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"the movement."
#11
RE: "the movement."
BLM started because there for a while about once a week we were being treated to stories of yet another unarmed black male being shot by police. The African-American community was rightly upset, and thus "Black Lives Matter" was born. Just like any political movement it may have been hijacked by other groups with other agendas, but I bet one thing they would like to accomplish is being able to drive home after work without wondering if they're going to be gunned down by an overzealous cop with an itchy trigger finger for Driving While Black.
Christian apologetics is the art of rolling a dog turd in sugar and selling it as a donut.
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#12
RE: "the movement."
(November 16, 2016 at 12:56 pm)Minimalist Wrote:
Quote:I was listening to a debate on the radio on the way home concerning black lives matter and it's ultimate end game. In that it wants 'african-american' culture to be on par with or the dominate culture in the US

Um, they want the fucking cops to stop murdering them for broken tail lights, you flaming asshole!

poor minnie..

Look at the link old sport. BLM has a new manifesto published.

They want:
To adopt certain 'crimes' (what white people deem to be crime) to be legalized for blacks.

They want an end to incarceration of really any and all crime.

They want to reparations for not only slavery but for laws created to 'oppress the black community.' (all non violent crime)

They want funding for black specific communities, by defunding prisons and jails.

they want what amounts to social ownership of what they deem black communities. Say for example large swaths Detroit or Chicago must be turned over to an unnamed black political structure.

Complete autonomy in those black owned and held areas. (to be a city-state with in the city/State)

We demand independent Black political power and Black self-determination in all areas of society. We envision a remaking of the current U.S. political system in order to create a real democracy where Black people and all marginalized people can effectively exercise full political power.



So again lets say Clinton won and she granted all of this... how will these changes impact the rest of America?
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#13
RE: "the movement."
(November 16, 2016 at 1:01 pm)Ben Davis Wrote:
(November 16, 2016 at 12:18 pm)Drich Wrote:


tl;dr "I don't understand multiculturalism, egalitarianism or history, luv Drich"


Thank you for the eloquent synopsis.  About what I would have expected.  More Drichy asshattery confirmed.
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#14
RE: "the movement."
(November 16, 2016 at 1:01 pm)Ben Davis Wrote:
(November 16, 2016 at 12:18 pm)Drich Wrote:


tl;dr "I don't understand multiculturalism, egalitarianism or history, luv Drich"

then please oh great world wise sage, explain it as you understand it.
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#15
RE: "the movement."
(November 16, 2016 at 1:01 pm)Opoponax Wrote:
(November 16, 2016 at 12:31 pm)Divinity Wrote: This topic is a movement.  A bowel movement.

Yes, but like the classic turd, there are actually bits of corn to be picked from it. However, I will not pick those technically edible kernels out of the OP for him... okay, maybe I will. 

I think there is a conversation that the left is:

1) In denial about needing to have; and therefore
2) Is not having it. 

But I will leave that to someone else, lest I:

1) Be called a racist
2) Suddenly find myself besieged by others who actually are racists and believe they've found an ally. 

I don't want that sink on me.

typical liberal foolish response...
In fear of what someone else may think... I won't express what I believe to be right.
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#16
RE: "the movement."
(November 16, 2016 at 12:31 pm)Divinity Wrote: This topic is a movement.  A bowel movement.

I thought it was a reference to Trump.



You can fix ignorance, you can't fix stupid.

Tinkety Tonk and down with the Nazis.




 








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#17
RE: "the movement."
(November 16, 2016 at 1:11 pm)Doubting Thomas Wrote: BLM started because there for a while about once a week we were being treated to stories of yet another unarmed black male being shot by police.  The African-American community was rightly upset, and thus "Black Lives Matter" was born.  Just like any political movement it may have been hijacked by other groups with other agendas, but I bet one thing they would like to accomplish is being able to drive home after work without wondering if they're going to be gunned down by an overzealous cop with an itchy trigger finger for Driving While Black.

again, I am not talking about what was... I am speaking to the manifesto that now is...
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#18
RE: "the movement."
Will none of you dare to click on the link of insanity the BLM is demanding from the US and speak to that?
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#19
RE: "the movement."
(November 16, 2016 at 12:18 pm)Drich Wrote: Then I began to think, in the history of the world, have Sub-Saharan Africans (S-SA) EVER in recorded history established a ideal empire, or a successful culturally and economically stable country? I could not come up with one example.
Uh, Aksum, Nubia, The Malian Empire, The Ashanti Empire, Ethiopia, probably more

A lot of what came before was lost to colonalism, in the same way a lot of Meso-American and Andean cultures were when the Spanish arrived. That doesn't mean they never existed, they just got overrun and destroyed and, yknow, history is written by the victors.

And as I've said before, African countries have been raped of any natural resources, and had borders placed at the expense of indigenous heritage, which have separated historically allied ethnic groups and forced together groups with historical conflicts. Do that, you set up these states to fail. I'm not going to say that everything is the fault of colonialism, there does come a point where people need to take some self-responsibility and drop draconian practices instead of blaming "colonialism" for starting them, but African countries weren't exactly given the best start.

It's like breaking someone's leg and asking them to walk on it.
"Adulthood is like looking both ways before you cross the road, and then getting hit by an airplane"  - sarcasm_only

"Ironically like the nativist far-Right, which despises multiculturalism, but benefits from its ideas of difference to scapegoat the other and to promote its own white identity politics; these postmodernists, leftists, feminists and liberals also use multiculturalism, to side with the oppressor, by demanding respect and tolerance for oppression characterised as 'difference', no matter how intolerable."
- Maryam Namazie

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#20
RE: "the movement."
We want to stop being disproportionately discriminated/racially profiled against and to stop being killed for no good reason. We also want to end the systematic and institutional racism and the corruption that affects all layers of government and law enforcement that enables the aforementioned disproportionate killings of black people.

It's not that hard to grasp, mate.
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