Reparations and the Legacy of BLM with The GoodFellows

This episode is actually my appearance on the Goodfellows podcast, which is run by the Hoover Institution. They asked me about the reparations proposal that was recently put forward in California. They also asked me about the legacy of Black Lives Matter. We talk about the 1619 Project. We talk about color blindness and a post-racial society. Finally, they went on to ask me what advice I would give to young black kids today.
I hope you enjoy this conversation as much as I did.
Good Fellows Podcast: bit.ly/3C8IQZC
Pre-order my book:
"The End of Race Politics: Arguments for a Colorblind America" - bit.ly/48VUw17
FOLLOW COLEMAN:
Check out my Album: AMOR FATI - bit.ly//AmorFatiAlbum
Substack - colemanhughes.substack.com
Join the Unfiltered Community - bit.ly/3B1GAlS
KZread - bit.ly/38kzium
Twitter - bit.ly/2rbAJue
Facebook - bit.ly/2LiAXH3
Instagram - bit.ly/2SDGo6o
Podcast -bit.ly/3oQvNUL
Website - colemanhughes.org
#ConversationswithColeman #CWC #ColemanHughes #Podcast #Politics #society #Colemanunfiltered #Unfiltered #Music #Philosophy #BlackCulture #Intellectual #podcasting #podcastersofinstagram #KZread #podcastlife #music #youtube #radio #comedy #podcastshow #spotifypodcast #newpodcast #interview #motivation #art #covid #history #republicans #blacklivesmatter #follow #libertarian #art #socialism #communism #democracy #woke #wokepolitics #media #blm #reparations #1619project #goodfellows

Пікірлер: 252

  • @ColemanHughesOfficial
    @ColemanHughesOfficial11 ай бұрын

    Thanks for watching my latest episode. Let me know your thoughts and opinions down below in a comment. If you like my content and want to support me, consider becoming a paying member of the Coleman Unfiltered Community here --> bit.ly/3B1GAlS

  • @killmongermyhero1169

    @killmongermyhero1169

    11 ай бұрын

    Bro we know your not us lil homie your not black..your not FBA..your a tether and the real black grassroots exposed you.. oh and we will never claim a mofo riding a subway pole in white draws..WTF

  • @toncuz8291

    @toncuz8291

    11 ай бұрын

    Not rocket science. Sixty years and $23 trillion in Affirmative Action, free grants for business and college, free housing and food...WAS reparations.

  • @jamesshaw6884

    @jamesshaw6884

    11 ай бұрын

    Coleman the token black guy with three white ppl

  • @killmongermyhero1169

    @killmongermyhero1169

    10 ай бұрын

    @@jamesshaw6884 he not even black he Puerto Rican and plus we don't claim mofo who pole dance on crowded Subway trains in his underwear

  • @jamesshaw6884

    @jamesshaw6884

    10 ай бұрын

    @@killmongermyhero1169 word up

  • @livengoodjames7406
    @livengoodjames740611 ай бұрын

    We need more people like you Coleman. Most people lack the knowledge and academic tools to bring truth to light like you do.

  • @deal2live

    @deal2live

    11 ай бұрын

    I do not think he is that unusual intellectual. What he has is free thought and less emotional. The media makes us emotional. We weight emotional arguments heaver than actual logical or ethical arguments.

  • @rashid9891

    @rashid9891

    11 ай бұрын

    No, we don't. We had many from the black community that sabotaged the black community within. Do we have problems YES? Do other communities have problems without a doubt, even more so

  • @mikejones-wn1sw

    @mikejones-wn1sw

    10 ай бұрын

    @deal2live what he is is nether intellectual or intelligently. He is just a parrot that repeats what white supremacy has said for years as an excuse on why they are evil. This guy is not even a black american eligible for reparations, he is Puerto Rican cosplaying as one of the descendants

  • @BrandonsCommentary
    @BrandonsCommentary11 ай бұрын

    Coleman Hughes Would you consider having your podcast shown inside the country’s prisons? I can help. Your voice is needed.

  • @laurenlockdown2791

    @laurenlockdown2791

    11 ай бұрын

    Put it ON!!!

  • @christopherkucia1071

    @christopherkucia1071

    11 ай бұрын

    Reach out to him directly or his team (I wouldn’t know how lol) don’t stop until you have a YES or NO from him! It’s important!

  • @BrandonsCommentary

    @BrandonsCommentary

    11 ай бұрын

    @@christopherkucia1071 thanks for the encouragement, I'll get on it asap.

  • @1232N
    @1232N11 ай бұрын

    It’s great that you were balanced, providing pros and cons, when asked about BLM’s legacy.

  • @LordMalice6d9

    @LordMalice6d9

    10 ай бұрын

    BLM is a Marxist movement.

  • @socialmoth4974
    @socialmoth497411 ай бұрын

    Your story about your grandfather really struck home for me. I am a white civil engineer and my old manager (retired now) was a black man who I loved working with. I really miss him. He was well known and respected in our city's engineering community. He still comes to visit our office from time to time and it's always nice to see him. Every stops what they're doing to go chat with him.

