tv The 360 View RT March 17, 2023 8:30pm-9:01pm EDT
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did you so she did, she actually puzzle the mountain burner. you said so too. i could see honey number . no, i'm she eat equal fluids are sent every neil, appreciate facility, but that's been katie ma'am. said dr. their girl, each would you believe or we can exist, ed to please a those article my past says one, it is us us, your best care. cisco's worshipping came all care venue testing. one has one is for oscillation to seek one mean call. naval can you call navy co exist a new meal each eci novel show to digest chris city, dig through full lead from alpha banner to help what m. c, castles we met about was all the truth said the buddha, when he saw says well, you didn't bow he very hollow to alicia will know. ah, in 2021. a song bashing that the president of the united states kicked
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a world renowned adel out of the number one spot on the music chart. since then, the self proclaimed most a sensor to wrapper and america continues to write and produce songs, which shines the spotlight on the crop politicians on both sides of the aisle. i'm going to use it on this episode of 360 view. we're going to have a conversation with robert bryson gray and the reaction of not only his family, but also the world since the release of his song. trump. is your president? let's get started. ah. 31 year old. a bryce in gray has opened it for claimed artist like a 50 cent, and he found himself in the middle of a pop culture storm when a song went viral and 2020, promoting donald trump and which addresses lyrics all of the modern conversations
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like gun control immigration, and of course the stereotype of the typical trump voter being white. try me now. is it pricing greg himself in a studio such an honor? thanks for joining us. thank you so much for having me. i want to start off with obvious that trump is your present song because it hit it went viral levels even though your 1st song about trouble politics didn't even hit. there are hundreds of songs about donald trump since 2015. some of them are real interesting. none of them rose to the level of success across multiple genres like yours did. why do you think your song gain this much popularity so quickly? i honestly, i really don't know. so i was going viral because of the interview. i did quite a walk around with a big mega had on put the point back to what about why am i the people that threaten me that used to run for me. ok, why would they threaten you? why would they run from you? was from north carolina and it looks like a the performance of the a, b, c you will, i, j, co is the form of the future. change disable. so when i came out, support it as
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a board and trump and people already, i was already kinds of birds with my biblical views. people thought i like turn on the culture. ok, so a, so i had a crazy effect while i, that is always turned on the culture. go into that. what does that mean? could you hear that? so many times you talk about african americans that are voting for trump, or conservatives, or, or christians even sometimes, which is so odd reconsidering how faith based. so many are what turn on your culture. well, so, and the black color, when you grow up, everybody knows to vote democrat, you don't know why, you don't know who, you know, you spoke of a democratic because of how we view it is democrats and for the minority and people that are rates and republicans are only for the rich and people that are minorities, so that that's how top i was going up and you get them. i, your grandma, tell your momma to yield. but you can see where that would come from in history. you see that traditionally democrats, the democratic party has but no to take care of. it's changed though. i think, i think that's the different. i mean, it has been the one to take care of necessary. we're probably like keep the money
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for like sometimes they have that reputation. people think that but it hasn't actually been that way. like it was history. there was a time where black people, what was more split, but then the l b, d go water. that's where it turn like overwhelmingly democrat. but even before you think about the take a little came from the democrats. i know people the nestle talk complaint, but it's literally true every single out of the of the k k. k. well, the democrat, margaret sanger with the democrats, she gave speeches to the women set for the k k k. like republicans about slavery. every 1st black person in politics came, they all were republicans, a 100 percent of them were republicans. so they, that his republican democrats is really more split than what you make. but when the civil rights act is what really did it, and l b, l b, j sign it. but the people actually look at the true history of the civil rights act . that was multiple, you know, saying goal water actually supported the 1st civil rights act. in l. b j was against it. but the one i guys signed go water bought. it was unconstitutional
