In a video circulating widely, the brutal reality of being a Black mother in an American hospital plays out with chilling clarity. A woman—barely moments after giving birth—is surrounded not by care, but by chaos. In this video, you see the medical experiences that Black women are having in American clinical settings.
This mother has literally just given birth, she's not dressed, her precious newborn baby in her arms—hearing and feeling all of this, her nervous system in complete shock, and yet three white uniformed officers and two white nurses are causing anguish, danger, and threat to the mother and her child. There is no consideration for the condition of her body.
As she tells the uniformed men to leave—she has no clothes on—they snap at her: “Get dressed!” because she's just a Black woman and that means slave property within a nation that still does not enforce equal access and protection for Black people under established laws—the attackers evidently fear no accountability for their actions, only the white privilege to control a Black woman's. The victim's voice is ignored—so she screams.
They've isolated her from family members, which is a blessing to have in the first place when so much is done systematically at the highest levels of legal authority in the USA to rip black families apart from the moment of birth as you can see in this video—they're keeping away from family members, they want the mother by herself. Their word against hers. One black woman's voice against five people, maybe more. One truth against official and white privilege. They are causing screaming and distress, bringing violence around the child before mother and baby even leave the hospital.
Because, so often, simply gaining access to Black women through proximity results in this type of traumatizing systematic criminality in which white people and immigrant populations abuse their employment power to act beyond the legal boundaries of those positions, doing whatever they want to Black women and children. This results in poor and often life-changing outcomes forced upon Black women and children, who are then blamed for the outcomes as if they were not victims of reported corruption. Their rights to protection are stripped away under plausible deniability, reframing crime to fit the guise of procedure with nothing more than lies told by the criminals—because they were told to an audience that wants to believe those lies.
You're not hearing us. America is not hearing us.
It's commonplace. It’s happening in all the institutions — from healthcare to education, housing, banking, and employment. There is violence being unleashed on us and our children, and they’re taking our children now that they have already taken our husbands and fathers. Constantly, I personally have survived this continuous flow of systemic violence for so long that we’re 360 degrees back to where I was as a child — back to the state trying to take my life and freedom now that my children are adults, and America is pretending they cannot see what is happening to us.
America doesn't want to see us or hear from us until there is something they can blame us for doing wrong — and most often, the accusations of wrongdoing come from incidents where we’re literally protecting life. They treat us like criminals for protecting ourselves when no one else, including the government, will protect us — as if being alive is criminal and every day is about being used by society until a society member decides to end our lives, at which point we will be jailed or murdered for resisting. It’s insanity.
Theses criminals are not acting in any official capacity—only opinions. White opinions. These are not official actions which are grounds for engagement. No crimes have been committed. No medical emergencies are present requiring security. Just suspicion. Just racism that says I'm in control. This isn’t about hospital policy. It’s not about safety. It’s about control, dehumanization, and the constant surveillance and suspicion of Black bodies—even in their most sacred and vulnerable moments. The mother’s pleas are met not with listening ears, but threats. Her trauma is amplified, her child’s earliest moments tainted by institutional violence.
The truth is, this video is reflective of the attacks, treatment, and disposable nature in which Black women and children are being faced when they walk into clinic rooms and hospitals in America. "It is not rare." What is rare is women who call out the horrible treatment and refusal to provide care, irrespective of responsibly getting themselves to clinic and having medical insurance. "We are being silenced."
This video reflects a wider truth that Black women have been shouting for generations—our experiences in medical settings are often marked by disbelief, neglect, and abuse. We are told to be grateful for access to care, while we are being traumatized in clinic rooms. We are blamed for outcomes we have no power over. We are called angry when we fight for our lives. We are labeled difficult when we demand accountability. We are left with the damages indefinitely.
Everyone is talking about the epidemic of Black maternal mortality and the high mortality rates of Black children, about the staggering death rates of Black babies and talking for Black women and children, but no one is talking to Black mothers about their experiences and their children's experiences. They are hiding us. We are not being protected. We are being erased. Experts speak about us. Politicians debate over us. Institutions conduct research on us. But very few are asking, “What are you experiencing when you walk into that hospital?” Meanwhile, what's happening in clinics and hospitals is nothing short of pre–Civil War plantation attacks and fraud worthy of racketeering charges. "Look."
