African Americans are the one race that has went through hell and high water over the centuries because of White supremacy, dominance, and myths. African Americans were looked at as animals, creatures, and as subhuman beings. As a result, Whites thought as of themselves as supreme beings and oppressed African Americans by living and dwelling upon theories and myths that made Blacks lower in relevance and importance in the world. Human beings are beings of praxis and live upon Action and Reflection. When theories and myths emerge, they reflect upon them and act upon what is practiced or taught. Humans adapt and conform to their surroundings mentally, emotionally, and physically. The myths that were thought of about Africans Americans are still prevalent in today’s society, and are causing as much harm as it did in the past to education and the society as a whole. Myths such as African Americans not being intellectual, inherently inferior, subhuman, and illiterate have tainted the image of Africans Americans affecting their image for forever more. Not all whites dwell upon these myths today, but the education system, work force, and even the government still shows impressions of these myths. Even though African Americans are not enslaved and forcefully working for the white man today, they are still oppressed because of the theories and myths that were practiced and believed by whites. African Americans started to believe the theories and myths also being that they have been a product of it for so long. African Americans were only practicing what they were made to practice. The oppressors made it that way. Even though education and everything else that was kept from them is available to African Americans today, they are still oppressed because of their reflection of the white man’s actions, myths, and practices based upon their unrighteous theories. Education has not been as transformative today because of the fact that hegemony is still present today and because there are myths that have controlled African Americans. Education is a transformative and beneficial tool and necessity, but was somehow kept from African Americans to keep them from mentally broadening, and keeping them entangled in hard labor and the task at hand set before them. To tie