@Mav2787@KevOnStage No, it didn’t. You didn’t expect the backlash & now you’re scrambling to walk it back. And for someone worried about “they” not taking us seriously, it’s wild coming from a battle rapper who helps reinforce that exact perception.
The Moynihan Report didn’t ‘analyze’ Black families, it blamed them. In 1965, the government framed poverty as a cultural failure instead of policy violence. Single Black mothers became the scapegoat, and the state walked away clean.
ashleytheebarroness
@JasonSt77914978@nasescobar316@AmericaPapaBear We neither seek nor require your respect. Your inflated sense of importance leads you to believe your judgments of us carry weight—they do not.
@belladesignsca @365CharlesParis That’s fair. I personally thought it was a good, wholesome movie—but the ending could’ve been stronger. What really made it stand out were the subliminals—the implied narratives that weren’t overt, but deeply resonated with anyone rooted in Black culture.
@Gaffer254@Chris490360 We are the reason you were able to come here on that Boeing 707 and enjoy the freedoms you do. Before the Immigration & Nationality Act of 1965, they didn’t want any of you here. Going back to build a mansion won’t matter. Your government will still be a slave to the West/China.
@MOUSE538669@Gaffer254@Chris490360 They also let them name their nations, define their borders, and exploit their natural resources. It’s laughable to think those who fled their corrupt, failed governments to live on foreign soil are somehow better than people who successfully fought against Jim Crow.