Tariq outed as a Republican by Conservatives

BiggWebb79

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This alone makes Obama look pretty bad in comparison. As the first black president, I can't think of anything tangible he's done specifically for blacks. He also passed some kind of prison reform.

Trump signs bill restoring funding for black colleges
No it don't this got debunked when Roland had a HBCU President Walter Kimbro on his show and he stated that the money that Trump gave to HBCU's was for one program that he let expire, the same program was first created by G.W.Bush, then extended for 10 years by Obama; who gave over 4 Billion to HBCU's while he was in office.

That First Step Act he signed was performative and was veto proof and he couldn't shoot it down if he wanted to; which he regrets signing. The bill was created in the House and strengthened in the Senate by Kamala Harris & Cory Booker. Trump's First Step Act basically started with Obama following the Fair Sentencing Act and G.W.Bush's 2nd Chance Act.
As far any tangible thing Obama did for Black people...
Key Accomplishments

Labor Market, Income and Poverty

  • The unemployment rate for African Americans peaked at 16.8 percent in March 2010, after experiencing a larger percentage-point increase from its pre-recession average to its peak than the overall unemployment rate did. Since then, the African-American unemployment rate has seen a larger percentage-point decline in the recovery, falling much faster than the overall unemployment rate over the last year.

  • The real median income of black households increased by 4.1 percent between 2014 and 2015.

  • The President enacted permanent expansions of the Earned Income Tax Credit and Child Tax Credit, which together now provide about 2 million African-American working families with an average tax cut of about $1,000 each.

  • A recent report from the Census Bureau shows the remarkable progress that American families have made as the recovery continues to strengthen. Real median household income grew 5.2 percent from 2014 to 2015, the fastest annual growth on record. Income grew for households across the income distribution, with the fastest growth among lower- and middle-income households. The number of people in poverty fell by 3.5 million, leading the poverty rate to fall from 14.8 percent to 13.5 percent, the largest one-year drop since 1968, with even larger improvements including for African Americans, Hispanic Americans, and children.

  • The poverty rate for African Americans fell faster in 2015 than in any year since 1999. While the poverty rate fell for across all racial and ethnic groups this year, it fell 2.1 percentage points (p.p.) for African Americans, resulting in 700,000 fewer African Americans in poverty.

  • African American children also made large gains in 2015, with the poverty rate falling 4.2 percentage points and 400,000 fewer children in poverty.
Health

  • Since the start of Affordable Care Act's first open enrollment period at the end of 2013, the uninsured rate among non-elderly African Americans has declined by more than half. Over that period, about 3 million uninsured nonelderly, African-American adults gained health coverage.

  • Teen pregnancy among African-American women is at an historic low. The birth rate per 1,000 African-American teen females has fallen from 60.4 in 2008, before President Obama entered office, to 34.9 in 2014.

  • Life expectancy at birth is the highest it’s ever been for African Americans. In 2014, life expectancy at birth was 72.5 years for African-American males and 78.4 for African-American females, the highest point in the historical series for both genders.
Education

  • The high school graduation rate for African-American students is at its highest point in history. In the 2013-2014 academic year, 72.5 percent of African-American public high school students graduated within four years.

  • Since the President took office, over one million more black and Hispanic students enrolled in college.

  • Among African-Americans and Hispanic students 25 and older, high school completion is higher than ever before. Among African Americans, Hispanics, and Asian students 25 and older, Bachelor’s degree attainment is higher than ever before. As of 2015, 88 percent of the African-American population 25 and older had at least a high school degree and 23percent had at least a Bachelor’s degree.
Support for HBCUs

  • The U.S. Department of Education (ED) is responsible for funding more than $4 billion for HBCUs each year.

  • Pell Grant funding for HBCU students increased significantly between 2007 and 2014, growing from $523 million to $824 million.

  • The President’s FY 2017 budget request proposes a new, $30 million competitive grant program, called the HBCU and Minority Serving Institutions (MSIs) Innovation for Completion Fund, designed to support innovative and evidence-based, student-centered strategies and interventions to increase the number of low-income students completing degree programs at HBCUs and MSIs.

