"This scene scared horror into every horror movie up to that point, and then some. Grace the MF'in Jones"
Showing posts with label Black. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Black. Show all posts
Wednesday, August 7, 2024
Boomerang
Labels:
Black,
Black Film,
Classic,
Film,
Grace Jones,
Horror
Saturday, October 8, 2022
Still...
Still not for the s**ts.
I'm not for a Militant solution, not just because I stand for peace, because ain't no way in HELL we gonna win in a firefight against trained racist armies and militias, ESPECIALLY not in 2022.....regardless of how many guns are out here, regardless of what people say in entertainment. We can't even come together at public event without some s**t popping off, like that's an admirable quality of a unified movement.
But I will defend myself.
#BlackLivesMatter
Labels:
Black,
BlackIssues,
CivilRights,
issues,
Militant,
Movement,
Pacifist,
Peace
Tuesday, August 2, 2022
Black Love and how it can re-shape the World. - Part 1 - Suffering
As Black people in America, we tend to hold social and cultural facets of other races to a higher regard. This is most prominent in relation to White people. We also obsess on our negative, destructive facets to the point of often falling into damaging self-fulfilling prophecies. This is a result of generations of mental colonization, false programming, and brainwashing by racism.
I was reading the book "Salvation: Black People and Love" by Bell Hooks and she brought up an interesting point. She says "There should be an entire body of work, both serious scholarship and popular material, focusing on Black self-love."
I found this very interesting and I wanted to expand this idea outside of self-love, to also include community and family love. In the next installment of this post, I'm going to create a small, abridged list of facets of social and cultural life we should celebrate. These facets aren't part of the popular, dominant culture, yet they promote a holistic sense of identity and understanding of the world around us.
For part one of this two part post, I want to write about these facets in light of the Black condition. The truth is that many of these practices exist because we sit at the lowest social strata in this country. We are this way because we suffer. Some see this suffering as an unnecessary obstacle, one that should be shunned, regardless of its output, while others see it in a Biblical paradigm, nurturing our highest, fullest, most God-like self.
While I agree that we shouldn't have to suffer, I tend to lean more towards the religious, spiritual understanding because I can't simply erase the scars, or ignore the impact generations of suffering has had on me, my family, and my people's existence. What was done has been done. There's no going back.
I don't necessarily see suffering as a the most extreme, destitute form of disenfranchisement, physical pain or imprisonment. That form of suffering does exist and it can be horrific, but its one of many forms of suffering. In its most rudimentary, yet still spiritually potent form, it can be that nagging feeling that something is wrong that needs to be fixed. Its not something that one looks for either. I try not to walk into suffering or repeat the patterns that cause suffering, that's the action of a psychopath. That's self-destruction. The suffering I'm referring to is the epic internal and external conflict known as "the struggle", that we deal with by being Black. Suffering is a great teacher, whose lessons are applied, preserved and updated.
Picture suffering as a man-made garden. The plot of land that was cleared to tend to this garden is the object of suffering. The land with its original growth now gone is the sufferer.
One can let that land sit vacant in the hopes that new growth will sprout by itself, which may lead to at best, a renewal of what was there before, or at worst a dead patch of land. This is the suffering that occurs with no follow up. Victims often experience this. We have repeatedly experienced this cruel roll of dice throughout history.
One may also plant seeds and never tend to it again, creating a growth that may find a way to form an organic symbiotic relationship at best, or a parasitic relationship at the worst. This is akin to shallow advice with no follow ups, ineffective legislation by government authorities, or moral platitudes often eschewed by the Church with no practical means of action to accompany scripture. We to have also suffered in this more complex dice game.
Another option is continuously preserve, tend to, and update the garden with new cyclical growth by rotating crops, plants and trees, creating a sustainable source of energy and a psychological refuge that promotes a sense of harmony and feng shui. This may create an entirely new ecosystem, or a fruitful source of nourishment for a village, or even the World on a macro level.
To apply this ecosystem metaphor to the Black experience is to refer to the ongoing social, psychological, and economic work performed at the community level. When we are at our best, we do this with spectacular results.
What are some of the ways we do this?
Stay tuned to part 2 for more:
:)
Read this book!
Sunday, May 2, 2021
Confession
Confession: Sometimes I look at footage like this of Philadelphia in the 40s and get envious. What would it have been like to ride an EL through a city like this being rich and White, owning a house in a convenient location in the city, feeling like you have a stake in your world, feeling like this was made for you in mind. The people around you viewing you as their equal. The civic authority working with you. You having a voice that's heard, and not because you need to raise it. What would that feel like?
Saturday, April 3, 2021
#BlackConsciousness
I like to test myself on the criticisms I make towards others, because everyone's fundamental thinking process stems from the same point, regardless of the variations of the actions that one participates in.
A deviation in thought for one person may be to eat a donut, knowing doggone well it has more sugar than one needs, for another person, that same thinking pattern may apply to an action such as pulling a trigger.
Tuesday, January 7, 2020
Black America: Abridged Africa, A Bridge to Africa
Black America is an abridged Africa.
Though not on the same scale, we've had:
- Slavery
- Exploitation
- Religions forced on us
- Cities bombed from the air and destroyed
- Infectious diseases spread via. Government conspiracy
- Decades of government
disinvestment
- White Terrorism
- Corrupt Police
- Street Tribes aka Gangs being infiltrated, exploited or corrupted and turned against each other (War on Drugs, J Edgar Hoover)
- Corrupt Leaders
- Rampant misogyny
- Polluted Water
- Black on Black Violence
- Ruthless assassinations
- Prison slavery
No genocides, yet. Very little starvation, but obesity is an epidemic.
Yet we still here and more prosperous than ever, just like Africa.
Labels:
Africa,
Black,
Black Power,
History,
Pan Afracanism,
Racism,
Solidarity,
Unity
Tuesday, December 3, 2019
We
We are a triumphant people
We are an accomplished people
We are capable. We are fearless.
We are Black. We are African.
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