(BALTIMORE – October 5, 2025) – Peace and blessings, family.

Recently, I received an email from a brother who’s been faithfully watching our Indigenous Series. In his words, the discussions sometimes feel “romantic, fragmented, or inconclusive,” and that all the “neo-intellectualism” might leave some folks scratching their heads.

First off, I appreciate that kind of feedback — because that’s exactly what this platform is about: dialogue. We don’t have to agree on everything, but we do have to keep talking — openly, honestly, and with love for truth.

Let me be clear: this series was never designed to hand out neat, pre-packaged answers. It’s about raising questions that have been buried for centuries. We are unpacking layers of history, culture, faith, and identity that have been distorted, erased, or mislabeled. And yes, that process is complex, sometimes messy — but absolutely necessary.

There are certain topics we will repeatedly explore:

  • The pyramids in the Americas

  • The origin of the Confederate flag

  • The hundreds, if not thousands, of mound and pyramid burial grounds across North America

  • The truths behind the Trans-Atlantic Slave Trade

  • The Hebrew, Muslim, and Native tri-alogue

  • And Richmond, Virginia’s Walter Plecker and the Racial Integrity Act of 1924, also known as the One Drop Rule — a policy that institutionalized paper genocide against our people.

We revisit these subjects because they are foundational to understanding our true story — a story that extends far beyond what traditional textbooks have told us. This isn’t about intellectual showmanship; it’s about reclamation. It’s about connecting the dots so the next generation won’t have to start from scratch.

The beauty of this work is that the dialogue keeps expanding — not just locally, but nationally. Every week, we’re joined by powerful voices: Hannibal James in Detroit, Horace the IVth in Chicago, Planet Wells — a Native New Yorker now in Hawaii, Mafia Shakur in Baltimore, Afro-futurist William Jones from the DMV, and Robert Scott in Atlanta. And of course, Brenda Bennett, our virtual reference guide, who keeps the discussion grounded with context and research.

Together, these thinkers help us build a bridge between scholarship and lived experience — between history and present-day identity.

So to that brother who wrote in — and to all our viewers — stay with us. Ask questions. Challenge us. Think critically. Because this journey takes time.

We’re not just having conversations.
We’re rebuilding a narrative — one truth at a time. Next show: Tonight at 8 pm.

Peace and power.

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