Never tell me America is racist: An open letter to protesters

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"And now I can legitimately classify you as racist. "

When all else has failed the white racist always want to call somebody black a racist.

Read my sig line Templar because it describes YOU.

Actually, it seems like a classic case of self projection on Malcolm X's part. And yours.
 
Since very few people are rioting, it's really a non issue.

That wasn't the case last week.

It was the case last week.
 
" He saw the rioting as immoral. "

You dont know what youre talking about because youre white.
I know Black people that marched and worked with him.

YOU LOSE.

And now I can legitimately classify you as racist. You are the very thing you hate.

I pity you.
"And now I can legitimately classify you as racist. "

Whatever makes you feel better about this ass whippin you took. :)

Is all that boasting a tactic to distract you from the pain of the ass whooping I gave you?

Looks like it.
Lol! You took a severe ass whipping son.

Elaborate. Don't tell me to search the thread, simply elaborate how you "whooped" anyone's ass, let alone mine.

The onus is on you to prove what point you or Asclepias made that makes you so confident that you won.

I'm curious to know.
 
"And now I can legitimately classify you as racist. "

When all else has failed the white racist always want to call somebody black a racist.

Read my sig line Templar because it describes YOU.

Actually, it seems like a classic case of self projection on Malcolm X's part. And yours.
Actually it's what you're doing. You have been shown what whites have done. Instead of accepting responsibility, you try claiming we are the ones that hate. Just like Malcolm said. And he said that over 50 years ago, proving that you are doing what those who came before you have done.
 
" He saw the rioting as immoral. "

You dont know what youre talking about because youre white.
I know Black people that marched and worked with him.

YOU LOSE.

And now I can legitimately classify you as racist. You are the very thing you hate.

I pity you.
"And now I can legitimately classify you as racist. "

Whatever makes you feel better about this ass whippin you took. :)

Is all that boasting a tactic to distract you from the pain of the ass whooping I gave you?

Looks like it.
The boasting is to ingrain this ass whippin in your brain until it becomes like a reflex or part of your autonomic system. Every time you go to say some stupid shit you will feel a pinprick of pain. That pain should remind you not to say anything stupid. I'll be watching you. Dont fuck up Temp. Dont fuck up.

watching_you_cat.png
 
The discussion isnt about who owns the issue.

Oh, is that so?

Then why are you making demands of society right now? Why aren't you speaking out about all the racial oppression instead of just yours?
Yes thats so. You need look no further than your own OP.

I havent been making demands of society at large. I may have kicked a racists ass 1 or 12 times times so they would get out of my way but typically I ignore most whites. Too busy building up and educating my own people.

I cant make demands for other people. They have to do that for themselves. I'm worried about my people so thats what I am going to speak on. The situation that my people are in is the worst in my estimation. If you dont like that then that sounds like more of a you problem.
You’re a paper tiger, like your boyfriend MarcATL. All talk. Very amusing.
 
" He saw the rioting as immoral. "

You dont know what youre talking about because youre white.
I know Black people that marched and worked with him.

YOU LOSE.

And now I can legitimately classify you as racist. You are the very thing you hate.

I pity you.
"And now I can legitimately classify you as racist. "

Whatever makes you feel better about this ass whippin you took. :)
" He saw the rioting as immoral. "

You dont know what youre talking about because youre white.
I know Black people that marched and worked with him.

YOU LOSE.

And now I can legitimately classify you as racist. You are the very thing you hate.

I pity you.
"And now I can legitimately classify you as racist. "

Whatever makes you feel better about this ass whippin you took. :)

Is all that boasting a tactic to distract you from the pain of the ass whooping I gave you?

Looks like it.
Lol! You took a severe ass whipping son.

If that's what y'all consider an ass whippin', you must be the Black Knights!

 
You have been shown what whites have done.

You showed me all the negative things they have done, which I was completely aware of before I posted this thread. White people are not immune to the consequences of their actions, as you would have everyone else believe. Whites were responsible for the Holocaust, the Crusades, Japanese Internment camps.

But then came other white people who thought that was wrong and chose to reform the law instead of forcing people to submit to them as you want to do with people of my skin color now.

You don't want to acknowledge the good things whites have done for people of color.

You have such a militant mindset towards white people.
 
" He saw the rioting as immoral. "

You dont know what youre talking about because youre white.
I know Black people that marched and worked with him.

