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I had joined the Black Power Group in Facebook. I agreed in part with a person's post about Blacks seeking whites for validation and offered my own interpretations maybe a week ago. We had been writing each other back in the group up until now. The male... moreI had joined the Black Power Group in Facebook. I agreed in part with a person's post about Blacks seeking whites for validation and offered my own interpretations maybe a week ago. We had been writing each other back in the group up until now. The male flattered me with the title, "Queen," to give himself a license to insult my intelligence, because (1) I refer to myself as Black American & (2) I critiqued Blacks seeking Africans for validation in the same way they do with whites. His responses contained generic statements and declarations of opinions, passing themselves off as facts, while he continuously insulted my intelligence, suggesting that I am uneducated. Basically, he said a lot of generic opinions without factual or detailed substance. I described an event where I actually observed African immigrants being racist to Black Americans, who pretend to be African, and this male suggested I was a reverse racist for noticing how Black immigrants publicly say racist things about Black American slave descendants. This verbally abusive person knows I have a college degree, but he won't disclose his level of education, while he is calling me stupid. I thought I was sharing historical and scientific information with my people to help give him the Africa for Africans he wanted and he still persisted with the personal attacks on my intelligence and college education. This male says the only path to freedom is war. I gave him a strategy based on social science that no other Black person has tried, to the best of my knowledge, and he would still get his war on the African continent, but not here in U.S. Then this arrogant male offered to lead me, a supposedly uneducated person, in the "right direction." I am so disappointed with this extremely ignorant Black person, who could not write a single post without suggesting I am stupid in spite of my college degree. I was generous enough to share all my strategies for Black Americans to get what we want and promote social change across the diaspora and this verbally and psychologically abusive male in the Black Power Group on Facebook would not stop calling me stupid. What can we do? What would you do? For example, if you were lucky enough to graduate from college, you try to help the Black Power movement by sharing your knowledge from college, and someone within the Black Power movement, instead of listening to you and debating over facts and logic, he verbally and psychologically abuses you continuously even after you tell that person to stop. The group is called Black Power group on Facebook. It should have been the perfect place to attract Blacks to HTN. I even posted to that group asking whether they have considered moving the group to HTN. Without mutual respect for each other as equals despite level of education, there is no Black unity. Without Black unity, there is no Black Power. That race war on whites this person is planning will fail with his death or a life-time prison term and no one will remember the shootout with police, the FBI, or the National Guard as a race war. Officials will call it homegrown terrorism, hate crimes, or gang violence by Blacks and that's it. My strategy, based on the ideas of Karl Marx, would have given the entire Black Diaspora social change and the war on the African continent that he so desperately wanted. #blacks, #africans, #respect, #disrespect, #facebook, #blackpower, #blackunity, #abuse, #inequality, #disunity, #arrogance, #evil, #hostility, #blackonblack. less
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I tried to do some consensus building on Facebook for Black American liberation and someone responded as though I was attacking him personally. He made a nasty comment about me, tagged my name or something, then, blocked me so I couldn't defend myself... moreI tried to do some consensus building on Facebook for Black American liberation and someone responded as though I was attacking him personally. He made a nasty comment about me, tagged my name or something, then, blocked me so I couldn't defend myself or ask this person what it is that I wrote that made him think that I was attacking him. That is so evil and cowardly. I am so disappointed with this Black male, because he sounded as though he was threatening me. I am promoting Black American unity and taking actions to solve our problems and I have "friend-ed" a bunch of strangers, who like to post articles about Blacks and about racism, but they are unwilling to strategize with other Black people in making our situation better in this country. They point out the problems, blame the Black victims of racism, then throw up their hands in helplessness, and, for some, give the problem to god to solve. I was raised in a Christian home and I had a grandmother, who said, "god helps those, who helps themselves." This sounds practical since none of us can scientifically prove our god's existence. It is like I "friend-ed" a group of Blacks, who want to complain, do nothing about it, and then hate me, because I am presenting actual solutions. I don't get it! They have this woe is me or woe are we attitude. Rather than consider the solutions I am suggesting, they either blame the descendants of Black American slavery for their poverty, unemployment, welfare dependence, self-destructive behaviors, and crime rather than blame the perpetrators, who brought Black Americans here. If a Black person is presenting solutions to our problems, why is he/she a bad person? Their responses to me are not for Black Americans gaining freedom; it is like they are against it or afraid to pursue liberation. However, now that I think about it, it makes total sense in the culture of slavery and the slave mentality. There were slaves, who seized their chance to runaway from slavery, genocide, and oppression; there were slaves, who were happy to stay in bondage or afraid to leave their masters. How do we break the psychological chains of Black American enslavement, if people don't want freedom and equality? #blacks, #unity, #disunity, #helplessness, #freedom, #equality, #liberation, #consensus, #building, #cowardice, #problems, #solutions. less
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http://www.cbpm.org/index.html continued: Each label for each smaller organization carries with it philosophical assumptions about our identity and shared experiences across history and geography, some of which I don't agree with. There is no consensus... morehttp://www.cbpm.org/index.html continued: Each label for each smaller organization carries with it philosophical assumptions about our identity and shared experiences across history and geography, some of which I don't agree with. There is no consensus on identity within this coalition. Consensus on a united Black label is necessary to identify problems associated with a set of shared experiences defined by an identity label and solutions for them. To me, these multiple labels reflect disunity in political philosophies and strategies within this coalition. Please respond to my polls, especially on Black labels. In order for Black Americans to unite over anything, we need to have to agree by vote or debate on one identity label and the historical and sociological reasons why. #blacknationalism, #blackpower, #cbpm, #fundraising, #coalition, #black, #african, #africanamerican, #unity, #disunity, #polls less
http://www.cbpm.org/index.html.
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I found this link for the Collective Black People's Movement at http://www.cbpm.org/index.html. It looks like a coalition of smaller black organizations raising funds and sharing it with each other, maybe, but they are still just doing their own things.... moreI found this link for the Collective Black People's Movement at http://www.cbpm.org/index.html. It looks like a coalition of smaller black organizations raising funds and sharing it with each other, maybe, but they are still just doing their own things. It is sort of what I would like to see, but not quite. I suspect funds will be shared and spent subject to the whims of local leaders of each smaller organization within the coalition, focusing on pet projects and salaries that have no national impact. I don't think their activities are strategic in nature. The coalition may just exist for fundraising purposes. The reason why I think that it is because the organizations associated with this coalition label themselves differently. Some call it a African, African-American, or Black organizations. #blacknationalism, #blackpower, #cbpm, #fundraising, #coalition, #black, #african, #africanamerican, #unity, #disunity, #polls less

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