1. I halfway agree. It’s not that we can’t do it, it’s that:
- Those of us who are at least somewhat successful don’t live in areas that are affected by these men.
- We understand that these degenerate men are, often times, protected and even revered by the same people who want us to correct them.
You see it on here all the time. In the black community, thug nikkas are somehow seen as “victims of the system” rather than what they are, which is urban terrorists.
Let the good ones amongst us start kicking ass and taking names and see how quick many of our own will run to white people to have the movement shutdown.
See: the Detroit 300.
Also, understand this.
If I have to go into a community and start cleaning up people’s mess and involving myself in their drama, from that point on I’m ruling with an iron fist.
Just to give you a historical example, that’s what happened when Saddam Hussein took over Iraq.
All of these different sects were beefing with each other, Saddam came in, took power and oppressed everyone (regardless of affiliation) so that it wouldn’t happen under his watch.
Personally, I don’t think black people in America are at that point where we need that type of totalitarian leadership.
We just gotta stop caping for these nikkas and start letting them deal with the consequences of their actions.
2. I partially agree on this as well. Maybe it’s a regional thing, but I live in Dallas.
We have entire black suburbs down here and there are plenty of black-owned businesses.
From my own personal experience, it ain’t that black men don’t provide opportunities for black women and children.
What I see often times is that often times black business owners (male and female alike) aren’t met with the same respect by their customers and employees alike, as their white counterparts are.
I’ve witnessed and experienced it myself, but that’s a totally different conversation. I do partially agree with you, though.
3. There are plenty of black male doctors, lawyers, engineers, architects, etc.
If you live in a predominately black area, there’s a good chance you see these and interact with these people anyway.
Like, when I was a kid, I knew these people existed.
So I’m not sure why we try to act like we don’t know these people exist.
We know they exist, they’re just considered “lame” by you know who, so the youth don’t aspire to be like them.
You want to know who taught me I could be aspire anything I want, even President one day (prior to the Obama years)?
My father, who would be considered “lame” by many black people’s standards.
4. There’s some validity to this, but again, there are already black men who think this way and are building up their own.
For some reason, many of you have this idea that we need to get ALL black men on one accord.
When in actuality, all it takes is a few of us to cooperate with and build with each other. Look at the Jews.
I also don’t know why some of y’all try to push this idea that regular “square” productive black men hate ourselves.
We ain’t the ones in the streets killing other black men for sport.
We ain’t the ones that made a billion dollar business out of wearing other people’s hair.
I could go deeper, but if I did it would turn this thread into a shyt show.