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wargasms (of Slept On Fam)



Last Updated: 11/4/2009

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Status: Single
City: WEST COLUMBIA
State: South Carolina
Country: US
Signup Date: 4/5/2005

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Wednesday, February 13, 2008 

Yes i had to ressurrect the word Nigger for this shit...even after the NAACP held a funeral for the "N Word". And this is how i will reference the NAACP in the future.



i dont know if anyone else heard this, because i was watching the news and it was only a brief mention on MSNBC last night.

But the NAACP has written a letter to Howard Dean, chairman of the democratic national convention FOR the seating of the delegates from Florida and Michigan to benefit Hillary Clinton, while playing the race card and saying it is reminicent of the civil rights violations that have occured in the past and racial discriminatory elections.

the NAACP also named Bill Clinton the "first black president" during his administration. Having an actual ceremony to give him this title.

They are obviously completely in the pockets of the clintons, and this is a blatant demonstration of a political favor called in. Hillary positioned herself to win these disciplined states by continuing to focus on them despite them being disciplined by the Democratic National Convention.

the Clintons KNOW that they cant be the ones fighting to get these states seated and steal the election, because then it would look like dirty politics. The safest bet was to call in a favor to the self hating Nigger Association for the Advancement of Clinton Politics, that way they can play the race card to the benefit of the clintons and nobody can accuse the NAACP of trying to sabatoge the black man.

I was livid at this last night. I already had major issues with the NAACP.
From the First Black President inaguaration of bill clinton
from the "N WORD" funeral
and from nominating R Kelly for a NAACP image award during the heat of his child molestation controversy.

They stand by the wrong people for the wrong reasons. And this is just blatant political bribery.


but guess who came on TV a couple of hours later and SHUT it down. Al Sharpton. Sharpton will smartly not endorse a candidate, and is remaining neutral, however he went against the NAACP and spoke out against the seating of the delegates and the NAACP.

He also sent this statement to Howard Dean.

"I firmly believe that changing the rules now, and seating delegates from Florida and Michigan at this point would not only violate the Democratic party's rules of fairness, but also would be a grave injustice," Sharpton wrote. "Changing the rules in the middle of a presidential contest is patently unfair both to the candidates (including Senator Edwards) and to Democratic voters everywhere."

Sharpton said that Bond's argument of disenfranchisement "should have been made many months ago before the decision was made to strip these states of their delegates, and, once the decision was made, it should have been vigorously objected to and contested by those who felt it disenfranchised voters. To raise that claim now smacks of politics in its form most raw and undercuts the moral authority behind such an argument."


here is an article on the NAACP's attempt to steal the election FROM a candidate who is doing more for the advancement of colored people, and american culture as a whole then they have yet to obtain or could ever hope to obtain as an organization.

http://ap.google.com/article/ALeqM5j3SsrXUFz9F4qVCx3zz9hMP0qKOwD8UP54N81

E. Green
Ervin Green

 
NAACP - They're out of touch and out of time...
 
Posted by E. Green on Wednesday, February 13, 2008 - 4:52 PM
[Reply to this
E. Green
Ervin Green

 
NAACP - They're out of touch and out of time...
 
Posted by E. Green on Wednesday, February 13, 2008 - 4:52 PM
[Reply to this
Highwind Kai
Victor inneh

 
In this day and age people don't equal votes, m..election. The NAACP is a prime example of the degradation of our people in this country. We've slipped back so much that one of the most prominent political forces in our country that represents us is selling out. Now I have nothing against Bill Clinton, and i personally have joked around with him being black, but Obama symbolizes hope, change, and the freedom that we've been owed from this institution from far too long.

Sorry to go all Huey Freeman like
The album was dope btw

Vic
 
Posted by Highwind Kai on Wednesday, February 13, 2008 - 5:39 PM
[Reply to this
Brianna

 
Barack Obama has such a strong campaign and such a will to do what he says is going to be done for the betterment of America that this is really a joke... seriously. I'm sure it's not the ENTIRE NAACP, but the reps have NOT realized the impact that this one man is making... If they were smart like HILLARY AND EDWARD, they'd join the bandwagon. I am almost positive they've already got the office set up in some way and some form with Obama being head.
 
Posted by Brianna on Wednesday, February 13, 2008 - 5:45 PM
[Reply to this
Brianna

 
Barack Obama has such a strong campaign and such a will to do what he says is going to be done for the betterment of America that this is really a joke... seriously. I'm sure it's not the ENTIRE NAACP, but the reps have NOT realized the impact that this one man is making... If they were smart like HILLARY AND EDWARD, they'd join the bandwagon. I am almost positive they've already got the office set up in some way and some form with Obama being head.
 
Posted by Brianna on Wednesday, February 13, 2008 - 5:45 PM
[Reply to this
wargasms (of Slept On Fam)

 
Sharpton: Don't Seat Fla., Mich.
3 hours ago

WASHINGTON (AP) — Seating delegates from Florida and Michigan at the Democratic National Convention would be a grave injustice, the Rev. Al Sharpton said Wednesday in a break with prominent civil rights leaders.

