Remember that Asian weave shop owner that punched the black woman in Tulsa?

cjlaw93

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@cjlaw93 was most likely raised by a single mother .so in his head black women can do no wrong. That's why this negro is always defending/simping them and shyt talking black men
Was definitely raised by both parents..both have degrees and successful in their fields..I’m just not a fukkin c00n
 

Breh13

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Meh. You'll always get completely broken and lost black people like those females in the video. Fortunately, it's not like there are thousands lining up.

They don't want to be saved, I'm sure some are aware how racist the owner is and the previous incident but the need for materialism and that weave overpowers it. We have some lost and broken people in the diaspora sadly.

That POS owner knows what he's doing too, probably done it countless times before.
 

Karb

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I can't even understand the logic behind this.

Get yo ass beat by the owner but still support and put money into his pockets

Some people thrive on dysfunction, humiliation and degradation sadly :yeshrug:

You can't blame Asians for taking advantage of the stupidity of those dumbass broads. :francis:
 

Honey Bee

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My mom and sister drive 30 mins to a black owned salon with black employees :yeshrug:


Why would you give money to Triangular racists? Starve them out of our neighborhoods. Suck up the not getting discounts shyt and BUY BLACK


She ain’t start fukking nikkas til THIS YEAR she said.

She also let a white man stick his finger in her ass and then he licked his finger afterwards. Don’t give her attention
What a random fukk buddy of mine have to do about what I said?And there are plenty of black men that like to do anal.I just turn them down.
 

Karb

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I don't know that I can agree. The Korean is able to get his hair super cheap because he has connects back home willing to sell to him cheap but raise the wholesale price to non-Koreans. That's on Asia, not America.

Those women would have failed the Montgomery Bus Strike -- which is why the Civil Rights Movement was full of ringers. There's a reason the old timers spoke a certain way on 'street people' in the Eyes on the Prize documentary.

Get your ringers on code first, and everyone else will follow when it's safe for them to do so.

This protest sounds like it didn't have ringers, influential people to cattle-steer the street people since street people live one day at a time, not for the big picture, and not for the long term, due to circumstance and experience. But I don't know.

The women will know. Maybe they thought that lady deserved to get punched. :yeshrug:

Breh, anybody can get those cheap ass supplies from East Asia :mjlol:

You think they won't sell to a black person? :russ:

Money is all that matters.

It's a globalized world breh, "connects" mean shyt. You can source from India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, China, Vietnam Sri Lanka etc etc... shyt ain't rocket science.
 

Karb

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I never really comment on the whole hair weave thing because I largely don't care about it, but after seeing this... I see why you guys say that some women are slaves to their hair products.

This is mental slavery. These women are enslaved to these products, and I make zero apologies in saying that.

Did you see any women from your crazy night out in Tulsa in that line? :lupe:
 

HarlemHottie

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that's a tad disingenuous.

If most women are wearing weave and fake shyt, ofcourse that's what the beauty standard is gonna gravitate towards. Women have made it clear they dont want men's opinions on this.
Not that it even much matters what we like because whenever black men actually bring up what we like it's met with "fakkit why do you care what women do?/its protective/women can do what they want/we want to feel beautiful" and a myriad of other pushbacks. You dont remember the kendrick "show me something natural" pushback? Women shyt on alicia keys when she went natural.
Beauty standards don't work like that, tho. Men seek signs of fertility: clear skin, long thick hair, curvy with a slim waist, etc. In this society, proximity to whiteness is sometimes important. Women notice who gets chose and use whatever tricks they can to meet the standard: diet pills, make up, skin bleaching, surgery, and yes, weave. I can see where men and women get confused about who's doing what for who, but I thought this guy broke it down well.

Men see feminine attractiveness from the perspective of judgment, while women see it from the perspective of competition.

Women do not make themselves attractive to attract men, they make themselves attractive to socially dominate women by displaying their ability to attract men. Being attractive to a woman is the social equivalent of having big muscles as a dude. Just displaying them acts as a deterrent against potential competition.

