In this raw conversation, Kodak Black delivers more than music – he delivers perspective. He talks about how “niggas like me don’t come around every generation,” placing himself in a line of leaders who take risks for their people. Comparing his journey to Martin Luther King Jr., Malcolm X, and Fred Hampton, Kodak explores what it means to sacrifice, to resist, and to inspire.
He touches on Black entrepreneurship, the legacy of inventors like George Washington Carver, and the dangers of fake politicians who profit off the struggle. Kodak raises questions about segregation, ownership, and why many are too afraid to stand against injustice. It’s a side of Kodak Black rarely seen, where the conversation shifts from rap to revolution, from survival to legacy.