He’s Right: The Biggest Issues Facing The Black Community

Ойын-сауық

Today we’ll be reacting to our friend Amir Odom as he walks through his diagnosis of the biggest issues facing the black community. We’ll be getting into everything from music and culture to victimhood mentality. Is his diagnosis correct? Let’s discuss.
Watch ‪@amirxodom‬'s original video: • The Most Concerning Th...
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  • @iamkellij
    @iamkellij6 ай бұрын

    I don't go to church often. But I remember going to church June 2021. It wasn't a church I normally go to. It was a new church. A new black church. The pastor went in that day. He opened up saying "I need to speak to my black folks. Like really speak. Yall need to stop blaming white people for your issue. Chad didn't force you to sell dope, drop out of school, lack sexual discipline, etc. That's your fault." I was the only black person in the crowd that clapped and yelled "Amen!" Because it's true.

  • @vegangelist

    @vegangelist

    6 ай бұрын

    I'm glad you yelled it. Pretty alarming that you were the only one. How did it feel to be the only one (other than the pastor) in church who wasn't deceived?

  • @anonamous6968

    @anonamous6968

    6 ай бұрын

    I wish it was the other way around and most people agreed with his message but I don't know if people will acknowledge his message any time soon. It's just too easy to blame everyone or anyone else. It's been done for so long now. People are raised with this way of thinking. It's not bad decisions or actions but some outside reason that is keeping you or those around you from achieving.

  • @Gr8nessnMe070

    @Gr8nessnMe070

    6 ай бұрын

    I cannot stand fake people like you. Did you know that less than 2% of Black people sell drugs? Did you know that less 5% of all Black people account for all major crimes? Did you know that that 5% the FBI points out encompasses all Black people as in foreigners and those born in America? Did you know that woman is twice as likely to be graped by a white person then buy a black one?

  • @nickcunningham6344

    @nickcunningham6344

    6 ай бұрын

    Sometimes messages take time to sink in, especially when they require taking accountability that people don't wanna take. But every now and then, they'll think of that one pastor that told them to get their shit together and stop blaming other people, and that one person who clapped and agreed, and they'll slowly start to question their current view of the world and learn to think for themselves.

  • @dionthomas5418

    @dionthomas5418

    6 ай бұрын

    Perfectly said, we as Black people need to really get Real and take some responsibility for all of our actions and words in life. I'm saying this and I'm a Black male. Who ever that Pastor was, he was right on 🎯 on the issues dealing with the Black community in America at large

  • @JWashington754
    @JWashington7546 ай бұрын

    He’s right but it will fall on deaf ears

  • @darnellwilliams8783

    @darnellwilliams8783

    6 ай бұрын

    @JWashington754 nah he is very wrong he wants to disrespect 😊 Hip Hop and Black Culture but Everyone is quiet on Rock music causing school shootings

  • @jahmeregill6243

    @jahmeregill6243

    6 ай бұрын

    @@darnellwilliams8783 "Rock music causes school shootings" holds about as much credence as "video games cause violence"

  • @timkelly6985

    @timkelly6985

    6 ай бұрын

    ​@@darnellwilliams8783 Your IQ is showing, and it is heartbreaking. The "culture" is broken beyond repair. And you help to keep it broken.

  • @darnellwilliams8783

    @darnellwilliams8783

    6 ай бұрын

    @@jahmeregill6243 sir wake uo and stop being emotional when we know rock muisc is very deomonic .and the lryics are too

  • @SombreroPharoah

    @SombreroPharoah

    6 ай бұрын

    Hip hop/Rap actually glorifies substance abuse, selling oneself and promiscuity, literal gun and gang violence... 🙄 Then rock music, covers alll kinds of subject matters, but actually never really any of those things. So pop off poppet, pop off... 🙄 😂 ​@@darnellwilliams8783

  • @roxannerodriguez7075
    @roxannerodriguez70752 ай бұрын

    "We're out here demanding to be respected, but we don't even respect ourselves!" Wowzers, that was heavy.

  • @robertmiller.

    @robertmiller.

    2 ай бұрын

    Other people do the same or worse things than black Americans

  • @sergeantwilliams8185

    @sergeantwilliams8185

    2 ай бұрын

    👏👏👏💯💯💯

  • @darriongreene1985

    @darriongreene1985

    2 ай бұрын

    No it wasn’t.

  • @philobetto5106

    @philobetto5106

    2 ай бұрын

    The Biggest Issues Facing The Black Community is division

  • @thebuttermilkgirlisback

    @thebuttermilkgirlisback

    2 ай бұрын

    I’m a substitute. The other day I substituted at a junior high school. Now junior high is already brutal, but it’s extra brutal when their limited vocabulary is swapped for the most disgusting curse words right in front of every adult. They’re entitled and try so hard to be intimidating (with Tik Tok influenced gang culture) to the point teachers are just there to collect a paycheck. They don’t care and I don’t blame them. My blood pressure was rising. I was so disgusted by their lack of parenting and guidance. I was almost an internal racist, but I know not all melanated people act like they belong either in a zoo or an insane asylum.

  • @kristinabc1143
    @kristinabc1143Ай бұрын

    I was a sophomore in high school in 1983-1984. I’ll preface this by telling you I’m white … I became friends at school with a black girl, then one day she was saying how her mom was going out of town, and she was upset because she had to go with her, rather than staying at home. I asked her if her mom would let her stay with me and my family, that I’m sure my mom would be ok with it. We both went home and asked, and after a phone call between our moms, she rode the bus home with me on a Friday, stayed the weekend, then rode her regular bus home the next Monday after school. We had a great time! Then Tuesday roles around, and she’s standoffish, won’t look me in the eye, and is trying to avoid me. I’m confused and hurt, but she’s my friend and I need to know what’s wrong, so I pull her aside during lunch, literally dragged her to a secluded hallway and ask her what’s going on. She breaks down in tears … she goes on to tell me that the night before after she got home from school, her mom went on to tell her that they were thru “using those white honkies”, she didn’t need to be nice to me anymore, and she best not be acting like that little white B* she stayed with, thinking she could take on “airs”. 😮 WTAF? 😱 Her mom actually degraded her own daughter because she had a white friend 🤦‍♀️ I was horrified, and hugged her and cried with her in the hallway. But despite her love for me, she slowly pulled away from me, hanging out with just the other black girls in the school. We were not talking before the end of the school year. This was my first taste of how difficult it must be to be “different” within their own culture. To this day I wonder how she’s faring, and hope she’s happy.

  • @nonyadamnbusiness9887

    @nonyadamnbusiness9887

    Ай бұрын

    The worst enemy the Gen X black kids had was their own parents and grandparents. Well, that and black politicians pushing a narrative that kept them in the spotlight.

  • @jenniferalloysius

    @jenniferalloysius

    29 күн бұрын

    😢❤

  • @k.t.7507

    @k.t.7507

    29 күн бұрын

    I am so sorry that that happened to y'all. We can't always use fear to rule us.. Even though racism is still prevalent in today's society, we have to act on our own accord . And judge the situation and people ourselves, with outside forces telling us how we should act. Because if we continue to do this, then we'll just be back where we started.. hating each other because of false accusations

  • @Laylow1212

    @Laylow1212

    28 күн бұрын

    Lying ass sad but good try we not like yall tf😂😂😂😂😂

  • @antisocialsocialite5046

    @antisocialsocialite5046

    11 күн бұрын

    😱 poor girl to have a mother like that...if some white mother had said the same about her family solely because of their race it would be pure outrage. But because she's black and it's towards a white family it's not racist in her mind. Really don't understand this mindset and it's even more prevalent now 😢

  • @Ladysalvador
    @Ladysalvador6 ай бұрын

    It is crazy that “acting white” means being civilized. Why cant all humans be civilized, polite, and do the right thing?

  • @ceciliamullanaphy1171

    @ceciliamullanaphy1171

    4 ай бұрын

    Welfare, when it took the man out of the home, in order to get the entitlement, introduced a subculture in many black communities. Prior to these sub cultures, people had a sense of citizenship with the broader culture and never had to be "acting white". They had good morales like the culture of the time. Morales were not defined by skin color but by having a shared humanity that did not hypersexualize children or glamorize gangsterism or ramport crime in neighborhoods and on subways.

  • @mariahtasby4

    @mariahtasby4

    4 ай бұрын

    An idea perpetuated by white people, written into the Bible and foundations of civilizations across the world centuries ago. This idea that whiteness is better than blackness was not written by black people.

  • @mustafamawla219

    @mustafamawla219

    4 ай бұрын

    😂😂😂😂 lmfao you people are so delusional and it’s sickening! I’m so tired of this lie! Nobody has ever said anything like this! If you go on any page like baller allert you will see most black people hate this type of shit! Y’all are too ignorant to do that so you make up anything bad about black people then call everyone else racist

  • @thecrazycatgirl

    @thecrazycatgirl

    3 ай бұрын

    civilized, intelligent, open-minded.. all of these things are associated with “whiteness” like it’s a bad thing. it’s so strange.

  • @jeanmcginnis9804

    @jeanmcginnis9804

    3 ай бұрын

    Yessss!👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼

  • @cantwin8105
    @cantwin81056 ай бұрын

    Acknowledging a problem shouldn't be viewed as racist. That's just not taking accountability

  • @Nanabrown964

    @Nanabrown964

    6 ай бұрын

    Exactly , that's also part of the problem in the black community

  • @TheEmpiricistNetwork

    @TheEmpiricistNetwork

    6 ай бұрын

    @@Nanabrown964 It’s racist when you disregard the historical and empirical evidence clearly highlighting the “causes” for such disparities.

  • @davinci3259

    @davinci3259

    6 ай бұрын

    @@TheEmpiricistNetwork So no personal accountability?

  • @chimyshark

    @chimyshark

    6 ай бұрын

    yeah but progressives don't have brains. They don't understand it's a two-way street, they just want the "systemic issues" to be fixed before they agree to better themselves.

  • @bryck7853

    @bryck7853

    6 ай бұрын

    @@davinci3259 no, that could cause better organizations and trust.

  • @jeffdalton6061
    @jeffdalton6061Ай бұрын

    When I was a young boy, probably around 9 or 10, I was on a bus with my football team heading to a game against a team in Watts. Before we got off the bus, we were told by the coaches to put our helmets on. With some confusion, we did, but once off the bus, we quickly realized why. Rocks were being thrown at us from some kind folks in the neighborhood. Conversely, my parents opted to take me home from the game and my dad's car overheated and we had to pull over in the neighborhood, whereby an elderly black man came to our aid and pulled a water hose and filled our radiator. This taught me a very powerful lesson. While some may hate you, others will show you love and respect. Never judge a community based on the actions of a few. This elderly man taught me to be kind to others and often that kindness will be returned.

  • @SwingingInTheHood
    @SwingingInTheHood2 ай бұрын

    Thank you, thank you, thank you. As a nearly 70-year old Black man, I've seen our culture go from one of hope and success to hopelessness and despair. We may not want to be associated with it, but the truth is that the rest of the world laughs at modern Black Culture and want nothing to do with it. And it's all OUR fault. My generation has watched this all go down -- crime, gangs, single motherhood, poverty, thug culture and the celebration of illiteracy and stupidity -- and has done ABSOLUTELY NOTHING. I say all of that to say that the only hope for the future is you, and Amir, and the hundreds of young Black people waking up to the reality and saying STOP. Something has got to be done, and WE are the ones who have to do it. You are our only hope now.

