He argued that «people can say
racist things because they are afflicted, temporarily or permanently, with stupidity, but that doesn't make them a racist.»
2017 was the year when the world's understanding of the most powerful man on the planet moved from «he's not necessarily dangerous and racist, he just says dangerous and
racist things» to «he is dangerous and racist, but he's not necessarily fascist, he just says fascist things.»
- I specifically state the book is addressed to a female within the first few pages: he thought it was addressed to a male - «shock» I suffered racism because I look more white - suggesting I only thought people had said
racist things to me because I have a persecution complex - minutes after I gave him the manuscript he said some sentences were too long.
There, he meets plenty of family friends who say slightly
racist things while attempting to make him feel at home.
A while back they moved to california where interracial relationships are supposed to be acceptable, he says people openly say
racist things to his face and most of the times they are minorities.
This is obviously outrageous, though it's worth noting that Sterling has done multiple outrageously
racist things before.
When someone says
racist things, they think
racist things.
HEY CRYSTAL SPRINGS FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH: the bible says God has hair like lambs wool and feet like bronze (dark brown) when you finally see God, good luck with
the racist thing!
We have this cultural idea very deeply nested in privilege that says no one should say or do anything that would make another person uncomfortable, like say, «That's not true» or, «that's
a racist thing to say».
It starts with the abuse of Guantanamo Bay prisoners (they're forced to eat «cock sandwiches»), then it runs along with a dim - witted Homeland Security agent Ron Fox (Rob Corddry) who wipes his ass with the Bill of Rights and does
every racist thing imaginable, and ultimately lands on a ridiculous portrayal of President George W. Bush as a pot - smoking dumbass who fears his father and the vice-president.
Not exact matches
For one
thing, even when Trump's misstatements and
racist commentary are singled out or highlighted as a problem, his support never seems to waver.
When I grew up, those
things weren't called
racist,» he declared.
Those high on philosophy might muse that those
things might not have been called
racist, but actually were
racist.
Microsoft's (msft) ill - fated Tay bot experiment in which online commenters taught the bot — basically software that takes on human characteristics powered by artificial intelligence — to say
racist and sexist
things also illustrates this point.
It seems to be, ok, he got some
things right, but we can't admit that because he's Trump (often
racist, and often wrong).
Racists, bigots, haters, lying politicians, bad bosses, cronyism, inequality, people who say one
thing and do another, thieves, and zealots who impose their will on others.
On Twitter, the most polarizing
thing about Three Billboards is how the film handles his
racist - cop character, but do Oscars voters agree?
The comments, says Liviakis, «were talking about pedophilia, and there were disparaging,
racist sort of remarks about my Greek heritage, and all kinds of evil
things, to try to make fun of me and make fun of companies that I was involved in, and anyway to scare down the stock.»
I suggest also you should distance yourself strongly from Lorrie Goldstein who is an open
racist, asserting among other
things that all carbon offset projects in developing nations are inherently scams, and whose lies in other matters are well documented.
If you are worried that, under your post about Churchill, someone is going to post a comment chiding you for failing to mention that he was a monstrous
racist, the
thing to do is to stop worrying and say to hell with anyone who writes that comment.
Thomas Jefferson, unfortunately, said a lot of
racist and horrible
things about other groups of people.
As
racist as this is going to sound, these people have been killing each other for ages and they will continue to do so in the future if permitted because it is the only
thing they know.
Facts are Facts, Would yould like to hear the
thing your cult said about the men of dark skin, Well you are going to anyway, A
racist is a
racist!
Ummmm... you got
racist out of that where, exactly???????????? Sweet, you can see invisible
things!
Blessed with every
thing, but a hindu, blinded, unable to recognize hinduism crookedness of hindu Magi's, criminal tricksters, bought hindu's cow's mams dung, hindu Mithra ism,
racist savior ism, thinking of it to be gold of truth absolute GOD.
Those callers acted foolishly and are
racists because they are broken people and they carry the sins of their ancestors in them and those
things are hard to shake loose — no matter what that sin may be.
It is a painful tale, burdened with an inexorable logic of defeat at the hands of a
racist society — we «know» from the beginning that terrible
things are in store — but illuminated by another logic, that of grace, by no means so certain, for it operates in secret with persons (Kumalo and the elder Jarvis) whose formation by it is in terms of the gradual and ambiguous growth of actual human development.
Perhaps, the most disturbing
thing about this ridiculous episode of distractive journalism is that it is Ms. Kelly who has earned the raspberries for pointing out the absurd racism of Ms. Aisha, and not Ms. Aisha for being so absurdly
racist.
One seriously interesting
thing, that totally threw me... and this might be a bit
racist.
I would like to hear another argument for keeping
things the way they are besides «It's Bush's fault» or «you're a
racist».
Call me
racist all you want but assuming evry
thing a white person does around a black person is
racist is prettty self centered.
You and everyone one else with your closed - minded, egotistical,
racist, bigoted views disgust me to no end and make me fear for the future of our great country... the only
thing that gives me hope is that someday, whether it be before God or some sort of act of Karma or whatever it may be, you will be judged.
One
thing I do know is he did not speak the that
racist Joseph Smith, which makes the entire Mormon religion a big cult lie, I am ashamed of Billy Graham!
In this case, I would be saying, «This
thing I am going to say next should not be interpreted in a
racist sense».
I know we probably all done the but
thing once or twice, but I think it's the
racist but that is hitting me hard right now.
President Trump said
things that were hate - filled, vile, and
racist.
Most people NOW wouldn't consider a
racist a likely Christian, but go back half a century and
things would be completely different.
One
thing is readily apparent, and that is that there are a lot more bigots and
racist, intolerant jerks in this country than ever before.
The
thing that bothers me most is that evangelicals liked his
racist statements, his homophobic statements, his antifeminist statements, his belligerency.
There is no such
thing as a white race unless you are a
racist and trying to keep the races separate.
You lie aboout prayer, you lie about having proven
things, you lie about atheists, you call on person here a Nazi
racist because she posted Hitler's quotes on his religious beliefs in a conversation about what Hitler believed, it just goes on and on.
Even if her parents are from Haiti, once she went through the educational system here, she has been brainwashed just like you have and that is why she saying those stupid
things (pandering to the
racist Republicans).
There wasn't a
thing in that post that was «
racist.»
People aren't
racist here; she must be reading into
things.
Another
thing no black would write black with out a second word, therefore you are no black but just a
racist who wants to say some
thing wrong and blame it on blacks while you must be some one who worship a cow?
yes, he has his right wing militant
racists as supporters, who if
things were right, wouldn't have any voice... but Obama had people that voted for him strictly on his skin color and who hate all white people....
Saying «they're not fans» might feel like the end of the matter — a personal act of dismissal — but it chimes uncomfortably against the fact they quite obviously are fans by any metric, and, even more importantly, they are fans who are happy to simultaneously be fans and be
racist, and be both those
things loudly and in public.
Indeed, over the last few years clubs have got quite good at addressing this sort of
thing among their own fans, at least in high - profile instances, and it's perhaps a positive sign that having a
racist element among the support is considered terrible PR.
The ingredients that make up a proper football fan are the subject of persistent and perpetual debate, but one
thing remains a certainty: whenever somebody who walks and talks and sings and shouts like a football fan is caught doing something
racist, somebody else will be along shortly afterwards to make the point that they are not, in fact, a football fan.
This philosophy or belief is exactly why I picked you up on your — as I thought - «
racist» comment about Brits not liking or rating Iwobi as he is not British but Nigerian, as if either of these
things irrelevant matter one jot.