WOKE BACKFIRE! 'The Woman King' DESTROYED For Glorifying African Women Fighting To Protect Slavery!

Publicado 2022-09-12
👕Merch: gforemanbcp.com/
🤙🏾 Patreon: www.patreon.com/blackconservativeperspective
👊Paypal: paypal.me/gforemanbcp?country.x=US&locale.x=en_US
💸Cash App: $gforemanbcp
🏃‍♂️Follow me on Twitter: twitter.com/gforemanBCP @gforemanBCP
📷 Follow me on Instagram: www.instagram.com/gforemanbcp/
⭐ Wooden American Star:
bridgethegapshop.com/discount/GFOREMANBCP

Viola Davis is TheWomanKing

Legal Disclosure: I’m not a financial advisor. The information contained in this video is for entertainment purposes only. Before investing, please consult a licensed professional. Any stock purchases I show on video should not be considered “investment recommendations”. I shall not be held liable for any losses you may incur for investing and trading in the stock market in an attempt to mirror what I do. Investments may decline in value and/or disappear entirely. Please be c

Todos los comentarios (21)
  • @orboakin8074
    I was genuinely surprised that woke hollywood made this movie🤔🤔 Many of us in Africa, especially us Nigerians, know of how Dahomey was a slaver kingdom that only stopped slavery because, ironically, the Europeans conquered them and forced them to stop slavery. Who thought this movie was a good idea?!
  • @aktob316
    I'm an African born, and I know a lot about Africa history. This is just ridiculous. Most kids in my country know about the Dahomey empire. The Ashanti tribes, selling people in exchange for weapons. Let's not talk about the industrial scale of the Arab Muslims from the North. Despite the history, WOKE people ignore those history and focus on just one.
  • @colinw7205
    Lupita Nyong'o she of "Black Panther" fame and more importantly is an Oscar winner for her role in "Twelve Years a Slave" and also is the daughter of Kenyan diplomats. She was sent the script and offered the leading role in the "The Woman King" but she went to Benin the modern state of the former Kingdom of Dahomey and did her own research. Upon learning of the brutal history of the Dahomey and their enthusiastic role in the Trans Atlantic Slave Trade she turned down the role.
  • @mynameisroman
    the strange thing is... those "strong woman" are always played "angry". like they don't have any range of emotion, just anger. that probably because they want to erase anything feminine to that character to make her "strong". thats why those characters are usually not very likeable or relateable
  • @rjacob06
    I was hoping that you would mention this. That movie is beyond offensive to history buffs like myself. The Dahomey were fighting to maintain slavery because they became wealthy from it. When the French abolished slavery, the Dahomey did not take the news well.
  • Its okay to defend slavery if youre black and a woman because its diverse, brave and stunning. 🤡🤡
  • @redandblue5925
    As a woman, i never wanted to be a man. I don't understand why these women try so hard to be something they're not. They're queens for sure but not kings!!! Men are kings!!!!!
  • @dawncreary4912
    Lupita Nyong’o did a great documentary about this after withdrawing from doing this movie. Lupita chose integrity over money. Can’t say the same for Viola😔 Viola will probably share her regrets a few years from now as she did with partaking in “The Help”😑
  • @cartabor7094
    I've seen the trailer and have absolutely no intention of seeing this movie. As an American woman and Black, I find not only the falsehood presented offensive, but also the presentation of Black women as loud, violent, masculine. The reputation that some Black women have created for all Black women is already extremely negative and non-feminine. 🤔
  • @Infamous1892
    This is another prime example of why you don't allow Hollywood to educate you.
  • @DokDo1995
    I just love the fact that tge first main actress walked after she learned about all the history behind this kingdom...
  • @Fishhunter2014
    I hate how the basis of this kind of thinking boils down to people believing that we aren't all the same as far as behavior goes. Humans have been doing terrible things to each other since the dawn of civilization regardless of culture, ethnicity, or time period.
  • @jnsmith111
    Yeah, this is the tribe that fought to keep slavery when other tribes and white folks around the area wanted to end it. The reason the women from the Dahomey tribe fought was because the outsiders fighting against the slave trade were killing off the tribe's men. So, they trained their women out of desperation. So, the white dude they try to portray as evil in the movie, was potentially a good guy in the real version of the history.
  • Selling black people was Sub Saharas number one commodity and had been for 1,400 years selling people to the Arabs before the Spanish and Portuguese showed up.
  • @leiajones852
    Not gonna lie I enjoyed the movie and didn’t even know that they were passing it off as true thought it was fiction the whole time. 😭😭
  • @ksw4tq1
    I’ve been saying this for years. Even lost a few friends behind it. Weird thing is ~ they were all black people, and whether they could comprehend my narrative or not, they chose to intensify the misguided hatred. It’s like it gave them power in some way. I saw this with my own eyes 😢
  • @jackmccall7926
    Yeah…this tribe was infamous for being slave traders and owning slaves to work their plantations.
    The writers completely forgot this little detail.
  • @Kingofportals
    The French crushed them and yet it is empowering to lie about the story.
  • @Dragonblaster1
    When the UK banned slavery throughout the British Empire, the people who complained the most were African slavers like King Gezo of Dahomey.