Skip to main content

tv   [untitled]    January 16, 2013 1:30am-2:00am EST

1:30 am
in the good old movie took an advantage to the targeted charts and just each worked so our year in a concrete jungle you've got to be respected as a man. in most cases respect. is absolutely. feed. you better respect me you better fear me. when i have it hard to live everything's homeward you want to be in the right state of mind if you're feeling good a bunch of dress code you know representative of the month and in one coming months . the want to dress like. that out of the world not ok because they want to name one of the things they've been doing with missoni no man is looking good in the good of london let's go let's go in do whatever it takes to look good doing the ones. i've something to wait until guys we're going to need in san
1:31 am
francisco to be interviewed i knocked on the door of their talent that kind of. and here are two of the most hardcore gang members and one of them it's got his ironing board out and he's got his traveling irons arning is supposed. to look you know these are just stores and we are assured. he was fresh in a cafe and stand up in a corner with nobody i'm there i'm. very.
1:32 am
for somebody that has no idea. what you are what is the alerts i join the gang not only for the protection for the love and unity to be a part of the family. if you live in the ghetto and you know mama where. i just got tired of being a victim it's like either you are a victim or you can fix or. you can. wait until it is not like you can to get out of there's no way of. teaching with a nine and i was really good do you know get chased out of school get shot at all the time it might get i'm damned if i go down if i don't. step out and get jumped in this world and in fact a mom will to my neighborhood. my neighborhood pompously mommy with a cold i don't look good and king is just.
1:33 am
that's why he's put up with this group they feed and they're looking out for me for the clothes on his back ok but now it's time to just go and look at these niggas he just shot up my house which he will do. wish you don't get to let me just fish you all must. say no to this will kill is my business to feed meat. told me when you first got a. problem. down when i was thirteen years old just to go to school if you don't have one you gotta be around somebody's got to. bring up the far right i don't want to have another i got
1:34 am
a back up. with a k forty seven only the legacy you got because you know twenty to thirty days pass but not sixteen come on now you've also got some. generation with the left for after my generation there was gun play there was no such thing to fight the kids today came right in the game of go. that's why so many murders. that's mainly a twelve year old one thousand year old king for a day i'm not gonna put you in on all of not the state. within itself says the chip law. you clear black people. are moms call the doll to. me clear the block standing twelve thirteen years old with
1:35 am
a pistol small. stick in your pocket and you walk all. over them for to use gun against another individual for human beings but once you block that part of your mind out becomes very easy you go watch them they become the first time jittery you can just see the nervous system will come back and look at this a person that's been allowed to live for years i mean they soldiers ready to go to . war with a lot of people right but being quiet and a big show i got a lot of local being a real mother. and that is save my life many times you'll say but at the same time
1:36 am
it's another generation that don't know me and feel like they can get a strike could they get rid of me. much or enemy and whatever they do you counterattack they write on the wall you drive to beat up somebody you've been in shoot somebody uses. it come over here she want to bust we go over the issue like to avoid in. the street but. with mr. lee became a dog the dog. alone will be killed that was his but. we are we telling it because no part of this job that you have to the film up there so that's going to make you feel when you freeze in the face of the sun will just go over and over and over. if.
1:37 am
i. let you bring. me back. even though i'm in the game i'm in. for a. deal with the world or i ignore it i don't pay attention to it is really no room in this in this world. is man so. i read a lot man because i know that ultimately to say the way to god or society intended it to be so a lot of times man i know morally i'm a good individual but sometimes i've got to put that moral state of my behind and
1:38 am
become an animal. thank clearly. there was a. well there's a man that out there in the guard world war two eighty five ninety percent of the black population this country lives in the south. was a lot of. black people would primarily lived in the south because of slavery in the south was a rule agrarian reform economy oh there's
1:39 am
a good way about. world war two ushers in a series of transformation is that the radically changing nature of black history in this country blacks for the first time are invited and now asked to work in america's arsenal for democracy building those tanks building those planes building those ships. thanks and forty's and seventy's you see over four million african-americans leave the south and ways that have never never occurred. and for new york head first head for los angeles. for the first time they were integrated into the american worker economy they were earning enough to be lower middle class homeowners in l.a. and to establish if not exactly
