Styles P Has A Message For The BidenSexuals

HarlemHottie

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I don't know if this is a good example since republicans have since made it their life's mission to specifically deny us tangibles and we've been withholding our votes from them for the longest.
But i have nothing against you, you cool people. matter fact @CHICAGO you cool too breh.
i just don't buy that this strategy works. i hope one day i am proven wrong and republicans and democrats come together to appease nonvoters by offering us reparations.
:beli: The reason you don't "buy" that this strategy works is because you are woefully under informed. Its ridiculous even trying to have the conversation with you if you refuse to educate yourself on your own history.

You get, and then you give, and then you leep foot on neck the whole 4- 8 yrs, none of that "Give him a chance" shyt. It's not complicated to anybody else. The following article explains how we initially got it right, then they killed Malcolm and Martin and Fred, and the nikkas that was left DROPPED THE BALL. Unless you're in your late 60s, you've never seen us leverage our votes properly on a national scale, so you dont even have the standing to reach such a firm conclusion. If you want answers to your (very basic) questions, you'll read the whole article, kindly c&p'ed in its entirety.


Days before the 1960 election, Coretta Scott King received a call from then-candidate John F. Kennedy while her husband was in a Georgia jail, charged with trespassing after leading a sit-in demonstration against segregation in Atlanta. “This must be pretty hard on you, and I want to let you both know that I’m thinking about you and will do all I can to help,” Kennedy told her. The Democratic nominee’s brother and campaign manager, Robert Kennedy, called a DeKalb County Judge and successfully lobbied for Martin Luther King Jr.’s release.

The personal call and the timely intervention significantly bolstered Kennedy’s standing among black voters. They also strengthened the political alliance between the Democratic Party and African Americans. After his release, King praised Kennedy for exhibiting “moral courage of a high order.” His father, the influential Baptist pastor Martin Luther King Sr., said, “Kennedy can be my president, Catholic or whatever he is. I’ve got all my votes and I’ve got a suitcase and I’m going to take them up there and dump them in his lap.” Kennedy earned 68 percent of the black vote, which was the decisive factor in key states such as Illinois, Michigan, and South Carolina.

Once in the White House, Kennedy faced pressure from civil-rights activists to make good on what King called a “huge promissory note” to pass meaningful civil-rights legislation. When President Lyndon B. Johnson signed the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and the Voting Rights Act of 1965, he cemented a political alliance between African Americans and the Democratic Party that continues to this day. But celebrating these landmark pieces of legislation makes it easy to overlook what black people in the United States lost when civil rights and equality for blacks were hitched to the Democratic Party.

While the passage of the Civil Rights Act helped Johnson earn support from 94 percent of black voters in 1964, there is a gulf between what black Americans hoped the legislation would achieve and what Democratic politicians actually delivered. Although the Civil Rights Act of 1964 helped end apartheid conditions in the South, a crucial objective for which grassroots black Southern activists fought and died, the legislation did little to address the structures of racism that shaped black lives in cities such as Chicago, Los Angeles, and Philadelphia. This was an intentional consequence of how the bill’s sponsors, largely liberals from the North, Midwest, and West, crafted the legislation.

As King understood, Democratic politicians acted more boldly on race issues in Alabama and Mississippi than in New York and Massachusetts. “There is a pressing need for a liberalism in the North which is truly liberal, a liberalism that firmly believes in integration in its own community as well as in the Deep South,” King told the New York Urban League in September 1960. As the Urban League’s executive director Whitney Young put it a few years later, “liberalism seems to be related to the distance people are from the problem.”

After the 1964 election, where Republican candidate Barry Goldwater described the Civil Rights Act as unconstitutional, black voters essentially found themselves in a one-party system for presidential elections. Republicans turned their attention to white voters in the South and suburbs and have made few serious attempts in subsequent campaigns to appeal to the African American electorate. Richard Nixon in 1960 is the last Republican candidate to earn more than 15 percent of black votes.

This is a problem for black voters, because the Democratic Party’s vision of racial justice is also extremely limited. Northern liberals pioneered what scholars now call “color-blind racism.” That’s when racially neutral language makes extreme racial inequalities appear to be the natural outcome of innocent private choices or free-market forces rather than intentional public policies such as housing covenants, federal mortgage redlining, public-housing segregation, and school zoning.

