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migrated back to the south |
Returning to the Underground Railroad 100 years later by Samuel Malcolm Hubbard, junior My family migrated from Stonewall Oakville, Appomattox, Virginia's cornfields, between 1930 and 1950. Six families left Virginia: the Hubbard, Trent, Cardwell Morgan's Rucker Joneses, and the Pace family. These families got together to make the treacherous trip into the unknown. They were looking for a new way of life armed with their youthful ambition, the driven locomotive force of their dreams. The great economic giants of the North were calling for them and their children. The financial motivation for migration was the combination of desires to escape the oppressive economic conditions in the South and the promise of greater prosperity in the North. The great migration, one of the largest internal migrations in the history of the United States, forever changed the urban North and the rural South. It was not surprising that the artfully refined nadir of segregation was nurtured and revived, mirroring the exact social and economic conditions of the South. The city of Philadelphia was their final destination. My mother and father settled in the projects in the Germantown region of Philadelphia. Eventually, they moved to Mt. Airy, where three siblings were born. My father was an automobile painter, and my mother worked various jobs. They were very persistent hard workers raising their three siblings. Life for us siblings born in these surroundings was exciting, exploring "who" we are. At a young age, we were oblivious to the proficient detrimental existence of racism. Our parents must've gone through some tough times to raise us. When I looked at my mother, she always had a warm smile and a great hug and spared no expense to make a life for us. She was the most beautiful woman I've ever seen. Sometimes I wonder if she's my mother. Now that all siblings have reached adulthood, life started changing. We could see the social, economic, and financial burden that forever increased daily, always doubling for the Afro-American people. How my mother survived all those years and still kept a roof over our heads and food on the table was an incredible feat of magic. As she grew older, her faith in God became more severe and profound. Living in the city became more precarious and dangerous now that my father was no longer alive. The great migration that started 50 ago has come to an end. The Homeland was calling for their children to return home to their birthplace. The next generation of siblings soon follows in their parent's footsteps. Returning to the Underground Railroad 100 years later The Underground Railroad, a network of secret routes and safe houses, holds a significant place in history. Established in the United States during the early-to-mid 19th century, it was a beacon of hope for enslaved African-Аmericans seeking freedom in the free states. Life for black people was extremely harsh, and the beginning of black-on-black crimes began with the introduction of alcohol and drugs at that time. From the 1990s until 2018, professional blacks who were highly educated and could afford the cost of buying a ticket on the railroad migrated back to the South. The high influx of inner cities, laws, crimes, and drugs was the new enslaver. The people begin looking for the gift of life from God back in the South. Who are these people fueling the drug epidemic? Pharmaceutical companies and politicians for population control are turning men and women into people with addiction. I called it Pandora's box syndrome as you cling to the Golden spark of hope with only the silence of your innermost deep thoughts. The great migration The large-scale migration of 6 million black African-Americans from the agricultural South to the industrial North during the twentieth century, The Great Migration, transformed the nation politically, economically, and culturally. But most experts don't see the current cavalcade having anything like that level of impact in the opposite direction. Most of the northern cities became police states with the sole purpose of brutally incarcerating black people for social and political gain—the invention of social and political parties. To create new laws and decentralize black families and communities. As war broke out, The northern demand for workers resulted from losing 5 million men who left to serve in the armed forces. World War I was the first time since Emancipation that black labor was in demand outside Railroad steel mills, factories, and tanneries. The creation of the Black Matrix (The Black Matrix is a Psychological Prison for the Black mind through the education system) How the matrix worked: a black person was psychologically conditioned at a very young age by an external condition that dominated and controlled the physical assets available. Those Afro-Americans who succeeded in ascertaining vital assets were legally taken away by force or by law. The 15th-century European education system was designed purely for white people, thus creating people in black communities of ignorance. During the 1960s, America's racially motivated brutality toward African Americans appeared to have reached its boiling point. There were many demonstrations of violent riots, protests, and civil unrest. The Kerner report's findings ensure the continuance of white dominance and control. The U.S. Government abandoned its open, blatant forms of racist systems used to suppress and control its Black population. This abandonment of outdated tactics necessitated the implementation of an improved method for ensuring white ruling elites. Their methods include implementing a massive media-driven ideological subversion perception management program. The United States media's distorted portrayal of Black America that amplifies the negative to the point that it distorts reality is more than just biased media reports. They function as a media manipulation psychosocial program. It is deployed through a massive media-driven– social engineering– marketing campaign that devalues African Americans. Its features include the ability to both influence the national climate and engender personal psychological feelings among African Americans that ensure the continuance of white dominance. This psychosocial program adversely manipulates and shapes the minds and collective perceptions of African Americans by subjecting them to seeing only the fraudulent worst in themselves. Its unrelenting daily assault on the Black psyche is designed to break down African Americans' sense of racial unity and allegiance, mold the character of self-hatred, and engender self-doubt, self-loathing, and division among their group that weakens their ranks. It also conditions Black people to accept white dominance over their lives by convincing them that it is now they that are their own worst enemies. 11a Furthermore, it also heightens mass insensitivity throughout the nation and world regarding the plight of African Americans therefore facilitating a consensual nationally setting for Black mistreatment. It fosters false justifications for America's legal system's mistreatment of African Americans, wherein they are disproportionately incarcerated, given stiffer sentences, and unfairly treated. This more covert and sophisticated method of deploying white racism provides the white ruling elites with a more socially acceptable and stealthier method of ensuring the continuance of the U.S. white dominance over its Black population. . The effects of this massive psychosocial program are also manifested in ideas, education, governmental policies, economic stratification, social segregation, housing markets, hiring and promotion practices, ( Chapters 1 Introductory 2 Return of the Underground Railroad 100 years later 3The great migration 4 The Black Matrix 5 Stages of Black Manhood 6 The four journals 7 Black American Stolen Identity Project |