Real Talk: Bro Outchea Saving Sharks While the System Still Messed Up
This Hermosa Beach cat Kevin Phan risked it all to free a great white, but what about the real sharks outchea?

Aight, listen up. This story 'bout this dude Kevin Phan out in Hermosa Beach, CA. Word is, he was fishing off the pier, right? Then, BAM! He hooks a baby great white shark. Now, most folks would be shook, call animal control, or somethin'. But nah, this cat jumps right in the water.
I'm talkin' straight up diving in, waves crashin' and all that. Video shows him wrestlin' with the shark, tryna cut the line. After a minute, he grabs the shark's tail and guides it back to the ocean. People cheerin' and whatnot.
Okay, cool. Dude saved a shark. Respect. But let's keep it 100, fam. While this is a good look, it ain't the whole picture. We gotta talk about the bigger issues. This is just one good deed, but the system still rigged against us.
See, they got us focused on these individual acts of heroism while the real sharks out here, the ones in suits and ties, are still eatin' away at our communities. They gentrifying our neighborhoods, lockin' up our brothers and sisters, and poppin' bottles while we struggle to make rent.
And let's not forget, these sharks are in the ocean because their habitat getting destroyed. Pollution, climate change, all that mess. Who's really responsible for that? It ain't the lil' man. It's the corporations, the politicians, the whole damn system.
So yeah, shout out to Kevin for doin' his thing. But let's not get it twisted. Saving one shark ain't gonna change the game. We need systemic change. We need to fight for environmental justice, economic equality, and real liberation.
Plus, lowkey, them sharks prolly just comin' closer cause the water gettin' warmer and they regular spots ain't the same no more. It's all connected, man. Environmental racism ain't just a theory, it's real life.
So next time you see a feel-good story like this, remember to look deeper. Ask yourself: who benefits from this narrative? Who's being left out? And what can we do to create real, lasting change for our communities and for the planet?
Saving the sharks is cool, but saving ourselves is the real mission. Keep it 100, y'all.
Sources:
* California Department of Fish and Wildlife: [https://wildlife.ca.gov/](https://wildlife.ca.gov/) * Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), Environmental Justice: [https://www.epa.gov/environmentaljustice](https://www.epa.gov/environmentaljustice)


