Last Day of bLaCk HiStOrY mOnTh! | Tue. 2-28-23
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"I can't breathe!" BLM crying wolf! Slave/owner descendents' "reconciliation ceremony"! Do Hispanics work hard? Calls in 2nd Hour!
Catch Joel Friday TV on YouTube after Hake today!
0:00:00 Tue, Feb 28, 2023 AD
0:02:11 Hey, guys! BOND tee
0:05:30 I can't breathe! They killing me! (Repeat)
0:18:33 Trump 2019: You built this nation!
0:25:41 Whites apologizing to blacks for slavery
0:49:30 Hispanics work the fields in the rain!
0:57:41 "Ain't No Monkeys in My Family Tree" - Knights of the New Crusade
0:59:50 Supers: Energy scam, Paul vs Jesus, etc.
1:08:17 FREDERICK: Victimhood pays off. Give all you have to the poor.
1:20:22 Hake talks more on giving and the Bible
1:22:32 TONY, CA: Why are y'all so violent to your own family?
1:32:54 Biden wants POC from India head of World Bank
1:35:01 Tommy Fury beat Jake Paul!
1:36:15 Lori Lightfoot re-election; Ron DeSantis autobiography
1:38:08 LAWRENCE, ID (Anaheim): I work hard! Callers infuriating!
1:43:44 LAWRENCE: World Bank, slavery, I like your show!
1:47:03 DANIEL, TX: Will blacks grow? Advice for whites?
1:51:32 Thanks, all! Call me tomorrow! Last supers…
1:52:16 "Fourth Man (Daniel 3)" - Stephen Wiley (1988, Rap It Up)
BLOG https://www.thehakereport.com/blog/2023/2/28/the-hake-report-tue-2-28-23
ALSO ON SUBSTACK / PODCAST https://thehakereport.substack.com
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SEE ALSO Hake News on The JLP Show | Appearances elsewhere (other shows, etc.)
SHOW NOTES | Tue. 2-28-23
MUSIC: "Fourth Man (Daniel 3)" - Stephen Wiley (1988, Rap It Up) //
TO GET TO
“I CAN’T BREATHE”
CLIP 14a (OrangeCoSheriff) This is the moment OCSO deputies apprehended Keith Moses, who shot five people on Feb. 22, killing three: 38-year-old Nathacha Augustin, 9-year-old T’yonna Major and @MyNews13 reporter Dylan Lyons. …1:22
CLIP 14b funny, he keeps saying “i can’t breathe” and “they’re killing me” … 1:48
(Fox35Orlando, Feb 22) Keith Melvin Moses: What we know about suspect in deadly Pine Hills shooting
REPLY: (MrAndyNgo) The mass murder suspect tried using the #BLM trick of repeatedly shouting, "I can't breathe" and "They're killing me!" The Atlanta Antifa domestic terror suspects, who are white, recently tried the same thing following a violent attack last month.
CLIP 14c: QUOTE TWEETED: (Jan 21, 2023, MrAndyNgo) Far-left extremists arrested at the violent attack in downtown #Atlanta all tried pulling a George Floyd by screaming, "I can't breathe." #Antifa & other far-left extremists gathered for a revenge riot over the death of their gunman at the autonomous zone. … 0:34
(he shares a video posted by a guy who apparently is calling cops thugs, in reply to (Atlanta Journal-Constitution ajc) What started as a peaceful protest at Underground Atlanta on [that] Saturday evening apparently turned violent when marchers headed downtown, with a police car afire and business windows broken.
TRUMP 2019: African Americans built this country
CLIP 11 (kylegriffin1 Oct 4, 2019) Trump: "African Americans built this nation. You built this nation. You know, you're just starting to get real credit for that, OK? I don't know if you know that ... You built the nation. We all built it. But you were such a massive part of it. Bigger than you were given credit." …
Video: (CNBC) President Trump speaks at Young Black Leadership Summit – 10/4/2019 (1:17:47)
Video: (Factbase videos) Speech: Donald Trump Addresses the 2020 Young Black Leadership Summit - October 4, 2019 (43:00)
Article: ‘You built the nation’: Trump courts black voters in White House mini-rally - POLITICO by Nolan D. McCaskill
President Donald Trump held what amounted to a mini-rally with nearly 300 young black supporters inside the White House on Friday, replete with campaign-style chants of “USA!” and “four more years!”
“You broke the sound barrier,” Trump told the audience of African American students and young professionals, who greeted him with chants and cheers inside the White House’s East Room. “I’ve never heard it quite like that, and I appreciate it. We love you.”
With an eye on the 2020 election, the president delivered his pitch to black voters — and aired his grievances — in true Trumpian fashion. He not only touted historically low unemployment among black Americans but also conducted a roll call of his top black supporters, calling out some of his African American critics while slamming Democrats and the news media along the way.
At one point, Trump also credited African Americans for building the country, a seeming reference to their ancestors’ role as slaves.
“You know, you’re just starting to get real credit for that, OK,” Trump said. “I don’t know if you know that, you’re just starting to get — you built the nation. We all built it, but you were such a massive part of it. Bigger than you were given credit for. Does that make sense?”
It was a stark contrast from the president who over the summer told four progressive congresswomen of color to go back to where they came from and blasted Maryland Rep. Elijah Cummings’ congressional district as “a disgusting, rat and rodent infested mess.”
Friday’s speech marked the second time in the past month Trump participated in an event with an overwhelmingly black audience. In September, he addressed leaders of historically black colleges and universities.
