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A Panther In Africa Classic Movie [Full Movie] [Ranked]Full EP - Full
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00:00:04Living here in Tanzania, you have to have a gun.
00:00:08We have witnesses, there have been reports of lions roaming around.
00:00:13But anyone who is not a Tanzanian requesting to possess a firearm
00:00:18must first get permission from their embassy.
00:00:21Now this is a crazy scenario.
00:00:23Pete O'Neil, former Black Panther in exile, has to go to the United States Embassy
00:00:30to request a license for a 12-gauge shotgun.
00:00:34And it was a 12-gauge shotgun in 1970 that led to my spending 32 years in Africa.
00:00:58As a member of the Black Panther Party, I was arrested on the very bogus charge
00:01:03of transporting a gun across state lines.
00:01:06I had had some very serious run-ins with the police in Kansas City and with the FBI as well.
00:01:12The policeman had seriously indicated that I would die if I went to prison.
00:01:17So my wife Charlotte and I left the United States and chose to go into exile.
00:01:26After having spent two years in Algeria, we came here to Arusha, Tanzania.
00:01:33And we've been here ever since.
00:01:39This pipe goes to our village.
00:01:42Children running on the Batista part to their goats.
00:01:43There's an elephant on the lake that dies here.
00:01:49We have to go into the boat and bear their boats.
00:01:49This is where the elephants have been stepping.
00:01:51We have to give them something to their housing stack.
00:01:57Now, because of the sun.
00:02:01You have to step them.
00:02:03We have to step them together and let us step them in.
00:02:08Oh, that's kind of scary.
00:02:16I'm hoping and praying that this will perhaps alleviate some of our water problems.
00:02:21Doesn't look very promising right now, but fingers crossed.
00:02:36When I brought Charlotte out here, she was 19 years old.
00:02:40She'd never been away from home.
00:02:41And I was 30 days.
00:02:45I cannot imagine that I would have been able to succeed without her.
00:02:51I do not have the ability to deal with details.
00:02:54I can't.
00:02:56Charlotte coordinates everything.
00:02:58Hey, hey.
00:03:01Sorry to be so rushed, rushed, but I got another meeting this afternoon.
00:03:05I need to know how we can do today.
00:03:07Because, you know, I got to go to Rotary.
00:03:09And then I got to...
00:03:11I know this is a running down.
00:03:13They got to go.
00:03:14Uh-huh.
00:03:15I'm just trying to work out how we can do transit.
00:03:17I can be a little impatient at times and have developed into a grumpy old man.
00:03:23Are you leaving now?
00:03:24And, uh, Charlotte is, uh, angelic by nature.
00:03:32I'm setting a new record for cholesterol.
00:03:34I'm going to be the first person to have a cholesterol level of 589 and survive.
00:03:40Oh, no.
00:03:40I'm telling you.
00:03:43Oh, no.
00:03:43Mm-hmm.
00:03:44Hiya.
00:03:44Yeah.
00:03:46Two names and Sasha.
00:03:48Okay.
00:03:48Hidasa!
00:03:51Hidasa!
00:03:51Hidasa!
00:03:52Hurry up.
00:03:53Come on.
00:03:54Hidasa!
00:04:03Hidasa!
00:04:05Hidasa!
00:04:13Hidasa!
00:04:15Hidasa!
00:04:17Hidasa!
00:04:19American Community Center. Myself, Charlotte O'Neill, my husband, Pete O'Neill, founded the
00:04:25United African American Community Center in 91. But we have been doing community work for years
00:04:33and years in Kansas City as members of the Black Panther Party, where we fed more than 750 children
00:04:39every day and had free medical clinics. When people think of the Black Panther Party,
00:04:44mostly due to the media, they think of young men with guns and berets and leather jackets,
00:04:50and that's true. But we were much more than that. The really good things about the Black Panther Party
00:04:59was the manner in which it served the community. If you look at what we're doing right now,
00:05:09you would find it difficult to distinguish the community work we were doing back in the day
00:05:14and the community work we're doing now. Do you know we're dealing with 90 students a day?
