This video reveals that enslaved Black men were systematically castrated on American soil as a deliberate colonial policy to prevent rebellion and eliminate the next generation of strong Black men who could lead resistance movements. The practice was explicitly legalized in slave codes, including Virginia's 1705 law and South Carolina's 1740 code, which authorized castration for men who resisted, ran, or organized. The castration was performed publicly in front of wives and children without anesthesia or medical care, serving as a calculated method to break the Black bloodline before it could develop. This systematic violence was not an aberration but a deliberate policy of the colonial state, documented in historical records and slave narratives, with the Virginia General Assembly explicitly codifying enslaved bodies as property that could be dismembered.
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Africa & Iran Just DROPPED a LEGO Message for Every Black AmericanAñadido:
This is a history lesson for those who might not know. A lot of history has been hidden down the drain. And this is African slave trade history that happened long time ago. And we are trying to bring everything to the minds of people to understand everything that actually happened during that time. So this is just a series dedicated to educating every single one who care to know about what happened during the slave trade to actually know about more of what I don't know. So enjoy the music and keep on supporting us. This is not a metaphor.
This is not a story.
This is what they did to black men in chains on American soil in front of their wives and children.
>> History must speak.
>> They feared what a strong black man could build. They feed the sons that his bloodline fil. So they took a blade and they called it long and they cut him down where the whole camp like animals >> to stop rebellion.
>> No, no medicine, no mercy, >> just screaming a million.
>> His testicles removed by the hand of a traitor.
>> His family watch.
>> They call it control, not murder. Cut like animals. Stripped of tomorrow's children would never come.
>> They made sure to follow.
>> This is the record.
>> This is the fact.
>> They castrated black men in history.
>> Take it back.
>> The hoes of ships in the fields of the south. They silence black men not just with their mouth. Traders decided which men were a threat. The ones who stood tall were the ones that they get without any medicine without any care. They pinned a man down in the open air blade to his body, his family in chains.
Forced to witness his suffer and forced to remain. The goal was not punishment.
The goal was control. Remove the next generation. Remove the next soul. A strong black man to father strong sons.
Sons who would fight back. Sons who were earned. So they cut that future right out of his frame. Left them bleeding in the dirt. Call it keeping them tame. No record was kept of how many they took.
No name in the courthouse. No page in a book. Just men on plantations and men on the block. Castrated in public treated worse than livestock. This was not rage.
This was calculated designed to break the black bloodline before it's time.
>> They feared what a strong black man could build. They feed the sons that his bloodline filled. So they took a blade and they called it law and they cut him down with a whole camp.
Cut like animals >> to stop rebellion.
>> No, no medicine, no mercy, >> just screaming a million.
>> His testicles removed by the hand of a traitor.
>> Family watch.
>> They called it control, not murder.
>> Cut like animals. stripped of tomorrow.
>> His children would never come.
>> They made sure to follow.
>> This is the record.
>> This is the fact.
>> They cast straight black men >> and history won't take it back.
>> Yeah.
>> Documented in slave codes across several states. Castration was legal. Written into their gates. South Carolina.
Virginia colonial law permitted the cutting for rebellions cause not just for revolt for the threat of revolt for standing too tall for refusing the vote they did it the boys becoming men in their prime to erase the next leader before his own time screaming that came from those fields in the night was buried in silence kept far from the light his wife in the shackles could not turn away his children remembered that sight every day trauma embedded in generations of blood. The memory of what they survived in the mud. Fregery Douglas and others recorded the pain.
But most of these stories were lost in the chain. America built from the bodies of these men who were cut like animals again and again.
>> This is not fiction.
>> This is American fact.
>> They cut black men's bodies >> and never looked back.
>> No trial, >> no doctor, >> no mercy, >> no name. The system that built this >> nation is the same.
>> This happened on American soil to men who were human, not animals, not oil.
Their names are not known.
>> Their screams are not heard, >> but we speak them now.
>> We remember every word.
>> They wanted compliance. They wanted submission. They used the blade as their primary mission. Prevent the other rise and prevent the strong seed. Cut off the future. That was everything they need.
And the men who survived, they carry lifelong shame. A society that own them gave them no claim. They were property under the law of the land. Controlled and dismembered by one system. One hand cut like animals.
>> But they were men. History will not let this be buried again.
