↓R↑LYB
I trained Sheng Long and Shonuff
What part of the video does Farakhan say that?
Start at 12:30
What part of the video does Farakhan say that?
Exactly why I understand that mufukkaz do shyt behind the scenes as prominent black entertainers/athletes.
And on top of that if one of these dudes were to put their neck out there and lose all his endorsements, how many of us will come out our own pocket to make sure he's taken care of now that cac society has made it impossible for them to make a living?
Yup.
Mufukkaz love telling people to do shyt they wouldn't even do.
like i said.....we have leader"s" just like in the 60's. we had black celebrities in the 60's(and before that) who wasn't leaders or try to be but they play they part to helpYou dudes really gotta stop saying there's no other leaders. Eva Longoria was on the forefront of the Dream Act campaign issue. She co founded the futuro fund and raised 30 million dollars to Obamas reelection campaign. She's also been extremely vocal on immigrant rights and is becoming a Latina activist in DC.
There's always been leaders and there always will be leaders. The problem is for whatever reason we keep looking for someone else to be the leader instead of us taking on that leadership position ourselves.
like i said.....we have leader"s" just like in the 60's. we had black celebrities in the 60's(and before that) who wasn't leaders or try to be but they play they part to help
to you that's a leader? right (i wouldn't call her a Latino leader but whatever) helping to process some way or some how with they means on the forefront
we have the same ppl/protesters doing things beyond that (protest). they don't have money like Eva Longoria or Oprah but they still doing work with government officials, meeting up with president etc.. they don't have media/fame status soo it wont be broadcast to the mainstream media to follow(that's why i post the information/updates in the Mike Brown/ Ferguson thread) behind the scene work. wouldn't you call that leaders? we dont have MLK. We don't have Malcolm or Huey. strong leaders/ black Messiah(to me) but they got killed or died. We only got this left right now. we only got us, lets work with that
the point im trying to make Oprah is full of shyt . those ppl aren't leaders because they don't follow her guild-lines(her fantasize of CRM or Butler script ). once again she doesn't know wtf(or she stir some shyt up) she talking about, she didn't do her research, just a delusional rich black mammy talking from a script they told her to read us
instead of "What can I do to help?"............ she say "Where are the leaders?(in a conniption matter )"
You dudes really gotta stop defending and taking the words of black rich"black excellence" celebrities as gold scriptures oversaw by YHWH when they shyt on black movements purposely (that can stir us in the right way to progress/or wake a few ppl up). Oprah just took big shyt on the movements as "nicely" as she could. Oprah is playing the game, and she just show us that
Please tell me black folks in ATL are taking the bolded seriouslyHow is Eva not a leader? She started an organization to fight for Latino rights, raised 30 million dollars for Obamas reelection campaign, was instrumental in getting the dream act passed, and is currently working in DC trying to get even more political support for Latinos in this country. If that's not the definition of a leader, then what is?
But regardless of whether there are Hispanic or gay leaders, I believe black people definitely need leaders to push our agenda and cause forward, mainly because so many of our people are completely divided and don't know what to do or what direction to go.
I don't take issue with what Oprah said because I agree with her. But unlike most dudes in this thread, I'm not gonna point the finger back at her and say "Why aren't you a leader Oprah?" I'm going to ask myself what can I do to help lead my community? On this site we constantly hear the rhetoric that the reason the black community is in the condition it's in is because it's a matriarchy and women can't lead, then these same men turn around and want Oprah, a black woman, to take on a leadership position.
Black men need to take on that role. Black men need to be the one fighting and putting in work. Black men need to be the ones coming up with strategies on what we can do to solve the problems we face (whether it's white supremacy, violence in our communities, joblessness, over incarceration, etc). We have no business asking Oprah, any black woman, or any non black man to fix this problem for us.
For me I believe economic independence is what our community desperately needs. So my goal is to start mentoring other young black men and motivate them to become entrepreneurs. To take part of the profits from the businesses I open and start programs for black people to push entrepreneurship. To eventually build relationships with other business owners in Atlanta and convince them to pool our money together, buy a politician, and get shyt set aside exclusively for black people in Atlanta.
We all can look at the black community and see shyt that needs to be fixed, but instead of us stepping up to the plate and trying to fix it ourselves, we'd rather wait for someone else to do the job.
Cause from what I've seen and heard the ch!nk$ have been setting up shop in ATL.On Eva being the Latina leader, im going to answer that later my respond is too long. however we cant compare they plights to ours in that level. They have anti-blackness in they own home country(Latina america, south america), island, and house hold. if you watch they broadcasting you wouldn't know if black/mulatto leave there. if we compare the similarities or observe the struggle that plague us, the plight we should look at is the afro-Latinos when it comes to how government respond to themHow is Eva not a leader? She started an organization to fight for Latino rights, raised 30 million dollars for Obamas reelection campaign, was instrumental in getting the dream act passed, and is currently working in DC trying to get even more political support for Latinos in this country. If that's not the definition of a leader, then what is?
