Black Culture Discussion Thread

Biya is a stauch supporter of France, which im completely agaisnt

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Mugabe was the complete opposite of him, he was for Zimbabwe and the blacks ONLY
The Blacks in his circle.
He definitely wasn't a Jerry Rawlings.

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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gukurahundi



Most of these African dictators have been using anti-European sentiment to hide their own corruption and atrocities towards their own citizens. How many of them die in their own countries?
 
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Nail Salon Brawls & Boycotts: Unpacking The Black-Asian Conflict In America
refinery29.com/en-us/2018/08/207533/red-apple-nails-brawl-black-asian-conflict
Nail Salon Brawls & Boycotts: Unpacking The Black-Asian Conflict In America There is a long history of Black-Asian conflict in America, and tensions were especially high in the early 1990s in New York and Los Angeles. Tiffany Diane Tso August 21, 2018 , 3:10 PM
As early as I can remember, my dad, an immigrant from Taiwan, would nonchalantly use the term 黑鬼 (hēi guǐ), Mandarin for “black ghost” and essentially the Chinese equivalent of the n-word, to refer to Black people. From a young age, I understood that the racial discrimination perpetuated against Black people in this country was mirrored in the sentiments of members of my community — a community that also faces intolerance in this country.

There have been ways in which this racial divide has been represented by the victimization of Asians, from coverage of the 1992 Los Angeles riots to reports of targeted attacks against Asians by Black people. It could be argued that the violence is mutual, but in reality, the Asian community and Asian-owned businesses have much responsibility to bear when it comes to anti-Black violence.

1 Photo: Douglas Burrows/Liaison.

A beauty supply store set on fire during the Los Angeles Riots.

On Friday, August 3, a dispute over an eyebrow wax became physical at New Red Apple Nails on Nostrand Avenue in East Flatbush, NY. According to a report in the New York Post, customer Christina Thomas was at the nail salon with her sister and grandmother when she received an unsatisfactory eyebrow waxing and refused to pay for the service. The staff ended up getting violent with the three Black women, with employees hitting them with broomsticks, dustpans, and their hands. A of the brawl went viral, which led to protesters trying to shut the down the salon, as well as other Asian-owned nail salons. It also led to a movement amongst Black women to patronize Black-owned businesses.
The New York Healthy Nail Salon Coalition was quick to condemn the violence of New Red Apple Nails’ employees, stating that “at no point, is any level of violence needed or justified,” while Asian American community organizations banded together to call out our complicity to Black oppression. “White supremacy is upheld when Asian American workers who are sometimes exploited with long days and low pay may unjustly take their frustration out with Black customers,” the statement read.
This incident does not stand alone. In fact, there is a long history of Black-Asian conflict in America, and tensions were especially high in the early 1990s in New York and Los Angeles. In 1990, the Flatbush boycott, also known as the Family Red Apple boycott, broke out following the assault of a Haitian woman by employees of the Korean-owned grocery in Brooklyn’s predominately-Black Flatbush neighborhood. Black protestors called for the boycott of all Korean-owned stores. In 1991, convenience store owner Soon Ja Du shot and killed 15-year-old Latasha Harlins after she wrongly accused Harlins of trying to shoplift a bottle of orange juice from her South Los Angeles store; a security camera video showed the girl had money in her hand to pay for it. Du didn’t serve any jail time. Harlins’ death is cited as a catalyst to the 1992 Los Angeles riots, in which Korean-owned stores were targeted, looted, and destroyed. Fast-forward to March last year, when Black community members in Charlotte, NC protested Missha Beauty store after owner Sung Ho Lim was filmed choking a Black female customer he suspected of stealing. These infamous incidents have become emblematic of Black-Korean conflict, which has been widely documented and researched.
Photo: Gary Leonard/Corbis/Getty Images.

A row of destroyed businesses after the Los Angeles Riots.

