This video analyzes archival footage from the 1960s showing white parents protesting school desegregation, demonstrating how resistance to social progress often follows cyclical patterns across generations. The content creator argues that the same individuals who opposed integration then may still hold similar views today, and that such resistance is frequently passed down through families, with mothers serving as primary transmitters of ideology to their children. The video emphasizes that social change requires sustained effort and that historical patterns of resistance continue to influence contemporary society.
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Don't Let Her Fool You (She's Far From Innocent)Added:
[screaming] >> But we are standing up for what WE THINK IS RIGHT NOW.
>> BARBARA.
>> I need it.
>> You're playing into their hands. Let me speak to them, okay?
>> In the name of God, how much more are we supposed to take?
>> Take from what?
>> From you people.
>> you mean you people? You sound like I'm a damn I'm a dog >> As we forgive those who trespass against us.
And lead us not into temptation, but deliver us from evil.
Amen.
>> You don't think they're going to know we're DOING IT?
>> NO. [screaming] WHAT WE NEED ARE OUR RIGHTS.
>> THEY WANT THEIR SCHOOL RIGHTS.
>> THEY'RE NOT GOING TO GIVE IT TO THEM.
>> AND THEY DON'T have enough gumption to turn around and tell that Supreme Court to rule on the laws of the land rather than mess with our children and ruin our education and put our country down.
>> You kidding me?
>> Now, they were appointed officials and we'll impeach every one of them if we have to to get this country back where we want it.
>> Man, but it's about time somebody do something again. Now, all of a sudden that the tide is turning a little bit you see how things feel. Now you all come all upset, huh? You all upset they're trying to take your rights away.
>> We want no trouble. We don't condemn these black people.
They are human beings, too. We understand that, but we want our school.
And we going to get it if we have to go to Washington to get it. We are doing what they have done many, many times.
Now, is that wrong people of this world today?
Is it wrong THAT WE STAND UP FOR A CHANGE? FOR the first time we are standing up for our rights.
What is wrong about that? And why did he have to come over here to order US TO DO WHAT THEY WANT us to do.
Now, we not going to do it.
That is over. These people fight for your right.
And I mean fight for what you think is right and what you're here to fight for.
You got a heart, you got a conscience, fight for it. And give it all you got.
And I mean the people of the world today better do it. Cuz if they don't they going to be dominated throughout this world by this federal government which is dominating the world today.
No matter who you are, black or white, if you feel that it's right, fight for it. But fight for the right thing.
Don't create a disturbance, but fight for what you got and for what you worked hard for. In my opinion, if anybody has the right to fight, it's the Indians.
They were the ones over here in this country before the black people over far we were.
>> So, y'all just saw that video right there. And I initially meant to do it as a reaction style video via StreamYard, like how I do my reactions, cuz it's easier for me to do it through StreamYard. But unfortunately, StreamYard was down at the time of me recording. So, I have to do it this way.
So, I came across this video on Threads.
And when I saw it, I said I have to bring this to the forefront because what is something I always say on my channel?
Especially when it comes to PC.
They are their clan ancestors. Listening and looking at this video sounds a lot like how it was going on today, even back then. As you can see, nothing has really changed. But one thing that really stuck out to me, hence the thumbnail, is who was in the forefront of all of this. And that was these angry evil wicked so-called Christian white women.
Out there leading the charge. Like they were the out ones out there carrying the signs. They were the ones out there yelling. They were the ones out there protesting since hence the one right here. I mean, that my God. I mean, this woman has the look of evil and wickedness flowing through her face. She doesn't have to say a word.
Just like look at what she's saying and look at how she looks talking about we want freedom. We want freedom.
Basically, what's going on is that the desegregation of schools has occurred at this time in the '60s and they don't want their children who are clearly white going to school with black kids.
