The Psychology of Black Fear

black people's problem in this country is fear. that's the bottom line, a fear of white reprisal for taking a correct and clear cut stance against white supremacy and the powes-that-be. it is protocol for the white power structure to project the image of an invincible amerikkka that can not be removed from its position of world domination. therefore, one of the main objectives is to present to the world a fighting machine, so technologically advanced, that there is nothing nor anyone that has the capability to defeat it, especially with all its smart so and so this and smart so and so that.the effect has been monumental on the mental plane of the black collective, that the black collective wouldn't dare conceive of a revolution that will set us free, genuinely free, not that false illusion of freedom that has been espoused by the likes of the civil rights pundits, who chose to cut a deal with the enemy state, in exchange for the creation of a black middle class, which is no more than an agency for or buffer against white supremacy. and if black folk do take part in a revolution of some sort, it'll amount up to no more than revolutionizing a phone, a car, a computer, an ipod, a television, a washing machine and dryer, a pair of shoes, etc., etc., etc.but, let us go farther back than the civil rights heroes, to the time of the psychic trauma of the physical slave trade. why do i say physical? i say that because we are obviously still mental slaves to the state. and part of that mental dysfunctionalism is the mechanism of fear, which was first predicated upon brute force, at the hands of a violent group of slave investors, whose euro-psychotic culture was centered around violent force, stretching back to at least four thousand years.there were many ways that were conjured up to instill that fear of whiteness in the minds of the afrikans, who had been the victims of the countless amounts of kidnappings that took place on the mother continent. one example was the decapitation of a body part of a so-called disobedient slave. these traumatic experiences and experiments had an indelible effect, which still lingers on today, among the black collective. as a way to avoid this fear, we look for options, such as voting or scapegoating, which means that we let the enemy off the hook everytime we turn inwards to find out what our problems are, or put the square blame on ourselves as a way to explain so-called black on black crime, which is a product of white on black crime.therefore, to vote has been heaped up into a fancy lil slogan rock the vote or vote or die, which is the gatekeeping method for saying rock the boat or rock the boat or die, or as dead prez says ride or die. but one cursory glance at the vote or die slogan reveals that we're still dying after being allowed to vote for the past forty years. so, there's clearly something wrong with that slogan. it is nothing but hype, hype that only workd for those of us who have been allowed access to material luxury. the slogan is flawed, because it is obvious to anyone, who has gauged our situation correctly, through the eyes of an afrikan-n-amerikkka, as opposed to an afrikan-amerikkkan, that voting is not the solution to the malaise of problems that we face everyday, as a collective black group or still displaced nation of people.in as much, the fear that black people have toward the enemy state or that big gigantic of a white stature, is placated when it comes to us and us, where we have no fear of dealing with each other on any level, barring so-called black on black crime participants. we'll exert all kinds of energy over anything among ourselves, but when it comes to dealing with the man, as the elders use to say during the sixties, we put our tails in our asses, because we've internalized the fear of whiteness, which has a great admiration in our psyches.so, until we begin to adress our fear of whiteness, in all its various forms, we'll continue to wallow in the psycho-social sexual dysfunctionalism that the europeans cultural group has indulged in for at least the past four thousand years. it'a about root knowledge not fruit knowledge. apples don't grow trees, trees do.UHURU SASA (FREEDOM NOW)!

You need to be a member of TheBlackList Pub to add comments!

Join TheBlackList Pub

Votes: 0
Email me when people reply –
https://theblacklist.net/