It's ridiculous, isn't it? In the comments someone posted an image with this...
“More whites were brought as slaves to North Africa than blacks brought as slaves to the United States or to the 13 colonies from which it was formed. White slaves were still being bought and sold in the Ottoman Empire, decades after blacks were freed in the United States.”—THOMAS SOWELL
And, the "interesting" (pathetic) thing is that while other cultures that endured many years of slavery "got over it", worked to better themselves and prospered, far too many blacks in the US - who were never slaves themselves - STILL REFUSE to let it go, ehine and moan about it, and wear it like a permanent badge of victimhood they (and pandering Dem politicians) use to explain their messed-up families/societies, the high crime rate among their demographic and the lack of motivation that could enable them to succeed.
The post shares a real video from Roots 101 African American Museum in Louisville where founder Lamont Collins places heavy slave shackles on a white woman's wrists during an interactive exhibit, saying "Welcome to America," prompting her to tear up while sharing her deep interest in Black history, Afrocentric classes, and membership in a primarily African-American church.
The exhibit aims to build empathy: Collins uses the shackles as a teaching tool for compassion and historical understanding of enslaved Africans' arrival, and the museum recently received a $1 million grant from Louisville, with the CEO calling viral reactions "hits of compassion."
Public reaction on X focuses on the performative nature: Replies highlight the woman's visible emotion and statements as examples of excessive white guilt, question why such simulations persist long after slavery ended, and debate the exhibit's focus amid broader historical contexts like African involvement in the slave trade.
No, this is not AI-generated.
It's a real video from the Roots 101 African American Museum in Louisville, Kentucky. The founder and CEO, Lamont Collins, regularly uses actual heavy slave shackles (some reportedly over 400 years old from Ghana) as part of an interactive exhibit to simulate the experience of enslaved Africans arriving in America. He says "Welcome to America" when placing them on visitors.
Yes, the Roots 101 African American Museum in Louisville did receive (or was allocated) a $1 million investment from the City of Louisville.
In April 2026, Louisville Mayor Craig Greenberg proposed a budget that included $1 million specifically to support an expanded, permanent downtown location for the museum on First Street (near Waterfront Park).
This comes after an earlier $100,000 allocation in the 2026 budget (the first city funding in several years).
Tony Martin, a black man, wrote a book about the jewish slave trade of black Africans, "The Jewish Onslaught."
... a professor of African American History who became embroiled in controversy over his classroom use of a book detailing the well- documented Jewish role in the Atlantic slave trade.
GTFO.
It's ridiculous, isn't it? In the comments someone posted an image with this...
https://x.com/quibbler/status/2054403581780889941?s=20
The word slave comes from slav. Whites from the black sea region. Probably enslaved by Kazarians.
And, the "interesting" (pathetic) thing is that while other cultures that endured many years of slavery "got over it", worked to better themselves and prospered, far too many blacks in the US - who were never slaves themselves - STILL REFUSE to let it go, ehine and moan about it, and wear it like a permanent badge of victimhood they (and pandering Dem politicians) use to explain their messed-up families/societies, the high crime rate among their demographic and the lack of motivation that could enable them to succeed.
So much brainwashing. So many lies.
Post - https://x.com/EndWokeness/status/2054401448369144066?s=20
Here's what grok said about this...
The post shares a real video from Roots 101 African American Museum in Louisville where founder Lamont Collins places heavy slave shackles on a white woman's wrists during an interactive exhibit, saying "Welcome to America," prompting her to tear up while sharing her deep interest in Black history, Afrocentric classes, and membership in a primarily African-American church.
The exhibit aims to build empathy: Collins uses the shackles as a teaching tool for compassion and historical understanding of enslaved Africans' arrival, and the museum recently received a $1 million grant from Louisville, with the CEO calling viral reactions "hits of compassion."
Public reaction on X focuses on the performative nature: Replies highlight the woman's visible emotion and statements as examples of excessive white guilt, question why such simulations persist long after slavery ended, and debate the exhibit's focus amid broader historical contexts like African involvement in the slave trade.
No, this is not AI-generated.
It's a real video from the Roots 101 African American Museum in Louisville, Kentucky. The founder and CEO, Lamont Collins, regularly uses actual heavy slave shackles (some reportedly over 400 years old from Ghana) as part of an interactive exhibit to simulate the experience of enslaved Africans arriving in America. He says "Welcome to America" when placing them on visitors.
Yes, the Roots 101 African American Museum in Louisville did receive (or was allocated) a $1 million investment from the City of Louisville.
In April 2026, Louisville Mayor Craig Greenberg proposed a budget that included $1 million specifically to support an expanded, permanent downtown location for the museum on First Street (near Waterfront Park).
This comes after an earlier $100,000 allocation in the 2026 budget (the first city funding in several years).
https://louisvilleky.gov/news/mayor-greenberg-proposes-budget-major-investments-build-citys-positive-progress-support
Link to museum - https://www.roots-101.org/
Sadomasochism. Both of them. Get a room.
The jews ran the African slave trade to and within the United States.
They owned the slave ships.
They ran the slave auctions in America.
Slave auctions were closed on jewish holidays.
https://gtvflyers.com/flyers/slave_trade.html
Tony Martin, a black man, wrote a book about the jewish slave trade of black Africans, "The Jewish Onslaught."
https://www.amazon.com/Jewish-Onslaught-Despatches-Wellesley-Battlefront/dp/0912469307
A post I made awhile back about the history of slavery:
https://greatawakening.win/p/13zNB0mLV2/