Josh Dubin
๐ค PersonAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
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.
What we should want is, you know, uplifting these people that have been born into circumstances that are just different. I come from a middle, middle class family, you know, sometimes trending toward the lower end. My dad had the knock around guy from Brooklyn. My mom was a school teacher.
What we should want is, you know, uplifting these people that have been born into circumstances that are just different. I come from a middle, middle class family, you know, sometimes trending toward the lower end. My dad had the knock around guy from Brooklyn. My mom was a school teacher.
What we should want is, you know, uplifting these people that have been born into circumstances that are just different. I come from a middle, middle class family, you know, sometimes trending toward the lower end. My dad had the knock around guy from Brooklyn. My mom was a school teacher.
And I think that going through some of those struggles set me up for success and to learn how to scrape a little bit. But I didn't have the experience of someone that was born in Watts or Bedford Stuyvesant or Harlem. I just didn't. And, you know, I'm a little less quick to judge that, you know, if more people had your sentiment, Joe, right, that sometimes it's a little bit deeper than you think.
And I think that going through some of those struggles set me up for success and to learn how to scrape a little bit. But I didn't have the experience of someone that was born in Watts or Bedford Stuyvesant or Harlem. I just didn't. And, you know, I'm a little less quick to judge that, you know, if more people had your sentiment, Joe, right, that sometimes it's a little bit deeper than you think.
And I think that going through some of those struggles set me up for success and to learn how to scrape a little bit. But I didn't have the experience of someone that was born in Watts or Bedford Stuyvesant or Harlem. I just didn't. And, you know, I'm a little less quick to judge that, you know, if more people had your sentiment, Joe, right, that sometimes it's a little bit deeper than you think.
As to why someone resorts to committing a crime? It's almost always deeper than you think.
As to why someone resorts to committing a crime? It's almost always deeper than you think.
As to why someone resorts to committing a crime? It's almost always deeper than you think.
You would love this book. I mean, the cast by Isabel Wilkerson, I feel like a paid spokesperson for it. But she talks about how, you know, there's very real consequences from the practical implications of what Jim Crow laws did to fragmenting our society. And it's not as if this went on a thousand years ago.
You would love this book. I mean, the cast by Isabel Wilkerson, I feel like a paid spokesperson for it. But she talks about how, you know, there's very real consequences from the practical implications of what Jim Crow laws did to fragmenting our society. And it's not as if this went on a thousand years ago.
You would love this book. I mean, the cast by Isabel Wilkerson, I feel like a paid spokesperson for it. But she talks about how, you know, there's very real consequences from the practical implications of what Jim Crow laws did to fragmenting our society. And it's not as if this went on a thousand years ago.
I remember where I was when that verdict was read. I was shucking oysters at Barnacle Bills on North Monroe when I was a student at Florida State. Wow. And I remember feeling like something really awful had just happened, but I understood it.
I remember where I was when that verdict was read. I was shucking oysters at Barnacle Bills on North Monroe when I was a student at Florida State. Wow. And I remember feeling like something really awful had just happened, but I understood it.
I remember where I was when that verdict was read. I was shucking oysters at Barnacle Bills on North Monroe when I was a student at Florida State. Wow. And I remember feeling like something really awful had just happened, but I understood it.
Because of Rodney King, and I understood it not just because of Rodney King, because of what had happened to the community in Los Angeles that for decades had been abused by police. Now, whether or not one wrong begets another and whether that's rough justice, you know, I don't even feel like I'm in a position to say. I don't think that there's ever been a more guilty person put on trial than O.J.
Because of Rodney King, and I understood it not just because of Rodney King, because of what had happened to the community in Los Angeles that for decades had been abused by police. Now, whether or not one wrong begets another and whether that's rough justice, you know, I don't even feel like I'm in a position to say. I don't think that there's ever been a more guilty person put on trial than O.J.
Because of Rodney King, and I understood it not just because of Rodney King, because of what had happened to the community in Los Angeles that for decades had been abused by police. Now, whether or not one wrong begets another and whether that's rough justice, you know, I don't even feel like I'm in a position to say. I don't think that there's ever been a more guilty person put on trial than O.J.
Simpson.