LOL ENJOY
i'm waiting homo.
let's see how you are gonna delete me off this site like you said you fakkit ass loser with no life. you mad because people's lives are better than yours, what a hater. 
LOL ENJOY
let's see how you are gonna delete me off this site like you said you fakkit ass loser with no life. you mad because people's lives are better than yours, what a hater. 
No sir, what you are doing is call filibustering.It's taken out of context because it's not the 1880s anymore and it's straight false to claim that that's what Gandhi continued to believe for the rest of his life.
People keep portraying those quotes as if those represent Gandhi's settled beliefs. It's like they're clueless on how history works.
Get real with me for a second. Imagine it is the 1880s and you looking at a non-Black subject of the British empire who has been taught his entire life that there is an hierarchy of races. You expect him to just become a 21st-century multiculturalist hero....how? That's the context we're talking about.
The crazy shyt is, Gandhi DID become that multiculturalist hero. It just took until 1907 and required the right experiences with Africans and the right intellectual defense of equality and his own maturity, it didn't happen automatically by a miracle when he was 25.
Now, let's stop the diversions and get back to the topic that was actually being debated.
Was Gandhi considered a friend and hero by African and African-American freedom fighters of his day or not, who were WELL aware of his beliefs?
Are you claiming to know more about his beliefs than friends of his like W.E.B. DuBois and John Dube?
Answer the question.
That's a lie if you're talking about post-1907 Gandhi. Finot's argument, which he accepted, was that ALL races were equal and that the apparent lower education and living standards of Africans were due to lack of education and opportunity, not to inherit differences.
Gandhi and W.E.B. DuBois attended the First Universal Races Congress of 1911 together, which worked for mutual understanding between ALL races. African Nationalists like Dusé Mohamed Ali and Mojola Agbebi were speakers, and African-American activists like William Sanders Scarborough, Sarah J. Garnet, and Susan McKinney Steward were speakers as well.
Tell me - are these statements by Gandhi legit or not? Are they arguing for equal rights for Africans or not?
And tell me, are these statements about Gandhi from the leading Black freedom fighters of the time true or not?
Remember, the question is whether Gandhi influenced the Black community of his era or not.
Look at those receipts, That is NOT a debatable question.
He did. You can't deny that.![]()
Wait, Gandhi's documented prejudice and hatred of Blacks was a by product of his British colonial education? More a product of his heritage and religious upbringing.
Anti Black , anti-dark skin prejudice was ingrained in India's societies well before the first Brit made contact there.
As he got older, I think he began to (publicly)challenge some of the cultural baggage of his people, including the Hindu caste system, and the color prejudice. I think he also saw the glaring contradiction of these things while he was trying to appeal for independence on "moral grounds" .
There was a campaign in Ghana that got a statue of Gandhi taken down...The petition was multi parts and listed some of his racist quotes....many are from several years after he landed in S.A.
Tear down the Gandhi statue [1]
Wait, so that's what you're calling these kaffir.savages quotes...."a couple of out of context quotes"?
They weren't taken out of context at all and are pretty consistent documented quotes over a 10-15 year span .
Are you serious?
Taken out of context is the first excuse you're using.............disingenuously by the way.."before he understood racial equality"
WHAT? He understood racial equality as applying to "Indo-Aryans" not to Blacks
most of the book is previewed in google books
I actually cannot believe some of what you wrote in this post.
If the next question is ..why did MLK revere Gandhi?
That's an old argument. Best answers are
1) by publicly linking the use of non violent protests by India against UK.....to the Civil Rights movement of AMERICAN Blacks against their own govt....he made the plight of American Blacks a more relatable story to international press &readers. Putting more pressure on US govt. to protect the rights of Black citizens. Aired America out as a hypocrite....standing for freedom...yet denying full freedom to everybody.
When you read of MLK receiving international awards (Nobel,etc) you see that as a tactic for international attention to the problem, it worked.
2)Perhaps not fully aware of Gandhi's life and views as a young man
3) Aware but used Gandhi and India anyway for the big picture
Diversion tactic for what?No sir, what you are doing is call filibustering.
If you can show me where I engaged in a direct discussion about whether or Gandhi influenced the Black community of his era or not in this thread, please show me.
Under the spoiler is EVERY post I've made in this thread directed at you.
Yeah, you didn't see it because it's not there. Perhaps you're confusing me with another poster, perhaps it's a diversion tactic.

WHAT? He understood racial equality as applying to "Indo-Aryans" not to Blacks.
Those were public writings and statements. They were well known.I'm not sure how much of Gandhi's personal letters and writings were common knowledge/publicly known in his lifetime and by whom. My speculation about the topic was summed up here
In Apartheid South Africa, Asians were honorary Whites

When did I "make excuses" for them?The idea that we are supposed to ignore, make excuses for , or cops pleas for openly racist documented comments by Gandhi is offensive. If he was asked about it later in life, I get the impression that he would have fully owned the comments he made....apologized for them, and mention that he evolved. What he probably wouldn't have done was make excuses for his words as you are doing here.
I told you where they came from and put them in context. ALL racist sentiments come from somewhere, it's not like people have a little devil on their shoulder that makes them do bad things. Racist behavior is always learned."Du bois and Mandela didn't care,,,,so why should you?" "hey, everybody was racist back then" " we didn't know racism was wrong in the early 1900s""savage meant something different back then than it means now......you are pc for being offended by me calling africans savages over 100 years ago"
HELL NO!

