"KYS!" Panelist Gets Called Out And Young Don Joins Destiny's Panel

Published 2022-11-21

All Comments (21)
  • @dubbykash
    Hearing this man tell his experiences and his hero black father get dismissed by hurry up where's this going legit made me rage
  • @dread3165
    when the man was telling his background trying to introduce himself and why he thinks the way he does just to get shit on by her saying "I'm bored this is boring" is infuriating and then when destiny calls her out she whines that he's not siding with her??
  • @roblowe6543
    I get that Destiny wants to have interesting conversations with interesting people and normally I'm down but Anna isn't interesting to me. She just comes across as insecure because she can't treat anyone respectfully or engage in good faith. She doesn't like to let people talk and is hyper aggressive. Probably so she can use their reaction to her being an asshole as an excuse to scapegoat black men and dismiss anything her opposition has to say. She's basically a slightly more intelligent and considerably more racist version of Jackson Hinkle or Infrared. It's boring. I'm out.
  • @mikeyg9958
    My brain melted out of my head when they started talking about religion
  • @a-ron.5040
    Ngl saying that Mexicans get treated like regular Americans is a clear example that most of these people havent spent more than a week in the usa lol 17:20
  • We will have to check in with Fanatiq to see if this was okay of Destiny to do, or if he's super racist.
  • “No one is saying the Black American experience isn’t unique” Except that was exactly what was said in the previous video. Beyond that there is meat to the bones of this conversation. There is a discussion to be had about both ends if the Systemic/Personal scale. Alot of the broader conversation does tend to limit agency in all the wrong ways, but you do need to meet people where they are.
  • Christians saying that those who went through tremendous suffering did it because they weren't being true enough to God is absolutely repulsive. That the African slaves were being punished for turning their back on Yeh or that anyone else who suffers through tremendous pain and greif and loss and horrific crimes is being punished by God is such a horrific thing to say, how could you justify that?
  • Finally a calm, mostly, productive conversation... Anna just ruins every conversation on how to help the black community with her terrible attitude and frankly her overt sexism/racism.
  • @HugeMeats
    Some of this is frustrating to watch. Fenty literally broke on to the scene with her bi-racial sob story weeks ago, she was able to get it out uncontested and her feelies taken into account. Seems messed up she would essentially step on the experience of BA’s so casually like she did in convo. Also Don with the “yeah who cares you’re getting lynched and can’t vote when the kingdom in heaven is eternal!!” Like bro comon. Sometimes these guys don’t even scratch the surface of what engagement is.
  • @MrPEYTON121
    Why do people continue to argue about what people "need to acknowledge" if we all understand that nobody is interested in doing so?
  • @philssox
    This religious talk is so dull. It's like arguing over your favorite super hero, just pointless
  • @owenleal
    Welcome to episode 2283739294838 of Destiny not learning his lesson.
  • @Jeulemonger.
    I get Don’s argument, but to say find Jesus as the solution feels extremely reductive. Especially considering the fact that that solution is more idealistic than realistic. Converting people to Christianity is a challenge in itself, and getting them to be truly spiritual and faithful is even more difficult, especially when everyone would be doing it for different reasons, if u want to fix the black community as a whole you’d need develop solutions that start with the lowest common denominator and build up from there, and if I had to guess, that denominator isn’t spirituality or family values, it’s education and economics.
  • @Scardor
    When I worked in social work one of the most eye-opening realizations I made was that areas and communities are not a certain way or have certain problems because of the people that live in them but because of the type of housing that is in those communities and their affordability. Because when people are lifted up from their level of poverty, they will simply move and will be replaced by someone else who is back on the old level of poverty. Certain areas will always keep their issues because they will be filled with people with those issues.
  • Bro even confronted with abortion being in the bible Don uses his own interpretation to defend his beliefs
  • @juicetube1360
    Something about this conversation hits home for me. I am a white American but my family is from Eastern Kentucky where the poverty rate is extremely high, and my family is basically your typical "poor whites." Some people like JD Vance get themselves out of a situation like that and then turn around and say the culture is the problem and welfare is the problem. I have been pretty successful compared to the rest of my family, and while I can recognize that culture is a major factor, there is so much more at play. Clinical depression, anxiety, debt upon debt, not knowing where to find resources, lack of social skills required for professional environments, and so much more. These people don't even know where to start, and it isn't their fault! If you want to prescribe a "boot straps" mentality for these communities, then by its very nature, only of a portion of the population will make it out! That's survival of the fittest, and it's not broad enough to help an entire community! People who have this POV are so blind to their own privilege, whatever form it may take.