This video provides a sharp structural analysis, reframing anti-Blackness as a foundational pillar of the global hierarchy rather than mere personal prejudice. It effectively illustrates how systemic fear is weaponized to preserve a socio-economic status quo built on historical exploitation.
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BLACK PEOPLE Are Nolonger Silent About This QUESTION And The TRUTH Is Finally SAID Out LOUD追加:
What did black people in America do to deserve this level of hatred and disdain? Most of us, our ancestors, we started coming here in the year 1619.
We've never started a war with you.
We've never tried to take the country away. We've never undermined the country. So my question here in America, what did black people do to deserve this level of ongoing hatred and disdain?
That is my question. America. Thank you.
>> A few days ago, somebody left a comment on one of my pages that just stopped me cold. And I had to think about it, but this is what they asked me. They said, "Why do they hate us so much?" And I want to answer that, okay? Honestly, because that question has lived in the hearts of black Americans for 400 years.
And it deserves more than just a shrug.
Like, I don't know. But here's what I do know.
It's not really about hate.
It's about fear. Stay with me. Stay with me. When you build an entire identity, an entire social order on the idea that you are above someone else, their freedom doesn't feel like justice to you. It feels like a threat. It feels like like loss.
It feels like your floor is being pulled out from under you. See, that's what we've been dealing with before this country ever even had a name. Okay?
Enslavers didn't just want free labor.
They needed black people to be less than because if we were equal, the whole story they told about themselves would fall apart. Okay?
And when that system ended, they built new ones, didn't they? Jim Crow, red lining, mass incarceration, voter suppression, still trying to do that. And every single one designed to maintain the same thing. Distance because distance meant dominance.
So, so when Jimmy Lee Jackson tried to help his grandfather vote, see that felt like a threat to somebody. All right.
When when John Lewis crossed that bridge, that Edmund Predis bridge creating good trouble, that felt like a threat to somebody. When we build, when we vote, when we teach our children that they are black and beautiful, when we teach them their history, that feels like a threat to somebody. It shouldn't, but it does.
A and it does. Not because we're dangerous, but because they're afraid.
Afraid of a level playing field. Okay?
Afraid of accountability.
afraid of what equal and equality actually cost them and fear. Fear dressed up in violence, in policy, in laws, in a damaged gravestone, in name calling, whatever it is, it's still just fear.
Now, here's what I want you to hold on to. Fear cannot organize the way love can.
Fear can't sustain the way purpose can.
Fear can't build anything that lasts.
We're still here. After everything, we are still here. And that's not an accident, y'all. It ain't luck either.
That's us.
People who refuse to let fear have the last word. Okay? So the next time somebody asks why do they hate us so much, remind them they don't just hate us, they fear us. Okay? As they should because we we're still here and ain't going nowhere.
I just want to ask, what did black people do to everybody on the earth to make y'all feel the way that y'all feel about us? What did we do? What is it that y'all trying to keep us from doing, man?
What? What would What the What? What in the hell did we do to anybody to deserve any of the things that we, you know, we're getting right now? Like, what did we do from the the police killings on down to the, you know, on down to everything, man.
You know, red line and all that. What do we do?
What do we do to y'all in other countries, man, to make y'all not like us, bro? What do we do?
Somebody tell me, man. Somebody put it in the comments, man. Please tell me, man. What do we do?
>> I have seen this question being asked several times by the black people on the social media, especially on Tik Tok, that why do they hate us so much? What did we do to them that is making them to hate us so bad? or why do we deserve this? Well, I came across the responses of the black folks because you know the more the question is being asked, the more people get so paranoid and come out with their responses. Then I say why not stitch them together and roll for you guys so that we can get the opinion of the people. And also I want to know in the comment section why do you think these people majority of them hate black people so bad? Like what did you literally do to be hated this much? Is it because the black people are succeeding? Is it because black people are strong? Is it because the black people are thriving in a system they were not designed to or what's literally going on? But anyway guys, before I talk much, let me roll for you the clips because some things are so heartbreaking and I don't understand why human beings, some of them decide to hate on the fellow human beings. Kindly give the video a thumbs up, subscribe if you're coming across the channel for the very first time. and I'm here to remind you that this video is for educational purposes only. So, let's let me roll for you the clips.
