A Lodisucio Says Black People Should "Kill Illegals"

in #lodisucio5 days ago

Earlier this morning, I came across a repost featuring a Black man with the caption: "BLK Americans we gotta join ICE and [kill] these illegals." This statement is highly racially charged and exemplifies the kind of absurd, inflammatory rhetoric typical of Lodisucios.

That said, the perspective he laid out in the video is as intriguing as it is disgustingly disturbing. He argues that Latino immigrants and communities are displacing Black Americans in the job market, largely due to their widespread bilingual or multilingual abilities— a skill far less common in many Black American households. He frames the entire Latino community as an existential economic and cultural threat, pointing to the tangible successes many Latino groups have achieved across generations in business, education, and community building. Rather than viewing this as a positive story of immigrant drive and adaptation, he sees it negatively — as something that undermines what he believes should be the primary position of Black Americans as the most empowered racial group in the United States.

It's not entirely surprising to see more Black Americans publicly expressing this kind of sentiment. Within certain Foundational Black American (FBA) or ADOS (American Descendants of Slavery) circles — communities that emphasize the unique historical lineage and struggles of Black Americans descended from U.S. chattel slavery — there has been growing frustration and outright anti-Latino rhetoric. These views often stem from real economic pressures in urban areas, competition for low- and mid-skilled jobs, debates over immigration policy, and perceptions that newer immigrant groups receive advantages or "cut in line" without the same historical claim to American institutions.

This incident isn't a rare exception; it serves as a stark example of where unchecked ethnic grievance politics could lead parts of Black America if we continue to ignore or downplay these Lodisucios-style narratives. Whether rooted in economic anxiety, cultural resentment, or a zero-sum vision of racial power, Black supremacy has no constructive place in a multi-ethnic America.

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