Posted on 06/13/2010 7:19:53 PM PDT by Las Vegas Ron
WASHINGTON A bizarre and baffling condition has seized American society and is spreading in pandemic proportions. But no one dare utter its name because this sickness is rooted in the most vulgar of four-letter words: race.
So charges a new book by author Erik Rush, who doesn't refrain from using the new N-word Negrophilia "undue and inordinate affinity for blacks," to describe the mindset that he says is behind a pervasive manipulation expertly employed and exploited to divide and destroy American society.
(Excerpt) Read more at wnd.com ...
I don't wanna say how I read that. I'll just ask you to consider what other letters bear a typographic resemblance to 'l' .
it’s still called racism when you specifically hire people from one race regardless of their qualifications (**cough** 0bama **cough**). which race is irrelevant.
When I search the term, I don’t find any references to the originators of it, as it was simply identified as “slang”. I was surprised at the depth of contempt that was expressed for those so identified, mostly from the “white side” I think. I always thought the term was simply descriptive.
I might add that there was a “wigger” character in the movie House Party, which for some reason I was inspired to view in the theater. In a notable scene, this guy “knew the answer” in some kind of radical black history class, and was given due respect by the radical black history prof, and a glance by DJ Jazzy Jeff indicating a reconsideration, as the question had been posed to him, and he didn’t know the answer. ( It was something about Malcolm X, I believe. ) Not to make too much of it, but that was it.
I have a very close friend who happens to be black, and we always tease about race for the fun of it. I often refer to him a “niggeriffic”. He just usually tells me I was born black, but can’t figure out I got so short and white.
'course that was Play ( Christopher Martin ) of Kid 'n Play ... don't say it! ... don't even think it!
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