The absence of preserved slave ships in museums does not disprove the transatlantic slave trade; rather, it reflects that slave ships were not built for long-term preservation and were often repurposed, destroyed, or abandoned after retirement. Historical evidence from the National Archives, including ship manifests showing slave trade routes, demonstrates that the trade occurred, with the last known slave ship (Clotilda) docking in 1860. This absence of physical artifacts has fueled online debates about historical narratives, prompting critical examination of how history is documented and preserved.
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Blk Americans Demands for Slave ships Evidence!!It was the Other way round π±Added:
So this video is for entertainment purposes only YouTube, okay? It's for educational and entertainment purposes only, okay? So you guys, I want you to pay attention to the sister in a gray and a white uh video. I think it's the third from this one.
And uh let me know what you think about uh what she's sharing right now because uh I mean let's get into the video. I'll come back at the middle of this video and at the end of this video to give my own final two cents. Feel free to drop your thoughts, okay? Let's get into it.
Where are all the slave ships? I mean, I have every other type of ship in the museum, so why don't we have any museums with slave ships in them? Yeah, I remember when people were making this argument at the beginning of the pandemic. Now, I didn't have a following back then, so I didn't want to bring it up.
After the way y'all decided to tussle with me over Dr. Sebi, I just figured we wait till the end of Black History Month for this. But, it's March 1st and I chose violence. So, with love and light, here's the answer. And we're going to combine some history, some context, and some common sense. So, here we go. The shorter answer is that slave ships weren't built to last 500 years, nor were they preserved once they were retired. Because by that time, the folks who were importing slaves found something else to import. So, there are people who are using this as evidence that the transatlantic slave trade didn't happen. And that's just not true.
The Middle Passage is very well documented. And if we're thinking in history in terms of the US, the last known slave ship to import Africans to America for the purpose of chattel slavery docked in 1860, and it was called the Clotilda. Now, we know that emancipation happened within 10 years of the Clotilda docking, but there's something that happened in 1808, about 60 years prior, that uh a lot of people don't know about. And that's called the Act Prohibiting the Importation of Slaves. Now, that act was passed in 1808. And what happened essentially was at the Constitutional Convention, the Founding Fathers argued about slavery the way that they've been arguing about slavery since the American Revolution.
And the compromise they came to was that the North was like, "Okay, South, y'all can keep your slaves that you already have, but you can't import any new ones." But, Cheyenne, you just said the Clotilda docked in 1860. Y'all, they were sneaking us in. Now, we know if there's one thing history's taught us is that white folks don't like the government messing with their money. And there were whole companies who did nothing but import human chattel. Ooh, y'all them people done lied to us. Here it is, 2026, and not one person, not one museum, can produce a single verified piece of evidence, piece of wood, piece of steel, piece of a plate, or anything from a so-called slave ship. But, hear me out now. Ain't it funny how they got artifacts from every other civilization, and all these artifacts, they magically appear, and they magically survive?
>> Yeah, all them artifacts except the darn slave ships that they said they brought us over here. And I'm talking about slave ships that traveled the most documented route in history of ever. So, here I am from Charleston, South Carolina, aka Summerville, the whole eastern Gullah Geechee corridor, okay? That's from Wilmington, North Carolina, or a little further up north to all the way to the tip of Florida, okay? Check this out, though. You mean to tell me this is the corridor where they always brought all the slave ships, and not one is still here?
They done brought the so-called Mayflower evidence of the Mayflower to Charleston, but you ain't got no slave ships? You ain't got no remains?
You ain't got no evidence? But, somehow, every February, this becomes Black History. Y'all, we got to open our minds now, okay? You got to open your mind at this point. At some point, critical thinking has to come into effect for all of us. We have to collectively wake up, cuz what's happening right now is there are individuals waking up, and instead of joining them and trying to help them do the research that's required to get all of this information lined up, and to get all of these receipts, you're pointing fingers, you're laughing, you're calling them a conspiracy theorist, instead of actually opening your darn mind and and and digging into what these people are saying. So, my suggestion to everybody out there that look like me, um stop living in la-la land.
Act like these people are going to tell us who we are.
Like, come on now. Yes, they did bring people from Africa, but guess what else?
