Anti-blackness within Latino communities stems from the Spanish colonial casta system, which established racial hierarchies that placed Afro-Latinos and Black Americans at the bottom, creating lasting cultural prejudices that persist today; this internalized racism manifests through workplace discrimination, colorism, and political choices that prioritize white proximity over solidarity, requiring conscious effort to unlearn these harmful patterns and build genuine unity between communities.
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The Tables Have TURNED Latinos BEGGING Black Americans Help Amid DeportationAdded:
Latinos of ALL BACKGROUNDS.
DO Y'ALL not realize black people are not the only people in this country? You got your Chinese Americans, your Japanese Americans, your Koreanameans, your Indian-Americans, your Muslim Americans, your white Americans, and your own people. So why in David Jones locker ARE Y'ALL SO PRESSED AND MAD at us because we not out protesting?
Folks, we did the most effective protesting last November and the data proves it.
We protested when it mattered the most.
WE WERE NOT OUT HERE WITH WHOLE PRODUCTIONS TALKING about some we y'all was out here with that foolishness knowing full well full well THAT Y'ALL HAD A FEW ABAS A FEW THEOS THE EYES MIHO AND MIHIS IN YOUR HOUSE UNDOCUMENTED BUT Y'ALL GOT Y'ALL BEHINDS on stage.
talking about some wee woo and you think we supposed to be out here protesting picket fence and HAND CLOWNING LIKE SOME MONKEYS IN A ZOO?
NO. NO, NO, NO, NO, NO, no sir. We bop.
We did what we were supposed to do and y'all put y'all's own community in the position that it's in now and y'all need to live with it. Right now, there's some Latinos that want to distance themselves from like the racist Latinos without acknowledging that racism exists in the Latino community because I remember growing up and being labeled a word because I had a black friend. Now, this is me growing up in South Central Los Angeles being Mexican-American and other Latinos, Mexican-Americans, would call me a specific word because I had a black friend. And people were labeling me this word from elementary to middle school. Experiences like that are a reflection on how normalized antilackness can be in the Latino community and how it becomes so normalized during our development. Go ahead and let me know what you think.
>> The minute you think you're better than the other person, that's where everything's go wrong. Latinos have a way they treat black people. On one side, they like to show them that they are together. That is the time they normally tell them, "Let's come come together as community. We join each other hands and do things together. we support each other. And on the other hand, they show black people that they don't like them. They are better than them. They are whiter than them. And they prefer to be more associated with white Americans. And this is where they go wrong. And black Americans are telling them we cannot do this again.
I've put more clips that you can watch.
And I would like to give credit to the original creators of this. Later, I'll be back for commentary. Hispanics practice Jim Crow against black Americans in Houston. Let me tell you what I'm talking about. At Houston Community College, right, the Chandler Caesar, he's a Hispanic man. He got together with the director of HR and the board of trustees and they came up with this plan to get rid of uh black employees at high positions. They did anything from putting false complaints in their folders so they could get demoted or get fired and then they replaced these black employees with Hispanics.
Hispanics went up. The hiring for Hispanics went up 50%.
These three individuals orchestrated the plan and this is what they stated in their emails. Now we Hispanics are going to receive preferential treatment. This plan was successful. targeting black top employees. Now they got a class action suit against Houston Community College for 100 million. They have to come up with some type of settlement by 2026.
But yeah, let Houston tell it. They'll tell you like brown and black unity. I for one am never going to forget how a lot of you guys on this app treated black women and the black women, but specifically the black women who said that we were resting and we were sitting this one up after the country played in our face when it came to Kamla being elected for president. I will never forget that because over the past year and a half that we have declared that we arresting, we have continuously seen people in our country be continuously antilack and racist.
The Latino community tried to come at us when everything started happening with the ICE raids. And now look, we have Latino people who are trying to fight us in the comments, fight other black people in the comments for calling out the consistent racism and antilackness within the Latino community. Um, on the heels of this Ashley Gonzalez video that has popped up, the sheriff from Houston that went on a racist rant.
We saw how y'all played in Jasmine Crockett's face. We saw how these online white leftists acted when black people were calling out the fact that it was wrong that Madami's wife, even though I [ __ ] with Madami, I like Madami, but his wife had those antilack and racist tweets and how we just need to get over it.
