Topic: Economic Status

3 chapters across the catalog

75: What U Gonna Do Cuzz
1:35:35 - 1:37:44

75: What U Gonna Do Cuzz

Workplace Culture, Social Economic Status and Isolation

Mo Facts discusses the loss of "work families" and the social support provided by colleagues who share the same economic status. He emphasizes the importance of community groups, such as the "Facts Family" and "No Agenda" meetups, in combating the isolation caused by remote work and mandates. He urges listeners to check on friends who may be struggling in silence.

38: You Ain't Binary
1:59:54 - 2:03:14

38: You Ain't Binary

Alien Contact, Tax-Free Status and "The Dub" Slang

A discussion on extraterrestrials leads into a proposal for "tax-free status" as a form of tangible economic justice for black Americans. The segment also clarifies that "a dub" is slang for a twenty-dollar bill, a term familiar to younger generations but new to some listeners.

20: Separate but Equal
33:17 - 38:17

20: Separate but Equal

14th Amendment, Institutional Racism and Economic Shifts

The Supreme Court unanimously ruled in Brown v. Board that separate educational facilities are inherently unequal, effectively ending the Jim Crow era. However, the hosts argue this led to a form of institutional racism where black schools were allowed to deteriorate as long as a select few students could access white schools. They observe that the issue eventually shifted from a purely racial divide to one based on economic class.