🌍 Welcome to the R.O.D Podcast! 🌍 I'm your brother man from the motherland, Junns the NBIC, and I'm here to guide you through powerful conversations aimed at awakening the Black and Brown communities worldwide. Join me on this transformative journey as we break free from the shackles of lies that have haunted us since the days of the slave ships.
Religious deconstruction, Spiritual enlightenment, Great awakening movement, Black empowerment and history, Unveiling hidden truths, Decolonizing religion, Truth seekers in faith, Biblical history exposed, Deconstructing Christianity, Consciousness and spirituality, Social justice and faith, African origins of religion, Breaking free from dogma, Critical thinking and faith.
R.O.D Podcast
Top of the top quiz let's get it
10 hours ago | [YT] | 5
View 5 replies
R.O.D Podcast
Still not seeing that it's a book of confusion? No proof, just passed down ideology about everything but who we are 🤔 #Confusion #Ideology #Truth
2 days ago | [YT] | 5
View 2 replies
R.O.D Podcast
Do my people see the common similarities?
3 days ago | [YT] | 4
View 5 replies
R.O.D Podcast
Shannon Sharpe asked Michael Beasley about Delonte West.
Sharpe: "Delonte West, he was a teammate of yours in China, right? How difficult is it to see him going through what he's going through right now?"
Beasley: "It's not"
Sharpe: " It's not difficult for you?"
Beasley: "No"
Sharpe: "Why?"
Beasley: "You just told me to mind my own business. We all have to go through what we have to go through to become the person we need to be for tomorrow. Tomorrow only knows survival. Us and our social cues of today tend to forget that. If tomorrow was a place we had to go to, you know how many people wouldn't make it? But we are so spoiled as to have it come to us and that you can sit on the couch and be 600 pounds. Life is just a maturation process and we are all on our own journey."
Sharpe: "Everybody has to go through something. Some more extreme than others but we got to go through something."
Beasley: "A wise man was a fool, you understand? In order to learn your lessons you go through things. My latest revelation. It's never not been right now. So if you get it now or you get it later. When you do get it, it's going to be right now. See, we all confuse right now with our right now and if you confuse that, then you're the present moment. When you finish, it's never not going to be the present moment. That's your right now. You just got to put your head down and just not worry about mine. So don't confuse my now with your now."
(Club Shay Shay)
GREAT INTERVIEW
4 days ago | [YT] | 24
View 0 replies
R.O.D Podcast
Muhammad Ali visited Bob Marley on his deathbed - and what Bob whispered to the champion followed him for the rest of his life...
May 9, 1981, Miami. A suffocating silence hung over the halls of Cedars of Lebanon Hospital.
Muhammad Ali, the man the world called unbeatable, walked toward Room 318 with a heaviness no title belt had ever prepared him for. Inside, Bob Marley lay almost unrecognizable - thin as a shadow, dreadlocks spread across the pillow, his bright fire reduced to a flicker.
Doctors had already said there was almost no time left. But Bob had not asked Ali to come just to say goodbye. He wanted to place one final truth in the hands of another legend before his voice disappeared forever.
When Ali took Bob's hand, Bob studied him with the calm of a man who had nothing left to fear. He noticed the tiny trembling in Ali's fingers, the strain behind the smile, the first quiet crack in the body that had once looked indestructible.
"Champ," Bob breathed, "the world taught us to be symbols. Strong. Loud. Unbreakable. But a man can die trying to prove he is made of stone."
Then he gave Ali the lesson that broke him open: real courage was not taking more punishment. It was knowing when to stop, when to go home, when to let love carry what pride could not. Ali never forgot those words - and years later, he said that was the day he truly understood what strength was...
The final conversation, the promise Ali carried, and the heartbreaking ending stayed with everyone who heard it - and what happened after that still leaves people speechless in the comments...
