us.

Zinge mean black.

Anthropus mean man.

He was  750,000 years old and he had a daddy.

And they went back and they dug and they found some  more skulls and some more skulls.

And they still unearthing skulls that never show  the origin.

But as far back as you go, they find you.

Wait.

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Now we have Caucasians  in this audience.

We have Hispanic brothers, sisters in uh brothers in the audience.

Yes,  sir.

We have men of many different hues and colors.

Yes, sir.

The Bible says from one  blood God created all men from one blood.

Blood is the life fluid of some living organism.

So from one blood meaning from the genetic strain of one life.

God made all.

Look at what the  Quran says.

Amen.

He created you from a single being and created your essence from the uh your  mate from the same essence and from these two he spread many men and women.

It started from  one.

Now it’s many.

Yes sir.

And how did you start? Good question.

You started from sperm  mixed with OAM and when the sperm connected with the OAM it produced the first cell of life  and from that one cell now you are billions and billions and billions of cells in this one body  but you started from one.

Can you dig it? Yes, sir.

Excuse my slang.

Now, the Quran tells us the  color of the first man.

First man is called Adam.

In the Quran, it says Allah created him from  black mud and fashioned him into shape.

Stop.

Since my body is from the earth.

If  he created the first man from black mud.

Step up.

Anthropologist.

Step up  historian.

Step up biologist.

Step up geneticist.

Dems denounce Farrakhan rhetoric amid pressure from GOP - POLITICO

Talk to me.

If  the first man were white, the yellow man couldn’t even get here.

Because two   white people cannot produce anything  other than what they are.

Talk to me.

So, I’m not teaching black supremacy.

I’m just teaching actual facts.

White people, listen to me  good now.

You can’t produce   us.

It’s a mathematical genetic impossibility.

So if you were the first,  we couldn’t have got here.

So the black man has in himself the whole range  of color because black is not a color.

It is the essence from which all color comes.

Before we go any further, I need you to pause and really hear this.

Most of what you  were taught about, who you are, your identity, where you come from, and what you’re worth, has  been carefully filtered, not to empower you, but to control how you see yourself.

And once a man  forgets who he is, he becomes easy to dominate.

We were told our history started in chains, our  image is cursed, and God looks nothing like us.

But what if that story is incomplete? What if  the truth about the origin of man, your origin, was never meant to sit comfortably in white  classrooms, history books, or pullpits that refuse to tell the whole story.

In this video,  you’re going to hear words that shake foundations, not because they are hateful, but because  they are unapologetically honest.

Words that challenge biology, history, religion, and the lie  of inferiority that’s been placed on the black man for generations.

This is not about supremacy.

This  is about identity, truth, and most importantly, this is about remembering who you are.

Listen  closely because once you see it, you can never unseen it and has God’s divine nature in you.

As David the psalmist says, “Yeah are all gods, children of the most high God.

” Now, let’s get  the Bible and Quran to back this up.

In the Bible, the apostle says, “How can you love God? whom  you have never seen and hate your brother whom you see every day.

Let’s stop a minute.

Let’s  look deeper.

What do you mean? How can you love God whom you’ve never seen and then hate your  brother? way, then there’s something in your brother that is of God.

So when you hurt  your brother, you’re hurting your father.

I’m a father, brothers.

I got nine children.

Yes, sir.

23 grandchildren.

Yes, sir.

One greatg grandchild.

Yes, sir.

And if I ever see my  children fighting, it gives me such pain.

Yeah, if you are God, not big God, but a little  God made as the Bible says, in the image, and the likeness of God.

That’s right.

Then Elijah  Muhammad said, “Every time I see a black man, I’m looking at God.

” So when I look at you,  I don’t have to wait to see the father.

I see the father in you.

So when I see you, I got a  duty by you, brother.

Go ahead.

When I meet you, you say, “Oh, Firecon, I’m real happy  to meet you, man.

” And I always say, “It’s my honor, brother, to meet you.

” And  you look at me and say, “What? What was he honored to meet me?” Yes, sir.

Because when  I meet you, I’m meeting a person that has never been on the earth before.

And there will never  be one quite like you ever, ever again.