  • @EgoFeederz

    @EgoFeederz

    Ай бұрын

    I agree but soo many Rap artists have said this message including both Tupac and BoneThugz. "Raising, Hustlers, thieves and prostitutes, young homie think before you shoot." "We got to start seeing each other as brothers instead of distant strangers but being real don't appeal to the brother in you." You are right we see Black culture as a joke.

  • @reneevaz7848

    @reneevaz7848

    Ай бұрын

    Very well put, sir.❤

  • @robgrey6183

    @robgrey6183

    Ай бұрын

    Nothing will change. The Government, media, and the big corporations are enabling it.

  • @randallwinters5427

    @randallwinters5427

    Ай бұрын

    In Jesus name ,Amen.

  • @Hunsuck_O_Rama

    @Hunsuck_O_Rama

    14 күн бұрын

    @@SwingingInTheHood ❤️❤️❤️

  • @etYouAreLate
    @etYouAreLate6 ай бұрын

    When I was a kid, my white parents hated cops. My dad had a sign that said "The only good cop is a dead cop" in the kitchen. It took time to realize that the reason we didn't have Christmas presents, nice things, food, and sometimes heat wasn't because of the evil government or the cops, it was because of my dad's meth habit. It is so important to learn how to think on your own. I have lived in a few different poor neighborhoods with different racial majorities. The problem seems to be the same among impoverished people, no accountability and heavy drug and alcohol use to escape reality. I wish positive role models were paraded around more than entertainment industry people. Kids need to see a way out that is realistic.

  • @jasmine.foot7

    @jasmine.foot7

    6 ай бұрын

    Cops are the ones who shut down backyard meth labs and save families. I'm so grateful to that.

  • @savrixx

    @savrixx

    6 ай бұрын

    The deconstructionist ideologies creating angry blacks and self guilty whites through propaganda is but a tool for the really bad guys. Imagine you needed a remaining population to be dumbed down on self consumption and lust for material things becoming happy with bigdaddygov handouts. During covid Aristotle-“No man is a slave if better off free” meaning if a group cannot contribute to society then they are better off a slave to the state. A permanent slave will not revolt against being a slave if they believe they are the highest beings in society. Hints “We wuz kangs” Those who dispersed around the globe can now absorb the technology and culture of those nations. The more guilt and compassion felt by those nations will make this cultural absorption become more absolute. Using foresight and reasoning I suggest all humans be ready to defend themselves against the world revolutionaries. They want what you have and more importantly they want you NOT to have it. To preserve life and history, we must “Old Yeller” the rabid

  • @dsparr1010

    @dsparr1010

    6 ай бұрын

    Good for you for doing better for yourself 👏

  • @xahnairyztheurbanlegend4889

    @xahnairyztheurbanlegend4889

    6 ай бұрын

    Poverty is a mindset and what you said is exactly what a lady on this app named Tiffany buckner/annointed fire says. Poverty is full of bad money management and victim complexes. I honesty don't like cops either but it's for seperate reasons like what they due to kids.

  • @elouise5593

    @elouise5593

    6 ай бұрын

    ​​@@xahnairyztheurbanlegend4889Not all cops are like the bad examples you have seen. The problem is, good cops don't make the headlines that sell newspapers or airtime. Newspapers and News shows sensationalize everything and make it seem like the bad ones are the majority.

  • @harmdizzle1979
    @harmdizzle19796 ай бұрын

    We all HAVE to stop exposing our kids to the glamorization of sex, crime and the distrust and hatred for authority. Give them a chance to grow with hope and positivity… THEY will be the ones to change the community.

  • @philovance1940

    @philovance1940

    6 ай бұрын

    I didn’t grow up hating cops. I was a little afraid of them because I was taught if I did something wrong, they might show up and arrest me and take me jail. Nowadays many young people especially black people think cops are there just hassle you and make up stuff so they can arrest you and it’s total BS .

  • @smittywerganyangermanjense145

    @smittywerganyangermanjense145

    6 ай бұрын

    I 100% agree. It's astonishing to me that it even happens. I understand very well HOW it can happen, but it makes me just frustrated and sad that more people don't stand up children's future and nowadays it can be really tough to be a teacher because young kids are so broken from the lack of socialization during covid. Just such a sad situation to see. I'm honestly very anxious about the future because it's just looking like it will be a sink or swim future for so many.

  • @josephmalone253

    @josephmalone253

    6 ай бұрын

    That's just naive

  • @harmdizzle1979

    @harmdizzle1979

    6 ай бұрын

    @@josephmalone253 what is?

  • @jbb8261

    @jbb8261

    6 ай бұрын

    Absolutely. My husband and I are about to be parents of two. We are homeschooling. Leading with faith in the home, and practicing our natural gender roles. I wear MY OWN hair, we do not leave our children exposed to adult content or violence or explicit music. We have to do better as a people.

  • @lisacardwell2508
    @lisacardwell25082 ай бұрын

    My daughter is a mixed child, when she was in junior high she was tormented by her black peers . I mean threatening to be stabbed and ultimately jumped by 3 black girls . My point is that she was not judged or threatened by whites . I am white and I struggled to get anything I have as a single mother . Food banks , church donations struggles eviction . Once she was out of school she flourished . I mean she was able to be free of the hate and violence and just utter negativity.I am so happy you use your platform to spread knowledge and positivity.❤️❤️ 41:02

  • @KS-hg2mf

    @KS-hg2mf

    Ай бұрын

    I'm so sorry this happened to your baby girl, you're an amazing Mum 🙌🏾

  • @Healingson

    @Healingson

    Ай бұрын

    It was mostly jealousy I’m sure

  • @jgonzalez372

    @jgonzalez372

    7 күн бұрын

    Sorry for the bad experiences that she faced in the past. You did good moving her out.

  • @danjay84

    @danjay84

    5 күн бұрын

    And that is the product of leftwing indoctrination. Racism is alive and well because of Democrats. You'd think after losing the Civil War, creating the KKK, pushing Jim Crow and passing the 90S Crime Bill that blacks would no longer support such a political party. But as I always say, propaganda is one hell of a drug!

  • @Khorne_of_the_Hill
    @Khorne_of_the_Hill3 ай бұрын

    That woman crying about the destruction has me in tears; it's disgusting that we let that lovely woman go through the trauma she did

  • @KartalaBreed
    @KartalaBreed6 ай бұрын

    29:53 I was the valedictorian in my middle school and the #4 in my high school, both of which were almost entirely black schools. You can imagine how disliked I was. I was told I acted white from day one because I was smart and did my homework. How gross is that behavior?

  • @adalheidisofadamahcaptaino18

    @adalheidisofadamahcaptaino18

    6 ай бұрын

    Crabs in a bucket mentality.

  • @caleighhraee

    @caleighhraee

    6 ай бұрын

    Very gross. Being intelligent and caring about your education isn’t a “white” trait. That’s a good human being trait.

  • @ItsMeLarren

    @ItsMeLarren

    6 ай бұрын

    It’s the pick me “black” people that comment this stuff to just provide ammunition for white people to continue to hate all of us. Ma’am white people who don’t know you personally will still discriminate against you regardless if you are intelligent or not. Climb the corporate ladder in any Fortune 500 company and ask any black person who has made it to middle management or above if they deal with racism from their white counterparts and an overwhelming majority will say yes.

  • @Stopthecäq

    @Stopthecäq

    6 ай бұрын

    @@caleighhraeeit’s funny because these same black people who stay stuff like that see themselves exactly as a white supremacist sees them. They say the same things.

  • @zibbitybibbitybop

    @zibbitybibbitybop

    6 ай бұрын

    I think the ghost of a certain Booker T. Washington would like to disagree that striving to get the best education you can is "acting white." That trope is such a insult to the legacy of all the black pioneers who fought tooth and nail for the right to go to school and better their lives.

  • @fmcscarkenlife
    @fmcscarkenlife6 ай бұрын

    This is what I'm talking about. According to society, the only thing black about me is my skin,but what I don't understand is why an order to be black I must talk unintelligent, listen to degrading music all the time, loudly vulgar, mad at the world, and dress like Jezebel. I'm glad not all black ppl are this way because I don't believe in check off boxes to fix no ones idea of how I should behave and look.

  • @miguelcunanan9855

    @miguelcunanan9855

    6 ай бұрын

    I just learned Jezebel is not in business anymore? Well, ma'am, as a guy who buys clothes from any building with clothes, I happen to be sorta glad Jezebel is out because.....ahhh I dunno, whenever I heard something about them it always left me with this awkward impression...like...... females that are ummm....I have never seen this type or community...like they want to get hurt on purpose... Omg WALL of text. Ma'am have a good day happy new year and be that explosion of joy -violin guy from LA

  • @cinnamonstar808

    @cinnamonstar808

    6 ай бұрын

    SHE IS NOT BLACK she need to go talk to her mama community who make colonizers by the millions

  • @optimisticzebra8498

    @optimisticzebra8498

    6 ай бұрын

    I’m a white woman. I have never in my life looked at any group of people and saw 1 thing. I believe most white ppl feel the same

  • @HgYt-ev9sf

    @HgYt-ev9sf

    6 ай бұрын

    The large population of women on only fans are white women, white women dress like jezebel just like black women, there are white women who speak unintelligent and there are tons of baby mothers in the white demographic just as there are tons of deadbeats dads. What you don't understand is demoralization and dehumanization are white people way of calling other people uncivilized while they get to project the white is good narrative. This thing is all mental, if you truly want to understand all this study white people from their time in Europe and you will understand how they think. There are are evil people in all demographic but that doesn't mean racism in America isn't real and black people complain too much.

  • @Sauveguy

    @Sauveguy

    6 ай бұрын

    ​@@optimisticzebra8498Can you do a better job explaining yourself?😮😮

  • @truck_yeah_440
    @truck_yeah_440Ай бұрын

    The first step to solving a problem is acknowledging the problem exists. Living in denial and passing the blame prevents this from happening. It's no different than an alcoholic or addict.

  • @nja3224
    @nja32242 ай бұрын

    First time I heard of Amir Odom, and my thoughts about him are that a) he is a fine young man, b) he earned my respect, and c) he’s got what it takes to be successful and can be anything he wants to be. He is a likable guy, full of common sense, logic and reason. He didn’t reveal much that I didn’t already know, but at least he’s talking about it and I give him credit for putting his thoughts out there, as I’m pretty sure the nasty and profane comments will be aimed at him, but he has the confidence and wherewithal to shake it off. I think we need more people like him speaking out.

  • @BlaineShire
    @BlaineShire6 ай бұрын

    This young man is 100% correct!!! We need to bring back shame, respect, manners, and morals.

  • @ladyk7317

    @ladyk7317

    6 ай бұрын

    It almost seems it's too late 🤦🏽‍♀️🙏🏾

  • @JazzySaxy56

    @JazzySaxy56

    6 ай бұрын

    Exactly, just like back in the 50s when white people really respected us as a people.

  • @BiggieTrismegistus

    @BiggieTrismegistus

    6 ай бұрын

    We can't bring back shame because we've never had it. The West is a guilt society not a shame society. The distinction is important and there are positives to using guilt as a means of social punishment instead of shame. The problem with our society today is that too many kids are being raised without ever learning and internalizing the universal morality that makes Western culture work.

  • @BlaineShire

    @BlaineShire

    6 ай бұрын

    @@BiggieTrismegistus well the last 3 generations have not been raised to feel shame the prior generations were raised that way.