  • The First in the World (FITW) program provided unique opportunities for HBCUs to compete for grants focused on innovation to drive student success.

  • In 2014, Hampton University received a grant award of $3.5 million.

  • In FY 2015, three FITW awards were made to HBCUs, including Jackson State University ($2.9 million), Delaware State University ($2.6 million) and Spelman College ($2.7 million).

  • While Congress did not fund the program in fiscal year 2016, the President’s 2017 budget request includes $100 million for the First in the World program, with up to $30 million set aside for HBCUs and MSIs.
Criminal Justice

  • The incarceration rates for African-American men and women fell during each year of the Obama Administration and are at their lowest points in over two decades. The imprisonment rates for African-American men and women were at their lowest points since the early 1990s and late 1980s, respectively, of 2014, the latest year for which Bureau of Justice Statistics data are available.

  • The number of juveniles in secure detention has been reduced dramatically over the last decade. The number of juveniles committed or detained, a disproportionate number of whom are African American, fell more than 30% between 2007 and 2013.

  • The President has ordered the Justice Department to ban the use of solitary confinement for juveniles held in federal custody. There are presently no more juveniles being held in restrictive housing federally.
My Brother’s Keeper

  • President Obama launched the My Brother’s Keeper initiative on February 27, 2014 to address persistent opportunity gaps faced by boys and young men of color and ensure that all young people can reach their full potential.

  • Nearly 250 communities in all 50 states, 19 Tribal Nations, Washington, DC and Puerto Rico have accepted the President’s My Brother’s Keeper Community Challenge to dedicate resources and execute their own strategic plans to ensure all young people can reach their full potential.

  • Inspired by the President’s call to action, philanthropic and other private organizations have committed to provide more than $600 million in grants and in-kind resources and $1 billion in low-interest financing to expand opportunity for young people – more than tripling the initial private sector investment since 2014.

  • In May 2014, the MBK Task Force gave President Obama nearly 80 recommendations to address persistent opportunity gaps faced by young people, including boys and young men of color. Agencies have been working individually and collectively since to respond to recommendations with federal policy initiatives, grant programs, and guidance. Today, more than 80% of MBK Task Force Recommendations are complete or on track.
Advancing Equity for Women and Girls of Color

  • In 2014, the Council on Women and Girls (CWG) launched a specific work stream called “Advancing Equity for Women and Girls of Color” to ensure that policies and programs across the federal government appropriately take into account the unique obstacles that women and girls of color can face. In fall 2015, CWG released a report that identified five data-driven issue areas where interventions can promote opportunities for success at school, work, and in the community.

  • This work has also inspired independent commitments to advance equity, including a $100 million, 5-year-funding initiative by Prosperity Together—a coalition of women’s foundations—to improve economic prosperity for low-income women and women and girls of color and a $75 million funding commitment by the Collaborative to Advance Equity through Research—an affiliation of American colleges, universities, research organizations, publishers and public interest institutions led by Wake Forest University—to support existing and new research efforts about women and girls of color.

  • At the United State of Women Summit in June 2016, eight organizations launched “Young Women’s Initiatives,” place-based, data-driven programs that will focus in on the local needs of young women of color. Those organizations include the Women’s Foundation of Minnesota, the Women’s Foundation of California, the Women's Foundation for a Greater Memphis, the Washington Area Women’s Foundation, the Dallas Women’s Foundation, the Women’s Fund of Greater Birmingham, the Women’s Fund of Western Massachusetts, and the New York Women’s Foundation.
Small Business

  • There are 8 million minority-owned firms in the U.S.—a 38% increase since 2007.

  • In early 2015, the U.S. Small Business Administration (SBA) launched the MBK Millennial Entrepreneurs Initiative, which seeks to address the challenges faced by underserved millennials, including boys and young men of color, through self-employment and entrepreneurship. A major component of this effort included the six-part video series, titled “Biz My Way,” which encourages millennials to follow their passion in business.

  • In fiscal year 2015, underserved markets received 32,563 loans totaling $13 billion, compared with 25,799 loans and $10.47 billion in fiscal year 2014, an increase of 26 percent in number of loans and 24 percent in dollar amount.