Guess what else evidence I found? Oh, baby, I went on that National Archives website and I saw slave ship manifest with ships was leaving here, okay? They had slaves on it under the cargo list.
They had the value of the slave on it.
And guess what the origin was? The origin was USA. See, I know how to read manifest. I used to work at the airport for like 9 10 years, okay? All right?
And the origin was the USA. The destinations were Africa. And then from Africa, they have sailed north, went around the top of Africa, and went to Europe. And they took slaves over there.
They took slaves to Africa. They took people to Africa. They were removing people here.
Okay? Hello, wake up. I'm not making this stuff up. All of this is in your national archives. I'm going to give you the rest of the sources in a second.
But, stop living in la-la land, baby, cuz I'm going to tell you right now the truth doesn't need fear. It needs honesty. People are tired of being lied to. And see, I shout out Gen Z cuz they came out and was like, "Y'all ain't about to keep this lie going with us. We ain't tolerating this. Y'all don't No, no, no, no, no, no, no." See, that's why this is the year of revelation. All that stuff them people been doing in the dark is all coming out. Look at these names.
And I saw them plane manifest a few years back. Matter of fact, while COVID and all that stuff was going on when these Epstein files first came out. Y'all remember that?
Mhm. I remember. And I saw people's names on there. I was like, "Oh, on the ship I mean the plane manifest." I was like, "Oh, Oh, he Oh, that hurt. Yeah, yeah, it's going to be some hurt people. But, this is a year of revelation. And that does not include just politicians and celebrities. All you local pastors, guess what? The jig is up. The jig is up.
Y'all don't went and spend all our money instead of saving everybody money, making sure everybody has scholarships in the community, make sure every black child went to college, make sure everybody had an education, make sure everybody had free health care. Y'all ain't do all of that. Y'all ain't do nothing that Bible said with that money.
Oh, the building fund, the building fund. You know how many churches still have a building fund?
And I am 46 years old and I've been seeing y'all with these building funds since I was little.
I'm 46. I'm to be 47.
The building fund, come on, y'all.
Critical thinking [music] has to kick in, right? Cuz everybody was talking so much trash about Drewski and his skit.
But Drewski, your skit was on point, baby. You hit the nail straight directly on the head, and you hurt a lot of hearts with that because now it's like people started opening their eyes like, oh, wait, you know, he might have a point.
He might have a point, but you still got them blind people and them them people that just ride or die for their preachers and be like, oh, y'all going to hell cuz y'all talk about the preacher touching not thou anointed.
Do y'all know touching not thou anointed goes both ways?
It counts you, too, anointed one. So, y'all listen, I'm not trying to cause destruction. I am doing quite what Yahusha, aka black Jesus, doing, okay? A lot of stuff y'all doing in these churches, he ain't like it. He don't Y'all Y'all act like he was such a pleasant person. No, he was not perfect.
He wept and he flipped tables. He was off the chain.
He was experience having that human experience.
Do you know what I'm saying?
But But so, I'mma say it like this, questioning the narratives that were forced upon us is is is not denial at all. It's like it's it's it's discernment.
A lot of us have heavy discernment, and that thing don't be sitting right within us. And we That's why we start to question things. It ain't got nothing to do with the devil inside of us or the devil putting influencing us or whatnot.
It ain't got nothing to do with that, y'all.
It's got everything to do with critical thinking.
Like, okay, what did we used to do before these white folk brought that Bible over here and and and the the And I'm not dogging the Bible cuz we had a lot to do with it. Y'all, it's about us.
The book about us.
You black American, you.
You Not Not just y'all. Not just us, but the 12 lost tribes. See, we was never lost, baby. We came over here. We was here in America the whole time.
They was like, well, where they at? We was the ones that stayed.
You got to look at the whole 'nother narrative. It takes critical thinking.
You really think them people going to put a whole bunch of us on a boat? You really think they can get a whole bunch of us together like this and and and and a couple of guns going to stop us? Look how we act in the regular hood.
Do a couple of guns just stop us? No.
