Divided by Labels, Owned by Confusion

Section 1: Arguing Over Identity
Some call themselves Black, others say they’re Moors, Israelites, or Indigenous. Each group claims a deeper truth about their roots. But while these debates go on, the white elite sits back, unaffected. The truth is, they don’t care what we call ourselves. They still hold the power, the land, the banks, and the laws. While we argue over labels, they keep getting richer. The more distracted we are, the more control they keep. Unity is our strength, but confusion keeps us weak.

Section 2: The Trap of Spiritual Confusion
A lot of people claim to be spiritual historians, but don’t know their own family past. Most don’t even know who their great-grandmother was. Many don’t read or study deeply, yet talk like scholars. This confusion isn’t by accident—it’s part of a system designed to keep us lost. Instead of focusing on healing or building, we argue. We chase titles instead of truth. We search for identity in books and YouTube videos, not in our actions or communities. That’s exactly what white supremacy wants—division without direction.

Section 3: The Real Struggles We Ignore
While we debate labels, the real problems grow bigger. Our water is poisoned, our schools are falling apart, and our minds are struggling. We face heavy debt, and many of us suffer quietly with mental health problems. We’ve lost touch with our roots and feel disconnected from our future. It’s not that identity doesn’t matter—it does. But we’re focused on the wrong fight. While we argue about who we were, we ignore who we need to become. That’s how we stay stuck.

Section 4: Power in Unity, Not Labels
The real threat to the system isn’t what we call ourselves—it’s what we build together. If we ever stopped fighting and started building, we’d be powerful. They don’t fear a Moor, a Hebrew, or an Indigenous person—they fear a united people. People who work together can create schools, grow businesses, change laws, and protect each other. But that can’t happen if we stay broken into small groups, all claiming to be the “real” ones. Unity doesn’t mean we all believe the same thing. It means we respect each other enough to move as one.

Summary and Conclusion
We are more than the labels we choose. Black, Moor, Israelite, Indigenous—these words only matter if they lead to action. The white elite doesn’t care what we call ourselves because our disunity keeps them in control. Our biggest enemy isn’t confusion—it’s division. The more we argue, the more we lose. The moment we choose unity over ego, we become unstoppable. This isn’t just history—it’s our future. Let’s build it together.

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