  • Last year, the SBA issued a new rule that makes most individuals currently on probation or parole eligible for a SBA microloan—a loan of up to $50,000 that helps small businesses start up. And in August 2016, SBA together with the W.K. Kellogg Foundation and Justine Petersen, launched the Aspire Entrepreneurship Initiative, a $2.1 Million pilot initiative to provide entrepreneurship education and microloans to returning citizens in Detroit, Chicago, Louisville and St. Louis.
Civil Rights Division

  • The Department of Justice’s Civil Rights Division continued to enforce federal law. Over the last eight years, the Division has vigorously protected the civil rights of individuals in housing, lending, employment, voting, education, and disability rights and through hate crimes and law enforcement misconduct prosecutions and law enforcement pattern and practice cases.
African-American Judicial Appointees

  • President Obama has made 62 lifetime appointments of African Americans to serve on the federal bench.

  • This includes 9 African-American circuit court judges.

  • It also includes the appointment of 53 African American district court judges—including 26 African-American women appointed to the federal court, which is more African-American women appointed by any President in history.

  • In total, 19% of the President’s confirmed judges have been African American, compared to 16% under President Bill Clinton and 7% under President George W. Bush.

  • Five states now have their first African-American circuit judge; 10 states now have their first African-American female lifetime-appointed federal judge; and 3 districts now have their first African-American district judge.

  • Also, the President appointed the first Haitian-American lifetime-appointed federal judge, the first Afro-Caribbean-born district judge, the first African-American female circuit judge in the Sixth Circuit, and the first African-American circuit judge on the First Circuit (who was also the first African-American female lifetime-appointed federal judge to serve anywhere in the First Circuit).

  • The President is committed to continuing to ensure diversity on the federal bench. This year, the President nominated Myra Selby of Indiana to the Seventh Circuit, Abdul Kallon of Alabama to the Eleventh Circuit, and Rebecca Haywood of Pennsylvania to the Third Circuit. If confirmed, each of these would be a judicial first—Myra Selby would be the first African-American circuit judge from Indiana, Abdul Kallon would be the first African-American circuit judge from Alabama, and Rebecca Haywood would be the first African-American woman on the Third Circuit.In addition, two of the President’s district court nominees—Stephanie Finely and Patricia Timmons-Goodson—would be the first African-American lifetime-appointed federal judges in each of their respective districts, if confirmed.
    Progress of the African-American Community During the Obama Administration
 

Pull Up the Roots

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Trump done more for black america than Obama, still a shytty president imo, but the facts speak for themselves. Obama didn't get anyone out of jail, no police reforms (trump shyt was watered down, but it's something), he didn't put no money in black schools, all he did was pander, and I'm not saying that Trump was great or anything, it's just the bar was so low for the dems, and still is.
This is a blatant fukking lie, Mr. "Think for myself."


While Trump has maintained policies that benefit HBCUs, it’s hard to quantify a president’s success in this area, Toldson said. Congress and federal agencies like the Department of Education are largely responsible for policies that fund these institutions.

“With presidents, the only thing they can do is not obstruct Congress and not try to actively prevent anything they’re interested in funding,” he said.

Plus, by some measures, support for HBCUs has actually decreased under Trump.

For example, since 2016, federal funding for scientific research at HBCUs dropped by 17 percent, according to a 2019 report from the National Center for Science and Engineering Statistics.

Toldson suggested this is in part because of Trump’s decision to move the Initiative on HBCUs back to the White House, instead of leaving it under the auspices of the Department of Education. While Trump praised the decision to move the Initiative to the White House “where it belongs,” Toldson said it “politicizes” the Initiative and distances HBCUs from the agencies that fund them.

“What HBCUs need is a fair playing field when competing for research dollars,” he said.

Meanwhile, Trump claimed in his speech that he increased federal funding to HBCUs by a “record” 13 percent, “the highest ever done.” But Dillard University President Dr. Walter M. Kimbrough said that’s not quite accurate. He pointed out that Trump’s percentage isn’t just money given directly to institutions. It includes loans, as well as capital finance loan deferment for 13 HBCUs.

“The overall budget has increased but most of that increase is borrowing capacity,” he said. “It’s going to have to be paid back.”