00:05:21How are you, Asha? I'm fine, all right? If we have someone who has ability to teach English,
00:05:26we teach English. If we find volunteers who have computer skills, they teach computers to our young
00:05:35children. Human. HIV is a human virus. What we're trying to do here is create a microcosm of what we
00:05:47feel the world should be. People of all races, all cultures, all traditions come together and live
00:05:54work for common goals. In 1968, I started to read about the Black Panther Party. I went to Oakland,
00:06:14California. I talked with the people who were running the party there, and we established the
00:06:20Kansas City chapter of the Black Panther Party. The Black Panther Party is officially in Kansas
00:06:26City. The Black Panther Party came into existence to try to control these mad dog policemen who were
00:06:35brutalizing people in the black community. The city of our black community. Of our black community.
00:06:41Right on. Right on. Our breakfast for school children program, our counseling programs,
00:06:47our clothing programs, all evolved from that original foundation. Before the Black Panther Party,
00:06:56I did many things that by anyone's standards would be considered wrong. The Black Panther Party turned my
00:07:04life dramatically around. I bet a lot of the, can you imagine how a lot of the elders in the
00:07:13village
00:07:13would view the, who is this? I said, well, that's Mama Charlotte. They say, who? Yeah. What's she doing
00:07:19with the gun? Yeah. Is she going hunting or what? Mm-hmm. Yeah. Do you remember when we first came
00:07:25to
00:07:26Dorsalong, to Tanzania? And I remember when we walked out of that airport and how warm it was, and it
00:07:33was
00:07:33those, those, those coconut trees, you know? And I said, Pete, I love this. This is like coming home. And
00:07:41it really was. And you had this puzzled expression on your face. I don't know what that meant.
00:07:47Do you know when I got off the plane here, and this is the truth, Shirley. Now, all kidding aside,
00:07:52now, I didn't have a good feeling. I just didn't, sister.
00:07:56And we've talked about this a lot, and I generally make light of it. But it was, to me, it
00:08:01was just like I had gotten too far away from everything that I knew. And it amazes me how you
00:08:07didn't feel that way.
00:08:08Mm-mm. Huh? I guess you were just as happy as a dead pig in the sunshine, huh? For me,
00:08:13I was saying, oh, boy. I saw the tin roofs with the rusted iron, and I said, uh-oh. I
00:08:22said, we are in for some, for a different kind of life.
00:08:29Okay, we were thinking little.
00:08:29right, here, now, my blanket.
00:08:33Okay, here, now, my blanket.
00:08:37How much? How much?
00:08:40How much- save you?
00:08:42Come in and then you will need your money.
00:08:45We are here till now.
00:08:50What are you doing?
00:08:51I'm here for your family.
00:08:53All of them are Inglis.
00:08:54All of them are Inglis.
00:08:54My mother has to be in the school.
00:08:57Thank you, nothing's important.
00:09:01She's talking about something misuse.
00:09:01Come on, come on.
00:09:03Come on, come on.
00:09:04Come on.
00:09:05You're in the company?
00:09:08He's in the company.
00:09:13I spend most of my life shopping and buying supplies.
00:09:18We feed 20 to 30 people daily.
00:09:21We've got our programs.
00:09:22We have student groups coming through.
00:09:24We've got all these people visiting.
00:09:26We've got people on honeymoon, people just passing through.
00:09:31We are in constant motion.
00:09:42I have a peaceful kind of floating in the clouds nature.
00:09:48That's just me, and it balances out the way Pete is
00:09:51because he's more hyper, and he sweats things more than I do.
00:09:57But he's very different from the way I remember him back in the day.
00:10:02I've watched him grow to be very tolerant of all kinds of people's opinions.
