Welp...lost another one brehs...Goodbye Tatyana Ali.

jadillac

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I feel u bruh. Even when going out to eat, I like all ethnic and types of food...from Asian, Mexican, Jamaican, Indian, Italian, and love healthy shyt like quinoa, smoothies, hummus, salads, wraps, etc. U know shyt u see at Trader Joes and Whole Foods. I even juice sometimes.

I like doing outdoor cac shyt too when the weather permits. Most black women not down with that...some are but most not. And most black women I date are picky eaters too. They wouldn't eat shyt like sushi, quinoa, kale salads and shyt like that. I dated one chick who only like chicken tenders and wouldn't eat anything else. But I try to be adventurous and can't find my Ashley/Tatyana.

Life is fuked up terrible man.

true man. Depends on where you live.

I've found Black women in Dallas, for the most part(not all), are very similar. It's hard to find ones who are GENUINELY interested in other things. Some show interest just to front like they're different. And many of the ones who are actually interested in other stuff are on that :mjpls:

Houston, ATL, DC, SF, etc you will probably find more black chicks with varied interests.
 

MJ Truth

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I still can't believe Halle paying 2 cac males child support. I'm thinking when sistas date white men....shouldn't that be a come up for the sista? Shouldn't she be getting paid.
That type of c00ning/bedwenching thought process is what got Halle paying two CACs child support. :yeshrug:

Dating outside of your race is only a "comeup" when you hate who you are.
 

Rawtid

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Vaughn Rasberry
Assistant Professor
Ph.D., University of Chicago, 2009
B.A., Howard University, 2000
M.A., University of Chicago, 2001
At Stanford Since:
2010
About
Vaughn Rasberry studies African American literature, global Cold War culture, postcolonial theory, and philosophical theories of modernity. As a Fulbright scholar in 2008-09, he taught in the American Studies department at the Humboldt University Berlin and lectured on African American literature throughout Germany. His current book project, Race and the Totalitarian Century: Geopolitics in the Black Literary Imagination, is forthcoming from Harvard University Press. His book questions the notion that desegregation prompted African American writers and activists to acquiesce in the normative claims of postwar liberalism. Challenging accounts that portray black cultural workers in various postures of reaction to larger forces--namely U.S. liberalism or Soviet communism--his project argues instead that many writers were involved in a complex national and global dialogue with totalitarianism, a defining geopolitical discourse of the twentieth century.

During World War II and the Cold War, his book shows, the United States government conscripted African Americans into the fight against Nazism and Stalinism. An array of black writers, however, deflected the appeals of liberalism and its anti-totalitarian propaganda in the service of decolonization. Richard Wright, W. E. B. Du Bois, Shirley Graham, C. L. R. James, John A. Williams, and others remained skeptical that totalitarian servitude and democratic liberty stood in stark opposition. Their skepticism, Race and the Totalitarian Century contends, allowed them to formulate an independent perspective that reimagined the anti-fascist, anti-communist narrative through the lens of racial injustice, with the United States as a tyrannical force in the Third World but also as an ironic agent of Asian and African independence.

His article, "'Now Describing You': James Baldwin and Cold War Liberalism," appears in an edited volume titled James Baldwin: America and Beyond (University of Michigan Press, 2011). A review essay, "Invoking Totalitarianism: Liberal Democracy versus the Global Jihad in Boualem Sansal's The German Mujahid," appears in the spring 2014 special issue of Novel: a Forum on Fiction. In 2015, he published a book chapter, "JFK and the Global Anticolonial Movement," in The Cambridge Companion to John F. Kennedy. He has another book chapter, "The 'Lost' Years or a 'Decade of Progress'? African American Writers and the Second World War," published in A Companion to the Harlem Renaissance (Wiley-Blackwell, 2015).

For Black History Month, he published an op-ed essay, "The Shape of African American Geopolitics," in Al Jazeera English.

An Annenberg Faculty Fellow at Stanford (2012-14), he has also received fellowships from the Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture and the Humanities Center at the University of Pittsburgh.

Vaughn also teaches in collaboration with the Center for Comparative Studies in Race and Ethnicity (CCSRE) and the programs in Modern Thought and Literature, African and African American Studies, and American Studies.

Vaughn Rasberry | Department of English

Black Excellence for sure!
 
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