Young Singers Spread Racist Hate

Discussion in 'Politics' started by ZZZzzzzzzz, Oct 21, 2005.

  1. "Some white people are going to live .... but (God) don't want them living with us. He doesn't want us mixing ourselves up with the slavemaster's children, whose time of doom has arrived." -- Sweet Lou

    March 11, 1984,



    OWNED
     
    #21     Oct 23, 2005
  2. Farrakhan is a racist.

    So that is your excuse for your own brand of racism, because Farrakhan is a racist?

    :confused: :( :confused:

     
    #22     Oct 24, 2005
  3. jem

    jem

    While I find this racism wrong.

    I was wondering if zzzz posted this story a few years ago.

    This is also disgusting. From a societal stand point. I can not imagine a white manager commentiing on black players abilities in such a manner and still working.

    So zzz post this stuff too.

    Baker stands by heat comments
    By Chuck Johnson, USA TODAY
    Chicago Cubs manager Dusty Baker, dismissing suggestions he made a racist assertion when speaking with reporters about day baseball, stands by his comments that black and Hispanic players are better suited to playing in the sun and heat than white players.

    Cubs manager Dusty Baker didn't back down from his comments, but he also won't address it any further after this.
    By Aynsley Floyd, AP

    "I'm not playing the race card. I'm telling it like it is," Baker said by telephone Monday.

    "What I meant is that blacks and Latins take the heat better than most whites, and whites take the cold better than most blacks and Latins. That's it, pure and simple. Nothing deeper than that."

    Harry Edwards, a sports sociologist who served on the faculty at the University of California-Berkeley for 30 years, called the comments "unfortunate and not totally informed" but said they weren't malicious.

    "Dusty and I go back a long way, and Dusty by no means is enamored with ethnic or racial stereotypes," Edwards said. "If we didn't have a race issue in this country, that statement would have little or no consequence. But we do have a race issue."

    Baker, whose Cubs play a majority of their home games in the daytime, made his comments Saturday.

    "It's easier for most Latin guys and it's easier for most minority people because most of us come from heat," Baker said. "You don't find too many brothers in New Hampshire and Maine and the Upper Peninsula of Michigan. ... We were brought over here for the heat, right? Isn't that history? Weren't we brought over because we could take the heat?"

    Tony Bernazard, a former major leaguer from Puerto Rico who is special assistant for the players union, didn't think anything was wrong with the comments.

    "It's somebody's opinion," Bernazard said. "I don't think anybody can accuse Dusty Baker of being a racist because Dusty Baker is not a racist."

    Baker's comments were ripe fodder for the talk shows Monday. Some charged that a white manager would be under fire if he made similar statements.

    "If a white manager made those statements, there's no question he would find himself in a group that includes Al Campanis and Jimmy 'The Greek' Snyder," Edwards said.

    Baker, one of four African-Americans among seven minority managers in the major leagues, agrees. "But as a black manager, I can say things about blacks that a white manager can't say, and whites can say things about whites that blacks can't say."

    Baker said he won't address the issue any further. "People have accused me of being sensitive, but maybe they're too sensitive," he said. "I'm not elaborating on it any more. End of topic. I said what I mean."
     
    #23     Oct 24, 2005
  4. That was great when Farrakhan claimed there were explosive devices on the levee's to make sure they would break to kill black people!! He's hysterical! Why the media is so easy on these comments made by Farrakhan/Jackson/Sharpton etc. is beyond me. Entertaining though!
     
    #24     Oct 24, 2005
  5. Sam123

    Sam123 Guest

    Is that so? It's quite interesting that on one hand a religion prides itself for being color blind, while on the other hand, it practices wholesale Dhimmitude against those who choose not to join the Muslim "klan."

    http://www.jihadwatch.org/dhimmiwatch/
     
    #25     Oct 24, 2005
  6. Sam123

    Sam123 Guest

    America is quite advanced and experienced at race relations. Other countries make idle comments about America’s “runaway racism” while they remain inexperienced because they are racially homogeneous. They may have multicultural college campuses, but that’s about it. America is one of the most racially integrated countries on this planet –not in every state, of course, but in a lot of places. And America has a proven civil rights campaign that reintegrated a race once condemned to slavery to equal status, prestige, and class.

    And throughout all of this, America has maintained its First Amendment that allows racists to express their racism in a lawful manner. Let these girls make their noise. Let Farrakhan speak. Racism is bad, but the pacification of free speech is worse. If I recall correctly, “Pacify” was a woman in a Greek myth who gave birth to a monster. She instructed her servants to create a great labyrinth to hide this monster from humanity.


    Anyway, here's the source of this article:

    http://abcnews.go.com/Primetime/story?id=1231684&page=1
     
    #26     Oct 24, 2005
  7. I'd put their shit right up there with any other hip hop or rap album.

    But of course the little girls are white which makes them an easy target, which is the ONLY reason Zz posted this.
     
    #27     Oct 24, 2005
  8. Nick just wrapped this whole thread up... well said, Nick.
     
    #28     Oct 24, 2005
  9. Yes, they are pretty white little girls (actually 13 years old now) which is why they get run at all.

    They appeal to white male perverts who fantasize about pretty young white girls, just like those who post here at ET in defense of their racist and separatist bullshit brainwashed songs written by their mother.

     
    #29     Oct 24, 2005
  10. Sir, just curious, do you post whenever african american albums that promote anti-white, anti-authority, anti-law enforcement lyrics are prevalant? Theres thousands of such albums that exist, yet see no post concerning said albums. May I ask why that is?
     
    #30     Oct 24, 2005