Michelle Obama criticizes black youth for worship of Rappers & Sport Stars

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Obama is laying down the law and is telling you nikkas to get ready.





Barack Obama: Incidental black man? - Salon.com

Barack Obama: Incidental black man?
The president gets personal at Morehouse College, as hard questions loom for black men and his presidency

BY RICH BENJAMIN

32 36 2
more

TOPICS: BLACK, RACE, COMMENCEMENT SPEECHES, BARACK OBAMA, EDITOR'S PICKS, LATINOS, IMMIGRATION, IMMIGRATION REFORM, DISPARITY, POVERTY, RECESSION, POLITICS NEWS

obama_morehouse-620x412.jpg

Barack Obama gives the commencement address at Morehouse College, May 19, 2013. (Credit: Reuters/Jason Reed)

With all the distracting controversies piling on his political plate, who could blame President Obama for getting reflective at his recent commencement speech to Morehouse College graduates? Who could blame the first black president, typically a cool arbiter of analysis and restraint, for getting personal in his remarks to his receptive, brotherly crowd?

How does a black president deliver 2013 Morehouse graduates realistic advice and a pep talk at the same time? How can he optimistically send them forth — with straight talk, or a straight face?

The average white family has about $632,000 in wealth, versus $98,000 for black families. The overall unemployment rate for whites is 6.7 percent, versus 13 percent for blacks, generally. The unemployment rate for black young adults ages 16 to 24 — those outside the commencement halls — is 25 percent, on par with Spanish- or Greek-level joblessness.

Health. College enrollment. Work. Income. Inheritance. The racial gaps are so appalling, this black man is wary to share them. If not properly contextualized, reciting the numbers can have the reverse effect: Hearing the drumbeat of disparities often backfires, and it subconsciously confirms blacks’ seeming inferiority in many white Americans’ minds. Many people privately believe these differences are rooted in blacks’ shortcomings, not in unequal opportunity or history. Indeed, white Americans believe they suffer more racial bias than blacks do, according to a study conducted by Harvard and Tufts Universities in 2011.

If anything, the president’s commencement speech to Morehouse College has an ironic whiff. The poignant nostalgia springs from the first black president addressing black men, both of whom appear to be in the twilight of their power.

As the president cannily knows, blacks are no longer America’s largest minority. How can this writer forget, soon after the president’s inauguration, all the reports that announced black Americans’ declining population share, a news flash that hit some of us like an eviction notice. Hey, effective immediately, the Latinos have ousted the blacks as America’s largest minority! Now the president is doing his best to master the politics of a quickly demographically shifting nation to achieve immigration reform. As an incidental black man.

The predicament of other black men, the president insisted to the graduates, is not just a result of technological change and globalization. He put partial blame at his brothers’ own feet.

“In today’s hyper-connected, hyper-competitive world, with millions of young people from China and India and Brazil, many of whom started with a whole lot less than all of you did, all of them entering the global workforce alongside you, nobody is going to give you anything you haven’t earned,” said the president. “Nobody cares how tough your upbringing was. Nobody cares if you suffered some discrimination.”

As Barack Obama winds down an impressive two terms in office, the historic novelty, from a racial milestone, is now obsolete. Black “firsts” are becoming obsolete. So the idea of a “black president” is obsolete. The president surely understands the quaintness and nostalgia of this commencement occasion, with its creaking racial symbolism.

Another thorny question lingers: Is Morehouse itself obsolete? Is the black male liberal arts college obsolete in a supposedly post-black, post-feminist, post-masculinist, globalized, techno-world?

This recession is throwing non–college educated black men under the bus. With or without a black president. Is it also putting a final nail in their coffin, as it were? Leaving us behind? The dark backdrop to the president’s address is black men’s viability in a 21st century world.


Images of Forrest Whitaker in “Ghost Dog” haunt me. As the president will soon take his exit from office, black men seem to be vanishing from participation and sight — declining as a collective political and economic force, vanishing from participation and sight in all the places that matter in America: the office, the voting booth, the trading floor and the college commencement hall.
 

MeachTheMonster

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Told ya'll.

Obama is laying down the law and is telling you nikkas to get ready.





