Josh Dubin
๐ค PersonAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
That's not a reason to pin a murder on them.
That's not a reason to pin a murder on them.
That's not a reason to pin a murder on them.
That's not what these people did.
That's not what these people did.
That's not what these people did.
And I do. I've been called a lot of things. One of them that I take exception to is being called a race baiter. I find that really problematic. Who calls you that? You know, trolls on the internet that don't matter. Stop reading comments. I know.
And I do. I've been called a lot of things. One of them that I take exception to is being called a race baiter. I find that really problematic. Who calls you that? You know, trolls on the internet that don't matter. Stop reading comments. I know.
And I do. I've been called a lot of things. One of them that I take exception to is being called a race baiter. I find that really problematic. Who calls you that? You know, trolls on the internet that don't matter. Stop reading comments. I know.
But one of the things that people should read, if you want a better understanding of what it's like to grow up a minority in this country or black in America, again, four black men in a very white community that were from out of town and drug dealers. So read Cast by Isabel Wilkerson.
But one of the things that people should read, if you want a better understanding of what it's like to grow up a minority in this country or black in America, again, four black men in a very white community that were from out of town and drug dealers. So read Cast by Isabel Wilkerson.
But one of the things that people should read, if you want a better understanding of what it's like to grow up a minority in this country or black in America, again, four black men in a very white community that were from out of town and drug dealers. So read Cast by Isabel Wilkerson.
And, you know, before you go judging what is going on in terms of, you know, your perception that people should pull themselves up by their bootstraps, you try being born into a cast system. C.A.S.T. C.A.S.T. And we are a country and I'm not on my soapbox. This is a fact. And if you can dispute anything in Isabel Wilkerson's book, this is a caste system that exists in America since its inception.
And, you know, before you go judging what is going on in terms of, you know, your perception that people should pull themselves up by their bootstraps, you try being born into a cast system. C.A.S.T. C.A.S.T. And we are a country and I'm not on my soapbox. This is a fact. And if you can dispute anything in Isabel Wilkerson's book, this is a caste system that exists in America since its inception.
And, you know, before you go judging what is going on in terms of, you know, your perception that people should pull themselves up by their bootstraps, you try being born into a cast system. C.A.S.T. C.A.S.T. And we are a country and I'm not on my soapbox. This is a fact. And if you can dispute anything in Isabel Wilkerson's book, this is a caste system that exists in America since its inception.
And the experience of a black American in this country is different. than that of a white American. So I think that these wrongful convictions happen disproportionately to people of color for a reason. And we have to start changing minds and we have to start getting people to come back to. I don't know what's more innate.
And the experience of a black American in this country is different. than that of a white American. So I think that these wrongful convictions happen disproportionately to people of color for a reason. And we have to start changing minds and we have to start getting people to come back to. I don't know what's more innate.
And the experience of a black American in this country is different. than that of a white American. So I think that these wrongful convictions happen disproportionately to people of color for a reason. And we have to start changing minds and we have to start getting people to come back to. I don't know what's more innate.
Is it innate to be to find the humanity within ourselves or is it more innate to tear each other down? We all have that decision to make. I don't know what it is about human beings where there's some sort of, ostensibly it's like some satisfaction in the tearing down of another. I know where that comes from. It comes from a weakness within you. It comes from a hole that you're trying to fill.
Is it innate to be to find the humanity within ourselves or is it more innate to tear each other down? We all have that decision to make. I don't know what it is about human beings where there's some sort of, ostensibly it's like some satisfaction in the tearing down of another. I know where that comes from. It comes from a weakness within you. It comes from a hole that you're trying to fill.