All the Way Home (1957) | When A Black Family Moves Next Door

2018 ж. 22 Шіл.
1 211 113 Рет қаралды

Demonstrates in a positive fashion that integrated communities can and do work. Exposes the property value fallacy and makes an appeal to reason and democratic principles. An examination of what happens in a community when a Negro family stops in front of a 'FOR SALE' sign. Dramatizes the unreason and prejudice which bar a solution to the integration problem in housing. - From the Prelinger Archive.
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  • When I was 6 yrs old in 1970 the first black family moved into our neighborhood. I barely remember but there was racist remarks among the adults. Anyway it was a young couple with no children.All of us little white kids were curious about them. I remember that lady was so nice .she was the sweetest person to all of us kids.Also I remember she invited some of us girls inside her home and was teaching us about fingernail care and soaking your fingernails in milk was healthy.she even demonstrated. I am 55 yrs old and I’ll never forget that. Kids aren’t racist , they’re curious. Racism is taught.I am thankful that my parents brought me up to love everyone.❤️

    @emmyloulovesyou5289@emmyloulovesyou52894 жыл бұрын
    • You had great parents who didn't curse you with a closed mind👍

      @billygrady6199@billygrady61994 жыл бұрын
    • Emmylou Loves you Amen

      @shananalexander9789@shananalexander97894 жыл бұрын
    • Emmylou Loves you If kids/children are racist, then you tell me why they grow up year after year killing Blacks for no reason at all. Why don’t you go make a statement like this to the news media and see what type of response you get. Do Not Insult My Intelligence. I am Black First.

      @mspeoples@mspeoples4 жыл бұрын
    • Sunshine Laugh idk I was just telling my story.

      @emmyloulovesyou5289@emmyloulovesyou52894 жыл бұрын
    • @Dustin StichOne having power over another.

      @Cin2023@Cin20234 жыл бұрын
  • My dad was born in 1933 and grew up very poor. That being said he lived in what he called the black community. His best friend was a black boy named Walter. Dad would get beat up on the 40s for walking around with his friend. Years later, when was dad passed away at the age of 76 I got to meet Walter at his funeral. What a hrsat man he was and spoke so highly of my dad. He told me dad never backed down and would always tell Walter to run cause he knew the kids would be harder on him. I'm glad I was able to be raised by a man that didn't judge people.

    @toystorycollector7025@toystorycollector702511 ай бұрын
    • How fortunate that Walter had your father as a friend.

      @avalon1108@avalon110811 ай бұрын
    • How fortunate for you - and all of us, that you were raised by such a Father.

      @georgestewart9739@georgestewart973911 ай бұрын
    • @toystorycollector7025 Have you considering selling your house and moving to the hood? It would be a wonderful way to prove that you don't judge people, with the added benefit of cultural diversity and enrichment. :) Chances are, you could easily sell YOUR house to a black family trying to live with white neighbors, and you could take their house.

      @commonmann3549@commonmann354911 ай бұрын
    • @@1rcuya1 That boy's daddy took a walk on the wild side.

      @commonmann3549@commonmann354911 ай бұрын
    • how lovely but unlikely

      @skutty5773@skutty577311 ай бұрын
  • I didn't watch this all the way through but it reminded me of a story the late Nat King Cole told of when he purchased a home in Beverly Hills. He said a group of his new neighbors came to his door and told him that they didn't want any 'undesirables' moving into their neighborhood. He just said to them, "Well if I see any, I'll let you know".

    @IvanRodriguez-hl4pg@IvanRodriguez-hl4pg11 ай бұрын
    • I never knew that, very profound (and true). Thanks for posting.

      @whaheydelee@whaheydelee11 ай бұрын
    • That is great!!!!!! They should have been honored to have him in their neighborhood. It’s not every day that a genius moves into the neighborhood!!!!!

      @kayhathaway6956@kayhathaway695611 ай бұрын
    • 😂😂😂😂

      @jeffmclaughlin6559@jeffmclaughlin655911 ай бұрын
    • Lol! MANNNNNNNNNNNN!

      @ericthomas151@ericthomas15111 ай бұрын
    • Nat King Cole should have made friends with lots of people who were near him. Everyone loves thar guy and he knew it. What a great voice and talent..

      @mclaurinisGODsSon2@mclaurinisGODsSon211 ай бұрын
  • In 1980 my family lived in a all white city. We had never interacted with different races and we displayed prejudices. We had a family move nextdoor to us that came from Kenya. We were up in arms and outraged our old neighbor sold to them. As the years went on, we learned so much from them, they were the most beautiful people, the wife would cook us food and treats and eventually they became my parents closest friends. Taking holidays together and nights on the porch chatting. Unfortunately they've both passed on recently but they educated our minds and I'm so thankful they taught us we're all the same and they broke the cycle of ignorance in my family.

    @Tombzy@Tombzy11 ай бұрын
    • It was good for your family to be open to new friends.

      @BethBurns68@BethBurns6810 ай бұрын
    • Eh. Real Africans who come here are really solid people. The mud-bloods who claim they could be kangz, on the other hand, are typically anything but.

      @peoplethesedaysberetarded@peoplethesedaysberetarded10 ай бұрын
    • Dude this was beautiful. I’m sorry but racism needs to stop being met with anger sometimes it’s truly just a misunderstanding and fear/stereotypes. After a few convos we will all be cooking Kenyan recipes with one another regardless of where one falls on the color wheel haha

      @hotmess9640@hotmess96409 ай бұрын
    • I think native African transplants behave differently than afro American sub culture

      @LucicPower@LucicPower8 ай бұрын
    • @@LucicPower they sure do. Not even the same species as American blacks. Every African (Kenyan, Ugandan, Congolese, Nigerian) I’ve ever known who has come here has been hard-working and law-abiding, with a strong emphasis on family.

      @peoplethesedaysberetarded@peoplethesedaysberetarded8 ай бұрын
  • Fifty years ago I came home from school to find two black kids playing on my swing set. Me n the girl became best friends till they moved away....now fifty years later we find that she works near the same town I now live in! We met for coffee and it was as if we’ve never been apart...

    @shockawha9@shockawha94 жыл бұрын
    • Thats so beutifull

      @LaMaruuuu@LaMaruuuu3 жыл бұрын
    • 💜

      @sensimania@sensimania3 жыл бұрын
    • that makes me so happy :)

      @totalbruhmoment4699@totalbruhmoment46993 жыл бұрын
    • Thats amazing! I'm happy you were able to rekindle that friendship from all those years ago. America needs more togetherness

      @Osprey1@Osprey13 жыл бұрын
    • That's very moving thank you for sharing

      @Kennychiwah1@Kennychiwah13 жыл бұрын
  • Good enough to cook their food, provide child and elder care, cleaning their homes, but not good enough to live next door.

    @amiranieves5254@amiranieves52543 жыл бұрын
    • Oh the irony! 😢😢

      @vio3366@vio33663 жыл бұрын
    • @coffeeinthemorning yes 🥰

      @sheilahawkins2506@sheilahawkins25063 жыл бұрын
    • Provide better ever than a husband, didn't provide for children but literally raised them. Second Mommies. Better wives than theirs too. Peace and thank you for raising such great ancestors for all of us. We're all mixed in by now. Love to all.

      @jwilcox4726@jwilcox47263 жыл бұрын
    • That was then this is now. Learn from the past as not to repeat it🙄

      @jacquelinerussell8530@jacquelinerussell85303 жыл бұрын
    • Yass

      @onlyfans.alycatrawr@onlyfans.alycatrawr3 жыл бұрын
  • Born and raised in Oklahoma. My grandma lived in a small town on 11 acres, not many people live there now. But the town had segregated white and black, home's and school's. There was the sweetest lady that lived down from my grandma. Her name was Ms. Johnson. I used to get in trouble all the time because my grandma thought that I was bothering Ms. Johnson. The thing was, Ms Johnson always had a kind word, always had a smile, and as poor as she was always offered me something to eat! I loved this lady because she showed me the kindest and sweetest person full of love and life. There wasn't any color to me. She was what I wanted to be. So, Ms Johnson, you've been gone since the seventies and I was such a young girl. I wish I could have told you how I really felt. But grandma thought I bothered you too much. I always made excuses to come visit ❤ RIP Grandma Juanita RIP Ms Johnson

    @ChasingRainbows67@ChasingRainbows6711 ай бұрын
    • Ye’s

      @johnnylongfeather3086@johnnylongfeather308610 ай бұрын
    • My dad was from kingfisher County Oklahoma. There were alot of good people white and black in the area.

      @marlanscott2508@marlanscott25089 ай бұрын
    • What about native Americans and other races?

      @rockyrobleedo3008@rockyrobleedo30089 ай бұрын
    • @@marlanscott2508what about native Americans and other races?

      @rockyrobleedo3008@rockyrobleedo30089 ай бұрын
    • @@rockyrobleedo3008 this certainly was native land to begin with. I have much respect for the native people. We have an all Indian center in the city that I live in.

      @marlanscott2508@marlanscott25089 ай бұрын
  • My dad grew up in the 30s and 40s in dirt poor Mississippi. He was one of the most unprejudiced men I've ever known. People of good will have always existed, in every era of time. Racism is a disease of the soul.

    @ogrelogre8429@ogrelogre842911 ай бұрын
    • The word 'racism' was invented in the early 20th century America. Can you Americans please leave the English language alone. Scott Adams said what?

      @andrewbarry6702@andrewbarry670211 ай бұрын
    • @@andrewbarry6702 What an oddly irrelevant comment.

      @ogrelogre8429@ogrelogre842911 ай бұрын
    • @@andrewbarry6702 Er.......what the......

      @QuadriviumNumbers@QuadriviumNumbers11 ай бұрын
    • @@andrewbarry6702 Who gives a fck......