Democratic lawmakers drafted civil-rights legislation that would challenge Jim Crow laws in the South while leaving de facto segregation in the North intact. When NBC News asked the civil-rights organizer Bayard Rustin why many African American communities rioted the summer after the bill passed, he said, “People have to understand that although the civil-rights bill was good and something for which I worked arduously, there was nothing in it that had any effect whatsoever on the three major problems Negroes face in the North: housing, jobs, and integrated schools … The civil-rights bill, because of this failure, has caused an even deeper frustration in the North.” Today’s protest movements against second-class citizenship in Baltimore; Ferguson, Missouri; Oakland, California; and elsewhere are in part a legacy of the unresolved failures of civil-rights legislation.


Unfortunately for black voters, most white politicians and voters assume that the civil-rights revolution not only leveled the playing field, but also tilted it in favor of African Americans. The white backlash to civil rights helped resurrect the Republican Party after the disastrous Goldwater campaign in 1964, and, over the last five decades, the Democratic Party has followed the electorate to the right.

This poses the biggest problem for black voters today, which is that Democrats running for state or national office aspire to win black votes without appearing to be beholden to black voters. This is especially true of the three Democratic presidents since Kennedy and Johnson. Black support was crucial to the elections of Jimmy Carter and Bill Clinton (each received more than 80 percent of black votes), but both distanced themselves from policies that might seem to disproportionately help black people. Urban League Director Vernon Jordan outlined his concerns a year into Carter’s presidency: “We have no full employment policy. We have no welfare reform policy. We have no national health policy. We have no urban revitalization policy. We have no aggressive affirmative action policy. We have no solutions to the grinding problems of poverty and discrimination.”

When Bill Clinton and the “New Democrats” emerged victorious in the 1990s, thanks in large part to 83 percent support from black voters in 1992 and 84 percent in 1996, they adopted policies, such as welfare reform (the Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity Reconciliation Act of 1996) and a crime bill (the Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcement Act of 1994) that proved ruinous for many black Americans. “It is difficult to overstate the damage that’s been done,” the legal scholar Michelle Alexander noted recently of Clinton’s presidency. “Generations have been lost to the prison system; countless families have been torn apart or rendered homeless; and a school-to-prison pipeline has been born that shuttles young people from their decrepit, underfunded schools to brand-new high-tech prisons.” Clinton acknowledged last year that the crime bill “cast too wide a net” and made the problem of mass incarceration worse.

More recently, as more groups—evangelicals, gays and lesbians, and gun owners, among them—lobby for specific policies, black voters have seen their interests deemed too “special” for consideration by a democratic administration. President Obama has felt the pressure to connect with black voters while distancing himself from black interests. Although his signature accomplishment, the Affordable Care Act, will surely benefit black Americans, he has been reluctant to endorse policies that cannot be pitched as universal. In a 2012 interview with Black Enterprise Magazine he said, “I want all Americans to have opportunity. I’m not the president of black America. I’m the president of the United States of America.”
In the 2016 Democratic primary, African Americans are challenging Hillary Clinton and Bernie Sanders to earn their votes. Whoever wins the nomination will likely garner support from more than 85 percent of black voters, but African Americans still lack a mechanism to hold Democrats accountable once they are elected. Consequently, the outlook for blacks in the United States regarding housing, jobs, education, and criminal justice is little better today than when Kennedy helped get King out of jail in 1960. During this election year, they will again weigh what they won and what they lost when they cast their lot with the Democratic Party.

What Black Americans Lost by Aligning With the Democrats
 

Everythingg

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Wasn't even takin a shot at you.. but by your reply.. yea. You sound upset.

fukk outta here with the passive aggressiveness. You called me a cac because I don’t view things the way you do. I’m not upset about it I just called out your BS takes. Not sure how that makes me upset

"Waiting for its fall" .. the fukk that even mean? Why would you wanna be here for that. If I see shyt poppin off, and goin sideways.. I'm takin my kid and I'm out. That shyt makes no sense to me.

Its simple. Vote for the party that at least shows the effort to help our people.. or DONT vote.. and enable the cacs that want our people to die off, to regain power again. In one scenario, we live to see another day, and to continue to fight for more. In the other scenario.. its just a matter of time before you and your loved ones perish. Its up to you.

You steady fighting for power in someone else’s kingdom instead of wanting power in your own kingdom. The kingdom you’re in belongs to cacs and they’re NEVER going to share power with you in their kingdom. The most they’ll do is give you crumbs and fake figureheads to follow.

You’re scared of them I get it. I’m not. They can tool up and bring an army. I don’t fear them breh. I was glad they were feeling froggy with Trump in office and was hoping they would leap so we could get this over with.

