mcdivit85
Superstar
Just ran across this aricle from Clutch Magazine:
Interracial Dating Horror Stories: When Racist White Men Date Women of Color - Clutch Magazine
Now, I know Clutch is a negro bed wench playground, but these chicks are truly delusional. Chick wrote an article highlighting another article about a black chick tired of being mistreated by racist white men while dating. For instance:
But in a dating relationship, that pain takes on a new dimension. It’s one thing to be called a racial slur by a stranger; it’s another to hear someone you care about, and someone you believed cared about you, use that racial slur to describe you to their friends. I know countless women of color who have languished for years in relationships with white men who they loved deeply, trying desperately to understand how this person who was so important to them could say things that hurt them so much.
Indeed, I was one of those women for whom racial insensitivity escalated to emotional and verbal abuse. While my ex-boyfriend used the fact that he was dating me as a shield against accusations of racism, he simultaneously used racially abusive language to undermine my self-esteem and manipulate my behavior, a horror story that is unfortunately common among women like me.
Are there any admitted negro bed wenches who can explain this level of cognitive dissonance to me?
Peace
Interracial Dating Horror Stories: When Racist White Men Date Women of Color - Clutch Magazine
Now, I know Clutch is a negro bed wench playground, but these chicks are truly delusional. Chick wrote an article highlighting another article about a black chick tired of being mistreated by racist white men while dating. For instance:
But in a dating relationship, that pain takes on a new dimension. It’s one thing to be called a racial slur by a stranger; it’s another to hear someone you care about, and someone you believed cared about you, use that racial slur to describe you to their friends. I know countless women of color who have languished for years in relationships with white men who they loved deeply, trying desperately to understand how this person who was so important to them could say things that hurt them so much.
Indeed, I was one of those women for whom racial insensitivity escalated to emotional and verbal abuse. While my ex-boyfriend used the fact that he was dating me as a shield against accusations of racism, he simultaneously used racially abusive language to undermine my self-esteem and manipulate my behavior, a horror story that is unfortunately common among women like me.
Are there any admitted negro bed wenches who can explain this level of cognitive dissonance to me?

Peace