14/04/2026
PART 5: You do not hate illegal immigration, you just hate your fellow black people.
I’m not even going to call you xenophobic. I’ll leave that word for others. What you are doing shows something deeper. You don’t just have a problem with outsiders. You even have problems with your own people, even people from different tribes in your own country. So if you can’t even accept your own, how do we expect you to accept other Africans?
Many of you shouting the loudest have never even left your environment. You are scared to travel. You are struggling, yet you refuse to move. Sometimes the sign is clear, change your environment, look for better opportunities, see how other people live. Movement opens doors. But because you are scared or you don’t have the means, you feel others should also stay stuck like you.
Some of this anger is jealousy.
When you see another African doing better, moving forward, building something, you feel intimidated. Instead of learning, you want to pull them down. Many of us don’t like seeing another African win. But if that same person shows you the way, you still won’t follow it because you don’t even understand how they did it.
In places like South Africa, many black people still don’t fully control the economy. Many don’t own land. Many don’t have stable jobs. These are real problems. But instead of focusing energy on fixing these issues or questioning systems that created them, some people turn their anger toward other Africans.
That is called misdirected energy, you are fighting the wrong people.
You are strong when it comes to attacking fellow Africans. But when it comes to bigger systems, real power, real control — you go quiet.
And to Africans living abroad, Some of you have left Africa to look for better life. You know what racism feels like. You know what struggle feels like outside. But instead of using that experience to teach others back home, you join the same mindset of attacking Africans.
That is so shameful.
You left your land to survive. Now you are shouting about “protecting” that same land from afar? That doesn’t make sense.
If some of you were deported today, you would cry. You would beg. You would want mercy. But you don’t give that same mercy to others.
So what does that say about you? I will tell plain blank, you're a hypocrite simple and your brains has stop working for all the long hours you been standing for. Maybe you need to rest so you will get some sense.
We Africans are too quick to fight ourselves. Too quick to hate ourselves. Too quick to reject ourselves.
And until we fix that mindset, nothing will change so the real problem is not just immigration the real problem is how we see each other.