Saturday, August 31, 2013

"IT'S ONLY A MATTER OF TIME BEFORE WE CAN OWN COLORED PEOPLE AGAIN"

WE SHALL OVER COME



                          JIM PORTER


NRA President Jim Porter: “It’s Only A Matter Of Time Before We Can Own Colored People Again”

May 05, 2013

By Stacy L.

HOUSTON — It seems new National Rifle Association President (NRA) president Jim Porter may have found himself in a bit of hot water. Not long ago he made his feelings about the Civil War known when he referred to it as the “War of Northern Aggression.” In that same speech he referred to President Obama as a “fake president” and Attorney General Eric Holder as “rabidly un-American.” However none of those remarks that anyone could deem as racist compare to his remarks made at a recent press conference discussing his new leadership role at the NRA.

 
“I’m very proud to be taking the lead here at the NRA. We need to really buckle down and strap on our best arguments to defend what is our God-given rights. No more northern folk tryin’ take away what is rightfully ours. I will not stand by and let some liberal-elitists try to ruin what has made this country great, especially a liberal of, you know, a different breed.”

 
When asked to clarify Porter said,

 
“I don’t have to clarify. You know gall darn well what I mean. In fact, it’s only a matter of time before we can own colored people again. They sure as hell won’t be our leaders. It’s out-right embarrassing. The War of Northern Aggression made it all possible, and you be best to know it’s all gonna change back. I’ll be on the front lines making sure it happens. I don’t want my grandkids growing up taking orders from a colored man. It’s our God-given right to keep them as property and keep them in line.”

 
Several at the NRA, including vice president Wayne LaPierre, have since tried to distance themselves from Porter’s remarks. LaPierre said, “They brought him in over me to try and liven things up, calling me boring and rehearsed. Next time they’d be better off just making me president.”
 
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NO MATTER WHERE, WE ARE ALWAYS THE BUTT OF SOMEONE'S JOKE


IT'S NEVER PERSONAL, IT'S JUST BUSINESS!


               WHO'S ZOOMING IN ON WHO?


Dunkin' Donuts Should Withdraw 'Racist' Charcoal Donut Ad: Human Rights Watch
AP  |  By By JOCELYN GECKER
Posted: 08/30/2013 8:44 am EDT  |  Updated: 08/30/2013 11:19 am EDT


BANGKOK (AP) — A leading human rights group has called on Dunkin' Donuts to withdraw a "bizarre and racist" advertisement for chocolate doughnuts in Thailand that shows a smiling woman with bright pink lips in blackface makeup.

The Dunkin' Donuts franchise in Thailand launched a campaign earlier this month for its new "Charcoal Donut" featuring the image, which is reminiscent of 19th and early 20th century American stereotypes for black people that are now considered offensive symbols of a racist era.


In posters and TV commercials, the campaign shows the woman with a shiny jet black, 1950s-style beehive hairdo holding a bitten black doughnut alongside the slogan: "Break every rule of deliciousness."

Human Rights Watch said it was shocked to see an American brand name running an advertising campaign that would draw "howls of outrage" if released in the United States.

"It's both bizarre and racist that Dunkin' Donuts thinks that it must color a woman's skin black and accentuate her lips with bright pink lipstick to sell a chocolate doughnut," said Phil Robertson, the deputy Asia director for Human Rights Watch. "Dunkin' Donuts should immediately withdraw this ad, publicly apologize to those it's offended and ensure this never happens again."

The campaign hasn't ruffled many in Thailand, where it's common for advertisements to inexplicably use racial stereotypes. A Thai brand of household mops and dustpans called "Black Man" uses a logo with a smiling black man in a tuxedo and bow tie. One Thai skin whitening cream runs TV commercials that say white-skinned people have better job prospects than those with dark skin. An herbal Thai toothpaste says its dark-colored product "is black, but it's good."


The CEO for Dunkin' Donuts in Thailand dismissed the criticism as "paranoid American thinking."

"It's absolutely ridiculous," said CEO Nadim Salhani. "We're not allowed to use black to promote our doughnuts? I don't get it. What's the big fuss? What if the product was white and I painted someone white, would that be racist?"

Salhani said that the Thai franchise of Dunkin' Donuts operates independently of the American operation and that doughnut sales have increased about 50 percent since the campaign was launched around two weeks ago, which he attributed to curiosity about the new advertisements.

"Not everybody in the world is paranoid about racism," said Salhani, a Lebanese expatriate in Thailand who said his teenage daughter was the model featured in the campaign. "I'm sorry, but this is a marketing campaign, and it's working very well for us."
 
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TRAYVON MARTIN FOUNDATION TO RECEIVE $50K DONATION

MAKING A DIFFERENCE







Trayvon Martin Foundation To Receive $50k Donation For College Scholarships
The Orlando Sentinel  |  By Rene Stutzman
Posted: 08/30/2013 4:19 pm EDT


An Orlando auto group, law firm and black fraternity are among those offering $50,000 as a scholarship to four graduating seniors from Trayvon Martin's high school in Dade County.

The donors, including the Boyland Auto Group and Invictus Law Group, are to present the money to the Trayvon Martin Foundation and his parents tomorrow in Isleworth.

The donors also include Delta Xi Lambda, a black fraternity based in Orlando, and Boyz-4-Lyfe, a group of long-time friends.

