.
[1724] You know, because that you, to be able to stay at 45 years old to still be the bad kid in class, at 45, I'm still in the principal's office.
[1725] Because if you look at, like, say, fashion, right?
[1726] If you think of something fashionable, it's probably going to look like the kid in the principal's office.
[1727] That's going to be the fashion.
[1728] And that's part of the reason why I'm the most influential person and fashion.
[1729] And fashion, because I refuse to leave the principal's office.
[1730] If the substitute teacher comes in, I'm going to say, you got a big butt.
[1731] Yeah.
[1732] And I'm going to get right back, right back to the principal's office.
[1733] And people are going to be like, yo, and that's what you keep on saying.
[1734] Like, who can we talk to?
[1735] Because no one can talk to me. No one, I'm out of control, bro.
[1736] It's just God, then me, and then fuck.
[1737] everybody you know what I mean that's how that's really how I live my life and I just want to say this one thing about the children thing I wanted to you know put that point together put that idea together that I don't like the word point I'm really big on like words words being powerful says the person with the sleepy tweet so you're full of contradictions yeah I'm human being right it's like some days I'm like I could go 30 days to be celibate you know like really like I'm a monk I'm being like faithful to God and then And I'll go like working out.
[1738] No carbs.
[1739] Like my weight will fluctuate.
[1740] And I'll have times.
[1741] I'm like, I don't feel like being told what to do.
[1742] So I don't want to work out with a trainer.
[1743] And I just want to drink this Hennessy.
[1744] But I want to say this thing that I will text to Kim sometimes.
[1745] I'll say, you know, you may not understand what I'm doing right now, but you will.
[1746] And that's what I would say to everyone.
[1747] You may not understand what I'm doing.
[1748] And this.
[1749] This gives a little bit, maybe we're like 20 % there, but there's still going to be people.
[1750] We leave this interview and they were like, I still don't like the way he apologized.
[1751] I still don't want to say what my involvement would have been to make him, lead him to that point.
[1752] And we just want things to be how they are.
[1753] There's people in the world who want the world to stay as it is, and there's people who want to change the world.
[1754] And that's happened throughout time.
[1755] They say that with Da Vinci, halfway into a conversation, he could not suffer fools.
[1756] much that he would walk away halfway into the conversation.
[1757] And I said, well, that's why it's the Da Vinci Code and not the DaVinci World.
[1758] And every time I go and piss off a group of people or do these things, on some end, it's like I could be turning my thing from a potential world vision to a code, or I could be opening up conversations with new friends that I may trust someday.
[1759] Yeah.
[1760] That's beautiful.
[1761] That's beautiful.
[1762] That, that because the change you will have on the world that you don't know for sure, but it'll happen across years, even decades, so you have to think in the future.
[1763] Like, you're working in the future.
[1764] Your actions are working in the future.
[1765] And a lot of people will judge this conversation and others you've done and so on in the present, and that doesn't matter.
[1766] You know why I apologize, why I say I'm sorry to the Jewish people that I hurt.
[1767] It's not about, like I said, oh, I've said, I'm not going to hold this apology hostage, right?
[1768] It's obviously it's about God, but God is everything, right?
[1769] So what's the point of having language and being, you can't engineer if you said, God, God, God, right?
[1770] It's like, it's God asks us to be judgmental so that you become, if you're a doctor, right?
[1771] It's your judgment that saves grandma, right?
[1772] And God puts that in this.
[1773] Like, we have God inside us.
[1774] We're a peace of God also, right?
[1775] So I'm going to go specific to a person.
[1776] That story about Da Vinci alone is enough of a reason for me to give a sincere apology to the Jewish people, because I do believe that there's a Da Vinci code inside of all of my misspellings and scribbles right here that God wants me to get to the world.
[1777] And when I, I'm in my way, if God has set something on me, when I'm in my way, I'm in God's way.
[1778] Now, I can point at other people and say, hey, you guys are in God's way because you're not listening to me. But if I'm in my way, I'm not listening to God.
[1779] And for me to be a philosopher and a leader, whatever other language, I have to listen to God.
[1780] So before God, what I will do is start off as a samurai and say, I'm sorry for hurting you as a Jewish person.
[1781] I'm sorry for the way that made you feel.
[1782] And I'm sorry for the entire population of a race that I feel is actually my brothers, because I classify and feel that I'm also connected with Christ in that way, that my people came from Africa in that way.
[1783] And I can't say it's this exact teaching or that exact teaching, But I feel that there's an important, you know, the sons of Abraham, however we want to word it, right, for us to come together and bring our different talents together to serve God collectively.
[1784] And he, as much of an alien as I am, he does not call me, he did not call for me to alienate.
[1785] And that's what the problem has been, especially in politics and in America.
[1786] He plays America as the TV, as the radio to the world.
[1787] We invented rock and roll.
[1788] right, we are the influencers of the rest of the planet.
[1789] We're the, we're the youngest startup in history, right?
[1790] We're the youngest country.
[1791] We're the youngest superpower, right?
[1792] So for me and my position, the fact that I can talk to Trump one day and be at a game with Kim Kardashian the next day and then be at Paris Fashion Week, they don't want me to be involved with language of decisive, divisive language, you know, proving that I can be just, as racist as a racist white person.
[1793] Oh, I can be a racist black person also.
[1794] That's not what God has called me to do.
[1795] So how do I simplify and say, hey, to you as a visionary, as an engineer, as a person that's given me a platform that, as my brother, I want to apologize to you for how that made you feel and to the rest of the people that carry specifically that pain, not the pain that I talk about, that doesn't seem to be as much of a pain for people when I talk about the abortion clinics and stuff.
[1796] That's, it's like, that's the argued pain even in my own community.
[1797] Like, not everyone thinks that's a pain.
[1798] But for the Jewish community, it's collectively this was a pain.
[1799] And I've gone, I've gone so far just psychologically on this journey since that statement it happened, where I didn't want to, like, give up the candy in my pocket.
[1800] I didn't want to say, hey, I stuck my hand in the candy jar.
[1801] I wanted to defend my freedom of speech.
[1802] I wanted this.
[1803] But even with freedom of speech, pain is pain.
[1804] Causing people to hurt is not helping.
[1805] Causing people to hurt is not helping.
[1806] So that means I have to take a more sophisticated approach to engineering this problem, This problem is the opportunity.
[1807] And yes, that what could some people may deem as a mistake, would it be more genuine if I called it a mistake?
[1808] I think I would be hypocritical by calling a mistake with the ending of that, the idea I'm going to say out loud.
[1809] So I'm not, I don't try to be a hypocrite on purpose.
[1810] So, but I will call it a mistake to add a genuine, to be genuine.
[1811] about the feeling.
[1812] With that mistake, with me as a human being, not to justify it, but I have to state that God makes no mistakes, because if I hadn't made that mistake, I wouldn't be in front of you today.
[1813] And that's not to justify this sleepy text.
[1814] But I can tell you a man that has love in his heart, and I hear that.
[1815] I hear it through the words explicitly implicitly.
[1816] And I think if we were to engineer a better future, the way to do that is with love.
[1817] So as one human to another, I love you, brother.
[1818] Thank you for talking today.
[1819] This is great.
[1820] I like you too.
[1821] Son of a bit.
[1822] Thanks for listening to this conversation with Yeh, formerly known as Kanye West.
[1823] To support this podcast, please check out our sponsors in the description.
[1824] And now, let me leave you with some words from Yeh himself.
[1825] nothing in life is promised except death thank you for listening and hope to see you next time