Topic: Gardening

6 chapters across the catalog

97: Flowers for Fuller
2:46:06 - 2:54:13

97: Flowers for Fuller

Constructive Behavior and the Four Clincher Questions

Mo Facts concludes the episode with a "booster shot" of logic, urging listeners to evaluate every action as either "constructive" or "non-constructive." He provides four "clincher questions" for conscious living: what do I want to do, why do I want to do it, how do I plan to do it, and what is the expected constructive result. The hosts sign off, encouraging listeners to pay attention so the truth can reveal itself.

94: Helping Our People
2:29:11 - 2:35:04

94: Helping Our People

James Brown Saves Boston, Catharsis in Cinema

On the night of MLK's assassination, James Brown's concert at the Boston Garden was televised locally to keep people off the streets and prevent rioting. The hosts compare this to the "catharsis" provided by Blacksploitation films and modern social media "dunking." They argue that the establishment uses entertainment to provide a controlled release for public anger.

92: White Lies
48:47 - 56:55

92: White Lies

Historical Parallels, 1930s Berlin and Eugenics

The hosts discuss Malcolm Nance's references to a 1935 Nazi rally in Madison Square Garden, arguing that the current establishment's tactics mirror those of the National Socialists. They link modern policies regarding vaccines and "essential transgender care" to historical eugenics movements and Planned Parenthood. Mo Facts suggests the elite want to consolidate power by reducing the population's reproductive capabilities.

84: More or Less
3:07:23 - 3:09:44

84: More or Less

Human Weeds and the Audacity of "Playing God"

A gardening analogy is used to describe the eugenicist mindset: "weeds" (unplanned children) are seen as strangling the "planned" flowers. Margaret Sanger famously referred to certain people as "human weeds." The hosts criticize the "audacity" of elites who "play God" by deciding which "seeds" are allowed to grow and which must be eliminated to preserve resources.

72: Duke Power
8:08 - 12:16

72: Duke Power

Nancy Grace and Media Portrayal of Wealthy Defendants

A 2006 clip features Nancy Grace highlighting the high property values of the defendants' homes in New York and New Jersey. The hosts analyze how the media used the players' wealthy backgrounds to suggest they would escape justice regardless of guilt. Mo provides local context as a resident of Durham during the events, noting the tension between the community and the affluent "preppy" student body.

34: Big Momma Drama
40:37 - 43:12

34: Big Momma Drama

Great Migration, Urban Food Deserts

The Great Migration of Black Americans from the rural South to Northern cities led to a loss of agricultural autonomy and the rise of urban food deserts. In the South, families maintained gardens and canned their own produce, but urban segregation forced a reliance on processed, off-brand foods. This shift in food flow and control is identified as a primary cause of the modern health crisis in Black communities.