The video confuses cultural popularity with real systemic power, turning complex global exchanges into a simple competition for validation. It focuses more on the pride of influence than on the actual economic challenges these communities face.
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Latinos & Asian Americans PUBLICLY ADMIT Black Americans EXCELLENCE Runs The Global CultureAdded:
Black Americans are the most [music] powerful when it comes to influencing.
>> It's the only community that has the power in this country to change anything.
>> They have a spending power of $1.8 trillion a year revolving. That is annual recurring power.
>> Look at how much they've done to [music] influence modern day pop culture.
>> African-Americans has always dominated music and that's how a spread and this has been happening all through our history.
>> They [music] are people that inspire.
They are people that are mimicked. A lot of people of different cultures, different demographics don't like black Americans, but yet copy as much as possible [music] from them.
>> They are the only one with the experience of civil matter. They are the only one that are not going to get deported anywhere. And you cannot put them all in jail.
>> They've been [music] stripped from their culture, their ethnicity, and everything they were once upon a time. They were meant to be a people that have nothing, that are nothing, that are just slaves.
Somehow someway, they inspire most people around the world of different different demographics. But that's just how how good black Americans are. And I have to say, black Americans because it's specifically black Americans >> are the only ones that are going to save the Latinos. Black people in African countries, black people in Latin America, black people in Europe, they don't have the same impact globally with culture, with trends, with fashion like black American. We didn't do shit for them. We didn't we didn't support anything that was going with them. Lat Cubans talk shit about African-Americans. Cubans did not support African-Americans. Cuban think that they all victimize themselves and all of this, all of that.
Africanameans are the only ones that are going to save your asses, Latinos. So, you better start kissing. If you're going to kiss some ass in this country, YOU BETTER KISS SOME BLACK ASS. Hello everybody. Welcome back to the channel.
Hey, listen. If you want to talk about cool on this planet, you have to talk about black Americans. If you want to talk about influence, you have to talk about black Americans. If you want to talk about the definition of black excellence, you have to talk about black Americans. And if you want to act as if you don't recognize that or you don't agree with that, then you just have a problem with giving flowers where it is due or giving credit where it is due.
Black Americans are the best community of melanated folks on this planet. And when you look at this video, different types of immigrants, especially Latinos, Asians coming together and agreeing on one thing. Black Americans are the reason why America is the way it is today. You cannot talk about black culture or American culture without talking about black American culture.
And this is actually very funny because it's coming from some members of the communities that of immigrants that actually like to look down on black Americans because they think that they are way more superior than black Americans. They look better just because they have some lighter shade of melanin.
We all know exactly how Latinos feel about black people. We all know exactly how Asians feel about black people. But in this video, we're going to be looking at different immigrants from the Asian community and Latino community calling for solidarity and unity and absolutely admitting something about black Americans that most of them members of their own communities cannot even admit.
Let's take a look. Subscribe to the channel if you're new. Hit a like button. Let me know what you think about this episode. Let's take a look. I'll be back with more.
>> The term cool came from an African-American jazz musician named Lester Young. People always want to sound cool. And because African-Americans are the one created the newest and coolest music, people want to copy the way they speak.
>> And there's no cooler black than American black. Small things and the big alike. You look at the music. You got, you know, jazz, [music] hip-hop, R&B, all black Americans style of clothing.
You know, just there's a [music] general swag that they've brought to everything.
Even small things like walking. I mean, walking is such a mundane activity, isn't it? It's just a very just very there's nothing cool about this thing.
You just you just move from one place to [music] the next and and pretty much everybody can do it. And then black Americans came along and then they just added in that bounce and then and all of a sudden you look really cool. You just, you know, you look like you have a purpose. That's why if you look Obama, every time he comes out of the jet or makes a speech, he's always just got that little bounce just before. And by far the coolest thing of all, coolest thing of [music] all is the talk.
>> The whole world wants to talk like black Americans, wants to walk like [music] black Americans, wants to dress like black Americans.
>> The black American sound dominates.
>> Everybody wants to sound like us. They don't want to look like us. Wants to tell us, but they want to sound like us.
>> I think secretly as people [music] tan, they do want to look like us.
>> Well, you know, you may have a point there, >> right? They definitely want to dress like us.
>> Oh, definitely.
>> And they speak like us. BLACK PEOPLE [music] GOT SOUNDTRACK MUSIC. YAY.
THOUGH WE WALK THROUGH THE VALLEY OF THE SHADOW OF DEATH, WE WILL FEAR no evil.
[music] >> Black people are the cool. They They're the culture drivers of America without question.
>> In some ways, I guess that's, you know, maybe ancient Greece. What's democracy if not the original hip-hop? How everything filtered out from there. It's kind of, you know, the same way.