  • @ladyk7317

    @ladyk7317

    6 ай бұрын

    @@BiggieTrismegistus no such thing as "universal morality " where do you think morality comes from? The Word of God aka Bible , left to ourselves we are liars , perverts and murdering demons... when we don't teach the next generation about our Creator Father God through His only Son Jesus Yeshua the Christ , we teach them to live a life of guilt , shame and sin , pretending it's something different is moral and spiritual death BUT thee is a way OUT John 3:16 Romans 3:23 1John 1:9 Christ keeps it all so simple and free 👏🏾👏🏾👏🏾💋

  • @timothyhargadon752
    @timothyhargadon7526 ай бұрын

    I'm a white guy who grew up in a black neighborhood and I was accused of "talking white" multiple times. But if my mother or the nuns at school heard me "talking street" I'd be in trouble with them. I was more afraid of the nuns than I was of the neighborhood kids so I stuck with "talking white". Ghetto is as mental as it is physical.

  • @xahnairyztheurbanlegend4889

    @xahnairyztheurbanlegend4889

    6 ай бұрын

    Most ppl don't kno the definition of ghetto obviously. Either way most of what's called talking ghetto is just a southern or country accent and then led in the water in ATl. Nothing is wrong with AAVE to be honest but it's only bad when southern ppl do it it seems. Also Sorry you grew up around nuns in the beast religion.

  • @sharonodom6423

    @sharonodom6423

    6 ай бұрын

    I had to switch from Church school to public; & it felt like I went from school to juvenile! --I was too articulate, I was a "snob", "book worm" NOT bcuz I raised my hand or did anything extra. I had a vocabulary & knew the answers(the material was miles behind I didn't have to open a book for years)?!! --I was freaking out, the teacher just left for over 45mins at any time, kids tearing up books, on their desks, interrupting, constantly going over the same material & no one gets it!!! It's multiple choice testing & the kid that does nothing is just "creative"?!? --They CANT READ, so the "curriculum" is just the teacher reading the assigned chapters to us ALL DAY?!! --I tried to fit in, but it's hard to change annunciation & speech patterns.

  • @mleecthulhu

    @mleecthulhu

    5 ай бұрын

    Thats messed up; in sorry u had to "be on" like that

  • @JojoBean-zo7nx

    @JojoBean-zo7nx

    2 ай бұрын

    "the nuns" lol where did u grow up?

  • @Anniekitty1016

    @Anniekitty1016

    2 ай бұрын

    I wanna know why the nuns were so scary.

  • @paulprecour3636
    @paulprecour36363 ай бұрын

    I have a Nigerian neighbor who recently immigrated here two years ago. It took her and her family about two months to figure out where NOT to live and why. When I asked her what prompted them to move to our small town, as adds another 60 minutes for her husband's commute, she rather frankly said they just went to Wikipedia and looked at the surrounding cities census data and demographics. Any more than two percent african-american or 'other' listed on the site as part of the population and they wouldn't even bother looking at buying a house there. Lower income and poverty level (i.e. government funded school lunches) among residents didn't factor in their decision making. I was shocked at how straight-faced honest she was about it, but it seems that this is the prevailing sentiment overseas with people wanting to move here as well. Seems like systemic racism in housing has made its way all the way to Africa now.

  • @elvickRULES

    @elvickRULES

    18 күн бұрын

    There was a Jamaican iirc woman who started to refuse to rent her air bnb to black Americans because of all the issues she was having with them. It’s just sad to see, and there are a few online clowns who made their infamy harassing Japanese people in Japan by cursing them out, intimidating them, playing their music loudly, etc. it’s just ridiculous what some people think is acceptable behaviour. And while I wouldn’t hold these individuals against all black people, at a certain people some people probably will. Japan in general has become even more against all tourists of all races, because of a lack of respect shown by them to their culture and it’s sad to see. I guess I’m digressing a bit, but things just seem to be getting worse and people are just getting worse in general

  • @JAM661

    @JAM661

    6 күн бұрын

    Well I am glad funding of school lunches was not a factor. In MN all the kids get free breakfast and lunch in school. The state found it actually cost more to try to get people to pay then just give every kid a meal. The state is also paying for in state tuition and fees for college if the family make less then $80,000 a year, must be a MN resident for one year and gradurated from a MN HS.

  • @elvickRULES

    @elvickRULES

    6 күн бұрын

    @@JAM661 So you pay for it with your taxes.

  • @paulprecour3636

    @paulprecour3636

    5 күн бұрын

    @@JAM661 There is no 'Free'. People making $81,000 a year and upwards pay with their taxes. People who never went to College or paid for it themselves without taking out a loan are also on the hook.

  • @alfreddouglass3751
    @alfreddouglass3751Ай бұрын

    A new collective attitude among our people should evolve. Without unity, nothing is possible/with it, all things are possible.

  • @TheeKing7
    @TheeKing76 ай бұрын

    I agree 100% that this victim mentality is doing nothing but hurting us. Blaming everything on others will never save you from your problems. You're right on the money Amala.

  • @LordMalice6d9

    @LordMalice6d9

    6 ай бұрын

    I have a moral right to blame the people and organizations that harmed me the most. Which is the medical establishment, US government itself and a certain "chosen people" that cannot be criticized.

  • @TheeKing7

    @TheeKing7

    6 ай бұрын

    @@LordMalice6d9 Gonna be honest here, this comment is weird LoL. Very cryptic and screams basement dweller. Just wanted to be honest. No disrespect though. 😇🙏

  • @TheEmpiricistNetwork

    @TheEmpiricistNetwork

    6 ай бұрын

    She’s not right, accepting your fate as if “nothing can be done”, is a logical fallacy. The only reason many aren’t taking action is due to the fact the current system works for those who are the majority and that’s the real issue. They don’t want to give up the “power” that comes from the atrocities committed, they understand that sacrifices must be made for “progress”, they just don’t want it to be them…

  • @TheEmpiricistNetwork

    @TheEmpiricistNetwork

    6 ай бұрын

    @@TheeKing7 That’s why they hire people like Amala to spout these narratives to get people to stop thinking and fighting the system because they want to keep it as it is. They use “Black” people like Amala and celebrities to be the new “blackfaces” of WS and give false hope because “some” Black people made it. Meanwhile, they hand pick these contract slaves just like they did in the past, these tactics are nothing new. And most of the time these so called “Black” people are African immigrants with no history of American slavery or oppression in any form.

  • @Uphold-your-Rights

    @Uphold-your-Rights

    6 ай бұрын

    ​@@TheEmpiricistNetworkyou really are working hard to push back and make excuses. Your comments suggest you don't want it to change. It would mean taking responbility. Do you know that the black vote, while only comprising a low percentage of the base, normally decides who is in office? Stop voting for shitty politicians. Stop voting for rascists. Biden, "if you don't vote for me then you ain't black". Stop voting for the same bullshit locally as well. But you wont.

  • @gold3c514
    @gold3c5146 ай бұрын

    “She think she somebody cause she in the smart people class but she as black as the bottom of my shoe” is what I dealt with whenever I interacted with my black peers in school. It caused me to have anxiety whenever around black ppl because I thought I was going to get verbally jumped for being “too black” and “acting white”

  • @adalheidisofadamahcaptaino18

    @adalheidisofadamahcaptaino18

    6 ай бұрын

    Envy.

  • @Gitn2it

    @Gitn2it

    6 ай бұрын

    This is a big reason why many black intellectuals, professional athletes, and celebrities opt for white spouses. I was shocked to find out that Ketanji Brown-Jackson and Kamela Harris were married to white men. I bet they got the same treatment as you did growing up. But what saddens me about these women and others like them is that they can't or won't be honest about the real problems in the black "community." They could have helped you and others who are dealing with the same problems, but they chose to blame everything on "systemic racism."

  • @Suspiria27

    @Suspiria27

    6 ай бұрын

    I had this at school too. My school in inner London was predominantly black and I’m white. I was bullied relentlessly and it got so bad I was scared to answer questions in class or to say anything much. Home time was a nightmare. Racism works both ways but I refuse to be a victim or hater because of the treatment I got. No more excuses.

  • @pjfan6310

    @pjfan6310

    6 ай бұрын

    That mentality is sad. Sorry you had to deal with that.

  • @Ed-xv4sy

    @Ed-xv4sy

    6 ай бұрын

    Envy.

  • @toddgoogle4387
    @toddgoogle4387Ай бұрын

    This Gentlemen is well spoken and precise with FACTS!

  • @philingrouille7198
    @philingrouille7198Ай бұрын

    "Acting white". How offensive is it that "acting white" basically, from what they write and say, means being "responsible", "wanting to live in a functioning successful nuclear family", "contributing to society" and "not living everyday thinking you're a victim".

  • @beauregardrippey5508
    @beauregardrippey55086 ай бұрын

    They are raised to not respect anyone anywhere anytime but they demand respect when someone confronts them about their shitty behavior.

  • @devarient

    @devarient

    6 ай бұрын

    Because the media is telling them that the people they should be learning to live with and garnering respect are the people with the boots on their neck, therefore they feel they HAVE to demand it. Sickening really

  • @saygerow

    @saygerow

    6 ай бұрын

    respect must be earned if u demand respect then chances are ur not worthy of respect but if u work hard and earn someones respect then they will give it to u with open arms

  • @dances_with_incels

    @dances_with_incels

    6 ай бұрын

    Just like a wahman

  • @beauregardrippey5508

    @beauregardrippey5508

    6 ай бұрын

    @@dances_with_incels raised on feminism and generic kool-aid

  • @KamariaNias

    @KamariaNias

    6 ай бұрын

    I don't know why you're putting " They " it feels that you're saying " black people" instead of some "black people" , that wasn't the point of the video be respectful please.

  • @mali2_pretty19
    @mali2_pretty196 ай бұрын

    A lot of the black community needs to hold itself accountable and be more mindful of what they allow to entertain them and let the victim mentality go. It’s just that time.

  • @ChristopherNegretti

    @ChristopherNegretti

    6 ай бұрын

    Never going to happen.

  • @kevinbrathwaite1116

    @kevinbrathwaite1116

    6 ай бұрын

    @@ChristopherNegretti exactly I remember singer India Arie chastised a group of young Black women for twerking disrespecting/disecretion of a former slave house in Africa and what did she get for it tons of backlash from her own community, a Jamaican buisness woman stating that she doesn't want ghetto Black Americans in her establishment because of past negative experiences with them again backlash, Tommy Satomayor speaking on the destructive path of the Black community pure hate from his own kind, Kevin Samuels on Black women being more feminine and submissive to their husbands they literally danced on his grave it's sickening, the young woman snatching the microphone from the College Administrator in the graduation crying racism instead of checking her on her behaving like a complete ass what people of her community do, cheer her on saying go "Slay Queen", many many more examples why they have no damn shame yet expect other cultures to respect them smh it's insanity with this community they are beyond help.

  • @kugelschreiber5678

    @kugelschreiber5678

    6 ай бұрын

    A lot? All. There’re PLENTY of black conservatives complaining about “MUH past traumas”, and they’re even in this comment section. I have zero hope for them.

  • @noonesishome

    @noonesishome

    6 ай бұрын

    *black American. This is uniquely a black American issue.