00:10:09Where I think years ago, if you wasn't down with the program,
00:10:15you know, you couldn't hardly say anything to him.
00:10:18You know what I mean?
00:10:25We don't see any racial problems in Birmingham.
00:10:27Oh, really?
00:10:28No.
00:10:28Scott and I live there, and we love it.
00:10:30We both live fairly Anglo lives in Alabama.
00:10:35I don't have that much interaction with inner-city blacks or anything,
00:10:39but I don't feel threatened walking down the street,
00:10:42and there's no chip on my shoulder, and as far as I can tell,
00:10:44no chip on any of their shoulders.
00:10:45Well, that was going to be my next question.
00:10:47How, I was going to ask you, how did you think blacks felt there?
00:10:50You're talking about where, Birmingham?
00:10:52But now I'm Birmingham, not 40 years ago.
00:10:54No, of course not, but I wanted to ask you, how do they feel?
00:10:56I don't agree with what Claire says,
00:10:58but I still notice that throughout the African-American community,
00:11:02I still think there are a lot of young people
00:11:04who still sense some resentment
00:11:05and get choked by the anger and the resentment
00:11:08and can't break out of that
00:11:09and almost wallow at times in the anger and the resentment.
00:11:15And instead of taking that energy and moving forward,
00:11:19it serves as a hindrance to their moving forward.
00:11:23There may be some truth in that,
00:11:25but can you imagine how difficult it is to forge your head
00:11:28when you have never had an opportunity educationally?
00:11:34But you don't know what it's like to be a white male in the South either.
00:11:37It ain't all bread and roses.
00:11:39But whites weren't slaves for centuries.
00:11:42But we don't live on the big rock candy mountain
00:11:44and the money doesn't grow on trees,
00:11:46and it's not even easy for a white person either.
00:11:50It's hard, Pete.
00:11:51It's not easy for whites.
00:11:53No, it's not.
00:11:53I agree with you.
00:11:54It's not.
00:11:55But you certainly,
00:11:56in any kind of intellectual honesty,
00:11:58you can't compare that with what blacks were.
00:12:01You were too intelligent a man
00:12:02to look at people that were treated like cows and chickens
00:12:07were denied bread was against the law
00:12:10to know how to read for centuries.
00:12:13Now, what's the solution?
00:12:14The first thing in all of these problems that we talked about,
00:12:18I can give you the solution.
00:12:19The first thing is to admit,
00:12:21and that's hard.
00:12:23That's the hardest thing.
00:12:24That's the hardest part,
00:12:25and particularly for whites.
00:12:27Not a white man never will be,
00:12:28but I can imagine this is the most difficult thing
00:12:31whites will ever have to do,
00:12:32is to admit categorically
00:12:34that we have had serious problems.
00:12:37We can't sugarcoat them.
00:12:40We can't cast blame on the victim.
00:12:42We have to say,
00:12:44hey, we screwed up.
00:12:45This was wrong.
00:12:46What can we do to make it right?
00:12:51Sister, sister, sister.
00:12:53If you could have heard some of the stuff
00:12:55that came out of their mouth.
00:12:57Lord.
00:12:59Part of the problem,
00:13:00no, damn it,
00:13:00he said the problem,
00:13:02and I'm paraphrasing,
00:13:03was that young blacks have resentment in their heart.
00:13:09Well, what in the hell do you expect to have?
00:13:13So many people have a lack of knowledge
00:13:15about the 60s and the 70s
00:13:18and the civil rights era
00:13:20and all of that, you know?
00:13:21It's like they've been living in complete isolation.
00:13:24Isolation and have no idea
00:13:25or even about the rest of the world.
00:13:28That's what blows my mind, too.
00:13:30We'll find people
00:13:31that'll come in our presence now,
00:13:33and they'll talk about social issues
00:13:35and racial issues
00:13:36and things like this,
00:13:37but these are things they don't think about
00:13:39when they're not,
00:13:40and they think they have to do this
00:13:42in our presence.
