Cracker mother effers! :-D Actually, it's a poem by H. T. Johnson in response to Kipling's "White Man's Burden" (which was about the burden of empire). I think the movie "White Man's Burden", named exclusively in contrast to "Black Man's Burden" without any recognition whatsoever for the Kipling work (and featuring the ridiculous John Travolta) kind of missed the history of these two poems and aptly misnamed it like a poorly written work should be. Anyway, poem below.
Pile on the Black Man's Burden. 'Tis nearest at your door; Why heed long bleeding Cuba, or dark Hawaii's shore? Hail ye your fearless armies, Which menace feeble folks Who fight with clubs and arrows and brook your rifle's smoke. Pile on the Black Man's Burden His wail with laughter drown You've sealed the Red Man's problem, And will take up the Brown, In vain ye seek to end it, With bullets, blood or death Better by far defend it With honor's holy breath.
white mans burden
A lack of resistance to tropical diseases.
The White mans burden. They believed that it was their responsibility to "Civilize" the African Natives.
the white mans burden was about the u.s. wanting to improve and continue our growth and militarism so we were number one. And so we would not get our heads chopped off by Russian solders.
Most defiantly, the white mans burden is talking about how as Americans/white men it is our duty to "help out" other nations who are not as civilized as we are. which was a major excuse for imperialism during that time. Many countries would say that just by being on the same land as the Savages and uncivilized races they were "helping" them even if they were destroying their land and exploiting their resources.
The audience for "The Black Man's Burden" include people who have some educational background and the imperialists.
The responses to both "The Black Man's Burden" and "The White Man's Burden" poems varied. Some praised the poems for shedding light on issues of race and imperialism, while others criticized them for perpetuating stereotypes and promoting colonialist attitudes. Overall, they sparked important discussions about power dynamics, privilege, and social responsibility.
white mans burden
The civilizing mission
Another name for "white man's burden" was "civilizing mission."
im a goon
white mans burden
Both ideas sought to justify imperialism and colonialism in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Social Darwinism argued that only the fittest societies would survive, legitimizing the dominance of Western empires. The White Man's Burden similarly justified Western colonization as a moral duty to civilize and uplift non-Western societies.
The rhyme scheme for the poem "The White Man's Burden" by Rudyard Kipling is ABAB CDCD EFEF GHGH.
A lack of resistance to tropical diseases.
white mans burden
Johnson's poem "The Black Man's Burden" was written in response to Rudyard Kipling's poem "The White Man's Burden," which promoted the idea of European imperialism as a civilizing mission in Asia and Africa. Johnson's poem critiques this notion and highlights the hypocrisy and racism inherent in the European colonial project. He challenges the idea that white colonizers were burdened with the responsibility to civilize non-white people, instead arguing that the true burden lay on the oppressed black populations who suffered under colonial rule.