This is a straw man argument! Since the civil rights acts (passed by Republicans by the way) there were few to no limitations on what a person could do in this country. The only limits were those imposed by the individual by himself or herself. The Blacks think they are the only ones that have ever been discriminated on well I hate to tell you but there are few few who have not been discriminated on. I was discriminated on because I served my country in Vietnam, but the difference between those the whine today and real people is that some of us move on and take care of our wife’s and kids while the whiners sit home and watch the tube and do drugs and drink! Even the black leaders in this country are starting to complain about the backs (inner city thugs) the rest are just trying to get by like the rest of us!
University of Pennsylvania Associate English Professor Salamishah Tillet was on Melissa McTampon Earring’s show on MSNBC, and while they all discussed the Ferguson case, she was asked about black on black violence – “what about black men and boys killing other black men and boys?” specifically. And of course, she deflected. She dodged the question, instead moving the discussion to the the notion of slavery and “state-sanctioned violence” in this country.
She said that “you have individuals, as in the case with Renisha McBride or Trayvon Martin, individual citizens who feel complete power to just kill black people as they see them, even if they’re no real threat. In Renisha McBride’s case, she was asking for help. So, what does it mean to be part of a country from its very beginning…that was predicated on black lives not mattering, or mattering only in the service of property or service…
View original post 183 more words