Wednesday, July 15, 2015

Annnnnd, This is what I'm Talking About With Tutu

Good Morning from I Don't Like Desmond Tutu in Upper Darby!

Some of you will say "Damn, Shawn!? What the fuck, man? The guy could be on His Deathbed and shit!? How the fuck can you"

BECAUSE HE SET US ALL BACK! NOT JUST BLACK SOUTH AFRICANS BUT ALL BLACK PEOPLE EVERYWHERE! WITH MORE OF THAT BLACK PEOPLE WILL GET JUSTICE ONCE WE'RE COLD AND DEAD AND THE GROUND! UNTIL THEN!? SURE YOU CAN FUCK US IN THE ASS! WE LOVE IT!
-_-
How's that for graphic.
SENSATIONALIST!?
YES!
But is what I just said, true?

YOU BET YOUR BLACK-ASS!
AND FUCK LEE DANIELS YOU FUCKIN NIGGER-TRAITOR!
Fuck you worried about PUSHING YOUR DUMB-ASS GAY-AGENDA WHEN BLACK PEOPLE ARE GETTIN SLAUGHTERED LEFT AND RIGHT EVERYWHERE AND YOU'RE WORRIED ABOUT WHO THE FUCK YOU CAN FUCK IN THE ASS OR GET FUCKED IN THE ASS BY ANOTHER MAN FOR!
--_--
FUCKIN PRIORITIES, PEOPLE!

Now? Watch this shit.
Me?
I don't GIVE A FUCK!
About if You're Gay OR WHATEVER!?
But here is a FACT!
Only a FOOL worries about their SMALL SUB-FACTION, when THE MASS-MAJORITY ARE BEING ERADICATED!

The stabilization of Our People AS A WHOLE. Comes FIRST. With that STABILIZATION? Then we can SIT DOWN IN PEACE AND HAMMER OUT HOW THE FUCK WE WANT OUR SOCIETIES AND NATIONS TO GO. When we are stable as a People? Then we can sit down and talk amongst ourselves and nobody is CLUBBING EACH OTHER IN THE BACK OF THE BRAIN! Because they can't find jobs! Are stressed the fuck out to the point of desperation where they will do anything, ANYTHING. To get some fuckin money. To get some job opportunities. To have a roof over their heads and clothes on their backs!

Destabilized People, are a DESPERATE PEOPLE, which makes for an EASILY EXPLOITABLE PEOPLE. That's what I am talking about. The survival of THE MASSES OF BLACKS, trumps the personal sexual-orientation of A SMALL PERCENTAGE OF BLACKS. But with us being UNSTABLE AS A PEOPLE? Then shit becomes BACKWARDS. The Minority Members of Our People, believe that somehow they can survive INTACT. By pushing THEIR NARROW AGENDA. NEVER MIND THAT GAYS LIKE SAME-SEX GENDER SO THEY CAN'T EVEN REPLACE OUR NUMBERS IF THEY'RE ABLE TO ACHIEVE THEIR NARROW-AGENDA!

At the expense of the rest of us who are heterosexual.
Only desperate-fools miss something as simple as that.
You always build around the stability of WHAT AND WHO YOU KNOW IS MOST IMPORTANT. Then when THAT IS DONE?
Now?
You can get into your likes, dislikes, fetishes, fantasies, or whatever else.

Meanwhile?

Here is further proof of what I said where Tutu NEVER CONFRONTS anyone from the Former White-Apartheid Regime about DID THEY USE PROJECT COAST TO INFECT THE BLACK SOUTH AFRICAN POPULATION WITH HIV/AIDS! Note how he attacks M'BEKI AND EVERYTHING ELSE?! BUT HIS BITCH-ASS WON'T GO NEAR THE FUCKIN WHITES THOUGH! Then he talks about how shit is a cakewalk in South Africa in comparison to Russia and the Middle East. But the comparison HE IS MAKING AND HOPES YOU MISS IS!?

