IKEA employees offended over Juneteenth menu.

Hater Eraser

Veteran
Joined
Dec 31, 2016
Messages
12,407
Reputation
7,171
Daps
77,801
Reppin
That California Lifestyle ...
1. That’s mad insensitive
2. That menu sounds delicious


giphy.gif















I would be more offended that they didn't have brisket considering Black people history with barbque.

How the Texas BBQ Boom Marginalizes Its African-American Roots
Austin American-Statesman: Local News, Politics & Sports in Austin, TX


giphy.gif
 

tuckgod

The high exalted
Bushed
Joined
Feb 4, 2016
Messages
46,605
Reputation
14,129
Daps
176,296
still would have been better than this goofys best guess turned out

That goofy was on point.

Obviously they were better versed in the tradition than folks that didnt even know what Juneteenth was 2-3 years ago.

I remember the thread when that Lizzo pic was posted and a bunch of “black” men clowning her, not knowing that they were the ones making a fool of themselves.

It’s the employees that should be ashamed of themselves.
 

Batsute

The Lion Choker
Joined
Mar 11, 2013
Messages
8,350
Reputation
2,544
Daps
29,281
Reppin
#Hololive
Nothing is wrong with those items individually it’s when they get combined together that sends up a racist signal.

Soon white people are gonna some kind food calculator.

Fried Chicken + Watermelon + Kool Aid = RACIST

Fried Chicken + Mac & Cheese + Grape Fanta = Proceed Cautiously

Fried Chicken + Mashed Potatoes + Tea = You Good but :ufdup:
 

The Fade

I don’t argue with niqqas on the Internet anymore
Joined
Nov 18, 2016
Messages
23,195
Reputation
7,088
Daps
127,320
This is that trolling outrage advertising companies do


Those luxury brands do it once every year to make black people mad.

cheaper to make black people mad than pay for an ad
 

ORDER_66

The Fire Rises 2023
Joined
Feb 2, 2014
Messages
143,594
Reputation
15,756
Daps
577,216
Reppin
Queens,NY
Facts.

Plus it’s super healthy and helped us digest all the other bullshyt easier.

If anything, the employees should be upset with themselves for not knowing watermelon is a traditional Juneteenth food along with red velvet cake, hibiscus tea or any other red beverage.

D9ejLAaUYAA-DJr.jpg

I gtta admit all that chicken looks good right now....:mjgrin::mjlit:
 

Emoryal

Superstar
Joined
Dec 8, 2015
Messages
12,130
Reputation
305
Daps
18,977
Its outta pocket because watermelon doesnt even go with the rest. Its just a a throw in.Without the watermelon it probably would have been okayd tbh
 

Samori Toure

Veteran
Supporter
Joined
Apr 23, 2015
Messages
18,849
Reputation
6,116
Daps
95,517
"feed slaves watermelon", we were getting money off watermelon. so racists made it seem like it was some pickaninny bullshyt, try to fukk up business

It is fake outrage. People don't even be knowing the history of stuff that they are outraged about.

Six Foods Brought To The Americas To Help Keep African Culture Alive
Africa , BHM , Black History , Cuisine , Soul Food

Danielle Dorsey • Aug 8, 2019

Africa is often portrayed as a starving continent, which is ignoring the fact that centuries before colonizers began depleting the region of its resources, Africans had advanced food systems in place. When enslaved Africans were taken to the Americas, they brought their culinary wisdom with them, forever changing the way we cook and consume food.

While some might have snuck seeds and plants on slave ships as a way of retaining a trace of their cultures, the foods brought alongside enslaved Africans to the Americas were largely intended to feed them and increase their chances of surviving the treacherous Middle Passage. Slave owners also sent back for seeds of foods that enslaved Africans were used to eating as the unfamiliar foods in America were making them sick.

The successful cultivation of these foods not only contributed to the rapid growth of the American economy, but led to the creation of soul food, Creole cuisine, barbecue, and more.

Here are six foods that originated in Africa that remain popular today:

1. Rice
It’s likely that the first rice seeds used for farming were imported directly from the island of Madagascar in 1685. It’s believed that enslaved West Africans were responsible for providing the expertise needed to successfully cultivate it and by 1750, slave owners in the Carolinas were farming large quantities of rice similarly to how it had been grown in Africa.

2. Coffee
Most people associate coffee with Central and South America, but Ethiopia is actually the birthplace of the world’s principal coffee. The word coffee is thought to stem from the word “kaffa” which is a former province in southwestern Ethiopia. When Europeans arrived in the 16th century, Ethiopians already had an in-depth understanding of various ways to roast coffee beans, extract flavors, and brew coffee. Coffee house culture had a stronghold throughout East Africa, Yemen, and Saudi Arabia, causing Europeans to dismiss it as a Muslim trend.

3. Yams
Yams were the primary food for enslaved Africans aboard slave ships, with one slave merchant noting that “a ship that takes in 500 slaves, must provide above 100,000 yams.” After these ships docked on American shores, yams remained a popular food, with sweet potato pie and roasted yams becoming Southern staples.

4. Black-eyed peas
Black-eyed peas also provided sustenance on slave ships. According to some sources, black-eyed peas reached Florida around 1700, North Carolina by the 1730s, and became a common table food in Virginia after the American Revolution. The high-protein bean grows quickly and suppresses weeds, making them a popular food for livestock (hence the nickname “cowpeas”). Nowadays, black-eyed peas represent a key ingredient in “Hoppin John,” a Southern dish made on the New Year that is thought to bring good luck.

5. Okra
Okra originated in Ethiopia and is still cultivated in present-day Ethiopia as well as Eritrea and parts of Sudan and was used in a variety of ways. The seeds were often prepared as a coffee substitute and the leaves were used medicinally as a softening ingredient for poultices. The word “gumbo” actually derives from a West African word that means okra, which used to be one of the main ingredients in the Southern stew.

6. Watermelon
Food historians are mixed on the origins of watermelon, but some believe that it’s the ancestor of a bitter melon that spread from Sudan to Egypt during the second millennium. Ancient Egyptians cultivated the fruit and buried it in pharaohs’ tombs to provide hydration for their crossing into the afterlife. Watermelon came to America during the trans-Atlantic slave trade.

Six Foods Brought To The Americas To Help Keep African Culture Alive - Travel Noire
 

Why-Fi

gnap
Supporter
Joined
May 1, 2012
Messages
18,276
Reputation
2,252
Daps
24,998
Reppin
gnap
That goofy was on point.

Obviously they were better versed in the tradition than folks that didnt even know what Juneteenth was 2-3 years ago.

I remember the thread when that Lizzo pic was posted and a bunch of “black” men clowning her, not knowing that they were the ones making a fool of themselves.

It’s the employees that should be ashamed of themselves.
i understand the ideal but he should have asked the people he works with. you and i dont work there
 
Top