KravenMorehead™
Barrel Brothers.®
look at this little sarcastic fakkit.You don't have to. Find the nearest white person and beat the shyt out of them. No ones stopping you.
look at this little sarcastic fakkit.You don't have to. Find the nearest white person and beat the shyt out of them. No ones stopping you.
uh.....
it looks more like a political cartoon criticising police officers than an attack on black folks. Elmer Fudd (stupid and boorish) is dressed as a police officer and just like he says "rabbit season" instead he says "Negro Season". I wouldn't be surprised if the person who did it was black themselves....
Do you guys ever consider or read context when you see things like this or just react on reflex?
What the hell are you talking about? You said you were tired of talking and want action and I said you can do it easily. Don't tell me you're another keyboard fakkit who expects others to their work for them whilst taking credit for it.look at this little sarcastic fakkit.
Does he have homies in the feds?@The ADD don't bust his gunz
The new @The ADD is corporate nowDoes he have homies in the feds?
ATL brehs you nikkas letting cacs do this when you outnumber them in your own city?
ATLANTA — Atlanta police are investigating controversial graffiti that was left on a side of a city building.
In the graffiti, cartoon character Elmer Fudd is wearing a police uniform instead of his usual hunting outfit. He is holding a shotgun with the words "Negro Season" on a sign behind him. The image, which included the tag name MAES, was painted on the garage of a building on West Peachtree Street.
The building's facilities manager told police that staff first saw the graffiti Saturday. By Monday, the image had been painted over. Officials are checking the building's surveillance camera.
"I think it's offensive to anyone. It's sickening," said Atlanta police Sgt. Greg Lyon. "I don't think of Atlanta as that type of city."
According to a police incident report, the graffiti popped up sometime overnight Friday and stayed up all weekend long.
In a climate where across the country, relationships between police and the black community are increasingly strained by deadly encounters, the graffiti has raised questions about its intention.
Police are trying to use the MAES tag to find the graffiti artist who would probably face charges of property destruction.
"Clearly people have a First Amendment right to express their opinion about whatever they want, draw pictures, do whatever they want," Lyon said. "But if you're going to do that, you need to do it on your own property. Don't do it on someone else's property. It's against the law."
A search of social media for MAES did not find any other street art or graffiti associated with the tag. It's not recognized as an acronym either.
Police said they are heavily reliant on the public to provide tips on who created the graffiti.
The new @The ADD is corporate now
I've seen your types on peachstreet midtownNow? I been corporate for 12 years
I gotta read about this non-sense later
Oh but i'm nothing if not patient, sir. I'm the type of guy who will wait till you're 70 years old for the perfect scenario to kill you for something you did to my daughter in 2003. So please pardon my forbearance.What the hell are you talking about? You said you were tired of talking and want action and I said you can do it easily. Don't tell me you're another keyboard fakkit who expects others to their work for them whilst taking credit for it.
uh.....
it looks more like a political cartoon criticising police officers than an attack on black folks. Elmer Fudd (stupid and boorish) is dressed as a police officer and just like he says "rabbit season" instead he says "Negro Season". I wouldn't be surprised if the person who did it was black themselves....
Do you guys ever consider or read context when you see things like this or just react on reflex?