  • @goodlookinouthomie1757
    @goodlookinouthomie175711 ай бұрын

    I've been talking about Tony Timpa ever since the summer of 2020. He died in almost identical circumstances as Saint George, but nobody gave a crap.... literally because he was white. So when people say oh there is systemic racism in our country... I say yeah... I agree.

  • @christopherkucia1071

    @christopherkucia1071

    11 ай бұрын

    It’s the political elite profiting off of division amongst the proles. And to CREATE issues to run on in election…….

  • @DarkAngel2512

    @DarkAngel2512

    6 ай бұрын

    😢and Timothy Coffman. Another white guy who died the same way. And even though neither of their deaths were due to racism I still agree there is def racism towards white people by others generally and workplace racism.

  • @lawrencefrost9063
    @lawrencefrost906311 ай бұрын

    I've watched nearly every Goodfellows episode. Such a great show. I'm glad you got to be a guest.

  • @moxtr
    @moxtr11 ай бұрын

    Calling it George Floyd's murder in my opinion is an opinion. I would refer to it as George Floyd's death in police custody if anything. I understand a jury thought differently.

  • @jamesaxten7163

    @jamesaxten7163

    11 ай бұрын

    Not really! The jury was scared to death and intimidated. In no way was that a fair trial!

  • @kaseyines

    @kaseyines

    7 ай бұрын

    If what happened to that man happened to your father you'd be calling it a murder but you're a coward so that's okay.

  • @DarkAngel2512

    @DarkAngel2512

    6 ай бұрын

    I didnt watch the whole courtcase but ny unnderstandjng is they couldnt determine if Floyd died before the fentanyl could have killed him despite he def did OD on it. There as mitigating factors such as negligence on the copper's part where he didnt assisst Floyd when he said he couldnt breath and what may have caused him to not breath being aggravated by the exhaust fumes or laying awkwardly on his front. If he died before the fentanyl caused his death then it means it was down to Chauvin's negligence. If you had someone in hospital saying they cant breath but the nurse didnt assist them and they died they may have died anyway but they would have potentially lived longer if assissted. Thats why its tricky because you have to assist a person who cant breath.

  • @DarkAngel2512

    @DarkAngel2512

    6 ай бұрын

    ​@@kaseyineshe had taken something like 50x the amount of fentanyl that would cause on OD. Read that as 50x more and not 50% more. He def had taken enough to kill him. Howver it doesnt sit right with me that Chauvin didnt assist a man struggling to breath. Thats straight up negligence on his part and he could have done that to someone else who wasnt def going to die from an OD and thus could be someone who contributes to another person's death even if he was the direct cause. Whether you cause that person to not be able to breath initially you arw very much why they are continuing to struggle by not shifting their position. Another person could be saved by sitting them up to expand their lungs. Whilst lying on ones front will do that it wont if your hands are behind you back changing how youre laying. When I lay on my front I need my arms under me to give that space for my lungs to expand when I breath.

  • @mikegray8776
    @mikegray877611 ай бұрын

    I watched this when originally posted by the Hoover Institute. And watched it again just now to re-listen to all the great, sane, balanced thoughts you put forward. Nice work, as ever. Thanks Coleman.

  • @captainbifid
    @captainbifid11 ай бұрын

    Have you ever thought about having Killer Mike from Run the Jewels on your podcast? It seems to me like his positions on most issues regarding Black Americans are the polar opposite of yours. And yet, you both strike me as well-informed, intelligent men acting in good faith. I think a discussion between the two of you would be of immense value. Thank you for your work, your decency, and your willingness to challenge popular views.

  • @robdielemans9189

    @robdielemans9189

    11 ай бұрын

    You could add KRS One I know he has a lot of knowledge about these polarizing subjects.

  • @herbjones3601
    @herbjones360111 ай бұрын

    Coleman, i am a big fan. I think the US has already paid “reparations” since 1965 in the form of welfare, food stamps, section 8 housing, head start and many other programs. I hope that some of that makes sense. And I’m a little disturbed that these white academicians keep referring to the horrible tragedy of George Floyd’s “murder” at the hands of a white policeman. I live in Minneapolis and that white policeman was known to be a POS but George Floyd was breaking multiple laws (and a history of lawbreaking) and then was fighting the police, and would not allow himself to be put in the back of the police car and then was being restrained by that cop who is spending more time looking at the people around him fearing he was about to be rushed than concerned with George Floyd’s state of health. As a physician, I can tell you that you cannot compromise someone’s airway by kneeling on the back of their neck. The spine is in the way. You can’t suffocate somebody that way. That’s why when people strangle people they do it from the front. Secondly if you are unable to breathe you are unable to vocalize am I understanding is that George Floyd was vocalizing throughout much of that 8 to 9 minutes. Lastly, George Floyd had horrific coronary artery disease, much more advanced than most people his age. That’s combined with his intoxication with methamphetamine and fentanyl and his Excessive struggles with the police and what caused his death. That was the original autopsy reports and in my personal opinion, knowing some of those pathologist at the Hennepin County medical center, is the truth not watch some hired guns from the defense and family said in exchange for payment. As much as this may be uncomfortable or perhaps seriously controversial, George Floyd was not murdered. George Floyd died from the stress of struggling with the police because of serious underlying coronary artery disease. My understanding he had a 90 to 95% blockage of his main coronary artery. My old girlfriend who was 50% Native American that looked very white was twice restrained for 15 minutes or more by that same knee on the back of the neck or upper back. In addition, as you sort of point out, more than twice as many whites are killed by the police each year, and I am speaking of gunshot killings Rather than suffocation, but somehow that never gets discussed. Thank you for doing what you do. I’m not a subscriber at this point but I do plan to at some point.

