Dr. Umar blames Professional Black Men for abandoning the black community

Ezekiel 25:17

Veteran
Joined
Jul 17, 2018
Messages
32,421
Reputation
1,686
Daps
118,050
:francis: fukking idiot

It’s the rappers and a lot of athletes who put down the professional black men in they songs or on social media or doing interviews. These same platforms young blacks boys and they hood mamas look at and agree

Go to almost to every hood in this country and tell a young black boy and black woman your a garbage man, manager at Walgreens, a barber, handyman, electrician, insurance agent and these motherfukkers would look at u and laugh and believe u not making money because Biggie said get a job at UPS or the nba or nfl nikka who being saying these same people hating me has to wake up every morning and have to deal with their regular day to day lives and jobs

Regular black men today and for the last 20/30 years has been seen as useless until these women get older and lonely and when these young black boys realized rappin and sports isn’t there for them..

Professional black men on the coli and lurkers keep doing what u doing and fukk umar and the people who just like him.. if u can get one young black boy to change , then great


Professional black men are often called c00ns who got lucky to make money.
 

Gritsngravy

Superstar
Joined
Mar 11, 2022
Messages
8,120
Reputation
572
Daps
16,413
Selling drugs to one another? Killing one another? Robbing one another? “Hitting licks”

KKK = Kings Killing Kings for free

A sub sector of this community loves dysfunction and this is why we’re in the mess we’re in. Especially when they don’t take care of their image.
They not white supremacist
We all could’ve easily been in the same position those dudes you calling the “KKK”
I’m not defending them from there actions but y’all need to stop with this hyperbole cause y’all sound goofy asl
 

Buddy

Keep my name out of it
Joined
Apr 28, 2014
Messages
18,520
Reputation
5,608
Daps
77,136
we're not?:dahell:
I hate to sound like 50 but complaining is a luxury we simply can't afford. Is that fair? Hell naw, but when has the world ever been fair for us? I tend to take on a "play the cards dealt" and "be the change you wanna see" mindset




No one cares tho breh :francis: The Data™️ means nothing beyond invested in building institutions and community to rectify it.
 

Gritsngravy

Superstar
Joined
Mar 11, 2022
Messages
8,120
Reputation
572
Daps
16,413
The neighborhood was first settled by farmers who quickly became disappointed in the region's swampy nature.[4] After the area was developed by nearby factory workers in the 1870s, it was incorporated into the city of Chicago in 1889 along with the Hyde Park Township.[1][4] In the 1940s, the factory workers were replaced by white collar residents.[4] By the 1970s, the neighborhood had earned a reputation for affluence and quality residences. The neighborhood soon became a favorite residence of African American doctors from the nearby South Chicago Community Hospital.[4] In a community area of above average wealth compared to the Chicago statistical averages,[2] Pill Hill has above-average affluence compared to the rest of the community area according to the Encyclopedia.[1] The moniker is attributed to the preponderance of doctors employed at the nearby South Chicago Community Hospital who reside in the grand homes situated atop the Stony Island ridge.[1] However, the neighborhood no longer hosts such a high concentration of doctors and is a varied middle-class neighborhood.[4] The racial transformation has been documented in the 1998 book entitled The South Side: The Racial Transformation of an American Neighborhood.[1][6][7] A play by Yale School of Drama graduate Sam Kelley entitled Pill Hill was set in this neighborhood. It debuted at the Yale Repertory Theatre has been produced in many venues in recent decades.[8][9] Pill Hill is credited by one Chicago Sun-Times author as one of the few communities to host civil rights activists such as Martin Luther King Jr. and Jesse Jackson...

My parents seen the downfall of this community.. I've seen the tail end of the destruction. Drugs and gangs ran the professionals out of her, and other locations as well. Im a "older" breh, so this isn't nothing I read about, I seen this shyt. Umar is off on this and he's playing with y'all emotional strings here, for the most part.
Whether the reasons are justified or not they still abandoned the community
 

Stuntone

Louisiana Made, DC PAID!
Joined
May 9, 2012
Messages
18,447
Reputation
5,203
Daps
88,295
Reppin
IT Cert-Gang Mafia, GMB and HOH
Do y’all want a community or should everybody become nomads?


Feminism and the Laws have turned the Black community into a Matriarchy. Only weak men and gay men can live there.


We're forced to become nomads or grab a woman of any race and moved to some suburb, with no village or support systems. And try to raise your family best as you can.
 

HARLEM AL

Your broad loves me.....
Joined
May 19, 2012
Messages
23,339
Reputation
4,255
Daps
93,717
Reppin
Harlem, NYC
shyt like this is dangerous......

He essentially saying the black men who fought their way out of poverty is the reason the way the black community is. Thats fukking disgusting...

Growing up I use to hate those hotep ass nikkas. They use to be on 125th in the way being annoying. Even more so growing up around them nikkas.. Funny shyt is, every last one of those nikkas had multiple babies all throughout the hood.
 