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because it was forcing being that it's like to overreach by government. and then it'll be de sided into law, and that's what pretty much set in stone l b j. say it i'm, i have black people that democrat for 200 years and uses her black. people don't either different time i can't say on a show. and i appreciate you not saying that, i mean we've got great editors, but even that that's what gets me. so could you to turn on your culture the fact that that was the culture that was put into that point, that seems almost like they expect everybody to march in line with a certain thought on that process. so what was the thought when you turn on your culture, what kind of backlash did you get? well, the 1st one was my parents, because my parents, there was already rumbles of people not working with me anymore. my parents to me on my music career away for something that didn't matter. like who cares about politics and i'm saying, and you don't have to say your biblical views out loud. you know that i'll never talk about religion and politics. you know, you're not saying so they'd all the radio station was going to stop playing my
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music for the radio station. i had a so i'm going to radio where i'm from in 2017. so you know, saying it's not that big that's here. yeah. and so when you're trying to break into, it's not an easy industry to break into. i could see where your parents would be going out on your throne your, for what, what are you going to be able to do as an individual, black man from north carolina? how are you going to make a difference in the movement? so now you've got that background from your family. your grandmother was even like parents, black panther is a lot of blood pressure, so it's a whole lot so you can see from the family. but then all of a sudden your song went even more viral internationally than i think even you were probably expecting when you put it out there. so what was it, do you think that this song made people gravitate to it? because there's a little, there's anger in the song, the lyrics has some anger around as well. you are wrongly enough, thompson presidents, one of my least favorite song by may is because the song isn't as meaningful as mother music. but it is catchy. the be can see a viper hook of katie and that's,
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that's, that's why a lot of people got into it. honestly, it would save time might, because i had to somehow, megabyte it down on something, retweet it when i saw the mag challenge and everybody was paying their own wraps to it. jimmy kimmel talked about it, you know, saying so bad 11 of my song as a sort of star going viral. and then i try to do mega challenge part to a temperature president. and it didn't go bible. and to begin, it was very interesting. my ha about, it sounds pretty catchy. the next thing i know i just woke up one day and everybody was holding it and everybody was talking about it because of because it takes a lot of, i don't know what, why it went viral who gravitated towards it, but definitely me for several years. there for 2 years, but also has to do with the person themselves. and obviously you said trump retrieved your 1st song, but then i think donald trump junior, the 2nd talk. so then it brings us to trump, and that's what i want to talk to because we, we talked a little bit about your background and obviously your opinions. do you believe it is this message or the man as in trump himself,
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which makes the mag crowd so powerful and feared by democrats and also by the industry when a song like yours goes viral and kicks a dell out of her top spot? do you think that's why they're so big and making sure that that is not put out that that narrative is never allowed to be to be challenged? while i'm in the movement when the mac and little man. i've talked in the beginning now so much lately. when the began, if i was truly an anti establishment movement, because at that time everybody viewed trumpet anti establishment. i have heroes who have anti heroes. you know, some other people, like, i think sex wrote a song into heroes. i mean, yeah, she was a movie that just came out. he was one of the anti hero with the rock and right. yes, i will put that way. we did. we know it's one of them, but he was like, like adam's back at him and he was like an anti hero. you know, i'm saying. and i feel like a lot of, of you try my life who we truly me there and he is average whoever he was,
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that was me who won't say when he's and he say no matter what the president and i will make a lot of rally behind him in the 1st place and, and that's was by the movement like so. you know, where you mentioned kind of shocking because you were a black man with a mag, a hat. that was a conservative and you had to conserve on going out. how do you feel about identity politics and the idea that your skin color actually puts you in this line with a certain political party? should we be open? are we pushing open minus about everything right now? why not this? i mean, i agree, but i'm not black according to joe biden, right? i didn't, i didn't vote for him. so why? but all but mine in this thing, why i'm a be, i'm not open minded at all because i believe in one being and it's called the bible . and to me that's right. what the bible was wrong was wrong about was right is right. so i wouldn't call myself open minded before the people that claim to be tolerate, the claim to be open minded. these are all the people that's in my deems right now to me, they have threats are saying, i go hang myself or something. i that will these people say, but then they say they're the open minded ones. they are so tolerate were so me.