At the same time, Trump’s speech neglected to mention decisions not directly related to HBCUs that harmed them, he added.

For example, changes to Upward Bound, a federal TRIO program which provides college preparation for low-income families, caused a third of HBCUs with Upward Bound programs to lose them, including Dillard. Also, the Federal Perkins Loan program expired, phasing out low-interest federal student loans to low-income students, which helped HBCUs and other schools.

“Those are the things that we’re not talking about that happened,” said Kimbrough.

But the biggest elephant in the room during Trump’s remarks was the Fostering Undergraduate Talent by Unlocking Resources for Education Act or FUTURE Act, which just passed in the U.S. House of Representatives and will soon head to the Senate.

This legislation would renew $255 million in annual funding for HBCUs and other minority serving institutions. The $850 million program initiated under Obama funded HBCUs for ten years. The funding is set to expire on Sept. 30th.


Trump shouldn't get any credit for the First Step Act.


We have. I mean, there's the fair sentencing act that was signed in 2010 among other reforms.

Wrt this, McConnell blocked it because it would have been seen as a victory for Obama. Why is it so hard for some of you to see what's going on here?

Why the Senate Couldn’t Pass a Crime Bill Both Parties Backed

WASHINGTON — A major criminal-justice overhaul bill seemed destined to be the bipartisan success story of the year, consensus legislation that showed lawmakers could still rise above politics.

Then the election, Donald J. Trump’s demand for “law and order” and a series of other political calculations got in the way.

Senate Republicans divided on the wisdom of reducing federal mandatory minimum sentences. Other Republicans, unhappy that President Obama was reducing hundreds of federal prison sentences on his own, did not want to give him a legacy victory.

...

Mr. Cornyn concedes the tumult of this election year was a major factor given sharp disagreement among Senate Republicans reflected in the decision by Senator Mitch McConnell, Republican of Kentucky and the majority leader, to not allow a vote on a proposal most believe would pass easily.


Obama Granted Clemency Unlike Any Other President In History

"According to our analysis of Justice Department records, about 98 percent of Obama’s commutations through Tuesday were for prisoners convicted on drug offenses. And many of those, more than 60 percent of all commutations, were charged under conspiracy laws. Activist groups like the American Civil Liberties Union argue that these laws allowed low-level drug dealers to be unjustly charged with the more serious crimes that distributors often face."

Remember When Obama Released 6,000 Federal Prisoners? Here’s How One Is Doing Now.

NEWPORT NEWS, VIRGINIA — Dallas Bell had just celebrated 16 years of sobriety, but nothing else seemed to be going right. It was 2006, and his once-successful cleaning business was slowing down. He was having trouble paying his mortgage, and his marriage was falling apart. And then his mother died.

“Everything was coming at me at one time,” he recalled, sitting behind his desk near the federal halfway house in Newport News, Virginia. “And when I lost my mother, that really sent me on a spiral.”

That spiral took the form of selling cocaine, a crime that eventually sent Bell to federal prison, in 2011. Two months ago, Bell was released early, along with 6,000 other non-violent drug offenders, as part of an effort by president Obama to reform sentencing laws for low-level drug violations.

@Scott Larock @JT-Money - You both dapped that post. What has Trump done?
 
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GMoney

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its not ADOS/FBA people on this site, i lean more towards ADOS but i wont sit here and go in on tariq like that

most of the people who are heavily against him are nonados people who interestingly were former fans of his.

Some of them are just consensus liberals (read: centrists) who dislike anyone outside of their approved pundit/media class.

I'm done with Tariq too, but it's not in service to any Democratic platform or under the guise that supporting the Democrats now is somehow in alignment with the black radical tradition or the trajectory of black civil rights in this country (which has rarely if ever had support from mainline politicians).

You're right. It's true that many of these centrist types on here are part of the black immigrant class. They are viewing politics and America through the lens of social mobility and don't truly understand the history of black people in this country or white America for that matter. The post-civil rights America they came to (that ADOS paved the way for) is the aberration, open white racism is the norm.

The general assessment from OP is correct though but Tariq's move is not so much to the right, it's just the opposite of the black political class with who he's in competition with.