Let's just be a thousand percent. This is going to take critical thinking, you guys. This is not me being no conspiracy theorist. This is them being the conspirators and y'all need to open your eyes cuz I done opened mine and they've been open a long time and I'm tired of people trying to make me or deem me out to be crazy or the people that think like me. You know, because there's a lot of us here in this community, right here on this app and they deem us as what?
Cray-cray.
No, we ain't fool. Ain't nothing wrong with us. So, we going to have to change in some narratives around here, okay? By digging up the truth. Y'all go look in the national archives. I'm talking about USA national archives. There's a lot of information hidden in there. You got and that's where I actually found the ship manifest. Y'all got to go look at old maps, okay? Did you know that there are some old maps where North America was actually called Africa?
Before Africa was called Africa. Yeah.
And Africa was actually called uh Sudan.
South America was called Ethiopia. Did y'all even know that? Yeah. Yeah. Those are maps out there that tell these they give clues and it's up to us to put two and two together. To put like we sit down and do a whole puzzle and sit there and put them little puzzle pieces together. Okay, so like I said earlier, this uh video is for entertainment and educational purposes only. Let's get into it. Yes, so a conversation uh that uh keeps uh going viral online is the question uh many black Americans are now asking, if the transatlantic slave trade uh was one of the most uh documented events in history, then where are the actual slave ships?
Okay, people online are saying, how is this How is it that our museum the museums are can uh uh preserve warships, pirate ships, ancient artifacts, and even tiny pieces of history from our civilizations uh thousands of years ago, but somehow there barely any preserved uh ship slave ships. And honestly, that question alone has uh sparked uh intense debates across our social media like plenty of videos.
And now, for education and entertainment purposes only, remember that. We're just uh reacting to what is uh trending online, and it's important to say that uh historians uh do document documents.
Um the trans-Atlantic slave trade extensively. So, ships like uh the Clotilda are often mentioned in historical records, and uh researchers have spent uh years studying manifest, trade routes, and shipwrecks are connected to that era. But online uh critics argue that uh the average person has never physically seen uh these ships displayed the same way other historical vessels are displayed. That gap is uh what has filled fueled uh suspicions, theories, and emotional reactions. Some people online are also pointing to how America preserved our plantations, colonial buildings, and Confederate monuments for decades, yet preserved slave slave ships are rarely part of our public discussion, okay? Others claim uh these absence raises about the full story surrounding black American ancestry and identity. Again, these are allegations, okay? And online opinions being discussed across social media platforms, not proven facts, okay? So, what makes uh this uh topic um emotionally charged is that many black Americans feel disconnected from their origin origin together or together. They're questioning records, challenging narratives, and uh demanding transparency. Whether people agree or disagree, one thing is undeniable on this, more individuals are beginning to critically examine history instead of uh blindly accepting everything um at face value. And in today's uh era where information spreads faster than ever, people are digging through archives, old records, and forgotten documents trying to connect pieces of a much much larger puzzles. Yeah, the internet has uh created a generation that questions everything. And this conversation about uh slave ships is now becoming part of that uh larger awakening. Okay, so let's just uh continue the clip that I rudely interrupted. I'm sorry about that, but it has to be done for the sake of YouTube. I don't want them slapping me with this, that.
Yeah.
I'm sorry about that. Yeah, I'm going to continue with that clip and then uh I'll play one or two clips and then I'll come back at the end of this video to give my own final two cents. Make sure you drop your thoughts in the comment section down below. If it's your first time to be on this channel, subscribe and turn on that notification bell so that every time I upload such videos, if you love such content, you'll be notified. Let's continue watching. This is what you got to do with us and our true identity and where we come from, which is here.
You indigenous people, you melanated indigenous Afro-indigenous people, you what's up T-Americans?
T-Ameri-I-Cans.
Atlanteans.
Kamites. Ancient.
Yeah.
Egyptians, whatever you want to call yourself, but listen, think about these things.
It's going to take critical thinking.
Stop calling everybody a conspiracy theorist because what they're saying doesn't add up with what you were taught by your teacher, cuz you know they were in on it. Did you know that they last year and going into this year, that a whole bunch of historians left the country?
Yeah, those are statistics. I forgot where I got those statistics from. It wasn't or I actually saw it on TikTok, but I went and looked and started looking up articles and yeah, they was fleeing the country. Why? Cuz truth about us coming out.
