The video provides a sobering critique of the "minority solidarity" myth, arguing that proximity between marginalized groups does not guarantee shared interests or mutual respect. It challenges viewers to move beyond performative inclusion and focus on the hard realities of institutional power and cultural friction.
Deep Dive
Prerequisite Knowledge
- No data available.
Where to go next
- No data available.
Deep Dive
latino Crowd Torches Black Chicago Woman’s Car and Baby ClothesAdded:
Black people should be joining [music] in to help the the Latin community Mhm.
to fend off um [music] everything that they've been experiencing by the hands of the government right now. All No, black Americans are resting. Somebody tell them we're resting in the chapel right here.
>> ICE raids, the meeting them at at their court hearings, schools, so forth and so on. Zip tying children. And a lot of black people feel like y'all are racist, so we're going to stay out of it. Which is it is true. I've experienced it since moving to Dallas that the Hispanic and the Latin community a large portion of them do not like black people. They're culturally racist.
Okay, that's what you need to understand. Cult- it's cultural. Okay?
There's no lying about that. That is something that you guys have to tackle and deal with. My wife is biracial. She's half Mexican. And even when we go to predominantly Mexican places, if looks could kill she'd be dead. The disgust, the disdain, the the the little comments they make.
They can't stand seeing her with a black dude. They think she's less than because she is with a black dude. So it is [music] some issues that we need to tackle. 100% proximity to YT [music] does not make you YT. And I wish the Latin community would understand that. No, you ain't got to teach them nothing, man. That that's not your people to teach, man. You can't teach them nothing. I'm just talking to my people. I I ain't I don't care what they do over there.
See, as long as we have money, power, political power, as long as we have our institutions in place, we're going to be fine. Black folk need to refocus on ourselves.
All right. And I'm not going to break up this conversation because I want you all to understand that we need to focus on us just like every other group is focusing on themselves. One of the best things we could have done is delineate.
So now we can say, "Well, who's with us and who's not?" But let's go ahead and keep listening.
For my people. For us. After they are done with them old reliable is still there as the boogeyman. We have always been the boogeyman. Crime [music] has been our fault. Unemployment has been our fault.
Welfare, this, that, and the third.
Yeah, but see, again, black Americans, real black, we don't give a damn what white people think or the newspapers or nothing else. That's why we keep dancing, keep going to school, keep enjoying ourselves, keep having our little cookouts, making our music. We don't care what they think. This is That's all for their entertainment. We don't White people don't live in our brains like that. And Mexicans, Latinos absolutely don't either.
Okay? That's How could we be focused on them so much and still be as productive as we are? You understand what I'm saying? We can't do that. That's not what we do. That's not part of our culture.
Uh but anyway, I'm going to move on to the next video. Y'all hit the number one button and uh make sure you subscribe to the channel if you have not already. I certainly would appreciate you taking the opportunity to subscribe to this channel. Okay?
Uh let's move on to the next video and uh let's check out some more of what folk have to say.
Uh hit the number one button, family.
Learning about black intellectuals like Frantz Fanon. One thing that I feel that we need to discuss in the Latino community is the decolonization of how we think and how we understand Latin American history and US history, how that shapes our identity and how we experience the US.
And one thing that I feel that needs to really be addressed is how we sugarcoat certain terms, how many in the Latino community will deny that racism exists and they'll prop up terms like colorism and anti-blackness or anti-indigenous to somehow circumvent that being labeled as racist. Cuz the reality is that anyone who adopts anti-indigenous or anti-blackness or colorist ideas in the Latino community is doing it through racism. And I feel that many Latinos would have a better understanding of decolonial thought if they put their anti-blackness to the side and listened and read about black intellectuals like Frantz Fanon. His works of Black Skin, White Masks or The Wretched of the Earth are just a few works to start with. But go ahead and let me know what you think.
What I think is that it's great that they would learn from black leadership. But the truth is, again, it's cultural racism. It's a toxin.