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but i've seen that they say my perfect example. they'll please body positivity, right? but if elizabeth was a conservative, never call her all the, all the feds you can think of in your mind these exam. so these people don't play by any real rules because they're godless and they have no real morals of core. they're not going to have open mindedness about a black person with a different opinion. how was your response from you said your family, but outside of that, the black cleaning themselves? did you have people that were coming up to you openly saying, i support you or even behind the scenes going, i actually agree with you, but i can't say it for fear that i would get the same backlash that you have for that for me versus everybody and to me, i was kind of fun. but before i went viral, they look, it was me versus everybody why i'm from me versus the people in the comments. this was so fun. what's funny is started like, like a year ago, year and a half ago. so many people are coming up to me. you was right. you know,
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when i visit home, i go to the same places, i use the goals, i go to the social restaurant and i know all the owners from new music. and then as i come to me like now you're right bro, was listen, the you i was my, we asked a was here. so you so she can tell you like, last time she came, everybody that saw me, you know about to was crazy at 1st. but now you're right. so right now everybody loves it like now why everybody respects me because i asked because i stood on what i say. you know, i talked to a lot of black, conservative often. and when the number of things they call me as an uncle, tom, that there trader to, to that side of it, when those remarks come at you, more importantly, i'm more the younger generation. you are a group of younger, of all different treaties coming out with different opinions and what they've, the narrative has been. how do you combat that? what kind of advice to give to people with that kind of hatred comes towards them? how do they handle it? if the family will part, personality people call me too harsh, right? but i'm from the black community. i mean to be honest with hearts,
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have you heard as a joke on each other? you know, as i am, so you have to be yourself and not try to be what you think you're supposed to be. if that makes sense, a lot of people will try to play a character being that character will convince whenever they're grouping them as being from the back community. that's why i'm from. what have you yourself, and don't back down. that's really more respectful man. i assume i get in a moment so many people want their instant gratification. that's not how it works. it's probably about plant and sees is red. there's are going to change somebody mine on the spot. that's not that's, that's really not how it works. you know, saying you got a plan sees and then when they come back, 6 months later, a year later, the nation that's, that's when the planet grows. so don't focus on necessarily arguing and trust me. i'm the bay. i'm very aggressive. but most of i talk to are the same way so they don't view it as you know, i'm saying a bad thing. so just make sure you yourself and try to play it. see i'm trying to force them to be on your side at that exact moment. ok,
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so let's go back to actually what we're actually talking about with this song and censorship because i think this is probably a very important topic to you and continued outreach. and you have tell me, will be tell me about being censored, both in america as your video was been on youtube, did you know, or this happening prior to you have any experience with it that this was happening to others? and or did you even believe that there was just, you know, one of those things that people just said it wasn't actually true until it happened to, you know, so i believe that i saw it. i just didn't believe that. what happened with music wasn't ever 3 music in an, a political opinion, your opinion, or people talking. because when you look at the history of music, especially hip hop, eminem has had, is rama and w, a had their rama. and the rule that they should be able to say what they want to buy music is supposed to be a liberal terminology for a safe space for freedom of speech, especially hip hop names. and i'm, so when a, when i got a bad m, i saw that wasn't very shocked. i'm like
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a mock harrison though. i'm other 6. i'm talking about drove. i'm not talking about a girl 2nd how, but meet them on money out or? i'm not, i'm of them are 70 i'm, i'm talking my view, my biblical views and politics. so i was sad. it came to music. it was crazy to me and it kind of makes you question what, there are, what the real agenda is when they band songs like that, like you said, wasn't promoting any sort of moral behavior, any sort of violent behavior. it was just talking about thinking and that's actually what was more dangerous and endangered to them to people like youtube. and the social media platform is, is crazy because like thomas are present as part of my lease controversial. so am i, it's higher catalog. they banded on tick tock. like my little you were over a 100000 people did a video to way band every night. it's got a might try to read it and they're willing to lose money ever because as we know, every click is a dollar. sometimes in their pocket. yup. brandon, i want to get you this conversation and i want to continue talking about be cause after this break, we're going to have
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slowly but surely, legacy media support of the west war in russia is changing. ukraine is not winning in hardly likely to win in the in propaganda is at times powerful. what hard cold facts eventually trump fables written by the elite mediocre scribes. ah. okay, we're back and i want to continue this chat with robert bryson gray who says he has been the most censored wrapper in america, which i find to be very curious because i've listened everything i've had to go and prep for this. you're right, there's no sex, no drugs, no promotion of violence, no promotion of activities that i would not want my children or myself to be involved with any yet. you've continuously seen sort of this stoppage on all social
