This isn't true at all, man. There are several open Trump supporters on here who also claim to be Black.No one.
That's what is hilarious about these threads. No one here is a Donald Trump supporter. They either don't care about politics, support the democrats fervently, or are anti-establishment altogether (aka #bothsides)
no one is twerking for Trump while claiming they're black here
Who in here is a Black MAGA?
I know some people are satirical on here...
@Neo TheInsurrectionistONE just be jokin' aroundWho in here is a Black MAGA?
I know some people are satirical on here...
This isn't true at all, man. There are several open Trump supporters on here who also claim to be Black.
This is just a small amount of the loudest among them:
@K.O.N.Y
@Bunchy Carter
@JT-Money
@Max Power
@North of Death
@TallMan_J
@satam55
@ShackZilla89
@tuckgod
You've tagged me in a thread I don't care about replying to a poster I have on ignore. Enjoy the rest of your day.This isn't true at all, man. There are several open Trump supporters on here who also claim to be Black.
This is just a small amount of the loudest among them:
@K.O.N.Y
@Bunchy Carter
@JT-Money
@Max Power
@North of Death
@TallMan_J
@satam55
@ShackZilla89
@tuckgod
...[h]ousing policies that mandated segregation. He notes that the Federal Housing Administration, which was established in 1934, furthered the segregation efforts by refusing to insure mortgages in and near African-American neighborhoods — a policy known as "redlining." At the same time, the FHA was subsidizing builders who were mass-producing entire subdivisions for whites — with the requirement that none of the homes be sold to African-Americans.
More than a century ago, before there was today’s Prince William Forest Park, there was a community of miners collectively known as the Cabin Branch Community. Founded after the Civil War by free Black people, the community included the two towns of Hickory Ridge and Batestown. While hundreds of small-scale farmers, laborers, and others lived in the area, most residents were employed by the Cabin Branch Pyrite Mine, which operated from 1889-1920.
During the Great Depression, President Franklin D. Roosevelt created the Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC) and the Works Progress Administration (WPA) which, along with other work programs, created many jobs and helped create and maintain conservation areas. In the 1930s, despite having been home to about 150 families, the federal government purchased the land through eminent domain to create Chopawamsic Recreational Development Area, later known as Prince William Forest Park. Ending a 400-year history of the community in the area.
Of Levittown, Stewart riffed, “It gave you a nice stable, a cheap home — there was no down payments. It was this incredible opportunity … Those houses were subsidized … It wasn’t lavish,” said Stewart.
The back-and-forth that followed is essential to understanding the Fox News celebrity:
O’Reilly: No, they weren’t subsidized. They were sold to GIs, and the GIs got a mortgage they could afford.
Stewart: Did that upbringing leave a mark on you even today?
O’Reilly: Of course. Every upbringing leaves a mark on people.
Stewart: Could black people live in Levittown?
O’Reilly: Not in that time — they could not.
Stewart: So that, my friend, is what we call in the business “white privilege.”
O’Reilly: That was in 1950, all right.
Stewart: Were there black people living there in 1960?
O’Reilly: In Levittown? I don’t know.
Stewart: There weren’t.
O’Reilly: How do you know?
Stewart: Because I read up on it.
O’Reilly: Oh, you read up! You don’t know that. I can find somebody…Why would you want to live there? It’s a nice place, but it’s not a place like … Bel Air, come on!
Bill O’Reilly, growing up in Levittown, and experiences with race
While doing some research on suburbs and race, I ran into a 2014 exchange between Jon Stewart and Bill O’Reilly about the latter growing up in Levittown, New York: Of Levittown, Stewart riffe…legallysociable.com
This country was great before they let more darkies in and started started playing that 'BoogaBooga' on the radio