But... The video is the bait-and-switch. To spoil it in the article would defeat the entire purpose...
But... The video is the bait-and-switch. To spoil it in the article would defeat the entire purpose...
Hmmph... I didn’t watch it, but apparently the Crash 2 speedrun was a bit of a trainwreck. Shame.
you know, she just came there to have a good time, and honestly...
Barry Switzer’s quote, “Some people are born on third base and go through life thinking they hit a triple,” is something that finally got the idea of my own privilege through my thick, white skull.
The best part was when a white student couldn’t get scholarships because she thought POC were getting them and when the host actually gave her facts that infact white people were actually getting the overwhelming majority of scholarships she said she felt “attacked”
Disagree, “Real World” was amazing at the beginning but it’s dead now, so so dead.
Do.. we need to get you a history book about the history of European colonialism in Africa? Or can I just direct you to South Africa in the 20th century as an example?
Myriad reasons but white people fucking shit up is on there.
And why do The Finns eat so much fish?!
White women that blame minorities for not getting into college or getting scholarships are the worst. As a white woman you benefit from affirmative action the most.
Are you that ignorant? Have you never heard of colonization and oppression? Do you have any idea about the history of the African continent? South Africa? Rhodesia?
I look forward to a fruitful and positive discussion in the comments...
We white people can start by not being so defensive every time someone brings up race. We can’t have a conversation if we take every mention as a personal attack. Katy in the piece above, and the initial Taylor Swift response to Nicki Minaj, show us that we can end the conversation before joining it.
can’t argue with this logic
“It means that the press is not in tune with the community it claims to represent.”
Oh it’s talked about, but it’s just painted in the form of a book or movie about a dude’s fucked-up relationship with his father and how he goes on a deep, spiritual journey in order to reconcile the emotional trauma it caused him because like you said, we’re supposed to believe that men are strong and us ladies are…
It’s funny because no one ever talks about how men have daddy issues and there’s lots of them. But of course we’re supposed to believe that men can overcome anything and women are fragile messes if they don’t have a strong male figure in their life.
Gotta protect dem delicate menzes from duh hysterical wimminzes.