      @GorillaCrewWarGaming@GorillaCrewWarGaming10 ай бұрын
    • It isn't always a case of racism. All people don't have to live together. Who cares if a town filled with only African Americans exists? People have a right to live as they wish, provided that wish doesn't infringe on another. People who like multiculturalism and diversity can live in communities which support it. Ideally, everyone could be happy. I wouldn't care if there was an Italian only community or a Native American only community. Oh, wait! There are already native American communities. They are called, "reservations" or, "rez" in Native American parlance. The Amish and Mennonite Christian faiths have there own communities. I support them in their desires to keep their lives free of 'worldly things', for lack of a better phrase. To keep any potential trouble outside of their little slice of paradise on God's green Earth. This might be the closest thing to Heaven on Earth. Living amongst one's own. Every citizen living within the reality of his fellow citizens. Doing business with other communities of native Americans, Peruvians, African Americans and other people of color*. *those of the darker persuasion, dark because their ancestors lived where being dark was considered an asset for a great many reasons including protection from the sun diurnally and protection from animals whilst foraging nocturnally. Presumably. American Educator Stedman Graham just shed 357 pounds of ugly fat simply by divorcing Oprah Winfrey.

      @Wolfshield7@Wolfshield710 ай бұрын
  • The children don't know about racism until they learn it from their parents. Children just make new friends and play.

    @RealEyes.Realize.RealLies@RealEyes.Realize.RealLies5 жыл бұрын
    • @Stay Wok Exactly!!Children(and people in general) are a product of their environment.Most kids(idk about now,but back then when i was growing up)idolized their parents,especially their fathers,as they were the "head of the household.What they believed was the gospel truth and kids assumed that all the ignorance was written in stone with blood!I grew up in Ca. where it wasnt(as a rule) as prominent as say,the southern states.I didnt know my parents "stand" on other races or even KNEW anything about other races really.I lived in Saratoga where everybody was white.I was SO THRILLED(unlike our neighbors) when a black family moved into the neighborhood!I came home from school and told my mom"Susie thinks SHES got a tan.Theres a new girl at school who has the greatest tan i have ever seen.Can i ask her over to play?When she found out that she was black,she laughed so hard!Thank goodness my parents werent racist.The neighbors would stare when she would come over.I thought they were just jeolous bc my friend was special and different.WHEN I FOUND OUT THAT PEOPLE IN THE SOUTH EVER,MUCH LESS STILL HAS SEPERATE PUBLIC RESTROOMS,EATING PLACES,SIGNS THAT SAID WHITES ONLY I WAS SPEECHLESS.HOW COULD THIS BE???TEACH UR CHILDREN WELL(sorry for the rant)

      @karenyoung7133@karenyoung71335 жыл бұрын
    • But eventually the children do learn to practice racism and come understand what it means to be white. Racism is practiced by white man, white woman and white child.

      @brabea23@brabea235 жыл бұрын
    • Afrika Rising -Anyone of any ethnicities can be racist.

      @loki2240@loki22404 жыл бұрын
    • @loki2240 Then explain how any ethnicity practices racism against white people.

      @brabea23@brabea234 жыл бұрын
    • Stay Woke Absolutely...

      @tmalone2648@tmalone26484 жыл бұрын
  • I am still waiting for the narrator to say...Here on this street which just happens to be in...the Twilight Zone.

    @messenger2102@messenger21025 жыл бұрын
    • Exactly 😅😅😅damn..so sad

      @tiffanyfoy1039@tiffanyfoy10395 жыл бұрын
    • messenger2102 Lol I was thinking the same thing.

      @sharonwalia4162@sharonwalia41625 жыл бұрын
    • messenger2102 😤😤😤😁😁😁😁😀😀 True !!

      @sharrigarvin3348@sharrigarvin33485 жыл бұрын
    • messenger2102 😂😂😂😂😂

      @Gwenethism@Gwenethism5 жыл бұрын
    • I was about to say the same dam thing until I read your comment. Thief. You stole my thoughts. Lol

      @harrysmovies4553@harrysmovies45535 жыл бұрын
  • Really good. When I was a kid, perhaps 6 or 7, I came running to my grandmother's car from a day at summer school, with a couple of friends that I had made that day: twin black girls. I always remembered the shocked & appalled look on GM's face when she pulled me into the car and said, "you can't play with THEM!". I never understood why, though she tried to "explain" to me. Sadly, my new friends must've seen or heard her; I never saw them again, which was a real loss. Wish there'd been shorts like that I could have shown to my grandmother and grandfather.

    @scottstrain8388@scottstrain8388 Жыл бұрын
    • Daam yr grandma was racist..wat year was dat

      @IslandmonGanjamon@IslandmonGanjamon Жыл бұрын
    • Unfortunately it probably wouldn't have mattered what you showed them

      @jasonwoodley3243@jasonwoodley324311 ай бұрын
  • Wonder what this neighborhood looks like today?

    @chess1458@chess145811 ай бұрын
  • This is like an episode of the Twilight Zone, except it's REAL.

    @shinbakihanma2749@shinbakihanma27493 жыл бұрын
    • I thought of the Twilight Zone immediately

      @tamlarse@tamlarse2 жыл бұрын
    • It struck me the same way!

      @TheCalico72@TheCalico722 жыл бұрын
    • Exactly what I thought!

      @gtron7692@gtron76922 жыл бұрын
    • Sadly it is. Land of the FREE

      @diduck6878@diduck68782 жыл бұрын
    • Jim crow twilight zone

      @whitenuttergoku7310@whitenuttergoku73102 жыл бұрын
  • My parents bought a house in a coveted “white” Seattle neighborhood in 1958 for $8,500.00. I own it now and it’s worth about 1.5 million. I’m no mathematician (...just a lowly engineer), but I’d say that’s a pretty good appreciation rate.

    @ethanthomas68@ethanthomas683 жыл бұрын
    • Seems pricey for back then tbh, a house that cost $8.5k and was bought in 1958, I personally would want a return of at least $3million, still maybe I am just being greedy and basing it on prices of where I live 🤷

      @kuchikopi4631@kuchikopi46312 жыл бұрын
    • You better hope some Mexican doesn't move in next door and cause your property value to drop.

      @ZDiddy7777@ZDiddy77772 жыл бұрын
    • @@kuchikopi4631 she was a black woman. It was still legal to discriminate against ppl of color especially in banking

      @hashslingingslasher4214@hashslingingslasher42142 жыл бұрын
    • @@kuchikopi4631 more than likely….. they Hit her with the old “black” tax

      @hashslingingslasher4214@hashslingingslasher42142 жыл бұрын
    • @@ZDiddy7777 that's exactly the point of the flick. I'm Hispanic. Bought a home in an all white neighborhood. I get bad looks when I change my own oil in my garage. I don't park my car on the lawn. Why? Because I made half my front lawn a driveway. Then guess what, suddenly my neighbors starting having bigger driveways and less front lawn. Funny, my house is now worth $50,000 more than I bought it for. Thanks to a Hispanic moving in an all white neighborhood

      @user-fb2jb3gz1d@user-fb2jb3gz1d2 жыл бұрын
  • Look at Cleveland, Detroit Chicago, Philadelphia. Personally I don't dislike anyone until they give me a reason to. Thank you for posting this.

    @bertram46@bertram4611 ай бұрын
  • It was worth the watch. I thoroughly enjoyed this movie. It was short, but long enough to make the point!!!! The writer and director did an excellent story to help communities see themselves for change.

    @chaplainred4263@chaplainred426311 ай бұрын
    • @Hello there, how are you doing this blessed day?

      @edithbannerman4@edithbannerman47 ай бұрын
  • I dont give 2 chits who lives next door to me as long as they are good ppl.

    @wendydayz6673@wendydayz66734 жыл бұрын
    • Right 👏

      @beatricephilistin5982@beatricephilistin59823 жыл бұрын
    • 👏🏾 great deflection response! But really, I do commend your willingness to allow anyone to live next door to you... Thank you 😉! However, the context here is NOT about “giving 2 chits who live next door....”, but about ... a black family... next door. COVID-19 isn’t the only Pandemic that’s a problem today. But, like Covid-19 there are many bigoted people that are asymptomatic and blind to their true condition/status! But no hate from me, i‘m just glad that at least some type of conversation seems to have started...

      @suffa07@suffa073 жыл бұрын
    • @@suffa07 i met a lot of those " im not racist, but .." they want to sympathized with out losing their racist prejudice.

      @NatyzDork@NatyzDork3 жыл бұрын
    • Esmeralda Martinez so true! ...great observation.

      @suffa07@suffa073 жыл бұрын
    • @@NatyzDork did I imply that somehow?

      @wendydayz6673@wendydayz66733 жыл бұрын
  • Why is this starting like a scary movie??? 🤣😂 I'm so nervous 🤣

    @frediaallure2528@frediaallure25283 жыл бұрын
    • Because it is terrifying.

      @karieslone4620@karieslone46203 жыл бұрын
    • @@karieslone4620 Always remember to repent of your sins (sin is transgression of YAHUAH’S LAW: Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers, & Deuteronomy) And Have Belief On YAHUSHA HAMASHYACH. HE Died and Rose three days later so that you can be forgiven of your sins! HE Loves you! Come to HIM!🙂🙂

      @ReyBanYAHUAH@ReyBanYAHUAH3 жыл бұрын
    • It is a scary movie for the Black people.

      @BronzeSista@BronzeSista3 жыл бұрын
    • 🤣🤣🤣

      @cha-ka8671@cha-ka86713 жыл бұрын
    • because it's like real life living amongst these racist psychopaths

      @thehoneyeffect@thehoneyeffect3 жыл бұрын
  • Great video mate. Cheers for uploading it. It's amazing how times change

    @hippy282@hippy28211 ай бұрын
  • Thank you Reelblack One, for yet another brilliantly curated find. It resonates to me as a 70-year-old white Southerner, and I wish my small-town "community" had seen something like this. Unfortunately I'm pretty sure it wouldn't have mattered a parlor damn; even after all these years it still pisses me off that I wasn't allowed to invite my friend Pearl to my fifth birthday party for reasons I didn't understand at the time, and still don't. Not then, not now, not ever.

    @CarrboroMIW@CarrboroMIW8 ай бұрын
    • Thank you

      @reelblack@reelblack8 ай бұрын
  • I'm so glad that this film was set in the North. The South is always stigmatised for racism and segregation yet the North was virtually the same !!!