It's not Black women. It’s not Black children. It’s not lifestyle. It’s not lack of clinics and hospitals. It’s not failure to get oneself and their children to clinic. It’s not lack of medical insurance coverage. It’s not race. It’s racism. This is not happening on any part due to the patient’s behavior. It's clearly happening due to the conduct of the staff, the officers, the institution who could have "gone away"—went an got the patients relatives and handled this with the standard of respect, privacy, law and dignity. This is not about safety. This is not about protecting staff. This is not about hospital procedure. This is abuse. It is misconduct. It is targeted aggression. It is happening inside medical institutions with full awareness and no accountability.
And this is not rare. I wouldn't have to create the Making A Killing expose if such traumatizing attacks were not common place. And when we try to tell the truth—about abuse, about medical negligence, about the theft of our peace, possessions, and parental rights—we are called crazy. When we demand to be heard, society justifies our pain as misunderstanding, our rage as instability. Meanwhile, the violence continues—sometimes physical, often administrative, always racial.
This is not about individual bad actors. This is systemic. This is a structure that allows, supports, and excuses the mistreatment of Black women and children. It’s not about the lack of clinics. It’s not about “lifestyle choices.” It’s not about insurance coverage or health literacy. It’s not about Black anger or Black criminality or even Black barriers. It’s about continually turning a blind eye to white violence and white criminality that intentionally target Black people because there is less likelihood of severe consequences — if there are consequences at all.
Black women and their children are being systematically killed through administrative corruption, while Black boys and men are being gunned down by uniformed police or caged by corrupt courtrooms, because the Black population at large is being kept socioeconomically confined from affording representation. And how much would be enough to afford representation if the attacks never stop coming—because society is operating on a culture of false privilege and entitlement to attack this population in the first place? Let’s stop with the fancy language and start demanding to hear directly from America’s Black population about what is happening within the community and what appropriate solutions are needed. If that means going viral in the midst of combat, so be it. God bless this mother, all alone, when standing her ground.
What’s happening in hospitals and clinics across this country often echoes the abuse and coercion seen in the darkest parts of our history. This is violence. This is fraud. This is institutionalized abuse. And it’s time to stop hiding it behind sanitized language. This is a reflection of a deep, deadly, and deliberate system. We don’t need more studies. We do not need more experts; we need audits and investigations attached to complaints made by Black women and youth — or the lack of investigations following those complaints. We need more narratives directly from Black women. We need more footage of these events released to the public, reviewed, and the conduct investigated. The people responsible must be held accountable. This is administrative violence. Medical neglect. Coordinated abuse. And it is being ignored. This article is not asking for perspective. It is not asking for debate. It is documenting what happened — and making it clear: What happened in that hospital room was not medical care. It was abuse. And it has to stop.
Black women in America are facing this conduct every day in clinical settings. Not because of who we are — but because of what these systems do. They strip us of dignity, ignore our pain, weaponize authority, and attempt to rewrite events as if our voices do not matter. If we speak up, we are called unstable. If we fight back, we are criminalized. If we survive, we are discredited.
But here is the truth: This mother was attacked. Her child was placed in danger. They escalated. They isolated. They provoked. They gaslit. And then they moved on — likely to do it again to someone else. Meanwhile, people talk about Black maternal health statistics like they’re disconnected from reality. Like the numbers exist in a vacuum. But the truth is: those numbers are the result of this conduct.
She is not a lone victim of abuse in America’s medical system. I empathize. Do Black women have to record every medical encounter in this nation in order to be believed, protected, defended—made whole after we’ve been systematically damaged? Is that the standard American culture is comfortable owning by reputation? Because if it is not, culture better change immediately, because what is going to happen is we’re going to start bringing that data to the public since no one is respecting our advocacy.
People aren’t going to dismiss me like I’m lying or like I’m the only one. If I say they abused me, they abused me. If I say they abused my children, they abused my children. If I say they destroyed my family and took all my possessions and freedoms to keep me quiet, they destroyed my family and took all my possessions and freedoms to keep me quiet. And if I say the people who did it are hiding behind credentials, uniforms, and policy—they are.
If we say we were abused, we were.
If we say our families were torn apart, they were.
If we say our freedoms were stripped to silence us, they were.
And when we speak up, society makes justifications and calls us crazy for fighting to survive. Shame on society. And shame on those in enforcement positions who are not enforcing regulation, policy, and law to hold attackers accountable so that the attacks stop! They’ve attacked this mother and her child after birth, while she was still in the hospital gown.
If you see or hear me, see or hear us, use the term demons in edifying what has happened its because humans don't have the capacity to behave as anything less than humans—this is demonic behavior.
Post a Comment