YOU LOSE.

And now I can legitimately classify you as racist. You are the very thing you hate.

I pity you.
"And now I can legitimately classify you as racist. "

Whatever makes you feel better about this ass whippin you took. :)

Is all that boasting a tactic to distract you from the pain of the ass whooping I gave you?

Looks like it.
Lol! You took a severe ass whipping son.

Elaborate. Don't tell me to search the thread, simply elaborate how you "whooped" anyone's ass, let alone mine.

The onus is on you to prove what point you or Asclepias made that makes you so confident that you won.

I'm curious to know.
Well to begin with your OP says we are to:

Never tell me America is racist:

Then you tell us America is racist.
 
Temps first post " But never tell me America is racist. "

Temp after he confused himself:. " Of course, racism still exists in America "

Lol. You can't discern nuance, can you?
I think I hear what you're saying--that institutionally and ideologically, America is not racist. Our laws are fair. We do not discourage diversity. You acknowledge that some individuals are racist, though.

The only thing you're forgetting is that every single law, regulation and ideal actually is enacted by individuals. Otherwise, those laws would mean nothing. They have to be put into action by individuals. When those people are racist or even unconsciously believe that blacks are more dangerous, more suspect, than whites, it cannot be fair.

" I think I hear what you're saying--that institutionally and ideologically, America is not racist. "


I disagree even with that statement that Temp lacked the ability to articulate. There is systemic/institutional racism in the US. You cant have racism without the supporting ideology.
I'd really be interested if you would take a deeper dive into some of this. What is institutionally racist? Where has the justice system written it into policy? I'm not arguing with you, I'm asking for some specifics, because I don't know much about it. It is ridiculous for me to even try to defend BLM except on general principle, because I don't really understand what specifically they are asking for.
This is kind of starting in the middle and I'm not claiming to speak for Asclepias but this might give you some insight into the mindset of those during this era

"Convict Leasing and Chain Gangs

Bankrupt in the wake of the Civil War and faced with the difficult task of rebuilding and sustaining an infrastructure, Mississippi and other state governments turned to a familiar expedient to fund their penal institutions. In the late 1860s many southern prisons began leasing convicts to plantations and industries bereft of the cheap labor formerly supplied by slaves. As the majority of inmates were African American, this new form of compulsory labor helped to bridge the gap between the Black Codes and Jim Crow as a form of social control that embodied the common racial hierarchies in the South. Likewise, vagrancy laws criminalized the social mobility recently acquired by former slaves and produced a steady supply of bodies for the prison labor system.

Although prisoners in the convict lease system were used for a variety of arduous tasks from railroad construction to cutting timber, inmates in Mississippi worked primarily on large cotton plantations. Edward Richardson, a plantation owner who had lost his fortune in the Civil War, was perhaps the state’s greatest beneficiary of prison labor. The first to have a convict contract with the state, officials paid Richardson eighteen thousand dollars a year for “care” of the prisoners. With the added income from the profits of their labor, he eventually regained his wealth, setting an inspiring precedent for the southern business community.

After reaching its acme in the 1880s, the convict leasing era wound down as a consequence of accusations that too many affluent southerners had profited from the system and of moral indignation over the treatment of convicts. Inmates were forced to work dangerous jobs that free laborers refused to take and were subject to wanton physical punishment and severe deprivation, conditions that resulted in high death rates among the prison population. Outrage was further fueled by the fact that the state did not maintain separate facilities or mandate special treatment for children, and many were leased out under the system. Publicity regarding these deplorable realities led to a public outcry that forced Mississippi to abolish convict leasing in 1890, the first state to do so.

Individual counties, however, retained the right to use prison labor, and county-run chain gangs replaced convict labor in the early 1900s. Cuffed together at the ankle in small groups, prisoners were put to work expanding and repairing transportation routes as part of the Good Roads Movement, an urbanization effort aimed at increasing accessibility in the South. Though considered a troubling part of the past today, this use of convicts was generally championed in its time, and supporters, including the US Department of Agriculture, considered it an efficient and progressive way to both build roads and control criminals.

