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Post by X factor on Jan 16, 2022 14:10:13 GMT -5
Notice how true Africans never refer to themselves as 'Black'
The best part about this video, for me, was that not once did any African in this video refer to themselves as 'black', which is the most colonial era degrading term one could refer to self as.
'black = void', and when defined as a void other tend to fill that void up with their own meaning, which may not have anything to do with who you or someone is.
I love this video cause the Africans in it refer to selves as others do, by the nation they come from and or other minor traits that have nothing to do with birth color.
I want these shoes now.
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Post by X factor on Jan 27, 2022 21:54:44 GMT -5
Black males are hostile towards other Black males Black males are super hostile towards other Black males, or those they perceive as 'black'. Ask any black male, and they'll tell you the most hostile person they'll encounter as an adult 'B' male is another 'B' male who has been trained from childhood, through rap lyrics and general urban culture, that 'you', as an adult 'B' male, are simply someone to slay or someone to be slain, cause I must slay you before you slay me'... Is the mindset of urban B males towards fellow urban 'B' males. Don't believe me? Just look at crime rates, look at who's slaying who...and or ask another 'B' male who is honest and they'll tell you the above is true. Can this ever be fixed or resolved? No, it can't cause the roots of self-hatred have just sunk in to far now, and manifest itself through song and lyrics (rap). Who's responsible for this song and lyric? Early on most of the industry producers and label heads were Jewish....and I'll just leave it at that. And that's a factual statement, not a bias one, if don't believe me than do your own research. www.msn.com/en-us/news/crime/17-year-old-fatally-shot-in-chest-near-his-high-school-police/ar-AATd3Zp?ocid=msedgntp
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Post by X factor on Mar 15, 2022 14:06:23 GMT -5
One of the reasons why I reject the term 'black', is that there's to many different variety of people under that umbrella term that have zero in common with one another, based on culture, value system, ethnicity, mixed vs pure and ect.
It's like saying 'Car' to describe the 1000's of auto-mobile companies and makes and models.
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Post by X factor on Apr 17, 2022 19:15:52 GMT -5
Black information network or radio
The black information network or radio channel, it's about worthless to me.
On that channel they basically feed 'black folks' the same info that other radio channels do.
The same stats, the same covid BS, the same crime updates, ect, the only difference is they keep repeating
'This is the black information network'
Same noise, different format.
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Post by X factor on May 2, 2022 6:48:19 GMT -5
The term 'black' and how it's used by others, doesn't allow you, as an individual, to be your own stat, and instead mockingly and rudely lumps you in with others whom you have nothing to do with and or no nothing about.
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Post by X factor on May 3, 2022 15:28:41 GMT -5
To be honest, I don't know what it means to be 'black'.
I know what it means to be 'me', but I don't know what it means to be black, or even how to be 'black', or any color.
I do know how to be myself though.
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Post by X factor on Nov 20, 2022 16:14:14 GMT -5
How come there was never no widespread famine, poverty, sickness, ect, in Africa until the Europeans arrived?
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Post by X factor on Dec 2, 2022 23:41:51 GMT -5
If I were a people marketer, and had to come up with a name to identify a people's, 'black' would never cross my mind.
To me, the term 'black' is an silent insult, it's a term born straight out of colonialism. There is no nation named 'black'.
And only people in America, dense enough to embrace such a stigmatized identity.
They tried calling native American Indians 'Red', but native Indians were to savvy and proud for that, and said 'No, we have a tribal identities, you will not diminish our value and uniqueness by referencing us as some generic color'.
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Post by X factor on Dec 2, 2022 23:44:06 GMT -5
No one who defines self as 'black', can really tell me what that means, in terms of an identity outside of pop culture.
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Post by X factor on Jul 11, 2023 15:11:24 GMT -5
What is 'black'(future podcast/video)
What is 'black', I mean obviously it's a color in the color spectrum, but as applied to man, what is 'black'?
