I debated the idea of writing an article focused on the issue of racism for quite some time. The hesitancy behind my vacillation is that the topic is simply old, tiring, and frankly just exhausting. Making matters worse is that it’s an issue that shouldn’t even be an issue within our modern society. Considering the time we’re living in, I know that I’ll need to explain what I mean by that statement. I’m not stating that I expect racism to be eradicated from every corner of the earth. That’s just wishful thinking and I simply don’t have that much faith in humanity. What I am stating is that we should all be wise enough as a collective to no longer allow racism to be used as a weapon to drive a wedge within the human race. Yet, here we are in the year 2025 and people are still allowing themselves to be baited into heated arguments and debates which drive further division. The amount of vitriol and downright ignorance that I’ve witnessed as of late on social media regarding racism is insufferable. So much so that I’m highly considering now walking away from Substack —another platform where the hate virus has recently spread. I question if the human race is even up to the task of fighting back against the giants who manipulate us through manufactured racism, let alone defeat them.
If nothing else in this piece —which will live as my final thesis on the topic of racism —is made clear I want to press one important point; we are all being programmed to hate each other in order to make it easier for a global system to identify and control us by dividing us into factions. Ignorance filled with emotion is key to the success of this agenda. The ignorance riding on the backs of emotion within American society is the energy that is fueling the cultural breakdown, ushering us further into a divided human race. There are those who have been so consumed by this hate virus that they now believe separation of ethnicities —the human race— is necessary. They’ve been convinced that our differences are too vast and therefore homogeny should not be sought after. This is precisely the type of thinking the powers of spiritual darkness would hope we would adopt. Division is the point. The truth of the matter is we’re all bound together by first our humanity and second by our beliefs. It is important to note that beliefs are agnostic in regards to ethnicity. Beliefs don’t care about skin color or nationality. Beliefs can also be changed as they can be fluid and dynamic. We are all the same race —human. What separates us if anything is our belief systems. I believe that the very idea of a divided human race is pure evil and not of God. I choose to view all of humanity the same way God views us —impartial, equal, and a collective good to be used by Him. I dare not take the position of God and view His creation any other way.
I’m going to tackle just a few concerns in this piece. I will layout my thoughts concerning assumptions made against the “Black community”; the issue of statistics regarding crime, the topic of isolating ethnicities, solutions, and even the N-word. I believe these are all concerns that are being used to fuel hatred through ethnic programming. Throughout this piece I will be largely contrasting Whites vs Blacks because within these ethnicities the issue of racism is most stark. It is not to say no other ethnicities have racist subgroups. I feel it is important to call this out so no one is misled into thinking this article seeks to disparage those who are White. Some may want to lead with the assumption I have an axe to grind against White people or those of any other ethnicity simply because they’ve been programmed to project such thinking. Nothing could be further from the truth. I have family members who are White, including a mother-in-law and subsequent brothers-in-law. I love them all. It would be incoherent to be an advocate for hatred towards those who are White as this would mean I am to advocate for hatred of my own family. I’ve spent most of my life around people of all ethnicities —with a good percentage of them being White. In a previous business I owned my co-founder was White. I’ve spent my entire tech career mentoring and working with White people —many who’ve been amazing individuals. I am a follower of Yahweh and recognize all people are equal and deserve the same level of dignity and respect regardless of ethnicity for we are all part of the human family. So the very idea that I personally have any angst against White people in general is simply an idea steeped in fallacy.
My degree in racism
It is important for me to lay a solid foundation if we’re going to wade into the choppy waters that is the topic of race. Far too often do I see people —particularly online— run head first into conversations chocked full of assumptions about me or all Black people because we all share dark skin and social media’s algorithms reward rage bait. Many people don’t realize they’ve been programmed to make certain assumptions about people that don’t look like them —whether Black or White. They operate foolishly and I give grace because of their ignorance as they often shoot first and never even stop to ask questions later. But, before I get to that, I want to first lay out some of my credentials as an expert on racism. Yes, I’m being sarcastic. But not really.