But regardless of whether there are Hispanic or gay leaders, I believe black people definitely need leaders to push our agenda and cause forward, mainly because so many of our people are completely divided and don't know what to do or what direction to go.
I don't take issue with what Oprah said because I agree with her. But unlike most dudes in this thread, I'm not gonna point the finger back at her and say "Why aren't you a leader Oprah?" I'm going to ask myself what can I do to help lead my community? On this site we constantly hear the rhetoric that the reason the black community is in the condition it's in is because it's a matriarchy and women can't lead, then these same men turn around and want Oprah, a black woman, to take on a leadership position.
Black men need to take on that role. Black men need to be the one fighting and putting in work. Black men need to be the ones coming up with strategies on what we can do to solve the problems we face (whether it's white supremacy, violence in our communities, joblessness, over incarceration, etc). We have no business asking Oprah, any black woman, or any non black man to fix this problem for us.
For me I believe economic independence is what our community desperately needs. So my goal is to start mentoring other young black men and motivate them to become entrepreneurs. To take part of the profits from the businesses I open and start programs for black people to push entrepreneurship. To eventually build relationships with other business owners in Atlanta and convince them to pool our money together, buy a politician, and get shyt set aside exclusively for black people in Atlanta.
We all can look at the black community and see shyt that needs to be fixed, but instead of us stepping up to the plate and trying to fix it ourselves, we'd rather wait for someone else to do the job.
This nikka said Tupac Shakur![]()
How is Eva not a leader? She started an organization to fight for Latino rights, raised 30 million dollars for Obamas reelection campaign, was instrumental in getting the dream act passed, and is currently working in DC trying to get even more political support for Latinos in this country. If that's not the definition of a leader, then what is?
But regardless of whether there are Hispanic or gay leaders, I believe black people definitely need leaders to push our agenda and cause forward, mainly because so many of our people are completely divided and don't know what to do or what direction to go.
I don't take issue with what Oprah said because I agree with her. But unlike most dudes in this thread, I'm not gonna point the finger back at her and say "Why aren't you a leader Oprah?" I'm going to ask myself what can I do to help lead my community? On this site we constantly hear the rhetoric that the reason the black community is in the condition it's in is because it's a matriarchy and women can't lead, then these same men turn around and want Oprah, a black woman, to take on a leadership position.
Black men need to take on that role. Black men need to be the one fighting and putting in work. Black men need to be the ones coming up with strategies on what we can do to solve the problems we face (whether it's white supremacy, violence in our communities, joblessness, over incarceration, etc). We have no business asking Oprah, any black woman, or any non black man to fix this problem for us.
For me I believe economic independence is what our community desperately needs. So my goal is to start mentoring other young black men and motivate them to become entrepreneurs. To take part of the profits from the businesses I open and start programs for black people to push entrepreneurship. To eventually build relationships with other business owners in Atlanta and convince them to pool our money together, buy a politician, and get shyt set aside exclusively for black people in Atlanta.
We all can look at the black community and see shyt that needs to be fixed, but instead of us stepping up to the plate and trying to fix it ourselves, we'd rather wait for someone else to do the job.

@Yup
I understand that black women aren't as appreciated in the black community and they need to be appreciated more than they are now but widening the genre divide isn't going to help.
Something does need to be done but what doesn't need to be done is alienating the black men who support black women.If you understand then something needs to be done cause these tensions are dragging the community down. It is beyond just being unappreciated!
I'm a cac, LoL. I made clear to everyone in here that I'm black.. Don't place Tupac in the same sentence with MLK, Malcolm X, and the Black Panther whom had taken risk to advance their people. Those leaders had an agenda for black people, they organized, and set their agenda in motion to make a difference. Tupac wasn't on that level. Please don't try to make an argument on his potential, because we don't know how his future will turn out if he didn't get killed.are you a cac?
Tupac's music/message reaches as high as the Pope and as low as slums in 3rd world countries.
What are you really saying right now?
I'm a cac, LoL. I made clear to everyone in here that I'm black.. Don't place Tupac in the same sentence with MLK, Malcolm X, and the Black Panther whom had taken risk to advance their people. Those leaders had an agenda for black people, they organized, and set their agenda in motion to make a difference. Tupac wasn't on that level. Please don't try to make an argument on his potential, because we don't know how his future will turn out if he didn't get killed.