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Trappin Tuesday's

The Lesson Fred Hampton Taught Me | Wallstreet Trapper

Trappin Tuesday's

Wallstreet Looks Like Us Now Network

Business, Wallstreet Trapper, Investing, Entrepreneurship

4.9 β€’ 2K Ratings

πŸ—“οΈ 31 August 2025

⏱️ 18 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

There's an importance of staying grounded and practicing humility, drawing inspiration from figures within black history. He reflects on lessons learned from the black panther party and how they relate to the concept of all power to the people. Tap in for some insight on the organization of afro-american unity and African American history. Join our Exclusive Patreon!!! Creating Financial Empowerment for those who've never had it. πŸ’ŽπŸ’ΈπŸ’ŽπŸ’ΈJoin our Exclusive Patreon!!! https://hubs.ly/Q03thsJt0πŸ’ŽπŸ’ŽπŸ’ΈπŸ’Έ...

Transcript

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0:00.0

The minute you think you better than the people is the minute you lose the people.

0:03.9

That's what Fred Hampton said. You just heard him say, he said, the minute you think you better than the people is the minute you lose the people, bro. And so a lot of times you always be like, bro, or when people around be like, bro, like, why you do this or why you do that? I'm like, bro, I will never be better than the people. This is my favorite black, second favorite black man of all the time.

0:24.5

First favorite black man of all time is Malcolm Mex.

0:26.9

Second favorite black man of all time is definitely Fred Hampton, man.

0:30.7

Fred Hampton was a fearless young leader who rose to prominence as the chairman of the

0:34.3

Illinois chapter of the Black Panther Party in 1960. At just 21, he united marginalized groups through his visionary rainbow coalition,

0:42.3

brigading racial and class divides to fight systemic rate oppression.

0:49.3

Hampton's charisma, intellect, and unwavering commitment to justice made him a powerful force in the

0:54.6

civil rights movement.

0:56.2

He championed free breakfast program, community clinics, and political education, empowering

1:01.5

the poor and challenging the status.

1:04.7

Hampton's revolutionary spirit and radical compassion threatened entrenched power structures

1:10.8

led to an assassination in 1969, police rated,

1:14.6

wildly viewed as an orchestrated by the FBI.

1:18.6

Long live, Jim. Y'all know that, man. He is tattooed on my back.

1:22.6

Man, when I think about Fred Hampton, I think I've watched

1:26.6

Judas and the Black Messiah

1:28.4

probably 100 times.

1:31.8

I probably watch it.

1:33.4

If I'm being honest with you, I might watch it once a month.

1:36.9

And this is no exaggerating.

1:39.8

I love that movie, bro.

...

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