Moderator: Andrew
The Sushi Hunter wrote:Get ready..shithead BOzo is about to say something really fucking stupid about this any moment now.
No Surprize wrote:The Trayvon Martin the media never showed us.
steveo777 wrote:There are plenty of black people who understand the trial was fair...
Boomchild wrote:No Surprize wrote:The Trayvon Martin the media never showed us.
From the way the media portrayed Martin you got the idea that he was like a12yr. skipping down the street singing nursery rhymes while Zimmerman gunned him down.
No Surprize wrote:The Trayvon Martin the media never showed us.
Voyager wrote:No Surprize wrote:The Trayvon Martin the media never showed us.
Yeah? Where is the Ron Goldman or Nicole Brown Simpson that the media never showed us? Maybe if we saw that they were terrible sinners, we could cut OJ Simpson some slack?
I have no idea why people think this way. It baffles the shit out of me.
Voyager wrote:steveo777 wrote:There are plenty of black people who understand the trial was fair...
LOL! Where are they?
An innocent black kid was profiled, stalked, and murdered, and a white/hispanic man got away with murdering him. Any way you twist the details, this still is exactly what happened.
There are maybe a few black GOP members that tow the party line in letting Zimmerman off the hook, but I wouldn't call them "plenty". More like a few rarities here and there.
Voyager wrote:steveo777 wrote:There are plenty of black people who understand the trial was fair...
LOL! Where are they?
An innocent black kid was profiled, stalked, and murdered, and a white/hispanic man got away with murdering him. Any way you twist the details, this still is exactly what happened.
There are maybe a few black GOP members that tow the party line in letting Zimmerman off the hook, but I wouldn't call them "plenty". More like a few rarities here and there.
Voyager wrote:steveo777 wrote:There are plenty of black people who understand the trial was fair...
LOL! Where are they?
An innocent black kid was profiled, stalked, and murdered, and a white/hispanic man got away with murdering him. Any way you twist the details, this still is exactly what happened.
There are maybe a few black GOP members that tow the party line in letting Zimmerman off the hook, but I wouldn't call them "plenty". More like a few rarities here and there.
The Sushi Hunter wrote:BOzo has said absolutely nothing about the little kid shot during the hold up robbery, nothing about the woman who was savagely beaten and nearly killed in front of her kid in her own house which was nicely recorded with the nany cam, nothing about the teen who drop kicked a woman in her face in San Francisco a few weeks ago when she was trying to pull herself up off the sidewalk after being robbed, again captured on video, and nothing about how blacks are killing each other all around the US every day of the week. Yet he does take this opportunity to protest and call it a racist incident of a shooting that was a valid act of self defense. This fucking asshole POTUS has just lowered himself to the likes of Al Sharpton, Jesse Jackson and the like. What a fucking POS!
slucero wrote:..and I voted for Obama in 2008.
Boomchild wrote:slucero wrote:..and I voted for Obama in 2008.
So you didn't vote to re-elect him in 2012? After all he's not the problem. Everyone else is. He just needs more time to fix things.
Boomchild wrote:slucero wrote:..and I voted for Obama in 2008.
So you didn't vote to re-elect him in 2012? After all he's not the problem. Everyone else is. He just needs more time to fix things.
Memorex wrote:I don't think you can say Obama has chosen to represent one race to the the exclusion of others.
His comments on race are based on experience. He is a black man. Therefore, that's his experience. That's unchangeable and not a choice he can make one way or the the other. His race speeches center on that experience. If he got up and started talking about white experience, he'd be kooky. But race speeches are not policy. It's leading in a moral sense, but nothing else.
So, can anyone disagree that his policies to date have only hurt the black community - more specifically the poor black community? Higher gas prices. Higher energy prices. Higher unemployment than any other sector. And frankly, I believe the help he has given, such as food stamps and higher levels of disability only serve to keep people in those situations from moving up and past that - no matter what race or gender.
If you are a low-income black person in America, outside of the pride of having a black president, nothing is better for you and it's most likely worse.
That's not just Obama - it's pretty much everyone in power now.
steveo777 wrote:Memorex wrote:I don't think you can say Obama has chosen to represent one race to the the exclusion of others.
His comments on race are based on experience. He is a black man. Therefore, that's his experience. That's unchangeable and not a choice he can make one way or the the other. His race speeches center on that experience. If he got up and started talking about white experience, he'd be kooky. But race speeches are not policy. It's leading in a moral sense, but nothing else.
So, can anyone disagree that his policies to date have only hurt the black community - more specifically the poor black community? Higher gas prices. Higher energy prices. Higher unemployment than any other sector. And frankly, I believe the help he has given, such as food stamps and higher levels of disability only serve to keep people in those situations from moving up and past that - no matter what race or gender.
If you are a low-income black person in America, outside of the pride of having a black president, nothing is better for you and it's most likely worse.
That's not just Obama - it's pretty much everyone in power now.
