The video effectively deconstructs how systemic racism evolved from overt segregation to the more "sanitized" efficiency of mass incarceration. It serves as a necessary reminder that institutional control doesn't end; it simply changes its legal vocabulary.
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W๐ค Pe0ple Finding Out They Are No LONGER The Dominant & Superior Race - B๐ค Pe0ple Are GAME ChangerAdded:
Hi sweeties, how are you doing? Welcome to my channel. Hope you are great.
Disclaimer, this video reflects my personal opinions and commentary. It is not intended to harass, harm, or defame any individual. Content is for discussions and educational purposes.
So, I stumbled on this video and I decided to bring it here because we all need to see it. The reality is that black people have been telling everybody what has been going on. And let me tell you, for those that do not know, everything happening presently today was all in project 2035 for those that did not know. Yes. That was one of the reasons why black people were hammering on that project 2025 because project 2025 was very dangerous, very, very dangerous. And now, how he talked about uh how his perspective on our criminal justice system and all that, and how uh the new Jim Crow, the old and the new Jim Crow affects me because you and I some people felt like Jim Crow like completely ended. It did not end, it completely evolved. And now, he talked about the new uh Jim Crow and uh well, when it comes to black people. And while [clears throat] he was talking about the new Jim Crow, he talked about disenfranchisement, uh the class citizen, the voting right, education, employment, housing, and all that. [clears throat] And then, coming to look at it, all these things are the things affecting people that look like me. Yeah, people have been screaming about this for centuries, for decades, and all of that. Some people thought it was one of those things like, you know, black people always talking. Let me tell us something. If a black person tells you something about politics or what they are going through, go up and come down. That there remains the truth.
Let's get into this video.
Remember when y'all said the black people were voting for comfort?
Remember when y'all said that? Remember when you sat there in your chair, over your phone, and took your little thumbs and texted as fast as you could in our comment sections and in our DMs and told us that we were voting for comfort?
Remember when we told y'all that this was not the one to play with and y'all mass reported our accounts? Remember when you filled our DMs and you filled our comment sections with hatred? Remember when you looked at Angela Davis and questioned her advocacy because she wasn't saying and doing exactly what you wanted her to do?
Remember when we told y'all this wasn't the one to play with and y'all doxed us and y'all harassed us and y'all harassed our families?
Now look.
Now look.
And oddly, now those same people who did all of that are nowhere to be found.
Haven't said a word.
Haven't said a like transitioned completely transitioned their content.
Won't own up to their own responsibility because a bunch of black folk told y'all what we needed to do and y'all blatantly ignored us and worse, attacked us.
>> [music] >> So a lot of people are asking exactly what is it that I saw, what truth did I see that made me change my perspective on our criminal justice system. And this is how it goes. So a person of color in the United States during the Jim Crow era faced disenfranchisement, second class citizenship, barriers to voting, barriers to education, barriers to employment, and barriers to housing.
Then in the United States we passed the 1964 Civil Rights Act, the 1965 Voting Rights Act that said that we can no longer do this discriminate based on skin color.
At 21, what is the only label that we can legally discriminate against, that we can legally disenfranchise, relegate to second class citizenship, have barriers to voting, barriers to education, barriers to employment, barriers to housing? If you guessed right, in 2021, convicted felons are the only people we are allowed to legally disenfranchise. Now, do you believe it's a coincidence that one in three African-American males now carry this label of convicted felon as opposed to one in 17 white males that carry this label of convicted felon to legally be disenfranchised? If you answered yes to that question, let's look at what's happened between the Jim Crow era and 2021. We've had a 700% increase in our United States prison population. We've gone from 300,000 inmates in 1970 to 1.8 million today and as high as 2.3 million. So, in spite of crime rate dropping, our prison population skyrocketed. And it was because we had the law and order agenda. And the law and order agenda increased police spending but decreased our education funding. And by doing so, we created the school-to-prison pipeline. We also created the war on drugs, which we now know is a war on people. In 1986, we passed the Anti-Drug Abuse Act, which differentiated between powder cocaine and hard cocaine, which we now know disproportionately impacted people of color. We also had the '94 Crime Bill with the Truth in Sentencing Act, which led to higher incarceration rates and harsher sentences for people of color.
And once I saw all this, my perspective changed cuz I know that Jim Crow era never ended. Racism never ended. It just evolved into what we now have as the new Jim Crow, modern-day slavery.
So, we have a lot of new followers.
We're going to talk about this again.