As with the convict lease system, most of the chain gang laborers were African Americans, who were thought to require a generous measure of discipline for proper “rehabilitation.” But convicts on county-run chain gangs often slept in cages and were subject to brutal corporal punishment and suffered from a host of debilitating ailments, including malnutrition, heatstroke, frostbite, contagious diseases, and shackle poisoning (infections caused by the constant rubbing of iron against the skin). Work songs helped to sustain morale and increase chances of survival, allowing prisoners to labor in a steady rhythm that could be slowed to protect the infirm or inefficient. As with the convict lease system, mounting public outrage resulted in bans on chain gangs nationwide by the mid-twentieth century.

Mississippi consolidated much of its convict labor force on Parchman Farm, a profitable and self-sustaining penal cotton plantation located on twenty thousand acres in the Yazoo Delta. Parchman was established in 1904 by Gov. James K. Vardaman, a proponent of prison reform who billed himself as a progressive and visionary but who regarded African Americans as mentally inferior and touted a paternalistic brand of racism that envisioned a pacified black population reconciled to subordinate social position.



Convict Leasing and Chain Gangs | Mississippi Encyclopedia
I would have loved to read this but they want me to subscribe or provide my email address which I'm not inclined to do.

Summary?
 
The discussion isnt about who owns the issue.

Oh, is that so?

Then why are you making demands of society right now? Why aren't you speaking out about all the racial oppression instead of just yours?
Yes thats so. You need look no further than your own OP.

I havent been making demands of society at large. I may have kicked a racists ass 1 or 12 times times so they would get out of my way but typically I ignore most whites. Too busy building up and educating my own people.

I cant make demands for other people. They have to do that for themselves. I'm worried about my people so thats what I am going to speak on. The situation that my people are in is the worst in my estimation. If you dont like that then that sounds like more of a you problem.
You’re a paper tiger, like your boyfriend MarcATL. All talk. Very amusing.

Oh, I forgot about Marc.
 
You have been shown what whites have done.

You showed me all the negative things they have done, which I was completely aware of before I posted this thread.

You don't want to acknowledge the good things whites have done for people of color.

You have such a militant mindset towards white people.
Look white boy, you don't get credit for calling the fire department after you start a fire. And all those "good things whites have done for us" came after long fights. I have a militant mindset towards white racists. I have no problem with white people.
 
Temps first post " But never tell me America is racist. "

Temp after he confused himself:. " Of course, racism still exists in America "

Lol. You can't discern nuance, can you?
I think I hear what you're saying--that institutionally and ideologically, America is not racist. Our laws are fair. We do not discourage diversity. You acknowledge that some individuals are racist, though.

The only thing you're forgetting is that every single law, regulation and ideal actually is enacted by individuals. Otherwise, those laws would mean nothing. They have to be put into action by individuals. When those people are racist or even unconsciously believe that blacks are more dangerous, more suspect, than whites, it cannot be fair.

" I think I hear what you're saying--that institutionally and ideologically, America is not racist. "


I disagree even with that statement that Temp lacked the ability to articulate. There is systemic/institutional racism in the US. You cant have racism without the supporting ideology.
I'd really be interested if you would take a deeper dive into some of this. What is institutionally racist? Where has the justice system written it into policy? I'm not arguing with you, I'm asking for some specifics, because I don't know much about it. It is ridiculous for me to even try to defend BLM except on general principle, because I don't really understand what specifically they are asking for.
This is kind of starting in the middle and I'm not claiming to speak for Asclepias but this might give you some insight into the mindset of those during this era

"Convict Leasing and Chain Gangs

Bankrupt in the wake of the Civil War and faced with the difficult task of rebuilding and sustaining an infrastructure, Mississippi and other state governments turned to a familiar expedient to fund their penal institutions. In the late 1860s many southern prisons began leasing convicts to plantations and industries bereft of the cheap labor formerly supplied by slaves. As the majority of inmates were African American, this new form of compulsory labor helped to bridge the gap between the Black Codes and Jim Crow as a form of social control that embodied the common racial hierarchies in the South. Likewise, vagrancy laws criminalized the social mobility recently acquired by former slaves and produced a steady supply of bodies for the prison labor system.

Although prisoners in the convict lease system were used for a variety of arduous tasks from railroad construction to cutting timber, inmates in Mississippi worked primarily on large cotton plantations. Edward Richardson, a plantation owner who had lost his fortune in the Civil War, was perhaps the state’s greatest beneficiary of prison labor. The first to have a convict contract with the state, officials paid Richardson eighteen thousand dollars a year for “care” of the prisoners. With the added income from the profits of their labor, he eventually regained his wealth, setting an inspiring precedent for the southern business community.

