Repping out 135 lbs.!
1:55
9 ай бұрын
Color Struck by Zora Neale Hurston
17:59
Пікірлер
@mctbuilds8980
@mctbuilds8980 Ай бұрын
Bro they says it’s a white guy lol
@jasonito23
@jasonito23 Ай бұрын
It's already a confirmed fact of who he was. They are always trying to change history. I addressed that in my very first video back when I was doing this history. That was one of my main reasons for starting this channel.
@jasonito23
@jasonito23 2 ай бұрын
Lot´s of fun!
@magnums55
@magnums55 2 ай бұрын
Whats your ig
@davicool4284
@davicool4284 3 ай бұрын
George S. Sky-ler
@jasonito23
@jasonito23 3 ай бұрын
Thank you!
@bobstewart1668
@bobstewart1668 9 ай бұрын
Thank you for speaking about Wallace Thurman's work! A fascinating writer and a more fascinating man. Thank you.
@jasonito23
@jasonito23 9 ай бұрын
I loved his writings.
@michelej9496
@michelej9496 9 ай бұрын
Dr. Woodson was sent to the to miseducate the Filipinos? 🤔 Have you read, Fugitive Pedagogy by Jarvis R Givens? "The African-Americans will not advance far if they continue to waste their energy abusing those who misdirect and exploit them. The exploiters of the race are not so much at fault as the race itself. If African-Americans persist in permitting themselves to be handled in this fashion they will always find someone at hand to impose upon them. The matter is one which rests largely with African - Americans themselves. The race will free itself from exploiters just as soon as it decides to do so. No one else can accomplish this task for the race. It must plan and do for itself." -Carter G. Woodson 11:22
@jasonito23
@jasonito23 9 ай бұрын
Carter G. Woodson wrote: The Miseducation of the Negro based on what he was tasked with teaching in the Philippines. I don´t understand why you´re questioning that. No, I haven´t read Fugitive Pedagogy. I will check it out though.
@michelej9496
@michelej9496 9 ай бұрын
@@jasonito23ah, got it, just wasn't clicking at the time, it be that way sometimes.
@nerdyblackgurlpodcast4817
@nerdyblackgurlpodcast4817 11 ай бұрын
I love your channel. What made you so interested in black history and literature? I wonder.
@jasonito23
@jasonito23 11 ай бұрын
#1 I'm black, high yellow and grew up in a very racist Ohio. I have a video on the slave papers in my family. #2. I went to an HBCU for undergrad. Morehouse #3. I want to grad school to major in Medieval English Lit, but in a class one of my classmates brought in The Ways of White Folks by Langston Hughes. I did a report on it and changed my concentration. However, I've changed this channel. I got burned out because I was rereading books I'd already read to do these videos. Edit: And like many others, my mom suggested I read The Autobiography of Malcolm X when I was 15. Changed my life.
@indyphillipconner6252
@indyphillipconner6252 11 ай бұрын
Fun Fact: new jersey was the last state to band slavery in 1866
@lilramborambo4399
@lilramborambo4399 Жыл бұрын
🫵😉👌💯💛🫡🫡🫡🫡🫡💯💛
@thea42
@thea42 Жыл бұрын
@jasonito23
@jasonito23 Жыл бұрын
Good job guys. You were all awesome!
@tzaph67
@tzaph67 Жыл бұрын
Fredrick Douglas’ account of his life, although horrific in many places is one of my favourite books. The fact that he overcame so much and achieved so much shows what an amazing person he was. Hearing him describe his life in his own words is so powerful - it inevitably makes me think of all the slaves who were never able to speak their truths. He’s one of my heroes. Lovely to hear you speak his words, thank you.
@SuperhumanUnchained
@SuperhumanUnchained Жыл бұрын
Some people are blessed with their physique
@jasonito23
@jasonito23 Жыл бұрын
I didn´t get abs until my 30s when I stopped eating garbage food. Cleaned up my diet and 3 weeks later abs started showing. All through High School I played football and ran track but never had abs.