So when I see you, I have to treat you like I would honor  God.

I have to respect each human being.

I have to respect you, brother.

Even though you don’t  know who you are, I know.

Go ahead.

And because I know my duty is to honor and respect you.

Even  these little children.

Yes, sir.

They are little babies.

But the power of God is in them.

And  they’re going to grow up one day hopefully to be mighty men.

So you start respecting them when  they in the cradle.

You start respecting them when you see the woman forming that child in the womb.

You don’t wait till it gets here.

And that’s why no man who’s a real manise will beat a woman.

No man who is a real man will beat a woman.

No man who’s a real man will disrespect a woman  because it’s through woman that we live.

Go ahead.

If you live to be the age of Methuselah,  which is 969 years, you still going to die.

So how do you continue? You continue through a woman.

That’s right.

So when she tells you, “I love you.

” When she says, “I love you,” if she  means it from the depth of her heart, she’s saying, “I want to give life to you.

I want to extend your life by my love.

Yes sir.

So you and she enter into a contractual  arrangement that is from divine listen and after 9 months she suffers the pain of death to give birth  to you all over again.

That’s right.

And so as a man who has a child, if you love God and love  yourself, when you see yourself growing again, you got a chance to make that life better than you  were made.

So when that life comes, it’s like a potter’s clay.

You can shape it, you can mold  it, you can make it something.

So Jesus said, “Reverend Jackson, when the disciples said,  “Master, when were you hungry and we fed you not? When were you naked and we clothed you not?  When were you out of doors and we gave you not shelter? When were you sick and imprisoned and  we ministered not unto you?” He said, “In as much as you have not done this unto the least of  these, my brethren, go ahead.

You have not done it also unto me.

” So the least little brother in  here is the brother of Christ.

Stop right there.

Talk to Stop, man.

We got to We got to get  through this part.

Don’t leave me.

Who is Christ? Christ is man in his perfectly developed state.

Therefore, Christ fully developed  is man in whom God dwells.

Christ is the express likeness image of God.

Why  is Christ so important? Good question.

Because he allows men to see the realm of possibility.

We can  be more than the prophets.

Don’t go around saying, “I’m the child of God.

” And never  grow up to be like your father.

Jesus was the only man in the Bible or scripture  that had such a unique relationship to God till he referred to God not as Elohim or Yahweh  or Allah.

He referred to him as his father.

Think about it.

Listen.

Yes.

And then when  the disciples wanted to learn how to pray, they said, “Master, could you teach us how to  pray?” He said, “Yeah, pray on this wise.

” Say, “Not my father, our father.

” Now, if the father  made Jesus so special, what’s wrong with you? You mean you’re not special? You mean the father  didn’t make nothing out of you? You nothing.

Your elder brother Jesus is something.

You nothing.

Muhammad is something.

You nothing.

Moses is something.

You nothing.

False.

Every one of you  are as they are if you submit to the source that they submitted to.

All right.

Now, let’s slow  down and really talk because this is where a lot of people get uncomfortable and truth usually  lives right there.

You see, we’re not just talking about religion here.

We’re talking about our  origin.

We’re talking about identity.

And once you understand where something starts, you understand  everything that comes after it.

Every major science, faith, and even biology itself keeps  pointing back to the same reality that humanity comes from one source.

One life, one beginning,  and one bloodline.

Not separate creations, not different gods, but one origin that branched  out over time.

Think about it for a second.

You didn’t start as a full-grown human.

You started  as a single cell, one.

And from that one cell came trillions more.

Different functions, different  shapes, different roles, but all carrying the same original code, same source.

Now apply that same  logic to humanity.

If life began in one place, in one form, then variation didn’t come first.

Uh, diversity came later, color came later, shade came later, adaptation came later.

And that  alone already challenges the lie that blackness is some kind of deviation or curse or afterthought.

And here’s where it gets really uncomfortable for people who’ve been taught a certain version of  history.

If the first human life came from the earth itself, rich, dark, and full of minerals,  then the idea that whiteness came first doesn’t even make biological sense.

This isn’t hate.

This isn’t ego, and this is logic.

