Are FBAs the only group that openly fights against white supremacy

DetroitEWarren

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Detroit You bytch Ass nikka
:ohhh::lupe:

Let’s discuss
nikka I don't give a single fukk about the meaning of FBA or ADOS, any nikka that brings that shyt up is a bytch that's finding random ass reasons to make other people of the same color different from you. It's sucka ass fakkit shyt that 1 SINGLE GARBAGE ASS nikka taught y'all. This shyt came from 1 single fukk boy that would be dead as hell if he ever stepped foot in any hood in America.

I've beat on and robbed more white supremacists than all of you fakkit ass FBA nikkas combined. fukk outta here with this fakkit shyt.
 

Uachet

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Black Self-Sufficiency
As a black American, most of the ninjas I see standing WITH white supremacy are the ones who recently started calling themselves “FBA” when term FBA going coined a few years ago.

If you truly understand white supremacy you know that white supremacy gives no fux about what brand of negro you want to identify with.

“FBA” alone can’t protect themselves from white supremacy. It’s going to require a global concerted effort. White supremacy isn’t even American. It’s global.
This is not true. MalcolmX and Muhammad Ali spoke on this. Also, my own grandfather told me his own experiences of how they differentiated Black Americans from foreign Black people.

"Malcolm X: We put down Asiatic. Asiatic in this sense: the Honorable Elijah Muhammad teaches us that originally this entire planet today known as Earth was called Asia. When you read some of the so-called great historians they even point out that the entire earth was once known as Asia and all of the people on it at that time were Asiatic. The only people here were black, brown, red, and yellow. At that time there were no white people here at all. We refer to ourselves as the Asiatic black man. On my draft card it says Asiatic. And anything that anybody puts in front of me that wants to know what is my race or my nationality, any Muslim will put down Asiatic and that ends it. But never put down Negro. The worst thing that you can call yourself is a Negro. If you don’t think so just call yourself that and immediately you will find all the doors closed. But at the same time the blackest man from Africa comes here and he rejects the term Negro. You can’t call him a Negro. He will tell you he is an African and every door is open. Last year Kennedy made a special point in Maryland and Virginia to tell all those whites down there: don’t do anything to practice discrimination against the African. Now at the same time he wouldn’t make any statements concerning the American Negro, but he did come out and make a statement about the Africans. Which shows you that there is a difference between being Negro and being black. The African proudly calls himself black. But now when you call yourself a Negro that is when you encounter all these racial indignities."




'Right now, in this country, if you and I, 22 million African-Americans -- that's what we are -- Africans who are in America. You're nothing but Africans. Nothing but Africans. In fact, you'd get farther calling yourself African instead of Negro. Africans don't catch hell. You're the only one catching hell. They don't have to pass civil-rights bills for Africans. An African can go anywhere he wants right now. All you've got to do is tie your head up. That's right, go anywhere you want. Just stop being a Negro. Change your name to Hoogagagooba. That'll show you how silly the white man is. You're dealing with a silly man. A friend of mine who's very dark put a turban on his head and went into a restaurant in Atlanta before they called themselves desegregated. He went into a white restaurant, he sat down, they served him, and he said, "What would happen if a Negro came in here? And there he's sitting, black as night, but because he had his head wrapped up the waitress looked back at him and says, "Why, there wouldn't no ****** dare come in here."'



So no, they knew and know the difference and treated us differently according to various sources who lived during that time. Also, some of them will admit that they were told to separate themselves and not align with us when they first got here.



Also keep in mind while 11% of Black American men voted against our interests for Trump, that percentage jumps to 30% for foreign born Black men.
 
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#BOTHSIDES

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Anglo-Zulu War (South Africa)
Cameroon War
Women’s War (Nigeria)

there’s like a treasure trove of African countries resisting colonial powers other than Haiti and Ethiopia
Ibrahim of Burkina Faso kinda
nikka I don't give a single fukk about the meaning of FBA or ADOS, any nikka that brings that shyt up is a bytch that's finding random ass reasons to make other people of the same color different from you. It's sucka ass fakkit shyt that 1 SINGLE GARBAGE ASS nikka taught y'all. This shyt came from 1 single fukk boy that would be dead as hell if he ever stepped foot in any hood in America.