>> Love it when you call me big. The same way music's been taking from black people forever.
>> Black people are better at sports. Black people are better at basketball. Kind of kind of a joke, but it's not that simple.
We're excellent at everything.
>> We are the [music] best and we so humble. We don't even pop it like we supposed to be popping. Like, I mean, it's crazy out here. Little old black Americans, descendants of slaves are the best.
>> Black people, they're cool.
They're cool. And I don't say that from a personal opinion. They are cool. You have to give [music] credit to black Americans. Y'all love our culture.
Everyone loves our culture. Whether you want TO GIVE US OUR CREDIT OR NOT, THAT IS YOUR PREROGATIVE, but you love it.
I'm African myself. I'm a firstg. And I never realized how influenced I was by African-Amean culture. From what I like to watch to what I like to listen to to how I dress and also what I like to eat.
And I genuinely love African-American culture, especially when it comes to style and swag. And like I feel like it's because when you grow up in America, it's a norm. So you kind of overlook it. And I feel like probably a lot of people do too. And they don't really get as props for real. Well, actually, people kind of do, but I feel like the people that really give it as props are actual like African-Ameans.
Like their families has been here for generations. And I don't think like people who are um immigrants or uh first gen of the immigrants like really realize it for real. It really lives roughly in my head right now.
>> Latino music has black American influence. And I just have to say y'all are tripping. Go to your computer, type in Ela or type in any country in Latin America, then type in hiphop and something's going to come up. There's rap battles in Brazil. I mean, even Pesopluma, which everybody's like Pesopluma, this, Pesopluma, that. Let's look at Pesopluma.
He sings coridos tumbalos, which are just coridos with hip-hop influence.
Let's be honest, Latinos are not making new music. They're just influencing more hip-hop into their music. Do you realize that black people in America are the most financially successful across the spectrum of black people in any other country in the world?
>> Did not know that statistic.
>> That black Americans would be in the 95th percentile for income in any other country in the world on average. That black Americans have more successful businesses in America. If black America was a country ex the most powerful country in the world, black America, the United States or black America is more powerful than any country in Africa, all countries in South America except Mexico and Brazil. All the countries in the Middle East, you have that kind of power. The the trick is making you think you don't.
>> These abilities you keep naming that you can build a country like America. You can invent all the things. Why the people from whom you came, why are they not doing it? because they don't got the same pedigree as the black people in America are the the richest black nation on earth. You're the most successful black nation on earth. We can't leverage resources like they do in Africa. We built >> I'm asking about the ability for you to do the things he listed. Why are they not doing the continent? If it's speak of the continent, I can only speak about black Americans in this country. Like that's this is what we did in this country with less resources with the less and we still accomplish more than anybody in the diaspora. Everyone's coming over here and benefiting from the fact that we put out the 13th, 14th, and 15th amendment. All of those things that started as the black liberation movement, but then got shoehorned into civil rights because everybody wants to come off of our pain. American culture is black culture.
>> Black Americans are the wealthiest black people on Earth globally. If you compare the average black person in America to the average black person in any other country in the world, the black American is has a higher probability of having more money. So yes, I did not stutter.
Black Americans are the wealthiest black people on earth today. We are superior.
We are not the minority. We're the actual majority. But because the white man highlights nationalities and not ethnicity, you think you're the minority. There's more black men in America than white men in America.
There's more black men in the world than white men in the world. When you learn to love yourself, then you're going to change your situation. Most black Americans do not live in high crime inner city neighborhoods. That's a fact.
Okay? The black population is spread across suburbs, exurbs, small cities, and mixed income communities. But again, when they think talk about the black community, they're always talking the inner city. And then the other thing, when they talk about inner city, they don't work. Well, wait a minute. Most black Americans work. Labor force participation among among black adults remain high relative to population share. Millions work in healthcare, education, logistics, government, [music] tech, sales, construction, professional services. Millions of black households earn middle and upper income, upper middle income. [music] Six figure black households exists across all industries, not just sports and entertainment. Even in the distressed neighborhoods, people go to work. we take care of the kids. The problem is not that the success doesn't exist. The problem is success doesn't sell outrage.
[music] >> I don't know if you can think of a people uh who were more held back, [music] more deprived, more sabotaged than African-Ameans. You took everything away from them and took them away from everything. They started in your country uh at less than zero, literally regarded and treated [music] as subhuman, not allowed to learn to read or write or anything for hundreds of years. But you see, they come from a people of accomplishment to one degree or another, not a people of piracy and theft and appropriation. They come from a people uh who created and built and developed [music] in their own countries, in their own land. And even though you did everything that you could possibly do to suppress them, to hold them down, to hold them back, and you're still doing that until today, [music] nevertheless, uh I don't think anyone can dispute the fact that African-Ameans have become a global cultural superpower.