Last edited:

Ahadi

Veteran
Joined
Aug 7, 2019
Messages
22,748
Reputation
3,308
Daps
93,393
They not white supremacist
We all could’ve easily been in the same position those dudes you calling the “KKK”
I’m not defending them from there actions but y’all need to stop with this hyperbole cause y’all sound goofy asl

How? We all have choices! That’s their fault.

The generation before had a responsibility & they completely fukked mine over. All because you turned the other cheek and didn’t check other men and these women who y’all are “scared” of.

Big mama and them

:laff:
 

HARLEM AL

Your broad loves me.....
Joined
May 19, 2012
Messages
23,339
Reputation
4,255
Daps
93,717
Reppin
Harlem, NYC
Do y’all want a community or should everybody become nomads?
Anybody that bust there ass to get where they are at should do whatever the fukk they want to do with their life. You know damn well if they came from the hood they were never celebrated or looked after.
 

DaRealness

I think very deeply
Joined
May 4, 2012
Messages
15,911
Reputation
4,137
Daps
67,375
Reppin
LDN
fukk outta here. I'm so tired of this.

Professional black men aren't fukking obligated nor owe anyone shyt. Just cos I grew up on the same street as you, I owe you something? If I worked hard and you chose to be a wasteman, how is that my problem? If you personally helped me out in life at one point, fine. Even then, if you're gonna drag me down I'm not fukking with you. You got a brain, hands and feet just like me.

This "you forgot where you came from" stance is just dusty nikka bullshyt.

Build with those who genuinely wanna build with you. fukk the rest.
 

HARLEM AL

Your broad loves me.....
Joined
May 19, 2012
Messages
23,339
Reputation
4,255
Daps
93,717
Reppin
Harlem, NYC
How? We all have choices! That’s their fault.

The generation before had a responsibility & they completely fukked mine over. All because you turned the other cheek and didn’t check other men and these women who y’all are “scared” of.

Big mama and them

:laff:
shyt is comical.
 

King Poetic

Sagittarius KingPin
Supporter
Joined
Feb 15, 2013
Messages
96,222
Reputation
18,594
Daps
468,867
Reppin
Los Angeles, California
Remember up to about the 80s the hierarchy

It was
Professional hard working black man— black men working in manufacturing plants, auto industry at Chrysler and ford, etc and other positions

Follow by
Black women, black kid and the communities was good, yards had grass, and the community was where black families would look out for each other and beat the other kids asses

Now its
Black Women
Black kids
Thedrugdealers/ballers/athletes/entertainer
Gays/lesbians
Dogs
And professional black men last

And you see how the neighborhoods are today in that order.. or should I say out of order

Everyday I look up I see professional black men try to help young boys, but these young boys rather here info from ex cons /gang members etc etc

Our own women even if they are your co workers look at u as a lame and they shacking up with a ex con .. I see it plenty of times and they at work complaining about the nikka not working

Professional black men always take accountability for our actions right or wrong, but everyone else n the community throw blame
 

Ricky Fontaine

Superstar
Joined
Nov 18, 2016
Messages
6,856
Reputation
3,986
Daps
44,939
The neighborhood was first settled by farmers who quickly became disappointed in the region's swampy nature.[4] After the area was developed by nearby factory workers in the 1870s, it was incorporated into the city of Chicago in 1889 along with the Hyde Park Township.[1][4] In the 1940s, the factory workers were replaced by white collar residents.[4] By the 1970s, the neighborhood had earned a reputation for affluence and quality residences. The neighborhood soon became a favorite residence of African American doctors from the nearby South Chicago Community Hospital.[4] In a community area of above average wealth compared to the Chicago statistical averages,[2] Pill Hill has above-average affluence compared to the rest of the community area according to the Encyclopedia.[1] The moniker is attributed to the preponderance of doctors employed at the nearby South Chicago Community Hospital who reside in the grand homes situated atop the Stony Island ridge.[1] However, the neighborhood no longer hosts such a high concentration of doctors and is a varied middle-class neighborhood.[4] The racial transformation has been documented in the 1998 book entitled The South Side: The Racial Transformation of an American Neighborhood.[1][6][7] A play by Yale School of Drama graduate Sam Kelley entitled Pill Hill was set in this neighborhood. It debuted at the Yale Repertory Theatre has been produced in many venues in recent decades.[8][9] Pill Hill is credited by one Chicago Sun-Times author as one of the few communities to host civil rights activists such as Martin Luther King Jr. and Jesse Jackson...

My parents seen the downfall of this community.. I've seen the tail end of the destruction. Drugs and gangs ran the professionals out of her, and other locations as well. Im a "older" breh, so this isn't nothing I read about, I seen this shyt. Umar is off on this and he's playing with y'all emotional strings here, for the most part.
You from the Chi?
 

ColdSlither

Extensive Enterprises
Supporter
Joined
Aug 29, 2018
Messages
7,340
Reputation
1,123
Daps
27,061
Reppin
Elizabeth, NJ by way of East Orange
Good thing I know my city history.. Nikkas use to kick down the doors of the professional brothers houses while they were at work.. So they moved..

And that's why all my older cousins moved in the late 70's and 80's from Newark. They tried stick it out for the culture. They had to think about the kids.
 
Top