Why do people think Boston is a racist city?

Izanami

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Boston too patriotic for me.. Celebrating all that Plymouth rock shyt :camby:and what not. the "history" Y'all cherish so much Is just a reminder for me about the role that area played in the destruction of my people.

Everybody so proud of the history there YALL should be ashamed. That's why I be like fukk Boston.

:ufdup: What an uneducated post. :snoop:

So we going act like Boston wasn't a safe haven for run away slaves. One of the central points for abolitionist?


The Kansas-Nebraska Act of 1854 broke the Missouri Compromise by leaving it to a vote of the inhabitants to decide whether a state formed from the Kansas territory would be slave or free. In Boston, emigrant aid societies publicly appealed to colonists to win the battle for the territory at the ballot box, while in secret, these same members shipped “special supplies”—Colt revolvers and Sharps rifles—to Kansas.

The legend of “Captain” John Brown—murderous fanatic and/or heroic defender of the antislavery cause—was born in “Bleeding Kansas.” By 1859, with financial support from Northern abolitionists, including five members of the “Secret Six” who lived in the Boston area, Brown began to plan direct action against the South, in the form of an attack on the arsenal at Harpers Ferry.

http://www.masshist.org/features/boston-abolitionists/john-brown

Between 1831 and 1865, as the population of Boston surged from 60,000 to more than 175,000, the African- American population remained relatively stable—increasing to about 2,400. The Boston abolitionist movement first emerged from this long-settled, free black population and fugitives from slave states who settled here. The interracial New England Anti-Slavery Society was founded at the African Meeting House in 1832, and during the first years of its publication, three quarters of the subscribers to The Liberator were black.

Through the pages of The Liberator, other local antislavery publications, and lecture tours by visiting American and English abolitionists, Boston became a hub of the national and international antislavery movement. The anniversary of emancipation in the British West Indies on 1 August 1834 became one date that was commemorated in Boston in the years that followed. Antislavery societies also often held rallies or events on the Fourth of July in the 1830s and 1840s.

:manny:
 
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:ufdup: What an uneducated post. :snoop:

So we going act like Boston wasn't a safe haven for run away slaves. One of the central points for abolitionist?




http://www.masshist.org/features/boston-abolitionists/john-brown



:manny:
Does that erase the fact that at one point mass was the only colony in the north that allowed slavery?

As factual as that is, I don't hear Bostonians talking about that. They talk about colonial times and the importance their colony played in the birth of this country but ignore the contributions of those who were forced to build the country from the ground up.

So they participate and benefit off slavery and then after everybody got rich and many of us wrre beaten, castrated , inbred and killed then they decide to harbor runaway slaves? Cool, thank you so much
 

Robbie3000

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I know some folks who've gone there and they said the downtown area is OK but that blacks should stay out of the white residential areas which are racist as hell.

I was gonna post the shyt about the racist tweets towards the hockey player but it's already been posted.

I lived close to Boston College on the green line. I think it was a Jewish neighborhood. (I saw a lot of Hasidic Jews walking to temple on Saturdays).

I never even had any issues. I had a white roommate from Providence and we used to hang out. fukked a few white chicks, went with my roommate to white clubs and bars etc.

Never really had any racial issues. But that's just my experience though.
 

Huey Shootin

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I lived close to Boston College on the green line. I think it was a Jewish neighborhood. (I saw a lot of Hasidic Jews walking to temple on Saturdays).

I never even had any issues. I had a white roommate from Providence and we used to hang out. fukked a few white chicks, went with my roommate to white clubs and bars etc.

Never really had any racial issues. But that's just my experience though.
Ladies and Gentlemen -

Another example of someone who thinks he never experienced racism because he was never called a ****** to his face.

:comeon:
 

Huey Shootin

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Anyway, there isn't a single city filled with white people in this country that isn't racist towards Black people. Chicago, LA, San Fran, NYC, Boston, Seattle, Denver, etc.

You #newblacks with your cac friends and whitewashed view of the world need to get the fukkouttahere. Sick of you delusional, unaware fakkits. :camby:
 

Robbie3000

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Ladies and Gentlemen -

Another example of someone who thinks he never experienced racism because he was never called a ****** to his face.

:comeon:

I said from my experience the three months I lived in Boston fukk boy.

I think a lot of you TLR nikkaz are paralyzed by your racial insecurities. Its like you muthafukkas search for racism at every turn.
 

Huey Shootin

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I said from my experience the three months I lived in Boston fukk boy.

I think a lot of you TLR nikkaz are paralyzed by your racial insecurities. Its like you muthafukkas search for racism at every turn.
I don't need to search for racism. It finds me every single day I wake up. It's on the television. It's on the Internet. It encounters me whenever I'm in public around white people. You act like we - Blacks who see what's going on - are the problem. Nah.

People like you are like that Black dude in the movie They Live. There's a scene in there where he refuses to put on these sunglasses that wakes anyone who wears them up to the truth. He literally had to get his ass beat near to death before he was willing to wear them. That's that #newblack way of thinking.

 
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Robbie3000

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I don't need to search for racism. It finds me every single day I wake up. It's on the television. It's on the Internet. It encounters me whenever I'm in public around white people. You act like we - Blacks who see what's going on - are the problem. Nah.

People like you are like that Black dude in the movie They Live. There's a scene in there where he refuses to put on these sunglasses that wakes anyone who wears them up to the truth. He literally had to get his ass beat near to death before he was willing to wear them. That's that #newblack way of thinking.

If you obsess that much about people who don't like you, you lost already lost.

Can't be healthy walking around carrying that much paranoia baggage.

But, do you.
 

DonFrancisco

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Boston just has a weird vibe to it. It isn't in your face racist but you just feel out of place if you aren't white I feel. Most of my Boston friends have moved to DC, Houston, or NYC (all of them minorities). One of my friends that moved from Houston to Boston went from being racially unaware (She's Asian) to having bi-monthly Facebook posts/rants about the societal atmosphere (in a racial sense) of Boston. She love it because she's a professional historian by trade but I get the feeling she misses her non-White friends of Houston and just being around non-White people in general.

I wouldn't mind moving to Boston but only to advance my career and to learn to live in a city that has a totally different racial dynamic than Houston. Honestly I'm too comfortable in Houston to a fault. Part of it is because I'm Latino and Houston has Latinos of all lifestyles and cultures (we even have Chicano hipsters :mindblown:).
 

DonFrancisco

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I would also add I think I might mistake Boston's racist vibe for Classism (like Dallas). I can see how a well dressed Latino or maybe Black guy can get a pass in Boston, especially if he or she has a good job and lives in a good place. This is my observation of a tourist and staying there 3 times.
 
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