They feel like that's just so morally wrong just to have it stay separate and all this that and the third. And they're going after the government and it's crazy because even during that time period just like today, they all represent the majority of the government. Back then, they probably represented a vast overwhelming majority. It probably wasn't that many black faces in government if any at that time who could really do anything about these laws. So, the thing about it is they literally got what they voted for.
Much how we say they got what they voted for today, they got what they voted for back then, but they didn't read the fine print. But see, when they saw when the government saw something that could work in their favor, then that's when they decided, "Oh, we're going to go ahead and make this change." When I watch a video like this, it kind of reminds me of a story my mother told me because she was born in South Carolina.
And it was a story of how when she was young, she was going to a segregated school. It only lasted for a couple of years because she when she got old enough, segregation already started to kick in. But she remembers I think she was in elementary school. Of course, the school was where, you know, blacks was in one school, whites was in another school. And when seg- desegregation was about to occur, they said the white parents, probably some of these white women, went and pulled their kids out of the school and then tried to send them to these private upscale white schools, but then what ended up happening is they could not afford it and they ended up having to send their kids and basically bite the bullet back to the desegregated public school which they could afford.
So, the really it just shows you right there that they did not have all the resources that they thought they did back then. They just wanted to not be around or have their kids around other black kids. Now, as for this woman right here, I call her the loud pack because she was probably the most vocal person of the entire video. She was the one that was going at this black man that you can see in the first picture and notice that you said well like he was saying you just talked to me like I'm a dog and everything like that, but notice the look on her face when she said it.
She was like trying to basically insinuate that she wasn't, but really she was. Again, this is a wash, rinse, repeat. I said that this is like history literally repeating itself in real time.
How they were back then is still how a lot of them are today. It's just that today because the land- scape has changed so much in social media and technology, they can disguise it a little bit better, but some of them still have that viral tone to them and some of them cannot hide it no matter how hard they try. But back then, they were very, very outspoken.
You see the white guy right there, he had to basically stop her from doing something because at that time those white women weren't afraid to get into a black man's face because they already knew if they did and that black man did anything back to them, she had the law on her side, she had her man on her side. And it's crazy because even today she still acts in that same vein. But like I said, this woman right here was probably the most vocal one in this entire video. She was very, very very outspoken about how she felt with what the government of that time was doing, but like I said before, they voted for that. What they got exactly what they voted for. Just like what's going on with Trump. Now, for those who are heavy Trump supporters, I'm talking about the PC ones, the ones that are complaining about the gas, the oil, the war, all of that.
You got what you voted for. See, the thing is, a lot of them probably think, even back then, thought that whatever I don't know what what year this actually is. I can just tell it's most it has to be the '60s. So, whoever they voted for at that time, hey, that's exactly what you wanted. And they said they was going to go to DC and fight for all this. Obviously, if they did go to DC, it didn't change anything because, as you can see, look where we are now. Once that desegregation happened, it didn't go back to reintegration. Once desegregation occurred and it happened, that was it.
They couldn't They couldn't turn the clocks back. What they did was, though some places probably held on to segregation as long as they could, but eventually, over time, you know, it was nothing they could do.
So, you know, this was back in the '60s.
It's 2026 now.
The kids of today would never have to experience anything like that. But what I also find interesting is some of these individuals could very well still be alive. I don't know about this woman in particular, but like hypothetically say she could still be alive and even if she isn't, she went on, she has kids, I'm assuming. She had a family.
Her family Her kids had families. And they passed that hate down like a family heirloom.
Now, not necessarily saying it could have stopped somewhere, but, as you can see right here, it was very alive and well. So, as you can also see right here, there's a sign. Again, white woman right in the front, and this is SOS.
Now, you know SOS stands for saving our souls, but in this case, they put save our schools. Basically, from the invasion of the blacks, you know, coming there. Apparently, black kids going to schools with white kids, that was seen as right there something that was snatched off of one of the seven circles of hell.