00:13:43Can they mean well?
00:13:44No, but that's the killer.
00:13:45This is the killer.
00:13:46This is the killer.
00:13:47They think in their mind
00:13:50that they are being as progressive
00:13:52and they're saying,
00:13:53look, look,
00:13:54it's really your fault.
00:13:56He said it's your fault.
00:13:57Are you playing,
00:13:58you're a big part of the problem,
00:13:59but he means well.
00:14:01Yeah.
00:14:02I don't like that, do you?
00:14:03I know that's a big part
00:14:04of what we talk about
00:14:06and what we try to do,
00:14:07but I don't like it, do you?
00:14:09You mean dealing with those issues?
00:14:10No.
00:14:11I'm talking about
00:14:11the whole cross-cultural thing
00:14:13when it brings that
00:14:16uncomfortable feeling, you know.
00:14:18I'd really,
00:14:18I'm not going to do this,
00:14:20but I'd really just say,
00:14:21hey, take that shit out of here,
00:14:23you know.
00:14:24Has there been any cooling off
00:14:25between you and the police
00:14:27in Kansas City?
00:14:28None whatsoever.
00:14:29There can never be any cooling off
00:14:30between the Black Panther Party
00:14:31and the racist pigs,
00:14:33regardless of what level
00:14:34of pigs we're talking about,
00:14:35until all oppression
00:14:37has been ended,
00:14:37until we've seen them all
00:14:38sent to their graves.
00:14:40When I look at that footage,
00:14:43I'm a little impressed
00:14:44with myself that I had
00:14:45the fortitude to say this
00:14:47and to say it on national TV.
00:14:51I have no qualms
00:14:53about what we were struggling
00:14:54for in the Black Panther Party.
00:14:55I think they were right.
00:14:57That's ludicrous.
00:14:58But when I see myself
00:14:59adopting a totally
00:15:02unreasonable stance,
00:15:03it almost says to me,
00:15:04I could have dealt
00:15:06with that better.
00:15:07And Eldridge Cleaver
00:15:08made the statement
00:15:09that he would like
00:15:10to go into the Senate,
00:15:11to shoot his way
00:15:12into the Senate
00:15:12and take McCollum's head.
00:15:14While Eldridge is doing that,
00:15:15I would like very much
00:15:16to shoot my way
00:15:17into the House of Representatives
00:15:18and get this racist
00:15:19lying Eichard's head.
00:15:22The interviewer,
00:15:23when I said that I wanted
00:15:24to take Congressman Eichard's head,
00:15:26who headed the investigation
00:15:27against me,
00:15:28he said,
00:15:31now when you say
00:15:32you want to take his head,
00:15:33you don't mean that literally.
00:15:37And I said,
00:15:38I mean it literally.
00:15:39I'd like to do that.
00:15:40And perhaps I did.
00:15:42Perhaps at that time
00:15:44I was thinking
00:15:45that going into
00:15:46the House of Representatives
00:15:48and taking the head
00:15:49of Eichard
00:15:50would somehow
00:15:51further the revolution.
00:15:53Well,
00:15:54if that's how I thought then,
00:15:56it's not a reflection
00:15:57of how I feel now.
00:16:01What I need to do
00:16:02is just really practice
00:16:03the pronunciation.
00:16:05to me pata,
00:16:07see I'm getting,
00:16:08struggling already.
00:16:09Try to use it.
00:16:10Okay.
00:16:12to me pata,
00:16:13muafaka.
00:16:17First tell me the meaning,
00:16:18what does it mean?
00:16:19The meaning is understanding.
00:16:21Understanding,
00:16:21like between you and I.
00:16:23Yeah.
00:16:23Say we quarreled
00:16:24on certain matters,
00:16:26and then we said,
00:16:27okay,
00:16:27let's forget about
00:16:29our differences.
00:16:30So that understanding
00:16:32is called muafaka.
