The video incisively dismantles the regressive fantasy that Black Americans remain a dormant labor reserve for agricultural exploitation. It highlights the stark disconnect between exclusionary political assumptions and the reality of modern Black economic agency and historical memory.
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White farmers threatened Black workers — now they know Black people can’t be intimidated!”Added:
I'm so sick of Privilege? Privilege isn't being white, bonehead. Privilege is living in government housing and calling people oppressors while they pay your [ __ ] without worrying about calling in sick to work because you don't have a [ __ ] job. Privilege is being able to cheat, lie, fail over and over again in life and still get bailed out while people who play by the rules get punished.
>> These farm owner dudes are saying, "Well, we thought the blacks would come back and do the jobs because they don't have jobs."
Well, I'm sorry to break it to you, but black people have jobs and you thought you were getting your slaves back is basically what you were saying. Like you That's what you thought. Hold on. So, let me get this straight.
The white farmers in Louisiana Louisianards They're mad because people of color won't come work on their farms for $11 an hour in 100° heat for 10-plus hours a day.
Let me run that back.
White farmers are mad.
The The very farmers that voted Republican Okay.
They voted for this.
Are mad that people of color won't come work on their farms for $11 an hour in 100° heat for 10-plus hours a day. I am a Republican. I voted for this administration, but my patience is running thin.
The closure of the Strait of Hormuz [music] is causing prices to skyrocket.
Things like diesel fuel and fertilizer.
>> Gee, I wonder who caused that. [music] We're buying a a little bit at a time.
Sometimes we we know that we've only got 2 weeks of fuel. So, what has happened to [music] us is not just the impact of 1 year. We have lost customers forever.
They will never come back because we're deemed an unreliable Gee, I wonder what fuel prices were 2 months ago before all of this stuff started happening. I think those were better times for you.
>> [music] >> There's going to be a lot of people that go out of business at the end of the year either because they have to or they're tired [music] of losing money. bit of a fun fact is that during the 2024 election season, farmers voted at almost 78% for Johnny, >> [music] >> meaning 444 farming dependent counties voted at 78% for [music] him. Farmers have already been struggling with rising costs and even tariffs making things even harder.
>> It's going to be the nail in the coffin for for a number of farmers. It's just [music] the straw that broke the camel's back.
>> Hey friends, are you tired, run down, and listless? Are you terrified from tariffs? Are you pooped out? Do you find tariffs unpopular? The answer to your problem is the guy that implemented these tariffs. [music] Now, I've supported Mr. Trump this entire way. I'm a big supporter of his.
But I do not agree [music] with this and I'm not happy about this at all.
>> Oh, so you voted for this, too?
President Trump, we're standing here in [music] this field right now. What would you say?
I'd ask him to stick a sock in his mouth [music] and not say anything for a while. Get these fuel prices down. Get them down. Yeah, they're probably not going to come down anytime soon because there's about less than three more years of this administration and we're all in for a wild ride. Including you guys that voted him in that's causing all the problems that you guys are experiencing [music] cuz you guys are playing the game of FAFO. But anyways, have the day that y'all voted for. Bye.
>> Texas is continuing the effort on and find out stage. Yes, what just hit zero before Donald Trump's approval rating.
Right there, farm labor attendance, zero. Entire fields, whole crews are ghosting fields, leaving fruits and vegetables to rot because the Donald Trump administration is too busy playing cat and mouse with people who just want to feed America. To the MAGA people who are saying that immigrants are taking your job, this right here is your opportunity. Pick yourselves up by the bootstraps, get those buckets, and pick those strawberries. No more hiding behind those welfare checks that are padded behind blue state dollars. You wanted the raids, you got them. Now, get in those fields and pick those fruits and vegetables before you watch the produce aisle turn to a luxury boutique section. Chop, chop, MAGA. That's it.
>> So, apparently they had this group chat or group call where the white MAGA farmers were upset and saying the only reason why they voted for shitty [ __ ] was because they thought the blacks didn't have jobs and the blacks would come back and work their fields.
Farm owner dudes were saying, "Well, we thought the blacks would come back and do the jobs because they don't have jobs."
Well, I'm sorry to break it to you, but black people have jobs and you thought you were getting your slaves back is basically what you were saying. [music] Like, you that's what you thought.