For starters, I’m Black. I’ve been black my entire life and have met real racism face-to-face several times. My introduction into racism dates back to my elementary school years where I spent a large part of my childhood living in Plattsburgh, New York. There I attended a predominantly White school where I was constantly harassed and bullied by a special group of ignorant White kids for being Black. The word “nigger” was just one of the slurs I received almost daily. I got into physical altercations because White kids wanted to practice their new karate skills on “the nigger”. Years later when my parents received orders to move overseas to England I got an extra helping of racism. England to my surprise was an incredibly racist country. I remember a time my younger sister and I were walking home after being dropped off by the school bus when three random White British kids on bikes circled us, incessantly spat at us while calling us niggers before racing off.
My fun with racism didn’t end in childhood. I’m reminded of a time —back in the late 90s—when I was serving in the Air Force, stationed at Goldsboro, NC. I had traveled to Greensboro, NC with a few Air Force buddies of mine for a weekend. We visited the local mall that Friday evening to shop, however, things went sideways when local security started heavily profiling everyone who was Black. They accused us of loitering in the mall. The rule was that if mall security saw you more than once, you were in a group of three or more individuals, and you had not purchased anything within a certain timeframe you were to be considered loitering and would be removed. I know this was the rule because they stated it the first time we ran into them.
That weekend local security was kicking out anyone that was Black on “loitering” charges. I had known the mall to profile Black people before, but this weekend was particular different due to a higher volume of Black athletes who were in town for matches. Unfortunately, as some of us were waiting for one of our buddies to exit a store where he was making a purchase, mall security ran into us for a second time. My buddies and I —including my friend who had just made a purchase— were all kicked out of the mall for loitering. We had been there a total of 30 minutes. So there we were, United States servicemen, getting kicked out of an establishment in America because we were Black.
Several months later I learned a civil suit was filed against the owner by the local NAACP and it was found that the owner of the mall did in fact instruct local security to profile and exit Black people out of the mall to keep their presence to a minimum. There had been complaints of this practice for years but nothing was ever done about it. The owner was found guilty in a court of law and eventually sold the property. Under new management the profiling stopped. This was over 20 years ago and the mall is still operating successfully to this day packed with every ethnicity you can think of. Black people weren’t the problem. Prejudice was.
Let me make something clear. I know what it is like to be kicked out of an establishment in America, as an American who was serving the country by putting my life on the line everyday simply because of my skin color. Many people think this level of racism died during the Civil Rights Era. I’m sorry to inform, no it did not. I have several more stories of being either profiled or flat out refused service based on my skin color alone.
I’m not sharing these stories to drum up sympathy or to prove racism against Black people exists or to claim White people are exercising systemic racism. My point in sharing is to elucidate the fact that despite the amount of hatred I’ve had to endure throughout my life as a Black man, I still don’t hate White people nor do I view them as a monolithic group. I also don’t believe we need to live segregated lives. Throughout my life I’ve had some incredible relationships with White people —shout out to my first girlfriend— despite the hatred and ignorance a subgroup of them have displayed towards me. When I talk about racism I know the subject well because I’ve lived it. Many people who don’t look like me don’t know what it’s like to live in a country where you are always the minority, being looked down upon, harassed, assailed, and prejudged just because you exist. This is the world I and many Black people live in. You are guilty until proven innocent. This lifestyle has created thicker skin which is necessary in order to operate above the hate and ignorance. It is my view that regardless of ethnicity, we all should wear the same thick skin in recognition that there will always be ignorant and weak fools among us.