  • @monykalynf3604
    @monykalynf360411 ай бұрын

    Such a great discussion. We need a whole lot more of these types of conversations.

  • @josehawking5293
    @josehawking529311 ай бұрын

    Charter schools replacing public schools is the elephant 🐘 in the room.🤔

  • @kellymcgowan3547
    @kellymcgowan354711 ай бұрын

    I love listening to Coleman. He needs to go big.

  • @rajkoelguapo12
    @rajkoelguapo1211 ай бұрын

    The Framers essentially had to tolerate slavery in some southern states so that said states would agree to ratify the Constitution and join the Union. Although they locked in a ban on the international slave trade (which they believed would eventually end slavery -- no source for new slaves would ultimately end the practice, right?). Unfortunately, there were two issues: as part of the ratification process, they had to allow for a 20 yr extension via a compromise before the international slave ban went into effect in 1808; and the number of slaves in southern states grew instead of declining. The intent of the Framers was not to perpetuate slavery or to protect it any more than they had to to achieve ratification. Defenders of slavery falsely claim that the Constitution was "pro-slavery" because it contained multiple provisions that could be perceived as being put in place for the benefit of slaveholders, like the fugitive slave clause (that required the North to return escaped slaves to their owners in the South), the militia clause (which allowed Federal forces to put down slave rebellions in the South), and the fact that various amendments permitted slaveholders to classify slaves as their property (and thus subject to legal protections under the Constitution). The Civil War was ultimately a battle over Constitutional interpretation, and who had the power to impose their will on the other. As the North grew more powerful politically (due to increasing populations), the South was worried that if the Western states were not allowed to be made "slave states" in equal proportion to as they were "free states," they'd lose their Senate parity (which was their sole protection against the increasing votes in the North). The Civil War was fought because Western states were admitted as "free states" to such a disproportionate degree that Southern politicians knew their time was limited anyway...so why not leave a system that no longer had your best interests in mind (and you didn't have the power to control it).

  • @lorileifer613
    @lorileifer61311 ай бұрын

    The fact that Coleman left this up even after he left the conversation is an indication of how thorough he is and how much integrity he’s going for in his channel’s postings. 👏

  • @ianl5882
    @ianl588211 ай бұрын

    Exceptional! From the Coleman part through the political and foreign policy parts, I thank you for your scholarship and learnedness - all the books you have to read an write an just everything that you all must do to bring high-level thinking to a wider audience. I know that I haven’t got the time to read and educate myself like you do and yet I am able to get some sort of start on how to think about all these topics from your insights and summaries of all this stuff. I am (slightly) more intelligent and informed after I listen to this and all your work. Thank you, thank you, thank you! 🙏🏻

  • @seva4411
    @seva441111 ай бұрын

    I live on the northwest side of Chicago and shortly after George Floyd died from fentanyl and a heart attack I saw an article online about a group of people on the south side preparing to go downtown to protest his death. A young black woman addressing this group said that every morning when she wakes up she wonders if this will be the day she dies. Was she talking about being shot by a black gangbanger who routinely shoot other blacks? Obviously not. She was talking about being shot by a white cop who, according to the left, routinely shoot blacks all over the country simply for being black. Many now talk about the need for more police but no one wants to be a cop in cities like Chicago anymore due to the extreme danger they now face after being demonized as racist murderers by the left. And now after Memphis even black cops are condemned as anti-black racist terrorists. So now we have a totally unworkable society. This does not bode well for our future.

  • @lati_da
    @lati_da10 ай бұрын

    BLM did have an impact on me. They causes me to withdraw all support, and empathy for the black community

  • @redgat96

    @redgat96

    Ай бұрын

    💯 yes me too. it actually made me read about the slavery trades + African history and when u do that you’ll feel less sympathy for them as a ppl.

  • @HatefYaminiOnline
    @HatefYaminiOnline11 ай бұрын

    Coleman, your commentary was superb, as it always is. Hope you’ll return to their podcast soon.

  • @safetythirdified
    @safetythirdified9 ай бұрын

    "Freedom is a call to responsibility. It demands of you to take your life into your own hands. Freedom, judges you. You Free!" -Shelby Steel

  • @hormone_moreno
    @hormone_moreno11 ай бұрын

    Not an American, but I'd love to have Coleman's shirt.

  • @riaa8689

    @riaa8689

    11 ай бұрын

    Coleman isn't an American either.

