Coil’s father TARIQ NASHEED wants to remove RBG flag

Wild self

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Boomers are the reason why sh!t the way it is today, inexperienced friend.

Gen X abandoned traditional family raising, obsessed with the jails and streets and being "gangsta" 24/7, not getting married, being in the club well into your 40s and 50s, always stuck in superficial shyt like hairline, low key tricking on light skinned hoes and gassing up non black women, and so on.
 

Rakim Allah

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Gen X abandoned traditional family raising, obsessed with the jails and streets and being "gangsta" 24/7, not getting married, being in the club well into your 40s and 50s, always stuck in superficial shyt like hairline, low key tricking on light skinned hoes and gassing up non black women, and so on.
The welfare state and Feminism created the abandonment of traditional families in the late 60s. The exporting of jobs and factories closing in the late sixties and throughout the 70s. Mass Incarceration and the War on Drugs under Nixon started in the 70s. Early Gen X were just kids during this period. Now you can blame Gen X for not gatekeeping and protecting the culture and genre of Hip Hop and rap music. Also, there have always been clubs and juke joints for Black peoples 35 and older, friend.

 
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Gen X abandoned traditional family raising, obsessed with the jails and streets and being "gangsta" 24/7, not getting married, being in the club well into your 40s and 50s, always stuck in superficial shyt like hairline, low key tricking on light skinned hoes and gassing up non black women, and so on.

Generalize millions of black people with unsubstantiated claims for a bullshyt narrative coli brehs. This a white man's play right here.
 

NatiboyB

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Personally that isn’t my flag so It doesn’t concern me. I wouldn’t be surprised if this dude Tariq came up with another flag to sale slong with pepper spray that is blessed by the ancestral spirits.
 

Roger king

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Tariq is a grifter and a charlatan he openly seeks out conflict and disagreement to use to line his pockets and get money, he is no different than the petty swindler you come across on the street or neighborhoods.
 

Wild self

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Boomers are the reason why sh!t the way it is today, inexperienced friend.

Gen X abandoned traditional family raising, obsessed with the jails and streets and being "gangsta" 24/7, not getting married, being in the club well into your 40s and 50s, always stuck in superficial shyt like hairline,
Generalize millions of black people with unsubstantiated claims for a bullshyt narrative coli brehs. This a white man's play right here.

Nah, its true to a large extent. How else is Gen Z the way they are?
 
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Gen X abandoned traditional family raising, obsessed with the jails and streets and being "gangsta" 24/7, not getting married, being in the club well into your 40s and 50s, always stuck in superficial shyt like hairline,


Nah, its true to a large extent. How else is Gen Z the way they are?

It depends on what you’re referring too. What critiques do you have a Gen Z, and I’m assuming you’re only referring too Black Zoomers
 

Rakim Allah

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Gen X abandoned traditional family raising, obsessed with the jails and streets and being "gangsta" 24/7, not getting married, being in the club well into your 40s and 50s, always stuck in superficial shyt like hairline,


Nah, its true to a large extent. How else is Gen Z the way they are?

The welfare state and Feminism created the abandonment of traditional families in the late 60s. The exporting of jobs and factories closing in the late sixties and throughout the 70s. Mass Incarceration and the War on Drugs under Nixon started in the 70s. Early Gen X were just kids during this period. Now you can blame Gen X for not gatekeeping and protecting the culture and genre of Hip Hop and rap music. Also, there have always been clubs and juke joints for Black peoples 35 and older, friend.
 

Wild self

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It depends on what you’re referring too. What critiques do you have a Gen Z, and I’m assuming you’re only referring too Black Zoomers

Gen Z: short sighted, obsessed with social media, anti social, loves Drill Music, males of all races skipping college, not working in jobs and quick to quit, red pill'd out.
 

Ish Gibor

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Do you know the TRUE ORIGIN of the RBG flag? The green part has absolutely nothing to do with Africa - it's an ode to the Irish.
Why the fukk would we want a Jamaican-Irish unity flag given to us by a KKK penpal named Marcus Garvey?
The same fat fukk who said "You didn't build the railroads, you don't deserve to ride them" (we did)

My assumption was always that the RBG flag was influenced by the Ethiopian flag, and the black replaced the yellow.

"The green-yellow-red flag appeared on 6th October in 1897. It was this flag of Ethiopia that became the basis for the Pan African colours."

"Although best remembered for his arrangements of African-American spirituals such as "Deep River" (1917), Harry T. Burleigh also made significant contributions to the American art song. Composed during the height of his success to a text by Walt Whitman, Burleigh's "Ethiopia Saluting the Colors" (1915) is a dramatic account of an African-American woman, or Ethiopian (by the mid-nineteenth century, "Ethiopian" had become synonymous with "African" in the Western world), and her chance meeting with a Union Soldier.

In the poem, "Ethiopia" is an old black slave woman who salutes the American flag as she sees General Sherman's troops march by, all the while being watched herself by a soldier. The colors in her turban--yellow, red, and green--represent those found in the Ethiopian flag. Burleigh musically depicts the setting with a precise, militaristic accompaniment, and with the quotation of the Civil War tune "Marching through Georgia." One of Burleigh's most ambitious songs and one he later orchestrated, "Ethiopia Saluting the Colors" is worthy of inclusion in today's concert repertoire."


The common story is:

"Red stood for blood — both the blood shed by Africans who died in their fight for liberation, and the shared blood of the African people. Black represented, well, black people. And green was a symbol of growth and the natural fertility of Africa."
[...]
At that time, the goal of Garvey's movement was to establish a political home for black people in Africa. Hill says that Garvey patterned his thinking on other nationalist movements at that time — the Jewish Zionist movement, the aftermath of the Russian Revolution, the fight against imperialism in China. And it was the Irish struggle for independence that Hill says "unofficially gave Garvey a lot of the political vocabulary of his movement."
[...]
The Pan-African flag's colors each had symbolic meaning. Red stood for blood — both the blood shed by Africans who died in their fight for liberation, and the shared blood of the African people. Black represented, well, black people. And green was a symbol of growth and the natural fertility of Africa.

Garvey and the UNIA framed the need for a flag in a political context, Hill explains. "Everybody immediately seeing that flag would recognize that this is a manifestation of black aspirations, black resistance to oppression."

Some years earlier, white minstrel singers were expressing the importance of flags as a matter of racial pride: In 1900, Will A. Heelan and J. Fred Helf composed a popular song called "Every Race Has a Flag But the c00n."
[...]
Robert Hill says that the Pan-African flag went on to become the template for flags all over Africa as they gained independence. Ghana, Libya, Malawi, Kenya and many other African countries adopted the red, black and green — often with the addition of gold, which sometimes symbolizes mineral wealth.


 
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Ish Gibor

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:troll:
The colors of this flag are certainly interesting.

"Bonny Scotland loves a thistle,
Turkey has her crescent moon,
and what won't Yankees do for the old red, white and blue?
Every race has a flag but the c00n."


 
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