1:40 am
a very close similarity to the american dream. wealthy british style. markets. find out what's really happening to the global economy for a no holds barred look at the global financial headlines to name two please. please
1:41 am
. do we speak your language anything about the law and not advance. what news programs and documentaries and spanish what matters to you breaking news a little turn it if angles couldn't stories. for you here if q. detroit altie spanish to find out more visit i to allahabad all tito is calm.
1:42 am
and. no way did not have the overt history with racism in one head of the south there were no laws a said blacks had to ride on one part of the bus for no laws that blacks had to be in certain schools there were however extremely exclusive web of racially restrictive housing evidence that kept blacks in particular areas and out of other areas these covenants mandated the sale of real estate along racial lines in an effort to keep traditionally white neighborhoods free of non desirable home sometimes not desirable men latino sometimes not desirable men do sometimes not
1:43 am
disarmament asian but it always meant black and so those racially restrictive covenants which didn't disappear into the late forty's early fifty's essentially kept blacks circumscribed in a very narrow portion of the l.a. county rich. white people were sort of forced to live on top of each other because it just wasn't possible to live where you chose even though you might have been able to afford it. in. south philly residents responded by transforming there are a lot of territory to a thriving cultural hub its central avenue developing into a sort of town west from. west coast best jazz clubs dozens of black businesses lining the street people dressed in their sunday best on the weekends a period during which the most affluent and the forest blacks live essentially side by side. and then
1:44 am
with will more to spend. time economy adapted itself to an automotive industry major corporations like g.m. chrysler ford goodyear and firestone all establishing factories in south los angeles. and we're going to. factory you got good benefits you get my house you could buy a car you could raise a family you could live a working class or lower middle class life. it was a moment of unprecedented black prosperity in which the two jacks three of black america was on the rise people were getting jobs were buying homes were buying cars sending their kids to colleges was a moment of real optimism. in the late one nine hundred fifty s. you begin to get the first. wave of what came to be called the
1:45 am
industrialization. the american economy is changing we're moving from one of those really cami to an economy based on service based on information rooted in technology that is its high skill file wage training on one very low skilled sweatshop labor another. class find their skills don't fit into either those demands. they don't have the education or the skill or the training because of historic discrimination to work in aerospace. on other hand they don't feel any desire or need to go into the low skilled service sector jobs like hotel cleaning like sweatshop work downtown l.a. because they don't perceive that as jobs that american citizens should have. and not talking about people who are at the rear we're talking about people with jobs
1:46 am
if you have a job you are in a on that job so when that factory closes you are in essence asked out. by the late sixty's you see those plants beginning to disappear when they disappear there is virtually nothing left in their wake. and so it leaves a gaping hole in the economy of the region. with consequences that are just enormous. generationally in america is supposed to be about the american dream people are supposed to move up to supposed to elevate. we're talking about a situation where actuality it whenever reverse the children over time began to do
1:47 am
worse than their parents. in one nine hundred seventy five the los angeles times said reporters into the streets to assist progress in the city's black communities ten years after the watts rebellion. the fearful lived behind protective bars and double locks high schools are graduating functional illiterates. some black people have got businesses some professionals have got into significant jobs but if you talk about the masses of that guy who was in trouble in one thousand and sixty five it is more difficult now. the black in the ghetto gold surviving. on.
1:48 am
a. good thing. let me ask you who are pushing yeah. this. odd. about a big one all night and all of that. all not. all. going
1:49 am
to. come to me. and i'm going to going to be going to a. headache to train the way a bit on a. day of refugees if you want to call it that would displace like a mole. in the accomplishment over the it might not be acceptable in britain would however some not occur every two or three hours in my community. in aesop's into a community basically which you have it in p.p.o. broken down business if you have any business and. take a walk downtown baltimore from crenshaw of our money you tell me the opportunities that are available low income housing five or six churches gang violence crack up the. introduction of crack cocaine onto the streets of l.a.
