I noticed the glaring similarities between US apartheid and South African apartheid a long time ago. We just called it segregation.
@darrmad3593 Жыл бұрын
Roland loves segregating blacks from whites, it's what he lives for because he fears the white man.
@ronaldmccord4477 Жыл бұрын
My people said I was crazy when I said the same thing, it is what it is
@darrmad3593 Жыл бұрын
@@ronaldmccord4477 who are your people?
@johnsonhunglo1993 Жыл бұрын
Mississippi is more like South Africa than the US as a whole.
@JoseManuel-jd1yr Жыл бұрын
✌️
@josedavid6203 Жыл бұрын
WOW!!!Thank you
@Vision25-k5w Жыл бұрын
Blessings 🙏🏾❤️🙏🏾 The Professor is phenomenal, Love, Peace, Light, Healing to You and family. Black people in USA are being displace, we see the few successful ones, but there are a greater multitudes that are uneducated, occupied by entertainment. Tax payers supporting foreign interest, be it wars, Latino/Latina migration, yet we turn back Haitians. The support of Africa's exploitations by foreign countries. We have to teach our young people value of life and the importance of lifting each other up. Save our lives, not take it, as we will need each other. Put yourself in environment for positive growth. Blessings 🙏🏾❤️🙏🏾
@gregorysedmunds2843 Жыл бұрын
Great Show Dr Carr... Thanks 👊🌚
@patrickdubois5898 Жыл бұрын
Thanks For the lesson Dr Carr great show
@antoineadams185 Жыл бұрын
This was awesome Dr. Carr
@soulfulsubstances9813 Жыл бұрын
I really appreciate Dr. Carr and I geek out on history. I see he is also one who seeks knowledge and understanding. This is the first episode that I have watched and it is intriguing and titillating to say the least. I see I will have to get some more books. If it’s gonna be like this, you have to count me in!!!
@joli2062 Жыл бұрын
You should see Saturdays with Carr, conducted by celebrated journalist and professor Dr. Karen Hunter she started during the pandemic. Fascinating polemics on history, the nature and directions of Africana people across the diaspora, and America itself.
@Grimloxz Жыл бұрын
The part that got me was 1:02:05 when my man Dr Horne said he purchased a microfiche machine!!! Do y’all young folk even know what that is??? When I heard that I said to myself I GOTS ta step my research game up!!! LOLOLOL
@veniswoodley5786 Жыл бұрын
When I was in school they did not teach any of this. I had to go to the library and learn this thing on my own.Thanks to people like Dr.Carr and Roland our young people can go get these books and listen to these men and women talk about how important black history is and history in general.
@torreyinnewyorkcity334 Жыл бұрын
Why is the intro so long? Why can't the show start?
@commonsensetv3censored Жыл бұрын
HI 👋 EVERYONE ‼️ YES IT'S BAD WEST TEXAS. I DEAL WITH IT EVERYDAY. YOU ALL STAY PRAYED 🙏 UP, BE BLESS.💯💋😊
@EricCharles-xu3sg Жыл бұрын
I am a Texan born and raised here been here for59 years and it hasn't been pretty
@minnijeantrickey9026 Жыл бұрын
So much needed information! Thank you both
@alisarashid5650 Жыл бұрын
Great show
@cgcade1 Жыл бұрын
WOW!
@kennyroberts2703 Жыл бұрын
You need to have a series where you chronicle African-American History for posterity. You're a wealth of knowledge/it can't be lost to history.
@p.w.7493 Жыл бұрын
Check out Knubia and Knarrative where In Class With Carr (ICWC - where Dr. Carr and Prof. Karen Hunter) host a live discussion each Saturday, rain or shine!!
@Grimloxz Жыл бұрын
Greg!!!! Me and you shook our head at THE SAME GAHTDAMN TIME!!! 1:02:05 Did my man Dr Horne say he purchased a microfiche machine???? Do y’all young folk even know what that is??? GAHTDAMN!!!! LOLOLOL. I gots ta step my research game up!!! LOLOLOL
@jacklynnmjackson2383 Жыл бұрын
Well, what is it ?
@jacklynnmjackson2383 Жыл бұрын
Ok. I hadn't listened far enough. Yet and still, ' over my head '.
@Grimloxz Жыл бұрын
@@jacklynnmjackson2383 LOL, my gods, back in the day when you went to the library there were rows and rows of these machines. You would request these little rolls of film that had micro pictures that the would get magnified and protected into a screen and you’d turn from page to page with a little knob. And the type of documents you could get were truly arcane and obscure. Newspapers from a Texas town in 1888, court transcript or arrest record from 1954, corporate documents from the 20s…. Dr. Carr and Dr Horne are right that everything ain’t on the internet. In a way, there was MORE available back then than now.
