Nah, I don't think it's because of slavery because we had a family unit, until the late '60's, and 70's. All of this stuff is new. We didn't call each other nikka every word. And when we did use it, it wasn't in front of whites. It started with my generation, and I remember it being an unspoken code that you just don't do. You really didn't do it around older black people. I reme!ber when my grandmother heard me talking(i didnt know she was listening) and she gave me such a scary look, and said i should be ashamed of myself talking that street talk. I didnt get it, until i got older, and can see how lost we have gotten. Once I got out of that shyt, i see it was street mentality that is killing us. It's a backwards way of thinking.I do think the black women respect issue does in fact go ALL the way back to slavery, most of the rest is just hyperbole and bigotrywhat you think?
We wasn't putting each other down all the time. We wasn't competing with each other like we do now. I remember the feeling. It felt like we was together more. Yeah, we had drug dealers, and shyt, but it wasn't something we praised. I know there's someone else in here who remembers things before they changed in the '90's.
what you think?


at him saying "nikka" with that voice
and then the tirade about owning slaves. Yeah thiscac is gonna end up dead