The Red Pill Room: Wife Test: Attractiveness

Extra reading:
The Red Pill Room: The Female Social Matrix: An Introduction
The Red Pill Room: Swingsets and Sandboxes - Playground Rules for the Female Social Matrix
The Red Pill Room: Wife Test: Attractiveness

Quiet as it's kept, I believe women reacted to Alicia Keys like that bc, that's like a pretty nikka bragging about bagging 10/10 broads while he was technically homeless, broke, 1 mo. since his last hair cut, and dressed bummy. What that got to do with the average nikka?:childplease:

:heh:
 

Karb

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Why Do Koreans Own The Black Beauty Supply Business?

Why Do Koreans Own The Black Beauty Supply Business?

September 27, 2010 | By MadameNoire

It’s odd but not so odd at the same time. By now, many people expect to walk into a beauty supply store and see a Korean store owner manning the register. Whether you’re in the suburbs of Houston or on MLK Blvd in Anytown, USA, you know what to expect. And yet, walking down a street in a Black neighborhood with Black residents and Black customers buzzing about the retail shops, that image of the few Koreans in the neighborhood only existing behind the cash register of liquor, beauty supply and other retail shops is still perplexing.


But what can explain the seemingly random attraction of Black hair to Korean entrepreneurs? Is it that they love Black hair so much? Was there a plan amongst the first wave of Korean immigrants to hone in on the black hair care industry and dominate the beauty supply store market? From a business perspective, it was no coincidence.

The wig business and the explosion of the wig business in South Korea in the 1960s is instrumental to understanding the Korean ownership of beauty supply stores. According to the book “On My Own: Korean Businesses and Race Relations in America”, the rise of the YH Trade wig manufacturing company was significant. Founder Yung Ho Chang, conceived the idea of the company while working as the vice-director of Korean Trade Promotion Corporation in the U.S. Between 1965 and 1978, his company exported $100 million worth of wigs.

The wig business was doing so well, especially amongst African-American consumers that the Korean Wig Merchants pushed to corner the market. “In 1965, the Korean Wig merchants joined together and convinced the Korean government to outlaw the export of raw hair,” said Aron Ranen, a filmmaker who has documented the marginalization of African-American entrepreneurs in the hair care industry in the film Black Hair. “[This ban] made it so that one can only buy the pre-made wigs and extensions.” In other words, Korean hair could only be manufactured in Korea. “Six months later, the United States government created a ban on any wig that contains hair from China,” effectively putting South Korea in prime position to exploit the market.



The business structure helped set up many Korean entrepreneurs in the sale of wigs and over the past five decades, wig stores have evolved to become full fledged beauty supply stores where hair for weaves and extensions represent the top selling products. Since then, it’s been a chain reaction as one store beget another; family members and employees of one store owner duplicated the business. According to said Dr. Kyeyoung Park, associate professor of anthropology and Asian American Studies at UCLA, competition also played a role in the proliferation. “Korean immigrants are more concerned with peer competition,” she said. “If one is running a business so well, then another Korean will open up a similar business very quickly.”

Today, there are over 9,000 Korean-owned beauty supply stores serving a billion dollar market for Black hair. Between manufacturing, distributing and selling these hair care products, Korean entrepreneurs appear to control all major components. Ranen was inspired to make his documentary because of what he saw as the injustice of unfair business practices.

“It’s really about allowing black manufacturers to get inside the distribution channel,” he said. “‘I mean, if you ask me, ‘what is your vision for the future?’” Well, right away, it’s a 100 black-owned stores opening up right next to Korean stores – a boycott until the Korean stores accept at least 20% black-owned manufactured products. Then we are talking about money in the community.”



According Ranin, there are only four central distributors serving beauty supply stores in the country and these Korean owned distributors discriminate against Black store owners in order to maintain their monopoly in the market. Ranin interviewed Lucky White, the owner of Kizure Ironworks which specializes in making styling tools like curling irons, for his 2006 documentary. Ms. White claimed that distributors told her that her products were no longer in demand as an excuse to turn away her products in favor of knock-offs produced by Asian companies.

Devin Robinson, an economics professor and author of “How to Become a Successful Beauty Supply Store Owner”, organized a boycott last November against Non- Black Owned Beauty Supply stores. “The problem is with the distributors.” he has stated. “Distributors are mainly Non-Blacks and they handpick who they will distribute products to. This oftentimes leaves aspiring black owners

School me on this tho breh: why can't they just source raw hair from India or some other country? Why does it have to be korea?? :dahell:
 
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