1:50 am
in one nine hundred eighty one proved to be a major tipping point for an already vulnerable to. cocaine came a toy it broke up a lot of you know a lot of people just thought crack was the way out you know what are you. think of what the key is you know what i'm saying that will broke a lot of homes that if that crack would never came probably still have nice the homes and nice to the families you know but when i came in like tow everything before but let me ask you into juba conventional trial. dysfunctional ass family in the south of us. to see out here is ninety three i was raised out of that he. had to be a man i take care my mom is too much the mobs are fairly mellow but this is said by myself i would buy for little brothers and sisters do what you do. with a look at me.
1:51 am
i grew up in a home where my mother worked two jobs but had three people so you can imagine we were supervised sold the business outside of the home. she was too busy making a living. then to love me. even though she tried and did the best that she could it was not a. lot of black youth in the neighborhood just not the opposite way so i went to gangs without fighting come out not a thing they had some hand getting your books then stayed on but if everybody in a lot of things would have been different but that wasn't the case.
1:52 am
the common thread throughout all of these conversations throughout our communities things to be. part of the most part the absence of a father male figure father figure in the home. i'm kind of in a home when there is no male influence. as a male going from. then everything is going to be out of whack the people that told me told me wrong tell me how to be whole tell me how it's been. he wants he's not be a man but his fight to me by somebody or goes to somebody does a way to tell me been a man. have a soap coach or of a young black man but tending to the men back killing each other. about standing up in a brothel amana. but there are misguided
1:53 am
. now days the fathers are the black men my age are the day and i'm in jail and one of the problems we have is. if they're going to try to arrest a problem that means they're putting all the black men in jail. in two thousand and three bureau of justice report reveals the twenty eight percent african-american men more than one in four be jailed or sent to prison in the last . week of engaged in this country and an absolutely historically unprecedented experiment in the past in prison. we now have and imprisonment plate that is six to seven times higher than it has ever been before in our history is suffocation coming to take effect prisoner which got me in two
1:54 am
thousand and seven four years governor announced plans to spend seven point four billion dollars to build forty thousand new prison. terms but. look at the population of people in the penitentiary particularly from the one nine hundred eighty s. going forward. black men are disproportionately represented the new deal right here the band plays. with niggas like the. little kids. to. gain a sense of. what this means is we are breaking even the possibility of there will be intact families with a mother and a father raising a child together. because we are sending the men off to prison with unprecedented rapes usually for nonviolent offenses that.
1:55 am
would. be. even with time served so many of those determined to start a new life find little freedom in their lives. go to get a job working for xerox sent an application and they found out i was on parole and i lost my job i used to be jealous some wives going to work it. this is my wife own a stew a balmy grew up with me bill me i was it was good as she would go out thousand go to work and i would be mad at her because she could go to work and i could help. i'll be mad because she's paying the bills and i can bet you there's never no cycle to get us out of this it's just a cycle to get us back into so of course people are going to behave in ways that are anti-social if we don't let them behave in pro-social writers.
1:56 am
could be happily ever after. going. under left something to live. so it will love and care for precious children. play on minds project shoulders. leave it to god. on our. faults makes life complete. nose and a happy family. or self-expression. a show. that seems so true. for you too late. child.
1:57 am
choose your language. of choice because with no inferential going to say still some honest. truth as good as the consensus you. can choose to opinions that invigorating book. choose the stories that imply good life choose to access to often. local lippold. live. and over the speed. her. live which.
1:58 am
looks. like a missile good live. just send them up and. come out fine i'm a little. plug mission and free credit case should be free lance for judges is free to make amends three kids three. types of free. download free broadcast plug in video for your media projects a free media dog r.t. dot com in.
1:59 am
play. it. play. play. play. play. play play play play. i.

30 Views

info Stream Only

Uploaded by TV Archive on