The money goes to the foundation, which will divide it between four 2014 graduating seniors of Dr. Michael M. Krop Senior High School in Miami, where Trayvon was enrolled at the time of his death, according to a news release announcing the gift.

Its purpose is to help minority teenagers, donors wrote.

"We are doing what we can to make the world a better place by not being divisive but by uplifting our community through educational opportunities for kids who otherwise would not have the same opportunity," the donors said in their announcement.

Trayvon, an unarmed black 17-year-old, was killed Feb. 26, 2012, in Sanford by George Zimmerman, a light-skinned Neighborhood Watch volunteer who had earlier called police, describing the Miami Gardens teenager as suspicious.

A six-member Seminole County jury acquitted Zimmerman last month of second-degree murder.

Trayvon's parents established the Trayvon Martin Foundation, a non-profit, last year as a way to provide support to the victims of violent crimes, according to its website.

Boyland Auto owns Mercedes-Benz of South Orlando, among other dealerships.

rstutzman@tribune.com or 407-650-6394. ___

(c)2013 The Orlando Sentinel (Orlando, Fla.)

Visit The Orlando Sentinel (Orlando, Fla.) at www.OrlandoSentinel.com

Distributed by MCT Information Services

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Friday, August 30, 2013

PHILLIP AGNEW TWO-MINUTES #OUR MARCH

                      THIS IS OUR TIME TO DREAM


                                     PHILLIP AGNEW
          DREAM DEFENDERS - EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR





Published on Aug 29, 2013
Director of Dream Defenders Phillip Agnew and leader of United We Dream Sofia Campos were ready to represent our generation at the commemorative events of the 50th Anniversary of the March on Washington. But at the last minute, they were cut from the speaking roster because of "time".

Our generation's dreams have been deferred too long. We don't need a mic. The time is NOW.

We ask that YOU record your own video with hashtag #OurMarch - what did the 50th anniversary of the March on Washington mean to you? Why do you march every day? For who?

Use #OurMarch along with #MarchOn and #MOW50. Tweet your responses. Let's have our own conversation.
Phillip Agnew, March On Washington: Dream Defenders Leader Cut From March Puts Out Video

By SUZANNE GAMBOA 08/29/13 06:14 PM ET EDT   

WASHINGTON — Phillip Agnew hoped to deliver his message to tens of thousands observing the 50th anniversary of the March on Washington, but time worked against him. Now he's making up for being cut with an online video.

Agnew, executive director of the group Dream Defenders, said he was on the steps of the Lincoln Memorial on Wednesday and saw his name on the teleprompter as the next speaker. As he headed for the podium, he saw the Rev. Al Sharpton walk up and begin speaking.

"That's when I found out," Agnew said Thursday. "I went and found I'd been cut, and I told them all I needed was two minutes. They told me people had run over their time and they didn't have any time left."

Some 70 speakers and performers were on the agenda at the event paying homage to the historic march and rally where the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. delivered his "I Have a Dream" speech. The final speaker was President Barack Obama. Agnew was one of the few young people on the speakers' agenda.

At least one other scheduled speaker didn't get to the microphone. A spokesman for The King Center, which organized the anniversary ceremony, could not be immediately reached for comment.

Agnew's group formed last year in the wake of the Feb. 26, 2012, fatal shooting of Trayvon Martin by George Zimmerman. The group marched from Daytona Beach, Fla., to Sanford, Fla., the town where Trayvon was shot while walking to the home where he was staying with his father.

Agnew said he's not angry about losing his spot at Wednesday's march commemoration. He spoke at the march event organized Saturday by Sharpton, and his parents were there to hear him, he said. At that event, the sound system was strictly managed and the microphone was cut off for most speakers who went over their time.

He said he made the video to get the word out about his group and their work. It's been posted to YouTube.

"It's up to us. It's up to young people. We can't wait on anybody else to do that for us," Agnew said. "So I put out our video and we are encouraging people around country to tell us what they would do with two minutes on a platform."
Here are our future young leaders of today.  Al Sharpton had no business with his bought and sold ass up there!  This is our time to dream of what could be.....
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OBAMA'S PROMISES TO BLACK AMERICA FALL SHORT ON MARCH

STILL PLAYING THEIR GAME







Obama's Promises To Black America Fall Short On March On Washington Anniversary
The Huffington Post  |  By Danielle Cadet   
Posted: 08/28/2013 2:21 pm EDT  |  Updated: 08/28/2013 2:29 pm EDT


Fifty years ago, the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. proclaimed a dream where his children would not be judged by the color of their skin, but by the content of their character. In an America where atrocities against African Americans were a regular occurrence, and segregation limited blacks to second-class citizenship, King's dream seemed just that -- a wild fancy, or mere hope.

But in 2008, when the country elected Barack Obama as its first black president, it seemed America had finally gotten to a place where reputation mattered more than race. Although he was not present at the March On Washington, Obama's election was the single biggest contribution to the civil rights fight in the U.S.

The president's standing in the shadow of King's legacy is a heavy burden to bear, and in the last five years, he has inevitably fallen short of the somewhat messianic expectations placed on him. But despite being his most supportive and unwavering constituency, African Americans have borne the brunt of Obama's shortfalls and remained at the bottom of the totem pole in many of the areas that made up Obama's 2008 campaign base: economy, health care and education. So as he takes his place in front of the Lincoln Memorial, standing on the shoulders of those who demanded equality 50 years ago, many blacks are wondering how much has actually changed.