@madelynjames3803 Жыл бұрын
I don't believe everything on microfiche has been digitally reproduced. So this scholar may want to view documents in the original manner they were produced.
@beverlyclark1961 Жыл бұрын
I love your show
@darrmad3593 Жыл бұрын
Roland is so scared of white people
@katielindsey5674 Жыл бұрын
Everything is not online. How true.
@bobbymuhammad1613 Жыл бұрын
Team Black Star
@Sema-Tawy Жыл бұрын
Keep going Texas against the AAA 👏👏👏👏👏
@Humanity2102 Жыл бұрын
Very informative interview!
@MarjorieBroome-xu4bk Жыл бұрын
❤
@clobbyhops Жыл бұрын
Boiling in oil and chopping up black people for entertainment in Texas 😲 did NOT know about this, thanks for the education
@sonora_rey Жыл бұрын
Video has an edit issue at the start
@darrmad3593 Жыл бұрын
Yea it forgot to mention how Roland fears the white man. And it shows
@bobbymuhammad1613 Жыл бұрын
BlACK BRAIN POWER IN ACTION
@ZelbeQahi Жыл бұрын
The Bureau of Indian Affairs, born out of The Department of War, today The Department of the Interior, STILL controls, monitors and distributes money royalties, pennies on the dollar, collected from mineral and resources like gas and oil profits. White Americans call this communism when applied to them. Indigenous peoples have no voice or say in getting OUT from that control. Why aren’t Americans fighting against this form of control? Because they directly benefit from this indigenous communism policy.
@chuck7802 Жыл бұрын
49:41
@ericperry4352 Жыл бұрын
Let all the racist publicity begin.
@MRSZ5440 Жыл бұрын
I use to drive 18-wheelers when Jimmy Hofia died the money also died then we started going backward in time enter Ronald Reagan how came out with NAFTA and all the money died so you don't and can't afford a living in 2023.
@Nardage Жыл бұрын
I highly recommend watching some Jesse lee Peterson videos
@dgh5760 Жыл бұрын
My biggest surprise was to find out that there were also black and indigenous slave owners in the US and that whites and indigenous were also slaves at many times in history. There were black tribes in Africa that enslaved other black tribes and indigenous tribes that enslaved other indigenous tribes. Gosh, this was a worldwide phenomenon that affected almost everyone of every background. Thomas Sowell has many good videos about the history of slavery around the world. It was also surprising to me to find out how many millions upon millions of people were victims of genocide including African, Jewish, Ukrainian, and other peoples. All of these historic incidents are horrific to our modern sensibilities and it is so hard for us to understand how any of that could have been acceptable or tolerated by societies. I expect future generations will find things that we did in this day and age to be unacceptable as well. I do question whether we should be so hard on ourselves though for things done by past generations that we had nothing to do with. Remember, for sure, and don't repeat those mistakes but I fear we will make and are making other mistakes. I also am disturbed by the hatred we are fueling between peoples when we should be working together to make the world a more accepting place for everyone.
@stanleycarter303 Жыл бұрын
Yes there were enslaved people in most known civilizations, the glaring difference is chattel slavery which included breeding, depressing of names, culture, religion, language! Chattel slavery was a western european invention and practice! For some reason Dr Thomas Sowell seems to not make that distinction! As a scholar he should know and do better!
@sevenstarsofthedipper1047 Жыл бұрын
@@stanleycarter303 Well said. The Right always tries to prop up their Black apologists. ps. In addition, the major insurance companies’ enriched themselves by insuring enslaved Black people and Black people were the most valuable commodity being traded on the NYSE. Two other distinct features of American Slavery to add to your rebuttal.
@theincantrix1144 Жыл бұрын
@@stanleycarter303 Which slaves in the world, at any point and time in the 5,000 yr history of humanity, were treated as something more than commodities? The problem with people having a room temperature IQ, is that they tend to blurt out their ignorance. What I expect from you is multiple logical fallacies and no actual history or data to back up your proof-less assertion.
@mimi-rk2qu Жыл бұрын
@@stanleycarter303 …often times l have issues with these scholars because of the lukewarm cleansing they give to racism and oppression of the Black and Native cultures. To tell Black people that slavery was basically a one size fit all and Black families were together during slavery is absolutely unconscionable doctrine. I don’t know if most do it because they have white spouses (yes!) and want to sleep better at night or if this is their true understanding of the horrors their own people suffered being lynched, raped, sold, and brutalized.