Official Antonio Moore Thread

Henri Christophe

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The only people who hate on Boyce are those who bought the dream that whites sold them

And also those who don't know how to make money without taking orders... that's why they wait around for the government to create jobs for them so they can feed themselves....

Hunters are on the same page as Boyce..

If you don't know how to hunt your own food... I could see why you don't like Boyce... cause you ain't on that level mentally... it's cool tho... not everyone was put here on this earth to be great and succeed.. we need workers too.
 

MajorVitaman

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The only thing cacs respect is violence. Simple as that!

So you plan on going to war with no

Economy
Black owned arms manufacture
Black owned ammo producer
Black owned armor producer
Black owned vehicle producer
Black owned plane producer
Black owned boat producer
Black owned war food producer
Etc.........
:skip:
nikkas love quoting Marx and talking about seizing the means of production when we ain't producing shyt. But we're gonna go to war right now?
:usure:
With who's guns?
:usure::usure:
With who's food rations?
:usure::usure::usure:
Are you gonna take the first shot?
:jbhmm:
 

Wear My Dawg's Hat

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Why are we are the only minority group that cares about this?

While we're worried about the collective and waiting on white daddy government the rest of these groups are becoming more business minded and getting it.

Nah, Yvette is 100% wrong here. Business is mutually exclusive from her agenda of reparations for DOS.

Meanwhile, Mexican, Honduran and El Salvadoran migrants are entering the country illegally, working
construction, agricultural, landscaping, painting and janitorial/office cleaning services (Yes, a company
gets paid big money to clean the offices at Google, Amazon, Facebook, Uber, Verizon, etc.).

In some instances, the white owners are doing so well that they retire, and guess who they are
selling OR even handing their businesses over to?

Not their children, BUT the Mexican, Honduran and El Salvadoran immigrants who are building their
own self-sustaining community economies in the U.S., while we're waiting for the "sensitive-to-black-folks-historical-needs" government to featherbed our future.
:francis:
 

Wear My Dawg's Hat

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Walmart doesn't exist without employees. Grocery stores don't exist without employees.

Is every other corner suppose to have a induvidual/family store? Most selection & cheapest goods wins. A business that is basic to society can't scale without employees.

Wasn't Walmart once an "individual/family store"?

"In 1950, Sam Walton purchased a store from Luther E. Harrison in Bentonville, Arkansas, and opened Walton's 5 & 10.[1] Thus, the Ozark Mountain town of 2,900 residents would become the headquarters for the world's largest retailer."


Or, are we simply content with watching every other group launch enterprises while we focus
on our "strategy" to be massively employed by those groups?
 

J-Fire

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Wasn't Walmart once an "individual/family store"?

"In 1950, Sam Walton purchased a store from Luther E. Harrison in Bentonville, Arkansas, and opened Walton's 5 & 10.[1] Thus, the Ozark Mountain town of 2,900 residents would become the headquarters for the world's largest retailer."


Or, are we simply content with watching every other group launch enterprises while we focus
on our "strategy" to be massively employed by those groups?

Walton had employees as he scaled! Walmart cashiers, clerks, etc are not bosses & punch clocks!!

Boyce said be your own boss...don't work for anyone! So everyone is suppose to have their own Walmart!?!? A large scale business means you need employees. When no one wants to be employees you can't grow.
 

Wear My Dawg's Hat

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The Land That Time Forgot
While the pied pipers of "comprehensive, government-ordered, white wealth redistribution" are waiting for
the big day, other groups are converting our "incredible spending power" into prosperity for themselves.

I hope that the charter schools in Crenshaw are teaching the kids Khmer during homeroom.

How Cambodians became the kings of beloved South L.A. fried chicken chain

By Frank Shyong, March 3, 2017

3690581438001_5347086346001_image-1488584100595.jpg


Cambodians have been a big reason for the success of the Louisiana Famous Fried Chicken chain. (March 3, 2017)

In a restaurant rising from an overgrown parking lot at 91st Street and Central Avenue, fried chicken, chow mein and the occasional fist bump pass through holes cut in panes of bulletproof glass.