  • @fatguyinatesla5780
    @fatguyinatesla578011 ай бұрын

    Just found you Coleman. Great content, great perspective. You will go far in life.

  • @UNCIVILIZE
    @UNCIVILIZE11 ай бұрын

    Excellent! I learned so much.

  • @heydayma10513
    @heydayma1051311 ай бұрын

    Great intel..thank you for making us smarter and wiser.

  • @jimhallinsn1023
    @jimhallinsn102311 ай бұрын

    This is interesting. Colman has voiced a facet of police misbehaviour which is drowned out by some rather unpleasant mischief makers, thank you this more balanced view point.

  • @amyl6426
    @amyl642611 ай бұрын

    “Buck dancing”?! Nope. Just an independent thinker.

  • @jenjen2864
    @jenjen286410 ай бұрын

    This is an excellent interview 🙏🏽

  • @user-ml4nc9io3d
    @user-ml4nc9io3d11 ай бұрын

    So Wonderful ! Spot on !

  • @JohnSmith-iu3ui
    @JohnSmith-iu3ui11 ай бұрын

    Guilt 34:00 Self-criticism 35:00

  • @victorbarbieri7686
    @victorbarbieri768611 ай бұрын

    Thanks!

  • @rashid9891
    @rashid989111 ай бұрын

    It's like trying to tell first-generation brit, Germ, Russia, Italian how American should be ran

  • @Nill757
    @Nill75711 ай бұрын

    Brilliant

  • @mrfathed3129
    @mrfathed312911 ай бұрын

    I know general McMaster is a public figure and he is a part of this program, but for some reason something about this still seems surreal.

  • @NM-qc2dh
    @NM-qc2dh11 ай бұрын

    How charming and sycophantic we are toward black men who agree with us. Once again mediocrity is hailed as exceptional just because it is black. How entertaining. Yes I’m black .

  • @leegundlach391
    @leegundlach39111 ай бұрын

    Van speaks the truth

  • @jeromedangelo7028
    @jeromedangelo702811 ай бұрын

    16:12 Exactly.

  • @explrr22
    @explrr2211 ай бұрын

    Long listener and general admirer. My first time hearing the argument that pandemic wasn't the cause of crime increase because it wasn't replicated in other nations... It also seemed like that this point was presented as evidence that BLM movements demands around policing were a substantial or primary cause. While I find it plausible and probable that the movement's impact on policing was a contributing factor, I also find the analysis as argued here and elsewhere unfortunately weak. With regard to the differences between the USA and other nations during the pandemic... There are just so many unique aspects of the USA regarding pandemic response and it's politicalization, the socialization and economics of those engaging in crimes, and cultural prominence of aggression and guns. I strongly suspect a serious examination of general rise in crime would find that BLM activity was a probable contribution, but hardly a dominant cause. Examining the nature of the spectrum and volume of criminal activity during the period, makes it difficult to find a plausible causative link to BLM. That said... I wasn't impressed by the movement, and on balance suspect it was more a misleading and harmful distraction that mostly drew popularity from peoples desire to engage in positive change. Lots of passion and turmoil.. much misdirected...quite confused and disruptive... consciousness raising, but misleading... On balance: I think it did more short-term harm than good. I suspect it did more long-term harm than good, but am far less certain, as new commitments to concern about others might be redirected more positively in future.

  • @leslielandberg5620
    @leslielandberg562011 ай бұрын

    People don't know their history. That guys argument is so simple, yet correct. I didn't know that Grover Cleveland had two non-consecutive terms. So there's a historical precedent. Plus stringing all the other basic rules of if this, then that together. The result of all of this could be another historic (and for the public), unexpected win.

  • @DLH.23
    @DLH.2311 ай бұрын

    Great point at 25:32. There is no fear whatsoever from the left that the problem of racism might be exaggerated--that possibility isn't even considered, and is met with mockery, rather than a sincere examination of the negatives associated with exaggerating the problem.

  • @paulhue86
    @paulhue8611 ай бұрын

    Slavery was not a "crime"; it was legal, and legal all around the world. It was wrong, but it was not illegal. One aspect of history is the positive evolution of human conduct in some areas, such as slavery. Are we going to have reparations in 5 generations for descendants of blacks who were denied a proper education during their school years?

  • @NorthernObserver
    @NorthernObserver11 ай бұрын

    Was GF murdered? I know that we were told he was murdered and certain judgements were made but the evidence that he died of a drug overdose and general poor health rather than the compression on his neck which was not continuous is just as strong. There is also the responsibility of the un indicted co conspirator in this case - the mob that prevented the ambulance medics from arriving in a timely manner. I think perceptions have been managed too aggressively for us to refer to GF as murdered.

  • @wadetisthammer3612
    @wadetisthammer361211 ай бұрын

    18:48 how to help poor black children in education. 23:55 to 25:30 - Example of the danger of exaggerating racism.

  • @17NateJohnson
    @17NateJohnson11 ай бұрын

    Coleman's comment that bad faith actors have no interest in "the debt being repaid" b/c the power of unpaid debt is too powerful. This is about politics.

