๐บ๐ธ๐บ๐ธ๐บ๐ธ, โฝ๏ธ, Metalhead!! Women look better without the goddamn makeups!! Racism used to be a sensitive topic, now itโs just a political gimmick!
To those who are privileged to bear the mantle of American citizenship yet fail to fully cherish it...reflect upon this. Narratives such as these profoundly touch my soul.๐บ๐ธ๐บ๐ธ๐บ๐ธ
Many people born in the US donโt understand what America means to some people. I became an American citizen a month ago, and I want to share my story. I dreamed about America since I was 13 years old; I thought it was the best country in the whole world, and it was my biggest dream to live here. I moved to the US when I was 17. It took me 11 years to become a US citizen. I had to get six visas one after another, and every time, I had to explain and prove that I deserved it. I was so scared that I might not be worthy of a green card, and I cried when I was finally approved.
In those 11 years, I never missed a rent payment or got a ticket because I really wanted to show that I was worthy of living here. Every single day, I aimed to be the best version of myself to live in what I saw as the best country. I spent over a million dollars on rent, my car, and daily living expenses. I always paid my taxes, and I worked incredibly hard to get to this point. Becoming a US citizen is one of my biggest achievements in life. I would look at the American passports of my friends and think, โWhat a beautiful passport,โ admiring every page, every detail. I would hold it in my hand, wishing and dreaming that one day I would open that little book and see my own photo inside. I still canโt believe it when I open my passport now and see my face. It feels too good to be true.
My whole point is that I never received any benefits or government support; I never wanted to take advantage of this country. I worked hard and was always grateful to live here. I support every legal immigrant who has gone through the same journey and made the hard choice to leave everything behind to start a new chapter for a better future.
It breaks my heart to see how some people now can just walk in and get a passport. Does this mean that all my hard work was for nothing?
This young black kid lives in reality
He says he doesn't fear White People or other races
He fears his own people
If I were to bet
I bet he had both parents in his life and they both had jobs
Thats what it takes to raise a healthy child in this world
Not sitting at home collecting EBT section 8
Ask any Black person like me who has walked away from their village, family, community, or hometown to build a life on their own.
They will tell you straight:
The vast majority of us did not leave because of race.
It has nothing to do with White people or any other race.
We left because we could no longer survive the mentality around us - the one that constantly drags us backward, kills ambition, and punishes anyone trying to rise.
Staying meant choosing failure by association.
So we chose ourselves.
It's like a death cult.
Again, nothing to do with SKIN COLOR. Everything to do with ATTITUDE.
๐จThis black guy is the perfect example of why Karmelo Anthony is going to prison for the murder of Austin Metcalf.
He is so quick to become violent because his brain canโt comprehend the notion of civilized debate.
People with knowledge donโt need to resort to violence because their ideas are enough to win an argument.
If I were this young manโs father I would sit him down and try to talk some sense into him before his attitude got him killed, but chances are he doesnโt have a father.
Another symptom of Democrat policies.
Starting in 1820, around 20,000 Black people voluntarily departed from America to establish the country of Liberia in West Africa.
It was supposed to be a democratic utopia for and by Blacks.
This is Liberia 179 years after its founding: