Posted on 07/18/2016 12:40:08 PM PDT by jazusamo
Men are highly underrepresented as knitters, babysitters, flight attendants, secretaries and nurses. Among other things.
Do we need national government programs and ngo social groups along with celebrity awareness commercials to right these wrongs too?
It works in the last man on earth scenario. Or near to.
But that is about it.
Was it that hot russian gal who plays chess?
All men are created equal, but your benevolent omnipotent government stepped in and has now corrected all that.
And women, they are a special protected class with more equality than men. All the perks of equality and none of the responsibilities that go along with it. Even special laws that give them protections and entitlements no man has, because he’s just a man.
It’s just marvelous.
I was in a chess club in junior high. We would have fallen on our knees and worshipped any girl that wanted to join.
It isn't just the commercials. How many TV shows have some black in the role of a scientist or other type of intellectual leader? Medical shows are particularly given to this type of presentation.
Someone who was an engineering major once told me that the "PRG" (pretty girl ratio) drastically declines the higher up you go in that field.
In January 1973, Norwich allowed Special Forces A-Teams from the 10th Special Forces Group at Fort Devens, MA to use their Ski Slopes for Ski Training, and I went almost directly from the jungles of Vietnam to the frozen ski slopes of Norwich University for a winter experience I’ll never forget.
Yes. I was fortunate to have played in music groups with Calvin Simmons while in high school in San Francisco in the 1960s. Calvin was black and extremely musically gifted, so much so that our band teacher allowed Calvin to student conduct the orchestra, band and jazz band. After graduation, Calvin got a prestigious scholarship to the finest academies, became assistant conductor at the Los Angeles Philharmonic, then the musical director of the Oakland Symphony Orchestra, all by the time he was 28. Became the youngest conductor of a large city orchestra in the nation, as well as being the first black. Unfortunately he drowned at the age of 32. I happen to own a vinyl record we cut when our high school jazz band scored tops in a California music competition (CMEA), with Calvin both conducting or soloing on the piano. He was a genius at playing several instruments.
Hou, Yifan - rating 2653
Ju, Wenjun - rating 2578
Koneru, Humpy - rating 2575
Kosteniuk, Alexandra - rating 2549
I cannot imagine which player you might be thinking of.
How old are you? You really need to talk to your grandfather or an older relative about Count Basie, Duke Ellington and his Orchestra and scores of others which were popular from the 1920s to 1960s. Most of them never existed, according to today's libtards, because they were Republicans!
Too bad there is little interest in classical music in the black community. Hell, there's little interest in most communities. About the only time I see blacks today in classical music is in opera. There are some very fine black opera singers.
I'm talking about symphony orchesras, dude! Ever hear of Beethoven, Mozart, Brahms? Hell yes, I know who Count Basie and Duke Ellington are (were-they're dead now). They were great musicians, but they were jazz/pop musicians.
rarest athlete.......
Black Orchestra conductor who skis
True. Very true.
But I didn’t cut her any slack. Had taken her apart about 9 times before. She was good so that was fun.
However, that game she just flat out beat me because I made a minor mistake that she expertly exploited. Frankly, that was fun too.
Dang. My informal rating is about 2200. They’d all kick my butt.
PS Would like to try with Alexandra! Wow, beauty and brains!!!
Nope. Just a local Texan.
I was very fortunate to have attended Balboa High School in San Francisco in the mid-1960s. Balboa was a mixed-race school, perhaps 30 percent black. The music teacher, Sid Walker was about the coolest hippest teacher I ever had. He worked extremely well in introducing not only jazz but classical music to all of us. He would often set up a fine stereo sound system in our Little Theater and have us just listen to different records, jazz to classical to rock. Half the members of the orchestra, jazz band and regular band were black, and many became very talented under Sid Walker. Calvin was equally proficient at jazz as he was at classical music. Here's a link to an article by a friend Wayne Wallace (well-known black jazz trombonist) who played alongside myself in the jazz band, where he mentions Sid Walker and Calvin Simmons (a few paragraphs down):
http://www.chipboaz.com/blog/2011/01/27/latin-jazz-conversations-wayne-wallace-part-2/
Wayne also makes mention that some of the members of "Malo" and "Sly and the Family Stone" had attended Balboa at the time. I happened to belong to several rock bands, one with members that formed Malo shortly after I left the music scene to concentrate on other things. There were lots of blacks engaged in the music scene, including classical, back then in the 1960s and 1970s. Not so much now.
Actually, yes. More in fact.
You can make million$ playing chess.
But you have to be very very very good. I’m good, but not nearly that good.
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