I will never forget how y'all acted with us when we said, "You know what? We're going to take a rest." And even some other black creators on this app, some some who I really enjoy their social and political commentary and you know, some were giving us grace and they understood and they were trying to talk about the nuance and the bigger picture of everything and how we shouldn't rest. I get that. But some of y'all were being very disrespectful and we have seen time and time and time and time again that we were right. That we were right. These people are in the comments of black creators who are from Texas or from LA or from Arizona. Three places which I have lived in all three places. I live in LA now and talked about their experience with anti-blackness and racism from the Latino community. They are and Latino people are in the comments right now telling black people that they shouldn't say that. Don't generalize us all. But y'all are under the comments of black people but not under the comments of the Latino people who are agreeing with Ashley Gonzalez. They're in the comments and the videos that you're commenting under. There are Latino people saying, "Oh, I agree with her." But you're not going back and forth with them. You're going back and forth with the creator or the other black people in the comments.
You got this this poor white trash using black people for rage bait talking about black proms and hood proms. Y'all had a lot to say, a lot of disparaging and mean things to say to the black community when they said we we're going to rest because y'all are playing in our faces. And continuously we have seen time and time again that we were right.
Latino and black communities have always been like this and we should continue staying like that. There is no reason why the two communities should be fighting. Okay, we have fought next to each other, side by side since the civil rights movement. Okay, there's no time for beef on either side. We need to stand together, especially with everything that's going on right now.
Since when has the Latino and black community ever been like this? And Latinos were not there during the civil rights movement fighting side by side with black American people. I literally was so confused because I was like, where were Latin people when segregation was happening? Where were they? What schools did they go to? How were they represented? And then I saw Latin people coming out videos saying that they went to white schools. They fought to be categorized and classified as white. So, I don't understand why y'all come up here and lie and act like y'all has been an ally for black people. And this is not to say that some has not, but as a collective, that's just not true. A lot of you all have racism and uh colorism within your own Latin communities. You all have a cast system within your own Latin communities. You all don't treat Afroatins the right way. You all discriminate and are prejudiced toward Latinas that look like me in you all's own communities, and you all's own countries. and y'all take that same, you know, um those same ideologies, those same prejudices, the the the same ideas and feelings, and when y'all do migrate over here, y'all bring that with you. A lot of y'all don't treat the Afro Latins the best.
Like if the Dominicans, they say the darker skin, oh that's a Haitian, that's a Haitian. Me, no black, me no black.
Like the Puerto Ricans, they don't you can't I'm not dark. I'm white. Like, let's stop y'all. It's the It's the cap.
It's the cap. It's the cap. It's the cap. It's the cap. It's the cap. It's the cap. EVEN EVEN Y'ALL EVEN SOME OF Y'ALL KNOW IT. I TOOK A screenshot of somebody a Latino up in your comment section. Let me post it. Look, they say, "No, we have not been like this. We've been like this." Then a Latin Jesus says, "No, we haven't. We have to fix the anti-blackness first. You have to obvious we have to fix the anti-blackness first. you have obviously not seen how bad our community is towards the black community. Our community became comfortable in this system.
She says, "I agree with you, but it doesn't mean that we can't at least try." So, why would you blatantly get up here and make this lying ass video?
Girl, you know you lie. So, with that being said, do y'all feel what what do y'all think? Spread love is the Brooklyn way.
One thing y'all are going to do is argue with me in the comments. And I want to preface this video by saying I am multi-racial, right? And sometimes it's important to highlight that for context because although I do believe in and identify with the one drop rule, I am lighter than a manila folder and I have passing and privilege and experiences afforded to me that not everybody has.
Right? Now that that's out the way, the main comment that I got yesterday on my Cinco de Mayo video was from black people saying, "If that's the case, then why do Mexican people hate us so much?"
Right? And it's because of racism. It's colorism. It is antilackness. is colonization. That's the reason racism and this on a global scale. There's a lot of books by psychologists and historians that analyze the psychological engineering and the systemic dehumanization used to construct global antilackness. And the entire non-black world has this unconscious bias that is scientifically baked into human perception. And nobody but black people seem to notice it, right? Especially if you're black and you travel, then you've probably felt unwelcome in a lot of places. You've probably felt the prejudices everywhere you go except the motherland.