>> Black people have been asking the same question for centuries. What did we do to y'all? Like, seriously, what the [ __ ] did we actually do? Because at some point, you have to stop believing that this is random. You stop believing that this is just ignorance. [music] Because how are black people simultaneously copied, feared, mocked, criminalized, fetishized, segregated, underpaid, overpoliced, erased, and exploited on basically every continent on Earth.
[music] At some point, you have to realize, oh, this is not about behavior.
This is not about morality. It's not even about individual black folks. This is what blackness was made to represent in the modern world. And that answer is ugly because the truth is black people became the foundation. the modern world built hierarchy on. That's the [music] answer. Not because black people did something uniquely wrong. Not because we're uniquely violent. Not because we're uniquely criminal, but because Europe and then the United States needed a permanent bottom cast to justify slavery, colonialism, empire, and capitalism. You can't build an empire on stolen labor without creating a group you can convince the world deserves exploitation. That is what we became.
That is what black people became the justification, the bottom rung. And once the world built itself around blackness meaning less than, every other group learned to define themselves in opposition to that. Right? That is why anti-blackness survives. Even in places with barely any black people because it's not based on personal interaction.
It's ideological, structural, inherited.
Now, let me show you what I mean when I say everywhere. In China during COVID, black residents in Wanu were forcibly evicted from their apartments, refused service at restaurants, banned from McDonald's, and quarantined separately from everybody else. In 2016, a Chinese laundry detergent commercial showed a black man shoved in a washing machine and coming back out as a clean, light-skinned Chinese man that ran on national TV. In India, black African students have been beaten in the streets, followed by mobs, refused housing. The skin lightening industry itself is worth over a billion dollars.
Billion would they be. In Russia, when the country invaded the Ukraine in 2022, black students were pulled off buses at gunpoint by the Ukrainian police to make room for white refugees. In Italy and Spain, black professional soccer players still have bananas thrown at them on the field. In 2026, in Lebanon and across the Persian Gulf, African and Asian women work as domestic laborers under a system that legally ties them to their employers. What is that called? Yeah.
Their passports get taken. They can't leave. Multiple of them have died by suicide, trapped in homes that they just can't escape. In Brazil, police kill more black people every year than almost any other country on Earth. Now, remember, they're a country that's over 56% black. In Argentina, the black population was literally erased from the official census for over a century.
Whole countries pretending that blackness doesn't exist within them. The hatred is global. The pattern is identical. It all traces back to the same source code. And it is profitable.
The global skin lightening market is worth between 14 and 19 billion per year. The same multinational corporations that publicly supported BLM, they're selling skin bleaching creams in 60 countries to black and brown women trying to escape blackness.
All so they can be considered beautiful.
L'Oreal Proctor and Gamble, Estee Lauder, y'all remember Fair and Lovely.
I do. After 2020, when global protest called out the racism, they changed the name from Fair and Lovely to Glow and Lovely. And they kept selling it. Same product, same premise, different label.
The hatred is profitable. That's part of why it stays. The other part is psychological. If black people are at the bottom of the global hierarchy, then no matter how badly your group is treated, you can still position yourself above somebody. Anti-blackness is the bottom rung that holds the whole ladder up. Take it away. And the entire structure has to be rebuilt from scratch. And that's why it doesn't move.
Black people are the constant negative reference point. every other group on earth uses to figure out where they stand. And the scary part is you can see how this plays out in everyday life, right? Because when one black person does something wrong, suddenly all of us become suspects, one black kid acts up in school, now black children are out of control, one black employee messes up, now DEI is lowering standards, one black neighborhood struggles with poverty, now blackness itself becomes associated with dysfunction. But when white people commit atrocities, suddenly everybody becomes deeply committed to nuance.
Mental health, isolation, economic anxiety, a troubled loner. White people get individuality. Black people get collective judgment. That is conditioning. That's centuries of propaganda teaching the world that blackness represents. Danger, incompetence, aggression, hypersexuality, criminality, laziness, whatever the society needed blackness to symbolize at that moment just to justify the unequal treatment. And people absorb those ideas before they even realize they have them. This is why black people have to constantly overperform humanity just to receive baseline grace. You have to be exceptional. We have to be exceptional to get what other people get automatically. And that [ __ ] is exhausting, exhausting. A lot of you all question why I show up the way that I show up. Because you wouldn't listen if I showed up any other way. And you know it. People in this country love to talk about racism like it's abstract. Slavery was bad. Jim Crow was bad. The civil rights movement happened and now we're past it. Right? That sanitized version is how this hierarchy stays intact. So, let me see what was actually done to black people in this country. Trigger warning, it's about to get graphic. Mary Turner, I've told you about her. 8 months pregnant. May 19th, 1918, Loun County, Georgia. Her husband had been lynched the day before for a crime he didn't commit. When she said publicly that the men who killed him should face justice, a white mob came for her. They tied her by the ankles, hung her upside down from a tree at Falsam's Bridge, dowsed her in gasoline, and set her on fire, all while she was still alive.