That's why his talking points appear "right-wing" when it's really just about being an alternative to the mainstream black political and media class which is admittedly a sorry bunch. Unfortunately, the alternative or "the new voices of black media" are proving themselves to be just as disappointing IMO.
 

Ya' Cousin Cleon

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whether they broke, shea butter, from the burbs, or from the hood, a lot of people use black empowerment as a way to shyt on black folk lowkey

just gotta KIM

I was very offended on how he was trying to shyt on Capitol Police Officer Eugene the other day. That really bothered me. It made me question his rhetoric and true motives. Now, I'm kind of looking at him with a side eye. The way that he talks to his audience and him constantly trying to "roast" all of the time is getting old too.

I'm just telling you that I've also peeped some shyt with Tariq. I still rock with him, but I don't know for how long. His antics are getting more boring and suspect every week that passes.
:francis:
 

Wiseborn

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Some of them are just consensus liberals (read: centrists) who dislike anyone outside of their approved pundit/media class.

I'm done with Tariq too, but it's not in service to any Democratic platform or under the guise that supporting the Democrats now is somehow in alignment with the black radical tradition or the trajectory of black civil rights in this country (which has rarely if ever had support from mainline politicians).

You're right. It's true that many of these centrist types on here are part of the black immigrant class. They are viewing politics and America through the lens of social mobility and don't truly understand the history of black people in this country or white America for that matter. The post-civil rights America they came to (that ADOS paved the way for) is the aberration, open white racism is the norm.

The general assessment from OP is correct though but Tariq's move is not so much to the right, it's just the opposite of the black political class with who he's in competition with.

That's why his talking points appear "right-wing" when it's really just about being an alternative to the mainstream black political and media class which is admittedly a sorry bunch. Unfortunately, the alternative or "the new voices of black media" are proving themselves to be just as disappointing IMO.
I'd be with you, but who's really arguing for a separate political system? Nobody is seriously using Black Panther Party/ Malcolm X talking points. Everyone is either liberal Democrats or centrists. Again a lot of people would be republicans if the GOP didn't embrace racism.
 

Wiseborn

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I think he has said, "If I was a republican, what the fukk you gonna do about it?"

And we all know the answer :sas1:
ask the bytches who donate to him what they're gonna do about it? Probably stop sending him donations (at least that what he seems to think). Either that or he doesn't want people to connect the "no Vote" thing to open Trump support.
 

Snoopy Loops

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Some of them are just consensus liberals (read: centrists) who dislike anyone outside of their approved pundit/media class.

I'm done with Tariq too, but it's not in service to any Democratic platform or under the guise that supporting the Democrats now is somehow in alignment with the black radical tradition or the trajectory of black civil rights in this country (which has rarely if ever had support from mainline politicians).

You're right. It's true that many of these centrist types on here are part of the black immigrant class. They are viewing politics and America through the lens of social mobility and don't truly understand the history of black people in this country or white America for that matter. The post-civil rights America they came to (that ADOS paved the way for) is the aberration, open white racism is the norm.

The general assessment from OP is correct though but Tariq's move is not so much to the right, it's just the opposite of the black political class with who he's in competition with.

That's why his talking points appear "right-wing" when it's really just about being an alternative to the mainstream black political and media class which is admittedly a sorry bunch. Unfortunately, the alternative or "the new voices of black media" are proving themselves to be just as disappointing IMO.
I had to be a sellout because I was just tryna to stand out, thats all:troll:
 

Kyle C. Barker

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Trump done more for black america than Obama, still a shytty president imo, but the facts speak for themselves. Obama didn't get anyone out of jail, no police reforms (trump shyt was watered down, but it's something), he didn't put no money in black schools, all he did was pander, and I'm not saying that Trump was great or anything, it's just the bar was so low for the dems, and still is.



These 2 points are wrong by the way and no, I will not produce those links for you. You can take the time out of your day to do that yourself.

Also 23% of the 408K people that have died in this pandemic have been black (93K and climbing).

But continue to be the edge lord that you are.
 

Wiseborn

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No, I'm saying don't be a coward and have a backbone our community is lead by black women which is why the democrats do what they do.