00:16:35Good Lord in heaven.
00:16:40Muafaka.
00:16:41Muafaka.
00:16:42Okay.
00:16:44I understand why
00:16:45you try to avoid
00:16:47using that word.
00:16:48Yes, I am.
00:16:49Because there's a phrase
00:16:50in English
00:16:51that sounds very similar,
00:16:53and it means,
00:16:55certainly does not mean
00:16:56understanding,
00:16:57you know.
00:16:59When Peter came
00:17:01to Tanzania,
00:17:02he was young,
00:17:03provocative,
00:17:05very rough.
00:17:06I remember,
00:17:09you cannot
00:17:11talk to Peter
00:17:14three words
00:17:15without exchanging
00:17:19horrible words.
00:17:21One day
00:17:22in town,
00:17:23he had this
00:17:24panga,
00:17:25a big knife,
00:17:26and I don't know
00:17:27what happened,
00:17:28but he chased
00:17:29a man
00:17:30with his knife.
00:17:32So a lot of people
00:17:33came out,
00:17:34and everybody
00:17:35was saying,
00:17:36wow, wow,
00:17:36what is this,
00:17:37what is this?
00:17:38Then we saw
00:17:39it was Peter
00:17:42in Tanzania.
00:17:43We don't do that.
00:17:45If you hate somebody,
00:17:46there is a way
00:17:48of giving him
00:17:49the message
00:17:50that,
00:17:50I don't like you.
00:17:52But not chasing him
00:17:53in front of people
00:17:55with a panga,
00:17:56with a knife,
00:17:59it doesn't happen.
00:18:04when Peter came here,
00:18:06he had some
00:18:08problems in his mind.
00:18:10I think he has
00:18:11some frustrations
00:18:12from America.
00:18:37I love the Tanzanian people.
00:18:40I love the Tanzanian people.
00:18:44And things are so much
00:18:46more mellow here,
00:18:47so much more polite,
00:18:49but it's hard for me.
00:18:50Who you need, do me?
00:18:52Oftentimes,
00:18:53the elders will stop me
00:18:54and want to talk
00:18:55about some issue.
00:18:56I'm still with that
00:18:57little bit of Americanism
00:18:59in me,
00:18:59want to rush
00:19:00and do what I have to do.
00:19:03I am required
00:19:04to visit regularly,
00:19:06to bring gifts
00:19:07when I do so,
00:19:08and I must express
00:19:10the highest form
00:19:12of respect.
00:19:14I have to struggle
00:19:15with it.
00:19:16Don't do it this way.
00:19:17Don't say it that way.
00:19:18Be polite.
00:19:19This is a daily struggle
00:19:21for me.
00:19:27Yesterday,
00:19:27I received an email
00:19:29about my lawyer
00:19:31has done so much
00:19:32dramatic will take place
00:19:34with our efforts
00:19:35to have my conviction
00:19:37thrown out
00:19:38and my legal situation.
00:19:39I really believe that.
00:19:45Now,
00:19:46what was that woman
00:19:47that was the
00:19:48Attorney General
00:19:49under Clinton?
00:19:49Janet Reno.
00:19:50That's it.
00:19:50This case
00:19:51even reached
00:19:53her desk.
00:19:54And she was,
00:19:55in a sense,
00:19:56sympathetic.
00:19:57She said,
00:19:57yes,
00:19:58I couldn't agree more
00:19:59that his conviction
00:20:00was probably
00:20:01politically motivated.
00:20:03She said,
00:20:04but it's going to
00:20:05have to be resolved
00:20:06in the courts
00:20:06or either
00:20:08a presidential pardon.
00:20:09Anyway,
00:20:10we'll see what happens.
00:20:10I'm confident,
00:20:11however,
00:20:12that eventually
00:20:13I will prevail.
00:20:15Somebody else
00:20:15give me a question.
00:20:17Okay.