And anybody who studied chemistry or, you know, uh toxicology understands that the only way that you can get rid of a toxin is to flush it out. You're not going to educate it out of people. You're not going to People are not going to leave their strongly held beliefs alone. And again, when you're dealing with a system when one group has the opportunity to do things and maneuver power in the system that benefits them as opposed to another group, which they can exclude naturally they're going to benefit themselves. And so you can't expect Mexicans, Latinos not to come together and do what's in their own best interest. Black people are the only one to try to include everybody in the group.
But it's black people's idea. Yeah, black and brown. This That's black people always trying to extend uh olive branches everybody. That's not that's not what other people do. Other groups look out for themselves. Okay?
Um let's keep listening to the broadcast. Okay? Y'all hit the number one button. And we're going to keep on pushing. Let's uh let's let's uh let's talk about Well, actually, you know what? Let me go ahead and uh get this one thing this one this one going, too. You guys know the rapper Plies, right?
>> All my Latino buddies, they was on what I was on.
But now that I look at it I it ain't as clear to me no more. And I'm trying to ask y'all do y'all feel, Latino brothers and sisters, do y'all feel y'all are more in line with black folk or do y'all feel like y'all are now more aligned with Caucasian?
You know, and I don't know if y'all feel like y'all more aligned with Caucasians or if y'all inspired to be more like them than y'all do black folk. Like I don't know.
I'm fine with it either way.
I'm just trying to get clarity on it cuz it's not as clear to me now. Bro, you're the only fool in the group.
Anybody who grew up in Southern California, I mean, you remember the racial riots. You you understand that?
This junk Yeah, man, you know I don't understand that. I mean, why would you expect a group of people who come from car If you go to Mexico, you see those little figurines where they have the ancient Mayan but they have still those ancient Mayan type things uh in some of those places. And the way they treat the black people indigenous there, it he's the only one uh delusional. Let's keep listening.
>> than it used to be. Like I I used to think we was in the same fight. Mhm. But now when I see things, you know, I remember the last election talking to Latino folk and they oh, no, no, no, he he going No, we him No, we he going to give us money.
He going to, you know. And I was like, goddamn. Like that's the [ __ ] who want to get y'all out of here. And the only reason I'm asking because I I want to I need to know who I'm defending.
>> [laughter] >> Like I don't want to be defending no [ __ ] who who don't even [ __ ] with me, for real.
No. So I'm asking so I know who I should and shouldn't be defending. Mhm. Um so if y'all can, just help me under- Why >> stand y'all thought process. Why would they be honest with you about their deepest held thoughts? Why would you You sound like an idiot asking these people to be honest about being It is It's only some of them that will. Most folk are going to deny. Why would they do that?
Why would they reveal that to you and they're being racist and their racism is directed towards you? I don't understand.
Why be so naive? You get on the internet and ask that. Maybe hopefully you already know the answer to the question.
And you're simply just uh I don't know.
Doing this this is purely performative.
Uh let's keep pushing. Y'all hit the number one button. We'll uh listen to some more. Check this out. Now this is something I found entry This is Oh, wait. Wait.
Now what you see happening, this is in Chicago.
This is uh where a bunch of young Hispanic people have taken over a city crowd a city street. And they they took it upon themselves to begin to attack a black woman in her car in Chicago. All right? And so you can see how it turns out.
Now the street is blocked off. She can't drive through. She doesn't want to drive over anybody and hurt anybody. So she's getting out of the car trying to get them away from the car. They've done popped the trunk. And it gets worse.
Y'all hit the number one button.
They're going to set this black woman's car on fire.
You understand what I'm saying?
So, this is what happened when these folk get numbers, right? This is what's going on in Chicago. This is very recent. Look it up.
Look at that.
Police coming to scatter it.
But but we're the violent ones, right?
Where where all the Latinos at? This What do y'all have to say about this?