@MaryTracy-jz6pw
@MaryTracy-jz6pw Жыл бұрын
Mixed emotions 💬
@ShawnThomas
@ShawnThomas Жыл бұрын
Frederick Douglass was not half white and half black. He was an American Indian. In the year 1600 there were approximately 10 million “Indians” in this land who were divided into about 600 tribes that had numerous confederacies. The Confederates who went to war with the Union, adopted its confederacy from those “Indians.” When they show images of the Indians they show images that look like modern day Mexicans, those are Plains Indians. However, what did the north eastern “Indians” look like? Those were the Indians the first white people encountered. The first Europeans told you how they looked. They called them “Copper-Colored” not unlike a copper penny. A red penny, hence the Red-Man. They went from calling those “Copper-Colored” people to just calling them “Colored.” Eventually that went to Negro, and then to black and African-American in the 1960’s. {I think of my mother. The only time I ever heard her use the word “Nigger” was to say “Red Nigger”} Our people never called themselves “Black” or “African” because they were not. They called themselves Niiji. Frederick Douglass was from the people now called Potomac Indians, which includes many different “tribes” who were in the Virginia Maryland area [Washington D.C.]. He was not a descendant of Africans who came to this land on slave ships. So, how did he end up enslaved? In the summer of 1666 the Virginia Council / Governor declared war on those Potomac people. The orders were to kill the men, and enslave the women and children. Frederick Douglass grandmother descended from those enslaved “Indians.” His grandfather was a free indigenous / aboriginal man. The “Slave Master” family, the Lloyd’s, purchased a plantation in Mississippi in 1835 to grow cotton. They began shipping the Bailey family (Frederick Douglass family) to Mississippi in the mid to late 1850’s. The damage done to these people was massive, and continues to this day. In the Mississippi Louisiana area are a nation of people who believe that they were taken out of some place in Africa and sold into slavery in the Deep South, not knowing that they are the Copper-Colored people from the north who the Europeans stole this land from; and that their identity continues to change to keep hidden from them who they are. By the way, the Wye House Plantation in Maryland is still there, and still in the hands of the Lloyd family; the same family who shipped Frederick Douglass people to Mississippi. KILL THE INDIAN SAVE THE MAN. I’m born in Brooklyn New York. My mother was born in Mississippi (something I learned much later), and raised in Louisiana. She fled the south in the early 1960’s and met my father in New York. I’m her middle child. The U.S. identifies me as black, I reject that and I’m seeking reparations far beyond anything that any of you would have ever imagined. Let me explain: Issac Bailey a free man born in the late 1700’s married and enslaved woman named Betsey; that type of thing was actually common back them. Both were copper-colored American Indians. They had about 12 children, mostly girls. I like to call them “The 12 Children of Issac” sorta like the 12 tribes of Israel. One of their children, probably the most famous of their children, is their daughter Harriet. She’s the mother of Frederick Douglass. The youngest, or second youngest daughter was name Priscilla, who was just 2 years older than Frederick Douglass. In his writings when he speaks of his aunt Priscilla, that’s who he’s talking about. She was just a child like him, close in age, living in the same dwelling, and seeing the same things. In Priscilla’s line, she would be the last to be born in Maryland. She was shipped to Mississippi where her first child was born, a boy named Iler. His first child, also born in Mississippi, was a girl. He named his daughter after his mother, Priscilla. Priscilla (number 2) first child was also a girl, she named her Laura; Laura’s first child is a girl named Estelle. Estelle’s first child is a girl named Jessie. Estelle had one more child, a boy named John. She died as a result of having John. So, Jessie and John were raised by their grandmother Laura, Estelle’s mother. They never knew their mother, as she died when they were both just babies. John was drafted in the Vietnam conflict were he was killed; he never had any children of his own. Jessie is the young woman who fled the south in the early 1960’s, she’s my mother. Laura, her grandmother (born in 1898) died in 1995. She raised my mother; and my mother’s first daughter; and my sister’s first daughter. Mamma Laura was the first to tell us that we are Indians. I may be the first in our line to discover what really happened. Why? Because I am question so often as to why I hate authority. There’s a thing that they now call “first amendment auditing.” I was the first in the country to do it, and to get that ball rolling. Yes, that began right here in New York in front of 26 Federal Plaza. I was arrested by the FBI, and Homeland Security for taking pictures of that building. Then I got the ACLU involved, now that is an entire movement within itself. I was also the first to bring the issue of photographing cops to the forefront. I say all that to say that I was asked many times about my stance on “authority.” I wasn’t riding on anyone’s bandwagon. I knew that I was not following anyone, but that it was in my blood, but I didn’t know where. I suspected that it was on my father’s side, and found it on my mother’s side. Frederick Douglass referenced his grandmother’s (my 5th great grandmother) grand children and great grandchildren in his writing. Those grandchildren and creat grandchildren are the people who raised the woman that raised my mother. I have of picture of Frederick Douglass grandmother, I have it online next to a picture of my 16 year old daughter. Their resemblance is shocking, visually they are the same, even down to their resting facial expressions and the thickness of their hair. Douglass was my 1st cousin five generations back. We are who we always were, nothing has change. Douglass was not an African, nor was he Black. We are owed a great deal. Which is why they continue to seek to change our identity. If we don’t know that this is ours we’ll never claim it. You now know more of the truth than most. Spread the truth.
