Slavery Never Ended — It Just Changed Its Name

Neo-slavery in America is not a metaphor — it is a legal and documented reality. Many people speak of enslavement as a closed chapter. However, the 13th Amendment explicitly permits forced labor as criminal punishment. As a result, the system never collapsed. It simply transformed. Furthermore, the language around it changed to protect its legitimacy. This is the foundation Ɔbenfo Ọbádélé Bakari Kambon builds upon in this essential presentation — and it demands our full attention.
Ɔbenfo Kambon is one of the most precise and fearless Afrikan scholars alive today. He is a Pan-Afrikan linguist, the architect of Abibitumi, and a dedicated builder of Abibifahodie — Afrikan liberation in thought and practice. In this lecture, he refuses comfortable narratives. Instead, he challenges us to see clearly. Most importantly, he holds the evidence directly before our eyes. The Kmtyw and all Afrikan people deserve this level of unflinching truth.
What Neo-Slavery in America Reveals About Repatriation and Survival
The word “legacy” implies something finished and passed down. However, you cannot have a legacy of something still actively in progress. Ɔbenfo Kambon uses the United States as a living case study. He traces how enslavement shifted names and forms while preserving its essential function. In addition, he dismantles the myth of Afrika’s past — exposing how that myth serves the ongoing project of Black subjugation. Therefore, repatriation is not nostalgia. It is a survival strategy rooted in clear-eyed analysis.
This presentation is not background noise. It is a call to radical clarity. Furthermore, it equips Afrikan people globally — scholars, parents, students, and community builders — with the framework to act with precision. Abibitumi exists to deliver exactly this kind of transformative knowledge. So do not wait. Study this. Share it. Build with it. Watch Staying Alive: Slavery, Neo-Slavery, Repatriation & The Myth of Africa’s Past now — available for $20.00 at Abibitumi.com.
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