- Mar 11, 2015
- 100,603
- 107,065
- 3,645
- Thread starter
- #21
Man, if you really knew, you'd shut up about somebody else being dumb. You are a racist, and that's a fact.I guess when you're dumb as a hammer, everything looks like a nail.
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Man, if you really knew, you'd shut up about somebody else being dumb. You are a racist, and that's a fact.I guess when you're dumb as a hammer, everything looks like a nail.
Man, if you really knew, you'd shut up about somebody else being dumb. You are a racist, and that's a fact.
Yes, YOU are.That's because a hell of a lot of people here ARE racist.
Man, if you really knew, you'd shut up about somebody else being dumb. You are a racist, and that's a fact.
You see, this is where the disingenuous nature of the white racist takes hold. I am no racist, the reality of what has happened in America is not racism. Neither is stating the fact that racism remains a problem and that rght wing whites need to become part of the solution insread of furthering the problem is not walowing in racism. Advocacy is not whining, and so all you have because you can't debate or debunk the truths you are shown is an attempt to gaslight. I am not needing a pat on rhe back, I am slapping racists like you in the mouth each time I post.No more racist than you are. Except I don't sit around all day wallowing in my racism, feeling sorry for myself, and posting threads so someone will give me a pat on the back.
You really need a hobby, son.
And look at how it is tolerated in a Zone 1 thread!im you call a hell of a lot of people here racist....you should have a hell of a lot of people on ignore then......
You see, this is where the disingenuous nature of the white racist takes hold. I am no racist, the reality of what has happened in America is not racism. Neither is stating the fact that racism remains a problem and that rght wing whites need to become part of the solution insread of furthering the problem is not walowing in racism. Advocacy is not whining, and so all you have because you can't debate or debunk the truths you are shown is an attempt to gaslight. I am not needing a pat on rhe back, I am slapping racists like you in the mouth each time I post.
Read my sig line moron, and understand that is how things have happened.
IM2 would like to fool taxpayers into thinking blacks are being oppressed and victimized when in fact Jews are being threatened with murder, prohibited from attending college for their own safety, and hiring military men with machine guns to stand at post outside the shul.Okie dokie.![]()
IM2 would like to fool taxpayers into thinking blacks are being oppressed and victimized when in fact Jews are being threatened with murder, prohibited from attending college for their own safety, and hiring military men with machine guns to stand at post outside the shul.
... I am no racist, the reality of what has happened in America is not racism.....
... I am slapping racists like you in the mouth each time I post.... .
My only "racism" is that I rarely agree with you. But that is your definition of racism. You even turn on people who agree with you 99.99 percent of the time when they dare to disagree with you.He's on ignore. I don't need to read his racism.
Its funny how racists use words like oppress. You can tell yoursellf all the lies yu want, but then:What's really hilarious is the fact that he's not fooling anyone, except for that one guy who keeps agreeing with him. Nobody's "oppressing" IM2, he's USMB's own version of Jussie Smollett.
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Its funny how racists use words like oppress. You can tell yoursellf all the lies yu want, but then:
"In five of the six redistricting cycles since 1960, the U.S. Department of Justice or federal courts have found that Alabama’s legislative districts — congressional, state, or both — violate the rights of voters under the U.S. Constitution or the Voting Rights Act." - NAACP Legal Defense Fund
“The persistent racial wealth gap in the United States is a burden on black Americans as well as the overall economy.” - The economic impact of closing the racial wealth gap, McKinsey and Company
“The U.S. racial wealth gap is substantial and is driven by public policy decisions. According to our analysis of the SIPP data, in 2011 the median white household had $111,146 in wealth holdings, compared to just $7,113 for the median Black household and $8,348 for the median Latino household. From the continuing impact of redlining on American homeownership to the retreat from desegregation in public education, public policy has shaped these disparities, leaving them impossible to overcome without racially-aware policy change.” -DEMOS
“Striving for racial equity – a world where race is no longer a factor in the distribution of opportunity – is a matter of social justice. But moving toward racial equity can generate significant economic returns as well. When people face barriers to achieving their full potential, the loss of talent, creativity, energy, and productivity is a burden not only for those disadvantaged, but for communities, businesses, governments, and the economy as a whole. Initial research on the magnitude of this burden in the United States (U.S.), as highlighted in this brief, reveals impacts in the trillions of dollars in lost earnings, avoidable public expenditures, and lost economic output.”-The Kellogg Foundation and Altarum Institute
“It will end up costing the U.S. economy as much as $1 trillion between now and 2028 for the nation to maintain its longstanding black-white racial wealth gap, according to a report released this month from the global consultancy firm McKinsey & Company. That will be roughly 4 percent of the United States GDP in 2028—just the conservative view, assuming that the wealth growth rates of African Americans will outpace white wealth growth at its current clip of 3 percent to .8 percent annually, said McKinsey.