After reaching its acme in the 1880s, the convict leasing era wound down as a consequence of accusations that too many affluent southerners had profited from the system and of moral indignation over the treatment of convicts. Inmates were forced to work dangerous jobs that free laborers refused to take and were subject to wanton physical punishment and severe deprivation, conditions that resulted in high death rates among the prison population. Outrage was further fueled by the fact that the state did not maintain separate facilities or mandate special treatment for children, and many were leased out under the system. Publicity regarding these deplorable realities led to a public outcry that forced Mississippi to abolish convict leasing in 1890, the first state to do so.

Individual counties, however, retained the right to use prison labor, and county-run chain gangs replaced convict labor in the early 1900s. Cuffed together at the ankle in small groups, prisoners were put to work expanding and repairing transportation routes as part of the Good Roads Movement, an urbanization effort aimed at increasing accessibility in the South. Though considered a troubling part of the past today, this use of convicts was generally championed in its time, and supporters, including the US Department of Agriculture, considered it an efficient and progressive way to both build roads and control criminals.

As with the convict lease system, most of the chain gang laborers were African Americans, who were thought to require a generous measure of discipline for proper “rehabilitation.” But convicts on county-run chain gangs often slept in cages and were subject to brutal corporal punishment and suffered from a host of debilitating ailments, including malnutrition, heatstroke, frostbite, contagious diseases, and shackle poisoning (infections caused by the constant rubbing of iron against the skin). Work songs helped to sustain morale and increase chances of survival, allowing prisoners to labor in a steady rhythm that could be slowed to protect the infirm or inefficient. As with the convict lease system, mounting public outrage resulted in bans on chain gangs nationwide by the mid-twentieth century.

Mississippi consolidated much of its convict labor force on Parchman Farm, a profitable and self-sustaining penal cotton plantation located on twenty thousand acres in the Yazoo Delta. Parchman was established in 1904 by Gov. James K. Vardaman, a proponent of prison reform who billed himself as a progressive and visionary but who regarded African Americans as mentally inferior and touted a paternalistic brand of racism that envisioned a pacified black population reconciled to subordinate social position.



Convict Leasing and Chain Gangs | Mississippi Encyclopedia
I would have loved to read this but they want me to subscribe or provide my email address which I'm not inclined to do.

Summary?
Temps first post " But never tell me America is racist. "

Temp after he confused himself:. " Of course, racism still exists in America "

Lol. You can't discern nuance, can you?
I think I hear what you're saying--that institutionally and ideologically, America is not racist. Our laws are fair. We do not discourage diversity. You acknowledge that some individuals are racist, though.

The only thing you're forgetting is that every single law, regulation and ideal actually is enacted by individuals. Otherwise, those laws would mean nothing. They have to be put into action by individuals. When those people are racist or even unconsciously believe that blacks are more dangerous, more suspect, than whites, it cannot be fair.

" I think I hear what you're saying--that institutionally and ideologically, America is not racist. "


I disagree even with that statement that Temp lacked the ability to articulate. There is systemic/institutional racism in the US. You cant have racism without the supporting ideology.
I'd really be interested if you would take a deeper dive into some of this. What is institutionally racist? Where has the justice system written it into policy? I'm not arguing with you, I'm asking for some specifics, because I don't know much about it. It is ridiculous for me to even try to defend BLM except on general principle, because I don't really understand what specifically they are asking for.
This is kind of starting in the middle and I'm not claiming to speak for Asclepias but this might give you some insight into the mindset of those during this era

"Convict Leasing and Chain Gangs

Bankrupt in the wake of the Civil War and faced with the difficult task of rebuilding and sustaining an infrastructure, Mississippi and other state governments turned to a familiar expedient to fund their penal institutions. In the late 1860s many southern prisons began leasing convicts to plantations and industries bereft of the cheap labor formerly supplied by slaves. As the majority of inmates were African American, this new form of compulsory labor helped to bridge the gap between the Black Codes and Jim Crow as a form of social control that embodied the common racial hierarchies in the South. Likewise, vagrancy laws criminalized the social mobility recently acquired by former slaves and produced a steady supply of bodies for the prison labor system.

