PoliticalChic
Diamond Member
- Thread starter
- #21
Agreed totally, it's not exclusive to black folks. But it's much more pervasive with them as there's barely any history there where black people had any amount of control. That's because they were closest to nature: closest to how humans are meant to live. Not talking about in loincloths in the jungle but within small tribes that respect the sovereignty of the people/tribes nearby. Africa is the most ethnically diverse continent on the planet and it's not even close and that can only happen after centuries and centuries of ideal nationalism, essentially.It's tragic how black people (in particular) have been so thoroughly brainwashed to give away their power to the ruling class. "White silence is violence" is just indicative of a message that says "white people need to do it all for me." That message is so deeply encoded with powerlessness that they've all but given up ever being truly free and self-determinant simply because of the color of their skin. That's exactly what the ruling class wanted for all of us, not just black people. They were the sacrificial lamb in teaching those with any amount of power left within the thoroughly corrupt system how to give their power away as well.
I'm so grateful that this is all coming to an end. Sunny skies are right around the corner.
"It's tragic how black people (in particular) have been so thoroughly brainwashed to give away their power to the ruling class. "
Let's be fair here......lots of white folks are just as brainwashed.....the Left owns and operates just about all of the vehicles for the dissemination of information.
Did you notice that that Fascist BLM group in the restaurant was almost all white?
"That's exactly what the ruling class wanted for all of us, not just black people. "
100%!!!
And us yellow folks, too.
"I'm so grateful that this is all coming to an end. Sunny skies are right around the corner."
I wish I were as optimistic.
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The weight of that from the collective conscious is unbearable. You either have the strength to muster the ability to make something of yourself against literally all odds or you succumb to what the world is telling you: that you'll never amount to anything because of the color of your skin. It's a script meant for all of humanity but perfected using a subset of it.
I don't believe you are placing enough blame where it belongs.
- It was the misfortune of black Americans that they were just on the verge of passing through the immigrant experience when damaging ideas about welfare and the lenient attitude about crime took hold. It could have happened to the Italians, Germans, Jews or Irish, but luckily for them, there were no Liberals around to “help” when they arrived.
- In fact, black Americans were doing better in individual pursuits than many immigrants. Barone compared their American journey to the Irish: “Both rise smartly in hierarchies (government bureaucracies, the military) but haven't fared as well in free-market commerce.” http://www.usnews.com/usnews/news/articles/941114/archive_013670.htm
- “Like members of outsider groups before and since, this African-American elite considered education to be the key to full citizenship. They also embraced values of character and responsibility….Gains in terms of entrepreneurship, finding a trade, finding a profession, setting down roots, buying property, and feeling they were at last becoming a genuine part of city life. They would refer to ‘color-phobia’ as ‘fast disappearing in our city.’…Peterson's great grandfather owned a pharmacy in a largely Irish neighborhood. ” "Black Gotham," by University of Maryland Professor Carla Peterson.
- For almost a century after the Civil War, black Americans had good reason to have a chip on their shoulder, but, somewhat amazingly, most did not- until Liberals put it there.
- There was a noticeable absence of resentment in many accomplished black Americans a generation or two out of slavery- Kelly Miller, James Weldon Johnson, Paul Laurence Dunbar, W.E.B. DuBois, Booker T. Washington, Archibald Henry Grimke, George Washington Carver, Jack Johnson, Huddie Ledbetter, Louis Armstrong, Thurgood Marshall, Joe Louis, etc.