How did I change? And the short answer is I finally started listening and validating the experiences of people who have been marginalized and oppressed by our systems and institutions rather than telling them what their experience is, was, or should be. Now, many people know I went from professional baseball, I signed with the Atlanta Braves, to addicted to drugs, to homeless, to 10 years in the Florida Department of Corrections, to now doing the work of anti-racism. And while in prison, I met a black Muslim by the name of Rashawn Clark. I was a white Christian nationalist, but didn't really know that that's what I was. I just considered myself a Christian conservative. Rashawn was sentenced to 20 years in prison at the age of 16, followed by 10 years of probation for one felony in which nobody was hurt. The Department of Juvenile Justice recommended that he get tried as a juvenile and given a rehabilitation program rather than being tried as an adult and going to prison. They sent him to prison anyway. I, on the other hand, had 14 felonies. I'd been to prison, back home, twice before Rashawn got out once. And while in prison, I would tell Rashawn to stop being the victim.
Systemic racism does not exist. That was a long time ago. It's time for us to take personal accountability for our actions. These are the consequences of our choices, and now we have to accept them. And Rashawn looked at me and said, "That's easy for you to say. I take personal accountability for my actions.
I know I was wrong, but I was also a 16-year-old kid. That judge didn't see me as such is what he said. When he sentenced you, he looked at you as the all-American boy, a guy that had went to college, ex-professional baseball player, somebody who just suffered from mental health and substance abuse, and needed a little time out and redirection, and probably some rehabilitation. He thought that your life was worth redeeming." He said, "In fact, you'd been arrested 10, 15 times before they even considered sending you to prison." He said, "Me, on the other hand, they looked at me as being inherently violent. They didn't see a 16-year-old kid. They didn't see innocence. They saw a criminal, a thug, a savage. When that judge looked at you, he probably saw his son in you. He did not see that in me. He didn't think that I had any redeeming qualities, is what Rashad said. He thought I was inherently violent. Rashad then went on to tell me to read a book by Michelle Alexander called The New Jim Crow, Mass Incarceration in the Age of Colorblindness. Now, in Florida prisons, they don't allow that book to go in there. They don't allow it to circulate the prison. And every time Rashad and I would talk, one thing he would always say to me is that you underestimate me.
And he was right, because I looked at him as a young black kid in the system.
What could he possibly teach me? I have some college education. I was arrogant.
I was loud. I was proud. And I did not take the time to listen to the wise words of somebody who did nothing but read while they were in prison. And when I got home, I read that book, and it forever changed my life. But this is what I learned. The 13th Amendment was the abolition of slavery, except when punishment for a crime. So, after the Civil War, they abolished slavery, but then they created a loophole for legalized slavery through the form of crime and mass incarceration. Fast forward 100 years, we had Jim Crow segregation. Black people faced second-class citizenship. They were disenfranchised from voting. They had to pass literacy exams and pay poll taxes in order to vote. They were discriminated with education, employment, and housing based solely on the color of their skin. We passed the '64 Civil Rights Act, the '65 Voting Rights Act, which says we can no longer discriminate based on race. Most white Christian conservatives believe that's when racism ended in this country. But what we witnessed after the passing of those two bills was an explosion in our prison population. We went from 300,000 to 2.1 million inmates in the United States of America. 5% of the world's population, 20 to 25% of its prison population. This is the staggering number I learned. One in three black males carry convicted felon label, one in six Hispanic males, one in 17 white males. Why is that? Because there's one group of people in 2025 that we can still legally discriminate against. We can disenfranchise from voting, we can relegate to second class citizenship, we can deny housing, education, and employment. And that one group of people is convicted felons. Now, do you think it's a coincidence that black people carry one in three convicted felon labels, that our prisons and jails are filled with black people. So, I had to ask myself this question. Are black people inherently criminal and violent, or is there something more nefarious at play? And if I, as an American, believe that black Americans are inherently violent or inherently more criminal, then yes, I am racist and I'm contributing to the politics of white supremacy, and I realized that I had to do something to change my life.
White people keep trying to tell me what the definition of racism is, so we going to talk about it. The definition that they like to use of racism is that racism is the belief, action, or institutional structure that treats people differently or unfairly based off of their race, ethnicity, or skin color.
The part that they always want to leave out though is that it operates on individual and systemic levels that create advantages for one group while oppressing another.
Now, that word oppression is in the definition, so to understand the definition of racism, we have to understand the definition of the word oppression. Oppression is defined as the systematic, unjust, or cruel exercise of power or authority by a dominant group over a marginalized group.
Do we understand?
We understand. But then, can't anyone be a marginalized group? No. Let's go over that definition, too. A marginalized group is defined as a community or population that experiences social, economic, political, or legal exclusions resulting in lower status, fewer opportunities, and and here's the word we're looking for, systemic disadvantages. There's that system right there. If we use our noodle here and we understand what all of those words mean when we put them together, then we understand what racism is and who can perpetuate it and who can be victimized by it. So, I'm going to say one more time for the people in the back who might not have heard me or the people up front who just didn't have their listening ears on.
