This Ain't Nostalgia. This Is Infrastructure. What does it mean to belong — not to a label, but to a lineage? Not to a trend, but to a system of memory? In this first foundational episode of The Discourse , James McMillon opens a deep and unflinching conversation on tribalism — not as a relic, but as a living framework: cultural DNA, sacred structure, and an orientation system buried beneath race, religion, professionalism, and politics. This episode is not about who’s included. It’s about who remembers — and who benefits when we forget. Topics and Tension points: Culture as the genetic code of a tribe — and why ethnic identity often erases it Why “Black” and “White” aren’t names — they’re colonial containers The legacy of intertribal disruption through slavery, migration, and doctrine Tribal roles, gatekeeping, and why you can’t just subscribe to fragments of belonging The technologist as modern shaman — building tools that carry memory Why modern borders, “illegals,” and land ownership are legal fictions rooted in theft A critique of spiritual censorship and the danger of calling truth-telling art “demonic” Reclaiming orientation in a world that sells you content but hides the source…