
Hosted by Black Talk Media Project · EN

Kevin Roberts studied Black survival, then helped weaponize the cultural term “woke.” But woke was never the problem. Sleepwalking through a dangerous nation built on anti-Black laws, Black Codes, convict leasing, and white mob violence was the problem then, and willful ignorance is still the danger now.

A man was shot during a traffic stop… then charged. But here’s what’s missing: we still don’t even know his name. This is how the system moves—fast to criminalize, slow to reveal the truth. And without accountability, the pipeline keeps feeding prison slavery. Free Bonus with all T-shirt purchases. Support independent media that exposes the system. Shop the New Abolitionists Collection and wear the message: “Slavery was never abolished.” Every purchase helps fund Black Talk Media Project. 👉 Black Talk Media Project

ICE agents shot Julio Cesar Sosa-Celis and charged him—until video exposed the truth. Charges dropped. Agents now under investigation. What happens when there is no video? This is how the system feeds the prison slavery pipeline.

What happens when soldiers stop believing in the mission? New reporting shows a surge in dissent inside the U.S. military, with a 1000% increase in conscientious objector requests. These aren’t fringe cases — this includes personnel across multiple branches who are saying they don’t want to participate in a war they don’t understand or support. At the same time, the Israel Defense Forces is being described as stretched across multiple fronts, relying heavily on reservists while expanding operations that require even more troops. This raises a serious question:Are we looking at two militaries under strain — one stretched thin, the other increasingly unwilling? In this episode, I break it down through the lens of Proxy Racism — how people are used as instruments to carry out agendas they don’t control, often against their own conscience. Some soldiers are now saying no. And that matters. 👉 Get the full breakdown and understand the bigger picture.👉 Get the book Proxy Racism (ebook & audiobook):payhip.com/BlackTalkMediaProject

BTRN - The City of Beverly Hills has issued an apology to NBA All-Star Jaylen Brown after admitting its earlier public statement about shutting down his brand event was inaccurate. Officials first suggested the event violated permit rules and referenced prior issues at the residence, but later clarified no permit was ever submitted or denied and no previous violations existed. Brown says the gathering was a private, invitation-only event held at a private residence around 7 p.m., well before local noise curfews. According to his team, music was shut off early, traffic was not blocked, and organizers had even contacted police beforehand about hiring an off-duty officer, which was declined. They say no evidence of any ordinance violation was ever presented. Brown argues the shutdown was based on biased or incorrect information, raising due-process concerns and causing financial and reputational damage. While the city apologized and called the situation an internal error, Brown maintains the apology came only after harm had already been done.

Join Us as we celebrate and acknowledge Black History Month and President's Day 2026. Join the discussion.Leave us a comment! @rvasoul.com talkingsmackpodcast@gmail.com VM Hotline 804 321-1010

In this Black Talk Radio Network analysis, we examine how modern dissent is criminalized while historical rebellion is sanctified. As footage circulates portraying Alex Pretti as belligerent and Renée Good’s family as emotional, the public is once again encouraged to focus on behavior rather than state violence. But when we place Minneapolis alongside the Boston Massacre, a contradiction emerges. Working-class colonists who confronted British soldiers are remembered as patriots, while contemporary protesters challenging federal power are framed as threats. From a Black historical perspective—one that remembers Crispus Attucks and the selective memory of American rebellion—this video exposes how anger, property damage, and resistance are judged differently depending on who controls the narrative. In the Black Talk Radio Network community, this pattern is understood as Proxy Racism: the use of narrative and social proxies to justify power while erasing its victims.

This video breaks down a real-world example of Proxy Racism: when oppressed communities are mobilized to support narratives and policies that ultimately strengthen the systems that harm them.

Proxy Racism isn’t force—it’s systems shifting control inward. Get the book here: https://payhip.com/blacktalkmediaproject

Rescinding an order isn’t protecting people—it’s stepping aside. Governors who won’t stop unlawful ICE policing have already broken their oaths.