Our true identity is coming out. Our grandmothers and grandfathers were actually correct.
Maybe you're Cherokee.
Mhm. Anyway, I love y'all.
You indigenous, you Afro-indigenous cutie, you.
So, I'm supposed to believe that they took thousands of Africans and brought them to America on these boats. I got a question and I was wondering if someone can answer this for me. If America is based on capitalism, why didn't those that run this country take the opportunity to make billions off the slave ships? What would be one of the biggest tourist attractions in America?
The slave ships.
>> [music] >> Think about it. Everybody would pay to see how in the hell they got all these rowdy ass Africans on these boats and brought them over here. But you telling me the people that run this country who love money never took the advantage of that billion dollar opportunity. You got all these statues and old ass houses of [music] so-called plantations, but not one slave ship. Not one. And then think about this. Why are black Americans the only people in this world without a country to back [music] them? The only people in this world whose history got a little mystery. Why is America the only country in this world as a corporation and not a country? Why does every other country have wars on their land but America? Because everyone knows this is the sacred land and they created Israel.
Everybody know who this land truly belongs to, which is why they can never pay us reparations. It would bankrupt the country. That's why black Americans are the only people who were stripped of their true identity because that had to be done in order to not only take the land but be able to keep it. The fact that they never took the opportunity to make billions off of having just one slave ship with the way they love money let me know we was already here. But you want me to believe it is. All my black brothers and sisters, I don't really know how to say this, but we got indoctrinated when we were kids. I'm sorry. Harriet Tubman probably wasn't real or at least that probably wasn't her real name. Martin Luther King was a plant. Rosa Parks was a plant. Obama was a decent president if you're comparing him to Trump, Biden, Bush, and Bill Clinton, but that bar is like insanely low. And as far as what he did for the black community, it was very little in relation to what we all expected. And even though his campaign slogans were yes, we can and change, it ended up being no, we can't and things stayed fairly the same, at least within the black community. However, he did change a lot for the LGBTQ community. And might I add, he imposed sanctions on African countries who didn't adopt those same policies, which is insanely sketchy if you ask me. In the black community in America, many of us have been told that white supremacy is a huge problem, yet many of the individuals who tell us that have white spouses. And then those of us black folk who make that observation get gaslit and told that we're coons. But let's keep going on how we were indoctrinated in school. Slavery didn't happen the way we were told. Most of black Americans ancestors didn't come over here on slave ships. Most of their ancestors were already here. The Indians that we learned about in school were really black Americans ancestors and they just remixed it to give them lighter skin with long Hollywood's been doing that for years. That's actually the whole point of Hollywood. It's just to propagandize us and give us certain ideas of things in order to further submit propaganda in our brains. It's funny cuz then people will come into my comments and they say, "What's your source?" And I'm like, "Here." pbs.org acknowledges that only about 388,000 Africans actually came to North America in the transatlantic slave trade over the course of like 350 years. Which if you ask me is probably still a little bit of an exaggeration, but it's not the 12 million that we were told growing up in school. Black Americans ancestors by and large are Indian indigenous Americans that had copper-colored skin.
I don't know how many times I have to tell y'all this before y'all realize that slavery as we were told it was cap.
And I've been holding my tongue on a lot of this just because I know people won't really believe it, but at this point I don't care. One thing y'all also didn't know is white people were enslaved in America, too. But they left that out of the school books because it didn't fit the narrative. The proof of this is a little bit harder to find, but it's there. Quote unquote slavery or indentured servitude was a little bit different for the Europeans. Many of them traded years of their life where they would be doing slave labor for passage to America. But once you learn the real history, you see how they always invert the story because there's more evidence to prove that Europeans came to America on ships in order to be labor than Africans did. If you're a real one, you know that the powers that be have been trying to get black people and white people in America to be at odds essentially from the very beginning. But we're just keeping it real. No one wants to say this, but I will. Black indigenous Americans and Europeans have always gotten along unless there is an outside force that is trying to manipulate the narrative and pin us against each other. I can't really say too much more, but if you're interested, I'm sure somebody in the comments will have more details for you.