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media platforms. you go to one and they do it. so let's start off with the cheer music find popularity and other parts outside of the united states, even prior to this. but especially when she found that you released her songs about the president and politics. i'm in a lot of room from the u. k. contact me from everywhere you get here and they're, they're like, i'm from this place. you like, how did you even hear my music? what is happening, but that's the power of social media. so it, it is pretty interesting, it's a small world sometimes, and that's been the good news, but i also feel like that's part of the reason why it was the point are important to restrict because as much as it fears the american government, i know other governments are fearful of people actually expressing something different from what the narrative might be. you know, artists do go into music because they want to be loved. or, i mean, they say it's for the art, for the reality is they really want some sort of positive response. most typically to their music, your music is loved and popular, but only amongst kind of a certain group right now. in fact, i think it's saved, it's safe to say it's kind of also loathed by an even bigger population. you probably don't lose much sleep over at at night and i love it. would you recommend
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other artists in other countries actually taking a stand against the mainstream, both clinical and cultural views. and what would your advice be to those are, as you said, you know what i want to go against what the narrative, what the majority of people are saying and put it into a music form. do it because one of the main aspects of my music is, as it is for the art i love making music, but it's not only for the art to inspire bonus. so my goal is to push christian propaganda, right? so at the level of the left terminology there and i am trying to inspire bone as i do have an agenda as an inspire bonus. well, 1st off is to get people to believe in god and then that will inspire bonus. but for other people to do it, to speak out, it is a guess or government speak out of it for your faith speak out. do especially little music because music of the one thing that can bring everybody together. so as i am like mother his pe, but i even some i like trump very popular top can inspire people as much as music
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care sounds. right. so music is probably the greatest art form we have to to reach other people. and i think everybody uses for meaningful things. well, since you brought up shop, we are and this is kind of want to part of the folks to the show. are you still buckled into this truck train? there's a lot of no going. there's a lot of the, any the answer and trade where there are other kids who are starting to get in one why, why are you no longer are so passionate about this president and what would are the past present? and could he do anything to get you back on that train? so the reason why is because i've been following from for a while and how i viewed trump is i don't care about the media. i don't, all i care about isn't true. i'm a said and truth, no matter what, i'm a drain the swamp. you're not saying and all of these things, but in, if you really look what smart was a swamp moraine matter of fact, he had a bunch of people that were so loyal to him. and then he fired all of them for the
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swamp. you know, sam, you need to get as a person who is in this city on a specific day in january. like all the people i like up by we all got talked to the side like rag dolls, and then he's hosting l g b t parties at mar lago to celebrate joe biden policies. and then let's not even get on a j, b, j. b, jab this algae, algae, the shot. all as it is a little bit too much. and because of be honest, the all over the older i gotten, i become one issue older. and i was guy because when i bought it from time, i didn't view him as a lesser 2 evils. i viewed him as the good and now people are trying to, to massive of a lesser 2 evils. i can't biblically justify one for less than 2 evils. trump is cool. i don't light trump as much as i live. jesus. teach you about even close by nowhere near close. so if somebody does things actively against the word of god,
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and i'm a call it out. i don't on the left lot of time. i called out mccrae for this. i call it raffle the crate for the same thing. i'm going to other christians and we will say now do the same thing for the drop. i will be here 3, sorry, can't do it. so what other candidates are there right now? okay, so there's none. so then what are you going to do? i mean, we'll say when we get there, i mean they're sell for margaret and they're starting to line up yet i'm, i'm not even against not doing anything are right in something, you know, some or final final, very part of canada. there's probably want to lose, at least i'll feel good in that. walk out there. feel like i feel dirty. there's an obviously bad night, you know, saying, and i've never been depressed in my life. and it's probably because i just, i myself all the time. and i don't plan on ever been at brass, so i can't go into this little world, leave me, you know what i'm saying were, know you, you have the do be well, the democrats, when listen, the democrats are winning in the most important aspects of culture. in my opinion,
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politics play a role in economics, which is why will be the best candidate even right now, even against the scientists, the standards doing good and for the bustling trump is better for the economy because the bodies thing we can do in 2024 what was the culture that's way more important in the political crap? look of any aspect of history looked up to every writing from every communist. they know they have to will tell the culture. they know this. so when the liberals are personality, all these crazy agendas on your key tv shows, in the schools, the music through movies, that is way more about this period. and because i still don't seem to truly gras vance, you know, i'm saying they have an option. is there, is it realistic to think that current conservatives could actually affect the culture, especially considering the values, the conservative supposedly embrace and they want to push could actually be popular mainstream values. again, you do believe that you want, i know that because of anybody. and i mean the background is what the rabble of
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anybody actually go into the black community and talk to people leave out of it, just talking about values. you'll find out quickly how conservative all of america is. right. and if we prove that, we can change the culture when we're, let's go. brandon came out, right? like you say, a big deal on a chart. top 4100 billboards ours. a lot of people don't know what that means, but anybody has noticed live about music. no, that is actually historic for independence song about paul about pompey have no liberal pushing no media saying i spent a whopping 0 dollars on and then want to charge top 40 how $100.00 billboard, their whole staff and an article afterwards. so i'm missing the article and i say, we worried about this, do we think this will continue because they were worried? and they say, no, it's probably a one of one thing and ever right? haven't happened. i've been again, you know, there, but they were scared the whole article about scared they were. so we can do it. i
