The video provides a sharp sociological critique of how internalized colorism and the pursuit of white proximity fracture the potential for meaningful cross-racial solidarity. It correctly identifies that assimilation into exclusionary hierarchies is a zero-sum game that ultimately undermines collective liberation.
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YT Woman Throws TRUTH BOMBS To Latinas Desperate For White Allegiance Even After WARNING From BlacksAñadido:
Why should I deport myself?
>> Because you're you're brown skin.
[screaming] >> I'm a US citizen here. We don't want brown skin. You're going to get deported. The most >> What the hell are you doing here? You should be back in Mexico.
>> Why? Why? Why should I go back to Mexico?
>> Because that's your country.
>> Why Why is my country?
>> This is not your country.
>> You're not white. This brown skin, they don't want you. And again, another one bites the dust. How many videos am I going to have to make to tell you if you don't look like me, but you think because you're not black, it's not going to happen to you, it's going to happen to you. And the irony is is your proximity to whiteness is never going to save you. And the call is always going to come from inside the house. Let's not forget that just a week and a half ago, they found a 19-year-old Latino boy hanging outside of a police department in Washington, DC.
We will never like you. We will never accept you. We will use you. We will abuse you. And then we will toss you aside. She's a dead woman walking. If she'll get drunk and get on Instagram on somebody else's page and talk like this, do you imagine what she says within the police department with other officers?
So now they're thinking if she'll yap, she'll yap. So we need to worry about that. We'll never protect you will never choose you. And you are not safe with us. Dear Latinos, being racist to other Latinos, indigenous, and black folks will not bring you any closer to the whiteness that you crave so much. And if this message bothers you, then it was probably meant for you. Racis trip.
Mexicans were thinking they was white folks. They forgotten about the Alamo.
All my Puerto Rican friends. I'm Spanish. Oh, a tall Mexican. No, I mean I'm Spanish. I thought that was a language. Everybody gets it twisted. If you take an African zebra to Canada, it does not make it a Canadian zebra.
Puerto Ricans, Dominicans, Cubans, ain't [music] nothing but black folks that can swim. You think that you better than us cuz they dropped you off first.
>> You will never be a part of the white community. Okay? And let me hold your hand while I say this. You will never be a part of the white community. No matter how whitewashed you are, no matter if you don't speak your native language, no matter if you don't have an accent, no matter if you get your steak medium rare, you will never be part of the white community. I myself am Mexican. My husband is white and the privilege that comes with that for him, never for me, for him. Um, everything that he doesn't understand. And I don't understand like Hispanics that are just so openly against their own people. I don't I don't get that. I mean like my son, we I am racing him fully rooted in the fact that he knows he's Mexican and he will never be ashamed of that. A lot of people that support different thoughts that don't align with them and what they look like are there's a lot of self-hatred in that. There's a lot of lack of self-acception. My sister-in-law is white. My husband is white. We are surrounded by white people all the time and we will never be part of that community. It's insane to me when people [ __ ] on their own culture and their own people. And that's just the reality that we live in today.
>> There has been a pandemic of coming from actually the Latina and Hispanic community where they show a lot of animosity, a lot of hatred and a lot of distancing from black communities, not other minority groups, but specifically the black community. And this is something that the black people have actually tried to talk about. They've told Latinas and Hispanics, the more you keep on, you know, or not bridging this distance between you guys and us, the more you keep on making sure that the distance and the connection between us two continues to become larger and larger, the more you're not helping yourself. Because as much as you want to have this proximity to white people, proximity to whiteness, and the benefits that white people get, you will never get to that point. Because at the end of the day, white people will never see you as one of their own. At the end of the day, there's a man who gives an example.
Just because you remove a zebra from Tanzania, take it to Canada, it doesn't automatically become a Canadian zebra.
They will when they are doing that geo world, when they're doing, you know, all these documentaries about wildlife, they will say that this zebra came from Tanzania. They're not going to say that this zebra grew up here. It's part of the Canadian. No, they're going to say that this came from a different country.
And this is the same thing that Latinos are being warned about. And even white people have come out and warned them. It has gotten to a point where white people are coming out and warning them and telling them this desperation that you have where you want to bridge this gap between white people and Latinas, where you want so much proximity that you're willing to hate on your own people, you're willing to hate on other minority groups. It's never going to help you because we are dangerous and we will be dangerous to you because we don't like you. We don't trust you. We do not want you as part of our community. But before I give my full commentary, let's listen to what other what other Latinas and what other white people have to say and what other black people have to say about this topic. Then we'll come back and talk about it. If you haven't already, kindly consider subscribing and commenting your thoughts about this.