I've beat on and robbed more white supremacists than all of you fakkit ass FBA nikkas combined. fukk outta here with this fakkit shyt.
uhhh… Dr Claude Anderson spoke abOUT and coined the term FBA. Should we listen to him or you?
 

Voice of Reason

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As a black American, most of the ninjas I see standing WITH white supremacy are the ones who recently started calling themselves “FBA” when term FBA going coined a few years ago.

If you truly understand white supremacy you know that white supremacy gives no fux about what brand of negro you want to identify with.

“FBA” alone can’t protect themselves from white supremacy. It’s going to require a global concerted effort. White supremacy isn’t even American. It’s global.







Yeah most of Tariqs following are lowly educated morons. But ADOS people in general are the only people fighting against white supremacy.
 

CoryMack

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As a black American, most of the ninjas I see standing WITH white supremacy are the ones who recently started calling themselves “FBA” when term FBA going coined a few years ago.

If you truly understand white supremacy you know that white supremacy gives no fux about what brand of negro you want to identify with.

“FBA” alone can’t protect themselves from white supremacy. It’s going to require a global concerted effort. White supremacy isn’t even American. It’s global.
you need to check your vision. over in africa, wasn't it the ivory coast and nigeria that spoke out against burkina faso, with the ivory coast allowing the west to use their country to build military installations? and that's just one recent example. over in haiti we see the kenyans being used as security forces, brought in on a deal with the US. so you're either not looking hard enough, or you're just seeing what you want to see. the problem is alotta Black immigrants come here and pretend they don't understand anything about white supremacy, even though white supremacy is the reason they've come here.

no FBA is standing with white supremacists. but we're also not standing with any Black man or woman, regardless of where they came from, that wants to act dumb like they don't understand what's going on.
 

Seoul Gleou

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McDowell's
No, FBAs (Foundational Black Americans) are not the only group that openly fights against white supremacy. Many organizations, movements, and communities across racial, ethnic, and ideological lines actively oppose white supremacy. Here are some key examples:

### 1. **Anti-Racist & Civil Rights Organizations**
- **NAACP (National Association for the Advancement of Colored People)** – One of the oldest and most prominent groups fighting racial injustice.
- **Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC)** – Tracks and combats hate groups, including white supremacists.
- **Black Lives Matter (BLM)** – Focuses on systemic racism, police brutality, and white supremacist violence.
- **Color Of Change** – Advocates for racial justice and challenges white supremacist ideologies in media and politics.

### 2. **Indigenous & Non-Black POC Groups**
- **Native American rights organizations** (e.g., NCAI, AIM) often confront white supremacist narratives tied to colonialism.
- **Asian American activist groups** (e.g., Stop AAPI Hate, DRUM) challenge white supremacy and xenophobia.
- **Latino/a/x organizations** (e.g., Mijente, UnidosUS) fight against white nationalist policies targeting immigrants.

### 3. **Multiracial & Ally Movements**
- **Showing Up for Racial Justice (SURJ)** – A white-led group organizing white communities to oppose racism.
- **Antifa (Anti-Fascist Action)** – A decentralized movement that physically confronts white supremacist rallies (though controversial, it is explicitly anti-white supremacy).

### 4. **Faith-Based & Interfaith Efforts**
- Religious groups (e.g., Black churches, Jewish orgs like the ADL, Islamic networks like CAIR) often mobilize against white supremacy, especially after hate crimes.

### 5. **Academic & Advocacy Groups**
- Scholars, think tanks (e.g., Race Forward), and educators work to dismantle white supremacist ideologies through research and policy.