  • @friarnewborg9213
    @friarnewborg921311 ай бұрын

    They had me smiling from the beginning

  • @tramaineparsons612
    @tramaineparsons6126 ай бұрын

    This brother is intelligent he’s dope but he’s young yet he’s on point I’m checking him out great job on the interview with the brothers who wrote the myths of left and right

  • @chadlee4281
    @chadlee428110 ай бұрын

    Damm cole .i like wat u said!

  • @Pasta-B1FBA
    @Pasta-B1FBA11 ай бұрын

    We are the new normal BGR 🕸️

  • @killmongermyhero1169
    @killmongermyhero116911 ай бұрын

    ANYBODY CLAIMING TO BE FOUNDATIONAL BLACK AMERICAN AMD YOUR NOT THEN KEEP REPERATIONS OUT YOUR MOUTH BECAUSE YOUR NOT QUALIFIED

  • @davidlamb7524
    @davidlamb752411 ай бұрын

    My father was a slave of the Japanese on the 'Death Railway' in Burma. By the time he was freed the mental and physical damage he suffered was permanent. The knock on direct effect on our family was catastrophic. Am I entitled to reparations from the Japanese ? Surely I have easily as good a claim as black Americans ? What do you think ?

  • @bn16fan
    @bn16fan11 ай бұрын

    Boom

  • @Y2KMillenniumBug
    @Y2KMillenniumBug11 ай бұрын

    How come TVO didn't have that feedback because they were saying that they needed more police. So I need to compare notes first.

  • @herbjones3601
    @herbjones360111 ай бұрын

    Coleman, i am disappointed in these guys. They clearly have limited understanding of urban black communities. As something that I have felt for many many years and something that Candace Owens pointed out which I was pleased to hear that she agreed with my concerns is the two major problems facing most American black communities are out of wedlock childbirth and lack of early childhood education and the general disrespect for education amongst so many in those communities, even despite the desires of their mothers. If a child’s brain is not exercised from ages 0 to 4 by being read to, by being allowed to ask questions and to probe the world and get reasonable answers to the questions, their brains will not develop properly. That is a medical fact. I know way too many Black men participating in illegal behavior who feel they cannot compete in society because they had “head trauma” when they were younger and have problems with memory and processing information. In my opinion, most of them are probably negatively affected by the shortcomings of their early childhood caregivers. Throwing money at people is not gonna solve anything and in fact will likely make the situation even worse.

  • @dennisddiamond854
    @dennisddiamond85411 ай бұрын

    If I was raised in the hood with few options to get out of it and I’m in high school, I would join the military, learn how to stand on my own, learn how to work as a team member, lean how to respect others with pride and purpose. I’d also benefit by the great programs that exist for soldiers to get educated, technical training and much much more. The Pentagon gets the largest part of our national budget and it is never taken advantage of by the American people.

  • @Y2KMillenniumBug
    @Y2KMillenniumBug11 ай бұрын

    You can't fire people like that cause we have certain standards like employment agreements, so we need to give notice. It's for the protection of employees. And I think you guys tried to change it but not sure whether it's already agreed or not cause I dunno.

  • @Y2KMillenniumBug
    @Y2KMillenniumBug11 ай бұрын

    When people keep labeling people wrongly they end up needing to explain stuff and just like the Bible it causes so much additional labels to cover up past misunderstanding.

  • @laurenlockdown2791

    @laurenlockdown2791

    11 ай бұрын

    Wrongdoings and below par behaviors.... #babylonISBurnin🔥 You are correct! PS remember what it felt like at 11:59pm on 12-31-99?!? Sure was a moment....

  • @dahveednelson2341
    @dahveednelson234110 ай бұрын

    I’d love to to share my perspective with the Hoover family .

  • @Gingerbit-bk3df
    @Gingerbit-bk3df11 ай бұрын

    I really wish you run for president one day. I will vote for you

  • @goodlookinouthomie1757
    @goodlookinouthomie175711 ай бұрын

    And how about the descendants of slaves who may present as white today? They seem to be specifically excluded from this proposition. Which gives the lie to any honest intention of justice.

  • @Traderbear
    @Traderbear3 ай бұрын

    I had the idea of a new movement to reinvent songs of peace and love from the 70s by today’s artists.

  • @bige7323
    @bige732311 ай бұрын

    Why does it seems like you are patronizing Mr. Coleman. He has well thought out and a valuable perspective. Just have him on more. I would love to have people like him over for dinner to just have friendly, effective debates. Only way we as a society will move forward.

  • @jensphiliphohmann1876
    @jensphiliphohmann187611 ай бұрын

    About 21:00 _If the government were serious about approving life of poor black kids and poor kids in general, it would implement these practices into the school system._ Good point. Someone who claims his goal is fighting poverty is actually interested in poverty persisting so that (s)he doesn't get her/his job done and become superfluous. Her/his measures must _look_ fancy but they shouldn't achieve too much. _The goal is not to win the war but to continue it._ -- George Orwell, _1984_ by fictional dissident Immanuel Goldstein --

  • @Y2KMillenniumBug
    @Y2KMillenniumBug11 ай бұрын

    That's for not being on the ground and opening the mouth to ask questions

  • @homewall744
    @homewall74411 ай бұрын

    Still love Coleman, but find it sad his thinking is always pushed back towards race chatter as there are few new ideas about race that haven't been discussed forever. It's as if we only think black people can talk about race problems and he's way smarter than that.