In a new Pew Research Center poll, only one out of four African Americans said the black community's situation had improved during Obama's tenure, and one in five said things have gotten worse. A quick look at the numbers reveals that while many strides have been made, there's still so much left to be done.

In 2008, 12.7 percent of blacks faced unemployment compared to 7.1 percent of whites. That number peaked in 2012, when the 14.1 percent of black joblessness nearly doubled the 7.1 percent among whites. Today, while white unemployment is at 6.6 percent, a slight dip from its 2008 number, the rate for blacks is at 12.6 percent -- still nearly double, and hardly changed from when Obama stepped into the White House five years ago.

During his 2008 campaign, Obama made many promises about fixing the economy. While he's kept many, the black community has oftentimes been the last to feel that change. And although the racial employment gap precedes his tenure, the weight of joblessness has made African Americans the majority of those living in poverty today -- 27.6 percent of the nation's poor, despite only making up 13 percent of the population.

As a result, black neighborhoods are often disproportionately plagued by high levels of poverty and violence, sub-par public schools and limited access to adequate health care, perpetuating a stubborn cycle of socio-economic struggle. In 2008, Obama's message of hope seemed to be the solution to these problems, with his plans for an increased minimum wage, tax relief for low-income workers, education reform and affordable health care. But five years later, disparities still remain, with blacks trailing behind in high school graduation rates, a 13 percent gap in college graduation rates compared to whites and a large portion of African Americans without health insurance.

While Obama can in no way be held completely responsible for these disparities, the promises he hoped to fulfill during his presidency and its juxtaposition to King's dream place him between a rock and a hard place. As the quintessential embodiment of black progress, he has been charged with fighting institutional inequities that existed long before he was born. However, his election was largely based on his vow to fight for a community whose progress has remained slightly stagnant since he took office.

In 2011, Obama challenged the black community to continue its fight with him as its leader, and replace complacency and complaint with proactive participation.

“I expect all of you to march with me and press on,” he said. “Take off your bedroom slippers, put on your marching shoes. Shake it off. Stop complaining, stop grumbling, stop crying.”

And despite criticism of these kinds of comments, black voters turned out in record numbers to help Obama achieve a second term. But as the community assesses its progress at this historic juncture, the question remains of what he has done for a constituency that has stuck by him through thick and thin.

"The great majority of African-Americans have shown patience, stuck with Obama even through this terrible recession, recognizing the real limits within which he has to operate," Harvard Law professor Randall Kennedy told ABC News. "They have bitten their tongue, not out of complacency, but out of a real, mature grasp of the difficulty he had to face."

But despite general support in the community, the president's critics question whether or not he is indeed the appropriate symbol of the civil rights movement.

"What allows President Obama to so readily address this 50th anniversary celebration is the fact that King is now a dead martyr," Tavis Smiley wrote in a recent op-ed for USA Today. "Otherwise, like Kennedy, Obama might also be mired in anguished soul-searching about whether to share the podium with a man who would undoubtedly be espousing uncomfortable and inconvenient truths."

Although the numbers are tough to read, they don't tell the full story of black progress. Obama's mere existence is a symbol of what so many fought for 50 years ago. But is his emblematic presence enough to override the statistics? The answer to that question is quite complex. Today, nearly 50 years to the minute of the moment King shook the country out of its slumber, Obama stands as the embodiment of the achievement of the dream, and a symbol of a step in the right direction. However, the journey toward true equality in a country plagued by years of struggle continues.
 
 
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JESSE JACKSON RESPONDS TO OBAMA: " WHAT WE DON'T NEED"

WHAT HAVE YOU DONE LATELY MR. JACKSON?



              JESSE JACKSON SR.


Jesse Jackson Responds To Obama: 'We Need A Response To The Dream, Not More Dreams' (VIDEO)
Huffington Post  |  Posted: 08/29/2013 3:46 pm EDT  |  Updated: 08/29/2013 3:46 pm EDT




Now that the 50th Anniversary of the March On Washington has come and gone, many are left questioning President Obama's next steps after his momentous speech. Reverend Jesse Jackson joined HuffPost Live to weigh in on what needs to be done to continue the fight for civil rights.

"We do not have equal protection under the law. That's why we have more in jail than in school."
Jackson
told host Marc Lamont Hill.

Emphasizing that the implementation of policy and legislation like President Johnson achieved in the 1960s is crucial to advancing the goals of the black community, Jackson said, "We need a war on poverty revived .... This requires the government responding to us with policy."

"I'm all for motivation, but the dream will have to challenge The White House and Congress to respond to the dream," he continued. "We need a response to the dream, not more dreams."





It is better to be loved for doing something, than to be hated for doing nothing.  Jesse Jackson love to cry and point his finger at what Obama haven't done when he haven't done anything  him self and he had more time on his hand doing just that.


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JOE WALSH - BORN IGNORANT AND PROUD OF IT!

MANY ARE BORN IGNORANT



           OTHERS ARE SIMPLY TOUGHT!!!