Although prisoners in the convict lease system were used for a variety of arduous tasks from railroad construction to cutting timber, inmates in Mississippi worked primarily on large cotton plantations. Edward Richardson, a plantation owner who had lost his fortune in the Civil War, was perhaps the state’s greatest beneficiary of prison labor. The first to have a convict contract with the state, officials paid Richardson eighteen thousand dollars a year for “care” of the prisoners. With the added income from the profits of their labor, he eventually regained his wealth, setting an inspiring precedent for the southern business community.

After reaching its acme in the 1880s, the convict leasing era wound down as a consequence of accusations that too many affluent southerners had profited from the system and of moral indignation over the treatment of convicts. Inmates were forced to work dangerous jobs that free laborers refused to take and were subject to wanton physical punishment and severe deprivation, conditions that resulted in high death rates among the prison population. Outrage was further fueled by the fact that the state did not maintain separate facilities or mandate special treatment for children, and many were leased out under the system. Publicity regarding these deplorable realities led to a public outcry that forced Mississippi to abolish convict leasing in 1890, the first state to do so.

Individual counties, however, retained the right to use prison labor, and county-run chain gangs replaced convict labor in the early 1900s. Cuffed together at the ankle in small groups, prisoners were put to work expanding and repairing transportation routes as part of the Good Roads Movement, an urbanization effort aimed at increasing accessibility in the South. Though considered a troubling part of the past today, this use of convicts was generally championed in its time, and supporters, including the US Department of Agriculture, considered it an efficient and progressive way to both build roads and control criminals.

As with the convict lease system, most of the chain gang laborers were African Americans, who were thought to require a generous measure of discipline for proper “rehabilitation.” But convicts on county-run chain gangs often slept in cages and were subject to brutal corporal punishment and suffered from a host of debilitating ailments, including malnutrition, heatstroke, frostbite, contagious diseases, and shackle poisoning (infections caused by the constant rubbing of iron against the skin). Work songs helped to sustain morale and increase chances of survival, allowing prisoners to labor in a steady rhythm that could be slowed to protect the infirm or inefficient. As with the convict lease system, mounting public outrage resulted in bans on chain gangs nationwide by the mid-twentieth century.

Mississippi consolidated much of its convict labor force on Parchman Farm, a profitable and self-sustaining penal cotton plantation located on twenty thousand acres in the Yazoo Delta. Parchman was established in 1904 by Gov. James K. Vardaman, a proponent of prison reform who billed himself as a progressive and visionary but who regarded African Americans as mentally inferior and touted a paternalistic brand of racism that envisioned a pacified black population reconciled to subordinate social position.



Convict Leasing and Chain Gangs | Mississippi Encyclopedia
I would have loved to read this but they want me to subscribe or provide my email address which I'm not inclined to do.

Summary?


MythAll white people are inherently beneficiaries of “white privilege.”

Fact: The Left’s “white privilege” narrative is false, used to divide and silence, and promotes racist assumptions.

But the Left suggests that because America has been replete with racism and bigotry historically, that means that racism pervades American society now. That’s not only untrue, it’s a cruel lie. Furthermore, we cannot acknowledge the racism that swamped America for two centuries without also acknowledging the central natural law principles that eventually led Americans to fight against that racism — that led hundreds of thousands of white Americans to die for the freedom of their black brothers in slavery, that led whites to march with blacks and legislate on behalf of blacks to end Jim Crow, that has created the most successful multiethnic democracy on the planet
 
The discussion isnt about who owns the issue.

Oh, is that so?

Then why are you making demands of society right now? Why aren't you speaking out about all the racial oppression instead of just yours?
Yes thats so. You need look no further than your own OP.

I havent been making demands of society at large. I may have kicked a racists ass 1 or 12 times times so they would get out of my way but typically I ignore most whites. Too busy building up and educating my own people.

I cant make demands for other people. They have to do that for themselves. I'm worried about my people so thats what I am going to speak on. The situation that my people are in is the worst in my estimation. If you dont like that then that sounds like more of a you problem.
You’re a paper tiger, like your boyfriend MarcATL. All talk. Very amusing.

Oh, I forgot about Marc.
IM2, Marc and Assfaceias don’t debate with me anymore. I ve embarrassed them too many times. A lot fewer Jews than African Americans and we don’t whine like these three bitches.
 
The discussion isnt about who owns the issue.

Oh, is that so?

Then why are you making demands of society right now? Why aren't you speaking out about all the racial oppression instead of just yours?
Yes thats so. You need look no further than your own OP.