And notice the woman that was at the podium with the mic, she was reading, you know, scripture. You know, the same thing about these so-called white Christians and how a lot of them use religion in order to pass on their anti-black ideology. This goes all the way back to the plantation. So, this right here is nothing new. So, again, this is them out there and they're the ones leading the charge. And something else I noticed, too, is when I was looking at the video, the other people that was out there with them with those white women were their kids. The only males that you really saw out there protesting with them were kids, like their children. Like, you know, school-age children. And then I saw another clip where it was a little girl out there. So, that just shows you right there, this is how they pass that on.
Again, they said the mother is the first teacher of the child. A lot of people have also gone to say when it comes to white supremacy and anti-black ideology, that starts with the mother. And then she passes it on to her children. And if she has son, she's probably thanking her lucky stars that she does because that's the one that becomes now the enforcer.
So, it's literally a cycle. They're bringing them out there. This might as well have been a clan rally, a clan march. All they was missing was the hood.
That's what this right here might as well have been, but they're disguising it as we want to save our schools or we want freedom and all this that and the third. Which, again, link it back to 2026. Many of them saying that they're oppressed. Look at what they're doing right here. At this point in time, during Jim Crow, cuz Jim Crow was still going on, this was when they were at their most so-called free.
This is when they displayed their oppression the heaviest and were allowed to do so. This in 2026 is what they want to go back to. Now you understand why they say make America great again. When I'm watching this, I said I was saying in my mind, this is what Make America Great Again means to them today. This is what they want to go back to.
If you put this in front of your dubs today, they will laugh at this and probably cry at the thought that this was at a point in time that they wanted to experience, but they can't because they can't turn back that clock. They can't jump in a time machine and just go back there cuz God knows if they could, they most definitely would and they would probably overstay their welcome.
They would blend in and stay there. They probably would never come back to the present.
Now, at this part right here, this guy is just holding a sign and this is a white guy holding a sign that says end racial fears. And I guess he's handing out some pamphlet, not Well, not a pamphlet, but some kind of paper. But in another part of the video that happens right after this, if y'all didn't catch it, you can go back and watch it. It showed one of the kids, it was like one of the boys who was there with the protest with the women. He had grabbed the paper from the guy and then he just threw it down. And the thing is, I knew he was going to do that. Before he even threw it on the ground, I knew that's what he was going to do. And he took the paper from the guy and walked around the car and just dumped it right there on the floor and went right back into the protest. Again, that's the indoctrination that the women, those adult grown women was putting into the heads of their children. Right there, that, you know, it's just no way we can be around those kids. They are bad for business. They're going to do this, that, and the third.
Like, and these are the same people that was You know what's so funny?
Yeah, the the dubs of today or even the dubs adjacent that will sit here and say that black people fared well back then.
Are you sitting here and you're really telling me black people at this time, looking at this video, fared well at this And this right here is tame compared to what black people dealt with. This right here was very, very surface level compared to what black people did at the had to deal with at the core.
So, when I hear people talking about, "Oh, black people did well back then."
How would you know? You weren't even around back then. And some of the people that was sitting in that weren't even here ancestry-wise because their lineage came from across the pond. So, how would you even know? Your parents didn't even go through that.
Shoot, a lot of the times when a lot of these tethers that came over here, y'all went out of your way to not even be around black people because you felt the same exact way because of what they put out there. Y'all was indoctrinated just as much as them as their kids. You might as well have been out there, but you know you wouldn't have fared well. It would've looked very awkward if you was out there.
I wanted to pull up this part with this black man in because you know in the video they did show little glimpses of black people just standing on the sidelines looking at these white people like, "Okay, whatever. What's going on?"
But, this is the only black guy that was out there that was actually being vocal with the loud pack. Do you know that woman that had too much mouth?
What I really got from this part right here is very interesting because people like that woman make it seem like it's black people's fault for whatever the government was doing as if black black people had all of this pull to make desegregation happen. There were black people back then, quiet as it's kept for those who are not in the know, that did not want integration to happen, either. And it wasn't because of the reason these white women didn't want it to happen. It was other reasons because they were looking out for their safety.