Behind the glass is a Cambodian immigrant family, and on the other side is the chain’s mostly black clientele. Bean pies and sweet potatoes are on the menu. So are whole pickled jalapenos.

The restaurant, part of the Louisiana Famous Fried Chicken chain, is a cultural mixtape that only Southern California could have produced: fried chicken, served by Cambodian refugees to black and Latino customers, from a chain founded by a white man from Michigan, Joseph Dion.

Dion started the chain in South Los Angeles in 1976, and it now has more than 148 restaurants in seven states and three countries. A big reason for the chain’s success, Dion said, is Cambodians.

More than 80% of the franchises are owned by Cambodians. They work hard, have never sued Dion and run many franchises as family businesses, enlisting sons, daughters and cousins for labor and paying themselves what was left over.

The franchise owners — many of them refugees — shared an understanding of poverty and struggle with the neighborhoods in which they are located. And they are frugal, getting by on far fewer profits than their competitors, turning survival into a bona fide business strategy, said Michael Eng, a Cambodian refugee who recently took over the entire chain.


How Cambodians became the kings of beloved South L.A. fried chicken chain
 

J-Fire

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While the pied pipers of "comprehensive, government-ordered, white wealth redistribution" are waiting for
the big day, other groups are converting our "incredible spending power" into prosperity for themselves.

I hope that the charter schools in Crenshaw are teaching the kids Khmer during homeroom.

How Cambodians became the kings of beloved South L.A. fried chicken chain

By Frank Shyong, March 3, 2017

3690581438001_5347086346001_image-1488584100595.jpg


Cambodians have been a big reason for the success of the Louisiana Famous Fried Chicken chain. (March 3, 2017)

In a restaurant rising from an overgrown parking lot at 91st Street and Central Avenue, fried chicken, chow mein and the occasional fist bump pass through holes cut in panes of bulletproof glass.

Behind the glass is a Cambodian immigrant family, and on the other side is the chain’s mostly black clientele. Bean pies and sweet potatoes are on the menu. So are whole pickled jalapenos.

The restaurant, part of the Louisiana Famous Fried Chicken chain, is a cultural mixtape that only Southern California could have produced: fried chicken, served by Cambodian refugees to black and Latino customers, from a chain founded by a white man from Michigan, Joseph Dion.

Dion started the chain in South Los Angeles in 1976, and it now has more than 148 restaurants in seven states and three countries. A big reason for the chain’s success, Dion said, is Cambodians.

More than 80% of the franchises are owned by Cambodians. They work hard, have never sued Dion and run many franchises as family businesses, enlisting sons, daughters and cousins for labor and paying themselves what was left over.

The franchise owners — many of them refugees — shared an understanding of poverty and struggle with the neighborhoods in which they are located. And they are frugal, getting by on far fewer profits than their competitors, turning survival into a bona fide business strategy, said Michael Eng, a Cambodian refugee who recently took over the entire chain.


How Cambodians became the kings of beloved South L.A. fried chicken chain


He scaled his business. He created a franchise system & those places still have employees that don't own! And those franchises still hire Cambodian if they can. Everyone can't have ownership unless you have a publicly traded company and it's part of 401k & compensation.

Magic Johnson has bought many of Starbucks....but it was a quick flip and he didn't use it to hire black. I hope Rick Ross is doing better with wing stop.
 

Wear My Dawg's Hat

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The Land That Time Forgot
Walton had employees as he scaled! Walmart cashiers, clerks, etc are not bosses & punch clocks!!

Boyce said be your own boss...don't work for anyone! So everyone is suppose to have their own Walmart!?!? A large scale business means you need employees. When no one wants to be employees you can't grow.