Hate thrives on assumptions
Today, we live in a time where social media has unearthed the fears of some White Americans as they now see violence and racism demonstrated against people that look like them. Unfortunately, we are all also witnessing a world where minorities appear to be given free passes to commit crime. To be fair, as a Black man, I know this isn’t a new problem. Many White people believe it is but, that is chiefly because in the past the “crime” was more isolated to Black communities and social media wasn’t as prevalent. Thanks to social media and Big Media people are becoming convinced some sort of uprising against White America is taking place —stoking irrational fear as people seem to forget the sheer numerical disadvantage Blacks have as a populace against their White counterparts —clocking in at a whopping 14% of the total population. This is after accounting for all Blacks, not just the one’s deemed as criminally violent —which brings me to my point about assumptions.
I’ve learned over the years that many of my White American counterparts assume ridiculous things about Black people. For instance, they assume all Black people are the same or that we operate as a monolithic people. I can tell you firsthand as a Black man, no we do not.
There are many cultural values that some Blacks hold that I and many other Black people do not hold. We don’t all listen to “thug” music, live in the hood, talk with hood slang, sag our pants, hate White people, do drugs, condone Black violence, subscribe to a victimhood mentality, agree with DEI, love Al Sharpton, want to “return” to Africa, adore Obama, hate America, vote Democrat, shop at Walmart, enjoy fast food, worship sports, love chicken and watermelon or any other racist tropes people tend to believe about “Black” people because the media told them to believe it. These ideas are seeded simply by way of racial programming.
Black people are not a monolithic group and White people are not as special or different as some tend to believe. Many things White Americans believe in and desire are the very same things many Black Americans believe in and desire. Over the years I’ve seen statements such as, “White people keep trying to move away from neighborhoods filled with Black criminals or thugs.” Statements like this are bewildering to me. Guess what? So do Black people like myself. I know what it’s like to live in a depressed neighborhood as I was a victim of theft by a crackhead who literally lived next door to me. I’ve entered into depressed Black neighborhoods to do street evangelism before. I’ve done jail ministry —sharing the Gospel with Black men who desperately wanted to get out of the cycle of violence as they came from crime ridden communities. Most people who live in depressed communities don’t want to be there contrary to popular opinion.
Most Black people —even those stuck in such communities— don’t want to live in the very neighborhoods White people claim to be avoiding. The depraved and violent lifestyle displayed on social media isn’t one that most people enjoy living. Sadly, it’s just a part of the fabric of broken communities. It’s all they know. Such cultural phenomenas are present within every ethnicity. So when those who are not Black chime in with their “Black education” concerning communities and people they know nothing about it simply adds fuel to a fire that’s been long burning and makes them look even more ignorant. This is a goal of the programmers.
There are other assumptions often made as well about Black people. That by and large we somehow aren’t aware of the statistics that speak to the volume of violent crime committed in comparison to our White counterparts. This is staggering to me. To my White counterparts that believe Blacks are all uninformed, “Thanks for finally showing up! Crackers and club soda is to your right.”
As I shared earlier, I’ve been Black my whole life and as a Black man most of us are raised with a bit of street smarts. We know not to go into certain hoods or areas we’re not from, especially at night when dealing with poorer Black communities. Many people my age grew up learning about the many gangs that existed from California to New York through friends, gang members themselves, family or “gangsta” rap music. We grew up watching movies like “Boyz n the Hood” and “Menace to Society”. We’re aware of the fatherlessness problem many Black communities face and the increased risk this presents in males finding themselves dead or in jail. Most of us oppose the Welfare State and believe it was a system setup to destroy the Black family as it rewards single motherhood. This isn’t new information to Black people yet many people think it is. They’re quick to point out “the stats” online to “prove” the issue. But Black people didn’t need the internet to know what was happening across the country in certain Black communities. We knew well before the rise of social media. There’s an irony in all of this.
