macromanjr
MacroManJr
macromanjr

I don’t see anything in RichWardJr’s comment suggesting otherwise than what you’ve stated.

I do, however, read a prompted reason why this news isn’t inherently “good.”

A relief to wildlife efforts, sure. He has nobody to blame but himself, sure. We don’t personally sympathize with the man’s lifestyle and choices, sure.

I think RichWardJr’s point was that this isn’t particularly “good.”

It wasn’t good what the man did for a living. But it’s not “good” that his family is now without him in their life.

Man can be a complete prick, but I’ll never celebrate someone’s death, particularly when the people they leave behind had nothing to do

Americans need to get with the program about “cunt.”

Seriously, I’ll never understand why “pussy,” “prick,” “twat,” “dick,” “dickwad,” and “douche bag” are all readily acceptable and widely used by many, on a daily basis.

But as soon as you get to “cunt”—GASP! STOP THE PRESSES!

This word which means the exact same thing

Sounds a bit like that horrible children’s song “Animal Fair.”

I thought the same thing, the very first time I heard of the feature described better than what I originally imagined “HD rumble” to be on the Nintendo Switch.

I don’t cheer or admire her one bit.

She knew he was a prick, even before she married him. (Hell, she’s part of the reason he proved to be a prick, when he cheated on his second wife!)

You speak too easily. Lawyers ain’t cheap. And this issue shouldn’t cost the family anything just to resolve, really. The principle of the matter.

The curse of being black in a non-black society at large.

Even in the seeming “little” things, we just can’t catch a break.

And our black girls and women get the worst of it.

White society: “Why are black people so touchy about their hair?”

Black society: “Because you guys are so touchy about our hair. Sometimes even literally.”

I’m late on responding to this article, but it’s still relevant here:

Nah, y’all lost me with Winehouse and Jojo as examples.

I’d assume that most NFL fans aren’t tuning into TV at all, and just getting updates on their phone.

Because many folks are cutting cable and relying more on mobile junk than enjoying the occasion of having live TV on in the living room.

Which is sadly why ESPN’s been resorting to his ESPN-level clowning, in a vain

I pay too close attention to trends, because trends tell a narrative and reveal social sentiment and societal direction.

I don’t just see race first. But I’m no fool about the phenomenon of observable trends regarding race, either.

Too often, black men speak easier about the matter here, because we’re usually with the

Both he (Bennett) and you (Judge) failed as writers.

The tone-deafness and false self-righteous “Can’t we all just get along?” narrative tone by Bennett are not lost on me. I know Bennett down to his character, with his writing. I know his whole complacent life, based on his tone.

The typical “WWMLKD?” angle is as

Sweet home Alabama. Where the skies are so gloomy, as they’ve always been, because that’s Alabama for ya’.

I’m from Georgia, myself. As a kid, Alabama always gave a negative connotation. Not that Georgia was always a whole lot better.

I’m not sure whether to be more embarrassed as a male, or to be more embarrassed as a black individual.

Everything about that whole incident was completely stupid and unnecessary.

But I’m going to put a bit more weight on the ladies here, on the matter of harming perception about black society.

Not to undermine what the

I’m not assuming he’s leaving his wife just specifically for a white woman. I don’t care, to be honest. Their business, not mine.

What I do care about is how this guy stays in the public eye and ear so much about black issues and elevating black women...and now he seems to be exhibiting the trend of famous black men

Thank you for reading.

The way Obama failed to help urban regions in like his own Chicago, he might as well have been completely white.

I’m glad he was an upstanding and well-spoken black man, with he and his black family representing the Office with poise and class.

He wasn’t afraid to voice his support for black matters. But the guy was

I couldn’t care less about his personal life. I don’t care about romance and relationships. I’m not even too surprised about it, to be honest. You’re right that it’s his business. And as male, I’m not one to socially cock-block another dude.