  • @laurelabouffe

    @laurelabouffe

    6 ай бұрын

    ​@@noonesishomeAs an African (Senegalese and Bissau-Guinean), I disagree. This victim mentality also exists in the former French-speaking colonies. And also among many black people living in Europe (I live in France).

  • @angelreder9064
    @angelreder90643 ай бұрын

    I love seeing these conversations happening in my country I've been waiting almost 60 years for this thank you

  • @lisag2877
    @lisag28773 ай бұрын

    2 great examples of positive, well-spoken young people.

  • @amirxodom
    @amirxodom6 ай бұрын

    Thank you for this! Love you all so much. 🫶♥️

  • @adalheidisofadamahcaptaino18

    @adalheidisofadamahcaptaino18

    6 ай бұрын

    Good video

  • @Tony-mw-533

    @Tony-mw-533

    6 ай бұрын

    Love you too ❤. Keep up the good work

  • @user-bu7vc8vj7r

    @user-bu7vc8vj7r

    6 ай бұрын

    Keep up the great work your doing Amir. Its peeps like you and Amala, and some others, that will hopefully get the right msg to the right people and gradually help turn the tide

  • @bajorekjon
    @bajorekjon6 ай бұрын

    This guy is speaking facts. I feel bad for the amount of hate he will probably get from ignorant people calling him racist, or an Uncle Tom.

  • @yourlogicalnightmare1014

    @yourlogicalnightmare1014

    6 ай бұрын

    Most of his attackers will be politicians and media 😂😂😂

  • @bajorekjon

    @bajorekjon

    6 ай бұрын

    @@yourlogicalnightmare1014 Politicians and the media won't pick it up. It will be from other black people and woke white people

  • @tractorp2255

    @tractorp2255

    6 ай бұрын

    Probably more hate from liberal whites than anybody.

  • @Ashcroft1313

    @Ashcroft1313

    6 ай бұрын

    ​@yourlogicalnightmare1014 Sadly, that's not true.

  • @grnews1706

    @grnews1706

    6 ай бұрын

    Ironically it's them who are doing the tap dancing...

  • @dejabembery1371
    @dejabembery1371Ай бұрын

    I’d like to add there are other factors present here that weren’t mentioned. Look at how we handle mental health in our families. I know from my experience, it seems like my own mother would rather be just shut up and figure it out like she cries about having to do because she chose (was not forced, changed her mind last minute) to have a child. I’ve taken control of my mental health stuff but I went to my mom as soon as I felt something was deeply wrong and instead of bringing me to get help, she literally yelled in my face and our relationship is severly damaged. Even when I got suspended shortly after and was sent to a psychiatrist, she blatantly went against everything the psychiatrist suggested. My family treats their kids as if they’re pets and organs - as long as you obey and never question me you’re my favorite, but also you are a part of me so if you look bad it makes me look bad so we’re gonna pretend you don’t have these problems or tell you it’s a you thing, so everyone thinks we’re a happy family

  • @FULAGYRL
    @FULAGYRL2 ай бұрын

    Glad your channel popped up! Sending to my kids. They feel the same way but there's no support. Thank you!

  • @antessawalters3595
    @antessawalters35956 ай бұрын

    A co-worker told me that because he was working on getting his Masters in Business, spoke "proper" English and was determined to make more of his life than the rest of his family and friends, he was ostracized and criticized for not being black enough. I just don't understand that mindset. Other friends who are from Africa cannot understand the mindset of Americans. They come to this country and are amazed at the opportunities that are open to them and do not understand why more do not take advantage of the opportunities to improve their lives.

  • @adalheidisofadamahcaptaino18

    @adalheidisofadamahcaptaino18

    6 ай бұрын

    Crab-in-a-bucket mentality. Happens often enough. As for why they don't all take the opportunities, it's called the cycle of poverty and the cycle of crime.

  • @PrashanthB-bi7lc

    @PrashanthB-bi7lc

    6 ай бұрын

    Africans are nothing like African-Americans, except in skin colour. Be it in African parents doing everything they possibly can to provide for their kids, raising them with the right morals, to seeing education as a ticket to a better life. A lot of African immigrants have the same mentality as Asian immigrants when it comes to work and education.

  • @daebak_hana

    @daebak_hana

    6 ай бұрын

    Same. My siblings would mock me all the time because I went to school in a different district than where we lived and I didn't act like them.

  • @jasonfields7058

    @jasonfields7058

    6 ай бұрын

    It's part of black cultural ideology. Stems from the 60s. When black people were building their identity, they didn't won't to be associated with white America or mainstream America. They didn't want to be associated with the "other" and so they did everything the opposite to portray that. How we talked, how we dressed,the foods we ate, etc. I'm pretty sure you have seen old school blacksplotation movies or whatnot and saw the difference between how white people dressed vs black people. The afro, the Africa neckless, etc. That aspect of the culture carried over until today with all its evolutions. Not to be the other.

  • @IrradiatedFeline

    @IrradiatedFeline

    6 ай бұрын

    Why in the 60s? And not earlier in the 30s or 40s? Black americans didn't seem to have a problem with emulating "white" culture to be successful until the 60s? Why?

  • @TTE.Heretic
    @TTE.Heretic4 ай бұрын

    I always think back to the Lil Wayne story where he talks about his life being saved by a white man after he got mortally wounded as kid and black cops busted in, and ran past him laying on the floor bleeding and a white cop picking him up and scolding everyone as he carried him out to get him to the hospital. That was a touching story that I won’t forget. Anyway, imo we’re all brothers and sister under God no matter what we look like.

  • @dtaefrm313

    @dtaefrm313

    3 ай бұрын

    I thought you said Emmett Till, you have to go back to a white cop doing his job to give credit to white people? Bro read some articles about white cops history in America, cause you’re drunk on delusion. They’re literally Slave Patrol with a new name😕😂. Have you not seen any of the riots between the 50-70s for example?

  • @user-vl6dc2mc8h

    @user-vl6dc2mc8h

    2 ай бұрын

    Hi! So I don’t know if you need to hear this but if you are struggling right now just know that there is always someone looking out for you. His name is Jesus Christ who died on the cross for your sins! No matter how hard you have been broken, hurt, or cheated he will never leave you or forsake you. I know times can be tough, so how about we make a deal? Put your trust on Him for one week, and pray. See what happens! You would be pleasantly surprised. He helped me in hard and he will help you too:)

  • @StephenKennedy-vs6ky

    @StephenKennedy-vs6ky

    2 ай бұрын

    Mortally wounded means he died.

  • @dannydaniel8975

    @dannydaniel8975

    2 ай бұрын

    "There are white people who mean right and in their hearts wanna do right. If 10,000 snakes were coming down that aisle now, and I had a door that I could shut, and in that 10,000, 1,000 meant right, 1,000 rattlesnakes didn't want to bite me, I knew they were good... Should I let all these rattlesnakes come down, hoping that that thousand get together and form a shield? Or should I just close the door and stay safe"? -Mohamad Ali

  • @TjayK2

    @TjayK2

    2 ай бұрын

    But then Lil Wayne lets himself get brainwashed by liberal media into painting Cops and Whites as racists despite a white cop being the reason he’s still on this Earth. He lost all credibility on the subject of race also.

  • @darkirstorm
    @darkirstorm2 ай бұрын

    Great show you two, as always, you're keeping us ahead of the game. 🤜🙌🤛

  • @andrefranklin2346
    @andrefranklin23462 ай бұрын

    Great commentary guys!!!! KEEP UP THE GOOD WORK. NO LIES TOLD!!!!

  • @jrmckim
    @jrmckim6 ай бұрын

    Im an Asian girl and moved to the the lower wards of nola at 14. The other girls targeted me because "their" men talked to me. I was raised on a farm in a small town and was thrown into that world. I was really naive too. The only thing that saved me was helping others with their schoolwork. I would help the teacher's explain stuff in a way they could understand. One boy was 17 in the 7th grade. He had the reading level of a 2nd grader. I worked with him the entire year and we are still friends in our 30s. I dropped out of school because I was transferred back to my small town where i was made fun and bullied every day. I got my ged and went to lsu for nursing. At 25 I realized my true calling was teaching. Applied for scholarships and got one for Tulane. Got my bachelor's in early childhood education.

  • @mleecthulhu

    @mleecthulhu

    5 ай бұрын

    DoNT COME TO RHE US TO TEACH PLEASE....IM begging you 🙏 U dont wanna teach these animals!😢

  • @aprillechalisse

    @aprillechalisse

    5 ай бұрын

    So, you were put into terrible situation amd you made the best of it. But, you were more accepted in the black community than the small farming town you came from is that right? Black people were mean at first and untrusting of you but they eventually got iver it right. That proves that what this commentator is talking about is misinformative. Black communities are they way they are because of centuries of racism, police brutality & misconduct & goverment. There's a whole opiod crisis in All of America that All communities are faceing. It's not a black and white issue. It's rich vrs poor. Nobody knows about middle class & upper class black communities so they assume the poor ones and gangsters are all we have. Gen alpha as a whole in an education crisis because of techology, overworked parents covid & inflation. The POC communities jusgo through the BS before it hits the whole country. Everything is bad everywhere. But congratulations on doing your best to rectify the situation. I'm a black women that comes from an educated family. We live amounst many educated black people who care about our community & our children. And we still deal with racism.

  • @PhilippAurand

    @PhilippAurand

    4 ай бұрын

    Awesome🙌🏼 Congrats on accomplishing your goals by being strong and resilient. Sounds like you have had some unique experiences that give you great perspective.. On a side note out of curiosity, were you bullied in both places, the small town as well as Nola?

  • @hunter.5625

    @hunter.5625

    4 ай бұрын

    Congratulations you seem to be a good human being with decency and common sense

  • @funsizedi88

    @funsizedi88

    4 ай бұрын

    I had the same issue as a white girl in an 85% black and Latino area. I ended up helping a lot of the other kids with homework, and they stopped picking on me so much. Still got in fights/got jumped if one of "their men" tried to talk to me, even tho I never dated anyone from my school before we moved in 10th grade.

  • @TheBanhagel
    @TheBanhagel6 ай бұрын

    Amala, people like you can fix the world .. profound respect to you

  • @oreally8605

    @oreally8605

    6 ай бұрын

    Fix the world huh? Like stopping hamas and fighting in Ukraine? Like missing children and sex trafficking around the world? You've gotta be 18 years old.

  • @apatriotone

    @apatriotone

    6 ай бұрын

    I grew up on Soul Train and love songs. I saw Rap and Hip Hop for what it was when it came out ine 90s -- a toxic stew for youth with predictable consequences. Now, more than a generation has been exposed to this poison and we see the results.

  • @apatriotone

    @apatriotone

    6 ай бұрын

    It will take an army of soldiers to make a change, and eventually Amala will get tired like so many before her I hope she can recruit more to open eyes. It will take a movement to make a change but we're losing fast!

  • @TheEmpiricistNetwork

    @TheEmpiricistNetwork

    6 ай бұрын

    How does anything she said fix 4 centuries of damage which caused all of these disparities?

  • @apatriotone

    @apatriotone

    6 ай бұрын

    ​@@TheEmpiricistNetworkit's not supposed to. Get over it. Live in the now, take responsibility and do you. Challenges have been there and overcome for generations and opportunities have never been better. We stand on the shoulders of those who came before us. I had exceptional parents and grandparents and they had it way harder than me. This victim parasite is recent. Let's get rid of it

  • @BraydenColdingSr
    @BraydenColdingSr3 ай бұрын

    Great show and powerful observations. I'm glad I found this show.