>> I know god damn well Trump didn't think that we was going to get back in the mother fields.
So, Trump going to get his ass on god damn TV talking about he prematurely deported the illegals that was working in the farms. Thinking that we, us, [ __ ] was going to get back out there.
[ __ ] we already did that. You see where it got us. Huh? We the fresh god damn race walking. You think we going to buy new Lord Batons that we god damn skipped out on our light bill for? No.
Mhm. Get somebody else to do it. What's wrong? They running short on lettuce that they put on them Big Macs that you eat every god damn day?
Talking about the inner city people don't want to take the farmer's jobs.
What the [ __ ] you thought was going to happen? You didn't think about this [ __ ] before you did it?
Well, newsflash, Mr. mother Trump, we don't even want to go to go to the god damn jobs that we got to clock in for.
They got AC units. We already complaining before we clock in. So, by a show of hands, which one of you go out there and sign up to go work out in them hot ass mother fields?
Yeah, that's what I thought.
What's up, guys? Welcome back to the channel once again. So, guys, people are finally starting to see what happens when politics meets reality. For years, immigration, farm labor, race, and job have all been turned into political talking point. But now, some farmers and communities are facing real economic problem, and suddenly the conversation sound very difficult.
>> [snorts] >> A lot of people voted based on anger, fear, and culture wars without thinking about how the economy actually works.
Farming is hard Farming is hard labor.
It takes real workers, real experience, and long hours in extreme hot and extreme heat. You cannot just remove thousands of workers overnight and expect everything to keep running normally. And another thing people are discussing online is this strange belief some folks ha- had that black Americans were somehow going to replace immigrant workers in the field. That idea shocked a lot of people because many black Americans already have jobs, businesses, careers, and live outside of farm labor. So now, there's this big national debate happening about labor, races, immigration, and the consequences of political decision. So, Cali, guys, I want you to watch this compilations of videos, then I'll be back with more comment. I just seen a guy come from Twitter and say that the white farmers was upset cuz they thought that the black people was going to be out there in the fields.
You better get your mom, your daddy, your auntie, your brother, your sister, your uncle, whoever else because black people are not You're not going to believe this.
I saw Someone on Twitter were saying the white farmers on Twitter were saying that when they had all these mass deportations, that they just automatically thought that they were going to send the black people to work their farms. The black farmers who had already lost their farms and just, you know, other black people because they needed the help and they wanted the government to send them I guess criminals so they can work on their farms so they can keep their farms because, you know, me keeping my farm and not caring about you and giving you low wages, that's just the American dream, right?
Stop it.
Y'all need to stop this. This is just totally ridiculous. Little Johnny, little Susie, all the ones that you're paying all this money cuz you've gotten all this government money for free, you need to go get them out of college, which is what they used to do in the olden days. Get them out of college, get them out of their little jobs, and get them working that farm on the weekend.
There you go. See, I fixed it for you.
These farm owner dudes are saying, "Well, we thought the blacks [music] would come back and do the jobs because they don't have jobs." Well, I'm sorry to break it to you, but black people have jobs and you thought you were getting your slaves back is basically what you were saying.
>> It's just been harder and harder and harder to find those people to work.
>> Bethany Gotts owns Koins Farm in Mountain Home, but now with fewer workers, a lot of the manual labor is left up to her. She tells me she's tried hiring locally, but it's been difficult to find people willing to do the hard work. Finding a legal American here that is going to work as hard as an immigrant is nearly impossible.
>> She even posted job openings on Facebook.
>> I had seven people contact me about it and when I sent them the description, I had no people respond. She says hiring undocumented workers is not an option with serious risks for both sides. One, you're going to get fined. You're going to Do you have a unfortunately an employee living in fear they could get picked up at any any moment and then you're without an employee. To keep her farm running, Gotts is hiring high schoolers and is now looking into the federal H-2A visa program.
>> I have endeavored to spend $200,000 to build a small small worker housing so that I can get H-2 workers next year.
Gotts hopes for long-term solutions that support both farmers and workers. The misnomer that farmers exploit immigrants is just so sad to me because like I said, my friends and neighbors, we love our workers. They're our family and they want to work and there will work hard and there needs to be a path for these people in our country because our government has failed them and it is failing, I feel, the farm owner dudes, they're saying, "Well, we thought the blacks would come back and do the jobs because they don't have jobs."