They took a butcher's knife and cut her open. Her unborn baby fell to the ground. A man in the mob stomped on the baby's head, and then they shot Mary Turner's body hundreds of times. She's one of at least 3,446 documented. Black people lynched in this country between 1882 and 1968.
And lynchings were not done in secret.
They were public events. White families brought picnic baskets. They brought their children. They posed for photographs next to burnt bodies. They cut off body parts and kept them as souvenirs. Fingers, ears, genitals. Sold them in jars at general stores.
Postcards of the bodies were mailed through the United States Postal Service. Yeah. the same one that brings you your mail. You could buy a postcard of a black corpse hanging from a tree and send it to your cousin in another state with a note that says, "We had a good day today." This is what was happening in this country in 1918, the same year my great-g grandandmother was a young woman. The same world my grandma May was about to be born into. EMTT Till, 14 years old, August 1955.
A white woman in Mississippi accused him of whistling at her. Decades later, she admitted she made it up. Two white men dragged this boy out of his uncle's house in the middle of the night. They beat him. They gouched out one of his eyes, shot him in the head, tied a 75lb cotton gin fan around his neck with barbed wire, threw his body into the Talahhatche River, and when his body was recovered, his face was so destroyed it was unrecognizable. His mother, Matil, insisted on an open casket. She said, "Let the world see what they did to my son. The men who killed him were acquitted by an all-white jury." A few months later, they sold their confession to a magazine for $4,000. That was 70 years ago. How old is your parent? How old is your grandparent? The violence has not stopped. We know that. So, let me bring you a little more current because that kind of stuff just doesn't happen anymore, does it? Sonia Massie, July 6th, 2024, Springfield, Illinois. A 36-year-old black mother of two called 911 because she thought there may be a prowler outside her house. Two sheriff's deputies came inside and she moved a pot of boiling water off her stove. She turned to the deputy. She said, "I rebuke you in the name of Jesus." The deputy pulled his gun and yelled, "I'll [ __ ] shoot you in your [ __ ] face."
And he shot her in her face in her own kitchen. After she called 911 for help, seconddegree murder. He got 20 years.
and her mother said at the trial, "Today, I'm afraid to call the police for fear that I might end up like Sonia." Briana Taylor, 26 years old, March 13th, 2020. Asleep in her own bed in Louisville, Kentucky. Police executed a no knock warrant on the wrong apartment. They fired 32 shots into her home. Six of them hit her. She bled out on her hallway floor. The officers that killed her were never charged with her death. That's just some of the names, you know, right? There are black women dying in police custody every year whose names you will never hear. There are black trans women being murdered every year, whose names you will never hear.
There are black children being killed by police whose families will never see a trial. The Washington Post tracks every fatal police shooting in this country.
Black Americans are killed by police at more than twice the rate of white Americans year after year after year.
And right now in 2026, the violence is being expanded. ICE rates are going into black neighborhoods. They're looking for Haitian, African, AfroCaribbean immigrants and disappearing them into detention. Families ripped apart.
Children separated from parents. People being deported to countries they never lived in. The federal government is rebuilding the infrastructure of racial terror. All under a new name. It's the same playbook, though, just a different uniform. I told you about my grandma May. is from South Carolina and she couldn't look white people in the eye, not didn't want to. She could not because black folks from her generation learned that eye contact could get somebody hurt. So even after the laws changed, her body still remembered.
That's what racism actually does to people. It settles into the nervous system. My grandma Alice barely talked about what happened to her growing up black in the South. And honestly, that silence bothers me more now that I'm older because I think some black elders knew if they started talking, the grief would never stop coming out. My mom was a part of the school integration process. She walked into the school and saw the words go home on the wall. My mom and still had to sit down and learn math after all that. My dad grew up hearing stories about the Hell's Angels.
Not the same stories, you know, the ones about them rolling through black neighborhoods hunting black people.
