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Kennita Jo.

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Everything posted by Kennita Jo.

  1. This is all I've had on Twitter.
  2. I think this one's on my Twatter, so. CoverGerl realness.
  3. Okay at you giving Damita Jo era glow.
  4. "Who the hell is Anna Mae anyway?" "I don't know, I think she wrote a book." lmfaooo.
  5. ^^ia. The chorus sounds so off to me. It's strange, I've actually never been with a guy who is circumcised and I live in Virginia. I don't mind it at all though.
  6. I’m not repeating myself because every thing I would say to that has been said and if you’re too ignorant to even consider it then that’s on you. You can paint me a racist all you’d like for disagreeing with your empty excuses, I couldn't care less. As a white man I have received no privilege in my life unattainable to anyone else. I’ve actually had to work for everything I have -- money, belongings, respect, college education – with zero help from the government or society for my pasty complexion or even help from my parents because of theirs. I said I wouldn’t go into what I’ve experienced because it is 0.00% of your business and it’s not a pissing contest but I can promise that you’ve never experienced some of the shit I have, for my race, my sexuality, my age, and the likes. But I know I’m not the only so I don’t make excuses and I push through and wind up smarter and wiser than the ignorant, pity-seeking asswipes like you who continue to make a bad name for the "creed” with which you identify and indirectly separate yourself. You can take your excuses and notions of total white privilege and shove them up your hairy black asshole babe. It’s 2014, no one is singularly oppressed. A brain is a brain and if statistically speaking the lot of the current black generation chooses not to use its brain, rather than continue to feed into its own stereotypes by indulging in crime and drugs and poverty and whatnot, that’s not the white man’s cross to bear. Stop making excuses, let go of a past that is not entitled to you and get ahead. That is my point. Nose to the grindstone.
  7. To what are you not entitled to as a black man in 2014? And sorry, Pops. I forgot you grew up in the fifties/sixties.
  8. i.word.com/idictionary/obtuse, n*gga. We need not go into anything I've been through. As I said, you and your spoiled sorry ass life don't bear the weight of your ancestors because not a one of us would know their struggle if it hit us like a two-ton whip on a cottonfield. On that account you shouldn't be saying it at all. You're spitting on their graves by disrespecting the delicate ecology of the word and continuing to isolate yourselves when the majority embraces the likes of you. It's ignorant asses like you, so warped by your social climates, who continue to keep the black man down beyond any other factor. Stop seeking compassion and entitlement for something you haven't endured. It's ridiculously pretentious. All or nothing.
  9. There is no connection Reyna. He's pulling it out of his ass because he's unable to maintain an intellectual argument, much like the others in this thread. But that's been the case with them for as long as I can remember and I've been a member for eight years. I actually stated more than once that I do. If anyone says it to me I am not fearful to say it back. Read or get read.
  10. Not you trying to do the same and failing to correct me because I actually know what it means.
  11. Black people use it towards me all the time as an endearment, strangers and friends. I reciprocate. That's the way love goes. And that schlock about us only wanting to use it because we were told not to is backwards ass bullshit. What you, Game, and Austin are saying is a result of social conditioning from your upbringing and social circles. Close-mindedness. Textbook psychology.
  12. lol I'm smarter than you two will ever be, but I'm sorry you're so obtuse. I'd seek pity too.
  13. I swear I thought you had some Latin in you somewhere. Not referring to last night.
  14. Basically. Black people separate themselves with their false entitlement to the word and its ancestry and their culture and then play the race card when society separates them. Backwards and that's my point. The word should not be said at all because it's ignorant and an enormous slight to its ancestry but if it's going to become an endearment then it has to become one for all, or it still retains its power by still being directed only towards black people. And I'll take Webster's or even the mathematical definition of "equal" over your definition, Austin. Thanks though.
  15. Equality is equality and "creeds" don't get exceptions. And you don't share that history, your ancestors did. What do you or any young person in America know about oppression except the second-hand knowledge you picked up in grade school? Nothing. So the right to say it belongs to all or none where "equality" is concerned, especially considering that it is the newer generations who have turned the word into an endearment.
  16. That quote actually proves reverse racism. And again, if you want equality then you can't hold onto those false senses of entitlement to prejudices. Equal is equal boo.
  17. I understand that racism is racism when push comes to shove but educate yourselves: www.thefreedictionary.com/_/dict.aspx?rd=1&word=Reverse+racism But according to Bill, it's "ridiculous" to think that any other/most groups have faced some form of prejudice.
  18. As a man my age I can assure with almost absolute certainty that you have as much experience as I and other like individuals have, skin color barred, and I don't even know you. The momentary slights and prejudices of passers-by are no examples of oppression; I firmly believe that everyone has endured some form of that and just because you happen to be black does not make you an exception. That's called equality. You could never have true empathy for what your ancestors endured and for the likes of you to walk around with that baggage unwilling to embrace equality is an enormous backhand to their struggle. Erykah told you that you were gon' hurt your back dragging all them bags like that. Heed. But never mind. You obviously don't want to understand.
  19. The irony of this is that I actually grew up in schools and neighborhoods predominately populated with black people and did, in fact, experience reverse racism on a daily basis, and things far beyond my skin color. But that still isn't quite the same and has little to do with either side. My stance is that equality means no exceptions. .
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