00:20:17Where's the tattoo?
00:20:19Oh, Lord,
00:20:20I knew someone
00:20:20would see that.
00:20:21You're the first one.
00:20:22These were put on me
00:20:23when I was in the Navy.
00:20:25This faded,
00:20:26said Pete.
00:20:28This one says,
00:20:29Mom,
00:20:30I've never in my life
00:20:31called my mother Mom.
00:20:32Never in my entire life.
00:20:34Now,
00:20:35the creme de la creme,
00:20:36you ready?
00:20:37Yeah.
00:20:37Are we prepared for this?
00:20:39Yeah.
00:20:39Is this one,
00:20:41which is a,
00:20:42what could,
00:20:42what could I have been thinking?
00:20:44A turtle?
00:20:46Man,
00:20:47I've got stuff on me
00:20:48that I said,
00:20:48Lord,
00:20:49please,
00:20:49let no one see it
00:20:50before I die,
00:20:51you know,
00:20:52and you want to know
00:20:53what I got in Hong Kong?
00:20:54Let me show you.
00:20:55You want to see it?
00:20:55Yeah, sure.
00:20:56This is not going to be
00:20:57salacious or anything.
00:20:58Don't get upset or worried.
00:21:00This is a Black Panther
00:21:02that I had put on
00:21:03in Hong Kong
00:21:04in 1958,
00:21:06long before
00:21:07a Black Panther party
00:21:08was ever thought about.
00:21:09Isn't that,
00:21:09isn't that a little
00:21:10odd coincidence?
00:21:11Isn't that something?
00:21:12We work with a lot
00:21:14of organizations,
00:21:16universities,
00:21:17and study abroad programs.
00:21:19Tourists come out here
00:21:20and they give us donations
00:21:21for staying here with us.
00:21:23So this is how
00:21:24we survive financially.
00:21:25We operate
00:21:26and we function
00:21:27on a wing and a prayer.
00:21:39See,
00:21:40we talk about water situations,
00:21:41sister,
00:21:41is bad.
00:21:42This could get disastrous,
00:21:44you know?
00:21:45Let me tell you,
00:21:46everybody,
00:21:46may I make a suggestion?
00:21:48Please forgive the
00:21:49indelicate subject
00:21:50at the dinner table,
00:21:51but when you pee,
00:21:53don't flush the toilet.
00:21:54Do not flush the toilet
00:21:56when you pee.
00:21:57And when you take showers,
00:21:59please be brief.
00:22:09one of our major difficulties
00:22:11in living here
00:22:12in this village
00:22:13is our lack of water
00:22:14and the fact
00:22:15that our water supply
00:22:17is so uncertain.
00:22:19Can be a pipe
00:22:20who's here,
00:22:21come on,
00:22:21may, may, may,
00:22:21when there's no rain,
00:22:23everybody's battling,
00:22:24trying to get
00:22:25a little bit more water.
00:22:26Oh, this can't be.
00:22:29This is a holy mess.
00:22:33There's a trickle
00:22:34of water coming in
00:22:35from the park.
00:22:36The water is the
00:22:37absolute last
00:22:39of our reserves.
00:22:40We have nothing else.
00:22:48I have a real bad stomach ache.
00:22:50I started getting fever
00:22:52and now I'm coughing a lot.
00:22:54I think it's bronchitis.
00:22:55I've had it before.
00:22:56And now I'm throwing up.
00:22:57I can't eat anything.
00:23:01I've been wearing a temperature
00:23:03between 100 and 101
00:23:05for three days.
00:23:06Do you have headache?
00:23:07Yes.
00:23:08It's not real bad,
00:23:09but I do have headache.
00:23:10At first I thought
00:23:11maybe it was malaria,
00:23:13then I'll see if you were.
00:23:23Yeah.
00:23:26There's scant malaria,
00:23:27so you would need
00:23:28some antibiotics also
00:23:29when there's malaria.
