Racial distrust between groups often stems from historical power imbalances where one group has systematically oppressed another; trust is built through consistent safety over time, and addressing systemic oppression requires acknowledging historical wrongs and actively dismantling ongoing discriminatory structures rather than simply claiming change has occurred.
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"White Americans Believe That Black Americans Are ILLEGALLY In Americans"Added:
So, this is for educational purposes only. The question says, why do black people hate white people so much? It goes both ways. Let's talk about it. Let me tell you why it doesn't work both ways. Never has there been a time in the United States in which black people had structural power and the ability to weaponize that power to discriminate and hate against white people. However, there was a period of time, a long period of time in the United States in which white people hated black people for nothing other than their race and had the power to do something about it.
White pride is rooted in white supremacy and was birthed out of a place of exerting power and control over other demographics of people. Black pride, on the other hand, was rooted in surviving oppression. Black pride was the conscious collective effort of a community to stop the eraser of culture and history. Any hatred, vitrial, and distrust by black people for white people is a natural byproduct of years of systemic oppression in the United States. The pathway forward to building that bridge and regaining that trust is for white people to not only acknowledge the egregious acts that the United States government committed against black Americans, not only acknowledge the wrongdoing of our ancestors. Most white people have done that part.
They're starting to acknowledge history.
But it stops there. They will say that's a long time ago. This is now. The problem is today, white people are still feigning ignorance and they're not actively working to stand in solidarity and dismantle the tools of oppression that are still in place today. Most white people, particularly white people on the right, will tell you that systemic racism does not exist today. In spite of the mounting evidence and data right now in our country, there is this yearning for this kumbaya. Can't we all just get along? The problem with that line of thinking is that it's very superficial. It's surface level. In a perfect world, we just say, "Stop the hate, end racism, everybody get along, and voila, everything will be back to normal." The reason why that never works is because there is something much larger and nefarious at play that profits off of our division. Till we, and when I say we, I mean particularly white people, cuz black people have been screaming this for years. Until we address the institutions and systems that are perpetuating this racism, we will never affect change. You know, there was a time when I used to hear black people say, "Screw them saltines."
I'll say it mildly. But I used to get so mad until I understood the root cause of black pain and black anger in this country. It wasn't until I got educated, I deconstructed and re-educated myself that my whole worldview and perspective changed. I will never say any form of hatred or bigotry is okay. But if I see hatred coming from a marginalized community, from a group of people that have historically been oppressed, I will try to understand and empathize where that hatred is coming from and do the work to do what I can to deescalate and defuse that hatred and turn it into love. But that takes a whole lot of work in earning trust. And I don't know what length people who look like me.
>> A new debate is now coming out of the on the media everywhere. People are now discussing this issue spreading online and uh it's raising a difficult question about identity, history and belonging in America. All right. Some white American are now making claims that questioning that whether black Americans are illegally or or rightfully part of the US. Okay. And uh the backlash has been uh very very immediate because for many uh people this argument ignore one major reality. Black Americans are deeply tied to the history, labor and culture and also development of the US. Why are these conversation becoming louder right now that black people are not either they belong in America illegally or illegally? Tell in the comment section I have clips here. Watch them. I'll come back and talk more about the video.
>> Hey, what's going on everybody? First off, I want to say thank you to everybody that uh liked and commented on the other video. Uh it's doing big numbers. I appreciate it. I couldn't get to everybody, but I really appreciate the engagement. Um I always believed in using analogies as ways to paint what I was uh trying to convey. And so, you know, it just I just found it an easier way to to to kind of get my message across. And so I want to use it in this same video where um I want to now convey to white America why black people have this certain feeling towards white America and uh black Americans feelings towards reparations.
Now of course I can't speak for everybody but the consensus.
So for white America, I want you to understand this. I want you to take Animal Planet. I want you to take a lion and a gazelle. Do you ever see a gazelle just stand there as the lion walks up?
No. Why? Because for generations, the lion has been ripping the gazelle apart.
The lion has been chasing it down and eating it for generations.
The gazelle does not trust the lion whatsoever. Why? Because it has been a predator.
So, do you think that one day that a lion walks up and says, "Hey, gazelle, we don't eat gazelle anymore. You're tripping. Stop doing stop running away from us." And then a gazelle looks at the corner of his eye, see another lion chewing on another gazelle. What do you think the gazelle is going to do? One, get away from me. No, I don't want you by me because I don't trust you. I don't trust that I could go to sleep and wake up alive. [laughter] So until the lion starts to transform its behavior and go, "Hey, you know what? I'm going to start eating these leaves and these berries and these plants over here and I'm not going to eat another gazelle."
The gazelle is not going to trust you.
It's just what it is. All right? So you have to change your nature.
Your nature is not displaying trust.
And this has been generations of abuse.
So, no, you can't just one day go, "We're not like that anymore. We're going to trust you." You can't go, "Oh, well, that was my father and father's father and father's father, you know, that was my ancestor that used to eat gazels." No, you're still eating gazels.
You may not be eating gazels. You may be the exception. You may be the one that be eating plants and and berries and stuff, [clears throat] but you got to look around and see the other lions. The other lions are still eating gazelle.
So, until you're walking up to them other lions and and paw slapping them, hey, stop doing that.
That's what the relationship is going to be.