Barack Obama: Incidental black man? - Salon.com

Barack Obama: Incidental black man?
The president gets personal at Morehouse College, as hard questions loom for black men and his presidency

BY RICH BENJAMIN

32 36 2
more

TOPICS: BLACK, RACE, COMMENCEMENT SPEECHES, BARACK OBAMA, EDITOR'S PICKS, LATINOS, IMMIGRATION, IMMIGRATION REFORM, DISPARITY, POVERTY, RECESSION, POLITICS NEWS

obama_morehouse-620x412.jpg

Barack Obama gives the commencement address at Morehouse College, May 19, 2013. (Credit: Reuters/Jason Reed)

With all the distracting controversies piling on his political plate, who could blame President Obama for getting reflective at his recent commencement speech to Morehouse College graduates? Who could blame the first black president, typically a cool arbiter of analysis and restraint, for getting personal in his remarks to his receptive, brotherly crowd?

How does a black president deliver 2013 Morehouse graduates realistic advice and a pep talk at the same time? How can he optimistically send them forth — with straight talk, or a straight face?

The average white family has about $632,000 in wealth, versus $98,000 for black families. The overall unemployment rate for whites is 6.7 percent, versus 13 percent for blacks, generally. The unemployment rate for black young adults ages 16 to 24 — those outside the commencement halls — is 25 percent, on par with Spanish- or Greek-level joblessness.

Health. College enrollment. Work. Income. Inheritance. The racial gaps are so appalling, this black man is wary to share them. If not properly contextualized, reciting the numbers can have the reverse effect: Hearing the drumbeat of disparities often backfires, and it subconsciously confirms blacks’ seeming inferiority in many white Americans’ minds. Many people privately believe these differences are rooted in blacks’ shortcomings, not in unequal opportunity or history. Indeed, white Americans believe they suffer more racial bias than blacks do, according to a study conducted by Harvard and Tufts Universities in 2011.

If anything, the president’s commencement speech to Morehouse College has an ironic whiff. The poignant nostalgia springs from the first black president addressing black men, both of whom appear to be in the twilight of their power.

As the president cannily knows, blacks are no longer America’s largest minority. How can this writer forget, soon after the president’s inauguration, all the reports that announced black Americans’ declining population share, a news flash that hit some of us like an eviction notice. Hey, effective immediately, the Latinos have ousted the blacks as America’s largest minority! Now the president is doing his best to master the politics of a quickly demographically shifting nation to achieve immigration reform. As an incidental black man.

The predicament of other black men, the president insisted to the graduates, is not just a result of technological change and globalization. He put partial blame at his brothers’ own feet.

“In today’s hyper-connected, hyper-competitive world, with millions of young people from China and India and Brazil, many of whom started with a whole lot less than all of you did, all of them entering the global workforce alongside you, nobody is going to give you anything you haven’t earned,” said the president. “Nobody cares how tough your upbringing was. Nobody cares if you suffered some discrimination.”

As Barack Obama winds down an impressive two terms in office, the historic novelty, from a racial milestone, is now obsolete. Black “firsts” are becoming obsolete. So the idea of a “black president” is obsolete. The president surely understands the quaintness and nostalgia of this commencement occasion, with its creaking racial symbolism.

Another thorny question lingers: Is Morehouse itself obsolete? Is the black male liberal arts college obsolete in a supposedly post-black, post-feminist, post-masculinist, globalized, techno-world?

This recession is throwing non–college educated black men under the bus. With or without a black president. Is it also putting a final nail in their coffin, as it were? Leaving us behind? The dark backdrop to the president’s address is black men’s viability in a 21st century world.

Images of Forrest Whitaker in “Ghost Dog” haunt me. As the president will soon take his exit from office, black men seem to be vanishing from participation and sight — declining as a collective political and economic force, vanishing from participation and sight in all the places that matter in America: the office, the voting booth, the trading floor and the college commencement hall.

Your article is going to point out and highlight the "tough talk" lines in his speech. But if you watch his speech in entirety, he acknowledges the very real effects of racism/slavery on black folks. He doesn't try to minimize them, or tell people to ignore them. He told the graduates to fight through them. Which is a good message.
 
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So we're going to act like we haven't seen the same criticism on the forums? C'mon.
 

☑︎#VoteDemocrat

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Your article is going to point out and highlight the "tough talk" lines in his speech. But if you watch his speech in entirety, he acknowledges the very real effects of racism/slavery on black folks. He doesn't try to minimize them, or tell people to ignore them. He told the graduates to fight through them. Which is a good message.