    @tdonovan4735@tdonovan47355 жыл бұрын
    • NYC is the most racist place you’ll ever live in. Blacks have no economic function there.

      @118Columbus@118Columbus5 жыл бұрын
    • @@lordsesshoumaru8596 The things you watch... It's always people who have your digital diet that always seem to be seeking superiority when it comes to blacks or women. No one is inferior to you.

      @today8488@today84885 жыл бұрын
    • I had an African-American youth put it to me this way. "Up north, you can be equal, just don't be close. Down south, you can get close, but don't think you're equal." I've always been ticked at how every time something happened that was racist and not in the south, "Oh, we've moved on from that. That's an isolated incident. We're not like they are in the south." It was like northerners didn't have to deal with their own bigotries if they could still point at the south and say, "they're the racists. We're not like them in the south." You look at history of the last forty years, it seems there was more racist encounters in northern and western locations than in the south. But tell a northerner that and they'll bring up Emmet Till and the civil rights workers killed in '63. I wasn't even born when those happened.

      @2up3rm4n1@2up3rm4n14 жыл бұрын
    • The north was in no way as racist as the south although racism in the north did most certainly exist

      @mjsmith8641@mjsmith86414 жыл бұрын
    • @@mjsmith8641 Yes, you're right. The south is responsible for keeping black people out of film and television until the entertainment biz got the balls to defy us, our bigotry was so strong. Our racism was so defiant! The problem today is obviously clinging to a past and stating the south was more racist. We don't have an out and are forced to deal with our bigotry, whereas northerners have always relied on insisting, "we're not as racist as THEY were," without resolving any issues. "No, we're not racist. That was a misunderstanding. That was an isolated incident. We're not racist like they WERE in the south. We're not THAT bad." And when the south does have an altercation of any kind, as we still have had happen, never said the south wasn't racist, "oh, that's the way THEY are down there. They always have been that way." As long as someone feels they can point at someone else as being worse, they never will deal with their own problems. Look up the names Willie Turks, Bernard Goetz, Michael Griffith, Yusuf Hawkins, Charles and Carol Stuart, Tawana Brawley, all of which were followed by Rodney King and OJ Simpson sometime. Yes, those were all in the past. That's not how ALL northerners were. Not like we were in the south. James Craig Anderson was killed in Jackson, MS, in 2011, because that's the way WE are in the south, right?

      @2up3rm4n1@2up3rm4n14 жыл бұрын
  • Rod Sterling was before his time he spoke out about racism, him being the narrator doesn't surprise me, listen Everytime he narrates, he is telling truths

    @jazminrodriguez9026@jazminrodriguez90263 жыл бұрын
    • The narrator isn’t Rod Serling.

      @E.L.RipleyAtNostromo@E.L.RipleyAtNostromo3 жыл бұрын
    • The name is Rod SERLING, not Sterling.🙏🏿

      @roderickmiles5889@roderickmiles58893 жыл бұрын
    • And besides, this is not narrated by him.🙄

      @roderickmiles5889@roderickmiles58893 жыл бұрын
    • I thought it was him too!

      @chelseacco7567@chelseacco75673 жыл бұрын
    • It's simply the cadence of his spoken word delivery. It' s emphatic abd serious lije Rod's opening monologue but yes you could pissibly compare this to tge epusode I belueve was title " The mobster on Main Street " All the neighbirs were terrified there was a impersonatibg alien in there midst. Hystetia and paranoia ensues. Lol. Not too far off from this scenario huh??

      @deborahwalsh2953@deborahwalsh29533 жыл бұрын
  • I’m in England and many years ago, when I was a toddler, a black, American army family moved next door. I don’t remember them, but my late mum loved them. Both our families were friends and the mum of the family gave my mum some beautiful American baby clothes for me. The children were called Laverne, Bobby and, I think Frizby. Although Frizby could have been a nick name. Anyway, my family spoke about them often and we had photos of them with me and my brother.

    @borleyboo5613@borleyboo561311 ай бұрын
  • My life story, I WAS the black family that moved in, this movie depicts what is possible. My Dad having to CLEAN his guns on the porch for a WEEKEND, is the only way we got the death threats to stop, Corporate brat, (Kodak, Levis, Prudential) moved 18x by the time I was 18,

    @jhinwsmite9117@jhinwsmite9117 Жыл бұрын
    • Yah sure

      @WitchKing-Of-Angmar@WitchKing-Of-Angmar Жыл бұрын
  • I don't care what colour or religion anyone is, if they are nice to me, I'm nice to them. It's as simple as that.

    @smokeycat6954@smokeycat69545 жыл бұрын
    • Smokey Cat I agree with you but I really wish it was that simple!

      @markwoods4439@markwoods44395 жыл бұрын
    • Nope its not that simple ... white supremacy is built into the fabric of this country

      @retoniabrashier1977@retoniabrashier19775 жыл бұрын
    • Retonia Brashier Sorry don't agree with that, I live in Scotland, I have never heard anyone making racist comments. It is not tolerated here.

      @smokeycat6954@smokeycat69545 жыл бұрын
    • Smokey Cat I am glad to hear that but how many black people live in Scotland. And how many live in your neighborhood?

      @markwoods4439@markwoods44395 жыл бұрын
    • Thank You Smokey Cat

      @charlesmelonson1912@charlesmelonson19125 жыл бұрын
  • All of those phones ringing simultaneously sound almost as crazy as the people making the calls.

    @drwpsych@drwpsych3 жыл бұрын
  • I grew up in St Joseph Missouri in the seventies. The schools were still segregated by the way the school zones for attendance were drawn. Late seventies the boundaries were redrawn and I was now in an interracial school. Best thing that could happen as we actually got to meet and know black folks.

    @roberturich1813@roberturich181311 ай бұрын
    • And you couldn’t do that on your own? I did

      @chriscampbell7895@chriscampbell789510 ай бұрын
    • @@chriscampbell7895 desegregation of schools was often done via busing. That means most neighborhoods were still segregated. Depending on where you lived you might have no other opportunity to meet children of a different race.

      @gevansmd@gevansmd6 ай бұрын
  • Had a black family move right next door (60's) they were VERY good people. Played with them a lot, we were young ranging in ages 3 to 12. Funny how when you're young skin color doesn't matter.

    @vernexport@vernexport11 ай бұрын
  • Great film. I have never understood what IT was about black people that was so undesirable. Every RACE has BAD people. Distinguish the bad from good by character, NOT color.

    @Kwaldon24@Kwaldon245 жыл бұрын
    • I'm white I grew up in a racially mixed neighborhood, and as you say there are good people of all different colors I had no problem with anybody based on race

      @ralphmelvin1046@ralphmelvin10465 жыл бұрын
    • Kena W when you know who you are then you will know why your hated

      @3rdeyedread750@3rdeyedread7505 жыл бұрын
    • That's easy to say when you have intelligence, a soul and you're not a hybrid of a human.

      @skysthelimitforeveryoung3437@skysthelimitforeveryoung34375 жыл бұрын
    • @@3rdeyedread750 2

      @homerroussaw519@homerroussaw5195 жыл бұрын
    • J Gunn it was blacks who civilized your nasty ancestors who never took a bath or brush their teeth. Your just jealous you ain’t black

      @3rdeyedread750@3rdeyedread7504 жыл бұрын
  • Damn...she was calling everyone on the block...phones ringing off the hook...damn!! Lol

    @fitnessguru8012@fitnessguru80125 жыл бұрын
    • 😂🤣😅🤣😂🤣😅🤣😂

      @user-mj8nf2vp7q@user-mj8nf2vp7q5 жыл бұрын
    • The two women first called others and others were calling others and others were calling others. Those telephone were busy ringing and the lines were jam packed.

      @childoftheking7773@childoftheking77735 жыл бұрын
    • @@childoftheking7773 #4reals

      @fitnessguru8012@fitnessguru80125 жыл бұрын
    • Fear is one hell of a motivator.

      @adrianjohnson1486@adrianjohnson14864 жыл бұрын
    • And 15yrs later The Sylvers cashed in on the song inspired by Whitey. Hot line, hot line Calling on the hot line ... Whitey always provides

      @postermark7173@postermark71734 жыл бұрын
  • PROFOUND...was so moved by this and the embedded wisdom--it's sad in some ways that the message didn't land back then in a way so many of us wish it had, BUT wonderful to know that great efforts like this DID happen, and surely still carries a message that's utterly timeless & of tremendous value...THANK YOU...❤...T.

    @tsimmons9680@tsimmons968011 ай бұрын
  • Watching the children play and holding hands reminded me if my childhood in the playground. We could learn so much from the innocence of children. They don't care about colour. They just want to have fun. Its the grown ups who are the problem.

    @Ebonygazelle@Ebonygazelle11 ай бұрын
  • I, personally have no desire to be anywhere that lacks a likeness of me. Lol, I don't want to be anywhere that privacy is not a priority, and common courtesy is not a requirement. Lol, bet you thought that I spoke of likeness of skin color...but; I spoke of personality and morality. I encourage everyone to live their best lives... out loud!!!

    @jahneastanfield2662@jahneastanfield26625 жыл бұрын
    • Amen

      @goodguy5595@goodguy55955 жыл бұрын
    • I grew up in an integrated neighborhood in The Bronx, NY. There have always been attitudes about race that I didn't (and still don't) understand at age 60. I agree with Ms. Stanfield. My parents brought me up properly. As a result, I gravitated to companions who were like-minded. Race wasn't even a factor. In reading some of the comments, I see that some may have given up hope. True, there is still much work to do, but, as long as one treats others as one want to be treated, that's a step in the right direction.

      @johnclemente9168@johnclemente91685 жыл бұрын
    • Everyone says that racism is learned by I don’t know. I grew up in an all whote area & with parents and grandparents who were extremely racist - out of fear, like this movie. Once I hit about age 10, it didn’t make sense to me. The black people I saw on Sesame Street and other TV shows really weren’t all that different than us, besides hair, obviously. We’d see black kids, parents and teachers when we went on field trips in school or to amusement parks and none of them had any desire to rape or kill us or rob us. The girls were so pretty with their hair in braids with beads. Their families were all there to have a good time like anyone else. It was then that I realized the fear was irrational. It wasn’t until I was a teen/early 20s that the crime rates started making sense. Of course there’s crime when people are desperate. Black people were not given the same opportunities for jobs and education... their ancestors weren’t allowed to own property, so a lot didn’t have property to pass on to an heir. I saw white people committing the same crimes but only getting a fraction of the punishment. So no, racism and hate isn’t learned. Sure, it’s taught... but anyone who has more than 2 brain cells should easily be able to see for themselves by age 10 that these stereotypes and fears are irrational.

