GOT TIME

Christopher John

A candid exchange of thoughts and perspectives where Black history intersects with art, culture, politics, and shades of social realities. 

Episodes

  1. Jul 6

    America Two-Fiddie | Unearthing Truth from the Ashes

    This episode cuts through the fireworks and flag waving to ask a harder question: what have we actually learned from the American experiment? Tracing a line from the first single color sparks of 1777 to the modern reckoning over race, power, and historical memory, this conversation confronts the resurgence of White grievance politics and names it for what it is, while making the case that Black resilience isn't just survival, it's a superpower forged in the fire of oppression itself. Along the way, we sit with Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson's recent invocation of Frederick Douglass, not just as an abolitionist, but as a constitutional thinker whose insistence that "nations should have memories" feels more urgent than ever. Because the real danger isn't forgetting history. It's distorting it to serve an agenda. This is a call to stop softening hard truths into "difficult history" and start telling it straight as an act of collective good trouble. 🎙️ A reflection on race, memory, and what it really means to build a more perfect union. #AmericaTwoFiddie #BlackHistory #FrederickDouglass#History #Constitution #Democracy #KetanjiBrownJackson #GoodTrouble #Juneteenth250 #IndependenceDay #RaceInAmerica #HistoricalTruth #BlackExcellence #PodcastEpisode Read Justice Jackson’s concurring opinion here: https://www.supremecourt.gov/opinions/25pdf/25-365_4hdj.pdf For those interested in reading the original Frederick Douglass speech Justice Jackson quoted, here’s the full text from the Frederick Douglass Papers Project: https://frederickdouglasspapersproject.com/s/digitaledition/item/18159

    America Two-Fiddie | Unearthing Truth from the Ashes
  2. Jun 30

    Uncovering Our Roots “More Than Names on a Family Tree” ft. Tracey N. Miller

    Genealogy is more than names on a family tree! Genealogist, Tracey N. Miller comes to the table for a powerful conversation exploring the intersection of family history, archival research, and the enduring legacy of the Creek Freedmen. Drawing from years of genealogical experience, Tracey shares how genealogy serves as a form of historical recovery; preserving stories that official records often overlooked or erased. Tracey is the founder of Nikki’s Roots & Records, a genealogy research company dedicated to uncovering, documenting, and preserving family stories. Together, we discuss the transformative outcomes of her genealogical work, the inspiration behind her works, and the personal journey that led her deeper into documenting her Creek heritage and Oklahoma roots. The episode also highlights essential genealogical resources from archives and libraries to school records, census documents, and yearbooks that help families reconnect with their histories. Our conversation further examines the historical significance of the Treaty of 1866 between the United States and the Creek Nation, the impact of the Dawes Rolls (1898–1914), and the ongoing struggles surrounding citizenship, identity, and recognition for Creek Freedmen descendants today.  This episode is a compelling exploration of ancestry, resilience, and the power of reclaiming history through genealogical research. Rather than reducing history to simple binaries, this episode challenges listeners to wrestle with the layered realities of identity, survival, power, and memory in America’s past.

    Uncovering Our Roots “More Than Names on a Family Tree” ft. Tracey N. Miller

About

A candid exchange of thoughts and perspectives where Black history intersects with art, culture, politics, and shades of social realities.