The Nigerian... come in this thread RIGHT NOW (Evidence inside)

Tommy Knocks

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btw. the reason I changed Obama to MJ was because Obama is bi-racial. and you were trying to make a point with black men, so I changed it to MJ, who is full black. I can name a whole list of safe black men.
 

Tommy Knocks

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the point is not looks but action friend---You are even more out of touch than i thought--

so Obama Looks safe to you?

Why, cause of his skintone?
you are making statements like a racist cac

no because he's a cool articulate charming guy wtf.

Do you know nigerian personally? you were making your comments based off his look and shirt. nikka, don't start back pedaling it aint sunday.
 

Sonic Boom of the South

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Rosenbreg's, Rosenberg's...1825, Tulane
no because he's a cool articulate charming guy wtf.

Do you know nigerian personally? you were making your comments based off his look and shirt. nikka, don't start back pedaling it aint sunday.

My opinions of him are based off his comments on here and Sohh- he isa c00n fully

and you too sir are a c00n who swoons over mongoloids and chooses to distance himself from Black people--- fukk you and the parents that bought you in this world

you soft ass rice-chasing bytch:beli::pacspit:
 

BrothaZay

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btw. the reason I changed Obama to MJ was because Obama is bi-racial. and you were trying to make a point with black men, so I changed it to MJ, who is full black. I can name a whole list of safe black men.

:snoop: GTFO nikka.

Obama is a BLACK man. Or let me restate that, he is an African American male.
There's no way around that.
 

Tommy Knocks

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My opinions of him are based off his comments on here and Sohh- he isa c00n fully

and you too sir are a c00n who swoons over mongoloids and chooses to distance himself from Black people--- fukk you and the parents that bought you in this world

you soft ass rice-chasing bytch:beli::pacspit:

whatever makes you feel better nikka. I don't know him, barely read his posts, you said 'looks like the safest negro' I asked you to explain how that was a bad thing, and you failed, and resorted to name calling.

I swoon over humans of all colors, acting like the only place I've lived is asia, a nikka was in Congo just last week. :beli:
 

Sonic Boom of the South

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Rosenbreg's, Rosenberg's...1825, Tulane
whatever makes you feel better nikka. I don't know him, barely read his posts, you said 'looks like the safest negro' I asked you to explain how that was a bad thing, and you failed, and resorted to name calling.

I swoon over humans of all colors, acting like the only place I've lived is asia, a nikka was in Congo just last week. :beli:

yeah ok toby, i have read your post before, yeah u a c00n:ohhh:

put me on ignore u hoe ass nikka-- dont quote me anymore Chad
 

Tommy Knocks

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yeah ok toby, i have read your post before, yeah u a c00n:ohhh:

put me on ignore u hoe ass nikka-- dont quote me anymore Chad

you sound like the most educated black man I've ever encountered, surely you are the pinnacle example of black men world wide. please enlightened our future generations to be as thought provoking as you.
 

50CentStan

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The Ummah!
Come on brehs this thread is too mean. I think it should be deleted. Nothing cool or wavy about hurting someone's feelings. Let's try and be nice to each other.
 

The Nigerian

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It's not about mean mugging and associating with black radicals. Obama never shunned his black heritage, he never left black culture behind to embrace his white colleagues. He doesn't hesitate to speak out against racist cacs and their bullshyt. He didn't pull out of his church and start going to church wit white folks. He caries himself with a strong chest out demeanor. All of this amongst other things ads up to a black man who is very threatening to white folks, and it has nothing to do with being a gangsta, or actualy being dangerous/threatening
DUDE! WHAT THE fukk ARE YOU TALKING ABOUT!?

Like, I'm really getting mad here because people who've never done any reading about Obama are suddenly portraying him as this uncompromising pillar of "blackness" that satisfies the likes of a troll like Geoff Choucer. Here's what people who actually went to Harvard had to say about him:

Christine Spurell Harvard Law, class of '91


Honestly, we were just very polarized on the Law Review, we really were. It's like you go to a college campus, and the black students were all sitting together. It was the same thing with the Law Review; the black students were all sitting together. Barack was the one who was truly able to move between the different groups and have credibility with all of them.

Why?

I really don't know. He grew up in a multiracial environment. I don't know what he's like now with conservatives, but I don't know why at the time he was able to communicate so well with them, even spend social time with them, which was not something I would ever have done. …

I don't think he was agenda-driven. I think he genuinely thought, some of these guys are nice, all of them are smart, some of them are funny, all of them have something to say. …

Now, as you may know, I had personal hopes for my own future on the Law Review. I was kind of hoping to get a masthead position, and I did not get a masthead position. So we went from the high of having Barack elected -- now, this is just me speaking, as at the time I was a very narrow-minded, almost radical student. I was 22 years old at this point, so I kind of saw everything in terms of race. I try not to do that anymore.

So I did assume I would get the position that I thought I had coming. I [did] think I had earned it as far as the quality of my work. But I'll tell you now, I had not earned it as far as the quality of my diplomacy with the other students. ... He did know I was a hard worker, that he did know. That's why I felt betrayed, because I worked so hard. I pulled so many all-nighters, I thought I should be rewarded. But he put the good of the Law Review ahead of my agenda. That's what makes him such a great leader. ...

Bradford Berenson Harvard Law, class of '91; associate White House counsel, 2001-'03


The law school generally at that time was riven ideologically, and not just in terms of Republican/Democrat partisan politics, but there were contending schools of legal thought at the time, represented on the faculty, that really polarized both the faculty and the student body. There was a far-left group of professors who adhered to what was known as critical legal studies, and then there were a handful of conservative professors, like Charles Fried, who had served in the Reagan administration. There were intense debates over affirmative action and race issues. This is, after all, just a few years after the end of the Reagan presidency. ...

That doesn't mean that, day to day, people weren't friendly to one another, but the classroom was very politicized. The debates and discussions of the law and of cases frequently pit conservatives in our class against liberals in our class, and the discussions often got quite heated. I would say the environment at Harvard Law School back then was political in a borderline unhealthy way. It was quite intense.

... Interestingly, race was at the forefront of the agenda. There were intense debates over affirmative action that sometimes got expressed through fights over tenure decisions relating to junior faculty at the law school. There were women professors and minority professors who either had come up for tenure or were coming up for tenure, and there were big fights, on the faculty and in the law school at large, over whether they should receive tenure, whether the quality of their scholarship merited that. ...

[A]fter [Obama] became president of the Review, he was under a lot of pressure to participate and lend his voice to those debates. And he did, I think, to some degree. ButI would not have described him as a campus radical or a campus political leader. He was the president of the Harvard Law Review, the leader of that organization. But, in that role, his job was to manage, in essence, a publication, and the editors who brought it forth and to do a lot of close editing of academic legal articles. …

You don't become president of the Harvard Law Review, no matter how political, or how liberal the place is, by virtue of affirmative action, or by virtue of not being at the very top of your class in terms of legal ability. Barack was at the very top of his class in terms of legal ability. He had a first-class legal mind and, in my view, was selected to be president of the Review entirely on his merits.

... I never regarded him as kind of a racial special pleader, or a person looking for race-based benefits, either for himself or others. I think as a policy matter, he supported affirmative action and believed in the arguments for it. But unlike many people on the left, he was also willing to acknowledge that it had costs, and he could at least appreciate the arguments on the other side. ...

Taken from: Obama - Harvard Law Days | The Choice 2008 | FRONTLINE | PBS

Asshats like Coucer would have dismissed him as a "safe c0on."

I'm sorry, but this idea that you have to be the enemy of white people to be a Black person is fvcking poisonous.
 
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