The video provides a necessary dissection of how colonial hierarchies continue to fuel internal racism and colorism within the Latino community today. It effectively challenges the myth of a monolithic identity by exposing the deep-seated prejudices that still divide marginalized groups.
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Hispanics are OUT OF CONTROL, they Discriminate their own Dark Skinned Indigenous People too.Added:
Why is Latino culture racist? Well, I'll tell you. Welcome to the Latino paperback test. Now, it's literally designed by YT people from Spain and they ingrained it into our brains. We had 100 extra years. The indigenous had 100 extra years of getting their be behinds waxed. And the only way to get a leg up is by intermixing. So, let me show you the hierarchy here. US Spaniards. And this is to show you too that what I'm saying. That's what I'm discovering that all Latinos are not the same race. We are not. We are not the same. Latinos, we must acknowledge this.
We are not all the same race. We are not. Latino is a culture, a slave, a slave culture. That's really what it is.
You have the Spaniards up from Europe.
You got the children, the ones that were born in America. Then you have the mix, the European and and indigenous. Then you have the other mixes, right? Right?
And the more pure pure-blooded you are, the lower down the totem pool you are.
And guess where Africans are. This is why you don't see nobody in Telmundo, noticed, etc. But it gets worse because you got these lap dogs over here. And I don't care who gets offended. The ones that are indigenous that mix with European and want to act like they're white. They became the gatekeepers and the lap dogs for these guys. So they started stomping on and it benefits them to stomp on the rest of them. And you know why? How I know this? Because now that I'm going back to El Salvador for all y'all saying get, you know, leave as if the white team is going to is going to accept you all of a sudden. Is that till this day, you got these guys, there's a submovement of these guys still trying to keep this cast like strong to keep oppressing the rest of them. Not all of us, but this is a thing and it's disgusting. And if where wherever you are, especially know y'all in Salvador, y'all y'all believe y'all believe like this. Y'all disgust me. But see, this is the the standard in Latin American countries. But what happens like when they come over, they bring that mentality over because it's nobody checks it, which is why I'm talking about it for all y'all who watch my previous video want to take a dump dump on me. All you're doing is reinforcing it. when you when you get all negative on me and talk about you don't care and everything else all you're doing like listen I don't need to talk about this I could just let Latinos be racist and delusional like it don't it don't bother me none I mean it does but it don't affect me directly like I'm passable not that I'm proud of it but it's just a fact like it I acknowledge that because of this sick system I can move in certain ways where I can pass I'm not accepted I'm not delusional but I can pass but anyways they bring it over here and this is why you want your jobs and everything else and want to kick you out your jobs cuz it's and it's these guys primarily like these guys got issues at the bottom the more pure bloods they got issues and they be racist and that's why Dominicans and Colombians and all anywhere where you got Afro Latinos they BE LIKE ME NO BLACK ME NO BLACK IT'S IT'S CUZ this is this literally you could not associate like you in Latin America now it's it's better nowadays but it's still bad like where it came from like you were literally at the bottom of society, bro. Like the stuff that these people went through, our ancestors, like it was a desperate like mission to mix in order to get up. And no, this isn't justification or whatever the heck y'all y'all was saying in the previous video. Only reason I'm talking about this is because it's disgusting.
And and I see the plight of black people talking about, yo, like we did all this, that, and the other for Latinos and the fighting for rights in America and everything else. Like that's honorable.
Like, yeah, that's messed up. Latinos being fake or whatnot. But I'm telling you, there's a whole just like y'all got CIA CIA implants and movements and submovements in your community. We got them in ours, too. And I'm telling you right now, it's these guys. It's these guys right here. And one last thing, you could talk all the smack in my comments.
You're just making it more about helping the algorithm. But on the other hand, you're just making the the them same ones that I was talking about go, you see, YOU SEE THAT'S WHY MIHO, NO, YOU STUPID. NO, YOU THIS IS WHY WE DON'T DEAL WITH THEM. That that's that's all you're doing. You Good morning, good evening, and good afternoon, Africans. I hope you're fairing well where you are.
Now, there's a tool proverb that says, "When the moon is not there, the sun shines brighter."