“Although ‘Black-Korean conflict’ may have largely disappeared from front page headline news, the reality of racially-distinct immigrant small business entrepreneurs operating in poor, underserved minority neighborhoods persists as a formula for potential conflict,” wrote author Miliann Kang in The Managed Hand: Race, Gender, and the Body in Beauty Service Work. “The potential for misunderstandings and dissatisfaction remains high in service exchanges involving emotional and embodied dimensions across various social divisions.”
Each publicized incident called into question the anti-Black biases of Asian immigrants and Asian Americans. But the boycotts that followed were often xenophobia-tinged retaliations, depicting a sort of tit-for-tat cycle between communities. In the protests following the August 3 incident at New Red Apple Nails, “Where’s ICE?” was heard among the chants outside of a second salon blocks away, Beautiful Red Apple Nails, according to New York Post. An employee at Beautiful Red Apple Nails told the New York Times that the two similarly-named businesses are not owned by the same people.
In 1990, the Haitian woman involved in the scuffle that began the Flatbush boycott allegedly told the cashier, “Yon Chinese, Korean ************. Go back to your country,” according to a report from The New Republic. During the ensuing protests, a Black teen bashed the skull of a Vietnamese resident with a hammer, as his accomplices yelled “Koreans go home.”
These sentiments mirror the xenophobic rhetoric often experienced by non-white immigrants, and call to mind, for Asian Americans, the 1982 murder of Vincent Chin, a Chinese man who was murdered by two white men who mistook him for Japanese. People of color often adopt the same an anti-immigrant mentality and buy into the fear of Yellow Peril created by white supremacy and nationalism — systems that make everybody complicit to them, including the oppressed.
Sociologist Tamara K. Nopper argued against depicting these Black-Asian conflicts as “mutual misunderstanding” in a 2015 article. “The use of ‘mutual’ misunderstanding suggests shared status or power, with each group contributing to each other’s vulnerability and suffering,” Nopper wrote. “The employment of the mutual misunderstanding framework suggests Asian store owners desire identification with and from Black customers across class and race lines. Yet many studies of Asian immigrant storeowners show they hold racist views of Black people and associate them with negative qualities purportedly absent among Asians.”
Asian Americans must admit and rectify the ways we uphold white supremacy, namely our anti-Blackness. Much like the U.S., Asian countries suffer from colorism and caste systems within their own societies. “Anti-Blackness is foundational to the creation of America,” said Diane Wong, an assistant professor and faculty fellow at NYU Gallatin, whose research has focused on the gentrification of Chinatowns and Afro-Asian solidarities. “It’s no secret then that anti-Blackness is reflected in Asian immigrant families, businesses, institutions and interpersonal relationships on a frequent basis.”
As a society, we have “progressed” from lynchings to viral videos of violence against Black people, from police killings and brutality to baseless accusations of criminality. In retail spaces, Black people continue to experience racism and antagonization. When Asians internalize and perpetuate anti-Black racism and violence, we are reifying our complicity and driving a deeper wedge between the minority groups.
It’s important to note that two groups are not equally positioned in larger structures of power, especially when one racial group is profiting off the other, which is oftentimes the case in these violent clashes between Black people and Asians.



When Asians internalize and perpetuate anti-Black racism and violence, we are reifying our complicity and driving a deeper wedge between the minority groups.

Tiffany Diane Tso



“Race is certainly a factor, but it is not the only factor,” Kang, an associate professor at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst, said in an interview. Kang’s research has focused on Asian-owned nail salons and their racially diverse customers. “Many nail salon workers are under pressure to work quickly and keep costs down, which does not create the best environment for building customer relations. The potential for tensions is heightened by the intimacy of the service, which involves direct physical contact, and the fact that many of the workers and owners are immigrants who do not speak the language or understand the culture of their customers.” In these scenarios, the tension is stoked by economic stress: the salon workers who often work for low wages under poor conditions, and the mostly working class clientele who cannot afford to waste money on subpar service.
Kang stressed the importance of putting these largely publicized conflicts in context. “I have observed hundreds of interactions in salons in this neighborhood that were very cordial and where workers and customers were very respectful and appreciative of each other,” she said.

