Cover image of show The Erudition Network Interactive Black History & Adroit Living

The Erudition Network Interactive Black History & Adroit Living

Podcast by Eddie K Phillips & Tina Phillips

English

History & religion

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About The Erudition Network Interactive Black History & Adroit Living

The Erudition Network Interactive Black History & Adroit Living SessionsSHARE & JOIN US EVERY WEEK!We are LIVE on YouTube every Monday at 7 PM MST for Adroit Living with Tina Philips. We are LIVE on YouTube every Thursday at 5 PM MST for The Erudition Network Black History Interactive With Eddie PhillipsPlease help us grow our YouTube following and social media reach!Share! Like! and Subscribe to our Audio Podcast, YouTube, and Facebook:Join us this evening for The Erudition Network LIVE interactive Session.https://www.youtube.com/@theeruditionnetwork7963/streamsRemember to join us as we learn together.

All episodes

29 episodes

episode Systems, Redistricting, and Political Deletion | Systemic Deletion: New Jim Crow Deleting More Than Your Vote artwork

Systems, Redistricting, and Political Deletion | Systemic Deletion: New Jim Crow Deleting More Than Your Vote

In this episode of The Erudition Network Interactive, Eddie K. Phillips examines the growing redistricting battles across America and why many Black scholars, activists, and historians argue that modern gerrymandering represents an adaptive evolution of older suppression systems rather than their complete disappearance. This is not surface-level political commentary. This discussion traces the historical continuity between Jim Crow suppression, Selma, Medgar Evers, Vernon Dahmer, the murders of James Chaney, Andrew Goodman, and Michael Schwerner, modern redistricting battles, algorithmic information systems, Black political fatigue, and the psychological and physiological burden carried by communities repeatedly forced to fight for institutional continuity across generations. The episode examines how procedural suppression, territorial control, coalition destabilization, information warfare, algorithmic conditioning, spectacle saturation, emotional flooding, audience capture, dependency conditioning, and the collapse of systems literacy can reshape political behavior while symbolic democratic language remains intact. Topics include: • Gerrymandering and territorial control • Adaptive systems and procedural suppression • Malcolm X and “The Ballot or the Bullet” • Martin Luther King Jr.’s later systems analysis • Coalition destabilization and information warfare • Algorithmic conditioning and spectacle saturation • Emotional flooding and audience capture • Institutional occupation and systems coherence • Dependency conditioning and political behavior • Black physiological stress and racial battle fatigue • Fragmented information environments and political decision-making The deeper question is no longer only whether people can vote, but what happens when adaptive systems reshape political behavior underneath symbolic democratic continuity. The Erudition Network explores Black history, systems analysis, institutional behavior, psychology, theology, media narratives, and historical continuity through long-form live discussion and strategic historical analysis. 🎓 Join The Erudition Network SKOOL Classroom: https://www.skool.com/the-erudition-network-3540 [https://www.skool.com/the-erudition-network-3540] 📘 Support the network through YouTube memberships: The Archivist • The Scholar • Erudition Historian 🌐 Official Website: https://www.eruditionnetwork.com/ [https://www.eruditionnetwork.com/]

20 May 2026 - 1 h 40 min
episode Systems, Control, and Black Opposition | Sellout, Uncle Tom, Coon: When Systems Rebuild Control Pt. 2 artwork

Systems, Control, and Black Opposition | Sellout, Uncle Tom, Coon: When Systems Rebuild Control Pt. 2

What happens when systems of control no longer need chains? In this episode of The Erudition Network Interactive, Eddie K. Phillips examines how systems of control survive after laws change, public language becomes more polished, and overt domination becomes less socially acceptable. This discussion connects Reconstruction, Jim Crow, voting power, redistricting, Black psychology, media influence, church leadership, and modern politics to the long history of controlled opposition and internal validation. This is not a surface-level conversation about race. It is a historical systems study. The episode examines how systems adapt across time, from slavery as a structured system of control, to the collapse of federal protections after Reconstruction, to Jim Crow restrictions, Hollywood stereotypes, modern districting debates, shifting legal standards, media conditioning, economic retaliation, migration, boycott power, moral authority, and the psychology of survival, compliance, and resistance. Using history, psychology, sociology, theology, economics, and political analysis, Eddie Phillips breaks down how systems can preserve influence even after older forms of domination become publicly unacceptable. This episode is not about emotional outrage. It is about recognizing patterns. History does not always repeat itself exactly, but systems often repeat incentives, structures, and outcomes. The Erudition Network explores Black history, systems analysis, institutional behavior, psychology, theology, media narratives, and historical continuity through long-form live discussion and strategic historical analysis. 🎓 Join The Erudition Network SKOOL Classroom: https://www.skool.com/the-erudition-network-3540 [https://www.skool.com/the-erudition-network-3540] 📘 Support the network through YouTube memberships: The Archivist • The Scholar • Erudition Historian 🌐 Official Website: https://www.eruditionnetwork.com/ [https://www.eruditionnetwork.com/]

19 May 2026 - 1 h 44 min
episode Systems, Internal Hierarchies, and Historical Patterns | Sellout, Uncle Tom, Coon: The Pattern Nobody Talks About Pt. 1 artwork

Systems, Internal Hierarchies, and Historical Patterns | Sellout, Uncle Tom, Coon: The Pattern Nobody Talks About Pt. 1

