You Nikkas are too much.
we all know op ain't just talking about chilling on no damn porch as "exploring outdoors"
OP also predicated the thread on a fake quote, as if someone on here actually uttered those words.
You Nikkas are too much.
we all know op ain't just talking about chilling on no damn porch as "exploring outdoors"
no it's because either A. segregation or racism kept black people away from certain things (why the stereotype of black people can't swim came from) or they just don't want to be around white people while doing those activities (because of racism and prejudice)It is sad that a lot of black folks think like this, many are scared of water and don't know how to swim. Makes no damn sense!
Yeah, nah. nikkas ain't in the woods like that. It is what it is.
As someone who loves Outdoor activities, this is sad
Damn, the White Man really got us conditioned to be afraid of Nature and Exploring the world. We really are fine being 2nd class citizens and only going to places where White people tell us that it's cool to go to. shyt is crazy
Nature = white people shyt, to ignorant c00ns who think urban is synonymous with blackness.What's the argument going on in here?
It’s funny how that conversation even came about. That thread was about an alligator chasing a toy boat then you nikkas switched it up talking what is and what ain’t “white people shyt“
Well that line of thinking is (or was) out there. I grew up in a city (a small one but a city nonetheless) and the thought of hiking and camping was seen as something that white folks did amongst my peer group. Fishing was about as outdoorsy as it got for black folks in my mind but I did view it as "country" activities. When we moved to the country that was when I saw more black folks hunting and doing stuff that I grew up to perceive as white people activities.Nature = white people shyt, to ignorant c00ns who think urban is synonymous with blackness.
Well that line of thinking is (or was) out there. I grew up in a city (a small one but a city nonetheless) and the thought of hiking and camping was seen as something that white folks did amongst my peer group. Fishing was about as outdoorsy as it got for black folks in my mind but I did view it as "country" activities. When we moved to the country that was when I saw more black folks hunting and doing stuff that I grew up to perceive as white people activities.
Argue about going outside, brehs.
Oh hell nah, I don't ever want to see a black bear in nature lol.
Sometimes you don't have to go into nature
Sometimes they encroach into the burbs
Just remember to stand your ground; make yourself appear big and loud and don't ever run or show them fear