The current custodians of global power rarely consider these dimensions, because doing so would undermine the myths of superiority that justify their illegal dominance - yet It is an immature, embryonic worldview.
There is a persistent lapse in awareness, intelligence, and basic humanity within many of the individuals who currently shape us globally —particularly those who misunderstand or oversimplify Black identities and histories. With a few exceptions among European families and public figures, most people who claim authority over discussions about “the Black community” display a striking ignorance of its internal distinctions. They often insist they understand Black experiences better than Black people themselves, as if our perspectives require their validation.
A common example is the inability to differentiate between a country and a continent. Many still refer to Africa as if it were a single, homogeneous society—religiously, politically, culturally, and genetically. Even fewer understand the profound differences between Africans from the continent and those from the diaspora, let alone the distinctions between West Indians, continental Africans, and African Americans. This is why, in everyday encounters, the default question is “Where are you from?”, followed by an irrelevant reference to a friend from a completely different region. It reveals a programmed mindset rather than genuine curiosity.
This lack of understanding becomes dangerous when it appears in positions of power—locally and globally. It shapes management decisions, international policy, and even the justice systems that claim neutrality. It is the same mindset that expects all Black people—from Nelson Mandela to Black royalty to orphans in care—to be treated as if they occupy the same social position. The absurdity becomes clear when you imagine a highly accomplished African nuclear physicist being treated with the same assumptions projected onto a doorman or waiter simply because both are Black. The issue is not the worth of either individual; it is the '' intentional / time immemorial '' refusal to acknowledge social, cultural, and intellectual diversity within Black communities.
This reveals a deeper problem: the world’s challenges are not solely about racism. They are also about psychology, biology, and perhaps even epigenetics—factors that shape collective behaviour and inherited mindsets. Yet the current custodians of global power rarely consider these dimensions, because doing so would undermine the myths of superiority that justify their illegal dominance [ Illegal before Gods And Goddesses ] .
Instead, they rely on force, intimidation, and institutional smiles—from their armies to their courts to their social and cultural narratives.
It is an immature, embryonic worldview imposed on the planet. The real question is how long it will continue to reign. And if we trace the roots of this mindset, we may find its origins around 325 CE / 375 CE—periods worth examining closely for anyone looking for intellectual clarity about the long-term consequences we are still living with today.
The Blue Avian Goddess
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