"I firmly believe that changing the rules now, and seating delegates from Florida and Michigan at this point would not only violate the Democratic Party's rules of fairness, but also would be a grave injustice," Sharpton said in a letter to Democratic National Committee Chairman Howard Dean.

"As former presidential candidates we both know that, whether we liked them or not, we adhered to the rules set forth by the Democratic Party to select its nominee for president."

Sharpton, a black activist and radio talk show host, sought the presidency in 2004.

NAACP chairman Julian Bond also wrote Dean recently, taking the opposite position. Bond said failure to seat the delegates would disenfranchise minority voters in Florida and Michigan.

Former U.S. Commission on Civil Rights Chairwoman Mary Frances Berry and former Justice Department official Roger Wilkins also wrote Dean urging the DNC settle the issue before the convention for the good of the party.

Berry — who oversaw the 2001 report that studied the disputed 2000 Florida election and found thousands of voters, particularly black voters, were disenfranchised — said she is also concerned about disenfranchisement of Michigan and Florida voters, although she didn't make a recommendation on how the DNC should resolve the dispute.

The DNC penalized Michigan and Florida for moving their primaries to earlier dates in violation of party rules. Both states were stripped of their delegates, and the party's presidential candidates signed a pledge not to campaign in either state. Florida lost all 210 delegates, including its superdelegates; Michigan, 156.

Since then, waging a hard-fought delegate battle with Sen. Barack Obama, Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton's campaign has pushed hard for both states' delegations to be seated. Clinton won Florida's primary Jan. 29 and Michigan's Jan. 15, but was the only candidate to appear on the Michigan ballot after the other candidates removed their names.

Sharpton said he disagreed with those who say minority voters in Florida and Michigan will be disenfranchised.

"That claim, if true, should have been made many months ago before the decision was made to strip these states of their delegates, and, once the decision was made, it should have been vigorously objected to and contested by those who felt it disenfranchised voters," Sharpton wrote. "To raise that claim now smacks of politics in its form most raw and undercuts the moral authority behind such an argument."

The DNC has said it would allow both states to hold a different contest, probably a caucus, that would comply with party rules. Either state can also appeal the penalty to the DNC credentials committee, which will not meet again until this summer.
 
Posted by wargasms (of Slept On Fam) on Wednesday, February 13, 2008 - 6:42 PM
[Reply to this
Serpentarius
Jamaine Bradby

 
Its sad that the NAACP actually seems to have forgotten WHY they are an organization in the first place.
 
Posted by Serpentarius on Thursday, February 14, 2008 - 12:11 AM
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*•.¸♥♥~CHEYLA~♥♥¸.•*

 
~~INTRODUCING DA 'HILL-BILLY'~~

Image Hosted by ImageShack.us


:D:D:D
You know they do resemble one another!! HAHAHAHA!!

The delegate issue is a hot topic. They don't want the Republicans to break any rules but the holier than thou,'Clintonians' don't seem to want to abide by the same regulations.

WHY WOULD ANYONE IN THEIR RIGHT MIND DESIGNATE 'BILLY-BOY AS A 'BLACK PRESIDENT?' A DAMN JOKE!!! You see that his sheet is just as white as Clarence Thomas' now, don't you?
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

The NAACP seems to be in the entertainment biz now, in my opinion - hence the 39th Image Awards a few nights ago.

W.E.B. Dubois, founder, Medgar Evers and Thurgood Marshall, tireless 'civil rights patriots' and a few of the first pioneers who risked their lives for the greater cause are 'turning over in their graves.' The organization doesn't hold clout as it once did. Perhaps they're 'selling-out' to a sub-government. Who knows??

The NAACP will mark their centennial next year. Of course, there will be a big 'to do' and all the 'big wigs' will come out in full-force. A couple of thousand dollars a plate will accommodate this celebratory function. Gobbledygook, oops, I mean speeches referring to the state of affairs will be made and applauded.

While Kweisi Mfume, excused the misspelling if there is any, was Chairman, I viewed him on C-Span on several occasions, discussing vital issues pertaining to the matter-at-hand, as well as local stations and CNN. This no longer occurs. I've even learned of the 'Jena-6' incident approximately 2 months before it hit the airwaves and became indelibly marked in our consciousness. This was courtesy of LINK-TV, an independent station. I initially didn't witness the NAACP denouncing the racial overtones which accompanied this heinous travesty.

Decades ago, at the NAACP office on prominent 5th Ave. in NYC, a banner ws placed outside of its window each and everytime a black man was lynched in a Southern town. This action will be deemed politically incorrect today.
 
Posted by *•.¸♥♥~CHEYLA~♥♥¸.•* on Sunday, February 17, 2008 - 11:01 PM
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