In 1950, Sam Walton did not launch Superstores in airplane-hangar size outlets. He operated a corner
variety store and grew that.

Apple and Microsoft began in car garages.

Motown began in a Detroit residential home.

We cannot survive on being 14 percent of the US population while owning just 2 percent of the businesses
receiving revenue.


"The Road to Walmart"

Sam Walton was born in 1918 in Kingfisher, Oklahoma. In 1942, at the age of 24, he joined the military. He married Helen Robson in 1943. When his military service ended in 1945, Sam and Helen moved to Iowa and then to Newport, Arkansas. During this time, Sam gained early retail experience, eventually operating his own variety store. 


In 1950, the Waltons left Newport for Bentonville, where Sam opened Walton’s 5&10 on the downtown square. They chose Bentonville because Helen wanted small-town living, and Sam could take advantage of the different hunting seasons that living at the corner of four states had to offer.

Inspired by the early success of his dime store, and driven to bring even greater opportunity and value to his customers, Sam opened the first Walmart in 1962 at the age of 44 in Rogers, Arkansas.


Our History
 

Lweezy

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Yvette Carnell is at least 60 percent cac thus 60 percent descendant of slave master equals disregard. Several seats ya high yellow beotch
 

J-Fire

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In 1950, Sam Walton did not launch Superstores in airplane-hangar size outlets. He operated a corner
variety store and grew that.

Apple and Microsoft began in car garages.

Motown began in a Detroit residential home.

We cannot survive on being 14 percent of the US population while owning just 2 percent of the businesses
receiving revenue.


"The Road to Walmart"

Sam Walton was born in 1918 in Kingfisher, Oklahoma. In 1942, at the age of 24, he joined the military. He married Helen Robson in 1943. When his military service ended in 1945, Sam and Helen moved to Iowa and then to Newport, Arkansas. During this time, Sam gained early retail experience, eventually operating his own variety store. 


In 1950, the Waltons left Newport for Bentonville, where Sam opened Walton’s 5&10 on the downtown square. They chose Bentonville because Helen wanted small-town living, and Sam could take advantage of the different hunting seasons that living at the corner of four states had to offer.

Inspired by the early success of his dime store, and driven to bring even greater opportunity and value to his customers, Sam opened the first Walmart in 1962 at the age of 44 in Rogers, Arkansas.


Our History

You are avoiding my statement. He had employees not a bunch of people saying I'm not working if I can't be a boss. If a black person comes up with a good idea work for them!!!.... don't demand to be a boss or else as you probably bashing your head against a wall competing for no reason.

Sure come up with ideas in this free Enterprise world....but a large scale institution needs worker bees. Grow the business as a worker so more workers can be hired into the institution.
 

Momentum

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Meanwhile, Mexican, Honduran and El Salvadoran migrants are entering the country illegally, working
construction, agricultural, landscaping, painting and janitorial/office cleaning services (Yes, a company
gets paid big money to clean the offices at Google, Amazon, Facebook, Uber, Verizon, etc.).

In some instances, the white owners are doing so well that they retire, and guess who they are
selling OR even handing their businesses over to?

Not their children, BUT the Mexican, Honduran and El Salvadoran immigrants who are building their
own self-sustaining community economies in the U.S., while we're waiting for the "sensitive-to-black-folks-historical-needs" government to featherbed our future.
:francis:

Wasn't Walmart once an "individual/family store"?

"In 1950, Sam Walton purchased a store from Luther E. Harrison in Bentonville, Arkansas, and opened Walton's 5 & 10.[1] Thus, the Ozark Mountain town of 2,900 residents would become the headquarters for the world's largest retailer."


Or, are we simply content with watching every other group launch enterprises while we focus
on our "strategy" to be massively employed by those groups?

While the pied pipers of "comprehensive, government-ordered, white wealth redistribution" are waiting for
the big day, other groups are converting our "incredible spending power" into prosperity for themselves.