Now, one of the biggest indicators that we all came from this continent is the fact that they don't have no slave ships.
They don't have the name of any slave ships. Now, we know about oh, the first slave ship was named Jesus. That's That's not confirmed. That's just something that people put on the internet and it just ran through, right?
But knowing how prideful these folks are, you mean to tell me you don't know the name of one slave ship?
They They burned supposedly burned all the slave ships? I don't The pride. I'm from the deep south, bro.
They still have Confederate statues, but they don't have no no slave ships? And then here's the thing, as as Americans we're waking up and recognizing that our country is horrible because we lied about a lot of things, right? With that being said, you don't think if we had slave ship we didn't lie about one of the slave ships?
Oh, this is the great grand Karina, our biggest cargo ship in the world. It It It transferred a lot of cargo even though when you dig deeper, that grand Karina was actually a slave ship. It didn't carry any of that cargo, it was people. You mean to tell me they don't have pride like that? They They not even lying about [Β __Β ] There's no ships.
Again, when you think about history, they're prideful of everything that they do.
And then when things that they can't be prideful of, they lie about it. You don't know the name of any slave ships.
They didn't lie about any ships that you know the name of. Like Like there's there's nothing.
But yet they convinced you that you come from West Africa. The same people around the same time Moors were in Europe teaching these folks how to do basic stuff like walking upright, talking, washing. You mean to tell me in what less than what in a couple of hundred years them same folks were advancing up to go over to West Africa and to carry a ship all the way across the seas to the Americas?
Again, a couple hundred a couple of generations before that we were teaching these people how to walk upright, my [Β __Β ] And you mean to tell me a couple of generations later they're carrying our ancestors from the shores of West Africa all the way to the shores of America?
Like bro, we are from we are native to this land. This is our land. The United States is our land, bro.
They lied about that whole slave narrative and I'm going to dig deeper into why they lied about it. If you know, type it in the comment section. But my only prevailing theory is to try to destiny swap the folks, right? But it it has to be a deeper reason why you lie and say everyone comes from another continent knowing damn well that we actually come from this continent.
And I can even attest, even though I didn't get a chance to know her as an adult, my great-grandmother.
People everyone around our family say, "Yo, we are native because of our great-grandmother. Our great-grandmother has a native blood in her."
Like a lot of our older ancestors, a lot of our older ancestors, if you had a chance to talk to them and meet them, a lot of our older ancestors said the same thing. Yeah, we come from this country.
No, we are the original Indians. I even as a child, I remember writing that under when they had race, writing Native American cuz I've always believed that I was native to this country. Well, I know I'm native to this country. But as a child, I believed, right?
So, going back to the original continents, with everything that these folks brag about, all the bragadocious ways that these people have, you mean to tell me they haven't bragged about at least one slave ship?
You can't you can't confirm at least the name of one ship, one single ship, right? But yet they try to convince you that you come from the shores of West Africa.
But yeah, that's just this is my little two cents. Let me know what you think in the comment section below. Okay, so at the end of everything, every discussion, this entire conversation goes uh far beyond ships, okay? That's uh what a lot of people are beginning to realize online. So, for many black Americans, uh the discussion is really about identity, truth, history, and the feeling that important pieces of the story, many um you know, they are still missing, okay? Social media has created a space where people are no longer afraid to ask difficult questions even when those questions make others uncomfortable. Now again, for entertainment and education purposes only, okay? We are reacting to what is trending this the discussions trending online. And none of this should be taken as verified historical fact unless supported by credible evidence. But one thing you cannot deny is that people are searching for answers. They want receipts. They want proof they can touch, see, and examine for themselves.
A lot of people online argue that if the trans- transatlantic slave trade was such a massive global operation, then where there should be something like you know, visible a physical reminders of it in the museums across America even in Africa, okay? They point to preserve military ships, colonial artifacts, old plantations, and even centuries um old objects from ancient civilization that somehow survived history.
Then they ask why does why why is it so hard why why why why does it have few harder to find a preserved ship slave ships in the same way? The that question alone, I mean, has become enough to ignite endless debates online. Others respond by saying many slave ships were you know, re-purposed, destroyed, abandoned, or simply deteriorated over time because they were not built for long-term preservations. Historians also point to written records, you know, shipping manifests, insurance logs, and archaeological discoveries tied to slave trade. But for some people online, paperwork is not enough. They believe physical evidence should be more visible and accessible to the public. And this is where the internet becomes both powerful and dangerous at the same time.
