This video argues that white people have an obligation to address wrongs committed by their ancestors, particularly regarding slavery, segregation, and systemic discrimination against Black people. The content explains that racism is a white-created problem that persists through systems like redlining, mass incarceration, and differential policing, which continue to impact Black communities today. The video emphasizes that understanding historical systems helps explain why different groups experience different outcomes, and that personal responsibility begins with individuals examining their own ancestry and the choices their ancestors made, rather than simply inheriting their DNA.
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WHITE Folks Are FURIOUSLY RAGED When This Black American Is CONFRONTED With HARD TRUTH.Added:
So, why people think that they don't need to be sorry for anything that their ancestors did. They don't need to right wrongs that their ancestors did.
They think that at least when it comes to black people.
They think that they it's has nothing to do with them and that it's their um free from any kind of judgment because of it.
But the fact is is that you as white people are obligated to right wrongs that your ancestors did.
You're obligated to do that.
And you have done it for every other ethnicity, if you will, besides black people.
So, yeah, you you should feel bad because you have not corrected wrongs that your ancestors did.
The responsibility falls on your shoulders.
And you shouldn't be sleeping good at night, and you should feel guilty because you have the ability to right wrongs.
And so now I see these videos about white white people wanting black people to stop talking about it and don't make me feel bad about myself and I'm not a bad person and I Yes, you are.
You absolutely are.
You are because you have chosen not to right wrongs that you know that your ancestors did, that you know that benefit you.
And we as black people, we're We're going to stop talking about it. We're not going to stop reminding you. We're not going to stop. If you don't want to hear it, too bad.
Cuz you can't shut us up.
And so you want to feel good about yourself, but you're not going to feel good about yourself because we're going to constantly remind you of your responsibility and your obligation to right the wrongs that have been done to our our ancestors. And not just to our ancestors, the wrongs that are still being done to black people.
And you are well aware of them.
You are well aware of how black people are being treated.
That's why you voted for Trump. You as white people are obligated to right wrongs that your ancestors did. White people want black people to stop talking about it and don't make me feel bad about myself and I'm not a bad person and I Yes, you are. If you don't want to hear it, too bad. The responsibility falls on your shoulders.
>> I don't feel bad about myself.
I don't feel guilt.
I most certainly don't feel guilty about something that I didn't do.
Not obligated to do nothing.
It is not my obligation to make you feel better because you choose to live with a victim mentality. That is not my responsibility. That is your responsibility.
I have to encourage you to go back and and reread history and understand what your ancestors did.
Let's start there if you want to talk about accountability. I'll tell you what, I didn't inherit my ancestors' bad decisions any more than you inherited a free pass to try to guilt trip strangers for history.
Okay, personal responsibility starts with you, not my DNA.
>> So there is ancestor work available to you as a white person. The comment reads, "How can I as a white person connect with my ancestors? My family knows nothing about our history and all ancestral work I find is geared towards people of color. Any advice would be appreciated. This whole conversation has a lot of sore spots, and let's just address them on the front end. No matter the land you live on, you benefit from the destruction of the indigenous, the enslavement of black and brown people.
If not your ancestors, the benefit of it directly, okay? There's a lot of pain and destruction and displacement of a lot of diasporic people attached to this conversation, and we're going to focus on another pain for this video. The pain of the loss of identity of people that have been assimilated into whiteness.
There was a place where you were once indigenous. There was a time from long past where your ancestors were not directly connected to Christianity, but instead a localized religion or belief system, where your people had cultural critical mass. Eventually, those tribal people were assumed into a nation. Many of those nations were created through the conquering of your people. Those nations were subsumed into a larger country or continental identity like European. And if you're a white person in America, then you are a European person that has assimilated into the whiteness definition within the United States. There are multiple placements the whole way back of times where your people had an other identity than they do now. So, you can see with all those different places, there's a lot of different moments you could start to learn more about this. And here's where I think the easiest place to start is.
If you're someone in the United States, for example, you should be able to go back not too far without too much effort to figure out who your people were when they first came to this country. You can do DNA tests, you can do ancestry.com, stuff like that. Figure out who they were. Odds are they were not the approved class of white, but you probably are. What did they give up? And what did they think they gained for it?
Even if you don't think they gained something, they most certainly lost stigma, discrimination, threat of violence. And what did they gain that other people, brown and black people and indigenous people did not have the opportunity to give up. Not to say losing your identity is ever worth the opportunity, but so many aren't even offered the choice. You can meditate on that. And then base those things that you learn off of what you know about white supremacy culture and what that does to people. And if you don't know a lot about white supremacy culture, that's going to be really important for this cuz that's the culture you've been given in place of your original identity.
Go check out creators like White Woman Whisperer, Rebecca. She has a Patreon and you can learn a lot from her about that. That can be a regular ritual for you for a while to figure out what your people chose to give up, what they had the opportunity to gain, what other people do not have the opportunity to gain because they don't look like you, and what by proxy people like you lost along the way because of their choices.