The black man carries the full genetic range of humanity.

That’s not an opinion.

That’s science.

Which means blackness isn’t the absence of something.

It’s  the source of everything.

And once you understand that, the next question becomes dangerous to  the system.

If we didn’t come from nothing, if we didn’t come from inferiority, then why were  we taught to see ourselves that way? That’s what we’re yet to unpack.

Jesus said, “I and my father  are one.

” Yeah.

See, when you submit to God, brother, he actually comes into you.

Oh, yeah.

He  travels into you through the word.

And the word contacts the essence of your nature, which is  the same as his nature, and turns on the divine essence of you.

and you start growing  spiritually just like you grew physically.

And therefore, brothers, when  you got a gun in your pocket, Yes, sir.

and you go on and shoot  a black man.

That’s like shooting a bit of God.

Oh yeah.

When you watch the  life ooze out of your brother, every time you squeeze the trigger, life is oozing out of  you.

Oh yeah.

Because love can’t find a place in you for your brother if you’re constantly  raping, robbing, destroying your brother.

This is your family.

Yes, we are not just family  from the same mother, but we are family from the same God.

Yes, sir.

So, you are truly my brother  and I am truly yours.

So, I make a pact.

Go ahead.

I will give my life for you.

Go ahead.

Because  my life is not more important than yours.

You are greater.

I am lesser.

Yes sir.

So I must become  your servant.

Yes sir.

Yes.

And you must see your people like that.

Yes sir.

When your brother is  down that’s you.

Yes sir.

Help pick him up.

Yes sir.

Don’t let different colors make you different  people.

Don’t say he got on red, man.

He ain’t one of the bloods.

He got on blue, man.

Yeah.

He ain’t  one of the brothers.

He didn’t get a right sign.

He ain’t one of the brothers.

Yes, sir.

When you  look in his face and you see the mark of the beast as your brother who has been destroyed like you  and you must never ever again hurt your brother when you and your brother have an argument.

develop the intelligence to reason with each other and not reach in your pocket.

This is why  the honorable Elijah Muhammad told us, “Throw away all guns.

” Yes, sir.

When we became Muslims, we  put all the guns away.

All the guns.

Threw them away.

Yes, sir.

Because Elijah Muhammad knew that  when we got in an argument, we would reach for our gun rather than reach for our ability to reason.

He forbade us to raise our hand to each other.

That’s right.

I remember in the FOI, the fruit  men’s class, I saw a brother and I, you know, and the captain saw me doing it.

He  said, “Brother,” I said, “Yes, sir.

He said, “Do you think you can whip us all?” Yes, sir.

I said, “No, sir.

” He said, “Well, the  next time you raise your hand to your brother, you’ll have to whip us all.

” And from  that day, I never raised my hand to my brother.

Never.

Not just my brother as a  Muslim.

This is my brother Christian.

Yes, sir.

I won’t ever raise my hand to him.

He  is safe from my tongue, from my hands.

His wife is safe because I know that his wife is  sacred to him.

She’s sacred to me.

Therefore, instead of violating his house, I will protect  his house.

His daughter is sacred to me.

And when we become like that, love  comes in.

When I won’t do you wrong, you won’t do me wrong.

You fall in love  with me.

I fall in love with you.

Then love is greater than the law because  love is the highest expression of law.

When I say I love you, man, you could  drop your wallet with money all in it.

That’s not a brother.

I say, “Hey, brother.

Brother, brother, you dropped your wallet here.

” Right.

He said, “Man, I I ain’t going to do  that.

If that fool dropped that wallet, and I see it.

I got it.

” Yes, sir.

But we are taught that if  your brother has a bowl of soup and you have none, half your bowl belong to your brother.

So  if I got money, you don’t have to steal.

If you got need and I got here,  brother, but I don’t want you to lay on me.

Right.

But I’ll  help you out as my brother now.

I would like to conclude this talk, but  I don’t want anybody to get up cuz we’re going to say prayer together.

But I want to just show  you in conclusion the meaning of the story of the donkey and the and the colt and show you how this  amount of men together.

I show you what we could do right here in Houston.

All right.

And you’ll  never be broke and powerless if you have unity.

