There’s a story out there that a young black adolescent male was with his teammates under a tent at a track meet when a white adolescent male walks into their tent, something you simply don’t do at track meets.
I would like to know what Substack did to push her essay to the top of everyone’s feed. Nothing in my read history should have made that junk show up in my feed.
I cannot ignore this story, and must speak out about it; because, it needs to be shown that not all of us are on Karmelo's side. This case was pretty easy to me; Austin took a leadership protector role (Which is what we need young men to do. I also heard that the coach told him to be the team leader). Karmelo is very typical of black people. He has a chip on his shoulder about white people, and clearly came from a home where accountability isn't taught (Listen to his parents). He was obviously unhinged, and wanted a fight. Regardless of my speculations; he killed Austin, and there was no excuse. It's not like he was being sexually assaulted or otherwise physically harmed. Even if Austin did push him; you can't meet a butter knife with an AK-47 and think that's okay. Thinking any differently displays racial idolatry, tribalism, and straight up sociopathic thinking. It's really important that as many logical black people speak up as possible.
Excellent response, in my opinion. I too had the referenced essay come up in my feed. I read it. I wish i hadn't.
It was amazing and sickening how centuries old milestones for boys growing and learning the skills necessary to be men was reversed to become evil. Men who don't know how to fight will not, no cannot, protect another who needs it. Self-discipline and self-control are necessarily learned in tandem to these things.
Then there are the posers. The ones who want to play big boy games without big boy consequences. They don't know the meaning of "boundaries". It seems their definition of boundaries is "No one can get away with hurting my feelings. If someone hurts my feelings, I have the 'right' to kill them."
Regarding Substack, your assessment may be correct. I began using this venue about 6 months ago. It appeared to be a platform where individuals expressed thoughtful reflections and engaged in constructive dialogue. The posts were much deeper than the sensational topics on YouTube. Besides, i can read faster and grasp presented material faster than listening to someone talk about. Yours was one of first to catch my attention, so I subscribed.
Essays like the one generating this post didn't come up in my feed. I can relate to your frustration. The author of the essay includes "Dr." in her handle. Her bio gives no credentials for this title. Actually, she describes herself as someone who wants to stir conflict. Unfortunately, this seems to be the cultural attitude in which we live. It is my opinion that this is a result of not having a higher authority to which we must answer for doing wrong. When this happens, individuals become the highest authorities and anything goes.
The fact that Dr. 2G is #17 on Substack in her "category" is a sad, sad reflection on the intellectual poverty that apparently inhabits certain groups who can possibly read but seem unable to critically process what they read here.
Despite the media push every comment I read, white or black, says these raging black women are insane. There aren’t many of them. Don’t exaggerate the problem.
I agree. I don’t think by numbers it isnhuge. But it might be 10,000 wanting to kill white people? 45M blacks. 10,000 lunatics. It isn’t a reflection on all blacks at those numbers. But a lot of damage can be done.
I've been cutthroat about what I will endure on my feed, and so I haven't seen her piece. Perhaps Substack algos are listening. So many people come onto this platform following their favourite authority, not because they want to read something new or gain another perspective, but to stan. They're mixed up with the rest of us who could care less about public figures' opinions and just want good, thoughtful, honest writing rather than ideological stoking.
Glad you're here and pushing back on tunnel visioned, racist rhetoric. If it's any consolation, I made #47 in Culture a few weeks ago on an article called 'Give Less Shit'.
I cannot ignore this story, and must speak out about it; because, it needs to be shown that not all of us are on Karmelo's side. This case was pretty easy to me; Austin took a leadership protector role (Which is what we need young men to do. I also heard that the coach told him to be the team leader). Karmelo is very typical of black people. He has a chip on his shoulder about white people, and clearly came from a home where accountability isn't taught (Listen to his parents). He was obviously unhinged, and wanted a fight. Regardless of my speculations; he killed Austin, and there was no excuse. It's not like he was being sexually assaulted or otherwise physically harmed. Even if Austin did push him; you can't meat a butter knife with an AK-47 and think that's okay. Thinking any differently displays racial idolatry, tribalism, and straight up sociopathic thinking. It's really important that as many logical black people speak up as possible.
I am disgusted by the entire left, they live for this kind of stuff. The double standards and hypocrisy, the lies. They have selective outrage, manufactured to manipulate the low IQ, The viewers of the media and The View. I think and hope like me the time of sitting back and staying silent is over. We are in a fight for survival, Europe is on its last breath. If we don’t start pushing back, it will be too late.
I would like to know what Substack did to push her essay to the top of everyone’s feed. Nothing in my read history should have made that junk show up in my feed.
Same. I’ve purposely avoided this story on every social media platform
Good point. It showed up on mine. Never should have.
I've heard this site is going woke/evil
Oh man I saw this article. “Black people have boundaries”, that’s where I kinda lost my shit🤣
Yes, they do. Everyone else's.