When Black Americans were complaining about these very problems dating back to the 1970s they were largely ignored. Black Americans were disparaged and everything they railed about were considered conspiracies. America was too busy continuing its practice of redlining neighborhoods despite the advent of the 1968 Fair Housing Act to care. When Black Americans were complaining that crooked cops were dumping guns and crack cocaine into their neighborhoods nobody cared and it was all chocked up as conspiracies. If common sense prevailed people would’ve realized Blacks didn’t own weapons manufacturing shops— especially poor Blacks, let alone shops to whip up cocaine.
Several books have been written —Dark Alliance by Gary Weber and Big White Lie by Michael Levine, for example— on the topic of the CIA being responsible for the crack cocaine epidemic that started in Los Angeles, California. Knowing what we all know about our “three letter agencies” today, it doesn’t sound so conspiratorial now. When Black Americans were complaining that White cops were gunning down unarmed Black citizens in urban communities nobody cared. Many were caught by surprise when the Rodney King riots ensued back in 1992. Black Americans who had been witnessing the abuse of power had enough and the Rodney King abuse and arrest was the straw that broke the camel’s back. White Americans weren’t informed because there was no social media and Big Media kept this issue hidden. There was a reason N.W.A wrote the song “Fuck Tha Police” in 1988. It wasn’t because they were bored. Cops were nicknamed “pigs” within the hoods because they were known to be dirty —instigating crime and setting up innocent Black men who were patsies. It was through Rap music that Blacks were able to communicate what was happening in their cities and neighborhoods. Black communities that were designated as depressed were being used as a means to facilitate crime at the behest of our government agencies while funding war efforts from the profits. But since these problems only impacted Black neighborhoods, people looked the other way. I’m of the belief the CIA is now operating their propaganda machine through social media. This way it looks as if the propaganda is simply citizen’s content —just like the crack-cocaine epidemic and gun trafficking was made to look like it was spearheaded by Black people living in poor communities.
It is a sad thing to watch many White Americans consistently take the race bait and decide to “educate” Black people on what’s happening. These individuals don’t understand the complex and rich history many Black American communities have faced. There seems to be an assumption all communities —White, Black, and everything in between— were originated the same way or that Black people operate as a monolithic group that condones criminal behavior. No. I and many, many Black Americans are tired of the depressed communities, the fatherlessness, the manipulation by the media, the manipulation by the government, the violence, the hatred, the trauma, the judgements, and people pretending to help while adding more fuel to the fire.
If we’re ever going to get past the hate then we all need to stop making assumptions about one another, ask more questions to learn about one another, and exercise grace with one another. We weren’t all given the same lot in life and everyone has a story. We’re all human.
The Numbers
While on the topic of violent crime, I’d be remiss to not address a very important point —the supposedly high rate of Black people within the Black community that commit violent crime. There’s an assumption that people like myself are simply outliers. But that is not true as the data doesn’t support that claim, nor has it ever. While it’s near impossible to know the exact number of murderers for any given year, enough data exists to present a rough idea. According to the FBI’s crime stats, for the year 2023 there were 9,299 murders committed by Black Americans with White Americans accounting for 6,333 of murders. This is important as it concerns the “statistics” narrative.
There are roughly 48 million Black Americans living in the United States. This means that out of the total Black population only 0.02% of Black Americans commit murder. That leaves 99.98% of Black Americans who are not violent, murderous criminals. So when people hop online and make claims that a large subset of Black people or even Black poor people are violent criminals they are not representing the facts.
The reality is, people like myself are not the outliers nor the anomalies. These are simply the facts. The numbers speak for themselves and anyone can look them up. Those who hope to encourage racist thinking are quick to point out the percentage of homicides committed by Black Americans in contrast to other ethnic groups without bringing to attention the actual number of total homicides or the number of criminals within the criminal’s particular ethnicity. The facts speak for themselves. Most Black people aren’t violent criminals and this includes those who live in economically depressed areas that subscribe to a culture that on the surface many Americans would think is violent. So when non-Black Americans make broad sweeping statements about “Black people” they are misinformed and out of touch with reality.