      @cicibelarus1916@cicibelarus19163 жыл бұрын
    • Agreed

      @JayNit2@JayNit23 жыл бұрын
    • @kirk mitchell 😂

      @traceytracey3756@traceytracey37563 жыл бұрын
  • Love how Hollywood was able to portray themselves as themselves but somehow still manage to go on as if they didn't see their true nature.

    @augustdreams2634@augustdreams26344 жыл бұрын
    • They just lettin us kno that they kno whats up. Theyve always known. And we cant do shit aboit it

      @JayNit2@JayNit23 жыл бұрын
    • That part

      @MsTexas73@MsTexas733 жыл бұрын
    • @NoBody Wuvs Me umm hollywood? Tf

      @JayNit2@JayNit23 жыл бұрын
    • This wasn't a feature film. It was produced by an educational institution in New York. Please read.

      @eltiochusma@eltiochusma3 жыл бұрын
    • Yes it has changed a lot

      @colby9529@colby95293 жыл бұрын
  • As corny as this was, I found myself deeply moved. All the heroes of the civil rights movement, those we know and especially those who we don’t that often sacrificed their lives, are the last great heroes of the modern age. I’m biracial and I was born in the 90s in Southie in Boston, a neighborhood that had just been desegregated slowly over the previous decade, a neighborhood where tensions were still high. And that was where my black mom met my Irish dad. Thank you to the civil rights generation ❤

    @Jamietheroadrunner@Jamietheroadrunner5 ай бұрын
  • I moved, and rented my house to some frat boys. My neighbors treated me this same way. They weren't wrong.

    @fin_jan@fin_jan11 ай бұрын
  • I believe that you are not born racist, it is taught in the home.

    @troyransome1263@troyransome12633 жыл бұрын
    • True. God don't show favoritism, because we are all created in the image of God. We are all unique in God's eyesight. God is love, not hate. God's says for your pray enemies, Matthews 5:44; Romans 12:20.

      @dorothycook3181@dorothycook31812 жыл бұрын
    • Now, it's taught in the schools. But, everyone is OK with it today.

      @jeffreymartin8448@jeffreymartin84482 жыл бұрын
    • Everything you are is taught by not only your parents but your history environment and experiences

      @sitimaan5054@sitimaan50542 жыл бұрын
    • @@jeffreymartin8448 explain that ? What is taught in schools? Who is ok with what?

      @sitimaan5054@sitimaan50542 жыл бұрын
    • @@sitimaan5054 I am white. My daughter is half white. She came home from 3rd grade one day crying: "Daddy, why didn't you tell me you're white?". They taught her that day in school that her daddy is white and inherently racist. They've been poisoning her mind ever since.

      @jeffreymartin8448@jeffreymartin84482 жыл бұрын
  • TV has always portray themselves as pure good people but history tell a different story and the same

    @virginiamattry5820@virginiamattry58205 жыл бұрын
    • @Chuck Bible That's not completely true. LOUIE ARMSTRONG , CAB CALLOWAY, LENA HORNE, NAT KING COLE. FIRST AFRICAN-AMERICAN. VARIETY SHOW, DENZEL WASHINGTON, SAMUEL L JACKSON , JESSE JACKSON, REVEREND AL SHARPTON, QUEEN OF SOUL-ARETHA FRANKLIN, GODFATHER OF SOUL-JAMES BROWN , GLADYS KNIGHT, THE FOUR TOPS, THE TEMPTATIONS and the list continues.

      @creamcornsurprize6608@creamcornsurprize66085 жыл бұрын
    • @Chuck Bible No disrespect but CAB CALLOWAY was not seen as negative You are right about the horrible legacy of discrimination and hate but you wrote that tv Always portrays blacks as negative. my point is there are so many positive portrayals of black people and the talent that is showcased through tv

      @creamcornsurprize6608@creamcornsurprize66085 жыл бұрын
    • @@creamcornsurprize6608 Cicely Tyson (the most talented phenomenal actress black or white), James Earl Jones, Sidney Portier, Jimmy Walker, Richard Pryor, Eddy Murphy, Danny Glover, Diahann Carroll, Dionne Warwick, Redd Foxx, Sherman Hemsley, Isabel Sanford, Marla Gibbs, Roxie Roker, Lionel Richie, Todd Bridges, Gary Coleman, Debbie Allen; endless!

      5 жыл бұрын
    • Vee Israel very true

      @jaajaarogers9101@jaajaarogers91015 жыл бұрын
    • @Ricki B. Take a look in the bible to know who started slavery

      @creamcornsurprize6608@creamcornsurprize66084 жыл бұрын
  • Good people of world need to unite.

    @gerald6919@gerald6919 Жыл бұрын
  • My mom grew up in a small town in the 60s and she said at school they had an assembly to inform the students that a black family would be moving into town. They did tell the children to be nice to the new black family but it blew my mind that they had an assembly about it.

    @mamadoom9724@mamadoom972411 ай бұрын
    • 😮

      @tashalynn29@tashalynn2910 ай бұрын
  • Wow, a 1957's Barbecue Becky...look she's running into the house to call 911!

    @messenger2102@messenger21025 жыл бұрын
    • messenger2102 🙂🤔

      @paulhunter1525@paulhunter15255 жыл бұрын
    • Jacquline Pauley just like they wanted BW cooking their food

      @cammiosis@cammiosis5 жыл бұрын
    • messenger2102 , Very hilarious! So, so funny!

      @rickeyb.9072@rickeyb.90725 жыл бұрын
    • 😅😅😅😅😅

      @new_yawker901@new_yawker9015 жыл бұрын
    • I’m on your side, but shit a 1957 Becky was way worse and there were more...

      @chrismzac@chrismzac5 жыл бұрын
  • "A typical family from a middle class neighborhood in a typical American town. A family wants to sell. A family wants to buy. A simple transaction in every dimension. Except, in the Twilight Zone"

    @Pablo123456x@Pablo123456x5 жыл бұрын
    • Blind by choice??😙 Or does the old adage of ignorance being bliss, apply?😌 Or are you attempting to shoot a shot without revealing your weapon? 😳😯😶😏

      @jahneastanfield2662@jahneastanfield26625 жыл бұрын
    • Pablo... Exactly

      @Eveningbreeze721@Eveningbreeze7215 жыл бұрын
    • Unfortunately it's America. Not the twilight Zone

      @yolandadavis344@yolandadavis3444 жыл бұрын
    • :( yes Yolanda, it is. I'm sorry. I fight, my kids fight and my grandkids are being raised to fight too. There needs to be more white people fighting the bigotry. Stay safe 💙

      @maryohall7286@maryohall72863 жыл бұрын
    • If this were a Twilight Zone episode, all the racists would wake up black at the end. If only all racists could.

      @RLucas3000@RLucas30003 жыл бұрын
  • Thanks for this doc. Thanks SO MUCH!

    @elainedaprano9130@elainedaprano913010 ай бұрын
  • How do they think the native Americans feel when they came here and took their land...

    @MoorishAmerica7@MoorishAmerica75 жыл бұрын
    • Are you here in the US? The place you live was also taken. Not just the homes of the whites.

      @Farmer_El@Farmer_El5 жыл бұрын
    • We didn’t take it, we fought and died for it.

      @johnsmith-qe2fd@johnsmith-qe2fd5 жыл бұрын
    • These people who they call black,negro,are the Native American, you either went to the Reservation or the ghettos! Hidden truth!

      @adambrooks2297@adambrooks22975 жыл бұрын
    • @@johnsmith-qe2fd No u stole it! Doctrine of Discovery, Dom Diversa!

      @adambrooks2297@adambrooks22975 жыл бұрын
    • @charlie parker Colombus and his brother, the U.S Government archives,Desoto wrote about it,William Byrd 2 wrote about it the guy who founded Ritchmond VA! Its everywhere, not the bs they lie about in these schools!

      @adambrooks2297@adambrooks22975 жыл бұрын
  • I grew up in a racially mixed neighborhood. I can truly say it was the richest most rewarding experience I ever could have had.

    @stopcensorship7365@stopcensorship73653 жыл бұрын
    • Italians and Irish don’t count 😂🤣

      @bobsingh5521@bobsingh55212 жыл бұрын
    • @@bobsingh5521 it wasn't just Irish and Italian. It was Black White Asian and Hispanic. Mostly Black and White. But, we all got along fine.

      @stopcensorship7365@stopcensorship73652 жыл бұрын
    • Me too

      @saleemahfareed4790@saleemahfareed47902 жыл бұрын
    • thank God...so did I...there were Black, White & Hispanics that lived on my street...there were also a few gay people that lived on my street...2 of them, were lifelong friends...so, that's how diverse my neighborhood was...I honestly don't think we knew there was a racial difference, like that when I was growing up...it just Never came up in a conversation...I mean, Never...

      @toyaadams8167@toyaadams81672 жыл бұрын
    • @@toyaadams8167 we would have make believe race wars and be playing ball together the next day 😂. It wasn't a big deal.

      @stopcensorship7365@stopcensorship73652 жыл бұрын
  • It’s still happening here in 2023. Breaks my heart. I educate as much as I can whenever I hear ignorance from someone’s mouth towards black people. A black woman saved my life. She was the only person I ever met who CARED. And when she told me God loved me I finally believed. I truly feel sorry for racists. They miss out on so much. Love is God and God is love. Hate of any kind is the opposite of God. Love your neighbor as yourself. Not more than yourself. Not less than yourself. Jesus said as your self. Golden rule. We’re all one.❤

    @mariecait@mariecait11 ай бұрын
    • There are racists on both sides. And everyone has different experiences, but I wish I could end it all. Love is the key, and Jesus is the ultimate key.