NO

NO

NO.

The point is Obama is telling them: "look, after I leave the past DOES NOT MATTER any more. NO ONE CARES what you go through"

Obama knows once he leaves, the game changes for black people.

In the eyes of the majority, there WILL BE NO RACISM any more.

Thats what you don't get. They won't give a flying fukk about what you went through. So soak it up now. Indulge in who and what I am today...but when I leave office, you have to fend for yourselves.

OBAMA IS THE NEW STANDARD AND IF YOU DONT LIKE IT, ROLL OVER AND DIE. THATS WHAT THEY WANT YOU TO DO ANYWAYS.

PERIOD.

If black people don't get it together, by 2016, its REALLY a wrap for them.

Literally.

 

El Bombi

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Your article is going to point out and highlight the "tough talk" lines in his speech. But if you watch his speech in entirety, he acknowledges thlet it e verlatest y real effects of racism/slavery on black folks. He doesn't try to minimize them, or tell people to ignore them. He told the graduates to fight through them. Which is a good message.

I think people are looking at two extremes and confusing themselves.

Yes we should try to achieve higher professional jobs and be accountable for own action. But that doesn't mean we should stop forcing representatives in Washington and local government to pass legislation that benefit our community.
 

El Bombi

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NO

NO

NO.

The point is Obama is telling them: "look, after I leave the past DOES NOT MATTER any more. NO ONE CARES what you go through"

Obama knows once he leaves, the game changes for black people.

In the eyes of the majority, there WILL BE NO RACISM any more.

Thats what you don't get. They won't give a flying fukk about what you went through. So soak it up now. Indulge in who and what I am today...but when I leave office, you have to fend for yourselves.

OBAMA IS THE NEW STANDARD AND IF YOU DONT LIKE IT, ROLL OVER AND DIE. THATS WHAT THEY WANT YOU TO DO ANYWAYS.

PERIOD.

If black people don't get it together, by 2016, its REALLY a wrap for them.

Literally.


Well I guess black people in South Africa can't blame racism now.:manny:
 

theworldismine13

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Your article is going to point out and highlight the "tough talk" lines in his speech. But if you watch his speech in entirety, he acknowledges the very real effects of racism/slavery on black folks. He doesn't try to minimize them, or tell people to ignore them. He told the graduates to fight through them. Which is a good message.

yo did you even read the article?

and you just spent 20 pages attacking both michelle and barack for their speeches, maybe you need to read things and listen to thing instead of just reading headlines
 

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We've got no time for excuses -- not because the bitter legacies of
slavery and segregation have vanished entirely; they haven't. Not
because racism and discrimination no longer exist; that's still out
there. It's just that in today's hyper-connected, hyper-competitive
world, with a billion young people from China and India and Brazil
entering the global workforce alongside you, nobody is going to give you
anything you haven't earned.



nikkas will do anything to avoid putting in work. :wow:
 

theworldismine13

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Well I guess black people in South Africa can't blame racism now.:manny:


they can't blame racism

in fact i didint want derail this and other threads and go off topic, but i was gonna make a post about south africa as it relates to the us

the point is apartheid is not the only thing holding black people back, there are things that black people have to do for themselves

what i am afraid of is that black people are gonna end up like south africa, where you fight for something, like ending apartheid, but you are still broke

racism or apartheid is only part of the reason why black people are at the bottom, the other reason is that black people need to make some fundamental changes to the way we do things
 

posterchild336

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they can't blame racism

in fact i didint want derail this and other threads and go off topic, but i was gonna make a post about south africa as it relates to the us

the point is apartheid is not the only thing holding black people back, there are things that black people have to do for themselves

what i am afraid of is that black people are gonna end up like south africa, where you fight for something, like ending apartheid, but you are still broke

racism or apartheid is only part of the reason why black people are at the bottom, the other reason is that black people need to make some fundamental changes to the way we do things

the problem is that if a white says it they call them racist, if a black person says it they are c00n sellouts and sh**ing on their own people...you cant win with people that think this way, quick to get defensive and start attacking..
 

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Not when they're killing white farmers. :win:

Plus, I don't see what SA has to do with the USA.

keep reaching though. :obama:

Well, it would be like whites in South Africa telling the black people that racism is over after they elected their first black South African President in Nelson Mandela. :yeshrug:
 
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