Self-education
Where I am from, you have to break generational curses of community members that see you as a failure. From there you have to contend a supreme system that will never allow you to succeed as a black person.
Now that's you fighting a negative scale and negative energy to just make it to zero effect, from there you start succeeding and making your way to the top.
I'm from a land where there is least development and a large amount of fertile land to produce and reproduce all the products we can ever wish for as a community.
It's time we dissociate ourselves from the false doctrines that state that we have limited resources. That we have to go to the cities to make a better standard of living. To distance ourselves from buying bread that we grew up eating from our own gardens. To not associate ourselves with the white Idea that we desperately want to be equal.
How can you be equal to what is inferior black child.
How do you see your self sharing equally to what's rightfully yours.
I'm not promoting violence, I'm promoting independence, through agriculture. Us going back to our villages and form the same systems that they saw attractive and stripped us from, turning us against each other.
Me shaming another party or success does me no good, but me crippling the same system that oppresses is a God given talent.
How do I begin to cripple the system? It's easy, for every action there is a reaction. If money is the action then reaction is no money. How do we live with no money? To live with no money is to be independent. To know how to plant a single seed that will produce fruits with plenty seeds and then plant again and again, for each single seed you plant, there are plenty of fruits with plenty of seeds waiting to be harvest by a community of people. A community that believes that a child is raised by a village.
Let's start with food, the only element that can reproduce its self with out money. Then we will realise how we have managed to harvest gold, which is the only currency that Africa has plenty of.