That's not everything, but it's a place to start. And you don't need a spiritual practice, a supernaturalist belief, or extensive research to figure that part out.
>> So, this video is for the white people.
If you are white, step on forward. If you are one of the so-called black indigenous people and you want to stick around, you're welcome.
And so, let's get right to it. In the words of one of my favorite creators and friend, >> All right, racist. Let >> Okay, listen up.
Racism is a white problem.
More specifically, it's a white man problem.
White men created racism.
They built the system. They wrote the laws.
White men decided who had power, got protected, and got punished.
And white women, you don't get a pass because those white men, they didn't [clears throat] raise themselves.
Racism is taught. It's not innate.
It's passed down generation after generation.
It's a learned behavior.
It gets handed to children at the dinner table, reinforced in church, normalized in school, and then it gets protected through your silence.
Racism is still very active today.
It's active in the fact that employers may not even give an interview to a person of color because their name sounds too black.
Yes, it actually does happen. Company screen resumes by names, not skill or experience, name.
>> One of the biggest disagreement is not about what happened in history, but whether the effects still exist today.
Every time conversations about slavery, segregation, redlining, discrimination, and generational inequality comes up, some people say that wasn't me. I wasn't there. But others argue that that's not the point. They say the real question is whether systems created generations ago still shape opportunities today. And honestly, that's why this conversation keeps making people uncomfortable. Let's watch more clips. Credit goes to all original creators of the clips in this episode. And if you love documentary videos like this, well to like and subscribe.
>> It's not coincidence, it's racism.
It shows up in who gets approved for housing, who gets loans, who gets pushed into certain neighborhoods and stuck there.
That didn't happen by accident, either.
It came from redlining laws that white men wrote.
Where the federal government literally drew red lines around black neighborhoods and denied home loans, home ownership, and investment, locking generations out of wealth.
Mass incarceration, it shows up there, too.
Black people are arrested more, charged more, sentenced longer for the same behaviors and crimes that white men are.
This didn't happen by accident.
It's racism.
It was designed through policies like the war on drugs, mandatory minimum sentencing, the three strikes law, and sentencing disparities where the same crime means more time if your skin is black.
Policing didn't evolve to protect black communities.
It evolved to control them.
Racism shows up when police interact with people differently based on their skin color.
A white person and a black person can get pulled over for the exact same thing.
The white person can be armed but still gets treated with respect, calm, fair, while the black person can be unarmed and can still end up in a body bag.
That's not about behavior or >> [snorts] >> it's racism.
Racism trains people, including police, to see black bodies as threats and white bodies as human.
>> The white peoples whose stance is that they don't want to be held responsible or accountable for what their white ancestors did when referring to slavery probably had the most despicable and violent ancestors because according to epigenetics, the lack of empathy derived from that. Those white people, I'll absolutely never have a back and forth conversation with them because they're literally embodying a lack of empathy.
There's no point in re-explaining slavery or what happened or any of those things. However, you could catch this smoke about Jim Crow laws. And ancestors typically refers to three plus generations ago.
Jim Crow laws are only one and two generations removed. You actually probably met your family members who were voting for and enforcing Jim Crow laws because they were your parents and your grandparents, it didn't end until the 1960s on paper. And even after on paper, Jim Crow laws ended in America.
Those practices still live. They still live today. Racial segregation is in the culture of America because of the Jim Crow era. I would argue that the Jim Crow era had more of an impact on the current state of being of the black black Americans as a majority than slavery.
The largest and most profitable banks, corporations, and universities were founded or started during Jim Crow era.
They capitalized off of racial segregation. That has negatively impacted black people the most.
>> After watching everything, I'd say one of the biggest misunderstanding in this debate is that people often confuse discussing history with assigning personal blame. Those are not the same thing. Nobody alive today created slavery. Nobody alive today created segregation. Most people alive today were not responsible for redlining policies, housing discrimination, or many of the barriers that existed generations ago. But the conversation many people are having is different.
They are asking whether the effects of those system continued long after the laws were changed. For example, if one family had access to education, property ownership, business loans, and wealth-building opportunities for generations, while other family was denied many of those same opportunities, would their grandchildren start from exactly the same position? That's the question being debated. And that's why topics like slavery, segregation, redlining, housing access, educational opportunities, and economic mobility continue to spark strong emotions today.
Some people believe society has largely moved on. Others believe the legacy of those system can still be seen in certain communities. Regardless of where people stand, understanding history helps explain how societies develop and why different groups often experience different outcomes. The real question isn't whether we can change the past.
The real question should be whether we are willing to understand it honestly.
Now, I want to hear from you. Do you believe historical systems still influence opportunities today? Or do you think society has largely moved on beyond them? Drop your thoughts in the comments respectfully. And before you go, watch this next clip here. It explains it all. And do well to like and subscribe to my channel. I'll see you in the next.
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