If the gap widens, however, with white wealth growing at a faster rate than black wealth instead, it could end up costing the U.S. $1.5 trillion or 6 percent of GDP according to the firm.” -McKinsey & Company.
“Closing the Black racial wage gap 20 years ago might have provided an additional $2.7 trillion in income available for consumption and investment.
Improving access to housing credit might have added an additional 770,000 Black homeowners over the last 20 years, with combined sales and expenditures adding another $218 billion to GDP over that time.
Facilitating increased access to higher education (college, graduate, and vocational schools) for Black students might have bolstered lifetime incomes that in aggregate sums to $90 to $113 billion.
Providing fair and equitable lending to Black entrepreneurs might have resulted in the creation of an additional $13 trillion in business revenue over the last 20 years. This could have been used for investments in labor, technology, capital equipment, and structures and 6.1 million jobs might have been created per year.” -CITIGROUP
"We find equal pay for equal work is still not a reality."-Payscale
“black men were the only racial/ethnic group not achieving pay parity with white men at some level."-Payscale
"Black women have to work more than 19 months—until the very last day of July—to make as much as white, non-Hispanic men did in the previous 12-month calendar year."-National Womens Law Center
"Even after completing undergraduate and graduate degrees, black and Hispanic workers earned less than non-Hispanic white workers with the same, or often less, education."
- Roy Eduardo Kokoyachuk, ThinkNow Research
"The median white single parent has 2.2 times more wealth than the median black two-parent household and 1.9 times more wealth than the median Latino two-parent household."-DEMOS
"A recent study conducted by a team of researchers from the National Community Reinvestment Coalition, Utah State University, Brigham Young University, Rutgers University, and Lubin Research found that banks were three times more likely to request follow-up appointments with white business owners than better-qualified Black business owners, and the Black business owners were subjected to far greater personal and financial scrutiny compared to their equal or less creditworthy white counterparts."
"There has been a long-standing scourge of white supremacy and racial capitalism, as well as slavery and its legacy, in the U.S. in which two systems of law exist: one for white people and another for people of African descent. Under color of law, Black people are targeted, surveilled, brutalized, maimed and killed by law enforcement officers with impunity, as being Black is itself criminalized and devalued. Invariably, when a police killing of a person of African descent is known to have been unjustified, it is dismissed as merely the action or collective actions of “a few bad apples.” This excuse obscures the real problem, however, which is structural racism, embedded in the U.S. legal and policing systems."
-Report of the International Commission of Inquiry on Systemic Racist Police Violence against People of African Descent in the U.S.
"The burden of police violence fatalities in the USA is known to fall disproportionately on Black, Indigenous, and Hispanic populations. Recent studies suggest that over the life course, about one in every 1000 Black men are killed by the police in the USA, making them 2.5 times more likely to be killed by police than White men. Black women are about 1.4 times more likely to be killed by police than are White women. Systemic and direct racism, manifested in laws and policies as well as personal implicit biases, result in Black, Indigenous, and Hispanic Americans being the targets of police violence."
-The 2019 Global Burden of Diseases, Injuries, and Risk Factors Study
"The Commissioners find a prima facie case of Crimes against Humanity warranting an investigation by the International Criminal Court (ICC). The crimes under the Rome Statute include: Murder, Severe Deprivation of Physical Liberty, Torture, Persecution of people of African descent, and other Inhumane Acts, which occurred in the context of a widespread or systematic attack directed against the civilian population of Black people in the U.S." -Report of the International Commission of Inquiry on Systemic Racist Police Violence against People of African Descent in the U.S.
Racists like JGalt know all this is going on because they are the ones doing it. Yet he will sit behind his computer using words like oppression as if we are too stupid to see that the way racism is done now is not how it was done in the 1950's.
Do you own a mirror?That's because a hell of a lot of people here ARE racist.
He has black privilege. It is racist to criticize himAnd look at how it is tolerated in a Zone 1 thread!