Intentional and it's insidious. Concept of blackness is inferior or evil or whatever. It was not by accident. It was by design. Antilackness was created to justify colonization and slavery. Most of us do not realize that the dehumanization of black people was actually foundational to the establishment of the modern world. This is across place and and time, various regions and different eras. A couple of y'all were in the comments talking about you're not black, you're brown. And in a vacuum, yes, that makes sense, right?
Anybody that is non-white is on some spectrum of brownness, but we do not exist in a vacuum. And we say black and brown people to highlight distinctions amongst the histories, the challenges, the struggles, the triumphs that are unique to the black experience. And saying only brown people to talk about everybody who was non-white would erase the distinct visibility and historical specificity of the black experience.
Besides, race is just a construct. It's not biological. And any classification system that we use to determine race is arbitrary. It's dependent on whatever you want it to be dependent on where where you are or what you are culturally. We're not referring to the actual color black. referring to culture, ethnicity, community, not racial categorization, but the black community in America specifically has endured particular systems of oppression. And just saying brown people referring to all non-white people would obscure and like dilute that experience.
So, there's no hard fast rules on race.
The the system is fluid and you can call yourself whatever you want, right? You can identify however you want to identify and I will respect that. But both perspectives can coexist. Two things can be true at once. And I stand by how important it is, especially when we're talking about history, to distinguish between black and brown people.
>> So why don't Latinos like black people?
I'mma tell you. It's because of our stupid ass Spanish ancestors and their white supremacist [ __ ] Now, when the Spaniards came to the Americas to, you know, colonize, they brought with them something known as casta, a cast system. Here's a historical painting showing the cast system and where people were put into their places. If this is confusing, this will make it a little easier. Now, the top of the casta was the Spaniards, people who actually came from Spain. And the people who usually came from Spain to the Americas were very wealthy aristocrats. Next in the food chain were their descendants, the creoleles. Now, they were still Spaniards, but they were lower on the food chain because they were born in the Americas, because again, white supremacist [ __ ] Next in the food chain, we have mystisos. These are people descended from Spaniards and Native Americans. And then we have mulattoos descended from Spaniards and Africans. Now at the bottom of the food chain were Native Americans and African slaves because again white supremacist is [ __ ] Now this social structure, these social classes were instituted for centuries in Latin America. But here's where the problem lies. Humans like to [ __ ] each other whether willingly and with consent or sadly by rape. That means they have babies together. So this social structure doesn't really work when you have a lot of mixed babies because basically everyone became mystiso and mulatto together. Everyone just mixed. So what happens when everyone is mixed? Basically this middle section disappeared and colorism seeped into our cultures very deeply. So, Latinos who were more light-skinned were seen as being higher in the social structure because they were more like Spaniards. And dark-kinned Afro Latinos were seen to be lower in the social structure because they were more like Africans, which again is stupid white supremacist [ __ ] Because most Latinos are this middle section, like me, Mystiso. So, why are Latinos prejudiced against Afro Latinos and black people? Because our racist ass colonizing ancestors taught this to us centuries ago. And it's so ingrained into our culture that it's hard to unlearn it. But we need to start putting in the work and start unlearning this white supremacist [ __ ] Thank you for coming to my TED talk.
Discrimination in California is a big thing and is frontline in the job markets and the hiring practices. For example, California has one of the highest lawsuits that settled out of court from black people that look like me that's being discriminated by George Hernandez, Maria Sylvia, stuff like that. What am I saying? The Hispanic population in California when they get jobs and they own businesses, they discriminate against blacks. They say if you're not bilingual, if you can't speak Spanish, no, you don't get to work here. That's actually against the law. It also comes out in more subtle ways. What they do is the Spanish speaking community boldly would say replace that one with a Spanish speaking one. They tell the bosses, they tell the managers, "Hey, we want more Spanish speaking people here."
Boldly, all this is documented. So much so, if you just focus on Los Angeles, matter of fact, you don't want to focus on Los Angeles. Pick one. Riverside, San Bernardino, they have a lot of lawsuits settled out of court. Black people are being discriminated against so bluntly.