Unfortunately, social media is a popular medium for propagating much ignorance. It is the perfect honeypot to draw in hatred with an endless supply of videos showcasing Black on White crime or even Black on Black crime. These psyop videos have no dates or time stamps or even location but they live forever on the internet and are pumped by triggered individuals who fall victim to rage bait. To these individuals these videos are evidence of a full-scale attack by Black people all over the world on White people or they are “evidence” of the entire Black community acting like animals.
There is also one more issue we need to address since we’re discussing statistics.
There’s another narrative that exists solely for the purpose of driving more division by ramping up racism and that is the narrative of “Black on Black crime”. We’ve all been programmed to think that Black people are some sort of special subgroup of human that goes after its own kind while no other ethnicity shares this character trait. That is a false narrative. According to the FBI’s own data, most victims of homicides are of the same ethnicity of the offender. This is chiefly due to the fact that the offenders and victims are close in proximity to each other within a community. Said another way, people of the same ethnic group usually interact with each other more than with others outside of their ethnic group.
Black people don’t have a special or unique problem. All ethnicities have the same problem. White people will murder their own kind before they murder a Black person. A Black, Asian, or Hispanic will murder their own kind before murdering another. Over 90% of murders take place within the same ethnic group. In fact, I once had to stand trial as a witness to a triple homicide committed by a hispanic male. He drove all the way from Mexico to the United States for a girl that left him and murdered 3 other young hispanics —one being the girl’s boyfriend and another, her brother.
There is a big takeaway here and that is, the next time you hear about Black on Black crime, remember every ethnicity has the same exact problem. There is a White on White crime problem. An Asian on Asian crime problem. A Latino on Latino crime problem. We’re just not programmed to realize it thanks to Big Media and social media. There’s a key word I’ve been using that I hope is becoming apparent and that is “programming”.
Ethnic Isolation
I want to press this idea of social media propagating ignorance and really bad thinking because both are true. There’s a new thought that consists of ethnic isolation by White Americans that’s currently being peddled. I’ve also seen it peddled by Black Americans.
To be fair, it’s not really a new idea. Within the Black community there is the idea of Pan-Africanism —a movement dating back to its founder W.E.B. DuBois in the early 1900s established to draw unity and solidarity between all people that were of African descent. Jamaican political activist, Marcus Garvey, subscribed heavily to the idea and started a “Back to Africa” movement for all Black people to achieve this goal of unity. I remember growing up in the 90s where clothing with African colors and imagery became popular. There was a push towards understanding our African roots with a desire to “go back to Africa”. Eventually this idea, like a lot of bad ideas flamed out.
The idea of ethnic isolation is a peculiar one to me. Chiefly because when I hear White Americans use such language I’m quickly reminded of Black people that somehow think things were better back in Africa before slavery. For one, most Black Americans aren’t from Africa and two, Africans were chiefly the ones responsible for selling their own kind into slavery. It’s as if people become so emotionally charged that they forget all historical context behind their ethnicity and reimagine a reality that never was. Many people are starting to believe that isolating ourselves by ethnicity is the solution to our racial woes and social media is the vehicle for promoting such a bad idea. Again, with more programming.
Ethnic isolation doesn’t solve anything and the history books have proven this time and time again. Are we to pretend that ancient Mesopotamians didn’t war against one another? Should we set aside the civil wars that existed within ancient Egypt between the Old, Middle and New Kingdoms? Are we to pretend ancient Israel didn’t fall from within due to culture collapse? What do we make of ancient Rome that brought about its own demise within just a couple hundred years? Do we ignore the warring that took place between old African tribes or the Native Americans before Europeans took over the Americas? Should we pretend Communist China didn’t murder its own people? Did the Rwandan Genocide not happen? How about the murdering of Indian Christians by those in India who hate Christianity? Are we all to pretend that nations don’t eventually become greedy and corrupt and decide to invade other isolated nations? Did the Native Americans ask Europeans to enter their land and wipe out their ethnic isolationist way of living? Ethnic isolation doesn’t work and if it does initially, it doesn’t work for long.
