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Iridescent Soul
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Iridescent Soul
@GlamNeural
AI artist & photographer | Holographic soul in a digital world ✨ Prism of light & consciousness ✨M & C ℒℴѵℯ*¨*• ♡✨
USA • Australia Katılım Mayıs 2026
90 Takip Edilen28 Takipçiler

Got it. Just wondering, is the info I read below, accurate?
“Most of America’s foundational systems weren’t built by slave labor: The Constitution, legal system (English common law), property rights, markets, universities, scientific method, industrial revolution, railroads (mostly post-slavery boom), factories in the North, and major innovations came from European settlers, immigrants (Irish, German, Italian, etc.), and their descendants. The North industrialized without heavy reliance on slavery and outperformed the South economically.
Slavery was regionally concentrated in the South and actually held back broader growth there: lower investment in education, infrastructure, and free labor markets. Post-1865, the U.S. economy exploded with free labor, immigration, and Northern/Midwestern industry. Claims of slavery as the “engine” of national success don’t hold up under economic history, cotton was important but not decisive for overall GDP growth. 
Black Americans have contributed significantly beyond slavery: inventions (e.g., traffic light improvements, blood plasma separation, peanut agriculture by George Washington Carver), military service (Buffalo Soldiers, Tuskegee Airmen, integrated forces), music (jazz, blues, rock, hip-hop), sports, literature, civil rights advancements, and post-slavery labor in factories during the Great Migration. Free Blacks and immigrants also built communities. But these are additions to an existing framework, not the origin.”
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The video argues U.S. development and modern Black American culture stem overwhelmingly from European/white contributions, downplaying independent African roots.
Historically accurate in part: European settlers/inventors drove core institutions, industry, tech, and post-1865 rebuilding (Civil War devastated the South economically). Enslaved Black labor was vital to Southern agriculture (e.g., cotton as key export), but not the primary builder of national infrastructure or innovation.
African American culture is syncretic—African rhythms/influences blended with English language, European instruments, and U.S. experiences (jazz, blues, hip-hop evolved here). Pre-colonial Africa had empires, metallurgy, and trade networks but lacked the wheel in many regions due to terrain and didn't industrialize like Europe.
Welfare policies post-1960s correlated with rising single-parent homes across groups (disproportionately Black), per data like the Moynihan Report. In-group preferences exist in all demographics; studies vary on relative strength.
Overall, the core thesis on white cultural dominance in shaping the modern West holds as a historical pattern, though "built the country" is interpretive—not purely false or true.
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@AntiFeminismAU Stories like this contribute to men opting out of relationships/marriage altogether, which has broader societal effects. Very sad!
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@GlamNeural @sacredrain @NC7983 @robertsepehr @Greene_Thoughts @BreitbartNews And....it was 120 years ago.
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@dcarroll1976 Yes, it was 120 years ago, a time when the treatment of minorities, including human zoos, was far worse. That history helps explain some of the ongoing resentment today, which makes the complaints about ‘the world hates us’ feel out of step.
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Christopher Nolan gets ripped by Greek-interest publication for hypocrisy in his DEI "Odyssey" casting:
“Ancient Greece is not simply an aesthetic backdrop... If Hollywood truly believes representation matters, then Greek representation should matter too” trib.al/a0zQ7f7
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Message From The Universe
The Universe wants you to understand something important: You are not watching the world fall apart… you are watching it transform. What you once knew has served its time, and a new reality is rising in its place. This shift isn’t here to unsettle you, it’s here to awaken you. You are standing at the centre of a transition meant to elevate your soul and realign your purpose. What no longer fits is dissolving. What once felt familiar is fading. You’re not being pushed backwards… you’re being positioned for what’s coming. A new world is forming around you, and within you. One built on clarity, truth, intuition, and deeper connection. One that asks you to step forward, not shrink back. One that calls you to participate, not wait. Your purpose is not an accident. The pull you feel is not your imagination. Your soul is preparing you for your next evolution.
The Universe is saying:
“You are not here to cling to the old. You are here to help create what’s next.” Take your place. Trust the shift. Your energy is needed in this new chapter that is already unfolding.”
It Is Done
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So sad what humans choose to do to other humans. Every single day we are granted the gift of free will; the power to choose kindness or cruelty, empathy or indifference, dignity or degradation. And yet, time and time again throughout history, we see people wielding that freedom to exploit, dehumanize, and inflict suffering on others for amusement, profit, or a false sense of superiority.
The image of that young Filipino girl sitting in an enclosure at Coney Island in 1906 is a heartbreaking reminder of how easily compassion can be abandoned when ‘the other’ is turned into entertainment. It forces us to confront an uncomfortable truth: free will is not just a privilege, it is a profound responsibility.
We must choose better. We must do better. Because the capacity for both great evil and great good lives in every human heart, and it is our daily choices that decide which one wins.
The Child in the Wooden Cage: Bound by Hands That Chose Cruelty

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