Let go of it dude. He was a songwriter, and he wrote this classic. You’re grasping at straws at this point.
Let go of it dude. He was a songwriter, and he wrote this classic. You’re grasping at straws at this point.
Looks more Muslim to me, dunno why. Plus, they have a stronger sense of ownership of women overall, don’t they?
His picture would be included in this article, that’s for fuckin sure.
True. Unless it’s a white person killing a black person—then, that’s the default explanation.
“You be you” is so trite.
Well, so you say. I disagree. If a man is raped he’s raped, and the reason for it doesn’t make him less of a victim.
Half Asian, half Jewish, and gay. So you presume to speak for blacks. Got it.
God what a dough face.
Of course, but at much lower percentages than men, be they white, black, or Native American.
When 7 black churches in the south are burned down by the KKK in a single weekend
It’s men who are victims of police brutality at a hugely disproportionate rate. First, Native American men; second, black men; third, white men. Women of all races are vastly underrepresented compared to Native/Black/white men. But I assume to identify the problem as “men’s lives matter” is somehow racist. Even though…
So, police killing non-blacks is not part of the larger problem? Did you know that white men are far more likely than black women to be killed while in police custody? Why shouldn’t the problem be identified as “men’s lives matter,” based on this fact?
I’m not at a black lives matter event right now. Can I say “all lives matter,” without being problematic/racist? Is there any situation in which I can say that without being criticized? I don’t think so. Which is how it’s very different from saying “prostate cancer matters.” It is perfectly appropriate to say that in…
That was my point. Not all black Americans have the same experiences. Just because they would identify specifically with a country or tribe doesn’t make black Africans not black. Respectfully disagree.
You’d be wrong. Recent arrivals from African countries are black as well. I could provide other examples, but my point is made.
But people aren’t denigrated for focusing on colon cancer if they choose too. Yet people who want to focus on police brutality in general, regardless of the color of the victim, are somehow racist. Bad analogy.
Because black people, unlike Asians, are “all the same,” right?
So if two people are talking, and one says “I’d like to raise breast cancer awareness,” and the other says “I’d like to raise awareness about all cancers,” what would you call the second speaker—because obviously he’s the equivalent of a racist in this scenario, right? Would you call him misogynistic? Curious as to…
Not what your point is, but if you think men aren’t raped in the United States, I suggest you look into the prevalence of rape and sexual assault in prisons. Unless you think the incarcerated shouldn’t count in such statistics.
How is it categorically more advantageous to not be Asian-American in the U.S.?