Buck Breaking (2021) - We was ass raped and shiet! Featuring "Beefsteak Pete" the black troon!

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If plantations had more chill conditions people like Tariq 100 percent would revel in their lives revolving around white men and their cocks
So we are now going to see a rise of images featuring black men with labels reading "Made for WMC" (White Master Cock)?

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Bleached

I think exaggerations like that are the least of the problems with this "documentary."

They never even mentioned Bayard Rustin who was openly gay and in MLK's inner circle. He was with MLK when he was shot. Not to mention that MLK was bisexual.


Of course, bringing up that kind of shit would completely shatter their narrative.
Wasn't Malcom x gay? What is it with black people and being gay.
 
I watched about 10 minutes, and I couldn't take anymore. I was crying laughing.
During these 10 minutes they claimed that
>Christianity believes that everyone has a spiritual energy and if it runs out, you die. Young people have a lot of it, so crackas harvested it from young african men and stored it in jars. The guy telling this story said he had several of these jars at home.
>They were shaved on the slave ships to shame them as warriors, because black warriors have special virility powers that are seen by their full hair. The slave traders were afraid of african warriors and their power to wield a sharp stick.
>Muh dik
It was constantly about either MUH DIK or MUH WEAVE. It was hysterical.
12/10, hopefully I can manage more in the future without dying of laughter.
 
I would like to say something witty about this but i am legitimately at a loss for words. It's like /pol/ and /lgbt/ got together to write a porno together. Clown world.


Honk. Honk.
Imagine being black, and making a soycuck face, while holding a movie about your ancestors getting raped by white men in front of their friends and family. Is there a deeper depth of cuckoldry even possible?
 
That claim was actually based on a real life (although likely sensationalized to some degree) event.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Delphine_LaLaurie
The crab people thing is a complete embellishment though.
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I learned something in that wiki article that, for all the talk of slavery in the US, I have never heard mentioned. It was illegal to mistreat slaves? And an angry mob would come to your house if you were mistreating slaves? Kinda throws a wrench in the common assumptions about how white Americans thought about black people.
 
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