So why did the Trump administration DO something in removing it?This is literally what's wrong with this forum now. Any time somebody points out that 90% of the time you can't comprehend what yall read, yall want people to die and they are c00ns and all that. Weird ass nikkas. It can be "symbolic" all it wants; it literally didn't change anything.
This is literally what's wrong with this forum now. Any time somebody points out that 90% of the time you can't comprehend what yall read, yall want people to die and they are c00ns and all that. Weird ass nikkas. It can be "symbolic" all it wants; it literally didn't change anything.
The level of coping from both sidersFrom article:
“While there are still state and federal laws that outlaw segregation and discrimination that companies need to comply with, legal experts say this change to contracts across the federal government is significant.
"It's symbolic, but it's incredibly meaningful in its symbolism," says Melissa Murray, a constitutional law professor at New York University. "These provisions that required federal contractors to adhere to and comply with federal civil rights laws and to maintain integrated rather than segregated workplaces were all part of the federal government's efforts to facilitate the settlement that led to integration in the 1950s and 1960s.
It was my fault for even engaging with someone in the terminal stages of cognitive dissonance. Not only do they serve no purpose, they're a net negative on the community as a whole.I would clean knock you the fukk out.
You are a waste of oxygen.
It was a trend for the time period just like all the songs from the Black Lives Matter movement.This linked music video made me sad. Because back then we had artists who would make music protesting this kind of treatment against the black community.
Rappers nowadays are more likely to co-sign trump and advocate killing black people. Who is gonna make the soundtrack to civil rights in the modern era?
I don't even trust the psuedo intellectual types like Kendrick to do us justice. They remind of Kyrie Irving more conspiracy theorists and contrarian than pro black.
The segregation clause is one of several identified in a public memo issued by the General Services Administration last month, affecting all civil federal agencies. The memo explains that it is making changes prompted by President Trump's executive order on diversity, equity and inclusion, which repealed an executive order signed by President Lyndon B. Johnson in 1965 regarding federal contractors and nondiscrimination.