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n this clip from episode 187 "Escape From Death Row" rapper RBX details how the hit record "Let Me Ride" from the classic "The Chronic" wound up closing out the album
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Video After The Jump
n this clip from episode 187 "Escape From Death Row" rapper RBX details how the hit record "Let Me Ride" from the classic "The Chronic" wound up closing out the album
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Video After The Jump
Houston rapper Sauce Walka recently sat down with Say Cheese TV to chop it up about a variety of topics, including his mom being a stripper, evolving his hustle and more.
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Mackenzie Dern joins Ariel Helwani’s MMA Show to preview her fight vs. Amanda Ribas at UFC Fight Night: Joanna vs. Waterson in Tampa, Florida. Dern, who just gave birth in June, describes her journey back to fighting and her decision to return to the Octagon so soon. (12:00) Dern says her metabolism has changed and losing weight has been easier.
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Report via BBC -- A 27-year-old Indian man plans to sue his parents for giving birth to him without his consent.
Mumbai businessman Raphael Samuel told the BBC that it's wrong to bring children into the world because they then have to put up with lifelong suffering.
Mr Samuel, of course, understands that our consent can't be sought before we are born, but insists that "it was not our decision to be born."
So as we didn't ask to be born, we should be paid for the rest of our lives to live, he argues.
A demand like this could cause a rift within any family, but Mr Samuel says he gets along very well with his parents (both of whom are lawyers) and they appear to be dealing with it with a lot of humor.
In a statement, his mother Kavita Karnad Samuel explained her response to "the recent upheaval my son has created."
"I must admire my son's temerity to want to take his parents to court knowing both of us are lawyers. And if Raphael could come up with a rational explanation as to how we could have sought his consent to be born, I will accept my fault," she said.
Mr Samuel's belief is rooted in what's called anti-natalism - a philosophy that argues that life is so full of misery that people should stop procreating immediately.
This, he says, would gradually phase out humanity from the Earth and that would also be so much better for the planet.
"There's no point to humanity. So many people are suffering. If humanity is extinct, Earth and animals would be happier. They'll certainly be better off. Also no human will then suffer. Human existence is totally pointless."
Mr Samuel says he remembers first having anti-natalist thoughts when he was five.
"I was a normal kid. One day I was very frustrated and I didn't want to go to school but my parents kept asking me to go. So I asked them: 'Why did you have me?' And my dad had no answer. I think if he'd been able to answer, maybe I wouldn't have thought this way."
As the idea grew and took shape in his mind, he decided to tell his parents about it. He says his mom reacted "very well" and dad too "is warming up" to the idea.
"Mom said she wished she had met me before I was born and that if she did, she definitely wouldn't have had me," he says laughing and adds that she does see reason in his argument.
"She told me that she was quite young when she had me and that she didn't know she had another option. But that's what I'm trying to say - everyone has the option."
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