Black Americans GO OFF on Somali Immigrants – The Raw Truth Mainstream Media Won’t Touch
If you want to see what real rage looks like in America, skip the sanitized headlines. Go straight to the comment sections, the viral videos, and the heated street debates, where Black Americans are making it clear: the Somali immigrant controversy is not about jealousy, not about racism, but about justice, respect, and the soul of the nation. While mainstream media pumps out non-stories and pretends the $8 billion Minnesota fraud is a blip, Black communities across the country are lighting up with raw, unfiltered truth. This isn’t just a clash between two groups—it’s a reckoning.
It started with a scandal too big to ignore: a sitting Minnesota governor caught up in a multi-billion dollar fraud. Taxpayer dollars embezzled, funneled into the pockets of Somali immigrants, with an estimated 80% of the payout going to a single community. The networks—ABC, CBS, NBC—barely touched the story. But Black Americans did. And they did not hold back.
Scroll through the comment sections of any video on the Columbus, Ohio Somali fraud and you’ll find a digital battlefield. Black residents from Columbus and other cities are sounding the alarm, begging for ICE and federal investigators to come clean house. “You don’t need pictures,” one commenter wrote. “Read the comments. You know I’m telling the truth.” This isn’t just local outrage—it’s a national chorus. Communities from coast to coast are demanding answers and accountability.
But what makes this eruption so toxic—and so necessary—is the response from Somali immigrants themselves. Some laugh at the outrage, claiming Black Americans are just jealous because “we know how to work the system.” Others openly admit to the fraud, boasting that America was promised to them, and they’re simply taking what’s theirs. “We drive nice cars,” they say. “We made it in one generation while you’ve been here for centuries.” The message is clear: this isn’t just about money. It’s about power, status, and who gets to claim ownership of the American dream.

The pushback is fierce. Black Americans aren’t jealous—they’re angry. “We’re not jealous at your success. If you got here and worked your way up like the rest of us, fine. But you’re scamming, defrauding, stealing taxpayer dollars. That’s money from American people.” The frustration isn’t about Somali success—it’s about the method. It’s about watching hard-earned tax dollars disappear into the hands of people who don’t play by the same rules.
The tension is amplified by high-profile figures like Ilhan Omar, who, instead of calming the waters, pours gasoline on the fire. Her allegiance to Somalia is no secret; she’s welcomed the Somali president to Minnesota, called him “her president,” and repeatedly spoken about Somalia with more pride than America. For Black Americans and other long-standing citizens, this is the ultimate betrayal. “If you feel that way,” one video host said, “go back home. We’d even support it.”
But it’s not just about politics. It’s about identity. Somali immigrants have distanced themselves from other Africans, gravitating toward Arab countries and refusing to identify as African. “You said you’re Somali,” one Zambian-American commentator declared. “You gravitate more toward Arabic countries, so you’ve distanced yourself from Africans. That’s why we don’t support you. You’re selfish, ungrateful, tribalistic. Nobody wants to support you. You’re a problem. You’re thieves, liars, scammers. Nobody trusts you.”
The criticism is brutal, but it’s not just coming from Black Americans in the US. Africans across the continent—from South Africa to Zambia—share the sentiment. “Somalis are standoffish. They say they’re not Africans. They’re embarrassed by you. And you’ve made it clear you don’t want our support.” The wound is deep, and it’s not healing fast.
But Somali voices fire back with equal intensity. “We’re not all committing fraud. Every community has bad apples. You’re just using that as leverage to hate on us.” They argue that their success is a product of hard work, not just gaming the system. “When you’re an immigrant group and you’re Black and African, they hate you for being successful.”
Yet the facts paint a complicated picture. The majority of social service benefits in America go to a small portion of Americans, while immigrants—both legal and illegal—receive a disproportionate share. The average American pays the lion’s share into the tax system, only to watch those funds siphoned off. The anger isn’t about race—it’s about fairness.
Then there’s the issue of assimilation. “Never in history has a third-world country come to a first-world country and made it better without assimilating,” one host declared. The failure to integrate, combined with open contempt for American values, has turned what could have been a story of triumph into a toxic flashpoint.
And while Somali immigrants insist they’re helping America thrive, the reality in places like Minneapolis tells a different story. The city is now ground zero for the controversy, with Somali immigrants claiming ownership and promising not to leave. “They’re letting it be known. They’re not going away. They claim Minnesota as theirs and they’re willing to fight for it.”
For Black Americans, this is a wake-up call. “We are Americans. Our parents, our lineage comes from the United States of America. This is our country. We got to be willing to stand up, defend it, and fight for it if we want to maintain our way of life and our position in this country. Otherwise, people who just got here will take over in a generation, and it won’t be good for anybody.”
The conversation is raw, unfiltered, and sometimes ugly. But it’s necessary. America’s Black communities are tired of being ignored, tired of being used as political pawns, tired of watching their neighborhoods change while politicians look the other way. They’re calling out the fraud, the arrogance, and the lack of respect—and demanding real accountability.

The Somali immigrant community, for its part, is unapologetic. They point to their rapid rise, their economic success, and their ability to “work the system.” They dismiss the criticism as jealousy, racism, or sour grapes. But the facts remain: a multi-billion dollar fraud, a sitting governor under fire, and a nation divided.
As for Ilhan Omar, her legacy is now intertwined with this toxic debate. Her words, her actions, and her open allegiance to Somalia have made her a lightning rod. “She really thought she was going to come over here and rob Americans blind while we was never going to find out,” one commentator said. “She overplayed her hand.”
The truth is, this isn’t just about Somali immigrants. It’s about what kind of country America wants to be. It’s about who gets to claim the dream, who gets to write the rules, and who gets to hold power. Black Americans are making it clear: they’re done playing by someone else’s script.
So what happens next? The fight is just beginning. Black Americans are mobilizing, organizing, and speaking out. They’re demanding that politicians stop selling out their communities for votes, that fraudsters face real consequences, and that America stop pretending everything is fine.
If you want to see the future of American politics, don’t look to the headlines. Look to the comment sections, the street debates, and the viral videos where the real battle is being fought. The toxic eruption isn’t going away. And for the first time in a generation, Black Americans are making it clear: they’re not jealous. They’re just done being silent.
This is the reckoning the mainstream media won’t touch. This is the raw truth America needs to hear.
So hit that like button, share the story, and let your voice be heard. Because when Black Americans go off, the whole country listens. And this time, the message is simple: respect, justice, and accountability—or the dream is dead for everyone.