"They Will Elect Anyone Before They Elect A Black Woman": Black Americans Are Sharing Their Brutally Honest Reactions To The 2024 Election

1. "I'm done. I'm just done. I'm not going to pretend that I'm not hurt or angry because I am. I'm not surprised and I wish I was. I'm not protesting or making calls; I'm not boycotting, going door to door, or signing petitions either. Y'all all wanted Trump, and Trump is who you have."

—Maddi8889

2. "Kamala, like most Black women, did the best she could in the time allotted. I'm not shocked she lost. Americans keep trying to gaslight Black Americans as if they're not racist. Four years ago, it was crime that was their concern. With crime down and the economy going in the right direction UNDER THE DEMOCRATS, they did gymnastics to use that as their issue. Trump knows his base are bigots, yet they will justify him not being one, missing the point that he knows they're racist."

—Anonymous

3. "I feel honestly depressed that so many other communities have taken from us and used us Black people for political gain and POC 'solidarity,' but were unable to vote accordingly."

—Anonymous

4. "I feel numb. What's sad is the demeaning and degrading words that were spoken about her by Trump and JD Vance. It's sad. This is how they feel about Black women. She held her head high. I don't know how he got all those votes."

—Anonymous

5. "It's a hard pill to swallow, knowing that some of us got conned by Trump. Sure, he tried to appeal to the Black vote, only to insult us more by shoving some lame-ass sneakers in our faces as a means to relate. Even more so, he thought having a rap sheet and going to jail was more 'relatable.' Don't get me going about immigrant POC 'invading cities.' Those of you who did, shame on you. You fucked around and now going to truly find out how much he cares."

—Shaboomer

6. "Sad to say that if slavery were on the ballot today, it would overwhelmingly pass. This is how deeply Trump has stoked the racism in this country, and it came through for him. Also, Kamala was too confident in white women voting for her. They are NEVER dependable when it comes to dismantling patriarchy."

—joyfulmatcha67

7. "As a Black American, I'm scared. Think about it. If he successfully deports Mexicans, Venezuelans, and El Salvadorans, guess who he's coming for next. The Haitians, Africans, and Jamaicans. After them will be the Muslims, Asians, and Indians. He wants a white America. He only cares about whiteness in America. That's scary to those of us who aren't white."

—jealousscissors503

8. "My first thought is that this is a perfect example of how Black women have to work twice as hard, be professional, can be fully qualified, and play by the rules and still lose because a white guy can act like a total fuck-up, do the bare minimum, and yet still win. I'm particularly disgusted by all Americans of color who voted for this orange piece of shit.

(Continued)

For sure, I'm naive, but still, I can't wrap my head over the fact that American BIPOCs voted for a guy who has a history of racism and is a sexual predator who also represents other white supremacists. How can you be a person of color and ignore or don't give a fuck about this?"

—antoinette yoo

9. "I think Black Americans need to 100% turn to developing our own Project 2025 instead of being reactionary and focused on somebody else's plan. Anytime you don't have a plan of your own, you will fall victim to somebody else who does have a plan."

—Anonymous

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@nursefrombirth that is the same mistake made over and over again that allows people who could be joined together by support for Universal Human Rights to instead be divided and conquered.

What do Universal Human Rights look like? The UN addressed that in the wake of WWII .
un.org/en/about-us/universal-d

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