Beruflich Dokumente
Kultur Dokumente
SLAVERY CONDITIONING
The methods used to socially condition Blacks were horrific and indicative of the
vicious nature of the enslavement process. One example, cited from the “Cardinal
principles for making a Negro”, the writer says:
“Take the meanest and most restless nigger, strip him of his clothes in front of the
. . . [slaves], tar and feather him, tie each leg to a different horse faced in opposite
directions, set him afire and beat both horses to pull him apart in front of the
remaining nigger(s). The next step is to take a bullwhip and beat the remaining
nigger to the point of death in front of the female and infant. Don’t kill him but put
the fear of God in him, for he can be useful in future breeding.”
Norman Coombs, in The Black Experience in America, pp. 40 wrote, “The social
conditioning process instilled strict discipline in Blacks, a sense of inferiority, belief
in the slave owners’ superior power, acceptance of the slave owners’ standards and a
deep sense of a slave helplessness and dependence. The slave owners cut Blacks
off from their history, culture, language and community, and implanted White
society’s value system”.
We should also understand that slavery should be viewed as a starting point for
understanding the African American psyche, and not as an end. Therefore, the
study of the African American psyche should include psycho-history, but if should
not be exclusively concerned with events in the past”.
These steps were taken to ensure the continuation of slavery from one generation
to the next. Such social engineering manufactured culturally deficient clones,
generation after generation, over the last four centuries. Each successive
generation was infected from the time of inception with an ingrained cultural virus
that was designed to prevent them from reaching their fullest potential.”
In Black Labor White Wealth, pp.165, Dr. Claud Anderson points out, “The slave
owner’s absolute power over Blacks allowed them to operate an efficient and
effective slavery conditioning system. Slaveholders constructed internal controls
on slaves that minimized the external force needed to control them. The
government provided the environment of legal framework that allowed the
conditioning process to exist for 250 years . . .
The effects carried over into freed Black society and affected the general
behavior of Blacks as a race of people”.
Jawanza Kunjufu, in the powerful book Solutions for Black America, pp.145 says,
“Affluent Whites who are valued in America and who have experienced trauma are
given treatment immediately. When there have been in stressful events –
Columbine, Kentucky, Oregon – the government sent counselors immediately to
address the survivors’ needs. The fundamental problem for African Americans is
that when slavery ended in 1865, African Americans were not given counseling to
address post-traumatic slavery disorder.”
A good book dedicated to the million African American families who live in squalor
and poverty and earn less than $7,000 annually and the 20 percent of African
American adults who earn less than $14,000 per year and, unfortunately, the 50
percent of African American children who live in their households is Solutions for
Black America, by Jawanza Kunjufu.
It seems like books are popping up all over the place and they advance many
different beliefs, liberal, conservative, establishment, grass root, multicultural,
racist, sexist, etc. We recommend that you read the books pointed out in the
Spearmangroup articles because we have read them and know the author’s
commitment to Black progress. That way you will be assured of getting information
that will take you forward.