Everyone has a a few things that are the bedrock foundation to how they see the world, their place in it, and the animus behind nearly all of their choices. Sometimes these things are correct and true, often they are not. But people build their lives on them anyways, and once there is a massive structure of life choices and opinions built on top of them, any attempt to change one of these foundations will be met with overwhelming hostility.
Because if you show them that their foundation is wrong, it invalidates everything that stemmed from it. And often that is decades of their life and everything in it. Most people have a very guttural negative reaction to 'everything you've believed and every decision you've made based on those beliefs for 30 years has been wrong'. It cuts to their core, and people almost always prefer continuing to believe the wrong foundation than deal with the mental break that would result from confronting it.
For nearly all blacks, one of those bedrock foundations is that every bad thing that has ever happened to them is because of unjust and unfounded racism from others. They build their lives around it, it influences every decision they make, every opinion they hold, even how they talk, what their tastes are; everything. If you undermine that foundation, it collapses basically their whole life and tells them they've wasted and squandered every minute of their life with all those decisions and personality aspects that were built on it, and they will avoid that at all costs.
If someone told you "Every single thing you've thought, felt, said, believed, and decided for nearly all of your life was wrong, and you were wrong to do all of that" and they could prove it, how would that impact your mental and emotional state? Sunk cost as it pertains to using the amount of life time you have isn't a fallacy. Every minute you used on A instead of B isn't coming back. That cost is spent and gone. Would you rather spend the rest you have agonizing over having wasted what you already wasted, or be comfortably and pleasantly wrong in willful ignorance wasting more on the same so long as it feels good? Most would choose the latter.
That's why when blacks "get out of the bucket" of crabs, all the other blacks try to drag their asses down. When the small population of them realize "this is fucking stupid" and tell them they're stupid and they want out, the rest of them will do EVERYTHING they can to make sure his ability to get out of that fucking bucket is stopped, because they know if enough of them escape that bucket, more and more will realize that it's not any fucking system stopping them, it's THEIR OWN FUCKING STUPIDITY (and the Jews).
Everyone has a a few things that are the bedrock foundation to how they see the world, their place in it, and the animus behind nearly all of their choices. Sometimes these things are correct and true, often they are not. But people build their lives on them anyways, and once there is a massive structure of life choices and opinions built on top of them, any attempt to change one of these foundations will be met with overwhelming hostility.
Because if you show them that their foundation is wrong, it invalidates everything that stemmed from it. And often that is decades of their life and everything in it. Most people have a very guttural negative reaction to 'everything you've believed and every decision you've made based on those beliefs for 30 years has been wrong'. It cuts to their core, and people almost always prefer continuing to believe the wrong foundation than deal with the mental break that would result from confronting it.
For nearly all blacks, one of those bedrock foundations is that every bad thing that has ever happened to them is because of unjust and unfounded racism from others. They build their lives around it, it influences every decision they make, every opinion they hold, even how they talk, what their tastes are; everything. If you undermine that foundation, it collapses basically their whole life and tells them they've wasted and squandered every minute of their life with all those decisions and personality aspects that were built on it, and they will avoid that at all costs.
If someone told you "Every single thing you've thought, felt, said, believed, and decided for nearly all of your life was wrong, and you were wrong to do all of that" and they could prove it, how would that impact your mental and emotional state? Sunk cost as it pertains to using the amount of life time you have isn't a fallacy. Every minute you used on A instead of B isn't coming back. That cost is spent and gone. Would you rather spend the rest you have agonizing over having wasted what you already wasted, or be comfortably and pleasantly wrong in willful ignorance wasting more on the same so long as it feels good? Most would choose the latter.
That's why when blacks "get out of the bucket" of crabs, all the other blacks try to drag their asses down. When the small population of them realize "this is fucking stupid" and tell them they're stupid and they want out, the rest of them will do EVERYTHING they can to make sure his ability to get out of that fucking bucket is stopped, because they know if enough of them escape that bucket, more and more will realize that it's not any fucking system stopping them, it's THEIR OWN FUCKING STUPIDITY (and the Jews).
Do you think the ability to accept being wrong and move on is tied to an iq level?