what it is is black lives matter and I've said it before and I'll say it again it was a psychosis decided upon by the mainstream media narrative there wasn't a signal statistic or data sign that could back up the fact that everybody wanted to have this conversation that was my point it's like what like is more important it's it's a real thing right and then we say if you do not get on board with the fake thing and how dare you bring up a real thing when we are decided already on the fake thing and we have the entire ecosystem the mainstream media we own the celebrities we own the phones we own the apps we've got Apple we've got Google how dare you think you have the audacity to stand up to the button that we just pressed and that's what you did yeah because the way I saw it is that I was very confused by living in England in 2015 and all I'd seen the five years from from the minute I left America after the Sri Lanka war ended and I couldn't talk about it I was like okay I'm leaving you know and from this perspective the way I saw it is that Obama and Hillary Clinton had started the Arab Spring and this entire campaign was going on in the Middle East and then we had all of this other stuff and problems and Isis were popping up in you know Iraq or whatever and you know and they were sort of threatening our comfortable lives in the west as well and all of these conversations were going on on your mainstream media you know this is just the news I was getting at the time and that's where my head was at when I said oh an American Musician who's huge huge like their platform is huge because they toe the line which is what we're already talking about when you toe the line you get to be a billionaire and I said when you're towing the line you can't say hashtag Syrian life matters a hundred percent you just cannot and that's why I was canceled so then if you know that I was at the Super Bowl and I gave the middle finger at the Super Bowl and I was sued for 16 million dollars so I have the right to talk about the Super Bowl because I was affected by the Super Bowl in my personal life and experience so I'm coming from a personal uh place you know so I was like yeah I went on the Super Bowl and I gave a middle finger and I got sued 16 million you know and they said what do you think of Beyonce putting up the Black Fist supporting black panthers at the Super Bowl and it was a it was a hit job and I didn't know but the journalists asked me and I said well she can do that as a black woman but maybe she won't be able to say Syrian life matters you know pointing out the hypocrisy and the irony so I was just saying yes that's fine it's fine because you could be a black woman in mainstream music and you can say I am back which is fine but I was like she also supported openly the Hillary Clinton campaign and the Obama campaign she would not be able to talk about the war in Syria but then the counter-attack that I got and the way they canceled me was to say black people are Muslims too so how dare you say that but that just didn't make sense it never makes any sense so it never makes any sense but I know that that people could be Muslims that's not the point I was making I was specifically making a point about if you are a mainstream artist who politically funds the campaign of this candidate who's then in an engaging a war over here would they speak out about it no what you're saying makes perfect sense it's interesting that you you start this by saying I probably shouldn't even go there I just want to say what you're saying makes perfect sense it's just like what you're saying makes sense because you're probably sometimes questioned your own sanity because I sometimes I say something and I'm like did I just say what I said because the headlines are now have I said something else that I have to go back and listen to what I said and that is the power of the gaslighting machine is that yeah they start to make you I don't know if I should even say anything at all because no matter what you lose by even opening your mouth saying you're not black so you can't speak on it you know is another thing that that has happened since then in a wider um you know it's been that argument of you're not there so you can't talk about it you know like if you leave race out of it you're not a woman so you can't talk about it you're not a man you can't talk about you know like that sort of easy to kind of shut down the thing is is affected culture in in how artists work you know like I see the the newer Generations suffering with this point you know a lot of the people that I work with or come come across they always say that say oh but I'm a white male so I can't touch this subject you know that they say well I I'm a Chinese person so I have to do this and and that sort of box building you know is really interesting to me just giving people power and it's crap because what's interesting is I'm a black woman allowed to say I wanted to bring it up to be like I you know having been on this side where you it's very confusing like also my dad's book when he talks about monetary exploitation he's not talking about monetary exploitation of Indian people specifically it's like no globalization and the globalist system is everyone you know includes everyone so when when you're past a certain point and you see the picture you cannot Define things by race if one people are oppressed in one place and another person's oppressed in the other place is still oppression and you get to see it like that you know and if you identify the oppressor which is which is what the whole BLM thing is you know we're discussing oppression and there's valuable conversations to be had between somebody like me and how the Tamil people who were engaged in an armed struggle you know and this is this was my response is to say if you fast forward some time where do you go with this it would be a black revolution in America you know the the fast forward the thinking of um this racial conversation you know or it's you know in America it's not a territorial thing and it's not an ethnicity thing but it is a racial thing but if you get to the extreme end of this conversation it's a it's a revolution it's a struggle you know it it could be an armed struggle and my dad already thought that and went there in the 70s and set one up and had the Army you know and then within that within the tamils we had four fractions so we had diff you know four different leaders with their four different groups and then they were into fighting so so you can have a Candice Owen you know the leader of black conservatives or you can have the leader of BLM whoever the leader is or Beyonce the leader of black people and they both say okay we need armed resistance and that's what it's about then I can tell you how it ends you know it was a debate that was worth having but nobody wanted the debate this Council comes culture thing that where they made me out to be the racist person was not I felt you know I was like who's at the bottom a bit you know there's so many different people this could be so it just that made me look into it even more you know and and I was like well you have this Elite Class you know you have black Elites and then you have poor black people in America who are controlled by the same mass media narrative as everybody else white people and in the Hispanics and you know they're all in it together like right now is confusing because the vice president is Tamil you know she's Tamil and black so it's that's another thing but we're not allowed to talk to each other because I'm a Tamil and you're black and you have to be in your experience and your narratives and I have to be in my experience and my narrative but we cannot have conversations