@jasonito23
@jasonito23 Жыл бұрын
I´m going to have to roll with what Frederick Douglass said in his own words in considering his race. He never events hints at being American Indian. His narrative is clear that he is an enslaved Black man. Along with this narrative he has various other writings focused on Africa, England and slave mutinies, where he is focused on enslaved Blacks. If he was an Indian, he never mentions it. You said they never considered themselves black or African, but Frederick Douglass wrote, ¨Whether this prophecy is ever fulfilled or not, it is nevertheless plain that a very different-looking class of people are springing up at the south, and are now held in slavery, from those originally brought to this country from Africa¨ and he also wrote, ¨. I could regard them in no other light than a band of successful robbers, who had left their homes, and gone to Africa, and stolen us from our homes, and in a strange land reduced us to slavery.¨ and ¨I now understood what had been to me a most perplexing difficulty-to wit, the white man’s power to enslave the black man.¨ These line are directly from the narrative, so I´m going to ride with his own words.
@ShawnThomas
@ShawnThomas Жыл бұрын
@@jasonito23 he was into ancestry and researching his family. He believed his family came from the Potomac Indians. He was correct. He is my first cousin 5 generations back. We do descend from those original copper colored peoples. My great grandmother is born in 1898, she died in 1995. Her name is Laura Davis. She is the child of Priscilla Bethley who is the daughter of Iler Bethley who is the som of Priscilla Bailey. Priscilla Bailey is Douglass aunt who is only 2 years older than Douglass, and is with Douglass at Wye House in Maryland. Laura Davis who is raised by the grand children and great grandchildren of Douglass’ grand mother Betsey, is the woman who told us who we are and that we are Indians. Douglass grandparents, my 5th great grandparents, were not descendants of African slaves. Issac was born FPOC in 1769, and comes from the Bailey family in Maryland that predates both the European and the slave ships. He married another Indian, Betsy. Also, Bailey, is originally Bay. Research deeper. Also, there is five generations between myself and Frederick Douglass grandmother. If you give it 20 years per generation, there are five generations between his grandmother and the year 1666, the year Virginia declared war on the Potomac Indians. How many African Slaves, not the indentured servants, but slaves, were here in 1774? Where are the manifest showing the number of slaves that land in Virginia from Africa by 1774?
@donniebrasco99
@donniebrasco99 Жыл бұрын
He isn't known in the Philippines because the first history books that were used in the schools in the Philippines were issued by the Americans, so, of course they wouldn't include someone whom they considered a traitor in the history books. It was only fairly recent that the story about Capt. Fagen and other African American soldiers came to light.
@jasonito23
@jasonito23 Жыл бұрын
Carter G. Woods on was one of those early teachers and that is what lead him to write "The Miseducation of the Negro." When he was sent to teach in the Philippines, he saw that the curriculum was more brainwashing than teaching.