  • @robertstewart9071
    @robertstewart90716 ай бұрын

    My niece had to leave 3 jobs last year. She was constantly harassed and followed home a few time. Why? Because she did her job with perfection and they accused her of showing off. All because she was doing the job she was hired to do.

  • @user56gghtf

    @user56gghtf

    6 ай бұрын

    It's not just because of her race. I'm not denying it's a factor. Because it is. But that not the big issue. It's because of your niece's spirit. Darkness doesn't like light and will try to always put out the light. People that are dark (and I'm not telling about color I'm talking about their character) are very insecure and jealous of people they are what they are not. Unfortunately the corporate structure no matter how small or large is darkness. And most of those at the top have that spirit of darkness as well. So the policies, processes, and work environment aren't design to uphold the integrity of and protect your niece. It's designed to try to break her so that she decides to be just like those coming against her. Please continue to uplift her and make sure she knows that God sees everything. He will never have you do through anything alone and will not present her with something she can't handle. Everything happens for us, not against us.

  • @martintimberlake2243

    @martintimberlake2243

    4 ай бұрын

    ​@@user56gghtfSO VERY WELL SAID 😇🙏🏼🙌GOD BLESS YOU AND EVERYONE 🙏🏼🙏🏼🙏🏼PRAY UNCEASINGLY 🙏🏼 🙏🏼🙏🏼

  • @amyfay4280

    @amyfay4280

    3 ай бұрын

    You are so right its nice too hear I've gone through a similar situation

  • @Brii98
    @Brii986 ай бұрын

    He’s soooo right! Thanks for introducing him to me. I’m half Nigerian, and nobody on my dad’s side (the Nigerian side) behaves like this. I understand that they are not from this country, but a few of them have lived here for decades. The mindset is completely different. They are all extremely successful university graduates, doctors, lawyers, etc. and rave about how many opportunities this country has to offer!

  • @michaelstein7510

    @michaelstein7510

    6 ай бұрын

    Back when I taught in high schools, African kids (or kids with African parents) were generally always some of the best students. They were polite, respectful, hard-working, and intelligent kids with great family support. Kids like that are a joy to teach.

  • @Brii98

    @Brii98

    6 ай бұрын

    @@michaelstein7510 I love that! You could compare African households to typical Asian households in terms of discipline and respecting those with authority

  • @michaelstein7510

    @michaelstein7510

    6 ай бұрын

    @@Brii98 Absolutely. The difference in work ethic and discipline is noticeable, compared to the average US-born kid of any race, in my experience. And their parents might work 12+ hour days, but would still take the time to be involved in their kids’ development. It’s great to see families like that, as a teacher. That’s the type of parent I aspire to be.

  • @DEEORM

    @DEEORM

    6 ай бұрын

    Check them new york Ivorians and guinean​@Brii98

  • @TheGuest954

    @TheGuest954

    6 ай бұрын

    Tell me something. Why is it that almost none of you so-called progressive foreign Blacks can never do in countries where you're the majority what Black Americans did as a minority? Black Americans were lynched, beaten, and had our communities bombed by racist regularly. Black Americans started over 100 colleges and universities less than a century removed from chattel slavery yet none of you have been able to do so where most you went decades without seeing a white face. We had people killing and running us off millions of acres of land we bought and paid for. They burned and bombed hundreds of prosperous communities out of spite. Nigeria has over 200 million Black people, but many still come here to be educated in schools built by Black Americans. What's the excuse for not developing Nigeria when you clearly have the numbers? Black Americans have been at a far bigger disadvantage than Nigerians for a far longer time. No other group of Black people anywhere on the planet has been as prosperous as Black Americans, and we made up a far smaller percentage of this country's population than any of you did in yours.

  • @YouAreFreeToCre8
    @YouAreFreeToCre82 ай бұрын

    Really love Amir and Amala! Amazing communicators of TRUTH 💜

  • @nonyadamnbusiness9887
    @nonyadamnbusiness9887Ай бұрын

    I have to make a correction to something Amir said: Doing the same thing and expect different results is not insanity, it's stupidity. Doing different things and expecting the same results is insanity.

  • @Cece-cares
    @Cece-cares6 ай бұрын

    Accountability is necessary for blacks to progress 👏

  • @Virgomamatoacapricorn

    @Virgomamatoacapricorn

    6 ай бұрын

    For everyone lol Idk how the huge line between Indigenous and African hasn’t been drawn, it’s all generational trauma yes but it’s OUR responsibility to fix ourselves and be accountable for our mistakes, maybe in part caused by that trauma but ULTIMATELY caused by our own actions. We shouldn’t belittle ourselves by blaming everyone else, because we are all better then that. I’m white passing Ojibwa lol I know I’m very pale and look like idk what I’m talking about but I assure you I do

  • @savrixx

    @savrixx

    6 ай бұрын

    @@Virgomamatoacapricorn The deconstructionist ideologies creating angry blacks and self guilty whites through propaganda is but a tool for the really bad guys. Imagine you needed a remaining population to be dumbed down on self consumption and lust for material things becoming happy with bigdaddygov handouts. During covid Aristotle-“No man is a slave if better off free” meaning if a group cannot contribute to society then they are better off a slave to the state. A permanent slave will not revolt against being a slave if they believe they are the highest beings in society. Hints “We wuz kangs” Those who dispersed around the globe can now absorb the technology and culture of those nations. The more guilt and compassion felt by those nations will make this cultural absorption become more absolute. Using foresight and reasoning I suggest all humans be ready to defend themselves against the world revolutionaries. They want what you have and more importantly they want you NOT to have it. To preserve life and history, we must “Old Yeller” the rabid.

  • @xahnairyztheurbanlegend4889

    @xahnairyztheurbanlegend4889

    6 ай бұрын

    ​@@Virgomamatoacapricornkzread.info/dash/bejne/dK16t4-qfLO3o9I.htmlsi=CCQqLSmsA7CMruPY

  • @ladyk7317

    @ladyk7317

    6 ай бұрын

    We have to repent , and acknowledge Jesus Christ as Lord ...that's how we will progress 🙏🏾💋without Christ none of us can do anything good .

  • @miaflowers3572

    @miaflowers3572

    6 ай бұрын

    ​@@ladyk7317-AMEN sister!!!❤🙌🏼🙏

  • @mustpavlovedogs
    @mustpavlovedogs6 ай бұрын

    So much respect to Amir. I admire anyone who will take a stand and criticize their own group (whether they want to be considered part of that group or not), especially in these heavily polarized and tribalized times.

  • @danilopompey754

    @danilopompey754

    6 ай бұрын

    Amir is just jumping ship to make mo' money since the MAGA Trumpkin Cult, also known as the GOP, pays more and the line in much shorter - and so much more gullible. Candace has jumped, Amala, Tatum, the Hodgetwins and quite a few others. Keep the bamboozle going. (lol) QED

  • @Justrtofctr
    @Justrtofctr29 күн бұрын

    Every time I watch this young woman I am impressed by her critical thinking, her sense of responsibility and her maturity. I am touched by her furrowed brow and honest concern and that she speaks truth. She truly does these podcasts from her heart w good intention. And I learned about Amala from my daughter who got to meet her and is a big fan. Thank you and your “guest” is also due a thank you for his honesty and integrity and willingness to work on the perception of the black culture. 🙏🙏👍👍🇺🇸

  • @PatriciaTipton-jm5wr
    @PatriciaTipton-jm5wrАй бұрын

    I've seen videos from both you and Amir. You both rock, and I completely enjoy listening to intelligent, level-headed conversation from younger people, and judging by the number of views, there are a lot people who agree with me. Thank you guys for sharing these. God bless you both

  • @alexandria_mckoy
    @alexandria_mckoy6 ай бұрын

    When I worked in retail, I had a couple coworkers (both black- 1 around my age and one of an older generation) always mock & tell me "you sound white", "you sound like a valley girl" and at the time I would low-key get annoyed, but then I just realized, NO! I just know how to speak proper. And honestly it came from watching alot of white shows bc I hated watching black movies growing up where it was many times hood movies of watching other black people get shot or act ghetto. So I started to observe my coworkers life vs mine. And realized, I'm perfectly fine being told "you sound white" by someone who has a life that I wouldn't dare want to trade places with. I do not affiliate myself with people just because we share the same skin tone. I affiliate myself with those that share similar values! (Ps: my black card was "revoked" since I was in HS & I'm over 30 now..but I live in a gated community that's clean and has great amenities... soo I guess they can keep my "black card")

  • @Yosoydom

    @Yosoydom

    6 ай бұрын

    I always got the “you’re not like the rest” when it came to comparing me to other black people. Because I’m well spoken, educated, and I make sure to smile very often and genuinely when speaking to people, even strangers. I love to make people’s day with kindness. And that’s not a trait that black women are known for. I also hate black movies/tv about the hood/drugs/drama. Why do I wanna see that on tv when it’s happening right outside my door? I grew up loving syfy like twilight and vampire diaries. And I think that shaped me alot when it comes to media, style, music taste, ect.

  • @historyrepeated4239

    @historyrepeated4239

    6 ай бұрын

    Great post. Being illiterate, knowledgeable, or striving to live in a safe neighborhood doesn't make you white, a sellout, or anything else. It makes you a productive member of society. And the minute we start pretending that any skin color is smarter than another, is when we truly give in to racism. The main challenge, here, is not skin color, but progress. When you take any person and make them dependent on the government, there are others who are in the same boat. This happens everywhere in the US and it is not limited to skin color. So....when you climb out of that dependency, your peers are going to be jealous because you have the drive and ambition they do not. Hence, someone giving you grief for you wanting to be more than a victim. As unfortunate as it may be, people form very strong bonds through alleged victimhood and envy. Bonding over values vs. slights is always going to win out, in the end. Best of luck to you.......your values will take you far, my friend.

  • @xahnairyztheurbanlegend4889

    @xahnairyztheurbanlegend4889

    6 ай бұрын

    But who makes the hood movies an who owns the media? 😉 You guys let the serpenr seed elites social condition you with BET.😂😂😂

  • @elouise5593

    @elouise5593

    6 ай бұрын

    ​@@Yosoydom Yep. As far as poor people, I know far more poor whites than poor blacks.

  • @ladyk7317

    @ladyk7317

    6 ай бұрын

    😂💪🏾

  • @WilliamScavengerFish
    @WilliamScavengerFish6 ай бұрын

    "Black" has taken on a life of its own. No longer is it just a group of people easily identified by degree of skin pigmentation but a specific mindset strongly identifying as perpetual victims amongst other toxic mindset.

  • @Devil_Around_Midnight

    @Devil_Around_Midnight

    6 ай бұрын

    Narcissists making narcissists, dunno what happened exactly, but I hear many stories of black ppl not being allowed to take their own path. Its also like that white other cultures and races, but less destructive.

  • @dannydaniel8975

    @dannydaniel8975

    2 ай бұрын

    And it was Europeans that introduced the concept of race to them..

  • @soldiernumber14
    @soldiernumber1415 күн бұрын

    ACCOUNTABILITY is profanity in this era. Having a single circumspective thought is too much hard work. It starts within the home then to extended family, but fix in house first.

  • @soldiernumber14

    @soldiernumber14

    15 күн бұрын

    If you like female rap kzread.info/dash/bejne/e3l6lNShcpa6Z6w.htmlsi=j6uu9gAa3s5yADrl

  • @BlackbeardsRevenge
    @BlackbeardsRevenge2 ай бұрын

    Some people don't want to believe the truth. They'd rather live comfortably in a bubble of their own ignorance.