Diversion tactic for what?
The object of the discussion, which was going on before you got here, was whether or not Gandhi had influenced the black community.
You came in talk on a side note of whether Gandhi's initial racism came from his Indian background or his British education. I said that it could have been both, it's historically unclear and frankly I don't even care either way, the British were definitely racist against Africans, the Indians may or may not have been colorist before British influence and it doesn't particularly matter to me.
Then you started whining about "out of context", and I answered very specifically what I meant by "out of context".
Then you came in and said:
And I showed how that was straight bullshyt after 1907-1913.
Those were public writings and statements. They were well known.
And the ignorant part of your statement is that you're treating it like it was MLK Jr's individual choice. You can't get away with explaining it like it was a personal decision of MLK Jr. to whitewash Gandhi, you have to explain why John Dube, S.S. Tema, W.E.B. DuBois, Marcus Garvey, Hubert Harrison, Mordacai Johnson, Martin Luther King Jr., Langston Hughes, Aminu Kano, Kwame Nkrumah, Nnamdi Azikiwe, Nelson Mandela, Albert Luthuli, Desmond Tutu, Julius Nyerere, Kenneth Kaunda, and Joshua Nkomo ALL caped for Gandhi. Dube lived within shouting distance of Gandhi and interacted with him all the time, Tema interacted with him too, DuBois interacted with him regularly, Garvey and Gandhi shared books and letters, Johnson and King went all the way to India to study his ways and interact with those who knew him, a lot of the guys on that list studied Gandhi for YEARS before coming to a conclusion about him.
This is called "historical anachronism", where ya'all read something out of context in 2018 and think that people in 1878 or 1943 or 1958 are gonna think just like you do. Political correctness wasn't a thing in their era. Anti-racism was basically not a thing in their era. Black people EXPECTED the average non-Black subject of the British kingdom to be racist. Even the scientists were racist in their day, there wasn't hardly anyone saying, "Don't be racist", anti-racism wasn't seen as a higher moral value. That wasn't saying it was a good thing, it was saying it was an EXPECTED thing.
Tell me the truth now - if God sends you back to 1880 and you interact with some random non-Black subject of the British empire, are you gonna expect them not to be racist?
Black activists didn't care if they learned about Gandhi's previous racism as a young man because they expected ALL them people to be racist by default. What they cared about what that he fought against White Supremacy, and that he eventually realized his racist views were wrong, became anti-racist, and argued for the equality of all peoples including the freedom of all Black peoples from oppressive White British and White American rule.
To act like Gandhi's racist statements in the first half of his life would have put him on the Summer Jam Screen in 1911 is just ignorant.
When did I "make excuses" for them?I told you where they came from and put them in context. ALL racist sentiments come from somewhere, it's not like people have a little devil on their shoulder that makes them do bad things. Racist behavior is always learned.
You don't seem to have no clue what I'm saying.
DuBois and King and the rest WOULD HAVE CARED if Gandhi had stayed racist. They would have cared if he never promoted African equality. But he didn't stay racist, so they didn't hold his earlier statements against him, his later antiracist work was far more unusual and surprising than his earlier racist past had been.
It's weird as hell you hitting me for this too. I know you've seen me in the Coliseum and Higher Learning put people on the Summer Jam Screen for their racist shyt. I'm the one who got the British White boy banned for talking out of line back in April, and just this week I was the one who put that unconscious agent on blast for regurgitating White Supremacist narratives. I have no tolerance for racist behavior. But I also don't see the point of putting people on blast for shyt they don't do anymore cause they changed.
White supremacists could not have asked for a better outcome when they read your post. They won and you let them.there really is no future for AADOS in this country anyway.
The 2020’s will just be more of the same
It doesn’t matter who we vote for or don’t vote at all.
Nothing will change for us regardless.
#Burnitdown


you act like republicans are 100% happyTariq is 100% right
Again, I posted extensive, extensive evidence of Gandhi's support for and from the Black community here, and the specific things he stated should be done to advance the African cause:
Tariq nasheed finally went too far
And there are 100 pages of those receipts here. That link goes on for pages detailing EXACTLY where and how Gandhi was speaking in support of the Black struggle in Africa and America during his own lifetime:
The African Element in Gandhi
The link you shared is no different than any other political correctness-based university movement anywhere else in the world in 2016. They took a couple quotes out-of-context from Gandhi's earlier years and ignored everything else about his history. Those statements were universally from the first half of Gandhi's life, from the 1880s to about 1905, before he understood racial equality. My quotes came completely from 1905 to 1942. So which set represents Gandhi's settled position?
Now, who do you believe is a better authority on Gandhi - people like John Dube, S.S. Tema, W.E.B. DuBois, Marcus Garvey, Hubert Harrison, and the rest who knew Gandhi personally and communicated with him directly? People like Mordacai Johnson, Martin Luther King Jr., Langston Hughes, Aminu Kano, Kwame Nkrumah, Nnamdi Azikiwe, Nelson Mandela, Albert Luthuli, Desmond Tutu, Julius Nyerere, Kenneth Kaunda, and Joshua Nkomo who studied Gandhi extensively IN HIS ERA and directly applied in life to their own struggle? Or a couple college professors 100+ years later who copy-and-paste some quotes no differently than a coli poster does?
Nothing Gandhi had said about Black people was secret or hidden. The Black and African intellectuals expected that of non-Black persons in the British empire as a default in the 1800s. It wasn't like today where racism was a known "bad" thing - back then even the pro-black non-black people were typically racist by default. It wasn't until Gandhi's personal experiences in the Bambatha Rebellion in 1906 and his reading of Jean Finot's Race Prejudice in the following year that he realized racism was wrong.
It comes down to whether you believe that damn near every Black intellectual and freedom fighter of the early 20th century was an idiot who didn't know any better, or whether you actually trust them that Gandhi was an inspiration to and friend of Black people in his era. A few quotes from the first half of someone's life don't invalidate the actual reality of what happened in the second half of his life.

Damn Tariq
He’s getting smoked in his mentions. This last crowd funding fell way short, so his hustle was drying up. This is really turning the tide against him