Race Riot unlikely to happen due to continued influx of Caribbean Blacks

Truth200

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It's the absolute truth, i have Jamaican family who are extremely successful here in America and laugh at the thought of "white supremacy"
 

Truth200

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1:45 mark of part 2 of the story.

link


They were talking about the anniversary of the McDuffie riots here in Miami and this comment caught my attention.

What says The Root?

This story hits home for me.

I have family in West Palm Beach right now that grew up and went to school Jamaica, then moved here and graduated from University of Miami.

From there went on to get continued education and degree's in Pharmacy and now make real money and own nice homes and cars.

Never have i heard them say white people are superior and white supremacy is holding them back or anything of that nature.
 

Suicide King

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It's the absolute truth, i have Jamaican family who are extremely successful here in America and laugh at the thought of "white supremacy"



I think what holds us back the most is we still want equality for all. A lot of people are eating from the fruits of our labor, but straight shiit on us. But we are the ones who absorbed all the damage. People still look at immigrants from across the 7 seas better than us. But we will always be the catalyst for change, cause the quo is not something we embraced.
 

Truth200

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I think what holds us back the most is we still want equality for all. A lot of people are eating from the fruits of our labor, but straight shiit on us. But we are the ones who absorbed all the damage. People still look at immigrants from across the 7 seas better than us. But we will always be the catalyst for change, cause the quo is not something we embraced.

It's not just caribbean blacks read this story...

Influx of African Immigrants Shifting National and New York Demographics

http://www.nytimes.com/2014/09/02/n...-national-and-new-york-demographics.html?_r=0

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Threatened with arrest in 2009, Lamin F. Bojang fled Gambia after publicly contradicting its president’s claims that he could cure AIDS. Now 31, Mr. Bojang lives in Concourse Village in the Bronx with his wife and 2-year-old son and works as a receptionist at Kingsbrook Jewish Medical Center in Brooklyn, while working toward a bachelor’s degree in political science at City College.

With educational and professional opportunities in Gambia scarce for his generation, “the rest will have to find ways of leaving,” he said, “and African migrants here, just as previous migrants, are likely not going to return to their countries of origin.”

Niat Amare, 28, graduated from law school in Ethiopia where she grew up, she recalled, “watching the media portray the U.S. as the land of opportunities.” She arrived here in 2010, lives in Harlem and said she felt welcome in New York. “Anyone would find one’s countryman here, which eases the strange feeling we all have the first time we leave home,” said Ms. Amare, a legal advocate for the African Services Committee, a nonprofit organization that assists new immigrants.

While the migration of black Africans is not new, the number of sub-Saharan immigrants has grown swiftly, an influx that is shifting the demographic landscape across the country, including in New York City.

Between 2000 and 2010, the number of legal black African immigrants in the United States about doubled, to around one million. During that single decade, according to the most reliable estimates, more black Africans arrived in this country on their own than were imported directly to North America during the more than three centuries of the slave trade.

And while New York State is home to the largest proportion and many have gravitated to ethnic enclaves like Little Senegal in West Harlem or the Concourse Village section of the West Bronx, to live among fellow Ghanaians, black immigrants from Africa have tended to disperse more widely across the country — to California, Florida, Georgia, Illinois, Maryland, Texas and Virginia — than Caribbean-born blacks.

About a third of black New Yorkers were born abroad, mostly in the Caribbean. Africans constitute about 4 percent of the city’s foreign-born population, but as much as 10 percent in the Bronx. At last count, according to an analysis of census estimates by the Department of City Planning, from 2000 to 2011 the African-born population increased 39 percent to 128,000, although other estimates suggest that many more are living here without legal residency.

“They’ve been doubling every 10 years since 1980,” said Kim Nichols, an executive director of the African Services Committee, which is based in Harlem. “There’s a more established family and community network here to come to.”

Some come as refugees, some with work visas or special skills, many to stay and others to hone their talents and eventually apply them back home.

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The yearly flow can be affected by wars and epidemics.

“They’re a self-selected population,” Ms. Nichols said. “They have to be the most ambitious and have the means to get here — at least one plane ticket — and a fearlessness about coming to a new place.”

She recalled a boy who was 13 and fluent only in Soninke when he arrived alone from Mali after his family had finally scraped together enough money to pay for his airfare. The young man, now 18, just got his green card.

“His parents saved everything for years to buy a plane ticket,” Ms. Nichols said. “They have this dream. They’re dirt poor and the only way their kids are going to get ahead is to get them here by hook or crook.”

An analysis of the Census Bureau’s latest American Community Survey, which ended in 2012, found that 30 percent of African-born blacks in the city had a college degree, compared with 22 percent of native-born blacks, 18 percent of Caribbean-born blacks and 19 percent of the nonblack foreign born.

Immigrants like Mr. Bojang and Ms. Amare say they still identify more as African than as black or African-American.


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“Many black immigrants do not identify with the historical experiences of discrimination encountered by blacks in the United States,” said Kevin D. Brown, a law professor at Indiana University’s Maurer School of Law.

Two generations removed from colonialism and legal segregation, said Dr. Khalil Gibran Muhammad, director of the New York Public Library’s Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture, “the younger African immigrants tend to be less consciously ‘black’ and are somewhat reticent to link their fates with the history and contemporary protest traditions of African-Americans.”

“Selma doesn’t exactly cut it for them,” he said.

http://www.nytimes.com/2014/09/02/n...-national-and-new-york-demographics.html?_r=0
 

Dank Hill

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Real talk same shyt, another day.
The more things change, the more they stay the same.



I see why cats like @Dirty @Malta are done with this country.
I'm back in japan right now and have been since the beginning of the month and I haven't even noticed a hint of racism from these people. The african brothers are cool here too.
 

OfTheCross

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I think what holds us back the most is we still want equality for all. A lot of people are eating from the fruits of our labor, but straight shiit on us. But we are the ones who absorbed all the damage. People still look at immigrants from across the 7 seas better than us. But we will always be the catalyst for change, cause the quo is not something we embraced.

I disagree with the notion AA are the only ones that want equality for all. All blacks from everywhere that come to America want that, I think. They want a fair shot and are willing to fight for it as well.
 

CASHAPP

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It's the absolute truth, i have Jamaican family who are extremely successful here in America and laugh at the thought of "white supremacy"

bro I made threads and posts last year ..actually months ago in the ferguson thread about getting advice on how to change my mother and the c00nish things she says....i lost trackof all the despicable things she has said about american blacks....

She was born and raised in kingstonjamaica...the men usually arent as bad but for some reason OLDER caribbean women are the biggest culprits....i never witnessed something like it before...
 

Truth200

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bro I made threads and posts last year ..actually months ago in the ferguson thread about getting advice on how to change my mother and the c00nish things she says....i lost trackof all the despicable things she has said about american blacks....

She was born and raised in kingstonjamaica...the men usually arent as bad but for some reason OLDER caribbean women are the biggest culprits....i never witnessed something like it before...

You gotta understand people from the 3rd world countries are trying to get here to America and succeed by any means necessary.

They literally laugh at American ghetto's, the victim mindset, hip hop culture and what breeds from it.
 
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