You see this ancient proverb from Togo speaks to the artificial hierarchies created when one light seeks to diminish other to assert to assert its own brilliance in the context of the complex often stained often strained relationships between Hispanic and black communities. This proverb illustrates a tragic anomaly which is something which is unusual you know of two groups that have both endured the shadows of colonial history and yet often find themselves in a social fiction that seems to defy their shared struggles.
This tension is not an accident of nature but carefully cons but a carefully constructed byproduct of history, politics and the enduring legacy of pigmentotocracy.
Right. Yeah. So black people are again falling victims to the Hispanics. The Hispanics have done it again. They are not pleased by black people. Right? This is not something new. It's something which has always been there. We know you don't like us. We know, >> okay, this is kind of how my family speaks when they're speaking about, you know, this race or whatever. So, as I started getting older, I started realizing like this this ain't right. It it got to the point that it made me so uncomfortable that I wouldn't even allow my black friends to come to my house cuz I never knew what my family would say at that point, right? But as I got older, again, I'm the first person to bring a bring a black woman into the household and say, "Hey, this is who I'm with." I had to start checking things as as they're being said.
>> I'm at a party. I don't want to be at a a family party worrying about what my family's going to say out of line, out of pocket, and now I have to stand up for not only, you know, the woman that I'm with at the time, but my kids. Like, you you're not about to disrespect any of them in saying what you're saying at this point. Was there any rhyme or reason for this hate that your family had?
>> So, looking at my family and then also a couple other Hispanic families that I've grown up with, uh I think that in Texas in Houston, uh there is an issue of Hispanics being what I would call whitewashed, thinking that they're not as bad as black people, they're on the same level as white people. But in reality, certain white people will look at both. Everybody sitting here on this panel today and be like, "I don't like any of you." Right?
>> A lot of black people in the Dominican Republic say things like Dominic, why are black people in the Dominican Republic trying so hard not to be black and or acknowledge their African ancestry? And rather than saying, "Yes, I'm black. I'm African descent." They'll say, "I'm not black. I'm Hispanic. And sure, technically because they speak Spanish, they are Hispanic. Sure. But speaking the language of the Spaniards that took away everything you are, your culture, your ethnic identity, and your language and then replace it with theirs. That doesn't make you them. But in this case, African descending people in the Dominican Republic, are denying the fact that they descend from somewhere in Africa, more than likely Nigeria, and completely denying the descent and saying, "I'm not black, I'm Hispanic." There is such a shame in being black. And what I've come to understand is that when I was a little kid, every single time that I turn on the TV and they showed anything in regards to Africa, they would show all the hungry little kids with the little bubble stomachs digging in the trash and all types of poverty. The most degrading and inferior conditions that a people can be depicted as is all I ever saw anytime something about Africa was depicted on television. There was a rapper who did an interview and said, "I'm so thankful for slavery because if not for Europeans going over to Africa and bringing us to America, I'd still be an African booty scratcher right now."
So you see that is very sad and obviously so much internal hatred. But the real question is, is it their fault?
The macro media pushes this narrative and agenda that the standard of beauty is white. And everything about the African, what we were taught in American TV is inferior. And everything that was been taught about the white folk is superior, elegant, royalty, right? Then you realize that dark skin and or black is associated with poverty and inferiority. So then when Dominicans say, "I'm not black." It's like saying, "No, I'm not poor. I'm not inferior. I'm Hispanic. I'm superior." This is internalized racism. Absolutely. But if you do some research, you realize it makes sense why we're like this. While we don't want to associate ourselves with what we've been indoctrinated to believe is poor, inferior, and everything negative, we want to associate ourselves with everything that is beautiful, superior, and class. Now I can empathize and sympathize with the black community. I've never been able to do that before because I would hear them say things like, "Oh, you know, we walk down the street and we get profiled and, you know, cops will just suddenly stop and frisk or whatever just because of the color of skin." I was and I always thought like, ah, you know, it's a little bit of a stretch. It feels like a little bit of a stretch. That person must be doing something, right? And obviously I've never experienced that before. I've never felt that way before and stuff. And so I always thought like ignorantly by the way on my part thinking like you know I think you guys are cuz I'm brown you know I've never felt that and stuff like that you know I'm also a minority but now for us it wasn't the cops cops aren't just randomly like go and check in the past but now it's it's our turn right now we feel it. Now we feel like crap can I just go down the street? Do I need my paper? You know it's like why are you stopping me? I'm a US citizen. what what the we're not doing anything wrong and now we're being persecuted. And so now I'm thinking like crap, this is what the black community meant, you know, and and I kind of feel bad. Well, I don't kind of feel I feel bad because I never really could understand where they were coming from or where you guys were coming from. Um, but I can assure you that now now that it's here with us too, it's like crap. I I honestly legitimately didn't think it was real. I But it's real as hell. And it's obviously minority groups that are targeted and and persecuted pretty much.
