Why is Poitier an insecure fakkit? Alway pickin on other black groups :dahell:

Poitier

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:troll: this nikka...

Funny this thread got made because I was thinking the same thing, I used think he was cool but he just kept exposing himself. This nikka is always in every thread about black people talking shyt, nikka even tried to convince me African-Americans don't look African. I don't even think he's black no more.

I don't even know you

Stop stalking me
 

Bawon Samedi

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It's not your word. I'm sorry bro. And if you think that divisiveness is gonna help you get somewhere, go ahead and keep thinking that. But for all the people who read this in silence, please do your own research and don't just blindly follow any man. Not me, or any other poster in this thread or any place for that matter.

Check your facts, then double check them. And form your own opinion.

Ya'll be cool though!


Worry about your own damn people and stop trying to minimize MY PEOPLES damn culture/history. It is our word, Jesse jackson invented it. Sorry.

Why don't YOU check facts.
 

Bawon Samedi

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tcam001551_zpsgumlicp8.jpg
:smoker::smoker::smoker::smoker::smoker::smoker::smoker::smoker::smoker::smoker::smoker::smoker::smoker::smoker::smoker::smoker:

Now explain to us collard green eating AAs thoroughly how reggae(which hardly any AAs listen to), influenced the whole southern trap scene. learn me please.:ehh:
 

Enzo

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Worry about your own damn people and stop trying to minimize MY PEOPLES damn culture/history. It is our word, Jesse jackson invented it. Sorry.

Why don't YOU check facts.

I did check facts.

Jesse Jackson did not invent the word.

If you go back a page, I even quoted where Jesse Jackson didn't invent the world. He popularized it. Worry about my own people LMAO. Man, the brainwashing is deep. You got it bro.
 

UnoVon

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I don't even know you

Stop stalking me
Your fakkit ass knows everybody on this site, your bytch ass is always online, your life is sad nikka, go outside for a change, get some fresh air, play with some legos, go talk to some boys, you lil dikk suckin fakkit ass nikka
 

Poitier

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Your fakkit ass knows everybody on this site, your bytch ass is always online, your life is sad nikka, go outside for a change, get some fresh air, play with some logos, go talk to some boys, you lil dikk suckin fakkit ass nikka

you let another man get you upset and you follow his every post

you're a joke and guaranteed bum nikka
 

Apollo Creed

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I just read it. My bad.

The issue at hand is people dont understand Race,Ethnicity, and Nationality.

"We" are all Black, Black Race has tons of different ethnic group, and a Black Person could be from different Nations.

Black people are the only ones who were victims of the Transatlantic slave trade thus we cannot use the same "guidelines" as other groups when it comes to describing ourselves as no other group has had a disruption of the magnitude as black people (specifically those of West African ancestry).

That said, Black Americans relate to each other no matter their ethnicity, a Black kid with Jamaican parents that was born in Harlem will relate to an AA more than he would a Black kid born in Kingston, because even if his parents passes down Jamaican culture, that child is still a Black American and takes on the issues other Black Americans face.

The issue with Immigrants is that they were born into one culture and moved to another culture and think they are a Black Jamaican living in America thus the issues of Black America does not impact them which is false. So while the immigrant may not understand the cause of the issues in the land they are in, it would be wise to honor what is happening because the same way a Black Jamaican can criticize Black Americas (in particular AAs) about why they have issues, a Black American can look at the state of Jamaican and make the same criticism.

The issue globally is white supremacy had created the narrative in every nation that the black natives there brought their issues on themselves, and people who immigrate to these lands think of it as being fact since these narratives are typically the only introduction and knowledge they have of people from those nations.
 

Cake

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tcam001551_zpsgumlicp8.jpg
:smoker::smoker::smoker::smoker::smoker::smoker::smoker::smoker::smoker::smoker::smoker::smoker::smoker::smoker::smoker::smoker:

Now explain to us collard green eating AAs thoroughly how reggae(which hardly any AAs listen to), influenced the whole southern trap scene. learn me please.:ehh:
umm I've posted proof pics too. You got your black friend to take that pic cac. Youse a cac.

I never said reggae influenced the whole trap scene. Foh. I said you can see reggae influences and you also find Carribean influence In southern style as a whole.

Cac
 

Athenna

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I agree sometimes he goes hard. He also seems to dislike me. (Probably because I'm AC.)
:manny:
But I'm pretty sure under all this "bitterness" @Poitier's a likable person.
 

IllmaticDelta

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Nah breh the term was coined by Jesse Jackson for Blacks who were in the US before and during Jim Crow

Nah, Aframs coined it way before Jesse Jackson came along


"AfroAmericans" the ethnicity


AyLg2Ey.jpg



Use of ‘African-American’ Dates to Nation’s Early Days

The term African-American may seem to be a product of recent decades, exploding into common usage in the 1990s after a push from advocates like Jesse Jackson, and only enshrined in the Oxford English Dictionary in 2001.