@MelanisupSupreme
@MelanisupSupreme Жыл бұрын
Full blooded Cherokee I'm not African nor African decent, nor moorish American not even black. Negros are natives to America's more than like the original Indians. Not the 5 dollar Indians that really Italians or Caucasians people. We keep believing we came on slave ships. No we didn't we were already here. I'm tired of folks perpetuating a lie from movies like roots, 12 years a slave etc. We were slaves on American soil not im Africa. Alex Hailey admitted that he made the whole story up but folks still want to believe that their Africans. African American came from Jesse Jackson. They named us after two different continents. It is imperative that folks ask their grandparents or great grandparents if they are still living. That exactly how I know that my grandfather was full blooded Cherokee. His father was full blooded Cherokee dark in color long hair with gray eyes. Stop believing everything you read and hear and just ask your family. They're are 4 different blood lines that will tell you if you mixed with other races. I beseech you to do your on research. Truth is coming out just pay attention.
@teelora1322
@teelora1322 Жыл бұрын
The truth this book was aimed at the truth and that's what they don't want us to know the truth truth
@teelora1322
@teelora1322 Жыл бұрын
I live in Massachusetts I live in Springfield Massachusetts and they claim we had no sleeves up North but there has been several documentation and proof from the library of Congress that there were slaves in Massachusetts I went on the underground railroad tour and Boston Mass there's beautiful houses that bus white people own and they still have their maid or servant quarters in them from the early
@jasonito23
@jasonito23 Жыл бұрын
There were actually African slaves brought here by the Puritans who first colonized the US. They even enslaved the Indians and some other white people. Anyone who tries to tell you that there were no slaves in their state is lying. Hell, the 13th amendment today condones the enslavement of prisoners, so there is still slavery in the North, South, East and West US.
@teelora1322
@teelora1322 Жыл бұрын
@@jasonito23 yes you're right because when they go to jail they work for free they work in the kitchen they do the cleaning they do everything for free or thus they might get paid $2 a day that is slavery
@teelora1322
@teelora1322 Жыл бұрын
But they claim there was no slavery in the north see what I'm saying these people constantly lie and they open up these filthy lies and books you can't read and believe everything read between the lines
@teelora1322
@teelora1322 Жыл бұрын
What was interesting about it this is what I'm saying when you're doing a narrative story there was nothing interesting about it she freed him after she had sex with him. She was scared that he would be murdered she probably did not know she was pregnant okay it wasn't intentional for her to get pregnant it was intentional intentionally for her to have sex with him not get pregnant so what don't you understand
@teelora1322
@teelora1322 Жыл бұрын
She only said the meanest slave again because he probably was the meanest slave he was the worst with all the time so they turned him into a mean slave Sochi depicted that man cuz that's probably the man that she wanted was the biggest blackest mean enslave you got these white women okay. Go all the way to Africa to seek out pure African men they even buy them okay they even go to the tribes themselves to buy the black men okay for whatever reason and so this is just a trait that they've been doing for centuries okay
@teelora1322
@teelora1322 Жыл бұрын
Through him she could manipulate him into having sex with her and him not telling because he knew he be in fear for his life and his safety and possibly and fear for his family if he did not do what she
@teelora1322
@teelora1322 Жыл бұрын
Why she went in debt to say that she picked the meanest slave is to give you a narrative of exactly what was going on and that young Mistresses had at the time and a lot of times like I said it's rebelling it's rebelling against her mother rebelling against her father and doing what she wants to do thus the white cow does to this day
@teelora1322
@teelora1322 Жыл бұрын
