I got a kid locked up. I turned him in. Yes I did because I’m a strong black woman.

George's Dilemma

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The people who are getting killed are usually not violent criminals (people who commit black on black crime) and most of the crimes they commit are misdemeanors. So the whole idea don't commit crimes and the police won't kill you is comical. She most likely see nothing with Tamir Rice, Jonathan Ferrell, or Sandra Bland being killed. I ignore these pro police folks because they are dangerous.


Just listened to most of it, up till the 3:47 mark. My attention span is minimal tonight, but with the exception of turning in her son and referencing Madea, I agree with her on everything else. The reality is we're way too passive on the pieces of sh!t in our communities. Little girl gets popped in a drive by, or a 93 year old man lost and looking for directions gets robbed and car jacked during two separate events on the same night in St . Louis, and nobody gives a fukk. Those Black lives don't matter. Or at least arent as important as some dope dealer, gangbanger, random criminal, etc. gets ruff housed or killed, and here comes the protesters. Sad to say I can't simply brush that off as a perception because it's reality. Too many young Black people have little to no pride for their own community, or a false sense of pride aka "where you from?" I feel her on that sh!t.

She lost me on the turning in her own son part. She basically participated in his becoming a felon if he isn't already one. His life is probably worse now than before. Still, a side of me understands her frustration because the folks doing all the fukkery in the hood are people we know quite well, oftentimes we're related to them. Yet, we take a "it's none of my business" approach instead of calling them out on their behavior. Sometimes we even admire what they do which is a twisted take on the Robin Hood story. Some days I figure it's all complicated, and there are no easy answers, and thats why you do for self and help who you can. Even that seems worthless as an approach. That's why I drink.
 

Soon

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Just listened to most of it, up till the 3:47 mark. My attention span is minimal tonight, but with the exception of turning in her son and referencing Madea, I agree with her on everything else. The reality is we're way too passive on the pieces of sh!t in our communities. Little girl gets popped in a drive by, or a 93 year old man lost and looking for directions gets robbed and car jacked during two separate events on the same night in St . Louis, and nobody gives a fukk. Those Black lives don't matter. Or at least arent as important as some dope dealer, gangbanger, random criminal, etc. gets ruff housed or killed, and here comes the protesters. Sad to say I can't simply brush that off as a perception because it's reality. Too many young Black people have little to no pride for their own community, or a false sense of pride aka "where you from?" I feel her on that sh!t.

She lost me on the turning in her own son part. She basically participated in his becoming a felon if he isn't already one. His life is probably worse now than before. Still, a side of me understands her frustration because the folks doing all the fukkery in the hood are people we know quite well, oftentimes we're related to them. Yet, we take a "it's none of my business" approach instead of calling them out on their behavior. Sometimes we even admire what they do which is a twisted take on the Robin Hood story. Some days I figure it's all complicated, and there are no easy answers, and thats why you do for self and help who you can. Even that seems worthless as an approach. That's why I drink.


Even the part where she says, "YOU black people are the most violent people..."

BLM is about justice. Criminals get arrested, cops don't.

I wish the violence and crime stops in our community, but the argument is black people do not deserve justice cause our neighborhoods are so messed up.

Now...this is the same reason they saw nothing wrong with George Zimmerman killing Trayvon Martin. Whites need to protect themselves against thugs.
 

George's Dilemma

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Even the part where she says, "YOU black people are the most violent people..."

BLM is about justice. Criminals get arrested, cops don't.

I wish the violence and crime stops in our community, but the argument is black people do not deserve justice cause our neighborhoods are so messed up.

Now...this is the same reason they saw nothing wrong with George Zimmerman killing Trayvon Martin. Whites need to protect themselves against thugs.


Btw breh, just noticed the avi, JW background?
 
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