Nothing scare the enemies of Africa more than our Unity. Global Black Unity of Black People is even scarier.
Project Sankofa, the Album.. Out on all https://t.co/zhdWEXWRJm
#fyp#projectsankofa@Michael_Excel
We Can Only Feel Guilty For Something We Did - Professor Nigel Biggar on British Colonial History
This exchange between Journalist Mehdi Hasan and Oxford Professor Nigel Biggar, is a textbook example of how Britain, and the West more broadly, seeks to rhetorically manage and minimise its colonial crimes.
Biggar dismisses inherited guilt but accepts inherited pride, even if he calls it “admiration,” for Britain’s role in ending slavery or defeating Nazism. This imbalance is deliberate. Western societies are quick to claim credit for parts of history that make them look good, but they avoid responsibility for crimes that expose violence and exploitation. As a result, colonialism, slavery, and extraction are treated as regrettable but distant events, cut off from today’s inequality and global power gaps.
At a deeper level, this exchange shows how the West often strips politics out of history. Colonialism is reduced to a moral or philosophical debate instead of being understood through its real-world impacts. This shuts down serious conversations about reparations and accountability before they can even start. They deliberately move attention away from what happened, who gained from it, and who is still paying the price, and redirect it into word games about guilt versus responsibility. This is how empire continues to protect itself: by removing any sense of duty, consequence, or obligation to repair the harm.
The government intentionally wants more illiterate and ignorant people. That’s why they don’t invest properly in schools and healthcare. It’s a deliberate strategy to keep people trapped in a cycle of poverty and ignorance. If more Nigerians were educated, how would they continue looting or buying votes? It’s a tactic and a form of advanced slavery.
“Here Are Some Crazy Things We Found In The 2026 Budget That Most Nigerians Don’t Know About. Nigeria’s 2026 Budget Prioritizes Government Luxury And Excess While Starving Critical Public Services Of The Funding Nigerians Desperately Need.”~ Lady Reveals
People get angry when I say “Black people don’t own or control Black culture in America” they had to own it and control it to whitewash all the atrocities they committed…
Slavery Was a Rape Economy, And You Know It
They show cotton fields, but never breeding plantations. Never the girls raped at puberty, reduced to livestock, their children counted as yield. Law protected this because Black and Indigenous people were declared subhuman. This was not just a “dark chapter” but a system. Sanitising it is moral cowardice.
This woman watched a 25 year-old get the promotion and then they turned around and asked her to train the 25-year-old.
I would have reacted exactly the way that she did!
How would you have responded?
@Raindropsmedia1 Man know thyself.. If you are not built for the dynamics of certain relationships then don’t get into them..
If you have to make your spouse choose between you or their kid at any point then either you don’t get into that relationship or leave if you already in it.
Dear Africans,
The world is very hostile to us and they don’t want us in their countries
We MUST work hard to fix our homeland, dignify our people so that we all can thrive on our own soil
Let us stop enabling the elites