Black people ruled over themselves and their lands and they will again bruh. What they got going on doesn’t go on forever so stop fighting for power in their kingdom and look towards having power in your own kingdom. That or fall by the wayside when shyt hits the fan. Your choice
:yeshrug::unimpressed:
 

HarlemHottie

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Are you claiming our ancestors that lived and fought to get out of Jim Crow wouldn’t vote for the Dems over the conservative republicans today
:mjlol: Now here you come.

No, you dumb mf'er. I'm "claiming" :mjpls: (with more evidence than you posted, btw) that they were politically adroit enough not to act like some scary little hoes. They played both sides against the middle in a time FAR more dangerous than this one and got concessions, ie tangibles, which is what you supposed to do when you're the deciding vote.
 

skylove4

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Dumb?:gucci:

Well tell us since you’re so smart:duck: How did our ancestors play both sides against each other to achieve their goals, because you haven’t provided evidence for jack shyt:stopitslime:
 

HarlemHottie

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Dumb?:gucci:

Well tell us since you’re so smart:duck: How did our ancestors play both sides against each other to achieve their goals, because you haven’t provided evidence for jack shyt:stopitslime:
:mjtf: I'm not your fukking ninth grade civics teacher. I literally posted an article on this very page, you dumb mfer.

nikkas need Yvette and Tone more than they know, and so slick at the mouth with the ignorance, too. :mjlol:
 

Nicole0416_718_929_646212

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Everyone wanted things to be “normal” which it will never be ever again. There was no choice it was either Biden or Trump. But both sides can eat a dikk I’m no party. If people stopped voting for both of these pawns in office then people would have the power.
There’s always a choice, there’s no such thing as “not having a choice”. That’s the greatest lie and most fail safe propaganda points ever told.

If there is a choice between evil v evil- then you don’t pick either. This is grade school logic - not having a choice. That’s sucker cop out shyt. You pick the lesser of the dEVIL and the EVIL still exists; you rid the evil by not contributing to it. That is the choice - to not choose moral decline, to stand on your beliefs, to formulate a code and to choose not to be apart of it. Not having a choice is being a coward - that’s always a fix for the weak minded. This is is why nothing ever improves- people can’t even get their mind right to make the hard decisions without being told what to do. No disrespect but people really need to read books on how revolutions are formed for change to be implemented. Black Americans have the blueprint from those before us but bc the majority power players manipulate their personal wants, at the expense of the minority. Tired of all this soft shoe cowering to white establishments while those who have “no choice”, enable it by doing nothing. You chose to do nothing therefore, nothing is gained. Revolving cycle of the same shyt.
 
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BK The Great

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There’s always a choice, there’s no such thing as “not having a choice”. That’s the greatest lie ever told. If there is a choice between evil v evil- then you don’t pick either. This is grade school logic - not having a choice. You pick the lesser of the dEVIL and the EVIL still exists; you rid the evil by not contributing to it. That is the choice - to not choose moral decline and to choose not to be apart of it. Not having a choice is being a coward - that’s always a fix for the weak minded. This is is why nothing ever improves- people can’t even get their mind right to make the hard decisions without being told what to do.


After seeing how this administration is handling things I’m completely done with politics. I have to wipe my hands clean and not bother with it. All I see is both sides arguing who is better when they’re both garbage. They’re both lunatics in reality. It’s also upsetting.
 

Nicole0416_718_929_646212

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:mjtf: I'm not your fukking ninth grade civics teacher. I literally posted an article on this very page, you dumb mfer.

nikkas need Yvette and Tone more than they know, and so slick at the mouth with the ignorance, too. :mjlol:
That poster Skylove is a white troll sis. He’s been outed times before. I don’t even feel like digging up his posts but last year this was noted, yeah. More than a few have pointed out his inconsistencies. I’m not telling you what to think but there’s certain info out about him that is extremely suspect.
 

Nicole0416_718_929_646212

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After seeing how this administration is handling things I’m completely done with politics. I have to wipe my hands clean and not bother with it. All I see is both sides arguing who is better when they’re both garbage. They’re both lunatics in reality. It’s also upsetting.
Right. And don’t think I was coming at you personally. I know you’re a good poster and you put me on to good stuff over at The Booth. I’m speaking in general terms of the entire system; even though my comment was a reply to you. No harm. There’s a passion behind my discussion - that’s all.
 
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There’s always a choice, there’s no such thing as “not having a choice”. That’s the greatest lie and most fail safe propaganda points ever told.

