The civil rights movement was fundamentally a Black American movement, with other groups like Puerto Ricans and Chicanos being inspired by and riding the coattails of Black American movements rather than participating on the front lines; historical evidence shows that some Latino organizations like LULAC fought to be classified as white to avoid discrimination, contradicting claims of solidarity during the civil rights era.
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CLASSIC | Latino claims his people were PIVOTAL in the CIVIL RIGHTS MOVEMENT like BLACK AMERICANSAdded:
Oh, sicko. Scrolling online and watching black Americans sit there and advise their people not to support the immigration movement that's going on across the entire United States.
Now, notice the tone, family. Notice the tone. Who the hell buddy think he is, man? He's so tired of We don't give a damn what you tired of. You dig? We don't give a damn what you tired of.
instead of worrying about us. Maybe you wouldn't be so tired if you weren't worried about us and worried about your people. See, y'all are too busy looking for us. You hurting your neck. Your neck is sore. Your feet are tired because you've been walking. You've been trying to look and find where the FBA is at instead of trying to look and find what you can do to help your people. You dig?
We don't owe y'all anything. Let's be clear about that, family. We don't owe these folks anything. And they need to start checking their tone. And that's the issue. this entitlement where we're supposed to or we're supposed to go out our way to look out for them.
And what do we receive for that? Nothing but disrespect.
You dig? But let's continue.
>> What have they done for us? They never supported our protest. Yes, they have.
Go watch some old footage. You're going to see people in different shades, different colors, even sizes. It's a beautiful thing. Now, >> notice he didn't give no examples.
family.
If you go back and look at this secret footage, you going to see people different sizes, different colors, different shades, but then give no examples. But let's continue. Maybe he maybe he gives us some examples. I don't know. Let's see.
>> I'm not simply going after black Americans because I'm watching Hispanics, Latinos with legal status that simply just betrayed their people, saying, "We don't support this." You know what's crazy? Back in those days, black Americans weren't the only ones that were fighting for civil rights, for equality. You had the Puerto Ricans. You had the Chicanos. You had black Americans. And the beautiful thing is that even back in those days, there was unity going on behind closed doors. You had the CHO movement, the Brown Barrettes, you had the Puerto Ricans, the Young Lords, you had the Black Panthers, all united. And guess what?
Back in those days, you had people like this spreading that same harmful rhetoric. All >> uh Okay, hold on. Hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on. Because what these folks like to do is they like to misappropriate history. Uh the Young Lords, the Brown Barrettes, all these were Chuco and Latino movements that were inspired by foundational black Americans like the Black Panther Party, Huey P and and others. Let's be clear, you were inspired by us. You rode the coattails of us and you used our momentum and our civil rights movements in order to sway public opinion towards your way in order to galvanize your people to do something for yourselves.
That wasn't this thing where we came together and we fought for civil rights.
Watch these folks because they'll try to turn the civil rights movement into this rainbow coalition. That's what they try to do. They try to turn to this rainbow coalition where we all black and brown, we all came together to fight for the rights of black people. No, you didn't.
No, you didn't. The brown barretes, they were fighting part of the cho movement.
They were fighting for chucanos.
Let's be clear. And they were inspired by the Black Panther Party, inspired by foundational black Americans who had the civil rights movement going. And they used that momentum to fight for their own rights. Let's stop. Let's not misinterpret and try to purposely mix and remix history. You dig? It was no unity. It was no y'all on the front line. I didn't ain't never seen no pictures of German shepherds being sicked on uh little Juan and little Sarah Lee. You dig? Lil Pablo and Lil Jesus. No, no, no, no. Fire hoes when getting sicked on your people. You dig?
I don't see no pictures of no Mexicans then lynched from trees. We not gonna mix those two. We not gonna mix those two, family. Let's stop with the BS.
Let's stop with the BS.
And what a lot of these folks do, I want you to notice what they do is they'll say, "Okay, when Black Lives Matter or something happened, it was some Mexicans out there. They're out there for their own tangible gain, family. They're out there to get something for their people. They ain't out there marching for us.
Let's be clear. They're out there so they can remix the narrative. So when we're talking about Black Lives Matter, they can throw brown in there, too.