You can't ask the mouse to be friends with the cat. That's only going to work in Tom and Jerry.
when it comes to reparations. Now, I'm only talking for foundational black Americans. I'm not talking about immigrant Africans that have come over here. And if you're an immigrant African, your family, but at the same time, your opinion and your input on reparations is invalid.
We don't need to hear your opinion. I mean, you can support, but you're not entitled to any of that money. You're not entitled to any of that equity. You're not entitled to any of it.
If you know, if you come over here, yeah, you're probably going to get treated like us anyway because you look like us. You are us. We are we're family.
But we didn't grow up in the same culture. We didn't have the same lineage of oppression.
So, whatever oppression that you came that you might have came from and many black Americans feel about white Americans and why. Okay, let's talk.
Because I'm tired of all these fake conversations. You know, people always want to ask, "Why do black people seem distant or cautious or skeptical towards white people?" They usually uh when you all ask that as white people, you're usually expecting some type of emotional answer. But the response is not emotional, y'all. It's historical. It's based on history. It's sociological.
And it's also it's a pattern. See, for first thing, black people are not a monolith. We're not all the same. Some people, some blacks are married to white spouses, right? Some of us have white best friends. Some, some of us work in white dominated spaces every day and thrive. But there is still something that exists underneath of that, y'all.
And it's called collective memory. You hear that, white folk? Collective memory.
Let's talk about sociology. That's why I just love sociology, study of people and concepts and things, because the sociology of trust.
Trust is built through consistent safety over time. Let me repeat that. Trust is built over consistent safety over time.
So, as a parent, your kid knows, oh, my mom is going to feed me every evening at 5 because you've consistently been feeding Jimmy at 5 for the past three years. So, you have built up a trust.
Your kid knows that based on history of my mother and what she's done for me in the past three years, she's consistent with what she's going to do today. Well, that's how it is with black people and our feelings towards white folk.
If a group experiences enslavement, as black folk did, legal segregation, voter suppression, housing discrimination, medical exploitation over centuries now, over centuries, our actual nervous system, the nervous system of that group, we adapt. So that's not opinion, that's called trauma science. Okay?
Communities develop protective instincts. This is for the sake of survival, right? And America has a long documented record of racial hierarchy.
See, this isn't ancient history. The Civil Rights Act passed in 1964.
That's not even one lifetime ago. You understand? So, let's talk about data because some of you all are really stuck on data. Studies from Pew Research consistently show a significant racial trust gap in America. Black Americans report lower levels of trust in institutions, law enforcement, and government compared to white Americans.
That distrust, distrust didn't appear out of nowhere. It follows experiences, and experiences follow policy. So, let's talk about economics and pattern recognition. We talk about redlinining.
Redlinining wasn't a rumor. It was federal policy. The GI Bill disproportionately excluded black veterans. mass incarceration, polices disproportionately um a affected black communities. When you see patterns repeat across generations over and over and over again, you don't call it coincidence. You call it structure. And structure shapes perception, you all.
So, what do many black people think? We don't necessarily, not all of us, some of us do now, but not all of us think hate. Most of us don't think revenge, but caution. Oh, yeah. Welcome back.
Black American are not new to America.
First first thing first, the history is in the in the country goes back centuries for many many years ago. It was long before modern politics uh debate generation of black Americans lived, worked and built and survived in the United States often under a condition they did not choose. they were forced to be there from slavery to segregation to the civil rights movement and everything you know so black Americans helped shape the nation while fighting for equal treatment within uh the US that's why many people are now seeing this online claim that historically disconnected from reality because whether through labor culture military science and business or activism Black Americans have been part of the US for a long time since the beginning right now. Moment of economic anxiety and political division often increase theity based on the argument.
Right? When people feel uncertainty about the future, some people now I mean some people now looks for a group or to blame or a question. Right? That means uh that once stayed on the edge of the society can now spread instantly online.
And when the controversial claim get attention attention quickly but many critics say this narrative are less about facts and more more about fear, frustration and changing the demographic in America. So many black Americans responded to this claim with disbelief or frustration. Some people are now just pointing out the contradiction of our questioning the belonging of the people whose families have been in America for generation. Others are now highlighting this historically sacrifice black Americans made in uh made in war, civil rights struggle and education, sports and also culture. And many simply asked how can people who helped to build the nation still have their own blowing questioned the question reveals a deeper issue about race and identity. So in in this lifetime in America they are like what you talking about because this story is not really about legal status.
It's about a national identity who is seen as fully American who gets accepted as automatically seen as a a US citizen legally and who continue to have their place questioned. Right? [snorts] These old thing are not new to people but they are now becoming more visible in an era rapid culture and political change and maybe just maybe that's why this conversation becomes so emotional because underneath there's argument is a deeper struggle over how America sees itself right and uh before the day ends history cannot be written through viral posts or angry debate.
Black Americans are not outside of to the American history. They are part of the a part of the it foundation, its culture and its evolution. And as as America continue to change, this conversation will likely grow louder.
But will the push back against narrative that attempt to erase the history of where somebody belongs? Tell me in the comments where we don't this whereby we don't just come here and talk about something without sharing your views on the comment section. Tell me in the comments. Do you feel like Americans are really trying to erase the history of black people in American history or do you feel like black people have been the foundation the founder of uh of the of of uh America? Because every time I come here and and and and read the comment in in in everything, I learn something new. I learn a new story. I I a new idea. I get new knowledge about history of America. All right. Tell the comments and God bless you. Peace be with you. I'm out.
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