      @trevorthompson330@trevorthompson33011 ай бұрын
    • 😂 no one cares about your wxird story go seek attention somewhere else ! Btw blks are racist too foh 🤡

      @Genovese11@Genovese1111 ай бұрын
    • I hope you don't think only white people are racists. I have had many experiences with black people as well. I have had black people tell me they only want black people to help them where I used to work because we worked on commission. These days many people believe that is okay but if a white person ever said that to a black person it would be all over the news.

      @timeforchange3786@timeforchange378611 ай бұрын
    • @@timeforchange3786 Exactly

      @trevorthompson330@trevorthompson33011 ай бұрын
    • @@timeforchange3786 white racism is much worse than black racism since whites definitely started it with the slave trade and calling themselves superior so your point isn’t that strong 💪🏾

      @PraveenSriram@PraveenSriram11 ай бұрын
  • I love these old school movies 🎬 reminds me of my great great great grandparents 😊they would tell me stories about this when i was little

    @kialljacobs8331@kialljacobs833111 ай бұрын
  • I emigrated to the U.S. from Canada after meeting an African-American woman who wanted to move back to the states. We ended up in CT and were looking for a place to live (this was 1977). I didn't understand why she sent me alone to look for apartments and I thought I had one. Then we both went to look at it and the landlord said the place had been rented in the few hours that passed. Ironically that whole neighborhood had become mostly black by the 90s and now is mostly Hispanic. Housing discrimination is real and hasn't changed that much.

    @othercarib@othercarib2 жыл бұрын
    • I have a black neighbor and they are the.most kind and helpful neighbors you could hope to have. I am in my 80s have had many neighbors but not not as good as them..

      @richardsantamaria4680@richardsantamaria4680 Жыл бұрын
    • Hispanic is not a race . All Spanish speaking and Portuguese speaking countries are known as Hispanic countries . Hispanics can be pure White European descendants , Black African descendants Hispanic , Mixed race Hispanics , Indegenous Hispanics etc - . Do you know that 50% of Brazilian population out of 200 million are Pure White Europeans descendants . Argentina is 90% White country ( Most Argentina people are Italians or Spaniards) .

      @bobfaam5215@bobfaam5215 Жыл бұрын
    • @Josh TylerPortuguese is considered part of Hispanic because it is very similar to Spanish . And they are of same language family.

      @bobfaam5215@bobfaam5215 Жыл бұрын
    • CT ?? Where is that sorry my ignorance I’m not from The USA 🇬🇧

      @lucaschapman2188@lucaschapman218811 ай бұрын
    • @@lucaschapman2188 It's the abbreviation for the state of Connecticut, on the east coast.

      @TheREALJosephTurner@TheREALJosephTurner11 ай бұрын
  • My family was one of the first black families to move to a white neighborhood in Houston in 1972 and I remember cross burnings, rocks thrown through windows and new surrounding houses immediately going up for sale. Some didn't want me coming to the neighborhood pool. It was not an easy thing. Could you imagine explaining this to your child?

    @vernongamble1115@vernongamble11153 жыл бұрын
    • My father made it a point to teach me that all people should be respected. ❤❤❤

      @Mary_Beth_Reimer@Mary_Beth_Reimer11 ай бұрын
    • Thank you for your endurance so that we can be free. You are strong

      @76shian@76shian11 ай бұрын
    • Sorry you had to go through this.. my people are evil as sin

      @xxxbrooklyn@xxxbrooklyn11 ай бұрын
    • Doubtful, sorry but everyone seems to have same story. Yeah it happened a lot but not as much as the people making these comments

      @chriscampbell7895@chriscampbell789510 ай бұрын
    • And there weren't any negative actions by black people first or after? Crime for instance. Or just totally innocent? In my experience the real deep and dangerous racism comes from black people more often. Not to say there aren't tons of awesome black people. True enough but we can't ignore facts. Even if it's just our experience.

      @manfrummt@manfrummt10 ай бұрын
  • The good ole days I miss it I was born in the 60s would love to go back to it

    @NTWJVIP@NTWJVIP10 ай бұрын
  • Thanks for sharing love it 💪✊✌️

    @mackattack8627@mackattack862711 ай бұрын
  • My dearest and closest friend I met when I was 19 at work. I helped her with a report she had to complete as she was having problems operating a mag card typewriter lol. She was new to it. I stayed behind and helped her. I am 62 now and she is still my dearest and closest friend. I loved when we went out for dinner or a special occasion as people would Iook AND keep looking either at her ebony smooth skin, or my China doll white skin. Either way as I married and had children, our families blended. She is as much a part of my family as my family is of hers. I don't see colour. I see goodness, decency, character and morals. That is why we were and still are friends, and will continue to be. My dear sweet sweet Maria, I'm so grateful for your friendship and for you being part of my life ❤

    @l.b.5892@l.b.58923 жыл бұрын
    • You sound just like me. I met Athena (not her real name) at college in Texas when we were both freshmen in 1986. I am white, she is black. We hit it off immediately over mutual interests and we've been friends ever since then. We live 250 miles apart but we have been chatting with each other for almost 40 years. We also visit each other in our own home towns. The only people who look funny at us when we're out at restaurants or other public places are the "woke" white liberals who think they have to treat us differently because we're together. SMH...

      @zabadazidit@zabadazidit3 жыл бұрын
    • Those folks aren't liberal or woke....not real like this story.

      @djeanthequeen8247@djeanthequeen82472 жыл бұрын
    • That is the most beautiful story L.B. God bless you and your friend Maria ❤

      @AG-kr1my@AG-kr1my2 жыл бұрын
    • How lovely. 💕😁💕

      @lindyjourde7411@lindyjourde74112 жыл бұрын
    • "My China doll white skin"...oh please!

      @oliviamartini9700@oliviamartini9700 Жыл бұрын
  • Thank you for posting this. I was born the year it was made. My father was very bigoted. Not just blacks, but Jews, Polish, Italians..basically anyone who wasn't Irish. I moved out at 17 because of it. Now I'm a Grandmother of 4. My kids are GenX'rs. I raised them properly without prejudice to any group. They grew into wonderful human beings and have helped me to understand what is happening now in 2020. It's all so very sad. We are one...humans. I hope to live long enough for *everyone* to finally understand this. It's up to each and every one of us. Please let's make it happen~

    @AGirlHasNoName829@AGirlHasNoName8293 жыл бұрын
    • As an Irish man he should have known better.

      @ludy41@ludy413 жыл бұрын
    • ....addition. My son made this video of my inlaws life (white's in the south). They were wonderful people. Not everyone was racist kzhead.info/sun/m5eAaNmhb2prkoU/bejne.html

      @AGirlHasNoName829@AGirlHasNoName8293 жыл бұрын
    • Well said!! ❤️❤️

      @nicolewright5342@nicolewright53422 жыл бұрын
    • Good job bring your children up the Bible book of Proverbs c 22 v 6 Train up a boy in the way he should go even when he grows old it will not depart from him peace to you Eileen

      @jager896@jager8962 жыл бұрын
    • As an Italian lady, i thank you, for sticking up for us! xxxx

      @twinkle3026@twinkle30262 жыл бұрын
  • WE NEED MORE FILMS ON THIS TOPIC SHOWN AND MADE. THESE OLDER FILMS HIT HOME.

    @tonysmith5878@tonysmith587811 ай бұрын
    • Any shows that will say the word negroes on tv should be Emmy nominated

      @cutter-lk8iw@cutter-lk8iw10 ай бұрын
  • In the early-70s a black couple was preparing to close on a house down the street when some of yhe neighbors pooled their money and bought the house out from under them. It was truly despicable.

    @justmeandthethree@justmeandthethree5 ай бұрын
  • Boy this IS the Twilight Zone. All those middle class white men taking the bus in the suburbs.

    @jameswillett7186@jameswillett71865 жыл бұрын
    • Totally gave me Twilight Zone vibes. I adore that show.

      @sun.sh.in.e@sun.sh.in.e3 жыл бұрын
    • There was a time when many people took public transportation to and from work or school.

      @24gmj2010@24gmj20103 жыл бұрын
    • It sounds like rod serling

      @devyncampbell3210@devyncampbell32103 жыл бұрын
    • Back whites COULD use public transportation. Now, do so at your own risk!

      @daleandrews9356@daleandrews93563 жыл бұрын
    • there was a spell where I did not have a car and had to take the bus. I was thankful it was available, but what a hassle. This was before cell phones and uber. I wondered how people did it on a daily basis. I got dropped off in a few neighborhoods, where I had no idea where I was, since I got on the wrong line and branch. Oh, the fond memories. It beat walking.

      @kfl611@kfl6113 жыл бұрын
  • "What are they so afraid of? They think we're gonna eat 'em?" "No, marry 'em!" _ A Raisin in the Sun

    @theromulanwarhawk@theromulanwarhawk3 жыл бұрын
    • Love it

      @justicelord3470@justicelord34703 жыл бұрын
    • One of the best movies ever made.

      @Archer335@Archer3353 жыл бұрын
    • god 4bd u outshine thm!

      @lauranovak8407@lauranovak84073 жыл бұрын
    • They’re not afraid, they just want to have their own white world and not have anybody else in it They enjoy and thrive when surrounded by their own race.

      @user-cf9np9cy8q@user-cf9np9cy8q2 жыл бұрын
    • @@user-cf9np9cy8q Only 16% of the planet is White. Why are so against such a small minority? Will you ever break free from your own racism? Doubtful the world ever will. Whites are the most opposed and discriminated demographic in the world today.

      @jeffreymartin8448@jeffreymartin84482 жыл бұрын
  • “Look at those housing projects in the city, they’re not ghettoes” lol had me 💀

    @yaboipele34@yaboipele3410 ай бұрын
  • If you yell Hi Neighbors these days they will take it wrong and shoot at you.... they're a peculiar animal....and dangerous.

    @_stardust62@_stardust6211 ай бұрын
  • I live in an all black neighborhood and have never wanted to live anywhere near whites and I'm age 63 and have lived in this home for 39 years.

