The movement will continue to grow and they will remain bothered.
what movement?
black feminist haven't accomplished shyt and are considered a joke
The movement will continue to grow and they will remain bothered.
for those who don't want to watch the video
summary:
first came a video where ana stated
-Says that people should leave Rachel alone, and that she should be accepted as black
-Ana says she can relate to being born into a cultural group that you don't identify with, because as an Armenian woman she doesn't identify with Armenian culture
then came a viewers response tweet
then came the video response in the op where ana
*Calls @WlZKHALIFA out of her name. refers to her as troll, dismisses her as a hater and an attention whore
*Trivializes black women's struggle w/ intersectionality
*Says in her nine years as a journalist she's done more coverage of black issues than any other new station
*Ask "How much more can I do for the black community"
followed by
because there white supremacist who need to put that gun in there mouth and commit thatCan some of yall please tell me what yall got against black feminists??? I must know...
homes and communities ran by female leadershipStop saying words you can't define.
Exactly.well, when it's explained like this(I didn't have enough info), I can see why black fembot went at her neck. White feminist is in no place to determine who is black and who isn't and shouldn't tell us who to accept a black. These muhfukkas have some nerves, smh.
Black feminist theory has argued that black women are positioned within structures of power in fundamentally different ways from white women. Black feminist theorists such as Angela Davis, bell hooks, and Patricia Hill Collins have argued, for example, that black women, unlike many white women, are marginalized along lines of race, class, gender, and sexuality.
"black women are sometimes excluded from feminist theory and antiracist policy discourse because both are predicated on a discrete set of experiences that often does not accurately reflect the interaction of race and gender".[7] Black women's exclusion from feminist and antiracist discourses became especially clear in 1960s and '70s social movements for racial and gender equality. Hence, the emergence of black feminist organizations.
All women suffer oppression, even white women, particularly poor white women, and especially Indian, Mexican, Puerto Rican, Oriental and Black American women whose oppression is tripled by any of the above-mentioned. But we do have females' oppression in common. This means that we can begin to talk to other women with this common factor and start building links with them and thereby build and transform the revolutionary force we are now beginning to amass ~ Weathers
interesting. any other time y'all (not you personally) telling me white people define our race and we have no choice in the matterWhite feminist is in no place to determine who is black and who isn't and shouldn't tell us who to accept a black. These muhfukkas have some nerves, smh.
Can some of yall please tell me what yall got against black feminists??? I must know...
homes and communities ran by female leadership
: a family, group, or government controlled by a woman or a group of womenYeah, no. You can't make up a definition and just hope it sticks.
And even if we went by your definition, unless Black women abandoning their children wholesale after they are born would equal the patriarchy you keep pining for, it still wouldn't work.
if black feminist woke up as white women tomorrow, do you think they'd have any complaints?A lot of these nikkas think that any issue that does not effect them specifically as black men isn't an issue worth worrying about.
Sure, they got wives, girlfriends, mothers, sisters, and daughters who are black women and those issues are important to them, but fukk those bytches, right?
: a family, group, or government controlled by a woman or a group of women