Video yükleniyor...

Video Yüklenemedi

Ana Sayfaya Dön

I never thought raising men to be men would be a problem. Maybe, it was Anthony Mackie’s phrasing on the “Death of the {American} male” that ruffled feathers, but I raised my son to be a man too. Genesis 2:15 states, "The LORD God took the man and put...

48,430 görüntüleme • 1 yıl önce •via X (Twitter)

10 Yorum

Jury Pool profil fotoğrafı
Jury Pool1 yıl önce

My only qualm is that you cite the myth on Genesis as of it's historical; not to say it's not helpful. Also, we should train both girls and boys on protecting the home. You ain't sending the boy out there to check unarmed, are you? Teach them both to put fire in ass if need be.

Ruperto Duncan profil fotoğrafı
Ruperto Duncan1 yıl önce

Well said👏🏾👏🏾

Danny Black profil fotoğrafı
Danny Black1 yıl önce

There maybe nothing more important than what you just said. I’m a Dad girl but she is self sufficient but she also knows that when the time calls for it her man is right there to take it on.

🇲🇽Mark Wayne🇺🇸 profil fotoğrafı
🇲🇽Mark Wayne🇺🇸1 yıl önce

Amen RC. That episode was nothing short of amazing.

3rd party time please 🙏 profil fotoğrafı
3rd party time please 🙏1 yıl önce

Those are the only type of men I want my kids to date, nice work

david crenshaw profil fotoğrafı
david crenshaw1 yıl önce

Stop!! You are a racist clown and if you ever open your eyes you could see the problem!! Look at Tyreck Hill and use your bogus attempt at scripture!! Oh wait, he is a black man so it’s ok with your agenda!!

coachjsmith profil fotoğrafı
coachjsmith1 yıl önce

Like LeBron, speaking up on him and his Son behalf, A Black man, shouldn’t have been a issue. But he didn’t do it to skip 🤷🏾‍♂️ Same ball park

William profil fotoğrafı
William1 yıl önce

Men do manly things without hesitation

Kevin Walters profil fotoğrafı
Kevin Walters1 yıl önce

Sorry….really used to respect you. You’ve lost your way.

D profil fotoğrafı
D1 yıl önce

When you talk about the death of masculinity…in 2025….you know what that sounds like cause only certain people phrase it that way lol while that’s not how Anthony meant it, don’t be shocked people reacted a way first cause this what we used to

Benzer Videolar

Fathers to a son: please read this. We dropped my oldest off at college this week. He is 18. Totally ready to leave the house. Desperate for independence. This is the way it should be. But it has torn me up. Statistically we have spent 90% of all the time we ever will together. I am sad because I know I made a lot of mistakes during this time. Mainly, I was too hard on him because he was the oldest, and he was a boy. I was the oldest, and a son in my family. I repeated some mistakes that were made with me. Even though I was convinced I would do a better job. I spanked him. I used unkind and hurtful words when I thought he fell short. Things that I have learned cause more harm than good. Things I wish I could take back. Basically I was just too damn hard on him. I have learned and (I hope) improved as a father. Which benefits his little sister and brother. I wrote him a long letter before he left. I told him how proud I am of him, tried to give him some words of wisdom, but also apologized for not always being a great dad. I told him I wanted to be the greatest dad in the world, but I didn’t always know how. I explained how I was brought up, and my father was brought up, and that I had brought some stuff along as a dad that I hope he is smart enough to leave behind when he is a dad. I know my grandfather had it ROUGH. My dad had it a bit less ROUGH. I had it by comparison better, and my son did too. However I could have and should have done a better job in my link of this chain of fatherhood. I am confident my son will do better when it is his turn. To the dads out there, especially with your oldest son…try not to be so hard on him. He doesn’t need to feel the weight of all of your expectations of a family lineage, he doesn’t need to be made into a clone of you, he doesn’t have to be made ready to be your “successor”. Watch how you discipline him…think very carefully about what you are trying to do and what the expected results will be. He just needs to be a good man and to be happy. And you need to keep a good relationship with him.