>> We are the only group of people, black Americans, that [music] thrives even through oppression.
When you look at Africa, the colonization destroyed the country, the the continent [music] in their countries.
When you when you think about it, they ran them to the UK. They ran them to America. [music] We're the only people that sat on this land and we said, "I wish I would leave."
We the [music] only one that really fought back collective. We have to get that mindset again. We fought back against the system and we're we're still thriving. [music] And I think that's what the beef is. But they not going to say that, are they?
Black Americans are the only people who has never oppressed another demographic of individuals. Black Americans are the only race that has never caused any form of chaos or destruction in this land.
Black Americans are the only ones who have been consistently oppressed throughout time. Black Americans are the only ones who have never decided to be racist and/or oppressive and/or cause enslavement and/or push down andor cause corruption within the government. We are the purest form of the race. No matter where you go, there's racism and oppression against black Americans. When I say bring me back black, I'm talking a black American. You guys do not realize they will lie to your faces and say every race has done wrong. Black Americans are the only race who has never done wrong. We have always consistently been enslaved. We have always consistently been raped, poked, prodded, used as DNA, uh mules for certain type of healthc care studies and different things like that. We have consistently been the backbone to everything that you have as an advancement today came from the pain of my ancestors. My demographic is the only one that has never done the chaos or destruction of any of your races. And this is not even me trying to kick you down and say that we are better, but low-key we are. My demographic is the only one that has never inflicted that type of pain or destruction on any race on any nationality. And that's something that I take with pride. [music] To be a black American is the most purest form.
We are the most purest individuals. We are the most innocent. And that's amazing.
>> Black Americans are the most resilient because we lost everything. You look at other cultures, they still, oh, I'm Haitian and I'm black and I'm I'm Jamaican or I'm Salvadorian and I'm Guatemalan. They still get to like got music to fool us. It's like we still had a soul food. We hip hop, we the lamb, we the dance, we the crew, we the jazz uh uh uh uh uh uh uh like we just be we be geeking. You feel me?
>> Black men and women in America. I just want to say you guys are so resilient.
It's so [music] shameful how dishonest our history books are about what what happened to black Americans, how we treated people, [music] and how this country came to be. It is so shameful.
The fact that when white men wrote our constitution and had [music] the audacity to say that men are created equal, all men are created equal, while those same people writing those lines [music] enslaved human beings. The hypocrisy is just astounding in that constitution, despite how they were treated for so long and that they fought for this country [music] to live up to those ideals. This country would not be anything. This country wouldn't be without black Americans [music] fighting nonstop for centuries, for generations for equality. And we're not there. We're not even close. We're not there. Black Americans actually believe in democracy. They actually [music] believe in equality. They actually believe in freedom. I just have to say, it's remarkable. And black Americans are so strong. It is incredible how strong you guys are. I'm sorry. Sorry, I'm crying. [music] It's just thinking about it all is just insane to me. What generations of black Americans have been through and what they continue to go through and the gaslighting [music] is just crazy.
>> Africanamean community could be the richest community in the world cuz you have something that [music] white people do not have and it could be a superpower. People hang out the most outside of their homes, around the walk around, outside in general and among each other where there's a lot of social life. White people are very isolated.
They don't go out a lot. They don't socialize a lot. [music] The community you have, the communities you have, subcommunities you have are something wonderful. It is something that could make you the richest communities in the world. One of the superpowers I have as an Italian living in America is the fact that I came here, I created my little community of Italians, which is my family, my friends, and everything. We literally collaborate. When somebody does something bad, we put them out. We don't make them part of the group.
Somebody has an idea, we put money together. Somebody wants to try something, we all go with that person and we share costs. We share everything.
Cost of living of an immigrant that lives in a community like I do is lower than the average American. And the easiness to get into larger investment has never been as easy because you not work as one person buying something. You work as a group of 30 people buying together or investing together or thinking together. Bro, if black people would act the same way as Chinese people do, they would be so much more powerful, so much more rich. There are so many black people in the world. There are so many, especially African-Americans. Bro, the thing is they are not bonding.
They're fighting each [music] other. If they will be as united as Chinese people, no, they will be powerful as fuck, but they're divided. But they could be powerful, but they don't have this unity. They don't have this gene which makes them connected. Or maybe it's the elite which keeps them divided.
>> I love my black Americans and [music] I totally understand the anger and the helplessness and the frustration and just anything and everything y'all feel.
Like I totally understand. I [music] don't understand from personal experience obviously, but I understand just thinking about it, conceptualizing [music] it, considering what you guys have been through for so long and how that would [music] make me feel.
