Tariq Nasheed "I do not support Immigration"

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CASHAPP

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Most of the civil rights movements were started or led by a full or half west indian. nikkas don't do research.

The people in this thread aren't saying anything about how weeks ago Tariq got on his Ustream and doubled down and said that it was African women causing AIDS in Atlanta by bedwenching with white people in Europe and then coming back to Atlanta and other cities to spread it :mjlol:
 

dj-method-x

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sorry kid, you are a dumb fukk.
Time for idiots like you to be removed from the discussion.

Obama increased police militarization higher than Reagan and Bush combined, he increased militarization budgets by 2400%, idiots like yourself can't think and don't want to.
Obama Prepares to Reinforce the Militarized Police Occupation of Black America | Black Agenda Report


Look you can be forgiven if you are ignorant, when you put your head in the sand to support a puppet and ignore reality, we have to call people like you what you are. Enablers and conspirators against black american improvement.

I'm the ignorant one? Here's some facts about Holder that you obviously didn't know. I'm not even going to get into what Obama has done for criminal justice like moving to close federal private prisons and granting clemency to more black people THAN ANY PREVIOUS PRESIDENTS COMBINED.

The civil rights legacy of Eric Holder

Holder sought to end mass incarceration
After the war on drugs began in the 1970s, the US dramatically increased the number of people it put in jail and prison, both at the federal and state levels. Since then, the difference in imprisonment and incarceration rates between white Americans and minority groups widened significantly.


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(National Research Council)

Under Holder, the Department of Justice and the Obama administration have taken several steps to undo that recent history of mass incarceration.

The most significant changes come through sentencing reforms for nonviolent drug offenders. In August 2013 Holder issued a memo instructing federal prosecutors to avoid triggering mandatory minimum sentences for certain nonviolent drug offenders, asking them to be selective about what information they include when charging an offender of a crime. In March 2014 Holder issued new requirements for federal halfway houses, requiring them to provide more resources and support for nonviolent drug offenders — in hopes of offering an alternative or stopgap to imprisonment.

These reforms reflect the stark costs and failures of mass incarceration and the war on drugs, in many ways. But Holder never held back in characterizing them as race issues.


incarceration_by_race.0.png

(National Research Council)

"Right now, unwarranted disparities are far too common," Holder said in a 2013 speech. "As President Obama said last month, it’s time to ask tough questions about how we can strengthen our communities, support young people, and address the fact that young black and Latino men are disproportionately likely to become involved in our criminal justice system — as victims as well as perpetrators."

Holder took significant steps to dial back the war on drugs


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US Attorney General Eric Holder testifies before Congress. (Chip Somodevilla / Getty Images News)

Beyond sentencing reforms, Holder oversaw some of the most significant drawbacks in the war on drugs since former President Richard Nixon and Congress launched the sweeping anti-drug effort in the 1970s. While previous administrations often touted federal laws to shut down medical marijuana dispensaries that are legal at the state level, the Obama administration drew back the crackdowns and even allowed Colorado and Washington to carry out the full legalization of marijuana without much federal interference, issuing guidances that enabled states to continue their marijuana legalization efforts.

In 2013 Holder filed a guidance asking prosecutors and regulators to avoid coming down on individual marijuana users and businesses in states where marijuana is legal — as long as the businesses avoided selling to minors and met other criteria. In 2014 Holder issued a guidancetrying to assure banks — unsuccessfully, for the most part — that they can work with state-legal marijuana businesses without facing federal prosecution.

Most recently, Holder questioned whether marijuana's strict legal classification — the foundation for the war on marijuana at the federal level — is justified and whether pot really belongs in the same legal category as heroin. "I think it's certainly a question that we need to ask ourselves — whether or not marijuana is as serious a drug as is heroin," Holder said in an interview with Yahoo News. "[T]he question of whether or not they should be in the same category is something that I think we need to ask ourselves and use science as the basis for making that determination."

Holder saw these reforms as a civil rights issue, noting the disproportionate rates at which black and Hispanic Americans were punished for marijuana-related crimes despite using the drug at roughly the same rate as white people.

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"[Y]ou see the disproportionate impact on communities of color, especially when you see that drug usage among African Americans, Hispanics is roughly the same as whites, and yet you see Hispanics and African Americans going to jail for far longer and a much greater rate," Holder told Yahoo News. "It's a civil rights issue, and one that I'm determined to confront as long as I'm attorney general."