White people cannot experience racism because they are the people who created it, perpetuated, and gain from it systemically and individually.
And the definition of racism isn't something that came from me, by the way.
No, it came from a white man, a racist white man at that. People love to give credit to Leon Trotsky, who was a Russian revolutionary and political theorist. No, no, no, sir. Before he ever used the word racism, we had Richard Henry Pratt.
You don't know who Richard Henry Pratt is, do you?
That's a shame. He was an American army officer and a very, very large proponent of Native American assimilation. He actually created the Carlisle Industrial School in Pennsylvania in the 1800s.
He's famous for the saying, "Kill the Indian, save the man." As in, remove the Indian ways from Native Americans and make them assimilate to whiteness and maybe they can be saved. So, as usual, don't be mad at me. Be mad at your ancestors. I got to get the jujitsu now.
Most of the issues in America today can be attributed directly to this country not punishing the South and the Confederacy enough. Growing up, I was always confused why when going to visit my family in the South, I would see Confederate flags flying high and it was understood that that meant was always tied to a different history, a nostalgic memory of their heritage and quite literally a different America. But that's treason, right? Why do you carry that flag? BECAUSE THIS IS MY HERITAGE.
MY FAMILY FOUGHT TO SAVE THEIR FARM.
>> YOU'RE fighting so hard [music] for this. Why should they take it away? We got our rights too. Well, they've already taken it away. We want it back.
Just keep it flying.
Keep it flying?
And why do you want to keep it flying?
Why do you want to Why would anybody want to erase our heritage?
In 2026, Mississippi, the Carolinas, Tennessee, Alabama and Missouri to name a few are redrawing or have redrawn their maps to eliminate black voter representation all with the aim of picking up Republican seats. An exercise of power, they wasted no time in acting following the Supreme Court's ruling gutting the Voting Rights Act. These communities are being redrawn into political irrelevance. Looking at pictures from Tennessee last week, it looks like we are in Jim Crow America and you couldn't tell the difference between 2026 and 1965. And based on the rigorous nature of this coordinated attack, they want just that. If you look at a map of the Confederacy, the states who voted against the Voting Rights Act and the current redrawn district eliminating black voting rights, you'll see they're all the same. You'll see this is all due to this feeling that the South and the Confederacy will rise again. What that really means is white supremacy and black subjugation. There have always been two Americas and this is why. The Civil War was never truly resolved. Reconstruction was abandoned.
In 1877, the federal government withdrew its presence from the South and surrendered the region to those who had sought to destroy the Union. Because of that surrender, Confederate ideology survived within our laws and within our institutions. We have Confederates and KKK members and white nationalists serving in Congress. Specific hypocrisy defines the current political landscape.
Red Southern states vocalizing the most intense desire for sovereignty are the same states that rely most heavily on federal funding to survive. They're all poor. These states consistently rank at the bottom of healthcare, education, and life expectancy. They stay afloat through massive transfer of wealth from blue states they claim to despise. The tax revenue from California's tech industry and New York's financial sector flows south. This is a rebellion subsidized by the same government these people are wishing to take down and dismantle. The air of the Confederacy is present in every voting booth. We are watching a surgical dismantling of black political power. Districts are carved up to ensure black votes carry the least possible weight. This is the resurrection of the grandfather clause.
A country cannot find unity while housing an an ideology it refused to defeat. The South was never de-Confederatized. The door remained open for the same power structures to return in different forms. The people who walked through that door hold federal benches and write state laws.
The Confederacy was never truly dismantled, not culturally, not economically, damn sure not legally.
Until that reckoning happens, the nation remains exactly what Lincoln warned us about, a house divided against itself.
The only solution is to vote. We need more black and Latino men to vote blue in these midterms than we've ever seen.
We A large percentage of you voted red last time, and we see if the impact of that. We're seeing the government mobilize to dismantle civil rights, voting rights, and to push us back to a time where we didn't have a voice or a choice.
I'm going to be honest, I don't understand why we're all still pretending this [ย __ย ] is normal. I feel like we're just scared to to stand up at this point. I think we're all just scared to do something about it. I think we just all sit behind screens all day and talk and talk and talk, but we don't collectively agree that now is the perfect time to collectively stand up as humans and do something about it.
Because let's be honest right now, this [ย __ย ] is not working. It hasn't been working and it's not broken by accident.
