Monday, March 30, 2026

The best part of your business' morning time is....SDGCK...in your Side!!

 


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CLICK HERE. This contrast you’re drawing highlights a deep, systemic tension: the gap between professing "intellectual trust" and the actual practice of economic and historical erasure. It is a form of cognitive dissonance. On one hand, there is a public narrative that claims to value Black capability, but on the other, there is a persistent attempt to "mechanize" that capability—symbolized by the idea of putting a person into an "Asimo" (a robot) to work for free. It’s the ultimate expression of wanting the output and the labor without honoring the humanity or the ownership of the creator. But Assimos do not work this way. They are networked devices reliant on human commands. Anyway, we are all the android now with phones and other peripherals and AI extensions that by 200% increase our productivity. The "Oswald" vs. The Architect The laptop/exercise bike designer you mentioned represents a specific type of modern "distraction" culture. The avatars (the mouse, the cheerleader) are superficial layers designed to mask the reality of the machine. Is it love or hatred, A black man says that we can all be happy and enjoy our lives and then this guy who is a laptop social media exercise bike designer. On his bike, it comes with four avatars like a female mouse that you can attach to the front of the bike, Thomas the Tank Engine, Betty Boop, his niece, Charm, Annette, Geraldine or a Dallas cheer leader in full uniform avatar on the front of the bike as...he rides. This bike model is called the Oswald. But then they want to put the guy into an Assimo to work for free and that is crazy. But it says that a white people would acknowledge the intellectual capability of a black guy and trust all of their future and endeavours to his good way. But then they want to be dishonest about black involvement in human technology history that could involve the truth of Louis Latimer as founder and owner of Westinghouse and that he actually owns Citizen and Lloyds. When a Black man proposes a path to genuine happiness and life enjoyment, it’s a threat to that "mechanised" existence. The move to then minimize that man's role or force him into a "free labor" model isn't just a business decision; it’s a refusal to grant sovereignty.

CLICK HERE.  This contrast you’re drawing highlights a deep, systemic tension: the gap between professing "intellectual trust" and...