Been reading, very slowly and using the red menace episode to help digest, wretched of the earth. Some of the things have been rolling around in my head like how the experiences a lot of minorities in this country face seem to mirror the experiences of the colonized. I know that america is the biggest colonizer but it also does it at home. Fanon talks about that in order to colonize the colonialist has to other the colonized and take a way their humanity but have to prepare when they fight back to try to reaffirm their humanity. I think this is where BLM comes into place in trying to fight back against this system that dehumanizes them. Minorities in this country have faced state repression since the beginning of our history but are starting to receive attention. Sorry if I'm rambling a bit but might need some time to sort things out and finish reading before it fully sets in.
Exactly, black neighborhoods and cities in America have essentially the same problem as former colonies today: the residents don't own anything. Money is drained from communities and split among several corporations or small business tyrants.
The book also talks about how some of the colonized will be elevated to a position of power that helps keep the current order. Thinking about black capitalism being presented as a solution to the income inequality present in these communities.
the colonization of the black community transitioned over time from people being the wealth that was extracted from africa to an apartheid regime where the u.s repeatedly fights any attempt by the black community to coalesce, whether that be black wallstreet, black panthers, or black lives matter...
so its an interesting case study of colonial mindset remaining even as the conditions of the colonization changes
Been reading, very slowly and using the red menace episode to help digest, wretched of the earth. Some of the things have been rolling around in my head like how the experiences a lot of minorities in this country face seem to mirror the experiences of the colonized. I know that america is the biggest colonizer but it also does it at home. Fanon talks about that in order to colonize the colonialist has to other the colonized and take a way their humanity but have to prepare when they fight back to try to reaffirm their humanity. I think this is where BLM comes into place in trying to fight back against this system that dehumanizes them. Minorities in this country have faced state repression since the beginning of our history but are starting to receive attention. Sorry if I'm rambling a bit but might need some time to sort things out and finish reading before it fully sets in.
Exactly, black neighborhoods and cities in America have essentially the same problem as former colonies today: the residents don't own anything. Money is drained from communities and split among several corporations or small business tyrants.
The book also talks about how some of the colonized will be elevated to a position of power that helps keep the current order. Thinking about black capitalism being presented as a solution to the income inequality present in these communities.
like @shitstorm said, you are exactly right.
the colonization of the black community transitioned over time from people being the wealth that was extracted from africa to an apartheid regime where the u.s repeatedly fights any attempt by the black community to coalesce, whether that be black wallstreet, black panthers, or black lives matter...
so its an interesting case study of colonial mindset remaining even as the conditions of the colonization changes