  • @sailordave1000
    @sailordave10006 ай бұрын

    I graduated in 1987. We had studious black students harassed and bullied by other black students for “acting white”. Some gave into the peer pressure and stopped getting good grades and started acting like those who harassed them. The few who refused to cave into the pressure went on to have successful career. One is a major in a local police department as he was a detective and the other became a teacher and moved up to college professor and university dean.

  • @dionthomas5418

    @dionthomas5418

    6 ай бұрын

    Congratulations to those who fought hard for their grades and didn't cave in to those who harass them for acting White

  • @4rtivist

    @4rtivist

    5 ай бұрын

    135 unarmed black people killed in 2015. We invoked change. Y’all acting like without calling it out, it would be at 12. Yall are sickos. Convenient for you to make this video AFTER WE DID THE WORK. And yall not gonna address poverty and the historical media representation. We can’t “take accountability” BECAUSE THEY GAVE AWAY LAND FOR FREE TO WHITE PEOPLE and redlined us from it. Goofies. Burned down towns. So we just dealing with it. There’s damn near nothing to bootstrap on a micro level, to the macro. It would have to come from the macro, just like the root causes of the environment came from. Hold the powers that be accountable. Cowards.

  • @hexcellerateofficial

    @hexcellerateofficial

    5 ай бұрын

    I got that same treatment when I was in school. No self-respecting person would give in to a culture that demonizes them for striving to be better.

  • @crazyleaf257
    @crazyleaf2576 ай бұрын

    My ex-friends were so affronted and flabbergasted and offended when I said there are problems in Black culture.

  • @thedoomtestament4547

    @thedoomtestament4547

    6 ай бұрын

    They are not your friends

  • @SuperKillerdog

    @SuperKillerdog

    6 ай бұрын

    As an independent thinker, what if I came to you as an outsider and I say there are problems with white culture? Every culture has their problem.

  • @Richard-gp5tg
    @Richard-gp5tgАй бұрын

    Respect cannot be demanded, it has to be EARNED.

  • @mlester738
    @mlester7382 ай бұрын

    I agree with this entire video. Thank you for speaking the truth.

  • @syaira6857
    @syaira68576 ай бұрын

    I was just starting middle school when the Trevon Martin case happened. Went to a all girls liberal hippie school (we had classes outside, were taken to protest, and girls were taken to planned parenthood and put on birth control without parents knowledge or consent). They had a assembly about racism and police brutality and as a Nigerian I had no idea of these concepts. I went home crying and shaking thinking I was going to get killed. My mom admonished the school so hard, and sat me down and told me the TRUTH. I thank God she nipped that in the bud so fast, allowed me to continue to live peacefully and freely from the narrative.

  • @rhondahunt9888

    @rhondahunt9888

    6 ай бұрын

    Sounds like you were lucky your mom lives in reality and not hype. Blessings for a good life! One without media-produced, liberal agenda-affirming fear!

  • @Parrallaxatives

    @Parrallaxatives

    6 ай бұрын

    What was the truth and what was school telling you

  • @sandrasteele976

    @sandrasteele976

    6 ай бұрын

    Nice try😂 an American school can't take middle school students to planed parenthood and put you on birth control. Neither can they take you to protests. This comment is just weird.😂

  • @Parrallaxatives

    @Parrallaxatives

    6 ай бұрын

    @@sandrasteele976 yeah the story sounds hella sus

  • @danielmuriithi8486

    @danielmuriithi8486

    6 ай бұрын

    @@Parrallaxatives Fr these imaginary scenarios have me dead

  • @yourdarkestfears1134
    @yourdarkestfears11346 ай бұрын

    If more black people would actually start listening to his video They’d finally realize just how MUCH these Politicians have been using them, abusing them and playing with their emotions

  • @whyisitneeded9012

    @whyisitneeded9012

    6 ай бұрын

    This video is a mixed race women, talking with a white guy about a guy black guys video. None actually represent black people

  • @innocentbystander3317

    @innocentbystander3317

    6 ай бұрын

    "If you haven't figured out if you're for me or for Trump, then you ain't black." -President Joe Biden

  • @aerickmon3350

    @aerickmon3350

    6 ай бұрын

    It’s as Malcom x and Fredrick Douglass said They made up over a tenth of the population so if they could make a mass vote together they could shift the vote in any way, they all said that they need to vote for those who would look out for them as a unified unit vote, but as they even listed in all their speeches that they very much feared, the vote quickly stopped going to those who under well educated review, but rather were easily able to be exploited for those who punched holes into the peoples’ insecurities

  • @grandpacereal1549

    @grandpacereal1549

    6 ай бұрын

    ​@@innocentbystander3317 I really and truly thought that sealed his chances to win, and people still gladly voted for him 😂

  • @grandpacereal1549

    @grandpacereal1549

    6 ай бұрын

    "Poor kids are just as smart and just as bright as white kids" AND HE STILL WON THE ELECTION??? WTF 😂😂

  • @kronick2009
    @kronick2009Ай бұрын

    Thanks for sharing this wonderful dude

  • @gundoctor4312
    @gundoctor43129 күн бұрын

    I remember when I was a kid, I was taught if I got lost, I found the man in the blue suit, and he will bring you home.

  • @AParrotSpeakingHisMind
    @AParrotSpeakingHisMind6 ай бұрын

    My little 85 year old grandmother was at a liquor store getting wine recently in Atlanta & told me how a younger black girl called her racist because she gave her a funny look. My gma is from Sicily and doesn’t even speak English well & she told me i gave her the look because she was screaming the F word across the store to her friends and was wearing a bathing suit in public….its so much more often about behavior.

  • @browncoaster
    @browncoaster5 ай бұрын

    "I am my ancestor's dream." Wow. Very thought provoking.

  • @user-zr9gn6rm9m
    @user-zr9gn6rm9m2 ай бұрын

    Love everything you stand for , and agree wholeheartedly to all 3 of you 2 nd time listener ❤

  • @bernieswim
    @bernieswim6 ай бұрын

    I grew up with my grandparents. He was a doctor and i grew up like Carlton in Fresh Prince. I don't have my "black card" anymore, but I'm a Christian first, so i looked for a spouse based on shared values and I'm happy with my white Christian wife and four homeschooled mixed kids. Trying to raise my kids to look at character and not race.

  • 6 ай бұрын

    That’s the best way to do it, character and culture first.

  • @junior.von.claire

    @junior.von.claire

    6 ай бұрын

    @ Yes, and accountability for character, not culture. The latter is a group and there's no collective salvation. I ask forgiveness for my sins, not for those of another.

  • @DT61636

    @DT61636

    6 ай бұрын

    Hear hear brother. Good on ya

  • @rubenmejia942

    @rubenmejia942

    6 ай бұрын

    May God bring many blessings to your family!

  • @noreenmcgovern1023

    @noreenmcgovern1023

    6 ай бұрын

    Bless you and your family

  • @Danika_Elle
    @Danika_Elle6 ай бұрын

    I’m a white girl in high school and I’ve experienced so much crap just for being white. Like people make fun of me for being white and say “oh that’s white peoples shit” and “y’all white people weird” and just blanket statements and I’m like… is that not racist? But yk I can’t defend myself bc that’ll make me racist. It just never ends. Like when will it actually not matter the color of your skin. Martin Luther king jr litterally said to not judge people by the color of their skin but by their character… so why are we going backwards? I have black family, Indian family, and Hispanic family and it doesn’t mean anything. We’re still family no matter the color of our skin.

  • @DepDawg

    @DepDawg

    6 ай бұрын

    Yeah, it was like that for me in the 80’s here in NYC. Almost everyday I’d hear, “hey white girl!”, and a punch would come flying at my head. Or a full lunch tray. I was robbed multiple times, beat up, pushed down the stairs. It happened to the few of us in the school that weren’t black or Hispanic. Complaining made it worse for us. Thankfully I made it out alive. I’m 55 now, and I don’t even remember those days until someone mentions something or i see a video. It’s unfair; I wish I could tell you otherwise. Hang on as best as you can. Try to join something outside of school where you can make friends - a gym, guitar class, dance class, city sports team, martial arts classes, church, or maybe volunteer at an animal shelter, or food pantry. Did you know the FBI has a Teen Explorers program that gives you the opportunity to intern with the FBI? Check them out on the web. Remind yourself these years will pass and you won’t even remember them, that’s how unimportant they will become. Please never believe the bad things spoken about you. It’s harder for this generation because schools, media, and entertainment teach hatred of white people. Don’t believe it! And my best advice for your career is DON’T GO TO COLLEGE for liberal arts! Find a well paying trade or technical job like electronics, dental hygienist, radiologist. If you really want to go to college, study a hard science, not a social science. I went into electronic engineering, but physical therapy and sports medicine, veterinarian sciences, and forensic pathology are areas I would consider now. Best of luck to you in 2024! 🤞🏼

  • @erievhs

    @erievhs

    6 ай бұрын

    You have to get rid of race to get rid of racism and no one in America is prepared to do that, and you don't have to be racist to defend yourself, you can just say you don't appreciate that or tell them it's a blanket statement with no basis you don't have to say the n word to defend yourself lol, but I feel you people are like openly racist towards white people lately and as a black dude I don't like it either

  • @erievhs

    @erievhs

    6 ай бұрын

    ​@@DepDawgTHAT IS INSANE! I'm so sorry you went through that were you in the hood or something?

  • @DepDawg

    @DepDawg

    6 ай бұрын

    @@erievhs yes, Brownsville in Brooklyn.

  • @dc_swamp_thing_7736

    @dc_swamp_thing_7736

    6 ай бұрын

    It is going backwards because, at the end of the day, the only way the Democrats will stay in power is to stoke racial division. Plus, social media and left wing news is forcing us to judge ourselves based on the worst of society. 99.9% of society may be decent people in the USA, but that leaves us with about 330,000 absolute evil/stupid jerks and all it takes is a few jerks per week to feed the narrative.

  • @mauriceslevines6100
    @mauriceslevines61002 ай бұрын

    Tremendous content and so important! This is America!

  • @berlygirl123
    @berlygirl1232 ай бұрын

    This was so informative! Thank you!

  • @visionhawk4403
    @visionhawk44036 ай бұрын

    My son played football in high school. They had a running back that probably would have gone pro or at least got a scholarship to a great school. Instead he was shot to death two houses away from his home coming home from practice one day. It hit the team and every parent of that team so hard. He was 17. I took my son to his funeral and there were a whole bunch of big football players just crying. He was an amazing person and was gone way too soon. My son said practices just wasn't the same anymore because he really was a nice and funny guy.

  • @noreenmcgovern1023

    @noreenmcgovern1023

    6 ай бұрын

    My motto is...do what takes to get your kids out of the hood

  • @janetlehr8829

    @janetlehr8829

    6 ай бұрын

    That is heartbreaking..cant give it a "like" because it is true but so sad

  • @desiree5895

    @desiree5895

    6 ай бұрын

    Wow that reminds me at a 4 of July party my friends brother shot a guy that was one of the best football players on the HS team. Everyone was shaken up ab it, he had a bright future ahead of him. But, he was accidentally shot instead of someone else.

  • @khutchinsoncpa1

    @khutchinsoncpa1

    6 ай бұрын

    Bad families create killers.