I just think it is shameful for him to continue to cry about “racism” when Jews can’t even show their face on college campuses, are hiring armed military men to guard them at synagogue, and are removing their mezzuzIm.He has black privilege. It is racist to criticize him
Its funny how racists use words like oppress. You can tell yoursellf all the lies yu want, but then:
"In five of the six redistricting cycles since 1960, the U.S. Department of Justice or federal courts have found that Alabama’s legislative districts — congressional, state, or both — violate the rights of voters under the U.S. Constitution or the Voting Rights Act." - NAACP Legal Defense Fund
“The persistent racial wealth gap in the United States is a burden on black Americans as well as the overall economy.” - The economic impact of closing the racial wealth gap, McKinsey and Company
“The U.S. racial wealth gap is substantial and is driven by public policy decisions. According to our analysis of the SIPP data, in 2011 the median white household had $111,146 in wealth holdings, compared to just $7,113 for the median Black household and $8,348 for the median Latino household. From the continuing impact of redlining on American homeownership to the retreat from desegregation in public education, public policy has shaped these disparities, leaving them impossible to overcome without racially-aware policy change.” -DEMOS
“Striving for racial equity – a world where race is no longer a factor in the distribution of opportunity – is a matter of social justice. But moving toward racial equity can generate significant economic returns as well. When people face barriers to achieving their full potential, the loss of talent, creativity, energy, and productivity is a burden not only for those disadvantaged, but for communities, businesses, governments, and the economy as a whole. Initial research on the magnitude of this burden in the United States (U.S.), as highlighted in this brief, reveals impacts in the trillions of dollars in lost earnings, avoidable public expenditures, and lost economic output.”-The Kellogg Foundation and Altarum Institute
“It will end up costing the U.S. economy as much as $1 trillion between now and 2028 for the nation to maintain its longstanding black-white racial wealth gap, according to a report released this month from the global consultancy firm McKinsey & Company. That will be roughly 4 percent of the United States GDP in 2028—just the conservative view, assuming that the wealth growth rates of African Americans will outpace white wealth growth at its current clip of 3 percent to .8 percent annually, said McKinsey.
If the gap widens, however, with white wealth growing at a faster rate than black wealth instead, it could end up costing the U.S. $1.5 trillion or 6 percent of GDP according to the firm.” -McKinsey & Company.
“Closing the Black racial wage gap 20 years ago might have provided an additional $2.7 trillion in income available for consumption and investment.
Improving access to housing credit might have added an additional 770,000 Black homeowners over the last 20 years, with combined sales and expenditures adding another $218 billion to GDP over that time.
Facilitating increased access to higher education (college, graduate, and vocational schools) for Black students might have bolstered lifetime incomes that in aggregate sums to $90 to $113 billion.
Providing fair and equitable lending to Black entrepreneurs might have resulted in the creation of an additional $13 trillion in business revenue over the last 20 years. This could have been used for investments in labor, technology, capital equipment, and structures and 6.1 million jobs might have been created per year.” -CITIGROUP
"We find equal pay for equal work is still not a reality."-Payscale
“black men were the only racial/ethnic group not achieving pay parity with white men at some level."-Payscale
"Black women have to work more than 19 months—until the very last day of July—to make as much as white, non-Hispanic men did in the previous 12-month calendar year."-National Womens Law Center
"Even after completing undergraduate and graduate degrees, black and Hispanic workers earned less than non-Hispanic white workers with the same, or often less, education."
- Roy Eduardo Kokoyachuk, ThinkNow Research
"The median white single parent has 2.2 times more wealth than the median black two-parent household and 1.9 times more wealth than the median Latino two-parent household."-DEMOS
"A recent study conducted by a team of researchers from the National Community Reinvestment Coalition, Utah State University, Brigham Young University, Rutgers University, and Lubin Research found that banks were three times more likely to request follow-up appointments with white business owners than better-qualified Black business owners, and the Black business owners were subjected to far greater personal and financial scrutiny compared to their equal or less creditworthy white counterparts."
"There has been a long-standing scourge of white supremacy and racial capitalism, as well as slavery and its legacy, in the U.S. in which two systems of law exist: one for white people and another for people of African descent. Under color of law, Black people are targeted, surveilled, brutalized, maimed and killed by law enforcement officers with impunity, as being Black is itself criminalized and devalued. Invariably, when a police killing of a person of African descent is known to have been unjustified, it is dismissed as merely the action or collective actions of “a few bad apples.” This excuse obscures the real problem, however, which is structural racism, embedded in the U.S. legal and policing systems."
-Report of the International Commission of Inquiry on Systemic Racist Police Violence against People of African Descent in the U.S.
"The burden of police violence fatalities in the USA is known to fall disproportionately on Black, Indigenous, and Hispanic populations. Recent studies suggest that over the life course, about one in every 1000 Black men are killed by the police in the USA, making them 2.5 times more likely to be killed by police than White men. Black women are about 1.4 times more likely to be killed by police than are White women. Systemic and direct racism, manifested in laws and policies as well as personal implicit biases, result in Black, Indigenous, and Hispanic Americans being the targets of police violence."
-The 2019 Global Burden of Diseases, Injuries, and Risk Factors Study
"The Commissioners find a prima facie case of Crimes against Humanity warranting an investigation by the International Criminal Court (ICC). The crimes under the Rome Statute include: Murder, Severe Deprivation of Physical Liberty, Torture, Persecution of people of African descent, and other Inhumane Acts, which occurred in the context of a widespread or systematic attack directed against the civilian population of Black people in the U.S." -Report of the International Commission of Inquiry on Systemic Racist Police Violence against People of African Descent in the U.S.
Racists like JGalt know all this is going on because they are the ones doing it. Yet he will sit behind his computer using words like oppression as if we are too stupid to see that the way racism is done now is not how it was done in the 1950's.