I am asking about opening borders and or at least creating a way for refugees to naturalize inside the nation. Did this happen? Why this is not shown? Why do they still hide behind the shield, if they opened up? Nothing about blood and fire in my question.
If they did not open their borders and if they don’t actually let people in, how is it hat different from the US setting up their „outreach“ NGOs in other nations, but throwing people from the South who cross their border into cages and camps?
Does a vision of an African nation which treats other nations the way Saudi Arabia and Turkey treat other inhabitants of the Middle East seem a good depiction of how technologically advanced Africans are „different“?
You also have not answered why they have an absolute monarchy, despite actual tribal societies being often against one-man rule?
Hong Kong is terribly treating black and non-Chinese Asian people, and is one of the most racist cities in Asia (if you‘d care to read up on racism in Hong Kong, you would know that). But that aside, my argument was exactly that the moviemakers chose to vilify a black person from a poor neighborhood as opposed to the isolated, fairly-tale „noble savages“. The way they depicted Killmonger was to make radical African activists seem like madmen. Even though it is the exact opposite: the perfectly normal, perfectly „esteemed“ white people were slavers. The normality and status-quo are not what they seem.https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_n5E7feJHw0
Killmonger is openly planning to send his "liberation" to places like Hong Kong (which also suffered under Colonial rule) AND he also doesn't make any mention about Latinos, Arabs, Asians or OTHER people of color so when you combine the two it's made clear that his "liberation" is blacks only if that. Moreover the fact that he's willing to murder and exploit his fellow blacks to get what he wants and rather hypocritically abuses Wakandan tradition (burning the herb so that NO ONE will be able to challenge his position is the act of a wannabe tyrant not a liberator). The guy doesn't give a donkey's left asscheek about liberation.
No - they, and me, are dissatisfied with the fact moviemakers chose to make the villain a black person with a poor background (anti-poor, anti-ghetto message), and they chose to depict a poor black person as a „contemptible shithead“ and a white CIA guy as a protagonist. Do you understand? The fact that something is possible does not eliminate the ideology.You're sources, while well intentioned, seem to get rather offended at the insinuation that yes it's entirely possible to advocate for Black Revolution and STILL be an evil contemptible shithead
If I make a film about how brave Southern soldiers resist an attack by the Union troops who burn down their city, that is possible. You may even find a real incident to base it on (as you notice that there were revolutionaries who became tyrannical or mob-like). Does this mean such a film is a neutral depiction and has no ideological point to make?
So the only character who has been through hardships and experienced racism is only used as a tragic and evil antagonist because he must be a madman, and one who must be killed, no reconciliation is possible here. I guess that is a very American view, but you must understand why it is criticized, then?and they ignore that Killmonger IS in fact played for tragedy (the whole scene where he takes the herb and has the conversation with his dad shows that if anything his dad's violent death fucked him up rather than any generic "blackness").
After what the West did to Africa, yes, it is heroic to fight the West. The lands of legitimate, „esteemed“ slavers. That was my point one. My next point is the one I made above: the way you choose to depict something is not neutral. If the white character was a civilian, a scientist, it would be different. The way you structure your story and whom you choose as protagonists matters.You say "The CIA „heroes“ prevent a black empowerment by shooting down Wakandan ships that give weapons to the most vulnerable and oppressed". A more accurate reading of the scene is "CIA guy aligned with the heroes shoot down a Wakandan ship that gives weapons for the explicit purpose of triggering a global uprising that will tear the entire world down in an orgy of fire and blood and kill countless innocents of ALL races". You utterly whitewashed the implications of what Killmonger was planning because golly gee fighting the EVIL West sure seems heroic to you.