The O.E.D.’s entry, revised in 2012, traces the first known occurrence to 1835, in an abolitionist newspaper. But now, a researcher has discovered a printed reference in an anti-British sermon from 1782 credited to an anonymous “African American,” pushing the origins of the term back to the earliest days of independence.

We think of it as a neutral alternative to older terms, one that resembles Italian-American or Irish-American,” said Fred Shapiro, an associate director at the Yale Law School Library, who found the reference. “It’s a very striking usage to see back in 1782.”

Mr. Shapiro, a longtime contributor to the O.E.D. and the editor of the Yale Book of Quotations, found the reference last month in one of his regular sweeps of various online databases that have transformed lexicographic research by gathering vast swaths of historical texts — once scattered across the collections of far-flung libraries and historical societies — in one easily searchable place.

One day, Mr. Shapiro typed “African American” into a database of historical newspapers. Up popped an advertisement that appeared in The Pennsylvania Journal on May 15, 1782, announcing: “Two Sermons, written by the African American; one on the Capture of Lord Cornwallis, to be SOLD.”

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With the help of George Thompson, a retired librarian from New York University, Mr. Shapiro found one of the titles — “A Sermon on the Capture of Lord Cornwallis” — and located a copy of it, a 16-page pamphlet, at Houghton Library at Harvard University.

The sermon, which crows about the surrender of the British Army at Yorktown the previous year, was acquired by Harvard in 1845 and seems to have been all but uncited in scholarly literature. Its author — listed on the title page as “an African American” — is anonymous, identified only as “not having the benefit of a liberal education.”

“Was it a freeman?” Mr. Shapiro said. “A slave? We don’t know.”

Black people in the Colonial period, whatever their legal status, were most commonly referred to as “Negro” or “African.”

But in the years after the Revolution, various terms emphasizing their claim to being “American” — a label which was applied to people of European descent living in the colonies by the end of the 17th century — came into circulation.

“Afro-American” has been documented as early as 1831, with “black American” (1818) and “Africo-American” (1788) going back even further.

“We want dancing and raree-shows and ramadans to forget miseries and wretchedness as much as the Africo-americans want the Banjar” — banjo — “to digest with their Kuskus the hardships of their lives,” a correspondent wrote to Thomas Jefferson in 1788. (“Kuskus” is a variant of “couscous.”)

Katherine C. Martin, the editor of United States dictionaries at Oxford University Press, said the O.E.D.’s researchers were in the process of confirming Mr. Shapiro’s discovery.

“It’s very exciting,” she said. “Once we have it nailed down, I would expect we’ll update our entry.”

The sermon, one of the earliest surviving ones by a black American, may also attract interest from historians.

In it, the speaker boasts about the capture of Cornwallis and decries the British assault on “the freedom of the free born sons of America” while nodding toward the fact of “my own complexion.”

“My beloved countrymen, if I may be permitted thus to call you, who am a descendant of the sable race,” one passage begins.

The speaker also addresses fellow “descendants of Africa” who feel loyalty to Britain, asking: “Tell me in plain and simple language, have ye not been disappointed? Have ye reaped what you labored for?”

The other sermon mentioned in the ad, Mr. Shapiro said, may be “A Sermon on the Present Situation of Affairs of America and Great-Britain,” which had been previously known to scholars. Both refer to “descendants of Africa,” he said, and have dedications invoking South Carolina, whose governor had been held in solitary confinement by the British for nearly a year.

But curiously, the title page of the other sermon attributes it to “a Black.”

“In other words, the bifurcation between the terms African-American and black, the two leading terms today, was present from the very beginning
,” Mr. Shapiro said.

http://www.nytimes.com/2015/04/21/arts/use-of-african-american-dates-to-nations-early-days.html?_r=0
 

Bawon Samedi

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I did check facts.

Jesse Jackson did not invent the word.

If you go back a page, I even quoted where Jesse Jackson didn't invent the world. He popularized it. Worry about my own people LMAO. Man, the brainwashing is deep. You got it bro.
The Emergence of the Term "African American" at Two Prestigious Institutions: The New York Times and the Supreme Court on JSTOR

^^It was still African-Americans(us) that coined the term. There is no brainwashing, about time AAs had ethnic pride. :smile:
 

Northern Son

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We've had some good conversations here and there, but dude is more bigoted than your everyday Trump supporting cac. A few of his comments are in self defense, but the majority of it (like TS's example) are unprovoked, and genuinely disturbing.
 

Rarely-Wrong Liggins

Name another Liggins hot I'm just honest.
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@Poitier you are an agent

what's with this nikka always pickin on africans and caribbeans, is your inferiority complex that massive :dahell:


this was from the thread of the girl that got harassed at the trump rally and look at the dumbass shyt he posted


mind you the chick was just protesting


the fukk is your problem man, you're stifling progress. It's truly demonic my friends, that a brother would try and kick down another black subculture what kind of c00n shyt is this?

You don't have anything to say about @Clean Cut though who makes much worse posts about AAs? :mjpls:
 
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