Monday, November 9, 2015

Fighting Fires without Fire Departments....

GOOD MORNING FROM UPPER DARBY!
I just finished reading this article about yet another Black Boycott of something White Controlled or Dominated, where the solution is to simply DIVERT TIME, FUNDS/MONEY, RESOURCES AND INTEREST! Into SOMETHING BLACK OR THE BLACK EQUIVALENT. And that ends that. This INCESSANT NEED to try to FORCE Whites to DO THIS AND DO THAT, yawn.

It's honestly PATHETIC.
And THE ONLY TIME you even ATTEMPT to force Whites to DO THIS OR DO THAT is when you have NO CHOICE. But? When you have a choice? Pfft! Take your Black ass and GO ELSEWHERE, PREFERABLY?! Where OTHER BLACK PEOPLE ARE. But one of OUR biggest problems is that WE'RE NOT COMMITTED ENOUGH TO INVESTING TIME, ENERGY, WEALTH, MAN-&-WOMANPOWER! INTO FIXING UP BLACK OWNED, BLACK CONTROLLED, DOMINATED, AREAS AND ESSENTIAL SERVICES!

Whites have BETTER THIS AND THAT from having STOLEN AT THE STARTING LINE AND THEN SYSTEMATICALLY TRYING TO KEEP THEIR SURPLUS HEAD START BY GETTING US TO INVEST INTO THEIR GOODS AND SERVICES, ETC! Which, TECHNICALLY SPEAKING, is what THEY ARE SUPPOSED TO DO. Not breaking news that you don't GIVE UP AN ADVANTAGE THAT YOU MURDERED AND LIED TO GET.

So when I READ THIS ARTICLE? It is MISDIRECTED ENERGY;

University of Missouri black football players pledge boycott over racism concerns

Reuters 
By Kevin Murphy
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (Reuters) - Black players on the University of Missouri football team say they will boycott practices, meetings and games until the university dismisses its president or he quits, contending he has not responded adequately to concerns about racism on campus.
The move comes as a hunger strike staged by a graduate student to protest racism enters a second week. A majority of the 35,000 students at the university in Columbia, about 125 miles (200 km) west of St. Louis, are white.
“The athletes of color on the University of Missouri football team truly believe ‘injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere,’" the university’s Legion of Black Collegians said in a statement on Twitter.
"We will no longer participate in any football-related activities until President Tim Wolfe resigns or is removed due to his negligence toward marginalized students’ experience,” it said. More than 30 players were in a photograph linked to the statement posted on Saturday night.
In a statement released on Sunday afternoon, Wolfe indicated no intention to resign but said solutions to the students' concerns were being discussed.
"It is clear to all of us that change is needed, and we appreciate the thoughtfulness and passion which have gone into the sharing of concerns," Wolfe said.
The university has been working on "a systemwide diversity and inclusion strategy" to be released in April 2016, Wolfe said.
Protests on campus have been led by a group called ConcernedStudent1950. It said black students had endured racial slurs and believed white favoritism existed in many aspects of campus life.
Racial tensions in Missouri flared last year when a white policeman in the St. Louis suburb of Ferguson killed an unarmed black teenager and a grand jury brought no charges against him. The shooting helped kindle national soul-searching about the treatment of blacks by law enforcement.
In Columbia last month, activists blocked Wolfe’s car at a homecoming parade and said he then bumped one of the protesters with the vehicle.
In a statement on Friday, Wolfe apologized.
“My behavior seemed like I did not care,” Wolfe said. “That was not my intention. I was caught off-guard in that moment. Nonetheless, had I gotten out of the car to acknowledge the students and talk with them perhaps we wouldn’t be where we are today.”
Wolfe acknowledged that racism existed on campus and vowed to address it. Wolfe said he met with Jonathan Butler, the student on the hunger strike. “His voice for social justice is important and powerful,” Wolfe said in the statement.
The Missouri football team, which has won four games and lost five this season, will play Brigham Young University next Saturday.
“We all must come together with leaders from across our campus to tackle these challenging issues, and we support our student-athletes’ right to do so,” the athletic department said in a statement on Saturday.
(Reporting By Kevin Murphy in Kansas City, Mo., Editing by Peter Cooney)

No comments:

Post a Comment