The Black Woman By Malcolm X

Cut to, I’m your karma. All of this vitriol towards us derives from the Devil. Proving my point with his treatment of Marsha Hunt and their daughter (read Marsha Hunt And Mick Jagger Timeline). Hate us cause you ain’t us has always been the vibe (read Mick Jagger Wants To Be A Woman). We are the best at witchcraft, my domain, and possess all genes, because humanity evolved from us. Fearing the power of black women, they try to suppress us, disparage us.

Look at Donald Trump, he’s done nothing but attack us and failed. The Zionist Jews are learning the same lesson (read Teaming Up With Candace Owen’s To Battle Satanic Zionists).

Who do you emulate? Who moves the culture? Love us or hate us it’s still an obsession. A Goddess has entered the chat and I’m going to learn you niggas fr. I won’t tolerate the insolence. I decide your fates, subjects. You’re going to learn to respect black woman, and listen when we fucking speak, Kali & Shiva. Via: The Black Media

Update: 2/4/2026 12:09am

Happy MLK Day 2025

“In the end we will remember not the words of our enemies, but the silence of our friends.”- Martin Luther King Jr.

An apt photo and quote for how I was treated when wrongfully arrested. Everyone who ran that mouth, but never checked on me, never read my pieces, never apologized, invalidated and gaslit me got exactly what their hypocritical, self-absorbed asses deserve. You’re trash. Idgaf who you are, or how long I’ve known you. I will never forget and you will pay for being complicit with evil. You don’t know your places in a world we divines provide, so I’ll make sure you’ll never forget. Martin Luther King Jr. is nicer than me. When provoked I’m far more Malcolm X in temperament. I had a dream that I beat that ass and so it shall be. Happy MLK day. Via: Kerry James Marshall

Happy MLK Day 2024

Just realized I only post to my Instagram about this holiday. Happy MLK Day! Martin Luther King Jr. is far too kind, kinder than me. All my life I wonder am I more MLK or Malcolm X? My beliefs are with the former, but my delivery is the latter.
Martin’s dream allowed me to live mine. Unfortunately for some my dream is their nightmare, one they can’t wake up from. He’s a pacifist, I’m not. Don’t ever forget it. I keep the same energy you give me and return it multiplied. Thank you for standing up against hate, raising the vibration of humanity against these inbred savages. Via: WhatsCulture

Pay Attention To Newspapers

If you’re not careful, newspapers will have you hating the people who are being oppressed, and loving the people who are doing the oppressing.
-Malcolm X
*Photographer: Kamyiis

De-Conditioning: Don’t Invalidate Feelings

First and foremost let me make clear, it is not my job to teach you about racism. It’s an institution that affects everyone (whether it benefits or oppresses), you have access to resources like the internet and libraries. Watch a documentary, read a book. Don’t be self-absorbed, walk a day in someone else’s shoes. However, I understand the need to learn, to understand and want to help those who are at a complete loss. This series is called De-Conditioning, based on my theory that everyone is conditioned until they aren’t. We pass down the traits to our offspring that have helped us survive, depending on who you are it could mean you are programmed to entitlement, or to stay safe by being subservient. The importance of ancestry. These traits are passed down through epigenetic’s, the expression of gene’s without changing the structure of one’s DNA. Fortunately for us these expressions can be modified.

Society dictates that white people are the default human, everything else is other and “white culture” is normative. Band-aids and ballet shoes are made the color of caucasian skin tones then labeled “normal.” What does that make everyone else? If you’re white these are things you don’t think about, but if you aren’t all you notice are all the ways your existence has been erased, or made secondary. When the world caters to your needs (which was granted through violent and immoral tactics) it’s easy to drown out everybody else, even if it’s unintentional.

In February I was furious when actor turned influencer Ed Westwick, his girlfriend and a “producer” victimized themselves after trolling me. His girlfriend decided to copy me, from recreating the same photos, to taking work from this very website. I called them out giving them ample time to apologize. She cried (Karen behavior) and he babied her. Both felt it was okay, because I’m a black woman the “lesser” gender and race. My feelings didn’t matter. To top it off, other white women (and a black actress) felt it was my job to let it go, to move on, to eat shit. They could have taken the same time to hold all parties accountable, but I was the one who had to fix it, even though they created the situation. This is a typical and unacceptable response. A person of color expresses how they feel, only to have their feelings invalidated. When people do this it perpetuates this false truth that we are secondary, our feelings having to get your approval to be real, because until the white person agrees your voice doesn’t matter.

Stop invalidating the feelings of colored people. If a p.o.c tells you they felt someone was behaving in a manner that made them feel uncomfortable, listen. This person knows what they are talking about, for you it’s a complaint, for us it’s a survival mechanism that’s been fine tuned and passed down. We know when someone is racist, because it’s a matter of life or death for us. Stop shaming the victim, accusing them of playing the race card. It’s not a card, it’s their reality.

Have you ever had your feelings invalidated? How did that make you feel?

Keep that feeling.

Have you ever invalidated someone else’s feelings?

Go back to when you felt unheard, now you know how it feels when you do the same to a colored person.

The fact that this even has to be a conversation is evidence that you see people as other. See people as the collection of their experiences, not their skin tone, but as human because that’s what we are.

Via: Images You Won’t See On TV