  • @searose6192
    @searose619211 ай бұрын

    I actually think one acre and a mule would be perfect. Particularly if the one acre comes with mineral and water rights etc.

  • @kham6006
    @kham600611 ай бұрын

    I want that shirt -

  • @mryouben
    @mryouben11 ай бұрын

    Tx

  • @dahveednelson2341
    @dahveednelson234110 ай бұрын

    I’d love to talk with you -as a young Black man.

  • @Johnconno
    @Johnconno9 ай бұрын

    'Colour blindness in a post-racial society.'

  • @dawudabdullaah6977
    @dawudabdullaah697710 ай бұрын

    Coleman Hughes is Latino, thus reparations is none of his business.

  • @JG-qt3pn
    @JG-qt3pn11 ай бұрын

    The recession equals Trump theory is interesting especially considering that his tax cuts to the middle and working classes are supposed to expire in 2025 I believe. I think he meant it to be the year after his second term ended but there you go. That plus a recession is an interesting mix.

  • @dahveednelson2341
    @dahveednelson234110 ай бұрын

    I noticed the obscuration created by the imprecise language of racism - and propose a more precise use of language .

  • @Y2KMillenniumBug
    @Y2KMillenniumBug11 ай бұрын

    He understands that it wasn't a war and they are making love. 😚😂

  • @dtety9800
    @dtety980011 ай бұрын

    Wow, you need to come to the UK and speak to people here. Are you on Twitter? I’d love to follow you.

  • @GiZeeGis
    @GiZeeGis10 ай бұрын

    34:02 as an African I have to disagree on the "your ancestors capture and sold slave..." like they say in Africa, the hunter only tell his own view of a hunting day... What do I mean? Well Europeans are the one that wrote the narrative above "slave trade". Since there was a slave trade people start thinking on one end, there must has been Africanw selling their brothers. I will say no as african never had the mean to stop slavery.

  • @jonathanrichter4256
    @jonathanrichter425611 ай бұрын

    C'mon, that Rushmore was pretty lame and heavily tilted toward recent history and Hoover Fellows. There have been a lot of effective foreign policies, particularly early in the existence of the United States. Diplomats behind successful policies include Benjamin Franklin, John Jay, John Quincey Adams, William Seward, James G. Blaine, George Marshall , George Kennan, Dean Acheson, and of course George Schultz. My Rushmore would have Franklin, Adams, Marshall, and Schultz.

  • @Pasta-B1FBA
    @Pasta-B1FBA11 ай бұрын

    2006-2021

  • @markballard1515
    @markballard15159 ай бұрын

    Again. Strawman arguments, Coleman. Who in favor of reparations is making the case of how lives would be different. It is a debt. Doesn’t matter how or if it will change anyone’s life at all.

  • @RBGHfam
    @RBGHfam11 ай бұрын

    Your awesome Coleman, the others after you sounded a bit neo-conish for my taste

  • @jensphiliphohmann1876
    @jensphiliphohmann187611 ай бұрын

    About 34:00f I wasn't aware of the amount Americans feel kind of guilt or rather say responsibility for slavery, just as many of my fellow Germans do for the Holocaust.

  • @shock_n_Aweful
    @shock_n_Aweful10 ай бұрын

    You are all giving Trump's thought process way too much credit. He does not consider any of these high minded factors, it's only how does it benefit him directly in the short term. He doesn't consider anything else, he doesn't even understand most of the details brought up here.

  • @LY-qv1np
    @LY-qv1np11 ай бұрын

    Better to teach a Man, Man embraces women, to fish than to give him a fish.

  • @Traderbear
    @Traderbear3 ай бұрын

    Please watch The Fall of Minneapolis

  • @JohnSmith-hs1hn
    @JohnSmith-hs1hn11 ай бұрын

    "There's no precedent for giving later generations reparations". You're wrong. Germany just got finished paying reparations from ww2, and virtually no one who fought against, nor no one who was a in that war is alive today. To reap the rewards of the nation state, and to also reap its detriments, IS the precedent. Black people are a group. We are directly affected by the legacy of slavery being their direct descendants.

  • @JohnSmith-hs1hn

    @JohnSmith-hs1hn

    11 ай бұрын

    @@foodconnoisseur9321 You're wrong. The reparations payment for ww2 was to the Allies nations due to the war destruction, not the Holocaust. They just got done paying in 2010.

