theobserver -> RE: transcending racial prejudice (11/9/2008 11:44:38 AM)
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quote:
ORIGINAL: bestbabync quote:
ORIGINAL: theobserver quote:
ORIGINAL: bestbabync i am speaking from experience, i have lived it! i was raised by white grandparents. i attended a mostly white school until i was in the 7th grade. i was for the most part totally accepted in the white community i was raised in. once i reached my teen years my experience of acceptance by the black community was not the same. i found myself going back to the white community because of the hatred for whites in the black community. my grandparents (both WW2 veterans) were very good to me and always instilled in me that it is what is inside a person that counts not skin color. as i have matured, married, had kids etc i discovered that my skin color does not matter! this country must come together and forget the things that seperate us. i hate being pulled back & forth. i want peace and acceptance for your children and mine. I'm glad you had a good experience with your grandparents and I'm saddened you had a negative one with certain Black people you've encountered, but others have not. No one is asking you to don the flag of Black Nationalism and prop a Black beret on your head. You've experienced prejudice from some Black Folks and so have I. I've also experienced it from some White folks. The key word is some not all. observer the stepshow i attended consisted of approximately 1000 black people and approximately 50 white people. a small percentage of the black and almost all of the white people had a puzzled look on their faces when the crowd cheered to the mantra "no more white suppression! the black people are in control now and we are going to turn this country around!" this scared the hell outta me and some of the others. then the black national anthem was sung, but the national anthem was not. my point is that both anthems should have been played/sung. i respect both as an american. i was raised that we all are equal. I don't know where you are from, but my sister is a college student, some of my cousins are college students and their responses have been very tepid. My sister called me yesterday and although she said she was excited to be in Grant Park when Obama was announced the winner, there were no shouts of end to white supremacy and so forth. I cannot believe some of the ignorant things being tossed around. Once again, cause supposedly 1000 people at the college step show supposedly chanted "No more white supremacy" all of a sudden that means what to the whole of Black citizens? What exactly are you scared of? So by that logic, I can fearful that all the folks before the election who were on television and showing up at rallies, with monkey's, shouting nigger, terrorist and everything else, should represent the mindset and actions of all non-blacks? Should I be scared? Let's be real.
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