Ex-NBA player who wore 'Trump won' on his head tells Steve Bannon that 'women have become too mouthy'
Former NBA basketball player Royce White was the player that sported a pro-Donald Trump message on his head during the last Big 3 League games on Sunday night. When he was welcomed onto Steve Bannon's online streaming show today, it became clear what he has in common with the far-right.
Bannon explained that saying "culture war issues" is really just another way of saying "rude, white, rural Christian, heterosexual, male, nationalists that are just focused on their wives being too, too mouthy, sir."
"Yeah," White agreed. "Well, look, let's just be frank. Women have become too mouthy. As the Black man in the room. I'll say that I don't know whether we're talking white men or Asian men or Black men or so on and so forth. But no, I mean, I'm serious. And, I mean there — and there was, and the thing that is scary about it — and will I say this ..."
Bannon stopped him: "Hold on, hold on. Can I officially say, can I officially say that Joy Reid's 'Black girl magic' does not work with Royce White? I just wanna make sure don't, hey, don't take it from me."
"No, no, you know, you're gonna send me off, you go to Joy Reid and she's wearing a white woman's wig, you're gonna piss me off this afternoon," White said, seemingly obsessed with MSNBC host Joy Reid's hair. "I'm having a beautiful day without thinking about that, that scam."
White then went on to argue that women shouldn't be in the workplace.
"But, what I'll say is," White continued, "you know, you take an operation like the Rockefeller Foundation and their grassroots fundamental support and sponsorship of the early women's rights movement and their involvement with the inception of the Federal Reserve and the ability of the Federal Reserve to tax the American working class twice with the insertion of women into the workplace. Now, I know we could look at WWII and say, 'Hey, women had to step into the workplace because of the war.' But when you look at the inception of the war, there might have been an economic incentive there as well."
He explained that women working "have a history" and people like Joy Reid are "banking on the fact that the modern American citizen is too hard up financially, too demoralized spiritually and too busy in their everyday logistics, whether it be with family or kids or God forbid going to the next Brazilian butt lift celebrity doctor to look into the history."
In 2013 while playing for the Houston Rockets, he was under investigation for beating up his then-girlfriend, TMZ reported at the time. Claiming "mental health issues," he didn't play his rookie season.
"White was famously profiled on an episode of HBO's "Real Sports" in a segment that chronicled his battles with OCD and anxiety disorder," the site also reported.
See the strange moment in the video below or at the link here.
Former NBA basketball player Royce White calls women "mouthy" and argues they shouldn't work www.youtube.com