5 days ago | [YT] | 37
View 2 replies
R.O.D Podcast
Today’s melanated men are the worst. They slapping and putting their face in anything walking even if it’s dirty
6 days ago | [YT] | 7
View 6 replies
R.O.D Podcast
A widely shared message connected to Dr. Frances Cress Welsing is being discussed again as people reflect on identity and self worth.
Dr. Frances Cress Welsing was a psychiatrist and author known for her work on Black identity, mental health, and self understanding. Her research and writing often focused on how children develop self image and confidence. Across her work, she consistently emphasized the importance of self knowledge and building a strong sense of identity from within. Her ideas continue to be referenced in education and community conversations today.
Many educators and parents say her work helps shape how they talk to children about value and confidence. The message often tied to her legacy is that identity should be strengthened early so it is not shaped only by outside influence. While some quotes circulating online are not verified as exact wording, they reflect themes found throughout her writing and interviews. Her focus remained on encouraging self respect and emotional grounding in young people.
Her legacy continues through ongoing discussions about child development and mental well being in Black communities. Many still turn to her work when talking about self image and empowerment. The ideas she shared remain part of broader conversations on how children learn to see themselves. Her influence is still present in spaces focused on identity, education, and growth.
(Photo: Dr. Frances Cress Welsing)
1 week ago | [YT] | 25
View 1 reply
R.O.D Podcast
This is murder #31 of a Black woman being killed by a whyte man since 2026 started, and I have posted every single one.
31 murders is what I have paid attention to, but there are many more I have missed.
This specific woman had a platform talking down on Black men, then got what she wanted from a whyte man (paid to be with, requiring trips, and money).
She got what she wanted but not what she expected, which is death.
Whether a man is whyte, Black, Asian, or Latino. If I had a daughter, I wouldn't want her to be with a man who basically buys her financially.
In 2025, women should have learned, men who buy women tend to be very dangerous, no matter their ethnicity.
Women complain about being feminine and submissive claiming it's slavery, but I know plenty of women who have gotten with men with money, and they all left saying they were basically all slaves, then got with an average earner, living an average life, growing together, and is happy now.
However, most women don't want to give that higher lifestyle up because that's what they think they are worth because they are all insecure...
Whyte men tend to kill Black women so much that when I see them together, I start to automatically assume death will eventually happen to her, and that's pretty bad.
What's even more sad about these deaths are Black women say or do absolutely nothing about it, when realistically they should be out there protesting.
Meanwhile, if a Black man does something as small as a lie, or if he has a side chick, Black American modern women will make sure the whole world knows about it through social media.
This story sounds more like a Karma death.
She was talking about Black men as if it's all of them, when only a very small percentage are what she was talking about, unless she was talking about Black American men averaging only $40K-$60K a year which is true, but God said to grow with your husband, and not wait at the finish line, which means $40K-$60K shouldn't even be a deal breaker, and expensive vacations, designer bags jewelry,etc, shouldn't be requirements to date you in the beginning. It's actually being a sex worker...
2 weeks ago | [YT] | 10
View 10 replies
R.O.D Podcast
You’d have to be a fool to think the ancient Semites and middle eastern people were mostly black when we have writings like this 😂😂😂
How could the original Semites have been Black when historical accounts claim Ham was cursed to be Black and to be slaves to shem and that Satan is Black? Furthermore, these sources claim Noah cursed Ham’s descendants so that their hair would not grow past their ears clearly mocking Afro-textured hair.
Since the Arab writers who recorded these stories knew that Jews were Semites (having adopted these narratives from them), why would they write such things about Black Africans if the original Arabs and Jews were also Black? And if the the original Jews were black how come they didn’t include Jews in this anti black rhetoric?
AGAIN THIS IS NOT OUR STORY, ALL JESUIT CREATIONS
2 weeks ago | [YT] | 10
View 8 replies
R.O.D Podcast
Million Dollar Question Nobody Wants To Answer
2 weeks ago | [YT] | 2
View 0 replies
Load more