In 2007, Black U.S. chattel slavery descendants (African Americans/ BAs) won an EEOC “same race” suit against an Ethiopian-owned company in Houston that discriminated against BAs in favor of native African drivers. Black ethnic specificity is already understood — federally…
In the EEOC complaint, Andrew Cooper — a black American working for Ethio Express reveals how he was told by Ethio Express management that,

"you blacks are happy as long as whites give you food stamps."
Cooper explains how Black American drivers “would be dispatched on ‘ghost trips,’ in which a driver would arrive at a destination to find no passenger waiting, while routes with paying passengers were assigned to drivers of Ethiopian origin.”

#PanAfricanism 🥴
When the inferior driving routes assigned to BAs experienced large increases in passenger volume like during the Super Bowl week in 2004, the Ethiopian bosses snatched the routes away from the BAs, giving them to Ethiopians so that they could get those passenger tips.😒
Now, shortly after answering the complaint, the Ethiopian-owned company filed for bankruptcy, placing it under the protection of an automatic stay in Bankruptcy Court. 😒
Fortunately, the EEOC reopened this case after the legally required waiting time after a Bankruptcy Court ruling has passed and secured a default settlement of $37,197, enjoining (prohibiting) the Ethio Express owners from discriminating on the basis of race or national origin.🎉
Links to court documents used in this thread can be found here: clearinghouse.net/case/8153/
Finally, it’s important to note that this case is regarded as one of the EEOC’s significant “same race discrimination ” cases.

Link: eeoc.gov/initiatives/e-…

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More from @guang_lie

May 15
There is no “Black and Brown” coalition. It’s a sham.

A thread 🧵 on EEOC lawsuits wins of Black U.S. chattel slavery descendants adversely affected by Hispanic hiring preferences:
A Black, non-Hispanic man told the EEOC that Champion Fiberglass refused to provide him with a job application after it learned he couldn't speak Spanish. The EEOC sued on behalf of an entire class of non-Hispanic job applicants.

Result: Company paid $225,000 to settle
Marquez Brothers International Inc. — a San Jose, California food producer, refused to hire non-Hispanic applicants of all races for unskilled production warehouse positions because its affiliates preferred Hispanic job applicants.

Result: paid $2 million to settle
Read 14 tweets
Apr 24
Marcus Garvey getting DRAGGED: A Thread on Correspondences between Marcus Garvey and William Pickens (1/6)
In a very flattering letter, Marcus Garvey cordially invites William Pickens to be honored at a UNIA-ACL convention in recognition of all the work that Pickens has done "in the name of scattered Ethiopia." Marcus Garvey sincerely hopes that Pickens will attend this event. (2/6)
Pickens reply to Garvey is EPIC:

"If you are trying to fool the Klan, you have employed a losing stratagem. If you are sincere, then you are more unfortunate to the American Negro than the whole Klan..." (3/6)
Read 7 tweets
Apr 11
Black U.S. chattel slavery descendants are racialized — ethnicized as “Black” in a very specific, historically-informed way that results in our having a relationship with “Black” that often differs vastly from that of West Indians & Africans. This is not American exceptionalism.
I’ll never forget arriving in South Africa ready to reconnect with the “Motherland”(😅) only to be told that I was “Coloured” rather than “Black” because of my “white” 🥴 complexion — mind you, in the USA, I am an unambiguously “Black,” medium-complexioned American Negro.
My entire life I had been nothing but “Black,” so I was initially very offended at being called “Coloured.” I was heated! But, then I began to understand that the history that had informed the shaping of race & ethnicity in South Africa was different from that of my USA history.
Read 9 tweets
Jan 28
Benefitting from a privileged black immigrant status, these migrants often “brought” with them an ignorance of how race/racism operated within the USA (because they assumed that race/racism operated the same here as it did in the Caribbean), and at least initially undermined BAs.
Claude McKay:

“It was the first time I had ever come face to face with such manifest, implacable hate of my race, and my feelings were indescribable. ... I had heard of prejudice in America but never dreamed of it being so intensely bitter.”

(1918)

(Credit to @Much2Blaq)
After immigrating to the U.S., Claude McKay was shocked to learn about the conditions of Black Americans and was actually radicalized *IN the United States. McKay’s understanding of how race/racism operated in the USA was not something he brought with him from the Caribbean.
Read 8 tweets
Jan 28
Social Media Management?

Gates was being ratioed horribly for this post; now his ratio has improved. Look at the last 100 or so accounts that have “liked” his post. You see the long numerical values in those Twitter account names? These accounts have almost no followers. #BOTS
If you scroll through the “likes” and target the accounts with numerical values, you’ll find that many of them have already been suspended. “Influencers” are hiring social media management firms with BOT farms that will swoop in and “fix” the ratios of Twitter posts “gone wrong.”
Do I know for sure that Henry Louis Gates hired a social media firm to monitor his account? No, but all of the now suspended accounts that swooped in to like his post sure does look mighty suspicious…and if it walks like a duck and talks like a duck, then…..
Read 4 tweets
Jan 17
This document right here is making me ill. I don’t know how anyone can read a report like this and not full-throatily advocate for reparations for Black U.S. chattel slavery descendants. @TheBlackCaucus @NAACP - y’all need to get it together.

cssp.org/wp-content/upl…
“A federal official who traveled to southern states following the establishment of ADC reported that few Black families participated in ADC because of White administrators’ presumption that Black women should work in the wage labor force—unlike White women.”
“Black women were often denied assistance and forced to work, even as White women were allowed to continue receiving assistance.”
Read 4 tweets

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