And it's right now with us, it's cuz we're brown. Um you guys have had your turn when you know cops are just in bigger cities, uh urban areas stopping disproportionately, you know, the black community and stuff. Um, and and I just want to say like I I guess now I understand. Um, I think moving forward there's going to be a little bit more unity because we're we're we now can see where you guys are coming from. Well, at least I can, you know. Um, and so yeah, guys, I just want to say sorry for being ignorant before, but I hope this unites all communities, not just minorities, and call out things for what they are, regardless of the race. I for one am never going to forget how a lot of you guys on this app treated black women and the black men but specifically the black women who said that we were resting and we were sitting this one out 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 anti-blackness 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 Jasine 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 Mandami, but his wife had those anti-black 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. because I live in LA now and talked about their experience with antilackness and racism from the Latino community. They are in 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 Ashen 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'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.
>> 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 >> I just want to talk about something real quick that I feel like it's not talked about enough. And y'all please don't mind this music. These are my neighbors.
It's such a strange feeling being a dark-skinned Latina because sometimes I'm Dominican, right?
Sometimes I have a hard time connecting with my culture because there are a lot of things that my culture does that I don't agree with and that I take offense to as a woman of color. So today, for example, um I was at work and I was talking to a coworker that doesn't really know me well or whatever about relationships and stuff like that. He's a fair tone Dominican, so he looks more Spaniard. We all know Dominicans come in different shades and stuff like that. My whole life I just have never been attracted to um Latino men. I've always dated black men. So, Africans, Haitians, Jamaicans, like that's just what I'm naturally attracted to. And so, I stated that and he responded and said, "Oh, maybe if I lower my pants and drag them down with my ass showing, maybe then you'll like me."
What is that even supposed to mean? Like what are you implying when it comes to black people? There has also been moments where I'm with another like fair tone Dominican and I remember one time I went to um BJ's and when we got there she said, "Oh my god, there's so many black people around." I was like, "What are you talking about?" When I hear stuff like that, when I hear Dominicans say stuff like that or even just any Latino country, like person whatever say that, like it really pisses me the [ __ ] off. I really hate this narrative that some Latino people look at black people this way, like there isn't black excellence and luxury classy people, classy um black people, all of the above. and they just look at them like this ghetto trash when I know that's not true. It's not true and it really upsets me. And obviously I am of color so I identify, I relate and I connect more with black people because I know what it's like to be made fun of for my complexion. That happened my whole childhood where I got made fun of because of my complexion.
And I hated that. I hated getting tanned before. or I would hide under the tree and I'll be I don't want to get tanned.
And now, thank God, I love my complexion. But literally, it's comments like that as to why I like I'm just don't connect with the Latino culture. Like, I don't get it. It's also so frustrating because I've had black people tell me, "Oh, you want to be uh black so bad." And I also have had the more like fair tone Latinos tell me, "Oh, you're not a real Latina."
So, I feel like there's no middle ground for us dark-kinned Latina women. And it's so frustrating.
>> I ain't going to hold you. I know Tik Tok don't like smoking your background and [ __ ] like that. But I got to get this off my chest. This [ __ ] been bugging me for a minute. I'm a New York City resident my whole life, right?
Something that bugs me is Latin racism.
I just never understood it. Especially amongst the generation that grew up with mine. What's your racism about? I know this is mostly the new people and people who got to stay away. It's like, yo, bro, if you going to share an area with black people, keep your racism to yourself. Cuz nine times out of 10, we not even really concerned with what you doing. We not concerned with like doing anything rude to you. We more interested on learning your culture, indulging in your foods and your nice prices in your supermarkets. Not your bad attitude.