I'll never advocate for violence
If you're saying that you need to promote a self defence agenda I'm with that. If I did live in america, I'd want to live in a heavily Black dominated area, But I can't live in a anti 2A area so Chicago, New York Balitmore in DC would be a no for me. I guess the A or the tidewater region would be the best bet for me.
 

Wiseborn

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Ummm ok. So not only are you a day one fan, but you share the same character flaw that aids in your "dislike" of him? You know too much and wanna be like him too much for you not to be a fan. You don't have to go the "hating" route tho, bro. If you think the guy is interesting in spite of saying some things you might not agree with, then just say it. Cause you sounding too familiar for you to hate the guy.
I literally said that in the last Tariq thread. If I thought the nikka was unapoligetically Pro Black and Pro Black Male. I'd rock with him no matter what. But I can't look past the obvious fukkery. The fact that we don't have a real advocate makes me legit sad. But just because the nikka said some cool shyt in the past doesn't mean I can't criticize or bush the nikka now.

shyt The Root says some cool shyt from time to time it doesn't mean I rock with them and I read their shyt all the time.

That's what I don't understand about the fan club nikkas if you acknowledge son went off the deep end with the conspiracies Bush him and keep it moving. The nikka told you years ago that if he won the lottery he'd bush you. I see him like I see a lot of other Black people who used to say some cool shyt They got the bag and they low key don't fukk with us anymore.

Again I like debating in general and the pappy protectors just won't say I like him It's always Why do you care? You were a Fan before. Frankly I can't see why y'all cant see where a nikka just out grew him. I mean shyt going back to the Macklessons days I can understand why a 50 plus dude married with children wouldn't want to fake like he's a pimp anymore.Maybe just maybe you can out grow just roasting nikkas all day.
 

8WON6

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Thery're way too p*ssy for that. This ain't for clowns throwing shots, this is for a random reading this. I meam Tariq's been talking about what he termed as The Confederate Coup. I mean if the election was stolen as Tariq said wouldn't storming the Capitol be the right thing to do? Or is he gonna be like Rush Limbaugh, Alex Jones and the rest of the Fox News crew and just talk about shyt but not doing a damn thing himself but taking superchats?
Tariq is saying the election was stolen (i don't agree with this specific point, i think people fairly voted trump out) and that Democrats made black people the face of the "steal". When Biden made that tweet about black people having his back combined with black twitter shills talking all that "we saved america with our vote sacrifice" stuff, you can see who the democrats were funneling that right wing rage to. This whole thing is backed up by the fact that a senator from Oklahoma made a direct apology to black people and his apology was based around the way the "steal" was focused on black communities' like Detroit, Philly, and Atlanta being focus of alleged election fraud.

REPUBLICAN SEN. JAMES Lankford of Oklahoma apologized to Black voters in Tulsa for questioning the results of the presidential election – one of the only members of the GOP to publicly repent in the wake of last week's riot on the U.S. Capitol by Trump supporters intent on overturning the results of the election.

"My action of asking for more election information caused a firestorm of suspicion among many of my friends, particularly in Black communities around the state," he wrote in a letter. "What I did not realize was all of the national conversation about states like Georgia, Pennsylvania, and Michigan, was seen as casting doubt on the validity of votes coming out of predominantly Black communities like Atlanta, Philadelphia, and Detroit."
"Many Black friends in Oklahoma saw this as a direct attack on their right to vote, for their vote to matter, and even a belief that their votes made an election in our country illegitimate," he wrote. "I can assure you, my intent to give a voice to Oklahomans who had questions was never also an intent to diminish the voice of any Black American."

He continued: "I should have recognized how what I said and what I did could be interpreted by many of you. I deeply regret my blindness to that perception, and for that I am sorry."



https://www.usnews.com/news/politic...k-constituents-for-challenging-electoral-vote


tl:dr....Black people were made the face of alleged election fraud. Tariq's whole point in linking this stuff up was that when the Maga idiots stop their coup attempts they'll be coming back to black folks next. I don't agree with Tariq with the whole election fraud thing, but i do agree that Black need to be on alert over this shyt. Between Biden talking about black people got his back, and the republicans blaming "black" cities...these magas clowns have been worked up.
 
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