  • @151Phace

    @151Phace

    6 ай бұрын

    I don't know what that has to do with anything but why don't you tell us who shot him. Another black boy or the police

  • @asmile4u
    @asmile4u6 ай бұрын

    When I was in college, I interviewed a black Alderman who had just been voted in for our North Minneapolis district. He said one of the biggest problems in his community was that parents raised their children to get out. They wanted them to succeed and move out which left only those who they deemed 'worthless' or 'a failure' the neighborhood. He wanted to encourage those that succeeded to stay in the neighborhood and to be an example and improve it. Over the next 3 years he worked tirelessly but was eventually pushed out by someone that spoke the language of " you just can't succeed because of something outside yourself. "

  • @belle8i

    @belle8i

    6 ай бұрын

    Most people in all cultures are jealous of those with success. A handful will be inspired.

  • @tankiller9638

    @tankiller9638

    6 ай бұрын

    As a person that lived in the area...not surprised Minneapolis as a whole has a very victim mentality. The more established would probably stay if gun crime could be brought down but last I checked its just as bad as its been for the last few years. Minneapolis has ALOT to figure out before I ever move back there.

  • @savrixx

    @savrixx

    6 ай бұрын

    !The deconstructionist ideologies creating angry blacks and self guilty whites through propaganda is but a tool for the really bad guys. Imagine you needed a remaining population to be dumbed down on self consumption and lust for material things becoming happy with bigdaddygov handouts. During covid Aristotle-“No man is a slave if better off free” meaning if a group cannot contribute to society then they are better off a slave to the state. A permanent slave will not revolt against being a slave if they believe they are the highest beings in society. Hints “We wuz kangs” Those who dispersed around the globe can now absorb the technology and culture of those nations. The more guilt and compassion felt by those nations will make this cultural absorption become more absolute. Using foresight and reasoning I suggest all humans be ready to defend themselves against the world revolutionaries. They want what you have and more importantly they want you NOT to have it. To preserve life and history, we must “Old Yeller” the rabid

  • @trombettafamily9008

    @trombettafamily9008

    6 ай бұрын

    I think it’s less raising them to get out and it’s more like your 18 now and i can’t get paid for you anymore.

  • @robynharrison7631
    @robynharrison7631Ай бұрын

    I love how he backs up his words with the FACTS!

  • @bboylinxcs
    @bboylinxcs19 күн бұрын

    Imagine a world were people are judged for who they are individually and not by the crowd that's standing around them.

  • @Eckerd84
    @Eckerd844 ай бұрын

    I said good morning to a cop the other day and he said he don't get that much often from black folks. I had to think for a second and switched up my stance. I've been a firm believer in if you protect the bad ones then you're bad yourself. But then we glority not snitching. They're so many times we put ourselves in situations that could have been prevented then we scream police brutality, it's insane. I've been pulled over many times, pride or not it's OK to be respectful.

  • @BennieCampbell-cl2lv

    @BennieCampbell-cl2lv

    2 ай бұрын

    It is so sad. Blacks are their own worse enemy and this is so unfair to the blacks who are good law abiding citizens. There are many blacks who try to avoid the negative blacks including myself. I will travel miles out of the way in order to eat at a decent restaurant or shop. If I don't want to be around ghetto acting blacks, I can understand why whites feel the way they do even though all blacks are not bad acting individuals.

  • @bsowers22
    @bsowers226 ай бұрын

    There was a documentary about athletes that go broke. One of the athletes they interviewed that didn’t go broke was Jamal Mashburn. He said “People can call me an Uncle Tom, or Oreo, or whatever. I don’t have a bunch of baby momma’s and child support checks to pay. Got one wife who’s the mother of my kids. I don’t have a crew of people that just hang around and expect me to pay for their good times. I’ve got a chain of car dealerships and employees who depend on me. Too many of us get in that mind set that when we make it, we have to take all of our friends out of the hood with us. And it just doesn’t work like that.” Same documentary, Leon Searcy, once the highest paid lineman in the NFL, got with a girl, and in less than a year put her name on the bank account, with his multimillion dollar signing bonus in it. Goes to buy a truck and is told he has no money. She cleaned it out because “If you leave me, I want to make sure me and my mom are taken care of!”

  • @g.v.fitmason1326

    @g.v.fitmason1326

    6 ай бұрын

    The Leon Story, He Threatened to Leave her, that's why she Took half of his Money

  • @marystokes779

    @marystokes779

    16 күн бұрын

    ​@@g.v.fitmason1326😅

  • @1luckyccmom
    @1luckyccmom2 ай бұрын

    Love what you’re doing with your channel. I’ve asked so many times why the “good “people black people don’t call out the “bad”black people and shut this crap down already.

  • @mauriceslevines6100
    @mauriceslevines61002 ай бұрын

    Wow this is the best video I have seen all year!

  • @warriorkala3960
    @warriorkala39606 ай бұрын

    This video was spot on! I’m Nero divergent, and during the time when TikTok had the fake mental disorder crowd going on, it made everyone skeptical of whose real and who is not. I am sick and tired of people thinking that having a mental disorder is playing the victim. I have a TBI epilepsy, and aphasia, yet I fought tooth and nail to go to college, and become an average person in society. Come on people. Pull up your boots straps, raised your head, high, and get to where you wanna be!

  • @LetsTalkOnePiece

    @LetsTalkOnePiece

    6 ай бұрын

    I am Caligula divergent, lol. It is neuro dude, as in neurology, related to the brain.

  • @kitkakitteh

    @kitkakitteh

    6 ай бұрын

    Hadrian here. And there we go discussing the Empire again.

  • @thatcrazymick

    @thatcrazymick

    6 ай бұрын

    I have epilepsy and 8 concussions under my belt and I am living a wonderful banana.

  • @Flesh_Wizard

    @Flesh_Wizard

    6 ай бұрын

    I'm Caesar divergent personally

  • @sentinelsofvmi2227
    @sentinelsofvmi22275 ай бұрын

    I went to high school in the rural south. There were less than 20 black kids in our school of over 700. My best friend was black and when I moved away senior year she was on track to be valedictorian. She also played and studied classical music. Her mom was the lunch lady, so they weren't wealthy (nor were most in our school). There was no "community" pushing a negative narrative. Therefore each person excelled in line with their family values and abilities.

  • @debrazawlocki3975
    @debrazawlocki3975Ай бұрын

    Excellent video! Thank you!

  • @elvonneypoole8653
    @elvonneypoole86532 ай бұрын

    I love you guys your content is so rich I wish you could bottle this and pass it around our community keep up the good work!

  • @richardring1563
    @richardring15636 ай бұрын

    You give me hope for the future. As an ex bleeding heart liberal, age and a questioning mind turned me centrist/moderate. Statistics and common sense debunk BLM beliefs and white liberal whining. Glad more people are seeing this!!!

  • @saygerow

    @saygerow

    6 ай бұрын

    statistics are fact, ideology is a lie we do need more people seeing the statistics and realizing mainstream medias have lied to them for a long time

  • @canecorsomom2023

    @canecorsomom2023

    6 ай бұрын

    Same! I'm by no means conservative, but the left has lost its collective mind

  • @Transformersarecoming4yourkids

    @Transformersarecoming4yourkids

    6 ай бұрын

    💯

  • @bobjohnson1633

    @bobjohnson1633

    6 ай бұрын

    So, you're only half fascist. You still vote for inhuman oppression.

  • @dougpeters3110
    @dougpeters31106 күн бұрын

    Thank you for saying this!!!! I have never hurt a black person!!! I am a white truck driver 65 years old,

  • @cmrjc74
    @cmrjc742 ай бұрын

    Thank you 🙏🏾 you don’t know how much the world needs this . Keep up the great work, identity with being a human and not a race ❤

  • @JinxMarie1985
    @JinxMarie19852 ай бұрын

    I am just here to listen and i wasn't going to comment... i just wanted to say I appreciate the work, time and effort it takes from you and others to make these kinds of videos for everyone. Thank you.

  • @Webedunn
    @Webedunn6 ай бұрын

    One of the most disgusting things I’ve seen came from my own home town of Baltimore. These awesome young Black kids, strait A’s, advanced classes and they get attacked by adult gang bangers. They ripped up their books, beat them and basically threatened them that they better say “F school” and join the gang or else. I rarely ever tear up but that was it for me. I was heartbroken! I felt so bad for them poor kids bc they probably did throw a great future away.😞

  • @danielk.english6004

    @danielk.english6004

    6 ай бұрын

    those communities are "crab buckets" for a reason. the people climbing out get pulled down.

  • @SuperKillerdog

    @SuperKillerdog

    6 ай бұрын

    😳! That can’t be true!!

  • @dariusmax91

    @dariusmax91

    5 ай бұрын

    Black folks need to have enough spine to fight for our kids, and uplift our brightest. We need to encourage our people to rise.

  • @hunter.5625

    @hunter.5625

    4 ай бұрын

    Ya black people are very envious of each other and love to bring each other down to their level instead of coming together and uplifting each other

  • @Scooterride13
    @Scooterride136 ай бұрын

    I’m a white woman and when I was 18 I was pulled over for my license plate light being out. The cops were white males who hastled me, patronized me, insulted me, accused me of having weed in the car when I had never smoked a day in my life and it was a new car. They ended up searching my whole car and myself on the hood of a patrol car crying begging them to let me go because I was leaving for the Army in 3 days and this could ruin my chances. They found nothing, still wrote me the plate light ticket and let me go. Very traumatizing experience that made me hate cops. I’m so tired of hearing that it’s only black people that the cops hassle.

  • @erroneous6947

    @erroneous6947

    6 ай бұрын

    Agree 100%.

  • @ninadaly7639

    @ninadaly7639

    6 ай бұрын

    Not “THE” cops. “THOSE” cops.

  • @revengenerd1

    @revengenerd1

    6 ай бұрын

    Relative was harassed 20 years ago when someone claimed he assaulted them. despite relative having proof he was miles away at time of the alleged assault the cops just wanted to make an example of him, he even had CCTV proving he was miles away and they claimed he could of got in a car sped there and still been there in time for the CCTV footage even that he went into a store to get himself a alibi, he was unemployed at a the time and they tried making stereotypical judgements of him despite him doing a lot of charity work, they also interviewed people who knew him and twisted their statements i.e he liked to go to a bar became "he liked to drink often" he was a flirt became "he had no respect for women" etc etc but even worse was when a complain was made against the local force for their behaviour I was with him when some men came up to us on the street claiming to be off duty policemen and saying relative got their colleagues in trouble and to watch his back and don't show his face in any local bars/shops etc or they will "find a way" to get him arrested. We are white btw.

  • @mogetit5999

    @mogetit5999

    6 ай бұрын

    Your comparison to black ppl cop trauma is laughable

  • @ninadaly7639

    @ninadaly7639

    6 ай бұрын

    @@mogetit5999 Oh please! Trauma is trauma.

  • @shawronofficial
    @shawronofficialАй бұрын

    at 19 years old i had an experience dealing with the police, im walking down the street with my sister and 3 female cousins, all of them younger then me and out of nowhere 8 cop cars pulled up and surrounded me and pulled their guns out, lucky for me i was only 20 feet away from my parents house and my Dad came out and talked to them and cops told him that i fitted the description of a group of teenagers vandalizing a house in the neighborhood and while my dad was talking to one cop another one comes up to me and ask for my ID and i said no because i just walked out the house and did nothing and the cop said "i can still take you to jail because you was walking on the wrong side of the road" and that was my first ever experience dealing with the police

  • @user-tt9jz5ym8h
    @user-tt9jz5ym8h2 ай бұрын

    This absolutely breaks my heart. The hopelessness that robs people of their own dignity, and the innocent and dignified suffer along with them. God help us all.

