- This topic has 925 replies, 34 voices, and was last updated 13 years, 10 months ago by Arraya.
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January 14, 2011 at 9:23 AM #654661January 14, 2011 at 9:38 AM #653564ArrayaParticipant
[quote=Allan from Fallbrook][quote=Arraya]
Actually, “The Man” is sixties radical black community speak for “the establishment” and most definitely “leftist”.[/quote]Does that mean, as a white guy, that I have to stop bitching about “The Man” and how he’s keeping me down?[/quote]
lol… you have to admit how Ironic it is that the tea party has adopted that sort of speak. I went to the Glenn Beck rally and, in an Orwellian fashion, he conflated the civil rights movement with the plight of the middle class white people today under the oppressive Obama regime. Ironically, he picked MLK day to do it. I don’t think that was a mistake .
January 14, 2011 at 9:38 AM #653631ArrayaParticipant[quote=Allan from Fallbrook][quote=Arraya]
Actually, “The Man” is sixties radical black community speak for “the establishment” and most definitely “leftist”.[/quote]Does that mean, as a white guy, that I have to stop bitching about “The Man” and how he’s keeping me down?[/quote]
lol… you have to admit how Ironic it is that the tea party has adopted that sort of speak. I went to the Glenn Beck rally and, in an Orwellian fashion, he conflated the civil rights movement with the plight of the middle class white people today under the oppressive Obama regime. Ironically, he picked MLK day to do it. I don’t think that was a mistake .
January 14, 2011 at 9:38 AM #654218ArrayaParticipant[quote=Allan from Fallbrook][quote=Arraya]
Actually, “The Man” is sixties radical black community speak for “the establishment” and most definitely “leftist”.[/quote]Does that mean, as a white guy, that I have to stop bitching about “The Man” and how he’s keeping me down?[/quote]
lol… you have to admit how Ironic it is that the tea party has adopted that sort of speak. I went to the Glenn Beck rally and, in an Orwellian fashion, he conflated the civil rights movement with the plight of the middle class white people today under the oppressive Obama regime. Ironically, he picked MLK day to do it. I don’t think that was a mistake .
January 14, 2011 at 9:38 AM #654352ArrayaParticipant[quote=Allan from Fallbrook][quote=Arraya]
Actually, “The Man” is sixties radical black community speak for “the establishment” and most definitely “leftist”.[/quote]Does that mean, as a white guy, that I have to stop bitching about “The Man” and how he’s keeping me down?[/quote]
lol… you have to admit how Ironic it is that the tea party has adopted that sort of speak. I went to the Glenn Beck rally and, in an Orwellian fashion, he conflated the civil rights movement with the plight of the middle class white people today under the oppressive Obama regime. Ironically, he picked MLK day to do it. I don’t think that was a mistake .
January 14, 2011 at 9:38 AM #654679ArrayaParticipant[quote=Allan from Fallbrook][quote=Arraya]
Actually, “The Man” is sixties radical black community speak for “the establishment” and most definitely “leftist”.[/quote]Does that mean, as a white guy, that I have to stop bitching about “The Man” and how he’s keeping me down?[/quote]
lol… you have to admit how Ironic it is that the tea party has adopted that sort of speak. I went to the Glenn Beck rally and, in an Orwellian fashion, he conflated the civil rights movement with the plight of the middle class white people today under the oppressive Obama regime. Ironically, he picked MLK day to do it. I don’t think that was a mistake .
January 14, 2011 at 9:39 AM #653557bubba99ParticipantPoint taken, blaming any rable rouser for violence is misplaced. But blaming Bernake for the greatest robbery in history would probably be appropriate.
January 14, 2011 at 9:39 AM #653622bubba99ParticipantPoint taken, blaming any rable rouser for violence is misplaced. But blaming Bernake for the greatest robbery in history would probably be appropriate.
January 14, 2011 at 9:39 AM #654210bubba99ParticipantPoint taken, blaming any rable rouser for violence is misplaced. But blaming Bernake for the greatest robbery in history would probably be appropriate.
January 14, 2011 at 9:39 AM #654343bubba99ParticipantPoint taken, blaming any rable rouser for violence is misplaced. But blaming Bernake for the greatest robbery in history would probably be appropriate.
January 14, 2011 at 9:39 AM #654671bubba99ParticipantPoint taken, blaming any rable rouser for violence is misplaced. But blaming Bernake for the greatest robbery in history would probably be appropriate.
January 14, 2011 at 9:43 AM #653579briansd1Guest[quote=jstoesz]
As a society we need to look past what “caused” someone to do something. Bad people do bad things, because they are bad people. They could become good people, but they choose to be bad. We should not care if some serial rapist was molested as a child. Or why some wife beaters actions are not so bad because, after all, his dad beat him too. Move past the vitriol rhetoric and place the blame solely and absolutely on the bad person…Stop looking for other people to ensnare who have nothing to do with it.
[/quote]Do you think that Muslim terrorists are not motivated by their imams?
Are the imams who preach jihad at fault at all?
January 14, 2011 at 9:43 AM #653646briansd1Guest[quote=jstoesz]
As a society we need to look past what “caused” someone to do something. Bad people do bad things, because they are bad people. They could become good people, but they choose to be bad. We should not care if some serial rapist was molested as a child. Or why some wife beaters actions are not so bad because, after all, his dad beat him too. Move past the vitriol rhetoric and place the blame solely and absolutely on the bad person…Stop looking for other people to ensnare who have nothing to do with it.
[/quote]Do you think that Muslim terrorists are not motivated by their imams?
Are the imams who preach jihad at fault at all?
January 14, 2011 at 9:43 AM #654233briansd1Guest[quote=jstoesz]
As a society we need to look past what “caused” someone to do something. Bad people do bad things, because they are bad people. They could become good people, but they choose to be bad. We should not care if some serial rapist was molested as a child. Or why some wife beaters actions are not so bad because, after all, his dad beat him too. Move past the vitriol rhetoric and place the blame solely and absolutely on the bad person…Stop looking for other people to ensnare who have nothing to do with it.
[/quote]Do you think that Muslim terrorists are not motivated by their imams?
Are the imams who preach jihad at fault at all?
January 14, 2011 at 9:43 AM #654367briansd1Guest[quote=jstoesz]
As a society we need to look past what “caused” someone to do something. Bad people do bad things, because they are bad people. They could become good people, but they choose to be bad. We should not care if some serial rapist was molested as a child. Or why some wife beaters actions are not so bad because, after all, his dad beat him too. Move past the vitriol rhetoric and place the blame solely and absolutely on the bad person…Stop looking for other people to ensnare who have nothing to do with it.
[/quote]Do you think that Muslim terrorists are not motivated by their imams?
Are the imams who preach jihad at fault at all?
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