[quote=pri_dk]Allan, you sure have a lot to say about black people.
And always have something so say about Obama.
Here’s the little voice inside Allan’s head: Obama, Obama, Obmma, OBAMA, Obama…
Seriously dude, put down the Drudge Report and consider for a moment that not every issue in the world is about Obama.
Lots of people, on both sides of the political spectrum had a WTF response when they first heard this story. Sure it’s become polarized now, but that’s just the partisan media doing it’s thing.
But you know the story is not about a self-defense law, or the influence of the gun lobby, or the limits of neighborhood watch groups, or any of dozen other issues…
Of course not, it’s about…OBAMA![/quote]
Pri: Ah, dangling the bait again, are we?
I don’t have a lot to say about black people. I simply cited an FBI report and made mention of the pervasive glorification of violence within contemporary black culture. Yes, I’m quite sure that’s racist, as now defined by Political Correctness and the grievance culture we live in.
Sorry, that dog won’t hunt. Whites in this country are so shit-scared of being labeled with the “R” word, that they won’t speak up and state the obvious for fear of it.
I don’t read Drudge (never have) and don’t listen to Limbaugh (never have). Obama CHOSE to involve himself in this situation and CHOSE to personalize it by remarking on how Trayvon looked like him. Doesn’t get more personal than that, does it? All the while remaining TOTALLY silent about the real scourge of blacks in America (which, BTW, isn’t dimwitted half-white neighborhood watch idiots).
Because that would mean admitting the failure of government policies that have effectively destroyed the black family in America and have resulted in a 73% out-of-wedlock birthrate, a high school dropout rate in excess of 50% and the creation of a permanent underclass in this country.
“There is nothing more painful to me at this stage in my life than to walk down the street and hear footsteps and start thinking about robbery. Then look around and see somebody white and feel relieved…. After all we have been through. Just to think we can’t walk down our own streets, how humiliating.” Jesse Jackson