Well, I'm sorry to break it to you, but black people have jobs and you thought you were getting your slaves back is basically what you were saying. I'm on the who who's going to care about Nebraska side of Tik Tok or does anybody care about Nebraska? Um and I'm watching white people like respond to that white woman like Nebraska didn't care about Nebraska. Who did you think was going to be in those positions or the immigrants are losing, blah blah, and they're [snorts] missing the point.
Nebraskans thought that [ __ ] was going to go back like they thought they they thought they had the early 1800s back.
That's what you're not seeing. It's not like they didn't think about that. No, they knew, "Okay, we'll lose our immigrants, but we're going to get our slaves back." And that, my good friends, is the problem.
>> farm owner dudes, they're saying, "Well, we thought the blacks [music] would come back and do the jobs because they don't have jobs. Well, I'm sorry to break it to you, but black people have jobs and you thought you were getting your slaves back is basically what you were saying.
So, I just saw this video of this white man who's not MAGA, by the way, or at least he says he's not, but cuz he damn sure selling the look. But, he says he has a fake account over on Twitter and he joined this group of white farmers and he's pretending to be MAGA just to see what they're talking about. So, apparently they had this group chat or group call where the white MAGA farmers were upset and saying the only reason why they voted for shitty britches was because they thought the blacks didn't have jobs and the blacks would come back and work their fields.
They thought they were going to get slavery back by voting for shitty britches.
But, they have been saying loud and proud with their chest that immigrants were taking their jobs.
Yet, there are a couple of farms here in Texas that overnight lost 100% of their workforce.
But, immigrants were taking their jobs, right?
Racism is expensive, huh?
re-parented on a wellness farm.
>> Let me read exactly what you said. You said, "Every black kid is now just standard, put on Adderall, on SSRIs, benzos, which are known to induce violence, and those kids are going to have a chance to go somewhere and get re-parented to live in a community where there'll be no cell phones, no screens."
You know, you claimed, in fact, you went on to say, actually the whole transcript was even worse. You said that that if you could, you would send, quote, every black kid, again, your words, not mine, to go live on farms and work. Is that your Can you >> I would have to see hear that recording because >> have the recording.
>> memory of saying anything like that.
>> Yeah, well, I actually have the recording um that I can give to you, but it is absolutely what you said. Um and if you want me to play it, I can play it.
>> But if you ask me what my opinion is, I I do not believe that every black kid should be re-parented on a wellness farm or whatever, and I have never believed that. So, you didn't say it?
>> black kid is now just ended up on Adderall, um SSRIs, benzos, uh which are known to cause induce violence.
And and those kids are going to have a chance to go somewhere and get re-parented, to live in a community where there'll be no cell phones, no screens. You'll actually have to talk to people.
And the basis The model for this is a community that I had to wreck contact with because a family member of mine went there, and it's called San Patrignano in in Italy.
That community is a 10,000-acre farm, and they grow organic foods. So, the kids eat very, very good food for the first time in their lives.
They have a bakery, and the kids work in the bakery. They work in um a furniture factory. They have an apparel factory.
They have a wallpaper factory. They learn a skill. They learn a trade. And and they can stay as long as they want for free.
And when they leave, they're placed in a job, but they're taught how to be responsible, how to tell the truth, how to show up on time, how to be reliable, how to be a a a caring member of a community, to reconnect.
So, many of our kids today are alienated. They're They're dispossessed.
They have no hope for their future, and they're The suicide rates are astronomical. Black is now is is at the highest rate of suicide, and um and it's it's one of the highest causes of death among black youth.
Uh we need to give kids back, again, hope and hope in our country, hope in their futures, but also a a feeling of community and an understanding about how to live in those communities. And they should be in a a where they're getting treatment, um where they're getting training, where they're getting drug job training, life training, and and [clears throat] spiritual enlightenment, spiritual enrichment because that ultimately we have to be able to induce in people who have who are enveloped in despair, we have to be able to induce in them profound spiritual realignment so that they're living on another plane, so that they understand that there's that God is out there, that he is watching them, that he loves them, and that um and that they have hope for their lives.
