Angry Black People please dont shoot just any lightskinned people!

OddBall1st

Well-Known Member
Now that`s more accurate, like that dumb black dude robbing a store on the phone until he got shot, wonder what he told his homies then,...prolly something like, "help me, I got shot and have no gun anymore, How can I be Gansta now" ?

The only thing I`d add to it is, What difference does it make...........
 

Flaming Pie

Well-Known Member
I don't want to be a part of the solution when I'm not a part of the problem. I don't get why this concept is so difficult for you to grasp.
So you want no part of a solution?

How do you change minds and influence people?

Ever hear the phrase "Catch more flies with honey?"

I totally get that shit is fucked up but you seem to be content with giving up or stooping to their level.

Not very productive.
 

Flaming Pie

Well-Known Member
After Black Power advocates such as Stokely Carmichael began to reject nonviolence, King lamented that some African Americans had lost hope, and reaffirmed his own commitment to nonviolence: ‘‘Occasionally in life one develops a conviction so precious and meaningful that he will stand on it till the end. This is what I have found in nonviolence’’ (King, Where, 63–64). He wrote in his 1967 book, Where Do We Go from Here: Chaos or Community?: ‘‘We maintained the hope while transforming the hate of traditional revolutions into positive nonviolent power. As long as the hope was fulfilled there was little questioning of nonviolence. But when the hopes were blasted, when people came to see that in spite of progress their conditions were still insufferable … despair began to set in’’ (King, Where, 45). Arguing that violent revolution was impractical in the context of a multiracial society, he concluded that: ‘‘Darkness cannot drive out darkness: only light can do that. Hate cannot drive out hate: only love can do that. The beauty of nonviolence is that in its own way and in its own time it seeks to break the chain reaction of evil’’ (King, Where, 62–63).
 

Flaming Pie

Well-Known Member
Until his death King remained steadfast in his commitment to the radical transformation of American society through nonviolent activism. In his posthumously published essay, “A Testament of Hope” (1969), he urged African Americans to refrain from violence but also warned, “White America must recognize that justice for black people cannot be achieved without radical changes in the structure of our society.” The “black revolution” was more than a civil rights movement, he insisted. “It is forcing America to face all its interrelated flaws-racism, poverty, militarism and materialism” (King, “Testament,” 194).

We need to go back to our nonviolent hippy roots, IMO.
 

UncleBuck

Well-Known Member
Until his death King remained steadfast in his commitment to the radical transformation of American society through nonviolent activism. In his posthumously published essay, “A Testament of Hope” (1969), he urged African Americans to refrain from violence but also warned, “White America must recognize that justice for black people cannot be achieved without radical changes in the structure of our society.” The “black revolution” was more than a civil rights movement, he insisted. “It is forcing America to face all its interrelated flaws-racism, poverty, militarism and materialism” (King, “Testament,” 194).

We need to go back to our nonviolent hippy roots, IMO.
sorry, but you don't get to cite MLK and then go vote for trump. not how it works, sugartits.
 

Flaming Pie

Well-Known Member
sorry, but you don't get to cite MLK and then go vote for trump. not how it works, sugartits.
Calling me sugartits is sexist.

Also, I thought we weren't going to talk about sexual things anymore. You can't push my finger away and then demand to suck my titties.
 

desert dude

Well-Known Member
So, Micah X. Johnson is basically the black version of Dylan Roof. A troubled, mentally disturbed guy fed a steady diet of racial hatred and self-pity who decides to murder a bunch of people.

Innocent lives matter.
 

UncleBuck

Well-Known Member
So, Micah X. Johnson is basically the black version of Dylan Roof. A troubled, mentally disturbed guy fed a steady diet of racial hatred and self-pity who decides to murder a bunch of people.

Innocent lives matter.
dylan roof went to white supremacy sites to stoke his racial hatred.

micah johnson just had to watch what the cops were doing on the news.
 

Flaming Pie

Well-Known Member
Hey, just throwing your logic back in your smug face.

You call people all sorts of names for certain behaviors, yet those names don't apply to you when you repeat the same behavior.
 

UncleBuck

Well-Known Member
You're a two-bit troll stoking the us versus them call to violence. You know nothing about me.
i know you joined a white supremacy group here and tried to deny it for months. then you accused others of stoking racial hatred, after you joined a white supremacy group.
 
Top