Let's watch and then we'll come back and talk about it. See you shortly. You will never be white. As much as you, a fellow Latino, wants to be in proximity to whiteness, you will never be white. You will never be chosen in that way. As much as you think that you are better than undocumented Latinos because your family came here the right way or because you're second generation or third generation or because you either forgot or unaware of the foundation of this country and the fact that immigrants from Europe came here, stole the land from indigenous people and then literally stole people people and forced them to be slaves, forced them to do labor.
So when you think that you want to be in proximity to whiteness because you consider yourself better, think about that. Think about that there is internalized racism in our own community. How there is antilackness in our own community. How there is colorism in our own community. Think about those things because no one no human being is better than the other because they think that because they have papers that they are better than another human being. A human being is a human being.
There is no alien. There is no illegal when it comes to the world. Okay? So, let me remind you that you will never be white.
>> Oh my gosh. Who was that?
This is why we as Latinos or Latinos can't um support each other because we're starting to like drink the Kool-Aid of white supremacy, capitalism, and colonialism because this is giving intolerance. Um this is giving eugenics and this [snorts] is the worst one because it gives everything at the same time. It gives capitalism. It gives American exceptionalism. It gives I don't know anything about economics, systemic discrimination, or even history. Um, and it's just embarrassing. Honestly, it's um pathetic that the whole mantra here is that you have complete control over how successful you are in a country that colonized you and discriminate discriminates against you.
all the time.
In that case, how come not every one of us is a multi-billionaire? Oh, because we're lazy, right? Or because we're stupid or because we don't care or because we portray ourselves as victims.
Read a [ __ ] book.
Talk to people. This is not a flex.
girl with this whole Ashley Gonzalez case, I'm just like before any Latinos or Hispanics get in my comments about, oh, it's not all of us and it's not um yeah, I know it's not all of you. That's like, you know, I know I'm I'm a Latina and I know it's not me. You know what I mean? But at the same time, we need to hold our people accountable. I live in Texas, okay? It's undeniable. It's undeniable. You come here to Texas, Latinos are using the word left and right, and I mean hard er and they say a lot of ignorant things about black people. They disrespect black people.
all while trying to be black most of the time. I feel like here in the United States, we associate blackness with coolness. And a lot of Latinos that are not black, because there is black Latinos, but there's a lot of non-black Latinos and non-black Hispanic people that try to be a part of black culture and black community without actually liking black people. I think this actually comes from being in a system here in the United States that only recognizes black and white. Okay? We don't ever really recognize Latino people or Hispanic people. Therefore, we're left with so many questions about who we actually are, what we represent.
We're left with so much ambiguity on what being Latino or being Hispanic actually is because it's not a race. My family specifically is multicultural, multi-racial. I grew up being very confused about my identity. I'm not going to lie. And a lot of the problems I had came from the Latino community.
The colorism, the racism, the, you know, even even just the classism in the Latino community is crazy. We often forget that black Latinos even exist.
And some of us have family members or friends who are black Latinos and deny their African ancestry. Again, I understand that not all Latinos and Hispanics are racist, but let's look at the stats. Let's look at the data. All the people that voted for Trump this year, a majority, it was overwhelmingly Latino people that voted for Trump. And if you're Latino and you're trying to deny any of this, oh, I don't I never grew up with that. I don't I really want you to think about things you might have been told as a child. If you had the nickname Werita or Morinita or Negrita, I really want you to think of why why the Latino community obsesses so much over skin color. Why does it matter if you're Morinita or Morinita Plita? Why does it matter? I think we all need to question too like why so many theosas aos um would tell us [ __ ] like, "Oh, don't go outside for too long. You don't want to be black." Right? Oh, you shouldn't date black guys. You're too pretty for it. N word. Hard R. I need you guys to please stop acting oblivious. Like, stop acting like this is not a real problem in our community.
>> Why are Latinos asking black people to join them in the protest? But last month, black people asked Latinos to stop saying the N word because black people find it disrespectful when Latinos say the N word. And Latinos were so offended that they started disrespecting the black community. And I'm probably going to get a lot of hate for this, but I want to say something.