Local police forces faced investigations and reforms under Holder


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Police officers watch over demonstrators in Ferguson, Missouri. (Scott Olson / Getty Images News)
Scott Olson/Getty Images
Following the August 9 shooting of Michael Brown and the protests in Ferguson, Missouri, that followed, Holder's Justice Department announced an investigation of the entire Ferguson Police Department and unveiled initiatives to help local governments in St. Louis County confront their unequal treatment of minorities.

"The Department of Justice is working across the nation to ensure that the criminal justice system is fair, constitutional, and free of bias," Holder said in a statement. "Ferguson and St. Louis County are not the first places that we have become engaged to ensure fair and equitable policing and they will not be the last. The Department of Justice will continue to work tirelessly to ensure that the Constitution has meaning for all communities."

HOLDER HAS OVERSEEN MORE THAN TWICE AS MANY CIVIL RIGHTS INVESTIGATIONS ON POLICE DEPARTMENTS THAN HIS PREDECESSOR

Holder's involvement in Ferguson wasn't unique for the attorney general. Holder has overseen more than twice as many civil rights investigations on police departments than his predecessor did in a similar time period. He even took steps against New York City's stop-and-frisk policy, which gained national notoriety for its disproportionate effect on black and Latino residents.

The civil rights investigations have clear goals: to systemically address the disparities in police treatment faced by white and non-white civilians and send a signal that such disparities are unacceptable in the eyes of the Justice Department.



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For Holder, his pursuit may reflect his own experiences with law enforcement. "I was a young college student driving from New York to Washington, stopped on a highway and told to open the trunk of my car, because the police officer told me he wanted to search it for weapons," he told ABC News. "I remember as I got back in the car and continued on my journey how humiliated I felt, how angry I got."

Through his position, Holder was given the opportunity to address that humiliation he and other minority Americans face every day, and he often called on the nation to follow him.

"Will we again turn a blind eye to the hard truths that Ferguson exposed, burying these tough realities until another tragedy arises to set them off like a powder keg?" Holder asked in a recent speech at New York University. "Or will we finally accept this mandate for open and honest dialogue, reach for new and innovative solutions, and rise to the historic challenge — and the critical opportunity — now right before us?"
 

Hiphoplives4eva

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You go back to your shythole fukkin country and roll around in the mud, Bush nikka
No you fukking c*nt. I'll go where the fukk I please, including your neighborhood. I'm an America citizen you stupid fukk, who obviously has a better understanding of the world than your dumb, simple ass does.

Morons like you a d Tariq actually think your opinion is actually relevant. You don't control shyt, so your opinion is shyt.

Learn to build some power in your community and perhaps people will actually give a fukk about what your dumb ass thinks.
 

dj-method-x

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Immigrants played a part but the vast majority of the civil right movement was orchestrated and led by AAs, especially in the South.

Who said they were the vast majority? My point is the shyt that Tariq is talking about there would never have been Malcom, Carmicheal, Potier, Belafonte, etc etc. The Harlem renaissance would not have been the same (google Claude McCay. Also the neighborhood in which it started, 50% were born in the West Indies), and hiphop would not have been the same (Grandmaster Flash, Afrika Bambaataa, and DJ Kool Herc were all West Indian).
 

Hiphoplives4eva

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Breh these posts are not productive, Nigerians are here living it up here because of the sacrifices of African Americans

AA have legit concerns about the attitude of immigrants, you are exacerbating those concerns
First off no one with black skin is "living it up"in a system of white supremacy.

It's obvious African Americans were instrumental in creating opportunities for non whites in America. Many Black immigrants have acknowledged and appreciate that fact. Many were also part of the struggle. Malcolm and many black leaders traveled to Africa for inspiration and guidance. Many African leaders attended school in HBCUS. Black Americans and Africans have always worked together to fight white oppression.

However many people are using their current status to attack immigrants instaed of the white people that put them in thay position. Whites literally have 96% of the wealth in this country, but c00ns want to focus on the 1% black immigrants were able to get for themselves. It's pathetic
 

Pit Bull

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No you fukking c*nt. I'll go where the fukk I please, including your neighborhood. I'm an America citizen you stupid fukk, who obviously has a Bette understanding of the world than your dumb, simple ass does.

Morons like you a d Tariq actually think your opinion is actually relevant. You don't control shyt, so your opinion is shyt.

Learn to build some power in your community and perhaps people will actually give a fukk about what your dumb ass thinks.
I ain't never watched a tariq video in my life you booty scratching dikk eating muthafukka, Bush ass. fukkin barefoot ass. Ribs prolly showin right now. Ebola face ass.
 