It's going on but they also rebelled against their father or their parents just like any child would do and so they would sneak off with slave men or slave young boys and it just so happened they would get pregnant and carry the baby and wish they knew this baby would never be allowed to be raised by them but because they were trying to you know teach mom or dad a lesson or they were just plain ol against it they did what they wanted to do it a lot of ways that screams out that you know a lot of the two suns in the daughters were against slavery they knew it was wrong they knew the sit was bad you know they learn to love their nannies they learn to love to cook they learned to love the people around them you know and so they started looking at them it is a really hard and uncompromising situation for both sides when it comes to emotions because we're only human
@teelora1322
@teelora1322 Жыл бұрын
They never they never really make mention of a mistress or Mistresses children sleeping with the slave men because the white woman is to be thought of as a delicate Angel who can do no wrong so you know when we talked about master sleeping with the slave women it was always supposed to be about capitalism it was never supposed to be about love or lust or any of that which we know that as humans you cannot bypass that perception when you have mastered coming in your cabin every night to sleep with you when you have master who has given you four of his children to bore so you know mistress was sleeping with her her slave men as well just like her children were was no doubt that we were human beings and what you find attractive in a personal matter what color they are you just find attractive in them and it's hardeven though the laws were very different back in this time it was still managed to happen mistress had given birth to plenty of Niger babies just like Master had given babies to his Niger slaves and that's just what happened it was not publicized enough about the men you know even the men being raped by a slave master and mistress you know the men was sodomized quite often but these are stories that you don't hear about slavery they use these people as property but they also use them for whatever whenever they wanted but we'll never seems to amaze me is that you say that we're not human but yet you sleep with us you let us breastfeed your children you let us raise your children you know it is crazy because they contradicted yourself throughout the whole slave-era Jim Crow era and all the
@smckay6438
@smckay6438 Жыл бұрын
Why did you leave out that IT WAS DEMOCRATS THAT DID THIS ? AND OVER 100,000 WHITE REPUBLICANS GAVE THEIR LIVES AGAINST DEMOCRATS TO FREE THE SLAVES ? AND THAT THE KLU KLUX KLAN WAS STARTED BY DEMOCRATS TO KEEP BLACKS AND REPUBLICANS FROM HELPING BLACKS VOTE BY LYNCHING BOTH BLACKS AND REPUBLICAN POLE WORKERS ? STOP MISINFORMING YOUR VIEWERS WITH INCOMPLETE HISTORY !
@smckay6438
@smckay6438 Жыл бұрын
The Democrats are the group that lynched both black and white Republican that helped blacks vote ! Thats the reason Democrats made the KLU klux KLAN! To stop blacks from voting and kill Republicans who helped blacks ! Democrats also voted unanimously against womans rights/suffrage!
@justincase4792
@justincase4792 Жыл бұрын
Thanks for this. Great review.
@jansonshrock2859
@jansonshrock2859 Жыл бұрын
this book seemed just like the Heart of Darkness reskinned
@jasonito23
@jasonito23 Жыл бұрын
Not even similar.
@aidanjones1974
@aidanjones1974 Жыл бұрын
My brother this is unreasearched material...please please go do your due dillegence n read the true sequence of events...MARCUS GARVEY HAD SUPPORT IN ALL OVER THE SOUTH ABD ISN'T IT IRONIC THAT FAGGIIT ASS DU BOISE ENDED UP IN AFRICA. FURTHERMORE LOOK AT THE RATE OF WORK IN THE SHORT TIME GARVEY AVCOMPLISHED HIS IDEALS...WHY DID THE FEDERAL GOVT COLUDE IN HIS CONVICTION...GOTAKE THIS BULLSHIT DOCUMENTARY DIWN..YOU VIOLATED
@JohnSmith-pk4xy
@JohnSmith-pk4xy Жыл бұрын
Maharlika was paradise on earth until the colonizers came and defiled her holy ground with their hate based on colors. Maharlikans may forgive, but we do not forget.
@ThaGodKingDorell
@ThaGodKingDorell Жыл бұрын
That pic is his son in your video
@jasonito23
@jasonito23 Жыл бұрын
I can't remember for sure, but I think that is the picture that they had in the caption of the letter.
@ThaGodKingDorell
@ThaGodKingDorell Жыл бұрын
@@jasonito23 Ok but that’s his son Burghardt and I’m friends with his Great Grandson Arthur
@SuperhumanUnchained
@SuperhumanUnchained Жыл бұрын
Great pushups and range of motion
@idontknowaboutthat1904
@idontknowaboutthat1904 Жыл бұрын
Amazingly fascinating topic, one that is almost never covered for obvious reasons, but did indeed happen to an extent we don't know, especially if pregnancy did not occur.
