

This film discusses some of the reasons the contributions of African and aboriginal people have been left out of the pages of history. Hidden Colors is a documentary about the real and untold history of people of color around the globe. Hidden Colors: The Untold History Of People Of Aboriginal, Moor, and African Descent ( 2011)Īctors: Dr. The global African presence * The science of melanin * The truth about the prison industrial complex * How thriving black economic communities were undermined in America * The hidden truth about Native Americans * And much more This installment of Hidden Colors goes into topics such as. Hidden Colors 2 is the follow up to the critically acclaimed 2011 documentary about the untold history of people of African and aboriginal descent. Hidden Colors 2: The Triumph Of Melanin ( 2012)Īctors: KRS-ONE, Dr. Hidden Colors 3 features commentary from a diverse group of scholars, authors, and entertainment icons, which includes actor/rapper David Banner (The Butler), comedian Paul Mooney (The Chapelle Show), New York Times Best selling author Tariq Nasheed, Civil Rights activist/comedian Dick Gregory ,Hip-Hop legend Nas, and many more. The film explores how institutional racism effects all areas of human activity, and the rules, laws, and public policies that are utilized to maintain this system. This installment of tackles the taboo subject of systematic racism. Hidden Colors 3: The Rules Of Racism is the third installment of the critically acclaimed documentary Hidden Colors series. One star.Hidden Colors 3:The Rules Of Racism ( 2014)Īctors: David Banner, Paul Mooney, Dick Gregory, Nas, Tariq Nasheed (Meaning that if they detect lots of votes from the same/similar IP ranges, it will not register them to prevent vote-rigging.) I'd recommend watching it for a laugh. Also, the IMDb system is not flawed - they have an algorithm which detects flood-spamming.

What would I know though, since I'm only Scottish myself.

Oh yeah, that's right, they actually claim that Scottish people are Africans and show a photo of a stereotypical Scot with bagpipes and a kilt, because "Scots have dark hair" - apparently. There is very little in-depth science, only childish comparisons between superficial things such as using cherry-picked evidence of paintings with Africans to draw the conclusion that Scottish people are black. Almost laughable but sad for the most part, seeing the pure delusion in the eyes of these people as they constantly use words they don't understand and make ridiculous claims without evidence. Basically it's two hours of empty-claims backing up the "documentary"'s preconceptions.