There’s an ass tied untied.

White folks got us  tied up to them, but they not using us.

Therefore, by the law of nonuse, sir, they have  forfeited their right to hold us.

Listen, Jesus is not a thief.

He didn’t tell his  disciples, “Go and untie him and bring him to me.

” When you got a tie on you, that means  you belong to somebody else.

But the master had come and he paid a price to redeem to redeem  them.

So he said, “No, they’re not using you.

I’ve suffered for you.

Go untie them.

I got  need.

Bring the ass to me.

” I’m not speaking vulgar.

No.

Then Jesus rides into Jerusalem on  the ass or the donkey.

People saying hosana.

Do you know in the history there has never  been to my knowledge a leader who calls black men out to a special meeting to talk to black  men.

Go check the history.

Brothers, brothers, if this happens in 15 or 20 cities across the  country, what do you think they’re thinking? See, you are the unlearned, the donkey.

Faracan  is who you came to hear.

That means you are the wave or the wind beneath his wings.

Yes, sir.

So  when they record this meeting, they’re going to say that Farrakcon, he’s getting them black men  stirred up.

The moment Jesus got on the donkey and rode into Jerusalem, his time was numbered  because they in secret council said he got to die.

I’m telling you tonight, they have  already decided far got to go.

Wait, wait, wait, wait, wait.

They they made their plans, but God made his.

You don’t have to worry about that.

Now,  here’s where this stops being theoretical and starts hitting home.

Because if  we all come from one source, one life,   and one origin, then the way we treat  each other isn’t just a social issue.

It’s a spiritual one.

And this is where  a lot of us get it wrong.

Think about it.

How can you say you love God, honor God, worship  God, but hate your own reflection walking down the street? How do you pray with one breath, then  turn around and destroy your brother with the next? That contradiction alone tells us something  is broken.

If God’s essence is in life itself, if that same divine spark exists in every human  being, then when you disrespect your brother, you’re not just disrespecting a man, you’re  disrespecting the source that made him.

When we harm each other, we’re not just spilling  blood.

We’re tearing at something sacred.

And let’s be honest, this system figured that out  a long time ago.

That’s why we were taught to fear each other.

That’s why we were trained to see  each other as enemies.

And the quickest violence in our communities is often aimed inward.

Because  once you convince people that their brother has no value, they’ll destroy themselves and call it  normal.

But here’s the truth.

They never wanted us to sit with.

Every black man, you see, is not  a mistake.

He is unre repeatable.

There has never been another himymn in all of human history.

And there never will be again.

That alone demands respect.

And when you truly see that, it  changes how you move.

You don’t reach for the gun so quickly, hate so easily, or devalue life so  casually.

Because if I see God’s nature in you, then my duty is to protect you, not destroy you.

This should be your mindset.

And that realization, that shift in how we see each other is exactly  what real power starts with.

I don’t believe they have a gun big enough, Go ahead.

to shoot me from  here across the street if it doesn’t please God.

Go ahead.

If it pleases God that I die, then  it pleases me to die.

I don’t think so.

We got work to do.

Oh, yeah.

So, here you are all  tied up.

I’m one of the master’s disciples.

I saw you tied.

I’m here tonight to loose you.

All right.

Come on.

Come on.

Yes, sir.

Come on, black man.

We We got a job to do.

I don’t care  what work you’re doing now.

You got a bigger job to do for God.

And since you said, “Lord,  if you get me out of trouble this one time, I’ll serve you.

” Now, here’s the way God wants  you to serve me.

First of all, brothers, each of us have to decide to clean up I act this body  is the real house of God.

Not this.

No.

No.

Not this building.

Not this building.

Not this.

It’s  a beautiful building.

But this building, yes, is not the real house of God.

This here Yes, sir.

is  greater than this.

That’s right.

Cuz this is the architecture of men.

This is the craftsmanship of  God.

So you must never violate the house of God.

You shouldn’t eat improper foods, unclean  foods, clogging up your beautiful system with unclean foods.

Some of you drove good cars.

I saw them parked all out there.

And brothers, you’re not going to put cheap gas in that finely  engineered engine.