I cannot ignore this story, and must speak out about it; because, it needs to be shown that not all of us are on Karmelo's side. This case was pretty easy to me; Austin took a leadership protector role (Which is what we need young men to do. I also heard that the coach told him to be the team leader). Karmelo is very typical of black people. He has a chip on his shoulder about white people, and clearly came from a home where accountability isn't taught (Listen to his parents). He was obviously unhinged, and wanted a fight. Regardless of my speculations; he killed Austin, and there was no excuse. It's not like he was being sexually assaulted or otherwise physically harmed. Even if Austin did push him; you can't meet a butter knife with an AK-47 and think that's okay. Thinking any differently displays racial idolatry, tribalism, and straight up sociopathic thinking. It's really important that as many logical black people speak up as possible.
Very well said. And thank you for sharing your comment.
Granger,
Excellent response, in my opinion. I too had the referenced essay come up in my feed. I read it. I wish i hadn't.
It was amazing and sickening how centuries old milestones for boys growing and learning the skills necessary to be men was reversed to become evil. Men who don't know how to fight will not, no cannot, protect another who needs it. Self-discipline and self-control are necessarily learned in tandem to these things.
Then there are the posers. The ones who want to play big boy games without big boy consequences. They don't know the meaning of "boundaries". It seems their definition of boundaries is "No one can get away with hurting my feelings. If someone hurts my feelings, I have the 'right' to kill them."
Regarding Substack, your assessment may be correct. I began using this venue about 6 months ago. It appeared to be a platform where individuals expressed thoughtful reflections and engaged in constructive dialogue. The posts were much deeper than the sensational topics on YouTube. Besides, i can read faster and grasp presented material faster than listening to someone talk about. Yours was one of first to catch my attention, so I subscribed.
Essays like the one generating this post didn't come up in my feed. I can relate to your frustration. The author of the essay includes "Dr." in her handle. Her bio gives no credentials for this title. Actually, she describes herself as someone who wants to stir conflict. Unfortunately, this seems to be the cultural attitude in which we live. It is my opinion that this is a result of not having a higher authority to which we must answer for doing wrong. When this happens, individuals become the highest authorities and anything goes.
- Chris
I started to read the comments on said essay. I wish I hadn't. What a cesspit.
The fact that Dr. 2G is #17 on Substack in her "category" is a sad, sad reflection on the intellectual poverty that apparently inhabits certain groups who can possibly read but seem unable to critically process what they read here.
Incredibly true
All very well said.
Despite the media push every comment I read, white or black, says these raging black women are insane. There aren’t many of them. Don’t exaggerate the problem.
This writer is #17 in culture on Substack. Count me out is referring to— if that’s what it takes to be on top on Substack, count me out.
And by turn please do not minimize the problem.
I agree. I don’t think by numbers it isnhuge. But it might be 10,000 wanting to kill white people? 45M blacks. 10,000 lunatics. It isn’t a reflection on all blacks at those numbers. But a lot of damage can be done.
I've been cutthroat about what I will endure on my feed, and so I haven't seen her piece. Perhaps Substack algos are listening. So many people come onto this platform following their favourite authority, not because they want to read something new or gain another perspective, but to stan. They're mixed up with the rest of us who could care less about public figures' opinions and just want good, thoughtful, honest writing rather than ideological stoking.
Glad you're here and pushing back on tunnel visioned, racist rhetoric. If it's any consolation, I made #47 in Culture a few weeks ago on an article called 'Give Less Shit'.
Actually, it’s very refreshing to know someone with human decency is awarded by the Substack gods in the culture arena.
I cannot ignore this story, and must speak out about it; because, it needs to be shown that not all of us are on Karmelo's side. This case was pretty easy to me; Austin took a leadership protector role (Which is what we need young men to do. I also heard that the coach told him to be the team leader). Karmelo is very typical of black people. He has a chip on his shoulder about white people, and clearly came from a home where accountability isn't taught (Listen to his parents). He was obviously unhinged, and wanted a fight. Regardless of my speculations; he killed Austin, and there was no excuse. It's not like he was being sexually assaulted or otherwise physically harmed. Even if Austin did push him; you can't meat a butter knife with an AK-47 and think that's okay. Thinking any differently displays racial idolatry, tribalism, and straight up sociopathic thinking. It's really important that as many logical black people speak up as possible.
Whoever the woman was who wrote the essay you're referring to is incapable of rational thinking.
Racial idolatry histronics
I am disgusted by the entire left, they live for this kind of stuff. The double standards and hypocrisy, the lies. They have selective outrage, manufactured to manipulate the low IQ, The viewers of the media and The View. I think and hope like me the time of sitting back and staying silent is over. We are in a fight for survival, Europe is on its last breath. If we don’t start pushing back, it will be too late.
Hey we need to acknowledge “if Obama had a son”.🥴
I happily remain obscure, isolated by choice, unpopular, and safe.