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To: 2ndDivisionVet

Black FEMALE beauty..?

Then why don’t black guys pursue them..?


2 posted on 06/14/2015 6:05:17 PM PDT by gaijin
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To: gaijin

Many black women are beautiful, but many of them have a deep anger that no man wants to touch.


6 posted on 06/14/2015 6:08:37 PM PDT by Jonty30 (What Islam and secularism have in common is that they are both death cults)
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To: gaijin

Then why don’t black guys pursue them..?
**************
Black men will take almost any white woman , even morbidly obese white women over a black woman with an attitude. Unattractive white women will latch onto a black man that treats her right... the same men that black women bulldoze with ‘tude and denigrate as weak.


54 posted on 06/14/2015 6:29:25 PM PDT by Neidermeyer ("Our courts should not be collection agencies for crooks." — John Waihee, Governor of Hawaii, 1986-)
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To: gaijin
"Then why don’t black guys pursue them.."

Because beauty, just like ugliness, is more than skin deep.

64 posted on 06/14/2015 6:32:39 PM PDT by semaj (.People get ready, Jesus is coming!)
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To: gaijin

Does anyone remember this book: “Black Like Me” https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black_Like_Me

Excerpt: Black Like Me

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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For the film based on the book, see Black Like Me (film).

Black Like Me

Black Like Me.jpg

Author
John Howard Griffin

Country
United States

Language
English

Publication date
1962

ISBN
978-0-451-19203-5

Black Like Me is a nonfiction book by journalist John Howard Griffin first published in 1961. Griffin was a white native of Dallas, Texas and the book describes his six-week experience travelling on Greyhound buses (occasionally hitchhiking) throughout the racially segregated states of Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama, and Georgia passing as a black man. Sepia Magazine financed the project in exchange for the right to print the account first as a series of articles.

Griffin kept a journal of his experiences; the 188-page diary was the genesis of the book.

At the time of the book’s writing in 1959, race relations in America were particularly strained and Griffin aimed to explain the difficulties that black people faced in certain areas. Under the care of a doctor, Griffin artificially darkened his skin to pass as a black man.

In 1964, a film version of Black Like Me starring James Whitmore was produced.[1]

Robert Bonazzi subsequently published the book Man in the Mirror: John Howard Griffin and the Story of Black Like Me.

The title of the book is taken from the last line of the Langston Hughes poem “Dream Variations”.


89 posted on 06/14/2015 7:15:29 PM PDT by Bronzy
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To: gaijin

99% of black women in pop culture considered beautiful have a lot of white blood


125 posted on 06/14/2015 9:49:23 PM PDT by wardaddy (Game of Thrones turned ugly)
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