Joe Walsh Commemorates March On Washington With Racially-Charged 'I Have A Dream' Rant
The Huffington Post  |  By Chris Gentilviso   
Posted: 08/28/2013 11:59 am EDT  |  Updated: 08/28/2013 1:44 pm EDT



Nearly a year removed from a one-term stint in office, former Rep. Joe Walsh (R-Ill.) commemorated the 50th anniversary of the March on Washington with an eyebrow-raising list of issues he believes are plaguing the black community.

In an address on his radio show billed as "My Own Dream For America," Walsh unleashed a line of racially-charged comments, headed by his view that African-Americans suffer from "dependency on the government plantation."

From Walsh's show's website:

Of all the commentators who have been asking whether King’s dream has been achieved, FOX News’ Juan Williams seems to be the only one with whom I agree. When asked by Chris Wallace if the dream has been fulfilled, Williams noted that there isn’t, “any question that [African Americans] have come along way,” before importantly pointing out that blacks have to address the problems that are created within their communities. “I think that if you look at the realities of today, you’ve got to talk about things like family breakdown,” Williams said. “You’ve got to talk about the fact that 70 percent of black children today are born out of wedlock. I think Dr. King would cry.”
I agree with Juan, but instead of invoking King’s legacy to lament about present problems I’ve decided to share my own dream.

I have a dream that all black parents will have the right to choose where their kids attend school.
I have a dream that all black boys and girls will grow up with a father.
I have a dream that young black men will stop shooting other young black men.
I have a dream that all young black men will say "no" to gangs and to drugs.
I have a dream that all black young people will graduate from high school.
I have a dream that young black men won't become fathers until after they're married and they have a job.
I have a dream that young unmarried black women will say "no" to young black men who want to have sex.
I have a dream that today's black leadership will quit blaming racism and "the system" for what ails black America.
I have a dream that black America will take responsibility for improving their own lives.
I have a dream that one day black America will cease their dependency on the government plantation, which has enslaved them to lives of poverty, and instead depend on themselves, their families, their churches, and their communities.
Walsh was soundly defeated in Nov. 2012 by Rep. Tammy Duckworth (D). The Tea Party favorite has turned heads with race-related remarks in the past, headed by his belief that President Barack Obama is "a historic figure" who was only elected because he is black.

The country voted for him because of that. It made us feel good about [our] self." Walsh said in April 2012, according to Think Progress. "I’ve said it before, it helped that John McCain was about 142 years old. It helped that the economy was tanking. A lot of these things helped. But he never would have gotten there without his historic nature."
 
 
Many are born ignorant because it's in their genes and their off spring will inherit the same trait.  There are those that are intelligent but are taught to be ignorant based on the company that they keep.
 
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Wednesday, August 28, 2013

DR. CORNEL WEST SET CNN STRIAGHT!

ALWAYS REFRESHING....



DR. CORNEL WEST
 

                                  
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KANYE WEST STILL KISSING THAT ASS!

CAN'T SEEM TO GET ENOUGH!!!



                   KANYE WEST  AND TAYLOR SWIFT

Kanye West still kissing that ass!

People say some of the most asinine things that not even they would imagine saying.  "Don't bite the hand that feeds you," is one of those sayings, because they often do. "Liquor in, the truth comes out," and Kanye West proved both points a FEW years ago at the MTV MUSIC AWARDS and he's been kissing Taylor Swift's ass ever since as if her shit doesn't smell.  He spoke the truth but afterward couldn't handle the thought of being hated even more by those white people.  That even now he continue to show how blacks at every chance that they get to show how unintelligent we can be when given the chance by offering an apology like this statement, "The last thing I would want to happen to my daughter is some crazy, drunk, black guy in a leather shirt to come up and cut her off at an awards show. That's the last thing I'd want…I was just a crazy rock star." Many racists’ whites would claim first that he is not a rock star and second because it's not their asses being kissed, then they don't want to hear another apology coming from him, because after all, he made her a household name in which few knew nothing of her until his rant.  On the other hand, we as blacks don't want to here nothing about him or his confessions of parent hood.  As always we put ourselves down and each other, for he could have said some crazy, drunk, white guy in a leather shirt, but then I guess he would have to apologize and kiss someone else ass for that remark also for referring to some white guy would have been found offensive in certain circles as well.
 
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12 "YEARS A SLAVE" OCTOBER 18

A LIFE TIME OF OPPRESSION








12 years as a slave, based on a true story, but then aren't they all said to be? Why is it, we continue to make movies such as this, but can't talk openly about slavery and 90 percent of the world don't want to hear about it unless it's a major movie event with some of your biggest named stars, mainly white. Because the black ones you never heard of nor will again and the few that you have heard of will always be over shadow by the whites. What good have ever come out of these kinds of movies?  Example: Hollywood funds a thirty million dollar movie about taking down one of the biggest bank jobs ever dreamed of hitting.  Hi-tech, explosives, the works, with some of the biggest names in the business co-starring, a year or so latter someone attempt to pull off, in detail what they saw in that movie.  Not once have anyone tried to understand us as a race or show compassion/ repentance for what their ancestors done to us, not a one after watching one of these movie.  So what do we get out of these type of movies other than employment, for its the only time you will ever see a host of blacks in a white mans production is when we are the subject of being humiliated, disgrace and a reminder to them or to validate what they have always believed, that they are superior..

