If you do not understand racism (white supremacy) and how it works, everything else you understand will only confuse you. - Neely Fuller

We need something to clarify everything for us, because we get confused...but if we use the concept of Asili, we will understand that whatever it is they are doing, whatever terms they use, however they come at you, you need to be thinking about what? How is this going to facilitate their power and help them to dominate me? -Marimba Ani

Wednesday, October 2, 2019

Black People, Stop Saying, “I Never Thought Something Like This (Racist) Would Happen To Me”
Unity Consciousness #1757

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(Part 9vv of 11)

The full range of possibilities always exists. That must be why any means necessary is always possible This must be why two black people (the brother and judge), hugged Amber Guyger who killed Botham Jean intentionally and premeditated, yet claimed she did nothing wrong. The always existence of the full range of possibilities also must be why black people keep saying, “I never thought something like this (racist) would happen to me.” You can be certain many more black people think this way. For any piece of logic, there is never just one person who has that logic. So there must be another black female bailiff who would also comb Amber Guyger's hair like a good nanny mammy should.

When it comes to “I never thought something like this (racist) would happen to me,” we need to critically analyze this glitch in order to fix it.

I Never Thought

Why not?
Why did you never thought?

When a person starts out with “I never thought” and adds “something like this (racist)” in the middle and ends with “would happen to me,” that statement tells you a great deal why that person thinks that way.

The statement tells you the person somehow thinks the way they personally individually think, changes the racist collective perspective towards them.
The person somehow thinks something about them provides a protective “do not harm” shield around them.”

An epitome example of ignorance is when a black person says, “I never thought something like this (racist) would happen to me.”
This is so much so a perfect example of ignorance, that it crosses over into stupidity.

This must be so because despite all evidence that the achievement of black people does not lessen the liklihood of encountering racism, some black people still think their personal achievement has changed racism's deeply entrenched historical pattern dynamics.

Understand clearly that the entire racist collective represents people with goo gobs of unresolved personal issues that have been transferred to each other epigenetically and nourished to full strength every generation. That's why they transfer and project their problems onto you, us black people.

Something Like This

Something like what?
Are you saying there are categories of racism that you graduate out of as you elevate yourself in the society?
Tell that to Dr. King, to Obama, to Oprah, to any well-liked black person, to any well-to-do black person, to any black person with a college degree, to any black person who doesn't smoke weed, to any black person who dresses the part, talks the part, walks the part, lives in the white hood part.....

...To Me

The black person is not saying “I never thought something like this (racist) would happen.”
They're saying “I never thought it would happen TO ME; however, I did think it would happen to other black people.
Why?
Because they're not like me and I'm not like them.
How's that?
You are black aren't you?
Say what? You're American?
Obviously the black person is hoping the racist collective will “see” them differently and respect them more based on things that ain't got nothing to do with racism.

Please give me one example of how being “different than other black folks” has worked in favor of that black person such that racists automatically leave different looking or different acting or different named black folks alone. I'm a French Canadian. Good luck with that escape route.

I...Me

[These are the first and last words of the statement]
Already we can see where the logic glitch begins and ends,

Racism ain't about I, Me, Myself, You.
Racism is about Us and We in the eyes of dem den dim them.
Racism is not about individual black people.
Racism is about collective white people who choose to vent their frustrations on collective black people, after killing the goodness in their whole family.
Racism is about all white people functioning as one against black people.
We assist racism when black people think like individuals.

Listen to how crazy the statement sounds when we change the context from I and Me to We, Us.
“We never thought something like this (racist) would happen to us?”

What group of black people on this planet makes that kind of statement?
Those in plastic bubble land?
That's how crazy it sounds each time an individual black person says I never thought something like this (racist) would happen to me.

What's so special about you, you individual black person, that makes you foolishly think that racism will pass you by like the death angel upon recognizing your innocence?
Is it because you have erased the mark of the beast off your face?
By making the crazy statement, “I never thought something like this (racist) would happen to me, that black person is subconsciously saying racism is caused by how black people look and act and therefore if black people change the way they look and act, then racism will decrease and not mess with the black people who are doing the white thing.
I'll state the painfully obvious again: A black person can never white their way out of racism. The black collective can never white their way out of racism.

Thought

Where does most of this stupid thinking come from?
The daily media.
] The media is a minefield constructed by white government and white businesses. The three are one.
There are many more institutions in this circle of criminal spirits.
When black minds are educated by white minds, we end up so conflicted, instead of Black people not trusting anything promoted or allowed by white folks, we turn around and don't trust the causes and effects of racism. We believe this so much so, that we set out on a life journey to prove it as an individual. Look at me, I'm a business owner. I'm a black woman minority small business owner who struggled and made it. I made it out of the fell clutches of circumstance (out of racism). And have not winced nor cried aloud. I'm proud, but not black because I don't act black and that will get albino monkey racism off my back. Praise thee de lawd for delibbering me outa da darkness inta de wundaful lite.

I'll say it again: Black people, quit trying to “work off” your blackness by thinking if you just do this, this and this, then you will be less black and less likely to be attacked by racism. Psycho-sociopaths don't think like that.

As long as there is racism taking place anywhere in the world against any black person, no black person should ever again think that certain kinds of racism can't or won't happen to them.
As long as there is a single racist left, no black person should ever think things have gotten better.
Why not?
Because there's no such thing as a single racist. Where there is one, there is a humongous colony of them.

Likewise, then, it's time black people wake up and reckon-wise, there's no such thing as an individual black person.
This is true not because of the conditions imposed by racism, but there is no such thing as an individual black person because this is how humans functioned in Africa before allowing glitches in their logic to tear apart their unity of self, with others and with all else. This glitch eventually led to the creation of racist logic.

(Ayinde's Speech) by Ayinde Jean Baptiste Million Man March 1995

I'll say it again, you can't denounce your Africanness and escape racism.
You call yourself by the name of another country and think you're no longer black.
This is especially true in Africa.
In Africa, if all of you are not going to be African first, then you need to be black first, if not, you are treading on a thin layer of non-harmonic unity.

Listen Black People, you can't marry your way out of racism. Ask Meghan Markle.
You most certainly can't white “friend” your way out of racism.
You can't sports team your way out of racism.
You can't membership your way out of racism by joining some :non-black” organization or movement.
You can't religion your way out of racism. Yes Jesus loves you, but the followers of religions worldwide do not love black people.
You can protest with white people for causes white people care about, and think that is going to get you a white master card. When we join with other groups for any cause that does not have helping black people as its number one goal, we are hurting ourselves and walking into another okie doke.

The only thing that will get you out of racism is your logic that restores knowledge of self.
See UC#448.