Not in not just in the workforce, in the hiring practices, the job markets. I'm talking about the housing markets, things like that. Black people are now starting to realize and and and come together in California with the acknowledgement and the recognition that hold up, my daughter who went to nursing school, she should have been hired just like the other one, just like Elizabeth and Maria. What happened? Well, when it when she finished nursing school and it was time for her to get employed, the managers, the Spanish speaking community said, "No, we don't want that. We want bilingual girls." Right now in California, black people has been moved and the replacement has come in. Not just the illegal immigrants, the regular ones, the ones who say, "No, a Mexican flag and an American flag."
Nevertheless, they come together to say, "Whatever the black people were talking about, we don't want to hire them." And then they put the stereotypes. They say all of them are loud, ghetto, not bilingual, uneducated. Would you be surprised? I know Spanish and several of my friends know Spanish, but Spanish isn't enough to get us through the door because of our skin is our sin in California is still going on. Let me just talk about the anti-blackness that exists in the Latino community because it's a real thing and it is only further perpetuating the division between our two communities and contributing to the overall oppression of our two communities.
And I know there's going to be some people out there that's like that's not even a thing. That's not a real issue.
But it is. I grew up hearing freaking racist remarks made towards black people and I heard it often and I know so many other people did.
And not only is it about anti-blackness, it's also about internalized racism that some Latinos, including myself, when I was a child, felt the need to be white because I saw white people being treated better. And in my mind, I'm like, well, if I'm white or if I consider myself white or if I tell people that I'm white, then I am going to be treated better. I didn't understand as a child why I even felt that. But we are socialized as a society to want that unless you break out of the freaking matrix and you realize, oh my gosh, we're all being oppressed by the same freaking systems. So for us to have division and for there to be antilackness in our community is not helping anyone. One, it's just wrong. But two, it's only further perpetuating the oppression that already exists in our freaking society.
So there's that part. And then and then there's this whole dismissal of Afro Latinos because Afro Latinos exist yet sometimes are classified as not Latino when in reality they are Latinos. Afro Latinos.
And then there's this whole freaking connection to where we find ourselves in American history, okay? And the fact that many people, many Latinos, Latino men in particular, did not want to vote for a black black and Asian, but a but a black woman.
Okay.
And then there's the intersection of machismo, internalized racism, anti-blackness, and all of it contributing again to the further perpetuation of oppression of our communities. That's what I need people to understand. When there's division between our two communities, that is that is purposeful. Okay? Because these systems, these people in power want us to be in fighting when in reality there's a lot more that we have in common. We are also being oppressed by the same systems. we should be supporting each other. And it is because of black people and their advocacy that we as Latinos and other communities have the civil rights that we have today. The ability for us to even be able to have that privilege was in large due part to black people. Okay? So, I need us to understand that and I need us to have a conversation about that because even if we were brought up that way, that doesn't mean that we can't change. That doesn't mean that we can't do better because we can.
Okay? Even if society social socializes to believe that we can change, we can do better. So if you want to have this conversation, follow for more.
>> Black people after they done with the Latinos, you next. Huh?
Next. We been we've been on the chopping block. Like you can tell that we all been living in separate Americas.
Separate Americas. Because why does everybody keep saying black people you next? They've been on our heels for 400 plus years.
Black people you next. You know what?
You can you imagine being in a relationship with the biggest narcissist in history? The biggest, right? Every time you go to school, he undermines you. When you buy a house, he undermines you. When you when you get healthcare, he undermines you. God damn. When you can't go to the gym, you can't go to parks. You can't go to the goddamn beach. You can't get health care. You can't you can't get child care. You can't do [ __ ] You can't cook chicken.
You can't eat eat fruit. You can't do nothing. Every angle that you live in life has been targeted. Understand that black people will always fight for Latinos. Our our struggle is intertwined. Like, understand this. But we don't got to worry about being next because we have been their fixation for hundreds of years. We still are. And you know what's the most heartbreaking thing about this whole thing is that Mexican people in black history, American history, have been some of the only people to show up. They were the biggest part of black liberation. And always and forever, I will always give Mexican people that respect. But since then, Latino people have been falling so far into white supremacy that is sick. You have been showing colorist behavior to your own people. You have been showing colorist behavior all in the hopes of having white proximity. All the antilack jokes that you hear growing up, you're talking about your own people. Just because you say pto moreno or negro don't make it no different. All those saying bettering the race, cleaning the blood, washing out the black. This is a part of a lat Latin culture and it's sad. And it and it needs to stop. You you want to know what's the first step of liberation? Stop that [ __ ] Stop trying to be have proximity to whiteness.
