The Historical Sabotage of Black America

The plan now is to push us down into poverty, by taking what we have and giving it to low-income whites, who they have neglected for decades.

The Historical Sabotage of Black America

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Aside from slavery and segregation, the US government and three-letter secret agencies have always had a plan to neutralize Black progress. During and after segregation, they used the welfare system to dismantle families. They took children, unhoused fathers, and impoverished Black mothers.

This is during the same time Black communities organized and protested with Black Power and Civil Rights movements. The plan after that was to assassinate the leaders of these movements to discourage Black pride and motivation, and to establish control. Riots ensued, and the US government had reason to insert state agencies and dependency into the Black home.

After the sixties, the plan was to strip away what remained of Black dignity and pride. To do this, Hollywood producers broadcast Blaxploitation films into the communities that undermined Black relationships. They pushed pimping films, street hustling and heroin addicts onto the movie screen. This devalued the lives of Blacks, lowered self-esteem, and aspirations. Black men turned to mistreating and abusing Black women and formed street gangs for a new masculine identity.

The seventies brought in the disco era and a new age of Black music and bands sored in popularity. As music brought Blacks and whites together more, Hollywood and network television decided to address racial issues and bring them to light by showcasing the problems on national television using humor. Racial harmony was attempted but many whites were troubled.

So, in the eighties, another plan was hatched and the US government felt the need to destabilize racial harmony by pushing drugs into the Black communities. This infiltration combined with Black street gangs brought crack addicts, drug dealers and gang wars, and gave Hollywood a reason to stereotype Black people as drug dealers, thugs, and gangsters.

As the community complained about the crime rates, politicians found a reason to spend more on police training and resources and placed hundreds of thousands of police into the Black community. Unfortunately, the police were white guys with racist attitudes. The government utilized these officers to profile, arrest and jail Black drug dealers and addicts while looking the other way on white suburban drug activity.

The nineties added to Black arrest and more policing through the child support system. Hundreds of thousands of Black men were hunted down and arrested for back and unpaid child support. The jails filled up faster breaking records of incarceration around the world. This left hundreds of thousands of single Black women with children living in poverty, underemployed and uneducated. The system then began taking away government assistance and enforcing work requirements, but no opportunities for jobs in the Black community. 

The music industry took full advantages of this era by demoralizing young Black, fatherless children by introducing negative rap music in lieu of the positive rap that ran through the eighties calling for revolution and resistance. This negative rap furthered the Blaxploitation era of entertainment by degrading women and pushing violence against one another. The eighties and nineties continued to lower the self-esteem and ambition of the Black mind.

The Black community always fought back against these generational forms of destruction of their community by encouraging education, college, job stability, strong families, and self-entrepreneurism. As we came through the nineties into the new millennium, Blacks were moving forward again without distraction. Until the frustration and resentment of white America became more blatant. They resorted to police killings and murders of Black men, racial profiling in the streets, and the rise of the criminalization of Black children through the school to prison pipeline, where Black children were profiled as delinquents and pushed into the juvenile justice system.

The first chance white America got; they jumped on an opportunity to show their resentment when Hurricane Katrina hit New Orleans. They publicly broadcast all manners of wickedness and humiliation on national television as they allowed Black people to suffer and die in the Superdome of New Orleans. To make up for this international embarrassment of the US, a Black president was appointed. But this infuriated the white community and the police killings, racial outrage and epithets increased.

As we all cruised through the Obama presidency, the racial tension boiled in white America. From the cities to the suburbs into the rural areas. Then along came you know who; who fueled the tension and gave an outlet to the hate that was simmering inside. Now, after ten years of hate and division, the Black community has come face to face with a retroactive shadow form of racism; being targeted with precision through every US institution there is. All headed by whites who have what they call “Black fatigue,” but are nothing more than modern day racist Klansmen.

The plan now is to push us down into poverty, by taking what we have and giving it to low-income whites, who they have neglected for decades. They will try to take our jobs, our homes, and our confidence by using fear and threatening us with imprisonment. They want cheap labor and to fulfill their age-old fantasy of a new form of Black chattel slavery. This will be met with a fierce resistance by the Black community because they do not understand we are not our ancestors.

But as always and through the other years of racial oppression by white America, Blacks will be okay, but this time, we will come out higher than we have ever been. This is because white supremacy is dying fast. It is kicking and screaming, throwing tantrums, and becoming more violent and intellectually incompetent by the day. They have a plan, but as always, they are not truly prepared for the backlash they will get this time around. We must remain vigilant, steadfast on our business, and have no fear of their harsh words, threats of death, or unjust laws.

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