These were stories that he eventually had to sit down and tell his children, me, about. Then my brother Steven, he's 2 years older than me, just two. He was working at a steakhouse when we were in high school. He was a teenager. The clan came in. He was expected to serve them, smile, refill drinks, pretend everything was normal, and he walked out. He quit.
And that story sits in my chest differently because it feels generational, you know, like something broke right there. Something broke with him. Like generations of forced submission finally collided with someone saying no. That's three generations of my family. Miss May lowered her eyes so we wouldn't have to. Miss Alice carried the silence so we wouldn't have to. My mom walked through the slur on the wall so we wouldn't have to. My dad carried the sto My dad carried the stories so he could tell us about it. Steven took off the apron and walked out. Each generation gave the next one more permission to lift their head. You get me? A little more freedom, a little more breath, a little more sky. And what scares me is that people think this history is over, but it's not. This country has done the roll back before.
After slavery came reconstruction for 12 years, from 1865 to 1877, black Americans have built more political power than they had in the previous 250 years combined. to state legislatores to the United States Senate. Black children went to school for the first time in this country's history. The federal government cut a deal to resolve a contested presidential election. The Republican party agreed to pull federal troops and end reconstruction. And what followed was called redemption. That is the actual historical term, redemption.
White America literally called the destruction of black political power redemption from black freedom. It didn't happen all at once, of course. It happened in pieces over decades, you know. Voting rights stripped state by state. Public schools reseegregated.
Federal civil rights enforcement ended.
By 1896, the Supreme Court legalized segregation. By 1900, most black men in the South couldn't vote. By 1910, lynchings in the South were happening at about three per week. The country watched all of this happen. The federal government let it happen. The Supreme Court blessed it. The civil rights movement of the 50s and 60s was the second reconstruction. Executive Order 11246 which LBJ signed that mandated affirmative action for federal contractors. In 2013, the Supreme Court gutted section 5 of the Voting Rights Act. In 2021, the court gutted section 2. In 2023, the court ended affirmative action in college admissions. In 2025, Donald J. Trump. He revoked executive order 11246.
The order that was signed in 1965 by LBJ, it was gone in a single signature.
He signed executive orders ending DEI in the federal workforce, in the Department of Defense, in the foreign service, banning federal contractors from affirmative action, banning federal employers from training on unconscious bias, banning federal schools from teaching about cultural sensitivity, now investigates private companies for DEI policies. The Department of Education now threatened schools that teach black history. In April, the Supreme Court dealt the final blow to the Voting Rights Act. And almost immediately, Tennessee acted. They moved to split up Memphis, the state's only majority black congressional district. That speed should terrify people. Protections weaken and suddenly black political power, coincidentally, starts disappearing again. This is redemption.
A second time. Voting rights weakened.
Black districts diluted, DEI attacked, black history targeted, affirmative action erased, ICE expanded, and people want black Americans to act irrational for noticing the patterns because our family survived the first version of it.
So, when black people ask, "What the [ __ ] did we do to y'all?" Here's the answer. We existed inside a system that needed somebody at the bottom. We existed inside a world that built itself on our own supposed inferiority. We existed inside countries that pretended that we were not real. And the world built an entire global system to punish us for it. We just refused to disappear while you told the world we weren't real. That is the answer. That's the only answer there's ever been. What did we do? Nothing. We existed and we still do. We're not going anywhere. Well, from the responses that I rolled for you guys, you've had the opinions of the black people because I can still ask the same question. Why do some of these people hate the black folks so much? Why don't they like seeing the black folks succeeding? Or what did we do to them?
And uh why are they treating the black folks across the globe like this?