If you've been following me for a while or have gone through my videos recently, you see that I'm constantly pushing for unity between communities. Majority of the black people in the comments are stating how they get a lot of disrespect from the Latinos, and majority of the Latinos in my comments are actually really disrespectful to the black community. And I've been pushing for unity because these protests are not where we're going to unite. There's something bigger to come where we need that unity. And something that I've been noticing during these protests is a lot of Latinos are asking the black community for help. And when the black community states how they don't want to or they don't feel like they should, Latinos are disrespecting them with racial slurs. There's a video circulating on the internet where a Latina is yelling the n-word in a very derogatory form to a black police officer. How is that helping our cause when we're asking the black community to join us? There's videos on the internet where the comment section is full of hate from Latinos to black people because the black community doesn't want to join us on the protest. And while sure I agree that this is everybody's fight, Latinos, we need to take responsibility and acknowledge of the fact that this is our fault. I find it very ghetto and disrespectful for us to be saying the N word. I find it very disrespectful for us to be even saying the M word that stands for Beatles in Spanish. And while I am going to have a lot of people in the comments saying that this is all politics and about the Latinos for Trump BS, this has nothing to do with politics because it is before Trump took office. We were put against each other back in the 1970s and the 1980s and we're a product of that now because it was our parents that were put against one another. Why? As I remind you that back in the 1960s when we were all united, we actually got things done like the Civil Rights Act movement, Latinos tend to forget that black people, the black community were out protesting for fieldworker rights, immigration rights with us. And the black community tends to forget that there were Latinos marching with Martin Luther King Jr. down to the point that we do have a statue for MLK in Mexico because MLK was a huge impact in the Latino community. And while I do not agree with Cesar Chavez and the stuff that he did to the immigrants in the United States, Cesar Chavez amongst many other Latinos were marching with MLK.
Black Panthers were protecting Mexicans while Black Panthers also helped start the Brown Berets. We have a lot of history together and this is why divided we stay conquered because together we get things done. So no, I'm not asking the black community to come out and march with us to protest with us because this is something small compared to whatever is about to come. I'm asking the Latino and the black community to take accountability for whatever we have going on and start asking yourselves why have we been put against each other and why have some of us actually gone along with the way that they want us against each other? Why is there hate amongst each other when we've done nothing but unite in the past and get things done?
Where does this hate come from? I've had my fair share of experiences with racist people in the past, but those people do not define the communities that they come from for me. There's always going to be races within each community. So, to my fellow Latinos, we've needed unity for a long time from other communities.
And now we're reaping the consequences of us being hateful towards other communities. We even have hate within ourselves. And until we take accountability and change that, no one's going to come out to our rescue. Food for thought.
>> Have you noticed that it's the minorities that are having the abortions?
>> Sir, I do not I do not think you as a Mexican are calling out other minorities because you have anal. You're not any whiter than us just cuz you're standing with greenos. I know you want that white that white praise from them, but you're not going to get it.
>> Marco Rubio was reminded that no matter how high you get in this administration, doesn't matter how much you do, you are still not white.
>> It is a good thing. It's reciprocated.
It comes back the other way as well. And so, the fact the president is here today and making this a priority is so critical. Um, if I may, because some of these cameras are covering Spanish. You all right?
>> Oh, good. We don't need an interpreter for this one.
I think I'm a good interpreter. You'll find out in a second, but uh is he better in Spanish or in English? I think he's better in Spanish. He's great. Uh please, sir.
Mr. President, I only I only speak American.
Now, for starters, I'd love for the alcoholic to explain to everybody in the class what speaking American is because last time I checked, that's not a language. But in any case, we see this moment where Pete P basically takes a jab at Marco and says, "Hey, just a reminder, you're not a true American."
Now, when I started making this video, um I originally took pleasure in seeing that because like so many of us who still yet don't understand how anyone who is Latino and and came from immigrant uh ancestors and family could ever support anything that this man is doing. Now, Marco Rubio's parents were immigrants. They migrated from Kuba to Miami, Florida, where Marco was born.
And that's why a lot of people have been so um critical of him cuz it's like how like you came from a family that migrated here. How are you supporting these mass deportations and and kind of going against your own people? And it's really a part of a bigger conversation that we've all been having since last year since we kind of all really saw how many Latinos were supporting uh Trump is, you know, what happened. At what point did we not all feel the same way about immigration and our people? And while it's easy to look at this and and be happy and it honestly makes me sad because at the end of the day and say what you want, maybe I I am a little too sentimental, but that's still a Latino.