Our perspectives are largely shaped by the way Black-Asian conflict is covered in media. “There is a lot of misinformation when it comes to reporting on salient issues that affect both Black and Asian communities,” Wong said. However, when videos of Asian business owners and workers inflicting violence on Black customers go viral, when Asian American activists protest in support for Peter Liang, an NYPD officer who shot an unarmed Black man in a stairwell, the message received by the public is that Asians do not care about Black lives.
These acts of violence are only a microcosm of the conflict between the minority groups, moments when the tension bubbles up to the surface and pops. There have been many ways statistics about Asian American achievement and the “model minority” myth have been used as a wedge between Asians and other minority groups, most notably through Ed Blum’s anti-affirmative action lawsuit against Harvard. Many Asian Americans have thrown their support behind ending affirmative action and in support of standardized testing in school admission, placing their own concerns ahead of the communities marginalized by these systems, namely Black, Brown, and indigenous peoples.
As a kid, I used to cringe when my dad, a self-proclaimed Democrat, would use slurs to refer to Black people, sometimes rolling my eyes and shouting “Daddy!” at him. Now, I realize that I must do more than just cringe. It is my generation’s job to undo the legacy of anti-Black racism within our communities and to resist complicity with white supremacy — and it starts with talking about it.



Red Apple Nails & Anti Blackness At Asian Businesses https://www.refinery29.com/en-us/20...OpqR1XpC16y4Ut0U5pK7ghKt4PRZ-itmwmTgqZKWVlwaU
 
History just keep repeating itself

Even worse, it never stopped. In this case, discriminatory voter ID laws in North Carolina have barely changed since 1897. Laws they passed specifically to prevent black people from being voted into government positions 100+ years ago still exists.
 
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That's why I now understand our media and entertainment complex to be such a distraction. Things are framed in a way to make someone hardly think critically or not at all about what reality really is. It's disheartening. Erase, rinse, repeat.
 
Tyrone was a whole crash test dummy..
At the end of the day Tyrone gets a criminal record and possibly sued. Meanwhile the lost continue to dump money into the asian community like nothing ever happened.
Black men...don’t be like Tyrone

no, black man be like Tyrone.

Sometimes its good to show that that unbridled rage. We cant always just sit back be docile and accept everything .
 
Is anyone following what's happening in South Africa?

yup

The most income unequal country in the world has convinced its poor majority blacks that their problems is due to their other African brothers taking their jobs, and not the whites and Indians minority that that controls most of the countries wealth.

Its beyond sad
 
yup

The most income unequal country in the world has convinced its poor majority blacks that their problems is due to their other African brothers taking their jobs, and not the whites and Indians minority that that controls most of the countries wealth.

Its beyond sad

The ANC, which used to sing "Kill the Boer," up until recently (if they have stopped), is not led by Indians and Whites.

https://mg.co.za/article/2019-09-03-00-xenophobia-and-party-politics-in-south-africa

Xenophobia and party politics in South Africa

Both the ANC-led government and the Democratic Alliance (DA) want to build higher fences at the border to prevent foreigners from coming in and undermining South Africa’s socio-economic development and security. Politicians claim that foreigners are the main reason for high crime rates; immigrants are blamed for the hardships experienced by poor South Africans and for overrunning South Africa’s cities.

In 2017, South Africa’s deputy police minister claimed that the city of Johannesburg was taken over by foreigners, with 80% of the city controlled by them. If this is not urgently stopped, he added, the entire country “could be 80% dominated by foreign nationals and the future president of South Africa could be a foreign national.” The mayor of Johannesburg often speaks about “our people” and “those people” [the foreigners] who make South Africa into a “lawless society.” The Economic Freedom Fighters has questioned whether those born outside the country—even the people born abroad to South African parents—can ever be trusted or regarded as “proper South Africans.”