@inwardheelallday
@inwardheelallday 2 жыл бұрын
Ortega se va lastimar su tecnica de peso muerto no esta bien, tiene que involucrar mas su gluteo y fenmoral y activar los laterales al momento de subir
@jasonito23
@jasonito23 2 жыл бұрын
Gracias para el comentario! Eres el primero ofreciendo buen consejo. Williams, Fuentes y Ortega entrenamos juntos. Usamos las videos para mejorar. Ortega no va a lastimar. Lleva tres años sin lastimar ni una vez. Todos podemos mejorar nuestras tecnicas sí. Pero numero uno en la lista cuando entrenamos es "no lastimar." La tecnica de Ortega esta bien. Estoy de acuerdo que tenemos que añadir fuerza al gluteo para mejorar la activación al momento de subir. Otra vez, gracias por el comentario.
@vicplay-gc4um
@vicplay-gc4um 2 жыл бұрын
Gracias por tu consejo lo tendré en cuenta para seguir mejorando, ya era consciente de que necesito involucrar mas glúteo e intento trabajar en ello, pero ahora también se que me hacen falta femoral y laterales
@inwardheelallday
@inwardheelallday Жыл бұрын
Quieres ver un video donde yo levanta 200kg?
@jasonito23
@jasonito23 Жыл бұрын
Yes
@jasonito23
@jasonito23 Жыл бұрын
Tenemos una competencia nueva en Junio. Muchos más fuertes van a competir.
@SuperhumanUnchained
@SuperhumanUnchained 2 жыл бұрын
Great powerlifting 🏋‍♂️ video
@imanimcovington2914
@imanimcovington2914 2 жыл бұрын
Recently read this book,oh my the stories,I reread several of them,WOW...
@irasaposnik6511
@irasaposnik6511 2 жыл бұрын
You know ? I’m not sure there’s one black person in this. But I’m glad we’re all reading it we all should
@jasonito23
@jasonito23 2 жыл бұрын
There is a section in the book where employers used black workers (scabs) to break strike lines. It's a tactic used by employers so that the strikers turn their hate towards blacks instead of the employers. They would bring in poor blacks from the South to do the work. There are a few books in proletariat literature where this strategy is implemented. Immigrants vs whites vs blacks when the real enemy is the employer.
@keisharose36
@keisharose36 2 жыл бұрын
Conscious? When they insist to let us know that our God is white! She is one out of many... we are a mislead race of people still trying to find ourselves, collectively.... and I love the Bible...
@kaphayahu8279
@kaphayahu8279 2 жыл бұрын
Good commentary!
@NickolasXavierRodrigues
@NickolasXavierRodrigues 2 жыл бұрын
Great analysis
@jasonito23
@jasonito23 2 жыл бұрын
Thank you.
@SuperhumanUnchained
@SuperhumanUnchained 2 жыл бұрын
Get well soon
@jasonito23
@jasonito23 2 жыл бұрын
I am well. This video showed the recuperation. This is the before and after pic on the thumbnail.
@jennthecapricorn
@jennthecapricorn 2 жыл бұрын
I'm glad you are feeling better. Continued blessings!💕
@jasonito23
@jasonito23 2 жыл бұрын
Wow. I literally just uploaded this and watched it for the first time now. You're quicker than me! Thank you!
@jennthecapricorn
@jennthecapricorn 2 жыл бұрын
@@jasonito23 I was looking at my phone when the notification came through and I had time. I was 3 and a half minutes in when I commented.🤣💕
@SuperhumanUnchained
@SuperhumanUnchained 2 жыл бұрын
Mexicanos al grito de guerra
@shenaejabbar4845
@shenaejabbar4845 2 жыл бұрын
No failure Only learning and motivation for higher and better ~ proud of you keep up the plant based life🍐🍉🍏🍎🍅🌶🫑🥑🥥🍒🍋🍓🫐🍍🥝🥔🥦🍇 and treating your temple beautifully 🙏🕊 Many blessings to You~
@jasonito23
@jasonito23 2 жыл бұрын
Thank you!
@kawyahgaradi
@kawyahgaradi 2 жыл бұрын
Thank you for what you’re doing great content
@jasonito23
@jasonito23 2 жыл бұрын
I appreciate that!
@celticmulato2609
@celticmulato2609 2 жыл бұрын
The elephant in the room is phenotype not always complexion; society judges you on phenotype which is #1 then color associated with phenotype. There are a few light complexion ( light brown!) Sub Saharan Africans and they are 100% Black but their phenotype says Black, not Asian or White, etc . They are only seen as Black and cannot pass for any other race due to their facial features and hair texture!!