On one side, people are encouraged to think critically, research history, and ask questions instead of instead of blindly, excuse me, following um narratives. On the other side, the speculation can quickly turn into misinformation if motion emotions over power facts. Um Yeah, okay. That's why this uh what we're discussing right now requires balance, patience, and careful research. Yeah, okay. So, what is really driving this discussion is a deeper frustration that many black Americans feel about their historical identity. A lot of people feel disconnected from their roots, disconnected from languages, disconnected from culture, and disconnected from ancestry. So, when they hear conflicting information online, emotions naturally rise. Some begin to question whether parts of history were hidden, manipulated, or rewritten over generations. And to be fair, history itself is full of examples where governments, institutions, and powerful groups were caught lying, covering things up, or rewriting narratives to protect uh their own interest, okay? That really makes uh many people more skeptical today than ever before. The average person no longer automatically trust official stories without doing their own research. Yeah, that's me, too.
They've turned me to be like that.
Research for myself, whether I find the truth or whatever. This skepticism is a is exactly why conversations like this continue to spread across TikTok, YouTube, podcasts, and live streams.
People are comparing records, reading archives, looking into ship manifest, studying, you know, genealogy, and trying to piece uh to put pieces together, you know, their own understanding of history. Some conclusion may be reasonable, while others may go too far into conspiracy theory. But, either way, the curiosity is still real. Another reason this uh topic keeps exploding online is because identity has become one of the biggest conversations of this generation.
People everywhere are questioning where they come from, who wrote history, and who benefits from certain narratives being accepted without challenge. Black Americans especially are having emotional conversations about belonging, ancestry, and historical I mean, can you blame them? Okay. Some online creators even argue that America profits from almost everything. So, they question why preserve why preserve the slave ships were never turned into major historical attractions the same way plantations or colonial landmarks were. I mean, that's Now that someone has mentioned it, I'm beginning to think about that. I mean, they've managed to preserve almost everything except that. Others strongly disagree with that idea and argue that the painful nature of slavery makes it different from other forms of historical preservation. Again, these are debates happening online, okay? Not confirmed conclusions, but regardless of where someone stands, one thing is certain clear. People want transparency, they want honesty, they want access to information, and they want the freedom to ask questions without immediately being dismissed or attacked or their videos being pulled down. At the same time, it's important to form important for viewers to separate questioning from automatically assuming every viral claim is true. Health skepticism should be uh should lead to deeper research, not blind in every theory that trends online. That balance matters because our once emotions take over completely, okay, facts can easily get lost in the noise. And in today's digital world, a viral clip can influence millions of people before anyone even verifies the information being shared. Still, this conversation reveals something much bigger happening society right now.
People are waking up to the idea that our history is often more complicated than what they learned in school.
They're realizing that narratives can evolve over time, okay? As new evidence, perspectives, and discoveries emerge. And because of that, many people are now revisiting older stories with a fresh eyes. So, whether someone agrees with these online theories or completely rejects them, the conversation itself shows how deeply people care about truth, identity, and history accountability. And honestly, that conversation probably isn't going away anytime soon. So, as always, please do your own research, read the multiple sources, study the history carefully, listen to different perspectives, ask our questions, but also be willing to verify claims before accepting them as truth. Because our knowledge without critical thinking can become dangerous, but critical thinking without knowledge can become just as, you know, dangerous.
And with that being said, let me know what guys I think about this down below in the comment section.
Do be Do you believe there's still answered questions surrounding this topic or do you think social media is pushing people too far into speculation? I want to hear from you on this topic. So, if you enjoyed this video, make sure you like, comment, subscribe, and turn on that notification bell so that you don't miss uh any of my next conversation. This channel is for educational and, you know, entertainment purposes only, where we react to trending discoveries, theories, viral theories, and culture conversation, you know, shaping the internet today. And remember, never stop asking questions. I'll see you in my next video. Please stay peaceful.
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