Yeah. Black and brown, right?
Okay. Let's be understand the game that these folks try to play. And let's understand that the civil rights movement was 100% a foundational black American movement from start to finish.
these other folks sat on the sideline.
Let's stop playing.
>> We shouldn't unite with the Puerto Ricans. Oh, we shouldn't unite with the CHO. Yeah, even back in those days, it was happening. If that wasn't the case, those >> It wasn't family. It was no uniting. It was y'all riding the coattails. Let's stop it.
>> Movements would have been a lot larger.
But guess what? There was a small group of people that saw the vision. And every time they united, they were successful.
And unfortunately back in those days it was eventually broken apart when one of the leaders end up passing away or they were hit with RICO charges and eventually they just disperse a lot.
>> Right. And a lot of these RICO charges a lot of our leaders that were taken down if you would look at it many of the times like in the Black Panther Party one of the dudes who was supplying the guns was a was a Asian guy who was supplying the guns and he end up was working for the CIA. So you got to be careful. See, our brother Fred Hampton, he fell into that, too. He started that rainbow coalition stuff. And that's when a lot of our people got infiltrated when they stopped betting people at the door when they start trying to mix in all these people. You dig? So you got to be clear about that.
>> People don't know this, but back in the day during Martin Luther King, he understood the vision. He understood and he motivated the Puerto Ricans to form and fight for their civil rights and equality and the chos. And they did.
They formed their stuff. And guess what?
I love this quote and it says a whole lot. It says, "We cannot walk alone. We will remember not the words of our enemies, but the silence of our friends." Martin Luther King, guess what?
>> Oh lord. He's quoting Dr. King. Dr. King also said that he had integrated his people into a burning house. He had realized integration and all that rainbow talk was a mistake. You dig?
Because he was diluting his community.
And he said, "The next time I go to DC, I'm coming for that check for foundational black Americans." And since he wants to quote, "Let me quote one of your ancestors." You dig? Let me quote one of your ancestors, family.
Let me quotes Felis Tina who said, "Let the Negro fight his own battles. His problems are not mine. I don't want to ally with him." 1957.
You dig? So, at the same time the civil rights movement was kicking off, your people were talking about let the Negroes fight their own battles. Since you want to pull up quotes, you want to quote Dr. King, let me quote one of your people. And by the way, this was the national president of the League of United Latin American Citizens, aka LUAC, one of the biggest Latin American organizations in America. That's what your people were doing during the Civil Rights Movement. They were telling the Negroes to fight their own battles like y'all always do. And LUAC has a history for this. Let's go to LUAC's page now.
Matter of fact, okay, this is LUAC's page now. This is the League of United Latin American Citizens. This is their current page. If you go to their milestones, this is the things they consider their milestones, family. If you go down here, and this says a lot. You go down to 1936, and I've been telling you for the longest time that many of these so-called brown people have always fought to classify themselves as white.
That's why their political history is of such. That's why most of them, many of them voted for Donald Trump because they see themselves as honorary white people.
And this is one of their milestones according to LULAC. This is one of the biggest Latin American organizations in America. It says 1936, beginning in El Paso, that they pressured the US Census Bureau to recclassify persons of Mexican descent from Mexican in 1930, previously white in 1920, and back to white in 1940 to avoid more discrimination associated with the color label. So, these people purposely fought the US Census to be classified as white. And now these folks, like the dude in the video, want to reclassify history and act like they were riding for the cause. These folks were never riding. They've always fought to be classified as white. Even when the United States wanted to classify Mexicans in the 1930s as their own race and they said, "Hey man, we're going to put Mexican on the census." They fought to say, "No, no, no, no, no. We don't want to be classified as Mexican because you're going to consider Mexican being colored people. We want to classify ourselves as white. And that says it all right there. Don't let these folks remix history and start acting like they were on the front lines with us facing dogs and water hoses and being shot, killed, and lynched. No, you weren't. You were sitting on the sideline doing the cowardly thing trying to reclassify yourselves as white. And a significant amount of Latinos, even to this day, classify themselves as white. Don't let them fool you,
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