I havent been making demands of society at large. I may have kicked a racists ass 1 or 12 times times so they would get out of my way but typically I ignore most whites. Too busy building up and educating my own people.

I cant make demands for other people. They have to do that for themselves. I'm worried about my people so thats what I am going to speak on. The situation that my people are in is the worst in my estimation. If you dont like that then that sounds like more of a you problem.
You’re a paper tiger, like your boyfriend MarcATL. All talk. Very amusing.
Youre like a little kid. Always tryin to get in on the conversation. Werent you taught to be quiet when grown folks is talking?
 
Then you tell us America is racist.

Uh no. Our institutions are not racist, our principles as they stand now are not racist. There are people in America who are racist, that does not imply America as a whole is.

You see only what you want to see. Selective hearing, selective vision... whatever you want to call it.

You and Asclepias are both black, yes?

If America were racist, would it let you earn enough money to buy the PC/Laptop you're typing your garbage on now? Would it permit you to do the same to pay for the home you're living in? The car you're driving? A proper education?

When you walk into a business or a restaurant, do you see any signage which tells blacks they are not welcome? No, of course not, because for the past 60 years America has spent time passing laws banning such intolerable behavior.

Ignorance is as ignorance does.
 
The discussion isnt about who owns the issue.

Oh, is that so?

Then why are you making demands of society right now? Why aren't you speaking out about all the racial oppression instead of just yours?
Yes thats so. You need look no further than your own OP.

I havent been making demands of society at large. I may have kicked a racists ass 1 or 12 times times so they would get out of my way but typically I ignore most whites. Too busy building up and educating my own people.

I cant make demands for other people. They have to do that for themselves. I'm worried about my people so thats what I am going to speak on. The situation that my people are in is the worst in my estimation. If you dont like that then that sounds like more of a you problem.
You’re a paper tiger, like your boyfriend MarcATL. All talk. Very amusing.
Youre like a little kid. Always tryin to get in on the conversation. Werent you taught to be quiet when grown folks is talking?
You mean old? You’re old. LOL. Are you bitching again? Jeezus.
 
The discussion isnt about who owns the issue.

Oh, is that so?

Then why are you making demands of society right now? Why aren't you speaking out about all the racial oppression instead of just yours?
Yes thats so. You need look no further than your own OP.

I havent been making demands of society at large. I may have kicked a racists ass 1 or 12 times times so they would get out of my way but typically I ignore most whites. Too busy building up and educating my own people.

I cant make demands for other people. They have to do that for themselves. I'm worried about my people so thats what I am going to speak on. The situation that my people are in is the worst in my estimation. If you dont like that then that sounds like more of a you problem.
You’re a paper tiger, like your boyfriend MarcATL. All talk. Very amusing.

Oh, I forgot about Marc.
IM2, Marc and Assfaceias don’t debate with me anymore. I ve embarrassed them too many times. A lot fewer Jews than African Americans and we don’t whine like these three bitches.
At some point you gotta stop kicking a fools ass. It becomes abuse at that point. No sport in whippin your ass more. Its just cruel. Youre like 0-245 against me in debates.
 
The discussion isnt about who owns the issue.

Oh, is that so?

Then why are you making demands of society right now? Why aren't you speaking out about all the racial oppression instead of just yours?
Yes thats so. You need look no further than your own OP.

I havent been making demands of society at large. I may have kicked a racists ass 1 or 12 times times so they would get out of my way but typically I ignore most whites. Too busy building up and educating my own people.

I cant make demands for other people. They have to do that for themselves. I'm worried about my people so thats what I am going to speak on. The situation that my people are in is the worst in my estimation. If you dont like that then that sounds like more of a you problem.
You’re a paper tiger, like your boyfriend MarcATL. All talk. Very amusing.

Oh, I forgot about Marc.
IM2, Marc and Assfaceias don’t debate with me anymore. I ve embarrassed them too many times. A lot fewer Jews than African Americans and we don’t whine like these three bitches.
At some point you gotta stop kicking a fools ass. It becomes abuse at that point. No sport in whippin your ass more. Its just cruel. Youre like 0-245 against me in debates.
Keep telling yourself that. You’re the one swearing and declaring yourself the winner while being ashamed of being black while my other bitch, IM2 has me on ignore. You’re almost broken. I ve broken Marc and IM2, you’re next, Assfaceias. #Butthurt lives matter.
 
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