If there is a choice between evil v evil- then you don’t pick either. This is grade school logic - not having a choice. That’s sucker cop out shyt. You pick the lesser of the dEVIL and the EVIL still exists; you rid the evil by not contributing to it. That is the choice - to not choose moral decline, to stand on your beliefs, to formulate a code and to choose not to be apart of it. Not having a choice is being a coward - that’s always a fix for the weak minded. This is is why nothing ever improves- people can’t even get their mind right to make the hard decisions without being told what to do. No disrespect but people really need to books on how revolutions are formed for change to be implemented. Tired of all this soft shoe cowering to white establishments while those who have “no choice”, enable it by doing nothing. You chose to do nothing therefore, nothing is gained. Revolving cycle of the same shyt.
that little quote underneath
"The true nature of evil is a combination of a non existent moral nature, and a calculated system of malicious intent. It is a science utilized for the suffering, destruction of whatever or whoever it is directed at. It is deeper than merely murder."
Where is it from or you made it up yourself?
Basically describes the ice cold world we live in
something that is hard for people to accept is
1) evil can go uncaught
2) evil has no depth anything goes
3) if you're smart enough to get away with it and have some luck, you will
luck being the key word because even a genius in everything doesn't know when their luck will run out
plenty of PURE evil people living blissful lives w/ no form of repercussion
people create concepts like karma hoping everything will come back on evil
 

Cynical Thoughts

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:beli: The reason you don't "buy" that this strategy works is because you are woefully under informed. Its ridiculous even trying to have the conversation with you if you refuse to educate yourself on your own history.

You get, and then you give, and then you leep foot on neck the whole 4- 8 yrs, none of that "Give him a chance" shyt. It's not complicated to anybody else. The following article explains how we initially got it right, then they killed Malcolm and Martin and Fred, and the nikkas that was left DROPPED THE BALL. Unless you're in your late 60s, you've never seen us leverage our votes properly on a national scale, so you dont even have the standing to reach such a firm conclusion. If you want answers to your (very basic) questions, you'll read the whole article, kindly c&p'ed in its entirety.

Days before the 1960 election, Coretta Scott King received a call from then-candidate John F. Kennedy while her husband was in a Georgia jail, charged with trespassing after leading a sit-in demonstration against segregation in Atlanta. “This must be pretty hard on you, and I want to let you both know that I’m thinking about you and will do all I can to help,” Kennedy told her. The Democratic nominee’s brother and campaign manager, Robert Kennedy, called a DeKalb County Judge and successfully lobbied for Martin Luther King Jr.’s release.

The personal call and the timely intervention significantly bolstered Kennedy’s standing among black voters. They also strengthened the political alliance between the Democratic Party and African Americans. After his release, King praised Kennedy for exhibiting “moral courage of a high order.” His father, the influential Baptist pastor Martin Luther King Sr., said, “Kennedy can be my president, Catholic or whatever he is. I’ve got all my votes and I’ve got a suitcase and I’m going to take them up there and dump them in his lap.” Kennedy earned 68 percent of the black vote, which was the decisive factor in key states such as Illinois, Michigan, and South Carolina.

Once in the White House, Kennedy faced pressure from civil-rights activists to make good on what King called a “huge promissory note” to pass meaningful civil-rights legislation. When President Lyndon B. Johnson signed the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and the Voting Rights Act of 1965, he cemented a political alliance between African Americans and the Democratic Party that continues to this day. But celebrating these landmark pieces of legislation makes it easy to overlook what black people in the United States lost when civil rights and equality for blacks were hitched to the Democratic Party.

While the passage of the Civil Rights Act helped Johnson earn support from 94 percent of black voters in 1964, there is a gulf between what black Americans hoped the legislation would achieve and what Democratic politicians actually delivered. Although the Civil Rights Act of 1964 helped end apartheid conditions in the South, a crucial objective for which grassroots black Southern activists fought and died, the legislation did little to address the structures of racism that shaped black lives in cities such as Chicago, Los Angeles, and Philadelphia. This was an intentional consequence of how the bill’s sponsors, largely liberals from the North, Midwest, and West, crafted the legislation.

As King understood, Democratic politicians acted more boldly on race issues in Alabama and Mississippi than in New York and Massachusetts. “There is a pressing need for a liberalism in the North which is truly liberal, a liberalism that firmly believes in integration in its own community as well as in the Deep South,” King told the New York Urban League in September 1960. As the Urban League’s executive director Whitney Young put it a few years later, “liberalism seems to be related to the distance people are from the problem.”