There are plenty of black Americans who have found that America does offer opportunity to everyone. There is no excuse for not getting an education in this country. None! When you have a culture of youth that subscribes to the typical hip-hop, thug, gangsta culture, where every word they use is either mispronounced, an expletive, or something derrogatory, you will find there is not much market for them when it comes to finding a job. Who's fault is that? That culture and it's teachings are failing them. These are just plain facts that are out there for everyone to see.
Memorex wrote:steveo777 wrote:Memorex wrote:I don't think you can say Obama has chosen to represent one race to the the exclusion of others.
His comments on race are based on experience. He is a black man. Therefore, that's his experience. That's unchangeable and not a choice he can make one way or the the other. His race speeches center on that experience. If he got up and started talking about white experience, he'd be kooky. But race speeches are not policy. It's leading in a moral sense, but nothing else.
So, can anyone disagree that his policies to date have only hurt the black community - more specifically the poor black community? Higher gas prices. Higher energy prices. Higher unemployment than any other sector. And frankly, I believe the help he has given, such as food stamps and higher levels of disability only serve to keep people in those situations from moving up and past that - no matter what race or gender.
If you are a low-income black person in America, outside of the pride of having a black president, nothing is better for you and it's most likely worse.
That's not just Obama - it's pretty much everyone in power now.
There are plenty of black Americans who have found that America does offer opportunity to everyone. There is no excuse for not getting an education in this country. None! When you have a culture of youth that subscribes to the typical hip-hop, thug, gangsta culture, where every word they use is either mispronounced, an expletive, or something derrogatory, you will find there is not much market for them when it comes to finding a job. Who's fault is that? That culture and it's teachings are failing them. These are just plain facts that are out there for everyone to see.
When an administration focuses very little on jobs, it hurts everyone. Combined with other factors, it takes a specifically hard toil on the black population. While there may be opportunities for all, there are not as many as are needed.
Memorex wrote:I don't think you can say Obama has chosen to represent one race to the the exclusion of others.
His comments on race are based on experience. He is a black man. Therefore, that's his experience. That's unchangeable and not a choice he can make one way or the the other. His race speeches center on that experience. If he got up and started talking about white experience, he'd be kooky. But race speeches are not policy. It's leading in a moral sense, but nothing else.
So, can anyone disagree that his policies to date have only hurt the black community - more specifically the poor black community? Higher gas prices. Higher energy prices. Higher unemployment than any other sector. And frankly, I believe the help he has given, such as food stamps and higher levels of disability only serve to keep people in those situations from moving up and past that - no matter what race or gender.
If you are a low-income black person in America, outside of the pride of having a black president, nothing is better for you and it's most likely worse.
That's not just Obama - it's pretty much everyone in power now.
slucero wrote:Boomchild wrote:slucero wrote:..and I voted for Obama in 2008.
So you didn't vote to re-elect him in 2012? After all he's not the problem. Everyone else is. He just needs more time to fix things.
I voted for him because I was fed up with the Republican party.. McCain was a fucking JOKE. After 28 years as a registered Republican .. I couldn't hold my nose any longer.. and left the party.
After the Republican National Committee fiasco at the RNC Convention, where they called a voice vote 3 times to get the rules change they wanted, throwing Ron Pauls delegates (and their votes) under the bus.. just so they could say Romney was "unanimously" nominated... I became a registered Independent, and voted for an Independent candidate..
Both parties are the same party... neither represent the People.
annie89509 wrote:I'm also a registered Independent ... leaning toward Republican as I share most conservative values. But, I'm liberal in some views, too. I agree, there are some really terrible things going on in both parties nowadays ... politicians who are so rigid in their thinking, ideologs, that only serves to hurt the well-being of the country.
Nevada is a state with a lot of libertarians, and I know people who just love Ron Paul. Let's face it, there hasn't been a really good presidential candidate since Reagan. Clinton was an okay president ... extra-curricular activities aside, the economy flourished under his watch. Bush was adequate president, except for those darn wars (to much money and soldier's lives wasted) that will forever tarnish his legacy.
McCain and Romney were 2 pretty weak candidates to go up against BO, but these 2 were the best the Reps. had to offer at the time, so what d'ya gonna do? For sure, Ron Paul had a lot of support, especially in this state... couldn't see myself "wasting" a vote on any third-party candidate, who couldn't possibly get enough to win. Kind of like when Ralph Nader decided to run ...so many liberals were happy and wanted to vote for him, but Demos were saying all he's going to do is divide the party base and give the Reps an advantage. Remember Ross Perot? Another 3rd-party presidential candidate on the fringe some years back. Seems all these 3rd-party guys have some character to them ... boring on loony ... haha.
Boomchild wrote:The way I see it, it's not about which party etc. etc.. It's about having people in office that do what is best for our country and it's citizens, while respecting the system our founding fathers put in place and upholding the constitution which is the blueprint for what they fought for.
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