Time and time again we produce these kinds of movies and for whom to enjoy? Do you think that those of us who have a strong sense of pride and knowledge of what white Americas has done to our race and still trying to under mind the significant of it as, that was so long ago and it's over now.  Like fools, little do they know, they are still entertaining the whites, because in their eye that is all we are good for.  Therefore they are the one's that enjoy watching these kinds of movies along with their simple minded African Americans whom they renamed once again, are still suffering from slave syndrome.  These are the kind of movies that they will pay to watch like going to a concert where they get to hear the blacks screaming nigga for the thousands time.  But make a movie with a black cast like Spike Lee and see how many white people you see in the audience, excluding the bi racial pretend not to be a racist.  The bottom line, if they are afraid to make black history a part of the schools curriculum because of what will come out of it like the truth, then there's no reason to continue making these kind of movies based on true events that have no value in humanity when it's just for entertainment purposes only, because it sure in hell isn't educational.
 
 
 
 
 
 
                                                   KANYE WEST ("LEAVES")


The Hidden Meaning Behind Kanye West's VMA Performance

Kanye West's silouette in front of a stylized image of the Lynching Tree on Sunday

(Photo: WireImage)

Kanye West's performance at the MTV Video Music Awards may have been bare bones in its presentation, but the song itself — and the deceptively simple imagery that accompanied it — had a lot more to it than viewers may have realized.  "Blood on the Leaves" samples Nina Simone's cover of Billie Holiday's "Strange Fruit," which describes Southern slavery and the lynching of African Americans. It's certainly not a song that inspires a live presentation featuring seizure-inducing lights or pyrotechnics; instead, West performed in silhouette in front of a projected still image of "Lynching Tree," a photograph taken by "Shame" filmmaker Steve McQueen.

The tree, which is located somewhere near New Orleans, was once a gallows for slaves and now serves as a marker for several lynched victims buried underneath it. The piece is currently on display at the Schaulager Museum in Basel, Switzerland.

The image is tied to Steve McQueen's new film, "12 Years a Slave," which tells the story of Solomon Northup (played by Chiwetel Ejiofor), a free black man from upstate New York who was kidnapped in 1841 and sold into slavery. The film, which co-stars Michael Fassbender as a cruel plantation owner and Brad Pitt as a Canadian abolitionist who befriends Northop, opens on October 18.


STRANGE FRUIT
 
 
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Tuesday, August 27, 2013

WAR ON THE HORIZON

                            PLAN OF ATTACK



                              AYO MIMATHI







HUFF POST:   BLACK VOICES

Ayo Kimathi Put On Paid Leave By Homeland Security Over Website Promoting Race War

ALICIA A. CALDWELLAP Aug 24, 2013


WASHINGTON -- The Homeland Security Department says an employee who runs a racist website predicting and advocating a race war has been put on paid administrative leave.

An acquisitions officer for Immigration and Customs Enforcement who deals with small businesses, Ayo Kimathi, operates the website War on the Horizon. It includes descriptions of an "unavoidable, inevitable clash with the white race." Kimathi is black.Kimathi has been with the department since 2009. He was told Friday that he is being put on paid administrative leave.

His website criticizes whites, gays, those of mixed race, and blacks who integrate with whites. The Southern Poverty Law Center, which monitors hate groups, earlier this week reported on Kimathi's role in running the site.

Kimathi hasn't responded to email and phone calls requesting comment.



Top Comments



Lol. Im a gun owner and I got plenty of ammo. I spend time at ranges and gun stores. Blacks are few and far between.

I also deliver for Ups. I deliver ammo on a daily basis. It’s mostly whites.

From my perspective, blacks aren't ready. I know who is...

Good luck.

Reply · 6


AND HE WORKS FOR THE US GOVERNMENT.....GUESS IT'S TRUE THAT OBAMA IS TRYING TO DIVIDE THE COUNTRY....

Reply · 4



WHO CARES?


BUT NOT U. TOO BUSY PLAYING SILLY GAMES, NIGER BOY. NOW GO AWAY, I DON'T NEED MY SHOES SHINED TODAY

 

DAMN RIGHT.  THE GOOD OL' DAYS WHEN BLACKS WERE PRODUCTIVE



STUPID FOOL  HAV NOTHING BUT A WHORE MOMMA. LIKE OBAMA'S WHORE MOMMA. OR SASHA'S WHORE MOMMA

 

TRAVON MARTIN IS DEAD. IT'S A START.



or any more wrong. There the mongrels & their jew supporters go again telling everyone what to do and how to do it.BLOW ME CHAM TORINO. NO WAIT, I DON'T WANT MONGREL SKIN TOUCHING ME. NOW GO AWAY, I DON'T NEED MY SHOES SHINED TODAY!


u know what i'm thinking? let me try...u think u wish u were white so u could live like a human being, and not a worthless animal. how did i do, kaffa?


atreenurse 8 hours ago
 
good black africans hate american mongrels as much as anyone. They don't want our trash.

 

co-workers maybe. but so different at home.

 
Last year State Republican Representative John Hubbard made the same claims, wrote and self published a hand book in detail and also hosted a web site to feaster his hate.  He wasn't put on leave nor asked to step down.  Why?  Because these are the same racists that make and break the laws in which we are to follow.


