Just saw this on Gutfeld. That kid needs an ass whipping, period.
nu awlins ag said:
Just saw this on Gutfeld. That kid needs an ass whipping, period.
Challenger 17 said:
I don't understand this. When I'm walking around and I see a young black male, ill sometimes walk on the other side of the street in case they decide to commit one of their 50% of the nation's violent crimes, or rob me.
C@LAg said:
https://www.campusreform.org/article?id=17286
A Northwestern student newspaper opinion editor wrote that White people at the school walk on the sidewalk in an annoying way because of internalized racism.
He added that "the racism that undergirded Jim Crow" is to blame for this behavior.
"When I first got to Northwestern, I wondered why walking around on campus could be so frustrating. Even when sidewalks were relatively empty, I would often have to walk way around people to pass without bumping into them," wrote Kenny Allen of The Daily Northwestern, "At first, I chalked it up to the geographic diversity of the school; maybe the people that came to this school were used to different ways of moving through a public place."
However, after "talking to [his] Black friends about my experience," Allen concluded that "people at this predominantly White school would not move out of our way on the sidewalk."
Allen then asserted that "the formal rules of Jim Crow were accompanied by a set of informal ones that governed the way Black people approached White people in public space and vice versa." This social order "required Black people to yield to White people whenever possible" -- such as "stepping off the sidewalk when a White person was walking past."
"White people came to expect the right of way in public spaces," he added. "White people who were accustomed to moving through the world like that intentionally or not taught their kids to move through the world in the same way. And the racism that undergirded Jim Crow wasn't eliminated just because the laws were no longer overtly racist."
Apparently. Do you have anything to add?Ghost of Andrew Eaton said:C@LAg said:
https://www.campusreform.org/article?id=17286
A Northwestern student newspaper opinion editor wrote that White people at the school walk on the sidewalk in an annoying way because of internalized racism.
He added that "the racism that undergirded Jim Crow" is to blame for this behavior.
"When I first got to Northwestern, I wondered why walking around on campus could be so frustrating. Even when sidewalks were relatively empty, I would often have to walk way around people to pass without bumping into them," wrote Kenny Allen of The Daily Northwestern, "At first, I chalked it up to the geographic diversity of the school; maybe the people that came to this school were used to different ways of moving through a public place."
However, after "talking to [his] Black friends about my experience," Allen concluded that "people at this predominantly White school would not move out of our way on the sidewalk."
Allen then asserted that "the formal rules of Jim Crow were accompanied by a set of informal ones that governed the way Black people approached White people in public space and vice versa." This social order "required Black people to yield to White people whenever possible" -- such as "stepping off the sidewalk when a White person was walking past."
"White people came to expect the right of way in public spaces," he added. "White people who were accustomed to moving through the world like that intentionally or not taught their kids to move through the world in the same way. And the racism that undergirded Jim Crow wasn't eliminated just because the laws were no longer overtly racist."
We're discussing a college newspaper article?
Quote:
Jews must step off the sidewalk upon seeing a uniformed or civilian German.
Robin Hood Was A Thief said:
Somebody says or does something
This board: the world is falling apart and my culture is at risk.
Joust because a few people do or say something, it doesn't make it a thing. Settle down.
Thus, my signature line.Aggie4Life02 said:
If everything is racist, then nothing is racist.
Robin Hood Was A Thief said:
Somebody says or does something
This board: the world is falling apart and my culture is at risk.
Joust because a few people do or say something, it doesn't make it a thing. Settle down.
thirdcoast said:
What happens if a white person sees a black person coming and steps off the sidewalk? Racist
What happens if a white person sees a black person coming and does not step off the sidewalk? Racist
Ghost of Andrew Eaton said:C@LAg said:
https://www.campusreform.org/article?id=17286
A Northwestern student newspaper opinion editor wrote that White people at the school walk on the sidewalk in an annoying way because of internalized racism.
He added that "the racism that undergirded Jim Crow" is to blame for this behavior.
"When I first got to Northwestern, I wondered why walking around on campus could be so frustrating. Even when sidewalks were relatively empty, I would often have to walk way around people to pass without bumping into them," wrote Kenny Allen of The Daily Northwestern, "At first, I chalked it up to the geographic diversity of the school; maybe the people that came to this school were used to different ways of moving through a public place."
However, after "talking to [his] Black friends about my experience," Allen concluded that "people at this predominantly White school would not move out of our way on the sidewalk."
Allen then asserted that "the formal rules of Jim Crow were accompanied by a set of informal ones that governed the way Black people approached White people in public space and vice versa." This social order "required Black people to yield to White people whenever possible" -- such as "stepping off the sidewalk when a White person was walking past."
"White people came to expect the right of way in public spaces," he added. "White people who were accustomed to moving through the world like that intentionally or not taught their kids to move through the world in the same way. And the racism that undergirded Jim Crow wasn't eliminated just because the laws were no longer overtly racist."
We're discussing a college newspaper article?
https://thehustle.co/black-owned-businesses-riots-george-floyd/Robin Hood Was A Thief said:
Somebody says or does something
This board: the world is falling apart and my culture is at risk.
Joust because a few people do or say something, it doesn't make it a thing. Settle down.
Quote:
3 stories of black-owned businesses damaged in the riots
In cities across the country, rioters have taken advantage of peaceful protests, damaging, looting, and destroying local businesses many of them owned by people of color.

Robin Hood Was A Thief said:
Somebody says or does something
This board: the world is falling apart and my culture is at risk.
Joust because a few people do or say something, it doesn't make it a thing. Settle down.
Is he asserting that, when walking slowly through the mall, that everyone but white people will get out of the way for other people that are walking faster?C@LAg said:
https://www.campusreform.org/article?id=17286
A Northwestern student newspaper opinion editor wrote that White people at the school walk on the sidewalk in an annoying way because of internalized racism.
He added that "the racism that undergirded Jim Crow" is to blame for this behavior.
"When I first got to Northwestern, I wondered why walking around on campus could be so frustrating. Even when sidewalks were relatively empty, I would often have to walk way around people to pass without bumping into them," wrote Kenny Allen of The Daily Northwestern, "At first, I chalked it up to the geographic diversity of the school; maybe the people that came to this school were used to different ways of moving through a public place."
However, after "talking to [his] Black friends about my experience," Allen concluded that "people at this predominantly White school would not move out of our way on the sidewalk."
Allen then asserted that "the formal rules of Jim Crow were accompanied by a set of informal ones that governed the way Black people approached White people in public space and vice versa." This social order "required Black people to yield to White people whenever possible" -- such as "stepping off the sidewalk when a White person was walking past."
"White people came to expect the right of way in public spaces," he added. "White people who were accustomed to moving through the world like that intentionally or not taught their kids to move through the world in the same way. And the racism that undergirded Jim Crow wasn't eliminated just because the laws were no longer overtly racist."