Hardest Since MC Ren
Kizz My Black Azz
He's a dikkriding cac who loves the attention
Thats the thing alot of the coli people can't refute. My beef with this is the girl doens't want to apologize just because and shaun got the laws involved. These are poor black people at the end of the day but you just can't say some wild damaging shyt like that without any facts.
someone in TLR called him "Talcum X"![]()
i dont know anything about that :jayhub: but as a play on words its pretty funny. i enjoy that kinda humor myselfthats what the white supremacists on Twitter call him too
He fights the good fight and he's lightskinned.Shaun King has been accused of using money donated to him for his personal finances for years. Since the time of Ferguson, there has been countless articles written so I dont understand why he took issue with her specifically but I hope he does sue. He'll have to prove the allegations are not true and maybe all of this will go away.
What does he do for a living living
I see all these allegations but no proof that he's done anything wrong. I'm sure if he has done anything that warrants charges, his ass would be charged. nikkas took an assumption ran with it & now crying because he's fighting back
He fights the good fight and he's lightskinned.
Pretty much all it takes to make the racists and the militants mad at you.
I'd rather someone come at him with provable claims. Take him to court. Pull up or I just consider these distractions to get in the way of his message/work.Not sure its that simple but let the lawsuit move forward and let him clear himself. He doesnt bother me and I thought he was doing good work but I have heard about the money issues for years, YEARS. So let him clear himself and then no one can ever say that about him again.
What does he do for a living living
The Bernie Sanders presidential campaign pioneered a new approach to mass participation electoral campaigns called "big organizing." The low-cost, high impact, digitally enabled, and volunteered powered strategies developed during the 2016 primary election offer a new playbook for winning down ballot races. Social media offers new opportunities to speak directly to voters with a big agenda for change and build audiences that are willing to take action to win real justice.
The Real Justice PAC will seek to win county prosecutor races by testing, iterating and scaling the "big organizing" approach outlined in the book Becky Bond co-authored titled: "Rules for Revolutionaries: How Big Organizing Can Change Everything." The PAC will also leverage social media, digital tools and the voices of a new generation of leaders like Shaun King who are organizing massive audiences to take action locally and nationally through rapid response campaigns.
THE OBJECTIVE OF REAL JUSTICE PAC IS TO WIN RACES WITH A BOTTOMS UP APPROACH AND A TRIPLE BOTTOM LINE.
- Elect candidates to county prosecutor positions where they can make a material impact on people's lives by helping to combat discriminatory policing, limiting or eliminating money bail, and rolling back other practices that lead to mass incarceration. Electing reformers to county prosecutor positions will also help restore voters' faith in public sector to address their problems.
- Win county prosecutor races with a systematic, mass participation approach to digital and field pioneered on the Bernie Sanders presidential campaign. Once prosecutors are elected they face enormous pressure from police unions, other elected officials, and the staff in their offices. A campaign that includes volunteer to vote contact, small dollar fundraising, and social media organizing will strengthen the voices of voters as a countervailing, pro-reform voice to hold newly elected prosecutors accountable to the people who helped elect them.
- Win races with a mandate for real justice. By working to help candidates with a bold, clearly articulated platform win by the widest possible margin, we help create a mandate for overcoming the barriers to making big changes on day one of a new administration. The 2017 success of Larry Krasner in Philadelphia raised the bar for what reformers could demand once in office -- and other elected local officials are following suit such as when the Philadelphia City Council voted to abolish cash bail.