I apologize for misinterpreting you some in the beginning. There's been too many trolls out there recently (a couple of them showed their ass heavy in this thread) and I was too quick to judge in that direction. Looking back at your comments you've been on point too and there was no reason for me to read too much into the OP.Thanks for your response.
This post was not about -- nor to compare anything to reparations. Hence, you and @Squirrel from Meteor Man comment is invalid here. This was about how we as ADOS have other route to help ourselves and our communities.
It was also not to compare our struggle to Natives. That can be argued elsewhere. It was to showcase examples on what we can ask (demand) from our representatives in the meantime.
Fighting for programs like the ones in the OP is exactly the kind of work that can be done at the legislative level right now. You're completely on target with that.
I personally think it's not going to succeed until more people are willing to make economic sacrifices to push the struggle forward. Being willing to work full-time or serious part-time on advancing these issues rather than chasing after stacks. Being willing to make hard economic choices that keep the money in positive outlets and stop funding the oppressors. In the ideal circumstance, even being willing to strike against the most evil of the city councils and police departments in CRA-style actions that pressure them to the point of defunding their oppression, even if it takes months or years of serious struggle in the meantime.
Research into revolutions show that you can begin to expect a revolution to succeed, violent or nonviolent, once you get over 3% of the population actively involved in fighting for the cause. It'll be a long time before we got 10 million people in the USA ready to overthrow the system completely. But what if you got 2,000 people willing to put their foot down in a community of 50,000? You could move mountains.
I completely agree with both, I'm just pointing out that it's a process. Some of the people who are making simplistic demands about something being done now, or whose entire agenda is just to see a presidential candidate list it on their platform, are clueless as to how this shyt works.Fighting for Reparations is ongoing -- and will be until achieved. There is not time-limit on doing so.
On your White people spill -- I can't worry about that -- nor should anyone else. We can do what we need to do -- and make sure we cover all bases. White people don't and won't accept or like anything -- but that shouldn't stop us from going after what is owed.
Again, thanks for comment.![]()
I'm repeatedly bringing up Ta-Nehisi Coates because the conversation was basically dead before he came in and framed the issues in a way that actually got people talking again. We need to keep figuring out new ways to do that effectively over and over again, while still fighting for shyt at the local levels and at the federal legislative program-level, until there is enough momentum that an actual reparations conversation can actually get somewhere.