I hope that the charter schools in Crenshaw are teaching the kids Khmer during homeroom.

How Cambodians became the kings of beloved South L.A. fried chicken chain

By Frank Shyong, March 3, 2017

3690581438001_5347086346001_image-1488584100595.jpg


Cambodians have been a big reason for the success of the Louisiana Famous Fried Chicken chain. (March 3, 2017)

In a restaurant rising from an overgrown parking lot at 91st Street and Central Avenue, fried chicken, chow mein and the occasional fist bump pass through holes cut in panes of bulletproof glass.

Behind the glass is a Cambodian immigrant family, and on the other side is the chain’s mostly black clientele. Bean pies and sweet potatoes are on the menu. So are whole pickled jalapenos.

The restaurant, part of the Louisiana Famous Fried Chicken chain, is a cultural mixtape that only Southern California could have produced: fried chicken, served by Cambodian refugees to black and Latino customers, from a chain founded by a white man from Michigan, Joseph Dion.

Dion started the chain in South Los Angeles in 1976, and it now has more than 148 restaurants in seven states and three countries. A big reason for the chain’s success, Dion said, is Cambodians.

More than 80% of the franchises are owned by Cambodians. They work hard, have never sued Dion and run many franchises as family businesses, enlisting sons, daughters and cousins for labor and paying themselves what was left over.

The franchise owners — many of them refugees — shared an understanding of poverty and struggle with the neighborhoods in which they are located. And they are frugal, getting by on far fewer profits than their competitors, turning survival into a bona fide business strategy, said Michael Eng, a Cambodian refugee who recently took over the entire chain.


How Cambodians became the kings of beloved South L.A. fried chicken chain

In 1950, Sam Walton did not launch Superstores in airplane-hangar size outlets. He operated a corner
variety store and grew that.

Apple and Microsoft began in car garages.

Motown began in a Detroit residential home.

We cannot survive on being 14 percent of the US population while owning just 2 percent of the businesses
receiving revenue.


"The Road to Walmart"

Sam Walton was born in 1918 in Kingfisher, Oklahoma. In 1942, at the age of 24, he joined the military. He married Helen Robson in 1943. When his military service ended in 1945, Sam and Helen moved to Iowa and then to Newport, Arkansas. During this time, Sam gained early retail experience, eventually operating his own variety store. 


In 1950, the Waltons left Newport for Bentonville, where Sam opened Walton’s 5&10 on the downtown square. They chose Bentonville because Helen wanted small-town living, and Sam could take advantage of the different hunting seasons that living at the corner of four states had to offer.

Inspired by the early success of his dime store, and driven to bring even greater opportunity and value to his customers, Sam opened the first Walmart in 1962 at the age of 44 in Rogers, Arkansas.


Our History
FACTS!
 

J-Fire

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Boyce responds:

Boyce making video in last 24hrs being in his feelings. Boyce be all over the place & just blurts out thoughts. Can't get a grasp on him!



Worry about your own family cause the black community probably will not be on board:





Next video Boyce wants more than mom & pops and wants to build lasting business to help the community, build relationships & wants us all working together a few hrs later, lol...but then jumps back on let it go & move on about white folks/gov though they owe us:





Off top of next video he bashes donation (Yvette) model of business, lol. Then he talks about how he & his family don't want to work for other people and neither should we...but in the next breath he's talking about trying to hire people as non bosses, lol. Next breath he says wealth gap is real, but he used "illusion" to motivate blacks to do for self!!!, He told on his own damn self!!!:


Fast forward again he's calling Yvette Out Indirectly by answering a fake question about jealousy, lol:
 

ridedolo

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haven't been following this but it'll be interesting to hear tones take on boyce. i've heard him repeatedly attack peoples lack of "education" but he won't be able to go that route with Boyce. :jbhmm:
 

ATownD19

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The Frances Welsing incident should've told Boyce about Yvette's character. Tariq Nasheed warned him in his response video about the incident.
 
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