I saw some of these TikToks and they said that on Twitter farmers were saying that they thought after workers were deported that black people would come to work on their farms.
>> [laughter] [laughter] >> Farm owner dudes were saying, "Well, we thought the blacks [music] would come back and do the jobs because they don't have jobs." Well, I'm sorry to break it to you, but black people have jobs and you thought you were getting your slaves back is basically what you were saying. So, I know I was talking about, you know, the Latino vote before. They be voting for Donald Trump.
Okay, well, let's get over to the white folks.
The white farmers. So, word is out now that the white farmers voted for Donald Trump because they thought they were going to get black Americans in the fields.
>> [laughter] >> Because they also thought black folks did not have jobs.
>> [laughter] >> So, when we put this all together, somehow the white farmers were convinced that black folks don't have jobs. We don't work.
We don't work. And so they voted for Donald Trump because they thought, "Okay, he going to send them in the fields." So Donald Trump and them with their whole project 2025 said, "Okay, so we got to make this happen. So we got to cut these DEI stuff, all this DEI stuff to put black Americans out of work. When in reality, they put a bunch of white folk out of work just to get black folks out of work.
And so all these cuts all these cuts that are happening are to try and harm black Americans so much till they think that we're going to go into the fields. Now when you think about that, that makes you double back and see why they want the Latino stuff because the Latinos, right? To them, they are reproducing entirely too fast, okay?
And so they're like, "We got to get them out of here because black Americans don't reproduce as fast as the Latinos."
>> [laughter] >> And so if we could get them out then the black Americans can take their place in the field. That's This is for real. And so now you double back to the black jobs. They're taking your job.
Yes, you got to double back to what he said. They're taking black jobs, y'all.
Like they have all this down. Like they have all this whole circle.
>> [laughter] >> So now let's go back to the farmers if you're still with me, okay? Because the white farmers, they That's what they believe that was going to happen.
So if y'all got all that straight this is a message to the white farmers.
The last thing you want is for black Americans to be in your fields.
>> [laughter] >> Don't let the devil fool you. As a matter of fact, you might want to let the devil fool you to see what's going to happen. What I'm trying to tell you the last thing you ever going to want >> [laughter] >> is black Americans in your fields.
No, no, I'm going to let you you fill in the blank.
And this goes to show that they will go to any lengths. Remember I said that you know, first of all, we got to the Latinos, some Latinos, not all of them, especially them Cubans, them Cuban ones.
Talk about they're you're next. You're next, right?
To black Americans. So, they thought we was immigrants, okay?
And so, now we have the white farmers who are still living in the 1700s.
Thinking back to glory days.
They thought with their vote we were going to the fields.
So, you got one group thinking they going to kick us out of here, and you got another group of people thinking that we going to the fields.
>> [laughter] >> Now, this right here this right here is a a real mental problem cuz people are literally stuck I'm telling y'all people are stuck in the 1700s when they think about black Americans, okay?
To I'm telling you their thought process they sit around probably at campgrounds and picnics and stuff and talk about how can we make this happen? [laughter] That was their heyday. I'm telling you when that freaking plantation house burned down in Louisiana, I think, right?
That was their heyday. Now, I'm trying to tell you that was their heyday. When that plantation house down in Louisiana got got torched, okay?
I'm telling you that broke them.
But you know, I just want to I you know what? I want to teach them a little a little bit more history if if I have your attention, right? If I have your attention, right? This is This is some history that a lot of people don't know, okay? But y'all didn't know um black Americans had white servants?
Y'all ain't know that?
>> [laughter] >> I mean, it wasn't widespread or anything like that, but we had we had we had a white servants. Yeah, and they wanted to be our servants cuz they needed work.
They were coming over from Europe.
Yeah, and they were docile, too.
Yeah, they were docile. And and black Americans the aristocrats Mhm.
The wealthy ones cuz there were wealthy ones, okay?
They had white servants.
So, I don't know if y'all ever see if y'all ever see them pictures. Let me find a picture. I couldn't find a picture. I wasn't going to go back and try to find a picture, but if you can if you can watch videos, you'll be able to find a picture of possibly some black people in the horse-drawn carriages. And there may be someone white as the horseman or the I'm not sure what you call them, coachman or whatever. Yeah, he worked for them.
