Tag Archives: Black Supremacy

Terry Crews Clarifies ‘Black Supremacy’ Remark: ‘Because I Have a Mixed Race Wife I Have Been Discounted From the Conversation’

Terry Crews Clarifies 'Black Supremacy' Remark: 'Because I Have a Mixed Race Wife I Have Been Discounted From the Conversation'

Terry Crews put his foot in his mouth last week when he made controversial comments about the rise of black supremacy as a result of beating white supremacy without white people.

“Defeating White supremacy without White people creates Black supremacy. Equality is the truth. Like it or not, we are all in this together.”

The 51-year-old actor added, “Any Black person who calls me a coon or and Uncle Tom for promoting EQUALITY is a Black Supremist [sic], because they have determined who’s Black and who is not.”

Crews was dragged and even his Everybody Hates Chris co-star, Tyler James Williams, had to gently check him real quick.

The White Chicks starred appeared on The Talk on Tuesday and clarified his tweets. “I compare that tweet to cussing in church. What’s wild is you have the message but if you’re cussing in church nobody is really hearing what you’re saying. The cuss word I used in this instance is black supremacy. What I said was defeating white supremacy without white people could create black supremacy. In the black race in black america we have gatekeepers. We have people who have decided that who is going to be black and who is not. And I simply – because I have a mixed race wife – have been discounted from the conversation a lot of times by very, very militant movements, black power movement.”

Terry Crews reflected on the backlash he received from the Black community and argued that we can agree to disagree. “I’ve been called all kinds of things like an uncle tom simply because I’m successful, simply because I worked my way out of Flint, Michigan. The problem with that is black people have different views. It’s funny because when you’re white you can be republican, libertarian, democrat, you can be anything. But if you’re black you have to be one thing. Even Joe Biden said “hey man if you don’t vote for me you ain’t even black”. And so this blackness is always judged, it’s always put up against this thing. And I’m going that right there is a supremacist move. You have now put yourself above other black people and then I got told it couldn’t exist.”

He went on to explain the 1994 Rwanda Genocide which was a civil war between Hutu and Tutsi ethnic groups. Terry slammed people who don’t believe it can happen in the United States. “I’m here to tell you that’s the first mistake. Anytime anyone says “oh that could never happen here” that’s exactly when it starts to happen.”

Terry Crews acknowledges that he may not have properly articulated his thoughts, but he wants the conversation of Black elitism to be had more often. “I can’t really regret it because I really want the dialogue to come out. Maybe there’s another term that might be better where as separatist or elitist or something like that. But the thing is I’ve experienced supremacy even growing up. I’ve had black people tell me that the white man is the devil. I’ve experienced whole organizations that have viewed themselves because of the suffering of black people that they have decided that now we are not equal, we are better. I think that’s a mistake, I’m trying to tell you just the mentality. What we’re trying to do a lot of the times with the social and economic and political issues we have right now, we’re providing those kind of answers. But this is a spiritual problem. Supremacy can’t really happen but spiritually it can. In your head you can look at yourself and you can develop a dangerous self righteousness that could really hurt what we’re trying to do right now. We have to include this white voice, this hispanic voice, this asian voice, we have to include it right now. Because if we don’t it’s going to slip into something that we are really not prepared for.”

Check out the full interview below:

The post Terry Crews Clarifies ‘Black Supremacy’ Remark: ‘Because I Have a Mixed Race Wife I Have Been Discounted From the Conversation’ appeared first on The Source.

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Tyler James Williams Responds to Terry Crews’ ‘Black Supremacy’ Comment

We were introduced to the on-screen, father-son duo of Terry Crews and Tyler James Williams by watching Everybody Hates Chris once it aired in 2005. Since then, fans continue to keep up with actors.

Recently, Terry Crews has been catching a lot of heat for his recent remarks regarding, “Black supremacy.”

“Defeating White supremacy without White people creates Black supremacy. Equality is the truth,” Crews penned. “Like it or not, we are all in this together.”

Although the actor has been under fire for the comment, Tyler James Williams has stepped in with a different approach. “Terry, brother, I know your heart and you know I have love for you and always will. No one is calling 4 black supremacy & the narrative that we are hurts our cause & our people. We’re just vigorously vetting our ‘allies’ because time & time again they have failed us in the past,” Wiliiams wrote on Twitter.

“Our people are tired of white people who put on a good face a claim they ‘arnt racist’ while operating and benefiting from the privilege of a clearly racist system. We’re not trying to do this alone. We KNOW we can’t. But we refuse to have allies who won’t go the distance,” he continued.

Williams concluded his Tweet series by making his intentions clear on why he addressed the situation. “I’m not trying to call you out @terrycrews. You know it’s all love always. But we’re rightfully angry right now and fed up with anyone not with our cause wholeheartedly. I don’t want to see that energy pointed your way or diverted from the cause.”

Well said Tyler.

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Dear Terry Crews, “Black Supremacy” is Not The By-Product of a Post-White Supremacy Society

This morning, actor Terry Crews was trending on Twitter for all the wrong reasons. The America’s Got Talent host was on Twitter Sunday night.

Apparently, Terry was feeling some type of way with all the solidarity happening with folks of color across the globe. He felt the need to take to Twitter to express an unwanted and guilt-laden perspective.

Upon later explanation by Crews, 51, he was trying to say that if white and black people don’t work together, “bad attitudes and resentments can create a dangerous self-righteousness.”

Following the death of George Floyd on May 25, Crews shared an emotional video to Instagram. There he told his followers that he saw himself in the 46-year-old, who died when former police officer Derek Chauvin put a knee on his neck for eight minutes.

“First of all my heart is broken,” he said the video. “George Floyd looks like me. George Floyd could be me. I could easily, easily be that man on the ground with that police officer’s knee on my neck. That could easily be me.”

Pro-Black Is Not Anti-White

There is a popular misconception that being proud to be Black means that you are anti-white. This is not the case.

However, what that statement reflects is a truly enslaved mentality because you cannot operate with that suspicion unless you are co-opted by white supremacy.

White guilt is defined as the feelings of shame and remorse some white people experience when they recognize the legacy of racism and racial injustice and perceive the ways they have benefited from it.

With his statement, Terry Crews is signaling that he has internalized white guilt for white people even though he is not white himself. All one needs to do is look at the front lines of every protest across the globe and white allies are there.

Allies who see their privilege as an invaluable asset to people of color are appreciated by the protest movement. Whether that involvement stems from guilt is a personal motivation, however, the action is needed and respected.

For Crews to create some mythological vacuum where black people are working in a silo for justice is not even close to reality. How he could justify fearing “black supremacy” when the protests are only initial surface pressure shows he doesn’t understand the true goal: system reform.

Feelings on either side will have to subside to doing what is right and if an ego or two is bruised in the process it is a small fee to pay for justice.

Terry Crews is still caught up in the rapture of Black unity optics in a society still encapsulated in white supremacy. If he wasn’t, he would count the white allies in a sea of black faces instead of lamenting how Black the movement looks and feels.

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