There are countless examples of the ethnic isolationist theory falling apart. Why? Because ethnicity doesn’t dictate culture. Beliefs dictate culture. Within every ethnicity there are subcultures predicated on various ideas, desires, and systems of belief. The more nuanced beliefs become, the more nuanced the ethnic group becomes. So much so that it can result in the development of internal factions that create civil unrest and later civil war. I understand why some White Americans think isolation is the answer but, this utopic idea rests on flawed thinking. Thinking that history has proved is not steeped in reality. Isolation doesn’t provide safety and security. Our ethnicity doesn’t unite us. We are all united by our cultural values and ethnicity does not dictate one’s culture. Safety and security is predicated on the community’s belief system, not its ethnicity.
The N-Word
Understandably, there’s probably no other word within the human language that is more polarizing than the word “Nigger”. This word —once used— reaches back in time and snaps forward carrying more baggage than a Boeing 747. It is a word that packs so much hatred and vitriol that all other disparaging terms within the human language put together would struggle to match its ferocity and level of demonization. This word doesn’t just carry with it the remembrance of the Jim Crow Era. It connotes that its recipient isn’t even human —which is precisely how Black people were once viewed. So it is no wonder that when Black people hear this word it causes a visceral reaction that oftentimes elicits a hateful response.
I’ve learned over the years that it is nearly impossible for those who are non-Black to fully understand the weight of this word. Many who are White think it has an equivalent such as “Whitey”, “Honky”, “Redneck”, “Cracker” or other terms. What they fail to realize is that the word “Nigger” carries with it not only the assertion of not being human but it also makes a statement that whoever uses this word would have no problem enslaving the recipient of such word —and not just the recipient but the recipients spouse, children, and friends. It communicates “slave master”. While the user of this word may not intend to communicate such an atrocious thought, this is part of the baggage that comes with this word. It simply does not carry the same weight as other derogatory terms typically associated with White people or any other ethnicity for that matter. Furthermore, it matters not if non-Blacks agree with this position. What matters is how that word can be and is often received by people who are Black, especially when used by someone who is White.
My point in providing clarity around this word isn’t to “get White people to stop using it” as some may assume. We’re all adults and people can use whatever words they want. My point in providing clarity is to help those who struggle with why this word can elicit such an aggressive and even highly irrational response to better understand the why behind it. It’s not just another ethnic pejorative.
The next question that undoubtedly will be raised —particularly by those that are not Black— revolves around the usage of this word by Black people. For starters, not all Black people use this word. This is a misconception. Most of us hate this word and hate when other ignorant Black people use it either as a disparaging term or as a friendly salute. I can’t answer the question as to why some Black people use it but it is a cultural phenomenon. It isn’t a word used by certain Black subcultures. There’s a belief that the word was reappropriated out of the hands of racists in an attempt to claim the word’s power. So now it’s used as a dysphemism in a more neutral or playful way but, can also still be used as a pejorative.
I’ve seen White people struggle with the power play concerning this word. Many feel that they should be able to use this word without fear or harm of retaliation. It is a word that leaves some feeling like they don’t have the “power” to use it and that is precisely the point behind reappropriating the word out of the hands of those who historically used it against Black people while suppressing them. While I don’t believe anyone should use this word because we should all be better than that, I also believe people are free to use whatever words they choose without fear of being retaliated against. There will always be ignorant and hateful people on the planet but, I don’t want to live in a world where words are policed.
