This video explores the complex identity dynamics within Black American communities, highlighting tensions between African heritage and American nationality. The speaker discusses how some Black Americans may feel disconnected from their African roots when associating with Africans, while others question the authenticity of those who adopt African cultural elements. The content examines the distinction between race, ethnicity, and nationality, noting that Black Americans are not native to Africa but to America, and that cultural appreciation should not be confused with cultural appropriation. The speaker criticizes Pan-African individuals who remain silent about disrespect toward Black Americans and argues that Black Americans have made significant sacrifices for society, deserving recognition and respect.
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|NEWS| These Africans Stay Focused On Black Americans追加:
And black Americans, I'm not trying to test y'all. I promise to God I'm not. I just want you to know that it's okay to be black Americans.
I'm so confusion. It's like an identity crisis. Men don't understand. Y'all start hanging out with a bunch of Africans and forget that you're from here.
You forget that all your peoples and your peoples' peoples are from here.
I'll be so confusion. I'll be like, "Where the black Americans at nowadays?"
Like, "Everybody African?"
Ain't nothing wrong with wanting to know where you originated from, but there are some black Americans who are proud.
They start hanging out with a bunch of Africans. THEY START DATING STRICTLY AFRICANS. STRICTLY. NOW THEY'RE AFRICAN.
They know more African songs than the born Africans with the strong ass accent. I'll be like, >> [laughter] >> "You're not proud to be an American?"
When I tell you I'll be so confusion, there's this one girl that I know for a fact cuz I spoke to her and she was like, "Oh, where you from?" And I was like, "Jamaica." But I didn't raise my mom. I wanted to go be a riot. That's all.
So miss out. Where are you from?
She told me one state. Let's pretend it's California.
No matter what, I can't see her out of an African outfit. I can't see her without an African man. I mean, all her friends African. I get it, but babes, like, please don't forget who you are.
You got to ride for that sometimes.
But I tell no lie to you, but you know, sometimes I've wondered, "Where are my folks from?"
But I can't go and do no DNA test. I don't want to have an identity crisis. I don't. I don't. I know I'm from Jamaica.
I know I was born there. I know I was raised there. I asked my granny and I asked her, "Where your people from?"
Hey, the only thing they know is Jamaica. Cuz [ __ ] if I find out I'm from Nigeria or somewhere else, can't nobody stop me from wearing a mermaid dress, EVER.
CAN'T NONE OF Y'ALL STOP ME FROM Y'ALL CAN'T STOP ME. YOU SEE WHAT I'M SAYING? NO, I'm just going to be out here confusion like the black Americans that keep forgetting that they're black Americans. Like I can't do it. I'm just going to stick to what I know, baby, and that's oxtail, sardine, chicken back. You get what I'm saying?
Curry chicken, curry goat, rice and peas and some cabbage.
>> After much debate, it has come to my attention that you guys are right. I am not black. Black is an American race, and black means African-American, and I am not black and I'm not African-American because I'm not native to America. My race is African.
My race is African, my nationality is American, okay?
So, I'm not black.
I might look black, but I'm not black.
My ethnicity is Kru and Bassa.
And Pele.
So, I'm multi-ethnic, mono-racial, period. Poo.
Bennin. I'm not a black American. I'm not an African-American.
I'm neither of those things because I'm not native to America like my other brothers and sisters that act like me being an African is an inconvenience to them being a black American.
So, listen up here.
I understand what's being said and I'm taking heed. I'm not black. I'm African.
Peace.
>> Video that Asian woman calling a Nigerian lady the N-word and her only response to that was, "Hey, I'm not black American. I'm Nigerian." is a great example of the mind contortion that assimilation to whiteness does to immigrants that come to this country.
>> What the [ __ ] are you talking about, gang? It took me all of 5 seconds to watch that video and see that's not what you said at all.
>> No, I am a I am a Nigerian-American. Do not call me an >> As you can see, nothing he said that happened actually happened in that video.
At all. She said, "I am a Nigerian-American, so don't call me the N-word." How did you get I'm a Nigerian, not an American, so don't call me an N-word from that statement?
Like, do you even remotely fact-check your videos at all?
Like, or do you just post misinformation just for the [ __ ] of it? And mind you, they're having genuine debates about this [ __ ] in his comment section. Oh, the point is Nigerians are still black, and then people are like, "Oh, but blacks aren't" Like, bro, what? All of this is stemming from something she never said. She's not even claiming to be fully Nigerian or not. She said, "I'm Nigerian-American, so don't call me that."
Where do we get this bull >> It's okay to not be Nigerian. And I say this because there's such an influx of people who are not African trying so hard to be part of the culture. Whether it's you're learning trying to learn pidgin, whether you're trying to go to Detty December, whether you're whether you're obsessed with the Nigerian or African men, whether you want to be in the Nigerian wedding, all of it is giving very much Rachel Dolezal or like white girls obsessed with black men because of sex. Like, it it it's not it.
And I've seen so much of this type of imitation or obsession that is getting to a point where it's like, are you actually mentally okay? Like, it's okay. It's literally okay to not be of the culture. It's okay to admire the culture. It's okay to have those friends. It's okay. But, when it come it becomes a problem when you have bad intent as far as like why you're acting the way you are.
Cringe all around. I don't I don't like it. I don't support it. I don't condone it. Y'all need to stop.
>> People irritate me when they say, "Go back to your own country like it's that easy. Immigrants documented or undocumented living in this country give up everything to come to the US. Selling their homes and personal belongings before moving here with their entire families. So how exactly are they just to pack up and go? Go back to what? It does not work like that. Lives are already built here. Jobs, kids in school and college, health issues that could only be treated here, homes already bought. So what do y'all mean when you say just go back? Some people escaped death and the USA is their safe haven.
