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  • Caricom

    IMHO the black community, in a relatively interdependent state, came to an end with the passage of legislation that allowed pregnant 18 year old black females to leave home, usually to escape parental control. The U.S. government promised to supply food, clothing and shelter for them and their child. The government became these young girls pimp, specifying NO MALES ALLOWED.

    This meant that these inexperienced young girls had to raise their children, usually without the guidance of parents, and/or the stability, protection and role model of a man in the home. This forced these young women to find affection and companionship in an illicit arrangement that often led to more pregnancies, often by different men. 

    Shortly after, other legislation was passed making it illegal for teachers and parents to impose corporal punishment on the children they are trying to teach and raise to adulthood. This encouraged young ones to lodge false accusations of abuse against teachers and parents who sought to discipline them. The degrading of the authority of teachers and parents, in addition to no man in the home has led to disrespect for authority by young people. 

    Add to these developments Urban Renewal, better known as Negro Removal, that effectively destroyed the inclusive black community, scattering the residents into different areas of the city/county, forming neighborhoods, not communities. Then we had, "integration" that actually is turning out to be assimilation has caused two generations of blacks to be mis-educated to the point of moving out of the black neighborhood, creating a vacuum of leadership, while assuming well-paying roles of authority to control those same black neighborhoods.  

    Today, even those neighborhoods are deteriorating and are being prepared for another wave of "Model City" programs or something like it. Like a plant with no roots, the black community lies on the side of the road withering away. Black lives do not matter and it is open season once again on black people in America, only this time the Most High is getting involved and a new dawn is approaching for black people in America. Watch for it.

    • Is a Black neighborhood a Black community?
      What make a Black neighborhood a Black neighborhood?
      What makes a Black community a Black community?

    • So are you saying Black parents are not part of the Black community? 

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