  • @beauregardrippey5508
    @beauregardrippey55086 ай бұрын

    Warning: this video may contain truths and facts not conducive for your feelings. Therefore, it is age restricted to people over 35.

  • @lgannawa

    @lgannawa

    6 ай бұрын

    😂

  • @Mustlovehorrorfilms

    @Mustlovehorrorfilms

    6 ай бұрын

    Hey now I'm 28 and I agree 🎉

  • @Smolchildslays

    @Smolchildslays

    6 ай бұрын

    Umm I’m 13 almost 14 😂

  • @beauregardrippey5508

    @beauregardrippey5508

    6 ай бұрын

    @@Smolchildslays you'll get it when you get older.

  • @bugsbunnypoo

    @bugsbunnypoo

    6 ай бұрын

    @@Smolchildslayssame

  • @oldsman7
    @oldsman76 ай бұрын

    Mothers are marrying the government and there are too many fatherless homes.

  • @kimberleyoliver8160

    @kimberleyoliver8160

    6 ай бұрын

    AGREE/

  • @junior.von.claire

    @junior.von.claire

    6 ай бұрын

    Yep, ever since 1965.

  • @LordMalice6d9

    @LordMalice6d9

    6 ай бұрын

    The government is evil.

  • @LordMalice6d9

    @LordMalice6d9

    6 ай бұрын

    ​@@junior.von.claireImmigration act as well.

  • @thatcrazymick

    @thatcrazymick

    6 ай бұрын

    Black fathers who do the job need to really start shaming the black fathers who don't. It's up to them.

  • @frankburklin1116
    @frankburklin1116Ай бұрын

    Well, I'd say everything to be said has been said, all i can do is wish those who strive to rise above this mess the best of luck.

  • @isabelstate3841
    @isabelstate38412 ай бұрын

    One of the darker skinned (I don't like using the term black) girls in my hiphop class (this was a while ago) requested a Doja Cat song and I looked it up later to find out that it was.. not great. It just hit me that the situations are the same. 😢

  • @curlygirl9023
    @curlygirl90236 ай бұрын

    I like when you made the point about saying “we” because it ISN’T all of us who are assisting in tearing the community down… a lot of us are doing out part by not engaging and raising our kids differently

  • @TheLouHam

    @TheLouHam

    6 ай бұрын

    That’s why I still have hope that maybe the next generation would be so much better.

  • @kendra6738
    @kendra67384 ай бұрын

    He’s right. I adore Amir. As a gay black man he gets so much hate from not only from most POC, blm ally’s, but also the LGBT+ community. People call anyone that steps out of line white sympathizer, closet homophobe (if you’re gay, lesbian, or bi and don’t agree with pride). Even myself a biological woman get called a “pick me” for defending who’s right, even if is a man. I can’t imagine the strength it takes to speak out and hear so much backlash.

  • @hansolo9585

    @hansolo9585

    3 ай бұрын

    The right loves their tokens. Gay AND black is like hitting the lottery for them lol

  • @Stopivehadenuf

    @Stopivehadenuf

    2 ай бұрын

    Who’s ur pfp? You seem like a white person

  • @central_scrutinizr

    @central_scrutinizr

    2 ай бұрын

    “Pick me” has got to be the most annoying and intellectually lazy criticism of recent times

  • @johnnielawrence420

    @johnnielawrence420

    2 ай бұрын

    suppose I start a strait pride movement...will that offend the gays?

  • @hansolo9585

    @hansolo9585

    2 ай бұрын

    @@johnnielawrence420 Straights aren’t called abominations

  • @sharonprice920
    @sharonprice9208 күн бұрын

    The brilliance on this episode...the statements of pure gold...it applies to EVERYONE in this world. We could all take better care of ourselves, our families and our communities if we took this information to our cores. Kudos to you all. I always love amala but this amir ...gets right to the center of it all. God bless you.

  • @jackspurlock629
    @jackspurlock6292 ай бұрын

    Amazing episode!!!

  • @kory7259
    @kory72596 ай бұрын

    He’s absolutely right, even with your story, I was the same way with police. Got pulled over one time because of an outside conflict and I was SHAKING in fear, nice police man, he was very remorseful. And recently I lost someone close to me from black on black crime, he was out minding his business, got shot and killed because these random black people thought it was a good idea to rob him. He had NOTHING on him, it was so devastating. He makes points I can resonate with every single way, and that I’ve seen myself. In no way is he saying we DONT face any hardship, I’ve had cousins be profiled for no reason, but if we want to fix any issue we need to start with ourselves.

  • @adaogomes8327
    @adaogomes83276 ай бұрын

    As an African, from Angola 🇦🇴, I've been asking these questions for so long. I can't understand why almost all music, movies and tv shows represent black people like they don't have a social structure.

  • @elettramia6380

    @elettramia6380

    6 ай бұрын

    Because unfortunately in the USA or English speaking countries That’s exactly the case. No social structure. My sister married into a family from Togo Africa and the differences are huge. They were made fun of by black Americans for Not acting the way black north Americans act. Which translated into they had self respect and respect for others, they found it important how others viewed them, they took their education seriously, they dressed more traditional, and so on. I have notice though this is common in English speaking countries like the UK as well. I’m Not sure why this is a common occurrence amongst black people in English speaking countries but it is unfortunately. It’s really Not fair to the many black people who have sense and structure that those who do Not are representing them as a whole.

  • @shelbysittig1047

    @shelbysittig1047

    6 ай бұрын

    There was two black cultures in America for a long time until the civil rights movement fed blacks that they can live off the government as long as the mothers kick out the fathers. There was black businesses and even a black ecosystem where blacks in the north were educated and even wealthy. The other culture was found in the south where poverty was prevalent and lack of education was elevated. In the 1920s-30s there was an integration of the two creating the black culture we have today.

  • @elettramia6380

    @elettramia6380

    6 ай бұрын

    @@shelbysittig1047 ya I’m gonna say that’s Not why the majority of black North Americans today create the majority of the issues here in the USA. It sounds nice but doesn’t validate what’s going on

  • @Lightskinemagic1995

    @Lightskinemagic1995

    6 ай бұрын

    Well who do you think are in charge of these media companies portraying us like that it sure ain’t no black folks

  • @erickcristian9607

    @erickcristian9607

    Ай бұрын

    Yet you Africans imitate American black culture. I've seen some of your television programs.

  • @Dibbz_TV
    @Dibbz_TV2 ай бұрын

    Another video said "CIA doing victory laps right now" is brutal.

  • @CEIGE48
    @CEIGE4828 күн бұрын

    So much truth. I am in tears. We have got to wake up.

  • @deweyr_fisher
    @deweyr_fisher6 ай бұрын

    As a black teen who’s going into law as a DA, I’ve been preparing myself for being called a sellout or being accused of wanting to put people in jail. I’m all for accountability and holding black fathers responsible, addressing the encouragement of ghetto/criminal behavior, but I also want to highlight the historical lack of resources, justice, and generational wealth + lack of stable families that contribute to black people committing crimes. They’re not mutually exclusive goals. And I feel like the people trying to ‘help’ black people by doing things like making tests easier/not necessary are part of the problem. Low expectations don’t help people. There’s a middle ground between a victim mindset and refusing to acknowledge that there are still problems [like black people being denied pain medication, black children with allergies given steroids to fix eczema instead of being told to get allergy tested, black people not being given as much attention when they go missing, black children being especially neglected in foster care, etc.]

  • @bobjohnson1633

    @bobjohnson1633

    6 ай бұрын

    Kamala Harris put shit tons of black people in jail, and black female voters think she's the blackest thing around. Just make sure you treat them like shit, talk to them like they are shit, and completely own it. Small, weak people respect power and strength. Exude that and make sure you call them the N word as an insult. They will respect you for it.

  • @Theprincessandthetea

    @Theprincessandthetea

    6 ай бұрын

    Stand strong there! I think Amala's videos can bring a lot of this free thinker mentality that you are gonna need it! Good luck on your journey :D

  • @michellemartinezjunco5144

    @michellemartinezjunco5144

    6 ай бұрын

    I know why you are where you are, you are smart with common sense! 👏🏼🥰

  • @LadyGodiva0611

    @LadyGodiva0611

    6 ай бұрын

    Keep following your dreams and achieving your goals baby girl! Leading by example is the only way we can try to change the culture. I'm proud of you!

  • @clydekimsey7503

    @clydekimsey7503

    6 ай бұрын

    Yes, those inequalities you list are terrible, but the laws and rules have done all they can to address this. The fault was with individual drs who were racist. They should have their medical licenses taken away. You cant inject love and fairness into an individual

  • @VueiyVisarelli
    @VueiyVisarelli6 ай бұрын

    I used to get the "You speak White" all the time as a kid. I love reading, and I voraciously consumed every sci-fi and fantasy book my parents (who also love reading) had in the house. Sometimes when my aunt came to visit, she'd accidentally leave her books there, and I'd read those, too. When I didn't understand a word or know how to pronounce it, I'd either ask about it or look it up. Those moronic children who mocked me had equated being *educated* as "being White." We are indeed doing this to ourselves. Fortunately, I learned to not give one flying flip what they said about me, and I'm doing well for myself. I'm now homeschooling my own kids, and my eldest wants to be a teacher. I think we're gonna have to get her to become a black belt if she wants to teach _public_ school, though...Maybe we'll encourage private school. 😅

  • @robertstewart9071

    @robertstewart9071

    6 ай бұрын

    I agree I was accused of acting white because I love to read, pronounciate my words without ebonics, and aspire to have a future.

  • @iamlia3069

    @iamlia3069

    6 ай бұрын

    Every time someone said this to me it pissed me off. I went to a college prep school I’m educated. I started saying back to people what that mean? What does a black person talk like ? Next thing you know the stuttering realizing how dumb they sound. Especially when I’ve been told that that way I speak has helped me achieve certain jobs and things in life.

  • @4rtivist

    @4rtivist

    5 ай бұрын

    135 unarmed black people killed in 2015. We invoked change. Y’all acting like without calling it out, it would be at 12. Yall are sickos. Convenient for you to make this video AFTER WE DID THE WORK. And yall not gonna address poverty and the historical media representation. We can’t “take accountability” BECAUSE THEY GAVE AWAY LAND FOR FREE TO WHITE PEOPLE and redlined us from it. Goofies. Burned down towns. So we just dealing with it. There’s damn near nothing to bootstrap on a micro level, to the macro. It would have to come from the macro, just like the root causes of the environment came from. Hold the powers that be accountable. Cowards.

  • @MusicOfColor

    @MusicOfColor

    5 ай бұрын

    So, there is a stereotypical accent that a lot of black people have, too, that's a cross between Midwestern inner-city and Alabama. It's not that black people sound uneducated. I have heard people talk using big words over the phone and I could tell that they were black. I probably would sound more white if I tried to sound black because I couldn't pull it off.

  • @theresas740

    @theresas740

    5 ай бұрын

    "Flying f***s of several styles are available on Etsy, as are rat's a**es. I can vouch for the quality of the rodential hindquarters.

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