    @N2LADIES55@N2LADIES555 жыл бұрын
    • N2LADIES55 😍💯

      @LUCIFER.LUX666@LUCIFER.LUX6665 жыл бұрын
    • God bless u

      @eveymonique32@eveymonique325 жыл бұрын
    • AND IT FEEL NORMAL RIGHT LESS PROBLEMS

      @dequadrewalton2582@dequadrewalton25825 жыл бұрын
    • Good for you

      @edrow72sexton19@edrow72sexton195 жыл бұрын
    • there was a old white lady she passed away now, but she had lived in our neighborhood. i knew her every since i was a little boy iam 43 now and it's and all black neighborhood but she lived there when it use to be an all white neighborhood and blacks where not allowed in that part of town. she use to ride the bus back then and tell her death and it was nice to hear her talk about the changes that she's seen and been in and i was always amazed at how that she grew up in that time period but didn't take on the hate that was at that time and because of that the neighborhood took care of her. When she died the neighbors made sure she had a wonderful funeral. the family didn't have to pay for a think. everybody came through for them.

      @dredaylarue@dredaylarue5 жыл бұрын
  • “Any place where a person is shut in or shut out because of the color of their skin, is a GHETTO.” And I oop- he said it not me. 🤷🏾‍♀️

    @sunkissedtpp@sunkissedtpp5 жыл бұрын
    • Women of Brewster Place was a good example of that ..a must read or watch

      @arelles13@arelles134 жыл бұрын
    • So is Chinatown a ghetto is little Italy a ghetto is Korea Town a ghetto..no..a ghetto is when you have a bunch of low vibrational people all surrounding each other that's a ghetto

      @highervibration3259@highervibration32593 жыл бұрын
    • Higher Vibration that’s the hood you describing lol ghetto places are impoverished period

      @FCLaney@FCLaney3 жыл бұрын
    • And I- oop you made me laugh I love that video

      @chatequaholliday9580@chatequaholliday95803 жыл бұрын
    • He told the TRUTH, AND NOTHING BUT THE TRUTH!

      @valeriejwade_94@valeriejwade_942 жыл бұрын
  • As a Black man, I found this hilarious!

    @Black_Patriot-Veteran-1970@Black_Patriot-Veteran-197011 ай бұрын
    • …but…it still exists

      @martharomo1342@martharomo134210 ай бұрын
    • @@martharomo1342 ...and...what....

      @Black_Patriot-Veteran-1970@Black_Patriot-Veteran-197010 ай бұрын
    • @@martharomo1342 Martha gets 100 equality points. She down with brown

      @cutter-lk8iw@cutter-lk8iw10 ай бұрын
    • 😮yooo me too😅

      @liddyw88@liddyw8810 ай бұрын
    • I didn't. I Remember in the early 70's when my family moved up north. The neighbors were friendly to our faces but later we discovered that many of then had signed a petition trying to keep us out of the neighborhood even before we had officially moved in. Not that we were surprised.

      @locadisa@locadisa10 ай бұрын
  • And just look what Dearborn is today. A sparkling jewel of a city bursting at the seems with multiculturalism and love for all. Dearborn is everything that Democrats have dreamed of. Ask them, they will tell you.

    @MitchBast-xu7jg@MitchBast-xu7jg11 ай бұрын
    • Dearborn is a city in Wayne County in the U.S. state of Michigan. At the 2020 census, it had a population of 109,976. Dearborn is the seventh-largest city in Michigan and is home to the largest Muslim population in the United States per capita. It also is home to the largest mosque in the United States. More of the Democrats handiwork. Marx would be so proud.

      @user-lx1is2wl7i@user-lx1is2wl7i11 ай бұрын
    • @@user-lx1is2wl7i , That is exactly the point I was trying to make. I'm glad it wasn't lost on you. Our nation is in desperate need of some "SPRING CLEANING"

      @MitchBast-xu7jg@MitchBast-xu7jg11 ай бұрын
  • I have BB King's wonderful autobiography "Blues All Around Me", and he spoke of buying a nice house in a "white" neighborhood, and the people who sold him the house got hell from some of the street. Can you imagine that? I would have loved having BB as a neighbor!

    @seanmeisner3190@seanmeisner31903 жыл бұрын
    • The music coming from that place alone would triple home values!

      @zabadazidit@zabadazidit3 жыл бұрын
    • THATS why I sing the blues. ( That's the name of one of his songs .)

      @aprilwest2402@aprilwest24022 жыл бұрын
    • I'm not a person that hates anyone. But i have come to know for a fact, and it has been proven to me that where ever you have white people you will have hate and mistreatment of people. Who are not like them especially black people. I know this for a fact.

      @ezerlenewatkins9644@ezerlenewatkins9644 Жыл бұрын
    • what is it was just an everyday black person?

      @j5muscle@j5muscle10 ай бұрын
  • Remember the Black man who lived in a rich neighborhood and the police didn't believe it? He even opened the door with his key's.

    @elizagold2186@elizagold21864 жыл бұрын
    • Sauce?

      @macaryl95@macaryl953 жыл бұрын
    • That happened to the singer T. I. a couple years ago-

      @MsMcmoe@MsMcmoe3 жыл бұрын
    • @@macaryl95 its source not sauce 🤣

      @sunbabbyyy1776@sunbabbyyy17763 жыл бұрын
    • @@sunbabbyyy1776 Both actually

      @macaryl95@macaryl953 жыл бұрын
    • Never heard that story.

      @guitarwhisperer6262@guitarwhisperer62623 жыл бұрын
  • Thank you for showing this again. People forget

    @randyaldridge3386@randyaldridge33867 ай бұрын
  • If people realized that we are all one, literally, not hypothetically then they would know that everything does affect everyone. You cant separate yourself from yourself. Lol ❤ Took me years to know this one fact that healed me and changed eveything for me.

    @kimberlysmith7311@kimberlysmith731111 ай бұрын
  • 03:49 ...She dialed that phone with a QUICKNESS didn't she!?!?

    @user-mj8nf2vp7q@user-mj8nf2vp7q5 жыл бұрын
    • Justin Aames , You make me Laugh Ha Ha Ha She dialed that phone with Quickess didn't She ?? Make me 😂😂🤣🤣🤣😂 Oh Man 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣 can't stop Oh hurt my stomach .

      @yvonnec-deaf2932@yvonnec-deaf29324 жыл бұрын
    • Justin Aames she was ANGRY.

      @MiamiPush2theLimit@MiamiPush2theLimit4 жыл бұрын
    • Fear is one hell of a motivator.

      @adrianjohnson1486@adrianjohnson14864 жыл бұрын
    • Fear is one hella of an opiod

      @antdogg422@antdogg4224 жыл бұрын
    • Speed dial when there was none 😂

      @dianv2218@dianv22183 жыл бұрын
  • Black or white. All I ask is Respect!!

    @yolandadmv9327@yolandadmv93275 жыл бұрын
    • Axel Jacques 👈🏼 Your problem. Y’all always hide behind something like Cowards. Now, it’s Fake Pages. ⚠️

      @Harley08@Harley083 жыл бұрын
    • Honestly

      @colby9529@colby95293 жыл бұрын
    • Same here!

      @tonyallen6510@tonyallen65103 жыл бұрын
    • So true!

      @spicyhot2552@spicyhot25523 жыл бұрын
    • Respect is earned, not given. MLK knew all about that.

      @zabadazidit@zabadazidit3 жыл бұрын
  • i grew up in the same suburban neighborhood for 20 years. my parents lived there for 35 years. i remember when the first black family moved into the neighborhood in the early 70s. you know what we did? nuttin'. i can't speak for everyone in the community but i don't remember anyone freaking out about it. the biggest threat to home owners these days is "home owner associations.' they have more rights and authority over your house and your life than you do. these groups, like "confedentiality agreements," are very illegal and violate basic human rights but they've completely taken over the housing market. go figure.

    @cjmacq-vg8um@cjmacq-vg8um10 ай бұрын
    • Well, this film is propaganda

      @joebrewer4529@joebrewer452910 ай бұрын
  • I lived in a nice neighborhood, middle class families- one black family out of 11 houses- I had trouble out of every neighbor there EXCEPT that black family

    @susanbobo5098@susanbobo509811 ай бұрын
  • History was made the first Karens 3:30

    @CanadianPrepper@CanadianPrepper3 жыл бұрын
    • "I'm going to get Dick on the phone right away." - 1950's Karen lol

      @JonathanTaylor95@JonathanTaylor953 жыл бұрын
    • Just typical conservatives, really

      @dougs7367@dougs73673 жыл бұрын
    • OMG, I was thinking EXACTLY the same thing!!!

      @SusanSez1@SusanSez13 жыл бұрын
    • @Cadilac Gaboy absolutely!

      @SusanSez1@SusanSez13 жыл бұрын
    • You pissin Ken off

      @brentjames2576@brentjames25763 жыл бұрын
  • Alternate Title: "A Karen Is Born"

    @foodbychefty@foodbychefty3 жыл бұрын
    • A Starin' Like Karen production 👀

      @gl6996@gl69963 жыл бұрын
    • @foodbychefty 😂😂Yay!

      @elainepavek3156@elainepavek31563 жыл бұрын
    • 😭

      @TheRealShawnte@TheRealShawnte2 жыл бұрын
    • Holy crap! That one got me rolling!🤣

      @caryinsheppard8003@caryinsheppard80032 жыл бұрын
    • Yes you hit it on head.

      @francinefreeman9472@francinefreeman94722 жыл бұрын
  • I have NEVER seen as many recommendations for ONE channel in my right hand feed. EVERY SINGLE recommendation is for Reelback One. There are NO other channels.

    @mattlassen5948@mattlassen594824 күн бұрын
    • I love it 🥰

      @reelblack@reelblack24 күн бұрын
  • I appreciate this video! It was extremely interesting to see a historical account of how black people were mistreated, and right after the civil rights movement started to take off, no less!

    @Alexander-zu7iw@Alexander-zu7iw10 ай бұрын
    • were?

      @thumperpaul155@thumperpaul15510 ай бұрын
  • I grew up in an all Black neighborhood in a home, it was truly beautiful and I feel blessed to have had it. Thanks to my beloved Parents.

