New Kobe Bryant Rape Case Movie on DVD

Discussion in 'Conversations Between White Women and Black Men' started by PeyBackTime8818, Mar 3, 2006.

  1. chocoluscious

    chocoluscious New Member

    O Boy someone's got an identity crisis. Speaking of identity crisis, where's Tucker these days. :lol:
     
  2. LUCIFERMORNINGSTAR

    LUCIFERMORNINGSTAR New Member

    Spider-senses are tingling, eh?

    Where, indeed.
     
  3. LUCIFERMORNINGSTAR

    LUCIFERMORNINGSTAR New Member

    :shock: Ah.

    Silvercosma, you once quoted a part from his post about "gorgeous, edible pearls"...is that also a "xerox" of an original?
     
  4. INJERA70

    INJERA70 New Member

    Yeah where is that dude?
     
  5. LaydeezmanCris

    LaydeezmanCris New Member

    yeah which is the reason why i didnt take credit for anything i put up. Those truly are not my words but i felt i should put that up as i couldnt agree anymore with all of that. 8)
     
  6. LaydeezmanCris

    LaydeezmanCris New Member

    Like i said previously, not my words but i agree with those who wrote them and since they've put it in a great way, i just put that up. Maybe i should remember to give references to prevent the risk of being seen as a fraud. :lol: 8)
     
  7. fly girl

    fly girl Well-Known Member



    Wow, you pretty much "owned" it when you asked to put your "own" two pennies in. :shock:


     
  8. SardonicGenie

    SardonicGenie New Member

    Though you have to realize the major hypocrisy in a lot of liberal/democratic chalk-n-talk, like some white supremacists in Florida, California, and even the Black Panthers. These Democrats are the types who only want a free ride out of life being reasoning of protest, rather than earning their own keep. Some Black Panthers actually mean well and believe that their cause is worthy in regards to fighting anti-black racism, but that does not count for all of them, so what I am saying is, the political party doesn't make anyone on any side any less of a villain than the other. (lesser of 2 evils, ha!)


    Well, hey, I've got nothin' against that, and I don't think that the Black Panthers would have any type of problem with Cris's sermon whatsoever. The previous paragraph also applies to this response.
     
  9. LaydeezmanCris

    LaydeezmanCris New Member

    I meant my own opinion. My wrong, for future purposes, i'd give references. :wink:
     
  10. SardonicGenie

    SardonicGenie New Member

    Even if Cris copied the articles from other sites without mentioning it, it's just as well to me since this is the Internet, and there are several people in this site alone cutting and pasting articles, statistic charts, and reports from newsletters throughout the forums...

    and, I would use my browser more if I actually had that kind of time.
     
  11. fly girl

    fly girl Well-Known Member

    Tell the whole story. Metzger was a life long Republican. He noticed that the Democrates were not going to run an candidate against a shoe-in incumbent. So, the last day before the deadline, he switched parties and filed to run as a Democrate. When he did receive the Democratic nomination, they actually endorsed the Republican Incumbent, Claire Burghner. He lost and immediately switch back to a registered Republican.
     
  12. SardonicGenie

    SardonicGenie New Member

    I read his website with a bio of him, stating that he was a democrat (before the page was removed and edited), so that's why I posted what I said. It doesn't say anything that you are posting, so there you go.

    And, since he actually did receive the nomination, well, that should tell you something about being a democrat also.
     
  13. chocoluscious

    chocoluscious New Member

    Sorry Sardonic! I respectfully conclude that that is the biggest load of bullshit you've written to date. First off, the Republican Party has historically been the party to hold blacks and poor people for that matter down. When David Duke - the Grand Wizard of the KKK - ran for Governor of Louisiana as a Republican he won 55% of the white vote.

    If you make a deliberate and conscious effort to join a party that accepts Duke's message - even if they publicly repudiate him - then you must accept the platform and the consequences. You can't have it both ways. If your reason for joining is 'Well the Democrats are no better', you could become an independent.

    Don't sit there and tell me that because Jesse Jackson is a corrupt, you must align with a Party that has consistently fought to keep Blacks out of the political and economic system.

    Are you high? I didn't say the Black Panther's would have a problem with it. But I bet you the Republicans would.
     
  14. SardonicGenie

    SardonicGenie New Member

    I never said that I was a republican, and furthermore, many blacks who are high up in society are also republican, and if you think that all blacks in America would agree with you on this, then you are only kidding yourself, as usual. If you also think that a political party determines whether or not someone is 'looking out for blacks', then you sir, are full of shit.




    Lets see you tell me how Jesse Jackson isn't...

    and, what have these democratic leaders done other than play the race card in their sermons again and again? By the way, weren't the original democrats from the South? Yeah, I thought so.