Adam Rossi

592,553 görüntüleme • 1 yıl önce

“For a long time, I was a guest in our house” Thierry Henry speaks from his soul. He has depth. He’s a man in touch with himself. I recall some years ago, he spoke about how much he wanted to please his father on Steven Bartlett Diary of a CEO podcast. Everything he aimed to achieve was to please the voice that rang in his head, telling him to do it better. His father stood behind him while he built a career, probably saw the good many never saw. As a father, he also mentioned how COVID-19 changed his life. It was the point he chose his family. That was probably why he said at some point, he became a guest in his house. Men become guests in their house. There was a Reminisce Alaga interview I saw. I think it was on ISaidWhatISaidPod. He said there was a point he went into his daughter(s) room and asked when they painted the wall pink. His wife told him it’s been there for two years. He said that was the point he thought it important to rest on the tours and be with his children. At that point, he probably was a guest in his house. Men’s lives are not easy. Footballers especially — elite footballers most especially are like tour musicians. They’re often on the road. You’re playing away games round the country, spending three days or more away from home when you have continental away games. Gabriel Jesus spoke about the same thing in his recent interview with The Players’ Tribune titled “A Letter to My Family and my Arsenal Family”. He said football made him distant but his ACL injury brought him closer. “I wasn’t the husband and father that I needed to be,” he said. When his wife gave birth to his daughter, he said he only held her for one day. Brazil called and he had to go. And he was a guy who grew up without a father. For his child at the time, he was there now but wasn’t there too. “I always promised myself: When I become a father, I will always be there for my kids. “When Helena was born, I was not living up to that. I was there, but I was always distracted, you know? Always catching a flight.” That’s the tough decisions men have to make sometimes. At the point of growth and ascent, life will ask questions, and difficult decisions will need to be made. Hopefully, it will be one that won’t damage the future. The future one is securing.

Rilwan

206,601 görüntüleme • 6 ay önce

I just watched a video by Charleston White… and for once, he said something that hits every man in his bones. A man can give everything he has… his strength, his youth, his peace, his labor, his sanity… and he will stay invisible until the day he dies. As long as he’s perfect, nobody sees him. The bills get paid… nobody sees him. The house stays standing… nobody sees him. He keeps danger off the family… nobody sees him. He wakes up exhausted and still gives more… nobody sees him. He becomes visible only when something goes wrong. That’s the truth men live with… and it’s the truth nobody wants to confront because it exposes the spiritual rot in this culture. And here’s the hard part… This wasn’t always the way. Families used to honor men. Communities used to respect men. Faith used to center men. A man’s sacrifice meant something. Democrats shattered that world. They built a culture where the man is disposable… replaceable… irrelevant. They taught women they don’t need men… they taught children to distrust men… they taught courts to punish men… they taught society to ignore men until they fail. They turned the Black man into a workhorse with no gratitude and no covering. A ghost in his own house. That’s how a man can die after a lifetime of sacrifice… and nobody even knows his name. But here’s the part that shakes the soul… God sees him. The Almighty knows the weight he carries. He knows every night the man went to sleep wondering if he still mattered. He knows every moment that man swallowed his own pain to hold up the people he loves. Men aren’t asking to be worshiped. They’re asking to be seen. If men are “privileged,” then why does the world only notice them when they break? #SilentMajoritySpeaks #AStoneGroove

A Gene Robinson

48,667 görüntüleme • 7 ay önce

I took my son to our local butcher, well not too local, it’s about 30 minutes away. He’s getting to be at an age where he’s beginning to be extra compassionate. This is him taking my phone for whatever reason since he has his own, and recording the cows. My dilemma is I can’t hide from him anymore what the fate of these specific animals are. I’ve taken him to this butcher/farm off and on for years. He still loves eating his steak and ribs of course because who doesn’t. But now he’s beginning to associate the truth that the cows he goes and pets and befriends will be the same ones in the display counter where he picks out his steaks. Am I wrong for not wanting to clarify and tell him that’s the case, should I just let him find out on his own? He’s already going through puberty now as we speak, he’s been extra hormonal and angry. I don’t know if I want to add another burden for him. I don’t want to tell him the animals he loves are the ones he’s been eating. Part of me wants to just get it over with but a part of me wants to not say anything, I don’t want to speed things up for him too quick. He has no problem buying steaks from grocery stores and such. The problem I’m facing now is that this place that sells meat also is where they raise the cows for slaughter. So the ones we see on the farm will be the same ones weeks from now that we will be eating. I’m not sure what I want to do just yet but I’ll keep you posted.

SonnyBoy🇺🇸

51,953 görüntüleme • 1 ay önce