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When krakkas churn out ahistorical movies about their hamitic slave-raiding/current managers of many of their colonial cages in Africa, apparently fighting against them, they know what they’re doing. Projecting their accomplices in ravaging Africa as “fighting for us” is very disingenous. They would never make a movie about those who actually fought against them and still resist them. They won’t make a movie on the warriors of Bini, Chimurenga, Ekumeku, Umkhonto we Sizwe, MauMau and so forth. If they do, it will be to portray them as “savage/pagan/ragtag/aimless” such as the movie “simba” made in 1955 to disparage MauMau
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Simba_(1955_film)
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Indeed. Switching tactics to align with new circumstances
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Blacksolutely! Good grounding in information will help one avoid the trap because of being able to differentiate the wheat from the chaff
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I see this problem with the whole woman king stuff
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You’re right. I made reference to that in particular
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I figured as much. I think “representation fever”, as sometimes call it, catches the better of us.
Once I know two lesbianism krakkka and a integrationist are involved, I know the ideological orientation.
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Most importantly, the implications and end results of the idea
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Exactly, I have been considering writing something about this regarding “black sitcoms” as I think entertainment mediums are often harder for us to grasp such implications.
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107,038 Abibisika (Black Gold) Points
Until yesterday’s premiere of The Art of Healing, which I featured in, my last time in a movie theater was 1998. Hollyweird should not have access to us.
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