Posted by sjpoker on 8/5/2016 4:45:00 PM (view original):
Lets look at moy's statement in more detail. His message seems to be:
"Blacks should handle their own issues." Well they are addressing what they think is an issue when they march in protest against police shootings right? I'm not seeing riots out there.
But, ignoring reality here, moy's statement leads to...
"Blacks don't even know what their own issues are." Because the real issues are 'locking up drug dealers" "Fixing schools" "Creating a forward culture". Moy and most whites know this because they have spent time in these neighborhoods and have done a lot of thinking about the problems in these areas.
which leads to...
"Whites need to tell blacks, or even GUIDE them to what the issues are." Because if they can't figure it out, and whites so magically understand the problems, then they must be either dumb or ignoring the real issues.
But, Moy said he didn't really want to deal with it right? So it comes down to "If Blacks can't figure it out, they need whites to show them the way, yet whites aren't dealing with it."
But you aren't going down that road are you Mike? You understand that this a complex issue in which either you OR ME could possibly understand because we are light years away from that world. Right?
Well, you didn't answer the question. The answer is "I fix my roof the best I can because help may never come."
I won't address it as a black/white issue. I'll address it as a poor issue. And I'll address it as someone who slept in their car for three days because they had nowhere to live and as someone who was glad they had a car.
I had nowhere to live. I had no money. I said "**** it. I created this. I'll fix it." I took my next paycheck, part-time, found a ****** trailer I could afford and moved into the shittiest neighborhood in the state. I cut back my college classes(I know, privileged white boy) so I could go to work full-time. I solved my problem without help. I could have moved back home, I could have asked my parents for help. But I took it upon myself to undo the shitstorm I created. Because it was MY situation.
Then I ****** up again 3 years later. I quit taking college courses because I was already working full-time. I took two ****** part-time jobs. A janitor. Which meant I cleaned ****** toilets. A midnight convenience store clerk in that ****** neighborhood that I once lived in when I ****** up before but had worked my way out of. I did this so I could pay the bills I created. Easy way was to default. I took the other way. Slept 3 hours a night 5 days a week then all day Sat/Sun until my midnight shift came up. No life. But I fixed the problem, quit the extra jobs after 7 months and started taking college classes again. Got my degree at 32.
Guess what I did? ****** up again. Fortunately, I was making good money but my numerous credit cards were blistering hot. I didn't do **** for a year other than play ball. Paid my credit cards off during that year.
Now I could have griped about how the system had ****** poor ol' 19 y/o MikeT23. Or 22 y/o MikeT23. Or 33 y/o MikeT23. I didn't. I just focused on fixing MY problems because they were MY problems.
I won't pretend to understand the plight of those living in poor, black neighborhoods. But I know there is a lot of complaining about how it's impossible to get out of them. How the system keeps them in their place. Yet, every now and then, someone gets out. How? Do you think it's due to complaining about the system ******* them over? Or could they possibly have focused their energy on improving their situation? I fully understand that some people just don't have the "tools" to move up. Hard work is all they can do and they'll still be in poverty. So, in your opinion, why are most people stuck in poverty? Keep in mind, if you say "They just don't have the intelligence to get out", you're more racist than you claim moy is. If you say "They just can't get jobs", I'll tell you that every business on earth wants hard workers.