  • @josehawking5293

    @josehawking5293

    11 ай бұрын

    "🍎 American £iberalism, principles of a New 🏛️ Republic, sprung from the Magna Carta with a belief in private property without government oversight within a framework of laws based on individual liberty. Gravitating through federalism, challenges with Jacksonian populism and southern Jim 🐦‍⬛Crow laws in retribution of reconstruction, half a century later, and the manifesting of empire, but invariably marching towards, the abolishment of slavery. A New 🎟🎟 🎟 Deal, initiated by a failure to thwart bank runs but germinating from reconstruction in its attempt at redistribution of property and later the Square Deal with its antitrust, conservation and consumer protections, and eventual creation of the Federal Reserve, expended public 🥽🐿 works while placing checks and balances on 🗒️🐿️ capital markets through a politically punctuating dynamism, and the voters 🐿💀🗿🐓 apex 🗳between the emergence of -🎩 Monopolism, an increasingly anti-competitive economic system of corporatization, consolidation, collusion and eventual private interference with the levers of government. And -🧸 Communism, a German dialectic materializing into a monastic 🕯️corporation of subsidiary Soviet Republics that puppeteered the collective with 🥖 bread, 🎏 spectacle and 🪑other means.Captivated by the 🦋🌻Great Society and subsequently moving from gold to real resources in the backing of the dollar, appearance of neoliberalism and implementation of our sphere globally after the collapse of the Soviet Union,before the emergence of social media, and the universities in relentless pursuit of 🌞🌜critical theories initiating the existential deconstruction of this 🏛️ Republic. These neo-transcendental illusions will inexorably punctuate into,🎏🗿 Cultural Maoism, a dialectic based on envy that manifests 💀🛹 revolution through the 👁 metaphysics of 🎏🐀 📻 deconstruction.🌻🏚️ 🐛🦋 And/or -🐿️ 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿 Cultural Conservatism, a dialectic based on restoration that is catalyzed to 👑crown 🍔McChrist through the metaphysics of retribution." 🐿️"I've moved beyond Marx." 🧃🐀 "Postmodernist?" 🥪🐿

  • @leslieanncortez
    @leslieanncortez10 ай бұрын

    Slavery in America was very different than anywhere else in the world. It was barbaric. Comments like this makes me sad. This country was also founded on genocide. Over 100 million native Americans were murdered. The civil war was about capitalism. North and south fighting over wealth. Slavery was just a side effect. Facts! Most Ancestors of Africans who capture captured slaves will tell you that their ancestors had no clue about the horrors of American slavery. No other form of slavery in the history of mankind was that barbaric. This young man should speak only for himself . Both of my parents, grandparents, etc., were black. Had a boatload of children. My dad alone had 27 children. I can sincerely say that most of my family and friends, about 95% do not have white friends.

  • @SG-dq5pj
    @SG-dq5pj11 ай бұрын

    I am not from this country and US is a police state. I live in suburbs and even here everywhere there is police.

  • @joekennedy2599
    @joekennedy259911 ай бұрын

    Defunded is fired

  • @rick6429
    @rick642911 ай бұрын

    Interesting that you would allow these republicans to ask you questions that they knew how you would answer. It seems to me that you played into their hand and that may have been your intention. One of them used the word Marxism several times. In my view of your ‘conversations’ you criticize the left routinely but I’m not hearing very much criticism of the right so are we to assume that you believe criticizing MAGA isn’t necessary because lots of others do it or is it because you support the right more than the left? It’s just a thought.

  • @deal2live
    @deal2live11 ай бұрын

    The enternal refugee status of Palestinians!!

  • @zachmorgan6982
    @zachmorgan698211 ай бұрын

    I don't mind the 1619 project for the actual attempt and message it sends. I do agree their inability to get big factual claims corrects is BAD and gives Republicans an easy way to attack and discredit it. But however much u think the opinions expressed are subjective and backward to how some may view it, u can't call the majority of the essays "historically wrong or inaccurate" But again, it just shows how much slavery and race have been discussed in this country. We've been arguing about it for at least 200 years and the amount of study and scholarship, books written,history taught, fed holidays observed, politicians speaking about it daily ect is staggering and overwhelming. We've been more or less An open book to anybody who WANTED to find out anything about slavery and the Civil war, the horrors and missteps of reconstruction, the fervent racism that has flourished for more than a century after the Civil War and any other topic on race between blacks and whites in America.So to pretend that we've covered it up as a society is manifestly untrue. Whether schools have properly included lessons on the role of the subjugation of African Americans or whitewashed it can be debated. But public schools imo don't have the obligation to make the society we live in as bad as possible. Especially on the taxpayer dime. That may sound d like a slimy excuse but PUBLIC GOV SCHOOLS do need to teach real history but they do need to teach it in a manner that compromises kids and their view of their own country at a young age thus tearing society apart.

  • @Shambayamiti
    @Shambayamiti11 ай бұрын

    Great regurgitation Cole. Well trained.

  • @janklaas6885
    @janklaas688511 ай бұрын

    📍34:49

  • @terryhughes7196
    @terryhughes719611 ай бұрын

    Race is the last thing on my mind. The internet has created a panopticon and that should worry everyone.

  • @b.alexanderjohnstone9774
    @b.alexanderjohnstone977411 ай бұрын

    Left is doing what it always does, what it did with Greta Thumberg, wheeling out someone harder to criticise.