After the 1964 election, where Republican candidate Barry Goldwater described the Civil Rights Act as unconstitutional, black voters essentially found themselves in a one-party system for presidential elections. Republicans turned their attention to white voters in the South and suburbs and have made few serious attempts in subsequent campaigns to appeal to the African American electorate. Richard Nixon in 1960 is the last Republican candidate to earn more than 15 percent of black votes.

This is a problem for black voters, because the Democratic Party’s vision of racial justice is also extremely limited. Northern liberals pioneered what scholars now call “color-blind racism.” That’s when racially neutral language makes extreme racial inequalities appear to be the natural outcome of innocent private choices or free-market forces rather than intentional public policies such as housing covenants, federal mortgage redlining, public-housing segregation, and school zoning.

Democratic lawmakers drafted civil-rights legislation that would challenge Jim Crow laws in the South while leaving de facto segregation in the North intact. When NBC News asked the civil-rights organizer Bayard Rustin why many African American communities rioted the summer after the bill passed, he said, “People have to understand that although the civil-rights bill was good and something for which I worked arduously, there was nothing in it that had any effect whatsoever on the three major problems Negroes face in the North: housing, jobs, and integrated schools … The civil-rights bill, because of this failure, has caused an even deeper frustration in the North.” Today’s protest movements against second-class citizenship in Baltimore; Ferguson, Missouri; Oakland, California; and elsewhere are in part a legacy of the unresolved failures of civil-rights legislation.


Unfortunately for black voters, most white politicians and voters assume that the civil-rights revolution not only leveled the playing field, but also tilted it in favor of African Americans. The white backlash to civil rights helped resurrect the Republican Party after the disastrous Goldwater campaign in 1964, and, over the last five decades, the Democratic Party has followed the electorate to the right.

This poses the biggest problem for black voters today, which is that Democrats running for state or national office aspire to win black votes without appearing to be beholden to black voters. This is especially true of the three Democratic presidents since Kennedy and Johnson. Black support was crucial to the elections of Jimmy Carter and Bill Clinton (each received more than 80 percent of black votes), but both distanced themselves from policies that might seem to disproportionately help black people. Urban League Director Vernon Jordan outlined his concerns a year into Carter’s presidency: “We have no full employment policy. We have no welfare reform policy. We have no national health policy. We have no urban revitalization policy. We have no aggressive affirmative action policy. We have no solutions to the grinding problems of poverty and discrimination.”

When Bill Clinton and the “New Democrats” emerged victorious in the 1990s, thanks in large part to 83 percent support from black voters in 1992 and 84 percent in 1996, they adopted policies, such as welfare reform (the Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity Reconciliation Act of 1996) and a crime bill (the Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcement Act of 1994) that proved ruinous for many black Americans. “It is difficult to overstate the damage that’s been done,” the legal scholar Michelle Alexander noted recently of Clinton’s presidency. “Generations have been lost to the prison system; countless families have been torn apart or rendered homeless; and a school-to-prison pipeline has been born that shuttles young people from their decrepit, underfunded schools to brand-new high-tech prisons.” Clinton acknowledged last year that the crime bill “cast too wide a net” and made the problem of mass incarceration worse.

More recently, as more groups—evangelicals, gays and lesbians, and gun owners, among them—lobby for specific policies, black voters have seen their interests deemed too “special” for consideration by a democratic administration. President Obama has felt the pressure to connect with black voters while distancing himself from black interests. Although his signature accomplishment, the Affordable Care Act, will surely benefit black Americans, he has been reluctant to endorse policies that cannot be pitched as universal. In a 2012 interview with Black Enterprise Magazine he said, “I want all Americans to have opportunity. I’m not the president of black America. I’m the president of the United States of America.”
In the 2016 Democratic primary, African Americans are challenging Hillary Clinton and Bernie Sanders to earn their votes. Whoever wins the nomination will likely garner support from more than 85 percent of black voters, but African Americans still lack a mechanism to hold Democrats accountable once they are elected. Consequently, the outlook for blacks in the United States regarding housing, jobs, education, and criminal justice is little better today than when Kennedy helped get King out of jail in 1960. During this election year, they will again weigh what they won and what they lost when they cast their lot with the Democratic Party.

What Black Americans Lost by Aligning With the Democrats

There’s always a choice, there’s no such thing as “not having a choice”. That’s the greatest lie and most fail safe propaganda points ever told.

