Mr BFK
Active Member
the bolded/underlined is def reasonable since u are willing to concede to thatMy thoughts didn't seem poorly organized to me, but if everyone else read them and took them the wrong way, I'll own that. That said, we could have saved all this back and forth if you dudes had just engaged me in a civil manner from the start rather than throwing darts at me because you didn't like/understand the point I was trying to make.
I never said black people can't unify. Of course we can. However, unifying small pockets within a population is very different from unifying the entire population. I'm glad you brought up the Civil Rights movement because it basically proves my point. It started in the 50s right and that focused movement ended almost as soon as the Civil Rights Act was signed and MLK was killed. So probably the best example of black unity in the West lasted less than 30 years and was replaced by a bunch of splinter groups that haven't been nearly as successful fighting for black empowerment.
I don't disagree with you that worldwide black unity would be wonderful. I just don't think it's achievable. I think we'd be much better off focusing all our efforts on unity within the African American community, and even that will be severely challenging.
but I think u are minimizing what opps actually did to stop/divert/dilute the Civil Rights movement..........black empowerment movements didn't just stop on their own..........they were specifically targeted by the US govt
and u don't need to unite all Black folks in a single city before u start aiming worldwide
even Black unity movements pre-Civil Rights didn't rely on locally homegrown unison before making moves that had a real impact
all it takes is enough of us from everywhere to link and start influencing others to get on board
all of ATL Black people don't have to unify if enough of us from multiple Black cities are making moves investing with our counterparts in other countries
the disbelievers will eventually just be left behind like the plantation slaves who were too afraid/skeptical to run to freedom