While speaking about their plans to run a coalition government on the national level if they get enough votes in 2019, the DA, Congress of the People and the right-wing Freedom Front Plus promised to place foreigners in camps rather than letting them roam free in South African cities. The African Basic Movement, a newly registered political party, has called for all foreigners to leave South Africa by the end of 2018. The party claims that foreigners plan to take over the country in a few years and thus must be stopped by any means. They also want to make it illegal for foreigners to marry South African citizens.

https://mg.co.za/article/2018-03-22...nti-poor-immigration-plans-and-rhetoric-in-sa
High fences and unworthy foreigners: Anti-poor immigration plans and rhetoric in SA

Here, the DA is only copying the ANC-led government. The White Paper on International Migration, drafted under the leadership of then (and again) minister Home Affairs, Malusi Gigaba, and approved by the South African government in March 2017, sees the poor and unskilled international migrants – most of whom are from the African continent and are coming to South Africa in order to escape hardships, conflict or prosecution and are in search of better life and/or safety – as unworthy masses that threaten South Africa’s security, stability and economic prosperity.

The future immigration plans will be aimed at preventing the poor African migrants from coming to South Africa by any means, ‘even if this is labelled anti-African behaviour,’ as the former Minister of Home Affairs, Hlengiwe Mkhize, pointed out in June 2017.

This despite the fact that South Africa is not overwhelmed by immigrants, who make up only 2.8% of the population according to the Stats SA Community Survey 2016. In addition, foreigners are not taking away jobs, services and resources from South Africans, as pointed out by the Department of Home Affairs in the Green Paper on International Migration in 2016.

The ANC government goes even further than the DA. It doesn’t only plan to build taller fences to prevent poor foreigners from coming in. It also plans to build large detention centres where the asylum seekers will be held until their applications are processed. Never mind that this would breach the country’s Constitution, as pointed out by the Lawyers for Human Rights. Anything to keep the unworthy out.
 
"even if this is labelled anti-African behaviour,’"

"Congress of the People and the right-wing Freedom Front Plus promised to place foreigners in camps rather than letting them roam free in South African cities. The African Basic Movement, a newly registered political party, has called for all foreigners to leaveSouth Africa by the end of 2018."

SMH @ South Africa. Tryna outdo the Trump administration.
 
I got my 23 and Me results back this Sunday. Basically I'm 2/3rd's Black and 1/3rd Caucasian.

It feels weird man. Mostly because my parents and grandparents from both sides were very adamant about us being Native American (0.4% Native American) and not Caucasian despite the vast majority of all of my family being lightskin going back at least 4 generations.

People lie so freakin hard about being Native American and other lineages :smh:. Quite a few of my white relatives are 5 dollar Indians and faking it.

I am hype about being 17.1% Nigerian(Yoruba) on my dads side because I've been practicing the Yoruba religion since the age of 7. At least I can say that I was practicing the culture of my people.
 
I got my 23 and Me results back this Sunday. Basically I'm 2/3rd's Black and 1/3rd Caucasian.

It feels weird man. Mostly because my parents and grandparents from both sides were very adamant about us being Native American (0.4% Native American) and not Caucasian despite the vast majority of all of my family being lightskin going back at least 4 generations.

People lie so freakin hard about being Native American and other lineages :smh:. Quite a few of my white relatives are 5 dollar Indians and faking it.

I am hype about being 17.1% Nigerian(Yoruba) on my dads side because I've been practicing the Yoruba religion since the age of 7. At least I can say that I was practicing the culture of my people.

lololol. Black people LOVE saying they Native America. Its all good bro, Im happy you got your results, do you mind posting it and blur out your name?

Im curious as to how 23 % me do it.
 
lololol. Black people LOVE saying they Native America. Its all good bro, Im happy you got your results, do you mind posting it and blur out your name?

Im curious as to how 23 % me do it.

Thanks!!!

I just cropped where it says my name and 100%. This is the generic report.