JOHN HUBBARD
 

Huffington Post
 

John Hubbard, a Republican member of the Arkansas House of Representatives, has written a new book in which he says slavery was “a blessing” for African-Americans, among other questionable statements.
 

Hubbard, a first term Republican from Jonesboro, Ark., makes a series of racially charged statements in the self-published book, including saying that integration of schools is hurting white students, that African slaves had better lives under slavery than in Africa, that blacks are not contributing to society, and that a situation is developing in the United States which is similar to that of Nazi Germany.
 

…the immigration issue, both legal and illegal… will lead to planned wars or extermination.  Although now this seems to be barbaric and uncivilized, it will at some point become as necessary as eating and breathing.”  (Page 9)

To read more of his rant you can check our Blog Archive section, October 31, 2012, titled “WOULD YOU LIKE TO MEET THE DEVIL?”

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WILD WING CAFE KICKS OUT 25 AFRICAN AMERICANS

BEWARE






                                   



Wild Wing Cafe Kicks Out 25 African Americans After White Customer Felt 'Threatened': Report
Aug 25, 2013

Right as the country commemorates the 50th anniversary of the March on Washington, people are flocking to social media to condemn a South Carolina restaurant for its allegedly racist actions.

According to CBS affiliate WCSC-TV, Michael Brown and 24 of his family and friends were at Wild Wing Cafe celebrating his cousin's final day in Charleston, S.C., last month when the group was suddenly told to leave.

The reason? The shift manager allegedly told Brown that a white customer felt "threatened" by his party. When one of Brown's companions started filming the exchange, the shift manager is said to have told the group to leave.

"[That] totally alarmed all of us because we're sitting there peaceably for two hours," Brown told the news outlet.

Brown said that his group had waited "patiently" for two hours to get a seat at the restaurant. He took to Facebook earlier this month to express his frustration with the North Charleston establishment:

WCSC-TV reports that a representative at the chain reached out to Brown to apologize and offer a free meal for the group.

"We had a conversation," Debra Stokes, Wild Wing Cafe's chief marketing officer, told WCSC-TV. "It was a really good conversation... they just didn't receive the experience that they have come to know and love."

Thousands of people have since shared Brown's Facebook post, and others have bombarded Wild Wing Cafe's Facebook page with calls for a boycott:
 
ONE MAN'S DREAM HAS BECOME OUR NIGTHMARE LEAVING US WITH NOTHING WE CAN CALL OUR OWN.  YET ANOTHER MAN'S VISION OF SEPARATE BUT EQUAL COULD HAVE BEEN A BETTER FUTURE FOR ALL CONCERN.  NOW LOOK AT WHERE WE ARE, STILL MARCHING....
 
 
 
 
 
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Monday, August 26, 2013

OUR PAST

NEVER FORGET IT!







OUR PAST

No one wants to remember regrets, mistakes, their lost, and our past; or talked about it, let alone slavery.  Yet we do among ourselves and we relive it every day when we are reminded, for some, not evening knowing it. Every time we get behind the wheel of an automobile we risk getting pulled over not because we broken the law, but because of the color of our skin.  The media claim or refer to it as, "Racial Profiling" in stead of calling it what it really is, which is a hate crime being committed like a blast from the past by the same racists people  past down from generation to generation. Our young men our being murder on a regular basis by those that have sworn to protect and to serve the people, not just the white American Citizens at large. While the media only focus and draw our attention to black on black crime.  We were taught or trained like animals to hate and kill one another and then lay the blame at our feet. "See what you are doing to your race," they then mock.  Then like obedient fools we start screaming like puppets, ”Black on Black,"  is echoed until it's self hatred all over again.  Never once revisiting our past history of where, how and why we are still standing at the cross road and refusing to move forward.  The whites kill their own every single day.  Starting with every member of the family including the dog, they shoot up an entire Shopping Mall, School Campus to Movie Theater and the media call it a tragedy.  Not once will you hear them refer to it as White on White and once more we will show empathy like former slaves and repeat what the media subliminally transmitted for us to say, "It's a shame or tragedy what just expired moments ago." They continue to rap our sisters and daughters like slave owners while they fool themselves by believing, "You can't tell your heart who to love," and yet it is easy for them to tell it whom to hate without reason.  Just because they married a black person don't mean that they are not still a racist.  Remember slave owners bedded a many slaves and that never changed his heart or hate for the rest he beaten and worked like the animals he referred to then and today.  Still there are many blacks today that are continuing to be the mouth piece for the whites and convince us that we have come a long way racially and made great strides toward progress.  2013 we still can't attend school and sit along side of them without being called a nigga, referred to as the dark ones or the butt of their jokes in blackface.  Just because we can patronize their stores through the front door doesn't guarantee the same commitment of service.  You can ask Ophar about that. 

 
Millions of American schoolchildren who never experienced Jim Crow or whites-only water fountains know the phrase “I have a dream.”  Beyond that, White American has kept blacks and their own ignorant to our contributions to this country and been denied the fruits of our labor.