Yes.

You put the highest octane in it cuz you don’t want it pinging and  going on.

And then you go and sit at McDonald’s and feed this magnificent house garbage.

It’s a great house, brother.

But you got to  take care of it.

Houses need maintenance.

you not maintaining that body.

I’m 60.

I’ll be 61 next month.

But brothers, these are my sons.

Two of them.

This  son can tell you his father at 60, come on, bench press 370 lb and  still don’t know the limit of my strength.

That’s right.

Deadlift 405  lbs.

Just snatch it up off the ground.

Squat 405 and still don’t know the  limit.

That’s right.

of my power.

I’m a young old man.

I don’t have no big gut.

No.

What do you look like? Some  of you have not seen yourself unless unless you get a mirror, your gut hanging all down over your  knees.

This is your lifeline.

Ask the champ.

Look how magnificent he looks  when he takes off his clothes.

You don’t have to age because you’ve been  here long, sir.

Go ahead.

Go ahead.

Ain’t none of you in here really old.

70 is not old.

80s not old.

90 is not old.

You just got here, man.

What you  getting out of here for? Hang in there, brother.

But you got to stay here long enough  to learn how to live so you can pass on valuable lessons to your children and your grandchildren.

You out of here.

Yes, sir.

Improper foods.

I have fasted from 3 days to 40 days.

You got to  learn how to cleanse your bodies and your minds.

I mean, I’m just quick, brother.

I can wake up  in the middle of the night and teach for hours, never repeating myself.

You are greater than I am.

You just need to get yourself in order with God.

Now I’m one man and they find  it difficult to handle me.

The whole world together finds it difficult to  crush one man.

Yes sir.

You know why? Greater is he that is in me sir than he that is in the  world.

Amen.

Suppose we let him get into us and we become a united power in God.

You don’t  need a gun anymore.

That’s right.

You can do it with this.

Come on.

When they told me 30,000  people were standing on the outside and they were trying to get screens, I went in my room.

Yeah.

And I said, “Oh, Allah.

” Yeah.

Hold back the rain.

Yeah.

Don’t rain on the people.

And he held it up.

Yes, sir.

You got juice, man.

Yeah.

You’re God’s people.

That’s right.

You  could run this thing crazy if you just came home to God and came into unity with one another.

Yeah.

You would have so much power you would frighten yourself.

Now I want to show you in conclusion  what we could do in this room.

You see, Reverend Jackson built all of this with the support of  the people that believe in him.

I’ve been in many churches.

I’ve never been in one like this.

As  big as this is hold as many people as this does, he don’t owe nothing on it.

He had people  working with him.

Now look at the 14,000 men that are here.

And if we could get the 15,000  that are outside and just check this out.

Suppose each of us put $10 together  tonight.

$14,000* 10 is $140,000.

Put it in the treasure.

Come back next week.

Put  it in the treasure.

Come back the third week.

Put it in the treasure.

By the fourth week, you  got over half a million dollar liquid cash.

You go to a bank, say, “Look here, man.

Uh, you got any properties that you foreclosing  on? Show me your portfolio.

” You say, “Well, yeah, we got this building.

in this apartment building  said we’ll take it.

In this room tonight there are carpenters, brickmasons, plumbers, electricians,  roofers, everything imaginable right in this room.

And you got young people in here who don’t know  any of these trades.

You take these abandoned buildings and you put the craftsman to work.

and  you put the young man beside him as an apprentice.

Before you know it, those abandoned buildings are  built back up and now somebody’s living in them, paying rent to you.

You the owner  now.

Oh, then you say, “Uh-huh.

Okay, let’s keep this up.

$10.

Now we got 30,000  people.

That’s 300,000 in one week.

You notice how white folk giving up their farms.

What you do? You go and buy you 1,000 acres and what I need a farm for.

That’s the engine  of life.

Yes, sir.

That’s where everything we got on comes from.

Yes, sir.

The farm, brother.

Our problem is we’re allowing everybody else to feed us.

We’re not feeding ourselves and  our children.

Now with a thousand acres and you can’t even see what a thousand acres look  like.

You got to get up in a helicopter to fly over what you own.