You're not you're not them. And if you want to know the results of this, just ask the question of what happened to all the black people in Argentina. There were a lot more. And yeah, you may have a sprinkle of Spaniard, but you ain't that. And I'm sorry to tell you, there's a reason why you have an indigenous or African nose and kinky hair.
>> Why are Latinos asking black people to join them in the protest? But last month, black people asked Latinos to stop saying the N-word. Because black people find it disrespectful when Latinos say the N word. And Latinos were so offended that they started disrespecting the black community. And I'm probably going to get a lot of hate for this, but I want to say something.
If you've been following me for a while or have gone through my videos recently, you see that I'm constantly pushing for unity between communities. Majority of the black people in the comments are stating how they get a lot of disrespect from the Latinos. And majority of the Latinos in my comments are actually really disrespectful to the black community. And I've been pushing for unity because these protests are not where we're going to unite. There's something bigger to come, where we need that unity. And something that I've been noticing during these protests is a lot of Latinos are asking the black community for help. And when the black community states how they don't want to or they don't feel like they should, Latinos are disrespecting them with racial slurs. There's a video circulating on the internet where a Latina is yelling the n-word in a very derogatory form to a black police officer. How is that helping our cause when we're asking the black community to join us? There's videos on the internet where the comment section is full of hate from Latinos to black people because the black community doesn't want to join us on the protest. And while sure, I agree that this is everybody's fight. Latinos, we need to take responsibility and acknowledge that the fact that this is our fault, I find it very ghetto and disrespectful for us to be saying the N word, I find it very disrespectful for us to be even saying the M word that stands for Beatles in Spanish. And while I am going to have a lot of people in the comments saying that this is all politics and about the Latinos for Trump BS, this has nothing to do with politics because this is before Trump took office. We were put against each other back in the 1970s and the 1980s and we're a product of that now because it was our parents that were put against one another. Why? I remind you that back in the 1960s when we were all united, we actually got things done like the Civil Rights Act movement, Latinos tend to forget that black people, the black community, were out protesting for field worker rights, immigration rights. with us and the black community tends to forget that there were Latinos marching with Martin Luther King Jr. down to the point that we do have a statue for MLK in Mexico because MLK was a huge impact in the Latino community. And while I do not agree with Cesar Chavez and the stuff that he did to the immigrants in United States, Cesar Chavez amongst many other Latinos were marching with MLK. Black Panthers were protecting Mexicans while Black Panthers also helped start the Brown Berets. We have a lot of history together and this is why divided we stay conquered because together we get things done. So no, I'm not asking the black community to come out and march with us to protest with us because this is something small compared to whatever is about to come. I'm asking the Latino and the black community to take accountability for whatever we have going on and start asking yourselves why have we been put against each other and why have some of us actually gone along with the way that they want us against each other? Why is there hate amongst each other when we've done nothing but unite in the past and get things done?
Where does this hate come from? I've had my fair share of experiences with racist people in the past, but those people do not define the communities that they come from. For me, there's always going to be races within each community. So, to my fellow Latinos, we've needed unity for a long time from other communities.
And now we're reaping the consequences of us being hateful towards other communities. We even have hate within ourselves. And until we take accountability and change that, no one's going to come out to our rescue. Food for thought.
>> Now that I have addressed the racism within my own community, let's talk about the antilackness that exists within the Latin American communities.
So, I wanted to take my time before I made this video. I knew it was coming, but um I had to go out in, you know, the field and ask my people what's going on.
So, this is what I concluded when I when I went to go talk to them. and they said that, you know, we don't like African African-Americans because they feel that we owe them something. I want to make two things clear. First, I want to start off by saying that when we say things like this, we are following the same agenda that we are fighting against. We are fighting against white supremacy and racism. those ideas that you know that we have, the way we think, the way we are taught to fear African-Americans, that is the same thing that we are fighting against.