And many American adults can recite from memory certain phrases: The Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.’s use of the prophet Amos’ vision of justice rolling down “like waters and righteousness like a mighty stream,” or the line about children being judged not by “the color of their skin but the content of their character.”  A dream that have yet to be for filled, because ignorance can also be taught and learned just like anything else, then past down generation to generation.  As you can see below:



chifan
267 Fans
6 hours ago (10:48 AM)
He dreamed he could cheat on his wife countless times and be an absentee father. He fulfilled that dream, and it seemed to catch on in the African American community.

chifan
267 Fans
7 hours ago (10:49 AM)
keep telling yourself that or get up off the couch and change it.


96 Fans
2 hours ago ( 3:30 PM)
By "We", I hope you mean black people: getting married, parenting their children, supervising their schoolwork, teaching them self-restraint, delayed gratification, decorum in dress and manner, and a work ethic.


96 Fans
3 hours ago ( 3:28 PM)
It's time for blacks to focus on the "content of their character" part, and stop their tunnel vision on the "color of their skin" part.


96 Fans
3 hours ago ( 3:28 PM)
Translation: Monetary reparations.

Not gonna happen.
 
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All Rights Are Reserved By Their Respective Owners (c)2013


ROMANY MALCO IS NOT ACTING

       KEEPING IT REAL-STRAIGHT TALK!



                         ROMANY MALCO




FROM:   ROMANY MALCO


I haven't touched on the Trayvon Martin issue because race matters in this country are the paralysis of the American people. To constructively discuss Trayvon would require empathy, introspection and an understanding of America's social and economic history. This is why the open forums we have seen thus far seem to fuel more ignorance and bias than reasonable debate.

To be brutally honest, the only reason people are even aware of Trayvon Martin is because it became a topic within mainstream news and pop culture. Meaning: News directors saw it as a profitable, sensational story. Hundreds of blacks die annually in South Side Chicago without even a blurb. Trayvon isn't in the mainstream news for any reason other than ratings and profit. The news coverage on the Zimmerman case almost implies that the killing of this young black man is somehow an anomaly and I resent that.

In this country, if it isn't streamlined through mainstream media and pop culture, it doesn't seem to warrant national debate. Our "government" continues to wreak havoc on our civil liberties and there is little to no protest from the black community because of media diversion tactics that keep such pertinent issues out of mainstream media. But if Jay-Z or Rihanna were to make mention of it, we'd suddenly be jolted out of our sugar comas and protesting on freeways.

My point being, people are up in arms about Trayvon based on regurgitated pundits and manipulated facts aired to elicit emotion while fueling America's anger and division. That's how you boost ratings. No different from Piers Morgan's desperate rant over gun control when he knew his ratings were in the dumps. And from where I stand, anyone who still relies on corporate-owned media pundits to support an argument isn't equipped to offer worthwhile solutions.

People are using Trayvon Martin's death as an excuse to project their own deep-seated issues with racism and will not be capable of intelligent, empathetic debate until they've cooled down and afforded themselves an education.

Addressing Trayvon without first addressing the absence of critical thinking in our schools, the lack of introspection, the reasons for our low tolerance and our country's skewed value system does nothing more than create a sounding board for the ignorant. So rather than facilitate more racism outcry, I'd like to address young black people specifically.

I believe we lost that trial for Trayvon long before he was killed. Trayvon was doomed the moment ignorance became synonymous with young black America . We lost that case by using media outlets (music, movies, social media, etc.) as vehicles to perpetuate the same negative images and social issues that destroyed the black community in the first place. When we went on record glorifying violent crime and when we voted for a president we never thought to hold accountable. When we signed on to do reality shows that fed into the media's stereotypes of black men, we ingrained an image of Trayvon Martin so overwhelming that who he actually may have been didn't matter anymore.

Don't you find it peculiar that the same media outlets who have worked so diligently to galvanize the negative stigmas of black men in America are now airing open debates on improving the image of black males in American media? Do you honestly think CNN is using their competitive time slots for philanthropy?

"You never want a serious crisis to go to waste." - Rahm Emanuel

If we really wanted to ensure Trayvon Martin's killing was not in vain, we'd stop perpetuating negative images that are now synonymous with black men in America. We'd stop rapping about selling drugs and killing niggas. The next time we saw a man beating a woman, we'd call for help or break it up, but one thing we would not do is stand by with our cellphones out -- yelling WORLDSTAR! Instead of rewarding kids for memorization, we'd reward them for independent and critical thinking.

We'd spend less time subconsciously repeating lyrics about death and murder and more time understanding why we are so willing to twerk to songs that bemean women and boast of having things we cannot afford. We'd set examples of self-love for our youth by honoring our own hair, skin and eye color. We'd stop spending money on designer gear that we should be spending on our physical and psychological health. We'd seek information outside the corporate owned-media that manipulates us. We'd stop letting television babysit our kids and we'd quit regurgitating pundits we haven't come up with on our own.

Education, introspection, self-love and excellence are the only ways to overcome the wrath of ignorance. So before going back to popping molly and getting Turnt Up, I urge you to consider the implications of your actions. Your child's life may depend on it.