>> The world is not waiting for us to wake up to our power. It is time for African-Ameans to take a seat at the table, not only in America, but also in the global e economy. Unfortunately, we continue to place our power in the hands of those who have historically oppressed us. And even worse, we continue to oppress each other. This is the meaning of internalized oppression.
To continue to fall into the cultural hypnosis of thinking that white America controls our lives is a true abdication of our personal power. And the reality is is that each and every day is an opportunity for us to create a new and powerful story in our culture. And unless we find a way to write this new story and to claim our power, there will be devastating implications for our community and for the world.
>> Hello and welcome back. Thanks again for watching this far. I really appreciate you all. The whole world wants to talk like black Americans. The whole world wants to walk with the swagger of black Americans. The whole world wants to wear the fashion of black Americans. And the whole world absolutely 100% wants to sing the way black Americans sing.
Basic. The definition of cool is black American. The definition of influence is black American. You cannot talk about American culture without talking about black American culture because black American culture has influenced like 98% of the American culture that we have today. It is the reason why we have American English. It's because of black Americans. Black Americans can just talk or speak with broken English and you won't even tell it because it's going to sound a little bit cool. It's going to sound actually cool because everybody wants to do it. The typical English language is very tedious how the British actually speak. Do you want to go there?
Black Americans are going to see it in another way. Do you want to go there?
That is cool, man. That is cool. Tell me who you are. Black Americans are going to tell you this way. Tell me who you is. Yeah, that actually absolutely has got to make you feel good about yourself. But somebody coming to you, hey, what's up, homie? Tell me who you is. Yeah, you know it sounds broken when it's actually written on a piece of paper, but when a black Americans picks it, oh my goodness, that is the definition of cool over there. Taking something that's broken and building it into something that everybody wants to copy. And that's why black American culture is the most influential culture on the planet. Period. You'll find people in Asian countries far away from America. Yeah. In even a country like North Korea, they're trying to copy black American culture. You know, South Korea is just another thing, man. The whole essence of K-pop is just a copycat of hip-hop. You know, they copy the music and sing that them in their own languages. So, it's just transcribed in their own language. So you can't even talk about South Korean music industry without mentioning black American music industry because it is black American music industry especially the hip-hop general that actually has absolute influenced the K-pop you know culture.
Talk about Chinese people influenced by black Americans. Japanese people influenced by black Americans. Have you seen Tokyo fashion? Yeah, man. You need to talk, you need actually to go look it up on Tik Tok or Instagram. That is black American fashion right there. That shows you how, you know, melanated folks have power, especially when they come together, when they unite, when they do something, you know, that actually benefits their own community. The only reason why they want to disunite us, the only reason why they want to keep you divided, quarering within yourself, you and your brother, not wanting to support your brother, it's because they know the power that melanated folks have once they are united. They want to keep you thinking that you are the minority, yet they are the minority. You are the majority on this planet. People of color, especially melanated folks, are the majority period. Find you find actually original people of any continent on this planet to be melanated folks. You'll find melanated folks in Africa. Yeah, that is everybody knows that you'll find melanated folks as far as Australia, the Aboriginals. Go look it up. You'll find black Japanese people. You'll find black Filipinos.
You'll find black Indians, you know, you'll find black Chinese people. You'll find Yeah. Latinos is another story. The original people on the South American continent were melanated.
You'll find them there. And then when it comes to North America, especially America itself, they want to tell you that you came on a boat really. But I'm going to leave it at that because yeah, it is true that some people did come on a boat, but it was used as a cover up because if you look at what you know, Christopher Columbus actually said in his memoir, the people how he described the people that he found on the mainland. Exactly. Melanated folks. But that might have been used as a cover up, you know, because it doesn't make sense, you know. It doesn't economically make sense. But there you have it. You know, when you look at now the communities in this episode, especially, you know, Asian community, the Latino community who also have a problem, who actually have a problem with how they look, with wanting that a white acceptance, with, you know, wanting to be close or within close proximity to whiteness. you know, some of their members coming online and publicly admitting that, yeah, they actually absolutely recognize the black influence in America. They wouldn't be where they are without melanated folks, without black people. They wouldn't, you know, be who they are without black people admitting, you know, the power of black American culture and influence. It is a fresh you know or breath of fresh air because most of the members in their own communities are have this kind of you know I don't want even to call it selfhatred because it is self-inflicted by you know generations upon generations upon generations to think that anything that has a lighter shade of melanin is actually way better and desirable than anything that has a deep shade of melanin. And that's absolutely, you know, a very bad thing, especially for them. But let me know in the comments what do you think about today's episode.
Subscribe to the channel if you're new.
Hit a like button. And as always, see you on the next
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