I do know this, there was never a tribe in Africa named black, so obviously that term given to, applied to, a people through the lens of lighter skinned folks from Europe, and or Asia, and or anywhere but Africa.
But, believe it or not, there are people with darker skin tones than many Africans, who live in the nation of India, or some of the tribes of South America, yet they're not considered black, by others.
So again, what is black?
Is it a color, a race, a mindset, nationality, a experience, a social designation, all of the above, none of the above, what is black.
If you consider yourself black, what does that mean to you? And if not black, when you refer to another as black, what are you communicating to yourself by designating another person as black?
To me, black is a void, and when defined as a void, a generic void, it then allows others to fill that void with whatever discriptors, or traits, that they want, that may not always be accurate.
Now, throughout Europes conquest of the African continent, during colonial times, and after, there have been much harsher, more demeaning names applied to those with African ancestry....terms I refuse to repeat on here. So obviously if people described as black, were once called worse names, does that mean the term black is ust a more polite, modern term for ect and whatever? And if so, how is that good?
Ye sure, people, mainly during the mid 60's, embracced the term 'black' , and loaded it up with terms of endearment and empowerment for self esteem purposes, but to me that's like someone handing you a old used acket, and you making the best of that old used acket by washing it, getting it taylored, ect, but it's still a old used acket that someone else handed you.
So goes the term 'black', it still means 'void', or a people without a real historic identity, a generic people, a generic people with no culture who can only define themselves from slavery to the present. A people forged and made in the image of their former masters.
To me, when someone defines themself as black, that tells me that outside of America, and a slave past, that they have no idea who they really are, other than what the latest street trends say they should be...for marketing purposes.
And it's why no other peoples on this earth, allow themselves, their past, their culture, to be defined or summed up in one color, other than, oddly enough, 'white', which comes with it's on back story. To be defined as 'white' basically meant you weren't black.
And in society, during colonialism, and beyond, and even today, it was better to be anything, other than black, which came loaded with all sorts of negative racial and behavioral assumptions, and still does.
Strip yourself of being defined and reduced to that of a void, and watch the healing begin.
We have a lot more to discuss, but for now, I'll close it out here. (possible future podcast or video)
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Post by X factor on Jul 15, 2023 7:28:45 GMT -5
Black women where I live, have forgotten how to be feminine, and don't even know how to cook anymore, and instead walk around acting 'butch', and all tattooed up, like their male counter parts. And some even get gold grills now, like pimps used to.
So I really don't want to hear complaints about people like Dillan M, filling that fem void, or any other guy.
But that's what happens when one is told they're 'black', or a void, is that there is no cultural standard behind that.
Being defined as 'black' is so colonial, like labeling cattle or something, it just means you're a generic people forged in 'our ugly nightmare'.
I mean yesterday, two hood, butch, black women serving food at public grill, Mexican food, and when asked on to add some sauce, and other stuff onto it, they, this butch looking black woman, just through it on like mud, didn't spread it or anything, it sickened me the lack of self awareness or culture in them.
Why the F were they serving Mexican food if don't even have the basic understanding of cuisine?? No class at all, but it's just a reflection of their home environment.
If defined as a generic void your whole life, you'll act like one.
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Post by X factor on Sept 17, 2023 8:12:22 GMT -5
Why many U.S. born 'black folks' who move to Africa, end up moving back to the U.S. or other Western nation
It amazes me how far ahead I am than most, I mean like duh, of course Africa isn't some social paradise where everyone just fits in due to having the same skin tone.
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Post by X factor on Oct 6, 2024 0:04:20 GMT -5
1. Never a tribe in Africa named 'black'.
2. Being stripped of tribal and cultural identities.
3. Remade in the West's image.
4. A people without an identity outside of labor.
5. When freedom came, those freed were nothing like those captured.
6. How being defined as a 'void' continues to have harmful effects on the pschy of B folks.
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