### FBAs and Their Unique Role
FBAs (Foundational Black Americans, descendants of U.S. slavery) are indeed vocal in opposing white supremacy, often emphasizing **Black-specific advocacy** (e.g., reparations, sovereignty). However, they are part of a broader ecosystem of resistance that includes many other groups with different strategies and focuses.
 

jay83

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I wish Tariq never took lead on the FBA. But I love the idea of black Americans having that distinction while all black people can still come together and work towards getting out of the bottom.

The problem is that would take time, money, sacrifice, putting egos to the side, and working together. It would mean gender war would need to end as well. I think there’s too many distractions and overall people are way too selfish. But eventually it would get to the point where we literally have to work together or perish on some Independence Day shyt. lol
 

AAKing23

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Black Americans are amongst the most resilient groups of people the world has ever seen. Few have battled against white supremacy and lived to tell the tale and we are on the frontlines of this shyt.

I will say the cost we paid for it was not cheap and you can still see the effects of it in our communities today. But I wouldn’t change it at the cost of bowing down to white people‘s will like most of the world does, fukk that :camby: We earned our reputation in the world, sooner or later they’ll all see who the prophet is :ahh:
 

TEH

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ChatGPT are Black Americans (FBA) the only group that openly fights against white supremacy?

No, many other groups and movements across the globe actively oppose white supremacy. Here are some detailed examples:

Indigenous peoples worldwide have fought against colonialism, racial oppression, and systemic racism rooted in white supremacist structures. For example, Native American tribes in the United States have organized protests like the Standing Rock Sioux movement against pipelines that threaten their land and water, highlighting resistance to environmental racism and colonial legacies. Similarly, First Nations in Canada and Aboriginal Australians have fought against policies rooted in racial discrimination and colonial domination. Indigenous movements in Latin America, such as the Confederation of Indigenous Peoples of Ecuador (CONAIE), also oppose racial hierarchies and land dispossession linked to colonialism.

Anti-colonial and anti-imperialist movements have historically resisted white supremacist systems. In South Africa, the African National Congress (ANC) led the fight against apartheid, a system of institutionalized racial segregation and white supremacist dominance that privileged white South Africans over Black citizens until the 1990s. The Algerian War of Independence saw the National Liberation Front (FLN) fighting French colonial rule, which involved racial hierarchies and systemic discrimination. Similarly, the Mau Mau rebellion in Kenya challenged British colonial rule and its racial policies.

In the Caribbean, Haiti’s revolution (1791-1804) was the first successful slave revolt that resulted in the abolition of slavery and the establishment of Haiti as the first Black republic, directly confronting white supremacy and colonial racial hierarchies. Post-independence leaders like Toussaint Louverture fought to dismantle colonial racial structures that oppressed Black populations.

Latin American movements have also resisted racial and colonial hierarchies. The Zapatista Army of National Liberation (EZLN) in Mexico advocates for indigenous rights and racial equality, opposing neo-colonial economic policies rooted in systemic racial discrimination. In Cuba, revolutionary leaders like Fidel Castro and Che Guevara promoted anti-imperialist policies that challenged Western racial and economic dominance.

Jewish communities and organizations actively oppose anti-Semitism and white supremacist hate groups. The Anti-Defamation League (ADL) works to combat neo-Nazi groups, white nationalists, and hate crimes. Many Jewish activists collaborate with other marginalized communities to fight white supremacy and promote social justice.

Asian communities and organizations also oppose white supremacy and racial discrimination. Groups like Asian Americans Advancing Justice work to combat hate crimes and systemic racism, especially during times of increased anti-Asian sentiment, such as during the COVID-19 pandemic.

In summary, the fight against white supremacy is global and includes a diverse array of communities and movements. Indigenous groups, anti-colonial fighters, revolutionary movements, religious minorities, and international organizations all actively work to dismantle racial hierarchies and promote racial justice worldwide.

If you'd like more specific details about particular regions or movements, feel free to ask.
 
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