However, I believe this presents a very glaring problem which is the fact that anyone would even desire to use the word at all, especially as a racist pejorative. I have noticed that some people —particularly those who are not Black— feel as if they’ve been stripped of power by not being able to use it. This simply elucidates the point that the word does in fact have power and whoever is able to use the word appears to enjoy the power that comes with it. For the word to be stripped of its power, it simply needs to stop being used by everyone. But this word seems to hold people captive like the One Ring from Lord of the Rings. In this case, it is no longer about the term itself but, the power one wields from using it. This issue elucidates the inconsistency of belief I’ve seen concerning this term. Some would say it’s just a word and therefore Black people should ignore it. Yet at the same time these same individuals are irate that they can’t use the word and feel as if they’re being stripped of their power to use it. Either it’s just a word, or it’s not. It can’t be both.
I do want to add that I don’t believe this is exclusively a “White people problem”. I believe that if no non-Black person ever used this word again it would still be used by a subculture of Black people. Chiefly because it is so ingrained into certain cultures. Fortunately, there are those who have elevated above using this word. I see this as no different than those who are still staunch racists while others are not. Hopefully in time there will be even less racists walking the streets and also less usage of this word. One can only hope. But until then, freedom of speech should reign.
Rebuilding
There’s no denying the issues that do exist within poor Black communities. High crime rates, absentee fathers, drug use, and the promotion of death culture are very real concerns. The problems these communities —and Blacks in particular— face are two fold. For one, there’s an enemy within which stems from the breakdown of the nuclear family causing young men and women to gravitate towards the immoral. The second problem is the enemy on the outside which can be understood as a sort of evil that seeks to undermine any progress made. To some this idea may sound outrageous or like “victimhood”. But there’s no doubt that over the last several decades there have been attempts to decrease the Black population.
The Anti-Drug Abuse Act of 1986 created a drastic disparity in sentencing between crack and cocaine. Being caught with five grams of crack would result in a five year prison sentence, however, it took 500 grams of cocaine to receive the same sentence. Crack was much more affordable in poor Black neighborhoods and more prevalent which resulted in disproportionate sentencing. There were other efforts to destroy Black communities such as the seeding of weapons and drugs by the government, the destabilizing of Black families through the invention of the Welfare State, the introduction of abortifacients to Black community church leaders, and many other unscrupulous acts.
Regardless of the evils that persist inside and outside of certain Black communities, if Black people who live within these areas truly want better lives then it will be up to them to create such a change. Each decision made whether it involves the committing of crime or having children out of wedlock are personal decisions. Ultimately, we are all responsible for the decisions we make in life. These are the same points I used to make when I would minister to young Black men in jails. Surprisingly, I never met anyone in jail that didn’t accept accountability for their actions. I believe in the moment it’s easy to rationalize criminal behavior but, later reality sets in and there’s a deep moment of introspection that appears to take place.
In order for change to take place within depressed communities there are beliefs that must be eradicated to end the culture of violence. Fathers need to be fathers and present in their kid’s lives every single day. Satanic music that glorifies murder, drug use, sexual abuse, and the objectification of women and men needs to stop. Furthermore, the victimhood mentality needs to be jettisoned and God needs to come first. The change that’s needed starts within the home. Strong communities are built one family at a time.
How the System manipulates us
I am a firm believer that American society is being groomed for a civil war. I believe this civil war will be replicated around the world where other dark-skinned individuals have permeated lands that were known to be predominantly European-ruled. I don’t believe it to be a coincidence that we’ve seen an influx of immigrants —mostly illegal— flooding European countries, protesting against the country and harming its citizens. One country is an unfortunate event. Several events is a coordinated attack.
I also believe that we are being divided not only by class but by ethnicity because we will become easier to control this way. Humans are an incredibly complex species. The only way to gain control of a species that is terribly complex and unpredictable is by designing predictability into the human experience. But this can only be done through pattern recognition and by preying on what is most important —the human desire to survive.