They were also they knew that if this happened, their businesses some would crumble because people would abandon it and they start going to the white neighborhoods, which unfortunately did happen. A lot of the movements that black people had, that would dissolve.
That's why they a lot of black people back then didn't want integration happen, not because they didn't want their kids to be around other races of children. You know, that was low brow for them.
It was because they were trying to keep their neighborhoods and communities intact, and they knew integration would crumble it. And unfortunately, it did.
And unfortunately even more, there were even people back then that didn't see the forest from the trees until later.
And now, you know, fast forward to today, you start to see the effects of that.
You know, a lot of stuff that could have happened, unfortunately, would never happen because integration happened. I'd said integration was going to eventually happen, but it happened way too soon. It happened way before it was supposed to. I actually believe if integration was to happen, it needed to be organic. It was very manufactured and very artificial.
It happened way way way too soon. I said that I would have probably, if it was me, I would probably had to give it at least at least another 10 or 15 years before it could happen. It happened almost a decade or two too soon, in my honest opinion. But, y'all can let me know what y'all think about that. And the last thing I want to talk about, going back to the loud pack, the loud mouth woman with so much mouth, was when she mentioned about how, if anything, the integration, if they're going to do something about anything, let it be with the natives because they were the ones that were here first.
Which is interesting that she even said something like this considering her tone throughout this entire video. And then she said, it shouldn't be have anything with black people. Hell, it shouldn't even be anything related with us. So, I was sitting there saying to myself, it's crazy how she even in that moment realized that they shouldn't be out there protesting this.
So, my thing is, if you know this, why are you out there? Why are you so upset?
If you said that the natives were should be the ones that are mad about this, why are you out there talking about it from a standpoint that you, as a white woman, feel oppressed? That you, as a white woman, feel that you're not free. So, while she was, you know, depending on how you look at it, some people might say she was right, she still contradicted herself because all of that anger didn't allow her to see clarity. She only saw, "Oh my god, I can't believe them inwards about the same sending their their tar babies to our schools to infect our pure children.
Like it's just it's just crazy how things how things back then have domino effect have spiraled and steamrolled into 2026 into today. You're talking about over 50 some in some cases 60 plus years ago that this video was made.
And here we are 60 plus years later and it's still playing out in the same cyclical form. It's just different people, you know, social media, so everything is real quick and fast. Everything's right there at your fingertips and you can see it, but it the mindset is still very much there. So what it really all boils down to is you see who was leading a lot of the charges even back then. It's something that I'm sure the media of today doesn't really put out there like that, but this is who they were back then. Like they literally gathered quickly. This was they gathered real quick cuz you know back then the neighborhoods were more closer. Like I said the world was much smaller back then. Social media just made it much more bigger. Actually the social media made it more smaller, but the world was more larger back then, but they all you know the communities.
They all you came together and they decided to go out into streets and protest because they didn't want their kids to go to school with black kids and vice versa.
And now and now look at it. But like I also said too is these women had kids. Some of them were out there in that protest with them. They went on to get married and have families of their own. You don't think they didn't pass that down?
After all they indoctrinated them and had their kids going there and who knows what they were probably saying to other black people back then.
Quiet as it's kept, we did not I'mma say that again. We as black Americans did not ask for this. We did not demand it.
There was some out there that wanted it, but like I said, black people and white people wanted integration for two different reasons.
But for the black people who did want it, it wasn't because of whatever they didn't want it for.
And vice versa.
So, again, they This is who they were.
This is who they were back then. I'm sure I probably have some followers or subscribers who are watching this who were around back then who can attest to that. And I can't wait to see what y'all got to say down in the comments. But, that's going to pretty much bring this video to a close. I can't wait to see what y'all going to have to say down in the comments in this discussion. And with that being said, I will talk to you in the next one.
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