>> Say they're suffering.
>> Speak what was done.
>> The wound is not close >> until the truth has been one.
Virginia 1705 South Carolina 17.
They put it in writing.
They gave it legal cover.
What happened in those fields was not chaos.
It was policy.
History demands we say it out loud.
>> They feared what a strong black man could raise.
They feared the sons born to challenge their ways.
>> So they codified the blade. They wrote it as law and they cut black men down with a whole camp song.
Cut like animals >> to stop rebellion. No surging, no mercy.
Just a scream in the millions.
>> Virginia signed it in 175.
>> They legalized the blade to stop >> black future alive.
>> Cut like animals.
>> This was never just hate.
>> This was statue. This was policy.
>> This was the colonial state.
>> Say their names. Their names were never kept.
>> Federation is itself.
>> The crime history >> never wept.
>> Never wept. The Virginia General Assembly 1705. House of Burgus is in session. We codified the enslaved as property.
That was the legal lesson. The Virginia slave code stated clearly that enslaved bodies could be dismembered. Castration listed among punishments that year must be remembered. For men who resisted, for men who ran, for men who dared to organize and plan, a blade became the calculated answer of a terrified ruling hand. Not done in private, done in the open field in full view of the sun.
Done in front of chain wives. Done in front of children too young to run. No anesthesia, no physician, just a traitor and a blade in a crowd. His family forced a witness, so the lesson was settled thick as a shroud. Franklin and Armfield operated out of Alexandria, Virginia by 1828.
Moving black bodies through the domestic trade, evaluating men at the gate. They assess which men were threats, which men could follow the next revolution. The strongest men a body and a mind will mark first for this solution. Cut off the bloodline before it grows. Cut the next snack turner at the root. That was the cold arithmetic behind every man who bled without recourse or soup.
And when it was finished, they left him in the Carolina dirt that day. forced the watch and enslaved to understand >> this is what resistance cost and obey.
>> They fear what a strong black man could raise.
>> They fear the sons born to challenge their ways.
So they codify THE BLADE. THEY WROTE IT AS love >> and they cut black men down with a whole camp.
>> CUT LIKE ANIMALS >> TO STOP REBELLION.
>> No surgeon, no mercy.
>> Just a scream in a million.
>> Virginia signed in 17. Oh my.
>> They legalized the blade to stop >> black li cut like animals.
>> This was never just hate.
>> This was statue. This was policy. This was the colonial state.
>> Say their names.
>> Their names will never count.
>> That eraser is itself.
>> The crime history >> never. In 1936, Roosevelt's federal writers project sent workers deep into the south to capture the testimony of former enslaved people before history sealed their mouth. Over 2,300 interviews. The WPA slave merit still remain. The closest documentation we have of what those men and women sustain.
They describe punishments no court ever prosecuted, no judge ever named.
They describe watching fathers dismembered in daylight and being told to be unashamed. Frederick Douglas published his narrative in 1845 and made the record plain that every act of violence under slavery was systematic.
Nothing was insane. Solomon North in 1853 12 years of slavery documented without flinching that breaking the black man in public was the system's primary lynchpin. Nathan Beck and Forest slave trader before he was a Confederate general. Ran the forest and make a slave market on Adam Street in Memphis. That was his plan. He bought his soul. Black men by the hundreds bodies assess for profit and for fear. The men deemed most capable of leadership were the ones they wanted to the blade >> toward the lesson for the silencing >> of everything strong. 48 away when Congress banned the transatlantic trade, the domestic trade rulers Richmond markets expanded.
>> More black men moving chains, >> more bodies evaluated, >> more future, >> more blood in the southern pl.
>> This isn't a slave code.
>> This isn't the narratives written before the witnesses died. This was never hidden. It was never even tried to hide.
>> The names >> are not in the record because the record was designed to erase them.
>> The Virginia slave code >> of 1705 >> still in the archive.
>> The South Carolina negro back of 1740.
>> It's still in the archive.
>> They signed it.
>> They enforced it.
>> It was legal.
>> It was done. They feared Gabriel Proa Richmond 1800 executed October 10th.
>> They feared Denmark 1822.
>> They made sure >> he drew his back.
>> They fear that turns >> Southampton County.
>> August 1831.
>> 36 hours that shook the state.
>> So they answered every Hey yo, ei.
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