It’s been interesting. To say the least.
In the past few months, many of us Black folk throughout America have proudly managed to go on to mainstream social media, like Facebook and others, and shut down quite a few white racist operative “Tea Party”-ish groups who went undercover in Blackface and began to post things like “ratchet” (i.e., ‘wretched’) video-ho’s and fights-in-da-hood mentally malfunctional junk from WorldStar HipHop’s devilish site, and others like it.
The ugly of American society had crawled out of its roach dens and managed to initiate many other racist whites in “Blackface Facebook profiles” to join forces with them. The bombastic energy of keeping Black people mentally enslaved and forever fighting one another was in full force on the most popular and populated social media site; and, for the most part, we managed to shut them down by hitting back with “good stuff” about Black people, keeping Black folk educated in spite of them, and for the ones who were easily shot down, ignoring them to death.
We drove a wedge into their little devious plans to divert, distract, and deflect Black America and throw us off our A-game. We snipped them off at the pass.
I must take the time out to congratulate and commend the many true “Black conscious warriors” who helped to ditch these operatives in the dirt, along with our white compatriots who stayed true to their own race and joined up with us to help end it. Some of us were killing them without knowing what we were doing except tracking them down and kicking them out of our Facebook groups and our ‘monolithic’ Black lives.
For the most part, a lot of the “ratchet” (wretched) noise of Black-oriented Facebook groups ended, with a few triflers still popping up from time to time to try and restart those mostly dead engines.
The good news is: They now know that we know who they are.
Good job.
Now how do we get Black America back on track? Where do the “monolithic we” go from here?
I don’t know how many Black people in America finally got the message when Barack Obama was elected that we’d spent more than 30 years allowing the wrong people to run our public offices, or totally ignoring who “they” let in, and the final message in that long history is that we’re going to have to vote them out come November 2014.
All of them, and start mostly from scratch with some good politicians, for whatever “good politics” is worth in America. There is a lot of damage control to do in Black America, but I see the mentalities changing, thank God for Al Gore, LOL.
It’s only taken these types of white Americans 525 years to let us know in no uncertain terms that their only goal in life is to stop us from rising, and they stopped only themselves while they were doing it. I think Black people in America are finally fed up with eating white folks trashy attitudes about us in the form of filthy music and over-sexualized, violent television shows.
Though we won’t be able to accurately assess the true damage Barack Obama’s presidency did to racism in America until he’s out of office, in the meantime, we’ve got a lot of clean-up work to do between now and January of 2016 to finish this trip up.
Someone said we were going over the “same old rhetoric.” I find it odd that no one calls it “rhetoric” when it’s negative hateful energy railed against us Black folk, but the minute we begin to tell the truth about something going on in our lives, it’s labeled the same-o same-o rhetoric. Hm.
Let’s just say that until it ends, and we are where we need to be in this nation psychologically, emotionally, spiritually, financially, and economically STABILIZED, the “same-o rhetoric” will continue, no matter who doesn’t like it. If we’re “monolithic” when they want to tear us down, we danged sure need to get “monolithic” to build us back up.
When he (Mr. President) leaves office in 2016, all of us PSYCHOLOGICALLY AND ECONOMICALLY MONOLITHIC BLACK PEOPLE ought to be sitting real pretty in every faction across this land. He was the one who was chosen to go through it –this moment in time and American history- and he has more than proven himself equal to the task.
He asked for the job, we gave it to him, so now the question remains “What will we do when he’s gone?” We should not be revisiting this same “isht” in 2016. Period.
Failure is not an option, Black People.
The Virtual End
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