    @stephaniebutler7300@stephaniebutler73005 жыл бұрын
    • Me too! My parents refused to flee when the others did. I had the best childhood and neighbors.

      @lisatrautner9426@lisatrautner94265 жыл бұрын
    • Could be scary, bringing your kids to a all white neighborhood.

      @zmaj6524@zmaj65244 жыл бұрын
    • @Tessie People like you are whats scary

      @zmaj6524@zmaj65244 жыл бұрын
    • @Tessie FOH, troll.

      @cfoster6804@cfoster68044 жыл бұрын
    • I just grew up .

      @sarasmith19@sarasmith194 жыл бұрын
  • I’m white and when I was in high school, my mom sold a nearby house to a black couple, and a crossed was burned on their lawn and our house was vandalized. It really pissed me off

    @LisaRichards_123@LisaRichards_1232 жыл бұрын
    • What an awful thing. What year was that? And well done to your mum for being open minded and working with clients of all kinds.

      @giselleduff1001@giselleduff1001 Жыл бұрын
    • ​@Wompwomp ...Such strong words from someone hiding behind a keyboard. 😅

      @kellcamz@kellcamz11 ай бұрын
    • @@W0mpW0mp999 That doesn’t show you in a very good light!! It says that you think so little of yourself that you have to belittle and bully another group of people!!! I feel sorry for you and yours!!

      @newnana9070@newnana907011 ай бұрын
    • By Democrats

      @stevepope6095@stevepope609511 ай бұрын
    • I've in Louisiana with always a large black populace. NEVER HEARD OR SAW A CROSS BURNED. EVER. I have trouble believing this. We had David Duke run for Governor and almost won. Never saw or heard anything like burning a cross. You know why. We got along. There might of been a few things but never to this degree!

      @cjhwngtkt6337@cjhwngtkt633711 ай бұрын
  • My father's parents immigrated from Italy, and my father was born in the US in 1914. He was old enough to remember when Italians were discriminated against, though of course not as much as Black people were. The suburban street I grew up on (ironically, in a Tudor-style home like the one in the film) was mostly white, but had a Black family and a Korean/Hawaiian family whose kids I was friends with, as well as Catholic and Jewish families.

    @lynnericotta4427@lynnericotta442710 ай бұрын
  • I JUST had an experience TODAY!! In the grocery checkout at my small town grocer there was this black lady talking to the clerk in the line next to mine. She was hollering that they were the first black family in Billings....on and on she went. She said they had just moved to our town and her neighborhood was on a small street and very quiet and no one bothered anyone. She went on to say she was not used to this being from Chicago. She, loudly of course, was concerned she said because, 'I'm the rowdy kind, I'm the big mouth, I'm the one who has to be noticed!!!". She did not know if she would fit in long. Needless to say, none of the white people (everyone else in the store) said a word. We all rolled our eyes. Here it comes and there goes the neighborhood.

    @stormy8092@stormy809211 ай бұрын
    • That's how my community was. We were integrated in living, not in neighborhoods. When 1 black family moves in, they invite friends over. Now they see other black folks are there, soon they're in a house too. Now someone driving through sees all this, and calls the number on a for rent sign. These folks likely are good people, but, they have a cousin, who needs a place to live... or sells drugs, and no one has 'claimed' this turf. I don't like being called racist. I don't like the re-writing of history , the special treatment and memory loss for gratitude. More whites died as Yankees than those who owned slaves. Retributions/equity... while not teaching math and reading. Equity has dumbed down colleges and public schools. We were integrated in living. A black kid stole my precious stapler in 2d grade - I was told to get over it. In 7th grade, a black kid would sneak up on me, and grind his groin into my backside daily. Again, no one said anything. I didn't even understand what he was doing. I just didn't like it. We were poor. We worked hard, saved and made good decisions, we aren't poor any longer. When millions cross our border w nothing, and make it work within years, what's the excuse for black folks? It's NOT my fault they make bad life decisions. White folks can make bad decisions too. It's the consequences and lack of accountability that keeps folks down. Gold teeth, $150 sneakers... why must I pay for their housing?

      @pibarrante6901@pibarrante690111 ай бұрын
    • Needless to say? No, go ahead and say it. All the white people that rolled their eyes or thought there goes the neighborhood are narrow minded bigoted racists. Lord knows there are no big mouthed white women, right?

      @929mmr@929mmr11 ай бұрын
    • Regarding clubs, activities, schools, gatherings..even protests...blk folk insist on joining in. No problem. Once there are 5 black folks - now they need their own branch, group or segment of this once cohesive group. Take the Oscar's. Take movies in general. Hollywood sucks now. HOW many white folks win a BET award? 12%of population..I sure see alot more than 12% making millions as tv anchors. Oh, they're repressed. My ass.

      @pibarrante6901@pibarrante690111 ай бұрын
    • You are a racist. You said loudly of course. What does that mean? All people of color are not loud. You know ,that was a racist comment. You can not like us all you want sweat-heart! This women of color has two kids in college very smart… oh yes hun they live on campus.. did I mention I married their dad! It’s ppl like you why we live in a messed up world….. but what racist ppl fail to realize we all bleed the same dam color and that’s a fact…. Because if your blood is not the same as mines … your not a human being love…… maybe your and alien ion lol

      @mrs.luc1lucas976@mrs.luc1lucas9767 ай бұрын
    • This film is the very type of seed that was planted in the minds of kids who then went on to become hippies and other countercultural types a decade later. This is how the Soviet Marxists fashioned their attack on American Democracy. I saw an interview with a former Soviet propaganda journalist who had worked for the KGB who had defected to the US. It explains everything. kzhead.info/sun/rKmre7iOm3eKo68/bejne.html

      @mattlassen5948@mattlassen594824 күн бұрын
  • “KAREN’S” at 3:30! Some things never change lol

    @unc1589@unc15893 жыл бұрын
    • And Ken

      @brentjames2576@brentjames25763 жыл бұрын
    • Og karens

      @tonyneal3266@tonyneal32663 жыл бұрын
    • Lol

      @lorir2800@lorir28003 жыл бұрын
    • you mean UNC at 3:30! lol

      @TRiggetyRex@TRiggetyRex3 жыл бұрын
    • 🖐🏾👍🏾😊

      @saleemahfareed4790@saleemahfareed47902 жыл бұрын
  • This video is an eye opener and it brings me to think about how redlining came about. I truly believe whites fought hard/came together ( just as this movie depicts ) and came up with ways to keep blacks in undesirable areas. On another note, it’s funny how whites can’t stand blacks moving close to them but they are quick to gentrify nice black neighborhoods.

    @kblissfullyme9090@kblissfullyme90905 жыл бұрын
    • Tessie you must not have read my last sentence because if you did, you wouldn’t respond like a incoherent bitch. I said that blacks who do live in nice areas (DESIRABLE AREAS WERE BLACKS TAKE CARE OF THEIR COMMUNITY), white people like to gentrify what blacks work so hard to accomplish. Also there are white ghettos, so take your megalomaniac nonsense elsewhere. You didn’t even touch on redlining either prick!

      @kblissfullyme9090@kblissfullyme90905 жыл бұрын
    • @Tessie GTHOH What do you know about Black people? Do you have black friends? Family? Hang out with black people? Are you invited into our homes? Holiday with us? Do you know a thing about BLACK HISTORY? No. Only what your RACIST, evil mind and environment tells you. What the HELL are you doing in black spaces if you HATE black people so much???? If you knew anything about black people, those places that you call ghetto, were like that because of black POVERTY as a result of systemic racism and discrimination that kept black people poor! Caused by RACIST minds like yours! It all starts with a JOB! That pays well. Well if you have been criminalised, demonised... for being black...... that becomes a major hurdle, doesn't it?

      @NickyM_0@NickyM_04 жыл бұрын
    • Tessie “They made them that way”. There was a time when Blacks were relegated to the “other side of the tracks”. The areas where the sewage treatment plants were, the creosote and fertilizer plant were. Eyesores and undesirable, yet necessary elements, like water towers, railroad tracks had been placed. Yes...they always had an opportunity to make those areas better...

      @minniethemouse62@minniethemouse624 жыл бұрын
    • Tessie I wholeheartedly agree with you. People want to jump on the offensive because it’s impolite to be PI. I for one prefer to base my conclusion on facts of observations. My neighborhood borders the AA side of town, where prostitution, panhandling, drugs, murder, and everything criminal under the sun occurs. They recently knocked down all of the projects and started building Apts here in my neighborhood and the projects people moved in. Now crime has gone up in my neighborhood. I went walking to the park, where I’ve been going to since the early 80’s only to have a group of young AA threaten me and pull out a gun. This has never happened to me until they built these apts. I hate to say, I really do, but it is the God honest truth. I won’t lie to spare anyone’s feelings.

      @GOD-2024-@GOD-2024-4 жыл бұрын
    • A 79 Yes....I’m more than sure that describes every place Blacks live. In your generalization of Black residential neighborhoods, let’s not forget the trashy trailers and run down houses in ghettos that provide shelter for every White meth head and heroin addict in the USA. Or, perhaps, those residential inhabitants are more acceptable based on skin color. Is it behavior that can be observed in ALL people, or just skin color for you? No one would want to live next to what you described, but disregard for neighborhood values comes in ALL colors. I said that and I’m not sparing your feelings.

      @minniethemouse62@minniethemouse624 жыл бұрын
  • "Well, there goes the neighborhood!" I heard that many times as a child in the 50's. It's still heard today......

    @stevendaniel8126@stevendaniel812610 ай бұрын
  • Thanks for the video it was a beautiful neighborhood in 1950 so clean and manicured I wonder how it's holding up these days in 2023 again thanks for content

    @brianhall8097@brianhall809710 ай бұрын
  • My best friend for 1 summer was a black girl. They were the only black family in our neighborhood. We hung out everyday the summer before 9th grade, High School. 2 days before school started, she road her bike to my house to tell me we couldn't be friends anymore. I asked why. She said "You know" I said, "No, I don't know" She said "Because I'm black and you're white" I said "So? I don't understand" She said "I'm sorry" and just road away. Yes, I would see her in school, but she acted like she didn't know who I was. Im crying about it right now, just thinking about it. It broke my heart.