We own it collectively.

Now we start farming.

Everybody can’t farm, but there’s some good farmers in here.

But we  ain’t going to farm with a mule anymore.

No, sir.

We get a tractor.

Get a tractor.

Then  you set up a canning factory.

That’s right.

Then you buy you some land and build you  instead of a beautiful church like this, you build up a supermarket.

Now you got your  cannon factory and you got First Baptist Peas.

Second Baptist corn, Methodist asparagus.

Yes sir.

Muslim carrots.

Yes sir.

On your supermarket shelf.

Then you tell all our  wives don’t shop.

Nowhere else.

Shop in your own supermarket.

Before you know it, the money we  spend on food is right back in our circle growing.

You got it, sir.

Our fathers picked cotton.

Yes,  sir.

Now we grow it.

Turn the cotton into lint.

Yes, sir.

And the lint into cloth.

All of us got  on underwear.

Right.

And we ain’t made one pair.

You set up a factory, put your woman in it.

Come on, baby.

We going to make underwear.

Make some gar.

Yes, sir.

Now you got instead  of designer underwear from Calvin Klein, put your name on it.

Right.

Then everybody  in Houston is wearing our own underwear.

All right.

The underwear market is yours.

The  shirt market is yours.

The suit market is yours.

The same way white folk can  get alligator.

I I got on gators, but the gator don’t belong to  them.

It was created by God.

We can get them, too.

Now, let’s take this  a step further because respect alone isn’t the finish line.

Responsibility is once you truly  understand your value, the next question becomes, what are you doing with it? Because knowing  who you are but living like you don’t, that’s a quiet kind of destruction.

See, power  isn’t just shouting truth in a room.

Power is discipline.

Power is self-control and knowing  you’re capable of more and refusing to live beneath it.

That’s why this message keeps coming  back to the body, the mind, and the habits.

Because if this body is truly sacred, if it’s the  house where life itself lives, then poisoning it, abusing it, and neglecting it is a form of  disrespect to yourself.

And we’ve been conditioned to treat ourselves cheaply while protecting  everything else like it mattered more.

Think about how careful we are with cars, phones, and  clothes.

Yet reckless with our health, our diet, and our minds.

That didn’t happen by accident.

A  weak body makes a tired mind.

And a tired mind is easy to control.

But imagine the opposite.

Imagine  a generation of black men who are mentally sharp, physically strong, and spiritually grounded.

Men who don’t age fast, don’t move sloppily, and don’t live on impulse.

Men who can  think clearly, build patiently, and lead confidently.

That kind of man doesn’t need a gun  to feel powerful.

He doesn’t need chaos to feel important.

His presence alone shakes the room.

And once that type of discipline becomes common, something else starts to happen.

Unity stops being  a slogan and starts becoming a strategy because now you’re not just surviving your building.

Cal  gave his hide to white folk.

He’ll give it to you.

Tan that hide and make you some shoes.

It’s a  shame we paying $140, $150 for Nike leaparounds and all we got to do is learn how to do it.

Do it for yourself.

And before you know it, you got a whole economic revolution started in  the black community.

And as men, we’re doing this.

Then your wife is looking at you saying, “Look at  my husband.

What he doing?” She starts smiling at you.

Then you say, “Well, baby, I don’t like the  way the schools are miseducating our children, but let’s set up our own school.

” You set it  up and everybody in here that’s a teacher, come on out of a plantation system and  begin giving your children real education.

And before you know it, white folk looking at  you saying, “Is these them same negroes that used to hang out in the in the second ward,  in the third ward, in the fifth ward, drunk and disorderly.

Now they own the fifth ward.

”  Yeah.

That’s their turf.

Then when you own it, you become interested in the politics that governs  it.

Then you run for office who you want to run that will look out for your interest.

And after  a while, you become a power in Texas.

And then before you know it, from the lone star state,  you get many other states wanting to put a star up like Texas did.

And before you know it, you’re  working hard.

And therefore, you deserve pleasure.

and your wife will say, “I really  want to help you.

” Cuz at last, honey, you’re doing something.

Come on, brothers.

Let’s fill the church up with men.

