“If race disappears as a category of official division, as it has in most of the world, this will facilitate the emergence of a plural racial order where the groups exist in practice but are not official recognized - and anyone ....
... and anyone trying to address racial division is likely to be chided for racializing the population.”
— Professor Eduardo Bonilla-Silva, Racism without Racists: #ColorBlindRacism
"The state prefers to endorse a uniform, homogenized culture, as such a culture would be simple to identify and easy to control."
Romila Thapar, Nationalism
"White Supremacy is the belief that white people are superior, white nationalism is the belief that society and the state should be organized to reflect that superiority."
— Adam Serwer
The Black Identity will not accept this. This is an abomination.
And, it will RAGE against it!
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Within the jungles of white supremacy exist a silver lining: They truly believe their encountering "inferior" races --monkeys. And, that's not necessarily a bad thing.
"Whenever Colin Powell is on the news, white people give him the same compliments: 'How do you feel about Colin Powell?', 'He speaks so well! He's so well spoken. I mean he really speaks so well!' Like that's a compliment.”
He speaks so well' is not a compliment, okay? 'He speaks so well' is some shit you say about retarded people that can talk."
“What do you mean he speaks so well? He's a fucking educated man! How the fuck did you expect him to sound, you dirty motherfucker?”
"We are a society that has been structured from top to bottom by race. You don't get beyond that by deciding not to talk about it anymore. It will always come back; it will always reassert itself over and over again."
— Kimberle Williams Crenshaw
(Thread) Abortion, Evangelicalism, and White Supremacy
Their FIRST “moral” crusade wasn't against abortion or homosexuals: It was against African American Christians.
“Race, not abortion, was the founding issue of the religious right”
“In 1971, two years before Roe v. Wade legalized abortion, the biggest white evangelical group in America, the Southern Baptist Convention, supported its legalization. The group continued that support through much of the 1970s. “
"The problem often lies in the failure to understand both the historical and the institutional dimensions of marginalization that African Americans have experienced."
"African American struggles in the United States could not be simply limited to how the US economy was entirely built on the shoulders of a people who were instantly turned into [racial] slaves and were accordingly deprived their history, culture, and ability to exercise ...