This is something I really don't understand like where this attitude comes from. I know this is from Abuela and Abuo, whatever Spanish words you got for your great-grandparents, but this [ __ ] is is it's becoming annoying. This is something I thought that would die off as I got older, but it's like it got worse. So that means like y'all really have a deep rooted hate for black people. I don't know what the [ __ ] that [ __ ] is about. As a black man, when it's more convenient for me to deal with the whiter race when it comes to business or when it comes to circumstance or even jobs or just even everyday living, it's easier for me to be around them. This is a different place in America we live in because I'm not looking at the white guy anymore for racism outwardly on my day-to-day. It's always the Latin person. Fix that [ __ ] bro. because I want no ill will done upon to you. Like, I don't want to hurt you. The reason this bothers black people like myself, and if you're not like myself, say the [ __ ] out my comment section. The reason this bothers black people like myself is because it's like we [ __ ] with y'all.
Genuinely, we [ __ ] with y'all. We interested in the culture, interested in the music, interested in the food, interested in the language, interested in the people, how communal y'all are, like the fact that y'all stick together in certain like there's there's a lot of things that we admire about you that you don't even know unless y'all like come and dwell with us. And those who come and dwell with us know how much respect we have for y'all. So that racism you have for us is like there's a thin line between love and hate. That love can quickly turn into hate and that hate can quickly turn into violence. We don't want that, bro. Because nobody benefits from that but the white guy. And I think that's what y'all don't understand. I ain't no politician, my [ __ ] I digress. That's what I wanted to say about that. I'll talk to y'all [ __ ] later, >> guys. So, I'm at work. I work at the Hampton. I'm trying to smile because I'm so upset and I feel so degraded right now. So, I work the front desk. I'm home from school, so I'm not always here. So, there were two gentlemen at the desk, one white guy and one Hispanic guy. They were beating at the desk and I said from the back, "You don't have to do all that, but I said it so nice and respectfully. Give me one second." And so, I walk up and the man says, "My room has not been cleaned in 5 days, and I requested it to be cleaned." And I said, "Okay, sir, what's your room number?" He tells me his room number, but he has this bad attitude. Give me one second.
So, I told him like, "I will put it in as a report that you want your room clean for tomorrow. Everything will be handled." He goes to say, "Yeah, I told that black kid to clean my room this morning. I looked at him and my heart dropped to the floor cuz never in my life would I ever expect that." I say, "I don't know what black person you're talking about." Now, we pulling race cars and mainly all of our housekeepers are Hispanic. Like for part two, I'mma finish the story. The world doesn't respect black people because we haven't done enough crimes against humanity.
And I will explain. So, tell me if I'm crazy. Tell me if I cracked the code. I have stumbled upon another Tik Tok of a this an African-American woman. It's always African-American people being discriminated against, being followed around, having to deal with slurs in countries that we don't even visit that much, countries that we have little to no history with. And we're constantly asking in the comments, "What the [ __ ] did we do? What did we do? We didn't do anything to them." And I think that's the issue is that we haven't done anything to them. I'm starting to think that these different countries, these different continents only respect crazy crimes against humanity. And we have yet to do that. Like Japan, for example, Japanese people tend to have a respect and a reverence for the same group of people who did Hiroshima.
Yet, we're an issue, right? I feel like we don't get respect the same way that henchmen don't get respect on Batman.
You feel me? It's like just a quick little obstacle to get over. There's much more reverence and much more thought going into and much more time taken to figure out how to take down Joker, how to take down Penguin, how to take down Clayface because they're a bigger threat and and there there's there's more story to them. No one gives a [ __ ] about the henchmen and their little petty crimes. Batman just swoops in, breaks their arm, and leaves. And I think that's the issue. If you notice when people complain about black people, they're always saying, "You guys are always looting and lording and and shooting at each other. You're all gang bangers and da da." And mind you, all those are crimes against each other. We don't go outside of our neighborhoods and [ __ ] with other people that don't look like us. If we're gang banging, we're gang banging against somebody who looks just like us on the other side of the same neighborhood. It's never us affecting other people. And I think that doesn't get us respect. Why would I respect people that are stealing out of stores, stealing out of malls, stealing out of gas stations when my people steal whole countries? We steal people.
We steal your ideas. We steal your children and sell them off and I'm supposed to respect you because you stole a [ __ ] candy bar. You're small time. And I think the moment that we start getting up and let me be quiet. I'm saying too much, but you get what I'm saying. racial bias cases are of Latino employees discriminating against and abusing black employees.