Yes, sir.

Let’s fill the mosque up with men.

Yes.

And let us never let religion and the labels divide us ever again  from one another.

Never again.

Will you do it? Are you with us brothers? Then may   Allah bless you as I greet you  in peace.

Assalam alalayikum.

Now, brothers, while you’re standing, brother.

Oh, I love you, too.

Before we have prayer, brother, I’m coming back, God willing,   but I’d like to have a black  woman’s meeting.

When I come back, I want to ask a question.

All of you who are interested in making our own communities a more decent place  to live.

Would you raise your hands, please? How many of you Thank you.

How many  of you brothers would like to accept a training that would cause you to be  selfdisciplined and then we in turn take the responsibility of disciplining our  community making it safe for our women,   our children and our elderly.

How  many of you would like to do that? Then I’d like to ask you brothers if you  would take this pledge.

And when you say it, if you say it, the only thing we have  is our word.

And once we give our word, we must strive never to break our word.

Take this pledge.

I I I say your name pledge pledge to strive to strive to love my  brother to love my brother as I love myself as I love myself.

Will you do that? Yes sir.

Second,  I I your name pledge pledge to strive to strive to improve myself to improve myself spiritually  spiritually mentally mentally morally morally socially socially economically economically and  politically and politically for the benefit of myself for the benefit of myself, my family, my  family and my people and my people.

Will you? Yes, sir.

That means that from tonight, we got to start  improving.

If there’s some habit that you got that you would like to get rid of, you know how to do  it, do it.

Once you make up your mind to do it, it’s done.

Third, I I Your name pledge pledge  to strive to strive to build to build homes homes.

Hospitals hospitals to buy farmland  to buy farmland.

To set up businesses to set up businesses.

To engage in international  trade and commerce.

to gain for the benefit of myself.

For the benefit of myself, my family my  family and my people and my people.

And last, I I your name your name pledge pledge to give  of myself to give myself my time my time my talent my talent and whatever I can spare of my  finance and whatever I can spare of my finance to accomplish now everything finally comes  together because awareness discipline and unity mean nothing if they don’t lead to action.

See,  the problem was never that we lack talent.

Look around.

We’ve always had builders, thinkers,  teachers, creators, workers, visionaries.

The problem has always been direction.

We have never  used our skills and talent to build our community.

We were never taught to pull our strength only  to compete inside a system that was never built for us to win.

But imagine this for a moment.

What if instead of waiting for permission, we started building for ourselves? What if  instead of spending money everywhere else, we circulated it among our own? And what if  instead of outsourcing our future, we trained our children to inherit it? That’s real power.

Quiet power that cannot be ignored.

And when men begin to stand upright mentally, spiritually,  and economically, everything around them changes.

Families stabilize, communities heal, and  children grow up seeing strength instead of chaos.

And eventually respect replaces fear.

This isn’t  about religion versus religion.

Labels don’t save people.

And principles do.

Discipline does.

Love does.

And responsibility does.

And once we stop allowing division to weaken us, we  become something the system can’t predict or control.

A people who know who they are and move  accordingly.

That’s when the conversation shifts from pain to purpose.

This message isn’t meant  to entertain you.

It’s meant to wake you up.

You are not an accident, inferior, or powerless.

What you’ve been hearing here is a reminder not of who someone else says you are, but of who  you’ve always been beneath the noise, the trauma, and the lies.

The truth is simple.

When we respect  ourselves, we stop destroying each other.

When we discipline ourselves, we stop being controlled.

And when we unite around purpose instead of ego, we stop begging for change and start creating it.

This isn’t a moment.

This is a mindset.

And once that mindset spreads, everything changes.

If this  message spoke to you, challenged you, inspired you, or made you think deeper, don’t keep it to  yourself.

Someone else needs to hear this, too.

Take a second to like this video.

It helps push  this message further.

Subscribe to the channel so you don’t miss what’s coming next.

And most  importantly, share this with someone who needs a reminder of who they are.

We’re not here to tear  down.

We’re here to build up.

We’re not here to divide.

We’re here to restore.

Stay grounded.

Stay disciplined.

And stay connected.

Peace.