It's no different. When we choose to to speak like this and and participate in these stereotypes, we are no better than the people we are fighting against. And that is that is a point I want to make very clear to the people within my community that you guys sound ignorant.
You know, we need to figure it out.
Where do you truly stand with this?
Because, you know, people are right. You can't ask African-Americans for help when this is in the real world. That is how they are treated.
My second point, reparations are owed to the African-American community.
Without them, we would not be able to vote. We would not be able to go to the same schools. We would not be able to sit wherever we want. Let's not forget they have been fighting for a very long time since they came here.
And us not acknowledging, you know, I I know I don't feel that as a country we have paid the respect that they owe, you know, they they really do. We owe them everything.
It's because of greats. They're great people. You know, Malcolm X, Martin Luther King Jr., the Black Panthers.
They paved the way for us. They are the blueprint.
And for us to go and participate in the same mentality that we are fighting against, it's just horrible and it's wrong.
If we don't fix this type of mentality and check our people, we are no better than the people we are up against.
I want you to know that ignorance is our greatest enemy.
So, please do not allow yourself to be blinded by hate.
I love and respect everybody. And I just want to say that if there's more people in the Latin community who are with me, I need y'all to say something. I need y'all to join the fight with me because I can't be the only one.
>> When black people were telling Latinos even before they elected Donald Trump, they should not elect Donald Trump because of what Donald Trump was telling them that is going to come and for to immigrants and deport them. They told black people, no, we are going on our side. We are more of Donald Trump. In fact, they were composing song, hey, we are for Donald Trump. They composed song for him and to Trump oppressing them that time. But in him he knew what you're going is going to affect you Latinos. But them they thought because they look more of like Trump, Trump will be on their side. And this is where they went wrong. Now coming back to tell black people they should come out and support them because of what is happening to them about deportation about their being the way they are being discriminated. What do you expect black people to stand? What do you expect them to do after they had already warned you about Trump that is coming for you people? Did they think that Trump was coming to black Americas to deport them?
Black Americas cannot be deported. So when you're thinking on that line, you went wrong. Black Americans cannot come and help you at this time. You are supposed to think about it way before you voted for Donald Trump. And you showed black Americans that you for Trump. you are not for Camar, you are not standing with the side of black America. Sometimes when you hate someone so much, you end up making a very big mistake because the way they hate black Americans, the way they treat them, there's a lot of racism between black Americans and Latinos, the way Latinos treat black Americans. Black Americans who have been standing for every immigrant in America are the ones who made every immigrant in America to enjoy what they enjoying now in America. But immigrant, majority of immigrant, they normally come and rubbish them, put them aside, calling them name, treating them so bad. And this is where many immigrants go wrong. Because as we can see with the new administration for Donald Trump now is coming for majority of immigrants and this is telling the black Americans come and help. What do you expect black Americans to do to come and help you yet they want you in hand?
They told you this is not the right way to go. The the time people are going to realize black Americans have been there.
They know America more than them. this is their place is the time things are going to change. So Latinos for now they should learn how to fight their own fight because black Americans are telling them we want to be silent. We want to keep quiet. We are not demonstrating for anyone. We have been doing it for a very long time. Let this time people fight for their own fight.
This is your own par. We are not joining. we are not going to do it.
Because for a long time, even when they do it for others, they still see black Americans as people who are not supposed to be respected. And in fact, it's the opposite. You're supposed at least to respect black Americans because of what they have done in America. All that you enjoy was fought for. It was not given free. So when you come on social media and start telling them this is the way, this is the not the way, that is where you make a mistake. Any place you go, let you be guided by people who have been there before you because they know better but they don't listen. But now black Americans are tell them no we cannot do it this time fight your own battle and I can see Latinos are not happy about it. They better learn to do it. Maybe next time they will make a very different decision on how they are going to handle their mothers. Thank you so much for watching this video. If you're not subscribed to my channel, kindly subscribe. Leave your comment about this video. What do you think black Americans are supposed to do? Are they supposed to stand up and help Latinos or Latinos to face their own battle? Bye and see you on the next
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