@jasonito23
@jasonito23 2 жыл бұрын
But this is based on passing in the US, US culture. In the US you can classify yourself however you want. But you can't decide for the society. Your name is Mulatto Sensei, but we don't even use the term mulatto anymore. Black Literature and black history is not biological science, it is social science.
@celticmulato2609
@celticmulato2609 2 жыл бұрын
@Mi Comunidad Vegana I'm not American and I know many Biracial of B&w who identify as Mulato. You can also see the moniker on plenty of social media sites. The Black elites in America have distorted the word, reinvented a negative term or negative connotations so as to discourage Mulattoes as identifying as such.and to accept the 1 drop rule. Mulato/ Mulata is also specific and leaves no ambiguity, it s also the most known word for B&W mixture in the world then Creole/ Brown( Pardo/ Mestico/ Coloured in some African countries) Biracial is vague and can be any mix.
@celticmulato2609
@celticmulato2609 2 жыл бұрын
@Mi Comunidad Vegana Most Black Americans don't even know what Black is because of social conditioning of the antiquated 1 drop rule; the only race that's lost in identity and claims others as Black with no discerning Black ( West African) phenotype.
@jasonito23
@jasonito23 2 жыл бұрын
@@celticmulato2609 - I agree, that there is not supposed to be a negative connotation to the word mulato/mulata however, the root of the word, mula means mule in Spanish which is a mix of horse and donkey. That is where the negative connotations come from. I've been around most of Latin America and identified as mulatto even though I'm not just a Black/White mixture. But this is around the world. In the US, if you try to maneuver through life, especially in the time period I cover in most of my videos, 1930s, all of that other stuff wasn't trying to be heard, at all. Quadroons were considered black and if you tried to maneuver through life as other than "colored" you were actually risking your life.
@jasonito23
@jasonito23 2 жыл бұрын
@@celticmulato2609 - Black Americans know what Black in America means. When you're not from the US, I don't think it's cool to come to the US and try to tell people what is black and what's not. It's clear that I am not 100% black, I am light and bright, but I grew up in a predominately white, and racist area in Ohio. They had no question about my being black as far as they were concerned. I know my page is not the most interesting in the world (lol) but in my earliest videos, I tried to establish that I am focused foremost and primarily in USA Black American Literature and History. The only time I venture out of the US is covering Langston Hughes travels into Mexico and Africa, WEB Dubois vs Garvey and Carter G. Woodson going to the Philippines. In their time period and in their writings the one drop rule was very real....and it really wasn't THAT long ago. It's only current that these rules are starting to fade a little bit. And the fading of these concepts could be the reason why currently no protests or concerns of Black people in America can't be met because there is no unity. Imagine of MLK Jr. or Malcolm X or the Black Panthers were telling light skinned blacks or brown skinned black that they weren't black enough to fight with them. As light as I am, I am ADOS too. I have a page where I talk about the slave papers passed down through my family. I still have family that live close to the area where he left West Virginia (Virginia during his time) into Ohio, to live in the North.
@celticmulato2609
@celticmulato2609 2 жыл бұрын
Did Obama pass as a Black man? Why isn't that the case! Being Mixed race doesn't make you a whole Black person!!
@celticmulato2609
@celticmulato2609 2 жыл бұрын
Passing??? What a crab in the barrel mentality!!! You Pass for what society sees you as especially if your genotype and phenotype states it. One doesn't have to be 100% White to be White just as one doesn't have to be 100% Black to be Black, same as Native American and other races; only in America and especially Black Americans are hung up on the racist White Supremacy 1 drop rule as acceptable! Black Americans use the 1 drop rule 1924 to 1967 to take accomplishments from Whites and other races because they lack real Black individuals who are pure or overwhelming Black in the West so they reinvent Black phenotype and claim European and Asians phenotype. The 1 drop rule was an insult to Blacks, not a compliment. The racist during slavery used the ODR to increase their slave population and now Black Americans use it to increase their population, ironic,yes??