That's still one of my people. And I don't take pleasure in anyone that looks like me being humiliated and really anybody. But I do want to take this moment to remind everybody that is still supporting Trump who came from immigrants just like Marco, who are Latinos, who speak Spanish, who got the npal strictly on their forehead. And I just want to take the moment to remind you that no matter how high you climb and no matter how much of the juice you drink, they're never going to accept you. See, for a lot of us, when our families came over, they wanted to assimilate. They wanted to blend in. And it wasn't because, you know, at least in my experience, they wanted to be white.
It was because they just wanted to be left alone. They didn't want to stick out because they knew that that would, you know, possibly end up in their deportations. But if you're a Latino in the US, your family somewhere along that family tree migrated here. And regardless on whether they did it the legal way or or the whatever way, the times have changed. And for a lot of those who have supported the mass deportations because they say that, you know, you should have done it the legal way. Analyze what year your family did it the legal way. Was it easier? Was it under amnesty from uh Mr. A, what was his [ __ ] name? Ronald Reagan. Damn it. Was it when Ronald Reagan gave everybody amnesty? Or was it when the immigration system wasn't as difficult or as costly or overwhelmed as it is now? And I'll end it here because I don't want to get too far deep into this, but to every Latino that still supports Trump, it's okay to say, "Hey, I messed up. I didn't think it was going to be this way. I thought it was just going to be all the criminals." You can still say, "I was wrong. I was lied to.
I was manipulated." Because I think by now, if you still haven't woken up, brother, it's going to be a hard time for you. He's already got us into another war. The economy is not any better. And he's definitely not a Christian. so many of the issues on uh that so many Latinos voted for.
Listen, the arms are always open, the chair is always free, there's always food at the table for you. It's still not too late. You can still make this right. We have the midterms coming up and you can still say hey >> Latinos doesn't matter where you are in Mexico, Kubanos, Argentina, everything any kind of Latino you can possibly think of always have thought that the light lighter skinned you are the closest the proximity of white that you can be and the unfortunate part is most Cubans are light-skinned. So they always think that they get a free [ __ ] pass because they're somehow light-skinned enough but they're never white-kinned enough. And not to mention that Kuba was a [ __ ] dictatorship country. So it makes perfect sense that is what they want some fascist leader to go ahead and run the country. And not to mention they were colonized by Spain and they have colorism like a [ __ ] and the internalized racism that they have because Afroanos will literally say that they are white without like hesitating at all. I mean, I lived in New York for a very long time, and the Kanos who think that they're literally white are fascinating to me because they literally feel as if they are the exception to the rule, but yet they do not know that obviously they were enslaved by Spain and that they're not only Latino, but most of them are Afro Kuanos or Afro Latino. So, like, it's just [ __ ] wild. That's why >> Latinos don't even like themselves. That is the real problem here. Centuries of colonization have ingrained deep self-hatred passed down through generations as internalized racism.
We've been conditioned to believe that assimilation equals survival. That belonging to white society means erasing our culture, our language, and our history. And today, far too many Latinos are still pathetically desperate for white acceptance. They will do anything, anything to prove themselves worthy of white proximity. They will sell themselves out. They will sell out their families. They will sell out their children. And they will sell out their entire community. They will stab themselves in the back. They will stab the black community and every other marginalized group they should be standing beside in the back just to beg for crumbs from a table that they will never be invited to sit at. And these very Latinos, they're the reason we as people will never make real progress.
Because every time we move forward, they sabotage it, destroying any progress that we fight for, even at the expense of their own families and their own communities. And now we're watching the consequences of their betrayal play out in real time. Ice raids tearing apart their own neighborhoods and the very democracy of this country hanging by a thread. They most definitely helped do this. They helped the very machine that's now coming to destroy them. And I am beyond pissed. Did you see this video out of Indiana where this white woman keeps harassing a Latino construction crew that was hired by the city? Watch and I got more information about what happened afterwards. Watch.
You didn't get high.
Stop until your supervisor here not.
>> So, there's no information on who she is yet, but I spoke to the person who posted the video. I tagged them below if you want to see the whole thing. First of all, they were absolutely allowed to be doing the work they were doing, explaining that they are able to work 25 ft from the street. It's called eminent domain. They were working along the whole neighborhood doing that up until they got to Karen's house. They had their permits. They were allowed to be there. They were hired by the city. And remember when she said, "Wait till your supervisor gets here." Well, the supervisor was already there. He was Latino. But it seemed like she didn't believe him. She was expecting a white guy to show up. And none of that made her happy. So the police came. The police told her, "Yes, they're supposed to be working here. Why don't you go inside and let them do their job?" Then she went inside, turned on the sprinklers, so the cops had to go and tell her, "Turn off the sprinklers and stop disrupting city jobs." She was not arrested, and nobody who she pushed or bothered press charges against her.