Yes, indeed. It was a big thing. It was a big big thing, you know, when everybody began to see in the early 1900s. Did you know what?
Black Americans, you know, they use the other word. Black Americans Black Americans have white servants? Yeah, that's the bit of history they don't like to put on TV.
>> [laughter] >> And you know, the reason for it is because they were like, "Okay, they had they had, you know, white people here that they could hire." And they also had black people here that they could hire, but they felt that the white people from Europe were so docile.
And they were they they were less expensive. Now, they weren't the only ones who thought that. The wealthy white people thought that, too.
Mhm. The wealthy white people were like, "Yeah, we like the docile the docile immigrant white people.
They're a lot cheaper. They take less money." Yeah, so there's a little history for you.
>> [laughter] >> Oh, yeah. Oh, yeah, it was like that.
Oh, yeah, because they knew they would have to pay black Americans a lot more.
A lot lot more.
So, they always went for the immigrant.
And see, when the black Americans hired the white immigrants, they were they did they were like really really like, "Yes, we will do it. Yes, we will do it." Cuz they want to stay in America. Here's the difference Here's the difference, though. Black Americans didn't mistreat them.
They didn't mistreat them at all. But, anyway, that's just a little side note.
But, yeah, to the white farmers again, this is the last thing you want. The last thing you want is for black Americans to be out in your fields.
The last thing you want.
Trust and believe. And next time And you know what? Stop Stop basing your vote on how to harm black Americans because you're going to end up running into that wall that's going to tumble, okay? That's what's going to end up happening. Stop doing it. All of you do it. Like, all of you had the conservative Asian Americans coming through with the whole Ivy League school, "We don't want black Americans there." Then you had the I will vote for Donald Trump Cubans, okay? Who were who were thinking, "Okay, you're next.
You're next. You're next, okay?"
Okay? We're not immigrants, so we're not next. And so And now we have the the white farmer who thought that they were going to get the black Americans in the fields. And then and then it's all off of project 2024.
So look look look what you got America.
Look what you got the United States of America.
And and you know a lot of people say why black Americans think everything revolves around them. No, y'all think everything revolves around us because y'all make everything revolve around us.
>> [laughter] >> Y'all stuff coming out.
>> Well, farming was uh term that was used by British social workers to describe a phenomenon that occurred in Britain after the Second World War whereby the Nigerian immigrants coming to Britain >> [clears throat] >> would foster or farm their children out to white working class families. We're talking thousands of thousands of Nigerian children all over Britain in order so that they could work and study.
The idea was that that one set accomplished what they set out to do, um graduated, saved enough money, they would then collect their children and return to their native homes. That practice became known as farming. And I was farmed at the age of 6 weeks old to a white couple in the southeast of England about an hour and a half outside of London.
The film with the same title follows my journey under that process.
This was unique to Great Britain? It was. It's peculiar that only to Britain and peculiar to only the Nigerian immigrants because at the time uh Britain was going through an economic recession and it called upon its colonies, the West Indies, India, and Africa to come and help rebuild it. So it was kind of like an expedient labor force. So how old were you when you were taken to this white couple? 6 weeks old.
And how old were you when you left? 16.
You can imagine at 6 weeks old uh my white foster family were my family. My two siblings were with me and uh within the house there were another about seven or eight other Nigerian children from other families. So we all considered ourselves as a family and our foster family as our parents. And I just grew up there as you would in Britain during the 70s.
The big difference of course being the area where we were placed which was a town called Tilbury Town uh was notoriously racist and they'd never been exposed to black children or black people at all. So we were the first blacks to be, you know, placed in that environment. So it was a very racist right-wing town.
>> Now guys, for years some politicians kept saying immigrants were taking jobs.
But now that labor shortage are hitting farms. Suddenly many farmers are admitting they cannot find enough workers. Crops are sitting in the field, produce is rotting, businesses are struggling, and now some of the same people who supported harsh immigration crackdowns are frustrated because the labor force disappeared. That's the part people are reacting to online. Some viral videos claim certain farmers believed black Americans will come back to work the field after mass deportation. Whether every story online is true or exaggerated, the reaction shows how sensitive American history still is.
