This was an excerpt from Luis Albert Rosales on groups that align with lodisucio concepts.
The proliferation of hyper-specific identity labels like Foundational Black American, ADOS, Soulaani, DAFA, and B1 (Black First)—alongside more extreme expressions such as certain Black Hebrew Israelite and WABOs—illustrates how lineage-based essentialism can evolve into exclusionary frameworks through racial-cultural exclusivity.¹ Though supporters argue they correct historical erasures and target specific reparative justice, the impulse to delineate “authentic” belonging often creates adversarial categories that pit groups against each other.
A growing conflict has emerged between native-born identity movements, few individuals who claim Indigenous ancestry, and those whom extremists refer to as “tethers.” Identity-based defensiveness, centered in black fragility, within these ideological circles may intensify broader demographic anxieties as the 2030 census approaches.² From a cultural perspective, public discourse has often emphasized concerns among some White Americans regarding the growth of Latino and mixed-race populations. However, it is equally important to document and critically examine radical groups and movements that may align with Black supremacist ideologies.
In a nation shaped by centuries of migration and intermixing, such approaches risk replicating the divisive logic they purport to oppose. Lodisucio thinking highlights this pattern of racial-cultural exclusivity and gatekeeping that dismisses mixed-heritage realities common among Latinos, mulatos and others.³ ⁴
Luis Albert Rosales
Notes
- Sands, Darren. "Democrats Are Freaking Out About Pro-Trump Messaging to Occasional Black Voters." December 4, 2019. https://www.buzzfeednews.com/article/darrensands/black-voters-2020-democrats-ados-blexit.
- Rosales, Luis Albert. "Black Fragility and How It Operates Through the Black American Experience." June 6, 2024. https://archive.org/details/black-fragility-and-how-it-operates-through-the-black-american-experience-luis-albert-rosales.
- Rosales, Luis Albert. "Lodisucio Exposed: The Anti-Latino Rhetoric in Foundational Black American Communities." April 26, 2026. https://thefreevoluntarist.blogspot.com/2026/04/lodisucio-exposed-anti-latino-rhetoric.html.
- Rosales, Luis Albert. "What Is Racial-Cultural Exclusivity? Define Racial-Cultural Exclusivity." June 27, 2024. https://thefreevoluntarist.blogspot.com/2024/06/what-is-racial-cultural-exclusivity.html.
Please support us by following us here:
Read more of our articles: The Free Voluntarist
Support our article on Blurt: Luis Albert Rosales Comments On Foundational Black Americans, Soulanni's, ADOS and Their Link To Lodisucios