Yo, in THOSE PLACES!? You can't be RAPING-N-MOLESTING AND MURDERING AND SHIT! AND THEN THINKING YOU CAN COVER THAT CRAP UP AND KEEP QUIET ABOUT IT OR JUST LET THE SHIT GO ON, FUCK OUTTA HERE! When people commit fuckin CRIMES!? YOU HAVE TO NIP THAT SHIT IN THE BUD! Otherwise you got free-flowing CRIME-FLOWERS OF CRAB-GRASS! ALL OVER YOUR FUCKIN PROVERBIAL COUNTRY'S LAWN!

People have to know that when they break the law then they're gonna be disciplined and HELD ACCOUNTABLE. Controlled-anarchy IS STILL anarchy!

Tutu Seeks Open Dialogue For S. Africa

Cleric Calls For Public Debate To Confront Nation's Problems

November 25, 2004|By Laurie Goering Chicago Tribune
JOHANNESBURG, South Africa — A decade after the end of apartheid, South Africa is a remarkable success story of a nation overcoming its past. But to confront the country's lingering threats -- AIDS, widespread poverty, crime, racism -- South Africa's government must begin encouraging public debate rather than discouraging criticism as unpatriotic.
That was the message Tuesday from South Africa's retired Archbishop Desmond Tutu, who won a Nobel Peace Prize for his contributions to the anti-apartheid struggle and who is considered, along with former President Nelson Mandela, a leading moral visionary in the country.
"Truth can't suffer from being challenged and examined," the 73-year-old cleric noted as part of a lecture in Johannesburg sponsored by the Nelson Mandela Foundation. South Africa, he said, should seek strong public discussion on divisive topics from affirmative action to policy on neighboring Zimbabwe rather than encourage "obsequious conformity."
Tutu's remarks come after a widely publicized flap last month between President Thabo Mbeki and political critics who questioned the role that widespread rape may be playing in spreading the country's HIV-AIDS epidemic.
South Africa has one of the world's highest rates of rape, according to police statistics, and the largest number of people infected with the AIDS virus of any nation in the world. But Mbeki responded to questions about the problem with a furious attack on white opposition members in parliament, insisting that only "people whose minds have been corrupted by the disease of racism accuse us, the black people of South Africa, Africa and the world, as being ... diseased, corrupt, violent, amoral, sexually depraved, animalistic, savage -- and rapists."
Critics, in turn, have accused the president of trying to stifle debate by raising charges of racism whenever his government's performance is questioned. Mbeki's government has been broadly criticized, particularly for its handling of the AIDS epidemic and for refusing to criticize the administration of President Robert Mugabe in Zimbabwe.
Tutu has called Mugabe a typical African dictator, prompting the Zimbabwean leader to furiously dismiss the outspoken cleric as "an angry, evil and embittered little bishop."
Tutu also said he was concerned that affirmative action programs in South Africa had left behind most people in "grueling, demeaning, dehumanizing poverty" while benefiting primarily a small group of government-connected elite.
Under pressure from South Africa's government, private companies are selling shares to black owners in an effort to spread the economic benefits and alleviate poverty. But so far a small group of rich South Africans, those with connections or the capital to finance deals, have been the main beneficiaries.
Tutu called that a violation of one of the anti-apartheid struggle themes, that "the people shall share."
He particularly criticized black South Africans who speak out against broader welfare programs for the poor while benefiting from affirmative action programs themselves.
Still, he said, South Africa has overcome so many problems since the apartheid days that it should serve as an example to other troubled parts of the world as to how much can change.
"We South Africans tend to sell ourselves short" and downplay successes, Tutu said. But the nation successfully averted a feared race war, put together a Truth and Reconciliation Commission that now is a model for other nations, created one of the most liberal constitutions in the world and nearly overnight dumped its pariah status for international acclaim.
"Of course we have problems -- serious, debilitating problems," Tutu said. But despite dire predictions about the end of apartheid, "as far as I can make out the sky is still firmly in place," he joked. Compared with the recent bloody hostage crisis in Russia and upheaval in the Middle East, "what occurs in South Africa looks like a Sunday school picnic," he added.
He said he hoped that South Africa could be a "beacon of hope for the rest of the world" that seemingly intractable problems have solutions, he said. But he warned that other nations should know, following South Africa's example, that "there is no future without forgiveness in the world."
The Chicago Tribune is a Tribune Co. newspaper.


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