Because when people hear comments like that, it reminds them of slavery, segregation, and old stereotypes that should have disappeared a long time ago.
And let's be honest here. A lot of people online are saying something very simple. Black Americans have jobs already. Many uh many work in offices, health care, transportation, education, technology, construction, businesses, government, and every other field in America. So, the idea that millions of black people were just waiting around to replace migrant farm workers make no sense to many people. Now, at the same time, we also have to be fair and realistic. Farm work is extremely difficult. Long hours, hot weather, physical exhaustion, many Americans of every race do not want those job for the wage being offered.
That's not just a black issue. That's an American labor issue. And some farmers are speaking honestly about it. They say they tried hiring local workers, but very few people stayed. Others say immigrant workers often return every season with weed years of experience, making farms more stable and produ- and pro- productive. So, now farmers are coffee- are caught in the middle between politics and economic reality.
That's where this story gets bigger than race. This is really about labor system, wages, immigration policy, and the economy. America agricultural system has depended on immigrant labor for decades.
Suddenly removing that labor creates massive problems. Food prices rise, supply chain suffer, farm lose money, small businesses collapse. Some farmers who supported these policies are now openly saying they regret parts of it because fuel price, fertilizer cost, tariffs, and labor shortages are crashing them financially.
And social media is having a field day with it. People online are basically saying, "You voted for this. Now, deal with the consequences." That's why you see all these sarcastic videos telling people to go pick the strawberries themselves. The internet is reacting emotionally because people feel politicians spent years blaming immigrants for economic problem without explaining how dependent certain industry are on immigrant labor. But, we also need to avoid turning this into pure hatred and division. Not every farmer is racist.
Not every Trump supporters believe those thing. And not every immigrant issue uh issues should become a race war. Some of the comments people are making on Tik Tok or and Twitter are clearly emotional ex- uh emotional. Social media always push the loudest and most extreme opinion because controversy gets uh views.
Now, guys, if you remove workers from an industry without a replacement plan, businesses suffer. If wage stay too low, people avoid those jobs. If political leaders promise simple solution to complicate uh to complicated economy problems, eventually reality catch up.
And honestly, America has always had a complicated relationship with labor and race. That history still affect conversations today. So, when people hear comments about black Americans coming back to the field, it hits a nerve immediately because of the country's painful history. So, guys, you have heard and you have seen how black Americans have been coming out and reacting towards these uh people because right now it seems like these people they voted for DJT knowing that DJT policy will come out and start to affect black Americans or they knew that or they knew that black Americans they will rush they will go back to the farms so that it looks like the days of slavery because these people they were coming out and saying the DJT administration they were coming out and say that they're going to bring black jobs or they were saying that immigrants that they were the ones who were taking Americans jobs but right now you can see after them voting for deportation you can see right now how America it is the the farmers they are really struggling because they don't have workers their crops it is rotting in the farms and also they've been trying to beg black people to come out and work for them but black people they have refused farm labor. It is not that black people they don't want to go out to work in the farm labor it is because of how these people they've been treating black people in the farms because they are not paying them wages which it were the the the good wages. They are not paying good wages and also these people for or during the times of slavery these people they have never paid their black people their ancestors they have never paid their reparations the and that it is also another reasons to why black people they are refusing to go to the farms and also right now black people majority of them they are having good jobs majority of them they are have they are in government also majority of them they are nurses they are doctors they are engineers they are teachers so right now black people they are not interested with farm labor and that's why you can see black Americans they are not interested in farm labors and these people for me I can tell them that they need to stop crying because they are the ones who voted for this so they need to call their family. If you are a white farmer, a MAGA farmer, and you're having a farm, stop calling black people. Stop asking government for assistance. You need to come out with your family. Take all your MAGA supporters, the people who the people who voted for this administration. Call them. Call the MAGAs to come and help you to pick the crops in the in your farm instead of coming out crying you're going bankrupt, you're losing your farm. No, you should call those MAGA people to sup- port you.
Call your family because right now black people they are they're concentrating with their own businesses.
So, kindly guys, you can also share this video, like, and also subscribe for who haven't guys. See you on my next one.
Kindly remember to subscribe. We're heading to 100,000 subscriber. Kindly guys, see you on my next one guys.
Bye-bye.
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