Trump made both broad and personal appeals to black voters Friday. He praised conservative commentators Candace Owens and Terrence Williams and White House aide Ja’Ron Smith, individually inviting each of them to join him on stage. Trump complimented Smith for his role with the White House and commended Owens for her television appearances and Williams for his tweets about actress Debra Messing, a Trump foil.
Owens, Trump said, is a “star” who is not only “tough” but also “beautiful.”
“Under the #MeToo generation, we’re not allowed to say it,” Trump said. “So all of you young, brilliant guys, never, ever call a woman beautiful, please. You’re not allowed to do it.”
Transcript: Remarks by President Trump at Young Black Leadership Summit 2019 – The White House (Archive)
BARF: whites apologizing to [b]lacks for slavery in NPR family “reconciliation” article
(Pocket) Code Switch: 1 side owned slaves. The other side started Black History Month. How a family heals (2/19/23, updated 2/23)
There are many things from childhood that Brett Woodson Bailey doesn't remember. Maybe it has to do with his cancer diagnosis at age 4 (NO WONDER HE SO SICKLY, NO OFFENSE!), living in the hospital for almost two years, undergoing intense courses of radiation and chemotherapy. He thinks that plays a part in why so much of his childhood is "hazy."
Forgetting after all, is a side effect of trauma.
But one moment he remembers clearly is his mother, Adele, sitting him down when he was in middle school, telling him that he was the descendant of a famous, important man.
You are the great great grandnephew of Carter G. Woodson, she told him. Woodson is the man behind Negro history week, which ultimately became Black History Month. She said Brett should be proud of this fact, he should even brag about it.
Brett is not the braggy type. Now 20, he's a soft-spoken and thoughtful sophomore at the University of California, Santa Cruz, majoring in environmental science, with dreams of becoming a wildlife biologist.
…. In 1926, Woodson created Negro history week, anchoring it between the birthdays of Abraham Lincoln and Frederick Douglass. In the 1970s the week officially expanded to a month.
Woodson helped pioneer the field of African American history, especially when it comes to education, and he fiercely believed that Black history should not be a separate, segregated thing, that our histories are intertwined.
…. Brett knows that surviving is no simple feat, especially when you are Black in America. "I am my ancestors wildest dreams," the aphorism goes. Then there is Brett's own experience with cancer — when he was diagnosed he was given a 30% chance of making it. But his people survived and he survived, and that means something. He carries history in his skin and in his bones.
….
In 1984 a postage stamp issued to commemorate the life of Woodson changed a white family's story
Growing up in the '40s and '50s in segregated Kentucky, it was part of Craig Woodson's family legend that they could trace their lineage all the way back to the beginnings of American history. There was even a book where the legend was enshrined, a family genealogy. Craig didn't read the book, but he knew the story.
John and Sarah Woodson crossed the ocean in 1619 from Bristol, England, to settle in the first colony of Jamestown. To start a new life in a new world.
One day when John was away and Sarah was at home with their two boys, "there was an Indian attack," Craig recounts. "An attack by the Native Americans, and Sarah fended them off with a cast iron pan," recalls Amy Woodson-Boulton. She's Craig's niece, and grew up with the story too.
To protect them, Sarah hid her two children, one underneath the potato bin, and the other in the bathtub. They survived, and from these two sons came the two lines of Woodsons — two genealogical bloodlines to populate the colonized new world. When you met another Woodson you would ask them — tub or potato bin?
.… 1984, when Craig was 41 years old. That year, on Feb. 1, a postage stamp was issued to commemorate the life and work of Carter G. Woodson.
It wasn't the first time Craig had heard the name, but it was the first time something clicked for him — that this famous Black man shared his last name.
"What's the deal with the Black Woodsons?" he asked his father. "Who are they?"
His dad pointed to the old genealogy book on the family's shelf. "It's all in there."
It was in the first six pages. In 1619, the same year the white Woodsons settled in Jamestown, a ship carrying around 20 kidnapped Angolans arrived at Point Comfort, in what is now Virginia. The Woodsons bought six of the first Black people who were forcibly trafficked here. They were some of the first American slave owners.
BLACKS ARE OLD NEWS
Next they’ll say Mexicans built America
CLIP 12b (PJocky82) Don’t ever say “they are taking our jobs” because you wouldn’t be out in the #California doing this during a damn storm. … 1m
(SergeantAqGo) In pursuit of the American Dream. Amazing. Much respect. Unfortunately many see them as “drug dealers and rapists”
POC INDIA-INDIAN IN CHARGE OF WORLD BANK (BIDEN’S DRUTHERS)
(CNN Fri.) QUOTE: “Ajay is uniquely equipped to lead the World Bank at this critical moment in history.” -- President Joe Biden, announcing Thursday that he's nominating Ajay Banga, a former MasterCard executive, to serve as president of the World Bank. "Raised in India, Ajay has a unique perspective on the opportunities and challenges facing developing countries and how the World Bank can deliver on its ambitious agenda to reduce poverty and expand prosperity," Biden said. The World Bank, a group of 187 nations, lends money to developing countries to help reduce poverty.
YouTuber Jake Paul suffers first defeat of boxing career
(CNN Mon.) In a split decision, Tommy Fury -- the British younger half-brother of heavyweight champion Tyson Fury (THE IRISH TRAVELLER, gypsy) -- won the highly anticipated match.
Tuesday: Lori Lightfoot, Ron DeSantis
More of the same
(CNN Sun.) TUESDAY: Election Day in Chicago, where incumbent Mayor Lori Lightfoot faces a slate of eight challengers. Lightfoot is one of four Black mayors leading the four largest cities in America.
(CNN Sun.) And an autobiography by Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis is set to be released amid speculation that he’s gearing up to launch a 2024 presidential bid.
–
Thanks, all!