It is, and I have explained why. If you make a fictional structure about evil black poor person and a good white CIA agent, it is your choice to frame it that way. It is your choice to tell a story where white people, inheriting the wealth hoarded by slavers, are „neutral“ or even potential victims, but black people fight among themselves and are a potential evil. It is your choice to make the key villain a poor black person. If you make a story about Southern soldiers resisting Union troops, this story is not neutral. The way you told it is not neutral. You have shown the perpetrators of slavery as victims, but avoided to show the part of the story where they perpetrate and fight to keep slavery.Dude. There have been cases where oppressed have become as bad as their oppressors and Mugabe and Dessalines are BOTH excellent examples. That the south shamelessly overplayed the fact that a massacre in haiti happened to try to justify slavery (and in the process shamelessly ignored that it COULD end peacefully) DOES NOT CHANGE THE FACT THAT PEOPLE WERE FUCKING MASSACRED! More importantly the entire reason it occurred was to "prevent new frenchmen from being born" which is the EXACT logic Colonel John Chivington used to justify the Sand Creek Massacre. That white supremacists shamelessly played up the event does not change that it was an atrocity. Mugabe not only committed mass murder against people of the Mdebele tribe (my teacher told me how he encountered a nurse who had witnessed a mass grave and was reluctant to talk about it to him) but also ran Zimbabwe into the ground and specifically made it so that only He and HIS Supporters benefitted (Which shows that he never really cared about his countrymen all that much). So in that regard they WERE examples of people who fought oppression and either became corrupt themselves or committed needless acts of violence to satisfy their own prejudices. Pointing out that Killmonger is like those guys is NOT racist despite what you so desperately want to believe.
So you do agree that a person who argued for actual liberation has been painted as a madman, a villain, and as a bad leader? You seem to have missed entirely the point that the authors chose to paint the character a villain in a certain way. This depiction is intentional, and its intent is what I question, and consider racist. Much as the racists used the scare of „violent black people“ to perpetuate slavery, apartheid, segregation, so do the authors of this story use it to discredit movements for black liberation by painting them senselessly violent, dangerous, only caring about black people and so on. It is like the hack attack on #BLM with „all lives matter“ - yes, but it is not the point of BLM.He also is willing to overlook Wakanda's complicity in the slave trade, blatantly states "the sun shall never set on the Wakandan Empire" (which is basically what ALL colonial empires argue) and after using Wakandan law to get the throne shamelessly ignores it when it's convenient. So no. He's NOT a good leader; even if violent revolution IS necessary (which is dubious) Killmonger would be a HORRIBLE choice for a leader.
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You failed to understand the simple difference between the realism of a depiction and its intent. I have no idea what gave you the right not to judge, but to ascribe me my views on Mandela?I explicitly brought up Mandela because he's proof that Blacks CAN be trusted with self governance. Hell Mandela using violence was entirely acceptable given that the Apartheid government was resistant to meaningful reform for years. Thing is, Mandela ALSO understood that at some point one has to be the bigger man and lay down the sword. When he was elected there were South African Blacks who would have liked nothing more than to forcibly expel all the white people. Mandela DID NOT DO THAT because he realized that moving on and healing meant that on some level you had to let go. Moreover there are nations like Ghana that have been doing pretty well for themselves overall. So no. Pointing out that revolutionary leaders CAN potentially become as bad as their oppressors is NOT inherently racist. And given that you were portraying Killmonger's actions as "heroic liberation" and shamelessly ignored that he was entirely willing to conquer OTHER oppressed peoples AND that his goal was to create a colonial empire himself you basically made it clear that you think Black people should overthrow the system violently, or at the very least view violent revolution as unquestionably good rather as something that is justified in some cases such as 60s-early 90s south africa and Zimbabwe (though it would have been better if someone better than Mugabe had been in charge) but which can also potentially be corrupted or can become a vehicle for something ugly. So no. I'm entirely comfortable judging you.
I will deal with the articles later. But imitation is also a non-neutral thing, if you depict Africans imitating an ape, that is a conscious choice. You could depict them imitating any other animals. Do you understand?Ok this largely boils down to attacks on my character, except for the tribal stuff which ignores that a.) in African Tribal customs priests often did imitate animals to "capture their power" and b.) since tribal religion is still alive in Wakanda that M'Baku is imitating a gorilla on purpose is not a way of saying "oh black people are savages" and more "oh they balanced their tribal traditions with being high tech". Otherwise you're just saying I'm an EVIL terrible person for not agreeing with you and that I MUST be a horrible disgusting racist. No substance, just you launching ad hominem attacks on me and ultimately coming off as rather juvenile.
Hell here are a few academics who rather liked the movie and thought it celebrated black culture
https://www.academia.edu/36489552/The_p ... ther_movie
https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/glo ... iberators/
https://www.academia.edu/36559591/Repre ... ck_Panther