Seriously, these white people can harass and bother and just make Latinos Day a living hell whenever they want and there's no consequences for their actions. I'm sorry this happened to this crew. And again, if anybody has any information on her, please leave in the comments. [music] So, this Latina who is a Trump supporter got deported from Mexico back to the US.
And I want to use this video to show y'all no matter how hard you try, you will never be white. And I say that because she made videos going, "Oh, look, people are making too big of a deal about Trump and the deportations.
He's only going after criminals. If you want to be here, you should do it the right way." Then she goes to Mexico, gets stopped by authorities while she's coming back from a concert. They check her papers and then they deport her.
Now, they deported her because she overstayed her visa. I know some people are like, "Well, you should have done it the right way." Calm down. Let's just give her a little gracer. She's not a criminal. Sure, she has ideologies you don't agree with, but she wasn't committing any crimes. She was down in Mexico partying it up. Now, this is where the you'll never be white part comes in. There's over 1 million undocumented white people living in Mexico. They are taking advantage of the system. They're not paying taxes.
They're down THERE JUST PARTYING IT UP.
And like advocates in Mexico have been saying, that authorities don't go after white people. They actually go after brown people. So you were racially profiled in a country that you were TRYING TO GET DUAL CITIZENSHIP FOR. SO, if you were racially profiled in Mexico, what do you think is going to happen to you in the US when Trump comes into office? BECAUSE THERE ARE AT least half a million white people undocumented in the US and they're never bothered. Because I need you to remember that the immigration system was never set up to hurt white people. It was set up to hurt people of color globally. Our movements are constantly restricted. While white people are never bothered when they do the same thing we do. So as much as you say, "Oh, well, if you want to come to this country, you have to do it the right way, it is not about doing it the right way." It is always, the immigration system has always been about hurting black and brown people, no matter where we are in the world. So please keep thinking how you're saved now that you're in the US back in your home country. They don't see you as a US citizen either. They want to take away your citizenship. They want to denaturalize people. So please let's get rid of that colonized mind because this immigration system was never made for us.
>> I do understand that colonialism took a big part into how the modern society is continuing to operate today because there are so many different countries, different continents that still act with a certain way because these are things that were enforced towards them and to them because of colonialism. We know that in Africa there are certain things that have been changed which benefit white people mostly and also hurt the black people. Mind you, black people are the majority. But when white people, you know, enter into these countries, you will find that there's a lot of worship towards these white people because there's this white washing. You have been taught to worship the white person.
You go around uh around the streets, you you know driving on the highways, you'll see billboards of white people. There's never black representation. Mind you, this is the continent of Africa.
No black representation. You want to buy something in a mall, you will be shown a white person. You want to buy a car, you'll be shown a white person driving the car. You want to buy whatever you want to buy. It's always representation of white people. This has gotten to a point where, you know, people have see white people as the blueprint, as what you should be, as what you should be close to. And it has gotten to a point where there is a lot of deconstruction that has had to happen where people are actually waking their forefathers up.
They're waking their not forefathers, they're waking their parents up, their grandparents and even their children and telling them this is not the way to go.
And this is something that is still continuing to, you know, occur and happen in different countries around the world where, like in the Latino community, um, and the Hispanic community, you find yourself wanting to be closer to white people. Mind you, you're not the only people. Latina and Hispanics are not the only people. There are Japanese, there are Chinese, there are Indians, there are people from the correct other opposite of land like the farthest land who still worship white people in Asia. That's a very different continent, the farthest from America, you know, that is if you're not passing through the ocean behind. But these two continents are very far apart. But you can find you'll find that Chinese people want proximity to white people. Uh, Japanese people want proximity to white people. They do not want any kind of interaction with black people. They don't want their children interacting with black children. They don't want their children marrying black uh people having relationships with black people.
And even most of them have been taught that as you continue to grow up, detach yourself from having relationships with black people because black people are not associated with power. actually associate yourself with white people and make sure you're closer to white people than you are with any other community because they have power. Mind you, the parents who are saying this have lived through colonialism. Some of them have re lived through some of the worst times in their own country where they have seen what the white person is capable of doing. They have seen their own people getting tortured, getting you know traded off, you know, being used as slaves, being bought off, being assaulted, you know, being killed. Like they have seen all these things happening to their own. And this all this madness has been caused by white people, but they choose still choose to tell their kids to be closer to that demon, to that person who has done the most atrocious things to your community.