What does it actually mean to be labeled a “sellout,” and who benefits from defining that label? In this episode of The Erudition Network Interactive, Eddie K. Phillips examines one of the most sensitive and historically recurring patterns within Black history: the role of internal alignment with systems of power. Often framed through labels such as “Uncle Tom,” “coon,” “collaborator,” or “sellout,” this discussion moves beyond emotional reactions into a deeper examination of institutional systems, historical continuity, psychology, media influence, and the formation of internal hierarchies. Rather than focusing on isolated personalities, this episode examines how systems throughout history have often relied on internal validation, intermediaries, gatekeepers, and rewarded alignment in order to sustain themselves across generations. The discussion traces these patterns from plantation hierarchies during slavery through Reconstruction, Hollywood image construction, Civil Rights-era tensions, respectability politics, media systems, and into modern politics, culture, and public discourse. This episode also explores the psychological realities surrounding survival adaptation, system justification, social reward structures, institutional incentives, identity formation, and the tension between individual advancement and collective responsibility. Topics include: • Plantation hierarchies and intermediary structures • Reconstruction and institutional alignment • Hollywood stereotypes and Donald Bogle’s character analysis • Respectability politics and social reward systems • Civil Rights era tensions and informant structures • Media influence and modern political narratives • Internalized oppression and system justification • Historical continuity and systems analysis This discussion is not about attacking individuals, but about recognizing recurring historical patterns and understanding how systems reproduce themselves over time. The Erudition Network explores Black history, systems analysis, institutional behavior, psychology, theology, media narratives, and historical continuity through long-form live discussion and strategic historical analysis. 🎓 Join The Erudition Network SKOOL Classroom: https://www.skool.com/the-erudition-network-3540 [https://www.skool.com/the-erudition-network-3540] 📘 Support the network through YouTube memberships: The Archivist • The Scholar • Erudition Historian 🌐 Official Website: https://www.eruditionnetwork.com/ [https://www.eruditionnetwork.com/]

19 May 2026 - 1 h 33 min
episode Systems, Informants, and Historical Memory | Did the SPLC Fund Hate Groups? artwork

Systems, Informants, and Historical Memory | Did the SPLC Fund Hate Groups?

Did the Southern Poverty Law Center actually fund hate groups, or does that claim ignore the deeper historical role of informants, intelligence gathering, embedded reporting, and legal investigation in exposing violent networks? In this episode of The Erudition Network Interactive, Eddie K. Phillips examines one of the most controversial narratives circulating online today by placing it within a broader historical and institutional framework. Rather than relying on surface-level commentary, this discussion explores how informants, infiltration, intelligence collection, and civil litigation have historically been used to uncover organized violence, extremist movements, and criminal systems in America. The episode examines historical cases connected to the Civil Rights era, including the murders of Medgar Evers, James Chaney, Andrew Goodman, and Michael Schwerner, while also connecting those patterns to modern investigative reporting, extremist monitoring, and legal cases such as Sines v. Kessler. This discussion explores the relationship between institutional power, intelligence systems, investigative strategy, public perception, media framing, and historical misunderstanding in both past and present contexts. Topics include: • Informants and intelligence gathering in American history • Civil Rights era investigations and historical cases • Embedded reporting and extremist infiltration • Sines v. Kessler and civil litigation • Media narratives and public misunderstanding • Institutional systems and investigative strategy • Historical continuity and systems analysis The Erudition Network explores Black history, systems analysis, institutional behavior, psychology, theology, media narratives, and historical continuity through long-form live discussion and strategic historical analysis. 🎓 Join The Erudition Network SKOOL Classroom: https://www.skool.com/the-erudition-network-3540 [https://www.skool.com/the-erudition-network-3540] 📘 Support the network through YouTube memberships: The Archivist • The Scholar • Erudition Historian 🌐 Official Website: https://www.eruditionnetwork.com/ [https://www.eruditionnetwork.com/]

19 May 2026 - 1 h 41 min
episode Systems and Historical Continuity | The Hidden System Behind Black America: From the South to the Cities artwork

Systems and Historical Continuity | The Hidden System Behind Black America: From the South to the Cities

What if the system never disappeared, but instead adapted into new forms? In this episode of The Erudition Network Interactive, Eddie K. Phillips examines the historical systems that shaped Black life in America from the post-slavery South to the conditions that developed within northern cities during and after the Great Migration. This discussion moves beyond surface-level history to examine the institutional structures, economic constraints, psychological pressures, and historical patterns that continue to shape Black communities across generations. The discussion explores how the Southern system operated through organized control, labor restriction, segregation, and violence, while also examining how many of those structural realities evolved through housing discrimination, redlining, wealth restriction, labor limitations, and urban policy after migration northward. This episode also examines the psychological and physiological effects of sustained stress, survival adaptation, institutional conditioning, leadership development, stereotype construction, and the role narratives played in maintaining social systems over time. The goal is not simply to examine isolated outcomes, but to understand the deeper systems that produced them. Topics include: • Post-slavery Southern institutional systems • The Great Migration and northern urban development • Housing segregation and redlining • Labor restriction and economic isolation • Psychological adaptation under sustained pressure • Institutional narratives and stereotype formation • Historical continuity and systems analysis The Erudition Network explores Black history, systems analysis, institutional behavior, psychology, theology, media narratives, and historical continuity through long-form live discussion and strategic historical analysis. 🎓 Join The Erudition Network SKOOL Classroom: https://www.skool.com/the-erudition-network-3540 [https://www.skool.com/the-erudition-network-3540] 📘 Support the network through YouTube memberships: The Archivist • The Scholar • Erudition Historian 🌐 Official Website: https://www.eruditionnetwork.com/ [https://www.eruditionnetwork.com/]

19 May 2026 - 1 h 37 min
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