Posted on 04/04/2012 12:16:10 PM PDT by Free ThinkerNY
Can we pause for a moment and remember Trayon whose mother trademarked the name so she can cash in her son’s death.
Where’s the Benjamins, yo.
So now he’s a “self-proclaimed” neighborhood watch captain?? This is the biggest travesty I’ve seen in years!!!!
Beyond disgusting. Wasn’t rubbing MLK’s blood on his shirt and photo hogging enough for Jesse?
That DID happen - you know your history...
“Meanwhile, race whores like Sharpton”
==
I hope he brings his “skillets”.
I worked for a company headquartered in NJ that had branches throughout Virginia & Georgia; I would speak to the branch staff on a daily basis, and had great working relationships with them (this was in the early 1990s).
We had a meeting in the headquarters for much of the staff, and I was surprised that some of the people I talked to every day were black. You would never know it by their speech, knowledge, etc. (race never came up); I had only dealt with urban blacks in the north, and was pleasantly surprised. It taught me a lot; it is a shame they are lumped with their urban counterparts. I guess they are the 10% that didn’t vote for Obama.
Before Uncle Sam made the black father unnecessary, they’d come a long way; unfortunately their trek northward to work in the factories coincided with the shuttering of those factories as jobs left our shores, and while the original immigrants did well the next generation dealt with the urban blight (and lost a chance at a middle class lifestyle).
I’d imagine the same thing would have happened if the Irish came here and the transcontinental railroad was already built and the Civil War was already over.
Bravo! A real historian. Many don’t know about the government’s role in Black society. A very negative, destructive role, but, it did keep them down on the “plantation.” Another failed social experiment — at great destruction!
And, not many know about the great northern migration after the civil war, with the resultant urban blight.
Nothing important about our history is taught anymore!
Thanks; I actually got to see the later part of the story when I was in college. I was working as a janitor, and we had many unionized steam pressers that were Southern blacks. They were great workers, mostly in their fifties (this was in the late 1980s), but they would describe problems with their children that were just terrible; the same type of stable jobs weren’t available to that next generation, and it really impacted them - the people I worked with had come up from the Deep South in the 1960s when good jobs were plentiful (we were right outside of Newark), and were the last generation to have those opportunities.
Just a shame; today you see much of the same dilemna (and reaction) from a wider pool of Americans facing the same dim employment opportunities...
What you describe mioors what happened in a lot of industrial cities, DC included.
I was very curious after see a local short about a long-time photographer (African-American) from Silver Spring/Bethesda where they profiled a lot of his work in his community. There were many, many pictures of affluent looking African-Americans from the turn-of-the-19th century.
It begs the question, “what the heck happened?” Why the “New Deal,” public housing (government sponsored ghettos)and welfare, of course — lots of social engineering.
I saw a lot of this first hand as a very young boy in Marin City, California in the early 1950s. (You should google “Marin City”)
Googling it does give a similar story to what happened in cities in the northeast.
It is a shame to see how so much changed for the worse over the decades...
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