Follow Romany Malco on Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/romanymalco

All Rights Are Reserved By Romany Malco and Their Respective Owners (c)2013



Sunday, August 25, 2013

"FOR COLORED BOYS"

REDEMPTION




Published on Aug 25, 2013
Season 1, Episode 1 of For Colored Boys, REDEMPTION.
A soul-stirring dramatic series about a father's attempt to repair his broken family after being released from prison, starring Rob Morgan and Julito McCullum with Tim Reid and Jacinto Taras Riddick.
with Lauren Hooper, Nashawn Kearse, Kai Muhammad, Jas Anderson, Ryan Stephenson, and Brittany Chance.
New Episodes every Sunday!

Created, Written and Directed by Stacey Muhammad for Wildseed
All Rights Are Reserved By Their Respective Owners (c)2013

FLORIDA LAWMAKERS REJECT "STAND YOUR GROUND" SPECIAL SESSION

WE HEAR YOU, WE JUST NOT FEELING YOU!



SOMETHINGS NEVER GET OLD, SORRY
 
 
Florida Lawmakers Reject 'Stand Your Ground' Special Session
   

TALLAHASSEE, Fla. -- An overwhelming number of Florida legislators have rejected a call for a special session to repeal the state's "stand your ground law."

The Department of State on Tuesday released a final tally. It showed 108 legislators voted against the special session while 47 voted for it. Four legislators didn't vote.

The vote was triggered by a written request by 33 legislators for the special session. They were urged to do so by protesters upset with the July verdict in the George Zimmerman case.

A "yes" vote by three-fifths of the Republican-majority Legislature would have resulted in a special session.

The vote was split largely along partisan lines. Seven Democrats joined with Republicans in voting no.

Protesters who pushed for the poll ended their protest at the Florida Capitol last week.

DUNKIN' DONUTS AND A BEAT DOWN TO GO!

          ONE TOO MANY MISTAKES




                           RAYJAY HALL






A Dunkin' Donuts employee in Lauderhill, Fla. was beaten and pistol-whipped Tuesday for delivering the wrong kind of coffee to a customer, and the ugly incident was caught on camera.

The employee accidentally gave drive-thru customer Alexis Longo an iced caramel coffee instead of the iced vanilla coffee she ordered, reports the Miami Herald. Longo parked her car in the parking lot to tell the employee about the wrong order, and when he realized his mistake, he asked Longo what he could do to re-make her drink properly.

That's when things started to escalate. Rajay Hall, the Dunkin' Donuts employee, came forward to NBC Miami to talk about the assault.

"The girl came in. She was getting upset," said Hall in the video above. "She was screaming at me, just like cursing at me." Hall pleaded with her to let him make it right.

"I made a mistake, I'll do everything I can to fill that mistake," he said. "I asked them, 'What do they want in the coffee?' She was like, 'I don't know, just make back the coffee.'"

Longo allegedly tried to hit Hall, but her husband Jeffrey Wright intervened and allegedly assaulted him instead. A security camera in the store captured the entire altercation, which started with punching and escalated to Wright beating Hall with a gun.

Hall told NBC Miami that Longo encouraged her husband to punch and even shoot him. Luckily police arrived on the scene before any shots were fired. Authorities were able to break up the fight and arrested both Longo and Wright.


Longo was charged with simple battery and Wright was charged with aggravated battery with a deadly weapon. Wright is an armed security guard with a license to carry a concealed gun, notes NBC Miami.

When it comes to abuse from Dunkin' Donuts customers, Hall isn't the only employee to make headlines this year. At another location in nearby Fort Lauderdale, Fla., teenaged employee Abid Adar was recognized by the corporation after he calmly endured a racist barrage of insults from a customer demanding free food. That entire exchange was also filmed; customer Taylor Chapman had uploaded the video to YouTube in the hopes of shaming the store for not providing her with a receipt for a previous purchase.

Saturday, August 24, 2013

"FOR COLORED BOYS"

TOO BE YOUNG AND BLACK IN AMERICA!






"For Colored Boys" Filmmaker Stacey Mohammad Discusses New Web Series (VIDEO)


In recent weeks, the conversation concerning the struggles African-American men face in this country has been widely-discussed. From the Trayvon Martin case, to the story of Oscar Grant's shooting in "Fruitvale Station," to the staggering incarceration rate of black men, there is no doubt that black men in America are plagued by tough odds.

Award-winning filmmaker Stacey Mohammad tackles that topic in her web series "For Colored Boys," which tells the stories of "African-American men from various walks of life as they navigate and overcome challenges, face their fears, find their truth, mend broken relationships, find love, build families and inspire the lives of many."

The first installment, subtitled "Redemption," follows the life of Benjamin Boyd Sr. and his journey reconnecting with family and reassuming his role as a father upon his release from prison.

Mohammad spoke with HuffPost Live host Marc Lamont Hill about the project and her motivation to tell these stories.

"I think that's the tradition of people of African descent," she told Hill. "You know, we're storytellers, and we've always used storytelling and art in a way in which it heals humanity."


Watch a clip of Mohammad's interview above, and subscribe to her YouTube channel to catch the "For Colored Boys" premiere on Sunday, August 25, at 7 p.m. EST.
 
 
Something like this is always worth watching if there is something to be benefited from, other than just something to watch. The question is what are we going to do about our situation after viewing it?  Malcolm X said, "If you are not ready to die for freedom, then the word shouldn't be in your vocabulary."  When are we going to stand together as a race?  These are questions that our own Black Filmmakers want posts are address.
 All Rights Are Reserved By Their Respective Owners (c)2013