Where you Latino folks at who call me racist? I'm just supposed to ignore this?
I'm just asking. Just let me know.
So, they set this black woman's car on fire, and we just supposed to just I'm asking. Where y'all at?
I'll see you in the chat room.
Let me know. How should I respond to this as a black American man? I'm seeing this foundational black American woman with a trunk full of baby clothes, and you got these Hispanics who chopped off blocked up the street to do whatever, these youngsters, and uh but we're we're the problem.
What what's your response to this? Where y'all at? You've been talking a lot in the chat room. I I just want to know.
And so, when I tell you all that these folks are culturally racist, and when they get their numbers up, that's when they really start showing their whole complete and entire ass, which is the same thing they did in California, cuz it was all good back in the '80s when they were coming up from El Salvador and Honduras, and they had their little ESL classes and biracial classes and whatnot. You had the Hispanic teaching teachers aid on one side. It was all good. We played together, played football together. It was all good. But then, when they start getting their numbers up, this is the start of This is what I see. I see Cubans down in Miami who are members of the Young Republicans saying racist [ __ ] about black Americans. I see Mexicans calling black people N-word in Dallas. I see uh Mexicans and Latinos in in high schools in California attacking and beating up little black boys. I see, you know, a racist uh you know, I mean, did you all need to see that again? Maybe we need to see this I see a racist HPD officer uh named Ashley Gonzalez, and she just rolled out the epithets. I I mean, let's let's let's let you tell me.
Tell me what I'm supposed No homo or nothing. Y'all don't know how good it felt to say like out loud. Like, goddamn, [ __ ] Like, oh my god. I feel like I was back in the Marine Corps, [ __ ] Like, I I like I kid you not. I don't know what the [ __ ] came over me. I grabbed that [ __ ] by the neck, and I was like, "Come here, you [ __ ] nigger." And oh my god, like, I felt like the world just stopped. Like, it was just peace. Like, I like I don't know. And then, he was just like like even I in my head, I was like, "Damn, [ __ ] that was out there."
Cuz I called him a [ __ ] [ __ ] dog.
Like, imagine how many [ __ ] downtown chinks were there. They could have beaten my ass. And then, he like stopped like, "YOU JUST CALLED me a [ __ ] nigger." I was like, "You're a nigger." I was like, "Oh my god. Like, you're a [ __ ] [ __ ] and I called you a nigger." Like, world peace, [ __ ] But I got so much off of my chest just by saying [ __ ] out loud.
Like, it felt really good, guys. Like, >> [music] >> So, where all the Latinos at? I I want to understand. How are we as foundational black Americans who've dealt with hundreds of years of open racism and bigotry, how are we supposed to take that?
I I I just want to understand that. I mean, you know, I mean, maybe I didn't hear what I thought I heard, but it seemed to me like she rolled off the N-word. Every third word was the N-word.
Let me know. You all let me know.
Related Videos
DeenTheGreat Is Absolutely DISGUSTING
challzbrown
681 views•2026-05-29
Choa Chu Kang Tragedy Raises Questions About Warning Signs and Relationship Violence
TwentyTwoThirty
872 views•2026-05-29
Why Is It ALWAYS About The Pregnant One? 😂
alikicomedy
9K views•2026-05-30
Flotilla activist on 'racist' response to Ben Gvir's video of her
MiddleEastEye
13K views•2026-05-29
10 French Cities That Could Collapse First as the Homeless Crisis Worsens
InsideEuropeToday
359 views•2026-05-29
Elections Are Rigged! Only Those In Government Can Tell How ~ Diana Ngao & Mark Ouko
RadioGenKe
696 views•2026-06-02
White People RECOUNTS How Great Black People Are Becoming So Fast Now They Can't Take It
mrsan_20
939 views•2026-05-30
Foreign-Owned Shops Targeted as Anti-Migrant Tensions Rise in South Africa
aljazeeraenglish
25K views•2026-05-30