Simply look at the bottom of Maslow's hierarchy of needs and this becomes more apparent. One simply needs to first threaten our physiological needs, followed by our need for safety to disrupt an entire society’s way of living —creating chaos and uncertainty. This will prompt a response to seek order and certainty by any means. I believe our global society is currently facing a spiritual attack on the bottom two tiers. Once we’ve all been divided so we can be more easily controlled, the system will manipulate us even further by leveraging our family and friends against us. Society will desire belonging from the system it serves over friends and family as the system will serve as the community. If you’ve read the book, 1984, by George Orwell, then you may reflect back on the children who would turn their own parents in to Big Brother —giving their allegiance to the system. I believe the next step will be the destruction of our own inherit self-esteem. Esteem will only be found in the system and our dedication to it. Our reward will be based on our level of dedication which will elevate our self-esteem and sense of worthiness. Lastly, we will derive meaning from the system we serve. Our only purpose in existing will be to serve the system. Anything that threatens the system which could undermine society’s way of life will be exterminated. The goal will be to keep harmony and to avoid chaos. To anger the gods is to invite chaos —something that the ancients knew all too well.
While humans are complex, we are easily programmable if our basic needs are threatened, just like the ancients. We will immediately leap into lizard brain because our will to survive will supersede all logic and reason, even if that means tossing our children into lakes of fire. Threaten our basic needs and what was once a very complex species becomes simple and highly controllable. It is my belief that we are all being controlled today. Many people who think they’re not being controlled are sadly some of the most controllable individuals. But that is the rub in being programmed. Once programmed you don’t know that you are in fact programmed.
Today, the internet is the highway that traffics propaganda —especially race baiting content seeded by bots and anonymous users who I believe work for one three letter agency in particular. This technology is also being used to surveil us and collect data concerning our personal habits. This very same technology will be used in an attempt to control our ability to have and spend money through ideas such as Central Bank Digital Currencies. This technology will be used to keep us all in line through the use of social credit scores —encouraging us to commit to the laws of the system we serve. We currently live in a time where we’re fighting for access to healthy food and the right to reject foreign substances from being injected into us like cattle. What I am saying is not farfetched. We are all being programmed and the lines of code are everywhere.
Racist, rage baiting content acts as a partition for society’s hard drive. It works to divide us into echo chambers. Once we’re in our echo chambers we can be more closely monitored as those within their respective chambers will share the same characteristics. Each echo chamber will exhibit different characteristics which will demand the deployment of different control measures for each chamber. If I was a psychotic, demon filled globalist this is precisely what I would do. This isn’t hard. Just herd the humans like humans herd the animals. Technology makes humans much more controllable because technology is controllable and humans rely on it. Manipulate the technology and you manipulate the human race. Why? Because we rely on it to survive. While there are other controls that operate as partitions such as political affiliation and class, racism is the most polarizing. It strikes at the very heart of humanity which is why it works so well to divide us as a species. It feels like a threat to our survival more than anything else. Hatred for those who are not “like us” eventually culminates into warring against those who are not “like us”.
It is of my belief that we must begin to operate above the concern of racism. It is not going away and the powers that be will continue to use it as a means to divide us all. But we do possess the power to do the opposite of what racism demands —which is to bind ourselves together through culture, love, and the desire to live according to God’s design, not our own. Failure to do so places us within the throes of the demonic realm and encourages the fall our species within this era. We are not the first human civilization. It’s either us or the giants and I prefer it to be us.
Peace, love, and grace to all of my White, Black, Asian, African, and Latino brothers and sisters. We’re all human, despite what the programmers may say.
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This is some essential reading. You are obviously a highly gifted intellectual living at just the right time in history to pen such a beautiful article. In my view, there is nothing you say that can be disputed as my many associations in life with people of all ethnic backgrounds has demonstrated. There are always going to be rotten ideas that create rot in the minds of others who are easily manipulated. The goal, it seems to me, is to try and educate the misinformed with love in the heart and hope that God will give us the strength to stand up to the hate. My hat is off to you and I pray your words will reach those isolated by their own culture.
Thank you for writing this and trying to push back on the divisions 🙏