Foundational Black American Lodisucios EXPOSED: The Racist Anti-Latino Smear Campaign Crumbling!

in #lodisucio5 days ago

Foundational Black Americans (FBAs) are increasingly aligning with the Lodisucio faction of their community. After being exposed for targeting Indigenous Americans and Latinos, Lodisucios within the FBA movement have launched a campaign to smear Latinos and mixed-race people. Much of their content remains publicly available, where they openly disparage Latinos, Indigenous peoples, and even African migrants. This shift appears driven by a desire to reinforce a strict "lineage-only" identity that prioritizes descendants of American chattel slavery over more recent Black immigrants or other groups. As a result, the rhetoric often frames non-FBA communities as competitors for resources, attention, or historical recognition rather than potential allies.

Lodisucios are aggressively pushing anti-Latino propaganda on TikTok, combined with pro-Black messaging aimed at convincing mulatos, zambos, and morenos to join their cause. This reflects a racial manipulation tactic rooted in an "us (Black people) versus everyone else" mentality. The videos frequently use emotionally charged racial rhetoric, historical grievances, and selective statistics to create division and encourage mixed-race individuals to reject their Latino or Indigenous heritage in favor of a singular Black identity. Over time, this approach risks deepening existing tensions between Black American and Latino communities, particularly in shared urban and Southern spaces where demographic overlaps are common.

While tracking their propaganda can be challenging due to its decentralized nature, content spreads rapidly within these circles. They network quickly across social media platforms, frequently downloading and reuploading the same posts created by other FBA accounts to expand their reach. Coordinated efforts, such as hashtag campaigns and cross-posting between TikTok, Instagram, and X, allow the messaging to gain visibility far beyond the core group. This organic amplification makes it appear more widespread and influential than it might otherwise be, complicating efforts by outsiders to monitor or counter the narrative effectively.

Foundational Black Americans are not merely small, decentralized groups. Many factions within the movement — including the largest Lodisucio umbrella organizations — appear to be well-organized and may hold institutional, regional, or local influence (for example, small regions in Georgia). Some factions have demonstrated the ability to mobilize supporters for local political causes, community events, or online boycotts with surprising speed and coordination. This level of organization suggests that while FBA remains primarily an online identity movement, certain elements could translate their digital presence into tangible offline power in specific geographic pockets.

Foundational Black Americans have a Lodisucio problem and it is only expanding further.

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