If there is a choice between evil v evil- then you don’t pick either. This is grade school logic - not having a choice. That’s sucker cop out shyt. You pick the lesser of the dEVIL and the EVIL still exists; you rid the evil by not contributing to it. That is the choice - to not choose moral decline, to stand on your beliefs, to formulate a code and to choose not to be apart of it. Not having a choice is being a coward - that’s always a fix for the weak minded. This is is why nothing ever improves- people can’t even get their mind right to make the hard decisions without being told what to do. No disrespect but people really need to read books on how revolutions are formed for change to be implemented. Black Americans have the blueprint from those before us but bc the majority power players manipulate their personal wants, at the expense of the minority. Tired of all this soft shoe cowering to white establishments while those who have “no choice”, enable it by doing nothing. You chose to do nothing therefore, nothing is gained. Revolving cycle of the same shyt.

that little quote underneath
"The true nature of evil is a combination of a non existent moral nature, and a calculated system of malicious intent. It is a science utilized for the suffering, destruction of whatever or whoever it is directed at. It is deeper than merely murder."
Where is it from or you made it up yourself?
Basically describes the ice cold world we live in
something that is hard for people to accept is
1) evil can go uncaught
2) evil has no depth anything goes
3) if you're smart enough to get away with it and have some luck, you will
luck being the key word because even a genius in everything doesn't know when their luck will run out
plenty of PURE evil people living blissful lives w/ no form of repercussion
people create concepts like karma hoping everything will come back on evil
These are dope posts all for different reasons.
 

BK The Great

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Right. And don’t think I was coming at you personally. I know you’re a good poster and you put me on to good stuff over at The Booth. I’m speaking in general terms of the entire system; even though my comment was a reply to you. No harm. There’s a passion behind my discussion - that’s all.


Nah you cool I understand clearly. It is the entire system. I don’t agree with it at all and I’m sure others feel the same way too. We the people are the ones that get played at the end of the day.
 

Nicole0416_718_929_646212

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that little quote underneath
"The true nature of evil is a combination of a non existent moral nature, and a calculated system of malicious intent. It is a science utilized for the suffering, destruction of whatever or whoever it is directed at. It is deeper than merely murder."
Where is it from or you made it up yourself?
Basically describes the ice cold world we live in
something that is hard for people to accept is
1) evil can go uncaught
2) evil has no depth anything goes
3) if you're smart enough to get away with it and have some luck, you will
luck being the key word because even a genius in everything doesn't know when their luck will run out
plenty of PURE evil people living blissful lives w/ no form of repercussion
people create concepts like karma hoping everything will come back on evil
That’s a well stated analysis. Regarding your question about the quote - I have a few good friends and family members that put me on to information. So I’ll drop a few sources that I came across below. Reading on my own from a law and philosophy course, as well.

Truth be told, on the random, I was actually watching a horror movie or documentary from what I recall - that quote was on the screen. That prompted me to read further into the “nature of evil” so to speak. My mind is on a speed race at times. Looked up the concept of “double effect” - ‘one should never do evil to bring about good’. That’s where this lesser of two evils fallacy comes into play- real talk, there is no such concept of a lesser evil. Evil begets evil, that’s it. Evil can’t be controlled by selectively choosing a degree of evil - No matter how people try to justify it in their simple minded heads, you are literally setting up consequences that have detrimental effect. This is the result- exactly what is playing out in society now. Evil does not make concessions. Keeping in mind- that you also have to study what the enemy thinks. No wars or revolutions are fought without researching the other side. Anyway - here’s the resources:

The Concept of Evil (Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy)

The Principle of Double Effect

Understanding Evil on JSTOR

https://philosophy.ucsc.edu/news-events/colloquia-conferences/GeneologyofMorals.pdf

Destruction of Black Civilization: Great Issues of a Race from 4500 B.C. to 2000 A.D.


Rules of the Black Panther Party (rules of decorum and membership in the Black Panther Party)


Black Panther's Ten-Point Program (The BPP’s 10 point program)


To Feed Our Children (audio clip of Huey Newton and breakfast program)


http://www.itsabouttimebpp.com/Chapter_History/pdf/North_Carolina/North_Carolina_Chapter.pdf (Black Panther Party Newspaper Mar 28, 1970)


Black Panther Newspaper page 2 (Archive of all Black Panther Party Newspapers)


http://www.mindfully.org/Reform/Denzil-Dowell-Killed25apr67.htm (first Black Panther Party publication Apr 25, 1967)

 
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