People are tired in a way sleep does not fix. People are stressed in a way that therapy alone cannot touch. Working harder than any generation before us and somehow owning less, feeling less secure, and being told to be grateful for it. And every time somebody says something's wrong, they're told to calm down. They're told to be patient.
They're told to oh, vote again. Oh, just wait again. Just trust again. Guys, how many times are we supposed to play a game that's rigged and still pretend we're surprised by the outcome? And look, this is not about left or right or red versus blue. Bro, this isn't even about politics at this point. Y'all think these videos I make are political.
This isn't even about politics anymore.
This is literally about human beings realizing they've been turned into resources. We are literally lab rats inside a maze that they're testing us on. They see us as test dummies, as pets. Labor extracted, attention harvested, energy harvested, fear monetized, lives reduced to numbers on a spreadsheet. And yet, what's happening right now with ICE is just one more crack in the illusion. Families torn apart, people are getting murdered, people are treated like paperwork instead of flesh and blood, entire communities living in survival mode while others are told it's just policy.
And now they're using this winter storm to keep us divided. There's no way y'all feel like there's something deeply wrong with that. And I'm not just talking about what's going on with ICE. I'm talking about with literally everything.
That included, but literally everything right now. Most systems don't fall because people fight them. They fall because people stop believing in them.
They stop participating in them. They stop giving the system the energy that it needs to maintain and and and remain alive. People stop respecting them.
People stop giving them their energy, their obedience, their silence. A real revolution is not chaos. It's clarity first. It's people collectively saying, I don't consent to being exploited anymore. I don't consent to a life where survival costs my soul. I don't consent to systems that profit from suffering and calling it order. And look guys, that does not mean violence. It just means withdraw. It means non-participation where possible. It means mutual aid instead of dependence, community instead of isolation, truth instead of propaganda, humanity instead of compliance. The people in power are not afraid of anger. In fact, that literally feeds them. That's what they want. They're afraid of people who stop needing their approval. They're afraid of people who stop defining success by their standards, who stop measuring life by productivity, who stop believing their worth is tied to output. Because once people stop chasing the carrot, the whip stops working, too. I'm going to be honest. Old Jim Crow finally got his map back.
It is what it is.
And it ain't what it ain't.
You may get that map back, but you will not get those Martin Luther King marching, you can whoop my ass, and I ain't going to do nothing back back. You will not get that let me step off the side of the sidewalk, so old Sundown can get by back. You will not get that. I need to go around the back to get my back.
>> I got from this video and uh you know one thing I I I I want to tell you is that uh this administration is very horrible.
And a very big shoutout to Danny. Danny made that video I think some years ago about Jim Crow, about his um anti-racism work, how he went to prison, how his life changed, and how he actually got to understood about black people, how he found out about Jim Crow, how he read, and how Excuse me.
And how everything evolved, which was not a lie, you know? One thing I love is the fact that a lot of people are also beginning to wake up and see things from black people's lenses. Because all these years, it looks like black people have been lobbying or making everything of and all that. You know, the Jim Crow era, there was disenfranchisement and um the class citizen, you know, barrier to voting, barrier to education, barrier to employment and to housing.
And again, what happened? We are back.
It never left, actually, but uh somehow it evolved, but now it is more like we are boldly bringing it back.
And uh they have also brought it back in Alabama and some other places. So, what does this means? It means whatever you are saying does not count. So, it means we are about to make America white again. And this was actually the plan.
If you all remember, there was a video I brought here last year about Stephen Miller saying that I left for him.
That uh he is going to make America just people that look like him. About how many million people that look like him only.
>> [snorts] >> But how do you want to make a country that is diversified just a white country? Now, somehow somehow, when I look at some people's behavior, you can actually see how it stands because some people's behavior is very disgusting. How do you wake up and all all you want to do is just to like, you know, I don't want to see any other person here. Just You didn't do anything to me, but I don't want to see you.
And this is the part of CRT that needs to be explained to literally everybody because people do not understand this, you know? And they are also not asking questions. And then they will tell you ban critical race theory, ban black history, and all of that. Their hearts are our feelings. They are violent.
You know, it takes a lot of strength to be black.
And when I hear my people saying, "I told you guys all these things were going to happen." Literally everything going on presently today was all in Project 2025.
Yeah. And that was my people's fear when they were calling literally everybody to come. Let's do the right thing. Some people thought it was all a joke because literally everything black people do and say is nothing but joke to them.
Man, I don't know how to say this, but uh >> [snorts] >> critical race theory is still very important to this very moment.
And he did a great job with that illustration because that illustration says it all.
The redlining, the housing, and the voting right, and the rest of it.
I don't know if it's going to get better because sometimes I don't like uh keeping our hopes up, but uh I am hoping that it gets better. Bye for now.
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