Tuesday, September 12, 2017

black people and adaptability

Black folks are most comfortable adapting, because adaptability has become a form of survival for most black people, especially affluent black people.
Don't fret when you see or hear ignorant black people like Randy Moss, Ray Lewis, Mike Vick or Stewart give their opinion publicly on Kaepernick. It is their survival instinct of adaptability that has kicked in to defend their white master. Adaptability supersedes even their pride and heritage. The Negro has been forced to adapt from the time they left the shores of Africa in captivity. Forced to practice a new religion, speak a new language, eat food foreign to them, and the list is endless to their journey of adaptability. That survival tactic of adaptability is passed down from generations. The higher the Negro has climbed up the financial ladder, the more susceptible he is to demonstrate his survival tactics to the world, and the less empathetic he becomes to the struggles of his own people.
We must understand the psychological transformation that takes place when a destitute person has been allowed to overcome their situation because they believe it has everything to do with their hard work, and not their lineage. Any black person who's athletically gifted, must first give credit to their lineage. It came from somewhere in their bloodline, and without their African ancestry, their athletic prowess wouldn't be relevant.

There are many Negroes out there who practice adaptability as a religion without knowing it. Most often these Negroes say dumb shit like "I can't live around black people, or I don't deal with black people." No other race in the world has ever said such ignorant statements about their own race. Jewish people are proud to live in Jewish neighborhoods. Asians love to create their own communities. Indians from India are proud of their Indian communities, Hispanics are very proud of their Hispanic neighborhoods, but black people are quick to tell you everything that is wrong with their community, while they look for a way out. Black folks don't protect, defend or correct their communities. Instead, they adapt to communities where they're not wanted. They'd rather put up with spray-painted graffiti on their front doors saying "Nigger go home," instead of standing up to help create a better black community. The survival instinct of adaptability has afforded the Negro the temperament to be docile during injustice against him. You can't really change a Negro who has adapted to the environment of his master. He revels in it and goes against any other Negro who dares stands against it. The mind of the Negro who has adapted works in contrast with his fears. He's quick to tell you how afraid he is of the people in his community, but shows very little fear to the angry white racist who calls him a Nigger every time he steps out of his house in the suburb.

Going against the grain is only for those Negroes with revolutionary minds. The adapted Negro likes to create a fictitious utopia in his own mind, where he's able to block out all the obvious racism he faces on a daily basis, because being in a white environment and around white people is the ultimate goal.

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