>> So, to me, it's kind of crazy that this pops on my for you page considering I was just thinking about this last night, but I'm personally going to just say I never I've never understood why black people and anyone of any kind of Latino/Hispanic descent don't like each other. Quite frankly, even if even if we are not technically the same thing, like, babes, we're colored. The white man will not favor you more because you're not black. And like I'm not even trying to say this to be funny. It's kind of like Dominicans and Haitians. If you ever call a Dominican black, I'm not black. I'm Dominican. Babes, you're right next to Haiti. You're black. Just say it. And that's why like I never play into conversations like when people are like, "Oh, but Cardi B is black or Cardi B's this."
You don't have to say it, but that girl is black. Like I I'm not trying to be funny. A lot of Latinos, like even like Mexicans and black people, I don't I don't get it. I've never understood. And like it's a lot of hatred considering we're all in the same [ __ ] boat.
>> So after carefully listening to the brothers and sisters, here's my deep critical analysis. And in order for you to listen to a problem, you need to understand its history, the history of this conflict.
And now the historical foundation what I would rather call las casters. You know to understand modern tension was one must look at the Spanish colonial era in the Americas. And like the binary racial system of the United States black or white the Spanish empire developed a highly you know uh social hierarchy known as the systemma decastas.
You see we they it it used uh terminologies such as pyneontocracy pigmenty.
Pigment is color.
Cassy is a system. So color system.
This pigmentotocracy was a system where social status was legal was legally and socially tied to the purity of one's blood.
At the top were the peninsulas which are the Spanish born.
They were followed by creos which are Americanborn Spaniards and descending through various mixtures of indigenous and African descent. You see we also had the invisibility of blackness while millions of enslaved Africans were brought to Latin America. The postc colonial push for me, you see a blended national identity often sought to erase African roots in a favor of a European indust in favor of a European indigenous hybrid.
This created a culture where whiteness was equated with progress and blackness and blackness with the bottom uh with the bottom of the social ladder.
You know, whiteness up, blackness down the ladder, you see. So, we had some cultural reasons for this. Culturally, many Hispanic societies were influenced by the concept of blanquto.
You see the idea of whitening the population. Now this was not just a social preference but often an official state policy in several countries during the 19th and 20th century to attract European immigrants.
First we had social shaming phrases like major larza you see improving the race became embedded in some dialects suggesting that marrying someone lighter skin was a duty to one's lineage.
Another one is the media loop. Latin America media has historically been dominated by light-kinned actors, while Afro Latinos were often relegated to roles of service or depicted through caricatures reinforcing the looking down upon the dynamic through a constant visual loop. You understand?
Also we have the political and economic competition which is something vital.
Now in the modern era particularly in the United States the friction is often exaborated by systemic pressure that pit marginalized groups against one another for limited resources. You had the middleman minority myth. In some political landscape, Hispanic communities have been positioned or have positioned themselves as a buffer group by distancing themselves from blackness.
Some segments of the community sought to gain quicker access to American dream, fearing that proximity to the struggles of black Americans would lead to shared systemic exclion.
You know, we also had what is called labor competition. Now economically in urban centers there are these two groups often compete for the same entry-level jobs or social services when the pie of economic opportunity is made to a small to to seem small by policy and neglect.
The result is often horizontal hostility rather than vertical solidarity against the systems causing the scarcity.
Interesting.
So what is the modern anomaly? What is the modern unusual thing that is happening here? So the anomaly lies in the fact that many Hispanics are blacks from the Caribbean coasts of Colombia and Panama to the Dominican Republic and Puerto Rico. The African diaspora is an inseparable part of his term Hispanic identity.
However, internal colorism within the Hispanic community often mirrors the external racism found in a broader society. When the moon of true equity is absent, these communities are often led to believe they must compete to be the brightest star in a system that was never designed to uh to either for either to shine. Overcoming this requires dismantling the colonial cast's mindset and a recognition as well that the liberation of one is inextricably tied to the dignity of the other. Yeah, that's my thought, my research, my perspective. I'd really love to hear your thought why you think there's this conflict between the blacks and the Hispanics. Share your thoughts on the comment section.
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