    You said that his article contains that same kind of rhetoric you heard from the Black Panther Party, and then you said that you have nothing but positive opinions of the Black Panther Party, so I guess maybe you need to slow down on the wacky weed yourself, :lol: and in my post, I was saying this in my response: The Black Panthers won't care about what political affiliation someone else has if it meets their agenda, nor will white supremacists, and yeah, the republicans would care, however, many so-called black 'democrats' aren't really democrats either, so you can stop throwing a tantrum now.
     
  15. chocoluscious

    chocoluscious New Member

    I didn't say the Democrats 'looked out for Blacks'. I said the Republicans have consistently fought to keep Blacks out of the political and economic system. That's a fact. You can deny it all you want. I did not say YOU were a Republican. YOU are for some odd reason answering for Cris who is a Republican. I asked HIM how he could have such conflicting views.
     
  16. SardonicGenie

    SardonicGenie New Member

    I know that the Republicans have consistently fought to keep blacks out of the political and economic system, but my point was that there are blacks who ARE a part of the political system masquerading as democrats, and I wasn't answering for Cris. I was replying to YOUR response which was directly to me earlier in the thread.

    I don't swing either way, because it isn't worth it to me.
     
  17. chocoluscious

    chocoluscious New Member

    You missed the point again. I am not saying you SHOULD be a Democrat. I AM saying you should be an independent given the sordid past of the Republican Party and your apparent frustration with the status quo. So you can use the same tired tactics of the Republican machine of throwing out code words like Al Sharpton and Jesse Jackson, but they don't work on me.
     
  18. chocoluscious

    chocoluscious New Member

    True but you won't see a Black Panther Party member joining the KKK and vice versa.
     
  19. SardonicGenie

    SardonicGenie New Member

    I already stated that I don't swing either way because of your opinion.
     
  20. LaydeezmanCris

    LaydeezmanCris New Member

    As you rightly pointed out, i am a Republican and proud of it. It comes off as a suprise to me that you would say that the GOP are fighting to keep blacks out of the political and economic system considering:

    · After the Civil War, 23 blacks (13 of them ex-slaves) were elected to Congress, all as Republicans.

    · That the first black Democrat was not elected to Congress until 1935, from the state of Illinois.

    · That the first black congressional Democrat from a Southern state was not elected until 1973.

    · That Democrats in 1854 passed the Kansas-Nebraska Act that overturned the Missouri Compromise and allowed for the importation of slaves into the territories.

    · Disgusted with the passage of this Act, free-soilers and anti-slavery members of the Whig and Democratic parties founded the Republican Party, not just to stop the spread of slavery, but to eventually abolish it.

    · That on July 4, 1867, in Houston, 150 blacks and 20 whites formed not the Black Texas Republican Party, but the Texas Republican Party.

    · That Blacks across Southern states also founded the Republican parties in their states.

    · In 1850 Democrats passed the Fugitive Slave Law.

    · Republican President Abraham Lincoln issued the Emancipation Proclamation during the Civil War.

    · In 1865, the 13th Amendment emancipating the slaves was passed with 100 percent of Republicans voting for it and only 23 percent of Democrats voting for it.

    · The 14th Amendment was passed giving the newly emancipated blacks full civil rights and federal guarantee of those rights, superseding any state laws. Every single voting Republican voted for the Amendment, no Democrat voted for it.

    · Congress passed the 15th Amendment in 1870, guaranteeing blacks the right to vote. Every single Republican voted for it, with every Democrat voting against it.

    · During 1872 congressional investigations, Democrats admitted beginning the Ku Klux Klan as an effort to stop the spread of the Republican Party and to re-establish Democratic control in Southern states. Blacks, who were all Republican at that time, were the primary targets of violence.

    · Between 1870 and 1875, the Republican Congress passed many pro-black civil rights laws. But in 1876, Democrats took control of the House, and no further race-based civil rights laws passed until 1957. In 1892, Democrats gained control of the House, the Senate and the White House, and repealed all the Republican-passed civil rights laws. That enabled the Southern Democrats to pass the Jim Crow laws, poll taxes, literacy tests, and so on in their individual states.

    · Only 64 percent of Democrats in Congress voted for the 1964 Civil Rights Act, while 80 percent of Republicans voted for the Act.
    REFERENCE FROM AN ARTICLE FROM BOB PARKS

    And the last time i checked, the Republicans were not the ones in support of Affirmative Action, a degrading phenomenon which basically says a black or any ethnic for that matter cannot succeed without any interference by the state. GOP trying to keep blacks outta the political and economic welfare, think again.
     

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