David_TheMan

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I'm the ignorant one? Here's some facts about Holder that you obviously didn't know. I'm not even going to get into what Obama has done for criminal justice like moving to close federal private prisons and granting clemency to more black people THAN ANY PREVIOUS PRESIDENTS COMBINED.

The civil rights legacy of Eric Holder
"
Yes kid you are ignorant and you don't have a single clue what you are talking about.

Lets look at reality vs. liberal media story framing.

A Critical Look at VICE's Story on Mass Imprisonment with Obama and Holder
but Glen, didn’t Barack Obama at least reduce the disparity in sentencing for crack cocaine from what was it, 100:1 to 18:1?

FORD: No, he did not. And he wasn’t even a great initiator of that. This had been in the works for a very long time. It had a bipartisan support from Republicans in Congress. It was basically a Democratic position to repeal the 100:1 penalties as it applied to essentially the whole rest of the party. No, he was not that aggressive. But I will tell you what he did do.


Once the legislation was passed he sent Eric Holder to the Supreme Court to fight against allowing the retroactive application of the new law, which drastically reduced those 100:1 penalties, Eric Holder went to the Supreme Court arguing that this should not be retroactive, and by doing so–and he won the case–by doing so he kept 6,000 people who had been convicted under the 100:1 penalty in jail. So that’s how he exerted his energies, to keep mostly black folks in jail, not as being somebody who was on point to get rid of this 100:1 penalty.

Holder & Obama Are Playing Us On Mandatory Minimums, the Drug War and Mass Incarceration | Black Agenda Report
The administration continies to funnel NSA intercept data to local cops for evidence in drug and other cases

Last week, Black Agenda Report was one of the few places that reported on a Reuters story that a pipeline of unknown dimensions exists between NSA's vacuum cleaner surveillance and local police departments around the country through the DEA, the federal police agency explicitly created to prosecute the war on drugs. DEA manuals, the copyrighted Reuters story says, instruct their operatives to tell local cops they must conduct “parallel investigations” to effectively launder the illegal evidence against suspects, and that they should conceal its existence from judges and prosecutors. Conspiracy and perjury, this would be called if anyone else but DEA and local cops did it. The DEA is part of Eric Holder's and President Obama's Justice Department.

Since the drug war principally targets nonwhites and nonwhite communities it's absolutely certain that disproportionate numbers of black and brown people have been effectively framed with this illegally acquired and laundered evidence.

Justice Department spokespeople have not commented in the NSA-DEA link, except to say they are “investigating” themselves. For his part, President Obama, who now says he is open to the appointment of “civil libertarians” or observers in the NSA processes and as secret witnesses in his secret courts, and that he may allow some of them a say in how the information gathered by NSA is used, presumably including by the DEA and local cops around the country. But this is the same president who assured us two months ago that nobody was listening to our phone calls or reading our emails, unless we were terrorists.

What Obama and Holder say VS what they do

The president and attorney general have waxed philosophical about racism, profiling, police practices and mass incarceration, although again they won't use that phrase. The president observed that Trayvon could have been his son or even himself 35 years ago. The attorney general shared with us that as a black father he must carefully instruct his young sons as to how to comport themselves in the presence of aggressive cops.

But Holder and Obama are not philosophers, pastors or teachers. They are the two most powerful black men in the US. They've been in actual power 55 months now, with a little over 40 to go. Their actions reveal their expressions of concern and feeling our pain are no more than politically expedient drive-by gestures to keep black America in line. Occasional expressions of concern, and constant celebrations of the victories of the civil rights era, are all that black America really wants from its black attorney general and black president, no matter what they actually do with the very real power in their hands.

The rest of our useless black political class is quiet too. None of them from the NAACP, the Urban League, the National Action Network and all the usual corporate funded suspects have commented on the Department of Justice's 3 year fight to keep crack defendants in jail serving longer sentences. None of them have a mumbling word, let alone a press conference on the disturbing implications of the NSA-DEA pipeline of laundered evidence in countless local drug trials. Maybe they're all too busy getting ready for the 50th anniversary of the historic 1963 march on Washington for Jobs and Justice. After all, the president is speaking, and what he says, and how he looks saying it seems a lot more important, than what he and his attorney general actually do.

Obama commute close to 1400 people, he fought successfully to keep 6000 who should be free in jail.
So fukk Obama and fukk idiots like yourself who give white puppets like him cover.
 
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