In a new interview with Seth Meyers, he took another shot at explaining himself. Here’s what he said when asked about the infuriating tweet…
“One of the big things I tweeted was the fact that I felt that, you know, defeating white supremacy without the help of white people could create a Black supremacy. Now the term ‘Black supremacy’ was just destroyed. I mean, and what I was trying to say is the fact that… I… as a member of the Black community, there have been so-called ‘gatekeepers’ who decide who’s Black and who’s not. And, in this effort, to really push equality and to end white supremacy and systematic racism, there are certain Black people who’ve determined that what I’m doing, it has no bearing. I have been rendered moot because I am ‘successful’ — and my point is: just the fact that we need all of us. When you’re talking about women’s rights — women’s rights without men, nothing changes. If men don’t understand how to treat women, we’re gonna have a problem and it’s the same thing with white people. If white people don’t understand how to treat us as a community, we’re gonna have a problem. But also, in our own community, we have to know how to treat each other. And we have to allow ourselves to agree, to disagree, to have different view points ’cause right now, in the words of Joe Biden, ‘If you don’t vote for me, you ain’t Black.’ And these are terms that are even passed around within our own community and I’m going ‘Guys, it’s bigger than that… We are bigger than that.’ And that was the point I was trying to make, but people held on to the Black supremacy concept. Again, it’s Twitter and taken out of context, anybody can roll with anything. But I do want to let everyone know that, that comment and that tweet was said out of love, in an effort for reconciliation. I want to be the solution. I do not want to be the problem.”
GlobalGrind
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