Lots of people would die for simply returning home. This is humanity we're speaking about guys. Why are we segregating immigrants from the rest of the human race? And to the black Americans who are loud and proud supporting Trump, it is madness. Shame on y'all. Y'all ancestors were immigrants. Forced undocumented immigrants that birthed you here, but now it's leave my country?
Listen, change your mindset and your mentality.
>> So there's quite a bit of disrespect directly in this video. The first video I want to start off with was the bonnet wearing guy. Again, I don't know who he is. Don't even know if he's black American.
So he did a stitch of a stitch. So the first guy, guessing obviously black American, he was speaking on the fact that the Nigerian woman who was being called a racial slur decided to state that I'm Nigerian American. Don't call me that.
What now every other black American can clearly see what it is that she stated.
And again, I agree with the very first black American, with the very first guy.
He was like, what she did was she tried to use her being Nigerian as a shield to tell the Asian person, "Hey, I'm Nigerian. Don't use that word towards me and don't apply that word towards me. I am African. I am not black American. I am not what it is that you speak of. We all understand what it is that took place, right?
That guy who wanted to make the response, he wanted to try to make it seem as though that that's not what she meant. It is what she meant.
It is. You said that it only took you 5 seconds to watch the first guy's video to understand No, dude, you're just 1,000% ignorant. That bonnet is way too tight. Bonnet is way too tight. You sitting up there relaxed and you really thought that you you hit the nail right on the head and you didn't, you missed.
You completely missed. You probably hit your toe and possibly your brain. Um that that was the stupidest response that I have seen thus far.
You really tried to write that off as if that's not what she did. That's clearly what she did.
Because I have another video of which there was a Nigerian, a young Nigerian man, and one of his people basically called him something.
They called him um an akata, right? And he started laughing, right? And he was like, "No, no, no, that's not No, no, no, no. Like I I am a, you know, I am a Nigerian man, right?
I am Nigerian by blood." He was like, "I can have my hair like this. I can I can dress like this. I can have tats like this, but I know who it is that I am."
Again, he did the exact same thing that the Nigerian woman did. Was like, "Hey, actually, let me correct you. I'm Nigerian. I am not black American. I am not what it is that you're trying to call me or what you're trying to insinuate or think that I am, right?"
Like I said before these clowns, I I I just got to sit up there and state to a lot of these Pan-Africans, all of this is your fault.
The the the the the the way that a lot of these folks out here sitting up there moving, the way in which that they're sitting up here speaking for a lot of the Pan-Africans, this is your fault.
This is clear-cut why in the very first video you had the the young Nigerian woman. She was trying to tell black Americans, "Hey, it is okay to be black American." I ain't never in my life.
Now, I'm not I'm I'm trying to figure out if this was really a jab or if it was sarcasm or if it was both. I feel like it was just everything, but I really feel more so that [music] she was being 100% when she was stating that there is a lot of black Americans out here that really try to embed themselves in African culture.
There are >> [music] >> There are and that's because of a multitude of reasons.
Um number one, dealing with America, dealing with the history, uh dealing with what it is that we have been taught or meant to believe, [music] right? And um you have some other people where they don't really feel like they belong here, right? Maybe they might have went through some stuff here and it was like, "Ah, you know, I have more kinship or or or I'd rather be friends somebody who is African and and maybe things will go different for me and raw raw raw." Like I said, it's it's quite a variety of things. But like I said again, for the Pan-Africans out there, the disrespect that she is giving, that she is stating, this is your fault.
I ain't never in my life has somebody >> [music] >> African trying to tell me that it is okay to be black American. I don't need your okay or validation or whatever it is in in order for me to just be me.
That's some crazy work.
That's some crazy work and and and this is the other thing that I want to sit up there and state as well, too. It's funny how she's stating this while her whole aesthetic is that of a black American woman.
Notice how that works.
Notice how that works. Even with the with the whole lingo and all that other type of stuff Like I said, the amount of cosplaying that goes on here while taking shots needs to be studied. I ain't never seen black Americans online dressed as Africans trying to have a thick African accent and then throwing shots at Africa. I ain't never seen it.
I've never seen it. I've never seen it.
Like I said, this type of stuff needs to be studied. But again, Pan-Africans, this is your fault. And I want to note to a lot of folks, all the disrespect that happens to Black Americans online all the time. Notice how none of the Pan-Africans come up to use their platforms to speak against this stuff?
Notice how they stay dead silent. They move on. They overlook. They don't pay attention to it. They feel like this is just beneath or below them. They have more important stuff to do. Notice how they will not effectively call this stuff out. That's some crazy work. And they're the leaders of all of this nonsense going on because in a lot of their videos, they will agree with the exact same Africans. Crazy work.
Diabolical in nature. This Yo, this Like I said, this this type of stuff needs to be studied 100%.
Like I said, it's just disrespect all across the board every single time.
Like I said, if it were not for Black Americans, a lot of these folks would not even be here.
Nobody wants to give Black Americans their flowers just due.
They they they don't want to give us our respect. They don't want to give us nothing. Like I said, a lot of people just come over here just to take take take take and take some more. And then when they can't take that no more, they leave and go to another country.
Like I said, the only reason that people are able to properly exist here and be comfortable is simply because of the sacrifices.
Blood, sweat, and tear.
All of the many bodies that Black Americans have sacrificed their families, their kids, everything, even history.
And that enabled everybody else to be and live here comfortably.
And it also enabled and allowed everybody to disrespect us as well.
Like I said, we are the main groups of people that have really sacrificed all so much just to receive nothing in return.
It's crazy work.
But anyways, let me know what you guys think about this video and everything that I stated in the comment description below. And as always, peace, love, and stay tuned for the next video.
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