    @teestjulian@teestjulian2 жыл бұрын
    • Racism cuts both ways but many won't admit that.

      @aaronbeauchamp3312@aaronbeauchamp331211 ай бұрын
    • Riiiiiiight.........

      @slimpickens01@slimpickens0111 ай бұрын
    • That chick was racist. Sorry you were friends with such a racist segregationist.

      @peoplethesedaysberetarded@peoplethesedaysberetarded10 ай бұрын
  • Smh! If it wasnt in black and white it would be a movie for 2019

    @adoreivette7373@adoreivette73735 жыл бұрын
    • Adore Ivette Sure would👊🏽

      @chanelladyone@chanelladyone5 жыл бұрын
    • preach

      @sonquatsch8585@sonquatsch85855 жыл бұрын
    • I 100% totally agree!!

      @jjrrhh1983@jjrrhh19835 жыл бұрын
    • I concur wholeheartedly.

      @adrianjohnson1486@adrianjohnson14864 жыл бұрын
    • Adore Ivette Amen!!!

      @paradyc@paradyc4 жыл бұрын
  • While growing up my family never did say one racist word about anyone or anything. We lived in the country but with the news and everything we were pretty much up to date on what was going on. However, there were no Blacks anywhere around. Even in my school, through school, there were never any Blacks anywhere. Now I'm 71 years old, and even today I don't consider myself racist but I have changed. After Highschool I joined the Marines. It was during those years I was introduced to Racism, Racism towards ME! Now with the rights that Blacks have along with BLM and others, I can fully understand why so many people are racist. It seems so many Blacks feel they are a higher caliper than Whites. I'm not saying Whites are higher but Blacks seem to flaunt it. More often Black women rather than Black men seem to be more racist. When I talk with a Black person I'm not talking to their skin, I'm talking to the person inside. So if I'm treated the same everything will be cool with us. In fact if the whole world treated everyone the same the world would be a happier place. HOWEVER, Forcing racism on whites will not work. Black Power, BLM, this kind of stuff only divides that racist wedge further and further between us. I'm just speaking out for myself and no one else.

    @Hoosier_Boy@Hoosier_Boy11 ай бұрын
    • These days, “no blacks around” sounds amazing. To not have to listen to the self-righteous squawking and gibbering of these lunatics sounds wonderful.

      @peoplethesedaysberetarded@peoplethesedaysberetarded10 ай бұрын
  • I love that adorable scene of the girls skipping together, holding hands, faces full of joy! ❤ the heart is so pure and open when we are little ones❤ I lived in a mixed race apartment complex in the bay area in the 80s...Never thought about any differences between myself and the other kids. All I remember is one day noting how interesting it was when my friend and I held our arms next to each other, observing briefly our skin tones...then we started playing and laughing again. I miss those innocent, pure wonderful beautiful days...wide open hearts and wide smiles❤arms linked, hearts linked. ❤ uncomplicated, free.....

    @softpawsasmr@softpawsasmr10 ай бұрын
  • Why does this movie seem like a Twilight Zone episode? “They are peaceful people” but their hearts are full of darkness!

    @tammyrobinson6409@tammyrobinson64094 жыл бұрын
    • Because Rod Serling was the narrarator.

      @AndiAndrea@AndiAndrea3 жыл бұрын
    • @@AndiAndrea No he’s not

      @jefferyepstein9210@jefferyepstein92103 жыл бұрын
    • The narrator sounds like it too..

      @deadheadwannabe6874@deadheadwannabe68742 жыл бұрын
    • Where you been all your life? Blacks don’t want whites in their stuff. Don’t act naive

      @user-cf9np9cy8q@user-cf9np9cy8q2 жыл бұрын
  • “Them” on Amazon prime...brought me into research mode

    @Twifan360@Twifan3603 жыл бұрын
    • Same here

      @UriyahMommy@UriyahMommy3 жыл бұрын
    • Yep!

      @mimij4660@mimij46603 жыл бұрын
    • Yup

      @OursonAaron302@OursonAaron3023 жыл бұрын
    • That was scary and poignant

      @4knewt505@4knewt5052 жыл бұрын
    • OMG that show was scary, and not because of the monsters. 😂

      @Bman846@Bman8462 жыл бұрын
  • This is the generation that taught the current generations this mindset

    @jland904@jland9045 ай бұрын
  • As sad as it is I understand their desire to keep them out. I own a bunch of rentals and I never really cared much about who I rented to because money is green.....but I always hold my breath when leasing to black folk and 8 times out of 10 the black family causes so many headaches. Typical problems are loud music, cars basing their music at ALL times of the night, loud aggressive talking while hanging out till all hours of the night, they don't know when trash day is, they keep their property nasty and they pay late. As it stands I have a few black families still in my units, one in the process of eviction, so it's not all of them.....but damn man.....I get it and it's a sad fact.

    @johngatsby1473@johngatsby147310 ай бұрын
    • Yup. Stats don’t lie. If black Americans want a different perception, they’ve got to act differently. Your black tenants paying on-time and keeping the place orderly and not having loud music going … that’s table-stakes for “living” for other races, man.

      @peoplethesedaysberetarded@peoplethesedaysberetarded10 ай бұрын
    • It’s not a general “fact” it’s just YOUR experience.

      @dailysanchez9246@dailysanchez92468 ай бұрын
    • @@dailysanchez9246 okay, so let’s look at FACTS. Forget about the inconvenience of “like, just this guy’s experience, man.” Know what the #1 killer of black boys and men is until age 35 is? Other blacks. Look at the FBI crime statistics. You’d be astonished, ignoramus. So good job here; you took an “opinion” of “blacks are noisy and can’t keep property clean,” and unearthed the _actual truth_ of “forget being bad tenants, blacks _kill people_ of all races in crazy-high ratios, and _each other_ so much that death by another black is what many black males have to look forward to until heart attack and diameter comes for them after 35.” 👍🏻 Edit: “diabetes,” not “diameter.” Phone, did you think they were getting hula-hooped to death?!

      @peoplethesedaysberetarded@peoplethesedaysberetarded8 ай бұрын
    • @@dailysanchez9246 I comingle in rental owners groups and I speak for all of them.

      @johngatsby1473@johngatsby14738 ай бұрын
    • That's why here in NYC decent people can't use their section 8 voucher. There is a stigma because of the behavior of prior tenants on section 8.

      @kevinforeman4485@kevinforeman44854 ай бұрын
  • Our creator is not racist so why should we. Every race has contributed something different that is what makes humans unique.

    @mariateresaeppolito3020@mariateresaeppolito30203 жыл бұрын
    • Tell that to Israel

      @jefferyepstein9210@jefferyepstein92103 жыл бұрын
    • Well, our creator created Testosterone, which boils down to everything

      @jaxcaulfield7071@jaxcaulfield70712 жыл бұрын
    • Testosterone in homo sapiens I mean

      @jaxcaulfield7071@jaxcaulfield70712 жыл бұрын
    • @@jefferyepstein9210 why kick others?

      @whyaminotoriginal@whyaminotoriginal2 жыл бұрын
    • @@whyaminotoriginal Ask Israel

      @jefferyepstein9210@jefferyepstein92102 жыл бұрын
  • I dont want to be nowhere that I'm not wanted!

    @debracecchi@debracecchi4 жыл бұрын
    • It wasn’t like ppl imposed on had a choice.

      @trulyblessed5254@trulyblessed52543 жыл бұрын
    • Lincoln wanted to move blacks back to Africa and it seemed reasonable given those times.

      @macaryl95@macaryl953 жыл бұрын
    • @@macaryl95 It would have been reasonable “during those times” for reprobates to have been satisfied with their own lot in life and stayed settled on their own land when the boundaries were already fixed by the Supreme Creator.

      @trulyblessed5254@trulyblessed52543 жыл бұрын
    • @Slim Pickens Yep, as long as you 🙉 no evil, 🙊no evil, 🙈 no evil and that you remain docile without question or any further investigation or might as well look forward to being afflicted.

      @trulyblessed5254@trulyblessed52543 жыл бұрын
    • You mean anywhere. Not nowhere.

      @maryfendley1084@maryfendley10843 жыл бұрын
  • Damn we need to follow this video now

    @lonewolfwildernesssurvival9443@lonewolfwildernesssurvival944310 ай бұрын
  • My family moved to an all white block in 1972...one night someone ripped the railing off our porch and threw it threw our front window...one of the other neighbors was mad and told us who did it...after that everyone on the block became friends ...the who did it moved after someone beat him up???

    @hattiemcpherson1850@hattiemcpherson18505 ай бұрын
  • Great film

    @diontaedaughtry974@diontaedaughtry97411 ай бұрын
  • 2019 and this is still taking place.

    @smc1774@smc17745 жыл бұрын
    • Nothing has changed in this country except the date on the calendar.

      @adrianjohnson1486@adrianjohnson14864 жыл бұрын
    • @@bruno8126 I want you to live there too.

      @augustdreams2634@augustdreams26344 жыл бұрын
    • @@bruno8126 WOW .And I'm white .We all bleed red so much hate in the world .I don't see color .🙏✌💙

      @jackiemarini3203@jackiemarini32034 жыл бұрын
    • @@jackiemarini3203 He said free Negro neighborhood not Negro free neighborhood.

      @cfoster6804@cfoster68044 жыл бұрын
    • Yep still petty.

      @oshun2866@oshun28664 жыл бұрын
  • "We don't see things how they are, we see things how we are." Dr. Joe Dispenza

    @user-mu7xp3uq2e@user-mu7xp3uq2e5 жыл бұрын
    • I'm a rapist and a murderer?

      @Archetype77@Archetype774 жыл бұрын
    • Deep comment.

      @CodyCole80@CodyCole8011 ай бұрын
  • Amazing 😮

    @hunterluxton5976@hunterluxton597611 ай бұрын
  • Your Yt Is Ah-mazing. Thanks so much for sharing

    @misscheesecake1952@misscheesecake1952 Жыл бұрын
    • You’re welcome. Subscribe to Reelblack Two!

      @reelblack@reelblack Жыл бұрын
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