Content Production

Content Production

 
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Currently In Pre-Production:

Documentary: “This is AmeriKKKA” -

“This is AmeriKKKA” is the working title of a documentary that explores the nation’s blindspot to its racial sins of the past and how those sins seeded the nation’s current state of racial turmoil.  It probes a light into how a great majority of Americans are unmindful to the severity and scope of our racial tensions, and as a result, most fail to grasp the depth of the systematic racial fractures that exist today.  The documentary examines the direct line between today’s racial/political strife and the failures of reconstruction during the post-civil war era.

The History:

When the confederacy seceded from the United States, they launched the Civil War to defend the immoral institution of slavery.  After losing the war, these states were readmitted back into the United States.  Despite the war, President Johnson pardoned confederate soldiers, and soon thereafter confederate politicians won elected office in the newly-reunited states. The influence of former slave owners and confederates contributed to erasing the rights that African Americans won in the 1860s, including citizenship and the right to vote.

The political campaign to remove African American rights was called the Redeemers movement, and it was led by former slave-owners and confederates, who wanted to redeem the South by returning it to the norms of chattel slavery. The Redeemers and "Make America Great Again" derive from America's oppressive, ethnocidal school of thought.

The Redeemers efforts were assisted by terrorist groups such as the Ku Klux Klan (KKK) and paramilitary organizations, such as the White League and Red Shirts, that were made up of former confederate soldiers. These white supremacist groups, terrorized and lynched black Americans, and they also prevented them from voting to help ensure that Redeemer candidates won elected office. And so, the terrorists became the government.

To this day, many Americans, and especially American hate groups, still celebrate confederate soldiers and politicians as heroes, and there are monuments and memorials dedicated to them across America.