White folks ain’t going to reblog this. They want their version of MK Jr. that only said “I have a dream”.
Guilt tripping white people into reblogging stuff isn’t going to make you have more allies, just saying.
It’s not about guilt tripping.
It’s about white people, even well-intentioned white allies, being too comfortable in their privilege and not learn more about the complex beliefs of civil right leader MLK Jr other than his “I have a dream” speech. MLK Jr. talked extensively about American Imperialism, Capitalism, and White Fragility/Complicity throughout his career and activism, which most Liberal white allies won’t share because they’re too comfortable with the white lies they were taught in schools.
Reblogged.
totally agree, however that is still guilt tripping lol
here’s the hilarious thing about calling this “guilt tripping.” the psychological definition of a “guilt trip” is an UNJUSTIFIED feeling of guilt induced in someone else. um, what about anything here said about white people that’s “unjustified” or baseless? we’ve got over 400yrs of evidence to back up our statements about white people. we even got studies, research and stats. none of which shows what @dreamyblackchild said to be false.
lmaoo white people love to act like we don’t have centuries of examples of who they are. always want to act brand new. like this suspicion and mistrust of your character isn’t earned every fucking day by your behavior, your treatment of black people, native people, brown people, by who you vote for, who you support with your money, who you tone police, your “jokes” and more. foh! like there isn’t a trail of dead black, native and brown bodies in your wake. we watched y’all whitewash the fuck out of mlk’s legacy (AFTER KILLING HIM BTW) and then tried to use that whitewashed version to limit our fight for liberation and justice to just the acts your comfortable with and then have the fucking nerve to say that calling out your typical behavior to be “guilt tripping?” fuck you.
the one other thing i know about “guilt tripping” is that it only works on people with a fucking conscious. foh!
no effort whatsoever. like mlk said…
for all the constant mlk quoting about “content of our character” blah blah blah i hear from white people, how do they think this reflects on their character?
Two years ago this week, shortly after President Donald Trump issued a proclamation declaring “A National Emergency Concerning the Novel Coronavirus Disease (COVID-19) Outbreak,” under 45,000 Americans were infected. The pandemic death toll was still below 500. But the economic ramifications were already being felt, as fears about the rapid spread of the disease were leading to mass layoffs, stock-market turbulence, and genuine concern about whether Americans would be able to put food on the table and pay the rent.
But it was a different story for the very rich. They were about to experience a redistribution of wealth that would see their fortunes skyrocket at an astronomical rate. While the pandemic has been hard on the vast majority of Americans, it’s been nothing but good times for the billionaire class.
Elon Musk was worth $24.6 billion when Trump issued his pandemic proclamation in mid-March of 2020. Today, he is worth $234 billion—an 851 percent spike that adds up to roughly $209.4 billion. During the same period, Google cofounders Larry Page and Sergey Brin doubled their wealth, to nearly $114 billion and $109 billion, respectively. Amazon’s Jeff Bezos enjoyed a more modest increase in his fortunes, gaining a mere $52.1 billion during the period. But Bezos still finished this remarkable run for the billionaire class as the second wealthiest man in America, with a net worth of $165.1 billion, according to Forbes magazine’s latest study of “The World’s Real-Time Billionaires, Today’s Winners and Losers.”
Indeed, Musk and Bezos have over the course of the past 24 months grown so rich that they can casually rocket into space in a Billionaire Boys Club game of atmospheric oneupmanship.
While almost a million Americans have died from Covid-19 over the span of two traumatic years, and while tens of millions of Americans have experienced financial hardship and uncertainty as a result of the economic troubles that extended from the pandemic, America’s billionaires have experienced an unprecedented run.
Americans for Tax Fairness‘s latest assessment of the condition argues that “U.S. billionaires’ wealth continues to soar above the misery.” ATF explained:
[As] of March 10, their collective wealth has shot up by $1.7 trillion, or 57 percent, since the pandemic emergency was proclaimed in mid-March 2020. Their total wealth reached $4.6 trillion, up from $2.95 trillion on March 18, 2020…. The number of U.S. billionaires increased by 15%, from 614 to 704.
Globally, during the course of the pandemic, Oxfam estimates that “[a] new billionaire has been minted every 26 hours, as inequality contributes to the death of one person every four seconds.” The growth has been particularly pronounced in the United States, where ATF has argued that the $4.6 trillion in assets controlled by this country’s 704 billionaires is “one-third more than the collective $3.4 trillion net worth of the entire bottom half of American society, or some 65 million households.”
A Connecticut Superior Court judge ruled Tuesday that a physician’s note submitted only for the judge’s viewing did not provide enough evidence on its claim that Jones was “confined to his home” as a result of “medical conditions” making it impossible for him to sit for the scheduled, in-person deposition.
In her ruling, Judge Barbara Bellis questioned attorney Kevin Smith, representing Jones, over his client’s doctor’s note suggesting he was “confined” to his home under a physician’s supervision.
In a notice filed Wednesday morning, Smith confirmed his client conducted his broadcast during the Tuesday hearing, and that it took place at, “Mr. Jones’ usual and customary studio in Austin Texas,” and clarified, “the studio is not located in Mr. Jones’ home.”
Attorneys representing the families said Jones’ defense counsel, Norman Pattis, arrived at the in-person questioning, scheduled for 9 a.m. local time, and told them Jones would not be showing up as a result of an unnamed medical condition — despite broadcasting his Infowars show from a studio outside his house the day before, according to his attorneys.
“This, in our view, was a cowardly display intended to cheat the plaintiffs of their right to put him under oath and ask him questions about why over the course of many years he lied about them,” attorney Christopher Mattei told reporters via Zoom.
Jones’ defense counsel said his, “nonappearance comes upon the advice of a physician who arrived in Austin to visit him on March 20, 2022,” according to a court filing.
The filings continue, stating that Jones, “so alarmed the physician” while being observed on Monday, “that he insisted on conducting a physical examination” and, “immediately advised Mr. Jones to go to an emergency room or call 911.”
Jones refused to call emergency services. After the episode, “the physician advised him to stay home, which Mr. Jones did not do. The physician subsequently arranged for a comprehensive medical workup to be conducted for Mr. Jones on March 23, 2022.”
Mattei said immediately after learning Jones, a controversial far-right-wing talk show host, would not be at the deposition Wednesday morning, the plaintiffs’ legal team asked a Connecticut court to direct Jones to appear at 9 a.m. Thursday. The court granted the request.
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