Isn't that sad?
Isn't that so ironic? And isn't it the same thing that is happening to the Latino and Hispanic community where they are being told that you need proximity to white people. Mind you, white people have done terrible things and are still continuing to do terrible things to their community. But they are refusing to say that. Like just a few days ago, there was a lynching of a young boy who was hanged in front of a police station.
Justice for that boy? Nope. no justice for that young boy, but you still want proximity to these same people who are ready to do such a thing to your own kids. Black people have never posed a threat towards the Latin and Hispanic community. And even if they have, not as big as white people. So why why is this why is there so much hatred towards the black community? are people who have tried to, you know, fight for your rights as much as you have also tried your best to fight for their rights. Why have you chosen to be closer to the enemy, to the person who have has caused so much terrible things, you know, has caused so much trauma to your family, to your parents, to your kids, to the future generations, things that you'll continue to talk about as you get older. Why do you want to be closer to that person who has hurt you more than you want to be closer to people who want to build you up? Because we have seen what happens when black people and Hispanic and Latina people come together and work together. Great things happen. There are so many things that these two communities have created and have done that are just beyond words. But with with this power has come so much negativity. And I'm not saying that the black community has not had a hand, but I'm also saying it has also really really tried. Because when we look at the past, just a few years ago, like one or two years ago, when black people are telling the Latino community, do not vote for Trump. Kindly, kindly, kindly do not do that. But Latinos went on to vote against.
They wanted to vote for themselves. And because they knew it was going to hurt black people, they did not care even one bit. So they chose to vote for themselves and white people. Actually, they chose to vote for white people then include themselves in whatever white people will get so that every other community that did not do this earlier will get hurt. They did not care about black people. No matter how many times black people wanted to warn them, Latinos knew what they were doing at the end of the day. They wanted to vote for this man because they believed that, you know, putting yourself in this much proximity to white people and wanting to support this Trump guy and supporting MAGA will get you to a certain level where you'll get loved and respected and called out to family cookouts. I don't know, I guess. And that didn't happen.
There were songs created, there were dances made, there were chants made, and still after all that all was said and done, you and the government chose to show you its true colors. When Maga said, you thought, you went on and took your phone and looked at the bottom of your contact and said, "Oh, black people, let me call them. Let me call them. and they'll get they'll get us out of this mess. Even though we weren't with them as because even though they warned us, we're going to call them because they have to be suffering the same as we do, right? And then you call them. Then they say no. And then because you feel that you're obligated that black people owe you something, you become rude. You use racial slurs. You start calling them names. You call them words that you're not even supposed to utter, especially from that community.
And you know what it feels like to be called in certain manners that are not supposed to be done, especially from people outside of your community. You continue to show this kind of behavior whilst at the same time needing black people to march on the streets with you.
Black people have said it time and time again. And I'm sure they will also comment in this video and they will tell you that it is unfortunate what you're going through, but they're still not going to help you. And there is [clears throat] no need in them trying to bridge a gap that they did not try to break because that's not on them. The more you continue wanting to be closer to white people, the more you're going to just ruin your whole foundation, your whole history. Because your history is about pain. Pain that has been caused by the same people you want to be close with.
Isn't that ironic? Isn't it ironic that you're teaching your kids to be closer to the people who have hurt you so much who have taken and taken and taken and still taking who have separated your families. We have seen just 2 days ago, 3 days ago, 4 days ago, I guess a week ago, Ashley Gonzalez, the police officer, saying the nword so many times, you know, and she was a police officer, which she has been fired. Thank God. But she was a police officer, meaning we do not know the kinds of things she used to do to black people. probably she was really harassing black people. Some black people have probably been arrested for things that they have not done. But you want black people to want you in their community. You want black people to accept you back with open arms when they are people like that who are walking around saying, you know, using the racial slurs, yelling and saying you hate black people. If you ask that lady why she hates black people, she will not tell you. Because if you're talking about violence between communities, each and every community has bad apples. You cannot say that black people are responsible for the wars that are in China, for the battles that are in Japan. There are no black people there.
So, you can't say there there's only Chinese people there. There's Japanese people there who are fighting against each other. You can't blame that on black people. You can't say that just because there are, you know, bad apples here and there within the black community, which is in each and every community that you want to judge black people according to, I don't know what according to their skin color. That's crazy. Especially when you know what it feels like when someone is racist towards you. But I would love to hear what you have to say. So, kindly comment your comment your thoughts about this.
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