  • @marksolomon2362
    @marksolomon236210 ай бұрын

    Why can it be about both issues......race and police accountability,

  • @jac9366
    @jac936610 ай бұрын

    Great work, interesting, however depressing prospect on likelihood of Trump being re-elected, esp sitting in Europe...

  • @killmongermyhero1169
    @killmongermyhero116911 ай бұрын

    THIS DUDE CAN'T GIVE US ADVICE WHEN HE IS PUERTO RICAN AMD SAID HE TRYING TO IDENTIFY AS BLACK FOR GAIN..😂 TETHER

  • @syourke3
    @syourke311 ай бұрын

    Slavery was not a crime. It was legal in those states where it was practiced. So no reparations are owed today or were owed in 1865.

  • @yanni_

    @yanni_

    10 ай бұрын

    That claim is false. The United States Government established Special field order No.15 (40 acres and a mule) on January 16th 1865. The freed slaves did not receive the land issued to them. Reparations are owed by the government. Each family shall have a plot of not more than (40) acres of tillable ground, and when it borders on some water channel, with not more than 800 feet water front, in the possession of which land the military authorities will afford them protection, until such time as they can protect themselves, or until Congress shall regulate their title.” Section one bears repeating in full: “The islands from Charleston, south, the abandoned rice fields along the rivers for thirty miles back from the sea, and the country bordering the St. Johns river, Florida, are reserved and set apart for the settlement of the negroes [sic] now made free by the acts of war and the proclamation of the President of the United States.”

  • @syourke3

    @syourke3

    10 ай бұрын

    @@yanni_ It was not an act of Congress or s presidential decree, and it was rescinded and never acted upon. If anyone is owed reparations, it’s the descendants of the slave owners who had their property stolen by the federal government. Neither the freed slaves nor their descendants were ever entitled to revive anything at all, then or now. In fact, I would argue that American descendants of slaves should be grateful that their ancestors were brought to the USA, or rise they’d be starving and dying of disease somewhere in the west African rain forest. Slavery was the best thing that ever happened to them.

  • @yanni_

    @yanni_

    10 ай бұрын

    @@syourke3 1862 compensation emancipation act Slave owners received reparations up to $300 per slave. The information on that is easily accessible.

  • @syourke3

    @syourke3

    10 ай бұрын

    @@yanni_ That act only applies to slave owners in the District of Columbia, what about the rest of them? They got no compensation at all.

  • @jkcrews09
    @jkcrews0911 ай бұрын

    Coleman, while I agree that we should always aim to do better, I would like to share a perspective that, if it is true, may indicate to what we are seeing. The Bible says that everything will continue to get worse as time gets closer to Jesus coming back as the judge. Sin is the nature of man until God the Holy Spirit becomes his/her helper from the time they are saved by their Savior. At that time forward, people can please God by doing His works of the spirit and that individual’s growth can bring glory to God. God wants people’s trust and growth. This is the beginning of the fix for each individual. If something here needs better clarification, let me know. I say all this but it is not in contradiction to policy and law change bring about good. But the definition of good is in the eyes of the beholder.

  • @tanashatesfaye7731
    @tanashatesfaye773111 ай бұрын

    I've noticed that you've frequently made a false comparison between George Floyd and Tony Timpa, and there has been minimal opposition to that. I believe this is due to your basic understanding of how data is collected, managed, analyzed, and presented. For a long time, many black people have harbored the belief that the police never accurately reported data regarding their interactions with them. George Floyd served as more of a symbol than anything else. It was an opportunity for them to finally expose and shed light on the issues they had been complaining about for years. A significant number of black individuals mistrust the statistics presented by the police because they never had faith in law enforcement to begin with. In my opinion, OJ was considered guilty by many (everyone thought he was guilty), but they supported him as a means of resisting what they perceived as a corrupt police force. Were you aware that separate autopsies conducted on George Floyd yielded different results? Doesn't that raise a question about how frequently this has occurred in the past, wherein police misconduct is covered up by utilizing favorable autopsy reports afterward?

  • @geekylove3603

    @geekylove3603

    11 ай бұрын

    R.I.P Secoriea Turner.

  • @bwhere45

    @bwhere45

    11 ай бұрын

    We already went through this with Rodney King in the 90s. One of the biggest problems is the stats simply don't stack up to the narrative being told. Yes, black people are far more likely to have lower level uses of force used against them, but when it comes to shootings the discrepancies almost entirely disappear. Butchered as it may be from the original, this comes from the research Roland Fryer did.

  • @tanashatesfaye7731

    @tanashatesfaye7731

    11 ай бұрын

    @@bwhere45 In my honest opinion, I believe this represents an epistemological distinction. It suggests that either the data is tainted or millions of black individuals, spanning decades, have been subject to a widespread societal blindspot. I do believe Richard Fryer has acknowledged my apprehension, as evident in his pursuit of a comprehensive approach. Regrettably, the issue of police brutality is highly intricate, and I am convinced that adopting a phenomenological approach can provide valuable insights