Because it's not only in the United States, it's across the globe. Like anything we do is triggering them. Even if you are integrating, it triggers them. If you are exaling, it triggers them. the kind of outfit you wear, it's still not enough. Like they must have something to say about the black people. Well, I know the kind of system, it wasn't designed for the black folks. They didn't expect that the black people are going to succeed in the system they designed by themselves. They knew that the system is only going to favor them and not the black people. They knew that the black people are going to fail and well when the first clip of this video that woman say that they hate us because the black people are strong because they fear the black people. without that like there is something inside the black people that is making them to be provoked to be enraged each and every time and that is why I always tell my friends even my family that in as much as somebody doesn't like you that means there is something so powerful in you that they are seeing and they don't want it to continue or they don't want to see you prospering. They don't want you to use the knowledge or the spirit of the ancestors that they left us with. Let me just be clear because honestly the spirit of our ancestors is still alive and they would not let the black people perish. That is what I know because I have seen several scenarios whereby some of these people when they do something bad to the black people it will come back. It will haunt them. Not even tomorrow, not even next week, even after several months, even after several years because you know very well that the spirit of ancestors are still alive and they will not let their children or the grandchildren perish. So if they do something bad to the black people, you'll find that several months later, that thing will haunt them and they will start blaming themselves. That is why those kind of things are happening to them. not knowing that the same things they were doing to the black people are the same thing that is literally haunting them. Well, I have seen majority of the black people prospering, exiling in various field especially the black Americans. I've seen majority of them excelling in music industry. the likes of Kendrick Lama, the likes of Beyonce.
I've seen majority of them excelling in sports, in athletics.
I've seen majority of them excelling in politics, interpreneurship.
And I think that is the main reason as to why some of them folks are so mad because they didn't expect that black people can do such kind of things. Then again, when it comes to being influential, the black people, especially the black Americans, have been so influential and I think it's a global influence because you'll find out that majority of the people, even Africans, are trying to act like the black Americans. They're trying to do whatever the black Americans are doing.
You know, I've been so keen on the social media lately because there is how some of them folks, even the brown folks are treating Africans, there is this video of the Chinese I watched. He was literally trying to lift a small baby. I think that baby was like 4 years, 3 years. The baby was not big.
I think 3 years old. That is the range.
So that Chinese he placed his hand on the neck like this and lifted that child that way and he started laughing. Then there is this comment of the black American. I read under that post that why don't Africans do whatever the black Americans are doing to avoid all this unnecessary drama that these brown people, the white people are doing to them. And well I agree with that because honestly as an African I know whatever majority of us are still doing like it's like some of us are still worshiping these people. Some of us are still thinking that they are gods and if they don't do whatever them folks want them to do they feel so guilty. I wish Africans could wake up because enough is enough. We have suffered a lot and even at the end of the day if you do the exact thing that they want, they will still be manipulating you, gaslighting you, provoking you the way they want and they won't even consider you as a fellow human being. That is why I'm saying that Africans, we need to wake up. If we follow the footsteps of the black Americans, whatever they have been doing, then these people will not even come and exploit our resources. They will not come to our continent and mistreat us because now they know that we will have the black Americans influence and it is scaring them. You have seen whatever the president of France, Emmanuel Macron, have been trying to do in my country. I'm a Kenyan to be specific. And I love the fact that the Jenzies in Kenya are currently waking up and they conducted a very huge protest to remove Emanuel Macron from Kenya because some months ago he was in Bkina Faso trying to overpower the Bukinaas president Ibraim. So I think these people they literally want to invade Africa or to recolonize it because I've been reading such kind of comments and when I saw the comment of that black American saying that Africans you need to stop sleeping and do whatever the black Americans have been doing so that these people can stop manipulating you or exploiting your resources or discriminating or mistreating you. And I agree with that. So guys, I've also been asking myself, why are some of these people hate the black folks so much? What did we do to them to deserve this? Or are we not supposed to excel? Is it a taboo to excel? Is it a taboo to be happy even during hard times? Because personally, well, I'm talking from experience.
Somebody literally told me that Judy, you can't complain because you're always happy in public and you want to pretend that you are sad. Like, honestly, so you're not supposed to be happy. You're not supposed to smile. You're supposed to be sad all the time. No, we're not going to that direction and that's not how it's going to work. But anyway, guys, let me know what you think about this in the comment section because this thing has literally been touching my heart. And this is not the first time they have started asking this question.
The Black Fox, the first video I ever saw was back in February when a certain sister from the uh from America, black American was asking the same question.
What did we literally do to be hated this much? So guys, let me know what you think about this in the comment section because personally I'm kind of flabbergasted.
Kindly give the video a thumbs up.
Subscribe if you're coming across the channel for the very first time. And I appreciate all my subscribers, all my members for the extra support each and every single month and all my viewers for always watching my video. I appreciate you so much. And to all the black folks al never ever give up. No matter how much somebody is trying to undermine you because they don't have your dream in their hands, you have it and you know how you can restore it. You know how you can overcome all these things because I came to realize that the more you rise, the more they get triggered. So never mind whatever they're saying about you.
Just keep the spirit high and always be optimistic.
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