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This is the all report which goes into the details and science behind the information. My wife went through this information in detail before i could because she was anxious to know what African tribes/regions were in my report

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The rest are 0.0% for a long list of race groups

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There is alot more information in the links shown in the images. It's worth the $100 but I think the health one would be too much of a guess especially considering that someone like me has alot of variance in my DNA across the African and European region. Both my African and European ancestors were most likely nomadic at some point.

There's a African tribe specific test from another company that my wife is considering as well.
 
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when my aunt did this test she got mostly Nigerian and Portuguese/Spanish.
I want to do it but is there any truth to these companies doing negative stuff with the results?
 
This is the old ancestry.com format. It’s a bit cleaner and lumps it up by geographical region.

I advice all my brothers in here to do a test to get an accurate understanding of your background, and not something you heard from people.

869E597F-3FD5-4F02-9D9E-94FD4ABAAE2E.jpeg
 
when my aunt did this test she got mostly Nigerian and Portuguese/Spanish.
I want to do it but is there any truth to these companies doing negative stuff with the results?

You dont have to give a name to your sample. They wouldnt know who you were. I only attached my name to it until afterwards.
 
Black authority speaking on jayz ulterior motives within the black community ....


 
"even if this is labelled anti-African behaviour,’"

"Congress of the People and the right-wing Freedom Front Plus promised to place foreigners in camps rather than letting them roam free in South African cities. The African Basic Movement, a newly registered political party, has called for all foreigners to leaveSouth Africa by the end of 2018."

SMH @ South Africa. Tryna outdo the Trump administration.
The most disappointing thing about this situation (and the broader environment in which it is OK to run political campaigns on scapegoating foreigners) is that those very foreigners were rooting for Black South Africans a mere 25 years ago. The release of Mandela, the end of apartheid, the truth and reconciliation commission are stories that Africans in their thirties have lived, and some of us even had to study South African literature in school (especially the books banned by the apartheid government at the time). It's insane how quickly the oppressed can become the oppressor.
 
no, black man be like Tyrone.

Sometimes its good to show that that unbridled rage. We cant always just sit back be docile and accept everything .

Doing actions that can lead to negative consequences out of emotion is never the way to go..
Did your black father not teach you that?
Its not about showing rage...we already intimidate THEM naturally.
Its about using your damn brain and thinking long term.
Again Tyrone did actions out of emotions like a silly *** schoolgirl.
Now his *** can be possibly sued and have charges pressed against him.
Who wins at the end of the day??
The Asian owners of that salon...that's who.

Being Jamaican you of all people should know better...you Caribbean blacks are the most passive and docile in AmeriKKKa.
So don't be in here trying to misguide us American brothas on doing ********.
Go preach that rage filled rebellion action crap in Jamaica and aim it toward your European dominated vacation resort industry plantation.
giphy.gif
 
Doing actions that can lead to negative consequences out of emotion is never the way to go..
Did your black father not teach you that?
Its not about showing rage...we already intimidate THEM naturally.
Its about using your damn brain and thinking long term.
Again Tyrone did actions out of emotions like a silly *** schoolgirl.
Now his *** can be possibly sued and have charges pressed against him.
Who wins at the end of the day??
The Asian owners of that salon...that's who.

Being Jamaican you of all people should know better...you Caribbean blacks are the most passive and docile in AmeriKKKa.
So don't be in here trying to misguide us American brothas on doing bull****.
Go preach that rage filled rebellion action crap in Jamaica and aim it toward your European dominated vacation resort industry plantation.
giphy.gif


lololol, its even worst now because the Chinese came in there and built the highway around the island, but the catch is that whatever land the highway touch they now own it. They were smart because they built along the coastline. Jamaica is practically little China now...smh

Either way, I think its important to fight and show them we arent afraid once in a while.

Case in point if a police is physically harming my sister, Im not gonna wait until court to try and argue. No, Im gonna punch the **** outta him. There has to be a fine line between being passive and calculating, but also showing these people youre not afraid of putting hands on somebody .
 
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