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just don't make, i'd like to start with them are willing to donate money to a politician. then to push the cultural side thing because what they more comfortable with from what they're used to. well, you talk about how populace was and we mentioned how social media every click is usually a dollar and somebody's pocket, whether not usually the content creator gets a small minute part of it. what did you say to you that some of these platforms are willing to lose money? because obviously your work is popular. they're willing to ban you lose money for be just because of a narrative that they want to hold daily to. the agenda is it that scary? yes, the agenda is more important because right now they have the keys. that's why people on of is all story recently, but people recall and emailed the re literally pushing, telling case so explore their gender. you know, same in the school system. so the left already have the kids, they don't want anybody else tell them to do some different because they already
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got a mock them for the most part. i'm sorry, haven't stop here. tell them into some different agitate. i'll be advocate, needs a repair. this is a degenerate. you know, i'm saying i don't sleep out about the women at the right bank, but don't get confused. they banned him. he didn't break any guidelines. they banned him because people were actually, he was the most popular person in the world for like 3 months. so the ban here because his message was telling me to be men in man lee. they don't want, they want to emasculate manual every man to be painted nails, dress, own feminine. you know, i'm saying so they had to get everything out of there because he was put in a different narrative. so yes, the narrative is that important going back. how do you fight the censorship? what, how do you get over? because unfortunately now that they know now they've caught on, are you fear that we're never going to be able to have freedom of speech? again, none of the u. s. and other countries that are watching us, i think, is going to get worse. the bible tells us so we can find it that the only hot water
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is how to get people to understand that is going to require us to do more work than . right. because a lot of these other people getting on netflix, just a normal, you know, i'm saying getting on twitter or instagram without a glimpse and every single day. so normal, you know, saying these other places that don't have the same amount of funding, sometimes in glitch a little bit more. but if you stay with them, that's why i created also c, g dot com for the same reason. all of our content on here is our platform. can you ban? but people have a problem paying $7.00 a month to us versus paying the netflix price. great, great conversation with you. thank you very much for the work that you're doing and we'll continue to keep up with you. don't worry, washington known as the father of the united states famous. they said, if the freedom of speech is taken away, then dumb and silent. we may be led like sheeps, the slaughter, an obvious censorship by a government is easy to identify and it's easy to create backlash for it. but tactic had changed. and now it seems, there's more of a subversive approach to limiting freedom of speech in the united states. and i
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imagine the same goes for around the world by making private corporations and industries like the media and social media platforms, create the pressure to cause submission or face isolation. then the government can claim they are not in violation of restricting freedom of speech. when, when for them plus knowing the same people who would cry about restrictions on freedom of speech would also be highly against governments creating parameters for bribe at business. this is a situation for oppressive behavior to have the ultimate when this type of manipulation is extremely hard to combat. and with economic ties, being so strong to the government lately for most corporations and even media platforms. the idea of a capitalistic freedom today is almost as much a pillar of the past has the freedom of speech. the answer, only a sound with the most courageous, and those who are willing to risk it all. and even then i can't guarantee the
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results will never be. what once was now i'm going to, he was and it's been your 360 view. thanks for watching the me a, with in 1884. the german empire began its colonial invasion into nam may be from the very start. berlin encouraged the white colonists to settle in south west africa and take away the best land from the local tribes. the germans were actively draining natural resources and using the local population as a cheap labor source. this was causing major protests and led to
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a rebellion. in 19 o 4, the hero and nama tribes rebuild against german colonial rule. kaiser wilhelm the 2nd was fully determined in order to suppress the rebellion with the utmost severity against the inhabitants of nam may be a germany through is 15000 well equipped army. all around the country. concentration camps were built in humane medical experiments over citizens were conducted within the period of 4 years. the germans killed up to 60000 people, among which there were 80 percent of the hero tribe, and 50 percent of the nama tribe. the events in south west africa are called the 1st genocide of the 20th century, and not without reason are compared to the holocaust just 2 decades later after the massacre in nam may be a hitler's assault unit put on the same brown colonial uniform which push the world
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into the chasm of the 2nd world war ah ah, a new era for russian chinese relations as it is confirmed she, jim pings 1st trip after re election will be to moscow next week. opening pandora's box, china denounces the strengthening of nuclear cooperation between australia, the us and the u. k, saying it could, there are some global security and we continue our special coverage of the grim legacy.
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