00:23:44So it's a terrible win.
00:23:46So you got bronchitis,
00:23:48you got malaria.
00:23:49That's right.
00:23:51How did you know
00:23:51that was afraid of typhoid?
00:23:54Hmm?
00:23:55I'm not hearing it.
00:23:57But your head was hurting,
00:23:58though.
00:23:58Yeah, I'm not hearing it.
00:24:00Yeah.
00:24:04Oh, Neil.
00:24:10You got to worry about things like malaria parasites.
00:24:14There's other parasites
00:24:16that you got to always be aware of.
00:24:18There's all kinds of problems
00:24:19that would be different
00:24:20in the states
00:24:21and non-existent states.
00:24:23But then when I look around
00:24:24and see all these trees
00:24:26and all this beauty
00:24:27and the birds singing,
00:24:29I know I can go around
00:24:30the compound
00:24:31and go into the classroom
00:24:32and see all those students,
00:24:35you know,
00:24:36working and thriving,
00:24:38any kind of inconvenience
00:24:39that we experience
00:24:40is nothing compared to that.
00:24:43Because I know
00:24:44we wouldn't be able to live
00:24:45a life like this in the states.
00:24:47No way.
00:24:49Charlotte is probably
00:24:50one of the most positive human beings
00:24:52that I've ever met in my life,
00:24:54and she can deal with anything.
00:24:56But we get malaria far too much.
00:24:58We actually are getting malaria
00:25:01three and four times a year.
00:25:08It's the most horrendous disease.
00:25:11I think malaria kills more people
00:25:12in Saharan Africa
00:25:15than anything else,
00:25:16including AIDS.
00:25:18The parasites hide in the liver,
00:25:20and at times of stress,
00:25:22they come out.
00:25:23Okay, you can completely rid them
00:25:25out of your body.
00:25:26Aching and chills
00:25:29and sweating
00:25:30and fever.
00:25:31It's horrible.
00:25:34This is just taking...
00:25:38That's so nice
00:25:39we got a show like this
00:25:41we can enjoy.
00:25:41Did it.
00:25:42As Albert Einstein said,
00:25:43the world is a dangerous place
00:25:45to live in.
00:25:46Not because people do evil,
00:25:49but because people sit by
00:25:50and let them.
00:25:51Sorry.
00:25:52Good point, brother.
00:25:55Congratulations, you qualified
00:25:56for the state tournament.
00:25:57I know this was going to watch it.
00:26:00He's upset about something.
00:26:03Yeah, you can see it right there.
00:26:05Look at that all tight face.
00:26:09Oh, now that's smart.
00:26:12Is that a teacher?
00:26:14Yeah, I think she flipped out
00:26:15or something.
00:26:16Look at her.
00:26:19Whoa.
00:26:20Everything okay?
00:26:22We're going to have
00:26:23another student teacher
00:26:27affair developing there.
00:26:29See, I see through all that squish.
00:26:33He's running that squish
00:26:34for getting closer to it, you see.
00:26:36White middle class kids.
00:26:38In case you hadn't noticed,
00:26:39I'm leaving.
00:26:39Not everything is black and white,
00:26:41Mr. Jackson.
00:26:42Standardized tests.
00:26:43I'm speaking now, sir.
00:26:46Uh-oh.
00:26:46The testing board
00:26:47is comprised
00:26:48of a broad spectrum.
00:26:49It's funny how 53%
00:26:50of white kids
00:26:51answered that same question
00:26:52correctly when only 22%
00:26:54of black kids did.
00:26:54How do you know this?
00:26:55I know it
00:26:56because I read about it.
00:26:57Well, run at that.
00:26:59Education ceases
00:27:00to be learning
00:27:00with the three R's
00:27:01are read, remember,
00:27:03and regurgitate.
00:27:04Uh-oh.
00:27:06Oh, that was a good one,
00:27:07wasn't it?
00:27:19Let's get into it.
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