I wasn’t in college in the 90s. I was in grade school in the south in predominately black schools.If you knew dudes, please include white dudes in the bucket too, because if the black dudes you knew in the suburbs were saying it to chicks, for every 1 black dude you knew that was saying these things to black women, there were 5-6 white dudes, Asians dudes saying these things to black women also. They wanted the "street cred" too.
Undergrads in the 90s at HBCUs were not talkin like this to black women. This was not the norm like you're trying to make it seem like
More gen x blaming
The thread clearly said the 90s, I pushed back and said that this was not the case in the 90s, you said you did not go to college in the 90s but yet you mentioned every, or most black men from the 90s was saying this? Stop it ma'amI wasn’t in college in the 90s. I was in grade school in the south in predominately black schools.
And nearly every dude was on that “fukk these hoes” tip. Dudes were even harmonizing about “sorry ass bytches” word to Nate dog. And it wasn’t just thugs.
By the time I hit college around 2000s and the internet became a thing it was a wrap.
Even chicks that weren’t doing anything wrong were liable to be called a bytch or a hoe. In fact I distinctly remember chicks pushing back with the “why she gotta be all that”.
And as a female, if you weren’t feeling a dude who approached you, “well fukk you too! You ain’t all that. Ugly ass bytch.”
I honestly don’t know where you could be that you didn’t see some of these dynamics. Oh well. Everybody got different experiences.![]()
I wasn’t in college in the 90s. I was in grade school in the south in predominately black schools.
And nearly every dude was on that “fukk these hoes” tip. Dudes were even harmonizing about “sorry ass bytches” word to Nate dog. And it wasn’t just thugs.
By the time I hit college around 2000s and the internet became a thing it was a wrap.
Even chicks that weren’t doing anything wrong were liable to be called a bytch or a hoe. In fact I distinctly remember chicks pushing back with the “why she gotta be all that”.
And as a female, if you weren’t feeling a dude who approached you, “well fukk you too! You ain’t all that. Ugly ass bytch.”
I honestly don’t know where you could be that you didn’t see some of these dynamics. Oh well. Everybody got different experiences.![]()
Mostly rappers, actors in hood movies who characters are under 25 living under the poverty lines would say these things to women, I don't recall too many college black men in the 90s quoting these things to black college women in the 90s. Never heard Dwayne Wayne or Theo quote these sayings to the black women on screen. Never heard Babyface or Tevin Campbell say these things. I usually heard this from coming from Gangsta Rappers,
Sorry to tell you that, but that kind of language when said outside of the songs come from men who live under the poverty lines under the age of 25.
I'm sure you are not saying men who are upstanding citizens were going around int he 90s telling up standing black women these things?
This is where your stance falls short, this did not happen in the 90s
All Black women are queens.
fukk you if you deny any one of them their opportunity to be great.
Always so eloquently said!For every “queen” that was thrown around there was also “black bytch”, “all these bytches is hoes”, “slob on my knob like corn on the cob”, “bird bytch”, “chicken head”, “hair hat” “burnt bytch”, “dark butt” “hoe”, “fukk these hoes”, “bottom bytch”, “hoodrat”, “rachet hoe” and “manly bytch” many more expletives to describe, denigrate and disrespect blk women. I’ll never understand where the phrase “pandering” comes from when it comes to black women, when we as a community are remarkably creative about clowning everything on a black woman from her hair to her toes.
So it cancels it out.