Ann Coulter said “attention foundational American blacks” 🤣🤣🤣🤣

JoelB

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who is actively cosigning her though. We know shes full of shyt already



Its not cosigning ann coulter. Its a water is wet statement

friday-movie-that-was-different.gif
 

TripleAgent

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A critical look at the group’s leadership, proposed policies, and actions provides more insight concerning the ADOS movement’s true intentions.

ADOS’s harmful and anti-Black practices and policies:​

  1. ADOS leaders have a history of working with right-wing media like NewsMax and the fake-progressive organization, Progressives for Immigration Reform that is supported by white supremacist, John Tanton.
  2. ADOS leaders want to split Black representation on the 2020 Census and make “ADOS” its own category – which would negatively impact the representation of Black communities, potentially decreasing access to funding and other resources available to Black communities overall.
  3. ADOS co-founders claim to be outspoken advocates for cash payout reparations but refuse to support the H.R.40 – Commission to Study and Develop Reparation Proposals for African-Americans Act – a bill sponsored by Rep. Sheila Jackson Lee. ADOS leadership initially supported the bill but is now pushing for the bill to include their newly presented moniker “ADOS” instead of “African American.” This is a frivolous excuse to move the goal post and center the reparations movement on the ADOS leadership instead of the communities they claim to represent.
  4. ADOS leaders have a proposed policy that would require Black Americans to provide slavery documentation before having access to affirmative action and reparations. Many Black Americans will not be able to provide this documentation. Consequently, their “slavery papers” policy would open the doorway to government scrutiny of family records, increased surveillance, and exclusionary practices.
  5. ADOS leaders bash and refuse to work with established Black reparations organizations like the National Coalition of Blacks for Reparations (N’COBRA), which has advocated for reparations on behalf of Black Americans for decades.
  6. ADOS leaders and members frequently attack Black historians, scholars, activists, and leaders through a form of online and in-person harassment called “swarming.”
  7. ADOS leaders seek to limit Black immigrants from obtaining U.S. visas, similar to the policies advocated by white supremacists that are attempting to stop the “browning of America” by decreasing Black and Brown immigrant entry to the U.S.
  8. ADOS leaders do not believe that Black Americans can or should have any connection with Africa. They tell their followers to trace their lineage to America only and to stop acknowledging Africa as the home of our ancestors.
  9. ADOS leaders have stated that Pan Africanism is dead and that African Americans are more closely connected genetically to white Americans than other people of African descent.
  10. ADOS leadership and members use radicalization tactics like “othering” by demonizing and blaming Black immigrant communities for a lack of resources and jobs. They twist facts to fit their narrative and limit successful dialogue with others by telling members to “stay on code.”
  11. The ADOS movement is suspected to be supported by a strategic propaganda campaign propped up by a large number of anonymous online accounts likely paid trolls – pretending to be Black Americans that agree with their movement in order to increase the appearance of their popularity and gain more followers.
  12. ADOS leaders use the work of deceased Black leaders like Queen Mother Audley Moore and Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. in their campaigns in order to build trust in the Black community. They use the works of these Black American ancestors out of context and exclude all references to African roots, African identity, Pan Africanism, or anything related to global Black movements or unity.
  13. ADOS leaders seek to take credit for all current reparations discussions, including the #1619 Project created by journalist Nikole Hannah-Jones and the recent House hearing on H.R. 40 during which Ta-Nehisi Coates and Danny Glover testified.
I don't rock with ADOS at all, but a lot of this is bullshyt. ChatGPT?
 

Dr. Acula

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There is no intelligent conclusion because the whole premise is dysfunct in the first place

Theres no real unity coming from brown and non white people. Thats a LALA land koonbuyae negros constructed in their heads

White people outnumber black,brown and non whites in places THAT MATTER. The black and brown people they're dealing with are people that fled homelands where their people are the majority, to run up under them. They are not worried about some people of color coalition

They will sooner buffer black and brown immigrants, then they are worried about some unified front:beli:

The relationship between African independence leaders and US black civil rights leaders show this is a lie. You’re just ignorant of the history and that is ok. Also perhaps you should question why African leaders that tried to build a proud black and African identity were murdered by the US and white western countries and replaced by corrupt leaders who have no sense of racial pride and would sell out even black folks of their own kind for a dollar.





  • Kwame Nkrumah (Ghana) ↔ inspired by U.S. Pan-Africanist traditions at Lincoln University; maintained close ties with W.E.B. Du Bois and George Padmore; hosted Martin Luther King Jr. at Ghana’s 1957 independence celebration.
  • Nnamdi Azikiwe (Nigeria) ↔ developed intellectual and political friendships with Langston Hughes and Du Bois during his time in the U.S.
  • W.E.B. Du Bois (U.S.) ↔ deeply engaged with African independence struggles; praised Azikiwe, supported Nkrumah, and eventually moved to Ghana at Nkrumah’s invitation.
  • George Padmore (Trinidadian Pan-Africanist) ↔ close ally and adviser to Nkrumah; helped shape Ghana’s independence strategy.
  • Langston Hughes (U.S.) ↔ supported Azikiwe through poetry and advocacy.
  • Paul Robeson & Max Yergan (U.S.) ↔ co-founded the Council on African Affairs (CAA), which directly supported African independence movements.
  • Channing Tobias (U.S., NAACP) ↔ initially worked to connect African liberation with African American struggles, though the NAACP later moderated its stance under Cold War pressure.
 

El Poyo Loco

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She's been saying this about the civil rights movement for over 20 years but smartened up people see through her that it's not genuine it's part of the con. She'll say this and on the other hand say some racist shyt to sell a book.

In order for a con to work there must be truth to reel people in then once you have them then you hit them with the bullshyt but when people as a collective see what it is the con doesn't work. So they'll change tactics and latch on to a movement or buzz words to work the same con on new marks.

And this is why I say Trump supporters in NYC and New Jersey who've been here for 40 years and above are the biggest fukking morons or just plain racists.
 
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