KingFace can’t walk two blocks without being stopped and recognized, either by a social media follower, or just for openly sporting a MAGA hat in the middle of New York City.
“I’m not here to convince anybody to be a Trump supporter or a Republican, I just want to share the truth,” he said. “Trump just so happens to be the truth; if it wasn’t the truth I wouldn’t support him, I wouldn’t defend it. But being that he is, I have no choice but to defend the truth.”
Now a public figure, KingFace, who is based in Queens, New York, said it really all happened by accident. He likes President Donald Trump’s policies and openly defends them often because the hat he’s worn every day for the past three years is a “conversation starter.”
One of his videos went viral. Since then, he’s been invited to the White House for the recent Young Black Leadership Summit and spoken on stage at the Atlanta Blexit event. A few years ago, he never would have thought he'd set foot in these places.
About a decade ago, politics meant nothing to him because they didn’t affect his life in a neighborhood rife with crime and poverty. Now he’s talking to people in the spot he once was in, and his reach has extended far beyond that.
“I was being a follower, not understanding that I’m a leader,” he said. “When I realized that I was a leader, I changed my mentality, which is the first thing that’s important. Once you change the way you think, then your life will change.
“For me, changing the way I think, I was invited to the White House. I met the president. That’s a positive thing for people to see.”
Community
KingFace was born Larry Henry, in Florida. When he was 3 months old, his mother gave him to his father to raise. He and his father then moved to Brooklyn.“I was a troubled youth, I was getting involved in stuff that I shouldn’t have gotten involved with, like gangs, and catching gun charges, getting kicked out of school. I was basically a nuisance and basically a problem in society,” he said.
He was looking for acceptance, and in the Brooklyn neighborhoods he lived in, the clear path to success was to run with gangs and work for drug dealers.
“I wasn’t thinking for myself,” he said. He really only became part of a gang by being “guilty by association.” Since everyone already thought he was part of a gang, he joined one.
KingFace was, and still is, a member of the Bloods, though he’s inactive. He wasn’t interested in fighting other gang members; in fact, he was the only one in his neighborhood who wasn’t a Crip.
Attacking each other on sight, based on color, is exactly what’s happening with identity politics in the culture today, he added. “I wanted to see the end of that, so that’s what led to my changing my mentality.”
Foray Into Politics
KingFace actually grew up a Trump supporter.But he doesn’t defend the president because he likes him as a personality; today, he’s far more interested in Trump’s policies.
“What he’s accomplishing now, he’s been saying for 30 years,” he said.
In fact, KingFace had voted for Barack Obama.
Once he voted for Obama, though, he started looking into what the Democratic Party stood for, and found that it was almost single-handedly responsible for all the negative things that had happened to his community, such as the welfare state and identity politics. This caused him to become interested in politics.
“Poverty, lack of education, safety, crime—I see a lot of that in our neighborhood. I’ve learned that politics can have a major effect on the changes in our community,” KingFace said.
When Aristotle wrote that man was a political animal, he was by no means saying we'd be happiest as legislators; rather, that we are social and live and thrive in cities and societies.
“I think these things are important because it is part of the development of life and how you look at yourself,” he said.
“Because they don’t care about their own lives. So why would they care about yours? So these things are important. I think we try to ignore it, act like it doesn’t mean anything, but it does because it’s part of the cycle of the dangers in our community, especially black on black crime.”
Economic policy is also at the heart of many issues. Everyone is looking for peace of mind, he said, and a lot of people in his community don’t have that because they’re worrying about how to pay their bills.
KingFace believes giving his community back their self-worth is far more important.
Becoming the Solution
KingFace mentioned he recently invited Jesus into his life and has peace knowing he’s walking a righteous path. He noted that he doesn’t call himself a Christian.These are people in KingFace’s neighborhoods, and often they’re just following what they see.
And people listen because he is part of their community. He speaks their language, which is more than just words. It’s also how you dress, where you come from, how you hold yourself. People in his community don’t want to listen to someone else who also has nothing, and they also don’t want to listen to a man who has never done wrong and won’t understand why people do certain things, he added.
Many are reluctant to leave gangs, for instance, for fear of losing ties to people, and KingFace doesn’t see this as a bad thing. He says he is a Blood for life.
“Blood” stands for Brotherly Love Overrides Oppression and Destruction, and although the gangs don’t necessarily stand for that, that’s what KingFace signed up for, and that’s what he intends to have the gangs really do.
“Let’s do something different, more positive. Let’s do this gang stuff that was originally about our community and uplifting our community, let’s really live up to that,” he said. “Instead of making it negative, let’s just turn it around and make it a positive.”
KingFace says his mission is to spread the truth.