ADOS Official Website With Black Agenda (ados101.com)

KingTaharqa

Greatest Of All Time
BGOL Investor








Diaspora wont claim their trash or coons and will ALWAYS look to dump them on us. BGOL made no mention of dude being Nigerian.
 

Mr. Met

So Amazin
BGOL Investor
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KingTaharqa

Greatest Of All Time
BGOL Investor




Kinda like how @Mr. Met wants all "outsiders" off the island of Jamica. But wants 100% open borders and same day naturalization for all diaspora blacks to the US. :lol:





@Mr. Met :idea: I think yall are waaaay more thankful and feel more indebted to White Americans. It is their culture that attracted your parents and grandparents to apply to live here, not ours.
 

Akata King

D3port Th3m @ll!!
BGOL Investor
MSNBC = MASSA SAID, NIGGA BE [A] COON.

:lol:

Gotta love MSDNC! Notice the brother they chose to relay their message. No surprise that Hotlantan posted this. Hotlantan and Mcguyver identify with him. I told @KingTaharqa that a lot of these posters are gay immigrants. Yet when we call out how the Black struggle is being subsumed into the LGBT movement, people try to ignore it:

Rashad Robinson comes to ColorOfChange.org most recently from The Gay & Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation (GLAAD), where he served as Senior Director of Programs, managing all of GLAAD’s advocacy and programmatic work.​
 

Akata King

D3port Th3m @ll!!
BGOL Investor


“Why does Yvette’s sexuality matter if she never uses it in her politics?”

I agree. That’s the difference between her and LGBTQ like you. Your politics are driven by your homosexuality and immigrant background. The racial wealth gap and reparations are non-issues to you.
 

Akata King

D3port Th3m @ll!!
BGOL Investor


The guy from MSNBC that you posted was a leader of GLAAD!

What is LGBT about this?

In his book, American Slavery, American Freedom, the historian Edmund Morgan concludes that slavery was not a contradiction of American freedom, but rather that slavery was the institution that made white freedom possible. In other words, slavery was not a mistake so much as a precondition for a societal hierarchy which requires descendants of slaves to remain a bottom caste and be made to suffer the necessary failures of a brutal economic system. This was followed by a Jim Crow-era that saw #ADOS become actual contagions that lead to a destruction of wealth; through federally-supported, discriminatory practices like redlining, black presence literally made wealth disappear in communities, all while American whites—and more recently, immigrants— enjoy advantage in a land of apparently equal opportunity that was in fact manufactured on the back of black failure.

According to Yale historian David Blight, “by 1860, there were more millionaires (slaveholders all) living in the lower Mississippi Valley than anywhere else in the United States. In the same year, the nearly 4 million American slaves were worth some $3.5 billion, making them the largest single financial asset in the entire U.S. economy, worth more than all manufacturing and railroads combined.”

Codified by government and exploited by private actors, the creation of an #ADOS underclass served as the financial engine of a nation that never recognized the debt it owed to the group as a result. As such, the #ADOS movement is underpinned by the demand for reparative justice in making the group whole, and as a necessary component in fulfilling the promise of opportunity from which, by design, ADOS have been historically excluded and denied.

The truth of ADOS life is seen nowhere more clearly than the racial wealth gap in this country:


Closing the racial wealth gap requires a New Deal for Black America. President Trump’s assertion during the 2016 Presidential campaign that Black Americans “have nothing to lose” was met with defiance by those on the Left, but the data supported the statement. From over all wealth levels, to home ownership, to student debt levels and beyond African Americans across this nation are suffering. According to a study from Brookings, half of Black Americans who are born poor stay poor. Most Black kids who are born into middle class families are downwardly mobile. And as Duke University economist Dr. William “Sandy” Darity, and co-founder of the ADOS movement, Antonio Moore, along with other researchers observed in their study What We Get Wrong About Closing the Racial Wealth Gap, the concentration of ADOS at the bottom economically is a consequence of lack of wealth transfers and multi-generational oppression, not individual agency or cultural patterns:

#ADOS #AmericanDOS sets out to shift the dialogue around the identity of what it is to be African American in an effort to move the discussion from melanin, and properly center the discussion around lineage.
 
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