Never Allowed out of the Hood

Friday, January 9th, 2015

A promising “Black Ivy” football star got shot in a home-invasion robbery — he and his friends were doing the invading — and the Z man blames racial solidarity:

The explanation for this that jumps out to me is the extreme racial solidarity in black America. In white America, keeping the good kids away from the bad kids is the focus of everyone. Even back in the paleolithic when I was coming along adults had no trouble culling the defects from the herd. Somewhere around puberty, the stupid and uncontrollable ended up in “special” classes, away from the rest of us. That is not permitted in black culture.

The result is Terrance gets to hang with Jakobi as an equal, but they are not equals. Jakobi, I’m guessing, is high status in the hood. His ghetto name is what I’m going on here. In the white world, Dakota is not allowed anywhere near Dwayne and that was the case from about the fifth grade. By the time Dakota is at college, Dwayne is long gone. In black America. Terrence is never allowed out of the hood. He has to “keeps it real.” Otherwise, he runs the risk of being a “Tom” or acting white.

Until blacks drop the racial solidarity, this story will be a common one.

(Hat tip to our Slovenian Guest.)

Comments

  1. Bob Sykes says:

    We should make sure that none of them ever get out of the ‘hood. And those that have should be rounded up and put back in.

  2. Toddy Cat says:

    Wonder how many young black men have died in the name of “Keeping it Real”?

  3. Slovenian Guest says:

    Or how during Obama’s first term black unemployment nearly doubled to 1983 levels, yet more blacks voted for him the second time around. Their voter turnout went from 64.7% in 2008 to a record breaking 66.2% in the 2012 elections, with places like Detroit having a turnout greater than 100%, now that’s solidarity!

    via Blacks Made History Surpassing White Voter Turnout Rates

    At this point in the US you may just as well do a head count instead of actually voting, just extrapolate the winner from census data and be done with it.

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