Wednesday, December 27, 2017

Happy Kwanzaa!


Yesterday marked the start of Kwanzaa! This made-up holiday is all about celebrating blackness/African heritage. The man who started Kwanzaa,  Ronald McKinley Everett or as he styles himself these days, Maulana Ndabezitha Karenga, had a very laudable reason for creating this holiday out of whole cloth:
He said his goal was to "give Blacks an alternative to the existing holiday and give Blacks an opportunity to celebrate themselves and their history, rather than simply imitate the practice of the dominant society."
I am all in favor of this. The more blacks separate themselves culturally from Whites, the easier it will be to separate them physically from us. Even though Karenga is a convicted felon for torturing naked women, which hasn't stopped him from being a professor and chairman of the "Africana studies" department at California State. Long Beach, I support his black nationalism. Let the blacks have their own holidays and culture and churches and other institutions and eventually let them have their own ethnostate where they can be free of White persecution and Whites can be free from having to pay for blacks and from violence at the hands of blacks.

Right now two of the main problems with distinct ethnostates for Whites and blacks is that a) blacks are entirely reliant on the largesse of Whites that fund and subsidize many aspects of everyday life for a huge percentage of blacks and b) blacks have some affinity for the United States. By encouraging them to embrace their differentness and to form and celebrate their own separate heritage we can begin to unwind their connection with the U.S.. As for the first part, the national debt and looming crisis over entitlements ought to get the job done as soon the government will either have to cut welfare spending or collapse entirely or both.

I won't be lighting candles or pouring out drink offerings or whatever it is you do for Kwanzaa but I wholeheartedly support the expansion of exclusively black rituals and institutions.

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